SAGITTARIUS WHORL
An
Adventure of the Rampart
Worlds
Julian May
A
Del Rey Book
Copyright ©
2001 by Starykon Productions, Inc.
Chapter 1
Behold a comatose human guy in a
dystasis tank, hooked to a psychotronic apparatus that plays the same
lovely dream over and over and over. He is being genetically
engineered.
That much
he knows, because he's been in one of the damned vats
before—sometime, somewhere. The details are a mystery. He
drifts in the glass coffin of bubbly oxygen-charged goo, too stoned
by the drugs and REMory dream-programming to react rationally during
his brief interludes of semiconsciousness.
The
wakeful bits, when he manages to force open his eyes and peer
myopically through the perfluorocarbon liquid, are fuzzy and surreal
and punctuated by stabs of fear and helpless anger. During them, the
floater recalls one vivid short-term memory snippet...
He sits in a smoke-filled bar in a
hollow asteroid in the distant Sagittarius Whorl, and the Haluk
smiles at him as his consciousness starts to drain away. He remembers
his despairing certainty, in the final instant before oblivion, that
the aliens are probably going to subject him to something
outrageously weird this time around, having failed to finish him off
during their previous assaults and batteries.
He squirms
in the dystasis tank, making a futile attempt to swim up, push off
the lid, and break free. But his limbs and trunk are firmly clamped
in an upright frame. Only his head, gripped less tightly, is able to
move a little.
He
remembers a few more things.
He can
swim. He can cook. He can pilot a starship. He can ride a horse.
He's a
disgrace. He's a lawyer. He's a scuba diver. He's a zillionaire.
He was a
cop. He was a suicidal drunk. He was a political gadfly. He was ...
doing something that got him in deepest shit.
When he
finishes wrenching his head around uselessly, he sees another
transparent-walled container next to his own. Inside it another body
is dimly visible in reddish womb-light, a companion in dystasis.
Straining, he tries to get a better view of the other person, but
finds it impossible.
His mouth
opens in a silent roar of frustration. With his lungs and the rest of
his respiratory tract full of liquid, his vocal cords are as impotent
as those of an unborn baby. The dystasis monitoring equipment detects
his frantic muscle contractions and the hormonal flood that indicates
an agitated mental state.
Naughty,
naughty! His struggles are disrupting the genetic engineering
procedure. The apparatus programs deeper anesthesia. He plummets back
into slumber mode and the umpteenth dream replay begins.
He's
always with his wife, whose name he can't recall any more than he can
remember his own. There is background music—Scott Hamilton
playing " 'Round Midnight" on a tenor saxophone. The
bedroom is very large and of a rustic southwestern ranch style, with
a high-beamed ceiling and walls of whitewashed adobe, adorned with
antique Native American weavings and artwork featuring elegantly lewd
pastel flower shapes. Double-glazed sliding doors with parted
curtains reveal that it's night and snowing hard outside. The sound
of the blizzard wind occasionally breaks through cascades of gentle
jazz. White drifts are piling up outside on the patio.
He and his
wife, young newlyweds, sit side by side on a shearling rug before a
blazing fire. They're naked, propped happily against each other,
sipping Roederer Cristal while they watch the dancing flames. Her
hair is ash-blond, rippling after being released from its braided
chignon, and reaches halfway down her back. Her eyes are the color of
deep ocean waters beyond the reef. She is striking rather than
pretty, and her features in repose are solemn until he caresses her
and makes her smile.
Time to
make love again.
And again
and again, as the psychotronic machine endlessly loops his most
exquisite memory to facilitate the dystasis procedure.
The poor
happy schmuck in the tank is me.
Drifting
and dreaming.
——
Tap tap
tap.
Someone
spoke, an alien voice filtered through a translator device. "How
interesting. It looks as though he is waking up."
Someone
else: "This is the template individual, Servant of Servants. The
original. The transformed human subject is recovering in another
room, attended by one's technicians. We will interview him shortly,
just as soon as he is lucid."
"Let's
see if this creature recognizes one."
Tap tap
tap.
I slowly
opened my eyes. The room outside was dimly lit, as always, with most
of the illumination coming from a bank of alien equipment some
distance away. The dark floor was intricately veined with a glowing
red web that converged on my tank and the one beside mine, which was
now empty.
Three
Haluk stood looking at me, two males and a female, all wearing
translator pendants. The tallest of the aliens knocked on the glass
wall to get my attention as though I were a sulky specimen in an
aquarium.
Tap
tap tap. "Wah! Can you hear one, Earth life-form?"
Of course
I could. My ears worked just fine while submerged in the oxygenated
glop, and he must have known it.
He pursed
his lips in the racial smile-equivalent and twiddled his
four-fingered hand in mock playfulness. "Do you recall this
one's identity?"
With
difficulty, I focused my eyes and concentrated.
Well,
sure. The last time I'd seen him, he was wearing a conservative
human-style business suit of dark green with faint white pinstripes,
tailored to set off his wasp waist and accessorized by a scarlet
foulard scarf and a diamond stickpin. He was now attired in exotic
haberdashery appropriate to his high station: bronze-purple robes
with glittering jeweled trim, an elaborate spiked diadem of platinum,
and a matching necklace inset with large fossil cabochons. But that
ugly blue face was unmistakable, and so were the oddly beautiful eyes
with their sardonic, hyperintelligent glint.
The
perfluorocarbon bath had rendered me mute, but I snarl-mouthed:
You
friggin' xeno bastard! Damned right I know you. You 're the Servant
of the Servants of Luk, the head honcho of the Sovereign Haluk
Confederation.
"Bravo,"
he said dryly. The Haluk aren't telepathic, but my response had
evidently been clear enough. "Please accept the profound
gratitude of this one and of the Council of Nine. Thanks to you"—he
nodded toward the tenantless second tank—"and to the
turncoat rascal with whom you shared your vital substance, one has
high hopes of an accelerated schedule for our Grand Design."
Suddenly,
a surprisingly concrete recollection popped into my skull. The alien
leader and I had had a nasty confrontation a couple of years ago
outside the Assembly Chamber of the Commonwealth of Human Worlds in
Toronto. At the invitation of Liberal Party members sympathetic to
Reversionist principles, I had finally testified about... something
important having to do with the Haluk and their trade treaty with
humanity. My speech had really pissed off the Servant of Servants and
the members of his alien entourage, as well as a sizable percentage
of the Assembly Delegates.
But
what had I said? And who the hell was I?
I hadn't a
clue.
The
Servant said, "Feeling all right, are you? Archiator Malotuwak
assures one that you came through the human-to-human genetic exchange
in fine fettle. Unfortunately, we can't let you out of the dystasis
tank just yet. We require a second demiclone."
Demiclone?...
What the hell are you talking about, huckleberry balls?
"Take
one's advice, human. Cooperate willingly when you're called upon
later for tutorial duties. Extracting the pertinent information by
means of psychotronic interrogation machines is so uncomfortable. Who
knows? If you do well, one might even allow you to live. Common
laborers are always in demand on our newly colonized planets."
Screw
you. With a magnum drill press!
The second
male Haluk spoke up. Short and stocky, he wore a plain
mustard-colored smock tightly cinched about his slender middle and
carried an elaborate Macrodur mag-slate of the type favored by
hotshot human scientists. "He's becoming excited, Servant of
Servants. This is not a good thing for a dystasis subject. It could
delay initiation of the second demiclone procedure. One will program
a calming medication for him."
He prodded
the slate and a warm woozy feeling began to seep into my body,
dulling anxiety and slowing my thoughts. I fought the desire to
relapse into sleep.
Demiclone!
I should know what that meant. I
did know. It was a highly
illegal genetic engineering procedure. The Haluk had stolen some of
my DNA and used it to—to—
To
duplicate me. To morph some other guy into a replica of my precious
person. I mouthed helpless obscenities. The Servant of Servants had
already lost interest in me and turned his attention to the Haluk
woman standing beside him.
She was
elderly, her skin faded to the color of wellwashed denim, and she
wore robes of glistening black with a hood that nearly concealed her
mane of pale hair. A very important-looking polished fossil on a long
chain hung about her neck.
"Is
it certain, Archiator Malotuwak," she inquired of Mustard Smock,
"that the newly created duplicate of this individual retains his
own mentality? It would be disastrous to the Servant's Grand Design
if the demiclone were to be ... contaminated, as it were, by the
mind-set of this template life-form."
"That
is quite impossible, Council Locutor Ru Kamik. Only the physical
aspect of the demiclone has been altered." A grimace of
distaste. "That other human's mind—such as it is—remains
his own. One might mention that he was most uncooperative during the
preliminary procedures, insulting one's assistants and behaving in an
arrogant and offensive manner."
The
Servant of Servants uttered the grotesque laugh of his species, which
sounded like a miniature poodle choking to death. "Fortunately
for us, the rascal's usefulness to the Sovereign Haluk Confederation
does not require a congenial disposition."
"Yes,"
the Locutor said. "However, his usefulness
does require
that his true identity not be detected. One was somewhat disconcerted
to learn that the demiclone is not, after all, an essentially perfect
replica of this original."
"True
enough," Mustard Smock conceded. "The restricted time frame
we were allowed precluded optimal DNA transfer. It was necessary to
use an abbreviated genetic engineering procedure. One made this quite
clear to the Servant of Servants and to the demiclone subject himself
at the outset. Even using the most advanced human equipment and
techniques, along with broad-spectrum PD32:C2 transferase agents,
four weeks in the dystasis tank is inadequate for complete
chromosomal transformation, given the relatively large amount of
intron material in the human genome. Introns are more difficult to
exchange than exons—"
The
Servant of Servants interrupted, addressing the female. "Nobody's
going to test him, Ru Kamik. They'll have no reason to doubt his
identity. He will be carefully coached in his role."
"Nevertheless,"
said the Locutor firmly, "please explain to this one the
circumstances under which the demicloned person might be
differentiated from the original subject by expert investigators of
the Commonwealth of Human Worlds."
The Haluk
scientist made the gesture signifying self-abasement. "You'll
forgive if one gets a bit technical, Great Lady?"
The
Locutor steepled her four-fingered hands in a gesture of
condescending assent. "Continue. One is by no means completely
ignorant of genetics."
"As
you may know, not all of the DNA within body cells acts as a
blueprint for life processes. Those segments that are active are
often called exons. They trigger protein production—build the
body and keep it in operation. The other DNA segments, those with no
known function, are called introns. The noncoding introns are
intermingled with the exons. In the human genome, about ninety
percent of the DNA is noncoding. By comparison, we Haluk have a
smaller percentage of introns, even though our total number of exons
is close to the human complement."
"I
understand."
"Because
one was commanded to perform this procedure in the shortest possible
time, one transferred only the exon DNA and about one-tenth of the
introns from the donor to the recipient. As a consequence, even
though the recipient exhibits the physical characteristics of the
template as perfectly as an identical twin, he nevertheless retains a
large part of his original intron DNA—the genetic material that
seems redundant."
"And
this can be detected by forensic analysis?"
"Readily,
Council Locutor. Most of the genetic variation among human
individuals is in the introns. Even a rough comparison of the
demiclone's DNA with that of the original will reveal the fake. If
one had only been allowed more time—"
"It
was not practical," the Servant of Servants said dismissively.
"And one must repeat: the chance of the demiclone undergoing DNA
testing during his mission are vanishingly small."
The
Locutor spoke in a neutral tone to the Servant of Servants. "Certain
members of the Council of Nine have very grave misgivings about this
stratagem. Using the human demiclone, that is, rather than one of our
own race."
"Their
doubts are groundless, Ru Kamik," the leader insisted. "The
revised Grand Design is going to succeed! Almighty Luk will shower
his beneficence upon us and shatter the spines of the human despots."
"There
is still great danger," she said softly. "And this one is
not speaking only of the possibility that the turncoat agent's
identity may be detected. He himself is a traitor to his race and
perhaps not entirely sane. One has seen his personality analysis—"
"Yes,
yes, curse it for a wad of odoriferous lepido nose wax! One knows all
about that. But the scheme he proposed is brilliant. If it succeeds,
our grand expansion strategy will be accomplished in years, rather
than centuries or even millennia."
"If
the scheme succeeds."
"Wah!
Would you have us abandon our great hopes, crawl back to the cluster,
embrace our fatal allomorphic heritage, and go down to extinction as
we exhaust the balance of our dwindling resources? Or shall we
continue to submit to humanity's tyranny here in the Milky Way? ...
No! This one has promised the people that all will be freed from
allomorphy—that our children will live on new, uncrowded
worlds. If the Grand Design succeeds, this goal will be achieved
peacefully. If it fails, we will use force to seize the planets we
require from the loathsome humans. Curse their arrogance up a
necrotic copulatory orifice!"
"Be
tranquil, Servant of Servants," Ru Kamik advised. "This one
has a duty to examine contingencies. Even unpleasant ones. Why would
it not be possible to use a Haluk demiclone rather than the disguised
turncoat to fulfill the Grand Design?"
"The
scheme was conceived by him," the Servant pointed out, simmering
down a bit. "And he alone is in a unique position to carry off
the deception—at least in its initial stages. No Haluk
demiclone would be able to worm his way into the confidence of the
Frost family and Rampart Concern quite so readily, or so quickly, as
the rogue human life-form. Once he is well-established, however, the
situation changes. Taking his place, a trained Haluk demiclone will
be able to maneuver freely, inserting other demiclones into positions
of power and influence. Humanity will find itself in thrall to us
before it realizes its peril."
"But
how can we be certain that the turncoat will not fly out of control?"
"One
has made the personal decision that the risk is acceptable. One is
aware of the individual's limitations, and they have been factored
into the operational equation. He will be carefully monitored by our
other demiclone operatives in the Earth capital city. The rogue's
personal agenda, vengeful and perfidious though it may be from the
point of view of his own race, coincides with ours. At least for the
time being."
"As
you say, Servant of Servants." She lowered her head so that her
eyes were momentarily concealed by the hood of her black garment.
"Don't
worry, Ru Kamik," the Servant reassured her. "As soon as
possible, the wretched human creature will be replaced by one whose
loyalty is above suspicion. Our own esteemed agent, Ru Balakalak,
will carry the mission to its successful completion. Meanwhile, the
turncoat will have laid the groundwork for the coup. Needless to say,
the rogue human knows nothing of our intention to eliminate him when
his services are no longer required."
She made a
noncommittal gesture and turned to address the scientist. "Is it
true, then, Archiator Malotuwak, that the more lengthy demiclone
procedure performed upon Ru Balakalak will create a totally
undetectable duplicate?"
Mustard
Smock hesitated. "That is the theory, Great Lady, according to
the reassurances of the late Scientist Milik, who introduced the
genetic procedure to us. Of course, there exists no validation. So
far as we know, no Haluk-human demiclone has ever been subjected to
DNA analysis by the Commonwealth Criminal Investigation Department."
"Milik!"
huffed the Lady in Black. "Can one rely upon
her word?
She was a flaming idealist and an egregious fool, claiming she was
ready to die if it would advance the cause of interspecific
friendship."
"Milik
was a selfless benefactor of our race," said the Servant with
dangerous emphasis. "A martyr canonized by the Priesthood of
Luk."
"But
one that we in the Council of Nine did not fully trust—no more
than you did, Servant of Servants. In truth, she was another human
turncoat of unstable temperament and cloudy motivation ... and one
who may have secretly meddled with our racial heritage, if certain
rumors are to be given credence. This one has recently heard that
some of Milik's work on the eradication of allomorphism has come
under scrutiny."
"Nonsense,"
retorted the Servant of Servants. "Those rumors are quite devoid
of truth. It's ridiculous to think that Milik would have tinkered
maliciously with the trait-eradication treatment. Or lied about the
flawlessness of the demiclone procedure." "As you say,"
the Locutor murmured. There was a brief silence. Then she asked,
"When will the second demiclone be ready?"
"Ru
Balakalak is preparing to enter the dystasis tank immediately. As I
understand it, the unabbreviated procedure takes about twenty-six
weeks. Is that correct, Archiator?"
"Approximately,"
said Mustard Smock. "In interspecific DNA exchange, there is a
necessary preliminary operation, a sort of inoculation of the human
template individual to preclude rejection of exotic DNA by the
nonhuman recipient. This is followed by the phase during which the
actual gene transfer and bodily transformation of the recipient is
accomplished."
"Twenty-six
weeks is a long time to wait," said the Locutor.
The
Servant said, "Additional time will be required to tutor Ru
Balakalak in details of the mission once he emerges from dystasis. It
is estimated that he will be ready after thirty weeks."
"Thirty!"
"Meanwhile,
one will keep the Council of Nine fully informed concerning
operations on Earth. Needless to say, one expects that you, Ru Kamik,
will be zealous in supporting the revised Grand Design."
She
lowered her head again. "As you say, Servant of Servants."
"Excellent."
He turned to the scientist. "And now one believes it is time for
this one and the Council Locutor to interview the human demiclone."
"He
awaits in the recovery room," Archiator Malotuwak said. "Please
follow this one."
The three
Haluk went away and I was left suspended in dopey horror, boggled by
the technobabble and at a loss to understand the kind of espionage my
duplicate was about to undertake. Questions swirled in my brain like
terrified bait minnows in a bucket.
Who was
the human traitor who now wore my face, who had hatched some ploy
that was deemed vital to the Haluk Grand Design?
Whatever
the hell
that was.
How could
a demiclone of me help put the Commonwealth of Human Worlds in thrall
to an alien race?
Dammit—
who
am I, anyway?
A
disgrace. A former cop. A diver. A zillionaire. Aside from the
useless fragments of memory, my drugged brain had no answers.
So after a
while I slept again and dreamed of falling snow, the roaring fire,
the champagne, and my nameless wife's loving arms. Dreamed over and
over again, to the accompaniment of Scott Hamilton's ancient,
peerless saxophone.
At long
last the dreaming stopped.
——
I realized
instantly that my situation had changed. Some instinct warned me not
to open my eyes and not to move. I had sense enough to obey.
I was out
of the tank, breathing ambient air, lying on my back on a firm,
slightly inclined surface, head cradled in a comfortable pillow. Warm
and dry, not hurting—and surprisingly alert, even though I
still had no notion of my identity or what had happened to me.
Alien
voices were speaking and I felt gentle pokes and prods in different
parts of my anatomy. Two Haluk individuals who called each other
Miruviak and Avilik were right beside me, performing some sort of
physical examination. The suffixes of their names indicated that one
was male and one female. They were not wearing translators. My
knowledge of the Haluk language is imperfect and I could understand
only part of their conversation, which seemed to refer to my
condition. I was apparently in satisfactory shape, and after a few
minutes they covered me to the chin with a soft blanket and moved
off, still talking.
I
heard one of them say: "The
blah blah authority figure is
soul-glowing about the
blah of the dystasis
blah blah."
I
understood that to mean that a Haluk VIP, perhaps my old chum the
Servant of Servants of Luk, was happy about the results of some sort
of dystasis procedure. "Dystasis" was the same word in
English and Halukese because a human had illegally introduced it to
the aliens.
The
remarks that followed were spoken some distance away, couched in
medical jargon almost totally incomprehensible to me. I risked
cracking open my eyelids.
1 could
see most of the room. It was at least six meters square and looked
like an accommodation in a superior Haluk hotel catering to humans,
situated on one of their long-settled colonial planets. With the
human-Haluk rapprochement in place in the Perseus Spur, I'd once
stayed in a similar place.
Good.
You remembered that. Now try to remember something essential—
like
who you are!
The
furnishings, except for scattered pieces of mysterious technical
apparatus with blinking telltales, were an eclectic mix of alien and
Earth designs. On my right, where the wall was completely shrouded in
opaque draperies, were exotic chairs, a low table, stands holding
Haluk bioluminescent lamps with quaint shades, and an elaborate
human-style infomedia credenza. To the left, in an open-plan adjacent
room, was a wet bar—no booze visible—and a compact
kitchen, also human in design. An alcove held a tall case full of
e-books and slates, plus a collection of anonymous small cabinets
constructed of exotic materials. The head of my bed was against one
wall. Another bed stood on the opposite side of the room, flanked by
an open bathroom door with a human-type sink visible. A second door
in that wall was closed.
The two
Haluk medical technicians, wearing human-style pale green hospital
scrubs and murmuring quiet comments, hovered over the occupant of the
other bed, who lay motionless while the aliens studied him. I didn't
have a very good view of the patient, but I could tell that he was a
good-sized human male with a fairly powerful build. A small console
with what looked like medical monitoring equipment stood at his
bedside.
I
caught the question: "If a third demiclone is not required, then
why not discard the
blah?"
The
female Haluk said, "This is a very
blah demiclone,
Miruviak. He must be taught
blah blah blah and
blah before
blah his mission. Some of the teaching will be done by the
human
blah who taught
blah blah. But
blah from
the
blah over there is also needed. Our orders are to keep him
alive until the
blah decides he is
blah blah."
Not very
enlightening. In fact, ominous.
"This
demiclone will wake up soon," said the male medic. "Listen,
Avilik: one thinks we should
blah blah blah. Just in case
blah
blah blah. Did you bring them with you?"
"Yes."
The
meditechs had finished their examination of the other patient and
replaced his blanket. Now they came across the room toward me again.
I quickly shut my eyes, relaxed, tried to think Zen thoughts, and
prayed that my bed wasn't equipped with a built-in vital signs
monitor that would betray the fact that I was rally conscious.
Somebody drew the covering away from my naked body. They rolled me
over and I felt a sharp prick in the back of my neck.
"It
is best that we wait to insert the second
blah" Avilik
decided. "But it is not really needed yet. He's still very
weak."
Miruviak
grunted something that might have been "That will take care of
it," and then they rolled me over again and tucked me in.
"The
dystasis turned him a most beautiful color," the female medic
remarked, uttering the squelched barking sound that represented Haluk
laughter. "His
blah blah are certainly of an imposing
size and
blah. Later, one hopes to know him better before we
must
blah blah."
"Disgusting,"
hissed her colleague, clearly miffed. "You women only
blah
one thing."
I heard
more alien snickering. Then both of the medical technicians went out
of the room. I lay still, cold dread seeping into my soul along with
a growing comprehension. My memory was coming back on-line—parts
of it, at any rate— and I didn't like what I recalled.
I'd been
in a dystasis tank for at least seven months. The Haluk had made two
demiclones of me. The first evil triplet had been a human traitor,
imperfectly morphed at the cell-nucleus level but otherwise my
physical duplicate. I had no notion what his mission might be, but it
boded no good for humanity. The second demiclone was a transformed
Haluk, destined to replace Agent Number One, who possessed certain
talents but also had the potential to become uncontrollable. Number
Two had been more expertly engineered and was perhaps a perfect
genetic replica. I presumed that he now occupied the bed opposite
mine. He was going to be tutored before going out to fulfill his
mission, and some of the briefings were to come from me, whether I
chose to cooperate or not.
The
suite's mishmash of Haluk and human decor made more sense now. It was
a schoolroom where my shadow and I would live and work together until
he had his act down pat.
Interspecific
genetic engineering ... there was something peculiar about it. I
tried to retrieve what I knew from my cerebral database. My
sister—what was her name?—had once been targeted for
demicloning. She was rescued before a duplicate of her could be made,
but she'd still suffered certain dramatic side effects from the
procedure.
As I would
have.
Turning an
alien into a human being was trickier than the usual total-spectrum
biological refit job and even more illegal under CHW law. It required
that the human DNA donor—in this case, me—first be
modified with an infusion of critical alien genes so the demiclone
subject wouldn't reject the human material. The preliminary genen
procedure superficially transformed the DNA donor—
Rats!
I lifted
my right hand and drew it out from beneath the covers. The skin was
very firm and tinted a rich sky-blue. There were no fingernails on
the four abnormally elongated digits. The bones of the pinkie and
ring fingers were partially fused now, enclosed in a single fleshy
envelope. My lower arm, quite hairless, was decorated with a dramatic
pattern of ridges that sported faintly drawn golden patterns, almost
like delicate enamelwork.
I touched
my altered face and cursed more eloquently. Weird bulges and a
Haluk-style flattened nose. Eye sockets of normal human diameter,
slightly smaller than Haluk orbits. It seemed that I'd kept my
human-sized eyeballs, just as my older sister Eve had when the Haluk
tried to demiclone her.
Eve!
Her name was Eve. And my name was ...
On the tip
of my tongue, which felt strange, as though it were too large for my
mouth. My teeth seemed peculiar, too. The spaces between them were
wider than normal.
Under the
blanket, my hands explored a body that was humanoid but not human.
Externally, the preliminary genen procedure had turned me into a
facsimile of a Haluk, complete with a wasp waist that was only about
70 centimeters in circumference. But inside my ridged blue skin were
human muscles and human guts and human bones, plus a discombobulated
but swiftly recuperating human brain. I lacked the Haluk elongated
neck and overall slender build. My alien hands groped lower on their
inspection tour until they reached my crotch—
Oh,
God! Holy blazing bloody shit! No! Not that!
It was all
I could do not to scream my lungs out. Those rucking xeno fiends ...
For a few
minutes I felt drowned in a black tide of self-loathing and despair.
Then I remembered that my partially morphed sister Eve—Who
hadn't experienced this particular indignity—had been restored
to her normal human physiology by another sojourn in the dystasis
tank. At the time, it seemed to be a miracle of modern science.
I, too,
could be made good as new. The ghastly transformation of my genitals
could be reversed, as could the other changes. Provided that I
managed to live long enough, and escaped from whatever exotic planet
the Haluk had stashed me on.
Very
slowly I sat up, experiencing nausea and a fleeting dizziness. I was
weak as a new-hatched chick and there was a curious itching sensation
at the back of my neck. I touched it and felt a tiny lump right at
the base of my skull. The damned Haluk meditechs had given me an
implant, and odds were it had to do with keeping me under control.
Maybe it
was signaling them at this very moment.
My weird
blue feet settled onto the floor—wood parquet laid out in a
minuscule herringbone pattern, coated with ice-clear "skating
rink" glaze a full centimeter in thickness. It was a
labor-intensive human interior design style, ultra-trendy. Just the
sort of thing the fad-conscious Haluk were likely to borrow. I judged
that I was being held in a very upscale alien establishment—certainly
nothing resembling the godforsaken outpost in the Sagittarius Whorl
where I'd gone on the Barky Hunt. Perhaps my captors had taken me to
the planet Artiuk, their colonial capital in the Milky Way...
Which
was situated in the Perseus Spur sector of the galaxy, fourteen
thousand light-years from Earth. More memories data-dumped. I'd lived
in the Spur myself, on a pretty little freesoil world called
Kedge-Lockaby. Had a house on a tropical island, a yellow submarine
named
Pernio II, and a bunch of rascally friends. Once upon a
time I'd been a disenfranchised Throwaway, an ex-cop, a
happy-go-lucky charterboat skipper who ran a sport-diving service for
tourists.
But not
lately.
Something
momentous had happened to me. I had returned to Earth and stayed
there for some years, doing ...
What?
Something
to do with politics. Something to do with lawyering. Whatever it was
had keenly interested the Haluk, given my double demicloning and the
secrecy attending it. Unfortunately, the exact nature of my recent
terrestrial activities still eluded me, along with my name.
My name!
If I could just remember that, all the rest of it would come back.
Wrapping
the blanket around my dainty middle to hide the disgusting alien sex
organs that had captivated the female medical technician, I struggled
to stand up. Exerted long-unused muscles and shuffled creakily across
the room to the other bed. Stared down at the guy who lay there,
asleep or unconscious, with tiny alien-type medical sensors stuck to
his forehead, temples, and neck.
Recognized
him.
I inhaled
sharply, found myself pitching forward in a sudden fit of vertigo,
shocked to the depths of my being. My blue fingers caught at the
bedclothes and I saved myself from falling, pushed my trembling body
upright and stood there swaying and gasping for breath.
The man
was tall and heavy-boned, with a physique less well-developed than it
should have been—although that flaw could be mitigated through
appropriate clothing or even judicious doses of steroids. The face
would need work, too. The skin was pasty from his long sojourn in the
tank, and the features were too fresh and regular. He lacked a
certain distinctive scar at the top of his left cheekbone. His nose
had never been broken in a Big Beach brawl and coaxed back into shape
by a defrocked Throwaway plastic surgeon suffering a cosmic-class
hangover from Danaëan rotgut. His hair was pretty authentic, the
color of bread crust, springing from his forehead in a distinctive
widow's peak. It was a little too long, but a barber would fix that.
When his eyes opened, I was positive they'd be cold green with an
inner ring of amber.
I knew
him, all right.
He was me.
My
demiclone, the alien imposter who was going to take my place—or
rather the place of Demiclone Number One, already secretly
machinating. We would help conquer humanity on behalf of the Haluk
race.
My name
was Asahel Ethan Frost. Called Asa by my family, Helly by my friends,
and Helmut Icicle by assorted crooks, ne'er-do-wells, and
disenfranchised wretches of the Perseus Spur. My father was Simon
Frost, the founder of Rampart Interstellar Corporation, which had now
become Rampart Amalgamated Concern. My mother was the late Katje
Vanderpost, gentle philanthropist, whose murder I had yet to avenge.
Her gift had made me a zillionaire. My siblings were Eve, Bethany,
and the matricidal Daniel. My wife—my former wife, for we had
been divorced for nearly eight years—was Joanna DeVet,
Morehouse Professor of Political Science at Commonwealth University,
Toronto Campus.
I
remembered it all, including details of my anti-Haluk political
activities, my legal triumph for Rampart Concern, and the ill-advised
escapade in the Sagittarius Whorl that had brought me to this pretty
pass.
So,
what are you going to do about it, you sorry Halukoid piece of shit?
The back
of my neck tingled as a wave of fury washed over me, and I jumped as
if I'd been goosed. Whatever I did, I knew I'd better do it mighty
damned fast.
Fake Helly
looked so peaceful, lying there. For an instant I wondered what kind
of sweet alien dream they'd programmed for him while he was in
dystasis. Then I twitched the pillow out from under his head, pressed
it over his face, and held it down while he writhed feebly under me
and uttered muffled cries.
The
medical monitor standing beside the bed let out a shriek of alarm.
Simultaneously, the gizmo implanted in my neck began to administer a
series of increasingly severe shocks at intervals of about five
seconds. If they were intended to deter me from homicidal rage and
other adrenaline-driven misdeeds, someone had badly miscalculated the
human pain threshold.
I flung
myself on top of my double, using my weight to pin his flailing arms.
Neither of us was up to snuff physically, but I still had my superior
human musculature and knew how to use it. The regular shocks from my
neck implant were now so strong that I was moaning in agony.
I kept on
doing what I had to do.
His
struggles weakened and finally stopped. I held the pillow down hard
for another minute or so, then pulled it away. His lips were
cyanotic, smeared with blood from his bitten tongue. The wide-open
eyes had tiny points of red dotting the whites, and the pupils were
wide and black. I felt for a pulse in his throat and found nothing.
The monitor continued its shrill distress signal.
He was
clinically dead, but they'd be able to revive him. Unless ...
The pain
from the neck shocks was becoming unbearable, and I knew I'd pass out
unless I could do something about it. I staggered across the room
toward the small kitchen, scratching impotently at my nape with
Halukoid fingers lacking nails. Tore open drawer after drawer,
finally found one with small cooking utensils. What to use? I
couldn't find any knives, which figured.
That!
If only it's sharp enough ...
I grabbed
it, thrust it awkwardly against the tiny lump, and gouged with all my
strength.
One last
bellow emptied my lungs. Then pain—but of a new sort, related
to torn flesh. I dropped the melon bailer with its malignant contents
on the floor, grabbed up a dish towel and pressed it against the
streaming wound. My blood was very red, very human.
As his
would be, no longer circulating. But the Haluk medics would be able
to do something about that unless I made it impossible.
I
dived back into the drawer of kitchen utensils and rummaged
frantically, cursing the absence of sharply pointed implements until
I realized that any damage I might inflict with them would be easily
repairable. I had to
destroy Fake Helly, and do it within
minutes.
A thought.
The wet
bar. Did it have what I needed?
Yes! My
blue hand closed over the drink-mixing wand. I stumbled back to the
motionless body. Eyes wide open in death, he didn't feel a thing as I
positioned the implement and bore down with gruesome effect. To my
surprise, the eyeball didn't rupture but simply slid aside. The thin
wall of bone behind it crunched and I was through to the brain.
And
activated the mixer's control to the highest setting: stiff whip.
Inadvertent morbid humor there. The efficient little machine didn't
even make a mess.
Try to
repair that in your dystasis tank, huckleberry balls!
I made the
mistake of withdrawing the wand, only to drop the thing on the floor
as my stomach gave a terrific heave and thin bile flooded my throat.
Fortunately, my guts were almost empty because of the dystasis, but
it still took me a few minutes to recover. After all, I'd just done a
cerebral puree job on myself...
Enough.
Think escape.
I was
surprised that no Haluk had responded yet to the medical alarm or to
the signal that had set off my neck-shocker. It was time for me to
get moving. Steal a set of clothes, flee into the alien landscape of
Artiuk, or whatever planet I was on.
Better
check the weather outside. I'd been on Artiuk only once. The climate
was torrid and subject to heavy rains.
I ran to
the wall of draperies, hoping they covered windows, pulled aside the
hanging fabric and uttered a disbelieving expletive.
Outside
the glass was an immense city, viewed from a height. It was night.
Soaring towers rose on either hand as far as I could see, their
shining colored forms enmeshed in webs of skyways and high roads with
streams of cars zipping along them. Aircraft moved in
traffic-controlled pathways like regimented fireflies through a sky
tinted bright gold. It had to be snowing hard outside the force-field
umbrella.
That
wasn't Artiuk out there, or any other Haluk colony. It was Earth. And
the city was one I knew intimately: Toronto, capital of the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds.
Still
holding the blood-soaked towel to my neck, I began to laugh like a
maniac. I only stopped when the outer door of the room crashed open
and the two medical technicians rushed inside, followed by a pair of
uniformed Haluk guards armed with Ivanov stun-pistols.
Chapter
2
Last
April, when I still wore the outward appearance of a human being, I
said goodbye to my legal staffers and got the hell out of town. While
the judges considered their verdict, I intended to rest up at my
family's Sky Ranch in Arizona and consider my future—especially
in regards to the Barky Hunt.
For the
first couple of days I did nothing but sleep. Then I worked out in
the ranch's well-equipped gym, swam laps in the indoor pool—it
still being a trifle brisk outdoors in the high country—read
some vintage Louis L'Amour and John D. MacDonald, and finished off
each evening riding out to watch the sun go down in a different part
of the sprawling Frost family spread.
My
favorite mount was a horse named Billy, a huge sweet-natured gelding
of the type southwesterners call a flea-bitten gray. That's not to
mean he's infested or broken down; the odd term describes a variety
of pale horse speckled all over with tiny spots of blue and red hair.
Billy was strong and smart, he obeyed orders, and he didn't spook
when an unexpected quail or jackrabbit exploded out of the chaparral
right under his nose. In Arizona you can't hardly ask more of a horse
than that.
On the
tenth day of my holiday, Billy and I plodded easily uphill in the
lengthening shadows while thin clouds turned from white to pink
beyond the Tonto Basin. Spring in the Sierra Ancha is unobtrusively
lovely. Golden yuccas, buckbrush, and manzanitas were blooming, tiny
little hummingbirds with amethyst throats poked busily around the
flowers for a final snack before nightfall, and the ethereal song of
the hermit thrush echoed among the mesas and canyons.
It was a
great place for unwinding, as different from the capital of the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds as it could possibly be.
I'd left
Toronto in a seriously fatigued state. Only my close-mouthed
executive assistant, Jane Nelligan, knew where I was going, and she
was under orders to reveal my whereabouts to no one. I told the ranch
staff to ignore my presence, and they did—except for the horse
wrangler who cared for Billy, and Rosalia the cook, who supplied me
with three gourmet squares a day and kept the chitchat to a minimum.
I'd earned
some incommunicado time. After more than two years of cosmic-class
courtroom warfare, Rampart Concern's civil suit against Galapharma
was finally ready for adjudication. Now it was up to three justices
of the Commonwealth Tribunal to produce a verdict in what the media
had deemed the corporate trial of the century, David vs. Goliath.
Little
Rampart, youngest and smallest of the Hundred Concerns, was suing the
pants off Galapharma, one of the oldest and largest. We alleged
conspiracy to devalue for the purpose of hostile acquisition,
sabotage, industrial espionage, theft and subsequent malicious use of
data, subornation of Rampart employees, and a lengthy laundry list of
other major torts. Pursuant to Statute 129 of the Interstellar
Commerce Code, Rampart demanded as redress the maximum damages set by
law—namely, all assets tangible and intangible of Galapharma
Amalgamated Concern, including their 5,345 booming planetary
colonies.
If we won,
Gala belonged to us. If we lost, the best we could hope for was that
Commonwealth prosecutors could make an assortment of criminal charges
against the big Concern stick. The odds of that happening were slim.
Important evidence had vanished, and crucial witnesses were dead or
had disappeared. The one man who might have fingered Galapharma for
its crimes was also the principal material . witness in Rampart's
civil suit; and Oliver Schneider had struck an immunity deal that
precluded any obligation to give testimony under the criminal
statutes.
If Gala
won, its lawyers would waste no time slapping Rampart with a colossal
civil countersuit, stunting the growth and profitability of its small
rival for years to come—if not destroying it outright.
As
Rampart's interim Chief Legal Officer, I had been in total charge of
orchestrating our case, always working behind the scenes. Not that
I'd asked for the job! I'd fought like a wildcat to avoid it. But my
father, Simon Frost, and my big sister Eve—Rampart's Chairman
of the Board and CEO, respectively—had leaned on me, inviting
my scrutiny of certain inescapable facts.
My older
brother, Daniel, the former Rampart corporate counsel and secretary,
could hardly head up the litigation. An unindicted Galapharma
coconspirator, Dan was kept doped to the eyeballs and under heavy
guard in a fishing lodge up in the Ontario North Woods, where he
stubbornly professed his complete innocence.
None of
the subordinate officers in Rampart's legal department were deemed
capable of directing a complex, unprecedented civil action such as
this one. To bring in an outside team of litigators was not an
option, either. There were aspects of the case that didn't bear close
scrutiny: for instance, the strong probability that Dan had
engineered our mother's death, acting under orders from Galapharma.
And there
was also the secret Haluk connection, political dynamite now that the
blue buggers were legitimate trading partners of the Commonwealth ...
Simon and
Eve maintained that only one candidate for Rampart legal battlemaster
had it all—being a major stakeholder in the Concern, a trusted
member of the family, and a highly trained lawyer (although
nonpracticing) familiar with every aspect of the case.
Yours
truly, Asahel Frost.
Trying to
wriggle out of the fast-closing trap, I reminded them that I was not
a member of the Commonwealth bar and could not be quickly qualified
by any string-pulling finagle of theirs. Even though my citizenship
had been restored through a technicality, the felonies I'd been
framed for were still on my record. In the eyes of the law I was
still a convict on probation. In the eyes of the media I was a
misfit—a charismatic one, though!—the black sheep of a
distinguished family, a notorious loudmouth with eccentric political
leanings. There was no way I could represent Rampart before the
Judicial Tribunal in person.
No
problem, said Simon and Eve. What they needed was not Rumpole of the
Bailey or Perry Mason, but rather my expertise in rousting corporate
outlaws, gained during my aborted career as an enforcement officer
with the Interstellar Commerce Secretariat. A staff of talented
associates would handle the actual pleading before the court. If
necessary, the underlings could be coached by me every step of the
way through cerebral chips.
I shifted
into whine mode. Hadn't I already risked my life half a dozen times
to obtain crucial evidence supporting Rampart's case against
Galapharma? Hadn't I rescued Eve from kidnappers that would have
demicloned her and seized control of Rampart? Hadn't I saved Simon
himself from a fate worse than death in the infamous prison known as
Coventry Blue? Wasn't that fucking good enough? I didn't want to
spend years on a convoluted legal case. I had other plans for my
life.
"Like
what?" my father had bellowed. "Stirring up a fresh
hornet's nest with the damned Reversionist Party? Or maybe reverting
to beach bum status on that boondock South Seas planet back in the
Perseus Spur?"
I invited
him to go to hell. He suggested that I perform a sexual act on
myself. The discussion trended downhill from there.
Simon and
I have a long history of horn-locking, beginning from the time
fifteen years ago when I refused on principle to join the family
starcorp. Now he castigated my selfishness and lack of filial
loyalty. He dredged up my fancy-pants doctorate from Harvard Law
School that I'd more or less tricked him into paying for.
Finally,
in a fit of bogus cowhand vituperation, the old coot allowed as how
if'n I let Rampart—i.e., him—down, I was nothing but a
chicken-livered pecker-ass bastard with a yellow streak so wide it
lapped plumb around to my brisket bone.
I was
about to tell Simon to stuff his John Wayne act where the sun doesn't
shine when my sister Eve ordered us both to shut up. Then she made a
single point that stabbed me to the heart and put an abrupt end to my
weaseling.
"Asa,
have you forgotten that our mother's murder was instigated by
Galapharma's chairman? Dan only acted as Alistair Drummond's
cat's-paw. We probably couldn't prove Drummond's complicity in the
crime even if we found he was still alive, but his Concern is still a
legitimate target. Do you want some kind of justice for Mom, or don't
you?"
Aw,
shit... Damned right I did.
So I caved
in.
And worked
my tail off for two solid years. When the case went to the judges at
long last, I figured we had an excellent chance of winning.
——
I guided
my horse Billy along Bear Head Canyon trail, approaching the
undistinguished peak we call Copper Mountain. At 2,071 meters, it's
the tallest of a scrub-covered range near the southern boundary of
the Sky Ranch.
When we
were kids, my brother and sisters and I were forbidden to go up
Copper because of a dangerous abandoned gold mine on its eastern
slope. So of course we made that our favorite secret spot. It was our
hideout when we played outlaw, and the den of xeno monsters when we
pretended to be Zone Patrol troopers. Just inside the mine entrance,
I'd once killed a blacktail rattlesnake that had menaced my little
sister, Bethany. Another time, my brother, Dan, risked his neck
exploring a tumbledown side tunnel and found a glittering chunk of
mineral that he declared was real gold. Dan was always the lucky
one—until he grew up and succumbed to the temptations of a
lunatic Scotsman.
Who might
or might not be buried deep inside that very gold mine.
Three
years ago, in a last ditch effort to salvage his faltering
conspiracy, Alistair Drummond had narrowly missed killing my family
and the rest of the Rampart Board of Directors by blowing up the main
house of the Sky Ranch. He tried to escape by driving up Copper
Mountain in a Range Rover, and when I came after him, he almost
managed to nail me before taking refuge in the abandoned mine. I used
a Harvey blaster to bring down a landslide on top of him.
Trouble
was, we'd never found Drummond's body in the rubble-filled mine
shaft.
The horse
carried me toward the gap that separates Copper Mountain from Bear
Head Peak to the west. I reined in before the going got too rough,
pulled a set of power oculars out of my saddlebag, and swept them
over the brush-covered flanks of Copper. Of course I found nothing
unusual; even the site of the great slide and the subsequent
excavation were on the opposite side of the mountain.
"What
do you think, Billy? Did the damned mine have another way out? Us
kids never found one, and we explored the hell out of that old hole
in the ground."
The horse
kept his opinion to himself.
I sighed
and put the ocs away. To hell with Alistair Drummond. To hell with
everything connected to Galapharma and the trial. This was my time to
kick back and drift. I turned the mount around so I could concentrate
my attention on the sunset beyond Bear Head. The western sky was
slashed with crimson and purple streaks of cirrus cloud. The color
faded slowly as I sat in my saddle, deliberately emptying my mind.
Billy did a different sort of emptying, then nipped at some fresh
greenery. A bat chased a flying bug through the chaparral. The high
country was very quiet.
After
a while the horse left off browsing, nickered softly, and cocked his
ears. He was listening to something upslope. I heard it, too—an
irregular metallic
tink-tink tinkety-tink that sounded almost
like a spoon handle rattling faintly in a thick coffee mug:
completely unnatural. A minute later a spherical black thing about
the size of a golf ball came creeping down the steep rocky trail on
thin jointed legs. Its two rat-eyes glowed in the dusk and its
sensors swiveled busily.
A SPYder.
It tippy-toed to within four meters of my fascinated horse and came
to a halt.
"Good
evening, Citizen Asahel Frost," it said. "I am not here to
threaten or harm you. Please confirm this by drawing your own
weapon."
The
robot's voice was a human transmission. The controller had probably
been tracking me by satellite from the moment I left the house. The
Sky Ranch doesn't bother with ground-based optical dissimulator
technology, although it has a full arsenal of intruder deterrents and
multiphase alarm sensors.
"You're
trespassing," I said, obediently pulling a Finnila Bodyguard
photon carbine from its gun boot on the saddle. The weapon switched
itself on automatically and scanned the thing that confronted me.
Device
is unarmed, my gun reported. I activated the targeter anyhow.
"I
repeat!" said the SPYder. "I am not here to threaten or
harm you."
"Goody.
But you weren't invited, either. Give me one reason why I shouldn't
fry your tiny Tootsie Roll."
"That
would be illegal," the machine said smugly, "since you've
passed nineteen meters beyond the boundary of the Sky Ranch into
public lands."
"Maybe
I have," I conceded, lowering the gun. The perimeter in this
remote and rugged area was unfenced and unmarked, the scanner units
that guarded it were hard to spot, and I'd deactivated the saddle
alarm days ago so it wouldn't bug me when I strayed off the spread.
"Who are you and why are you stalking me?"
"Jordan
Sensenbrenner of the
Wall Street Journal here! Would you care
to comment on today's Rampart-Galapharma verdict by the Commonwealth
Judiciary Tribunal?"
My jaw
dropped. "A decision already? My God—it's only been ten
days! How did the judges rule?"
"You
mean you haven't heard about it?"
"I've
been totally incommunicado. Getting some much-needed peace and quiet.
You want to tell me what happened?"
The
SPYder's voice went cagey. "Perhaps you don't know about Simon
Frost's sensational announcement, either. The
Journal would
definitely like to hear your reaction to that."
"My
saddle has a datalink and display. Why don't you pass along what
you've got. When did the verdict come down?"
"Mmm
... Maybe we should talk quid pro quo. You give me a decent statement
for attribution, I'll have our comsat download the
Journal
articles we'll be posting later tonight on our site. They contain
full details of the court decision given an hour ago, along with your
father's announcement. Deal?"
Damn
webcrawlers had more nerve than a sperm whale's wisdom tooth. This
one was starting to annoy me, so I lifted the Finnila and blasted a
rock just a mite to the left of it.
The SPYder
skittered sideways and instantly deployed a miniature force-field.
"You can't do that! I claim media privilege! I'm just trying to
do my job!"
"I
can do whatever I please—provided I don't give a damn about the
consequences. You're trying to pressure me, Jordan Sensenbrenner.
There are people who'd tell you that's not a very smart thing to do."
"I
assure you I didn't mean—"
"That
puny shield your bot is wearing can stop a laser bolt but not a gross
physical assault. Suppose I kick your expensive little toy down a
coyote hole and roll a rock on top? Or maybe stomp it till it's
crippled and smother it in some of the horse apples Billy just
dropped? Would that make your editor happy?"
The SPYder
dropped its defensive shield. It was groveling time. "Citizen
Frost, perhaps this interview got off on the wrong foot—"
"It's
not an interview yet, only a close encounter of the Wild West kind
... However, I admit I'm anxious to hear the big news before it hits
the PlaNet. I suppose I could call the folks down at the ranch and
ask them to patch me into Rampart Tower in Toronto, but it might take
a few minutes to organize the relay. So I'd be much obliged if you'd
just pass on the information out of the goodness of your heart, no
strings attached. Don't you think your boss at the
Journal would
consider that a wise move?"
"Oh,
very well," the SPYder grumped. It told me the satellite's
access code.
I
uncovered the unit on the saddle pommel, activated the antenna and
expanded the viewscreen, entered the data and tapped sat download. A
moment later I was reading the
Journal copy quoting the
judges' unanimous decision.
Galapharma
AC was found guilty on all charges, with no appeal to be entertained
by the Tribunal.
Compensatory
and punitive damages owed by Gala to Rampart were still to be
assessed, but the consensus among legal scholars was that the
greatest pharmaceutical and genetic technology company in the galaxy
was fucked to a finality. The Tribunal would probably order
Galapharma to be turned over lock, stock, and barrel to Rampart,
instantly lofting my family's firm into the exalted company of the
Big Seven.
Some
observers attributed Rampart's victory to the brilliant litigation
strategy of its unofficial CLO, the dashing and unconventional Asahel
Frost. He was also rumored to have personally apprehended the
principal material witness for the prosecution, using highly
unorthodox methods.
I finished
reading and eyed the SPYder. "Very nice, Jordan. You may quote
me as being personally gratified by the verdict, which affirms my
faith in the CHW judiciary system. All corporate entities, most
especially those of high status whose actions influence the very
integrity of the Commonwealth, must conform scrupulously to the
dictates of the law."
"Have
you yourself always done so, Citizen Frost?" Sensenbrenner
inquired blandly. "There's been speculation that the witness
Oliver Schneider was—"
"Next
question."
"Perhaps
you ought to read your father's statement first."
I skipped
through the sidebar articles and trial commentary, scanning for
Simon's name. I found the piece, read the headline, and uttered a
shocked expletive.
.
RAMPART CHAIRMAN,
JUBILANT OVER GALAPHARMA VERDICT, DECLARES HE WILL STEP DOWN IN FAVOR
OF MAVERICK SON
.
by Jordan Sensenbrenner
.
Toronto,
Earth, 19 April 2236—In the wake of today's historic verdict
favoring Rampart Concern, its Chairman of the Board, Simon Frost, 88,
declared: "This is the happiest moment in my life." After
congratulating his legal team on its success, he made a sensational
announcement.
"During
the past few years," Frost said, "Rampart has not only
repulsed a criminal hostile takeover attempt but also managed to
thrive and expand. We've risen from a closely held Interstellar
Corporation to an Amalgamated Concern, thanks largely to the efforts
of a brilliant group of top executives headed by my daughter Eve
Frost, Rampart's CEO. I'm proud to have played a role in this
expansion, just as I'm proud to be a cofounder of Rampart.
"Back
in 2183, when my brother Ethan and our partner Dirk Vanderpost and I
went out to the Perseus Spur to seek our fortunes, we never dreamed
that a day like this would come. It was enough that our little
Starcorp could meet its payroll and keep the Haluk and Qastt pirates
from stealing our cargoes.
"Well,
times change. Today both of those races are CHW trading partners. The
Spur boasts 219 prosperous Rampart Worlds, with more being opened to
human colonization and economic development every month. I'm tickled
pink that I lived to see that happen.
"Now
that Rampart has weathered its greatest crisis and come out on top,
I've decided that it's time for me to step down from active corporate
leadership and make way for younger blood. I intend to retire as
Chairman of the Board. And I hereby nominate my son Asahel Frost to
take my place. Without him, Rampart would have succumbed to
Galapharma's hostile takeover ploy. Without him, we would never have
won our civil judgment against Gala.
"I haven't
consulted Asa yet, so this is going to be a bit of a surprise to him.
But I'm confident that he'll accept the chairmanship, just as I'm
confident that Rampart Concern will continue to prosper in the years
to come."
——
Having
delivered the antimatter warhead, the article continued with a
summary of my roller-coaster career. Sensenbrenner glossed over my
stint as a Divisional Chief Inspector in the ICS, where I had been
one of the valiant, overworked band charged with ferreting out
wrongdoing among the Big Businesses that effectively control the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds. In contrast, the details of my
conviction, my dismissal from the enforcement arm of the Commerce
Secretariat, and my disenfranchisement were presented in lip-smacking
detail. He had even interviewed a few of my more vengeful
acquaintances on the planet Kedge-Lockaby, who painted a revolting
and accurate picture of me in my days as a drunken Throwaway.
My rescue
of Eve from her kidnappers and my alleged apprehension of Oliver
Schneider in an illicit raid on the Qastt planet Dagasatt were
described more cautiously to skirt the libel laws. (I was a citizen
again by then.) The article was silent on my role in the presumed
demise of Alistair Drummond.
Katje
Vanderpost's mind-boggling gift to me of her Rampart quarterstake had
lifted me into the ranks of the political movers and shakers. The
writer seemed to have no idea why I'd dedicated almost all of the
obscenely large income from my mother's stake to projects of the
underdog Reversionist Party. (I'd made a promise to carry on her own
sponsorship, since party principles coincided with youthful ideals I
had mothballed while serving in the ICS.) Jordan did concede that I'd
made a notable splash for ten entertaining months, attacking the
Commonwealth Assembly's craven symbiosis with Big Business, until the
Galapharma trial forced me to put my political life on hold.
The
article ended with speculation on what course I'd choose to follow
next.
If they
only knew ...
"I
can't answer that question yet," I told Sensenbrenner. "I'm
going to have to think long and hard about it. But you can quote me
on this: I will do nothing that will contravene the Reversionist
Guiding Principles, nor do I intend to completely abandon politics."
I couldn't resist adding, "Perhaps it's possible that under my
leadership, Rampart Concern could modify its operations to reflect
the philosophy of Reversionism."
Wow—heresy!
The reporter couldn't keep the expectation of a major scoop out of
his voice.
"But...
most Reversionists favor drastically limiting the political influence
of the Hundred Concerns—in effect, destroying the galactic
economic structure!"
I laughed.
"I admit that some party zealots might feel that way. My own
views on the subject are not nearly so radical. Nevertheless, for
nearly two centuries Big Business has exploited the stars with only
minimal checks and balances by the Commonwealth. I want the Hundred
Concerns made more accountable to the Assembly. To the elected
representatives of humanity at large. I'd like to see laissez-faire
interstellar economics reined in or even abolished, along with the
laws that enable human business interests to do just about anything
they please if it means increased profits for their stakeholders. I
also favor just treatment of nonstargoing Indigenous Sapient races
whose worlds are colonized and developed by humanity. And closer
regulation of trade with interstellar alien civilizations that might
not be fully committed to ... interspecies goodwill."
"Are
you speaking about the Kalleyni, the Joru, the Y'tata, and the Qastt,
Citizen Frost? Or about the Haluk?"
"No
further comment at this time."
"As
chairman of Rampart, do you really believe you could implement your
Reversionist ideals?"
"If I
took the position, I could try. My late uncle, Ethan Frost, who
headed Rampart in the beginning, was one of the first galactic
entrepreneurs to give Insap workers human-equivalent wages and decent
working conditions. I'm convinced his policy was the principal reason
Rampart prospered in the Perseus Spur, while Galapharma and the other
oppressive outfits who tried to make a go of it failed and had to
withdraw."
"But
the majority of economists and financial authorities don't believe
that approach would be practical in the longer-settled Orion Arm
worlds, much less in the Sagittarius Whorl—"
I flapped
a dismissive hand at the SPYder. "Stop. I won't argue the point
with you now. I told you that I don't know yet what I'm going to do
with my life. Maybe I'll accept the Rampart chairmanship. Maybe I'll
go back to being gadfly-in-chief for the Reversionists. Maybe I'll do
something completely different. Right about now I feel like flying
away to some quiet little planet where nobody knows my name. The
Galapharma trial left me worn down to a nubbin. Simon's proposal
couldn't have come at a worse time. I need to re-tune my perspective
before I commit myself."
"How
long before you—"
"That's
enough," I said. "End of interview." I turned Billy
away and started back down the trail. The high clouds had lost their
color and the first stars were popping out in the east.
The
SPYder came scuttling after me. "Citizen Frost! Just a few more
words! When do you expect to return to Toronto? Would you grant the
Journal an in-depth interview concerning your political
ambitions? Or discuss the direction Rampart Concern might take under
your—"
Casually,
I shifted in the saddle, raised the carbine and fired from the hip,
drilling the little machine through one of its glowing eyes. It
exploded in a brief puff of smoke and plasma. Billy didn't even
flinch.
Then I
started back to the ranch house. I figured it wouldn't be long before
my father showed up.
——
I
half expected Eve to accompany Simon, the better to coerce me. But
when I arrived an hour or so later I found him alone in the big
living room of the fully restored main house, staring into a blaze of
pinon logs in the big fireplace and sipping his usual bourbon and
branch water. A magslate, the logo of the
Wall Street Journal
shining on its viewer, lay on the polished petrified-wood coffee
table behind him. The late edition had been posted. I presumed that
my interview with Sensenbrenner was in it.
Looking
glum, Simon nodded but didn't speak as I came through the open French
doors, still covered with trail dust.
I took off
my stained old Stetson hat and Pendleton blanket jacket and went to
the sideboard where the drinks were. Passing by the Maker's Mark
Limited Edition, Hirsch Pot Still, and other upmarket tarantula juice
that my father fancied, I helped myself to my favorite blue-collar
tipple: Jack Daniel's, straight up. A single shot sufficed to
demonstrate that I hadn't reverted to the lush life. After tossing it
down I drew a tall draft beer from the keg of Dortmunder tucked in a
compartment of the sideboard, sat on one of the leather couches in
front of the hearth, and began to haul my boots off.
Simon
stood watching me out of hooded green eyes. His hair was light brown
with a prominent widow's peak, just like mine. I'd inherited his
thin-bridged nose, too, and the wide mouth with downturned corners
that was capable of blooming in a megawatt smile. He'd taken full
advantage of modern medical science and genengineering to stave off
time's ravages, and usually gave an impression of indomitable
physical vigor.
But not
today.
He
was dressed in one of his semiformal riverboat gambler suits rather
than the tailored ranchman outfits he usually sported, perhaps
signaling the special character of the occasion. He seemed tired and
wary, and the black broadcloth of his suit emphasized his abnormally
wan aspect. I recalled being taken aback when the
Journal article
gave his age. People—including me—tended to forget how
old Simon Frost really was.
"They
were having a victory bash at Rampart Tower when I left," he
said to me at last. His voice was just a bit too loud.
"Everybody
was toasting you—even the people who pissed and moaned the
loudest when Evie and I appointed you acting legal chief and gave you
free rein. The whole gang agreed we never would have won a
nonappellate verdict without your leadership. I suppose
congratulations are in order."
I thought:
Well, thanks all to hell, Pop! But I said nothing.
He
continued. "You were the best one for the job and you did it.
'Muff said. And now there's another job needs doing ..." He let
the words trail off, as if daring me to turn him down flat.
Oh, no you
don't, you old buzzard. This time we play by Helly's rules.
I finally
got rid of the boots, put my feet up on the low table, took a deep
swallow of beer, and slid forward on the cushions so my rump was
almost level with my shoulders. "I'm surprised Evie didn't come
with you."
"The
quick verdict caught her by surprise. She's four days out, en route
to the Spur, and didn't want to backtrack. There's some sort of
conkbuster situation connected to the Cravat facility expansion. Zed
couldn't seem to get a handle on it so she decided to take care of
the matter personally. She'll return to Toronto as soon as the flap
is resolved and help you and the other legal eagles work out the
petitions for redress."
"Sam
Yamamoto and Marcie Kirov are perfectly capable of supervising
that—along with all the other post-trial stuff," I told
him. "I got you your damned verdict. Don't expect me to shovel
up after the circus parade."
A
long silence, broken only by the faint cries of nighthawks. The doors
were still open to the patio, and I could smell the perfume of the
hundred-year-old wisteria growing on the
cenador next to the
barbecue pit. Miraculously, the explosion that destroyed the main
house had spared the rustic dining shelter and the adjacent gardens,
as well as most of the trees and ranch outbuildings.
I said,
"How'd you know where I was?"
"A
pushy
Wall Street Journal reporter told me. He found you with
a Big Eye satellite three days ago. Figured you might give him an
interview on your trial strategy once the verdict was in. Seems you
didn't try very hard to keep undercover once you got out here. Right
after I issued my statement at the media conference, this
Journal
joker was all over me wanting an exclusive follow-up. Said he
intended to contact you here at the Sky Ranch, too. I told him lotsa
luck getting through the security umbrella. But I reckon he did."
"A
SPYder robot tracked me down as I was riding outside the perimeter
this evening. I gave a few quotable remarks before I zapped the bot
to smithereens with my Finnila. It was giving me attitude."
"Goddammit,
Asa! What's the sense antagonizing the legitimate media? It's not
like the webster was from a tabloid."
"The
real question," I said, pushing myself upright and looking him
dead in the eye, "is why the hell you chose to offer me the
Rampart chairmanship via a media release instead of putting it to me
privately, in person. Do you really think it's an offer I can't
refuse?"
"More
like a trial balloon," said the crafty old bastard, "to see
how the Hundred Concerns might react to the idea. Especially Adam
Stanislawski and his venture-credit hardheads at Macrodur. Rampart
will need them more than ever after the Gala consolidation. I wanted
to float the idea of you as my replacement while your reputation is
still sky-high and shiny."
"As
opposed to it taking a dive into the cesspool if I get involved in
politics again? ... And what about my standing felony convictions?
Ollie Schneider's ready to make a deposition about the trumped-up
charges, but it'll take forever for a reversal to work through the
courts."
"That's
a dead issue, boy. Even if it can't be proved that you were framed,
anyone with half a brain figures Gala dry-gulched you so's you
wouldn't be able to use your position in the ICS to stymie the
takeover. As for your flaming lefty politics, if you just soft-pedal
things a little—"
I uncoiled
and climbed up from the couch, invading his private space until we
were nearly nose-to-nose in front of the fireplace. "Let me tell
you something, Simon," I said quietly. "My Reverse
principles are still very much alive. I won't soft-pedal them, no
matter what decision I make concerning Rampart. And I'm going to do
something about the Haluk situation, too."
"Send
out more hothead media releases denouncing the trade agreement?"
He gave a snort of derisive laughter. "Fat lot of good that'll
do. The deal's done, and Rampart's in the Haluk Consortium with both
feet."
I said,
"Those slippery Haluk bastards are making fools of us,
pretending they've given up their aggressive expansion policy.
They're already pressuring the Assembly to grant them more Rampart
Mandate worlds immediately."
Simon
shrugged and sipped his drink. "So long as the xenos pay a good
price in ultraheavy elements, they'll likely get what they want."
I let
loose a flare of temper. "And that's just dandy for you and for
the other Concerns in the consortium, isn't it! Business as usual.
Everybody wallows in profits, never looking beyond the bottom line.
Meanwhile, nobody's quite sure just how much expanding the Haluk
intend to do! How many of them are out there in that star-cluster,
anyhow, champing at the bit to emigrate to the Milky Way? ... We
don't know! They don't allow visitors to their cluster and they
vaporize trespassers. And your consortium doesn't give a rat's ass
about the Haluk's long-range intentions so long as trade keeps
booming."
"Zone
Patrol and the SXA will keep an eye out for funny stuff. It's not the
consortium's responsibility to monitor a sovereign alien race."
"No,"
I agreed. "So perhaps someone else will have to look into the
matter."
A faint
expression of alarm flitted behind his eyes. "Who'd be nutty
enough to do that? Don't tell me you—"
"I
can't believe you've forgotten what the Haluk did!" I yelled.
Simon blinked and backed away from me. "Marooning me on that
goddamn comet... collaborating with Drummond's goons ... snatching
Rampart World colonists and using them as slave labor and lab rats!
And what about those two hundred human templates on Dagasatt that got
blown to hell along with the Haluk demiclones? The Haluk were
manufacturing fake humans to spy on us, and nobody seems to care
why."
"Industrial
espionage," he opined. "To infiltrate Rampart and Gala—why
else? They were desperate to obtain our PD32:C2 genen vector. The
demiclone spies were gonna help 'em get more of the stuff in some
scheme or other. But now they can buy the vector from Rampart on the
open market, so the demiclone thing is a dead issue."
"You
think so, do you?"
"Yes,
dammit, I do!" He did a double take at my skeptical sneer.
"What? You think the blue-balls put demi moles into some human
government agency? You still think they're cooking up a fuckin' war?"
"We've
got lots of good stuff the Haluk want besides PD32:C2. Why should
they buy it in dribs and drabs for a whopping high price over a long
period of time if they can take it for free? And get unlimited
lebensraum besides?"
"Horse
puckey," Simon scoffed.
"They've
hated and feared humanity ever since we came into the Perseus Spur
and stopped their colonial expansion cold. They covet our superior
technology and envy our ability to stay awake and active all year
'round. That kind of mind-set didn't evaporate when they signed a
couple of treaties two years ago."
"Wouldn't
be the first time in history that old enemies kissed and made up,"
Simon said reasonably. "Hey—look at you and me! The
Haluk've tried to make amends for the past. Agreed to pay reparations
to the families of the kidnapped engineers and template victims. Paid
Rampart for deprivation of employee services and the damage done on
Cravat, too."
"And
that's supposed to wipe the slate clean? I suppose you don't give a
damn that Haluk are flooding into the Perseus Spur by the millions.
The fifteen new T-2 worlds they were granted by the Assembly last
year are already bursting at the seams."
He
finished off his drink. "They pay through the snoot for Rampart
Mandate planets. So why not?"
"If
their long-range expansion strategy includes forcible penetration of
the Milky Way," I said in a low voice, "there are lots of
reasons why not."
"Nobody
believes they'd make war except you, son. And you don't have one
smidgen of proof to back it up."
I
enumerated what I considered to be valid evidence. "
Uno:
the ruthless way they went after PD32:C2 to erase their allomorphism.
Dos: their refusal to allow unrestricted inspection of their
home worlds or Spur colonies by humanity.
Tres: the vastly
overpopulated planets of their home star-cluster. And if they
continue to eradicate their allomorphic trait and no longer have half
their people in hibernation at any given time, they'll need even more
room! ... Do you have any idea how many top-line transports the Haluk
have purchased from Bodascon over the past couple of years? Nearly
three hundred! And that doesn't count the starships they're building
on their own, copying human high technology"
"That's
not proof, that's unsupported inference—worthless as a bucket
of mule piss."
"I'll
find evidence that not even the ostriches in the Assembly can ignore.
Don't think I haven't been working on it! And now that the Gala case
is won, I intend to work even harder."
Simon
turned his back on me and headed for the booze table. He uncorked the
bottle of rare old Hirsch bourbon and half filled his Waterford
tumbler. No water to dilute it this time. He moved toward the open
French doors. "Let's step outside. I need a breath of fresh air,
and you could use cooling down yourself."
I padded
reluctantly after him, bringing my beer. The patio flagstones were
chilly, and a cutting breeze came from the west. Discreet gas-flame
lanterns mounted on low posts had come on automatically at dusk,
giving soft illumination to the expanse of irrigated lawn, the
surrounding gardens, and the driveways that led to the other
buildings. The main house stood on a rise and had a magnificent view
of the mountains that completely surrounded the ranch. Now, with
night having fallen and no moon, the sky was crowded with incredible
numbers of stars and banded by the Milky Way. The Perseus Spur, at
the galactic rim fourteen thousand light-years from Earth's solar
system, was visible if you looked carefully to the north; but the
small Haluk Cluster that lay seventeen thousand light-years farther
out from the Spur's tip was hidden by intervening dustclouds. No one
had known it existed until human explorers crossed the Black Gap.
My father
gave a sigh that was just short of being theatrical. "Damn, that
sky's a pretty sight. I never get tired of high-desert nights."
"I
do," I said evenly, "when I'm standing on a cold stone
pavement in my stocking feet."
He
chuckled uneasily. Then came a very long silence while he lowered the
level of his costly panther pee and I finished off my beer. His voice
was somber when he finally said, "Do you really hate me so much,
Asa? That you'd abandon Rampart when it needs you, just to get even
with your old man?"
"I
don't hate you, Simon. You and I just have different priorities. We
always have. A long time ago you tried to bully me into accepting
yours. When I rebelled, you washed your hands of me ... until you
were desperate for my help."
"That's
true enough. And you came through like a champ, several times over.
I'm damn grateful."
"Then
let it go at that." I couldn't keep the bitterness out of my
tone. "It's not true that Rampart needs me now. Eve has done a
marvelous job as CEO during the past three years. She's restructured
top management and gained the full confidence of the Macrodur
financiers. There's no reason to believe that she and her team won't
be able to handle the Gala consolidation just as competently,
provided you continue as chairman and give her the benefit of your
experience. There's nothing inherently rotten in Galapharma, you
know. Its basic corporate infrastructure is sound. Alistair Drummond
was a megalomaniac and a crook, but he was also a brilliant
businessman. And he was right to believe that Rampart and Galapharma
are ideal corporate harness mates. All Eve has to do is weed out the
handful of bad apples who were direct participants in the conspiracy,
and integrate Gala's management into Rampart's."
"You
make it sound simple—but it's not. Your sister's an outstanding
executive officer and she's come far in a very short time. But she's
still just a beginner in the top Concern ranks, about to start
swimming with some very large sharks. She wants you to be part of
Rampart just as much as I do."
"I
doubt it."
He looked
at me with what seemed to be genuine puzzlement. "What's that
supposed to mean?"
"You
read my interview with the
Journal reporter. Eve has, too, by
now. Did you think I was just playing mind-games with the guy when I
talked about the Reversionist Principles—and possibly applying
them to Rampart if I accept the chairmanship?"
He didn't
reply.
"Come
on back inside," I said. "My feet are freezing—as you
know damned well—and I haven't had my supper yet. Starry vistas
don't make me choke up the way they used to."
He
followed me and closed the French doors behind us. "I wouldn't
mind a little snack myself. I'll talk to Rosalia."
"Chili
con carne and a big salad for me. She knows what I like."
"I'll
just have me some shrimp nachos with Navajo sheep cheese and salsa."
He
contacted the cook through the old-fashioned intercom. Domestic
robotics had been taboo in the original Sky Ranch main house because
my late mother Katje believed that they deprived human beings of jobs
and had the potential to invade privacy. When Simon rebuilt after the
explosion, he restored the place exactly as it had been before.
I stood on
the hearth and warmed my feet, declining his offer of another shot of
whiskey and accepting more beer. Then we arranged ourselves on
opposite sides of the petrified wood table and waited for the food.
"So
you really did mean it," Simon said tentatively, "when you
threatened to screw up Rampart's Insap policy if you became
chairman."
"Not
screw up. Modify humanely. Preindustrial natives should get more than
a few jobs when their planet is exploited by humanity. They deserve a
stake in the profits. Plus subsidized education options for those
races that can take advantage of them. Anything short of that is
unjust—and I'm not alone in believing that's true."
"Dammit,
Asa, it's just not practical! Usually it takes years before a newly
developed world starts showing a profit. What about our human
stakeholders and the Macrodur finance people? You think they'll just
lie down, roll over, and let you scratch their rummies when you
spring this crackpot scheme on 'em? And what the hell will happen
when Insaps on our new ex-Galapharma Orion Arm worlds decide they
want the same deal as the Perseus planets?"
"We
give it to them. In a prudent manner, over a reasonable period of
time. Education first, then stakeholdership."
"It
won't work! Way back when interstellar commerce first got going, a
few limp-weenie outfits tried to organize human-alien cooperatives
and suchlike shit. The Insaps got uppity ideas, wanted a bigger and
bigger piece of the enchilada. First thing you know, the humans had
full-blown worker insurrections to deal with. Preindustrial xenos
can't be treated like human beings! Some of 'em are barely rational.
Others are stuck at the tribal or feudal social level and only
respect an iron fist. Some have goofy counterproductive customs that
preclude any kind of discipline. Most don't understand free
enterprise at all!"
"I
didn't say I thought the modification would be easy. Perhaps the
policy won't be feasible with marginally sapient peoples. But if I
become Rampart chairman, the board members will have to accept the
policy."
"Even
if it throws the Concern into chaos?"
"I'll
do my utmost to see that doesn't happen. But yes— I'm willing
to take a huge risk in hopes that Rampart's example will spread to
others of the Hundred Concerns. If you and Eve and the board of
directors are afraid I'll fail, then forget about me. Keep your
chairmanship. I'll do what I can to promote Reversionism in other
ways."
I sat back
then waiting for the bluster, the combination of wheedling and
threats that he'd used to bulldoze me in the past. Either that or
he'd withdraw the nomination forthwith.
All he
said was, "Son, I can't retain the chairmanship. I'm no good for
it anymore. I'm too old."
I couldn't
help a snort of disbelieving laughter. "You're healthy as a
horse! You could carry on for another twenty years."
A slight,
rueful smile lifted his thin lips. "Nothing wrong with me
physically. I'm old inside my skull. Tired. Running out of steam and
moxie. It happens ... But I'm smart enough to recognize that I'm past
it, and that it's time for me to step down. Rampart'll get a new
chairman one way or t'other. Eve doesn't want the job, and neither
does Gunter Eckert or Caleb Millstone. They're happy where they are.
You refuse, what might happen is we'd have to accept Ellington or
some other Macrodur nominee because of the twenty percent stake they
got from me in the venture credit scheme."
"Well,
shit," I muttered, mainly because I couldn't think of anything
else to say.
"Adam
Stanislawski likes you," Simon said. "Ellington does, too.
Most of the other Macrodur wheels were mighty impressed with your
legal tactics against Gala." He scowled and looked away. "Of
course, that was before you came out with that chuckleheaded
interview in the
Journal—all in living color, no less,
posed against an Arizona sunset with a carbine in your armpit like
Wyatt-fuckin'-Earp. God knows what the Macrodur directors think about
you now."
"The
reporter posted our live conversation?" I was aghast. According
to stubborn tradition, conservative news media such as the
Journal
nearly always reported news in a readonly format. Sensational
video clips were for the tabloids.
"Ee-yup,"
Simon drawled, nodding at the magslate on the coffee table. "Check
it out if you like. You sure come off as one trigger-happy cowpoke,
son,"
"Rats!"
I didn't bother to pick up the slate. Jordan Sensen-brenner had got
the last laugh after all. "I guess I did shoot myself in the
foot this time. Sorry. I'll take full blame for my idiocy, try to
smooth things over with Macrodur if I can."
"Do
it soon." The brief flash of amusement faded from Simon's face
and he looked draggle-tail weary.
"I'll
go to Toronto tomorrow," I said. "And I hereby swear off
impromptu interviews—at least until I decide what to do about
your proposal."
"You
better make up your mind pretty damned quick."
"I
won't be stampeded, Pop. You know me better than that." His eyes
lit up as I made rare use of the paternal familiar. "When I gave
that interview, I was pretty certain I'd reject your offer. Now..."
I shook my head. "You'd still want me, knowing what I'd do with
the chairmanship?"
"I
figure you're bound and determined to give Reverse activism a try.
But I don't think for a minute you'd run Rampart into the ground just
to make some quixotic philosophical point. Shit—maybe you're
right and the Hundred Concerns are wrong! Stranger things have
happened."
"I
need time to think," I insisted. "There are things I could
accomplish in the political arena that might be difficult to pull off
if I were a mere businessman."
"It'll
be half a year at least before the Galapharma dismantling protocol is
finalized and the Concerns merge," Simon pointed out. "I
guess I can hold the fort that long. Nothing much can happen till
then."
"I
guess not."
Clairvoyance
has never been my strong suit, nor Simon's, either.
"So
take a nice long vacation," he urged me. "God knows you
earned it."
"I
might go out to Kedge-Lockaby for a couple of months. I'll be fairly
safe from media harassment there. The locals in the Out Islands
aren't fond of busybodies. I can drive my submarine and scuba-dive
and weigh the options. If you need my input for something of cosmic
importance, my next door neighbor on Eyebrow Cay has a subspace
communicator. He'll know how to find me. You remember him: Mimo
Bermudez."
A nod.
"The old smuggler. Nearly as squirrelly as you."
"My
best friend. Another man with quixotic principles."
We sat in
silence for a time, watching the fire. Then, on impulse, I asked him,
"Did you ever hear of another elderly smuggler named Barky
Tregarth? He operated out in the Spur over forty years ago, peddling
contraband weaponry and materiel to the Haluk and Qastt."
"Damn!
I haven't thought about Barky for years. How'd you hear about him?
From Bermudez?"
"Yes."
And Karl Nazarian had known about the old crook, too.
Simon's
brow wrinkled thoughtfully. "Hamilcar Barca Tregarth, teller of
tall tales! Spun this crazy yarn about going to the Haluk Cluster on
a bet, back when Galapharma owned the Spur. Said he ran rings around
their patrols, then managed to sweet-talk the Haluk leadership into
letting him land on one of their major worlds to refuel. Even claimed
the aliens gave him the key to the city because he reminded 'em of
some legendary Haluk hero. The poor bastard never did collect on the
bet—and it was a sizable one. Seems nobody believed his story
when he got back to the Spur. The souvenir he claimed he got from the
Haluk could've come from anywhere."
"Did
you meet Tregarth personally?"
"Once.
Before his alleged trip. I had a drink with the guy in a saloon on
Hadrach, maybe half a dozen years after Rampart got the Perseus
Mandate. Jesus, he was a piece o' work! Sharp as a Buck knife and
talk an arm and leg off you. My Lord, Barky'd be over a hundred
twenty years old if he's still alive."
"Do
you think his story about going to the Haluk Cluster might have been
true?"
"Most
folks thought he was lying in his teeth. Especially those in on the
bet. But Barky sure as shit ran a lot of guns to the eleven Blueberry
colonies in the Spur when Rampart was just getting started. Zone
Patrol finally nabbed his ass— when?—maybe just after the
turn of the century. Somebody broke him out of the Tyrins slammer
before he came to trial. He was Thrown Away in absentia. Never
operated in the Spur again." Simon eyed me dubiously. "What's
your interest in Barky Tregarth, anyhow?"
I was
saved from having to answer by a gentle knocking at the inner door of
the living room. It opened and the cook, Rosalia Alejo-Mertz, came in
with a food-laden serving cart. "I hope you two are hungry,"
she said. "I brought some extra things I happened to have
cluttering up the kitchen. Spit-roasted turkey slices, duck liver
pate, and wild strawberry shortcake."
In an
instant Simon forgot about Barky Tregarth. "Rosie, you angel!
Me'n Asa are hungry enough to eat a folded tarp and burp grommets!"
We
began helping ourselves to huge portions of everything. Rosie smiled
at us benignly and left us to our supper. Time for further
distraction away from the Barky Hunt. I said, "Tomorrow I intend
to have a little chat with Adam Stanislawski at Macrodur, see if I
can do damage control for the
Journal gaffe."
"Good
idea," Simon said. "At least get his reaction to your
nomination, so we know where we stand."
I spooned
chili into my face and talked with my mouth full. "I've decided
to make a surprise visit to Galapharma Tower, too."
Simon
stopped short in the act of devouring his fifth shrimp nacho. "Why?"
he asked suspiciously.
Oops.
Maybe I shouldn't have mentioned that. A Freudian slip? My wise old
pal Mimo Bermudez would have called it seeking Big Daddy's approval
even as I spit in his eye.
"It's
something I've been planning for some time, contingent on our winning
the court case. There's an informal request I want to put to their
top brass—preferably Lorne Buchanan, the CEO—while
they're still reeling from the verdict. If Gala gives me what I want,
I'm ready to promise that Rampart will mitigate bloodshed among
Gala's management during the consolidation. Maybe try to stave off
criminal prosecution, too."
My
father's eyes narrowed. "Informal request? What the fuck
kind
of informal request?" "I'd rather not say."
Because it involved sharp practice at best, and trade-treaty
violations at worst. But it did have the potential for uncovering
Haluk double-dealing, so I reckoned the risk was worth it.
Simon
exploded. "Dammit, Asa! You're not the boss hand of this outfit
yet. Tell me what you're up to!"
Well, I'd
opened my big yap.
"I'm
going to suggest that Gala immediately give me everything they have
concerning the allomorph trait eradication and demiclone procedures
that they developed for the Haluk. Most specifically, I want the
genetic marker that Emily Konigsberg incorporated into the
demicloning process. The thing that ID's the fake humans. The marker
was Drummond's secret way of keeping tabs on the Haluk scheme. Emily
told Eve that the alien leader, the Servant of Servants, knew nothing
about the marker. I also want complete details about the clandestine
demiclone labs that were in operation prior to the Dagasatt blowup.
Karl Nazarian and his crew obtained some intelligence about them from
the data-dump of
Chispa Dos, that starship I stole from the
Galapharma agent. But it needs verification from another source
before we can present it as hard evidence."
Speechless
with consternation, Simon gaped at me. I plowed on.
"I
also want to know how many imitation human beings those demiclone
labs produced. Someone at Galapharma knows! Its security people were
in charge of most of the demi facilities, and its agents tracked
every gram of PD32:C2 illegally sold to the aliens."
Simon
relaxed in premature relief. "All those incriminating Gala files
were sealed by the Secretariat for Xenoaffairs as part of the new
Haluk nonaggression pact."
"I
intend to unseal them—very carefully—and pass on selected
excerpts to an influential friend of mine in the Commonwealth
Assembly. Efrem Sontag is Chairman of the Xenoaffairs Oversight
Committee. He'd go along with immunity for the Gala execs involved if
I asked him to."
"What
the fuckin'
hell do you hope to accomplish?" Simon
exclaimed furiously.
"You
were wrong when you said I was the only one dubious about the Haluk.
Sontag has already initiated a secret probe of demiclone shenanigans,
based on intelligence supplied by me right after the Dagasatt affair.
He also believes that SXA's cover-up deal with the aliens stank to
high heaven, even if it did pave the way for the new trade treaty."
"But...
Christ on a crutch! Something like this could swamp the consortium if
the Haluk find out!"
"Nonsense.
The aliens won't like it, but they'll hardly stop buying human
products. You're going to have to trust me on this, Pop.
We need
this information. I know Gala was supposed to have surrendered
all the incriminating data to Xenoaffairs, but you can bet your left
nut that somebody in the Concern kept copies—just in case Gala
won the civil case and it needed an ace in the hole sometime in the
future. As an edge against other consortium members, maybe. Or even
against the Haluk themselves. Alistair Drummond didn't trust our
needy blue buddies either."
"Couldn't
you hold off until—"
"No.
Right now, I'm in a perfect position to exert pressure on
Galapharma's top officers, while they're afraid of losing their
precious jobs and stakeholdings. If I wait for the consolidation, it
could be too late. Gala will wipe the computers clean rather than
take a chance that Rampart would discover the data. They could be
doing it right now."
"Maybe
it's done."
"No—they'd
wait until the trial verdict was in."
"You
really got a wild blue hair up your ass, don't you, boy?"
"I'm
convinced the Haluk are mortally dangerous, yes."
"God
almighty!" My father shook his head. "All right. Put your
goddamn request to Lorne Buchanan. Nobody else. He's got the most to
lose in the consolidation, and he has the power to get what you want
if anyone does."
"I
promise to use the utmost discretion. I'll get Ef Sontag to promise
the same. We won't go public unless we have proof of malicious intent
by the Haluk."
Simon
pushed his plate of food away, shaking his head, and got to his feet.
"You just can't leave things be, can you? Always lookin' to stir
up trouble."
"Where
the Haluk are concerned, damn right I am. But I'll do it as quietly
as possible now—for Rampart's sake. I'm not trying to dissolve
the Haluk trade treaty, and I certainly don't intend to force them
back into their overcrowded star-cluster. But I do aim to make sure
they behave if they move into our neighborhood."
"Arrogant,
self-righteous young prick!" Simon growled. "Who elected
you Speaker of the Commonwealth Assembly?"
"Nobody,"
I said. "Frankly, I'd rather be a beach bum on Kedge-Lockaby.
But if I decide to give Rampart's chairmanship a pass, I may just
turn into the meanest goddamn Reversionist beach bum you and the
Assembly and the Hundred Concerns and the Haluk ever met."
"I've
lost my appetite," my father said unhappily, heading for the
door. "I'm going to bed."
"You
can always fire me," I called after him. "By law, I'd
revert instantly to Throwaway status. I'd be out of the galactic
poker game for keeps and out of your corporate hair."
"Nope,"
Simon Frost said. "Gonna let my bet on you ride. God help us
all."
The door
closed behind him.
I decided
it was high time for some more of Jack Daniel's best. Maybe even a
double.
——
Later,
when it was a reasonable hour on Kedge-Lockaby's Eyebrow Cay, I
called Mimo Bermudez on the ranch's sub-space com. He'd seen the
Journal posting and congratulated me on Rampart's legal
triumph while being tactful about Simon's notion to promote me beyond
my station.
Then we
got around to the reason for my call: the Barky Hunt. Mimo had
promised to make discreet inquiries about the ancient gunrunner among
doddering members of the Spur underworld. My friend's courtly Mexican
manners had thus far precluded his asking me for an explanation.
"I
found several people who knew Tregarth in the old days," Mimo
said, "even a few who had participated in the original wager
that supposedly sent him off on his incredible journey. All but one
of those that I spoke to branded Tregarth a bare-faced liar with an
overly fertile imagination. The exception was a certain
vejarron
named Clifton Castle who once worked as a fence on Tyrins. After
Tregarth escaped from the lockup there, he contacted Castle and sold
him an extremely rare jewel to finance his flight back to the Orion
Arm. It was a exotic fossil cabochon set in platinum—beyond a
doubt Haluk in origin. Tregarth claimed it had been a gift from the
official of a planet he visited in the Haluk Cluster."
"He
might also have got it from one of their Spur colonies."
"That's
always a possibility. Clifton Castle had another interesting piece of
information. Tregarth made a condition that the fossil not be resold
for one month, saying he hoped to buy it back—at a premium, of
course—since it was his only souvenir of the great adventure."
"Pawning
the thing. Did Barky redeem it?"
"Yes,
three weeks later. Castle sent it by registered StelEx to the planet
Famagusta in Sector 5. This happened in the year 2201."
"I
don't suppose this Castle knows whether Barky is still alive."
"He
had no idea. I could send out more feelers, but as you know, my
principal sources are in the Perseus Spur, not the inner Orion Arm.
You might have better luck consulting our mutual friend, Chief
Superintendent Jake Silver. Tregarth might be in the CCID database."
"Maybe
I'll talk to Jake. I'm heading for Toronto tomorrow."
My
pal's dark eyes peered from thoughtful slits. "You've never told
me why you're so anxious to find this geriatric
contrabandista"
"Mimo,
it's better you don't know."
He shook
his frowsy head in chagrin. "Helly, Helly, Helly. It's rather
obvious, isn't it? You still believe that the Haluk intend to wage
war on humanity."
"I
think they might—if their population pressure is exceptionally
severe. This guy Tregarth might be dead or he might be a total
shuck-and-jive artist, the biggest liar since Baron Munchausen. On
the other hand, he might just know more about our mysterious blue
buddies than any other human being. I want to talk to him."
"And
then what?"
I smiled
at the SS com screen. "I've got a sabbatical coming, while the
Galapharma settlement is sorted out and I decide whether to accept
the Rampart chairmanship. I told my father I'd spend the time loafing
on K-L—but it might be more fun to take my modified Y770
starship on a grand tour."
"Caracoles!"
The semiretired Smuggler King of the Perseus Spur immediately
guessed what I had in mind and was appalled. "Please tell me
you're joking!"
"Of
course I am," I lied.
"I'm
relieved to hear it. You realize that a private individual who
traveled to the Haluk Cluster would violate both the nonaggression
pact and the trade treaty with that race, laying himself open to
sanctions from both the Xenoaffairs and Interstellar Commerce
Secretariats. Every asset the individual possessed might be
seized—and he himself would not only be disenfranchised, but
probably also incarcerated without possibility of parole."
"Unless
the illegal expedition was accomplished without the individual being
caught. And the individual came back with significant intelligence
data."
"Why
you?" my old friend exclaimed in exasperation.
"Who
else?" I retorted. "I've got the inclination and time to
spare. I've also got the ship."
My
personal blitzboat was named
Makebate—an old word
meaning "troublemaker." She was a Rampart executive
perquisite, the only expensive toy I'd allowed myself during the two
tedious years of brain-bending legal work associated with the
Galapharma trial. I'd managed to take only rare brief jaunts in her
to visit my friends on Kedge-Lockaby in the Spur. A chance remark of
Mimo's at a luau on Eyebrow Cay three months ago had planted the seed
for the Barky Hunt... and what might follow if it was successful and
the old crook really did have important information about the Haluk
Cluster worlds.
Returning
to Toronto for the climactic part of the trial, I had arranged for
Rampart Fleet Maintenance technicians to modify
Makebate while
I was grounded. Her fuel bunkers had been greatly enlarged and her
weaponry significantly beefed up. She now carried state-of-the-art
sublight drive dissimulators for stealthy near-planet maneuvering and
orbital concealment. I was having special bodycount gadgetry
installed that would make clandestine fly-by census scans of hostile
planets feasible, and I also intended to look for warships. The
Commonwealth seemed content to believe that massive Haluk purchases
of astrogational equipment were intended for use in colonial
transports; I thought that notion was pure bovine excrement.
Mimo
sighed. "Always the cowboy! I had hopes that your stint as
Rampart's Chief Legal Officer would have mellowed you."
"Tourism
can be amusing and educational," I said. "Wanna come along?
I could use some human company. Talking to the ship's computer gets
boring after a few days. And there's always the possibility of a good
fight."
"And
a quick death. Or worse, if you're captured."
I just
grinned at him. "I'm going to count blue noses and look for blue
battleboats whether or not the Barky Hunt works out. Come on! It'll
be a hoot."
"Unfortunately
I have a previous engagement in the tank."
It took me
a moment to realize what he was saying. "The—The tank?"
"I'd
accompany you to the Haluk Cluster if I could, Helly, if only to keep
you out of trouble. After all, I'm a much better shot with a photon
cannon! I'm also curious how the Haluk manage to mine transactinides,
given their technology lag. But this old body of mine is in need of
serious repair. I must go into dystasis in Rampart Central's big
hospital on Seriphos, since the doctors at the Big Beach don't have
the resources to deal with my case."
I tried
not to show my dismay. Mimo was a man in late middle age, but as far
as I knew, he was healthy. "So. It's something serious?"
"It
is," he said gently. "A flare-up of an old problem.
However, the prognosis is good. All that's necessary is a grotesque
amount of money to pay for the sixteen-week procedure.
No importa
dos cojones." His standard disclaimer: It doesn't matter two
balls' worth.
Of course
money was no problem to Mimo. Decades of smuggling fine liquor, Cuban
cigars, premium coffee, and other luxuries past Rampart excise
collectors had made him one of the wealthiest private individuals in
the Perseus Spur. But I felt a pang of guilt as I recalled the
threadbare state of Kedge-Lockaby's modest little hospital. I should
have done something about that a long time ago, now that I had the
means. K-L had been good to me.
And so had
Captain Guillermo Bermudez Obregon.
I
said, "You have a nice long soak in the tank, Meem. Cure what
ails you. With luck, I'll be there on Seriphos waiting for your
rollout. I'll ferry you back to K-L and wait on you hand and foot
while you convalesce. I owe you,
amigo."
"All
you owe me is staying alive." He was no longer meeting my gaze.
"For the sake of prudence, I've sent a small package to your
office in Rampart Tower via StelEx. You should find it waiting when
you arrive tomorrow. Please take good care of what's inside. Do what
must be done if... circumstances warrant."
I felt a
cold breath of irrational dread and pushed it aside, knowing that
Mimo was going to be fine. The hospital at Rampart Central on
Seriphos had the finest genetic engineering therapy department in
Zone 23, and I'd pull strings to make certain that Mimo had Ultra
Important Patient status.
The rest
of our conversation was little more than gossip about our mutual
friends on Eyebrow Cay. Eventually we told each other good-night and
signed off.
I left the
com center and shuffled through the darkened ranch house toward my
bedroom, brooding about mortality and about two very different old
men and the influences they'd had on my life.
It had
been a busy day. Tomorrow would be even busier in Toronto. If Lorne
Buchanan yielded to my pressure, I'd have to touch base with Efrem
Sontag and arrange for him to take charge of the sensitive
information.
And
there was Jake Silver. Maybe he and I could have dinner, perhaps
catch the acclaimed new production
of Macbeth at the Winter
Garden Theater, if he hadn't already seen it. Both of us were
Shakespeare buffs. The Bard had a keen understanding of the criminal
mind, and so did Jake and I.
As it
happened, I never got to see the play. The damned criminal minds were
already cooking up a different sort of melodrama.
Starring
me.
Chapter 3
Chief
Superintendent Jacob Silver of the Commonwealth Criminal
Investigation Department was a man done wrong by fate, who managed to
crawl out of life's manure pile with a rose in his teeth.
He
reminded me a bit of myself.
Banished
to the outermost Perseus Spur for daring to blow the whistle on a
superior who'd taken a big bribe from the Carnelian Concern, the
powerful producer of electronic weapons and devices, Jake Silver had
been demoted to the tiny Public Safety Force of freesoil
Kedge-Lockaby. He'd been stuck in this dead-end office on a minor
resort world and Throwaway haven for nearly ten years before I
arrived in 2229, newly disenfranchised and determined to pickle my
brain in ethanol as a prelude to suicide.
Jake had
no difficulty ferreting out the true identity of the derelict who
called himself Helmut Icicle when I applied for K-L resident status.
During my slow rehabilitation, he occasionally called upon my ICS
expertise to outwit visiting corporate connivers—most notably a
gang of Native American sharpies from Infinitum, the monster
entertainment Concern, who tried to seize control of K-L's casino. A
takeover would have deprived the little planet's schools of their
principal source of revenue. I showed Jake how to legally spike the
redskins' guns, and he and I became cautious friends.
He risked
his professional neck to help me during Rampart's fight with
Galapharma. So I made a promise—rashly improbable at the
time—to do my damnedest to get him posted back to Earth. I was
able to come through for Jake when Simon and Eve pressured me to head
up the legal case against Gala. Rampart itself didn't have the
political clout to bring the Super back to his family in Toronto, but
its prestigious venture-credit stakeholder, Macrodur Concern, sure as
hell did.
Macrodur
is the proverbial 400-kilo gorilla, the largest and most connected of
the Big Seven Concerns by reason of its monopoly on computer
products. I made Jake Silver's reinstatement—with promotion—at
CCID headquarters a condition of my acceptance of the interim CLO
gig. Macrodur wanted me as chief architect of the case against Gala
just as badly as Rampart did. The gorilla leaned. The fix went in.
The upshot
was that Jake Silver returned to a cushy staff job in the capital cop
shop. He and I had a celebratory dinner at Truffles, then for two
years we mostly went our separate ways.
——
Using the
ranch's secure landline, I called him before breakfast on the morning
after the big verdict, announcing myself to his assistant as "Helmut
Icicle, confidential informant."
The face
that appeared on my vidphone display was leaner than it had been on
K-L and more mastifflike. The jowls drooped and the shrewd, watchful
eyes peered from deep pouches that were not disfiguring but seemed
oddly appropriate to a watchdog lawman. Chief Superintendent Jacob
Silver was now fifty-six years old, no longer the sweaty, sartorially
challenged mess I'd known on K-L's Big Beach. He wore a black
cashmere sweater vest over an expensive pink designer shirt, and his
gray hair was carefully styled.
Jake's
greeting, however, had all its old familiar charm.
"Mother-o'-pearl!"
he groaned. "If it isn't Hell-Butt, the conquering shyster and
tsar of
tsuris. I smell trouble... Don't tell me! Payoff day
is here. You want reciprocity for engineering my transfer, and I have
to put my decrepit cock on the block for you again and risk losing my
pension."
"I
need a very small favor," I soothed him. "Nothing to
jeopardize your desk-riding posterior. How are Marie and the kids and
the grandkids?"
His
forbidding features relaxed into a rare broad smile. "They
couldn't be better, thanks to you. Nice going, shooting down
Galapharma." He chortled wickedly. "On the other hand, that
interview in the
Wall Street Journal sure made you look like a
horse's patoot. You gonna hook up with Rampart permanently now?"
"I'm
thinking about it. I may postpone the decision indefinitely.
Meanwhile, I'm doing some private investigating. I need to find a
guy."
Jake
rolled his eyes. "Here it comes ..."
"Hamilcar
Barca Tregarth," I said. "Nicknamed Barky. Disenfranchised
for gunrunning and peddling embargoed high tech to aliens around
2201. He used to operate in the Spur but fled to the inner Orion Arm
or maybe the Sag Whorl after escaping custody on Tyrins. He might
still be alive."
"That's
it?" Jake seemed disappointed.
"Locate
Barky Tregarth for me, Super. I'll be grateful. Buy you a steak
tonight at Carman's. Also treat you to
Macbeth if you're free.
Got two good seats."
" 'By
the pricking of my thumbs,'" Jake quoted the Scottish play,"
'something wicked this way comes!' I hope that's not you, Hell-Butt."
"Absolutely
not. I am a paragon of corporate probity. For the moment, anyhow."
"Okay.
I accept your offer to dine. Sorry about the Shakespeare, but Marie
and I saw the production last week. Bring one of your ladies and give
her a treat. Micklewhite and Dorsey are outstanding as Lord and Lady
M. The set designers got the holo FX right without screwing up the
traditional mise-en-scene."
"Always
a good thing."
"You
want to hold a minute, I'll check the roster of lowlifes for
Tregarth. We might hit an instant jackpot. Why is his name familiar?"
He turned
away from the phone to consult his computer.
I
considered his suggestion about feminine companionship only
momentarily. My sex life had been pretty arid during the trial, due
to the long hours of grinding work. When I did take a rare break, it
had invariably been a casual fling with one of the politically active
sophisticates I'd met through the Reversionist Party. Their partisan
intensity had been a welcome distraction from the legal fray.
But now,
with the trial over and my imprudent blabbering a hot topic on the
capital grapevine, the last thing I needed was the company of a
political woman. I'd go to the play alone.
Jake
Silver was emitting a ruminative humming sound as he searched for my
quarry. Finally: "Last domicile of record for our chum is on
Manala, Sector 4. It's one of those aster-oidal fueling way stations
located at the rim of the Sagittarius Whorl, almost out in Red Gap.
Nasty shithole, as I recall, but handy to the trans-ack producers.
Eleven years ago one H. B. Tregarth was nabbed and fined a whopper
for violating the Y'tata high-tech weaponry trade interdiction. He
left Manala and hasn't been arrested since, or compelled to submit a
verifying DNA sample for any other reason. He's not in the rolls of
the officially deceased, either—which may or may not prove
anything. He might have died without a genetic assay. Most Throwaways
do. As far as the Commonwealth of Human Worlds is concerned, your
Barky doesn't exist."
"Rats.
I was afraid this wouldn't be easy."
Jake
glowered at me. "You really
really need to find him?"
"Yes."
"May
I ask why?"
All I said
was, "Is there any unofficial way you can track him down?"
"There
are always ways. They can take time, which I don't have, and cost
money, of which I am chronically short. Why don't you hire one of the
big tracer outfits? Or—" He broke off. You could almost
see the legendary lightbulb clicking on above his head. "Wait a
second, now. Tregarth last came to our attention peddling
actinic-beam weaponry from a Carnelian subsidiary to the Y'tata. It
occurs to me there's something quick and dirty I could try."
"Do
it."
"Meet
me in the lobby of CCID HQ about 1730 hours. Bring an open-ended
blind EFT card. If my idea pans out, maybe you can use the card to
buy something besides a night on the town."
He ended
the call and I went to breakfast, whistling "Empty Saddles in
the Old Corral."
——
Rosalia
served me huevos rancheros and a honey-sweet Chilean watermelon the
size of a grapefruit, remarking that my father had already left for
Toronto in his private hopper. Not in a good mood.
"Too
bad," I remarked. "I hope it wasn't something I said."
I'd
already talked to Jane Nelligan at Rampart Tower, a couple of time
zones ahead of Arizona, asking her to get a status report on the
refit job on
Makebate and make appointments with Adam
Stanislawski and Lorne Buchanan. She called back as I was finishing
my second cup of coffee, and I answered on my pocket phone.
"Chairman
Stanislawski has a very crowded schedule today," she said
briskly. "He can see you for fifteen minutes at noon in his
office at Macrodur Tower if that'll suffice. Otherwise he's not
available till Monday."
Jane is
always brisk, as well as tactful and awesomely efficient. Since I am
nothing of the sort, I value her as a pearl beyond price. She is
married to the head vet at the Sunder-land Racecourse, has twin sons
in business school at Commonwealth UT, and copes like a steely eyed
drill sergeant with the forty-six gung-ho lawyers who comprise
Rampart's Toronto-based legal staff.
I told
Jane that a noon touch-and-go at Macrodur was dandy. All I wanted to
do was get Adam's reaction to my nomination. Unless I missed my
guess, his opinion was going to coincide with my own and save me a
lot of aggravation with Simon and Eve.
"Lorne
Buchanan's gatekeepers were reluctant to accommodate you," Jane
continued. "I took the liberty of taking your father's name in
vain since you told me the meeting was urgent. That did the trick.
Citizen Buchanan prefers to come to you. He won't be in his office
today."
"I
can't imagine why."
"I've
made the appointment for 1430 hours in our penthouse conference room.
Citizen Buchanan will stay as long as need be. His security people
insist on sweeping the place for bugs before the meeting. They want
to check you out personally, too. I couldn't get them to budge on the
stipulation."
I laughed.
"Perfectly acceptable. See that Rampart InSec returns the
courtesy to El Queso Grande himself and his flunkies. Also, alert
Karl Nazarian to expect one psy-chotronic interrogation subject
following Buchanan's meeting with me."
"Himself?"
Jane's eyes widened.
"Yep.
And I want the results before the end of the afternoon."
"Right...
The final fuel-bunker and radiation barrier modifications of your
starship were completed last week. The survey instrumentation is
installed, except for a Carnelian LRIR-1400J scanner that seems to be
on permanent back order."
"Tell
the mechanics to find one any which way and plug it in immediately. I
don't care if they have to steal it off a Carney dock or buy it on
the goddamn black market."
"Very
well." She turned away from the phone video pickup, then
returned holding a StelEx letterpak. "This arrived less than an
hour ago, marked 'personal and confidential.' The sender is your
friend, Captain Bermudez."
"Would
you please open it?"
She did.
"A small e-slate requiring your ID for activation. And this."
She held
up a platinum neck chain holding two gold wedding rings.
I felt my
breath catch. Mimo had been holding the rings for me ever since they
were rescued from the stomach of a house-eating sea toad. They had
belonged to me and my former wife, Joanna DeVet.
I told
Jane, "Please put the rings and the slate in my office safe."
"Right.
There have been more messages for you since we spoke earlier, most of
them from the media. I gave them the standard referral to our public
affairs department. Geraldo Gonzalez also called and said it was very
important that you and he talk before you, urn, quote, flit off to
some godforsaken boonie planet, unquote."
Gerry
chaired the Reversionist Nominating Committee, the group empowered to
select the single Commonwealth Assembly delegate the party was newly
entitled to, following the latest poll of CHW citizens. The committee
had been deeply divided on my tentative candidacy, in spite of the
fact that I was their principal financial resource and had also
brought them the publicity that had finally gained the party its lone
seat. However, certain Reverse stalwarts felt I wasn't
anti-Big-Business enough to be their standard bearer. Others
contended I was too flaky. Both points were valid.
After
reading last night's
Journal, Gerry and his crew were probably
scared to death that I'd accept the Rampart chairmanship, mutate
instantly into a capitalist swine, and cut off all their lovely
money.
"I'll
give Gonzalez half an hour. Make the appointment for 1300 in my
office. Anything else?"
"Bethany
Frost heard you were coming in. She wants to talk to you briefly
about your brother, Dan."
"Rats."
This I didn't need. "Maybe for a few minutes in my office, if
there's time after I finish with Buchanan. But I'm off to meet Jake
Silver around 1715. Two for dinner, just me for the show. Cancel the
second Shakespeare ticket. Jake begged off."
"I'll
take care of it. Is there anything else you need me to arrange before
you arrive? A limo and security escort for the restaurant and
theater?"
"Nope.
I'll wear my Anonyme and take the Path just like an ordinary citizen.
Media stalkers will never notice me in the capital crush. I'm in
disguise." I held the phone at arm's length so she could check
me out.
I'd seen
no reason to conform to Rampart Concern's dress code during my stint
as Chief Legal Officer, since I rarely left the tower. My customary
work attire of ratty jeans, scuffed boots, and tired western-wear
shirts had scandalized Jane Nelligan sadly, although she never said a
disapproving word. Today, however, I'd donned a featherweight
charcoal worsted business suit with a matching silk turtleneck, a
muted aquamarine scarf, and a silver neck brooch inset with a small
nugget of turquoise. The only vestige of maverickhood I'd allowed
myself were a pair of well-polished, low-heel, pointy-toed, Tony Lama
cowboy boots in black mokcrok, peeking out from beneath my elegantly
creased trousers.
"Unbelievable,"
Jane murmured. "You'll certainly impress Stanislawski and
Buchanan. If they recognize you at all."
"Oh,
they will," I said dryly. "I can guarantee that."
I said
goodbye and finished my coffee. Then I exited the ranch house through
the kitchen, kissing Rosalia the cook on her cheek as I passed by.
It
was a beautiful Arizona morning, clear and cool, with the sun shining
over Buzzard Roost Mesa and warblers singing their hearts out among
the ponderosa pines. I heard the faint whinny of a horse from over by
the stock barns. Maybe it was Billy, saying
hasta la vista.
Empty
saddles in the old corral.
Carrying a
briefcase full of executive paraphernalia, I trudged down the
manicured gravel path to the hopper pad, where my Garrison-Laguna
hoppercraft waited. No pilot. I almost always do my own driving. It's
a control thing.
Control.
I'd fallen
asleep last night brooding about it, and when I woke my mind was
firmly made up. It wasn't going to take me months to decide on my
future—assuming I had any when my Haluk excursion was over. I
knew for certain that I'd never again relinquish control of my life
to any person or any institution. Not to Rampart Amalgamated Concern.
Not to the Reversionist Party.
The head
seat at Rampart's boardroom table had never been a viable career
choice for me. It was true that I'd be in a powerful position to
advance Reversionist ideals if I became Rampart's chairman. Setting
the agenda and having a tie-breaking vote on the board could
significantly affect company policy. But the personal independence
that had always been so important to me would be lost if I took
Simon's place. I'd be fenced in by constant decision-making, forced
to weigh every action and utterance because it could influence the
lives and fortunes of billions of people, poisoned by creeping
expediency, morphing inevitably into the kind of corporate drone I
professed to despise.
I couldn't
do it. My skills were adversarial, not executive. I'd been a
competent cop, a cunning legal strategist, and a damned fine
vigilante. But I was no organization man. No way, no how.
Serious
politics wasn't an option, either. It was one thing to play
grandstanding left-wing firebrand as I'd done two years earlier,
trumpeting radical ideas without taking responsibility for their
implementation, happily twisting establishment tails while the
tabloid media egged me on: Asahel Frost—another rich man with a
big mouth and a bee in his bonnet, convinced he has the answers to
the galaxy's ills!
I still
thought my answers were good ones. However, serving as the sole
Assembly Delegate of a fledgling splinter party was simply not a
practical course of action. Why, I'd have to learn tact and
diplomacy. Legislative horsetrading. The art of graceful compromise.
Me?
Who was I
kidding? Even the best and brightest Liberal Party lawmakers, such as
my friend Sontag, endured a perpetual uphill battle in an Assembly
dominated by Conservative creatures of the Hundred Concerns. An
amateur like me didn't have a prayer.
There was
a more appropriate way for me to advance the Reversionist cause. I
intended to discuss it with Gerry Gonzalez today.
Whistling
"Happy Trails to You," I climbed into my flying machine,
entered the destination in the navigator, and let myself be whisked
off to Toronto.
——
You
pronounce it "Trawna" unless you're a hopeless clodhopper
or belong to an alien race, in which case you or your mechanical
translator doggedly voice every vowel and consonent. While
Torontonians snicker.
The city
was born as a native "place of meetings" where two rivers
flowing into Lake Ontario flanked a convenient marshy plain.
Scattered tribes came there to swap furs and copper and shell beads.
It became a small French trading post in 1720, and later it was
briefly the capital of British Canada. Waves of immigration in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries brought steady economic growth and
a uniquely cosmopolitan character that made Toronto a popular choice
for the United Nations' permanent headquarters, then for the capital
of the Commonwealth of Human Worlds as the commercialization of the
stars began.
By the
year 2236 the conurbation sprawled across 20,000 square kilometers
above the northern shore of the lake. Its population was about
seventeen million—most of them human. Viewed at night from
space, Toronto proclaims itself with a triumphant blaze of light,
beyond any doubt the largest and most prosperous city on the planet
Earth.
The
original mosquito-plagued trading ground between the Humber and Don
Rivers remains the city center, augmented now by scores of artificial
islands out in the lake. A semipermeable force-umbrella 40 kilometers
in diameter fends off inconvenient weather phenomena. Toronto's heart
bristles with hundreds of multihued crystal towers crammed with
offices and apartments, interconnected by skyways and the
computerized highroad network. Beneath the surface streets lie
rapid-transit and service subways, along with the unique warren of
underground pedestrian walks known as the Path.
Many of
the modern buildings stand astride venerable Canadian structures that
have been carefully preserved. Churches, grand hotels, theaters, and
picturesque old shopping precincts and restaurants are hedged by
clear piers and buttresses that support the soaring towers.
Sometimes
the new hovers pleasingly over the old. The massive Commonwealth
Assembly House rises on sturdy glassy stilts above the old Ontario
Parliament buildings; historic BCE Place is comfortably embraced by
Omnivore Concern's fanciful obelisk; Macrodur Tower benevolently
engulfs St. James Cathedral. But in other cases the overall effect is
more ominous. Carnelian's ugly needle of beef-bouillon-colored silica
glass, entangled in a dozen skyways, overwhelms the stately old City
Hall, while the 400-story ithyphallic monstrosity that houses
Galapharma seems on the point of crushing the Queen's Quay Terminal.
Rampart
Tower, only thirty-five years old and innocent of historic
underpinnings, is a relatively modest blue-and-white skyscraper
across the street from Grange Park. It is neither distinguished nor
ugly, a mere hundred stories high, served by three vehicle skyways
and having a hopper pad for aerial access. Before Rampart attained
Concern status, it only occupied the top fifteen floors, leasing out
the rest. The expanded firm now filled the entire building. God knew
what would happen after the consolidation.
The
conference room where I would meet Lorne Buchanan today was a
circular chamber at Rampart Tower's summit. My offices and the rest
of the Legal Department occupied the ninety-sixth floor. The place I
called home while I resided in the capital was a small clutch of
rooms on the lake side of the seventy-third floor, identical to the
suites housing transient junior executives, except for a hologram
mounted over the fake fireplace that depicted a yellow submarine
named
Pernio II, chugging wistfully along the surface of a
sapphire alien lagoon.
I hated my
Rampart Tower apartment. But I'd resisted Simon's urgings that I get
myself a more suitable dwelling in The Beaches or one of the other
upscale parts of town. No use bothering, I told him. I wasn't
planning to stay.
He'd never
believed me.
——
The sky
was leaden and a combination of cold rain and sleet was falling when
my aircraft arrived at the southern outskirts of Toronto Conurbation
ATZ. I gave Traffic Control my destination, Macrodur Tower's upper
landing shelf, and was promptly shunted into a holding formation over
the dull green lake while computers sequenced my hopper—and
about four dozen others—to touch down in the identical place.
It was
already quarter to twelve. I'd been delayed by a traffic-vector
glitch in Chicago airspace. I got on the phone to warn Stanislawski's
secretary that I might not be able to make the appointment unless I
jumped the line.
"I'll
arrange priority routing," she told me. "You'll be landing
in a restricted area. Please wait in your aircraft until a transport
capsule arrives."
Beneath
the force-field, Toronto's central district was sheltered from the
icy rain. But occasionally, vagaries of cold air-flow and high
humidity conspired to produce weird artificial clouds under the
protective roof. It was happening today. Although it was high noon,
the fielded part of the city was sunk in heavy twilight. Swags of
mist hung spookily around the illuminated towers and hid the tips of
the loftier ones.
The
engineers at Macrodur's skyport dealt efficiently with the nuisance,
clearing the air with infrared beacons. My hopper settled onto a
sequestered pad, alphanumerics and transponder ID discreetly masked
by security electronics from the moment I exited controlled airspace.
Not a living soul was in sight, in spite of the fact that scores of
aircraft were taking off and landing.
A VIP
transport capsule with one-way windows came gliding out to meet me
and extruded a boarding tunnel that docked with the door of my
hopper. A robot voice requested an iris scan to confirm my identity.
I showed it my eyeball, then climbed in as instructed.
The
skyport, like the rest of the building's gold and white exterior, was
exquisitely designed. But once inside the tower walls, the visitor
was conveyed through corridors and anti-grav transit tubes that were
uniformly mushroom-colored, blank, and claustrophobic, lacking any
directional signs. All I saw as I sped toward Stanislawski's offices
were anonymous carts and capsules traveling on unfathomable errands.
The doors leading off the access platforms were unmarked, giving no
hint of what lay beyond them.
I had
visited Macrodur Tower—but not the chairman's lair—numbers
of times over the past couple of years. Worrywart financial mavens
concerned about Macrodur's investment in Rampart periodically
commanded me to explain my more bizarre tactics during the Galapharma
trial. Sometimes Adam Stanislawski attended the interrogations; more
often he didn't. But he had always expressed complete confidence in
me, and on one occasion had gone out of his way to reaffirm his
personal decision to grant Rampart the venture credit it had so
desperately needed. His action had paved the way for Rampart's
upgrade to Concern status and finally forced the hand of Galapharma's
lunatic CEO, Alistair Drummond, contributing to his downfall.
The
Macrodur chairman's access platform was as featureless as all the
others. There were no obvious security features guarding the great
man, who admitted me to his private office himself. Three walls of
the large room were covered with alternating strips of dark wood
paneling and buff grass-cloth. The fourth wall, behind a vast
Victorian partners desk, was an enormous window. Heavy drapes of dark
green monk's cloth framed the eerie scene outside. The pictures on
the walls were nonholographic, romantic terrestrial landscapes with
the exception of a woman's portrait in oils above the green marble
fireplace. No modern data-processing or communication equipment was
in evidence, but I suspected that most of the antique cabinets,
presses, and escritoires furnishing the room had been gutted and
stuffed with cyber-ware.
"Filthy
day," said Adam Stanislawski. "Let's sit by the fire and
have some coffee."
He was in
his mid-sixties, of stocky build, and had abundant white hair and a
grandfatherly mustache, in defiance of alpha male corporate chic. His
hyacinth-blue eyes were small, alive with intelligence, humor, and
fuck-not-with-me authority.
"Thank
you for seeing me, sir," I said, taking a designated chair. Adam
is one of the few persons I know who naturally rates an honorific.
"My
pleasure, Helly. I believe you take your coffee black these days."
He handed me a plain stoneware cup of steaming brew.
For the
sake of politeness I took a sip. "I won't waste your time with
preliminaries. You're aware that my father has proposed me to succeed
him as Rampart's chairman. I'd like to know what you think of the
idea."
Adam
Stanislawski snapped the ball back to me without hesitation. "It
sucks. Like the Great Sagittarian Mother of All Black Holes."
I burst
out laughing. "Would you care to elaborate?"
"The
chairman of an Amalgamated Concern is responsible for the long-term
direction of the firm. He or she must have a coherent vision of the
firm's future. But having a vision isn't enough. A successful
chairman needs the force of character to make that vision a reality."
Zing!
A perfect gut-shot. I started to speak, but he held up a hand and
forged on.
"You'd
like to steer Rampart hi a completely new direction, beginning
immediately. That won't work. I'm not saying your dream of Insap
small-stakeholdership is foolish or impossible. Only that it's
premature and currently inappropriate. Marrying Rampart and
Galapharma is going to be godawfully difficult. The new Concern will
not merely be the sum of the parts of the previous two. The
transition requires a generalissimo who can identify and encourage
those executives who'll be the most effective leaders for the future.
He'll have to scrutinize every major project and decide whether it
should be retained, modified, or discarded. Rampart's new chairman
will have to be a hard-nosed evaluator. Even a hatchetman. This is
not a job for"—he smiled good-humoredly—"a
spontaneous paladin."
"Or a
rogue cowboy," I said, drinking more coffee.
"You're
both of those things, Helly Frost. Someday in the far distant future
you might make a good Rampart Chairman of the Board. But not now."
"Not
ever," I said.
"Have
you ever thought of becoming Rampart's syndic? I should think that
job would suit your talents rather well."
The
Corporate Syndic was a glorified lobbyist, the principal liaison
between a Concern or Starcorp and the Commonwealth Assembly. At
present, my cousin Zared Frost held the position, in addition to that
of Chief Operating Officer. The latter job took most of his
attention, and also required his residency on the planet Seriphos in
the Perseus Spur. He was a competent syndic, but an unspectacular
one.
"The
idea's interesting," I told Stanislawski. "The position
certainly has more appeal to me than the chairmanship. But perhaps
Simon would be a better choice, given his long years of experience."
The
Macrodur chairman shook his head. "Your father's day is done.
When Rampart consolidates with Galapharma, your corporate syndic will
have to be a vigorous person, able to stand up to the pressures of
capital politics. Think about it seriously, Helly."
I smiled
noncommitally. "I will. But right now I'd like to know who you
think would make the best chairman for Rampart."
Without
hesitation Adam Stanislawski said, "Gunter Eckert, your Chief
Financial Officer. He's a founding stakeholder and one of the best
intellects on the Rampart team. I know he doesn't want the job. But
he'll take it and do it well. I'd like our director, John Ellington,
to be vice chairman, a close adviser to Gunter without additional
voting authority. The two of them, working with your older sister,
will keep the reorganized Concern on track. If you like, I'll pass on
my considered opinion to Simon and Eve."
The
"opinion" of the 400-kilo gorilla.
"I'd
appreciate it if you would, sir."
Adam
Stanislawski rose from his chair. Taking the cue, I did, too,
figuring that our short meeting was over. I felt relieved and
vindicated. Better get one thing straight, however.
"I
don't plan to give up my Rampart directorship," I said. "Or
my notion to apply Reversionist principles to the Concern's relations
with nonstargoing Insaps. Even if I don't become Corporate Syndic, I
intend to exert continuous pressure on the other directors. Rampart
is going to initiate experimental programs on suitable worlds where
fuller Insap economic participation is most feasible."
"Good!
I'll be watching with interest." He shot me an oblique look. We
hadn't started for the door yet. "And I'll keep an eye on your
other activities, too."
"My
financial support of the Reversionist party will continue, but I'm no
longer interested in becoming an Assembly Delegate."
"That's
not the kind of activity I was referring to."
Uh-oh...
Adam
Stanislawski went to the window. The view was stupendous, a forest of
jewel-bright spires glittering with countless points of light, the
arching high roads and their streaming traffic, controlled swarms of
aircraft—the whole wrapped in glowing bands of mist.
"I
have the reputation of being a straight-arrow," the Macrodur
chairman said. "Galapharma's vicious raid on Rampart bugged the
hell out of me. So when your sister Eve proposed her venture-credit
arrangement, I was receptive. Helping a feisty little outfit poke a
sharp stick in Alistair Drummond's greedy eye sounded like a great
idea. But I'm a practical businessman, too. Macrodur never would have
taken a stake in Rampart unless I'd been convinced that the
investment was a good one. The deciding factor was the potentially
huge Haluk market for your genen vector, PD32:C2."
"I
realize that."
"I've
heard that you have a private vendetta against the Haluk. That you're
looking for a way to discredit them and abrogate the new treaties. Is
it true?"
"I
believe that the Haluk can't be trusted, and that our treaties with
them are severely flawed—especially since there's no provision
for close human inspection of their planets. The Haluk almost
certainly have a severe overpopulation problem in their star-cluster
that's being made worse by eradication of their allomorphism. The
severity of the problem deserves investigation."
"Ah."
A restrained nod.
"The
only recourse the aliens have is to move into the Milky Way," I
went on. "To do that without destroying their economy, they need
our advanced starship technology, as well as human expertise in other
scientific areas. If the Haluk were content to migrate to our galaxy
in a peaceful and civilized manner, there'd be no problem. My
personal experience with them suggests they'd prefer a more drastic
solution to their predicament."
"But
you have no concrete proof of hostile intent."
"I
have presumptive evidence. It's kept under conditions of the most
stringent security by Assembly Delegate Efrem Sontag, an old friend
of mine from Harvard Law School. I hope to obtain more proof, working
very discreetly as a private citizen. I have a certain talent for
clandestine operations. Since no one else seems interested in
analyzing Haluk ways and means, I'm taking on the job by default."
"I
see. Let me be frank, then. Macrodur and its affiliates will never do
anything to impede your investigations—provided you keep me
personally informed of verifiable dangers to the Commonwealth."
Well,
who'da thunk it!
"You
surprise me," I said evenly.
"If
you knew me better, Helly, perhaps you wouldn't be surprised. But
don't assume that other Concerns share my point of view. If you are
seen to
openly endanger the new trade treaty, you risk lethal
retaliation. Most specifically, from agents of Carnelian and Sheltok,
the Concerns that have the most to lose."
"I
understand."
"I
wonder if you do, entirely." Stanislawski was staring out the
window with his hands clasped behind his back. "The ultraheavy
transactinide elements vital to antimatter fuels and other
high-energy applications are devilishly difficult to obtain. For the
most part, they're found on R-class Sagittarian worlds—appalling
planets in recurrent-nova systems where humans can't survive, even in
full armor. Mining these elements robotically from orbit is becoming
increasingly expensive, as the more accessible lodes are worked out.
And now, suddenly, a new source of these crucial energy products has
unexpectedly opened up. By some astrophysical fluke, the Haluk
Cluster is also rich in the ultraheavies, perhaps because it's a tiny
captive galaxy rather than a true satellite of the Milky Way. So, in
a certain sense, the Haluk have us over a barrel."
"A
nice metaphor," I remarked cynically, "that most people
take care not to examine too closely."
"I
won't belabor the point." Stanislawski took me gently by the
elbow and steered me toward the door. "The Haluk trade treaty
with humanity is mutually beneficial. Antimatter energy is vital to
the continuing growth of interstellar commerce. Remember that."
"I'm
not a loose cannon, Adam," I said softly. "Just an ex-cop
who can't resist analyzing evidence when it's shoved into my face."
"I
appreciate that. Which is why I won't stop you from gathering more of
that evidence." His blue eyes twinkled benignly. "You do
realize that if I wanted to stop you, I would. Decisively."
"Oh,
yeah."
He
opened the door for me. A transport capsule waited. "You know,
Helly, thus far in our exploitation of the stars, we've been very
lucky. We've never come up against an alien race with the inclination
and the capability to successfully wage war on us. That good
luck has made us complacent. Complacency is bad policy—for a
business, and for a government." He shook my hand. "It was
good to talk to you ... Let me know what Barky Tregarth has to say,
if you find him." He stepped back and the featureless door slid
shut, leaving me alone on the platform with my wild surmise.
——
Geraldo
Gonzalez met with me in my office at Rampart Tower and went away
doubly relieved when I told him I would continue my lavish funding of
the Reversionist party and promotion of its ideals, while not
demanding the Assembly seat in return. I wasn't surprised when he
admitted that the Nominating Committee preferred him for the new
post.
I strongly
advised Gerry against squandering our lone vote in futile causes. He
said I was a fine one to talk. We parted amiably, after agreeing that
I deserved a long holiday, untroubled by political hassles.
When he
was gone I opened my office's wall safe and took out the slim StelEx
package from Mimo Bermudez that I had not yet had time to examine. I
tipped out the encrypted slate and the two plain gold wedding bands
on their chain. The larger ring fit exactly over the small one. The
fact that I'd kept them had convinced both my big sister, Eve, and
Matilde Gregoire, a woman I'd once asked to live with me, that I was
still in love with my former wife.
I'd denied
it. But it was I who had divorced Joanna DeVet following my frame-up
and criminal conviction, even though she had been willing to share my
exile in the Perseus Spur. Crushing humiliation and despair made it
impossible for me to accept her sacrifice.
Joanna had
never remarried. She was still a professor of political science,
teaching at the central campus of Commonwealth University only a few
blocks north of Rampart Tower. It might as well have been 14,000
light-years.
Eve, wed
only to her job but a soppy sentimentalist all the same, had urged me
again and again to call Joanna. But I could not bring myself to do
it, any more than I could analyze the reason why.
Setting
the rings aside, I opened Mimo's slate. The letter on the small
screen was what I half expected. My friend had sent me a copy of his
last will and testament. Since I was due to go to the meeting with
Lorne Buchanan in just a few minutes, I only scanned the document
briefly. The principal legatees were the schools and hospital of
Kedge-Lockaby's Big Beach continent, which would receive his
substantial fortune in semi-ill-gotten gains.
But Mimo
had left his beautiful bungalow on Eyebrow Cay to me, along with the
rest of the island.
——
Lorne
Buchanan and I, our bodies certified to harbor no nano-eavesdropping
devices, met alone in the equally bug-free premises of the spacious
Rampart conference room. We quickly came to an agreement that was
mutually gratifying.
He was a
young man, only in his mid-forties. His build was athletic, his brow
clear and wide, his jaw forthright and spade-shaped, and his manner
confident. Only the smallest whiff of fear lurking in his deeply
shadowed eyes acknowledged the fatal quagmire that now threatened to
pull him under. He had been Gala's Chief Operating Officer before
becoming CEO upon the death of Alistair Drummond. He was a doer, not
a schemer, whose Concern responsibilities had principally involved
overseeing commodity production on the thousands of Gala worlds in
the Orion Arm.
Lorne
Buchanan swore to me—offering to confirm the fact by submitting
to the truth machines—that he had had no direct involvement
either in Gala's illegal Haluk adventure or in the dirty tricks of
the Rampart takeover conspiracy. He claimed to have advised Drummond
against a Haluk alliance from the time the scheme was first broached.
Buchanan stopped short of calling his former boss a stone nutcase,
but the inference was there. Other members of the Galapharma board,
he said, were furious and frightened at the mess Drummond had gotten
them into. After Drummond's violent demise, the board had elected
Buchanan in a vain hope of salvaging the situation.
When I
dangled my deal, Lorne Buchanan swallowed it hook, line, and sinker.
He readily agreed to affirm the agreement by undergoing psychotronic
interrogation by my trusted associate, Karl Nazarian, before leaving
Rampart Tower.
I wanted
truthful answers from him to the following questions:
——
1. Are you a Haluk demiclone? Can you identify any
demiclones now working in Galapharma AC?
2. Are you willing to obtain and hand over to Delegate
Efrem Sontag all information pertaining to the allomorph trait
eradication and demiclone procedures developed by Galapharma for the
Haluk, including details and locations of all clandestine demiclone
labs that were or are now in operation, plus the total number of
human-Haluk demiclones produced there?
3. Are you willing to obtain and hand over to Delegate
Son-tag the secret genetic marker identifying a Haluk-human
demiclone?
4. Are you willing to obtain and hand over to Delegate
Son-tag all information available on the supervision of Haluk
demiclone labs by Galapharma Security personnel?
5. Are you willing to ensure that Delegate Sontag alone,
and no other person, government agency, corporation, or media data
retrieval system gains access to this information—preferably by
destroying all traces of it personally?
——
Lorne
Buchanan declared emphatically that he was not a Haluk ringer, nor
did he know anyone else who was. As I had suspected, the "sealed"
data concerning the Haluk still resided in Galapharma's computers
under heavy encryption. He was certain he could obtain everything I
requested, send it to Sontag, and obliterate all traces of it from
the Gala database.
In return
I agreed to give him a document carrying my personal iridographic
seal, stating that Rampart would not cooperate in any criminal
prosecution against him or designated close associates. Furthermore,
we would hire him as Assistant Chief Operating Officer in the
consolidated Concern, and continue his employment for a minimum
period of ten years or until he chose to vacate the position.
Jane
Nelligan brought the document to the conference room. Buchanan and I
eyeballed it. The Gala CEO zapped a copy to his personal attorney and
I sent others to the offices of Simon, Eve, and Efrem Sontag. Then I
handed Jane the questions for Karl Nazarian and she courteously
escorted the visitor away to the torture chamber.
Lorne
Buchanan would fulfill his promises scrupulously. Sadly, he would not
live long enough enjoy the perks of the trade-off. There was another
question I should have added to that list of his:
——
6. To the best of your knowledge, is
Alistair Drummond dead?
——
"Helly!
Felicitations on winning the Galapharma verdict!"
"Thanks,
Ef."
"I
presume you want me to forego wisecracks about your loony-tune
interview in the
Wall Street Journal."
"I
spoke from my heart of hearts," I retorted, "and shot from
the hip. As the king said,
Honi soft qui merde y pense."
"That's
mal ypense."
"It's
all shit to me, pal... For your information, I have declined the
Rampart chairmanship. Neither will I seek a seat in the Assembly.
Gerry Gonzalez will hoist high the banner of Reversionism among you
and your colleagues. Be kind to him."
I had
reached my friend Sontag in his hopper. He was flying home alone to
his home on Lake Simcoe following the early Friday adjournment of the
Assembly. After he had secured our call with Phase XII encryption, I
filled him in on details of the deal I had struck with Lorne
Buchanan.
Ef was
cautiously enthusiastic. "If Buchanan comes through with
everything he promised, we'll end up with enough solid data to
finally make a presentation to my committee. Then the matter can be
opened to debate on the Assembly floor. Perhaps I can even force a
special review of the no-inspection clause of the nonaggression pact.
The existence of sizable human-Haluk demiclone factories alone is
prima facie evidence of some sort of questionable intent by the
aliens. During the treaty talks, the Haluk Servant of Servants
maintained that only a handful of human transforms had been created.
As I recall, his explanation was ingenious but not very plausible
from a human point of view.
"The
fakes were supposedly going to serve as some sort of goodwill envoys
on Haluk planets in their star-cluster, where we humans are viewed as
big bad boogymen. The Haluk fed that ridiculous story to Galapharma
to get the demiclone project going in the first place. I'm sure
Alistair Drummond didn't believe a word of it. But it was expedient
for him to accept it, just as it was expedient for Concern-connected
bureaucrats in Xenoaffairs and Interstellar Commerce to do the same
when they drew up the treaties."
We briefly
discussed legal aspects of Buchanan's material—mostly ways our
political enemies might attempt to discredit it. Then I told Ef my
plan for pumping Barky Tregarth about life in the Haluk
Cluster—provided I could locate the old Throwaway. I said
nothing about going extragalactic myself, but Mama Sontag didn't
raise any dummies.
"I
like the idea of checking out Haluk demographics through an
informant," he said. "Even if he's disenfranchised, his
deposition
sub duritia would be admissible if it pertains to
the security of the Commonwealth. Ask Tregarth about the Haluk
military-industrial capability. Ask him for details of their
production of transactinides. But don't even think about buzzing off
to the Haluk Cluster yourself to verify Barky's story."
I started
to deny I had any such notion, but he cut me off.
"Don't
try to bullshit me, Helly. A snoop job like that would violate the
nonaggression pact. I wouldn't be able to use any evidence you
gathered."
"Not
in a formal Assembly inquiry, perhaps. But it could still be useful
poop for you to leak to the media, sway public opinion, pressure the
other Delegates—"
"I
can't be seen to condone your breaking Commonwealth law."
"Not
even the asinine ones? I can tell the difference, you know. I'm a
Juris Doctor from Harvard, just like you."
He
shook his head wearily. I was testing his patience with my lame
humor. "And
I'm a politician with a certain reputation
for probity, working in a government almost entirely under the
control of galactic Big Business. The public respects my integrity,
and so do the media. My square-shooter image is the source of my
power and I can't do anything to endanger it. Why do you think I've
been so cautious about waiting for the appropriate time to present
the evidence you've already gathered? Two years ago you weren't a
credible source. Today, by some miracle, you very nearly are ...
unless you fuck yourself, pulling some idiotic stunt."
Ouch. "Can
we at least agree that you'll hold off asking your big question on
the Assembly floor until I question Barky Tregarth?"
"You
don't know how long it will take to find him. And what if the man's a
washout?"
I just had
to give it one last try. "Look. A quick survey of selected Haluk
Cluster worlds would take me ten weeks maximum. I've got the ship and
the equipment, and I can do the job. Ten weeks, Ef! I could release
the information to the media anonymously. Sure, the Haluk and the
consortium will suspect that I'm the secret source—but so what?
They won't be able to prove anything."
"Helly,
the Assembly is on the verge of approving the sale of fifty more
Rampart Mandate T-2 worlds to the Haluk. It'll happen in June, just
before summer recess. Less than eight weeks from now."
I voiced a
heart-felt "Fuck!" No one at Rampart Tower had said a word
to me about this.
"It
gets worse. A new bill that would let the aliens buy three hundred
more Rampart worlds will come out of committee and be put to a
vote shortly after the new session begins in late August. All of the
Conservatives and many of the incoming new Liberals will vote for it.
There's been a tremendous push from Sheltok and Bodascon and the
other consortium members to give these additional Haluk colonies the
green light. The only chance I have of preventing the bill's passage
is by preventing its introduction: killing it in committee. To do
that we've got to ignite a firestorm of public opinion on the PlaNet
that even the most venal Delegates can't ignore."
"Can
you kill the fifty-planet giveaway?"
"Impossible.
It would be terrible strategy to open the Haluk inquiry just before
the summer recess. We have to concentrate all our efforts on
scuppering the second bill. Ideally, the evidence should be placed
before my Xeno Oversight Committee when the Assembly reconvenes. And
you should be prepared to testify personally. We won't use
psychotronic interrogation on witnesses before the committee—but
it may be necessary when the inquiry moves to the Assembly floor."
"I
understand."
Efrem
Sontag and I stared at each other in silence. We were the same age
but he looked ten years older. The image on my office communicator
showed a slightly built unhandsome man with lank dark hair, oversized
ears, and the scorching eyes of an indomitable fighter. In spite of
his membership in the principal minority party, he was one of the
most powerful Assembly Delegates, a true untouchable, the scourge of
fellow legislators who dwelt cozily in the pockets of the Hundred
Concerns.
The
inquiry he was about to orchestrate would touch off one of the
biggest political rows in the history of the Commonwealth. While the
Concerns screamed bloody murder at the prospect of Haluk trade
disruption, the tabloid media would joyfully fan the flames of
controversy. We hoped that the Commonwealth citizenry would be
sufficiently alarmed at the notion of Haluk doppelganger spies that
they would pressure their Delegates interactively over the PlaNet,
overriding the influence of the Concerns and forcing a review of the
dubious treaties.
And what
would the Haluk do then, poor things? Cave in, confess all, permit
full inspection of their worlds, and promise to behave in the future
if we let them continue to colonize the Milky Way?
Maybe. If
the heat was turned high enough.
I said,
"It's in your hands now, Ef. I have a few reliable people who've
worked with me that I'd like you to consider taking on board. People
with reputations above reproach like Karl Nazarian, and Beatrice
Mangan of the ICS Forensic Division."
"I'd
welcome their help."
"I'll
do my best to get Barky Tregarth's deposition for you quickly.
Meanwhile, take very good care of yourself, old buddy."
Sontag
uttered a brief laugh that had no humor in it. "The Concerns
wouldn't dare send their thugs after me."
"I'm
not worried about the Concerns. The problem could be Haluk demiclones
operating right here in Toronto. Fake humans."
He gazed
at me for a moment in shocked silence. "Are you serious?"
"Dead
serious. I've met a few who were masquerading as Galapharma Security
personnel. They were extremely convincing. The Haluk are at least as
intelligent as we are. And they have a really steep learning curve."
His
expression remained neutral, but I knew he was finding it hard to
believe that a disguised alien entity could successfully pose as a
human being over a significant period of time.
I said,
"One of the most important pieces of data we're supposed to
obtain from Lorne Buchanan is the gene market that identifies
demiclones. Pass that information on to Bea Mangan as soon as
possible. Then get her to secretly test all of your close associates
for creeping Halukitis." I hesitated, hating to say what had to
come next. "And test Liliane, too."
Sontag
exclaimed, "Are you out of your mind, Helly?"
"All
you need for a proper DNA assay is a snotty Kleenex or a hair with a
live follicle. Neither your wife nor your staff people have to know
they're being checked out. Dammit, Ef, the demiclone moles are out
there! I'm sure of it. The Haluk ringers who penetrated Gala Security
are probably long gone, but there have to be others holed up for the
long haul."
"I'll
get on it," he said grimly. "God—you really know how
to spoil a man's day."
"Think
how useful it would be to our case," I said, "if you found
Haluk spies in sensitive government positions."
"Useful!"
He made a face.
"I'll
talk to you again as soon as I know anything useful."
"Have
a safe Barky Hunt," he said.
"You
keep safe, too, Ef. No joke."
"I
know." He ended the call.
I sat
quietly at my desk for some time after that, alone in my familiar
messy office with suitcoat, vest, and neck scarf discarded. Running
over the events of the afternoon. Feeling both drained and
exhilarated at what I'd accomplished in a few brief hours.
It was
almost as good as lying on a tropical beach on far Kedge-Lockaby.
My desk
clock said 16:42. In less than an hour I'd be meeting Jake Silver.
Should I put off my younger sister, Beth, or do my family duty?
Maybe she
hadn't shown up.
I touched
the intercom. "Jane, did Lorne Buchanan finish his psychotronic
session with Karl Nazarian?"
"It
went very well. All responses were positive and there was very little
discomfort because of the cooperative mindset of the subject. Citizen
Buchanan left the tower about ten minutes ago with his entourage. He
asked me to tell you that the requisite data will be transferred to
Delegate Sontag's office immediately under conditions of strictest
security."
"Outstanding.
Um ... do I have anyone waiting in reception?"
"Your
sister Bethany has been here for over two hours," Jane said,
with a hint of reproach. "I informed her that a meeting today
might not be possible, but you would do your best to see her."
Rats.
"Send
her in, please."
Rising
from the desk, I opened the door to my seldom-used clothes closet to
expose the full-length mirror and began reknotting my scarf.
Beth
wafted in. "Good afternoon, Asa." Her voice was almost
inaudible, a bad sign. The quieter she spoke, the more pissed off she
was likely to be.
"Please
sit down," I said. "Forgive me spiffying myself up. I have
to rush out of here in a few minutes for an urgent appointment."
"It's
quite all right." She refused my offer of coffee and sat
silently for several minutes while I finished dressing.
Bethany
Frost was wearing a smart walking suit of teal silk tweed with
shimmering greenish highlights. Dark blue ankleboots, a matching
handbag, and a choker of heavy gold links inset with a myriad of tiny
diamonds completed the ensemble. As always, in spite of her
high-fashion clothes, she managed to look ephemeral, like some
delicate butterfly that the slightest breath of wind would crumple.
Beth is not as petite as Eve, but like her, has the fine bone
structure and fair coloring of our late mother, Katje Vanderpost.
I call
Beth my little sister because she was born seven years after Eve and
has always looked more youthful than her years. She is actually two
years older than I. Her intellect is sharp as a scalpel, with a
mathematical bent, but her emotional temperament is unstable. For
nearly ten years she served Rampart as its Assistant Chief Financial
Officer under Gunter Eckert, until our brother Daniel's fall from
grace drove her to a nervous breakdown and she retired from the
business world. She and her husband, a cybernetic researcher named
Carter Berg, and two teenage children.
Beth and I
were never particularly affectionate toward one another. When we were
small children, she and I were rivals for the quasimateraal
attentions of Big Sister Eve, who for some reason enjoyed the company
of a brash baby buckaroo rather than Beth's tiresome coy brilliance.
Beth retaliated by bestowing her sibling loyalty on Daniel, two years
Eve's senior. In adulthood the brother and sister remained very
close.
When I
refused to join Rampart after finishing law school, Beth concluded
that I was a traitor to the family. She had always believed me guilty
of the trumped-up charges that destroyed my career in the
Interstellar Commerce Secretariat. During Galapharma's rough wooing
of Rampart, she had sided with those who favored a sellout.
Beth
remained stubbornly convinced of Dan's innocence, in spite of all Eve
and I had done to prove that our brother was a secret collaborator in
Alistair Drummond's conspiracy and directly responsible for our
mother's death.
I went
back to my desk and we stared at each other without speaking. It was
an old ploy of Beth's to put one on the defensive. Her huge blue eyes
were full of unshed tears, but with the tyranny of the meek, she
waited me out until I was forced to break the silence.
"What
can I do for you, sis?"
She
whispered, "Let Dan go."
"That's
not possible."
"It's
killing him, Asa—penned up like a dog in that damned wilderness
lodge up in the Kenora! Snow on the ground six months of the year,
nothing but moose and mosquitoes and loons the rest of the time. And
that filthy medication the InSec people use to keep him docile ...
Dan can't hurt anyone. Let him go home to Norma and Jamie."
"Norma
sees Dan every weekend. Jamie could visit his father if he chose to."
But he didn't. My nephew, a busy young microsurgeon, was convinced of
his father's guilt and made only rare trips to isolated Kingfisher
Lodge in the far northern reaches of Ontario.
Norma
Palmer, Dan's wife, a long-time Conservative party Delegate in the
Assembly, was a more enigmatic figure. She had always kept aloof from
the rest of the family, and now used her political influence to keep
the media away from her luckless husband. It was plain that Norma
still loved Dan, doubtful that she would have approved her
sister-in-law's desire to set him free.
"The
trial's over," Beth persisted. "The tabloid hacks will back
off once consolidation of Rampart and Galapharma begins and find
other fish to fry. Let Dan come back to Toronto and have a normal
human existence. He promises to live very quietly, without rocking
your precious Rampart boat."
"It's
impossible."
"Why?"
she whispered ominously. "Because you and Eve say so?"
"Because
of what Dan did. The way he colluded with Alistair Drummond's
criminal tactics during the takeover fight. Our brother is a crook,
Beth. He could sabotage the consolidation. By rights, he should be
facing criminal prosecution."
"Alistair
Drummond lied to Dan! The merger tactics were never supposed to
involve illegal activity. It was to be strictly business, with only a
little computer snooping to smooth the way. Dan knew nothing about
the sabotage, Qiu's death, Eve's kidnapping, any of that. And he
swears that he never did anything to harm our poor mother. I believe
him."
"Then
let him tell his story to the machines," I said coldly, "and
see if they do."
"You
know those horrible devices can cause brain damage! When you were on
trial for malfeasance, your lawyer wouldn't let you submit to them.
Why should Dan?"
"We've
been over this before. The reason Dan won't undergo psychoprobing is
because he's guilty. For the love of God, Beth—he confessed to
Simon and me while he was flying us to Coventry Blue at gunpoint! He
extorted our voting proxies from us by threatening to have us
transmuted into alien sex slaves!"
"That's
absurd," she said. "That story is so ridiculous not even a
child would believe it. Dan convinced you two that there was nothing
further to be gained by opposing the Galapharma merger. You and Simon
gave him your proxies willingly, then you reneged and came storming
down to the Sky Ranch because—"
"That's
not true. Dan's lying, manipulating you."
"Asa,
he's our
brother. A good husband and father. A man who worked
faithfully for Rampart for over twenty years, making it strong."
"Who
sold out when Pop wouldn't appoint him CEO." I rose from my
seat. "I'm sorry, Beth. I know you love Dan, but he's a
dangerous man—perhaps as crazy as Drummond himself. The proof
that he had our mother killed is overwhelming. But Dan shows
absolutely no remorse, only denial. We've done the best we can for
him, under the circumstances."
"Is
that your final decision?"
"Mine,
Simon's, and Eve's. Now I'm afraid I have to leave. And so do you."
I crossed
to the closet and got my Anonyme anorak, a garment esteemed by shy
skulkers such as minor celebs, unfaithful spouses, and urban
misanthropes. The thing is available in a several fashion colors. Its
privacy-field visor is guaranteed to be proof against any scanner. My
anorak even boasted a special feature, a comfy light armor lining—not
that I needed that kind of protection anymore. With Alistair Drummond
presumably gone where the goblins go, and the Haluk still unaware of
my plan to cramp their style, no one had a motive to whack me. My
greatest enemies nowadays were media busybodies.
I slipped
the anorak on, drew up the open hood, and flicked the switch. Presto!
No face. The tiny force-field is unnoticeable to the wearer. You can
even eat and drink through it—although I didn't intend to
insult Carman's mouth-watering menu by doing so.
Beth
remained in her chair, posed as rigidly as a statue. Her voice was
still low-pitched and calm, but tears coursed down her cheeks,
ruining her flawless makeup.
"All
Dan wanted was the best for Rampart. He was deceived. He would have
made a wonderful CEO, but our father chose Eve instead. His precious
pet! Simon is an arrogant, misguided fool. And you, Asa ... you're—"
I opened
the office door. Jane Nelligan was at her desk.
"Please
see that my sister Beth gets safely home," I said. "It
would be best if you can contact Dr. Berg and advise him that his
wife is feeling upset and needs him. Failing that, have one of the
InSec officers take her home in a hopper." I lowered my voice.
"Make a note. Her visitation rights and phone access to Daniel
Frost are suspended until Eve or I say otherwise. And now I'm outta
here."
"Bastard!"
Beth screamed. "You fucking heartless bastard!"
My
sister's furious shouts continued as I hurried to the bank of
ordinary inertialess elevators that serve Rampart Tower and descended
to the underground thoroughfare called the Path.
Chapter 4
The
force-umbrella sheltering the capital is proof against high wind and
precipitation, but it doesn't modify the ambient air temperature or
humidity. So millions of office workers, junior execs, bureaucrats,
and other downtowners seeking to avoid chilly or overly hot weather
walk from place to place along an extensive system of subterranean
concourses that has been a Toronto fixture for over 250 years.
The Path
connects rapid transit subway stations with every commercial and
government tower in the central core. Its multiple levels comprise a
virtual underground city of bright tunnels having sections of moving
walkway, shopping malls, and jogging lanes. The Path's busier
corridors are lined with fast-food eateries, amusement arcades, and
service establishments. There are even miniature parks where flowers
and trees grow under artificial light, fountains contribute
beneficial neg-ions, and the city's famous black squirrels cadge
handouts from people having lunch on patches of grass. Nothing with
wheels or antigrav lifts—except city cops on bicycles and the
personal powerscooters of the disabled—is allowed in the Path's
pedestrian-friendly network. It invites those interested in a casual
stroll as well as bustling, single-minded commuters.
The
Path has its own folklore, too. Certain little-traveled parts of the
system to the north are alleged to be haunted by the ghosts of Thrown
Away panhandlers and unlicensed vendors, cleared out in a pitiless
sweep thirty years ago. A mazelike area near the university subway
station is fraught with urban legends of suicidal lovers, a berserk
sweeper bot that attempts to suck up the unwary, and the Headless
Professor—behind whose privacy visor lies
nothing. The
lowest levels, shut off behind locked access hatches, are a labyrinth
of disused shopping corridors dating from the previous century, old
service tunnels, ancient sewers, and modern storm drains. They
supposedly form a Dark Path frequented by the lawless, the
desperately poor, and uncountable hordes of giant rats.
During my
recent term of legal servitude, I would sometimes take a break and
hike long distances in Underground Toronto. I enjoyed the infectious
vitality of the Path and the human diversity of its denizens. Some of
them walked shrouded in anonymity, as I always did; but the majority
went about their business with the boisterous self-confidence of a
youthful elite fortunate to have good jobs in the most exciting city
on Earth.
Fair
numbers of aliens mingled with humanity on the Path. The city center
had embassies for four of the five star-going Insap races. (The
grotesque Kalleyni, who found Earth gravity oppressive, kept a
legation at Luna Landing— a fortunate thing for human dignity,
since they were such appalling practical jokers.) A stroller on the
Path might expect to encounter towering Joru in elegant
black-and-white habits, irascible little Qastt, pale Y'tata under
strict orders from their protocol people to take their charcoal pills
and an-tiflatulence medication, and—most numerous of all—the
Haluk. They had flocked to the human capital in droves after the
signing of the treaties. Their blue-skinned trade attaches lobbied
relentlessly in the halls of government, and their commercial reps
infested the executive suites of half the Hundred Concerns, wheeling
and dealing.
The Haluk
were the only aliens who adopted human clothing during their Earth
sojourn. I had never been able to get used to the sight of them,
striding boldly through the underground thoroughfares, always in
groups of three or more, dressed in expensive high-style outfits.
Members of the Joru, Y'tata, and Qastt races lived in apartments
scattered throughout the central city; but all of the Haluk resided
in their embassy, which comprised the top two-thirds of the enormous
Macpherson Tower on Edward Street, just across from the headquarters
of Sheltok, the Big Seven energy Concern.
Like the
restricted Haluk planets, their embassy was strictly off limits to
humanity.
——
Thanks to
my sister Beth, I was late for my meeting with Chief Superintendent
Jake Silver.
I took the
McCaul Street leg of the Path north to the edge of the university
campus, then turned east beneath the teeming government area until I
reached CCID Tower on College Street. An escalator brought me into
the historic lobby, which is part of the original Toronto police
headquarters. I found Jake fidgeting and glaring at his wrist
chronometer. He was wearing a natty camel-colored overcoat and a
black beret.
I sidled
up to him and deactivated my visor. "Yikes! The fuzz!"
He gave me
a dirty look. "It's about time. You know what happens to people
who come late for a reservation at Carman's? Come on. We'll save time
walking outside."
He strode
through the front doors, with me trailing apologetically after. I
turned my privacy visor back on. "Don't get all in a snit, Jake.
They won't throw you out of the place if you're with me. I'm a star!
Rich, too."
"Wiseass.
When was the last time you had dinner at Carman's?"
"Recently,"
I prevaricated. But I actually hadn't been there for over two years,
back when I was still a political wannabe, wining and dining Liberal
party Delegates sympathetic to Reverse notions, hoping they would
allow me to address their open committee sessions and badmouth the
Haluk.
"Did
you get a line on Barky Tregarth?" I inquired.
"I'll
answer that," Jake said, "when I have a tumbler of
Clynelish scotch in my fist and my steak is smiling up at me. You
better pray that the maitre d' is in one of his good moods."
"Is
Albert still there?"
"He
is. And merciless to the tardy."
The
restaurant was only a couple of blocks away, on Alexander Street.
Damp cold struck through my anorak, making me wish the garment had
environmental controls instead of armor. April can really be the
cruelest month in middle North America. Down on the Path, daffodils
and tulips were in exuberant bloom. Aboveground, it still felt like
winter.
Jake and I
charged along the crowded sidewalk without speaking until the traffic
signal at Yonge Street caught us. VIP cars and taxis were in a state
of gridlock, as usual, waiting to get onto the computerized high-road
ramps. The City Council's latest proposal to ban private ground
vehicles from central-core streets had once again been shot down by
the Hundred Concerns.
"Have
a hard day, Chief Superintendent?" I asked Jake neutrally.
"The
usual. Squabbling with a Zone Patrol liaison, chewing out the idiot
droids in Data Processing, accepting shit with a smile from the
powers that be." He paused. "And renewing an old and very
unsavory acquaintance, thanks to you. I got what you wanted, but
you're probably not going to like it."
He didn't
say another word until we reached the 275-year-old steak house. We
were twenty minutes late, but Albert's austere face lost its scowl as
I hove into view, shucking my anorak. An attendant took it and Jake's
overcoat.
"Helly!"
The maitre d' beamed at me. According to Rampart's standard operating
procedure, Jane Nelligan had booked the table in the Concern's name,
not my own. "Welcome back! I was afraid you'd forgotten us."
"Never.
I've just been working my butt to the bone, forced to live on junk
food."
Albert
nodded. "The trial of the century! Your name is on everyone's
lips."
Everyone
who reads the
Wall Street Journal, anyhow. I gave a wry smile
as I slipped him a fat gratuity. "How about a spot in a very,
very quiet corner?"
"Certainly."
He'd make certain that no newshounds or table hoppers annoyed us
during dinner. It was all part of Carman's service.
More than
one head turned as we were conducted through the crowded main room,
where copper and pewter pans and utensils hung thickly from the
ceiling like metallic bats. The air was filled with the smell of
pricey broiled meat and garlic toast.
Our table
was secluded, in one of the cellarlike annex rooms. We perused
leather-bound menus while sipping aperitifs. I had a dry sherry while
Jake knocked back a double of the fiery Highland single malt that was
his favorite.
"Seems
a pity to anesthetize your taste buds with that kiltie coffin varnish
in a restaurant like this," I murmured. "What the hell
proof is it, anyhow?"
"A
hundred twenty-two cask strength, sonny-boy, and only an ignorant
Arizona shitkicker would insult this nectar of the gods. All my years
exiled on K-L, I only managed to get two bottles of Clynelish from
the local bootleggers. Now I'm back on the Blue Marble, I'll make up
for lost opportunities—especially since you're paying."
"I
apologize. Have another wee dram."
"Damn
right I will. And I expect a decent wine with the meal, too."
So I got
us a noble Haut-Brion '21. Jake ordered a grilled T-bone, potatoes
Lyonnaise, and sauteed morels garnished with Aeolian krill—which
he Insisted were kosher. I decided on a flash-seared Wagyu filet, a
side of asparagus with mustard miso, and a salad of nittany ears. He
had an appetizer of artichoke-stuffed ravioli. I chose tiny
last-of-the-season Quilcene oysters, definitely not kosher.
"You
want to tell me what you found out about Barky Tregarth?" I
asked him after his second double scotch arrived.
"Give
you a little back-story first. Long time ago, when I was young like
you and full of the same sort of sappy ideals, I got the goods on a
superior of mine named Ram Mahtani. A tipoff and a data-trail seemed
to show that Ram had taken juice—probably from the Carnelian
Concern—to quash an investigation into violations of the Y'tata
high-tech weaponry embargo. Mahtani had always been a decent boss to
me. And he was a devoted family man with a daughter who had lots of
medical problems. So before I filed a report with Internal Affairs, I
asked him if he had an explanation for the suspicious behavior."
I said,
"Oops."
"Exactly.
I used to be a hopeless softy. Anyhow, overnight the incriminating
data disappeared in a convenient computer crash, and my tipster
changed his story. Poof went the case against Mahtani. Three weeks
later I was bounced from Criminal Investigation, transferred to
Public Safety, and outward bound to a jerkwater world in the Perseus
Spur. Ram Mahtani took early retirement from CCID the following year
and became a highly paid security consultant for Carnelian."
"Sad."
I nibbled on a garlicky breadstick.
"I
remembered Ram when you asked me about Barky Tregarth. It's an open
secret that Carnelian wholesalers in remote Sectors wink at
contraband transactions. Their security people are alleged to keep a
secret roster of trustworthy smugglers. I contacted
Mahtani—anonymously, of course. He told me that Tregarth is
very much alive. I said that my client had a business proposition for
him and wasn't out to nail him. Mahtani might or might not have
believed that. His price for Barky's current alias and address is two
million in untraceable funds."
"Holy
shit!"
"I
told you you wouldn't like it."
"Like
it? I haven't
got it."
"Come
on. You own a quarterstake in Rampart, for chrissake. Two mil isn't
chump change, but it wouldn't even fuel that muscle starship of yours
for a round-trip to the Spur."
"Rampart
pays my fuel bills. I do get a sizable draw—a salary—as a
corporate officer, but I've been treating it like Monopoly money,
funneling almost all of it off to needy Re-versionist causes as soon
as it hits my account. I've done the same with the income from my
Rampart quarterstake."
"Tell
the party to give some of it back."
"It's
probably spent. You know pols."
The
succulent little oysters arrived. I gave them my full attention for
the few minutes it took to wolf them down.
Jake said,
"So you really can't hack the bribe? I thought all you Frosts
were richer than God."
"I
have some money of my own, but I was planning to use it to grease
Tregarth." And for other upcoming expenses. "You think this
Mahtani might haggle?"
"The
man's no street-corner fink, Helly. Two megabux was his price. And
you might want to think very seriously about why he set it so high."
I gave a
gloomy nod. "To see how badly some anonymous party wants old
Barky."
"Here."
Jake took a tiny notepad from his inner breast pocket, tore out a
page and handed it to me. "Mahtani's contact number."
The piece
of paper had a phone code scrawled on it. "An ultrasecure
routing server, I presume."
"Of
course ... And there's something else you should consider before you
deal with this joker. He's a top-notch professional investigator and
he has Carnelian resources to back him up. If you pay him, even with
a blind EFT, he might be able to track you down and screw up your
operation."
"Yeah.
Gran dinero leaves big footprints."
All I
needed was a Carnelian bloodsucker snatching Barky before I could
milk him. Or interrogating him after the fact, which would be even
worse—provided the guy did have crucial information about the
Haluk. Adam Stanislawski's warning about lethal retaliation from
threatened Haluk Consortium Concerns was still vivid in my memory.
The question was, did Ram Mahtani know enough about Barky's past to
make the Haluk connection?
Rats.
Maybe I'd have to forget about the old gunrunner. Unless I could
spike Mahtani's guns, get what I wanted while simultaneously warning
him off...
The waiter
appeared with our main course. We waited until he had finished
arraying the planks with their sizzling chunks of meat and the
various side dishes.
I said to
Jake, "I just had a brilliant idea. I'm going to try a loanshark
for that two mil. A very large shark that Mahtani might not want to
mess with."
Jake
shrugged. He tucked in with gusto while I entered a code into my
pocket phone. It was one that I had never had occasion to use before,
and I held my breath wondering whether the call would go through.
But a
familiar face finally appeared on the small screen. We stared at each
other for a moment and then I lifted the instrument to my ear,
cutting off the video.
"What
is it, Helly?"
"Sorry
to disturb you at home, sir. I have an urgent need for a large sum of
untraceable credit. Naturally I will personally repay the loan at a
future date, along with whatever interest you deem appropriate."
"I
see," Adam Stanislawski said. "How much?"
"Two
million, right now."
"Very
well."
"Can
you load a blind EFT card so that the hidden source of the funds will
be Macrodur, not A. E. Frost, Esquire?"
"Yes.
Is this payment going directly to the person I mentioned at the end
of our visit this afternoon?"
Crafty old
Adam. "Unfortunately not. It's a bribe to a go-between, a highly
placed informant in Carnelian who knows the whereabouts of this
person. The informant might be able to do me damage—but
probably wouldn't dare go up against you."
"The
name."
"Ram
Mahtani."
"I
understand completely."
"Let
me level with you: I can't afford this steep a bribe, even if I
wasn't scared stiff of Mahtani."
Stanislawski
laughed. "I can afford it. And I'm not afraid. Plug your card
into the phone."
I
complied. The instrument's data strip indicated a transfer of funds,
triple the amount I'd requested.
"A
contribution to the war chest," said the Macrodur chairman. "If
Tregarth comes through, you'd better bring him back to Earth for
safekeeping. Tell him I'll personally make it worth his while."
"Will
do. Thanks for the vote of confidence, sir."
He nodded
and broke off.
"So
that's how the simple folk do business," Jake marveled.
"You
ought to know," I said, very quietly.
He sat
still, his fork poised halfway to his mouth. The faintest trace of
guilt shadowed his eyes. Then he calmly resumed eating.
Gotcha,
Jake. How else would Adam Stanislawski have known about the Barky
Hunt?
I picked
up the phone again, engaging maximum encryption, a voice disguiser,
and a masked code of my own to accommodate the server-link to
Mahtani.
A
robot voice said,
Code entered. Please hold.
I put the
phone down and we ate and drank in silence for a few minutes. Jake
didn't meet my gaze. The Bordeaux was splendid and my chunk of
pampered Japanese cattle flesh so tender that it surrendered to the
knife with hardly any pressure. I only managed to gobble a few subtly
flavored quivering slices before my phone, sitting on the table
beside the asparagus, began to blink.
I picked
up and said, "Yes."
"Do
you accept my terms?" a disguised voice inquired. The view
screen remained blank.
"I
have the EFT card ready."
"Transmit
the agreed-upon honorarium."
I
sent the
mordida winging through the ether. Words popped up
instantly on my instrument's readout strip.
——
BARNEY
CORNWALL-PHLEGETHON, ZONE 3
——
"It
has been my pleasure to assist you," said Mahtani, or whomever.
"The information is accurate, as of today. Good evening."
And he was
gone.
I showed
the phone to Jake. "Where is this place? I've never heard of
it."
He munched
a 'shroom redolent of shallots, wine, and exotic Crustacea before
answering.
"It's
a hollow asteroid in a Sheltok Sagittarian system. One of the way
stations for Shel UH carriers traveling from assorted R-class
hellmouths in Zone 1 to the Orion Arm. Over the years, it attracted
small-time human operators who traded with the local Joru and Y'tata
worlds. The place expanded internally—sort of like an old tree
getting hollowed out by more and more termite galleries. Now
Phlegethon is a entrepot for all kinds offences and sleazy little
trading outfits. Some are even legitimate."
"Sounds
like a perfect place for Barky."
"Let's
see if his Barney Cornwall alias computes," Jake said.
He pulled
out his own personal communicator, a police jobbie with more bells
and whistles than mine, unfolded it, and summoned information from
the CCID database. There was no trace of Barky Tregarth's revised
moniker in any official listing.
"Can
you get direct access to the Phlegethon resident census through
Sheltok?" I asked.
"Officially,
no. Unofficially ..." He entered a confidentiality override
code, but gave a muttered curse of disappointment. "No one using
the Cornwall or Tregarth names is on the asteroid's roster. Mahtani
could have jerked us around, but I don't think so. He has a certain
reputation to maintain. I think old Barky is lying low. You'll just
have to go to Phlegethon and start digging." He grinned at me.
"I'd lay odds that he'll know somebody's looking for him, too."
"It
figures," I said. "What else can you tell me about that
part of the galaxy? How about checking the ZP crime stats for Zone
3?"
He did so.
"Hmm ... There's been a severe outbreak of piracy in those parts
during the last couple of years. Twenty-one Sheltok megacarriers
vanished without a trace, and others had close calls. I can get
details from Zone Patrol."
"I'd
be obliged."
His search
indicated that the energy-ship attacks had been laid at the doorstep
of Y'tata freebooters, denounced—but of course!—as
outlaws by the righteous Y Federation. Jake popped me a data-dime
with full particulars and I filed it for later study.
"There
could have been other hijackings that Sheltok didn't report to ZP,"
Jake said. There was something elusive in his tone that I didn't pick
up on immediately. "Just rumors."
I nodded.
Sheltok might have good reasons of their own not to publicize the
attacks, especially if they'd been skimping on fleet security. It was
unusual for Y'tata crooks to be hijacking transactinides so
aggressively. They were an ancient race of nearly humanoid albinos,
with about a thousand planetary colonies on both sides of Red Gap.
But their population was nearly stable, and they seemed content to
piddle along with their relatively low-tech interstellar
civilization, only occasionally resorting to piracy. Since they owned
long-established ultraheavy element sources of their own in the
Whorl, their marauders usually targeted freighters with more
generalized cargoes ...
For a
while we ate in silence. I finished my main course and began on the
salad. The nittany ears were crisp and tart, just the way I like
them.
After a
time Jake said casually, "You planning to head for the Sag?"
"In a
few days, maybe. If Barky's inside that Sagittarian rock, I'll find
him and wring him dry. Whether he has any useful information for me
is another matter."
"He
might run," Jake said. "Mahtani is sure to warn him that
someone's very anxious to meet him."
"I'm
betting he'll stay put, take precautions, and see what the deal is. I
would, if I was in his position."
"Whole
lotta money to pay, long way to go, on an off chance."
I gave him
a cynical look. "Adam Stanislawski already knows why I'm
interested in Barky Tregarth. No need to pump me, Jake."
He grinned
sheepishly. "What can I say?"
Not much,
I thought.
"You're
wondering what
my price was," Jake went on. "The
answer is: zero, zilch, zippo. You know I owe the Big M even more
than I owe you. For my posting home. The agreement was, if I ever
came across anything that might affect Macrodur significantly, I was
to pass it along. Your peculiarly urgent need to interview Tregarth,
a guy who once engaged in illicit trade with the Haluk, tripped the
alarm."
"You're
a smart cop, Chief Superintendent."
"And
you're a crazy hotdogger. When you get on somebody's case,
meshugeneh
things happen. I remember Helly's Comet. I remember Cravat and
Dagasatt. So you won't tell me what you want with Barky. But I happen
to know that the guy's only claim to fame is a drunken boast that he
once went to the Haluk Cluster and got back to tell the tale."
"Bull's-eye."
I refilled his empty wineglass.
He eyed me
with what might have been real concern. "You're not planning to
go after Tregarth alone, are you? It wouldn't be wise. The old kocker
didn't pick a dump like Phlegethon as a retirement haven. He's still
on the job."
There were
people I might have asked to join me on the Barky Hunt: a smart young
bodybuilder and an ex-ZP officer who'd started as hired hands and
later became my friends; a small group of retired Rampart security
agents recruited by Karl Nazarian to assist my semilegal campaign
against Galapharma; even several private investigators I'd worked
with during my Reversionist period. But Ivor Jenkins was far away in
the Perseus Spur, operating his own gym on Seriphos, and Ildiko Szabo
had taken over the wholesale flower business of her aging parents in
Hungary. I'd lost touch with Karl's Over-the-Hill Gang during the
long trial, and the Pi's were experienced in ferreting out capital
chicanery, not crewing deep-space rumbles.
Going
after Barky Tregarth alone seemed a perfectly feasible option.
Phlegethon would certainly cater to Joru traders as well as Y'tata,
since both races lived in that sector of the galaxy. This fact had
suggested to me a way I might visit the place under cover. I had no
intention of telling Jake Silver about my scheme, however.
"Thanks
for the warning, Chief Super. Actually, I'm planning to muster my
usual task force of space dreadnaughts and a brigade of commandos for
the Barky bust. You can't afford to take chances with senile
gunrunners."
"Not
Tregarth, you putz. His friends. I'm serious."
"Y'tata
pirates? Or are you talking about Carnelian's thugs? Or Sheltok's?"
"All
of the above—and maybe a wild card as well." He paused for
an uncomfortable beat. "There might be funny business going on
out there involving the Haluk."
My jaw
sagged. "Why didn't you say so before?" I demanded, none
too politely. "You know you can set your own price."
Jake
winced. "I suppose I deserve that... But what I know, you can
have for free. God knows it's little enough. A single report, about
eighteen months ago, kept ex-database by special order of Xenoaffairs
to avoid distressing our new blue trading partners. A patrol cruiser
responded to an emergency call—the attempted hijack of a
Sheltok trans-ack carrier in the Zone 3 section of Red Gap. The
patrol captain claimed that they scanned four bandits during the
attack. Three were typical Y'tata pirates. The fourth ship was a hell
of a lot faster, with a slightly different fuel signature. It hung
back during the firefight, then broke off and ran with the others.
ZPV conformation scan of number four was futzed by weaponry EMI
during the encounter, but the bandit wasn't human. Or Joru or
Kalleyni, either. The fuel signature might have been Haluk."
"In
the Sagittarius Whorl? That's crazy! Too far from their Spur
colonies, way beyond their lines of supply."
Jake sawed
away at the remains of the T-bone. "I heard about it from a
half-drunk ZP Assistant Deputy Commissioner at a fuckin' cocktail
party. We were discussing the Haluk expansion in the Perseus Spur.
Their starships are all over Zone 23 now, scoping out potential
colonies, trading with the Rampart worlds. Blueberry scouts have even
been seen in the outer Orion Arm—and mere was this one
anomalous spotting in the Sag, which might or might not have been
Haluk."
"It
makes no sense. Why would they go there? And why throw in with Y'tata
trans-ack nabbers? The Haluk don't need to steal ultraheavy elements.
They
sell them, for chris-sake. The notion's ridiculous on the
face of it."
"Right.
Whole lotta ridiculous shit going down these days. I'm glad I'm just
a simple desk cop who doesn't have to worry about such things."
The waiter
materialized. "Can I interest you gentlemen in our dessert
menu?"
"What
d'you think, Jake?" I inquired. "This might be our last
meal together for quite a spell."
"Coffee
and cognac," the Chief Super said. "I don't suppose you
have any Ferrand Reserve Ancestrale?"
"Of
course. An excellent choice."
"Two,"
I said.
The waiter
nodded and went away.
"Figuring
to get in one last lick before riding into the sunset?" I asked
Jake sadly. The cognac was one of Earth's finest, and the price was
cosmological.
"I
guess that's up to you, Helly. Serve me right if you shit-canned our
friendship."
"Problem
with that, I haven't got very many. Friends, that is." And he
hadn't really done me any harm by telling Macrodur about the Barky
Hunt. Maybe just the opposite.
"How
about I pay for the Ferrand?" he suggested. "Peace
offering."
"Peace
is good," I said.
When the
waiter returned with the cognac and coffee, we drank to it.
——
I saw Jake
off on the Yonge Street subway, which would whisk him to his home in
German Mills in about fifteen minutes, then started down the Path to
the Winter Garden Theater, a twenty-minute walk south of Carman's
restaurant.
The
commuter rush had slackened a little now that the day-shift workers
from the towers had left and those on the evening watch were settled
in, but there were still throngs of pedestrians heading for downtown
attractions: shopping, nightlife, amusement, fine dining, and most
especially the innumerable watering holes where congenial
companionship of one sex or another awaited trolling lonelies.
I got onto
a very crowded moving walkway. Many of its riders were striding along
to enhance their groundspeed, but I stood still at the far right
side, since I was in no particular hurry. I was jostled often and
hard by impatient passers, but thought nothing of it until a
particularly sharp jab insulted my left hip and made me grunt with
pain. The guy who did it sped past without an apology. He was small
and slightly built, wearing a bomber jacket and carrying a bulky
portfolio of the type favored by commercial artists.
I stepped
off the conveyor at a Jolie Jacqueline lingerie shop, cursing mildly.
My assailant had left the moving walkway ahead of me and was skipping
nimbly across the mainstream of pedestrian traffic on the opposite
side of the concourse. He disappeared into a corridor leading to the
Bodascon Tower escalators.
There was
a small hole in the side of my anorak that looked almost like a stab
from an icepick. The armored lining was visible and the edges of the
hole seemed wet. What the hell had Bomber Jacket hit me with—a
large pen or some other sharp artist's implement? Mellow with
expensive alcohol and the heavy dinner, it never occurred to me that
the poke hadn't been accidental. My survival instincts, which had
been on red alert during the perils of the late Galapharma takeover,
were rusty after nearly three years of disuse.
I looked
up at the opulent window display of silk and lace in Jolie
Jacqueline. A thought came to me, a way to repay Jake's favor while
simultaneously playing a mild practical joke to point up his
treachery. I stepped into the shop.
"May
I be of assistance, m'sieu?" A saleswoman of a certain age,
wearing a little black dress, approached me with an encouraging
smile. Her name badge said annette. She did a very creditable French
accent.
I flicked
off my intimidating privacy visor in a gesture of civility. "Would
you please show me your very nicest nightgown and peignoir set? I'm
not sure of the size, but I think I can eyeball it."
"Of
course. Let me bring you several choices."
I followed
Annette to a counter. The items she showed me were very pricey
indeed. I selected an ensemble in cherry-red silk chiffon with lots
of lace inserts, gave her my corporate EFT card, and consulted my
phone dex for the home address of Chief Superintendent Jake Silver
and his wife of twenty-eight years.
"I'd
like the package gift-wrapped and sent to Marie Warrener, 163 Linden
Crescent, German Mills, Markham."
"Certainly,
m'sieu. Will there be an enclosure?"
I
took one of the tiny cards she offered and wrote,
From your
adoring Snuggle-Puppy, Jake.
While
Annette wrapped Marie's present, I wandered idly around the small
shop, indulging a fantasy or two. There were no other customers in
Jolie Jacqueline. The place had a boudoir decor with soft lights,
gauzy hangings, discreetly semitransparent holograms of lovely ladies
modeling sexy underthings, and a lot of gold-framed mirrors. In one
of the angled ones I caught a close-up glimpse of my own back.
Right at
rump level, the Anonyme's outer fabric had been perforated twice
more. Around each small hole was a dampish corona.
I felt my
throat tighten. Those earlier jostlings on the walkway had been less
vigorous attempts to stab me. The wet spots suggested that Bomber
Jacket had tried to inject me with an unknown substance, probably
poison.
Damn!
Think, Hetty, think. Get your sozzled brain back in gear.
A random
attack by a psycho? It had been known to happen, even in beautiful
cosmopolitan Toronto.
Had Ram
Mahtani traced me after all and taken out a contract on my life now
that he had his money? Impossible. The time frame was too tight and
the motive wasn't there.
Had Jake
Silver sold out my ass to somebody other than Stanislawski? No way.
It made sense that Jake would nark on me to Macrodur in a manner that
did me no particular harm. That he'd be an accessory to my murder was
inconceivable.
Think,
Hetty, think.
Bomber
Jacket could have trailed me from the moment I left Rampart Tower. If
he was a real pro, he could have ID'ed me easily through a body
language analysis, in spite of the concealing Anonyme. Everybody has
a distinctive walk, individual arm and head mannerisms. During my
brief political fling the media had made countless holovids of me. My
motion signature would be easily obtainable.
So who
genuinely wanted me dead?
The minor
villains in Galapharma had been neutralized long ago. If Gala's
ex-CEO, Alistair Drummond, was still alive, he was certainly crazy
enough to come after me out of revenge. But Bomber Jacket himself
wasn't Drummond. My old nemesis was a tall Scotsman with a princely
bearing, not a skittering runt. And why would Drummond have waited so
long?
The
only others who had any motive for killing me shouldn't have known
yet that I was an immediate threat to their galactopolitical
ambitions. But maybe the Haluk had other reasons for wanting me out
of the picture. The article in the
Journal would have reminded
them that I was now at leisure and once again in a position to cause
them serious trouble in the Commonwealth Assembly.
And if
there were still Haluk demiclone agents in Galapharma's woodwork,
they might have learned about Lorne Buchanan's transfer of
incriminating data from the Concern's computer to that of Efrem
Sontag.
I let out
an involuntary snarl of disgust. My night at the theater was a scrub.
I'd have to get back to the safety of Rampart Tower as quickly as
possible, then lie low until I could take off for the Sagittarius
Whorl—
"Is
there another way I can be of assistance, m'sieu?"
Annette
had snuck up on me. "No thanks. I was just checking a rip in my
jacket."
I turned
my visor back on and drifted to the door. Blank-faced, I carefully
studied the crowd outside. There was no sign of Bomber Jacket. I
exited the shop and walked a few meters away to put a solid wall at
my back, then took out my phone and called Rampart Internal Security.
"InSec.
Duty Officer Callahan."
"This
is Asahel Frost, Sean. I need a squad to come and get me. I'm on the
Path between Bodascon and Daimler Towers. Someone just tried to stab
me. Three times. My jacket armor saved me."
Sean
Callahan stifled an exclamation. "I understand. I'll have bike
patrol cops get to you immediately. Just activate your personal
emergency beacon. Meanwhile, my situation team will take a hopper to
Bodascon skyport and—"
"No.
I don't want Bodascon Security involved." The colossal aerospace
Concern was a prominent member of the Haluk Consortium. "Or
Toronto Public Safety, either. This has got to be kept quiet. Now
listen carefully. Put three of your plainclothes people on the subway
at Osgoode. Let them come up the loop from the south. I'll backtrack
north on the Path and meet them at College Station."
"The
subway!" Callahan was incredulous. "It would really
be safer If you remained right where you are, under police guard, and
we flew in. If you don't want a touch at Bodascon skyport we could
come via Daimler."
"The
hit man ran up into Bodascon. He could call for reinforcements from—"
I shut my mouth. I hadn't seen any Haluk pedestrians for a long time,
but their embassy was only a couple of blocks away. However, I didn't
want to share my suspicion of the aliens with a low-level employee
like Callahan.
"Sir?"
I said, "I
think the perp is long gone. I'm safer moving with the crowd than
standing still. The call is mine to make, Sean. Have your troops meet
me at College Station. We can all take a nice slow taxi ride to
Rampart Tower. Frost out."
I started
back the way I'd come, not using the moving walkway and staying near
a wall whenever possible. There were only two short blocks to go. The
crowds were thicker, but the hustle and bustle seemed entirely
normal. I made it to the subway intersection without incident and
turned east. Access to the transit station above was via an
escalator. I got on a rising step just behind a young woman in a red
coat who carried a Bergdorf shopping bag.
We'd
nearly reached the upper level when I felt a stinging sensation in my
left calf. Almost instantly my body's voluntary muscles began to
freeze. I felt myself toppling toward the woman. She made a dismayed
noise.
"Whoa!
Easy there, Fred. We gotcha, ol' buddy."
A man two
steps below came up beside me and took hold of my arms to support me.
Another guy joined him immediately. Stiff as a board from the
injected paralytic, I felt small objects being shoved into each of my
armpits. All of a sudden I wasn't falling anymore; I was floating.
The faces
of my assailants were unremarkable. The first wore a black leather
car coat and blue jeans. The other had a brown fleece jacket over a
business suit and carried a sport duffelbag on a shoulder strap,
which must have concealed the injector. The pair worked together, one
at my side and the other on the step below, clamping my upper arms
firmly to my body and keeping a tight grip on my elbows. The
anti-grav devices in my pits made manhandling me a snap.
Boozy
fumes wafted from somewhere. I presumed one of the goons had spritzed
it onto me to enhance the charade of drunkenness. The woman in the
red coat stared over her shoulder with ill-concealed disgust, and so
did a few rub-beraeckers on the adjacent descending escalator. Thanks
to the Anonyme, no one could see the twisted expression of fury on my
face.
"We'll
take care of him," Black Leather told the woman glibly. "Not
to worry. Sorry if he bumped into you."
"Poor
old Fred," Brown Fleece added. "He had a really bad day,
y'know? Lost a major client, then tried to kill the pain with too
many vodka martinis."
The woman
turned her back on us. Some of the other stair riders looked
sympathetic.
"You
just take it easy, mate," Black Leather told me in a jovial
voice. "Try not to throw up on these nice people. We'll get you
safe to a taxi and home to beddy-bye."
"What're
drinking buddies for?" Brown Fleece chimed in. "You're
gonna be okay, except for a helluva hangover tomorrow."
I tried to
speak. Couldn't produce more than a breathy croak.
My
cowboy-booted feet floated a centimeter off the ground as the
escalator reached the subway station level. There were no Rampart
Security personnel existing the standing train. Probably they'd be
along on the next one, for all the good it would do me.
I wafted
between the pair of abductors like a human balloon. They steered me
onto another escalator going up to the street, continuing their
solicitous patter. I was just another upper-class lush being helped
along by friends.
Outside,
we crossed Dundas Square. Pedestrians averted their eyes. A bike cop
gave us the once-over, decided all was cool. We moved along the
sidewalk, turned into a narrow lane amidst a row of small historic
houses that huddled beneath a stubby business tower. The crowd
thinned immediately and the streetlighting became less intense.
A Mercedes
limousine was parked illegally at the exit of an underground parking
lot. Its doors opened as one of my captors zapped it with a remote
control. They removed the lifting devices under my arms and eased me
into a forward-facing seat in the capacious passenger section. Black
Leather got in beside me. Brown Fleece tossed his duffel in front and
slipped behind the wheel, leaving the sliding privacy panel open. The
car doors shut.
Fleece
addressed the car navigator. "Enter Ottawa Highroad eastbound.
Go to Express Lane Six. Go to Peterborough 122. Exit highroad
northbound and revert to manual control."
En
route, said the car.
We were
off, circling around Ryerson Tower and hanging a right to the on-ramp
of the highroad. A longish wait in line until it was our turn to
accelerate—then up, up and away, thirty meters above the
teeming city on an elevated twelve-lane ribbon, our limousine guided
precisely into the far-left express lane where motorists in a hurry
paid a premium toll to travel at speeds of 300 kph. Unfortunately,
because of tonight's heavy volume of traffic, the express lane was
limited to a mere 230 kph, while the five nonpremium east-bound lanes
limped along at 170.
Any hope I
might have entertained that my kidnappers were human melted away when
Leather said something to Fleece in the Haluk language. Fleece
laughed—not human-style, but in the throttled-puppy mirth idiom
of the blue aliens.
Black
Leather reached into the right sleeve of my Anonyme and flicked the
switch. The visor blinked off and the security catch unlocked. He
pushed off my hood and spoke to me in Standard English.
"If
you make a very strong effort, you'll be able to blink your eyes. I
suggest you do it as often as possible to avoid desiccated corneas.
You should voluntarily swallow your saliva, too, unless you enjoy
drooling. The drug has no other unpleasant side effects. The rest of
your autonomic nervous system should remain safely operational until
we give you the antidote later." He smiled. "Much later."
I managed
a grunt, then blinked and swallowed.
It wasn't
hard to do, it was rather easy. And my previously numb toes and
ringers and tongue were starting to tingle.
Hello!
They'd
shot me with a toxin that preserved consciousness, going for the leg
after my armored anorak had foiled the body hits. A jab in the lower
calf would have worked nicely on somebody wearing conventional
executive footgear.
But I was
a cowboy.
The
injector had penetrated the tough leather of my boot with difficulty.
It must have been slightly deflected and failed to deliver the entire
dose. I'd taken in enough chemical to paralyze me, but the stuff
might already be starting to wear off.
I sat
absolutely still. We were traveling through the rainy night, out from
under the force-umbrella now, soaring over Toronto's eastern suburbs.
I speculated briefly upon the reason why my captors hadn't taken me
to the Haluk embassy or even Oshawa Starport out in Lake Ontario
rather than heading out of town toward Peterborough.
North of
the interchange at kilometer 122 were roads leading into the
Kawarthas, a picturesque region of lakes, rolling woodlands, and
pretty little towns: Bridgenorth and scores of other dormitory
exurbs, modest art colonies and resorts like Fenelon Falls where my
friend Bea Mangan and her husband had a technocottage, enclaves of
stunning affluence such as Mount Julian, where top Concern executives
maintained pseudorustic pieds-a-terre on Stony Lake.
Come to
think of it, when he wasn't hunkered down at Galapharma HQ in
Glasgow, Alistair Drummond had lived up in the Kawarthas, too ...
The
demiclones talked freely to each other in the difficult Haluk
language, confident that their paralyzed prisoner, like so many lazy
translator-addicted Earthlings, was unable to understand them.
Mistake.
——
During my
politically active phase, when I was eloquently disparaging the
secretiveness of the Haluk before one of the commerce committees and
it looked as though the Delegates were starting to take me seriously,
the Servant of Servants of Luk made a diplomatic gesture intended to
defuse a deteriorating public relations situation.
The
Haluk leader proposed a guided tour of Artiuk, their principal colony
in the Perseus Spur, to show that his race had nothing to hide. The
invitation was extended to twelve influential members of the
committee, three media representatives from
Newsweek, Cosmos
Today, and the
Times ... and me, badass motormouth
celebrity. Because of delicate Haluk cultural inhibitions, no
audiovisual recording devices would be allowed; but we visitors would
be able to dictate copious notes into handheld computers.
The SSL's
invitation was eagerly accepted.
Alone
among my human colleagues, I chose to take a sleep-course in the
Haluk language during the eight-day trip out to the Spur. It was
something I'd been meaning to do for a long time: know thine enemy,
and all that. The other members of the group opted for the greater
convenience and
efficiency of mechanical translators. I
intended to wear one, too; but I'd hatched a vague plan to discard
the thing conspicuously at some point during the tour, hoping to
provoke our Haluk hosts into making imprudent comments in the belief
that I wouldn't understand them.
As it
happened, my subterfuge wasn't necessary. The translators worn by us
humans malfunctioned almost from the first moment we set foot on
Artiuk—perhaps because its solar system was in the throes of a
sudden ionic storm, perhaps for another reason altogether. Whatever
the source of the problem, the fritzed-out devices reduced Haluk
speech to incomprehensible gibberish, and they could not be repaired
with the tools available on the alien world.
This might
have put a serious damper on our visit, had not the Servant of
Servants graciously provided each one of us with an English-speaking
Haluk escort. These high-ranking officials of his personal staff
subsequently accompanied us everywhere and filtered all conversations
between us and the Artiuk locals.
The Haluk
facial structure is not conducive to emotional display. I was able to
discern that the instant translations the guides provided us were
often very creative.
As I'd
expected, the "fact-finding tour" turned out to be little
more than a puff job. It revealed only superficial aspects of Haluk
life and absolutely nothing about their military-industrial
capability. We were allowed close contact only with gracile-phase
humanoid individuals.
"It
would be depressing for you to meet the poor lepido-dermoids, much
less view the dormant testudinals," our hosts said, gently
reproving curious members of the delegation. "And besides, there
are no longer very many nongracile Haluk residing on Artiuk, thanks
to the miracle of your PD32:C2 genetic engineering vector, which has
changed our lives so marvelously by eradicating the curse of
allomorphism."
So we saw
what the Haluk wanted us to see: performances of dissonant Haluk
music, displays of beautiful Haluk artwork, timid Haluk children at
crowded primary schools who presented us with bouquets of alien
flowers, Haluk agronomists operating impressive hydroponic farms that
grew produce mildly poisonous to the human digestive tract. It was
all very edifying, and to sophisticated human galaxy trotters, duller
than belly-button lint.
Unless one
happened to understand what the non-English-speaking Haluk were
actually saying about their distinguished visitors.
The adults
hated our collective entrails because we had cruelly stalled Haluk
emigration to the Milky Way and charged extortionate prices for
PD32:C2 and other vital technology. The poor little Haluk kids were
scared rigid of us because the adults had told them that humans were
cannibals who ate misbehaving children.
I did my
best to share eavesdropped intelligence with the Assembly Delegates
and the reporters, but my well-known anti-Haluk bias bent my
credibility. In the end the relentless hospitality of the Servant of
Servants and his minions won the hearts of our group.
When we
returned to Earth, the media special reports were glowing. A month
later the Haluk treaties were ratified by the Assembly.
From my
alarmist point of view, the trip had been worse than useless. All I'd
really gained was a superficial knowledge of an abstruse alien
tongue, most of which faded from my mind almost immediately.
But not
all of it.
——
Under
computer control, the limousine roared along the storm-lashed
elevated road. The rain was now mixed with ice pellets. Brown Fleece
relaxed behind the wheel, lit a cigarette—the vice had spread
like wildfire among the blue aliens resident on Earth—and spoke
in the Haluk language to the leather-jacketed demiclone seated at my
right.
"Blah
blah will be up a copulatory orifice because we are so late. One
fears the road
blah blah blah. It is the last day of the
normal human work
blah and
blah blah blah"
Black
Leather said, "One might as well be fighting the
blah back
home on
[some Haluk planet]. Great Almighty Luk help our
blah
posteriors if we
blah blah blah"
Fleece:
"One is carefully watching the
blah blah. At present the
sky road is
blah all the way to Peterborough."
Leather:
"Thank Almighty Luk ..."
The
demiclones were complaining about Friday night traffic. Welcome to
the club.
Fleece
said, "One presumes that our next
blah blah will be to
take the brother."
What!
Leather:
"Ru Balakalak will decide. The angry human
blah still
strongly resists that idea. He
blah blah blah. And he thinks
the brother lacks
blah blah."
I exerted
all my willpower to avoid flinching in dismay. Were these turkeys
referring to my disreputable brother Daniel?
Fleece:
"This one believes the revised plan using the brother is
superior. And the
blah younger sister would
blah blah blah
his disappearance."
Leather:
"Perhaps. The brother is surely more easily
blah than the
appalling human
blah. But does he possess
blah blah to
accomplish
blah blah blah!"
Fleece:
"Maybe not, if one can trust
blah of the angry human
blah."
Leather:
"Curse all humans! The plan itself is excellent but
blah blah
of it stinks like lepido nose wax. This one will continue to urge
strongly that a Haluk
blah blah be used, rather than any human
blah."
Fleece:
"Who will listen to one? Ru Balakalak leads. He is a stubborn
[epithet] and favors the quickest
blah blah in order to
please the Servant of Servants. The danger
blah blah blah."
Leather:
"[Epithet.] One wishes we would
blah blah blah and
put an end to it."
Fleece:
"We are not ready. One knows that. When we are ready, it will
happen."
There
followed an interval of portentous silence, during which I felt my
guts twisting into a granny knot. Were they talking about an attack
against humanity? And what kind of plan would they have that would
involve me, my wretched brother, my sister Beth, and another human? I
was trying to sort this out when my thoughts were suddenly
interrupted by a resounding Haluk curse from Black Leather.
"Are
we slowing down?" he called out to his compatriot. "We
are!"
Up
front, Brown Fleece was studying the navigation display, which was
not visible from the passenger compartment. "Almighty Luk! The
blah indicates a
blah blahl" He broke into a
tirade of alien vituperation.
Black
Leather spoke impatiently to the car in Standard English. "Navigator,
why is traffic decelerating?"
The
robot voice said,
A vehicle on-board computer has malfunctioned
catastrophically and caused a multiple-car accident with injuries at
kilometer 100.4. All six eastbound lanes are blocked at that point.
A sea of
red brakelights glowed in the sleet storm outside as the marvelous
automated speedway reverted to ox-road status. Pavement deicing
equipment had kicked in, adding clouds of steam to the atmospheric
melange.
"Exit!"
Leather commanded his associate. "Hurry, before we are
blah\"
But we had
just passed the ramp at Enniskillen. Fleece asked the navigator,
"What is our next exit option?"
Exit
80, the Lindsay-Clarington freeway, fifteen kilometers ahead.
Estimated time of arrival at this exit is now approximately 21:10
hours.
Black
Leather spat more exotic obscenities and smacked his fist furiously
against the refreshment console just in front of our seat. Our speed
was now less than 40 kph and still dropping. We were going to be hung
up for over an hour, creeping at a snail's pace toward the next exit
together with hundreds of other luxury vehicles and their fuming
occupants.
I wiggled
my toes. The tingling had faded.
"Can
we not summon an aircraft to
blah us out of this
fex-pletiveJT' Black Leather asked his companion.
The
limousine, of course, could be programmed to exit the highroad all by
itself if we were evacuated via hopper. Perhaps other trapped bigwig
motorists were also considering that extreme option, although private
aircraft were forbidden to land on the highroad, and the storm made
the prospect of being winched into the sky through the roof hatch an
uninviting one.
Fleece
said, "One doubts that would save significant time, since our
blah blah aircraft are
blah at Mount Julian."
Leather
groaned.
"[Convoluted expletive.] Then we are truly
blah,
my friend."
"One
must
blah blah our delay." Fleece began to speak in an
undertone into the driver's communicator.
Muttering,
the alien sitting on my right opened the refreshment console and took
out a packet of cigarettes. The limo was rolling more and more
slowly. At speeds of less than 10 kph it would be possible to unlock
the doors manually from the inside.
I flexed
the fingers of my left hand. They worked. So did the other muscles of
that arm, which I tensed gingerly without making any suspicious
motion. The paralyzing agent seemed to have almost worn off.
Right.
Wait for the moment.
Slower.
Slower.
Now.
Black
Leather was holding a flameless electric lighter to his smoke. I
slammed a roundhouse left hook into his face, singeing my knuckles on
the glowing cigarette tip as I drove it and the red-hot lighter
against his mouth.
He let out
a hideous cry and clawed at me like a madman. I slammed his head down
onto the console and flicked the lock switch. In the front seat,
Brown Fleece whirled around, gabbling in Haluk. He was too far away
to reach me. I tore open my door, dropped outside onto the road
shoulder, picked myself up, and stumbled toward the inner guardrail.
Fleece was
opening his own door as I vaulted over the barrier onto the median
safety catwalk that separated the eastbound highroad lanes from the
westbound. It was very cold. Traffic was now nearly at a standstill
on our side, and vapor from melting pavement ice swirled amidst the
driving sleet. Crouching low, I raced back the way we'd come,
forgetting that I would be silhouetted against the headlights of
oncoming cars. I still wore my Anonyme anorak. With the hood off I
was half blinded by the torrent of stinging sleet pellets. They
hissed against the vehicle surfaces like a nest of rattlesnakes,
almost drowning out the roar of turbo engines powering the
automobiles of more fortunate motorists in the open westbound lanes.
Solid
ground lay thirty meters below the catwalk grating, hidden by mist
and the purple glow of the powerful anti-gravity reticulum that
buoyed up the ribbon of reinforced pavement. The AG field was
generated by machinery housed in huge pylons situated every 500
meters along the highroad. The only emergency exits for pedestrians
were inside those pylons. Under normal conditions, auto breakdown
service and ambulance evacuation for accident victims were
accomplished by Highroad Authority hoppercraft. The police used
hoppers, too.
Over the
noise of the westbound traffic and the storm I heard ominous sharp
pinging sounds. A volley of stun-darts zipped around me, striking the
ceramalloy stanchions and railings.
Running
flat-out along the catwalk, I managed to pull up my armored anorak
hood an instant before one of the darts struck the back of my skull
and bounced off. The impact caused me to see stars momentarily and
stagger with pain.
I
recovered my senses, belatedly realized that the unimpeded stretch of
catwalk was a perfect shooting gallery, and flung myself back over
the railing onto the shoulder. Bobbing and swerving, I darted like a
cockroach into the six lanes of crawling cars, now spaced precisely
three meters apart by the traffic-control computer. A few startled
drivers honked and flashed their headlights frantically. Most of them
ignored me.
Brown
Fleece was galloping along the shoulder, showing no inclination to
follow me out among the moving cars. Darts loaded with sleepy-juice
flew through the sleet-streaked headlight beams like supercharged
fireflies, missed me, and ricocheted off the vehicles.
Nobody
opened a car door and invited me inside to safety.
My bruised
head hurt like hell. The sleet was changing to heavy flakes of wet
snow and visibility was terrible.
Another
dart hit me in the back of my armored jacket. I thanked God that my
vulnerable legs were shielded by the surrounding cars. All I could do
was continue to zigzag through the traffic jam, taking small comfort
from the realization that Brown Fleece certainly had orders to take
me alive. His weapon was probably an Ivanov stun-pistol that
typically fired small missiles with a limited range. It would be
virtually impossible for the Haluk demiclone to use the gun's
none-too-reliable autotargeter system while taking snap shots in a
storm.
I was
moving faster than Fleece, but for a time he nearly kept pace with
me, not having to lose ground by dodging. Two more darts hit my right
arm and upper body, painful but not incapacitating. There was a lull
in firing when he might have replaced the magazine, then the pops
came faster and more furiously. All of the darts missed. I had pulled
well ahead of him.
Less than
a hundred meters away was one of the massive pylon structures, barely
visible in the thickening snow. If I reached it I could escape down
the emergency stairway that spiraled through its interior. Perhaps
the alien wouldn't follow. Some of the motorists might have reported
the running gun battle to the police by now, if only because of
superficial damage done to their expensive vehicles by the fusillade
of stun-darts.
I
heard a distant shout in the Haluk language and understood only one
word:
coming.
I didn't
dare look over my shoulder, but I had a bad feeling that Black
Leather had pulled his scorched shit together and joined the chase.
Slush was beginning to accumulate underfoot in spite of the deicing
grid.
Run,
Helly, run! It's not far now. Don't slow down ...
But I was.
Residual chemicals circulating in my bloodstream had diminished my
stamina. My lungs were on fire, my vision was going blurry and weird,
and my leg muscles were seizing up.
Rats.
The two
Haluk behind me were shouting back and forth to each other. No one in
the soundproofed vehicles would hear them, much less catch the alien
intonation. Brown Fleece had once again stopped shooting at me with
the Ivanov. Maybe he was out of ammo.
I quit
jinking among the cars and did a straight sprint, tearing along the
line of glowing little eyes that divided lane five from lane four,
squinting into the misty headlight glare. Snow pelted my face. My
mind was empty of all thought except attaining the shelter of the
massive pylon that arched above the road ahead of me, floodlit and
crowned with ruby aircraft-warning lights.
I was only
forty meters away when I skidded on a slippery patch, lost my
footing, and crashed to the slushy pavement right in front of a
slow-moving Volvo taxi. I rolled aside just in time to avoid being
crushed, then heard a sudden loud noise followed by shrill female
screaming.
My fall
had apparently saved me. I hauled myself up and saw that the
safety-glass windshield of the Acura sedan next in line had been
holed and spiderwebbed by a missile. The hysterical woman behind the
wheel cowered away from the empty front passenger seat, where a slim
black object with a distinctive shape was embedded in the headrest.
It was a magnum stun-flechette from an Allenby SM-440 or some other
high-powered carbine. Black Leather had brought in heavy artillery.
"Lady,
get down!" I yelled. She dropped out of sight, still wailing, as
her car moved on. A second flechette barely missed my head and soared
over the traffic into the darkness beyond lane one.
I took a
dive myself, scrambling along on hands and knees, hugging the shelter
of the slow-rolling automobiles. Then Black Leather changed his
tactics. Big darts began to whiz beneath the vehicles, clanging
occasionally against their undercarriages and wheels. The flechettes
were no danger to the cars' self-sealing tires or sturdy chassis, but
I wasn't at all sure that the thin armor of my anorak would protect
me from them.
Was
Leather using a warm-body scope or a light magnifier to spot me? The
capability of either one would have been stretched to the limit in a
snowstorm, with the target skittering among closely packed moving
cars whose engines radiated infrared, on a heated pavement swirling
with vapor. Maybe he wasn't trying to hit me at all, but hoping to
flush me out of the traffic so his buddy could shoot me on the side
of the road.
I went
into a crouch and duckwalked ludicrously between the lanes, splashing
through icy slop, doing my best to shield my legs under the skirts of
the anorak. God only knows what the passing motorists thought about
the wacky spectacle. Not a one had attempted to intervene personally.
In their place I'd have opted for noninvolvement, too.
The firing
stopped. So did I, a few minutes later.
I'd made
it—sort of.
I was
beneath the gargantuan pylon structure at last, shuddering with cold,
squatting between creeping streams of traffic in lane five and the
express lane. All I had to do now was cross the exposed shoulder,
pass through an opening in the inner guardrail, and climb three steps
onto a small platform where there was a door in the pylon wall. The
illuminated sign above it said:
——
EMERGENCY EXIT ONLY
USE PHONE TO SUMMON ASSISTANCE
——
If only!
The phone was on the wall right beside the door. As I contemplated
the useless instrument in bemusement, a single small Ivanov stun-dart
smacked into it and rattled onto the platform.
Wonderful.
Brown Fleece was back in the game, probably shooting from the median
catwalk, daring me to make a run for it.
What an
idiot. If he hadn't given himself away, I might have dashed right
across his field of fire. I tried without success to spot him in the
blowing snow and steam clouds outside the pylon archway, but I
figured that the dumb xeno couldn't be very far away. And his pal—
A magnum
flechette hummed past my head like a wasp. Its trajectory indicated
that Black Leather was firing from the same lane divider I was parked
on. A sudden gust of wind tore the mist and I saw him, his body
eerily illuminated by the lights of cars passing on either side. He
was no more than twenty-five meters away, with his carbine stock
against his cheek.
I was a
sitting duck.
"The
next dart will take you down, Frost!" he shouted. "Get up!
On your feet! Now!"
Why didn't
he just nail me where I was?
...
Because he was afraid that I'd convulse as the magnum load of toxin
hit me, fall under the wheels of a car and be injured or killed. The
earlier wild firing had been a panic response. Leather definitely
intended to herd me onto the road shoulder, where Brown Fleece would
drop me safely with the Ivanov.
An idea.
I turned
away from Black Leather, ignoring his shouts, and studied the
oncoming traffic in the express lane. A Volkswagen Lady Bug trundled
past, followed by one of those ass-dragger Maseratis—scant
shelter for a cowering fugitive. Behind the Italian car came an
enormous black Dodge Bighorn sport utility vehicle with chrome
rollbars and noseguards and great deep-tread balloon tires. It was
the kind of transport that intrepid wilderness travelers favor for
jaunts to Hudson Bay or the Canadian tundra. Silly role-players used
them for city commuting.
"Stand
up, Frost!" Black Leather yelled. He sent another flechette over
my head, missing me by a whisker. "On your feet, dammit!"
Instead, I
began to squirm and moan as though I'd been nicked, crumpling onto
the wet pavement. The Maserati passed by. As the lumbering SUV drew
even with me, I rolled sideways beneath it, caught hold of an
ice-encrusted shock absorber inside the monstrous right front wheel,
hooked one leg over a transmission bracket and hoisted myself off the
ground.
Screamed
my lungs out. Then shut up abruptly.
I could
hear the two Haluk demiclones bellowing incomprehensibly at each
other in their own language. Would the ruse work? Only if Fleece,
over on the catwalk and hopefully closer to me than Leather, took the
bait.
Someone
came running, splashing through snow saturated with meltwater. Legs
clad in sodden suit trousers trotted along the shoulder, close beside
the slow-moving juggernaut. Brown Fleece shouted: "One does not
see him! Perhaps he is beneath, being dragged by the
blah!"
Oh, yeah!
I let go and fell unharmed between the four great wheels. Lay still a
moment, then rolled quickly onto the shoulder as the big black SUV
moved on. It was no trick at all avoiding the Toyota estate wagon
creeping along behind it. Brown Fleece hadn't seen me. He was still
scuttling along, Ivanov in hand, trying to peer under the chassis of
the Dodge behemoth.
Black
Leather did spot me and yelled a sharp warning to his buddy.
Too late.
I tackled Fleece. We both went down hard, less than half a meter from
the stream of traffic. The stun-pistol flew from his hand and
disappeared among the cars. We wrestled on the shoulder pavement for
a few moment before he managed to slither out of my grasp. He bounced
to his feet, leaving me sprawled in the slush, and fetched me a nasty
kick in the head. When he tried to stomp my face I seized his foot in
midair with both hands, twisted viciously, and felt a satisfying
crackle of anklebones. He howled and fell.
Fleece
rolled in the direction of the guardrail, trying to rise in spite of
his injured ankle, roaring with pain and rage. I lay much closer to
the express lane traffic. I was having trouble standing myself. I'd
bashed both knees badly during the tackle, and the kick in the head
had rattled my neurons.
Fleece
made a flying leap, knocked me onto my back, straddled my body,
pinned my right arm, and began to batter my face with both fists.
Spiking him in the kidney with my left mid-knuckle didn't do him much
harm; the fleece jacket was excellent padding. I bucked up my hips,
throwing him unexpectedly forward and forcing him to brace himself
against falling by extending his arms. Then I caught him in the
crotch and squeezed his genitals with all my strength. He screamed
and writhed sideways into the express lane, clutching himself, just
as a big Daimler towncar cruised sedately by.
Both left
wheels went over his neck. The towncar deviated not a millimeter from
its computerized vector. Its cocooned occupants might not even have
seen what had happened. They would have felt only a minimal double
bump.
In the
stormy sky to the southwest a small constellation of fuzzy blue
lights was intermittently visible, flying at a low altitude.
Chapter 5
I was
dazed, hurting, soaked, and half frozen. My face was one huge bruise,
my hands were flayed, and the rest of me felt like it'd been stomped
by Cape buffalo.
With
difficulty, I pulled Brown Fleece back onto the shoulder and
.crouched beside him. Blood leaked from his mouth. His head was
impossibly twisted to one side, the jaw dislocated and the windpipe
crushed. The pupils of his eyes were totally dilated, and a growing
stench indicated that his sphincters had relaxed. When I thought to
check his mangled throat for a pulse, I couldn't find any. The alien
spirit that had animated his humanoid flesh had fled.
... But
the unknown man whose DNA had been stolen to disguise Fleece was
probably still alive, floating comatose in a dystasis tank on an
exotic world, forced to share his genes again and again in order to
create more perfidious replicas of himself.
I felt no
sense of triumph at Brown Fleece's demise. Instead, there was a
flashback. To the last time I'd killed Haluk who masqueraded as human
beings.
On the
planet Dagasatt, I'd found hundreds of demiclone subjects in paired
tanks in a secret laboratory. Many of the Haluk floaters were already
transformed into perfect human replicas, while the pathetic human
templates had partially morphed into Haluk form, a side effect of the
genen procedure that precluded rejection of their DNA by the alien
receptors.
I shot
each demiclone in the head. It was not a part of my life I was proud
of, but I had no regrets, either.
Before I
could rescue the captive human templates on Dagasatt, alien gunships
arrived and leveled the facility with heavy blasters. I escaped the
holocaust; but I still walked through that damned laboratory in my
nightmares, staring in disbelief at the paired tanks with their
Halukoid humans and humanoid Haluk ...
Enough. It
was time to deal with the nightmare at hand.
For the
first time, I realized that the alien I had nicknamed Black Leather
was no longer shooting at me. The reason why was sporadically visible
up in the snowy air. The blue pulsing lights were mounted on a
squadron of cop-hoppers coming out from the Highroad Authority
barracks in Pickering. My surviving assailant now had other things on
his mind besides the capture of Asahel Frost. He was probably
hotfooting it back along the median catwalk to his limousine. If he
had any brains at all, he'd already disposed of his Allenby
stun-carbine through one of the drainage openings in the road
shoulder.
The
eastbound lanes of cars were finally beginning to accelerate
slightly. Their dark-tinted side windows hid the occupants from my
sight. Were the riders gaping at the scene beside the road as they
glided by? Or had they done the sensible thing and activated their
windows' projection option, substituting images of some pleasant
landscape for the tedious reality of a creeping mass of vehicles
bogged down on a stormy night?
The fuzzy
blue lights in the sky came closer.
The cops
were going to nab me.
Black
Leather would reach his limo safely, escape the traffic jam, and
vanish into the unmonitored maze of country lanes around the Kawartha
Lakes. Meanwhile, the Highroad Authority would haul me off to the
nearest Justice Center. A media circus would strike up the band as I
attempted to explain my abduction, my great escape, and my subsequent
lethal brawl with a well-dressed individual—undoubtedly
possessed of impeccable credentials—whose true nature and
motivation I didn't dare reveal.
Perhaps
the police would believe I had acted in self-defense. Or they might
just charge me with manslaughter.
I waited
numbly for spotlights to stab down from the hoppers. Nothing
happened. Four aircraft sailed over the pylon and continued moving in
the direction of the distant accident scene.
I couldn't
believe my luck. If the woman with the shattered windshield or any of
the other motorists had reported shooting on the highroad, the news
apparently had not yet been passed on by dispatchers to the cops in
the air.
Time to
hit the trail, buckaroo.
Adrenaline
generated during the fight still kept me warm, but every bone in my
body seemed to be aching, particularly my skull. I got up and started
for the pylon platform, only to stop short as I realized what I was
leaving behind: the only existing tangible evidence of a Haluk
masquerading as a human being, evidence that had eluded me and my
investigators for over three years. If I abandoned the demiclone
corpse, it would almost certainly be taken to the closest county
morgue. Brown Fleece's alien confederates would retrieve his remains
with laughable ease.
That
wasn't going to happen if I could prevent it.
I unzipped
my anorak and rumbled for my pocket phone. Punched up the code that
would connect me to the computer of my private hopper. I could
program it to come and get me once I got down off the highroad. Even
a few hundred meters away from the pylon the airspace would be
unrestricted.
The
phone said,
We are sorry. The code you have entered is temporarily
ex-operational.
Rats! The
damned Haluk must have sabotaged it, perhaps to make sure I didn't
use the aircraft to escape their dragnet. My car was probably ex-op,
too.
Right. So
I entered the personal code of my friend and associate Karl Nazarian.
Karl was a
charter Rampart Starcorp stakeholder and its first security chief at
the operating HQ on the planet Seriphos in the Perseus Spur. My
father made the huge mistake of putting him out to pasture after long
years of service, installing a hotshot named Oliver Schneider in his
place. Schneider sold out to Galapharma and became their main mole
inside Rampart.
I came
along and drafted Karl Nazarian to assist in the search for my
missing sister Eve. The veteran security man helped make that
operation a success, and continued the good work in subsequent covert
actions that culminated in the capture of the material witness
Schneider and the indictment of Galapharma. Since then Karl had
shared my private investigations of the Haluk.
When
Rampart became an Amalgamated Concern and I agreed to become Acting
Chief Legal Officer, I saw to it that Karl was appointed Vice
President for Special—i.e., spooky—Projects, a post that
Simon had originally dragooned me into accepting. Karl reported only
to me. During the pretrial phase of the Galapharma case, he
supervised "discoveries" for my cadre of legal eagles,
helping to organize—and edit—ultrasensitive pieces of
evidence. When that work was done, he and his small staff of
trustworthy cronies occupied themselves gathering information about
the shady machinations of the big businesses that called themselves
the Haluk Consortium. Not that I was in a position to do anything
with the intelligence during the trial, other than pass on the
juicier bits to Ef Sontag.
Karl was
the only person I would have trusted to do the delicate psychotronic
interrogation of Lorne Buchanan. I'd confided my early hopes for the
Barky Hunt to him, too. And now I desperately needed his help again.
"Nazarian
here." The gnarled face, like a topographic map of Armenia
divided by a rocky cleaver of a nose, gazed at me from the phone
screen. "Good God, Helly, you look like a drowned rat. A
thoroughly buggered-up drowned rat."
"I
feel even worse. I'm sitting on the shoulder of the Ottawa Highroad
in a snowstorm, next to the corpse of a Haluk demiclone."
"That's
fantastic! You're certain it's a Haluk?"
"Absolutely.
The demi's mine if I can sneak him out of here before the county
mounties spot us. It could happen any minute. Can you come and do an
evac in your hopper? Mine's ex-op."
A shocked
silence, then: "I'm not in Toronto Conurb. I'm nearly 1,200
kilometers away, out in the Kenora at Kingfisher Lodge."
I knew
what that had to mean. "Oh, shit—not Dan!"
"I'm
afraid so. Your brother flew the coop a couple of hours ago. He had
help. Four of the six guards are dead. The survivors can't tell us
much. The lodge just wasn't secured for a massive armed assault. An
BMP blast took out the sensors and the rest of the electronics. A
single large hopper carrying a dozen bandits did the job in less than
ten minutes."
"Karl,
there's a good chance that Dan didn't escape. He might have been
kidnapped by Haluk."
"Christ!"
"My
sister Beth could also be in danger. The aliens might try to nab her,
too. She'll need round-the-clock security."
"I'll
get InSec over to her place immediately. What kind of a cluster-fuck
have we got going here?"
"The
situation is even worse than you might think. Earlier this evening
two Haluk demiclones snatched
me. Bold as brass. The bastards
took me right off the Underground Path in the midst of the Friday
night crush. They talked to each other about some plan involving Dan
and maybe Beth. I couldn't make any sense of it. My knowledge of the
Haluk language is too rusty. I managed to get out of their limousine
when the Ottawa Highroad shut down with a multicar accident. One of
the alien goons is with me here, stone cold dead on the tarmac. The
other one skipped out."
"Oh,
boy. More demiclone operatives! Just what we were afraid those blue
bastards would do—"
"Listen,
Karl. You know how vital it is for us to hang on to this corpse and
get it to Bea Mangan for a genetic assay. But I can't use regular
Rampart Security for transport. There's no way I could explain this
situation to them. And if we're caught with the stiff, Rampart itself
could face criminal charges. I killed the Haluk accidentally, in
self-defense, but body-snatching is a felony, and interfering with
the scene of a fatality could lead to a charge of obstruction of
justice, at the very least. You got any thoughts?"
"You
say you want to take the body to Mangan right away?"
"I'll
check with her first, but I know she won't have any scruples about
cooperating. This is the break we've been waiting for. The smoking
gun that proves the Haluk are infiltrating humanity."
"Then
call Bea herself for a lift," Karl advised. "Her place in
Fenelon Falls is—what?—only fifty klicks or so north of
the highroad. She's sure to have a hopper at her disposal. Or her
husband Charlie will."
"Damn.
I should have thought of that. The Haluk punched out my lights and
I'm kinda nebular at the moment."
"Is
there anything else I can do to help?"
I tried to
think. It wasn't easy. "Cover me with Sean Callahan at Rampart
Tower InSec. Just before the Haluk grabbed me down on the Path I
phoned Sean and asked for help. He sent a situation team, but too
late to do any good. Tell him I'm with you—that my emergency
turned out to be a false alarm. He'll be suspicious, but there's
nothing we can do about that."
"Listen,
Helly, if you can't reach Bea Mangan, call me again. I'll get to you,
but it could take a while."
"Let's
hope it doesn't come to that. I think you should return to Toronto as
soon as possible. We'd better meet at Bea's place. I don't want to go
back to my apartment just yet. Haluk might have the place staked out.
Hasta luego." I ended the call.
The cold
was beginning to get to me. My hood had come off again and melting
snow ran from my hair into my two blackened eyes. I wiped them,
cringing at the pain, pulled the hood up, and summoned Mangan's
personal code from the dex. The phone buzzed.
"Pick
it up," I prayed. "Please, Bea." I stared at the small
blank screen, shivering hard now, and waited. After five buzzes a
robot voice asked me if I wished to continue my attempt to reach
Beatrice Mangan directly, or if I wished to go to voice mail and
leave a message. I told it, "Try again." The robot hadn't
said she was unavailable; for some reason she just wasn't choosing to
answer. Busy people did that all the time.
The
buzzes resumed, and every five seconds the artificial voice cut in
again. I kept saying, "Try again," and watched the display
that said stand by for connection. Snowflakes fell on me and the
demiclone corpse, coating us with tiny points of light that sparkled
in the sweeping car headlights.
Beatrice
Mangan, who held the rank of Chief Superintendent in the ICS Forensic
Division, was a respected expert in molecular biology and the
criminal aspects of genetic engineering. She was also an old friend
from my days in the enforcement arm of the Interstellar Commerce
Secretariat, one of the few people who had not believed the
trumped-up charges that led to my disgrace and dismissal.
I had
drawn her into the Galapharma conspiracy almost from the beginning of
my own involvement. She helped me to nail Bronson Elgar, Galapharma
assassin and master of dirty tricks—who unfortunately proved to
be completely human. Later, she'd continued to lend her expertise to
my quest for evidence that Haluk demiclones were wearing Earthling
bodies with nefarious intent.
Bea had
shared my frustration when every likely lead dug up by Karl and his
associates petered away into failure or uncertainty. The efficient
robotic cleaners so ubiquitous in modern society made it almost
impossible to find castoff bits of incriminating DNA in starships or
buildings that we knew had harbored faux humans. The biosamples
Karl's people did manage to glean had been too badly damaged by
mechanical housekeepers to be conclusive.
But now I
had a whole demiclone corpse for Bea to analyze—if she'd just
answer her goddamn phone!
All she
had to do to prove conclusively that Fleece was a Haluk in disguise
was take cellular material from him, run it through a fine-spectrum
genome analyzer, and compare its DNA profile to the genetic marker
data that Lorne Buchanan had just turned over to Efrem Sontag. By
consulting the population database, she could also ascertain the
identity of the human template who had been used to engineer Fleece's
transformation. Along with our other evidence, the demiclone corpse
would tangibly demonstrate to the Commonwealth Assembly that Haluk
were infiltrating humanity.
What
Fleece's body wouldn't necessarily prove was malicious intent,
although we could show that the Haluk leader had lied when he claimed
that all of the living demiclones had gone to the Haluk Cluster to
serve as goodwill ambassadors. Getting more concrete evidence of
alien evil-doing might take a long time, unless—
The
interminable buzzing stopped.
"Bea?
Thank God! I'd about given up."
"Helly?"
a nonrobotic voice said. "That is you, isn't it? Your code is
security-blanked and the video pickup on your phone isn't working
very well." Bea Mangan's gentle round face, framed with a
loosely wound turban of white toweling, smiled at me. She'd been
taking a bath.
"It's
probably melted snow blurring the sensor. I'm sitting on the side of
the Ottawa Highroad in a blizzard, and I have a wonderful present for
you. The only catch is, you have to come and collect it—and me,
too. Do you have a hopper available? I'm not far from the Clarington
interchange."
"Charlie
and I can be there in fifteen minutes."
"No.
It would be best if your husband knew nothing about this—at
least for the time being. It's a matter that relates to our... alien
extracurricular activities."
She stared
in silence for a moment. "Tell me your exact location."
I gave it
to her, trying to keep my voice from quavering. "Bea? Bring
along a thermos of hot coffee and an electric blanket, will you?
Maybe some painkillers and antibiotic goop, too."
"Oh,
my. What
have you been up to?"
"We'll
also need a body bag." I punched out using a frigid finger, the
color of which closely approximated Haluk blue.
I made one
last phone call, to the voice-mail option of Efrem Sontag's
ultrasecure private code, and left a request for him to allow Bea
Mangan unlimited access to the computer files obtained from Lorne
Buchanan. I told him I had finally obtained a valid biosample from a
Haluk demiclone for Bea to analyze, but gave no other details. I
asked him not to call me; I would call him.
Then,
groaning with the effort, I grasped Brown Fleece by the wrists. It
took nearly all my dwindling strength to drag him to the pylon
platform and get him through the emergency exit door onto the upper
landing of the open spiral staircase. There was no way I could carry
him down, but I'm not squeamish and Fleece was beyond caring, so I
folded him over the stairwell railing and let him fall thirty meters
to the bottom of the shaft. Then I lugged him off into the snow.
We hid
together in a nearby thicket, me shivering convulsively and he taking
it easy, until Bea Mangan's hopper arrived. She was flying very low,
without navigation lights, to avoid being seen from the highroad.
Snow was falling thickly. I staggered out to greet her, arms wide,
using my last erg of energy, and fell flat on my face. By then I was
so deeply hypothermic that I suspect my internal temperature nearly
matched Fleece's. Her scanner found me anyhow.
She used
an antigrav tote to hoist me into the aircraft's passenger
compartment, stripped off most of my icy clothes, wrapped me in the
electric blanket, and clamped my chilled fingers around a cup of
steaming coffee. I made pitiful noises as the thawing process began.
"You
belong in a hospital, Helly. I'll call Charlie and he can have an
ambulance—"
"N-N-N-Noo!"
I groaned, through chattering teeth. Her husband, Charles White, was
a family practitioner in the small resort community of Fenelon Falls.
He was aware that Bea had given me unofficial help gathering evidence
of the Galapharma conspiracy, but he knew nothing about the Haluk
demiclones.
"I'm
going to have Charlie look at you, whether you like it or not,"
she insisted stubbornly. "You need a full-body scan."
Which
would turn up the needle puncture in my calf and suspicious drug
residuals in my blood. Perhaps Dr. White would have to be let in on
the secret after all.
"Go
get your present, Bea." I jerked my head in the direction of the
thicket. "Over under the little trees. Sorry if he's a trifle
stinky."
"First,
you get dosed with analgesic. It may make you drowsy."
She
held a device tipped with a glass knob to my jugular.
Ooh. Fly me
to the moon. Then she smeared my damaged face and hands with
antibiotic and pressed prickly bruise-diffuse pads gently around my
eyes. A not quite painful tingling ensued. I could feel the swelling
begin to subside.
"Feel
better?"
"Much.
Got the body bag?"
She nodded
resignedly. "Who's the deceased?"
"Don't
know his name. But he's a genuine twenty-four karat totally authentic
Haluk demiclone. I killed him... didn't mean to. Mighty convenient
for a comprehensive DNA assay, though."
"Jesus,
Mary, and Joseph!" she said.
"I
don't think he's part of their congregation. Check with Great
Almighty Luk."
Bea was
dressed in an orange snowmobiler's suit with a fur ruff around the
hood. She slipped a pair of protective plastic mitts over her gloves
and went to get the corpse.
Pain free
at last, I sipped caffeine-laden elixir and felt warmth and life seep
back into my anatomy. In a few minutes Bea returned with the loaded
tote floating behind her and stowed the sealed body bag in the
hopper's cargo compartment. Then we lofted into the sky. She kept the
running lights off and flew low until we were safely away from the
highroad.
I finished
the coffee, drew the blanket close about me, and allowed myself a
nasty smile, thinking about Black Leather. He'd have a hell of a lot
of explaining to do once he reached Mount Julian. Not only had he
lost me, but he'd also let his fellow demiclone fall into the hands
of the one person in a position to do serious dirt to the alien
cause.
My
eyes were drifting shut, but I resisted sleep. Something important
about the town of Mount Julian ...
What?
Other
thoughts swirled in my punchy mind: I'd have to leave Earth as soon
as possible ... stay out of reach of Haluk kidnappers and consortium
thugs ... at Phlegethon, go in without giving away my identity ...
disguised ... mustn't let Barky know I'm the guy who paid off Ram
Mahtani... need some gimmick to get me close to him... trade goods...
meanwhile, Karl works with Bea and Ef Sontag ... coordinates the
search for my brother.
Poor old
Dan! Once, I was the prodigal son, he was the golden boy with high
hopes of someday heading up Rampart. Now the Haluk had taken him—
Suddenly,
I thought I knew where.
"Bea?"
I mumbled.
"Yes,
Helly."
"Do
something very important for me. My phone ... inside pocket. Find
Karl Nazarian's personal code in the dex. Call him as soon as you get
to your house. Tell him you have me and the dead demiclone safe. Tell
him... urgent he takes an armed security team to Alistair Drummond's
former country home in Mount Julian. Place might be a hive of Haluk
... maybe they're taking my kidnapped brother Dan there ... old
bastard
himself might still be alive ... crazy as a bedbug,
working with the blueberries. Tell Karl."
"I'll
tell him everything you said," Bea Mangan said, "even
though it doesn't make much sense. Rest now, Helly. It's the best
thing for you."
So I did.
——
I woke up
in a quaintsy-poo guest room, tucked in a four-poster bed beneath a
flowery comforter. I was wearing an honest-to-God flannel nightshirt,
and there were small adhesive medical sensors stuck to my forehead,
sternum, and inner left wrist, which I peeled off and dropped into
the wastebasket. The old-style bedside alarm clock with external
bells read 7:13. The turquoise pin from my neck scarf, my pocket
phone, wallet, and wrist chronometer were there on a bedstand. I
ascertained from the latter that it was Saturday evening. I'd just
about slept the clock around.
Rolling
off the bed, I lurched over to the chintz-curtained windows and
opened the blinds. Gray twilight. A soft rain was falling and the
snow had all melted away. The cottage garden had patches of pink
daffodils, purple and white crocuses with their petals clenched, and
yellow forsythia bushes. Green-painted wrought-iron furniture stood
on a patch of winter-sere lawn faintly tinged with new growth. Beyond
a screen of balsams and budding maple trees, Sturgeon Lake was a
silver glimmer beneath a cloudy sky.
The
bedroom door opened behind me. I turned around and there was Dr.
Charles White, looking benign and reassuring in an open-necked shirt,
khaki pants, and a tattered brown cardigan. He was a tall man, skinny
as a rail, with skin the color of polished teak and eyes that were a
startling sea-green. His tightly curled dark hair was worn in a
sculptured style, with long sideburns like the cheekpieces on a Roman
helmet.
"Ah,
Helly. So you're finally up and about." He pronounced it
a-boot
in the good old Canadian way. "The med monitors showed you
perking along in fine fettle before you eighty-sixed the poor little
things. How do you feel?"
The mirror
above the dresser showed me a sandy-srubbled face, slightly
purplish-green around the eyes, but unlikely to frighten timid
toddlers.
"Good
enough. Thanks for the repair job, Charlie. I presume I'm pretty much
okay?"
"You're
normal except for scabs on your knuckles and healing contusions.
There'll be no lingering side effects from the paralyzing agent. The
needle only grazed your calf, gave you a minimal dose."
"Lucky
me." I checked my bare shank. A faint red line was the only
souvenir of my narrow escape.
He
tactfully didn't ask what kind of fine mess I'd gotten myself into
this time. "Fresh clothes for you in the closet. Your business
suit was ruined but the handmade cowboy boots survived with a little
attention from the valet machine. The syringe puncture in the left
boot is repaired. I've got supper downstairs, pizza and
spinach-tomato salad. Karl and I have already eaten, but we'll keep
you company with coffee and homemade German chocolate cake."
"Pizza
and salad would be marvelous, and you know I'm a sucker for Bea's
cake. Is she here?"
He shook
his head. "She went to her lab in Commerce Tower to do some
work. Don't worry about your deceased friend. I'm Deputy Coroner for
Victoria County. The body is tucked away in our little hospital
morgue with a John Doe tag on its toe, and none of the staff saw Bea
and me bring it in. It'll be secure for as long as need be."
I
hesitated. "What did Bea tell you about the guy?"
"That
he drugged and kidnapped you. That he's important. That overzealous
parties in the Secretariat for Xenoaffairs might try to take his body
away, and we have to prevent that."
"I
didn't mean for you to get involved in this, Charlie. It could be a
massive crock of shit."
He
shrugged and smiled and headed for the door. "Well, I'm
involved. So don't worry about it."
"Give
me a few minutes to dress," I said. "I'll be right down."
I shucked
the nightshirt, emptied my bladder, slapped depilatory gel on my
face, and had a quick shower. The clothes my host had provided were
just my style: Levi's, a black roll-neck tee, and a red wool
buffalo-plaid overshirt.
Before
I left the guest bedroom I entered Bea's personal code in my phone.
She didn't answer. Then I called a guy named Cosmo Riendeau, the
night supervisor at Rampart Fleet Maintenance at Oshawa Starport. For
special consideration, he and his crew had been expediting the
off-ticket refit of the good ship
Makebate.
"She's
ready to rumble when you are, Helly," Riendeau told me
cheerfully. "We tracked down an LRIR-1400J scanner for you in
Chicago, scheduled to be installed in an Astrophysical Survey vessel.
Bribery triumphed and it'll be here tomorrow. I tested the new
dissimulator and weaponry systems myself. That buggy of yours is now
one righteous bandit-killer."
I resolved
to send the perennially funds-strapped survey a replacement scanner,
plus a corporate donation, as soon as possible. "The ship's gig
all refitted, too?"
"Absolutely.
Extra shielding and new cannons. The provisions and the personal gear
you ordered are stowed, and the fuel bunkers are topped.
Makebate's
new range is forty-kay lights at a conservative fifty ross
cruising pseudo-vee— twenty-eight thou if you put the pedal to
the metal and exceed eighty. Of course, from now on you'll have to
eat and sleep on the flight deck. The only accommodations we didn't
rip out for the jumbo fuel-cell installation were the captain's head
and a little snack bar. It's gonna be pretty claustrophobic."
Cosmo
Riendeau and his team had no notion why I'd had the starship modified
so radically. There had been no alternative when I conceived my
aborted exploration of the Haluk Cluster, 17,200 light-years from the
closest Rampart refueling depot in the Perseus Spur; but now the
ship's extreme range gave me a tactical advantage in tracking Barky
Tregarth to Zone 3. Normally, a Y-770 speedster like
Make-bate
would have been obliged to make three pit stops to cover the
9,600 lights to Phlegethon at top ross. Rampart owned no planets
along the route to the inner galactic arm where I might have refueled
with a reasonable expectation of confidentiality, and unfriendly
folks would have been able to follow my progress easily if I'd used
commercial facilities. But now I could approach Barky's world from a
totally unexpected direction if I wanted to, with fuel to spare for
the trip back to Earth.
I said,
"Nice going, Cosmo. There'll be a juicy bonus for you and the
gang, subject to keeping zipped lips about the refit details per our
original agreement."
"Goes
without saying," Riendeau said. "That's a joke."
I gave an
obligatory chuckle. "One final thing: Have you or your people
noticed any outsiders poking around the shop during the past couple
of days, maybe asking questions about when my ship would be ready?"
"Nobody
came during the night shift. I can check the day and swing crews.
Call you back."
"Do
that. And get hold of Monte Gill at Fleet Security and tell him to
post armed guards at
Makebate's bay until I fly her out of
there."
"You
got 'em."
I thanked
Riendeau and ended the call, then went downstairs to the cottage
kitchen. Through the window, a Rampart hopper was visible on the pad
beyond the rainswept garden: Karl Nazarian's ride. He was sitting at
the table with Charlie White, drinking coffee. A delicious-looking
cake, only minimally dissected, sat on a platter covered with a glass
dome.
"You
look pretty decent, considering," Karl said.
"There's
nothing wrong with me that food won't fix."
"Drink
lots of water, too," Charlie ordered. He had already laid out
the salad and a pitcher of icewater, and he now took a plate holding
three huge wedges of steaming pepperoni pizza out of the microwave
and gave it to me.
"Yes,
Doctor. Thank you, Doctor." I picked up a dripping slice,
corraled the cheese strings, and started chomping. Even warmed over,
it was very good. I was both famished and thirsty.
Karl said,
"A few things happened while you were sleeping."
Charlie
gave us a tactful look. "Why don't I let you two discuss your
business in private."
"Don't
go," I said. "You're part of the Baker Street Irregulars
now by virtue of the body-snatching. Accessory to a felony. You might
as well know the rest of the story. Just let me get an update on
current events from Karl first."
The doctor
nodded and sat down again. He uncovered the cake, cut three generous
pieces, and passed them around.
Karl said
to me, "Your sister Beth is safe. She hasn't left her house. I
personally told her that Dan had escaped with the help of unknown
confederates, and she seemed genuinely surprised. Pleased, at first,
but the fact that four of Dan's InSec guards were killed cooled her
jets a little. She's promised not to go to the media or otherwise
impede our investigation. I suspect she might be rethinking Big
Brother's protestations of innocence."
I doubted
it. "We'll have to keep Beth well guarded or even get her
offworld. The two Haluk thugs who bagged me last night had some sort
of plans for her ... What about Dan himself? Did you check out
Alistair Drummond's old place in Mount Julian?"
Karl's
expression turned grim. "I had a Rampart incident team hop over
there as soon as Bea called me last night. They were there within an
hour. By then the firefighters had pretty much gotten things under
control."
I yelped
around a mouthful of pizza. "A fire—"
"The
big old wood-frame main house was totally destroyed, right down to
the foundations. The battalion chief said the place went up like a
bomb. It must have happened just about the time you first contacted
me from the highroad. There were no human remains found. Or Haluk. A
sophisticated accelerant that generated a very high-temperature burn
was used to torch the house. All that's left is white ash and slag."
"Damn!
The demi who got away must have sounded the alarm. A fire would have
ensured that there were no bits and pieces of incriminating DNA left
behind."
"I
went out to the scene myself this morning and interviewed the arson
investigation people. Talked to the neighbors—such as there are
in an upscale area like that. The property has extensive grounds, a
wooded perimeter with a security fence, beam-guarded frontage on
Stony Lake. It's not easy for unauthorized persons to get close to
it. The adjacent homes are owned by wealthy types or corporations
that use them mostly in summer. No one saw anything unusual
immediately preceding the fire. Of course, there was a minor blizzard
raging at the time. A caretaker woman who lives in a place half a
kilometer down the shore says the house was inhabited for at least
the past two months. She thought she might have seen a hoppercraft
landing on the property yesterday afternoon, when the weather was
better."
"Who's
the owner of record?" I asked.
"Livonia
Holdings SC, a Carnelian subsidiary, bought it from Galapharma after
Alistair Drummond's death. About a year ago Livonia leased the place
to S'yoma tib Katatosi—a Y'tata trading company—after
installing a heavy-duty ventilation system. The Y's wanted it for an
executive vacation retreat. An entity that I reached at the Y'tata
embassy claims that the Katatosi outfit is only sporadically in
residence on Earth. Conveniently absent at present. The entity was of
the opinion that Katatosi
might have sublet the house to some
human business clients. The place was automatically supplied with
food and the like by RoboGrocer and kept clean by Livonia-programmed
domestic bots. There was no live-in human help."
"Uh-huh.
What about the security system?"
"That
fed to a Y outfit in Toronto that alerted the local fire crew. The
Y'tata security entities refused to give me any specifics."
"This
suggestion of a Y'tata-Haluk connection could be significant, Karl.
When I talked to Jake Silver about the Barky Hunt Friday night, he
told me about a suppressed ZP report about collaborating pirates of
the same two races operating in Zone 3, hijacking transactinide
carriers."
"Zone
3?" Karl's expression was incredulous. "Haluk in the
Sagittarius Whorl? That doesn't sound likely."
"I
didn't think so, either. But Jake's source said that the Haluk
presence was deliberately hushed up by Xenoaffairs. Maybe the
blueballs are encouraging Y'tata freebooters to steal ultraheavy
elements so that there'll be a shortage."
"To
increase the profitability of their own trans-ack trade with us?"
"Maybe.
Barky Tregarth is supposed to be hanging out in Zone 3, too. Jake got
me a solid lead on him that I intend to check out as soon as
possible. If the Haluk are operating in the Sag, I'll bet Barky knows
about it."
"There's
more bad news," Karl said, "maybe unconnected to this
business. Lorne Buchanan is dead. Apparently a suicide."
"My
God! The secret Galapharma file data—"
"Relax.
Everything pertaining to the Haluk was transferred to Efrem Sontag on
Friday evening, just as Buchanan had agreed. His body was found
Saturday morning in his Rosedale house. There was no note. He had
apparently shot himself in the head with an antique Glock handgun."
"The
poor bastard didn't kill himself," I declared. "You know
that as well as I do, Karl! The Haluk found out what he'd done and
murdered him. Maybe to discourage other Galapharma executives from
coming forward with evidence against them."
"We'll
never prove it."
"Probably
one of those security people Buchanan brought to Rampart Tower—"
I started to say.
"Any
demis in the bunch will be long gone by the time we're able to check
their DNA. It's a dead end, Helly. Now that they know we can spot
them with the genetic marker, they'll be ultracautious."
"Shit.
I hoped we'd be able to keep the Haluk in the dark about that—at
least for a little while longer."
The good
doctor had been looking more and more dismayed as the mystifying
two-way conversation proceeded. I said, "Charlie, it's about
time we put you into the picture."
He
said, "Did I understand you to say that
Haluk were
responsible for your abduction yesterday? And for Buchanan's murder?"
"Yep.
They probably kidnapped my brother Daniel, too."
"That's
appalling! Why haven't you notified the Secretariat for Xenoaffairs?"
"Because
SXA is hand in glove with the consortium and the other members of the
Hundred Concerns who have a vested interest in keeping the Haluk
happy. SXA knows very well that I have a hard-on for our devious blue
brethren. As we lawyers would say, I am not a credible accusant."
"Then
inform CCID—"
"There's
something else, Charlie. Bea's probably working to prove it even as
we speak. The Haluk who tried to nab me were demiclones. They had
been illegally engineered into perfect human replicas."
"What!
And the dead man in my morgue—"
"Is
almost certainly an alien. Bea will know for certain when she
finishes her genetic assay. The Haluk have been using demiclones as
secret agents against humanity for several years now—predating
their treaties with us."
"I
can't believe that no one in authority knows about this!"
"People
in Xenoaffairs and Interstellar Commerce almost certainly have proof
of demiclone activity on Earth and on other human worlds that they've
concealed from the public and the Commonwealth Assembly. But no one
in SXA or ICS will blow the whistle because high officials in both
secretariats are creatures of Big Business. Mustn't endanger the
profits of the Haluk Consortium."
I'd
finished the pizza and salad, and now I started on the slab of German
chocolate cake. "Let me tell you the story, Charlie. It's a real
seven-ply gasser."
——
The scheme was hatched from a
miscegenation of deluded idealism and corporate greed. It started
with a crackpot idea conceived by a naive woman who hoped to foment
peace and love between the Haluk and humanity by means of genetic
engineering.
Emily
Blake Konigsberg was a brilliant and very attractive scientist who
worked for Galapharma in the years before its unscrupulous CEO
decided to take over the Rampart worlds. Emily and Alistair Drummond
became lovers. In the course of their pillow talk she told him about
her great dream.
Emily was
keenly interested in the Haluk and deplored the fact that our two
races were enemies. As you know, the Haluk bitterly resented the fact
that we halted their aggressive expansion into the Perseus Spur,
forced them to accept a humiliating armistice, and declined to share
our advanced technology with them. It was Emily's belief that the
refusal of the Haluk to even consider detente was largely rooted in
their envy of our stable physiology. She was probably right.
Humanity
was spawned on a relatively benign planet. Aside from some relatively
minor seasonal glitches, we're physically and mentally operational
all year round. But the Haluk evolved on a world with a highly
eccentric orbit that annually carried it into a region of intense
solar radiation. The result was allomorphy, an adaptation that
originally enabled the race to survive.
For about
two hundred days each year, while the home planet was sufficiently
distant from its sun, the ancestral Haluk existed as smart, active,
sexual, somewhat humanoid individuals called gracilomorphs. But then,
as the orbiting world approached the zone of strong solar radiation,
Haluk bodies underwent protective changes. For about sixty days,
during their lepidodermoid phase, they became increasingly
thick-skinned and sluggish. They lost their sexuality. Their brains
began to power down, leaving them incapable of high mental function.
Finally, in a climactic Big Change, the lepidos morphed into a
coffinlike testudinal phase. They slept inside radiation-resistant
golden chrysalids for 140 days. When the home planet once again swung
away from its ferocious sun, gracile Haluk awakened from estivation
and emerged from their protective shells to carry on their
interrupted lives.
Eventually
the Haluk achieved interstellar travel. On new planets, allomorphy
was no longer a survival trait but instead a tremendous inconvenience
that slowed racial progress. Millennia passed. As the Haluk expanded
throughout their star-cluster, the allomorphic cycles of individuals
lost their ancestral synchrony. This lessened the annual nuisance
somewhat. At least they weren't all asleep at the same time. But
their civilization—and most particularly their science—suffered
a great disadvantage compared to that of other stargoing sapients.
Especially
humans.
The Haluk
entered the Milky Way Galaxy at the tip of the Perseus Spur and
established eleven colonial planets. At the time, the only local race
having starships were the Qastt, and they were easily subjugated. But
when humanity extended its powerful hegemony to the Spur, Haluk
expansion was stopped cold by our superior technology.
So they
hated and feared us and refused to trade or enter into normal
diplomatic relations.
Emily
Konigsberg told her lover, Drummond, that she was convinced Haluk
hostility could be mitigated and the race's great potential realized
if their allomorphy were to be eradicated. It was her opinion that
the job could be done easily through advanced techniques of genetic
engineering. She sincerely believed that Commonwealth policy denying
this technology to the Haluk was immoral. If Galapharma Concern could
see its way clear to bypass CHW strictures—that is, work with
her to set up genen therapy programs among the blue aliens—a
great wrong would be righted.
Alistair
Drummond didn't have an altruistic bone in his body, but he liked
Konigsberg's idea all the same. The Haluk Cluster was rumored to
possess abundant supplies of valuable transactinide elements, which
the aliens had heretofore adamantly refused to trade. Galapharma
stood to make enormous profits in the therapy venture, doing well by
doing good.
So
Alistair entered into secret negotiations with the Haluk leader, the
Servant of Servants of Luk, and the deal was done. Emily set up a
genetic engineering lab on the principal Haluk Spur colony, Artiuk,
staffed entirely by Galapharma personnel. The project achieved
success by inserting human genes into the Haluk. Modified alien
individuals remained in the active, brainy, gracile phase
permanently. And because the therapy also modified Haluk germ
cells—so did their offspring.
The great
achievement was doubly illegal under Commonwealth law, which forbade
meddling with the genetic heritage of a sovereign race, to say
nothing of sharing human DNA with aliens. This didn't bother Alistair
Drummond. Galapharma was one of the almighty Big Seven Concerns. He
figured that if they were caught, they could pressure the
Commonwealth Assembly to legalize the scheme retroactively since it
was good for business.
Eventually,
that's just what happened.
It was a
minor embarrassment to Emily Konigsberg that the only viral vector
suitable for allomorph eradication therapy was not one under patent
to Galapharma Amalgamated Concern. PD32:C2 was an exclusive product
of Gala's small rival, Rampart Starcorp, which had obtained the CHW
mandate to the Perseus Spur after Galapharma withdrew in 2176. The
vector could not be grown under laboratory conditions or synthesized;
its sole source was the planet Cravat, owned by Rampart.
PD32:C2
could be purchased on the open market, of course—cautiously, so
Rampart would not know that the stuff was being resold at an enormous
markup—or it could be stolen. Gala agents and Haluk pirates
pursued both courses of action, while Alistair Drummond tried to
engineer a hostile takeover of Rampart in order to regain control of
the Spur planets—especially Cravat—that Galapharma had so
imprudently let slip out of its hands.
At the
same time, the wily CEO encouraged other large Concerns—Sheltok,
Carnelian, Bodascon, and Homerun— to join the illicit Haluk
trading partnership. There was safety in numbers, and plenty of
profits to go around. The Haluk were hungry for all kinds of advanced
human technology and willing to pay through the nose.
Emily and
Alistair were no longer romantically involved. Her idealistic pursuit
of a "greater good" allowed her to turn a blind eye to the
commercial shenanigans orchestrated by her ex-lover while she
expanded the therapy program, training Haluk scientists to build and
operate dynamic stasis units. The aliens were very quick learners.
Too damn
quick—but none of the human conspirators had any inkling of the
awful truth.
One day
the Servant of Servants of Luk proposed a new genetic enterprise to
Emily. He had conceived a plan that would open a great new era in
Haluk-human relations. Its fulfillment required "a small number"
of demiclones. These Haluk in human guise were to become special
cultural envoys to the populous planets of the Haluk Cluster,
supposedly soothing the intense xenophobia that had poisoned any hope
of rapprochement between the two races from the time of their first
encounter over a hundred years earlier.
Emily
Konigsberg was dubious about this bizarre notion. Demicloning, like
other extreme forms of genetic engineering, had long been outlawed in
the Commonwealth of Human Worlds. But eventually she gave in to the
Servant's pressure and even contributed her own DNA to the project.
When
Alistair Drummond found out about the demiclones, he was furious. He
believed the Servant actually intended to use fake humans to spy on
the Concerns and gain trade advantages. Drummond's first inclination
was to shut down the demiclone project, but he relented after the
Servant hinted that serious consequences would ensue. By then,
illegal trade with the Haluk had generated immense profits that
Galapharma and its Concern collaborators were reluctant to forfeit.
Drummond
hatched a ploy to minimize the danger of industrial espionage. He
ordered Konigsberg to incorporate a genetic marker into the demiclone
procedure without Haluk knowledge. In addition, the sole genen
facility producing the clones was placed under strict human
supervision, on a remote human world. Galapharma itself undertook to
supply the luckless donors of human DNA.
Alistair
Drummond's precautions worked well enough ... until the aliens
learned how to perform the complex demiclone procedure without the
help of human scientists, built secret labs of their own, and
discovered how easy it was to defeat the sporadic DNA testing of
employees that was supposed to prevent Haluk ringers from
infiltrating the human race.
——
As I
reached this point in my narrative, my pocket phone trilled. It was
Cosmo Riendeau. I excused myself from the table and went to answer
the call in the cottage's living room, urging Karl to continue the
story while I was gone.
Cosmo's
report was disturbing. "Only one outsider took an interest in
your starship, Helly—a very pretty young woman from the
accounting department in Rampart Tower. She showed up here in Oshawa
yesterday, around noon, and apparently had the proper pass and
personal ID. This cutie told Ole Wiren, the day-shift supervisor,
that she was at the port to reconfigure a billing procedure for our
number crunchers. She said she was on lunch break and ever so curious
about the big starships, and she begged Ole for a quick tour. He
admits he came down with instant beaver fever and showed her around."
"She
saw
Makebate."
"I'm
afraid so. Your boat was obviously something special—not just
another freighter or ExSec cruiser. Ole told her your starship was
almost ready to leave the barn—even let slip that we'd done a
fuel-cell augmentation. Sorry, Helly. The whole team knew your refit
was supposed to be hush-hush, but that chick played poor Ole like a
Stradivarius."
"Probably
no harm done," I lied. "Did the woman give her name?"
"Dolores
da Gama. I pulled her image and voice-signature off the shop entry
security monitor for you. Hold on while I feed a dime."
He
inserted a data disklet into his phone and a talking image popped
onto my screen. Da Gama was stacked like a brick shithouse and had
wide-set dark eyes, pouty lips, and long black hair with a white
blaze at the left temple. She talked her way past the laxly guarded
entrance to Rampart Fleet Maintenance using a voice as sweet and
seductive as fireweed honey. If Dolores was a demiclone, her original
must have been a real hottie.
I cut off
the replay. "Thanks for the information, Cosmo. I'll look into
this, but I'm sure everything's okay."
"Anything
else I can do for you, Helly?"
"I'd
like to lift off sometime early next week. Think you'd have time to
rig simple arm and leg restraints on the copilot's chair—plus
an exterior lock on the John door?"
"Prisoner
transport, eh?"
"Something
like that."
"I'll
attend to it personally."
I thanked
him and hit the End pad, then used the phone to access Rampart's
roster of accounting personnel.
There was
no Dolores da Gama. Why wasn't I surprised?
I sent a
copy of her mug shot to Sean Callahan at InSec and told him to pass
it along to his supervisor. I doubted that the lovely lady would
press her luck and try another incursion, but Rampart Tower's
doorkeepers had to be put on alert.
And I had
to get out of town before a fresh set of demiclone thugs came
sniffing after me.
However,
there was still unfinished business to be taken care of with Simon,
Ef Sontag, and a few other people. I also needed to assemble certain
items crucial to a successful Barky Hunt that probably wouldn't be
available off-Earth.
I sat for
a few minutes, thinking, then made two brief calls. The first was to
Tony Becker, Rampart's brilliant but testy Vice President for
Biotechnology, who grumped and bitched and asked questions that I
didn't intend to answer. He only agreed to put together what I needed
when I used both a carrot and a stick: the promise of a hefty bribe,
plus a half-joking threat to have him fired if he didn't come
through.
The second
call went to Halimeda Opper, a venerable and trustworthy Reversionist
party stalwart who was a media production designer by profession. She
heard me out, then referred me to a theatrical supply house in
Mississauga that would have exactly what I required.
——
I returned
to the kitchen and helped myself to a second piece of German
chocolate cake. Next to snickerdoodle cookies and rozkoz flan, it's
my favorite confection. Karl was regaling Charlie with accounts of
our more recent adventures with the Haluk—demiclone and au
naturel—on Dagasatt and on the journey back to Earth following
my capture of Oliver Schneider. I lowered my eyes modestly during the
heroic parts, which seemed a lot more fun in retrospect than they'd
been at the time.
When Karl
wound down, Charlie said, "I'm still not clear on the aliens'
motivation. Trade between humanity and the Haluk is regularized. On
the face of it, we're friends. So why the continuing demiclone
espionage?"
"Why
indeed," I murmured. "Perhaps the Haluk have a hidden
agenda that involves more than taking care of business. Perhaps
they've had that agenda from the inception of the demiclone scheme!
What if their moles have dug deep into the inner operations of the
Hundred Concerns? What if they're rooting around inside our
scientific establishment, our law enforcement agencies, and our
government?"
"To
what end?" He asked the question, but an intelligent man like
Charlie White had to know the answer already. I spelled it out
anyhow.
"Maybe
the Haluk aren't willing to wait patiently while the Commonwealth
Assembly doles out small numbers of new Milky Way worlds for them to
colonize. I have this theory that population pressure back in the
Haluk Cluster is dire—otherwise, why would they have made the
desperate and difficult step of jumping to our galaxy in the first
place? The only Spur colony of theirs I ever visited seemed
conspicuously lacking in elbow room. The school I toured was
jam-packed with youngsters. Now that allomorphy can be eradicated
in
the germ line, parents no longer pass on the allomorph trait to
their offspring. Pretty soon everybody'll be wide awake back there in
the Haluk Cluster, as well as in their Spur colonies. If they already
have an overpopulation problem, doing away with allomorphy will make
that problem worse."
"You
believe the Haluk intend to seize planets in our galaxy by force?"
Charlie said.
"I
think it's a strong possibility. So do Karl and Bea and a few other
voices crying in the wilderness."
"The
difficulty," Karl interposed, "has been proving Haluk
hostile intent beyond a shadow of a doubt. Placing concrete evidence
before the Commonwealth Assembly so the matter must be openly
debated—not swept under the rug, the way the Hundred Concerns
and corrupt elements in SXA and ICS would prefer. Up until now, we've
never even been able to prove conclusively that demiclones exist."
Charlie
said, "The body in my morgue—"
"Is a
corpus delicti," I said. "The legal meaning of that term
has nothing to do with a cadaver. It means 'the body of the
crime'—the substantial proof that an illegal act has been
committed."
Charlie
nodded slowly. His lucent green eyes had a detached thousand-meter
stare, looking into a future almost too alarming to contemplate. "If
only the Haluk weren't so intelligent! It's said that they haven't
simply purchased our high technology—they've improved on it."
"That's
a fact." Karl looked bleak as he cut himself another hunk of
cake. It was almost gone. "Some of their star-ships are equal to
the best we have. Most are inferior. But the technology gap will
close as they obtain advanced production machinery from us. There's
still an embargo against selling weapons to the Haluk, but you know
how effective that will be. Gunnmning to the Insaps is a fine old
human institution, tremendously profitable."
"They'll
wage war on us," I said, "unless we expose their hostile
intent. Force them to allow human inspection of their worlds on pain
of full trade interdiction."
"Force
them?" Charlie White exclaimed. "In heaven's name, how?"
"I'm
working on it," I said.
"Do
the Haluk know that?"
"Probably,"
I admitted.
"Maybe
that's why they tried to kidnap you," Charlie said.
I'd pretty
much come to the same conclusion. "Yeah. But I'm damned if I can
figure why they didn't just kill me outright. Why take me alive? I
don't have possession of the crucial evidence against them. Efrem
Sontag does, and he'll back up the data and secure it so immaculately
that not even I can touch it. It's still too early in the game for us
to have finalized our anti-Haluk strategy, so I can't spill any great
secrets under psychotronic interrogation. And why would they need to
snatch my brother Dan and sister Beth along with me?"
Charlie
just shook his head.
Outside,
the shades of night had fallen. Patio lights gleamed in the rain and
reflected on the smooth sides of Karl's big hoppercraft. I ate the
last piece of chocolate cake.
Charlie
made fresh coffee and we sat around drinking it and waiting, not
saying much.
Finally,
about 2100 hours, Bea Mangan's hopper wafted down and parked beside
Karl's. She came in through the back door, looking tired but pleased
with herself, and dropped a magslate on the table in front of me.
"Here's the report, Helly. I've already sent a copy of it to
Delegate Son-tag."
Charlie
helped his wife off with her coat, heated water, and put a couple of
peppermint teabags into a big china cup labeled C
10H
19OH.
I pulled out a chair for Bea and apologized for the fact that we'd
scoffed up all the cake. She said she'd eaten supper at the cafeteria
in Commerce Tower. After she had relaxed for a few minutes and sipped
some of the calming brew, I asked the pertinent question.
"What
did your genetic assay show? Speak freely. Charlie knows the score
now."
Bea gave
me a reproachful look. "Helly, I thought we—"
I said,
"Your husband is in this thing up to his neck, just like the
rest of us. He deserves to know what's really going on."
"It's
for the best," Charlie said to her. "At least now I know
the importance of that bod stashed in my morgue under false
pretenses."
"So—is
he a demiclone?" I asked Bea.
"He
is," she said, "provided the data Lorne Buchanan sent to
Sontag are correct. The so-called marker incorporated by Emily
Konigsberg is actually a unique suite of introns— multiple
noncoding sequences of DNA—occurring on four different
chromosomes, plus a single mutant exon from the complex controlling
telomeric proteins. The genetic profile of the individual you
nicknamed Brown Fleece contains both the intron suite and the mutant
exon typical of demiclones."
"What
are telomeric proteins?" I asked.
Dr.
Charlie said, "Telomeres are ribbonlike appendages on the ends
of chromosomes. Each time a cell divides—and those in the
normal human body split about seventy times before kicking the
bucket—the telomeres diminish a little. Youthful cells have
long telos. Old worn-out cells have shorter ones. Tinkering with the
genes that influence telo proteins is one of the important ways that
dystasis therapy brings about cell rejuvenation and healing. There's
an enormous scientific literature on the subject."
Bea said,
"Brown Fleece's telomeres seem to be of an appropriate length
for a human male of his apparent age. It's quite possible that the
exon mutation's effect is negligible."
I frowned.
"Then why would Konigsberg bother to include it in the demiclone
marker group at all? Wouldn't the intron suite adequately label fake
humans?"
"It
would," she said. "Emily was
forced to include the
exon—for a very odd reason that I'm going to tell you about."
"What
does this mutant thing do?" Karl asked.
"Apparently
nothing," Bea said, "if we're to judge by Brown Fleece. In
the biosample I briefly studied, the telomeric proteins seem
completely normal."
"Isn't
there any way to check it out more intensively?" I asked.
"One
would have to do some rather time-consuming research," she said,
"in vitro tissue culture of cells from different parts of the
demiclone body—artificial acceleration of cell division to
determine whether the overall aging process or specific bodily
functions were being significantly affected. Perhaps the exon is a
protogene—one that's effectively dormant until it's switched on
by some external factor. In that case, a researcher might not uncover
the mutation's effect unless she found the relevant trigger. Perhaps
Haluk scientists have already noticed this rogue exon and researched
it. However, given their relative backwardness in molecular biology,
I'd be inclined to doubt it."
"Me,
too," I said. All this was more genetics than I really wanted to
hear about right now, even though I suspected it might be important.
Bea took a
long drink of the mint tea and sighed. "Let's move on to the
other interesting—and very puzzling—thing I discovered.
Do you remember the Haluk cadaver that was sent to Tokyo University
by Rampart? This happened several years ago, just before Eve was
abducted."
Karl and I
nodded. I explained to Charlie: "The body was a gracile. It
looked like a normal allomorph, but it wasn't. It had human DNA mixed
with the Haluk. During the long period of hostility, human
researchers had very little opportunity to study the Haluk genome. So
when Rampart captured a Qastt pirate vessel that had a Haluk suicide
aboard, it sold the body to Tokyo University for a nice price. That
particular corpse unexpectedly provided the first proof that Haluk
allomorphism was being erased by unauthorized genen therapy. Bea had
it briefly but was unable to do much research."
"That's
right," she said. "The body was returned to the Haluk as a
provision of the new trade treaty, supposedly for religious
interment. The Secretariat for Xenoaffairs confiscated and sealed the
Japanese researchers' data and mine for policy reasons that weren't
made clear to the scientific community ... Perhaps you
don't know
that officially the Haluk genome remains pegged at its
pre-allomorph-trait eradication status. Fresh research by human
scientists into Haluk biology is now allowed only with SXA
permission. And no permits have been issued."
I gave a
cynical smile. "Right. The Haluk—and our goddamn
government—don't want to publicize the fact that human genes
were used illegally to wipe out allomorphism. That's why the Tokyo
study was never published. My father obtained a precis of it by
twisting academic arms, but the full report was quashed."
"Nevertheless,"
Bea said demurely, "I managed to obtain a copy of it two years
ago, as did a number of other people in my line of work. Today, when
I finished assaying Brown Fleece, I compared his genetic profile to
that of the Tokyo Haluk. I did this for technical reasons, to see how
much of the redundant human DNA in the Tokyo body might have survived
in a demiclone. Of course, the Toyko Haluk didn't contain the intron
marker suite typical of demiclones ... but the body
did have
the mutant telomere exon."
"What
the hell does that mean?" I demanded. I was beginning to feel
very confused. All this science was giving me a headache—or
perhaps it was too much German chocolate cake.
Bea said,
"I think we can presume that every nonallomorphic Haluk
possesses this small exon mutation. Older studies of Haluk genetics
confirm that the altered gene is not present in Haluk possessing the
allomorph trait. Nor has the mutation ever been noted in human
beings. I have to conclude that the exon is an artifact. Emily
Konigsberg created it."
Karl's
bushy brows rose quizzically. "She added a little something
extra to
both the trait eradication and the demiclone genen
procedures?"
"Apparently
so," Bea said, "but there's no documentation for it in her
research materials. I haven't been able to read everything in the
secret Galapharma files yet, of course. But there was an extensive
section dealing with allotrait eradication that I did study
carefully. I found no reference to insertion of the mutant exon.
Konigsberg must have concealed it within another gene-resequencing
procedure, keeping it secret from both Haluk authorities and the
Galapharma technicians. Later, when the demiclone project was
established, she was forced to describe the mutant exon in the marker
group. It would be detectable, you see, when Gala checked its
employees' DNA to be sure they weren't Haluk spies."
And a
mighty sloppy job they did of that, too ...
"So
Emily's magic exon occurs in nonallos and demiclones both," I
said, "and we have no notion why. Aren't most mutations
harmful?"
"Not
necessarily," Bea said. "Given the highly idealistic
temperament of Konigsberg, it doesn't seem likely that the exon would
be deleterious. She wouldn't want to harm her Haluk friends. The
mutation is probably neutral—or even beneficial."
"For
who?" I murmured. "Humans or Haluk?"
A silence.
Finally, I
said, "This new information bugs the hell out of me. What if
that damned woman figured out a way to increase the Haluk lifespan,
or make them super-healing, or something?"
"That's
extremely unlikely," Bea said mildly. "But I could
discreetly consult my forensic colleagues. Perhaps some of them would
agree to quietly undertake some tissue-culture experiments, using
biosamples from Brown Fleece. They wouldn't have to know the subject
was a Haluk demiclone in order to investigate the effects of the
mutation."
"Go
ahead," I said. "But for God's sake stress the need for
secrecy."
"I
don't think we have to worry about their discretion." She
paused. "However, there's another kind of secrecy we should be
very concerned about. Have you considered that there might be
demiclone spies in Efrem Sontag's office? His association with you
and his skeptical attitude toward the Haluk Consortium are
well-known."
"Sontag
and his staff and even his family will have to be vetted," I
said. "He's already agreed to it. We'll obtain DNA samples
without the other subjects' knowledge and you can do the assays."
I glanced apologetically at Karl and Charlie. "You'll have to
test us, too, Bea."
"Oh,
I've already done that, Helly." She smiled into her cup of
peppermint tea. "I took biosamples from you to the lab and
compared them with the Vital Stat database. You three are absolutely
authentic. But I'm afraid you'll have to take
me on faith—at
least for the time being." "We'll risk it," I said.
——
Not long
afterward, Karl and I boarded his hopper and took off into the rainy
night sky. For no reason other than an old security chief's love of
arcane gadgetry, he had installed a sophisticated intruder-defense
system in his small home in Port Perry, south of Fenelon Falls. It
was the kind of setup that would hold off even the most determined
Haluk kidnappers, far superior to that in my Rampart Tower apartment.
I asked Karl if I could stay with him, and he readily agreed. He was
a widower and lived alone except for a ten-kilo purebred, bluepoint
Ragdoll cat named Max. The cat even liked me.
"It'll
just be for three days," I said, "while we work out a
long-range game plan with Sontag based on all this new evidence.
After that, I'm off to a Sagittarian asteroid named Phlegethon. Barky
Tregarth is supposed to be holed up there—literally. The
friggin' place is an orbiting rabbit warren. Hollow."
Karl
turned in the pilot's seat and regarded me with amazement. "But
you can't go now—not after what's happened!"
"Sure
I can." I was scrolling through the hopper's music library.
Mostly classical, dammit, and heavy on Khachaturian. Finally, I found
a Cal Tjader collection and called up "Running Out."
Apropos, no?
"You're
needed here!" Karl protested.
"No,
I'm not. You need Cassius Potter, Hector Motlaletsie, and Lotte
Dietrich." They were the retired Rampart security agents who had
worked closely with us in the Perseus Spur during the Galapharma
takeover attempt. The three were among the few people fully cognizant
of the Haluk demiclone threat.
"My
Over-the-Hill Gang?"
"Sign
'em on again," I told him. "They'll come running if you
explain the situation. We're going to need Lotte's computer expertise
to analyze the archival material we got from Lorne Buchanan. She'll
know how to validate its authenticity for Sontag, in case SXA tries
to discredit the chain of evidence later. Cassius and Hector will
have an even more sensitive mission: collecting biosamples from every
Delegate in the Commonwealth Assembly. They should all be tested. So
should as many of the Delegates' aides as we can grab DNA from. If
any demiclones are found, we leave them in place—then let
Sontag blow 'em sky-high when he starts his committee hearings."
"You
should be here for those. You've
got to be here! You're a
principal witness."
"My
Barky Hunt won't take long. Maybe not even two weeks. Five days to
reach Phlegethon, maybe a few more to track the old gunrunner down
and hook him up to the truth machines I'm packing on
Makebate. If
he comes up aces, I'll transmit the results of his interrogation to
you immediately via encrypted subspace com, then hightail it back to
Earth with Barky lashed to the copilot's chair."
"And
what if something goes wrong? Nothing that superannuated crook is
likely to tell you is worth risking your life for."
"That's
not true." I told him about the upcoming Assembly vote that
would permit the sale of fifty T-2 Rampart Mandate planets to the
Haluk, as well as the bill that would be introduced in the next
session opening an additional three hundred worlds to the aliens.
"Sontag thinks it would be bad strategy to attack the
fifty-planet bill by introducing the demiclone evidence during the
final eight weeks of this Assembly session. I don't agree. Maybe
Barky Tregarth can help me change Ef's mind."
Karl was
quietly appalled at the political news. "I never dreamed that
the pro-Haluk faction was pushing ahead so fast! T-2 worlds ... not
as desirable as T-l 's, but bad enough. Isn't there anything you
could do as a Rampart director to stall the sale?"
"Me?"
I let loose a cynical cackle. "Not a prayer. The Rampart board
would vote me down in a landslide if I tried to block either deal. A
huge credit infusion right now is just what the doctor ordered to
grease the wheels of the Galapharma consolidation. The only way to
force an open-door treaty on the Haluk and slow their influx is by
discrediting them in the Assembly."
"We
already have the evidence to do that, using Brown Fleece and the new
Galapharma material. Dammit, Helly! Galloping off after a long shot
like Barky Tregarth is reckless and irresponsible. To say nothing of
bloody dangerous!"
"My
life's in danger if I stay on Earth," I pointed out. "So I
might as well go. At least there won't be any Haluk demiclones
gunning for my butt around Sagittarius."
"Jesus
Christ," he muttered darkly. "Why not just admit you're hot
to trot on a new offworld adventure after two years of boring legal
shit?"
"There's
that," I admitted, grinning.
He turned
away and stared out the side window of the hopper. Cal Tjader was
playing his great Latin take on "'Round Midnight."
"So
follow your damned cowboy instincts," Karl said softly. "If
you end up dead, the rest of us will carry on the crusade somehow."
"I
know," I said quietly. "I'm counting on it."
"The
bad hats will be expecting you at Phlegethon, you know."
"That's
why I'm going there in fancy dress. I'll disguise myself as a Joru
trader. A very
short Joru trader. And I'll have trade goods
that no Haluk-oriented smuggler can resist. I twisted Tony Becker's
arm and he's putting the stuff together for me." I told Karl
what merchandise I planned to offer and he laughed. "If I give a
decent performance, none of the local wiseguys will connect my Joru
persona with the guy in Toronto who paid big money to learn the
whereabouts of one Hamilcar Barca Tregarth."
Karl
thought about it. "Hmm. This goofy idea could actually work."
I flashed
a confident grin. "Of course it will. And you know what?
Masquerading as an alien might even be fun!"
What an
idiot I was.
Chapter 6
Tony
Becker, Rampart Vice President for Biotechnology, was an
ultraefficient executive and a fine scientist who didn't suffer
fools—or cowboys—gladly. He was scrupulously upright,
loyal, hardworking, and couldn't stand the sight of a certain
flamboyant black-sheep lawyer who used his family name and fortune to
make political waves.
Tony was
also the only one I would have trusted to put together my Barky bait.
When I
coerced him into cooperating with me, I made it clear that I needed
the crucial materials no later than 0400 hours on Wednesday morning,
the day I intended to leave Earth from Oshawa Starport. Tony
grudgingly promised to meet the deadline but said he'd probably have
to bring the trade goods to the Rampart pilot's lounge at the last
minute.
The
starport serving the Human Commonwealth capital had such heavy
traffic that landings and departures were firmed up two days ahead of
time. To keep Haluk agents off balance, I planned to usurp the
liftoff slot of another Rampart ship scheduled to depart at 0440. It
was a fairly common ploy of impatient VIP executives. The bumped
vessel would be banished to the end of the line and endure a
forty-eight-hour delay. Taking its place,
Makebate would be
entered into the starport computer record only at the last minute.
Promptly
at four in the morning I sat alone in Rampart's pilot lounge in the
central module of the lake-island platform, waiting for Tony. Through
the observation window I could see the cloudy sky brightening in the
east. Every few minutes a massive starship lofted silently off one of
the thirty-six floating cradles that encircled the tower structure,
then vanished into the overcast under sublight drive.
Makebate
was on the conveyor already, moving along the underwater tunnel
from our shoreside maintenance facility to her designated cradle. At
0430 I'd have to be on her flight deck, going through the final
checklist of procedures for liftoff, or else forfeit my slot.
The wall
chronometer showed 0410 hours, and still no Tony Becker. I couldn't
believe the prickly bastard would screw me, but it wouldn't be any
surprise if he shaved the time to the bone just to make me squirm.
Phone him?
Nope. I just cursed and waited.
At 0415
the pork sausage patties, scrambled eggs, and fried tomatoes Karl had
given me for breakfast did a fandango in my gut. For some reason, the
notion of postponing the Phlegethon trip for two days was
unthinkable. If the Biotech vice president didn't show, I'd leave
without the trade goods and think up a new way to entice my quarry
into range. As for Tony Becker... would I really have him fired if he
failed me, as I'd threatened? Would I dismiss a valued Rampart
executive, a tireless charity fund-raiser, a devout churchgoer, a
staunch family man, merely because he'd refused to be an accomplice
in my cockamamie scheme?
You're
damned right I would.
But he
strolled into the pilot lounge at 0419, blase as you please. I
climbed to my feet and said, "Hey, Tony. Almost missed you."
Becker
was a round-faced blond man in his late thirties who wore a white
track suit that was not only immaculately clean,
but pressed. He
looked at me as though I were something that needed scraping off his
pristine athletic shoes, then thrust a padded fabric lunch pak into
my hands. It was the kind of thing small children took to school,
imprinted with images of the cartoon character Daffy Duck.
"Here,"
he said snippily. "One of my kids contributed the deceptive
packaging. Do you have
any idea how tough it was to get this
material put together? You'd better be damned sure nobody ever traces
this unethical stunt of yours back to me."
The Daffy
pack contained only two items. One was a semiobsolete Macrodur
magslate with a chipped case and a dirty screen. The other item was
an important-looking little technical container about the size of a
sandwich box that had built-in refrigeration and self-destruct units
and biohazard symbols stuck on all sides. I tipped it carefully out
of the pack onto a coffee table.
"Here's
the key." Tony handed me a dime.
Inside the
box were six smaller self-refrigerating biocontainers nested in
contour padding. I opened one and found a sealed, unlabeled vial
nearly full of viscous purplish liquid.
Tony
Becker said, "The viral vector is the real thing, with an
admixture of harmless contaminants and stain in the culture to make
it look exotic. It'll pass any test. The slate contains a complicated
production protocol that I faked up, using data from our own Spur
factories, and translated into Joru. It'll serve your purposes.
However, I should warn y»u that a really competent
biotechnician will probably suspect that the alien manufacturing
procedures are bogus. They're too efficient."
"That's
okay," I said, "so long as the vector itself passes
muster."
"I
told you it would, didn't I?" Tony snapped.
I handed
him a plastic card. It represented five hundred shares of Rampart
Preferred, signed over from my personal stakeholding. "A
tangible token of my appreciation, as I promised. But perhaps your
tender conscience won't allow you to accept a bribe."
I swear
that he hissed at me. Then he snatched the card, shoved it into his
belt wallet and stomped off, leaving me grinning. I took a last look
at the small vial before putting it away with the others. What looked
like runny grape jelly was actually the genetic engineering vector
PD32:C2. Barky Tregarth would be led to believe the vials were
samples— from a brand new source of the invaluable virus
located on a Joru planet.
I
locked up the container, slung the Daffy pack over my shoulder, and
dashed to the transporter. I arrived at
Makebate's cradle with
two whole minutes to spare.
——
The early
part of my voyage to Phlegethon was spent in dress rehearsal for my
upcoming role as a Joru. I strode masterfully about the cramped
flight deck practicing xeno gestures, dressed in flowing
black-and-white brocaded robes reminiscent of those worn by medieval
Dominican friars, doing my best to convey the impression that I was a
third of a meter taller and weighed an additional 45 kilos. (A few
shrimpy Joru were my height, 193 cm.) My stage presence had to
reflect the almighty chutzpah of a person who believed, as every
supremely self-confident male Joru did, that the sun, moon, and stars
shone out of his cloaca.
The
costume I had purchased at the Mississauga theatrical supply
establishment recommended by Halimeda Opper was elaborate and
expensive, intended for human actors impersonating Joru in close-up
holo performances. The fabric and accessories seemed authentic at
close inspection. My body, beneath the voluminous robes, was modified
by a padded suit that gave it additional bulk in the right places. I
also wore soft-armor longjohns and had additional armor in the hood
of the costume. My hands were enclosed in six-fingered gloves—the
prosthetic extra digits were even capable of movement—that
simulated hairy orange paws adorned with heavy golden rings. I
slipped small armor pads into the gloves to guard the backs of my
hands.
Disguising
my head and face was trickier, requiring the use of recontouring
makeup appliances, bulging faux eyes with vertical pupils, skin
texturizer, and a bald cap sporting a knobby crest and tufts of
apricot fur.
Alien
oxygen-concentrating equipment hid the lower part of my face—and
made the entire impersonation feasible, since Joru had peculiar
narrow jaws that were impossible to simulate on a normal human skull.
The mask wasn't operational, of course. Instead it was fitted with a
special internal translator device that modified my whispered
utterances into the alien language and broadcast them through an
annunciator at normal volume.
I
also wore an earpiece that would decipher Joru in case any member of
that race tried to speak to me in the mother tongue. A second
pendant-model translator, clipped to my collar in the usual fashion,
could be activated to
retranslate my Joru words back into
appropriately florid Standard English; I wasn't a good enough actor
to reproduce the mechanical idiom on my own.
After
getting my moves down pat and polishing my conversational candences,
I used the ship's computer library to brush up my knowledge of Joru
culture. I also created a personal legend that was loosely based on a
Joru criminal I'd known in the old days.
My
new identity was that of Gulowjadipallu Gulow, a native of the planet
Didiwa in Sector 7 in the inner Orion Arm. I had three wives,
fourteen offspring, and a pet
wulip back home. I was a
professional middleman, an information broker, as were so many other
members of my urbane and discreet race. I was semiretired, but still
kept a paw in when a truly unique opportunity presented itself.
Because I was rich and my time was so valuable, I traveled in a late
model star-ship of human manufacture. No one at Phlegethon would scan
it closely because I'd leave it in orbit, hidden in its impenetrable
dissimulator field, and dock at the asteroid in my ordinary-looking
ship's gig.
With luck,
minions of Ram Mahtani or other unfriendlies would never see through
my elaborate camouflage; and Barky Tregarth, even forewarned and
wary, wouldn't suspect my true identity until it was too late.
——
Four
days out of Earth, as I was traversing Red Gap, between the Orion Arm
and Sagittarius, I picked up a distress call on the generalized
subspace communication channel. At the time,
Makebate was
outside the normal shipping vectors, streaking through faintly
glowing drifts of interstellar gases slightly below the galactic
plane. There wasn't a star within 350 light-years, and no solid
matter larger than a mouse turd within 100.
The
automated beacon-style subspace signal was so faint it almost missed
me. But
Makebate's gonzo receiving equipment managed to pull
one of the flashes into dimensional focus, enabling us to lock on. I
only hesitated for a moment before transmitting a beamed response.
"Vessel
in distress," I said, "do you copy on Channel 6113?"
"...
We copy on Channel 6113. Thank you for responding."
The voice
was human with a heavy ethnic accent, indicating that its owner was
Earth-born and probably used his ancestral tongue at home in
preference to Standard English. Lots of people were like that,
defying the language police.
My
instrumentation showed that the com beam was very weak. The starship
sending the SOS traveled anonymously, as was common in regions
frequented by pirates. I, of course, was anonymous, too. My
rangefinder placed the other ship 154 light-years away in the
direction of the Sag, well out of scanner range.
"State
the nature of your emergency, vessel in distress," I said.
"Responding
starship, please identify yourself."
The hell I
would. With a focused SS com linkage established, the other ship
could now calculate my hyperspatial pseudovector with precision. If
it was an innocent, I'd do my best to help. If it was a trolling
buccaneer playing games, attempting to entice me within striking
distance, I'd teach it a painful lesson.
I
repeated, "Please state the nature of your emergency. My name is
Hugo. I'm a human trader who prefers to remain incognito at this
time." This was a coy admission that I was a smuggler. A few of
them, like my pal Mimo Bermudez, were not entirely devoid of humane
impulses. "I will attempt to contact Zone Patrol on your behalf
if you wish."
Abruptly,
the vessel in distress deactivated its ID blank-out. The data display
on my console showed its registration and ICS-approved itinerary.
SBC-11942 was a Sheltok bulk trans-ack carrier en route from Shamiya
in the Sag to the big fuel-plant complex on Lethe in Zone 8 of the
Orion Arm.
"Citizen
Hugo, this is Ulrich Schmidt, master of the
Sheltok Eblis. We
are under attack by a fleet of sixteen bandits. Our ULD engines are
disabled and we are operating under minimum subluminal
drive—effectively dead in the void. Our AM torpedoes are
exhausted. We have diverted nearly all remaining power to our
defensive shields. Uh ... I estimate that we can hold out for two
more hours, then we will have to surrender."
"I
understand. What can I do to help?"
"The
initial attack severely damaged our communication system. Our SS com
input is too weak to reach Sheltok Fleet Security on Lethe or any of
our Sagittarian units. We have also been unsuccessful in attempts to
contact Zone Patrol. Please notify the patrol of our situation if you
can."
"I
copy that and will comply, Captain Schmidt," I said. Then I
added mendaciously: "My long-range scanner picked up a ZP heavy
cruiser in my slice of hyperspace less than half an hour ago. It
might be able to reach you in time to drive off the bandits. Do you
have a racial ID on them?"
"It's
the
verftuchte Haluk again! No doubt about it. I hoped to
outwit them by vectoring below the galactic plane on
this trip,
but they found us anyhow. Twenty of the pig-dogs! I popped four with
AM torpedos before they needled my engines."
"Haluk?
Are you sure of that identification, Cap'n?" I tried to keep the
excitement out of my voice. The Barky Hunt had paid off already.
"Of
course I'm sure,
du Scheisskopfl Do you think I'm the first
carrier to be ambushed by these
doppelgurkeri fuckers? They're
bleeding Sheltok dry in Zones 3 and 4."
"Well,
that's a rotten shame, but it sure as hell ain't my fault."
Schmidt
was instantly contrite. "I'm sorry I lost my temper, Hugo.
Please—if you aren't able to contact Zone Patrol within ... a
viable time frame, then I request that you tell Lethe what happened
to us, as soon as you are able to do so."
"You
just hang tough, pardner. I'll do my best to set the patrol onto
those fuckin' blue scrotes. Good luck! Hugo out."
"Thank
you, Hugo.
Sheltok Eblis is out."
I'd lied
to Schmidt just in case his emergency was a hoax. I hadn't scanned a
ZP starship for over thirty hours, and that one had been back in Zone
8 of the Orion Arm, nearly 2,200 light-years away. The patrol has
precious few high-ross vessels, and they use them to guard heavily
traveled regular shipping lanes, not the godforsaken underbelly of
Red Gap.
But
not to worry, Cap'n!
Makebate could substitute nicely for a ZP
heavy cruiser. And I was bored and ready for some Lone Ranger action.
——
Roaring
down the hype at max pseudovee, I arrived at the ambush scene well
within Schmidt's estimated two-hour limit. Still, it was a near
thing. The shields of the great eight-kilometer-long carrier were
flickering crimson by then, and they wouldn't have held up much
longer.
The
bandits were so intent on savaging
Eblis that it took them
forever to spot me coming at them from down under, among the dust
clouds. When one of them finally scanned
Makebate, the whole
bunch broke off their bombardment, engaged ULD, and sheered away in
sixteen different directions. They were driving speedy small
starships that looked something like Bodascon Y600 knockoffs,
ornamented with those odd cobalt-blue running lights the Haluk are
fond of. They had plenty of horsepower to fly rings around a
slow-moving leviathan like
Eblis, but were hardly a match for
my souped-up sled and its extravagant weapon systems.
I played
reasonably fair—aside from misrepresenting myself as Zone
Patrol—sending warning shots from my actinic cannons at the
Haluk ships and calling for them to throw in the towel or sincerely
regret it. They kept running, most of them too panicked by my scary
conformation and superior speed even to fire on me. I made a
recording of each pirate ship's image and fuel signature before
wasting it. It took me almost two hours to chase down the last of the
sixteen, by which time I'd lost my appetite for one-sided combat—not
that I had any alternative to slaughtering them. If I gave them a
pass, they'd just find fresh prey.
There
was no way to tell if the doomed Haluk had sent subspace alarms to
their base. I was already having uneasy second thoughts about the
wisdom of my knight-errancy, but I put my worries aside, figuring I
hadn't really compromised the Phleg operation. If the Haluk high
command recognized
Makebate from a pirate's description—so
what? They already knew I was prowling the galaxy; the lovely Dolores
da Gama had seen to that. But they didn't know my destination or my
mission, and they certainly had no idea I'd be doing a turn in Joru
disguise.
Look on
the bright side, Helly! I told myself. You did your good deed for the
day.
And now I
had proof of Haluk freebootery in the inner galactic whorl to add to
the pile of accumulating evidence against them, plus some interesting
questions that needed answers:
Were Haluk
trans-ack pirates operating out of an independent base in the Sag, or
were they using Y'tata facilities? Was it possible that the Haluk had
formed a secret alliance with the frolicksome albino farters? Were
the hijackings intended to create an artificial shortage of
ultraheavy elements, or did the Haluk have other motives for grabbing
the stuff?
Perhaps
Barky Tregarth would know.
If he
didn't, I might just be forced to nab me a Y pirate out of some low
Phlegethon dive and hook him to the truth machine. It would be a
nasty interrogation for both of us. Sometimes aliens didn't survive
psychotronic questioning. (Occasionally humans didn't, either.) And
unless I corked the victim securely, the stress of the procedure
would generate a stomach-churning stench. Maybe I could grill the Y
while wearing a space suit...
I
returned to the immediate vicinity of the derelict trans-ack carrier
and dropped out of hyperspace. The region was still boiling with
ionic crud from the earlier bombardment, futzing the big ship's
scanners, but to be on the safe side I erected
Makebate's
dissimulator before hailing Captain Schmidt on short-range RE I
didn't want him or his crew to get a close look at me.
"Sheltok
Eblis, this is your old pal Hugo. Do you copy? The bandits are
gone and won't be back. You can relax now."
A Germanic
expletive came out of my com speaker, and then the viewer showed an
agitated middle-aged man in the ugly marigold-colored Sheltok
uniform. He had brush-cut hair and a thick neck.
"You
destroyed the Haluk pirates! All sixteen! Who are you?
What are
you?"
I had the
recorder going again. I ignored the skipper's demand that I turn on
my flightdeck video. "Captain Schmidt, congratulations on your
survival. Do you have any casualties?"
"No,
Gott sei Dank! But it was a close call for the engineers when
our ULD powerplant was disabled. We—We are very grateful for
your assistance, Hugo."
"Are
you aware," I said formally, "that Sheltok management has
suppressed information about Haluk pirate attacks against ultraheavy
element carriers? The media and the general public know nothing about
them."
The
captain's hooded blue eyes looked away.
"Ach, it's a
political thing, you know? Anyone who speaks of it..." He
trailed off, shaking his head.
"How
long have Haluk bandits been attacking Sheltok ships?"
But he was
too shrewd to fall into my clumsy trap. "I know what you're
trying to do," he growled. "You think you'll sell my
admission to the web-tabloid muckrakers. Wouldn't they pay a pretty
penny for a sensational story like this! Well, you won't get any more
out of me, whoever the hell you are. What good is it to be rescued
from killer pirates if one ends up Thrown Away for corporate
disloyalty, eh? Answer me that!"
"If
criminal behavior by the Haluk is brought into the open, they can be
pressured to cease and desist. You could avenge the other victims and
prevent—"
He
interrupted me with a scornful laugh. "I thought before that you
were a fool, Hugo. Now I know it for a fact. Sheltok will stamp out
these Haluk vermin and their renegade Y'tata confederates without
having its affairs smeared across the filthy media. Meanwhile, the
situation must be kept under wraps so as not to undermine public
confidence in the Concern. Do you understand?"
"I
only want to help."
He
suddenly sounded very tired. "Then call Lethe on your subspace
communicator and ask them to send a tug for us. Send it soon, Hugo.
Eblis out."
The viewer
went dark. And that was that.
I did as
Schmidt asked, in a roundabout fashion. As I resumed my interrupted
voyage, I contacted Karl Nazarian on the SS com and fed him the
recorded information I'd gathered on the pirate attack.
"Sixteen
Haluk bandits attacking one bulk carrier?" he marveled. "Good
grief. It almost sounds as though your war has already started."
"Pass
this fresh intelligence along to Ef Sontag. Then find a way to
anonymously relay
Eblis's request for a tug to Shel-tok Tower.
Their external security people will take it seriously if they're
given the coordinates of the derelict."
"What
about informing Zone Patrol?"
"Don't
bother. The report would only be suppressed. The carrier captain let
slip that Haluk attacks are common out here. Sheltok's just keeping
it quiet so as not to rock the consortium applecart ... Do you have
any good news for me?"
"Well,
there are no demiclones on Sontag's staff or in his family. Hector
and Cassius are skulking around the Assembly dining rooms, pinching
used water glasses and half-eaten croissants. So far, no Delegates
test positive. Lotte has analyzed and recollated all of the Gala
secret files. She's working with Sontag's people to mesh the new data
with the old. Bea Mangan found six scientists willing to do
tissue-culture research with the mystery gene."
"That's
great."
"Other
news: Simon nominated Gunter Eckert to be the new Rampart chairman
and John Ellington to be VC. The board will vote when Eve returns
from the Spur next week. Not a trace of your brother Dan. However,
one of the injured guards recovered enough to help InSec make up
computer-model images of three of Dan's abductors. Let me show them
to you. I think you'll find them interesting."
Three male
faces, side by side, flashed onto the com display. Two of the men
were totally nondescript; but there was something disturbingly
familiar about the third, and I felt a sudden dry sensation in my
throat.
"Karl,
is it my imagination, or does the guy in the middle look a little
like Alistair Drummond? Remove the mustache, add more flesh to the
cheeks, and lose the eye bags, give him a designer haircut..."
"The
resemblance isn't very close, but I spotted it, too."
"Drummond
and the
Haluk!? The aliens washed their hands of him—all
but betrayed him to us!"
"Yes,"
said Karl. "The resemblance is probably coincidental. But I
wanted to show it to you anyhow. Give you some food for thought."
"Thanks
all to hell," I grumbled. "Anything else?"
"The
weather in Toronto is sensational—twenty-three degrees celsius,
bright sunshine, balmy spring breezes. The Conurb Council turned off
the force-field umbrella for the first time this year."
"Wish
I was there."
"No,
you don't," said Karl Nazarian.
He bid me
goodbye and I resumed my interrupted journey to Phlegethon. A day or
so later I arrived at the asteroid without further incident.
——
From space
the little world looked like nothing much— perhaps a pitted and
decaying pumpkin, dull orange-black in color, with a handful of tiny
orbiting craft floating around it like fruit flies. Here and there
amber lights shone out of craters in the surface. What seemed to be
scores of deformed silver minnows nibbling the pumpkin rind—together
with numbers of smaller noshmates—were actually huge
transac-tinide carriers and lesser starships, either taking on fuel
or docked nose-to-ground while their crews rested and recreated
inside the not so heavenly body.
I have
been told that the original Phlegethon of Greek mythology was a fiery
river in Hades. Sheltok Concern owned a dozen or so similar way
stations with brimstony names—Gehenna, Styx, Sheol, Tophet,
Avernus, Niflheim, and the like—that served vessels bound to or
from the terrible R-class worlds where ultraheavy elements are mined.
Compared to the genuine inferno of the Sagittarian arm of the Milky
Way—nearly lifeless, seething with deadly gamma and x-radiation
blasted out from the galactic hub, clogged by colossal interstellar
dust clouds and minefields of cosmic debris, and infested with
malignant little black holes and the weird oscillating novae that
generate stable transactinide elements—dreary Phlegethon was a
Garden of Eden.
My
computer told me that the asteroid was only 163 kilometers in
diameter. It followed a distant orbit about a melancholy blood-orange
sun near the outer margin of the Whorl. The other planets in its
solar system were tired gas giants and waterless desert worlds. What
made Phlegethon appealing to starfarers was the fact that it was not
composed of solid rock or sterile meteoric metal, as are most
asteroids. Phleg was a carbonaceous chondrite.
CC's are
as common as comets in our galaxy. Most of them are smaller than a
bread box, a mixture of iron and magnesium silicates, other minerals,
and generous amounts of dihydrogen oxide, plus lots of simple organic
compounds—including amino acids, the building blocks of life.
Little CC's, falling as meteorites, can seed the oceans of newborn
worlds and cook up primordial soup. Large CC's, judiciously carved
and riddled, are the best possible interstellar way stations.
Warm one
of these lumps up with an internal powerplant to melt the embedded
ice, provide light and enough artificial gravity inside so denizens
and visitors can walk about in reasonable comfort, crack some of the
organic compounds to release nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide for
a breathable atmosphere in the tunnels, and you have an instant space
station. Add fertilizing trace elements to the pulverized asteroidal
substance and you can build yourself a garden in space, for an
asteroidal carbonaceous chondrite is nothing but a big ball of rocky
dirt. Carbon-based foodstuffs will grow like mad in an enhanced CC.
So will marijuana, magic mushrooms, coca shrubs, dilly beans,
pseudopoon, rakka, hebenon, and a host of other recreational narcotic
plants. Phlegeton grew those, but it was also noted for its succulent
salad veggies, suzyberries, sweet melons, and barley.
Yep,
barley. For beer. The place had five microbreweries.
Even
though Phlegethon was Sheltok property, it operated as a freesoil
world. There were none of the usual arrival formalities when my gig
docked at one of the small-craft mooring facilities. I came through
the airlock carrying only a locked titanium case hanging at my hip on
a baldric. It contained the contents of the Daffy pack and a Hogan
H-18 miniaturized low-power psychotronic interrogation device that
would enable me to learn whether Barky knew anything at all useful.
If he did, I'd take him back to
Makebate and attach him to
really efficient truth machines for more serious discussion.
I'd be
returning regularly to my starship to sleep and get a decent meal. My
costume's mask had ports for drinking through a straw and the
insertion of small edibles, and Joru readily consumed many kinds of
human alcoholic beverages and snack foods; but I wasn't going to give
up my favorite rib-stickin' ranch-type vittles for the duration. My
other personal needs would be take care of in the asteroid's public
conveniences, omniracial cubicles of the type that are
blast-sterilized after every use.
Hidden
under my robes was a collection of special equipment that included
both a stun-gun and a Kagi blue-ray blaster, restraint cuffs in
several sizes, antigravity supporters similar to the ones Black
Leather and Brown Fleece had used on me during my abduction, and a
projector capable of generating a movable small force-field
hemisphere. My flexible body armor would protect me from stun-darts
and most types of photon pistols, but I really hoped I wouldn't get
into a gunfight. The damned six-digit paws didn't enhance trigger
dexterity.
The
arrival-departure lobby of Phlegethon was a roughhewn cavern, very
well lit, swarming with people of four races. Humans were the most
numerous, but there were plenty of Y'tata and Joru. A few groups of
ponderous Kalleyni slouched about, giggling and gaping at the
goofy-looking humanoid entities.
Gravity in
this part of the asteroid was about seven-eighths terrestrial, enough
to put a good bounce in your step. The air was chilly, humid, and
smelled faintly of formaldehyde, one of the simple organic compounds
abundant in the asteroidal substance. A thin mist hung about the
light fixtures. I could hear the dull roar of powerful ventilation
equipment.
The floor
appeared to be wet tarmac, cambered for drainage and punctuated by
openings covered by ceramalloy grates. The walls and ceiling, so
heavily pocked and cratered that they resembled gritty dark Swiss
cheese, were covered by a transparent sealant that had cracked in
numerous areas, allowing meltwater and gases to seep through. You
could see embedded chunks of dirty ice everywhere. A rat's nest of
exposed cables, pipes, and utility ducts decorated the ceiling.
At regular
intervals around the chamber perimeter were large tunnels topped with
directional signs. They served as pedestrian thoroughfares, or gave
access to elevators and the small network of transport capsules.
Other openings in the lobby wall, stoppered by glass doors with heavy
gaskets, led to Sheltok offices, the better human-style hotels, and
the quarters of legitimate trading establishments.
I wasn't
interested in the latter.
As I stood
in a small alcove studying a holographic map of the place, a young
Y'tata sidled up to me. His wrinkled albino skin was an unhealthy
gray and the beady red eyes were crusted with matter. He was dressed
in light green pants, a long-sleeve green shirt, and a copper-scaled
kilt and vest. The garments were typical of a Y starship crew member,
but they were shabby and tarnished.
"Hey,
Mr. Joru, welcome to Phleg! You maybe need a guide? I'm your main
man. Whataya say?" He spoke in Standard English, as aliens are
obliged to do on human worlds—at least when humans are likely
to be listening. Y'tata translation devices have a snappy command of
semi-obsolete English slang.
"Go
away," I said shortly. I figured him for a maroony, one of those
unfortunate wretches who can be found on almost any galactic way
station, dumped off for some infraction of ship's discipline and
trying to earn enough credit through odd jobs to get back to their
home world. Human and Y maroonies were the most common, although
Qastt castaways were coming on strong in the Perseus Spur now that
they'd signed a trade treaty with the CHW.
"I'm
Sh'muz. Good name for a fast talker, hey? Or doesn't that translate?
Ha-ha! I can help you find abso-fuckin'-lutely
anything you
need. How's about a comfy high-oxygen hotel with nice hard beds? A
restaurant with
juwulimopsh like your dear old mothers used to
cook? Hey, you into sex for hire? Primo dope? Honest Injun gambling?"
I stared
haughtily at the entity in the condescending manner of my kind. Joru
and Y'tata shared roughly the same region of the inner galaxy, where
for over twenty thousand terrestrial years they were the only
stargoing Insaps. Their relationship had been one of contemptuous
toleration until the advent of the appalling Commonwealth of Human
Worlds, with its superior technology and policy of relentless racial
aggrandizement. A sense of mutual humiliation had drawn the Joru and
Y'tata closer together.
But not
too close.
For Y'tata
digestive processes generate peculiarly malodorous gases that once
served as a useful deterrent to predators on their planet of origin.
The effluvia are a rank offense to the sensibilities of the
fastidious Joru, whose breathing equipment concentrates oxygen from
the ambient atmosphere of exotic worlds and tends to amplify smells
as well. On Earth and the larger human colonies, there are laws
requiring Y'tata visitors to avert the danger of backfiring by taking
special medication; but minor settlements like Phlegethon that make a
special effort to attract alien customers tend to be more easygoing.
With a little extra effort, your average Y-on-the-street can control
himself in most interracial social situations.
Sh'muz was
doing his best not to offend, but not really succeeding. I was much
taller and probably scary-looking, making the creature nervous.
Maybe it
was the olfactory assault that overcame my common sense. At any rate,
I committed what eventually proved to be a major blunder. Stepping
back a few paces from the worst of the fug, I muttered, "There
is only one way in which you might assist me, disgusting noisome
entity. Do you know where I might find a human trader named Barney
Cornwall?"
Sh'muz
blinked his red eyes rapidly, a mannerism indicating both
disappointment and despair. "Never heard of the bugger." He
perked up. "But I know a Bernie Cohen! Any kinda contraband you
wanna buy or sell, Bernie's the guy. I can take you to his burrow in
the Bazaar right now."
"Thank
you, no." I began to move away.
"Look—I'll
ask around, see if anybody ever heard of this Barney Cornwall. Get
right back to you. You got a phone code? How about the name of your
hotel?"
"No!
Begone, obnoxious person!"
Sh'muz had
no intention of letting go of a live one. "I'll find the guy for
you, trust me. I got contacts! How's about we meet in about ten
hours, see what shakes? There's this bar, La Cucaracha Loca, a human
joint but all kinda entities welcome. On Level 4, near the
heavy-craft refueling bays. Midnight. Whataya say?"
The
answer to that one was:
Oh, shit. I'd carefully worked out
stratagems for introducing Barky Tregarth's alias into conversations
with Phlegethon locals, in hopes of luring him to my bait. None of my
tactical scenarios included a clown like Sh'muz trumpeting Barney
Cornwell's name about the asteroid like some flatulent town crier.
"Please
do not exert yourself on my account," I said firmly. "I am
not really interested in meeting Trader Cornwall after all. Is that
clear? Forget him and forget me!"
"Aww
..." Utter dejection. The pathetic Y'tata maroony was probably
counting on the tip for eating money.
I opened a
pouch in my baldric, extracted a human hundred-dollar bill, and
handed it over. "Please leave me alone. Here is a little
something to tide you over until you find another client to guide."
The
Y'tata's eyes blazed like the taillights of a BMW as he registered
appreciation.
"Hey—thanks
a bunch, Mr. Joru! You're a prince. Or prime minister. Or whatever!
I'll find Cornwall if I hafta tear this orbiting garbage heap apart.
Don't forget! Cucaracha Loca. Twenty-five hundred hours. Be there!"
He dashed
away into the crowd, leaving me cursing in a miasma.
——
I got on
an elevator and headed down.
The
uppermost levels of Phlegethon were devoted to fuel storage areas,
starship repair shops, Sheltok offices, and traveler amenities. Below
were situated enormous ultrase-cure warehouse caverns, many with
access tunnels opening to the surface, labeled only with anonymous
alphanumerics. Some of the merchandise locked inside might have been
legitimate trade goods; a larger percentage was undocumented
contraband. Sheltok's port officials didn't care what went into and
out of the storerooms; they simply charged extortionate rent and
collected stiff entrance and exit fees on every transshipment.
Beneath
the storage levels the elevator passed farm galleries lit by dazzling
vapor lights, alternating with blocks of environmental utilities. In
the denser core of the asteroid, where embedded ice and volatile
organic chemicals were at a minimum, were apartment warrens for the
permanent inhabitants and the catacombs where shady traders
congregated.
The more
prosperous of these hucksters conducted business in an area called
the Bazaar, on Level 32. Here hundreds of chambers had been carved
out of the asteroid's interior substance. Some were no-frill holes in
the wall that bordered on the squalid, wide open to passersby, crude
excavations fitted out with desks, computers, com equipment, and a
few stools. Others, with sample merchandise on display, were fully
enclosed and as elaborately tarted up as the small retail stores in
Toronto's Underground Path. Both kinds of outfits were swarming with
customers.
A
directory, divided into categories, was posted next to the elevator.
I consulted it and made a list of arms traders. There were over a
dozen of them, peddling everything from Kalleynian ceremonial
tail-sabres to antimatter torpedoes. Since guns and materiel had been
Barky Tregarth's area of expertise in the Perseus Spur, I hoped he
was still in the same game here in the Sag. It would certainly fit
neatly with his interest in the Haluk.
I visited
each merchant of death in turn, beginning with the humans. Most of
them brushed me off almost immediately when they discovered the
esoteric nature of my trade goods. To those who showed an interest, I
delivered my spiel, which went something like this:
——
merchant
of death: What you want? I'm a busy man, Joru, so make it quick. None
of your damned time-wasting yackety-yak.
helly
as joru: I have some extremely valuable merchandise on offer, of a
most unusual nature. It does not readily fit into any category listed
in the Bazaar directory; but since the material has a certain
strategic value, I wish to sound out your interest.
mod:
Extremely valuable? ...
haj:
[Taking a single small biocontainer out of his baldric case while
simultaneously allowing his sleeve to fall back, revealing an arm
holster containing a Kagi pistol with a glowing ready-light] Allow
me to open this refrigerated cylinder. Ah—there! The contents
are a genetic engineering viral vector known as PD32:C2.
mod:
Never heard of it. And I don't deal in biological warfare items. Get
lost.
haj:
This viral vector is of special interest to the Haluk race. They pay
the human corporation Rampart Concern enormous sums for it.
mod:
[Slight lessening of hostility] Oh. That stuff.
haj:
Precisely. In the Perseus Spur a similar small vial of this precious
substance would bring 250,000 on the black market—twice as much
if sold directly to the blue-skinned ones.
mod:
[In disbelief] Haifa million bucks for one of those little
ampules? You shittin' me, high pockets?
haj:
That is still twenty percent less than Rampart retail. But here is an
interesting thing: this PD32:C2 was not manufactured by Rampart! It
comes from an entirely new viral source on a certain Joru world. The
simpletons there do not realize that the vector they are producing
for the genetic modification of livestock is identical to the
substance so desperately coveted by the Haluk. This vial I have shown
you is only a sample. I have access to unlimited quantities—and
my price is a mere 120,000 per vial.
mod:
[Shaking head] Yon should be peddling this stuff in the
Perseus Spur, fella. Around these parts ... it could be really hard
to move. Nobody's gonna give a guy like you anything like the kind of
deal you quoted. Maybe not even a tenth the price.
haj:
[Seeming not to understand the implied invitation to dicker] One
hears rumors. Very persistent rumors of a clandestine Haluk presence
in this Sagittarian zone, in association with individuals of the
putrid Y'tata race. And so, rather than travel from my home base on
Didiwa to the forbiddingly remote Perseus Spur, where Haluk trade
operations are spied upon by arrogant agents of Rampart Concern and
the Human Commonweal, and I or my agents might be imperiled, I
traversed Red Gap to this place of... peculiar reputation, where I
had never before done business. Even though Phlegethon is a
possession of Sheltok Concern—may diseased
maslaw defecate
upon their corporate earnings report!—I understand that it is
possible here to engage in confidential undertakings without personal
hazard. I confess that I hoped to find knowledgeable and enterprising
persons in this asteroid who might have access to the far-ranging
Haluk.
mod:
/
Uncomfortably} I've heard the rumors about Haluk pirates
going after Sheltok carriers in the Sag. Far as I know, they're just
rumors. No blueberry bandits ever drop in here to fuel up or hit the
casinos.
haj:
I must speak frankly now. The name of a certain human who has been
known to trade with the Haluk was suggested to me by a colleague on
Didiwa. I confess that I originally came to Phlegethon hoping to make
contact with this trader—but no human I have spoken to thus far
seems to know him. Or if they do, they will not reveal his
whereabouts to a Joru. I would pay an extremely generous finder's fee
to the person who steered me to him.
mod:
What's this joker's name?
haj:
He is called Barney Cornwall.
mod:
[Elaborately casual] Mmm. The name's sort of familiar. I seem
to remember that he's a hard guy to get a hold of. Comes and goes,
you know?
haj:
You do have his acquaintance, then?
mod:
I didn't say that.
haj:
[Taking a dilapidated magslate out of the baldric case] This
device contains the complete manufacturing sequence for the Joru
vector production facility. Of course, the verbal portions are in the
Joru language, but that should not prove too much of an obstacle. In
order to prove the authenticity of my merchandise, I am willing to
allow a cooperative person to copy this manufacturing data and pass
it on to the man Cornwall.
mod:
How about handing over one of those sample vials? For all I know, you
could be peddling grape jelly.
haj:
[Insulted] It is the true PD32:C2, only from a new source! I
vow it upon my honor as a Joru! The virus will pass any test. If you
wish, we can take it to a bioassay establishment immediately. I note
that there is one listed in the Bazaar's directory.
mod:
Well... maybe that won't be necessary.
——
At this
moment of truth I would tell the arms peddler that he could buy the
sample for fifty kay and resell it to Cornwall for whatever the
traffic would bear. He would laugh scornfully and accuse me of
playing a confidence game. I would become furiously indignant at the
insult, grab up my things, and storm out of the place.
Four
dealers called me back before I got out the door, calmed my wounded
feelings, and eventually persuaded me to let them have a freebie
along with a dime copy of the magslate contents, citing their
excellent reputation among the local entrepreneurs and their strong
hope of being able to track down Barney Cornwall. I promised to phone
the next day.
After
making my pitch to the last trader, I returned to
Makebate,
stripped off my disguise, and had a long hot shower. Then I
reconstituted some barbecued baby back ribs, a baked potato, some
Blue Lake green beans, and a handful of snickerdoodle cookies, and
ate them seated in my command chair while listening to quiet jazz
selections by Bill Evans and Marian McPartland.
By and
large I was well satisfied with the day's masquerade. Surely one of
the four traders who had taken a sample would pass it on to Barky
Tregarth—or at least contact him with news of the sensational
find. Then my only challenge would be figuring out a safe way to
snatch him and do the preliminary interrogation. I hoped the old man
wouldn't be too frail to withstand the rigors of interrogation. Maybe
he'd spill his guts for a payoff, as Adam Stanislawski had suggested.
Then all I'd have to verify was the general truth of his statements.
I put on
another recording—surf breaking on a barrier reef, rustling
mint-palms, crooning elvis-birds—reclined in the chair and fell
asleep. I dreamed of my tropical island on Kedge-Lockaby, 23,600
light-years away, and my new yellow submarine, which I'd hardly had a
chance to break in.
In the
"morning" I ate a big breakfast, since I'd get almost
nothing to eat while in costume. It took nearly an hour and a half to
restore my Joru makeup. Then I climbed into the gig and returned to
the asteroid. On the way in I phoned the four arms dealers.
Two of
them said they'd had no luck finding Barney Cornwall. They offered to
return my vector samples. The other two, shiftier than the first
pair, told me they were still looking. I should call again tomorrow.
Or maybe the next day.
Rats.
I'd have
to try my shtick on the other contraband merchants. There were nearly
a hundred of them in the Bazaar, trading in everything from scandium
fuel catalyst to Kalleyni pornography, and lots more were doing
business in bars of public corridors. Even if I confined myself to
humans and Y'tata, those races were far and away the most numerous
among the dealers. I was in for a long and unpleasant haul.
Y'tata
offensiveness went without saying. And if yesterday's experience held
true, the human traders would be spectacularly rude. Interspecies
harmony wore thin in the galactic boondocks, especially between
humanity's lower orders and the snotty Joru, who had a rep for
pennypinching. It wasn't much fun being an alien after all...
I left the
docked gig and reentered the asteroid's big lobby, thinking depressed
thoughts, for the first time facing the possibility that my clever
scheme was a piece of shit. Maybe Ram Mahtani had suckered me out of
Stanislawski's big bribe after all. Maybe Barky Tregarth had been
dead for years. Or if he was alive, maybe Ram had warned the old
geezer to run for his life. Maybe I was a self-deluding asshole off
on a futile snipe-hunt, and I should have listened to Karl and stayed
home on Earth making use of the evidence we already had—
"Hey,
Mr. Joru! Missed you last night at Cucaracha Loca."
I whirled
about and found Sh'muz. His garb was cleaner and his complexion had
lost some of its terminal lividity. A little money, a little hope of
cashing in further on a good thing, can do that.
"I
told you that I do not require your services," I har-rumphed.
"Sure
you do," he retorted breezily. "I found somebody you might
really wanna meet."
"What!
Are you saying you found Barney Cornwall?"
"An
entity who knows him." He paused, then rubbed his digits
together in a gesture nearly universal among sapient beings.
"Of
course I'll pay you for the information." I named a sum that
would buy a ticket to any Y'tata planet within Zone 3. "You say
'entity.' Does this mean that your source is not a human?"
"Y'tata
starship captain. Independent operator." Sh'muz meant pirate.
"He'll want to be paid, too. Lots more than me."
"That
part of the transaction need not concern you. When and where may I
meet this person?"
He twirled
his eyes in the Y gesture equivalent to a wry human shrug. "You
coulda done it last night if you'd met me in La Cuca. Come tonight.
Same time, midnight. I'll do the introduction, you pay me, I
skedaddle."
"You
are
absolutely certain that this person can put me in contact
with Barney Cornwall?"
"Hey—is
the Pope Catholic?"
I huffed
disdainfully through my mask. "That Standard English slang
phrase does not translate into Joru, but I presume it is affirmative.
Very well. Expect me at the drinking establishment at 2500 hours."
Sh'muz
gave a jaunty farewell bounce—fortunately without losing
control—and skipped away into the throng. I stood there for a
while, thinking. It seemed a good idea to retrieve the two samples of
PD32:C2—after all, they were Rampart property—so I did
so, giving modest tips to the honest gun merchants. Then I scoped out
La Cucaracha Loca and its immediate environs, with a view to
abduction.
The bar
was close to Phlegethon's busy fueling bays, a handy little oasis for
transient starfarers and the contraband traders who wheeled and
dealed with them. Loud Latin jazz played over an uproar of voices.
The place served only human beverages and snacks, and was packed with
human, T'tata, and Joru drinkers. Even a few grotesque Kalleyni
squatted in a corner where the gravity was turned low, slurping
beakers of corrosive White Lightning and shrieking mirthfully at
their own jokes.
I ordered
a martini. I hate martinis, but that's what Joru drink in human
dives; martinis with extra olives because that's the best part of the
drink. The aliens poke the gin-soaked fruit through the eating ports
of their masks and chew rapturously. I wasn't ready to suffer that
much for my art.
The
bartender said, "Something wrong with the olives?" He was a
tough-looking human with a pencil-thin mustache and sallow skin.
"They
are exquisite," I assured him, "but I am feeling a trifle
indisposed. Please direct me to the relief facility."
He looked
at me funny, as though this were a question I should know the answer
to. "In the rear, in the alley. Pay for your drink before you
go."
The dimly
lit alley-passage backed on numbers of other grogshops, cheap
cabarets, and modest eateries in the immediate vicinity. It contained
two refuse-recycling units, a triplex latrine with an exterior
puke-basin, haphazard stacks of empty crates, and a stock-delivery
elevator. The latter was in use.
Leaning
against the toilet cubicle near the basin, I fumbled with my mask and
moaned, pretending to be unwell, and watched a human worker bring
barrels of beer out of the lift and tote them into one of the other
pubs. When he was gone I summoned the elevator myself and surveyed
the interior. The control pads were labeled with the names of several
beverage and food supply outfits located on lower levels. The only Up
button wore a little sign that said dock 0-6.
Well,
well.
I pressed
it and made a short ascent. When the door slid open I found myself in
an area where medium-sized freighters and the lighters that served
larger starships were discharging cargo and taking it aboard.
Roboporters loaded with container pods were zipping all over the
place. A human stevedore maneuvered a train of small cars carrying
crates of familiar terrestrial booze into a kind of cage next to my
elevator and began off-loading them. Unfortunately, he spotted me in
the open elevator car.
"Hey,
Joru! Whatcha doing in there?"
When
caught flatfooted in suspicious circumstances, act blotto. "Aargh.
I—I fear I am confused by strong drink. I am seeking my vessel,
the
Julog- Will. It appears I have come to the wrong dock."
"Yeah,
well, you get the hell back downstairs and find the right fuckin'
lift. This is a human dock. Joru ships tie up at D-3 and D-4."
I
apologized and returned to where I had started. Back in La Cucaracha
Loca, I treated myself to a shot of Jack Daniel's. The bartender
looked at me askance, since Joru don't drink whiskey, but I didn't
give a damn. It was celebration time.
I'd
found a way to remove Barky Tregarth unobtrusively from Phlegethon.
All I had to do was lure him to La Cuca, slip him a mickey, take him
into the alley, lose my Joru disguise, and get us both up to Dock
G-6.
Makebate's gig would come for us on autopilot if I
summoned it with my phone-link. The dock was so busy that I doubted
if anyone in authority would notice another small orbiter craft
nosing in among the lighters and picking up two human crew members.
Yes. It
was going to work... provided that Sh'muz and his pirate pal weren't
scamming me.
I went
back to my starship to get things ready.
——
I arrived
half an hour early for the rendezvous, just because it seemed like a
good thing to do, and sat unobtrusively at the end of the bar nearest
the front door. The Latin music was less raucous than it had been
during my earlier visit. Sh'muz and a formidable-looking entity who
was clearly his informant were sitting together at one of the little
tables, drinking beer. Y'tata love beer. The maroony had a longneck
bottle of Bud, and the large ugly Y in the shiny skipper's uniform
had just picked up his freshly arrived stein of draft and started to
drink it down.
But the
brew didn't suit the alien starship captain's taste. He puckered up
his pasty face in revulsion, slammed the mug down on the table,
splashing poor Sh'muz, and roared, "Waitress! This overpriced
belly-wash is flat!"
"That's
our top-line house microbrew," the overworked human server said
over her shoulder. "You want more carbonation, blow bubbles in
it. Just be sure you sue your north end—or I'll have our
bouncer cork you so tight you'll never whistle 'Dixie' again."
This
provoked general merriment among the non-Y'tata patrons. A human
starship crewman called out, "That's telling him, Gigi! Fuckin'
Y bum-tootler."
Actually,
members of the intestinally challenged race frequenting La Cucaracha
Loca that night seemed mostly to be on their good behavior. No alien
flatus defiled the atmosphere, which smelled of tobacco smoke, grass,
hops, popcorn, bacon sandwiches, and the odd but not unpleasant aroma
of Kalleyni slime. But storm clouds, so to speak, were on the
horizon.
"Insolent
human shitwit!" yelled the Y'tata skipper to the starman,
surging to his feet and flipping up the back of his copper-studded
vest in challenge. "Step outside and I'll toot you right off the
friggin' asteroid!"
A barroom
brawl wouldn't serve my purposes. I rapidly pushed my way to the
scene of the confrontation and placed myself between insulter and
insultee. Even though I'm a Joru midget, I was considerably larger
than either the Y skipper or the human starship crewman with the big
mouth.
"If
you please, dispenser of beverages!" I thundered to the barkeep,
waving a large-denomination bill. "Serve both of these worthy
entities some Pilsner Urquell. Include a thirty percent gratuity for
yourself and the female server, and let tranquility and good
fellowship be restored."
Gigi the
waitress brought open bottles of the pricey premium brew with crystal
glasses upended over the mouths. She handed one to the appreciative
human spacer, who said, "Wow! I always wanted to try this
stuff."
I
appropriated the second Urquell and sat down at the table of the two
Y'tata. "Allow me to do the honors, Captain," I said
suavely, easing the golden liquid into the tilted glass and creating
a moderate head of creamy foam. "I pray you will enjoy this most
excellent variety of beer with my heartfelt compliments. It is brewed
only in a single city on Earth."
The
skipper glared at me suspiciously as he reassumed his seat. It took
the Pilsner glass from my hand, upended it, and downed the beer in a
single heroic chug. "Good bubbles. I'll have another one, Joru."
I signaled
Gigi, who nodded and went off.
"This
is Captain B'lit," said Sh'muz. He'd turned a whiter shade of
pale during the face-off and his voice still quavered slightly.
"I am
Gulow," I said. "I hope to do business with you tonight,
Captain."
"How
much is it worth to you?" the skipper inquired insolently.
I lowered
my voice almost to the point of inaudibility. The other bar patrons
were ignoring us now that the danger of a pong assault had abated.
"If you are truly an acquaintance of the human trader Barney
Cornwall," I said, "and are able to introduce me to him
promptly, so that I may offer him certain rare merchandise, I will
vouchsafe an appropriate emolument." I named a sum that made
Sh'muz gasp.
"Double
it," sneered BTit, "and you got a deal."
"The
aforesaid generous price is firm," I said stonily. "Vulgar
haggling is beneath the dignity of the Joru."
"Cheapskate,"
muttered BTit. His second Urquell arrived and he took his time
pouring and sipping it. Finally: "How do you figure to pay?"
"By
means of preloaded blind EFT cards issued by a human financial
institution. Once activated, the cards are negotiable on any human
world and many alien ones, with no questions asked."
"Hmm.
This rare merchandise you want to sell to Cornwall ..." The
skipper was elaborately casual. "You got it in there?" A
pink claw pointed at the locked metal case hanging on my baldric.
"Certainly
not," I said. "The most valuable thing I have to sell,
Captain BTit, is information. And it is most securely guarded. As is
my own person." I let him see the arm holsters up my sleeves.
"Do not take me for a fool. Furthermore, I will require proof of
Barney Cornwall's identity before I pay you."
"Ask
him yourself, you Joru prick," the Y skipper said.
"He's
sitting over there in the corner. He owns the goddamn joint!
C'mon—I'll introduce you."
The two
Y'tata and I moved through the closely packed patrons. The man in the
corner had an unusual area of empty space around his table. He sat
with his back to the wall, nursing a stein of microbrew, and watched
our approach with an ironic smile.
It was a
setup. But what kind? I decided I'd have to carry on according to
plan.
The man
who might have been Hamilcar Barca Tregarth didn't look at all like
the doddering centenarian I'd envisioned. In fact, he might have been
fifty years old or even younger, with shoulder-length brown hair and
unlined, rather handsome features. If he really was the man I was
looking for, he'd been very extensively—and expensively—
rejuvenated. He wasn't tall but his build was solidly muscular, shown
to advantage by a tailored jumpsuit of dark blue leather, zipped open
to the waist to reveal a trendy fishnet T-shirt. Around his neck hung
a heavy platinum chain with a large pendant. When we were closer, I
was able to identify the stone in the pendant as an exotic fossil the
size of a plum. I'd seen its like before, in the Perseus Spur...
"Hey,
Barney," said the Y skipper.
"Hey,
BTit. Been a long time."
The Y'tata
winked one piggy red eye. "This is the guy."
I did my
Joru thing. "Do I have the pleasure of addressing Barney
Cornwall?"
"Pleasure?"
The man in the blue jumpsuit gave a hard laugh. "We'll have to
see about that."
"Before
we go any further," I said firmly, "I must tell you that a
certain associate on my home world recommended Trader Cornwall as the
person most likely to know the true value of... certain extremely
specialized goods I am offering for sale. You must forgive me if I
verify your identity."
"What!"
BTit exclaimed. "You want a DNA profile? It's Barney Cornwall in
the flesh, you Joru dipstick! Every big-time freebooter in the Sag
knows him. Now pay me!"
"Me,
too," Sh'muz whispered. "Please?"
I took a
pair of EFT cards out of my baldric and programmed them with the
agreed amounts, flapped a wait-a-bit paw at the two Y'tata, and
addressed the man at the table. "There is a simple way to prove
you are Barney Cornwall. Please tell me your other nickname."
His dark
eyes turned to slits and I felt a brief touch of uneasiness. But
after a prolonged pause, he smiled again and said softly, "Some
people call me Barky."
"The
very answer I had hoped for! Thank you for enduring my necessary
gaucherie in a civilized manner." I handed EFT cards to each of
the Y'tata. "And now I must insist that you two entities depart
forthwith." Sh'muz scuttled off, but B'lit continued to stand
there, smirking insolently. "Go!" I roared. Grabbing the
copper epaulets of his uniform vest, I spun him about and gave him a
propelling knee in the backside.
Bad move.
He laughed, then retaliated as only a Y'tata can, strolling out of
the place in a fusillade of farts as patrons rushed to get out of his
way, groaning and cursing. But an instant later some sort of powerful
exhaust fan kicked in and quickly sucked up the reek. I suppose there
was a special sensor for social errors in this sort of place. The
bartender cried, "Drinks on the house!" and any potential
exodus was nipped in the bud.
Barky
Tregarth was unperturbed. He indicated the seat opposite him and
said, "Sit down." When I did, he stared at me in silence
for several minutes, finishing his stein of beer. Then he gave a
little nod, as though satisfied by his inspection, and placed a small
object on the table between us.
It was one
of the biocontainers of doctored PD32:C2 I'd handed out to the arms
dealers the day before.
"Terrific
bait!" he said. "The real thing. I had it checked out.
And that's a damned good xeno disguise, too."
My innards
turned to ice. I sat without moving. He'd made me as a human and a
fraud, probably knew I was Ram Mahtani's mystery client. But did he
know who I really was? And was there still a chance I could pull off
the abduction?
He
continued, "I knew you were looking for me as soon as your
Y'tata bud contacted Captain B'lit yesterday. I had to check you out,
after a warning that I got from a friend on Earth, so I had one of my
people zap your paw with a diagnosticon in the seventh gun shop you
visited yesterday. A medical body scanner, you know? You never
noticed the gadget sitting on the counter. It said the skin of your
hand wasn't alive. Imagine that! So you're not a Joru, and there's no
new source of PD32:C2, and I'm kinda pissed off 'cause I was really
hoping somebody had the fuckin' key to El Dorado for sale."
"There's
still a lot of money to be made," I said, and started to open my
baldric pouch.
"Hold
still," Barky hissed. "You wouldn't be dumb enough to reach
for a gun, would you? An associate of mine at the table behind you
has you targeted. And I know about the Kagi and the Ivanov stashed up
your sleeves."
But do you
also know about my body armor? And my force-field generator?
"I'm
reaching for another EFT card," I explained. "A very
friendly sort of weapon. May I?"
He
inclined his head and I pulled the little slip of plastic out and
passed it across the table. It was Adam Stanislawski's last minute
contribution to the war chest. Barky Tregarth's eyebrows rose as he
checked the load readout. "A nice sum. Not El Dorado, but...
nice. What do you want?"
"Information
only. Confirmed psychotronically."
He
laughed. "I'm just a gunrunner and innkeeper. Moderately
prosperous in my old age. What do I know worth that kind of money?"
I leaned
forward and pointed to the pendant hanging around his neck. "Where
did your jewelry come from?"
He sat
stock still, then said, "So that's it."
"I've
seen that kind of fossil before, on the planet Artiuk, a Haluk colony
in the Spur. Some of the local officials and other dignitaries I met
on a visit there wore the pendants as badges of honor. But you didn't
get yours in a Haluk Spur colony, did you, Barky?"
"No,"
he said calmly.
"It
was given to you in the Haluk Cluster, wasn't it? That's why you were
so anxious to redeem it from Clifton Castle, the fence who lent you
the money you needed to escape from Tyrins, thirty-five years ago."
"You
seem to know a lot about me."
"I
have no animus against you. I'm not at all interested in your shady
business career. But I do want to know what you saw when you visited
the Haluk Cluster. I want any information you have on their
population density, the total number of inhabited planets, the
demographic pressures that drove them to emigrate to the Perseus
Spur. I want to know how big a supply of transactinide elements they
have out there in their cluster, and how they mine ultraheavies,
given their inferior technology. And I'd like to know what they're
doing
here, in the Sag."
"Who
are you?" Barky Tregarth asked.
"My
name isn't important, but I do have some important friends. One of
them is responsible for the stake on that EFT card. I believe that
the Haluk are still hostile to humanity and plan to invade our
galaxy. Part of their strategy involves attacks on our starships.
That's going on right here and now, in the Sagittarius Whorl. Haluk
bandits are hijacking trans-ack carriers, and Sheltok Concern is
doing a big cover-up, pressured by other members of the Haluk
Consortium who do business with the aliens. The Haluk scheme for
domination also involves infiltration—a conquest from within.
My friends and I have proof that Haluk masquerading as human beings
have wormed their way into the Hundred Concerns. They may even have
spies in our government. We need more evidence to support our
contention that the Haluk represent a serious threat to human
security. When we get it, we'll put it before the Commonwealth
Assembly. Public opinion will force the Delegates to reexamine the
Haluk nonaggression pact and their trade treaty."
Barky was
still holding the nonactive EFT card, doing the old gambler's trick
of "walking" it from one finger to another. "Politics!"
He gave a bleat of derisive laughter. "Fuck that. I'm a
Throwaway—a noncitizen. The Commonwealth says I don't exist.
Why should I give a hoot in hell if blueberry raiders heist trans-ack
carriers? In the Sag, Sheltok charges stargoing aliens and
independent human operators twice as much for fuel as it charges
Concern ships. So the Haluk even the score, with a little help from
the Y'tata. Big deal."
"I
think they're planning to wage war, Barky. Interrupting our supply of
vital fuel elements is only part of their strategy"
"That's
a crock of shit. The Haluk want to trade, not fight."
"Are
they buying weapons from you?"
"Sure!
It's no big thing. So do the real Joru, and the Kalleyni, and the Y.
I'm the biggest gun-peddler on Phleg. And you know where I get my
merchandise? From Carnelian, and from over a dozen other Concerns who
wink at contraband trafficking. What do those corporate ass-wipes in
Toronto care where the stuff goes, as long as the price is right? As
for your war idea, I think it's crapola. There aren't enough Haluk
fighting ships in the Sag to wage war on the Kalleyni fruit
fleet—much less the Human Commonwealth."
"Do
you know how many Haluk ships are operating here?"
He held up
the EFT card between two fingers. "Will the blueberries know I
sold 'em out if I talk to you?"
"No,"
I lied. "Whatever I learn from you will only be used back on
Earth. For political purposes, as you said. My friends and I have no
interest whatsoever in shutting down your Phlegethon operation or
halting your trade with the Haluk. Even if we did, how could we? The
asteroid is Sheltok property. CCID and the Secretariat enforcers have
no authority here unless Sheltok grants it. That won't happen."
"I
can't compromise my Haluk tie-in."
"You
don't have to. Any questions I ask that you don't want to
answer—don't. We can still do business."
"Maybe."
He was twiddling the card again, apparently weighing the pros and
cons. As he'd observed, it was a nice amount of money.
I said,
"If you talk to me, you'll be just another confidential source.
CHW can't touch you. As you pointed out, you're an important man here
on Phlegethon."
"Damn
straight," said Barky Tregarth, grinning. "You try anything
cute, you're one dead Joru fucker."
I nodded
submissively. "I have a Hogan miniature psychotronic
interrogation device in my case—useless for prying the truth
out of reluctant subjects, but it will indicate whether a cooperative
person is telling the truth. You can sit right here and tell me about
your adventure in the Haluk Cluster—that's the thing I'm most
interested in—then add whatever else you wish to tell me about
Haluk activity in the Sag. I can check your veracity with a single
question: 'Is everything you've said the truth?' If the machine
confirms your reply, I'll activate the plastic. You'll be richer by
four million. What do you say?"
"What
the hey! Why not? You know, it's kinda gratifying to finally find
somebody who believes that I made the Big Trip."
A waitress
came up behind me and asked if we wanted another round of drinks.
Barky gave
her a big smile. "Another stein of Peg-Leg for me, Lola. And my
friend ..."
"Jack
Daniel's," I said. "Straight up."
"I
thought Joru didn't like whiskey," the waitress said. "It
is an acquired taste," I replied over my shoulder, "and
I've just acquired it."
——
It was not
so much the great distance to the Haluk Cluster that had deterred
exploration by the Commonwealth of Human Worlds so much as the
uselessness of the enterprise. The implacably hostile aliens wanted
nothing to do with humanity, and in the early days of human galactic
exploration the Haluk backed up their antipathy with enough firepower
to deter CHW survey ships and curious adventurers.
Later,
after Galapharma AC began to exploit the Perseus Spur and faced
attacks from Haluk colonies there, the big Concern and Zone Patrol
got tough. Humans and Haluk fought a brief interstellar battle near
the human colony of Nogawa-Krupp, and the aliens were soundly
defeated. Facing the potential annihilation of their eleven colonial
planets, the Haluk signed an armistice. One of its terms halted their
Milky Way expansion; another precluded human exploration of the Haluk
Cluster.
Barky
Tregarth figured he had a chance of making the trip and coming back
alive because he was a smuggler, not a representative of a Concern or
CHW. The Haluk desperately needed the superior technical equipment
made by humanity, and the only way to get it was through contraband
dealers like Barky. Most human outlaw traders dealt with the Haluk in
deep space; but a handful of the most favored made brief visits to
Haluk Spur colonies.
One of the
favored ones was Barky.
Without
telling his wagering pals, he prevailed upon a Haluk business
acquaintance on Artiuk to provide him with a letter of introduction.
Then he returned to his base on the freesoil planet Yakima-Two, a
notorious smuggler hangout, and made his wager. It was a very large
one.
He
fitted his starship, which was over twice the size of
Makebate,
with oversized fuel cells as I had done, and still had enough
room left in the hold for a cargo that he thought would ensure him a
warm welcome once he arrived. He loaded his ship with high-end
computers, force-field generators, portable antimatter powerplants,
programmable virtual-reality ticklesuits, a single Bodascon ULD
engine of the latest type, and 1,500 Japanese silk kimonos in subtle
colors, size
okii, highly coveted by Haluk males as wedding
garments.
Then he
set off where no human had gone before.
Even
thirty-five years ago the scanner technology on Barley's ship was
hugely superior to that of the Haluk. He managed to elude all of
their patrols, he found the solar system where the cousin of his
Artiuk acquaintance resided, and after some very fast talking he was
allowed to come landside in his gig.
The
cousin, whose name was Ratumiak, was on the personal staff of the
planetary governor and a person of considerable influence. He advised
Barky to forget any notion of selling his valuable cargo. Instead,
the smuggler presented everything to the governor as a gift. On
Ratumiak's advice, Barky told the Haluk official the barebones truth:
that he had made the trip on a bet.
The
governor thought that was hilarious.
He
compared Barky's lunatic exploit to a similar jaunt by a legendary
Haluk hero and declared that the bold human voyager would be treated
as an honored guest. Barky got a grand tour of the Haluk world and
asked a lot of questions about the alien civilization. His roguish
sense of humor, snarky jabs at Commonwealth policies, and shocking
tales of Concern corruption made a great hit with his hosts, who
showered him with gifts—some of great intrinsic value,
including a diamond ear-stud from Ratumiak and the fossil set in
platinum given to him by the governor.
Barky had
a marvelous time during his eighteen-day stay and didn't mind that
most Haluk looked on him as an entertaining freak. Amazingly, a few
Haluk females found him sexually appealing, and taught him several
astonishing things he would later find useful in his love-life. When
it was time to depart, he was bid a cordial farewell and warned never
to return to the Haluk Cluster under pain of death.
He set off
for the Milky Way and had nearly made it back safely to his base on
Yakima-Two when he was attacked by a human pirate ship. Its scanners
were even better than Barky's, and its ship faster and better armed.
The bandits forced Barky to surrender, boarded, and stole all of the
Haluk gifts except the fossil, which Barky managed to detach from its
chain and conceal in a bodily orifice. Then the pirates stole his
ship, too.
He was set
adrift in a lifeboat and eventually rescued by a Rampart freighter,
which dropped him off on Hadrach, from which he made his way home to
Yakima-Two and the heartbreaking discovery that he wasn't going to
collect on the big bet.
——
"That
was really an unfortunate happenstance," I said as he finished
his tale. "Losing your ship on top of everything."
"Oh,
I got that back a year or so later with a little help from my
friends," he said. "I knew who'd taken it, you see. But the
alien jewelry and stuff were long since disposed of." He
shrugged. "Then I got busted by the patrol and jugged on Tyrins.
I think you know the rest of the story." The ironic smile again.
"I escaped, knocked around the galaxy, ended up here, got lucky.
Just imagine my surprise when the Haluk snowed up in the Sag. They
hadn't forgotten me, either. We do good business. I intend to keep on
doing good business." The smile turned cold, and once again I
felt the frisson of uneasiness.
The
waitress came up behind me again and asked if we'd like another
round.
"A
Peg-Leg for me, Lola," Barky said. He seemed relaxed and
amiable. "And some of my private-stock whiskey for my friend,
here. The Wild Turkey Single-Barrel." She left us, and he said
to me, "You'll really get a kick out of it. Best I ever tasted."
"I've
heard of it, never tried it."
He held
out the EFT card. "You ready to validate this now?"
"Just
a few more questions. Did the Haluk planet you visited seem heavily
populated?"
"You
better believe it. High-rise buildings packed to the rafters in the
cities, affluent folks in the suburbs living in little cottages on
handkerchief-sized plots. Ratumiak told me his planet had a
population of nearly twelve thousand million. Other worlds were even
worse."
"How
many inhabited worlds were there in the cluster?"
"Around
thirty thousand, Ratty said. Ideally, Haluk need T-2 worlds. They'd
already colonized all of those, plus all of the T-l's and a fewT-3's
that weren't too hopeless. But they'd really run out of suitable
land. That's why they made the big jump to our galaxy, even though it
was a terrible drain on the economy."
I
had already done the horrifying calculation in my head. Twelve
billion times thirty thousand equals ...
360 trillion Haluk? It
was forty times the population of galactic humanity!
"Uh—do
you know how they manage to mine transactinides without sophisticated
robotics?"
His
expression turned grim. "The lepidos do it. You know, the
thick-skinned intermediate racial morph. Even in heavy armor, the
poor bastards don't live long on R-class planets. They're convicts.
Gracile-phase cons work in the orbiting collection stations until
they go lep. Then it's down to the mines. A lepido miner turns up its
toes, the supers retrieve the armor, send somebody else down."
"Appalling."
He
shrugged. "Different strokes for different folks. It's gotta be
a dandy crime deterrent."
"Do
the Haluk have a large supply of ultraheavy elements?"
"Don't
have a clue."
"Would
you say they're highly industrialized?"
"You
bet. Not up to human standards when I was in the cluster, but I
understand that's changed. Haluk are quick on the uptake. They're
good at copying our technology. Even make improvements on the
original."
Well, we
had proof of that already. One of my friends had compared Haluk
ingenuity to that of the preindustrial Japanese.
"Drinks,
gents." Lola the waitress set them down.
I
thanked her over my shoulder. "One last question, Barky."
Then I'd hook him to the little machine and—
zotz! I'd
modified my earlier plan slightly. Instead of slipping him a mickey,
I'd modified the interrogation device to deliver a taser bolt. If I
acted fast, I could have both of us behind a hemispherical
force-field shield within seconds. Then out the back door and into
the elevator...
"Try
the Wild Turkey," he urged. "Let me know what you think."
I sipped
the exquisite bourbon through my mask's integral straw—not the
best way to savor one of Earth's premium spirits, but the bouquet
came through with a vengeance. "Superb," I said. "One
of the best I've ever tasted."
"I
think so, too. What's your last question?"
"What
are the Haluk doing here in the Sagittarius Whorl?"
"Grabbing
transactinides. They figure if we start experiencing a shortage, they
can jack up their prices."
"It
seems logical," I said. "Are you ready to undergo the truth
test?" I took out the little machine and set it on the table
right next to the EFT card. Barky had put it down when his fresh
schooner of beer arrived.
"I
don't think I'd better," he said, pushing the card toward me.
"Our deal is off, Citizen Frost. But it was fun talking to you."
He raised his voice. "Lola!"
Oh, shit.
The force-field projector was in a pocket behind my robe's front
scapular drape. I tried to reach for it, but my arm suddenly wasn't
working. Neither were my leg muscles when I tried to jump to my feet.
Earlier, when I'd been forced to visualize the failure of my grand
scheme, Ram Mahtani had played the villain's part. But Ram wasn't the
one who had worked with Barky Tregarth to play me for a sucker.
The
waitress named Lola came around the table and for the first time I
got a good look at her. She was drop-dead gorgeous, with glossy black
hair that had a white blaze at the left temple.
"Dolores
da Gama?" I managed to whisper. "You slipped me a mickey?"
"It
seemed the simplest course," the demiclone said complacently,
"with all the body armor you're wearing. The drug is a harmless
and effective way to bring you down."
Barky was
standing beside her. "My bouncers will take him to your starship
gig. It was great doing business with you, Lola. You make a pretty
good waitress. Sure you don't want a job?"
Dolores da
Gama laughed richly and gave him a playful smack on his taut,
leather-covered buns. I felt strong hands grip me, hoist me upright,
move me toward the rear door. Dolores was utilizing my own abduction
scheme.
"Why
..." I gasped. "Why ... want me alive?"
"We'll
think of something wonderful, sweetie." Her smile was megawatt
bright in my fading vision.
"How...
find me here?"
"Your
gunfight with our corsairs. One of the pilots transmitted your
starship conformation and fuel-trace signature to our base on Amenti
before you blasted her out of the sky. Your ship is unique. We sent
out other corsairs to track you to Phlegethon."
We
were in the elevator, going up. I was seeing the world through a
shrinking tunnel embedded in fog. "But how did ...
you get
here so quick?"
"I
left Earth the day after you escaped from us. So did other Haluk
agents. The massive fuel-bunker refit on your ship showed your intent
to undertake a long, stealthy voyage. It was a toss-up which way
you'd go—either the Spur, for a penetration of our cluster, or
the Whorl. We believed you might have found out about our campaign
against Sheltok. Other Haluk were waiting for you near Seriphos and
Tyrins, in case you topped off your tanks at either planet before
leaving the galaxy. I drew the Sag assignment and went to Amenti with
my assistants. And suddenly, there you were. Potting our people in
cold blood. You're a ruthless man, Asahel Frost."
"What
happen ...
real Dolores? You show her ... any bloody
compassion?"
We
were out of the elevator, heading for a gig. I had no doubt that a
fast Haluk starship was waiting in orbit, hidden with a dissimulator
field a little less efficient than
Makebate's.
My head in
its Joru makeup wobbled helplessly. In another minute I'd pass out,
and she seemed to know it. "You're about to experience what
Dolores did. It won't be unpleasant. But before you sleep, here's a
little extra information to give you pleasant dreams. We have another
reason for stealing transactinides: our ships will need extra fuel
for the invasion."
"I
knew that," I said, and faded to black.
Chapter 7
I expected
they would take me to their secret base on Amenti—an asteroid
station abandoned nearly eighty years ago by Sheltok—or even to
a Haluk colony in the Perseus Spur. Instead, as I discovered much
later, they brought me back to Toronto, to the commercial and
residential tower where they had established their embassy and secure
living quarters.
There I
was demicloned. Twice. The complicated process took about seven
months. When I was finally released from the dystasis tank it was
mid-November, although I didn't learn the date right away.
I had the
superficial appearance of a Haluk, a side effect of the preliminary
phase of the demiclone process. The disorienting discovery didn't
prevent me from executing the Helly Frost replica who shared my
recovery room—the demiclone who had lived most of his life as a
Haluk. But another perfect duplicate of me was already at large,
committing God knows what sort of crimes in my name. The first
impostor was a renegade human being, collaborating with the aliens.
I hadn't
had much time to speculate on the identity of Fake Helly I. When the
medical device monitoring Fake Helly II flat-lined, it triggered an
alarm. Rather slow on the uptake, four blue-skinned xenos took their
own sweet time coming to the recovery room to see what had happened.
None wore translators. Two of the Haluk were meditechs, the same ones
who had attended me and Fake Helly II while we recuperated from
dystasis. The other pair were uniformed embassy guards armed with
Ivanov stun-pistols.
The aliens
stood in a close group, about ten feet away from me. They had me
backed up against the tall windows. I'd opened the drapes earlier to
determine my whereabouts, and outside was a nightscape of downtown
Toronto, a glittering forest of colored glass towers.
The taller
guard barked at me in his own language. "Human! Do not move!"
I
understood. With two laser targeting dots shining on my sternum, it
was easy. I stood still.
The
female medic, Avilik, darted to the bed where the dead demiclone lay
and checked out the corpse with a diagnosticon. She uttered a
horrified expletive, then came away from the bed and spoke to me in
the Haluk tongue. "Wah! What have you done? Ru Balakalak is not
only dead, he is
blah blah!”
"Yeah.
He sure as hell is," I replied in English. My tongue felt funny
and my teeth seemed to be too far apart. The larynx was mine, but it
was laboring under some exotic handicap. My voice was gravelly and
deeply resonant, almost Louis Armstrongesque. I continued in
execrable Halukese. "This one did it! Ru Balakalak will not live
again by dystasis. This one thinks that is very, very good!" I
switched back to English. "And fuck you all very much."
The four
of them exclaimed, "Wah!"
Then
Avilik began to jabber rapidly with her male colleague, whose name
was Miruviak. I only understood one word in ten of the agitated
conversation, but the general tenor seemed to be that some maximal
manure would impact the rotor when the Servant of Servants found out
about the catastrophe. Damage control was the order of the day.
I was
stark naked. My general bodily contour was still sturdily human, not
nearly so willowy as that of normal Haluk males. I had a narrow waist
and four-fingered hands without nails. My skin was sky-blue, except
for the parts of me smeared with my own blood. My chest, arms, and
upper legs were patterned with intricate ridges almost like glossy
scars, some of them nicely marked with gold. I had seen my face
briefly in a mirror before the aliens found me. By human standards I
was hideous. I had short silvery hair. My normally green eyes were
now a brilliant sapphire, with huge irises and no visible whites. My
eye sockets were slightly smaller than those of a true Haluk, but any
ordinary human observer would take me for a genuine blueberry.
Hey, all
Haluk look alike.
I held a
bloody towel to the streaming wound at the back of my neck. It marked
the place where I'd hacked out a small shocker device, implanted in
the skin at the base of my skull for the purpose of controlling me.
It hadn't.
Avilik and
Miruviak finished talking and stared at me balefully. The big guard
rapped out a question to them in unintelligible Halukese. Probably:
"Should I stun this fucker's ass now?"
"Don't
shoot!" said Avilik. "Don't hurt him!"
Her
male partner asked a question that I only understood part of.
"Blah
blah him now with
blah blah Avilik said, "Yes. Be
careful and slow. He
blah blah but we must
blah and
make a new demiclone."
Miruviak
carried a small case, which he snapped open, revealing a shiny little
instrument with a pistol grip, a cylindrical metal body, and a short
barrel tipped with a glass knob. Bea Mangan had used one of those on
me, the night she'd picked me up in the snowstorm. The thing was a
hypodermic injector, the kind without a needle that squirts powerful
little jets of liquid right through unbroken skin and clothing. It
was probably full of a gentler sort of knockout juice.
"Human?"
Miruviak said to me gently. "One will not hurt you. Only
blah
blah sleep."
He started
toward me. In order to inject the drug he had to touch me with the
glass knob. The guards still had me targeted. They held their Ivanovs
two-handed, in the approved human combat style. I suppose Haluk
demiclones had bought the stun-guns on the thriving Toronto black
market. No aliens were permitted to carry arms on Earth.
Miruviak
was coming at me from the right. Haluk faces are hard to read because
of the ridged patterns, but it seemed to me that he was distinctly
nervous at the prospect of putting down a brute my size.
The
big guard must have thought so, too.
"Blah Vumilak and
this one
blah put our guns to his head
blah blah. He is
too large and strong
blah blah blah."
"Be
silent," Avilik told Big Guy. She acted like the boss of the
outfit. "The human is frightened and
blah. He is also
feeble from
blah blah in dystasis and
blah blah. You
shoot
blah blah blah."
Yeah. Only
as a last resort. Okay, let's boogie ...
I touched
my bloody nape, let out a groan, and did a little stagger dance that
took me back against the windowsill. Cringed away and whimpered in
broken Halukese, "No! Do not do it. No dystasis!"
Clutched
the sopping scarlet towel tightly at one end.
Miruviak
was closing in, making soothing sounds. I turned toward him and
whip-snapped the towel sharply in his face, then flung the gory thing
at the guards.
Eeeuw!
They couldn't help flinching. By the time they'd recovered, I'd
grabbed the startled medic by both skinny wrists and pulled him
against me as a shield. The guards fired their stun-guns. Miruviak
took two bolts in the back and sagged, dropping the injector.
I picked
up his slight form and threw it at the guards. Avilik was screaming
unheeded orders. The unconscious medic's body hit both Haluk and sent
them sprawling. Scooping up the injector, I took a headlong dive and
skidded across the slick parquet floor toward the floundering pile of
aliens. Found a uniformed leg. Pressed the injector ball against a
thigh and shot the high-velocity jet right through the cloth. The
smaller guard let out a squawk and dropped his Ivanov. I grabbed it.
Big Guy
was on his back, still entangled in the cold-cocked medic, waving his
weapon and cursing. He fired a dart at the ceiling and another at the
wall. A third barely missed my head. Then I shot him in the ribs and
he subsided.
Avilik
gave a wail and ran for the door. Firing from the floor, I popped her
in the shoulder. She folded into a crumpled heap.
Intense! I
stayed down for a while, drained of the raging hormones that had let
me override my tank-induced debility. Avilik had been correct when
she opined I was feeble from dystasis and scared stiff. I'd also
suffered considerable blood loss. But I was a husky human male, not a
Haluk, and under certain dire circumstances we can do great and
wondrous deeds. I breathed deeply, psyched myself up, and got to my
feet. Washed-up Supercop pulls his fraying shit together once again,
spurred by the realization that time's a-wasting.
Get out of
this goddamn place, Helly. And do it pronto.
I made my
rubber-leggedy way to the door and tried it. It was locked. Somebody
had to have a key-card. I knelt beside Avilik. If she was the boss
... yes! An encoded red-striped plastic slip was in an outer pocket
of her smock. I turned off all the room lights from the switch plate
beside the door, unlocked it, and cracked it open the merest
nanoskosh. Then I did my patented reconnoiter from knee height.
Nobody ever expects to see a person peeking from down there.
The
recovery room door was one of three opening into a small foyer at the
end of a long corridor. The other two doors nearby bore Haluk
ideographs that I couldn't decipher. There were more doors down the
hall, all closed, and an alcove midway along that I hoped might
contain an elevator. No one was in sight.
I closed
the door again and locked it, turned the lights back on. Then I
started undressing Big Guy. He had a nice Breitling wrist chronometer
that I strapped on. His spiffy gray uniform with black accents would
be a tad snug for my human physique, but at least my wrists wouldn't
stick out of the tunic arms like a scarecrow's, and the boots looked
like they'd fit my funny feet. He wore grubby alien underwear, which
I eschewed.
Big Guy's
family jewels made a modest bulge in his drawers and seemed more
meager than my own newly acquired exotic equipment. Maybe that
explained Avilik's appreciative remarks earlier...
Before
I put the clothes on I took a fast shower. My damned neck gouge was
still leaking—I found out later that dystasis puts
anticoagulants into the blood that take a few hours to wear off—so
I ripped a pillow cover into narrow strips and bound up the wound as
well as I could.
You try tying a pressure bandage around your
neck ...
All
dressed up, wearing Big Guy's holstered Ivanov and with the second
stun-gun tucked inside my tunic, I looked like one dangerous Haluk. I
felt on the verge of keeling over, but that was not an option.
Searching the other three bodies, I found an assortment of colored
key-cards and tucked one of each kind into my gun-belt pouch. All of
the aliens carried phones, and for a few moments I thought I'd hit
the jackpot. But when I tried to call Karl Nazarian's personal
code—one of the few I could remember offhand—I reached a
Halukese-speaker and hastily hit End. A check of the instrument's dex
showed that only a list of preprogrammed codes were accessible—and
they all had to be Haluk. I might have known there'd be no easy
access to the general telecom net.
Rats.
Without a pocket phone, and the personalized dex and datalink
facilities that went with it, you were almost nonexistent on
twenty-third-century Earth.
Well, if I
couldn't call for help, I'd have to walk out. Or ride.
Unfortunately,
the aliens weren't carrying human money or credit cards, which might
have been useful. The only other items I appropriated were the
sedative injector—returned to its case; a flashlight, wrist
restraints, and magazine pouch that were clipped to Big Guy's belt;
an alien switchblade knife I was surprised to find on Miruviak; and a
steel flask from Small Guy's inside tunic pocket that contained a
facsimile of high-proof vodka.
Science
tells us that alcohol is not a stimulant. I beg to differ. A quick
snort perked me up considerably.
After
momentary hesitation I also stole Big Guy's platinum ring inset with
a fire-opal cabochon, slipping it on my own elongated alien finger.
If I didn't have money or credit, maybe I could barter.
Before I
left the room I returned to the window and tried to orient myself.
The Haluk embassy occupied the top 210 floors of a huge structure
called Macpherson Tower, on Edward Street near Yonge, right across
from Sheltok's headquarters. My window looked south, toward Sheltok
Tower, and by comparing the two buildings I figured I was on the
180th floor, or thereabouts. Most towers in this vicinity had
automobile access ramps to the downtown skyways on the fiftieth,
100th, and 200th floors. Maybe I could commandeer a car at one of the
upper ramp portals.
That would
be my preferred plan of action. If it didn't work I'd try to descend
to the Path—provided I could pass through the security system
that sequestered the Haluk section of the tower from the
human-occupied suites below. The only other way out I could think of
was via the hopper sky-port at the tower's summit, which was used
exclusively by the alien tenants. But high-floor suites inevitably
belong to high-ranking persons. Security up there and at the skyport
was probably extra-tight. The l00th-floor auto ramp was my best hope.
I left the
recovery room, found the elevators, drew the Ivanov from my tunic,
and pressed the Down pad. The wait seemed endless.
Except for
a few signs and door designations in Halukese and a nice piece of
alien sculpture by the window at the end of the lift alcove,
everything I'd seen in the corridor looked undistinguished and
completely human—the carpeting, the light fixtures, card locks
on the doors, even the occasional potted terrestrial plant. But it
was a human-owned building, of course. The Macpherson management
would not have allowed major xenoforming.
The
elevator arrival chime sounded and I felt my muscles tense. I had
tucked my right hand into the front of my tunic, Napoleon style,
gripping the unholstered Ivanov. If the door opened on a squad of
armed Haluk coming to reinforce the two I'd chopped—worst-case
scenario—I was ready to fill the car with stun-bolts. But
disposing of the snoozers would be risky, maybe impossible.
If I got
lucky and the car held unarmed Haluk or demiclones, I'd play it by
ear. Act the aloof cop and keep my mouth shut if anyone spoke to me.
I could only guess which pad designated the 100th floor unless the
Haluk had left the original numbering intact. However, most
commercial tower elevators had a hopper or auto icon next to the pads
for the appropriate floors.
The door
slid open. Only one person was inside, a tall, thin human male.
My older
brother Daniel.
——
For a moment I was sandbagged with
shock. But his glazed eyes slid over me, hardly seeing me. I was just
another alien.
I stepped
into the elevator beside him and glanced briefly at the panel. There
were no icons designating the skyway portals, and the floors were
designated only with alien symbols. I touched the pad for the lowest
floor. A red light immediately began blinking beside a card slot that
bore a little Halukese sign. The car door remained open and the chime
pinged annoyingly.
Oops. I
wasn't ready to try out my card collection just yet. I hastily hit a
button a couple of floors above the interdicted one. The elevator
door slid shut and we descended. My brother didn't even notice that
I'd goofed. He seemed dazed.
Dan wasn't
going nearly so far as the lower floor I'd randomly chosen. The car
stopped, and when he got off I was right behind him. He slouched
along like a sleepwalker. He was dressed in black slacks, an argyle
sweater-vest, and a yellow shirt. He'd lost a lot of weight and there
were dark circles under his eyes. I wondered if he was still drugged.
We were in
a residential part of the building. A few other people passed us in
the maze of corridors, evidently coming from other banks of
elevators. They looked human and probably weren't. Some carried
attache cases and wore expensive outerwear. They appeared to be
homeward bound executives and I wondered which Concerns they'd
infiltrated. Domestic robots trundled along, carrying clean towels
and other supplies. A servitron unit popped out of a little door in
the wall, bringing room-service dinner to someone. Humanized Haluk
have to eat human food. Their exotic edibles are slightly poisonous
to the human metabolism. I caught a whiff of some savory entree that
made my empty stomach clench like a fist.
My brother
Dan still didn't realize he was being followed. He slipped a key-card
into his lock and opened the door to his apartment. I spoke in an
imitation of mechanically translated Haluk speech. "Daniel
Frost! One wishes to speak with you."
He whirled
around, threw me a look compounded of fright and fury, then quick as
a jackrabbit whipped inside and slammed the door in my face.
Well,
shit.
I sorted
through the access cards. The red one didn't work. Neither did blue,
green, or gold. I tried an important-looking jobbie with silvery
stripes: bingo.
When I
came in and closed the door behind me, Dan was standing there
vibrating with rage. "Ah, for chrissake! I just finished a
six-hour session with the damned tutors. Not even a fuckin' potty
break! Can't you xeno bastards give me a minute's peace?"
"One
must question you," I repeated.
"I'm
taking a leak before you start," he said. "You don't like
it, stun me." He disappeared into the bathroom.
I did a
quick prowl of the apartment. There were no obvious surveillance
devices, but that didn't mean the place wasn't bugged. Most likely
the aliens had only installed an-tisuicide sensors that monitored the
occupant's breathing.
The
comfortably furnished living room had an infomedia center and a
well-stocked library of slates and e-books. Tranquil pictures on the
walls, nice gas-log fireplace, even a musical keyboard. Dan liked to
noodle on the piano and faked jazz tunes rather well. The
bedroom/office contained a queen-sized bed—made with military
precision—and a computer desk. I sat down at the unit and tried
to call up a general telecom link. No luck, but no surprise, either.
The closet
held a fair selection of clothes and shoes, arranged meticulously.
Good old anal-retentive Dan. There were a couple of track suits that
might fit me. I took the roomiest one, which was navy-blue, and found
athletic shoes and a gym bag to go with it. A dresser yielded socks,
underwear, and even a baseball cap with a Toronto Blue Jays logo. I
stuffed everything into the bag.
Dan
came out of the John and did a disbelieving double take. "What
the fuck! You're stealing my
clothes,” I said, "Give
me your phone. Now." The instrument was no doubt as useless to
me as the ones carried by the Haluk; but I couldn't trust Dan not to
call on the aliens for help.
He dug in
his pocket and handed the phone over. Trained to instant obedience.
Good. If I kept a close eye on him, he wouldn't be able to raise the
alarm.
I checked
the phone dex and found only the same kind of preprogrammed codes the
Haluk phones had contained.
When I
asked the instrument if it had any extensions, it replied in the
negative.
"You
got anything to eat, Dan?" I'd dropped the Haluk diction, having
decided how I was going to handle him, but he seemed not to notice.
"In
the kitchen," he said sullenly. "But it's all human chow.
We can order in if you like."
"No
need," I said.
I
herded him ahead of me and made him open the refrigerator. Saw sliced
ham, Jarlsberg cheese, tomatoes, Grey Poupon mustard.
Perfecto! I
ordered him to build me two sandwiches and nuke them in the
microwave.
"You're
joking!" he exclaimed. His eyes were red and swollen and his
pupils tiny. He was on something, but if he'd been working with Haluk
tutors, his intellect was probably operational.
The little
dining table was maple, with matching captain's chairs. I sat down,
drew the Ivanov from inside my tunic, and put it on the table in
front of me. "I'll also have some strong coffee with sugar. A
big glass of water, too."
He moved
about following orders and finally set my repast before me. I told
him to sit down and wait, then fell on the food and drink like a
famished coyote. The last time I'd been in dystasis, in K-L's little
hospital, they'd fed me baby slop when I came out. Maybe solid food
in my empty stomach would sicken me. I didn't care.
Dan
watched, frowning and biting his lower lip, which was already raw.
I'd almost finished eating when his eyes narrowed and he figured it
out. He gave a terrified gurgle and bounded to his feet, nearly
knocking over his chair.
"You!"
he gasped. "Asa... my God, it's
you, isn't it!"
Sweat had burst out on his forehead and his eyes were bulging. He
looked like he was about to have a coronary.
"Sit
down." I picked up the stun-pistol and waved it casually. "Yes,
it's me. Take it easy, Dan. It's all right. We have to talk. They'll
be looking for me soon, but I figure I've got a little time yet."
"How
did you get away? Jesus! We were supposed to begin the tutoring
sessions for your second demiclone tomorrow. That's what—"
"Be
quiet. I need answers to some questions. Tell me: Which floor is the
skyway portal on?"
He paused
for only a moment before answering. "The two hundredth is the
only one the Haluk use. The one at the hundredth floor is closed for
security reasons. It's at the boundary between Haluk and human
occupancy. But you'll never escape through the two hundredth. It's
used by Haluk top brass. There are at least three checkpoints, and
the guards up there carry Kagi blasters."
"What
kind of security do they have at the lowest Haluk level? The
hundredth floor?"
"Double
card-locks, gold and blue, guards armed with stunners. It's the main
egress. Haluk are going in and out twenty-four hours a day."
Okay. So
would I.
"Dan,
I'm busting out of here. D'you want to come with me?"
"Yes,"
he said dully. "But I can't. And you probably can't get away,
either. They've put control implants into us."
"In
the neck. Right. I cut mine out and I can do the same for you."
He gave a
hollow laugh and tapped his breastbone. "There's another one,
Asa. In the thoracic cavity. You cross a blue checkpoint without your
attendant entering the proper code, a tiny charge detonates and
vaporizes your heart and lungs."
Rats! ...
But had the meditechs gotten around to installing the lethal gizmo in
me? Didn't I recall one of them saying they'd wait on it? Or was I
mistaken? Had they put it in before I regained consciousness?
I said,
"I'll get you out of this place. Trust me. If you give me
truthful answers to some questions, I swear I'll come back and help
you. And when you're out, and this Haluk mess is resolved, I'll let
you live with your family again ... if they want you."
Another
dismal laugh. "I'm fucked, Asa. And so are you."
"Dan,
I'm getting out, and I'm going to raise such a media stink that the
Haluk will be begging us to rewrite their treaties and let us send
inspection teams to their colonies."
"In
your dreams."
"Who
is the first demiclone?" I asked.
He stared
at me stupidly. "I don't—"
"Fake
Asahel Frost, Mark One," I prompted him. "Who's the human
male the Haluk transformed the first time around? The one out there
pretending to be me, right this very minute? The aliens didn't trust
this mutt, but they had to use him until their own boy came out of
the tank. I had half a notion the Haluk might have used you to
impersonate me, but that didn't make sense. So it's somebody else.
Who?"
Dan had
gone white. He was shaking his head. "No. They'll kill me, Asa.
I can't tell—"
I stood
up, grabbed his shirt, and hauled him halfway across the table for a
nose-to-nose. "/'// kill you, asshole, with my bare hands! But
you won't go quick. You'll scream until your goddamn voice-box is in
shreds. Tell me his name! Tell me! Tell me!" I shook him till
his eyes rolled, then pushed him backward. He crashed into his chair.
Spilled coffee spread over the table and dripped onto the floor. My
brother crouched there, numb with fear. Then he began to weep.
First the
Bad Cop, then the Good Cop.
I sat down
again. "Danny, Danny. I know what happened. They took you from
the Kenora fishing lodge and brought you here. Told you that you
could go on living if you cooperated. They needed background material
on me to make their demiclone masquerade work. Intensely detailed
stuff. So their clone could fool Eve and Delegate Sontag as well as
my associates."
"They
had me hooked to the machines for nearly three weeks," he
whispered, scrubbing at his face with the back of one hand. "I
thought I was a goner. The pain, Asa! Like every nerve in my body was
on fire. Like being wrapped in a burning net! They squeezed me dry.
Then they fixed me up, let me rest and recover. I helped fine-tune
the act of the first demiclone. They wanted me to do the same for the
second one. And you would have helped with the coaching, too. Whether
you wanted to or not."
He was
shuddering as fresh tears ran down his ravaged face. I leaned
forward, stretching my blue lips in a non-Haluk smile, and laid an
alien hand on his shoulder. "Danny, you know what they intend to
do. Colonize our galaxy by force. Destroy humanity if that's what it
takes. How does my clone fit into their scheme? Are they using him
politically, in the Assembly? Or did they wangle the fake back into
Rampart upper management?"
"Bom.
You're—
he's Rampart's president and syndic. Eve and the
others were so relieved when you reappeared after being presumed lost
in the Sagittarius Whorl that they didn't question your strange
change of heart. Cousin Zed's still Chief Operating Officer, but he's
permanently based on Seriphos now. You—I mean, the
demiclone—and Eve are effectively calling the shots from
Toronto, with Gunter Eckert and that Macrodur stooge Ellington and
the rest of the board sitting back applauding."
"Eve
has no idea she's dealing with a fake?"
"He's
very well prepared. A natural actor with compelling presence."
He flashed a twisted grin. "A lot like you, kid. It helps that
you were always such a headstrong loner, not socializing with the
rest of the family. And of course he knows the business inside out.
The Rampart-Galapharma consolidation went through like gangbusters
under his direction, and he's got the Haluk Consortium following his
lead like Mary's little lamb. The fifty new Haluk colonies in the
Spur are up and running, with settlers flooding in by the millions."
"Did
the Assembly approve the three hundred additional colonies?" I
asked grimly.
"Not
yet. The vote is expected very soon. Last I heard, maybe two weeks
from now. Your demiclone has been guiding the strategy of the other
Concern lobbyists, showing them where to exert pressure and how best
to counter Delegate Sontag's opposition. He and his Xenoaffairs
Oversight Committee threw open their meetings to the media. Released
a shitload of evidence detrimental to the Haluk and started a
slam-bang row. The accusations of demiclone spying caused a furor."
Atta boy,
Ef! "That's great. Are citizens pressuring the Assembly to
revise the Haluk treaties?"
"Sure.
But Concern lobbyists are fighting it hammer and tongs. Bringing in
their own experts to demonstrate that Son-tag's 'proof of a vast
demiclone infiltration is nothing of the sort. Only Macrodur and some
of the smaller Concerns are DNA-testing their top executives. The
other big outfits are stalling. No demiclone spies have been
uncovered yet." Dan gave me a sour look. "It doesn't help
Sontag's case that his chief witness has recanted his original
testimony and now claims that false depositions were entered under
his name."
"Chief
witness—"
"You."
Dan managed a weak chuckle.
"Who
is he?" I asked in a low, encouraging voice. "Who's the
first Fake Helly demiclone?"
He shook
his head. His eyes were darting wildly.
"I've
got to know. To stop him."
"They'll
kill me."
"You'll
tell me in the end, Dan. I'll hurt you if I have to. Save yourself
pain—"
He
screamed at me:
"What do you know about pain? My whole life
is pain!"
Return of
Bad Cop.
I
hit him a sharp backhanded blow to the face. "Bullshit! Bull!
Fucking! Shit! The worst pain you've experienced is hurt pride and
failed ambition. You're an arrogant, self-centered fuckwad, Dan. A
driven, calculating monster! You wanted Pop to make you head of
Rampart. When he didn't, you lost it completely. You hooked up with a
madman who promised to give you what you wanted. You did everything
you could to ensure that Alistair Drummond would take control of
Rampart. It was
your twisted idea to demiclone Eve.
You
dreamed up the scheme to sell Simon and me to that freakazoid
pimp in Coventry Blue... And you poisoned our mother, Dan, because
Alistair Drummond threatened to kill you if she didn't turn over her
Rampart quarterstake."
"I
didn't," he mumbled, fingering his bashed nose. It was bleeding
a little.
"You
did," I said sadly. "And that's your worst pain of all."
I waited
while he cursed and sobbed, denying it. Then I said, "It's
Alistair Drummond, isn't it? He's alive, and he's wearing my face."
Dan gave a
violent start and stared at me open-mouthed. "No! It's not him!"
But it was
all the confirmation I needed. I'd never been able to believe
Drummond was dead, and there was the tenuous bit of evidence that
he'd been present at Dan's abduction from the fishing lodge. When I
was in the tank, the Haluk leaders had discussed an unstable human
rogue with a scheme that fit the Grand Design. The Haluk had
suspected that the man might be insane. I knew for a fact that
Alistair Drummond was a charming, plausible, brilliant sociopath.
And
now he was
me.
I climbed
to my feet, picked up the Ivanov, went around the table to where my
brother cringed in his seat. "I can't waste any more time on
you. When the Haluk hook you up to the truth machines later, be sure
you tell 'em I intend to fuck their shit. I'm going to rip my skin
off Drummond and chop the rest of him into red-flannel hash."
"Asa,
they'll torture me to death with the damned machine!"
"Maybe.
But before you turn up your toes, be sure to tell the Servant of
Servants I know about his invasion plan. Tell him he better give it
up, cut his losses, and start begging the Assembly for mercy. If he
doesn't, humanity is going to chase his baby-blue ass back to the
Haluk Cluster and make damned sure that he and his people rot there
till the Big Crunch."
"Asa,
for the love of God—"
I shot Dan
with two stun-darts. He'd be unconscious for at least half a day. I
took off my uniform's weapon belt, since I'd never get out of the
building wearing it, divested it of its useful equipment, and put the
stuff in the gym bag with the change of clothes.
Then I
headed back to the elevator. Maybe my vitals would explode when I
tried to pass the checkpoint at the 100th floor, and maybe they
wouldn't. There was only one way to find out.
Going
down, I found that the gold-striped key-card did indeed give me a
green light to the lowest Haluk floor. I was on my way to freedom.
Aliens
joined me in the elevator car at lower stops, but there were no
humanoid demiclones among them. I decided they must have private
elevators. It would hardly be prudent for them to be seen entering or
leaving those set aside for the building's Haluk tenants.
Some xeno
passengers wore native garments, others were dressed like humans,
perhaps off for a night on the town. No one paid any attention to me.
I kept a position near the doors in case of an emergency.
And an
emergency happened.
The door
opened to admit another passenger, a Haluk male who wore a dull
yellow smock and carried a technical magslate. When he saw me his
pupils widened in the racial equivalent of surprise. He kept staring
as we made other stops and the car became crowded. Then he was pushed
to the rear, out of my sight.
But I knew
him. Mustard Smock! He was the one called Archiator Something, who
had shown me to the Servant of Servants and the VIP female Haluk when
I was still in the tank. Then he'd acted like the demiclone project
director or some other technical bigwig.
Was he
alert enough to spot my anatomical anomalies?
Yep.
I
felt someone grip my arm and speak in low Halukese. "Guard. Tell
me your
blah blah" Mustard Smock was asking for my ID.
The door
opened again to admit three more passengers to the nearly full car,
meditechs in pale green human-style hospital garb with diagnostic
devices hanging on cords around their necks. In his own language I
told Mustard, "Sorry. No time." Then I pulled away from him
and slipped out just as the doors were sliding shut. He tried to
squirm after me and didn't make it.
My heart
was pounding as I dashed out of the elevator alcove and flattened
myself against the wall just out of sight, expecting to hear the
chime as the door reopened. It didn't happen. Perhaps Mustard
couldn't get to the control panel in time to stop the car. Perhaps
he'd decided to brush off his suspicions and get on with his
business.
Perhaps
he'd alert security at the checkpoint.
There were
no sculptures or pretty decorations on this floor, and no windows,
either. The area had subdued lighting and there was a chill in the
air. I rejected my first instinct, which was to catch the next
elevator down to the checkpoint and try to escape before the flap and
foofaraw started.
Easy
does it, Helly, I told myself. Haluk guards
do tend to look
alike. I needed to change my clothes. Maybe find another elevator
bank.
There was
no one in the corridor. I went down a few doors before using my
master key, slipped into a dark room, and locked myself in. Then I
turned on the light and spit out an astonished expletive.
The place
was full of golden mummy-cases, standing upright in narrow
open-fronted booths. They lined the walls and were set up in close
rows like library shelves, with space to walk between them. A medical
monitoring device was attached to each elegant coffinlike chrysalis.
I knew very well what they contained—Haluk testudomorphs, the
dormant phase of the allomorphic alien race.
But Haluk
who had undergone allomorph eradication therapy with PD32:C2 didn't
hibernate. And it was common knowledge that the Haluk did not send
allomorphic members of their race to Earth. It wasn't cost-efficient
for their embassy staff and trade attaches to sleep for half a year,
and the Haluk were ordinarily very cost-efficient.
So what
were the testudos doing here?
I went
back to the door, doused the light, and did a lowboy scan of the
corridor. Empty. I opened the door opposite and found more ranks of
testudos. Racing to another chamber several doors down, I found still
more. This time I shut myself in the room and rapidly began to change
into Dan's athletic gear.
My mind
was spinning and my overloaded stomach felt queasy. There seemed only
one explanation: treated Haluk were somehow reverting to their
original allomorphic state.
Had Emily
Konigsberg done it deliberately with her mutant exon? Or was the odd
bit of DNA some sort of necessary genetic stopgap that actually
staved off a reversion process that was inevitable?
When these
testudos completed their dormant cycle and hatched into graciles,
could they be treated again? If so, what did the Haluk think about
being obligated to humanity—and especially Rampart
Concern—indefinitely?
Rampart...
the pieces of the puzzle were coming together.
I fastened
my shoes, put on the baseball cap, and pulled it low over my eyes.
Took all of the hardware out of the gym bag except the spare Ivanov
and sedative injector and stowed the stuff in the ample kangaroo
pocket below my jacket's half-mast zipper. Put the key-cards in my
pants pocket. Considered leaving the guard's uniform and boots
behind, along with the bag, injector, and extra gun, then remembered
it was damn near winter outside of Macherson Tower. So I stuffed the
uniform into the gym bag in case I needed it for warmth, and kept the
other things, too. I was still wearing the fire-opal ring.
When I
opened the door I discovered I was not alone in the corridor.
Fortunately, the Haluk lepidodermoid pushing the gurney that held a
gold chrysalis was going the other way. In their asexual intermediate
phase, the aliens are thick-skinned, ponderous, slow-witted, fit only
for simple tasks. The lepido pushing the gurney stopped at a door
beyond the lift alcove, used a key-card, and rolled its burden
inside.
I dashed
for the elevator and caught one going down almost immediately. It was
only moderately crowded. But when we reached the bottom Haluk floor,
the doors failed to open and the chime sounded its alarm. I felt my
overloaded stomach contract with fear and almost disgraced myself.
One
of the passengers said,
"Blah blah fexpletive! forgot to
blah the gold key?"
The red
light beside the card-slot was blinking. A sensor inside the car had
counted us and counted the card insertions. One short.
There were
disgusted mutters from the others, who glared at each other trying to
spot the careless twit causing the delay.
I mumbled,
"Sorry!" forced out a strangled-puppy Haluk laugh, and
plugged my card. The light went green, the doors opened and we all
emerged into a crowded lobby.
There were
eight lines at the outbound checkpoint gates. Everyone held a blue
key-card at the ready and quickly passed through. I fumbled in my
pants pocket and sorted out my own. When I inserted it, would my
heart explode? Would that hurt? How long would it take me to die?
Guards
stood beside a second group of elevator banks, those leading down to
freedom. Were they watching for a bold impostor? If I got through the
gate without popping my pump, would they seize me and escort me back
upstairs to the tank?
Inhaling
and squaring my shoulders, I pushed in the card.
The gate's
indicator light glowed green.
My heart
kept on beating and I went through. Keeping my head low, I shoehorned
myself into a crowded elevator car. A few moments later the doors
opened into the Path.
——
My first
need was to get as far away from the vicinity of Macpherson Tower as
possible. My second was to find a reasonably secluded public phone.
Using it would be dangerous. Without money, and unable to eyeball my
way into the iridoscopic ID system with my exotic irises, I would
have to recite either my personal code or the Rampart general code,
plus their authorization tags, to make a credit call. I didn't doubt
that the Haluk had access to both codes. If they'd penetrated the
telecom databank as well, they'd not only know where I'd called from,
but also whom I'd called.
It
required some serious thinking. If I attempted to contact my
relatives, friends, or close associates, I might immediately endanger
their lives.
And even
if I did reach someone, would the person believe the Halukoid geek
with the rumbly voice was me? Not bloody likely. All public vidphones
transmitted the image of the caller unless you physically blocked the
video pickup, a move justly regarded as suspicious by those answering
the phone. People in the upper echelons of society—and that
included Eve, Simon, Karl, Ef Sontag, and Bea Mangan— screened
their electronic communications carefully. They probably wouldn't
even accept a public phone call from someone who refused to show his
face.
But I
thought I knew someone who would.
Almost
instinctively, I took the Path westward beneath Dundas Street, in the
direction of the old Rampart Tower. (I'd only realize later that
Rampart would have transferred its Toronto headquarters to the
ithyphallic monolith on the waterfront that had once housed
Galapharma.) At University Avenue, I rode the escalator to the upper
level and found a suitable phone in a com bank at the St. Patrick
subway station.
Using the
Rampart code and ID tag, I called CCID Headquarters: Cop Central. I
covered the vid pickup with my hand. When the duty officer responded,
I asked for Chief Superintendent Jacob Silver. He wouldn't be working
the night shift, but I was pretty sure they'd patch me through to his
home if I stated a family emergency and gave my name and personal
code. And the police link would be secure from Haluk snoops.
"I'm
sorry," said the deskman. "Chief Superintendent Silver is
deceased. May I route your call elsewhere?"
"No—"
Stunned, I
cut him off. Stood there paralyzed.
Jake. Jake
was dead. Because of me? Because Alistair Drummond had slipped up
imperceptibly during his public playacting, and only Jake, the wise
old cop, had spotted it? And not-so-wisely confronted my demiclone?
Jake.
Rats...
I don't
know how long I stood there. My precariously stoked vitality was
swiftly draining away. Several trains entered the station, discharged
and took on passengers, glided off quietly, defying gravity. The
crowds were moderate. A clock said it was 2002 hours.
I
knew I had to get away from the public phones, so I moved to the
nearest newsstand and pretended to watch the big-screen PNN posting
of
News on the Hour. Top Story: a tsunami on Hokusai causes
heavy damage to a big Homerun Concern manufacturing facility. Oh,
yeah—and five thousand people died.
I felt
lightheaded and stupid. My belly was beginning to cramp. I could feel
a hot throbbing beneath the improvised bandage at the back of my
neck. Maybe the wound was infected with alien germs.
One thing
was certain: my weakened body had been flogged enough. It now
demanded to be horizontal. If I didn't go down soon of my own free
will, I was going to collapse.
Where the
hell could a Haluk in a track suit catch some z's?
I couldn't
rest on one of the inviting Path benches. The searchers would find
me. I had no money to patronize a spa or theater.
The
subway station sign caught my eye. st. patrick station. A church? ...
Many of them were open in the evening. Humans dozed in them all the
time, but a sleeping alien would alert a suspicious sexton. A public
database? ... Lots of people rested their eyes in the library, but
the nearest one was over a mile away, on Yonge Street. There was
another in the university campus, closer but still at least twelve
blocks away. I'd never—
Oh, shit.
They were here! The first Haluk hunters.
I spotted
them from the corner of my eye—I now had great peripheral
vision—exiting from a northbound train. Two uniformed blue
alien males and a female in casual attire. They found a vantage point
near the escalator and stood slightly apart, carefully scanning the
throng. One spoke into a handheld com device, no doubt reporting that
I was no longer near the public phones. I pulled my cap even lower
and hunched my shoulders, trying to look less conspicuous.
Right,
Helly, you moron. Why not just hunker down on the floor and put your
fat blue head between your knees and kiss your ass goodbye?
I
straightened up and readjusted the hat. Tried to look confident and
ordinary. Began to drift toward the subway turnstile, figuring to hop
over it when the next train was about to pull away, slip aboard
through the closing door and take my chances. Wondered if I had
enough energy left to make the leap.
Stopped
wondering when the female Haluk searcher spotted me and pointed me
out to her companions.
The trio
walked purposefully in my direction.
I
panicked.
There was
only one way open to me where they didn't dare follow. I dropped my
gym bag, flung myself bodily over the turnstile barrier, and landed
with a bone-jarring crash. A few people yipped and shouted. The three
Haluk broke into a canter. I rolled to the platform edge and went
over. This time the impact with the ceramalloy antigravity reflector
grid did more than shake me up. Something in my left shoulder snapped
and a white bolt of agony lanced through my brain. Broken collarbone.
I'd suffered one before on Kedge-Lockaby when I fell off my sub's
flybridge, drunk as a skunk.
Don't
pass out! One last push, Helly. Come on, you gutsy blue fucker. Get
up up up!
I
struggled back onto my feet and scrambled into the subway tunnel. It
was straight as a die, dimly lit with small yellow bulbs mounted
along the ceiling every dozen meters or so. No sign of an approaching
train.
Unzipping
my jacket halfway, I thrust my injured left arm into it in an
improvised sling. Better. I jogged clumsily along the grid side,
where there was very little clearance between the reflector area and
the wall. An uproar of voices echoed behind me. I dared a look over
my shoulder. The three Haluk weren't following.
Pain
pain pain. My shoulder. My laboring lungs. My heart thudding like a
punching bag going full tilt:
whop-a whop-a whop-a. Another
goddamned chase scene, starring me. Monotonous.
My head
ached like a sonuvabitch and I was starting to see double. My brain
was losing contact with my legs and I tripped'over a structural
member and nearly took a header. Caught at the wall with my good hand
and kept going.
There had
to be an emergency escape hatch along here somewhere. I'd seen them
myself, looking through the windows of speeding trains, inconspicuous
niches with doors in them.
A soft
breeze had begun to blow in my face and I heard a peculiar rushing
sound, not very loud. Far, far away I could see twin starry
pinpricks: train headlights. Shit. Not that ancient cliche! I tried
to move along faster and failed. Picked up my heavy feet and laid
them down. Felt giddy, sick, hopeless.
The
dancing headlights were brighter, closing in. Soon the sensors in the
lead car would take note of an unauthorized object on the grid ahead.
They would bring the train to a halt, leaving me jacklighted in front
of it like a trapped deer, waiting for the arrival of the Transit
Authority Police.
I was
staggering with pain and vertigo, ready to pack it in, when I finally
came to the niche. Almost passed it by, not recognizing my salvation.
Managed to pull open the narrow metal hatch, fell through onto my
broken shoulder, screaming, and kicked the hatch shut.
A surreal
interlude followed. The place inside was spinning, or I was,
engulfing me in a cataract of deafening sound and colored
kaleidoscopic shapes. After what seemed like a long time—but
was probably only minutes—the chaotic noise diminished into a
nearly subsonic drone and the psychedelic light show coalesced into
solid retinal images, blurry but bona fide.
I sat up,
hurting like hell, no longer suffering from incapacitating dizziness.
My refuge was a lighted utility room less than ten feet square and
about as high. The deep humming sound, which I presumed came from
hidden antigravity generators, had just enough volume to set my teeth
on edge.
The
walls of the place were crowded with pipes, conduits, and impressive
junction boxes with high-voltage warnings on them. Through bleary
eyes I saw a prehistoric nonvideo telephone on the wall beside the
exit to the tunnel, along with a cabinet labeled emergency equipment.
An iron ladder was mounted on the opposite wall. It went up to a dark
shaft in the ceiling and down through an equally dark hole in the
floor.
I opened
the cabinet and saw a large canister of foam spark-suppressant, a
pair of heavy insulated gloves, two ceram pry bars of differing
lengths, a cutting torch, several oddly shaped wrenches, and a small
first-aid kit. I took that, tucking it into my ever-handy kangaroo
pocket, and turned my attention to the ladder.
I decided
to go down, no contest. I lacked the strength to climb.
Slip,
trip, get a grip. Here's Supercop, descending into a spooky abyss
with one useless arm, wincing in agony every time he jolts his busted
bone, pursued by Haluk fiends!
I found
that I was grinning—even energized, in some weird way.
Go figure.
I must have slithered twenty meters
down the narrow shaft before I came to a less constricted space, and
then a solid floor. I pulled out the guard's flashlight and turned it
on, discovering that I was in another small chamber almost identical
to the utility room above. It had a similar equipment cabinet but
fewer conduits and pipes lining the walls. The light had burned out
and the place had a disused look to it. The exit door featured a
substantial latch, a key-card slot, and a sign that said:
——
NO UNAUTHORIZED EXIT
IF DOOR IS OPENED
WITHOUT KEY, ALARM WILL SOUND
——
I figured
it had to open out into the University Avenue segment of the
Path—useless as an escape route, even if I had been willing to
risk setting off the alarm. The hunt was on, and soon there'd be
Haluk strolling everywhere in the underground concourses. I knew what
they'd tell the cops: "Officer, have you seen our poor deranged
kinsman who wandered away from his sickroom? No, he's not dangerous
at all. Only extremely ill, suffering from delusions. We appreciate
your assistance in our urgent search."
Thus far
I'd heard no signs of pursuit from above. It would come, though.
Andale!
Going down, one more time ...
The ladder
didn't end at this level. Its uprights passed through two slots in a
solid semicircular manhole cover set into the floor against the back
wall. The cover looked old. There was a central inset ring to lift
the thing, and I gave it a puny tug. The cover didn't budge. I didn't
have the moxie to move the heavy thing.
Emergency
equipment cabinet. The longer of the two pry bars, used as a lever.
Squat. Heave very slowly, using my good right arm and my flabby leg
muscles. With a rusty screech the manhole cover tilted up a few
precious centimeters and promptly fell back into place. It probably
weighed about twenty-five kilos.
Okay.
Rest, then repeat the maneuver. This time, when the lid lifted, I
kicked the tip of the smaller pry bar into the aperture. Then I
collapsed. A smell compounded of mold and dampness wafted up through
the crack.
In a few
minutes, when I'd recovered a bit, I used both pry bars to move the
metal cover aside. It had another inset ring underneath. A long piece
of rope was knotted through it.
I felt a
prickling along my spine. The rope was new.
Below, it
was absolute blackness and a continuation of the ladder. I switched
on the flashlight. The lower shaft was twice as wide as the one I'd
previously negotiated and gleamed with moisture. Some sort of
revolting crud was growing around the ladder brackets. The powerful
little beam reflected from water that might have been another dozen
meters below. The ladder continued into it.
Above the
level of the water were two sizable circular openings. One was beside
the ladder on the west wall of the shaft, and the other was directly
opposite.
I didn't
hesitate. I replaced the short pry bar in the cabinet and closed it.
Then I positioned myself on the ladder a few rungs down and painfully
maneuvered the cover back into position, alternately levering with
the long bar and pulling on the rope. Finally, I twisted the rope
around the bar and used my body weight to help seat the cover,
millimeter by millimeter. It was very dark. I'd been afraid to prop
the flashlight on one of the ladder treads for fear my exertions
would dislodge it, and it was too thick to hold in my mouth; so it
had stayed safely in my kangaroo pouch.
Finally,
the lid dropped. So did I, nearly, as my foot slipped. But I clung to
the rope and bar with my single hand, swung back to the ladder and
wrapped my ankle around one of the uprights, sobbing with relief and
renewed pain.
When I
recovered a little, I jammed the bar through the manhole cover's ring
so its ends extended evenly on either side of the semicircular
opening and bound it in place with the rope. Now it was impossible
for anyone to lift the cover from above. Then I crept slowly
downward, dazed and exultant. The lit flashlight poking out of my
pocket gave adequate illumination. A half meter or so above the water
level, I stepped into the round opening beside the ladder. It was a
huge pipe, completely dry, made of old-fashioned cast concrete.
Perhaps one of the old storm drains.
A short
distance in from the shaft lay an empty Marlboro cigarette pack, a
Starbucks coffee cup, and the bag from a McDonald's Happy Meal. They
weren't dusty and old. They might have been dropped there yesterday.
Oh,
Christ...
No. I
wasn't ready to think about the implication of my new find. Not until
I rested and did something about the pain.
I sat down
and opened the first-aid kit. It had bandages, antibiotic ointment,
and—best of all—some powerful analgesic self-dosers. I
positioned one of the tiny pillow-shaped things on my left carotid
artery—where I hoped it was, anyhow—and jabbed sharply
with my thumb. The drug injected explosively. In a few seconds the
pain from my broken collarbone vanished. So did my other miseries.
I swabbed
the gouge at the back of my neck with antiseptic, applied antibiotic
goo, and rebandaged it as well as I could using one hand. Then I
improvised a more efficient sling. To celebrate my repair, I had a
belt of alien vodka from the steel flask. Then I started to walk.
Correction: shuffle.
I followed
the storm drain for less than half a kilometer before finding a
handmade ladder placed against a dry spillway. At the slope's top was
a flimsy grate with light faintly shining through. Using my last bit
of strength, I crept up the ladder, unhooked the grate, and emerged
at last into the Dark Path.
I saw a
ghostly subterranean concourse, eerily reminiscent of the familiar
Path I knew so well, except it was in a state of abject ruin. The
light came from portable camping glolamps someone had set out every
ten meters or so along one cracked wall. My hole opened beneath a
derelict escalator that had once led up into a long-vanished office
building. Now it dead-ended in a ceiling slab of rough plascrete,
swagged with dusty spiderwebs. A titanic structural pier made of
modern material punched through the slab. Around its base heaps of
rubble cut off the corridor on the far side of the broken stairs. On
the other side stretched a line of decayed shops, some with familiar
names. Their windows were gone and their interiors had been looted
long decades earlier. Oddly, the corridor floor in front of them was
fairly clean and dry. A couple of overhead ducts purred, drawing out
stale air.
At first
my fuddled brain didn't comprehend that the Dark Path was inhabited.
Low walls of unmortared concrete block formed about a dozen
open-fronted cubicles along the blank wall opposite the old shops.
Each space held a few pieces of furniture and stacked small container
pods. A dim night-light sat on one cinder-block wall.
I drew my
Ivanov and shambled out of my hiding place beneath the escalator like
a zombie. Saw a community kitchen in front of a ruined Taco Bell
fast-food joint, a "reading room" alcove with shelves of
slates and e-books, a billiard table and a collection of video game
machines, laundry pegged to a line outside an old public rest room.
Heard snoring...
Then a
woman's quiet voice said, "You won't need the pistol, honey."
She was sitting up in her simple bed inside the cubicle with the
night-light, watching me, not yet recognizing what kind of a creature
had invaded her secret world.
Tottering,
I let my gun hand fall and must have groaned, because she said, "I'm
Mama Fanchon. It's all right, sweetie-babe. Have you just arrived?"
Instinctively,
I knew what she meant. "The—The police are after me. And
the Haluk. I'm walking wounded, my collarbone and my neck. I
can't—can't—"
I stood
there swaying, seeing colored flashes again and hearing the cataract
work up to a roar.
——
Mama
Fanchon was putting on a robe and slippers. A moment later she turned
up her glolamp and gave a sharp cry of dismay, seeing me clearly.
"Santa! Mohammed! Leah! Sweet Lord, it's an alien!"
Muffled
curses and squeals from the cubicles. A big old white-bearded guy
whom I later learned to call Santa Claus demonstrated how he'd got
his name by bounding out of his space and covering me with a
Claus-Gewitter photon blaster. "Hoist 'em high or die,
blueberry!"
Two
adolescents advanced on me, armed with pry bars. The female shrilled,
"You heard the man! Hands up, xeno!"
"I'm
not!" I cried, consumed by despair. "Not an alien. They did
this to me. I'm human. Human, for God's sake!"
"Bite
me!" jeered the male adolescent.
"Does
anyone have a phone?" I asked politely.
Then I
crashed.
Mama
Fanchon believed me.
She knew
anatomy, being the tribal healer, and my thick neck alone was enough
to show her that I was no true Haluk. She also regularly watched
newscasts on her tiny portable TV and was aware of the accusations of
illegal demiclonery being lodged against the Haluk by certain
Delegates of the Commonwealth Assembly.
Others of
the Grange Place Tribe were less willing to accept her kindly
assessment; but Mama overruled their objections, put me to bed in her
"hospital," and tended me during the three days of my
recovery.
For part
of that time I was delirious. I'm certain that I told her my name,
also fairly sure that she recognized it and drew certain conclusions.
At one
point, when I was only partially lucid, I pleaded again for a
telephone. "Please, Mama! Have to call my sister Eve, CEO of
Rampart Concern. To warn her! He's not me. The syndic. She has to
fire him. Denounce him. Tell the Assembly he lied. The impostor. Get
me a phone! Call Eve, get her down here. Convince her. A phone. Oh,
God, Mama, please get me a phone—"
"No,
honey-lamb. You're not calling anyone, the condition you're in. If
that big-shot woman is really your sister, she won't talk to a poor
sick Haluk. Or a well one, either. You better think of somebody else
to call later on, when you feel better. Sleep now and think on it,
Helly." I slipped back into unconsciousness.
Later,
when I was back on the road to rationality, she told me her own
story. Nine years earlier, Fanchon had been a hospital nurse. She
accidentally gave the wrong medication to the son of a Bodascon
Concern executive, and the child nearly died. Thrown Away, her every
asset confiscated to settle the massive civil judgment against her,
she had no relatives or friends willing to support her or pay for a
ticket to a remote planet where she might have made a new life.
So she
descended into the Dark and began another sort of career as a member
of the Grange Place Tribe. There were twelve of them—eight
disenfranchised adults, three runaway children who had fled abusive
families, and one man wanted for the murder of his unfaithful wife.
They lived together, defending themselves against human predators and
the violent insane who stalked parts of the underworld. Their food
and supplies were gleaned by "shopping"—the tribal
euphemism for scavenging and clandestine requisition—in the
Bright Path, which they visited during quiet hours. They'd left the
rope on the manhole cover that I'd found. They'd also disconnected
the door alarm and broken the light in the utility room, which was
only one of many exits into the other world.
Fanchon's
nursing skills came to be valued by other Dark Path dwellers because
she was willing to help others without asking for payment. Many
patients gave her gifts anyway. She always shared them with her
tribe.
——
When I
woke up at last with a mind that was fully clear, Mama Fanchon was
the first person I saw, a woman in a red turtleneck sweater and
padded goosedown vest, sitting in a folding chair just outside the
hospital cubicle, smoking a briar pipe, knitting, and watching a
soundless Maple Leafs hockey game on her small television.
Behind
her, in the communal kitchen, Santa Claus was grilling some sort of
spicy meat and toasting buns. The aroma was inviting. He was dressed
in a wool shirt and dirty Carhartt insulated overalls, with a striped
canvas apron tied over them. Next to the two-burner Gaz stove stood a
table spread with clean newsprint. It was set with mismatched plates
and cups and also held a restaurant-sized jar of kosher pickles, a
bunch of spotty bananas, and a box of Krispy Kreme doughnuts.
"How
are you feeling, Helly?" Mama Fanchon inquired. She put her
knitting away and came to stand over me, hands on her ample hips. "Is
the bone-brace treatment working? The medicine was a bit past its
expiration date, but no one's been shopping in a clinic for nearly a
month. Not since Johnny Guitar fell into the cistern under Spadina
Chinatown and broke both legs."
"I
feel much better, Mama Fanchon," I said. Unzipping the sleeping
bag, I sat up. I was naked as a jaybird. Same color, too. "Need
to use the facilities. I can walk. May I have my clothes?"
"I
think someone had better go along with you, in case you need help."
She called out: "Mohammed!"
A skinny
teenage boy with sunken eyes and four missing front teeth came into
the cubicle. Like the others, he wore winter clothing. The Dark Path
was cold. My Ivanov stun-pistol was stuck in his belt.
The kid
glowered at me. "So the Haluk's awake. About time." I
recalled that he'd helped with my care while I was flat on my back,
passing in and out of consciousness. He was a lot stronger than he
looked. Young Mohammed adored Mama Fanchon and didn't trust me one
micron's worth.
She was
rummaging in one of the storage pods and said to the boy, "Supper
will be ready soon, angel. Please get Helly a nice warm jacket from
the hope chest, and take him to the rest room after I check him out.
Eeyore finally found a new power cell for my diagnosticon. Isn't that
wonderful?"
She waved
the device expertly around my bod while Mohammed went off. "Very,
very good! Your collarbone is just fine now. It'll be tender for a
week or so, but it's stronger than ever. Put your clothes on,
honey-bunch. You can eat at the table with us tonight." She left
the cubicle.
"Polish
sausages almost ready!" Santa Claus called out. My mouth began
to water. Three or four other members of the tribe drifted toward the
kitchen.
Mohammed
stood by while I pulled on my track suit and stuffed my feet into
sneakers without bothering with socks. He handed me an Eddie Bauer
car-coat with the price code still attached. The "hope chest"
had nice merchandise.
Trailed by
the armed boy, I trudged off to what had once been a public lavatory.
Now most of the white tiles were cracked and stained black with
mildew, and the mirrors were so cloudy that they were almost opaque;
but someone had reconnected the water with jury-rigged plastic
piping, and the old-timey tank toilets and sinks worked.
Mohammed
scowled as I relieved myself. "You can't be human. Not with
those"
I
shrugged. "I told you, it's what happens when Haluk genetic
engineers build a demiclone from your DNA. First they inoculate you
with some Haluk genes. You end up looking like an alien on the
outside."
"I'd
kill myself!" the boy declared.
"When
I get my life sorted out, I'll go back into the vat and get fixed.
Look just like my old self again." I finished my business, had a
fast wash, and slipped off the coat. "How's the wound on my neck
looking?"
"Got
a dry scab. The scab's purple. You're healthy, man ... I mean, Mr.
Haluk! Time for you to hit the road." He touched the pistol and
his face was like polished golden marble.
"You're
not hanging out here anymore. No matter what Mama Fanchon says."
"No,"
I agreed. "I'm very grateful for your help, Mohammed. And for
Mama's, and all the rest of the tribe's. But I won't try to stay with
you. There's something I have to do, a place I have to go. I'll need
help to find it, though, traveling the Dark Path."
"Where?"
he asked suspiciously.
I gave him
an address in ultrafashionable Cabbagetown, just east of the city's
central core, where once upon a time poor Irish immigrants grew their
favorite veggies right in their front gardens.
"It's
a long way," he said, looking dubious. "Can't get there
direct. The DP's broken at Yonge. You'd have to detour south to the
Inner Harbor, come back north through the Parliament Street drains."
"Will
you take me?"
He
laughed.
"I'll
make it worth your while. When I'm a man again."
"Horseshit,"
Mohammed scoffed.
"My
name is Asahel Frost. Once I was a convicted criminal and a
Throwaway, just like Mama and the others. Then I became the Chief
Legal Officer of Rampart Concern. I was rich and important. That's
why the Haluk stole my identity. Do you watch the news on Mama's TV?
Did you ever see the man who uses my name? Saying what terrific
people the Haluk really are?"
"Never
watch those talking-head dudes. Boring." But the boy's gaze had
momentarily shifted. He'd seen Alistair Drummond, all right.
"The
fake Asahel Frost is a traitor," I said. "Crazy as an
outhouse rat, and just as vicious. He wouldn't give a damn if Earth
and all the human planets became alien property. I'm going to cut his
nuts off and stuff them down his lying throat."
A spark
flickered in his bruised-looking young eyes. "Who lives in
Cabbagetown?" he asked me abruptly.
I told
him.
His mouth
dropped open, showing the pathetic gaps in his teeth. Replacing them
had been beyond Mama's skill. I wondered what else had been done to
Mohammed in the world Upstairs. Who'd been responsible. Wondered
whether I might do something about it someday, just as I intended to
do something for Mama and the others if I ever became a man again.
"You're
shinin' me on." His skepticism was weakening.
"Nope.
God's own truth. I've got nowhere else to turn, Mohammed."
He
was silent, then: "The Haluk
really did... that to you?"
"They
had help from some stupid and evil human beings. But, yeah. Haluk did
it as part of their Grand Design to take over the damn galaxy. Some
nerve, huh?"
"Motherfuckers,"
he said, shaking his head. "It's for real? This alien plot?"
"It's
a nightmare, and it's for real."
"Jeez."
"I
gave Mama Fanchon the opal ring," I said. "When we get to
the place in Cabbagetown, I'll see that you get some money."
"Okay,"
he said softly. "I'll take you where you want to go. You
ruin
those blueberry fools, hear me?"
"That's
my plan," I told him. "Now let's eat."
Together,
we went back to the dim corridor where the others were already
sitting at the kitchen table.
——
The next
day, after Mama Fanchon checked me out again with the diagnosticon
and gave her reluctant approval, we were ready to leave. Santa Claus
had supplied us with a pack of food and bottles of water. He'd even
refilled my flask with some of his own brandy. I wore my dark track
suit over heavy polypro underwear from the hope chest, the new
car-coat, the Blue Jays baseball cap, and gloves. Mohammed was all in
black. He still had my Ivanov and the magazine pouch of stun-bolts. I
was armed with the exotic switchblade and the sedative injector.
(Mama didn't want that for her hospital. She preferred to use
minidosers, which were much more common and easier to steal than
high-pressure drug cartridges.)
The
whole Grange Place Tribe decided to accompany Mohammed and me as far
as the old Spadina Street utility tunnel, which was to be our
principal route south. Santa Claus led the way with his blaster. The
girl runaway named Leah was at his side, lighting the way with a
brilliant argon lantern. Most of the others had glolamps. Mama
placidly smoked her pipe, walking with the Thrown Away Omnivore
executive called Johnny Guitar, who strummed his instrument in solemn
march tempo:
brrrump, brrrump, brump-brump-brump. Before long
we were all whistling "Colonel Bogey."
Weirdly,
other troglodytic figures carrying lights of their own emerged from
shadowy side tunnels to join us as we moved through the debris-strewn
Dundas West concourse. When we reached the utility tunnel, a crowd of
almost fifty people gathered around me, smiling and shyly wishing me
good luck. I was astonished and deeply touched.
"The
word got around," Santa Claus explained. "Mohammed never
could keep his mouth shut. These other folks ... they heard you were
a Throwaway, heard what the Haluk did to you. Most of them know how
it feels to have a good life, then wake up one day to find the
universe turned upside down."
So I made
a little speech of my own, thanking them, making some wild promises
that were greeted with disbelieving hoots and spatters of applause.
Then the Dark Path people began to wander away.
Mama
Fanchon kissed me on the cheek and slipped something into my hand.
"Here's what you wanted, Helly. My pocket phone. Take it with
you. Not too many of these down here. Most of us haven't much need of
them, but sometimes other tribes call me when a person's really sick
or hurt bad."
"I
can't take this," I protested. "Let me make my call now,
right here."
"I
don't think that would be wise. Wait till you're in Cab-bagetown,
after you've checked the place for a stakeout. You'll want to be sure
your friend is at home—and I'd also suggest that you give fair
warning about your big surprise." She turned to Mohammed and
spoke sternly. "And
you won't take any money from Helly!
Not a single dollar."
He
shrugged. "I'll bring back your phone."
——
The
journey was long, tedious, dirty, cold, and frequently dangerous. Our
convoluted route covered over eight kilometers and took seventeen
hours. I was strongly reminded of my trek through the caves of
Cravat, several years earlier. But there had been no human crazies in
that little planet's underworld; Branson Elgar and his homicidal crew
had been extremely sane, and the Haluk hiding in the Cravat caverns
were unexpectedly lacking in malice.
On
Toronto's Dark Path, there were malicious denizens galore. I never
would have gotten to Cabbagetown without Mohammed.
He knew
exactly how to calm nervous tribes ready to kill any
stranger—especially one that looked like an alien—who
entered their territory. Mention of Mama Fanchon's name turned them
from enemies to cautious allies. The roving gangs of well-armed
robbers and sex criminals infesting undefended no-man's-land regions
would have been more of a challenge; luckily, we didn't encounter
large groups of outlaws during the southbound leg of our trip.
Small
groups and loners, yes.
A pair of
knife-wielding muggers sprang at us out of the dark when we were
halfway down the Spadina tunnel, just above King Street. Mohammed
stunned them neatly, and after fettering them with the plastic wrist
restraints I'd taken from the Haluk guards, he called the nearest
tribe on Mama Fanchon's phone and coolly asked for "garbage
disposal."
I didn't
ask what that meant.
We
continued on. A few minutes later a third robber dropped on me from a
ceiling beam in the ruined King Street subway station. We grappled
while my young companion danced around waving the pistol, afraid to
shoot for fear of hitting me. The thug was a raving crankhead, the
drug giving him almost superhuman strength. I finally thumbed his
eyes and he turned me loose, giving Mohammed his chance. He plugged
my frenzied attacker with three darts.
"That's
usually fatal, you know," I told him when I managed to catch my
breath. "Not that I'm complaining."
"Then
I guess we don't have to bother the disposal folks. The rats'11 take
care of him." Mohammed helped himself to the late
bandido's
money and wristwatch before resuming his interrupted guide
duties.
Our
narrowest escape happened hours later, down near the Inner Harbor,
almost directly beneath what had once been Galapharma Tower. I
presumed the structure now contained Rampart's Toronto headquarters,
or would very shortly. In either case, the place offered me no
refuge.
Au contraire ...
After a
strenuous crawl through an abandoned sewer, we had come to a very old
masonry culvert, part of some antiquated stream-diversion system
buried deep under the old quay. The tall arched tunnel was half full
of fast-moving black water. By that time I was exhausted, since we'd
been on the go with hardly a letup for nearly eight hours.
I rested
on a wide ledge with a lantern perched beside me, while Mohammed
searched with his flashlight for the improvised bridge over the
stream that existed in Dark Path folklore—and also, we hoped,
in reality.
Suddenly,
a pack of hideously diseased scavengers came rushing out of the
darkness, screaming like wildcats, intent on separating us from our
possessions. I think they were human, but the few glimpses I caught
of them in the lamplight were inconclusive. We fought. I threw four
of the smelly varmints into the rushing water, where they either
drowned or ended up dog-paddling in Lake Ontario. Mohammed used the
last of his Ivanov darts subduing the other five.
We finally
found the makeshift bridge, crossed over, and entered the Queen's
Quay Dark Path. It was an abandoned goods-delivery system that once
served waterfront buildings, now inhabited only by rats. They minded
their own business and so did we, traveling eastward for three
miserable kilometers through passages partially flooded with icy
water. We nearly perished from hypothermia before finding a friendly
tribe of genuine Indians, Throwaways from Infinitum, the gambling and
entertainment colossus, near the Parliament Street junction. They let
us dry out in front of their space heaters and gave us hot food and
coffee. My Halukoid appearance didn't seem to bother them in the
least.
The last
part of the trip was anticlimactic, 1,500 meters of dry storm
drains—we were still beneath the force-field umbrella—cramped
utility conduits with snarls of ancient fiberoptic and electrical
cable, and the walled-off subbasements of vanished public housing
units.
We arrived
in Cabbagetown shortly before midnight, emerging through a drain
grate into a small park.
"The
town house you want is in the next block," Mohammed informed me.
"Make your phone call."
I sat in
deep shadows with my back against a tree trunk. The little park was
forlorn and deserted, its shrubs leafless, the flowerbeds empty, and
the fountain turned off for the winter.
Mohammed
crouched beside me. "Go ahead," he urged. "What are
you waiting for? I want to get home tonight."
I
hesitated because I was afraid. The long, perilous journey hadn't
terrified me, but the prospect of making this phone call did. I
stalled. "How do you expect to get back to Grange Place tonight?
It's too far. Too dangerous."
"Damn
right it is, man. But only if you take the Dark Path. I'm going to
walk crosstown on the
surface, right down Dundas Street for
three klicks, till I get to Spadina and our regular bolt-hole. It'll
be a breeze, now that I don't have a fuckin' Haluk fugitive in tow.
Make the phone call!"
Dex
Assistance gave me the code. I tapped it in, keeping the viewer
inactive. Got an answer and a face.
"Yes?
Who is this, please?"
"It's
Helly," I whispered. "I need to see you immediately."
"Helly?"
"Please
listen. I'm in trouble. Serious trouble. You know what—what's
going on in the Assembly. The free-for-all about the three hundred
new Haluk planets. My own close involvement as Rampart syndic."
"Yes.
But I don't see—"
"The
demiclone spy accusations. They're true. The—The person using
my name, giving statements to the media, is an impostor. A clone.
I've been kept prisoner by the Haluk for seven months while this
other man has used my identity to discredit Efrem Sontag's
investigation."
A
protracted silence. "This isn't... some sick practical joke?"
"No.
It's true. I only escaped from the Haluk tower a few days ago. I've
been hiding in the Dark Path. Under the city."
"Good
God. And you want—"
"Your
help. Please. There's no one else I can turn to. No one who would
believe me."
"Your
voice—"
"I
know. I've been through hell. It's not the only thing about me that's
changed. But I can prove who I am. Here's a secret password:
Kashagawigamog."
"The
lake where you almost drowned when you were five years old."
"Where
Eve saved my life, then beat the shit out of me for disobeying orders
and going out in the canoe alone, without a life vest. I told you
about it when we visited that art gallery in Haliburton."
Another
interminable pause, then: "All right. I'll listen to what you
have to say. Come to my town house. Do you know where it is?"
"Yes.
I'm only a block away. I'll use the back door. You wouldn't want your
neighbors to see me coming in."
"Why
not?"
"Trust
me."
"Very
well. I'll leave the rear garden gate unlocked. Come through the
alley."
"There's
something I have to warn you about. My appearance. I don't want to
frighten you, but—"
"I
don't frighten easily. You of all people ought to know that."
"Yes.
I'm sorry. But I'd better show you what was done to me by the Haluk.
I'm not the man you remember." I activated my viewer pickup.
"Jesus
Christ," Joanna whispered.
"They
demicloned a Haluk, gave him my DNA. This— This change is a
side effect of the genen process."
Her eyes
were full of sudden tears. "Oh, Helly!"
My
name. She used my name. "It
is me, Joanna. I need you so
very much."
"Come,"
my former wife said.
So I did.
Chapter 8
I jogged
wearily toward Joanna's place with my baseball cap pulled low,
praying I wouldn't meet another night-runner who'd notice my filthy
athletic clothes and outlandish features. I figured the chance of
Haluk agents physically watching her place was vanishingly remote.
More subtle varieties of spying were possible—even satellite
eyes. But I'd had no relationship with Joanna for years, and I was
fairly certain that the aliens would have discounted her as someone
I'd call on for help. They'd be concentrating their surveillance
efforts on Karl Nazarian and my other associates, on my family, and
on Efrem Sontag.
That
night, the pleasant streets of Cabbagetown seemed almost deserted.
Paving-stone sidewalks, lamp posts that simulated gaslights, big old
trees. A two-meter-high ornamental iron fence surrounded each row of
town houses. The locked gates in front of each unit had security
boxes with viewscreens. Following inner-city guidelines, there was no
private hopper pad anywhere nearby. You didn't fly into affluent
enclaves like Cabbagetown; you drove or cycled or walked, and you
didn't leave your vehicle parked overnight in front of the house,
either.
There were
six large town houses in Joanna's row, built in the gracious style of
the previous century—gray clapboard facades, heavy white window
frames, overhanging eaves, attic dormers on the third floor, multiple
chimneys, little sheltering porticos with hanging lanterns above each
front door. The houses shared a two-story mews in the rear that had
garage space for twelve cars below, exercise and hobby rooms
upstairs.
I jogged
around onto a side street and entered the alley. The mews building
sported brass carriage lamps. A single gate beside it gave admittance
to the communal garden. The telltale on its card-lock box glowed
green, and when I tried the gate, it swung open silently.
Her back
porch light hadn't been turned on and the lower part of her house was
dark. Blinds were drawn in two illuminated rooms on the second floor.
I crept up
the steps. Before I could touch the bell pad, the door opened and I
saw a tall, slender woman silhouetted against indirect light from an
inner hall. She wore a tightly belted crimson velvet robe over a
high-necked white nightgown. Her blond hair was still long, as I had
remembered it. Freed from its chignon, a single glossy braid fell
over her right breast.
She stared
at me, austere features shadowed, eyes wide and touched with twin
sparks from the carriage lights, lips parted in a soundless cry of
trepidation. My grotesque face seen on a small phone viewer lacked
the impact of solid, atrocious reality.
"It's
me, Joanna," I said gently. "It really is me."
"Yes.
Come in." Her voice was steady. She stepped aside as I entered
and then locked the door. For a few seconds we stood still, studying
each other in the half-light like cornball characters from an old
grade-B science-fiction movie: the attractive woman in her
nightclothes and the monstrous alien intruder.
Then she
said, "Phew! Why didn't you tell me you'd been hiding in a
sewer?" Before I could reply, she strode off briskly. "Come
with me. Before we do anything else, you've got to have a long, hot
shower."
I
followed meekly through the kitchen and up the back staircase to a
sumptuous bathroom on the second floor. "Put those nasty clothes
of yours into the valet and use the disinfect setting. You'd better
program a serious germkiller bodyscrub, too. The shower has an
enormous spritz selection—although I can't say I've ever had to
use the industrial-strength option myself. There are guest toiletries
in the large cabinet. Toothbrushes and the like." She paused and
gave me a quizzical look. "Umm ... you
do still have
teeth?"
I burst
out laughing and bared them in an un-Haluk grin. They felt like my
originals, even though the spaces between them appeared to have
expanded. Then I playfully stuck my tongue out at her as well, and
instantly regretted it. Earlier, I'd vaguely felt that the organ was
a tad abnormal. Now the mirrors in the bright bathroom revealed that
it had become obscenely long and agile. I could easily touch the
underside of my chin with it. And it was colored a rich plum-purple.
"Holy
shit!" said Joanna DeVet, Morehouse Professor of Political
Science. She backed away from me into the hall. When I made a piteous
noise she forced herself to smile. "It's not such a bad tongue.
Rather handsome, as those things go. Can you unfurl it like a
chameleon and catch flies?"
"I'll
have to give that a try one of these days," I said wretchedly.
"I'm
sorry, Helly. I shouldn't joke about it. It's just so ..."
"Alien,"
I said softly.
"Yes,"
she agreed. "Are you hungry? Can you eat human food?"
"My
last meal was rat stew, dished out by feral Native Americans living
in waterfront catacombs. I'm famished."
"I
have half a tandoori chicken with spicy yogurt sauce, nan bread, and
rozkoz-poppyseed coffee cake from Granowska's." Joanna hated to
cook, but she knew the best takeout and home-delivery places in the
city.
I said,
"The chicken sounds just great."
"Is
there anything else you need, dear?"
She said
it so sweetly, with such natural, heartfelt concern, that I felt my
throat tighten and my eyes begin to fog.
Oh,
Joanna. Why had I been such a self-centered fool?
But there
was no time now for sentimentality. In spite of her composed
demeanor, my former wife was undoubtedly in a state of profound
emotional turmoil. I had to keep her calm if she was going to be of
any use to me.
Use.
That was
the only reason I'd come to her, right? Not for asylum and solace,
but for help in resuming my quixotic crusade against the Haluk. So
I'd better get on with it...
"Does
your phone have Phase XII encryption capability?" I asked.
"Yes.
I've never used
that, either." She sighed. "I
suppose we're about to go into serious cloak-and-dagger mode."
"Call
the Interstellar Commerce Secretariat Forensic Division. Ask for the
emergency voice mail of Chief Superintendent Beatrice Mangan. She's
the head of the ICS molecular biology department and an old colleague
of mine who knows all about the Haluk demiclone threat."
"Yes,
I know who she is. She was one of the most impressive witnesses
during Delegate Sontag's open committee sessions, testifying about
the demiclone corpse."
I went on.
"Show your face and transmit your iris ID, then leave a message
asking Bea to call you at home as soon as possible, max encrypt."
"Do I
mention your name?"
"Absolutely
not. You're going to have to be my mouthpiece for a while until I
gain credibility. Somehow, without telling Bea anything about me or
my situation, get her to come to your house early tomorrow. It's
imperative that she not be followed, and I don't want her to risk
coming at night. The Haluk are certain to have her under
surveillance. Ask her to bring a portable genetic assay kit with her,
and a phone with a datalink to ICS."
"I
see where you're going. Your DNA will identify you positively."
"Even
better. Bea can confirm that the Haluk embellishments in my genome
are the result of an illegal demicloning procedure."
"What
will you do then—go to the media?"
"Eventually.
There are more urgent matters to take care of. I've been in a
dystasis tank for seven months, and I need to get back up to speed on
current events before I make any drastic moves. For that I could use
your help, Joanna. If you're willing."
"Of
course. I have a large library of reference materials here. I can
provide you with whatever information you need."
"As
soon as Bea Mangan is ready to vouch for me, I intend to show myself
to Delegate Efrem Sontag and my close associate Karl Nazarian—perhaps
to Eve and my father as well. We'll work together to decide the best
way of blitzing the blueberries. Don't worry, we won't use your house
as our command post. I won't endanger you, any more than I have
already by simply coming here."
"I'm
willing to take risks, Helly," she said simply. "If it will
help you."
Her
unexpected loyalty struck me mute, shamed me.
"Joanna.
Thank you. But I've got to get out of Toronto. The capital's a hotbed
of Haluk. Everyone knows that their embassy staff and trade
delegation number in the thousands. And I'd bet the ranch that a
sizable percentage of them are out beating the bushes for me right
now."
"What
about the Haluk impostor using your identity? He's been very
plausible, you know. I certainly would never have doubted him."
"The
active Fake Helly demiclone isn't an alien. He's a transmuted human.
The Haluk made two copies of me."
"Don't
you want to expose him at once?"
"I'll
need help blowing the whistle on this guy. He's more than a Haluk
apologist and secret agent—he's dangerously insane."
"You
know that for a fact?"
"Oh,
yes. And I'm not the only one who thinks so."
"Who
in the world is this monster of depravity?"
"Alistair
Drummond, the former Gala CEO. He didn't die in Arizona."
"Good
heavens!" She thought about it for a moment. "How ...
absolutely perfect."
"I'm
sure the Haluk thought so, too, when Drummond presented his ingenious
little scheme to their leadership. They also realized that the man is
a ticking timebomb, and planned to replace him with a more
trustworthy Fake Helly as soon as possible. A Haluk demiclone. That
won't happen now. My second clone is very, very dead." I
couldn't help the grim satisfaction in my voice.
Joanna
gave me a look. Political scientists aren't slow to grasp unpleasant
tactical realities. "So the Haluk are stuck with Drummond, who
no doubt has an agenda of his own."
"Damned
right he does. When he tricked Eve and the Rampart board into making
him president of the Concern, he put himself in a position to do
immense damage. With the Galapharma consolidation, there are now
nearly six thousand planets under Rampart control. Drummond has
access to databases for all of them. He can control their starship
fleets, their internal and external defenses, even their management
rosters. For all we know, he might have put Haluk demiclone moles
into top executive positions in Rampart Tower and on significant
numbers of Rampart worlds in both the Perseus Spur and the Orion Arm.
He's had plenty of time. Personnel reshuffling during the
consolidation would have made his actions seem logical. I'm sure he's
also used his position as Corporate Syndic to promote the Haluk cause
effectively among the Assembly Delegates."
She
nodded. "He's been very ardent in his defense of the aliens,
personally appealing, utterly convincing. Certainly no one would ever
suspect him of being—" She touched the side of her head.
"A
flaming nutcase? Hardly. When he organized the Rampart takeover
conspiracy, he was motived by hubris and overweening ambition. Now, I
suspect he's out for revenge—against me, against Rampart,
perhaps even against the entire human race. We can't simply discredit
Drummond and expect him to quietly surrender. He'll find ways to
fight back the minute he realizes he and his Haluk allies are being
seriously threatened. There may be only one practical way to deal
with him."
"I
see." And she did, too. "You and your friends are going to
be facing some tricky realpolitik decisions. The Assembly vote on the
new Haluk planets is expected very soon. Perhaps within two weeks."
"We've
got to shoot that bill down, Joanna." I spoke with desperate
urgency. "The aliens can't be allowed to bring vast numbers of
colonists into the Spur. With Drummond's help, they'd find a way to
seize all of Zone 23. And that's not even the worst of it. The Haluk
have a secret base in a Sagittarian asteroid. Last April their
pirates were using it to hijack Sheltok transactinide carriers. By
now the damn place might have been expanded into a staging point for
an all-out attack against our starship fuel supply."
"Helly,
this is appalling! You'll have to go to the media at once.
Concentrating your efforts on the Assembly members themselves might
not be effective. The Hundred Concerns want the Haluk colony bill to
pass. A majority of the Delegates will bow to their pressure unless
the constituency absolutely forces them to do otherwise."
"Through
media exposure."
"Yes.
The Commonwealth constitution has provisions for a citizen referendum
under certain circumstances. But the Assembly itself must—"
I
interrupted her, suddenly overcome by a crushing fatigue that was
both physical and mental. "Later, Joanna.
Please. I
know Sontag and the others will welcome your expert advice. We'll
talk about all that tomorrow. But for now, just convince Bea Mangan
to come over here in the morning. Before I can do anything else, I
have to prove that I exist."
"I'll
call her at once." Impulsively, she extended her hand. I took it
very carefully in my inhuman blue one, bowed my head over it in an
archaic gesture of courtesy that seemed instinctive, and released it.
Joanna
blinked, then let her gaze fall. "I'll bring the food to my
little sitting room at the end of the hall." She turned away and
went down the back stairs.
I closed
the bathroom door and stripped, inserting my grimy clothes and
footgear into the valet machine as she'd instructed me. Then I
stepped into the shower and did my best to wash everything away.
It didn't
work, of course.
——
She was
waiting when I padded into the sitting room in my stocking feet. The
soaked and battered Adidas hadn't survived the valet's attentions and
the car-coat was beyond salvage; but the other clothing I'd
appropriated from Dan was fresh and clean again.
A thought
of my wayward brother had flitted briefly through my mind as I
dressed. I'd wondered if the Haluk had interrogated him yet. There
was nothing he could say that would help the aliens find me, but they
might persist in the questioning anyhow. Too bad for Dan ...
"You
smell much better," Joanna remarked. "Don't tell me you
used the lavender bath oil."
"I
needed some soothing aromatherapy," I said, trying to sound
casual. "You know I always liked lavender. It makes me feel
relaxed." And horny, worse luck.
Three
couches were grouped in a U shape before a tall holoscreen. She'd
programmed an underwater scene, blue-black tropical water with a
school of gleaming opal moon-jellies rising and falling languidly
amid ghostly spires of coral. The music was strange, soft blooming
chords that might have been Olivier Messaien.
"I
like the holo," I said. "It almost reminds me of home.
Kedge-Lockaby, that is. The freesoil Perseus world where I lived.
Except the planet's sea never evolved jellyfish."
"Is
it a very beautiful place?" Joanna asked me.
"Oh,
yes."
"And
you were happy there."
"Not
at first. Later, when I got my head back together, I was very happy."
The food
waited in a covered hotdish on a low table in front of the couches. I
sat across from her, noted the unfolded vidphone sitting beside a
carafe of coffee and a bottle of Jameson whiskey.
"Bea
Mangan hasn't returned your call yet?" I inquired.
"Yes,
she did. She'll be here tomorrow morning at seven, with the genetic
assay equipment. She said she'd take a taxi from ICS Tower."
"That
should be safe enough in daylight if she takes precautions."
"Helly
... I'm afraid she guessed the truth. I'm sorry if it upsets your
plans. I never hinted—"
"It's
all right. I might have known Bea would figure it out. After all,
she's a cop."
"She
wants to talk to you right away. She said it was extremely urgent."
"Rats."
It had to be bad news. I knocked my fist against my ridged forehead,
trying vainly to jump-start my brain. Switched the phone's viewer
option off and went through the encrypt rigmarole. Bea picked up on
the first buzz.
"Beatrice
Mangan here."
"It's
Helly. The weird voice goes with the rest of my Halukoid ensemble."
"So
the aliens subjected you to the preliminary genen procedure—"
"Yes.
And I escaped. Pardon me for not doing a vis-a-vis, but I'm really
tired of being blue and hearing about it."
Her warm,
maternal face was full of sympathy. "How awful for you. I'll do
whatever I can to help. You know that."
"Thanks,
Bea. Just verify my DNA tomorrow. After that I'll be getting in touch
with Ef Sontag and some others to work out a plan of action. I
haven't decided yet whether to go to the media right away or wait a
couple of weeks to make my big revelation just before the Assembly
vote on the Haluk colonies. In either case, I'd like you to redo my
genetic profile in public, as part of the big show."
"Helly,
that's why I wanted to speak to you immediately. Joanna mentioned the
Assembly vote, too. But you won't have two weeks to prepare for it.
Ef Sontag called me earlier this evening and told me that the
Conservatives suddenly forced cloture on the Haluk colony debate.
They passed a resolution calling for a vote on Wednesday, the day
after tomorrow."
"No!"
I whispered. "No no no."
There goes
the ball game: Haluk-300, Humans-0.
Bea said,
"On Tuesday, tomorrow, Ef and his group will be allowed to
present a summary of their opposition. He asked me to appear as an
expert witness reiterating the Brown Fleece cadaver evidence. The
pro-Haluk committee will then do their own final summation. The
Speaker will call for the vote promptly at 1000 hours on Wednesday
morning."
"I
know why the debate was squelched," I said dully. "The
Haluk leadership hit the panic button after I escaped. They were
afraid they wouldn't recapture me before I blew the lid off."
"I'm
sure you're right about that. The Servant of Servants and the entire
Haluk Council of Nine are here in Toronto. I've seen them myself in
the Assembly Chamber VIP observation gallery."
"The
Servant would be in a position to add threats to the usual Haluk
lobbying efforts with the Hundred Concerns. The corporate Syndics
squeezed the pocket Delegates to force the early vote. Shit! This
probably means that a majority of the Assembly will approve the
colonies, too."
"Ef
thought so. But I think you should talk to him, Helly. He's spending
the night in Government House with his staff, working on last ditch
tactics. Perhaps—"
"Sorry.
That's a no-go. I'm totally exhausted. Too strung out to think
straight."
The
metaphoric black pit yawned in front of me, and oblivion had never
looked so appealing. I'd go into hiding, fight the impossible fight
some other day ...
But Bea
was saying, "Why don't I go to Ef early tomorrow, break the news
about your return, and ask him to come along to Professor DeVet's
house with me?"
"If
his office has a demi mole—" I objected.
"All
of Ef's people give DNA samples every week, and he has stringent
security monitoring. There's no mole. If the Haluk do have his
offices under surveillance, it can only be the crudest kind of
corridor peeping. I can get him out of there cleanly, Helly. Trust
me."
"I do
... But damn it all to hell, Bea! What can we hope to accomplish in
one day? Ef can present me to the Assembly as Exhibit A and I can
give a nice little speech. But would it really make any difference in
the voting?"
Joanna
suddenly said, "Pocket Delegates, Helly. Rampart's own."
Stupid
stupid. I didn't get it. "What?"
On the
phone, Bea echoed, "What?"
I
activated the speaker option and Joanna spoke louder.
"There
are a substantial number of Delegates beholden to Rampart now,
following the Galapharma consolidation. Those votes can be swayed if
you undercut Drummond's influence immediately, by removing him from
the syndic post and replacing him with an ally. Can't you think of
some sneaky lawyerish way of doing it so you wouldn't have to
confront the impostor himself?"
I finally
understood what she was saying. The logjam in my cerebrum exploded in
a flash of fresh hope. "Christ! If it could only work!"
I'd
persisted in thinking of Rampart as it used to be, a beleaguered
little outfit without political influence. Before the consolidation,
the Rampart worlds of Zone 23 had rated a meager four Commonwealth
Assembly votes under the complex allocation formula that took into
consideration both population and corporate worth. With Galapharma's
pocket Delegates added in, the total would now be eighty or ninety.
It might be enough—
Bea
Mangan's incredulous voice interrupted my train of thought. "Did
I hear Professor DeVet mention Alistair Drummond?"
"He's
me," I said tersely. "Fake Helly the First. There was also
a Haluk copy of me. It died. If you want the complete scoop on Asahel
in Demicloneland, I'll tell you tomorrow."
Joanna
brought us back to the point. "How does a Concern oust its
syndic?"
"According
to Rampart's bylaws," I said, "he's customarily appointed
or dismissed by the president. A simple majority vote of the Board of
Directors can also do it. Drummond is president as well as syndic and
he won't fire himself, so that leaves the board. Gunter Eckert, the
chairman, can call an emergency meeting. But I'll tell you ladies
right now that a hardheaded old businessman like Eckert won't accept
me as the real Helly unless he sees a DNA assay done right before his
eyes and then has me interrogated with a psychotronic probe."
"Then
do it," Joanna said.
I
had to laugh at her naivete. "I don't even know Gunter's
goddamned personal code! He's certainly ex-database. But that's moot.
We'll never get him to call a meeting or watch the assay because
he'll never believe that the Asahel Frost who's President of Rampart
is an impostor. He won't
want to believe it. Neither will Eve,
or my father, or any of the other directors. Because if it's true,
and the Haluk get their shit blown out of the water, Rampart stands
to lose more than any of the other Hundred Concerns. There's no one
on the board who—"
I
shut my mouth, overcome with the abrupt realization that I was wrong.
There
was someone.
"Helly?"
Bea Mangan said anxiously.
"I
just had a thought. I'll have to follow through on it. The odds are
long, but the Rampart situation might not be completely hopeless
after all. Listen, Bea. You come here tomorrow with Ef Sontag and
your genetic profiling equipment. And I'd also like you to bring a
Hogan H-18 miniaturized low-power psychotronic interrogation device."
"Of
course. I can borrow one from Enforcement. Is there anything else?"
"Pray,"
I said, and told her goodbye.
Joanna
regarded me with a puzzled expression. I said, "Give me a
minute." Then I sat still, closed my eyes, and tried to remember
a phone code, unlisted, that I'd used only once before, months ago. A
code that might mean the difference between galactic war or peace.
Got it,
you crafty blue bastard, you!
I tapped
the pads. This time I left the viewer turned on. There was no need
for extra encryption. The man I was calling had the best personal
security in the universe.
He
answered his phone, stared at me, and said, "Good God in
heaven!"
"No,
sir," I corrected him. "Helly Frost, back from a
very
bad trip. Captured by the enemy in the Sagittarius Whorl.
Demicloned and horribly transmogrified by Haluk villains. But my
Barky Hunt wasn't a fiasco. I got the answers we were looking for. Do
you want to hear about it?"
"Yes,"
said Adam Stanislawski evenly. "If you can prove you are who you
say you are." No hesitation, no emotional dithering. He weighed
Drumrnond's Helly persona against my unlikely claim and was willing
to keep an open mind! What a guy ...
"Have
you ever heard of Joanna DeVet, Morehonse Professor of Poli Sci at
Commonwealth University?"
"The
former wife of Asahel Frost. I've read several of her books. Thought
they were brilliant."
"I'm
at her house in Cabbagetown. If you come here tomorrow morning at
about 0700 hours, I'll prove who I am with a DNA test and a truth
machine. After that I'd like you to get hold of your man John
Ellington, Vice Chairman of Rampart. Have him force Gunter Eckert to
call an immediate emergency meeting of Rampart's Board of
Directors—without the participation of the individual presently
masquerading as Asahel Frost."
Stanislawski
frowned thoughtfully, then a broad smile broke over his shrewd,
guarded features. "I see. Turning the pocket Delegates, eh?"
"There
ain't no flies on you, sir. You guessed it. It was Joanna's idea."
"Is
Professor DeVet there? Let me talk to her."
I pushed
the phone in front of her. She said, "Good evening, Citizen
Stanislawski. Thank you for your kind words about my books. I'm
rather surprised, since they condemn the coercive role of business in
galactic politics. I'm even more surprised that my former husband
should have contacted you under these extreme circumstances."
"Is
it
really Helly?"
"Absolutely.
Escaped from Haluk durance vile. They cloned him."
"I'll
be damned. Tell me how to get to your house."
She did.
"Until seven tomorrow, then, citizen."
"I'm
really looking forward to it, Professor."
She ended
the call, folded the phone, and uncovered the dish of chicken.
"Eat
your food now, while it's hot. Would you like an Irish coffee? I'm
going to have one. Maybe several. It's decaf, so it won't prevent you
from sleeping." She picked up the carafe and began filling a
glass mug.
Sleep!
With my brain fumbling to process the stunning developments of the
past half hour, there was small hope of that. But I said, "Sounds
good to me, babe."
She
partially filled both mugs from the carafe, stirred in a little
sugar, added generous measures of whiskey, inverted a spoon and used
it to carefully float a layer of heavy cream on top. We lifted the
mugs and tapped them together, simultaneously murmuring, "Cheers."
Sipped, avoiding each other's eyes.
I began
picking dutifully at the food. The baked chicken was meltingly tender
and delicious, but I had no appetite. I should have made small talk,
asked about her work at Commonwealth University, her life during the
years we'd been apart.
I
couldn't. The nearness of her, the very real possibility that I'd be
killed tomorrow by alien agents or the hirelings of Alistair
Drummond—even the lingering scent of the goddamned lavender
bath oil—had cranked up my blood pressure to the point where I
didn't even trust myself to speak to the woman seated across the
table from me.
I wanted
her so much.
Goofy old
human nature has a paradoxical instinct that sometimes asserts itself
under circumstances of impending peril: before the male Neanderthal
goes out to hunt the mammoth, before the knight sallies forth against
the invincible foe, before the Sioux warrior meets the Seventh
Cavalry, before battered Blue Supercop charges blindly into the lair
of the corporate bad guys.
But
this time around my body's urgent need to reaffirm life was doomed to
frustration. If it
was only a need, and not a symptom of
something deeper ...
Seeing my
alien hands clumsily manipulating the knife and fork, painfully
conscious of the awful face that had stared back at me from the
bathroom mirror, I was prey to a burning sense of self-loathing and
despair that was only partially associated with my horrifying
appearance. I had rejected my wife out of stupid pride, denied my
feelings for her because I had been afraid, come back to her only as
a last resort.
Persons
I'd respected had told me that I had never stopped loving Joanna:
Mimo Bermudez, Matilde Gregoire, my sister Eve. I'd denied it with
all my strength, even as I kept the two wedding rings on their
platinum chain. I was still trying to deny it, now that we were
together again and the situation was hopeless.
I was no
longer a man, and yet I was.
Joanna sat
in apparent ease, bare feet crossed at the ankles, red velvet robe
falling away from her white gown, watching the drifting moon-jellies
when it became evident that I was incapable of conversation. Finally
I couldn't eat any more. She cleared the table and put the dirty
dishes into a dumbwaiter.
"Would
you like another Irish coffee, Helly?" So polite and
compassionate toward the poor freak.
"Yes,
please. No cream this time."
She handed
the cup to me but didn't resume her seat, walking instead to the
windows overlooking the street and briefly parting the drapes. "This
is a very safe part of the city, regularly patrolled and
well-equipped with security devices. I'm sure you'll be all right
staying with me."
"Just
show me the guest room," I said. "Or I can lie down here on
one of the couches."
"You're
welcome to stay as long as you like," she insisted. "If
we're careful, there's no reason why any of your enemies should
suspect you're here. I'd also be happy to help with your ...
appointments at Rampart Tower and the Assembly tomorrow."
"I
couldn't possibly jeopardize your safety or impose on you any more
than I already have."
"But
where will you go?" She seemed genuinely concerned. "Helly,
there'll be a media frenzy! And you'll be in danger from Drummond and
the Haluk, no matter how the vote goes."
"I
have a hiding place in mind," I said brusquely. "Don't
worry about me." After I'd done what I could in Toronto, I'd go
to the place I'd thought of earlier. My first idea had been to
retreat to Karl Nazarian's fortified cottage; but I'd rejected that
idea instantly. It would be one of the first places my enemies would
look.
And Karl
might have already gone the way of Jake Silver ...
I drank
down the last of the coffee, gabbling about how grateful I was to
Joanna for her kindness. If she wanted to do more, she could provide
me with a file of news magazines and holovid newscasts. I'd spend the
night skimming them, since I doubted I'd be able to sleep.
"Poor
Helly," she said, smiling. "I'll gladly do that for you if
you wish. But there are better ways to relax." She untied her
robe, slipped it off, and tossed it onto a chair. Then she began to
undo the long golden braid of her hair.
The coffee
cup almost fell out of my hand. I said, "Joanna."
She said,
"My dear. I've missed you so very much."
"No,"
I moaned. Alien flesh, human hormones. Oh, God. I was coming alive
again. They were.
"Let
me see you." She had turned off the room lamps with a snap of
her fingers and was undoing the front buttons of her demure white
nightdress one by one. It was made of some delicate opaque fabric,
with soft lace at the wrists and collar. The only illumination came
from the opalescent sea creatures that seemed to float in the virtual
water behind her. I could see the thrust of her nipples, her shining
eyes.
"I'm
hideous," I said hoarsely. "Changed. You don't understand."
She shook
her head, the smile widening. "You're intriguing. A fantasy come
alive. Don't tell me you've never thought about such things. All
human beings have."
The gown
fell to the floor. Her wonderful body was the same as always, pale
and glowing, with an ash-blond ecu that matched her long hair. She
lowered the zipper of my track suit, removed the jacket, slipped her
cool hands under my T-shirt and lifted it.
"Oh!"
Not revolted, interested. Caressing my chest's bizarre cobalt
trapunto ridges, the twin rows of vestigial mammaries like ornate
golden buttons on a hussar's coat. "What in the world are
these?"
"Fuckin'
extras," I muttered. "The damned Haluk have litters."
She pulled the T-shirt off. "And that's not the worst of it.
Please don't—"
She was
fitting her hands around my stupid wasp waist. "That's amazing!
How in the world does it accommodate your diaphragm and digestive
tract?"
"I
don't know! Joanna, for the love of God—"
She took
my face in both hands, drew it down and kissed me, long and slow,
savoring the alien juices of my mouth, accepting the responding
thrusts of my awful tongue, crushing her body eagerly against mine,
feeling my erection but still not aware of the ultimate indignity.
"Now,"
she said at last, drawing me to the large central couch. Her eyes
were like stars. "My love. My dearest alien love."
Despairing,
desperate, on the brink, I said, "Look!"
Tore off
the rest of my clothing and let her see me naked.
"Two?"
she whispered in disbelief. "But how—"
"I
don't know!" I roared, feeling tears of frustrated lust start
from my eyes. "I don't
know!"
"Then
we'll have to experiment," she said. Her face was radiant and
her touch gentle. "The entire ensemble is more streamlined.
Elegant. Very different, of course, but actually quite beautiful."
"Beautiful....?"
"Hush
now," she said, and began the experimentation.
——
I crept
out of her bed shortly after 0500 hours, leaving her deep in sleep,
and had a quick shower. After collecting my clothes from the sitting
room and putting them on, I took the phone down to the kitchen to
make my call to Karl Nazarlan.
Once again
I cut out the video option. Before entering his personal code, I
programmed an emergency voice-mail override and activated his ringer.
Then I held my breath as the buzzing began.
Be there,
old friend. Don't be dead because of me.
His face
appeared, puffy from slumber and mad as a hornet. "Who's there?
Do you know what friggin' time it is?"
I said,
"It's five twenty-two on a dark November morning."
"Show
your face, you inconsiderate bastard!" he raged. "Hector,
if this is you calling from that goddamned deer-camp of yours, I'm
going to wring your bloody black neck."
"It's
not Hector." I tried to make my voice sound as normal as
possible. "Engage Phase XII encryption, Karl. Do it now. Someone
might be listening."
I heard
cursing, some of it in a language that might have been Armenian, then
the signals indicating that the call was secure.
"Well?"
Karl snarled. "If you know me, you know that nobody ever,
ever
taps my phone. Who the hell is this?"
"It's
Helly Frost. The real one, not the demiclone fake who's been
masquerading as me for the past half year."
"The
real—"
"Asahel
Ethan Frost, alias Helmut Icicle, alias Cap'n Helly, the
fish-flickin' fool of Eyebrow Cay, freesoil planet Kedge-Lockaby,
Zone 23, Perseus Spur."
"Oh,
my God!"
"The
Haluk bagged me out in Sagittarius and made a Helly demiclone. I
finally escaped from the xenos a few days ago—and I'm ringy,
riled, and swoll up with mad like a chuckwalla lizard trapped in a
fuckin' hobnail boot!"
"It's
you, all right," Karl conceded after a brief, incredulous
silence. "Now that I think about it, your double never did quite
come across as a proper cowboy."
"I'll
bet. The fictitious gent hi question is none other than our old chum,
Alistair Drummond."
"Christ
on a crutch! They turned Drummond into a demi of you?"
"Yeah.
I'm going to have a devil of a job taking him down, too. But I'll do
it or die trying."
"That
sneaking bastard! He did an incredible job. Played you to the hilt. I
don't mind telling you it nearly broke my heart when it seemed you
were repudiating all the evidence against the Haluk that we sweated
blood for. I had to figure you'd sold out to protect Rampart's bottom
line. You want to tell me the whole story?"
"Later.
I need your help, Karl. Right now, if you can manage it."
"Where
you calling from?"
"I'm
at my ex-wife's place in Toronto." I gave him the address, told
hun about the lack of adjacent hopper pads, pleaded with him to come
as soon as possible, as clandestinely as possible, in a ground
vehicle.
"No
problem at all. My girlfriend has a catering business. I'll borrow
one of her vans."
"Girlfriend?"
Karl had been a solitary widower for as long as I'd known him.
"Lots
of things happened while you were floating. Some good, some not so
good. What do you need? Weapons?"
"An
Ivanov Squire will suffice. I also need a phone primed with a new
personal code—use the name Helmut Icicle. Get into Rampart's
database, retrieve all my old dex listings and links, and install
them in the new phone."
"Uh-huh.
Anything else?"
"A
set of full soft body armor, size XLT; a regular Anonyme anorak in
XL; a pair of lightweight mittens; a sturdy pair of boots, size
twelve medium. Oh, yes. Another set of Joru robes. No makeup or
fright-wig necessary this time."
I told him
briefly what I hoped to accomplish that day at Rampart Tower and at
the Commonwealth Assembly. He uttered a disappointed expletive when I
told him how tight the time frame was for scrubbing the new Haluk
colonies, and wanted to know how the interactive citizen vote could
be invoked.
"I
don't know that much about it. You can ask Joanna to explain the
thing when you get here. Watch your back en route. The Haluk probably
have had you under surveillance for several days, ever since I broke
out of their embassy in Macpherson Tower."
"The
day I can't slip a tail is the day I get fitted for my halo and start
taking harp lessons. Is there anything else I can bring you?"
"No,
but there are a couple of other things you can do. Do you remember
the report I sent you on the Sheltok carrier pirate attack?"
"The
Haluk corsairs operating in the Sag? Sure. I certified it."
"Can
you access it quickly and send a copy to Ef Sontag's office?"
He didn't
reply immediately. Then: "Yes, I can do that. What else?"
"After
today's action, I'm going to hide out for a little while until things
cool off. I'll need a fast, well-armed hopper. I'd like you to
requisition one of Rampart's big Garrisons—"
"Sorry,"
Karl said. "Can't do that. Your alter ego cost me my job. A
couple of weeks before you supposedly returned from the death-traps
of Sagittarius and turned into a raving capitalist, I came down with
a mysterious virus that the Rampart medics couldn't cure. I was
bounced from my vice-presidency with a nice pension that I never
thought I'd live to spend. Big surprise! When I went to an
independent physician for treatment, the deadly bug turned up its
toes. How do you like that shit? Fake Helly and his friends were
clearing the decks."
That
explained his hesitation about the Sheltok report. He'd have to hack
it out of the Rampart database, along with my phone files. I had no
doubt that he'd do the job immaculately.
"I
suppose Lotte, Cassius, and Hector were deep-sixed along with you,"
I said.
"Correct.
They're all living in the area, retired and bored stiff. You got
something in mind?"
"I'll
need the entire staff of your old Department of Special Projects
immediately—provided I can pull off a certain ploy over at
Rampart this morning. Put your folks on alert, but warn them it's
gonna be balls-to-the-walls this time. I suspect Rampart may be
infested with other demiclones besides Fake Helly. You and your gang
may have to extract them, and the job just might begin this
afternoon."
"Christ.
Okay, I'll get on it. Anything else?"
"Can
you get hold of any kind of hopper at all?"
"Cassius
has a Tupo he keeps at Toronto Island Airport. Kind of slow and not
armed. I'm sure he'd—"
Joanna had
come into the kitchen and was listening shamelessly.
I said,
"Get it if you can, but I really need that other stuff. Come as
soon as possible. We'll sort everything out when you get here."
"Okay.
It'll be damned good to see you again, Helly."
"Oh,
no it won't," I said, and hit the End pad of my phone.
Joanna was
wearing jeans, a metallic gold turtleneck, and a loosely knit white
sweater with a shawl collar.
"You
didn't show yourself to your friend?"
"Not
everyone thinks the Haluk form is beautiful."
"All
of you isn't," she said, smiling slyly. "Only the
essentials."
"Well,
Karl Nazarian is a tough old buzzard, but I still want to reintroduce
myself to him tactfully. That goes for our other guests as well. I
may need your assistance."
"Oh,
my. Then you'd better strengthen my resolve by plying me with a pot
of strong hot coffee. You do remember how to make it? If not, I'm
open to other inducements."
"Are
you, indeed," I murmured. "Let's induce."
A taxi
carrying Beatrice Mangan and Efrem Sontag arrived shortly after
seven. As we had arranged it, I lurked in the upstairs sitting room
while Joanna gave Bea and the Delegate coffee, peppermint tea, and
muffins with Bonne Maman black cherry preserves. After about ten
minutes Joanna brought Bea up with her equipment to do the DNA test.
The astonishment of my former ICS colleague was brief and her
interest in my exotic body entirely clinical.
Joanna
stood by during the blood-drawing and cursory physical exam. I
absolutely refused to strip down.
"Damn,"
said Bea Mangan. Then she smiled at Joanna.
I
swear Bea
knew. How do women do that...?
Working
with her impressive machine on the table in front of the blank
holoscreen, Bea quickly developed a genetic profile from my
biosample, then compared it with the one in her ICS files, studying
screen after screen of esoteric data.
"Fascinating!
It's you all right, Helly, but overlaid with suppressing sequences
from your late Haluk demiclone. You're a genetic palimpsest, my man.
A human parchment with the original writing not quite erased, written
over with something terribly new."
Joanna
laughed appreciatively. "What a cogent metaphor."
"I
hate scholarly jokes," I growled, "particularly when I'm
the butt. Can a layman make sense of this analysis? Will we be able
to use it to prove my identity to people like Ef Son-tag and Adam
Stanislawski, who don't know anything about advanced biology?"
"Stanislawski?"
Bea said. "You
have been busy." "He'll be here
any minute, and so will Karl." "Oh, dear," Joanna
said. "I hope they're not hungry. Bea and Ef ate the last of the
muffins, and there's not much else in the house."
"Hospitality,"
I muttered, "is the least of our worries." Bea did
something with the machine. "Look here, then. We start over.
Enter Original Helly's DNA,
comme fa. Now enter Halukoid
Helly's DNA,
comme ca. Tap the correlation pad, then hit
pr6cis,
et voila! Go ahead, do it yourself." She walked
me through it. At the end the readout said:
——
POSITIVE MATCH PLUS 1623 ANOMALOUS CODING
SEQUENCES SUBSTITUTED FOR PORTIONS OF NORMALLY NONCODING GENETIC
MATERIAL.
DO YOU WISH CODON-BY-CODON BREAKDOWN
OF ANOMALIES? Y/N.
——
I
told it n.
"Looks
good, Bea. Thank you. Can I keep the machine with me today while I
confer with some people?"
"You
aren't getting rid of me that easily," she said. "If you
hope to use that data to convince others of your identity, you'll
need a live expert witness to vouch for it. Otherwise you might as
well be demonstrating a video game. I volunteer my unimpeachable
authority for as long as you need me. I'll operate the psychotronic
device, too, if you like."
"Bea
... there's no way I can say how grateful I am."
"Then
don't," Bea said. "Are we ready for Sontag's
show-and-tell?"
"I'd
rather wait until Stanislawski shows up. It'll save time, maybe even
reinforce plausibility. We won't wait for Karl Nazarian. He has some
necessary items to assemble and it might take him a while. You and
Joanna go down and keep Ef company. Show him the test results. I want
to sit here and pull some ideas together."
"Of
course," Bea said.
They left
me alone. I'd already been briefed by Joanna on events of the past
half year as we ate our small breakfast, following the inducements.
Seeing holovids of "myself" had been bad enough. But I was
even more shocked at how quickly the Haluk had moved to insinuate
themselves into the Commonwealth economy, dismayed at how readily
their reassurances of goodwill had been accepted, in spite of Ef
Sontag's efforts to sound the alarm. Not even Brown Fleece's
demiclone corpse had significantly swayed public opinion against the
Haluk. The Concerns had produced experts of their own who
contradicted Bea's evidence.
Ef and his
committee had done their best. Unfortunately, the fact remained that
the blue aliens were very good for business, and the Hundred Concerns
were fearful of rocking the prosperity boat. Their pocket Delegates
would vote on the Haluk colonies as they were told to, unless I could
unleash a groundswell of citizen opposition in time to make a
difference.
I began to
dictate to a small e-book. Doing my best to remember incriminating
remarks made by the two Haluk leaders as they stood in front of my
dystasis tank. Trying to recall details of Barky Tregarth's story,
Dolores da Gama's spiteful boasts, and the Sheltok skipper's damning
admissions of Haluk piracy being swept under the rug by nervous
Concern management.
The front
doorbell rang.
I looked
out the window, saw a little red Honda Civic parked in front of the
town house, and assumed that Karl had changed his mind and acquired
another set of wheels. About ten minutes later Joanna came up to the
sitting room.
"Adam
Stanislawski, the richest man in the galaxy, has arrived. Both he and
Ef Sontag have accepted the proof of your identity. You won't have to
submit to the truth machine on their behalf. On stage, Blue Boy. The
dress rehearsal audience is waiting."
With her
leading, I went down to the kitchen. Ef and Adam and Bea were sitting
at the table, where cups of coffee and tea shared space with forensic
apparatus.
Gasps at
my entrance. The two men sat still as statues.
"Good
morning, all," I said mildly. "Thanks for coming and thanks
for believing. I'm sure you're curious about the circumstances that
resulted in my physical change. In just a few minutes I'll satisfy
your curiosity and tell the whole story. But first: I hope no one is
in need of a defibrillator."
Strained
chuckles.
"No?
Excellent. There are two principal objectives I hope to accomplish
today, with your help. The first is the removal of a demiclone agent,
loyal to the Haluk, who has-been taking my place as President of
Rampart Concern and Corporate Syndic. Adam Stanislawski has pledged
to help me accomplish this. When this impostor is deposed by the
Board of Directors, I hope to have Vice-Chairman John Ellington, the
Macrodur stakeholding representative, elected syndic in his place. He
has the stature—and the motivation—necessary to pressure
Rampart's so-called pocket Delegates into a one-eighty-degree
switch."
Ef Sontag
said, "Are you certain this new syndic will obey orders?"
Adam
Stanislawski laughed. "John will do as I say."
"And
you're certain," Joanna said, "that John
is the man
you think he is."
"All
of my employees have been required to take DNA tests every week,"
Stanislawski said. "Delegate Sontag's open committee sessions
describing demiclone infiltration scared the liver out of me. I
instituted the policy at the beginning of September." The
Macrodur chairman's blue eyes did their friendly twinkle thing. "And
before you ask—I have not excluded myself from the testing.
Even though I haven't heard Kelly's story about his latest exploits,
I've decided to accept his thesis that a vast Haluk conspiracy
exists, and that it poses an immediate threat to humanity. All of
Macrodur's, er, political influence will be exerted to defeat the
Haluk colonial bill. I'll do my best to see that Rampart does the
same. You have my word on it."
The
400-kilo gorilla had spoken. Ef Sontag nodded, showing admirable
legislative sangfroid.
I said,
"Let's move along. The second objective I hope to accomplish is
the one Chairman Stanislawski just iterated. To this end I volunteer
to appear today as a witness in Ef's opposition summation in the
Assembly. Prior to my appearance, I'll undergo DNA testing and a
brief psychotronic interrogation before a conference of the news
media. I will then invite the man masquerading as Asahel Frost to
step forward and do the same thing. He won't, of course. By the way,
the impostor is a human, not •» Haluk. He's a traitor to
his race whose behavior can perhaps be explained by the fact that
he's a dangerous sociopath. His name is Alistair Drummond."
"Sonuvabitch,"
said Adam Stanislawski.
"I
have my reasons for unveiling myself to the media prior to my
appearance before the Assembly," I continued. "It's good
psychology to give the Delegates prior warning of a bombshell."
"I
agree with the tactic," said Ef Sontag. "We don't want them
so shocked by the revelation that they don't pay attention to what
you're saying."
"There's
another factor favoring media revelation," I continued. "It
will warn the general population that something dramatic will happen
during the Assembly session, and ensure that the session receives
maximum viewer exposure. Professor Joanna DeVet suggested the
possibility of an interactive citizen referendum on the colony
measure. I believe there's constitutional provision for that."
Sontag
didn't look encouraging. "In this situation, I doubt that a
majority of the Assembly Delegates would yield their voting power to
the people. The provision was designed to apply to grave emergencies,
in situations where Delegate factions appear to be hopelessly
deadlocked. A vote on new Haluk colonies might not qualify as a grave
emergency—especially in the minds of my Conservative
colleagues." He considered for a moment. "However, if the
vote goes against us tomorrow, as it very well may, there's
constitutional provision for an interactive
veto if enough
citizens express immediate disapproval. Am I right, Professor?"
Joanna
nodded. "Delegate Sontag could call for citizen participation
from the Assembly floor after the Delegate vote is tallied. Unlike
the referendum, a citizen veto poll doesn't require Assembly
approval. It can be okayed by the Speaker herself."
"She
might be amenable," Ef said, "provided sufficient numbers
of citizens had expressed opposition to the measure following the
summations. I'll be sure to mention that during our media show."
"Say
it again at the end of your summation," I urged.
Joanna
said, "You realize that a final veto tally would probably take a
couple of days, while PlaNet hits from remote worlds are collated and
verified." She looked bemused. "You know, there hasn't been
a citizen veto for sixty years. Not since legislation on the death
penalty for all Throwaways was shot down."
And if the
citizens hadn't gotten off their apathetic duffs and killed that
draconian measure, Yours Truly would not be alive today, and in a
position to make trouble ...
"Are
there any other questions or comments concerning upcoming events at
the Assembly this afternoon?" I inquired.
"Do
you really think it's wise to expose Alistair Drummond during a media
conference?" Bea Mangan queried the room at large. "I'm a
medical doctor as well as a geneticist and I did study
psychiatry—although I admit mine is very rusty by now. But it
seems to me that there's a danger of provoking this man to some very
rash actions. He might even try to disrupt the media conference.
Perhaps Assembly Security ought to be warned of that possibility."
I said,
"Good point. But I think it's necessary that Drummond's
credibility be destroyed immediately. I believe he's inserted
demiclone agents into other Concerns besides Rampart."
"I
agree," said Stanislawski, "but with one stipulation.
Expose the fraudulent Helly, but don't name Drummond." He
frowned. "There's bound to be confusion about why Helly looks
like a Haluk, when his demiclone is a human being. I know
I'm
confused."
"I
hope I can let that slide for today," I said. "There were
two duplicates made of me. The first was Drummond and the second was
a Haluk. I killed the Haluk demiclone in cold blood, while he was
unconscious. It was necessary, but I don't intend to defend my action
in a quickie media conference."
Everybody
stared at me in silence for a long beat.
Then Ef
Sontag cleared his throat tactfully. "The regular media room in
Commonwealth Assembly House is probably too small for this affair.
When we announce the purpose of the conference, every person in the
capital with media credentials will want to attend. We might have a
mob scene on our hands, even without interference from Drummond. I'm
not sure that my staff will be able to cope."
"Suppose
I have my own media-relations people liaise with them," said the
Macrodur chairman. "You and I can discuss the matter after Helly
tells us about his recent activities." He turned to me. "I'm
very interested to know how you ended up blue. Lamentable as the
condition is for you, personally, I'm inclined to believe it might be
extremely advantageous to our cause. A humanoid Haluk corpse wasn't
dramatic enough to shock people. A live Halukoid human is something
else."
I
stretched my alien lips into a smile facsimile. "My tale is next
on the docket. But first, sir, you need to get on the horn and tell
John Ellington to organize the emergency Rampart board meeting. Let's
make it 1100 hours at Rampart Tower. And please caution your stooge
very strongly to keep news of the gathering away from Fake Helly
Frost. Otherwise, we might arrive at Rampart Tower and discover that
all of the directors except the demiclone have disappeared."
"Leave
it to me," said the 400-kilo gorilla. He took a phone from the
inside pocket of his suit coat and began tapping pads.
During
the hiatus, the back doorbell rang and Joanna went to answer it. She
returned in a moment followed by a rugged elderly man wearing a white
coverall labeled c'est cheese catering service. The logo of a comical
mouse in a chef's toque was embroidered on his back.
Karl
Nazarian spotted me, did the predictable double take and said, "Aw,
shit! Aw,
shit! Is that you, Helly?"
"Yes."
"Shit,"
he said for a third time. He stood there for a moment with his face
screwed into an expression of thunderous fury. Then he put down the
sizable container and the garment bag he was carrying, came to the
table, pulled me to my feet, and embraced me in a bear hug. "We'll
get those Haluk bastards for this!"
"Yes,"
said Bea Mangan quietly. "We will."
I
introduced Karl to the group. "I was just about to regale these
good people with the adventures of Helly the Haluk. Now you can hear
the story, too. What's in the box? Weapons?"
"They're
outside in the van. This is something better." He opened the
large container and began unloading it onto the table. "My
girlfriend the caterer thought I might as well bring some of her
great home cooking. Quiche, anyone? Six different kinds. Also
pigs-in-a-blanket, croissants, brioches, walnut bread—"
"One
of everything for me," I said. "I have a feeling I'll need
to keep up my strength today."
——
By the
time I'd finished telling my story and answering questions, it was
nearly ten o'clock. We'd eaten all the food Karl had brought.
Periodically, my narrative was interrupted by phone calls, some
directed to members of the spellbound audience, some made by the
audience themselves.
Sontag
heard from his media liaison people. Superefficient Macrodur flacks
were already demanding a lightning policy briefing in anticipation of
the big show. Ef passed on information and gave orders.
John
Ellington called back, informing his boss that he had organized the
emergency Rampart board meeting. Eight of the twelve directors were
in Toronto, constituting the necessary quorum. I would do my
presentation before Gunter Eckert, my sister Eve, my father Simon,
John Ellington, Chief Finance Officer Caleb Millstone, Chief
Technical Officer Crista Wenzel, Small Stakeholder Representative
Thora Scranton, and Chief Legal Officer Satoshi "Sam"
Yamamoto.
According
to Ellington, no one at Rampart Tower knew the whereabouts of the
alleged Asahel Frost. He had not been seen in his offices for three
days.
Prompted
by my account of the Haluk leaders viewing me in the tank and
discussing the Grand Design, Bea Mangan deduced—correctly—that
Alistair Drummond was not a virtually perfect genetic replica of me
as Fake Helly Mark II had been. Since Drummond had been in dystasis
for only four weeks, he would retain substantial amounts of his own
DNA. Bea downloaded Drummond's stats from her lab at ICS. At her
suggestion, Adam ordered Macrodur sleuths to begin searching for a
verifiable biosample of the impostor— as well as for Drummond
himself.
When I
described the pirate attack on Captain Schmidt's vessel, and
mentioned that the demiclone Dolores da Gama had let slip the name of
the Haluk base in Sagittarius, both Sontag and Stanislawski went into
action.
The
Delegate told his staff to subpoena the Sheltok Chief Operations
Officer as a hostile witness during today's Assembly presentation. Ef
planned to use the report on the incident that I'd sent to Karl; but
even though that report was certified, it remained hearsay unless an
independent source corroborated it. If the Sheltok COO did that, we'd
have admissible evidence of Haluk hostility.
The
Macrodur chairman ordered a fast, heavily armed cruiser belonging to
his fleet to set off immediately from Katahdin in Zone 3. Its mission
was to perform a secret scan of the supposedly abandoned asteroid way
station called Amend. It was unlikely that the recon of the alleged
Haluk pirate base would be completed before the Assembly vote took
place, but Stanislawski wanted the evidence anyhow— and he
didn't trust Zone Patrol to obtain it.
I
concluded my recital by describing my trip through the Dark Path of
Toronto, together with an expurgated version of my reunion with
Joanna, who smiled enigmatically. The others seated at the table
burst into ironic applause at the end.
Adam
Stanislawski said, "I never heard such a crazy yarn in my life.
I believe every word of it."
I said,
"Thank you, sir."
He said,
"Call me Adam. What do you say we adjourn now, and let Helly get
on with raising a shitstorm in the Rampart boardroom?"
"I'm
coming with you," Joanna said to me. "To the tower and to
the Assembly. And don't you give me that old-fashioned look, Citizen
Stanislawski."
"Adam,"
he repeated, grinning.
"But
Joanna—" I protested.
"Any
political scientist would sell her soul to be present at these two
events," she said. "Don't you understand that there's
another
book in this? Besides, I'll make a splendid character
witness for Helly." She thought for a moment.
"Perhaps
I'd better change into something more media-appropriate."
"Beat
you to it," said Bea Mangan, rising from the table and showing
off her handsome black suit. "And I'm going to Rampart Tower,
too."
Joanna
left us, and Bea began tinkering with her genetic assay equipment.
"Speaking
of clothes," Karl Nazarian said, picking up the garment bag he'd
brought and handing it to me, "here's the body armor and the
Anonyme and the footgear you asked for. The new phone, too. But what
in the world are you planning to do with the Joru costume?"
"Wear
it into Assembly House later for the media conference," I said.
"They wouldn't let me inside, wearing an Anonyme privacy screen.
So I'll step into the galactic spotlight dressed as a shy, friendly
alien; all muffled up. Whet the crowd's curiosity: Who he? Wasn't
this conference supposed to be about Haluk? Then Ef gives the signal,
I whip off the Joru cloak and hood—"
"Eek,"
said Bea.
"And
take your place in show-biz history," Sontag said wryly. "I
have to get back to my office. There are things that need doing,
especially if we're to include that Sheltok piracy evidence in the
presentation. The media conference is scheduled for 1315 hours in the
rotunda, during the lunch recess. We'll be expected in the Assembly
chamber exactly forty-five minutes later when the session resumes.
Helly, you and Bea better not let me down—or I won't just have
egg on my face, I'll have dinosaur doo."
"I'll
get him to the church on time," Karl promised. "I have the
catering van to drive him and Joanna and Bea from here to Rampart
Tower. After the board meeting, one of my associates will be waiting
in a hopper at the tower skyport for the trip to the Assembly."
"Cassius
in his Tupo?" I asked Karl.
"He's
rounding up the Over-the-Hill Gang even as we speak. They'll be ready
if you need them."
"You
seem very well organized, Citizen Nazarian," Adam said.
Karl
shrugged. "I was VP for Spooky Projects at Rampart until
Alistair Drummond fired my ass. Helly says I may be rehired fairly
soon."
"I
hope your van has room for one more passenger. I intend to go along
to Rampart myself to keep an eye on the proceedings." The genial
glint in Adam Stanislawski's eyes turned into something ice-cold.
"And perhaps encourage a suitable outcome to the meeting."
He passed out cards. "Here's my personal code, if any of you
need to get in touch with me at any time."
I said,
"You'd all better make a note of my new code, too. If you call
the old one, you'll be talking to Alistair Drummond!"
Assorted
humorous exclamations ensued. They really weren't all that funny to
me.
Ef Sontag
looked at his wrist chronometer. "I better call me a cab, then."
Adam
offered a car key. "Take my little red Honda. It's parked out
front. When you finish with it, just tell it to go home. Don't be
deceived by its modest appearance. It's fully shielded and equipped
with enough gadgetry to tempt the ghost of James Bond."
"Can
it make a vente triple-shot no-foam latte?"
"In a
New York minute."
Ef took
the key, kissed it, and headed for the front door.
Karl
Nazarian cocked his head in sudden bright-idea mode. "Chairman,
I wonder if I could ask a favor. After today's Assembly session ends,
Helly will need to get out of town quickly to avoid the media and ...
certain other people. Our friend Cassius Potter has offered his own
private aircraft, but it's rather slow. And unarmed."
I saw what
Karl was driving at. "My safe house is some distance away. Using
a Rampart hopper isn't an option because of security considerations.
If you have one I could borrow—"
Stanislawski
poked a code into one of his cards with a cheap plastic stylus and
handed it to me. "Go to the Assembly House skyport when you're
ready to leave and give this to the dispatcher."
"Thanks
very much."
"Would
you like to tell me where you'll be staying?"
"Let's
wait till I get there. I may have to change my plans."
Karl said,
"Go get dressed, Helly. It's time to put this show on the road."
Adam
smiled at Bea Mangan. "Why don't I help carry your equipment to
the van, Chief Superintendent?"
"Not
until I've done a DNA tesf'bf you and Karl." Both men stared at
her, nonplussed. "We can't afford to take chances with
anyone,
can we?" she inquired reasonably.
I went
upstairs to find Joanna, hoping there might be time for one last
little inducement before the battle.
Chapter 9
Adam
phoned John Ellington again as we drove south to the waterfront and
the newly rechristened Rampart Tower, ordering his long-suffering
minion to notify the Internal Security officers at the VIP skyway
portal of our imminent arrival. In an unlikely vehicle.
I had to
hand it to the Rampart guards. They didn't blink an eye as a catering
van badly in need of a wash job stopped inside the elegant portico on
the 300th floor, where only executive limos and other prestigious
rolling stock usually dared venture. One man opened the passenger
door for me, while the other helped Joanna, Bea, and Adam alight from
the rear. The guards courteously took charge of Bea's equipment,
which was to be sent directly to the boardroom.
By then
John Ellington himself had arrived to escort us to our rendezvous
with corporate destiny. The vice chairman was a stocky black man
dressed in a gorgeous three-piece Italian silk suit the color of aged
bourbon, a green-striped scarf, and a golden brooch shaped like an
African mask. The mask had tiny emerald eyes.
Stanislawski
introduced Joanna and Bea by their formal titles, but pointedly left
me incognito.
I said,
"Vice Chairman, do you have the skyport access authorization
code for Citizen Nazarian and the group that will arrive later by
air?" Ellington shot me a nervous look. The privacy visor of the
Anonyme hood has that effect on some people. Then he nodded.
"Give
it to me, please."
I passed
the card to Karl through the van's window and whispered, "Catch
you soon, I hope!" We had already discussed contingency plans as
we made our way through surface traffic to the tower. Karl gave me a
little sardonic salute, then drove away into the down-ramp.
"Perhaps
you'd like to leave your things in the visitors' cloakroom and
freshen up before the meeting," Ellington said. He led us into a
spacious lobby that contained enough potted tropical greenery to
qualify as an annex of the Allan Gardens Palm House. A woman wearing
the uniform of an InSec captain approached our group, looking grave,
and addressed the vice chairman.
"I'm
sorry, sir. But this ... entity is armed." She nodded at me. "He
will not be permitted to
t, go further unless he
relinquishes his weapon."
'
I
carefully removed the small Ivanov Squire from the pocket of my dark
gray anorak and held it out in harmless display. My Halukoid hands
were concealed by dark gray matching mittens. "I prefer to keep
the weapon."
"And
he is wearing body armor," the captain pointed out. We'd all
been scanned as we came in the door.
"Thank
you," Adam Stanislawski said. "The gentleman will keep his
gun and armor. That will be all."
The
captain started to object, but Ellington made a curt gesture and she
retreated to her desk. Adam and the two women went to doff their
outerwear. The vice chairman was left standing with me.
"Looks
like we're in for a change in the weather," I said.
"Are
you speaking literally," John Ellington inquired in a snide
voice, "or figuratively?"
A
smartass. I wished I had managed to overhear more of Adam's
conversation with him when they spoke on the phone earlier. How much
did he already know?
"Are
the Rampart directors present and accounted for?" I asked.
"Eight
of us are here, including Chairman Eckert. As I told Adam, we have a
quorum." He had moderated his tone to almost courteous. After
all, I was here under the auspices of the gorilla.
I said, "I
understand that Asahel Frost will not be joining us. Was he notified
of the meeting?" A little double-checking never hurts.
"Following
Adam's explicit instructions, I didn't invite him."
"Good.
Tell the security captain, there, to alert all InSec posts in the
tower. If Asahel Frost shows up, you are to be informed instantly.
Then you'll inform
me even faster."
He stared
in frustration at my privacy visor, lips tightly compressed, before
speaking very softly. "What the hell's going on here? Some kind
of a palace coup?"
"Talk
to the captain, John, and don't get uppity."
His dark
eyes widened in outraged dignity. "Who are you?"
When I
remained silent, he shook his head, went to the security desk, and
did as I'd told him. A few minutes later the others joined us and we
entered a very large, very elegant lift that had its very own potted
palm. After Ellington plugged his card, we were whisked up another
hundred stories to the top of what had once been Galapharma Tower,
the most distinctive edifice on the capital skyline and the only one
that had earned an obscene nickname.
Alistair
Drummond's little joke. The same nickname had been applied to him.
I was
gratified to see that the redoubtable Mevanery Morgan, executive
assistant extraordinary, was still guardian of the corporate inner
sanctum. She had relocated from the Seriphos office when Rampart
attained Concern status. Morgan was not wearing her Gorgon Medusa pin
today, but the dour, suspicious expression on her face made up for
it.
Her new
computer desk was even more awesomely equipped than the old one,
situated at the center of the anteroom like the tuffet of a
controlling spider. Crimson carpeting with dramatic ocher spokes
surrounded the desk. The room's wall panels were satin-finish golden
metal alternating with dark rosewood. There were no potted palms. The
sleek Braque sculpture, Simon's pride, that had graced the former
Rampart executive reception area hadn't made the transition to the
new digs; it had been supplanted by a tortured assemblage of ruby
glass tubing that looked like the large intestine of some unfortunate
marine mammal, internally illuminated by glowing ordure. I wondered
if Rampart's new president had chosen it years ago to adorn
Galapharma Tower ...
Mevanery
Morgan greeted us solemnly and led us to the boardroom door, one of
four that opened into the anteroom. None of the doors had anything so
plebeian as an identifying sign. We trooped inside, ladies first.
John Ellington went to his place near the head of the long table, at
the right hand of Chairman Gunter Eckert. Adam Stanislawski sat down
at the table's foot without asking anyone's permission. Morgan showed
us lesser mortals to chairs on either side of Adam and then went out,
closing the door.
I noticed
that Bea Mangan's genetic assay device and the small Hogan truth
machine had arrived ahead of us. They rested on a stand beside the
door.
The wall
behind Gunter Eckert's chair had tall narrow windows that overlooked
the leaden, island-scattered waters of Lake Ontario. Beyond the
southern edge of the force-field umbrella was a fuzzy blur that might
have been either mist or falling snow.
Eve and
Simon stood near a refreshment bar at the far side of the room,
talking quietly together, their backs to the rest of us. Caleb
Millstone, the prissy CFO, Crista Wenzel, the Chief Technical
Officer, and Thora Scranton, who had represented Rampart's small
stakeholders for over two decades, sat at the boardroom table just
below John Ellington, staring at me. Three chairs on Gunter's left
were empty. The fourth was occupied by Sam Yamamoto, my friend and
colleague in Rampart's legal department, who had been my principal
associate during the Galapharma trial. I was glad Sam had been
promoted into the Chief Legal Officer slot, wondered what he was
studying so intently on the recessed computer display in front of
him.
Gunter
Eckert said, "Ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to call this
meeting to order."
Eve and
Simon came to the table and sat down in the chairs at Gunter's left,
leaving an empty seat between them—presumably in case President
Asahel Frost showed up after all. My sister did not condescend to
notice those of us at the foot of the table. She had always been a
clotheshorse, but today she was so perfectly groomed— striking
in an ivory sheath and large sapphire earrings, every hair in her
coiffure lacquered firmly in place—that she might have been an
android mannequin. A rather short one, with an attitude.
Simon was
a shocking contrast. Seven months had worked a terrible change on my
father. He had become skeletally thin, his signature denim ranchman's
outfit appeared many sizes too large for him, and his tooled leather
belt had been ratcheted to the last hole. Sunken rheumy eyes darted
restlessly from one person to another until they found my incongruous
figure and turned slitty with apprehension.
I thought:
What in God's name have they done to you, Pop?
But I knew
the answer. No doubt Simon had refused to retire, and couldn't be
forced off the Board of Directors, so Drummond and his crew had dealt
with him as they had Karl Nazarian. Unless I intervened, the
malignant virus was going to live in my father until he died.
Gunter
Eckert called the group to order, dispensed with the reading of the
minutes, and invited John Ellington to present the first order of
business.
"Before
I do that, let me introduce our guests," Ellington said. "You
all know Adam Stanislawski, Chairman and CEO of Macrodur Concern. He
requested this extraordinary meeting today. On Adam's left are Joanna
DeVet, a distinguished author and professor of political science at
Commonwealth University, and Chief Superintendent Beatrice Mangan of
the Interstellar Commerce Secretariat's Forensic Division. The man
seated at Adam's right has not been presented to me. Perhaps Chairman
Stanislawski will do the honors."
Adam said,
"The Chief Superintendent, Professor DeVet, and I are agreed on
his identity. Those gadgets over there on the cart will verify it as
well." He took me by the arm and rose to his feet, drawing me
with him. "This man is the real Asahel Frost."
Murmurs of
astonishment and indignant disbelief.
"No,"
Eve said. Her face had turned the color of ash.
Adam
plowed on. "The person who has used Kelly's name for the past
six months is an impostor. A genetically engineered demiclone of the
type described by Delegate Efrem Sontag in his committee hearings.
This afternoon Delegate Sontag will present evidence of Kelly's
identity to the news media and to the Commonwealth Assembly."
"No!"
Eve said again in a more emphatic tone. "That's impossible!"
Several of
the others loudly voiced their agreement with her opinion. But Sam
Yamamoto was smiling at me, and one of his eyes slowly closed in an
unmistakable wink.
Gunter
Eckert bellowed, "Adam, have you lost your bloody mind?"
Stanislawski
turned to Joanna and Bea with an ironic smile. "Ladies? Have I?"
Bea said,
"I tested this individual's DNA. He has been subjected to a
genen procedure and his appearance has been altered. But he's Asahel
Frost, beyond a doubt."
Joanna
rose from her chair and stood beside me, one hand resting on my
shoulder. "I know him better than any person here. Better than
Eve, better than Simon. This man is my husband."
I
felt my chest constrict in sudden breathless joy, wanted to leap and
shout and stomp and tell the Rampart board that I didn't give a hoot
in hell what they thought—what the whole goddamned galaxy
thought!—so long as
she accepted me.
All the
same, I didn't say a word, didn't move a muscle.
Eve
regarded the lot of us with cool contempt. "I don't know what
you're playing at, Adam, how you've managed to dupe these two women
and Delegate Sontag, or brainwash them—"
"Let
him prove himself," Thora Scranton demanded. "Use the truth
machine."
"Machines
can be rigged," said Gunter Eckert.
Bea Mangan
said, "Then bring in your own psychotronic device and your own
interrogator. Call the ICS and request another DNA examiner with
another assay machine. This man will pass any identity test you can
give him. He is the real Asahel Frost."
"No,"
Eve insisted. Her eyes were burning in her pale face and both hands
were clenched into fists. "No impostor could have done the
things my brother Asa did. He accomplished far more than the
Rampart-Galapharma consolidation. He made himself my good right arm!
He's kind and affirming and strong. He's never tried to undermine my
authority. Thanks to him, Rampart has become a respected member of
the Big Seven."
"Thanks
to him," I said, finally speaking up in my altered voice, "trade
with the Haluk is the bulwark of Rampart's prosperity. But it won't
last, Evie. The aliens will take it all away. The impostor has
inserted Haluk demiclones into Rampart corporate management."
"The
Faceless One speaks!" drawled Crista Wenzel.
"And
you'd better listen," Adam Stanislawski said.
Eve cried
out, "This is ridiculous! Everyone in the Concern has been
DNA-tested regularly since the Sontag committee started its flap in
August. Including me. Including Asa."
"Who
did the testing?" I demanded. "Rampart Internal Security?"
"Of
course."
"Evie—"
"Don't
call me that!" she shouted.
I said,
"Madam Chief Executive Officer, if the Rampart president is a
demiclone, don't you think InSec would be the first part of the
Concern he'd subvert? ... Have you forgotten our turncoat pal Ollie
Schneider so soon? I know how devastating this revelation is. How
shocking. Joanna showed me holovids of the impersonator inaction.
He's utterly convincing. A corporate team player—exactly the
kind of man you and Simon hoped and prayed I'd turn into after the
big trial, ready to fulfill the family 'hopes that I'd dashed over
and over again in the past. But you know in your heart that the real
Asahel Frost could never have become that man."
"I
know nothing of the sort!" she said, but the conviction that had
been so rock-solid before might have been faltering.
With the
exception of Sam Yamamoto, who was whispering into the stylomike of
his computer, the other directors were listening to Eve's and my
exchange with expressions that ranged from blank puzzlement to sick
uncertainty.
I asked
her, "Would you be willing to have independent experts assay the
DNA of every top Rampart executive? Including that of your so-called
brother Asa?"
She
lifted her chin and smiled coldly at me. "Of course. I'll
authorize it personally—
after the Haluk colony bill
passes."
"The
hell you will!" Adam Stanislawski exclaimed furiously.
"Don't
try to bully me, Chairman," Eve snapped. "Rampart is my
corporation, not yours, and I won't see its best interests
compromised. If my decision doesn't please you, put your stake on the
block and we'll buy you out."
Sadly, I
said, "Oh, Evie. Are you willing to set aside all your past
suspicions about the Haluk, all their treachery and the personal
suffering you endured at their hands? Never mind that the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds might also be in deadly danger—"
"There
is no plausible evidence of a Haluk threat to humanity," she
stated. Her voice was flat, almost without inflection. "The true
Asahel Frost has proved that to our satisfaction."
"Under
psychotronic interrogation?"
"Don't
be idiotic."
Simon
suddenly said, "Who is he?"
Everyone
looked at my father, who pointed a trembling finger at me and spoke
in an agonized rasp. "If you're Asa, then who's this crafty
sidewinder who's taken us all in, played us for fools?"
"He's
Alistair Drummond," I said.
Eve cried,
"That's a lie!" The other directors seemed petrified.
Simon's
gaunt face twisted with some devastating emotion. "Turn off your
privacy visor, you! Right this fuckin' minute! I'll know if you're
really my son!"
"Maybe
not, Pop," I said. "The Haluk have worked me over in a
dystasis tank." And to my sister: "Same as they did to you,
Eve, once upon a time on the planet Cravat."
"Quit
shilly-shallying, dammit!" Simon said. "Show us your face!"
"All
right." I pulled off my constricting mittens and flicked the
switch of the visor.
Pandemonium.
As the
room erupted, I removed the anorak and handed it to Joanna, who still
stood beside me, and whispered a few words to her.
She said,
"Are you sure?"
"Watch
him. Go over to the refreshment bar. I don't think there's any
immediate danger, but don't take your eyes off him for a minute. I
won't be in a position to do anything during the tests. I'll have to
depend on you. Can you manage?"
She folded
the Anonyme and held it tightly against her. "Yes."
Adam
Stanislawski endured the uproar for only a few minutes before
shouting, "That's enough!"
In the
ensuing silence, Gunter Eckert said, "Chief Superintendent
Mangan. Please use your machine to test this— this man's DNA."
Bea said,
"Very well." She moved the equipment cart next to my chair
and set to work.
Joanna was
helping herself to coffee. Simon sat slumped in his chair, eyes
closed, lips mumbling silently. Eve's expression was stubborn and
aloof. Adam Stanislawski wandered up to the head of the table and
spoke in an undertone to Gunter Eckert and John Ellington. Millstone,
Scranton, and Sam Yamamoto waited with expectant faces. Crista
Wenzel, the Chief Technical Officer, left her seat and took up a
position where she could observe the DNA analyzer's display.
After a
few minutes the machine confirmed my identity.
Wenzel
said to me, "Now I'd like to use the psychotronic device to
interrogate you briefly, if you please." She smiled minimally.
"Or if you don't please."
I
submitted to the hookup. When the truth machine activated, I felt an
unpleasant sensation, as though an entire hive of nanobot bees had
invaded my cranium. Wenzel asked only one question.
"Are
you Asahel Frost?"
I said,
"Yes, I am."
Zap.
Momentary blankout. Pain.
Wenzel
watched as Bea touched several control pads. The CTO studied the
display, nodded, and addressed the board. "This machine also
confirms his identity. In my opinion we have no choice but to
tentatively accept these test results, pending confirmation by an
independent examining team. I so move, and call for a second."
"I
second the motion of the CTO," said John Ellington.
Gunter
Eckert said, "Those in favor, please raise your hands."
Ellington,
Crista Wenzel, Thora Scranton.
"Those
opposed."
Eve, Caleb
Millstone, and—shit!—Sam Yamamoto.
I looked
at him. He shrugged.
Gunter
said, "Simon? Are you abstaining?"
The old
man had tears streaming down his face. He said to me, "It'll
destroy Rampart, you know. After everything we went through. The
other Concerns will wipe us off the map for screwing up the Haluk
trade."
"We're
going to face some tough times, Pop," I said. "All of us,
not only Rampart. The greed and stupidity of the Hundred Concerns
have put humanity at terrible risk. I'm going to the media this
afternoon to talk about it, and then I'll repeat my allegations
before the Assembly. Whatever this Board of Directors decides, I
don't intend to let Alistair Drummond and the Haluk win."
Simon's
green eyes blazed at me with some of their old fire. "You gonna
stick with us, then, afterward?"
I
hesitated, knowing what he was asking. Sighed. "Yes, you
blackmailing old coot. If I survive this rucking mess."
"I
vote aye," Simon said.
Eve shook
her head. "Oh, Pop. What have you done?"
"What
I had to do," he said to her coolly. "What's more, you know
it, missy! Rampart's not your child any more'n it's mine. And don't
you forget it."
The virus
hadn't sapped my father's old feistiness, or his common sense,
either.
Gunter
Eckert touched the computer display on the table in front of him. "In
the absence of our Corporate Secretary, I herewith record that the
motion has carried." His eyes swept the group. "We now face
a peculiar situation. Our election of the erstwhile Asahel Frost to
the positions of president and syndic is nullified—"
"No,
it's not," I said. "You elected Asahel Frost. I'm Asahel
Frost. I hold the offices and I still have a seat on this board, by
virtue of my quarterstake." Thus giving notice that any attempt
to vote me out would fail for lack of the required stakeholder votes,
I spoke to Yamamoto. "Do you agree with my position, Mr. Chief
Legal Officer?"
"In
my opinion, you're correct." Sam spoke blandly. "Although I
doubt there's any precedent to support you."
"You
can't do this!" Eve exclaimed. "You have no right!"
I ignored
her, wondering how Alistair Drummond had managed to turn this
intelligent, decisive woman into a deluded fool. Perhaps Simon was
right about her thinking of the Concern as a person with a life of
its own. Legally, of course, it was—but not morally/Trust a
lawyer to make the distinction.
"As
Rampart president," I said, "I exercise my right to
relinquish the office of syndic, and appoint John Ellington to fill
the vacancy. Do you accept, John?"
Almost
inaudibly: "Yes."
"I
instruct you to immediately contact those Delegates of the
Commonwealth Assembly who represent our planets. You will urge them
to vote against the upcoming measure granting the Haluk three hundred
new Perseus colonies. If your persuasions fail, you may expect the
gravest possible consequences."
"I
understand." He threw a bitter glance at Adam Stanislawski. "I
have every confidence that the Delegates will respond appropriately."
A silence.
"Is
there any other new business?" Gunter Eckert asked formally.
Simon let
out a cackle of laughter that hovered on the edge of hysteria. "The
hell with business. Let's all get on over to the Assembly chamber and
watch the friggin' fireworks!"
"It's
my intention," I declared, "to request that ICS, CCID, and
ECID teams immediately begin genetic profile comparison tests of
every person in top-echelon management and every member of the
Rampart security force. Eventually, each Rampart employee will be
tested. In Toronto this action will be supervised by Chairman Gunter
Eckert, as soon as his identity is verified by Chief Superintendent
Mangan, and by Karl Nazarian, who has already been tested by her.
Karl will resume his former position as Vice President for Special
Projects at once, appointed by me. In our Seriphos outplanet
headquarters, I will request that CCID personnel immediately test
Zared Frost, Rampart Chief Perseus Operations Officer, and Matilde
Gregoire, Vice President for Perseus Security. They will then
supervise testing of Rampart executives in that region. In our Hygeia
headquarters similar testing will be under the supervision of Orion
COO Edison Vivieros and Orion Security VP Reinhard Fournier. Does any
member of the board wish to move an objection?"
No one
spoke. Eve was staring at her clasped hands.
I said,
"Then I move this board meeting be adjourned."
"Second,"
said Thora Scranton. "Helly, are you giving out freebie tix to
your media circus over at the Assembly?"
Good old
Thora; we'd always been buddies. I showed my inhuman grin. "Anyone
interested can join the party... after Bea Mangan tests their DNA."
"Except
John," said Adam Stanislawski, "who has other business to
take care of."
Ellington
had already risen from his seat and started for the door. He said
sourly, "Stop twisting it, Adam. I told you I'd convince the
Delegates."
"I
think not," said Sam Yamamoto. He stood up suddenly at his
place, a Kagi pistol in his hand. "Come back to the table, John.
The rest of you, sit still."
Thunderstruck,
Eve whispered, "Sam?"
Adam
Stanislawski said, "Oh, shit."
"Is
Alistair Drummond on his way, Sam?" I inquired archly. "Or
did you just send out a general mole-call on your computer?"
"Guess."
"He's
a demiclone," I said.
"Shut
up!" Fake Sam shouted. He fired at me twice. The blue beams hit
me square in the chest. The people at the table cried out in horror
as I fell from my chair and landed in a heap on the floor, praying
Sam wouldn't try a head shot. A sharp smell of ozone and burnt fabric
filled the air.
I heard
starchy Caleb Millstone call Sam an unexpectedly filthy name. Lying
on my right side, I had a perfect view of the demiclone as he pulled
Simon to his feet, pressing the muzzle of the photon gun into the old
man's temple. "Everyone sit down and keep quiet! My people will
be here in a few minutes and we'll sort everything out."
Eve said,
"Oh, Asa ..."
I couldn't
see her face, but the changed timbre of her voice told me that she
had finally accepted the truth. I hoped that it wasn't too late to
matter.
John
Ellington addressed the impostor. "Do you seriously think
Mevanery Morgan is going to allow unauthorized persons access to the
executive elevator?"
Fake Sam
smiled. "She will, if the alternative is watching Simon Frost's
brain go extra-crispy." He swiveled his captive around toward
Gunter Eckert. "Call her in here, Chairman."
I wasn't
hurt, of course. My body armor had saved me. I waited for an
opportunity to make a move without endangering my father.
Eckert was
hesitating, and it made the demi nervous. "Do it now, Gunter! Do
it, damn you!"
He
brandished the Kagi for emphasis, and it shifted momentarily away
from Simon's head and pointed harmlessly at the boardroom wall behind
Eckert. I braced one arm and leg and hurled myself crabwise at the
legs of the two men— —at the same time that Joanna, still
standing behind Fake Sam at the refreshment bar, shot him in the back
with the Ivanov I'd left in my anorak pocket.
——
I phoned
Karl Nazarian, who was waiting with his gang at the Rampart Tower
skyport, and asked for his suggestions on what we should do next. Our
contingency plans hadn't included a demiclone on the Board of
Directors who would tip off his alien confederates inside the
building.
Karl told
us to call the cops.
CCID was
clearly flabbergasted at receiving a request for armed assistance
from an Amalgamated Concern—big businesses always cleaned up
their own messes—but Gunter Eckert's authority was not to be
denied. Inside of twenty minutes Rampart Tower was sealed and
swarming with Criminal Investigation personnel corraling Rampart
executives and security employees. Half an hour after that, forensic
teams from ICS and half a dozen other government agencies were
administering DNA tests.
Only a
handful of InSec demis offered armed resistance. Even fewer managed
to escape. All of the executives submitted meekly to the testing.
Karl
and his crew came from the skyport to the boardroom for instructions
shortly after CCID arrived. By the time he reached us, Bea Mangan had
already checked the DNA of Gunter Eckert and the other members of the
board, as well as that of Morgan the Gorgon, who was vastly indignant
that we should think a Haluk capable of impersonating
her.
Everyone was legitimate except snoozing Sam.
I gave
Karl custody of the unconscious demiclone, then arranged for a CCID
SWAT team to accompany him and his associates to Rampart InSec's
psychotronic lab. Karl had orders to commandeer the place and
interrogate anyone in the building whose DNA wasn't up to human
snuff. I promised to check with him after the second act of the day's
melodrama played out at Assembly House.
A felony
theft-of-identity warrant was issued for the arrest of a human John
Doe having the spurious iris-ID of Asa-hel Frost. Among other places,
the APB was transmitted to every starport on Earth. I hoped we
weren't locking the barn door after the horse had escaped. One of the
messages sent by Fake Sam had gone to my old personal code, so
Alistair Drummond knew we were hot on his trail.
As we
prepared to leave, Adam Stanislawski declared he'd had enough
up-close-and-personal excitement for one day. He intended to watch
the rest of the fun and games from the safety of his own private
suite in Macrodur Tower. Cassius Potter dropped him off there
beforeflying Bea, Joanna, and me to the media conference.
——
It took
place pretty much as Ef Sontag and I had scripted it.
We
appeared side by side, I in my concealing Joru robes, at a podium on
a small improvised dais at the very center of the rotunda that
fronted the Assembly chamber proper. Bea Mangan, her trusty
equipment, and Joanna were poised just behind us, awaiting their
cues. Experienced Macrodur flacks helped Ef's PR staff orchestrate
the technicalities.
There must
have been close to six hundred reporters crowded into the glass-domed
circular foyer, all festooned with the tools of their trade. Huge
holovid monitors had been set up in adjacent areas to accommodate the
nonmedia audience, who numbered in the thousands. Displays in the
Assembly dining rooms also showed the news conference live, at the
request of interested Delegates.
I hoped
the Servant of Servants of Luk and his entourage were paying close
attention, too. A member of Ef's committee had reported that the
Haluk were already in the building.
After
Sontag greeted the journalists and made brief introductory remarks, I
flung off my concealing black-and-white robes to dramatic effect,
standing on the dais naked to the waist while the cameras went crazy.
Ef told the crowd who I was, why I looked like a Haluk, and what I
was going to talk about today inside the Assembly chamber.
Then Bea
tested my genes and not only proved that I was Asahel Frost, but also
demonstrated that I had been subjected to illegal demiclone
therapy—presumably by the same entities whose superficial
appearance I now wore. In a touching character-witness testimonial,
Joanna declared once again that I was certainly her former husband, a
man unjustly convicted of crimes and deprived of citizenship, whom
she had never ceased to respect.
Connected
to the Hogan truth machine and interrogated by Sontag, I told the
citizens of the Confederation of Human Worlds how I had been
kidnapped by the Haluk and cloned. I described how my Evil Twin had
taken my place at Rampart so as to gain control of the genen vector
PD32:C2, and how he had used my name and reputation to promote the
Haluk cause. I disavowed the lies that had cast doubt on the evidence
presented by Sontag's committee. I dared the impostor wearing my face
to come before the media and get tested as I had been.
I did not
identify the Fake Helly demiclone as Alistair Drummond.
The
galaxy-wide audience heard a heavily edited version of the Rampart
Board of Directors meeting and my reclamation of the office of
Rampart president. Racked with pain from the continuing zaps of the
nasty little Hogan machine, which verified my every statement, I
described the measures being taken at that very moment to flush
demiclone agents from Rampart. I urged other Concerns and
Commonwealth agencies to be zealous in the DNA testing of their own
personnel.
Another
piece of intelligence I passed on was the demicloning of Sam
Yamamoto. Where—I asked rhetorically—
was my
real friend being held prisoner? Where were the other unwilling human
DNA donors whose places had been taken by Haluk spies? Were they
captives of the aliens—as blue and miserable as I—or had
they been callously executed after they had served their purpose?
I told my
listeners that the confessions being elicited from captured demis
would probably come too late to be included in Delegate Sontag's
Assembly summation. With luck, however, they might be released in
time to influence tomorrow's vote.
Keep tuned
for late news at 2200 and 2300 hours! ...
The last
thing Ef Sontag asked me was, "Are the statements you have made
here today truthful?"
I said,
"They are." And the psychotronic device socked it to me one
last time, confirming it.
Then,
while the media people cafled out questions and Ef responded to a
favored few, Bea Mangan detached me from the Hogan machine. Joanna
gave me a drink of water and some painkiller perles. She wiped my
streaming alien eyes and mopped my sweaty azure brow.
"Delegate
Sontag!" said PNN. "What reason would the Haluk have to spy
on humanity with demiclones?"
"That
matter will be addressed inside the Assembly," he replied.
"Do
you have any evidence of demiclones infiltrating or influencing the
Haluk Consortium of Concerns?" asked the
Wall Street Journal.
"Not
at this time. The matter is under scrutiny."
"Prominent
Conservative party members have stated that the Haluk trade is vital
to the continuing prosperity of the Hundred Concerns," said
The
Times. "Do you agree with that sentiment?"
"I do
not."
Next,
20/20
Interactive asked, "Will the Liberal party call for
revisions in the Haluk nonaggression and trade treaties if the new
colonies are voted down?"
"I
can't speak for other Delegates. I will personally demand such
revisions no matter how the vote goes."
He shook
his head negatively as more queries were shouted.
"We
have no more time for questions, ladies and gentlemen. It's almost
1400 hours and the afternoon session of the Assembly is about to
begin. My committee and I will be presenting new evidence supporting
a vast Haluk conspiracy against humanity. One of our witnesses will
be the genuine Asahel Frost. After we've spoken, Delegates favoring
the new Haluk colonies will summarize their position. A final vote on
the measure will be taken tomorrow at 1000 hours Toronto time."
He paused,
taking a breath, then burst into an uncharacteristically passionate
peroration. "Citizens of the Commonwealth, I urge you to observe
the upcoming Assembly session. Use the PlaNet to inform your own
Delegate of your reaction to this media conference and to the
Assembly vote. Powerful commercial forces have exerted pressure on
your Delegates, demanding that the three hundred new Haluk colonies
be approved. These forces wish to ensure that trade with that race
will continue without significant human oversight or inspection of
Haluk planets in the Milky Way. Do not let this happen. Tell your
Delegate that the Haluk cannot be trusted. Tell your Delegate that
you will not permit Haluk demiclones to infiltrate human institutions
and undermine our economy. Citizens—tell them! ... Thank you
for listening."
"A
little showboaty," I whispered to Ef as we left the dais
surrounded by a wall of security personnel, "but it's been that
kind of a day."
——
Politicians
are often keen showmen. Ef Sontag, for all his natural reticence, was
no exception. He decided it would bore our galactic audience—and
the Delegates, most of whom had been listening avidly to the news
conference one way or another—to repeat my genetic testing and
psycho-Ironic interrogation inside the Assembly chamber. So Bea and
Joanna would not be asked to testify after all.
Ef
arranged for the women to watch the proceedings from the VIP gallery.
Maybe they'd meet Simon or Thora Scranton or Crista Wenzel up there.
The other Rampart directors had declined to attend, either afraid of
being cornered by the media or engaged in damage control at Rampart
Tower.
When the
session warning-chime sounded, Ef and the six Delegates of his
committee led me into the chamber. I had discarded the remnants of
the Joru costume and was dressed once again in Dan's track suit,
complete with twin burn-holes in the breast of the jacket. We took
our places at small desks on the central testimony platform—alias
"the floor"— that stood immediately before the
Speaker's bench. Above the bench was a representation of the Great
Seal of the Commonwealth, and behind that rose a colossal holoscreen
that would show close-up images of persons addressing the Assembly.
Semicircular
tiers encompassed the chamber; inset within them were the
shell-shaped carrels of the fifteen hundred legislators. About
three-quarters of the delegates were physically present, and the rest
were participating virtually. The spectator galleries and regular
media boxes were packed. A quick flick of my desk display panned the
VIP section. I didn't see any Rampart people, but Bea and Joanna had
good seats. Most of the alien visitors occupied special loges at the
front.
I searched
carefully—and there he was: the Big Blue Cheese himself, the
Servant of Servants of Luk.
In honor
of the occasion, he'd forgone frivolous human attire and was garbed
in magnificent rainbow-hued formal regalia, topped off with the
ostentatious platinum diadem and ceremonial fossil jewelry. The SSL
was surrounded by somber figures in black robes that I took to be the
Council of Nine. No one seemed to know if their role was only
advisory or if they enjoyed genuine authority. Other Haluk in
handsome dress uniforms had to be a security force. There were at
least two dozen of them crowded into the loge.
Another
chime. Silence fell.
The
Speaker, Aziza Alameri, called the session to order and invited those
opposing the Haluk colony bill to give final testimony. There was
some procedural backing and filling. Members of Sontag's committee
presented a brief summation of their earlier arguments, then Ef
himself called the first of only two witnesses who would be asked to
support the summation.
"If
it please the Speaker and this Assembly: in evidence of ongoing Haluk
hostility toward the Commonwealth of Human Worlds, I call Citizen
Hengpin Kang, Sheltok Field Operations officer. He will testify under
subpoena via sub-space communicator from his office on the planet
Lethe in Zone 8."
The giant
holoscreen activated, and the real show began.
——
sontag:
Citizen Kang, have you been informed by Sheltok counsel of your legal
rights and obligations relative to this Assembly subpoena?
kang:
I have.
sontag:
Do you affirm that the statement you are about to make is completely
truthful?
kang:
I do.
sontag:
Are you aware that your statement may be verified
sub duritia, by
means of psychotronic interrogation, at the request of Assembly
Delegates?
kang:
I am.
sontag:
Very well. At this time the Assembly requires answers only to
selected questions. We reserve the right to depose you in more depth
at another time... My first question: Do you have personal knowledge
of pirate attacks upon Sheltok transactinide carriers traversing the
Sagittarius Whorl during the past twelve months?
kang:
I do.
sontag:
Approximately how many such attacks have taken place during that
time?
kang:
I have personal knowledge of thirty-four. Others may have taken place
that were not brought to my attention.
sontag:
How many of these attacks resulted in the hijacking of the carrier
vessel or its unexplained disappearance?
kang:
Twenty-eight.
sontag:
To which race did the pirate vessels belong?
kang:
It wasn't always possible to tell. Some of them were certainly
Y'tata. We've always had trouble with Y outlaws in Zones 3 and 4,
most of it relatively minor. But in the past year or so ... Haluk
corsairs have been positively identified in about half of the
incidents, sometimes in company with Y'tata, sometimes not.
sontag:
To the best of your knowledge, has Sheltok Concern deliberately
concealed knowledge of these Haluk attacks from Commonwealth
authorities, from the media, or from Sheltok stakeholders?
kang:
Our personnel received strict orders from Sheltok Earth management
not to discuss the Haluk attacks with the media or the general
public. I have no knowledge of whether stakeholders knew of them.
Following regulations, my staff regularly reported hostile Haluk
activity to Zone Patrol and to the Secretariat for Xenoaffairs.
sontag:
Did official action result from your reports?
kang:
None that I was ever aware of.
sontag:
In your opinion, why has this Haluk activity been concealed?
kang:
In my opinion ... so as not to inflame the citizenry against the
Haluk trade treaty and the Haluk Consortium of Concerns.
sontag:
Is it true that, approximately seven months ago, the element carrier
SBC-11942,
Sheltok Eblis, under the command of Ulrich Schmidt,
arrived at the planet Lethe and reported an attack by sixteen Haluk
pirate ships?
kang:
This is true.
sontag:
Is it true that Captain Schmidt's vessel was saved from hijacking or
destruction by the intervention of an armed cruiser, human in
conformation, whose identification was unknown?
kang:
This is true. Captain Schmidt reported that the unknown human
starship destroyed sixteen Haluk bandits. The cruiser commander
identified himself only as Hugo. Captain Schmidt assumed he was a
Good Samaritan smuggler, if you can imagine such a thing ...
sontag:
Thank you, Citizen Kang. You are excused.
[To the Assembly:] The
next witness, Asahel Frost, will also address this incident. First,
however, my committee and I will ask him to provide background
information on his personal involvement with the Haluk.
——
Sontag
read me the same caution that had been given to Kang. At the pleasure
of the Assembly I could be interrogated later, till my eyeballs
popped and blood flowed from every orifice. For now, I took a simple
oath to tell the truth and nothing but.
Then, with
Ef and his fellow Delegates prompting me, I began to relate my
adventures with the Haluk, beginning with the appearance of the
titanic Haluk starship at Helly's Comet, in support of Alistair
Drummond's scheme to seize control of Rampart Interstellar
Corporation. I described my horrific adventures on Cravat and
Dagasatt. I deplored the secret collusion of the Hundred Concerns
that had enabled the Haluk to acquire advanced astrogation technology
and other embargoed human science—including the genetic
engineering therapy that had illicitly eradicated Haluk allomorphy.
I didn't
say a word about Emily's Mystery Mutant Exon, or my suspicion that
the eradication therapy might not be permanent.
I removed my jacket and showed my
Halukoid torso— monstrously magnified on the holoscreen behind
the Speaker's bench—as evidence that the Haluk were continuing
to create demiclones. I stated that my own DNA had been stolen, and a
Haluk demiclone of me had been created for the purpose of gaining
control of Rampart, the Perseus Spur worlds under Rampart Mandate,
and the genen vector PD32:C2 necessary to suppress Haluk allomorphy.
I stated my opinion that the Haluk intended to use their Spur
colonies as jump-off points for a general invasion of our galaxy, and
then gave evidence to support my belief.
I
described my quixotic Barky Hunt, and what I had learned from
Tregarth about the severe population crunch in the Haluk Cluster. It
was hearsay, I admitted; nevertheless it provided a motive for the
obstinate, even desperate, determination of the Haluk to migrate out
of their home star-cluster.
I
admitted my personal intervention in the Haluk pirate attack upon
Sheltok Eblis, confessing that I was Hugo. I had concealed my
identity from Captain Schmidt because of personal notoriety and a
desire not to compromise my search for Barky Tregarth. I stated that
I was positive that the pirate ships were Haluk.
Ef Sontag
entered in evidence the report on the pirate attack I had sent to
Karl Nazarian, as well as Captain Schmidt's report to Hengpin Kang.
The Delegates would be able to read the documents at their leisure.
I went on
to tell how I was captured on Phlegethon, and how the demiclone agent
Dolores da Gama had boasted to me that ultraheavy fuel elements were
being stolen by the Haluk in order to cripple human starship
capability and fuel an alien invasion fleet.
Finally,
I told what I knew of the Haluk Grand Design to overwhelm humanity,
gleaned while I eavesdropped on the Servant of Servants and Council
Locutor Ru Kamik as I floated in a dystasis tank in Macpherson Tower.
I pointed a blue finger at the Servant himself—sudden close-up
of his affronted face on the holoscreen—and invited him to
submit to psychotronic interrogation and affirm that his people did
not intend to use their Perseus Spur colonies as
stepping-stones for an invasion of the Milky Way.
Then I
told Delegate Sontag and the Assembly that I had nothing further to
say, and I was excused.
Speaker
Alameri invited the Servant of Servants of Luk to comment on my
testimony.
The Haluk
leader declined the invitation to submit to a truth machine. He
consented to give a brief voluntary statement, should the Assembly
care to receive it.
The
Assembly did. So the Servant stepped onto an anti-gravity transporter
that wafted him down to the floor, where Sontag and his committee and
I were still seated. I gave a little finger-twiddle of greeting. The
Servant stonily ignored me and delivered his speech in simultaneous
translation.
"Respected
Speaker! Delegates of the Human Commonwealth! This one calls upon
Almighty Luk to endorse the truths that follow, namely:
"This
one strongly asserts the opinion that the person calling himself
Asahel Frost is an egregious liar—a scoundrel who attempts to
vilify a noble race for evil motives of his own. He has taken on a
simulacrum of Haluk form solely in order to mock and calumniate us.
May Almighty Luk punish this contemptible person as he deserves!
"Delegates
of the Human Commonwealth Assembly: this one asserts that no
Haluk-human demiclones have been created since the signing of the
Treaty of Nonaggression, which specifically forbade it. None! If
counterfeit humans exist upon the planet Earth, they are agents
created and employed by persons unknown to the Sovereign Haluk
Confederation.
"This
one further asserts that, if Haluk corsairs are indeed operating in
the Sagittarian arm of the galaxy, they do so without the
authorization of our Sovereign Haluk Confederation. Any such ships
are outlaws. We repudiate them and are eager to cooperate in their
extermination.
"In
conclusion, this one pledges to the Human Commonwealth, and to the
worthy Hundred Concerns that are the bulwark of its economy, the
eternal goodwill of all peace-loving and law-abiding Haluk people.
There is no sinister Haluk Grand Design hostile to humanity. The
Haluk do not contemplate invading the Milky Way. Such a notion is
illogical. Orderly emigration has always been our objective. Your
galaxy is huge, with countless desirable worlds having no sapient
inhabitants. Haluk settlement of some of these worlds can only
enhance galactic harmony and prosperity. The worthy Hundred Concerns
concur in this belief.
"Delegates!
We Haluk are eternally grateful to the Commonwealth of Human Worlds
for permitting us to colonize planets within your hegemony. We pledge
to cooperate with all just human laws regulating interstellar
commerce and social intercourse. We look forward to receiving from
this Assembly the three hundred additional planets so generously
proffered to us.
"The
Servant of Servants of Luk thanks you for your gracious attention.
And now, as a token of our outrage and sorrow at the insult offered
to us by the person calling himself Asahel Frost, the Haluk presence
will withdraw forthwith. Wah!"
The
Servant then proceeded to stalk out of the chamber through the
rotunda door. When I checked the gallery, the other Haluk observers
had also disappeared. Big symbolic gesture, right?
I was
mistaken. They had something else in mind.
Ef Sontag
concluded his summation, then yielded the floor to the pro-Haluk
faction.
——
What
followed was mostly a dreary anticlimax for me, three hours confined
in Ef Sontag's carrel, during which the Conservatives tried to
discredit or gloss over the new evidence presented by the opposition.
The only good thing about their summation was the fact that Assembly
rules prevented them from cross-examining me or Kang.
"We
gave it our best shot," Ef said. He'd called for water and
analgesics to soothe my splitting head. What I really wanted was a
triple shot of Jack Daniel's, but booze was contraindicated following
psychotronic torture—even the comparatively mild version
inflicted by the Hogan machine.
"How
did I
really do, Ef ?" I asked him anxiously. "The
Haluk Servant implied I was pulling a hoax. Do you think any of the
Delegates will buy that?"
He
laughed. "You looked outlandish. No denying that. But your being
blue helped our case. Only an idiot would believe that you underwent
genen therapy and turned Halukoid in order to thumb your nose at the
xenos and score political points. I can't say whether any of the
pro-Haluk Delegates will be swayed by your testimony, but I guarantee
that none of them will seriously entertain the notion that you're a
hoaxer. You were impressive, Helly."
"Impressive
enough?" I muttered. "The Servant's Big Lie routine didn't
incite any hisses or boos. I was watching some of the ranking
Conservatives during his performance. They weren't worried or even
indignant. Those pocket pols think just like the Hundred Concerns
that own them—they're confident they can sweep even the most
dangerous and uncomfortable facts under the rug, and citizens will be
too apathetic or fearful to do anything about it."
"This
time, we might have a chance of beating the odds," Ef said.
"Besides your own evidence of Haluk wrongdoing, there's Kang's
deposition. And let's hope your people can wring something nice and
damaging out of Fake Sam Yamamoto in time for the late night news
posting. It would also help if a few more clones got flushed out of
Rampart Tower and were positively ID'd as aliens."
"I'll
check with Karl right away and see what's happening," I said,
and also reminded him about the starship Adam Stanislawski had sent
to reconnoiter the presumed Haluk base at Amenti. "There's a
slim chance it might report in before the vote."
"I
almost hope the ship finds nothing," he admitted gloomily. "The
alternative is a really squirmy can of worms. A casus belli. I'm not
ready for a war, Helly."
Neither
was the Commonwealth. Zone Patrol was spread much too thinly,
especially in the Perseus Spur. If the Haluk launched an attack,
humanity's main line of defense would be the fleets of the Hundred
Concerns ...
I phoned
Karl at Rampart Tower and requested a progress report, turning on the
phone speaker so Ef could listen in. Karl said that Fake Sam was
still zonked from the two stun-darts Joanna had shot him with; he
would be fully consciousness in three more hours, whereupon his
interrogation would begin.
I said,
"There are some important questions I want you to ask him."
I enumerated them, then asked how things were progressing generally.
"The
building's in a state of lockdown. The executives and security
personnel are being held under guard in four employee cafeterias,
pending genetic profiling. Lesser personnel were allowed to leave
after being cautioned not to talk to the media under pain of job-loss
and disenfranchisement."
"Ouch,"
I said. "Whose idea was that?"
"Eve
and Gunter Eckert gave the order. The genetic profiling is moving
along as rapidly as possible, but it'll probably take all night."
"Caught
any blue fish?"
"So
far, five demiclones had been confirmed among intermediate level
InSec personnel. The big news is an exec named Amadeo Guthrie, a
Galapharma holdover. He's Deputy Chief Fleet Dispatch, and he's a
Haluk. We just finished his preliminary grilling. I didn't want to go
to full interrogation before checking with you."
"Good
one, Karl!" I enthused. "This bird will need special
handling. Who's the CCID official in charge of the Rampart
operation?"
"A
Chief Super named Gleb Khabarov. Seems sensible and efficient."
"Ask
him to witness the next phase of Guthrie's interrogation. You'll have
to squeeze this mutt hard, and I want official corroboration of the
gravity of the situation in case the clone dies on you. We need the
names of all other demiclones working in top Rampart fleet positions,
especially in the Perseus Spur. This is absolutely vital, Karl. We
can't allow Haluk agents to have any control over our starships at
this time. You're free to tell Khabarov that we're afraid of a sneak
attack, particularly on Cravat or Seriphos. When you get the names,
insist that Khabarov have the demis arrested by Spur CCID. If he
gives you any back-talk, call Adam Stanislawski."
"You
really think the Haluk might move before the vote?"
"I
don't know what the bastards will do. Call me when you get something
solid out of Guthrie. Is there any word on Alistair Drummond?"
"Nothing."
"Okay.
Talk to you in a while." I broke the connection.
Ef said,
"Scary stuff. But I think the Haluk will wait for the vote."
"I
hope you're right."
I dozed
for a while, overcome by reaction to the stress. Then I was suddenly
wide-awake again, remembering something I'd forgotten to ask Bea
Mangan. Fortunately, she and Joanna were still in the VIP gallery,
sticking it out to the bitter end.
I phoned
her and asked the question, keeping the speakerphone activated for
Ef's sake.
She
replied, "Yes, the six researchers did finish their experiments
with the mutant telomeric exon. As far as they can determine, it's a
powerful inhibitor that staves off sequence degradation. In layman's
terms, it keeps one set of genes— let's call them bad
genes—from turning off another set of good genes. Of course,
the researchers had no notion of the precise function of the good
gene/bad gene sequences. That was our little secret. Given the
limitations of the experiment, the researchers couldn't provide me
with precise timing of the turnoff. Or identify the sequence that
would be affected."
"But
we know what it has to be, don't we!"
"I
can only presume that Emily Konigsberg didn't permanently eradicate
allomorphism in the Haluk after all. I've been studying her notes for
months. By inserting human genes, she intended not only to eliminate
the trait in the engineered Haluk individual, but also in the
individual's germ line, so that offspring of treated parents would be
nonallomorphic, too. That's a complicated piece of work."
"Bea,
I think Emily's therapy is already failing." I told her about
the warehoused testudos I'd seen in Macpherson Tower.
"How
interesting." On the phone display, Bea looked both thoughtful
and apprehensive. "I wonder if the testudos will morph into
normal allomorphic graciles on schedule? They might not, you know.
They might not morph at all."
The
implications of that hit me like a kick in the stomach. "Haluk
technicians were watching the warehoused ones. Each testudo was being
biomonitored. If they
don't hatch..."
She smiled
sadly. "If I were a Haluk who had undergone therapy, I'd be very
pissed off at humanity. Paradise Lost, and all that. Do you have any
idea how many Haluk have received the treatment?"
"Jesus.
I think it started in a small way nearly eight years ago. Since the
trade treaties went into effect, millions of them must have been
treated. But wouldn't Haluk scientists have spotted the problem and
called a halt to the therapy? I mean, my God—"
"Perhaps
the reversion has only just begun," Bea said. "On the
individuals who were among the earliest treated."
I was
trying to remember something. "While I was eavesdropping on the
Haluk in dystasis, the Council Locutor, Ru Kamik, made some
derogatory remarks about Emily Konigsberg. The Haluk name for her was
Milik. Ru Kamik said, 'This one has recently heard that some of
Milik's work on the eradication of allomorphism has come under
scrutiny.' The Servant of Servants denied that anything was wrong.
But he would, wouldn't he?"
"You
know, Helly, even if a renewed course of therapy reestablishes the
nonallomorphic gracile state, the Haluk would still require periodic
treatment all throughout their lives."
I said,
"Yeah. From a limited supply of PD32:C2, harvested from one
small Perseus planet. The stuff won't grow in the lab."
"I've
heard rumors that Rampart is working hard to synthesize the viral
vector," she said, "but so far without success. Haluk
scientists are probably trying, too. Unfortunately, they aren't very
experienced in the field of designer-virus construction."
Ef Sontag
broke in. "But what does it mean, Bea, from a political
standpoint?"
"Damned
if I know," she said. "But we'll probably find out."
"Will
the human demiclones revert also?"
"Unfortunately,
no. The genes for Haluk allomorphy are completely eliminated by
demiclone therapy—not merely suppressed, as happens in the much
less drastic eradication treatment."
Ef said,
"That could have ominous implications."
"I
thought so," Bea agreed.
"What?
What?" My brain was badly in need of rebooting. I didn't have
the faintest idea what they were talking about.
"It's
rather far-fetched," Bea said. "But if the Haluk discover
that allomorph-eradication therapy is invariably fatal, they may be
tempted to go the demiclone route. All it would require is the
synthesis of PD32:C2 ... and an unlimited supply of human DNA."
——
Finally,
the interminable Assembly session adjourned. Ef 's final call for a
citizen referendum was voted down, as we had expected. But the
gesture had been made and the stage set for a potential citizen veto.
When it
was all over, he escorted me to the large skyport at the top of
Assembly House. Bea and Joanna had agreed to meet us there, and Ef
had mentioned that he intended to fly Bea Mangan to her home in
Fenelon Falls. I assumed he'd see Joanna home as well.
He called
for his private hopper and I asked dispatch to send the aircraft Adam
Stanislawski had promised to provide for me. The skyport concourse
wasn't very crowded yet and no journalists harassed us. They were
busy doing reaction coverage downstairs, where every pundit in the
capital would have opinions to express and predictions to make. Many
of the Delegates were still conferring with their staff members or
frantically consulting web pollsters to find out what kind of impact
the day's sensational events would have on their constituents. No
doubt the syndics of the Hundred Concerns—including John
Ellington—were lobbying like mad to influence tomorrow's vote.
It was a
scene neither Ef Sontag nor I wanted any part of. We'd had enough
limelight for one day.
The two
women finally emerged from the transporter and found us waiting in
the ready-room. Bea Mangan was pulling an AG tote with her equipment,
and Ef hurried to take charge of it and have it loaded aboard his
hopper.
"Did
you get lots of hot poop for your new book, Professor?" I asked
Joanna.
"Today's
action will provide at least two outstanding chapters," she
said. "But the plot is still thickening."
"That's
what I'm afraid of," I said wearily. "It can thicken
without me."
A fast
getaway was all I wanted right now, and after that the empty white
silence of the Ontario north country, where I planned to hole up
until I decided how to recreate my shattered life.
"Will
we have time to stop and shop on the way?" Joanna asked me.
I looked
at her without comprehending. "Shop?"
"Well,
it probably wouldn't be prudent to go back to my town house for
clothes and things."
When I
persisted in stupidity mode, she smiled. "My dear, I'm coming
with you to your hideout! There's so much more I need to know. The
deep background of your anti-Haluk crusade."
"Your
book's going to be about
me?" I couldn't conceal my
dismay.
"Of
course! You're a public figure, a freelance provocateur, a cage
rattler. Did you think you could do your thing and then slip offstage
without anyone taking notice? Gun-slinger comes to town, raises
righteous hell, rides off into the sunset?"
"No,
but—"
"Your
story will personalize the controversy, catch the interest of
nonacademic readers. As we say in the trade, you will be my hook. By
the way, my publisher is very interested. I called her during your
testimony. She was watching, of course. Along with almost everyone
else having PlaNet access."
"A
book sounds like a great idea," Bea said. "I'd download a
copy."
I groaned.
"Joanna, this affair isn't over. Political-science-wise, it's
hardly begun."
"But
your direct participation in it is done, isn't it?"
"God,
I hope so. I'm so tired of tilting at blue windmills! Whichever way
the vote goes tomorrow, I believe the Haluk are heading for a fall.
Their demiclones will be exposed, along with the Sagittarian piracy
and the other shit they've been pulling inside the Concerns. After
the smoke clears, the Haluk treaties will be revised. There's no real
possibility of a cover-up or a reversion to the status quo. Too many
genies have been let out of the bottle."
Ef Sontag
had returned from the baggage bot and was listening with approval. "A
book that told the entire story would help ensure that," he
said. "Joanna's right."
"Of
course I am," Professor DeVet said serenely.
"What
are your immediate plans?" Ef asked me.
"I'm
going to kick back and take it easy. After the vote, who knows?
Eventually I'll have to go back into the tank for a month or so to be
restored, but God knows when I'll get around to doing it. If you need
me, I'll be available for a few weeks, anyhow. I promised my father
to help pull Rampart back on track, but I won't let that become a
full-time job. During the Galapharma trial, I devoted nearly every
waking minute to Rampart. That'll never happen again."
"Good,"
said Joanna. "You don't owe them that."
"I
don't owe them anything," I said grimly. "They owe me. And
if Eve or anyone else starts putting stumbling blocks in my way, I'll
be out of there faster than a lobo with a knot in his tail, and
Rampart can go straight to hell."
Ef was
watching the overhead dispatch display. "Here's my hopper. Come
along, Bea. Helly, Joanna, keep safe." The two of them went off.
I threw my
former wife a look that mingled panic and confusion.
She smiled
and put a hand on my shoulder. "If you really don't want me with
you now, I'll respect that. I can take a taxi home."
"No!
I mean—" What did I mean?
"The
stress of the past days must be unbearable. I apologize for trying to
intrude. If you need quiet time alone, we can talk about the book
later."
The
dispatch display showed that the aircraft for Helmut Icicle was
ready.
I took her
hand, pulled her toward the door leading to the hopper pad. "Dammit!
I do want you to come. We'll watch the vote taken tomorrow, then see
what comes down. You can tell me what it all means from a
galactopolitical point of view."
She
laughed. "All right. But I mean it about stopping for the
clothes."
——
The ship
was a big mean-looking Mitsubishi-Kondo that wore the white and gold
Macrodur colors and the Big M corporate crest. It had full defensive
shields, significant armament, a subspace communicator, an
ultraencrypted phone link, and a well-appointed bedroom.
"How
long did you say our trip would take?" Joanna inquired in a
throaty purr.
I sighed.
"Not long enough. Besides, I'm a useless wreck, babe."
"Then
a holiday is just what you need."
"It
won't take long to get where we're going, even if we stop and shop.
This boat toddles along at three kay per. Adam lent us a lovely
ride."
We settled
in on the flight deck. "He seems like a very nice man,"
Joanna remarked. "He lives up to his reputation. No wonder the
other Concerns hate Macrodur."
"Yeah.
Imagine a businessman who doesn't put business first . . ."
We lofted
into the air, moving slowly northward under the control of Toronto
Conurb ATZ. The atmosphere was so thick with trapped mist that it was
hard to distinguish one tower from another, but our hopper was not
immediately vectored out from under the force-field. Instead, we came
to a dead stop in midair, joining multiple stalled processions of
other aircraft. A moment later the force-field's golden umbrella
winked out. The mist that had been held beneath it was torn to bits
by sudden wind, and snowflakes swirled around us.
"What
the hell?" I murmured, and began querying the navigator.
"Helly,
look!" Joanna exclaimed, pointing outside.
A train of
starship gigs was descending out of the storm toward the city center.
There must have been thirty or forty of them, large and beetle-shaped
and decorated with cobalt-blue lights.
They began
to touch down at the Macpherson Tower sky-port.
"I'll
be damned," I said. "The Haluk are leaving!"
I used the
hopper's sensitive scanner to clarify the scene and was proved right.
The aliens had somehow obtained permission to embark directly from
their tower into Earth orbit, without using Oshawa Starport.
"But
why?" Joanna asked in bewilderment. "Is this what the
Servant meant by withdrawing the Haluk presence? Is it some formal
expression of wounded dignity?"
"I
hope that's what it is," I said. But a ghost-icicle had
materialized at the back of my neck.
The aerial
exodus lasted about forty minutes, while hopper traffic above Toronto
remained totally paralyzed and the snowfall thickened, causing mild
havoc on the streets below.
I surfed
the news channels. The media were giving the amazing event a big
play, even broadcasting satellite views of a monstrous alien starship
waiting in low geosynchronous orbit for the return of its
auxiliaries. It was the flagship of the Servant of Servants. I'd seen
it myself twice before, under more ominous circumstances.
When the
last gig vanished into the sky, the force-field umbrella was turned
on again. Air traffic resumed its normal pattern. The capital of the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds went about its interrupted business and
so did we, escaping the restricted airspace of the conurbation and
rising to our cruising altitude in the ionosphere.
Had all of
the Haluk gone away?
Absolutely
not, the media reported breathlessly. Reporters' phone calls to the
official Haluk embassy codes were answered—curtly. No comments
would be forthcoming from Haluk sources until after tomorrow's
Assembly vote. The Servant's flagship was "on a meditative
cruise."
Macpherson
Tower was shielded against scanners, as were most of the commercial
and government buildings in the central city; however, persons of
Halukoid physique had been observed moving in front of undraped
windows. One enterprising media snoop even analyzed water usage in
the upper half of the tower—and concluded that Haluk toilets
were being flushed. Lots of the aliens were still in there!
Hoppers
carrying tabloid websters that attempted unauthorized landings on the
Macpherson skyport were shooed away, as always, by Haluk guards armed
with riot-batons. Elevator access was blocked, as usual, by Haluk
security personnel. Neither CCID nor the Enforcement Division of
Xenoaffairs attempted to enter the tower by force. Technically, the
top two-thirds of it was still alien soil, and no Commonwealth judge
was empowered to issue a warrant to search it.
Yet.
Half
dozing in the command seat as we soared through the sky under
autopilot, I wondered whether my brother Dan was still inside
Macpherson Tower. Was Alistair Drummond hiding there, too, along with
other blown demiclone spies who had infiltrated other establishments
in the capital? Minor genplas makeovers and iris implants would
enable them to assume alternate identities. If they avoided sensitive
occupations, demis might easily be able to fade away into the general
population—especially on the free-soil worlds. All human beings
had a genetic profile made at birth, but retesting everyone would be
prohibitively expensive.
It was
more likely that both the Haluk and their demiclone agents were
simply biding their time as we were, awaiting the outcome of the
all-important vote.
Nothing of
any importance, I believed, could happen until then.
Chapter 10
Now
arriving Timmins Municipality ATZ. Please supply next routing.
I started
awake at the sound of the navigator's voice. Joanna had also closed
her eyes during the half hour or so it had taken us to travel the
first leg of our journey. She yawned and stretched and looked out the
side window of the flight deck.
We were in
a holding pattern at ten thousand meters. We'd left the snowstorm
behind, and the clear night sky blazed with stars; there was no moon.
The total blackness of the land surface was relieved by widely
scattered patches of twinkling lights that marked small communities,
plus a single urban constellation of moderate size directly beneath
us.
"Timmins,
Ontario?" she murmured in disbelief, checking the navigation
display. "This is your secret hideout?"
Timmins
was a former mining center 180 miles north of Lake Huron, now a hub
for an assortment of wilderness recreation areas.
"It's
your one-stop shopping mall," I told her. "We're about
halfway to our destination, a place called Kingfisher Lodge, another
six hundred fifty klicks northwest of here. The lodge is a great big
comfortable house that Rampart once used for corporate junkets and
executive family holidays. Nice lake—although that'll be frozen
over by now."
I said to
the navigator, "Land at Timmins Municipal Sky-port. Proceed to
the general aviation terminal."
En
route.
"Is
the lodge very isolated?" Joanna asked.
"There's
a little town called Central Patricia about ninety kilometers west of
it, maybe four hundred souls. Otherwise, nothing but bush, a few
trails and unpaved roads. No one lives in Kingfisher Lodge during the
winter months, but it's always heated and maintained. Domestic robots
keep it clean and in good repair. It has a storehouse full of staple
foods and all kinds of other supplies. It also has an exceptionally
good security system, which is the main reason I decided to stash
myself there."
The hopper
was plunging inertialessly toward the ground. We'd land within a few
minutes. I gave Joanna the Macrodur corporate niobium credit card
that I'd found waiting for me on the hopper's instrument console.
"Use
this to buy whatever special edibles and winter clothing and personal
items you think we might need. Keep my damned wasp-waist in mind when
you buy my snow gear. And no gloves for me, either. My four weird
fingers won't fit. Stick with mittens."
"I
understand."
"Take
as long as you like to shop. We're in no hurry. As a matter of fact,
I need time to make a few important phone calls. The Timmins
e-merchants and mallearmoire services will deliver right to the
hopper. I'll stay out of sight while the stuff is stowed aboard."
"I
wonder—does the lodge have equipment for crosscountry skiing?"
She smiled in reminiscence. "It might be fun for us to do that
again ... unless you think we should stay indoors."
"No,
of course not. Why don't you buy skis and envirosuits for us. I know
there are snowmobiles at the lodge. We can play with them, too."
We flew
over Timmins at low altitude, heading for the skyport north of town.
It was only 1935 hours and the place was wide-awake.
"I've
never driven a snowmobile," Joanna said. "Is it risky?"
"Not
if you travel at a reasonable speed and stay off thin ice. The snow
won't be very deep this early in the season. Tell you what. Give me
your phone. I'll program it with my own dex and links. That way
you'll have instant access to all of Rampart's services in an
emergency. And you won't end up locked outside the security perimeter
or unable to access the in-house systems if I get stomped by a bull
moose or something."
She gave
me a sidelong glance. " 'Or something.' Are you talking about
danger from the Haluk?"
"I'm
just saying that in the wilderness, Mother Nature can get you if you
don't watch out—or even if you
do. It's only sensible to
take precautions. As the for the Haluk... I suppose they could come
after me, if they knew where to look. But I've covered our tracks
pretty well. And now that the Helly-demiclone cat is out of the bag,
they no longer have any compelling motive for shutting my mouth.
Actually, after the Servant's denials in the Assembly today, it would
be counterproductive for them to try it."
"True."
But she looked troubled as she rummaged in her shoulder bag and
handed me her phone. "I'm afraid it's just an inexpensive thing.
It doesn't even have video."
I checked
the instrument out. It was a real clunker, at least five years old.
"We'll need a model with a bit more pizzazz. Why don't you pick
up a Lucevera 4500 just like mine. I'll teach you how to make it do
some great tricks."
She tucked
the phone back into her bag with a sigh. "You probably think I'm
a hopeless Luddite. To me a phone is just something for talking into,
or accessing the odd bit of data when I'm away from my computer."
We
were on the ground now—actually hovering just above it—drifting
after a follow me bot that led us to a parking bay. Timmins had a
nice little skyport with heated pavement, but there was no
force-umbrella and the air temperature was around minus-ten Celsius.
I conversed with the general aviation desk and arranged for a short
stay undercover, then turned back to Joanna.
"Tell
me the truth, babe. Are you having second thoughts about this jaunt?
If so, you can catch a commercial flight back to Toronto in a couple
of hours."
"No.
I'm going with you," she insisted. "About our fresh food
and wine: How long will we be at the lodge?"
I hadn't
thought much about that. Besides the basic security considerations, I
had a compelling need to put distance between myself and the chaos in
Toronto while still remaining accessible for long distance
consultation. Whether I'd be able to indulge myself depended on one
of the phone calls I was about to make.
"How
long would you like to stay?" I asked Joanna.
"We
could try it for a week," she said softly, after hesitating a
moment. "I'll call my department secretary tomorrow and plead
urgent family business. It's more or less the truth."
"Are
we ... a family, Joanna?"
She
smiled sadly. "I don't know the answer to that, Helly. I don't
know
you—and I'm talking about the man inside the blue
skin, not the captivating alien who had his wicked way with me."
My laugh,
at least, was still human. "I beg your pardon, Professor. Who
seduced whom?"
She gave a
wry shrug. "I confess. You were irresistible." Her
expression became somber. "But you've changed so much over the
years we've been apart. I can sense it, even in the short time we've
been together again. Those stories you told..." Her eyes
clouded. "You're more driven, more adamant, less vulnerable.
Perhaps it's a good thing." But she didn't sound convinced.
"I
think I'm also a lot wiser than I was when I left you. It was the
worst mistake of my life. But I was devastated by what had happened.
I didn't want your pity. That, on top of everything else—"
"It
wasn't pity I felt for you then! It was love."
I had to
ask the question. "How do you feel about me now?"
"I
don't know." She looked away.
"I
love you. What I did—giving in to despair, not trusting you—was
stupid and cowardly. I'd like to start again. This damned body of
mine—"
"That's
not a factor, Helly. It's only a distraction."
"What
is a factor?"
She seemed
to take a deep breath before plunging ahead. "For one thing, I
was very disturbed when you said that you'd killed your Haluk
demiclone in cold blood. It wasn't self-defense, then? Did you really
mean what you said?"
"I
meant it."
"Will
you tell me about it?"
"I'd
rather not." I had glossed over the incident when recounting it
earlier.
"I'm
not morbidly curious. I'm trying to understand."
Understand
what goes on inside a killer's head ...
"All
right." I spoke slowly and calmly. My stiff Halukoid features
were a useful mask to hide behind. "I woke in a kind of hospital
room inside Macpherson Tower. There were alien medics tending me for
a while, and then they went away. I didn't realize at first that my
body had been transformed. When I discovered what had been done to
me, and found the unconscious demiclone lying in a bed across the
room, I knew what the Haluk were going to do with him. Even knew why
they'd let me live. I was going to be forced to tutor my double in
his role as
me. I smothered him with a pillow."
She nodded
slowly, unwilling to comment.
"It
wasn't revenge, Joanna." But as I said it, I had to wonder. "It
was mortal combat. An act of war against an enemy that intended to
use my persona to further their conspiracy against humanity."
"But
there is no war!"
"The
Haluk Grand Design is equivalent to war. And demicloning is a weapon.
I had a right and an obligation to prevent that weapon from being
used against us. Fake Helly had no right to live, any more than a dog
infected with rabies has. There was no way I could cure the demi of
his ... condition. All I could do was prevent him from using it to
harm the Human Commonwealth."
She spoke
calmly. "You killed him because he stole your identity and was
going to insinuate himself into Rampart. Not because you believed he
was going to harm anyone."
"I
admit that those notions were in my mind. But there were larger
considerations as well. You don't know the Haluk as I do, the
monstrous things they've done. What they intend to do. And you have
no idea of my real feelings about Rampart. I don't love the Concern
or live for it, the way Eve does. And I certainly would never kill
for it."
But it
wasn't my motivation that distressed Joanna so much as the state of
my conscience.
"When
you killed the clone ... didn't you feel
any remorse?"
Her tone was now almost desperate. I knew the reassurance she wanted,
but I couldn't give it to her. She had a right to the truth.
"What
I felt was revulsion," I told her. "Regret that the actions
were necessary. But I had no sense of doing wrong and certainly no
remorse. I wasn't sorry then and I'm not sorry now. Do you remember
my telling you and the others about the two hundred demiclones in the
secret lab on Dagasatt? I killed them deliberately, too, because it
seemed necessary at the time. I've had nightmares about it for years,
and I'll probably dream about snuffing Fake Helly when my overloaded
brain gets the incident fully processed. I killed because I had to,
Joanna. If you can't bring yourself to accept that—"
She
lifted her hand, touched the side of my alien face. Tears welled in
her eyes. "I'll try. I'll do my best to try to understand. When
I see what the Haluk did to you—your poor face, the lost smile
that I loved so much, the rest of your body—I'm so
sorry,
Helly! I didn't intend to make it worse for you." She threw
her arms around me, buried her head in my chest. "But it's
hard."
Hard to
love, easy to pity.
I said,
"Let it alone. Put it out of your mind, at least for a week.
Please, Joanna."
"All
right," she said, drawing away, trying to smile. "I'll
begin by applying woman's sovereign remedy: shopping."
——
While she
was inside the terminal, I retreated to the hopper's bedroom to make
the first of the phone calls. After engaging encryption, I programmed
the data-strip to identify me by my real name, sans code ID. I left
the video option engaged, then buzzed my old pal and political
antagonist Geraldo Gonzalez, the lone Delegate of the Reversionist
party. Our conversation was brief—with a predictable preamble
when he saw my face.
"Gerry,
it's Helly."
"Jesus!
... Oh, man! I watched the news conference and nearly had a heart
attack. And then your performance in the Assembly—"
"What
did you think of it? Was I credible?"
"I
sure as hell accepted your story. You know why? Because one of the
first things the impostor did when he mysteriously returned from
Sagittarius was cut off Asahel Frost's financial support of the
party! You and I haven't always seen eye-to-eye on political
strategy, but I couldn't believe you'd abandon us without an
explanation. That asshole absolutely refused to meet with me. All
he'd say was that he'd had a change of heart."
"That
was true enough, metaphorically speaking."
"So
he was a Haluk impostor! Did you manage to nab him?"
"The
demiclone has vanished," I said, not correcting his error of
fact. "God only knows what kind of a mess he left my financial
affairs in, but I wanted to assure you that my funding of the
Reversionist cause will be restored as soon as possible. Meanwhile,
I'll see that you get a generous string-free contribution directly
from Rampart."
"Thank
you ... Helly." He was still uncomfortable connecting the
identity to the blue face. Couldn't blame him.
"I'm
back on the Rampart board," I told him, "and I've taken
over as Rampart president. We're weeding Haluk demiclones out of the
Concern with the help of CCID, and we'll release their names and
their confessions as soon as possible. I intend to do everything in
my power to show up the Servant of Servants as a roaring bullshit
artist."
Gonzalez
was nodding his agreement. "Yes. Yes. Throw that lying speech of
his right back in his teeth! Jesus God— how many Haluk spies do
you suppose we're going to find hiding in the woodpile?"
A good
question. "Gerry, have the Assembly Delegates ever submitted to
DNA profiling?"
"Sontag
proposed it in mid-September, when his committee hearings were really
raising a media stink. The measure was voted down. A few Liberal
Delegates followed Sontag's example and were tested anyhow. There
were also rumors that your man Nazarian did some clandestine testing
six months ago and found zip."
"I
put him up to that. But a lot could have happened in half a year."
"Fuckin'
A. After today you can bet your life the DNA testing measure will be
reintroduced by constituent demand. Maybe I can do it myself! My
office is being deluged with mail from worried citizens—and
most of them aren't even Reverse voters. I'm not the only Delegate
getting an earful, either. The Liberals I've talked to say the volume
of negative comment is unprecedented. The Conservatives are keeping
mum and looking worried."
"Good.
That's what I wanted to hear. Well, I'll let you go now. I just
wanted to reassure you about my commitment to the party and its
principles."
"Umm
... you should know that we've taken a slightly different direction
since the Sontag committee hearings began. The push for preindustrial
Insap rights lost its popular appeal with the disclosure of the Haluk
demiclone threat. We switched our emphasis to the corrupt influence
of the Hundred Concerns—especially the Haluk Consortium—on
Commonwealth political decision-making. We blame them for letting the
Haluk situation get out of control, pushing those ineffective
treaties through. Our current push is for prompt treaty revision."
"I
agree one hundred percent. We'll talk later, Gerry."
I touched
the End pad, thinking that the Reversionist party wasn't the only one
that would have to rethink its strategy during the days ahead.
Especially
if the Haluk colony vote went the way I feared it would.
I tapped
out Karl Nazarian's code. It was several minutes before he answered.
He looked calm and assured, and somewhere along the line he'd ditched
the incongruous caterer's coverall and donned an elegant business
suit that would have done John Ellington proud. Both men had about
the same build. Maybe the vice chairman had shared.
"Do
you have time to give me a progress report?" I asked. "I'm
on my way to the safe house. With Joanna."
"I
see." The old security man kept a perfectly straight face. "Are
you going to reveal your secret bolt-hole to me?"
"Kingfisher
Lodge. Don't tell anyone else."
Karl
nodded his approval. "Yeah, that might be just about perfect.
God knows none of the paparazzi websters will find you up there. We
pretty much shut the lodge down after Dan's abduction, but there was
no important damage to the physical plant, and the fritzed security
system was repaired. Do you have portable weapons?"
"The
hopper Adam loaned me has a locker full of top-drawer assault gear.
Supplying computers to the Commonwealth must be dangerous work."
Karl
chuckled. "High-paying, anyhow. You want me to let Stanislawski
know where you are?"
"I'll
tell him myself. What's happening in Toronto? Any trace of Drummond?
I figure he's either hiding in Macpherson Tower or else the Servant
of Servants took him away in the Haluk flagship for some strenuous
debriefing."
"Maybe
not.
Makebate's gone."
"Shit—I
didn't even realize the ship had survived Phlegethon!"
"Fake
Helly drove her back to Earth, claiming he'd been held captive by
Y'tata corsairs for six weeks. Since then Drummond has taken the ship
all over the galaxy, overseeing the Rampart-Gala consolidation. He's
even been to Artiuk, the Haluk GHQ in the Spur. No telling where he's
headed now if he's driving that dazzle-boat of yours. A Macrodur
security team checked
Makebate's berth at Oshawa Starport and
found her gone. She jumped the line and lifted off for an unspecified
destination just before noon. That would have been shortly after Fake
Sam called Drummond's code from the boardroom. The ship manifest
listed a pilot named Helmut Icicle."
"That
wiseass! Thumbing his goddamn nose at me... I'm surprised he didn't
wait to see if Fake Sam regained control of the boardroom situation."
"Probably
figured it wasn't going to happen," Karl said. "Think about
it."
"Yeah.
Well, it's probably for the best if Drummond just drops out of sight.
We certainly don't want to bring him to trial. Let the galaxy believe
that an anonymous Haluk was my double."
"There's
no trace of
Makebate's fuel signature within a hundred
light-years of Earth. He's had all the time in the world to make a
clean break. Zone Patrol's on alert, and Rampart has put a hefty
price on the head of the John Doe perp who stole the starship.
Makebate is so distinctive that Drummond won't dare take her
to any important human world."
"Let's
hope he ends up on Bumfuck-Beta in the Crab Nebula," I grumped.
"What's the situation now in Rampart Tower? Have you been able
to question Fake Sam?"
"Yes.
The Haluk Grand Design is just what you suspected: a plan for
conquest by subversion. Demiclones were supposed to infiltrate
Commonwealth government agencies and the Hundred Concerns over a
period of years. According to Sam, they already have a fair number of
maggots inside the Concerns, but relatively few in the government."
"Did
you ask him about Assembly Delegates?"
"Yes,
but he had no information. I suppose it figures. Most espionage
systems are compartmentalized."
"Tell
me more about the Grand Design."
"No
real surprises. While the demiclone insertion continued, Haluk
colonies in the Milky Way were supposed to expand as rapidly as
possible. They'd build up their starship fleets, their scientific and
technical establishments, and their heavy industry, with help from
unsuspecting humanity. Eventually the Commonwealth authority
structure would be so riddled with alien subversives that it would
fall without much of a fight. Sam didn't know the precise Grand
Design timetable. That's in the hands of the Haluk Council of Nine."
"Not
the Servant of Servants?" I was surprised.
"Sam
said the SSL concocted the original scheme, but he ultimately answers
to the Nine. Their offices are hereditary and they act as
repositories of racial wisdom and conscience. They don't overrule the
Servant very often, though. He receives his authority directly from
the Haluk common people—hence his title."
"Interesting.
Did Fake Sam know whether an imminent attack on humanity is being
contemplated?"
"No.
He isn't privy to military strategy. He was trained in human
corporate law and only assumed his position a couple of months ago.
It was fortuitous that he went to Rampart rather than some other
Concern. It's not easy for the Haluk to insert ringers in really high
places without arousing suspicion, so they're forced to wait until an
appropriate opportunity presents itself. The real Sam Yamamoto was
granted an extensive leave of absence not long after you took off for
Phlegethon, with the understanding that he'd be promoted and raised
to the board on his return. It was a perfect setup for the Haluk to
plug in their man."
"Did
you find out what happened to the real Sam?"
"The
demi says he's locked up in Macpherson Tower. The Haluk kept him
alive for what the fake called 'coerced consultation.' There are
nearly three hundred other DNA donors being held prisoner there for
the same reason. Not all from Rampart."
"Christ!
... Karl, we've got to do something about them before the Haluk
decide to eliminate incriminating witnesses."
"I've
already got Hector working on it. There's no way short of a
declaration of war that CCID or ECID can search an alien embassy
without permission. But embassies have been stormed by inflamed mobs
of citizens before. I guess it all comes down to the principle you
quoted in your infamous
Wall Street Journal interview: we can
do whatever we please, so long as we don't give a damn about the
consequences."
"Kelly's
Rules," I murmured, "come back to haunt me. Okay. Do it!
Just have Hector and his hooligans wait until after Toronto's 2300
hour newscast... Did Fake Sam give you the names of other demi agents
inside Rampart?"
"So
far we have Amadeo Outline, our biggest fish, thirty-six Internal and
External security people ranging from colonel to grunt, and
forty-five relatively low-ranking personnel in the Finance and Data
Processing departments. Sam also named twelve high-ranking executives
working for other Haluk Consortium Concerns. They were the only
outsiders he could recall offhand. I've already passed that
information on to CCID and ICS. We'll get more names out of Sam
during the next interrogation session when we go to deep-probe. He's
resting now."
"Right.
Now tell me about Amadeo Guthrie."
"Pure
gold!" Karl grinned triumphantly. "He opened a secret file
in his personal computer that listed over sixty demiclones in crucial
Rampart fleet positions on Seriphos, Tyrins, Hygeia, Asklepios, and
Caduceus. Dispatchers, Fleet Security starship officers, even an
Assistant Maintenance Chief at Seriphos Starport. With luck, they're
being rounded up right now. We're getting the situation under
control."
"Karl,
I want the names of all Rampart demiclones in custody released to the
media in time for tonight's late news posting. We need to arouse
public opinion—make the invasion of Macpherson Tower morally
justifiable."
"I
can't release the names myself, Helly. I don't have the authority. If
I leaked them anonymously, only the tabloids would pick them up. You
need the information posted on legitimate media sites."
"All
right, I'll talk to Eve about it. You pass the names on to her
immediately, along with any other confession material that might make
a splash. Just one last question: When your gang did the secret DNA
testing of the Assembly Delegates, did they find any ringers?"
"Not
a one. We tested a fair number of staffers, too. They were all human
seven months ago."
"Okay.
Keep up the good work. And let me know how Hector's plan to storm the
embassy shapes up."
I ended
the call, got myself a cup of coffee from the hopper's tiny galley,
and drank it down scalding, cursing the impossibility of having a
real drink for at least two more hours. I could have used some Dutch
courage before making the call to Eve, which would determine whether
Joanna and I continued on to Kingfisher Lodge or returned to Toronto.
Under
normal circumstances, even with the Haluk out to fry my fanny, I'd
probably have stayed at Rampart Tower and worked with the others on
damage control, at least until after the Assembly vote. But I wasn't
normal—not mentally and certainly not physically. I was walking
wounded and desperately in need of a timeout. Trouble was, I was
afraid my older sister might be, too.
She picked
up on the third buzz.
"What
is it?" Her face was haggard but her hair was still perfect. She
recognized me instantly and didn't flinch.
"I'm
on my way to a safe house. I plan to stay undercover for a while
until I'm certain the Haluk aren't still gunning for me. I'll keep in
close touch with you and with Karl Nazarian and Adam Stanislawski."
"Gunter
Eckert will also want to confer with you," she said crisply.
"Will you let me have your phone code?"
I gave it
to her. "Tell Gunter I'll talk to him tomorrow, after the vote.
Till then I'm incommunicado unless the world falls down. I've got a
serious case of combat fatigue, and if I want to function tomorrow,
I'll have to get some sleep. How are you holding up, Evie?"
Her eyes
were focused firmly on mine. "I'm coping ... Asa. The police
action in the tower has quieted down. Simon has retired to his tower
suite. The other members of the Board of Directors are still here,
helping to normalize the situation in whatever way they can. John
Ellington will be wire-pulling and whip-cracking all night. I've
spent most of my time talking to Cousin Zed and Matt Gregoire on
Seriphos. Rampart ExSec starships are cooperating with Zone Patrol to
organize interstellar surveillance over the Haluk colonies. Matt
suggested we evacuate all civilians from Cravat as a precaution, and
I agreed."
"We'll
have to set up a heavy blockade around the planet. The best ships we
have."
"They're
already on their way. I understand the situation. Now."
"Evie—"
"You
can trust me, Asa. I fully accept what you told us at the board
meeting. I was duped and I feel humiliated and angry, but I'm not
dysfunctional or in a panic. I'll survive this mess and so will
Rampart. Just don't expect any warm gushes of sisterly sentiment for
a while. At the moment, my emotions are on hold. There's too much
work to be done."
"I
agree. And it sounds like you have things well in hand. One thing I
need you to take care of personally is the release of the names of
all Rampart demiclones to the media. Do it in time for the
Late
Night Toronto newscast on PNN. Karl Nazarian will give the
information to you right away."
"May
I ask why you want to do this?"
"Have
you been keeping in close touch with Karl?"
"He
sends me hourly progress reports. I've only skimmed the latest one.
The Perseus situation has occupied most of my attention."
"The
Sam Yamamoto demiclone confessed that around three hundred human DNA
donors—the real people who were exchanged for Haluk agents—are
alive and being held prisoner inside Macpherson Tower. They look just
like me."
"Oh,
dear God."
"I
want you to tell that to the media, as well as announcing the names
of our missing people. Demand that every single one of the captives
be freed immediately, unharmed. Warn the Haluk that dire things will
happen if those people are killed or taken away. After the newscast,
call up the Haluk embassy and formally reiterate your demand. Insist
that it be forwarded at once to the Servant and the Council of Nine.
If you can manage it, convince other Concern CEOs to do the same. A
lot of those captives aren't Rampart people."
"But
the Haluk will deny—"
"To
hell with them! We want to arouse public opinion. Make our citizens
receptive to the notion of a rescue raid on Macpherson."
"Asa,
you can't!"
"It'll
be a mob of outraged citizen protesters or some such thing," I
said. "Nothing to do with Rampart. Would you rather have the
captives dead?"
"No,
but—"
"You
have to do your part. Those people had their DNA stolen, just as I
did. They've lost their human appearance and their identities. Alien
interlopers have taken their places at work, lived in their homes,
invaded the lives of their families ... Can I count on you to issue
the statement, Evie?"
"Yes,"
she said, with no more hesitation.
Her old
self.
"Thank
you. There's one final thing you should know about." I told her
how Karl had been deliberately infected with a debilitating virus by
Haluk agents, and my suspicions about Simon. "Ask Karl to refer
you to the doctor who was able to cure him. It's imperative that
Simon no longer be treated by Rampart medical people."
"Those
bastards," she hissed. "Those fucking blue bastards! I'll
have Pop taken care of right now."
She cut me
off.
I sat on
the edge of the bed with my head in my hands, overcome with abruptly
released tension, trying not to vomit up the coffee I'd drunk.
Thanking God that Eve was charging ahead with her usual efficiency.
That Karl and Hector and the others would continue to fight the good
fight without me. That I didn't have to return to Toronto.
Joanna and
I could continue on to the tranquil solitude of Kingfisher Lodge.
Deliberately, I programmed my phone to accept only Cosmic Priority
emergency calls. Then I lay down to catch a few winks.
——
We arrived
at our destination in the Eastern Kenora region of Ontario just after
2115. With only starlight for illumination, it was difficult to see
any details on the ground, so while we were still at cruising
altitude I turned on the wide-scan terrain viewer with false color
enhancement to give Joanna an idea of what lay beneath us.
It was a
beautiful, forbidding landscape of rolling, snow-covered boreal
forest, laced by rivers and streams and strewn with icebound lakes.
To the south, beyond the arterial Albany River, lay the vastness of
Nipigon Wilderness Park, a rugged outdoor playground in summer,
nearly uninhabited in winter. Northward and to the east the land
flattened into dense boggy thickets of black spruce and tamarack that
extended without a single track all the way to Hudson Bay. To the
west was the little town of Central Patricia, where only
administrative personnel, service and transport people, and traders
lived all year round.
We
descended to a little over 2000 meters and hovered in preparation for
landing. I switched to a close-up view of Kingfisher Lodge itself.
The rambling one-story building was constructed of sturdy plascrete
with an attractive faux-log veneer. It was situated on the shore of a
moderate-sized body of water called Caddisfly Lake, frozen solid now
and smoothly covered with snow. Dense stands of balsam fir and white
spruce surrounded an open compound about three hundred meters wide. I
knew that the defensive perimeter extended another 400 meters into
the forest and the lake.
Aircraft
casually overflying and scanning Kingfisher Lodge would think it was
deserted, buttoned up for the season. The compound had no
ground-based dissimulator, external force-field, or any other
detectable high-tech defenses. The Kagi emplacements and less lethal
intruder deterrents were well-camouflaged among the lake rocks and
brush, as were the multiphase alarm sensors. No interior lights were
visible from the air. Two of the fieldstone chimneys gave off narrow
plumes of vapor, indicating that the heating system was functioning,
although the thermostat was probably set at a temperature level too
low for human comfort.
In
addition to the main lodge, which had at least ten bedrooms, the
establishment included a guard tower disguised as a backwoods food
cache, an equipment building, a couple of utility structures, and a
boat shed. Between the rear outbuildings and the main house was a
snow-covered circular area about ten meters in diameter, a lidded
hopper lift that gave access to an underground hangar carved from the
solid granite of the Canadian Shield. A tunnel led from the hangar to
the house. Not part of the original design, hangar and tunnel had
been added during Dan's year-round confinement, for the convenience
of the resident staff.
"Now
let me show you how we get inside our rustic fortress," I said
to Joanna. "Since this is a Macrodur hopper, it doesn't carry
any of the lodge's system links, so we'll use your new phone."
She took
the instrument out of the inside breast pocket of her suit coat and I
showed her how to call up the lodge-exterior command menu, deactivate
the antiaircraft sensors and photon weaponry, and roll back the door
covering the elevator platform of the underground hangar.
While I
guided the hopper's manual descent, she took care of the landing
preparations. Then she accessed the lodge-interior menu and tapped
more pads to switch on room lights, crank up the heat, awaken the
housebots so they could deal with our baggage, turn on the
mattress-warmer in the master suite, and start a couple of hot baths.
"This
is absolutely decadent," she said, laughing. "A backwoods
technocottage! Look: I can light a fire in something called the
master-suite snuggery. Doesn't that sound cozy? And the phone even
wants to program the stereo. Would you prefer classical or jazz?"
"Both.
How about the
Undercurrent and
Intermodulation albums
with Bill Evans and Jim Hall. Then maybe
Eine Kleine Nachtmusik."
"Perfect."
I
reengaged the perimeter defenses. We were hovering now at a little
over tree height above the underground hangar entry, which was over a
hundred meters from the house. I turned on the Mitsubishi's emergency
landing spot and saw something dash across the snowy ground and
disappear behind one of the outbuildings. Joanna saw it too.
"What
was that?" she exclaimed. "It looked like a bear."
"Small
one, maybe. Funny. I'd have thought bears would have hibernated by
now." Something else was odd about the presence of the animal,
but I was too maxed-out mentally to make sense of it. "Okay,
babe, down we go. Hit the pad to roll back the hangar elevator door."
"I
thought I already did," she said, frowning.
"The
lid's still closed. Give me the phone and I'll recheck the menu."
A blinking
red telltale. I queried it and the display read
——
HANGAR DOOR IS LOCKED. PLEASE GIVE PASSWORD.
——
Well,
damn. The thing wasn't supposed to lock until I fed it my own new
password. I tried the override and reboot, but the maneuvers didn't
succeed. The circular opening remained sealed shut.
"Rats.
Could be a computer glitch. Or maybe some jerk forgot to purge the
old password when the staff left. Well, we'll do things the
old-fashioned way for now, and I'll check the lift machinery
tomorrow."
I touched
down in an open area less than twenty meters from the back of the
house. The night was windless and pitch-black after I doused the
hopper's spotlight, the snow depth modest, and the temperature
minus-twenty Celsius.
We spent a
few minutes in the cargo bay sorting out clothes and toiletries for
our immediate needs and stuffing them into a large duffelbag. I
pulled a couple of guns out of the weapons locker—a holstered
Ivanov to discourage wandering bears, and a big ugly Talavera-Gerardi
333 actinic blaster with an autotargeting scope, in case the Haluk
slammed the perimeter defenses and started besieging the house. The
rest of the supplies and weapons could wait until tomorrow.
"Why
don't we slip into the envirosuits instead of carrying them," I
suggested to her. "It's pretty cold out there and the snow's
deep enough to ruin your nice shoes."
So we did
that, hauling the lightweight coveralls over our regular clothes and
donning heated overboots and helmets. I strapped on the Ivanov, slung
the heavy Tala-G on my back, and carried the duffel and a heavy-duty
flashlight. Joanna had her purse and a plastic grocery sack that
contained the makings for a late supper of scrambled eggs, Nova
Scotia smoked salmon, French bread, fresh Tasmanian strawberries, and
Veuve Cliquot champagne.
I used a
remote-control gorget hung around my neck to open the hopper's cargo
door and deploy the steps. Said, "Mush, you huskies! That means
you, Professor DeVet."
She
giggled and we disembarked into shin-deep snow. I used the gorget to
close up the aircraft and turn on its security system and
environmental shield. Then we stood side by side in an immense dark
silence roofed with overarching stars. It was every bit as beautiful
as Arizona.
I was
about to make a romantic remark when Joanna said, "What's that
smell? Could it be the bear?"
A very
faint disgusting odor hung in the icy air and penetrated our helmets.
It wasn't the familiar skunky perfume of bear scats, though; this
stench was as offensive as the reek of the Y'tata, although composed
of different molecules. And I knew what kind of creature had produced
it.
"Not
a bear, a wolverine. That's what we must have seen moving below the
hopper."
I turned
on the flashlight and found a line of prints that made a beeline
across the compound. We went to look at them. They were nearly as
long as a human hand but much wider. Big guy. The animal had stepped
neatly in its own tracks, placing the hind foot where the front foot
had pressed down the snow, so that each print seemed to have a double
row of five stout claws.
"That's
strange," I murmured. "The perimeter defenses let small
animals and birds get through without getting zapped. But something
as large as a wolverine should have triggered a painful warning shot
from one of the Tazegard units, then a lethal Kagi blast if the beast
kept on coming. I wonder if part of the perimeter is down?"
We paused
while I unzipped my suit and asked my phone to run a system check.
All the defensive units were on-line. The obvious explanation eluded
my fuddled brain. "I can't figure it. But I hope the critter
managed to escape the lodge perimeter while we were landing. We sure
as hell don't want a wolverine loose inside the compound."
"Why?"
"They
don't hibernate, they're powerful enough to kill a moose, and they
like to break into wilderness houses and smash things for the fun of
it. Then they spray the bits and pieces like a giant skunk and...
sometimes deface the scene of the crime in other unpleasant ways."
"Good
grief! I've never seen a wolverine. Are they very large?"
"A
big specimen can weigh nearly 30 kilos and be more than a meter long.
I've only seen one in the wild. It had reddish-black fur and looked
like a small bear. They're notoriously fierce and have the worst
temper of any North American wild animal. You don't ever want to meet
a wolverine."
"Well,
I guess not," said Joanna, looking apprehensively over her
shoulder.
Instead,
we were about to meet something a whole lot worse.
——
We had
unlocked the lodge's heavily secured back door before leaving the
aircraft, so we entered easily into a warm, brightly lit mudroom
where we were able to take off our envirosuits. I hung the hopper
gorget and the pistol belt with the Ivanov on a handy peg beside my
suit.
Joanna was
still wearing the handsome camel-colored wool ensemble and blue silk
blouse she had chosen for the earlier festivities. With her shining
hair pulled back into a braided coil, and a discreet string of pearls
at her throat, she looked like every randy student's dream of a
female academic.
Mine, too.
I was
still clad in Dan's perforated athletic garb, although I had shed the
body armor right after the media conference. I looked shabby and
ridiculous and felt like a sack of azure ordure.
A domestic
robot appeared, one of those faceless yard-high jobs with umpteen
recessed grab-arms and finicky cleaning accessories. It said, "Good
evening! May I carry your baggage?"
Someone
had pasted a label on it that read: roberta. Clever. Half the
domestic bots in the Commonwealth were named Roberta. The rest were
called Robbie.
Nevertheless,
I gratefully handed over the duffel and the weighty long gun. Joanna
kept the groceries.
"May
I know your names, sir and madam?" the machine inquired.
"I
hate these things," I muttered. "So pushy. Mom and Pop
would never have them in the house."
"Don't
hurt its feelings," Joanna admonished me. "It's only trying
to do its job." To the machine: "I'm Joanna. He's Helly.
Please follow us with the things, Roberta. Don't make any gratuitous
remarks or offer helpful comments unless we ask you to do so."
"Yes,
Joanna."
The three
of us moved into the kitchen, which wouldn't have shamed a small
hotel. Joanna began opening cabinets and inspecting appliances.
I said,
"I'd love to cook for us, but I don't think I could boil water
tonight. Can you manage?"
"Poor
baby. Of course I can. Why don't I get our little supper ready now.
The lodge has a servitron robot. It can bring the food and wine to us
when we want it. Meanwhile, you go unpack our things and relax. Just
tell me how to find our room—"
"Master
suite," I corrected her. "Go down the long hallway until
you get to a living room the size of the Commonwealth Art Gallery.
The suite's on the opposite side of the living room, down another
hall that leads into the guest-bedroom wing. Remember that your bath
awaits, madame! I'm going to have one that's lavender-flavored."
The bot
and I trundled off, while Bill Evans and Jim Hall played "Angel
Face" on the global stereo.
When
my brother Dan was in residence,
he had inhabited the master
suite—the family wanting to make him as comfortable as
possible. I'd tell Joanna about Dan's incarceration when our stay in
the lodge was over. Why infect the ambience for no good reason?
The decor
was luxuriously backwoodsy, with floors of heated stone flags
relieved by large rag rugs. Walls of dark-glazed pine were decorated
with watercolors, limited-edition photoprints of outdoor scenes and
animals, and Indian carvings. Not a stuffed critter head in the
place. Officially, no one was allowed to hunt out of Kingfisher
Lodge. All the windows were covered by armored shutters disguised as
wood. I decided I'd roll up the ones in the bedroom so we could enjoy
starlight on snow. If the wolverine came around, we'd show him a
thing or two.
With
Roberta trailing after, I passed a breakfast room, the main dining
room, a game room, a huge library, a room devoted to fly-tying
paraphernalia and fishing tackle, and a full bar with a baby grand
piano and other musical instruments. Beyond that was the main entry
hall, with one set of closed doors opening into the living room and
another, heavily secured now, leading to a large sunporch that was
used only during warm weather. A third door led to the service wing.
I opened
the doors to the living room and said, "Follow me, Roberta."
It kept
quiet. No gratuitous conversation.
The
chamber was cavernous, with a high beamed ceiling and a hideous
chandelier made of discarded caribou antlers that for some reason had
not been turned on. Most of the room was deeply shadowed. The bot and
I went about halfway across the room, to where half a dozen leather
settees were grouped around a huge fireplace fashioned of granite
blocks. The only light came from gas flames flickering among faux
paper-birch logs, and a Tiffany-style bridge lamp standing near a
liquor cart full of decanters and glassware. The stereo speakers in
this room were playing some Germanic opera that Joanna certainly had
not programmed.
She hadn't
ordered the huge living room fireplace turned on, either, or
requested the liquor cart.
"Stand
perfectly still," he said, from somewhere behind me and to my
right. "It would be a great pity if I had to double-dart you
before we had an opportunity to talk. We've never really had a decent
conversation, you and I. It's an appropriate time, don't you think?
On the brink of events that will stagger the galaxy."
It
was my voice, but overlaid with an intonation that was British or
Scottish. No trace of a cowboy twang. The theatrical diction was
way
wrong.
He stepped
out of the shadows holding an Ivanov MS-120, a model that fired darts
with extra sleepy-juice. Two shots would put an adult human out for
twelve hours. I saw a tall, husky man with breadcrust-colored hair
and a prominent widow's peak. His eyes were mean green and his mouth
thin-lipped and wide. He wore knife-creased brown slacks, a tan wool
Pendleton shirt, a cream neck scarf, and Gucci loafers. The duds were
nice, but hardly my style.
He said,
"Are you armed?"
"Only
the Tala-'G the bot's carrying. Left an Ivanov in the mudroom."
"Let's
make sure. Strip down."
"Aww—"
"Do
it!" God, he was an ornery-looking devil. Is that what people
had seen when they looked at
me! "Don't bore me with
false modesty, laddie. I've watched you floating in the tank. And a
gratifying sight it was."
He made me
give my phone to the bot and tell him where the remote control for
the hopper was. As I removed my clothes, shook them out, and then
immediately got dressed again, my fatigued mind was putting it all
together. Too late.
His
own aircraft was inside the locked hangar, secured by his password.
Not
Makebate, which was much too large to fit, but her orbiter
gig, with the starship herself parked in space, concealed by the
powerful dissimulator.
The
wolverine had snuck into the compound when he lowered the lodge
defenses for landing, then found itself trapped.
His own
"Asahel Frost" personal phone, programmed with virtually
all of the data in my own instrument, would have given him access to
the lodge. And of course he'd been here before, during Dan's
abduction. He'd know what a superb hideaway it was.
Two great
minds with but a single thought...
He told
the robot to withdraw to the opposite end of the room, after
instructing it to accept commands only from him. "As for you,
lad, please be seated. We'll wait for your lovely wife." He
indicated a couch opposite the liquor cart. "I was surprised to
see her at your side during the media conference. Her loyalty was
touching."
"Joanna
never had anything to do with you," I said. "Let her go. Do
whatever you like with me."
He poured
amber liquid from one of the decanters into a cut-glass tumbler and
sipped it, still standing, without offering me any. The Ivanov was
tucked in his belt, its two-shot ready-lights glowing. I didn't have
a prayer of rushing him, even if I'd been fit.
"I'll
do whatever I like with both of you," he said. "Your wife
will be just as valuable a negotiating piece as you. When I came here
to the lodge, I could conceive of only one way to save my neck. Now,
thanks to you, I have two alternatives—and the second is much
more attractive than the first. After tomorrow's Assembly vote—"
Joanna
screamed, "Helly! Oh, God, Helly!"
She had
entered the darkened room and seen him illuminated by the Tiffany
lamp and the flames. The man with my face.
I rose
from my seat. "No. It's not me."
She stood
transfixed, staring incredulously at the two of us, clutching the
strap of her shoulder bag as though it were a lifeline.
"Let
me introduce myself, Professor DeVet. My name is Alistair Drummond. I
am the former chairman and CEO of Galapharma AC. Please come and be
seated beside your former husband."
She
obeyed, moving like a sleepwalker, unable to take her eyes off him.
He had put down his drink and taken the Ivanov from his belt, holding
it negligently, apparently without threat.
"Please
empty your purse onto the coffee table," he said. She complied
and he stepped closer to inspect the contents—a card wallet, a
cosmetics case, a computer notebook, several stylomikes, a flat-key
folder, a handkerchief, a tiny tin of peppermint Altoids, and a
phone. He scooped up the computer and the phone and tossed them into
the darkness.
"Roberta!
Pick up the two items I dropped. Take them and the other things
you're carrying to the communication room. Leave the things there and
secure the door with my password."
"Yes,
Citizen Drummond," said the machine. No facile familiarity with
los domesticos for our Alistair. "I was instructed by
Joanna not to offer helpful comments. Will you rescind that order?"
"Yes,"
Drummond said. "What d'you have to say?"
"A
servitron containing cold champagne and hot food prepared by Joanna
is waiting in the kitchen. Shall I summon it?"
A
brilliant smile broke over Drummond's face—my face. I heard
Joanna gasp. She'd always loved my smile.
"Yes,"
Drummond said to the robot, "I'm feeling a bit peckish. Good of
you to've obliged, Professor."
Joanna
glared at him.
"Only
two place settings have been included," said the robot. "There
are adequate amounts of food and wine for three. Do you wish an extra
place setting?"
Drummond
laughed. "Yes, by all means, Roberta. And now you are
dismissed."
"Damned
fink-bot," I growled. "God, I hate those things."
——
So we ate
and drank, Joanna and I sitting side by side, Drummond lounging on
the couch opposite us. He was only slightly inconvenienced by having
to keep us covered with the stunner while shoveling down eggs and lox
and hogging most of the strawberries. He was in excellent spirits and
seemed eager to talk. Maybe megalomaniacs aren't really happy unless
they have an audience.
As Karl
had suspected, Drummond knew the game was up as soon as Fake Sam
informed him that Helly the Haluk had been accepted by the Rampart
Board of Directors. Even if Sam's demiclone security officers had
been able to take control of the boardroom and its distinguished
occupants, there was no possible way for Sam to salvage the
situation. Murdering the directors would accomplish nothing. Taking
hostages was an even more useless option. Realistically, all Sam
could have hoped to do was retreat, taking the Rampart demi
contingent with him.
Sam had
urged Drummond to immediately take refuge in Macpherson Tower. Not
bloody likely! The Scotsman was crazy but not stupid. The brilliant
stratagem he had conceived was totally buggered, and in his
Fake-Helly demi-clone condition, he was a dangerous liability to the
aliens. If he entered their embassy, he would never emerge alive.
Free, he might think of a way to blackmail the Haluk into financing a
new life for him on some comfortable freesoil world. But where could
he hide while waiting for events to ripen?
He
remembered Kingfisher Lodge.
Taking a
Rampart hopper there would have meant almost instant capture—either
by Rampart or by the aliens. Every corporate ground vehicle,
aircraft, and starship had a monitoring chip in its navigator that
sent a coded data stream directly to Fleet Security and from there to
the bean-counters in Finance. Haluk demiclones were present in both
departments.
The
only Rampart ship exempt from monitoring was
Makebate. I had
made sure of that.
Drummond
was reluctant to leave Earth for the reasons I had already noted. He
was a wanted man;
Makebate's ultra-luminal fuel-trace was easy
to identify, given enough people looking for it, as was the ship
herself; he had no outplanet hidey-hole ready to receive him; and he
wanted to stay close to the action in Toronto so he could judge his
options accurately. Therefore he did the only practical thing—took
off in the starship using ordinary sublight drive, parked in geosync
orbit, then returned to Earth immediately in the gig, staying outside
the air traffic control network.
I said,
"But you must have suspected that the day would come when the
aliens wouldn't need you anymore. Didn't you whomp up some sort of
insurance policy, the way Ollie Schneider did when he was your mole?"
"No,"
he said quietly. "It wasn't necessary."
Oh, boy.
Maybe escape hatches and fallback maneuvers were too mundane for
hubris-loaded nutcases: every contretemps a fresh challenge. Even now
he wasn't planning a getaway. He was mulling over a new scam
involving Joanna and me.
I could
hardly wait to find out what it was.
Joanna
said to Drummond, "May I ask you something?"
That
damned smile. "You may
ask." He poured the last of
the champagne into his own glass.
"How
in the world did you escape from the landslide at the Arizona gold
mine?"
"By
following rattlesnakes." He threw me a humorous look. "Spare
me the obvious comment, lad. The mine was riddled with old tunnels
and shafts. I had my little penlight, which I tied to my head with my
scarf, and I had my Lanvin actinic pistol. There was water to drink.
So I coped."
He had
crept and crawled inside Copper Mountain for nearly three days. A
couple of times he nearly died in rock-falls. One of them cut him off
from returning back the way he'd come. (And convinced searchers that
he must be lying dead beneath it.) On the third day, weak from hunger
and with the penlight battery starting to give out, he began
following what seemed like a moving stream of air, thinking it might
lead to an exit. It only brought him into a dead-end gallery.
"At
that point I thought I'd had it. There seemed nowhere else to go. I
set about exploring a jumble of large rocks and suddenly put my boot
right into a rattler nest. The snakes were rather small, but they
were striking at me viciously and I knew they were venomous. I shot
at them with the Lanvin and fried a few—but the rest fled into
a crevice among the rocks that I hadn't noticed. Every single snake
disappeared. I checked out the crevice and discovered the source of
the wind. It was rubble-choked crawlway too narrow for my body, with
sunlight at the end. I blasted rocks until the charge in the Lanvin
pistol was exhausted, and shifted the pieces with my hands. I got
out. I climbed down the mountain and followed a dirt track fifteen
kilometers to a highway. I hitchhiked to Phoenix in a ranch truck and
contacted Tyler Baldwin, the demiclone Galapharma security chief...
and told him about the idea I'd conceived while lost inside the gold
mine. He took me to the Haluk leaders. I think you can imagine the
rest."
"That's
amazing," Joanna said.
"Do
you really think so, Professor?" He'd told the story directly to
her, and as he spoke his eyes had toured her leisurely from north to
south, with several scenic detours that had made me grit my teeth in
fury.
Before she
could reply, I said, "You got lucky. But the Haluk aren't going
to give you a third chance at the jackpot, so what's your new game
plan? Holding us for ransom?"
Reluctantly,
he shifted his attention from Joanna to me. His voice was quite
courteous. "A variation on that theme. Following the Assembly
vote tomorrow—whichever way it goes—you will invite Adam
Stanislawski and the seven members of the Rampart Board of Directors
presently in Toronto to confer with you here at the lodge. The
meeting will be conducted under conditions of the utmost secrecy,
with no other persons present—"
"I
won't do it," I said.
His gaze
flickered to Joanna. "I think you will, given the proper
incentive."
"It'll
never work. You can't hold hostages here. The security's not good
enough. Remember how you grabbed Dan. Others know Joanna and I came
to the lodge. They'll be suspicious—"
"We
and our guests won't remain here," Drummond said airily. "We'll
all be aboard
Makebate, one of the fastest star-ships in the
galaxy. And one that is very well armed. A deal will be struck. I
guarantee it. If not—" He shrugged, cocked his head and
listened to the edgy music. "—at least the denouement will
be appropriately Wagnerian."
He gave us
a mocking toast and tossed down the last of the champagne.
Joanna was
staring at him with an expresion of objective interest. Her voice had
taken on a clinical tone. "That's what you really want, isn't
it? A dramatic ending. To destroy Helly and Adam and the Rampart
leadership, because they defeated you twice over."
Alistair
Drummond put down the empty champagne flute and lifted the Ivanov.
"You're a very lovely woman, Joanna. I'd like you to share my
bed tonight."
"No,
thank you," she said politely. "I'm afraid I've just
started my period."
"You
lying bitch!" Drummond snapped.
"No,
it's true. Why don't I clear away these supper things into the
servitron?" She rose from the couch, picked up a china plate,
and suddenly scaled it expertly at Drummond like a Frisbee, missing
his head by only a few centimeters. The plate smashed against the
granite fireplace.
Drummond
shot her in the breast with the Ivanov. Two darts. She fell back
against me. "Lying bloody bitch!" he shouted.
I
struggled to shift her body and get at him, but it was useless. He
popped me twice in the shoulder and I felt the world dissolve into a
red-black abyss.
The last
thing I remember was Drummond calling, "Roberta! Clean up!"
——
She was
sitting beside me on the edge of the king-sized bed, fully clothed,
wiping my face with a damp towel. When I made an inarticulate noise
she lifted my head and held a glass of water to my lips.
"Careful,
dear. Just take small sips."
I did. My
mouth felt like week-old straw in a mule stall.
She took
the water away. "Thank God you're finally awake. We've got to
act quickly before he comes, and I'm not sure how to work the damned
thing."
"What?"
I struggled to sit up. We were in a beautifully appointed bedroom. A
clock on the nightstand said it was 1333 hours. What was going to be
the most memorable day of my life was already half gone.
I
stretched my arms, flexed my legs. Except for a sore spot on my
shoulder where the darts had penetrated, I felt almost good. Maybe
I'd send the Ivanov people a testimonial.
Joanna had
left me and gone to a large pottery vase on a low dresser that held
an ornamental arrangement of dried grasses. She rummaged around in
it. "I hid it in here, in case he came in before you woke and
decided to ... search my clothes."
She pulled
out the new Lucevera 4500 she'd bought in Timmins and handed it to
me.
I said,
"Jesus Christ!"
"It
was in my inside jacket pocket all the time. Drummond never thought
that I might have been carrying two phones. Thank heaven he shot me
in the opposite boob." She made a face. "Incidentally, the
dart wound still hurts like hell. I was afraid that if I used the
phone to call the Rampart emergency code, the call would register
somehow on Drummond's own phone. That's why I waited for you to wake
up."
"No,
it wouldn't. He and I have separate phone codes. All we share is the
computer data and system-links. But I'm glad you waited. We'll call
Karl instead of arguing with ExSec. They're likely to be kinda
uptight and antsy at this point in time."
The
armored shutter on one window was open. Outside, fat snowflakes
fluttered straight down in a winter wonderland. I climbed out of bed
and checked the compound. The Mitsubishi-Kondo was gone.
"He's
moved the hopper," I said. "He must have put it into the
garage out of sight. Along with the orbiter gig."
She said,
"The door of our suite is locked and it's not ordinary wood. I
think it's made of the same armor as the shutters. The glass in the
windows looks very thick, too."
"They're
unbreakable and laser-proof. This suite was designed to be
ultrasecure. A good thing, too. We're going to lock Alistair Drummond
out of here, then make some big botheration."
I began
tapping pads.
"What
are you doing?" Joanna asked apprehensively. "Won't he know
if you access the lodge systems?"
"Not
unless he's looking at the phone display. Pray he's got it stowed in
his pocket... Hah! Gotcha. The original code for the secure-suite
lock was deactivated when the lodge was shut down. A new one hasn't
been installed. That means Drummond must have used his simple
password to engage the lock. The dumb galoot even gave the password
to that idiot robot."
Tap
tappety tap tap tap.
"I
don't understand," Joanna said. "Secure suite?"
"Never
mind. Look." I showed her the phone's data-strip. It said:
——
list
passwords: glasgow 1/1
——
"He
didn't encrypt it. Why should he? Anytime we want, we're out of here,
babe. But not yet. Definitely not yet!"
I
installed a new code for the lock—encrypted, of course—killed
the Glasgow access, and locked us in. Then I closed the window
shutter that Joanna had opened.
"We're
going to make sure our fish doesn't get away," I said. "Then
we call for help. Crawl under the bed."
While
she gaped at me in stark disbelief, I summoned another menu. This one
was for
Makebate's gig. I explained: "Both Drummond's and
my phone have links to the nav-autopilot system of the starship gig.
If I park the gig somewhere, or even leave it inside the starship, I
can call it to come pick me up—just like a car or a hopper."
"But
the gig is already here," Joanna protested. "In the
underground hangar along with the Macrodur hopper."
I
took her arm and urged her onto the floor. We both slithered under
the bed. "I'm going to send the gig home to
Makebate.
Unfortunately, I'm going to forget to open the garage door
first."
"Oh..."
"The
lodge is a very sturdy building," I reassured her. "We
should be all right. Ready?"
I
pressed the pads that would light up the gig's engines. Did the
requisite preflight rigmarole. Then I told the orbiter to lift off.
The phone began to shriek like a banshee. I could hear a tinny
computerized voice saying,
Danger. Danger. Overhead obstruction
scanned.
Liftoff aborted. Liftoff aborted.
No doubt
Alistair Drummond heard it, too.
I told the
phone, "Override alpha-three-one-one. Go!"
The
concussion did not lift the house off its foundation, nor did it
break the armor-glass windows. The hangar was carved out of bedrock
and the major force of the fuel blast was directed upward, with a
secondary Shockwave rushing along the subterranean tunnel, where it
severely damaged the deserted staff quarters wing.
We clung
together while bits of demolished machinery rained down on the
ceramalloy roof like a hailstorm from hell. The bedframe had leaped
off the floor and thumped down harmlessly. A tall chest of drawers
and a bookcase had toppled and scattered things. The ceramic bedside
lamps had crashed, and so had the vase with the grasses, a couple of
large framed pictures, and a passel of nameless sundries that had
fallen off shelves and out of cabinets in the adjacent bathroom.
"Are
you all right?" I asked Joanna.
"Yes.
My God, it was just like a bomb!"
"Exactly
like one." The clinging was very nice. "Did you really
start your period?"
"It's
a standard antirape ploy. Men are so squeamish."
"All
the same, I'm glad you threw the plate ... On your feet, babe."
We crawled
out into the mess. I opened the shutters on all three bedroom
windows. A tall column of smoke swirled from the hangar hole in the
middle distance. Not much debris was visible; it had sunk out of
sight in the deepening snow.
Next order
of business: I called Karl Nazarian's personal code.
"It's
Helly, at the lodge. Alistair Drummond's here. I've destroyed the
transportation. Send a SWAT team fast. He's armed with a Tala-G and
God knows what else. Joanna and I are barricaded in Dan's old
secure-suite. We'll be okay."
"I
copy your emergency," said the cool old cucumber. "Hold
while I talk to ExSec and dispatch the team."
I waited.
Joanna
said, "I hear something at the door."
Scratching
sounds. Then the sharp yelp of a photon gun, one with less power than
my Tala-G, perhaps a Claus-Gewitter, weapon of choice for serious
meat-hunters. Maybe Drummond didn't know how to operate the more
esoteric combat piece.
Cheeow
cheeow.
I
muttered, "Give it up, sucker. You and your Haluk goons
couldn't blast your way in here when you came for Dan. You had to
torture two guards to death to get the lock-code."
Joanna's
eyes were wide with horror. "Helly ...?"
Another
photon blast, then silence.
"I'll
explain later," I told her. Karl was back on the phone.
"The
team'll fly out of our Oshawa facility inside of half an hour,"
he said, "five hoppers and thirty personnel. You're looking at a
ninety-minute ETA. They'll try to take Drummond alive."
"Goody.
Did the Macpherson Tower raid come off?"
"You
haven't heard?"
"Drummond
was waiting for us when we arrived. Joanna and I have been
stunned-out for over twelve hours."
"Well,
shit. You missed some crazy action. Eve made her pitch to the media
and then to the Servant, who denied everything in a rebuttal
newscast. Couple hours later a mysterious armed hopper shot
sleepy-gas grenades into every floor in the top half of the tower.
Toronto Public Safety and ECID were shocked. Shocked."
I laughed.
"Let me guess. The hopper escaped. The cops entered in force to
assess damage to the embassy and injury to the poor alien occupants.
They found the Halukoid folks."
"All
safe, all removed to Toronto General Hospital—including your
brother Dan, the only human being in the place who actually looked
like one. There were no demiclones in Macpherson. They must have all
been evacuated. Of course the media had a field day. And the Servant
filed a formal protest with Xenoaffairs, claiming the cops had
kidnapped innocent Haluk, not transformed humans."
I snorted.
"Stick with the Big Lie, right to the edge of the Grand Canyon
drop-off."
"The
vote!" Joanna exclaimed. "What about the goddamned vote?"
"Did
you hear the professor's respectful query?" I asked Karl.
He said,
"The Assembly approved the three hundred new Haluk colonies by a
margin of forty-six votes. The Speaker invited a Citizen Veto Poll.
The PlaNet hits are still being tabulated and verified, but it looks
like the veto won."
Joanna and
I cheered.
"What's
more," Karl said, "there's a groundswell growing for the
recall of the Delegates who voted for the Haluk colonies. Some
Reverse spokespersons are demanding top-to-bottom reform of the
Assembly to eliminate the influence • of the Hundred Concerns.
We're living in interesting times, my friend."
"And
here
we are," I lamented, "sitting it out on the
sidelines with a homicidal maniac."
"I'll
be on my way to the lodge myself after I talk to some people. Turn on
your holovid and catch up on what's happening in the universe. Sit
tight till the cavalry arrives, and don't do anything stupid."
"Have
I ever?" I asked, and ended the call.
Joanna was
already examining the holo projector in the adjacent snuggery,
prodding its remote keypad without result. "Nothing but a blank
blue field," she mourned. "The projector seems all right,
so I suppose the antenna was damaged in the explosion."
The phone
buzzed. I looked at the display. The instrument was in intercom mode.
I said,
"Hello, Alistair. Did you enjoy the fireworks?"
"It's
not over," he said softly.
"Yes,
it is. Tell you what. I'll see that you get your real body back
before they chain you to the bed in the funny farm."
"I'm
leaving now, Frost, but we'll meet again. I doubt that the pleasure
will be mutual. I intend to have something very special waiting for
you—and for Professor DeVet. Dream about it." He ended the
call.
Leaving?
Something
medium-large sped past the windows, then reappeared and cut a sharp
right turn, kicking a rooster tail of snow against the glass.
Cursing, I
ran to check it out. The snowmobile's track led from one of the
outbuildings to the lodge. Drummond had deliberately buzzed our
suite. Now he was heading directly toward us at low speed, the twin
headlights of the sleek Ski-Doo haloed by floating ice crystals.
The
machine was classic yellow-and-black with nice scarlet flashes. The
helmeted figure in the saddle lifted a hand with two gloved fingers
extended. Peace?... V for victory? ... Nope. In the British Isles the
double-digit salute had another meaning.
Fuck you.
An instant
later a portable force-field shield enveloped the Doo in a hemisphere
of golden sparks. Drummond did a 180 and headed straight out onto the
frozen lake at maximum speed, leaving a huge white cloud of powder
snow in his wake.
I dug in
my pocket for the phone, frantically called up the lodge-exterior
menu and switched on the defenses he had deactivated. Too late. The
damned sled was traveling at nearly 200 kph and it was already
outside the perimeter and gone away.
I rushed
to the door of the suite, spoke the unlock code, and began galloping
down the hall. Joanna was right behind me as I crossed the living
room—where there was remarkably little damage from the
blast—came into the entry and took a detour into the service
wing. The com room door was wide open. My Talavera-Gerardi lay
centered on a small table, neat as a display in a gunshop.
I
swiftly checked the weapon out. It seemed completely undamaged, the
barrel was clear, and the ready display said full charge. I slung the
piece over my shoulder.
Joanna
said, "What are you going to do?"
I pushed
past her, heading for the mudroom. Our enviro-suits, helmets, and
overboots were still there. The Ivanov was gone. I propped the long
gun against the wall and began to dress.
"I'll
need to take the phone," I said. "You'll have to make a
note of the door code so you can lock yourself in the secure-suite."
"But—"
"Drummond
might double back. The exterior defenses are useless because he can
access them. When I'm gone, get back into the suite and stay there
until the SWAT team arrives."
"You
can't go after him!" she stormed. "Don't you understand?
It's what he wants you to do! He's not trying to escape. He'll be
waiting for you out there."
I tinkered
with the helmet, establishing the phone link and the system feed with
the suit and boots that I hadn't bothered with during the short trip
from the hopper to the lodge.
"Find
something to write the code on, Joanna."
"Wait,"
she said tightly. She went into the kitchen and returned with a
recipe e-book.
I read out
the alphanumerics, tucked the phone inside my suit, and zipped up.
She said,
"Don't do this, Helly. Not if you love me. Don't go after that
man to kill him." Her face was very pale, with an odd hectic
flush on the cheeks that had nothing to do with makeup. She clutched
the little book tightly in one hand, holding it at her side like a
missile ready for throwing.
"I'll
bring him back alive if I can."
Speaking
in a strained whisper: "The SWAT team can do that better than
you. Stay with me. Please don't leave me alone again."
"I
can't let Drummond get away. If he reaches Central Patricia, he could
commandeer a fast Park Service hopper and fly down to Thunder Bay
Conurb. There's a starship shuttle service at the skyport—"
"He's
not trying to get away." Her eyes were bright with moisture. "He
left your weapon when he could have taken it himself or destroyed
it... And I'm sure you'll find an operable snow machine waiting out
in the equipment building. If Drummond wanted to escape, he'd have
disabled it. He's playing a game with you, Helly. An insane game!"
"Will
you kiss me goodbye? I love you, Joanna."
She let me
embrace her, passively accepted my hard lips, the alien tongue we'd
laughed about and enjoyed. When we broke apart her tears had
overflowed.
"Goodbye,
Helly," she said, and turned and walked away.
——
Of course
Joanna was right about Drummond planning an ambush. I knew that his
chance of escaping—even as far as Thunder Bay—were
infinitesimal. The SWAT team would nab his ass as easily as a pack of
Ontario timber wolves running down a crippled caribou. Unless I got
him first.
And I
intended to.
I'd
ignored my wife's good counsel, confirmed her doubts about my
character, maybe torpedoed any chance of a permanent reconciliation.
One part of me was kicking the other part and cursing it for a
prideful fool. But I couldn't do anything else.
Cowboys...
As Joanna
had predicted, there was another shiny Ski-Doo waiting for me. Two
toys were evidently all Rampart had sprung for to entertain the
troops, but the Concern hadn't stinted on quality. The Formula 12K-XC
was the primo back-country trail sled. Its frame was scandium
alloy—the same stuff that catalyzes trans-ack starship
fuel—stronger than titanium and lighter than aluminum. To make
the machine ride even lighter—and get you out of holes when you
bogged down—it had inertial stabilizers and optional
anti-gravity enhancement. Its powerful engine was whisper-quiet. The
console was loaded with nifty gadgets, including com equipment, a
terrain scanner with warm-body capability, global positioning, an
emergency beacon, and a buddy beacon. Drummond would deactivate the
latter feature, and so would I. Buddies we weren't.
Other
goodies included a retractable bivouac enclosure that you could
shelter in if you broke down or got trapped in a blizzard, an
independent heater, trail rations, survival kit, and first-aid unit.
My sled did not have a defensive force-shield. That particular item
is not among the luxury accessories offered by the Ski-Doo folks.
Drummond had either brought his own umbrella or swiped one from the
Macrodur hopper. The Doo did have a swingaway hunter's gun-mount with
a weatherproof stretch-sheath that was barely adequate to cover my
ultramacho Tala-G. I installed the weapon, fired up the engine, and
eased out of the barn.
I hadn't
been on one of these machines for nearly ten years, but I didn't
anticipate much difficulty driving. I was in no hurry. Alistair
Drummond would wait for me in the backwoods arena of his choosing.
I
hoped to arrive at a time, and from a direction, that was
not of
his choosing.
The snow
was coming down heavier. It was now impossible to see the opposite
shore of the lake, six klicks away. I checked the scanner to be sure
my adversary wasn't lurking anywhere in the immediate vicinity—or
circling the compound to catch me from the rear. Even with a
tree-filter, there was a lot of clutter on the screen. It showed only
a single warm body blip, sans machine accompaniment, moving at a
brisk galumph through the woods on the other side of the lake. An
animal. The data strip said:
——
species:
wolverine-wt: 35.5 kilos
——
"Go
away, beastie," I murmured. "Other game is afoot."
I called
up the positioner map, selected a twenty-kilometer radius, and
studied the bright terrain-proper display. A number of narrow tracks
webbed the forest and bogs surrounding the lodge, illegally zapped a
couple of years ago by bored security guards whose duty it was to
nanny my unfortunate brother.
During
warm weather the trails were probably horrific even for iron-butt
backpackers or anglers—muddy, rough with burned-off stumps, and
mosquito-plagued. In winter, after the snow attained a reasonable
depth, they'd be handy little corridors for snowmobilers and game
poachers, hence the gun-mount on my sled. Nothing like a rack of
venison or a moose-muffle to liven up the staff menu. Nothing like a
running target to sharpen rusty marksmanship skills.
I expanded
to a 50 km overview, then 100 km. The last display included the
hamlet of Central Patricia ninety klicks to the west. A single trail,
beginning at the far side of Cad-disfly Lake, twisted and twined and
ended up there. I wondered briefly what attractions the lonely men
had found in the tiny outpost. A bar with live music and friendly
local ladies? Hey, in their shoes it would have appealed to me.
I
highlighted the C-Pat Trail, then returned to the large-scale map and
called up a holographic topo display. To check for high ground
overlooking that trail—preferably not too far away from the
lodge.
There
wasn't much. The most likely—very nearly the only!—ambush
spot I could find was a sparsely wooded granite ridge only 29 meters
above the surrounding terrain. It was situated about nine klicks from
the western lakeshore. The ridge was relatively steep and treeless on
the southern side, above the trail, and sloped gently to the north,
where the forest was thicker.
The
stretch of the C-Pat Trail next to the ridge was fairly wide and
straight, inviting a sledder to travel at speed. A couple of klicks
west of the high ground, a branch trail came in on the right. This
was a much narrower and more convoluted path leading back to the
lake, paralleling a short creek that drained a pond. Its termination
was about five kilometers north of the C-Pat trailhead.
If I were
Alistair Drummond, I'd drive across the lake and go west on the C-Pat
past Granite Ridge to the Creek Trail junction. Turn right. Trend
back eastward a klick or two behind the ridge. Leave the trail and
drive my sled ever so carefully south, upslope through patchy trees
and rocks to the overlook.
Hunker in.
Wait for Helly to come bombing along the C-Pat down yonder, gung ho
to catch up with the fleeing miscreant. Pot him like a ptarmigan.
Unless the
intended victim entered the forest on Creek Trail instead, and snuck
up behind the sniper.
——
I sped diagonally across the lake. The
ice was freeway flat and the scanner came up dead empty. From the
shore the Creek trailhead was almost invisible, clogged with brush
and a tangle of downed birch saplings. I punched the anti-gravity and
hopped over them, then started along a winding path that was barely
wide enough for a single machine. The air temperature was minus-five.
My snow-depth indicator read 34 cm. Ten of that was fresh powder, and
there'd be lots more before long.
Nearly an
hour had passed since I'd spoken to Karl Nazarian. The SWAT team
would be arriving soon. I cranked the throttle and drove as fast as I
dared. The engine was a tiger-purr, muffled by the falling white
stuff.
Twenty
minutes later I was behind Granite Ridge. The irregular ground
upslope showed no trace of a warm body. I could only presume he was
on the other side of the crest, where broken rock formed a natural
redoubt above the C-Pat. If I went farther along the Creek Trail,
looking for his sled tracks to verify that he had, in fact, chosen
this spot for the ambush, there was a chance he might scan me or hear
me. I opted to climb the ridge on foot. The scope of rny Tala-G had a
thermal targeter three times more sensitive than that of a Ski-Doo—or
a Claus-Gewitter blaster.
I called
up a compass on my visor display and took a rough bearing on my
objective. The vantage point was about a mile and a quarter
southwest. There would be adequate cover until I reached the ridge
top, where only small clumps of trees had found a footing in the
frost-fractured granite.
My boots
had a nifty feature: deployable miniature bear-paw snowshoe webs. I
spread them and started mushing. The blood singing in my ears was the
only other sound in the winter fastness. I still didn't have my old
stamina, but I made the climb without too much difficulty in the
relatively shallow snow, doing a sweep with the scope every dozen
meters, finding nothing warm—and no shield ionization
signature, either.
Just below
the ridge crest, sheltered by a group of jack pines, I rested and
turned off the heating system of my envirosuit. Every little erg
counts. Then I began to creep toward the overlook, which I estimated
was about 200 meters away, snaking through tall snow-covered rocks,
taking advantage of every bit of cover, sighting through the gun
scope every other minute, praying that Drummond was up here and that
he was concentrating his attention on the C-Pat Trail, not scanning
the ridge to his left.
In the
scope, two blips of warm.
I
flattened, sinking into the snow behind a white-capped chunk of
granite the size of a car. Changed the scope mode to amplification,
peeked out.
I saw a
crouching figure holding a long gun at the ready. His Ski-Doo waited
close by, slightly downslope among the trees. No force-field
hemisphere, of course. You can't shoot a blaster through a simple
portable shield.
I pulled
off my right mitten so I could operate the trigger and targeted
Alistair Drummond, the man wearing my body. Range, 156.2 meters.
Don't
do this, Hetty. Not if you love me. Don't go after that man to kill
him.
I'll
bring him back alive if I can.
Rats.
I switched
the gun to manual fire and blasted a pine snag six meters away from
him. He fired down at the C-Pat Trail, then sent another wild shot to
his right, decapitating a small balsam fir. He hadn't found me with
his scope and the snow made it impossible for him to judge my
position.
I waited.
Willing him to do it.
He fired
again, coming nowhere near me, then made a dash for his snowmobile.
Boarded, flicked on the shield. Safe from my photon weapon beneath
his sparkling dome, he started his machine and headed downhill toward
Creek Trail, weaving feather-light through the spindly pines. He'd
turned on the antigravity enhancer to maximize his speed on the
flurry powder.
I surged
to my feet, clambered on top of the rock, and began to mow down the
trees ahead of him, blasting the trunks near the base so they dropped
like jackstraws. Some bounced harmlessly off the force-field, others
fell to either side as I continued to aim in front of the scuttling,
turtle-shaped mass of golden sparks.
He had
nearly dropped below my line of fire when I nailed him. A perfectly
felled pine came down right across his path and the sled hit it
head-on. The force-field projector cut out as the power died. I
watched the yellow-and-black machine do a nose-flip right over the
log and begin rolling down the steepening slope. Drummond was still
in the saddle.
The
Ski-Doo disappeared in the snow. I hopped off the rock and began
floundering after it. I found him a few minutes later, under the
broken and twisted machine. It had fetched up against a tree. Both of
his legs were grotesquely entangled in the skid-frame. There was not
much blood.
I dug the
snow away from his head and opened his visor and looked into my own
face, twisted in agony. Alistair Drummond was fully conscious.
He said,
"Damn you. Damn you."
"There's
no way I can winch this thing off without hurting you," I told
him. "I'll have to go back to the lodge and find a cutting
tool."
"Why
didn't you shoot me on the ridge?" he asked.
"I
killed myself once in Macpherson Tower. Once is enough."
The
first-aid unit and survival kit were intact. I wrapped the parts of
his body that I could reach in mylar foil blankets. Did my best to
inspect his shattered legs without removing the remnants of his
envirosuit. It was still producing warmth.
"There's
bound to be a medic in the Rampart SWAT team coming up from Toronto.
It should arrive soon. I'll put up the survival tent to keep the snow
off you. Would you like a drink of water?"
"Go
to hell."
He turned
his head away and didn't say anything else. His eyes were closed.
There was a pulse in his neck, so I figured he'd either fainted or
gone into shock.
Time to
move along. I flicked the emergency beacon, erected the tent, and
turned on its heater. Then I hiked back down Creek Trail to my own
machine and returned to the lodge.
——
Joanna and
I were still trying to find a cutting torch in the shambles of the
workroom, which was in the damaged staff wing, when five blue Rampart
ExSec hoppers landed in the compound. The team leader was an
Amazonian black woman named Captain Sarah Marcus.
She had
the medical personnel and the equipment necessary to free and
evacuate Drummond. She had the good sense not to argue when I said I
was going along.
Two
aircraft landed in the creek bed, the only open space available.
Captain Marcus supervised loading the gear on AG totes, but I was the
one who led the way as we snowshoed through the cold white woods to
the place where Alistair Drummond awaited rescue.
"What
the hell is that stink?" Marcus said.
I said,
"Oh, shit," knowing.
We found
the tent torn to bits and bloody snow trampled by clawed feet and a
body with its throat torn out, defiled with foul-smelling musk.
"There
it is, Cap!" one of the troops cried, whipping out his Kagi
sidearm and taking aim. "Looks like a goddamn bear!"
I knocked
his gun arm up and the blast went harmlessly into the trees. A bulky
dark form bounded out from a tumble of rocks and dashed downhill with
surprising speed. In a moment it had vanished into the storm.
"Not
a bear," I said. "A wolverine. Leave it alone."
Captain
Marcus said, "It killed this man. We can scope it out and burn
it later, when we're airborne."
"No,"
I told her firmly. "We'll let the animal be. It's a wild thing.
It acts naturally, following its own rules. It has a right to do so.
Do you understand?"
"Yes."
She turned her back on me and began giving orders to the others, and
I tramped away downhill into the clean white falling snow.
Epilogue
The scout
ship that Adam Stanislawski had sent to Amenti, in the Sagittarius
Whorl, reported that the asteroid was the home base of an estimated
two hundred Haluk corsairs. Shortly after the incident at the Haluk
embassy was reported by the media, the Macrodur chairman dispatched a
fleet of Concern cruisers to clean out the pirate nest.
Following
the destruction of their starships, the Haluk declared war on the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds.
A force of
consisting of eighty heavy warships and 160 light starfighters lifted
off from Haluk colonial planets at the tip of the Perseus Spur and
headed for Seriphos, Rampart's local headquarters. The attackers were
intercepted in deep space by Rampart starships and Zone Patrol.
Eventually they were annihilated, although the outnumbered defenders
suffered heavy casualties. Seriphos itself was left unscathed.
Immediately
after this engagement, a second enemy fleet of equal size left the
Haluk worlds and began to encircle Cravat, sole source of the genen
vector PD32:C2. Rampart forces had been siphoned away from Cravat to
defend Seriphos, and the tide of battle began to turn toward the
aliens.
At the
same time, Rampart's powerful Fleet Scanner Satellite at Tyrins
detected nearly four thousand alien vessels en route from the Haluk
Cluster to the Perseus Spur.
I
consulted with the Rampart Board of Directors, then ordered the
Rampart defenders to incinerate every landmass on Cravat with
antimatter bombs.
Virtually
every armed Concern and Commonwealth star-ship in the galaxy,
including that of Captain Guillermo Bermudez Obregon, based on
Kedge-Lockaby, was mobilized to defend the Milky Way Galaxy. I drove
Makebate.
After
sixty-one days of righting in intergalactic space outside the Perseus
Spur, the aliens surrendered.
Mimo, who
was once again in excellent health, personally accounted for
eighty-four ship-kills. He threw a celebratory luau at his Eyebrow
Cay home, and some three dozen lowlife starship commanders who had
distinguished themselves in the late conflict attended.
So did I.
I was still blue, but no one minded. I had popped 166 of the
bastards.
——
The
defeated Haluk deposed the Servant of Servants and imprisoned him in
a monastery of Anointed Elders, where he was to undergo corrective
meditation for the rest of his life.
The
surrender agreement was eyeballed by Locutor Ru Kamik and the Council
of Nine. In it they abjectly disavowed the Grand Design and begged
the Human Commonwealth to have mercy on the Haluk people.
Magnanimous
in victory, the Commonwealth agreed to sponsor a massive research
program—contracted out to Rampart Concern—synthesizing
the vector virus PD32:C2. If, after five years, the aliens
demonstrated that they embraced peace and abandoned the pernicious
philosophy of uncontrolled population growth, the vector
manufacturing process would be made available to them, gratis. Human
inspection teams and family-planning counselors were to be welcomed
in the Haluk Cluster, as well as the Haluk colonial worlds. Normal
trade relations would be reestablished. If all went well during the
five-year period, the Commonwealth would consider systematically
granting limited numbers of Milky Way planets to the Haluk, until
their population pressures eased.
Until then
they were stuck with allomorphy and the worlds they already
inhabited.
The flawed
alloeradication therapy developed by the late Emily Blake Konigsberg
would be studied by human experts during the interim, and tweaked to
eliminate the relapse factor. Fortunately, treated Haluk individuals
who had reverted to the testudomorph state did emerge from their
chrysalids as healthy allomorphic graciles.
In another
condition of the surrender, the Haluk agreed to round up all
Haluk-human demiclones, toss them into dystasis tanks, and change
them back into normal Haluk. A few genetic transforms, including the
woman known as Dolores da Gama, eluded the dragnet and are said to be
blissfully enjoying the human condition on obscure freesoil worlds.
Nearly ten
thousand human DNA donors were rescued from the Haluk colonies, in
addition to the higher-status individuals imprisoned in Macpherson
Tower. Some of the former had floated for years, and had had five or
six alien copies made of themselves. After memory reprogramming, over
half of the donors regained their mental health, found employment,
and resumed their interrupted personal lives. The others were cared
for by the Commonwealth at Haluk expense.
The Haluk
promised to eschew mining transactinides with convict slave labor. In
another CHW-sponsored project—contracted out to Sheltok
Concern—human mining engineers traveled to the Haluk Cluster to
instruct the aliens in more civilized technology. The Haluk were apt
pupils. In time Sheltok would find itself purchasing more efficient
machinery for the Sagittarian mines, designed by Haluk—just as
Bodascon Concern would adopt certain Haluk starship innovations.
The aliens
were hardware hotshots but abysmally unskilled in biotechnology and
computer science. The new trade treaty allowed them to buy all the
human goods they wanted, with the exception of certain armaments.
Julian
May 375
Enormous
quantities of Macrodur computers were sold to the Haluk. The
manufacturers of ticklesuits and Japanese kimonos also did a roaring
business.
——
Meanwhile,
back on the planet Earth, a political upheaval was in full swing.
Many
Conservative Delegates were recalled and Reversionist candidates
elected to take their places. Geraldo Gonzalez matured into a
statesman of major stature. Together with Efrem Sontag, he sponsored
Assembly bills that eventually eliminated the longstanding domination
of CHW politics by the Hundred Concerns.
Pocket
Delegates disappeared into oblivion. Syndics found other jobs.
Corporation finks were immediately purged from the Secretariat for
Xenoaffairs, the Interstellar Commerce Secretariat, and Zone Patrol.
Over the next decade, legislation was enacted that reformed many
areas of the human governmental structure.
The
Conlegius statutes, which had given Concerns far-ranging
independent police powers, were abolished. At the suggestion of
Delegate Sontag, Karl Nazarian was appointed to a new CCID task force
overseeing Concern security reorganization.
The
Commonwealth Correction System was also revamped, eliminating the
penalty of disenfranchisement except for capital crimes. Throwaways
were invited to reapply for citizenship and carefully screened. The
scandal-ridden Coventry penitentiaries were closed down.
Corporate
ownership of the stars would persist for a long time, as the Assembly
slowly whittled away at the entrenched hegemony of Big Business and
enacted new tax measures to finance the reforms. Rome wasn't built in
a day, and neither was a galactic democracy.
Nonstargoing
Insap races were granted just wages and given educational options.
They did not become corporate stakeholders and share in the profits
of their exploited
worlds.
Their consciousness raised, some of the natives became predictably
restless. But the majority didn't give a damn, so long as the human
invaders brought in plenty of trade goods.
Beer was
an especially big hit among carbon-based life-forms.
——
After the
brief Haluk War, I spent time in dystasis and emerged with my
previous body, buffed up a little here and there. Joanna was present
for my rollout, and so were Simon—healthy as a horse—and
Eve and Beth and even Cousin Zed. Karl Nazarian and his Over-the-Hill
Gang were on hand, along with Mimo and my old comrades Ivor Jenkins
and Ildiko Szabo.
Daniel
Frost pleaded a previous engagement with his psychotherapist. He now
lived quietly with his wife in a secure house in the Ontario Cottage
Country and steadfastly denied that he had done anything wrong.
Fulfilling
my promise to Simon, I now serve as a part-time Rampart executive.
Most of my work is tedious troubleshooting. I have moments when I
sincerely wish I were a beach bum again.
I did
manage to implement Reversionist principles on many of the planets in
the Perseus Spur, but the ex-Galapharma worlds in the Orion Arm
fought my radical notions tooth and nail. Their reform may have to
wait until the Commonwealth Assembly does the job for me.
I myself
have no desire to seek public office, although I still give generous
donations to the Reversionists. A political cowboy is a sorry thing.
One of the
charitable foundations that I manage is dedicated to alleviating the
lot of the denizens of the Dark Path. Sadly, numbers of them want
nothing more than to continue on exactly as before; the trogs are
always with us. A sizable majority have been assisted by my
foundation to make new lives under one sun or another.
Mama
Fanchon Labrecque became head of the Visiting Practitioner Service of
Kedge-Lockaby's new Katje Vander-post Memorial Hospital.
Mohammed
al-Wazan is in medical school and hopes someday to join Mama. The
sadistic executive creep who used him as a boy-toy was mysteriously
shanghaied and is now a permanent maroony, in charge of
toilet-cubicle maintenance in the asteroid Phlegethon.
Santa
Claus still lives beneath Toronto. If there is profound symbolism
there, I haven't been able to figure it out.
The rest
of the Grange Place Tribe have returned to their families and are
doing as well as can be expected.
Professor
Joanna DeVet teaches political science at Commonwealth University for
three terms each year. Her book was a popular smash and provoked
unseemly jealousy among certain of her academic colleagues, even
though she donated the proceeds to charity.
We were
remarried a week after I emerged from the tank. We have a house in
the Kawartha Lakes region and an apartment in Rampart Tower. Neither
one has domestic robots.
We
vacation at the Sky Ranch and on Kedge-Lockaby. She loves my yellow
submarine. I love the way she sits a horse.
Joanna is
still trying to understand me, and claims that the natural history of
the wolverine offers significant insights into my character. I call
that piffle.
She has
also tells me that she sometimes misses Helly the Haluk.
I don't.
The End
SAGITTARIUS WHORL
An
Adventure of the Rampart
Worlds
Julian May
A
Del Rey Book
Copyright ©
2001 by Starykon Productions, Inc.
Chapter 1
Behold a comatose human guy in a
dystasis tank, hooked to a psychotronic apparatus that plays the same
lovely dream over and over and over. He is being genetically
engineered.
That much
he knows, because he's been in one of the damned vats
before—sometime, somewhere. The details are a mystery. He
drifts in the glass coffin of bubbly oxygen-charged goo, too stoned
by the drugs and REMory dream-programming to react rationally during
his brief interludes of semiconsciousness.
The
wakeful bits, when he manages to force open his eyes and peer
myopically through the perfluorocarbon liquid, are fuzzy and surreal
and punctuated by stabs of fear and helpless anger. During them, the
floater recalls one vivid short-term memory snippet...
He sits in a smoke-filled bar in a
hollow asteroid in the distant Sagittarius Whorl, and the Haluk
smiles at him as his consciousness starts to drain away. He remembers
his despairing certainty, in the final instant before oblivion, that
the aliens are probably going to subject him to something
outrageously weird this time around, having failed to finish him off
during their previous assaults and batteries.
He squirms
in the dystasis tank, making a futile attempt to swim up, push off
the lid, and break free. But his limbs and trunk are firmly clamped
in an upright frame. Only his head, gripped less tightly, is able to
move a little.
He
remembers a few more things.
He can
swim. He can cook. He can pilot a starship. He can ride a horse.
He's a
disgrace. He's a lawyer. He's a scuba diver. He's a zillionaire.
He was a
cop. He was a suicidal drunk. He was a political gadfly. He was ...
doing something that got him in deepest shit.
When he
finishes wrenching his head around uselessly, he sees another
transparent-walled container next to his own. Inside it another body
is dimly visible in reddish womb-light, a companion in dystasis.
Straining, he tries to get a better view of the other person, but
finds it impossible.
His mouth
opens in a silent roar of frustration. With his lungs and the rest of
his respiratory tract full of liquid, his vocal cords are as impotent
as those of an unborn baby. The dystasis monitoring equipment detects
his frantic muscle contractions and the hormonal flood that indicates
an agitated mental state.
Naughty,
naughty! His struggles are disrupting the genetic engineering
procedure. The apparatus programs deeper anesthesia. He plummets back
into slumber mode and the umpteenth dream replay begins.
He's
always with his wife, whose name he can't recall any more than he can
remember his own. There is background music—Scott Hamilton
playing " 'Round Midnight" on a tenor saxophone. The
bedroom is very large and of a rustic southwestern ranch style, with
a high-beamed ceiling and walls of whitewashed adobe, adorned with
antique Native American weavings and artwork featuring elegantly lewd
pastel flower shapes. Double-glazed sliding doors with parted
curtains reveal that it's night and snowing hard outside. The sound
of the blizzard wind occasionally breaks through cascades of gentle
jazz. White drifts are piling up outside on the patio.
He and his
wife, young newlyweds, sit side by side on a shearling rug before a
blazing fire. They're naked, propped happily against each other,
sipping Roederer Cristal while they watch the dancing flames. Her
hair is ash-blond, rippling after being released from its braided
chignon, and reaches halfway down her back. Her eyes are the color of
deep ocean waters beyond the reef. She is striking rather than
pretty, and her features in repose are solemn until he caresses her
and makes her smile.
Time to
make love again.
And again
and again, as the psychotronic machine endlessly loops his most
exquisite memory to facilitate the dystasis procedure.
The poor
happy schmuck in the tank is me.
Drifting
and dreaming.
——
Tap tap
tap.
Someone
spoke, an alien voice filtered through a translator device. "How
interesting. It looks as though he is waking up."
Someone
else: "This is the template individual, Servant of Servants. The
original. The transformed human subject is recovering in another
room, attended by one's technicians. We will interview him shortly,
just as soon as he is lucid."
"Let's
see if this creature recognizes one."
Tap tap
tap.
I slowly
opened my eyes. The room outside was dimly lit, as always, with most
of the illumination coming from a bank of alien equipment some
distance away. The dark floor was intricately veined with a glowing
red web that converged on my tank and the one beside mine, which was
now empty.
Three
Haluk stood looking at me, two males and a female, all wearing
translator pendants. The tallest of the aliens knocked on the glass
wall to get my attention as though I were a sulky specimen in an
aquarium.
Tap
tap tap. "Wah! Can you hear one, Earth life-form?"
Of course
I could. My ears worked just fine while submerged in the oxygenated
glop, and he must have known it.
He pursed
his lips in the racial smile-equivalent and twiddled his
four-fingered hand in mock playfulness. "Do you recall this
one's identity?"
With
difficulty, I focused my eyes and concentrated.
Well,
sure. The last time I'd seen him, he was wearing a conservative
human-style business suit of dark green with faint white pinstripes,
tailored to set off his wasp waist and accessorized by a scarlet
foulard scarf and a diamond stickpin. He was now attired in exotic
haberdashery appropriate to his high station: bronze-purple robes
with glittering jeweled trim, an elaborate spiked diadem of platinum,
and a matching necklace inset with large fossil cabochons. But that
ugly blue face was unmistakable, and so were the oddly beautiful eyes
with their sardonic, hyperintelligent glint.
The
perfluorocarbon bath had rendered me mute, but I snarl-mouthed:
You
friggin' xeno bastard! Damned right I know you. You 're the Servant
of the Servants of Luk, the head honcho of the Sovereign Haluk
Confederation.
"Bravo,"
he said dryly. The Haluk aren't telepathic, but my response had
evidently been clear enough. "Please accept the profound
gratitude of this one and of the Council of Nine. Thanks to you"—he
nodded toward the tenantless second tank—"and to the
turncoat rascal with whom you shared your vital substance, one has
high hopes of an accelerated schedule for our Grand Design."
Suddenly,
a surprisingly concrete recollection popped into my skull. The alien
leader and I had had a nasty confrontation a couple of years ago
outside the Assembly Chamber of the Commonwealth of Human Worlds in
Toronto. At the invitation of Liberal Party members sympathetic to
Reversionist principles, I had finally testified about... something
important having to do with the Haluk and their trade treaty with
humanity. My speech had really pissed off the Servant of Servants and
the members of his alien entourage, as well as a sizable percentage
of the Assembly Delegates.
But
what had I said? And who the hell was I?
I hadn't a
clue.
The
Servant said, "Feeling all right, are you? Archiator Malotuwak
assures one that you came through the human-to-human genetic exchange
in fine fettle. Unfortunately, we can't let you out of the dystasis
tank just yet. We require a second demiclone."
Demiclone?...
What the hell are you talking about, huckleberry balls?
"Take
one's advice, human. Cooperate willingly when you're called upon
later for tutorial duties. Extracting the pertinent information by
means of psychotronic interrogation machines is so uncomfortable. Who
knows? If you do well, one might even allow you to live. Common
laborers are always in demand on our newly colonized planets."
Screw
you. With a magnum drill press!
The second
male Haluk spoke up. Short and stocky, he wore a plain
mustard-colored smock tightly cinched about his slender middle and
carried an elaborate Macrodur mag-slate of the type favored by
hotshot human scientists. "He's becoming excited, Servant of
Servants. This is not a good thing for a dystasis subject. It could
delay initiation of the second demiclone procedure. One will program
a calming medication for him."
He prodded
the slate and a warm woozy feeling began to seep into my body,
dulling anxiety and slowing my thoughts. I fought the desire to
relapse into sleep.
Demiclone!
I should know what that meant. I
did know. It was a highly
illegal genetic engineering procedure. The Haluk had stolen some of
my DNA and used it to—to—
To
duplicate me. To morph some other guy into a replica of my precious
person. I mouthed helpless obscenities. The Servant of Servants had
already lost interest in me and turned his attention to the Haluk
woman standing beside him.
She was
elderly, her skin faded to the color of wellwashed denim, and she
wore robes of glistening black with a hood that nearly concealed her
mane of pale hair. A very important-looking polished fossil on a long
chain hung about her neck.
"Is
it certain, Archiator Malotuwak," she inquired of Mustard Smock,
"that the newly created duplicate of this individual retains his
own mentality? It would be disastrous to the Servant's Grand Design
if the demiclone were to be ... contaminated, as it were, by the
mind-set of this template life-form."
"That
is quite impossible, Council Locutor Ru Kamik. Only the physical
aspect of the demiclone has been altered." A grimace of
distaste. "That other human's mind—such as it is—remains
his own. One might mention that he was most uncooperative during the
preliminary procedures, insulting one's assistants and behaving in an
arrogant and offensive manner."
The
Servant of Servants uttered the grotesque laugh of his species, which
sounded like a miniature poodle choking to death. "Fortunately
for us, the rascal's usefulness to the Sovereign Haluk Confederation
does not require a congenial disposition."
"Yes,"
the Locutor said. "However, his usefulness
does require
that his true identity not be detected. One was somewhat disconcerted
to learn that the demiclone is not, after all, an essentially perfect
replica of this original."
"True
enough," Mustard Smock conceded. "The restricted time frame
we were allowed precluded optimal DNA transfer. It was necessary to
use an abbreviated genetic engineering procedure. One made this quite
clear to the Servant of Servants and to the demiclone subject himself
at the outset. Even using the most advanced human equipment and
techniques, along with broad-spectrum PD32:C2 transferase agents,
four weeks in the dystasis tank is inadequate for complete
chromosomal transformation, given the relatively large amount of
intron material in the human genome. Introns are more difficult to
exchange than exons—"
The
Servant of Servants interrupted, addressing the female. "Nobody's
going to test him, Ru Kamik. They'll have no reason to doubt his
identity. He will be carefully coached in his role."
"Nevertheless,"
said the Locutor firmly, "please explain to this one the
circumstances under which the demicloned person might be
differentiated from the original subject by expert investigators of
the Commonwealth of Human Worlds."
The Haluk
scientist made the gesture signifying self-abasement. "You'll
forgive if one gets a bit technical, Great Lady?"
The
Locutor steepled her four-fingered hands in a gesture of
condescending assent. "Continue. One is by no means completely
ignorant of genetics."
"As
you may know, not all of the DNA within body cells acts as a
blueprint for life processes. Those segments that are active are
often called exons. They trigger protein production—build the
body and keep it in operation. The other DNA segments, those with no
known function, are called introns. The noncoding introns are
intermingled with the exons. In the human genome, about ninety
percent of the DNA is noncoding. By comparison, we Haluk have a
smaller percentage of introns, even though our total number of exons
is close to the human complement."
"I
understand."
"Because
one was commanded to perform this procedure in the shortest possible
time, one transferred only the exon DNA and about one-tenth of the
introns from the donor to the recipient. As a consequence, even
though the recipient exhibits the physical characteristics of the
template as perfectly as an identical twin, he nevertheless retains a
large part of his original intron DNA—the genetic material that
seems redundant."
"And
this can be detected by forensic analysis?"
"Readily,
Council Locutor. Most of the genetic variation among human
individuals is in the introns. Even a rough comparison of the
demiclone's DNA with that of the original will reveal the fake. If
one had only been allowed more time—"
"It
was not practical," the Servant of Servants said dismissively.
"And one must repeat: the chance of the demiclone undergoing DNA
testing during his mission are vanishingly small."
The
Locutor spoke in a neutral tone to the Servant of Servants. "Certain
members of the Council of Nine have very grave misgivings about this
stratagem. Using the human demiclone, that is, rather than one of our
own race."
"Their
doubts are groundless, Ru Kamik," the leader insisted. "The
revised Grand Design is going to succeed! Almighty Luk will shower
his beneficence upon us and shatter the spines of the human despots."
"There
is still great danger," she said softly. "And this one is
not speaking only of the possibility that the turncoat agent's
identity may be detected. He himself is a traitor to his race and
perhaps not entirely sane. One has seen his personality analysis—"
"Yes,
yes, curse it for a wad of odoriferous lepido nose wax! One knows all
about that. But the scheme he proposed is brilliant. If it succeeds,
our grand expansion strategy will be accomplished in years, rather
than centuries or even millennia."
"If
the scheme succeeds."
"Wah!
Would you have us abandon our great hopes, crawl back to the cluster,
embrace our fatal allomorphic heritage, and go down to extinction as
we exhaust the balance of our dwindling resources? Or shall we
continue to submit to humanity's tyranny here in the Milky Way? ...
No! This one has promised the people that all will be freed from
allomorphy—that our children will live on new, uncrowded
worlds. If the Grand Design succeeds, this goal will be achieved
peacefully. If it fails, we will use force to seize the planets we
require from the loathsome humans. Curse their arrogance up a
necrotic copulatory orifice!"
"Be
tranquil, Servant of Servants," Ru Kamik advised. "This one
has a duty to examine contingencies. Even unpleasant ones. Why would
it not be possible to use a Haluk demiclone rather than the disguised
turncoat to fulfill the Grand Design?"
"The
scheme was conceived by him," the Servant pointed out, simmering
down a bit. "And he alone is in a unique position to carry off
the deception—at least in its initial stages. No Haluk
demiclone would be able to worm his way into the confidence of the
Frost family and Rampart Concern quite so readily, or so quickly, as
the rogue human life-form. Once he is well-established, however, the
situation changes. Taking his place, a trained Haluk demiclone will
be able to maneuver freely, inserting other demiclones into positions
of power and influence. Humanity will find itself in thrall to us
before it realizes its peril."
"But
how can we be certain that the turncoat will not fly out of control?"
"One
has made the personal decision that the risk is acceptable. One is
aware of the individual's limitations, and they have been factored
into the operational equation. He will be carefully monitored by our
other demiclone operatives in the Earth capital city. The rogue's
personal agenda, vengeful and perfidious though it may be from the
point of view of his own race, coincides with ours. At least for the
time being."
"As
you say, Servant of Servants." She lowered her head so that her
eyes were momentarily concealed by the hood of her black garment.
"Don't
worry, Ru Kamik," the Servant reassured her. "As soon as
possible, the wretched human creature will be replaced by one whose
loyalty is above suspicion. Our own esteemed agent, Ru Balakalak,
will carry the mission to its successful completion. Meanwhile, the
turncoat will have laid the groundwork for the coup. Needless to say,
the rogue human knows nothing of our intention to eliminate him when
his services are no longer required."
She made a
noncommittal gesture and turned to address the scientist. "Is it
true, then, Archiator Malotuwak, that the more lengthy demiclone
procedure performed upon Ru Balakalak will create a totally
undetectable duplicate?"
Mustard
Smock hesitated. "That is the theory, Great Lady, according to
the reassurances of the late Scientist Milik, who introduced the
genetic procedure to us. Of course, there exists no validation. So
far as we know, no Haluk-human demiclone has ever been subjected to
DNA analysis by the Commonwealth Criminal Investigation Department."
"Milik!"
huffed the Lady in Black. "Can one rely upon
her word?
She was a flaming idealist and an egregious fool, claiming she was
ready to die if it would advance the cause of interspecific
friendship."
"Milik
was a selfless benefactor of our race," said the Servant with
dangerous emphasis. "A martyr canonized by the Priesthood of
Luk."
"But
one that we in the Council of Nine did not fully trust—no more
than you did, Servant of Servants. In truth, she was another human
turncoat of unstable temperament and cloudy motivation ... and one
who may have secretly meddled with our racial heritage, if certain
rumors are to be given credence. This one has recently heard that
some of Milik's work on the eradication of allomorphism has come
under scrutiny."
"Nonsense,"
retorted the Servant of Servants. "Those rumors are quite devoid
of truth. It's ridiculous to think that Milik would have tinkered
maliciously with the trait-eradication treatment. Or lied about the
flawlessness of the demiclone procedure." "As you say,"
the Locutor murmured. There was a brief silence. Then she asked,
"When will the second demiclone be ready?"
"Ru
Balakalak is preparing to enter the dystasis tank immediately. As I
understand it, the unabbreviated procedure takes about twenty-six
weeks. Is that correct, Archiator?"
"Approximately,"
said Mustard Smock. "In interspecific DNA exchange, there is a
necessary preliminary operation, a sort of inoculation of the human
template individual to preclude rejection of exotic DNA by the
nonhuman recipient. This is followed by the phase during which the
actual gene transfer and bodily transformation of the recipient is
accomplished."
"Twenty-six
weeks is a long time to wait," said the Locutor.
The
Servant said, "Additional time will be required to tutor Ru
Balakalak in details of the mission once he emerges from dystasis. It
is estimated that he will be ready after thirty weeks."
"Thirty!"
"Meanwhile,
one will keep the Council of Nine fully informed concerning
operations on Earth. Needless to say, one expects that you, Ru Kamik,
will be zealous in supporting the revised Grand Design."
She
lowered her head again. "As you say, Servant of Servants."
"Excellent."
He turned to the scientist. "And now one believes it is time for
this one and the Council Locutor to interview the human demiclone."
"He
awaits in the recovery room," Archiator Malotuwak said. "Please
follow this one."
The three
Haluk went away and I was left suspended in dopey horror, boggled by
the technobabble and at a loss to understand the kind of espionage my
duplicate was about to undertake. Questions swirled in my brain like
terrified bait minnows in a bucket.
Who was
the human traitor who now wore my face, who had hatched some ploy
that was deemed vital to the Haluk Grand Design?
Whatever
the hell
that was.
How could
a demiclone of me help put the Commonwealth of Human Worlds in thrall
to an alien race?
Dammit—
who
am I, anyway?
A
disgrace. A former cop. A diver. A zillionaire. Aside from the
useless fragments of memory, my drugged brain had no answers.
So after a
while I slept again and dreamed of falling snow, the roaring fire,
the champagne, and my nameless wife's loving arms. Dreamed over and
over again, to the accompaniment of Scott Hamilton's ancient,
peerless saxophone.
At long
last the dreaming stopped.
——
I realized
instantly that my situation had changed. Some instinct warned me not
to open my eyes and not to move. I had sense enough to obey.
I was out
of the tank, breathing ambient air, lying on my back on a firm,
slightly inclined surface, head cradled in a comfortable pillow. Warm
and dry, not hurting—and surprisingly alert, even though I
still had no notion of my identity or what had happened to me.
Alien
voices were speaking and I felt gentle pokes and prods in different
parts of my anatomy. Two Haluk individuals who called each other
Miruviak and Avilik were right beside me, performing some sort of
physical examination. The suffixes of their names indicated that one
was male and one female. They were not wearing translators. My
knowledge of the Haluk language is imperfect and I could understand
only part of their conversation, which seemed to refer to my
condition. I was apparently in satisfactory shape, and after a few
minutes they covered me to the chin with a soft blanket and moved
off, still talking.
I
heard one of them say: "The
blah blah authority figure is
soul-glowing about the
blah of the dystasis
blah blah."
I
understood that to mean that a Haluk VIP, perhaps my old chum the
Servant of Servants of Luk, was happy about the results of some sort
of dystasis procedure. "Dystasis" was the same word in
English and Halukese because a human had illegally introduced it to
the aliens.
The
remarks that followed were spoken some distance away, couched in
medical jargon almost totally incomprehensible to me. I risked
cracking open my eyelids.
1 could
see most of the room. It was at least six meters square and looked
like an accommodation in a superior Haluk hotel catering to humans,
situated on one of their long-settled colonial planets. With the
human-Haluk rapprochement in place in the Perseus Spur, I'd once
stayed in a similar place.
Good.
You remembered that. Now try to remember something essential—
like
who you are!
The
furnishings, except for scattered pieces of mysterious technical
apparatus with blinking telltales, were an eclectic mix of alien and
Earth designs. On my right, where the wall was completely shrouded in
opaque draperies, were exotic chairs, a low table, stands holding
Haluk bioluminescent lamps with quaint shades, and an elaborate
human-style infomedia credenza. To the left, in an open-plan adjacent
room, was a wet bar—no booze visible—and a compact
kitchen, also human in design. An alcove held a tall case full of
e-books and slates, plus a collection of anonymous small cabinets
constructed of exotic materials. The head of my bed was against one
wall. Another bed stood on the opposite side of the room, flanked by
an open bathroom door with a human-type sink visible. A second door
in that wall was closed.
The two
Haluk medical technicians, wearing human-style pale green hospital
scrubs and murmuring quiet comments, hovered over the occupant of the
other bed, who lay motionless while the aliens studied him. I didn't
have a very good view of the patient, but I could tell that he was a
good-sized human male with a fairly powerful build. A small console
with what looked like medical monitoring equipment stood at his
bedside.
I
caught the question: "If a third demiclone is not required, then
why not discard the
blah?"
The
female Haluk said, "This is a very
blah demiclone,
Miruviak. He must be taught
blah blah blah and
blah before
blah his mission. Some of the teaching will be done by the
human
blah who taught
blah blah. But
blah from
the
blah over there is also needed. Our orders are to keep him
alive until the
blah decides he is
blah blah."
Not very
enlightening. In fact, ominous.
"This
demiclone will wake up soon," said the male medic. "Listen,
Avilik: one thinks we should
blah blah blah. Just in case
blah
blah blah. Did you bring them with you?"
"Yes."
The
meditechs had finished their examination of the other patient and
replaced his blanket. Now they came across the room toward me again.
I quickly shut my eyes, relaxed, tried to think Zen thoughts, and
prayed that my bed wasn't equipped with a built-in vital signs
monitor that would betray the fact that I was rally conscious.
Somebody drew the covering away from my naked body. They rolled me
over and I felt a sharp prick in the back of my neck.
"It
is best that we wait to insert the second
blah" Avilik
decided. "But it is not really needed yet. He's still very
weak."
Miruviak
grunted something that might have been "That will take care of
it," and then they rolled me over again and tucked me in.
"The
dystasis turned him a most beautiful color," the female medic
remarked, uttering the squelched barking sound that represented Haluk
laughter. "His
blah blah are certainly of an imposing
size and
blah. Later, one hopes to know him better before we
must
blah blah."
"Disgusting,"
hissed her colleague, clearly miffed. "You women only
blah
one thing."
I heard
more alien snickering. Then both of the medical technicians went out
of the room. I lay still, cold dread seeping into my soul along with
a growing comprehension. My memory was coming back on-line—parts
of it, at any rate— and I didn't like what I recalled.
I'd been
in a dystasis tank for at least seven months. The Haluk had made two
demiclones of me. The first evil triplet had been a human traitor,
imperfectly morphed at the cell-nucleus level but otherwise my
physical duplicate. I had no notion what his mission might be, but it
boded no good for humanity. The second demiclone was a transformed
Haluk, destined to replace Agent Number One, who possessed certain
talents but also had the potential to become uncontrollable. Number
Two had been more expertly engineered and was perhaps a perfect
genetic replica. I presumed that he now occupied the bed opposite
mine. He was going to be tutored before going out to fulfill his
mission, and some of the briefings were to come from me, whether I
chose to cooperate or not.
The
suite's mishmash of Haluk and human decor made more sense now. It was
a schoolroom where my shadow and I would live and work together until
he had his act down pat.
Interspecific
genetic engineering ... there was something peculiar about it. I
tried to retrieve what I knew from my cerebral database. My
sister—what was her name?—had once been targeted for
demicloning. She was rescued before a duplicate of her could be made,
but she'd still suffered certain dramatic side effects from the
procedure.
As I would
have.
Turning an
alien into a human being was trickier than the usual total-spectrum
biological refit job and even more illegal under CHW law. It required
that the human DNA donor—in this case, me—first be
modified with an infusion of critical alien genes so the demiclone
subject wouldn't reject the human material. The preliminary genen
procedure superficially transformed the DNA donor—
Rats!
I lifted
my right hand and drew it out from beneath the covers. The skin was
very firm and tinted a rich sky-blue. There were no fingernails on
the four abnormally elongated digits. The bones of the pinkie and
ring fingers were partially fused now, enclosed in a single fleshy
envelope. My lower arm, quite hairless, was decorated with a dramatic
pattern of ridges that sported faintly drawn golden patterns, almost
like delicate enamelwork.
I touched
my altered face and cursed more eloquently. Weird bulges and a
Haluk-style flattened nose. Eye sockets of normal human diameter,
slightly smaller than Haluk orbits. It seemed that I'd kept my
human-sized eyeballs, just as my older sister Eve had when the Haluk
tried to demiclone her.
Eve!
Her name was Eve. And my name was ...
On the tip
of my tongue, which felt strange, as though it were too large for my
mouth. My teeth seemed peculiar, too. The spaces between them were
wider than normal.
Under the
blanket, my hands explored a body that was humanoid but not human.
Externally, the preliminary genen procedure had turned me into a
facsimile of a Haluk, complete with a wasp waist that was only about
70 centimeters in circumference. But inside my ridged blue skin were
human muscles and human guts and human bones, plus a discombobulated
but swiftly recuperating human brain. I lacked the Haluk elongated
neck and overall slender build. My alien hands groped lower on their
inspection tour until they reached my crotch—
Oh,
God! Holy blazing bloody shit! No! Not that!
It was all
I could do not to scream my lungs out. Those rucking xeno fiends ...
For a few
minutes I felt drowned in a black tide of self-loathing and despair.
Then I remembered that my partially morphed sister Eve—Who
hadn't experienced this particular indignity—had been restored
to her normal human physiology by another sojourn in the dystasis
tank. At the time, it seemed to be a miracle of modern science.
I, too,
could be made good as new. The ghastly transformation of my genitals
could be reversed, as could the other changes. Provided that I
managed to live long enough, and escaped from whatever exotic planet
the Haluk had stashed me on.
Very
slowly I sat up, experiencing nausea and a fleeting dizziness. I was
weak as a new-hatched chick and there was a curious itching sensation
at the back of my neck. I touched it and felt a tiny lump right at
the base of my skull. The damned Haluk meditechs had given me an
implant, and odds were it had to do with keeping me under control.
Maybe it
was signaling them at this very moment.
My weird
blue feet settled onto the floor—wood parquet laid out in a
minuscule herringbone pattern, coated with ice-clear "skating
rink" glaze a full centimeter in thickness. It was a
labor-intensive human interior design style, ultra-trendy. Just the
sort of thing the fad-conscious Haluk were likely to borrow. I judged
that I was being held in a very upscale alien establishment—certainly
nothing resembling the godforsaken outpost in the Sagittarius Whorl
where I'd gone on the Barky Hunt. Perhaps my captors had taken me to
the planet Artiuk, their colonial capital in the Milky Way...
Which
was situated in the Perseus Spur sector of the galaxy, fourteen
thousand light-years from Earth. More memories data-dumped. I'd lived
in the Spur myself, on a pretty little freesoil world called
Kedge-Lockaby. Had a house on a tropical island, a yellow submarine
named
Pernio II, and a bunch of rascally friends. Once upon a
time I'd been a disenfranchised Throwaway, an ex-cop, a
happy-go-lucky charterboat skipper who ran a sport-diving service for
tourists.
But not
lately.
Something
momentous had happened to me. I had returned to Earth and stayed
there for some years, doing ...
What?
Something
to do with politics. Something to do with lawyering. Whatever it was
had keenly interested the Haluk, given my double demicloning and the
secrecy attending it. Unfortunately, the exact nature of my recent
terrestrial activities still eluded me, along with my name.
My name!
If I could just remember that, all the rest of it would come back.
Wrapping
the blanket around my dainty middle to hide the disgusting alien sex
organs that had captivated the female medical technician, I struggled
to stand up. Exerted long-unused muscles and shuffled creakily across
the room to the other bed. Stared down at the guy who lay there,
asleep or unconscious, with tiny alien-type medical sensors stuck to
his forehead, temples, and neck.
Recognized
him.
I inhaled
sharply, found myself pitching forward in a sudden fit of vertigo,
shocked to the depths of my being. My blue fingers caught at the
bedclothes and I saved myself from falling, pushed my trembling body
upright and stood there swaying and gasping for breath.
The man
was tall and heavy-boned, with a physique less well-developed than it
should have been—although that flaw could be mitigated through
appropriate clothing or even judicious doses of steroids. The face
would need work, too. The skin was pasty from his long sojourn in the
tank, and the features were too fresh and regular. He lacked a
certain distinctive scar at the top of his left cheekbone. His nose
had never been broken in a Big Beach brawl and coaxed back into shape
by a defrocked Throwaway plastic surgeon suffering a cosmic-class
hangover from Danaëan rotgut. His hair was pretty authentic, the
color of bread crust, springing from his forehead in a distinctive
widow's peak. It was a little too long, but a barber would fix that.
When his eyes opened, I was positive they'd be cold green with an
inner ring of amber.
I knew
him, all right.
He was me.
My
demiclone, the alien imposter who was going to take my place—or
rather the place of Demiclone Number One, already secretly
machinating. We would help conquer humanity on behalf of the Haluk
race.
My name
was Asahel Ethan Frost. Called Asa by my family, Helly by my friends,
and Helmut Icicle by assorted crooks, ne'er-do-wells, and
disenfranchised wretches of the Perseus Spur. My father was Simon
Frost, the founder of Rampart Interstellar Corporation, which had now
become Rampart Amalgamated Concern. My mother was the late Katje
Vanderpost, gentle philanthropist, whose murder I had yet to avenge.
Her gift had made me a zillionaire. My siblings were Eve, Bethany,
and the matricidal Daniel. My wife—my former wife, for we had
been divorced for nearly eight years—was Joanna DeVet,
Morehouse Professor of Political Science at Commonwealth University,
Toronto Campus.
I
remembered it all, including details of my anti-Haluk political
activities, my legal triumph for Rampart Concern, and the ill-advised
escapade in the Sagittarius Whorl that had brought me to this pretty
pass.
So,
what are you going to do about it, you sorry Halukoid piece of shit?
The back
of my neck tingled as a wave of fury washed over me, and I jumped as
if I'd been goosed. Whatever I did, I knew I'd better do it mighty
damned fast.
Fake Helly
looked so peaceful, lying there. For an instant I wondered what kind
of sweet alien dream they'd programmed for him while he was in
dystasis. Then I twitched the pillow out from under his head, pressed
it over his face, and held it down while he writhed feebly under me
and uttered muffled cries.
The
medical monitor standing beside the bed let out a shriek of alarm.
Simultaneously, the gizmo implanted in my neck began to administer a
series of increasingly severe shocks at intervals of about five
seconds. If they were intended to deter me from homicidal rage and
other adrenaline-driven misdeeds, someone had badly miscalculated the
human pain threshold.
I flung
myself on top of my double, using my weight to pin his flailing arms.
Neither of us was up to snuff physically, but I still had my superior
human musculature and knew how to use it. The regular shocks from my
neck implant were now so strong that I was moaning in agony.
I kept on
doing what I had to do.
His
struggles weakened and finally stopped. I held the pillow down hard
for another minute or so, then pulled it away. His lips were
cyanotic, smeared with blood from his bitten tongue. The wide-open
eyes had tiny points of red dotting the whites, and the pupils were
wide and black. I felt for a pulse in his throat and found nothing.
The monitor continued its shrill distress signal.
He was
clinically dead, but they'd be able to revive him. Unless ...
The pain
from the neck shocks was becoming unbearable, and I knew I'd pass out
unless I could do something about it. I staggered across the room
toward the small kitchen, scratching impotently at my nape with
Halukoid fingers lacking nails. Tore open drawer after drawer,
finally found one with small cooking utensils. What to use? I
couldn't find any knives, which figured.
That!
If only it's sharp enough ...
I grabbed
it, thrust it awkwardly against the tiny lump, and gouged with all my
strength.
One last
bellow emptied my lungs. Then pain—but of a new sort, related
to torn flesh. I dropped the melon bailer with its malignant contents
on the floor, grabbed up a dish towel and pressed it against the
streaming wound. My blood was very red, very human.
As his
would be, no longer circulating. But the Haluk medics would be able
to do something about that unless I made it impossible.
I
dived back into the drawer of kitchen utensils and rummaged
frantically, cursing the absence of sharply pointed implements until
I realized that any damage I might inflict with them would be easily
repairable. I had to
destroy Fake Helly, and do it within
minutes.
A thought.
The wet
bar. Did it have what I needed?
Yes! My
blue hand closed over the drink-mixing wand. I stumbled back to the
motionless body. Eyes wide open in death, he didn't feel a thing as I
positioned the implement and bore down with gruesome effect. To my
surprise, the eyeball didn't rupture but simply slid aside. The thin
wall of bone behind it crunched and I was through to the brain.
And
activated the mixer's control to the highest setting: stiff whip.
Inadvertent morbid humor there. The efficient little machine didn't
even make a mess.
Try to
repair that in your dystasis tank, huckleberry balls!
I made the
mistake of withdrawing the wand, only to drop the thing on the floor
as my stomach gave a terrific heave and thin bile flooded my throat.
Fortunately, my guts were almost empty because of the dystasis, but
it still took me a few minutes to recover. After all, I'd just done a
cerebral puree job on myself...
Enough.
Think escape.
I was
surprised that no Haluk had responded yet to the medical alarm or to
the signal that had set off my neck-shocker. It was time for me to
get moving. Steal a set of clothes, flee into the alien landscape of
Artiuk, or whatever planet I was on.
Better
check the weather outside. I'd been on Artiuk only once. The climate
was torrid and subject to heavy rains.
I ran to
the wall of draperies, hoping they covered windows, pulled aside the
hanging fabric and uttered a disbelieving expletive.
Outside
the glass was an immense city, viewed from a height. It was night.
Soaring towers rose on either hand as far as I could see, their
shining colored forms enmeshed in webs of skyways and high roads with
streams of cars zipping along them. Aircraft moved in
traffic-controlled pathways like regimented fireflies through a sky
tinted bright gold. It had to be snowing hard outside the force-field
umbrella.
That
wasn't Artiuk out there, or any other Haluk colony. It was Earth. And
the city was one I knew intimately: Toronto, capital of the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds.
Still
holding the blood-soaked towel to my neck, I began to laugh like a
maniac. I only stopped when the outer door of the room crashed open
and the two medical technicians rushed inside, followed by a pair of
uniformed Haluk guards armed with Ivanov stun-pistols.
Chapter
2
Last
April, when I still wore the outward appearance of a human being, I
said goodbye to my legal staffers and got the hell out of town. While
the judges considered their verdict, I intended to rest up at my
family's Sky Ranch in Arizona and consider my future—especially
in regards to the Barky Hunt.
For the
first couple of days I did nothing but sleep. Then I worked out in
the ranch's well-equipped gym, swam laps in the indoor pool—it
still being a trifle brisk outdoors in the high country—read
some vintage Louis L'Amour and John D. MacDonald, and finished off
each evening riding out to watch the sun go down in a different part
of the sprawling Frost family spread.
My
favorite mount was a horse named Billy, a huge sweet-natured gelding
of the type southwesterners call a flea-bitten gray. That's not to
mean he's infested or broken down; the odd term describes a variety
of pale horse speckled all over with tiny spots of blue and red hair.
Billy was strong and smart, he obeyed orders, and he didn't spook
when an unexpected quail or jackrabbit exploded out of the chaparral
right under his nose. In Arizona you can't hardly ask more of a horse
than that.
On the
tenth day of my holiday, Billy and I plodded easily uphill in the
lengthening shadows while thin clouds turned from white to pink
beyond the Tonto Basin. Spring in the Sierra Ancha is unobtrusively
lovely. Golden yuccas, buckbrush, and manzanitas were blooming, tiny
little hummingbirds with amethyst throats poked busily around the
flowers for a final snack before nightfall, and the ethereal song of
the hermit thrush echoed among the mesas and canyons.
It was a
great place for unwinding, as different from the capital of the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds as it could possibly be.
I'd left
Toronto in a seriously fatigued state. Only my close-mouthed
executive assistant, Jane Nelligan, knew where I was going, and she
was under orders to reveal my whereabouts to no one. I told the ranch
staff to ignore my presence, and they did—except for the horse
wrangler who cared for Billy, and Rosalia the cook, who supplied me
with three gourmet squares a day and kept the chitchat to a minimum.
I'd earned
some incommunicado time. After more than two years of cosmic-class
courtroom warfare, Rampart Concern's civil suit against Galapharma
was finally ready for adjudication. Now it was up to three justices
of the Commonwealth Tribunal to produce a verdict in what the media
had deemed the corporate trial of the century, David vs. Goliath.
Little
Rampart, youngest and smallest of the Hundred Concerns, was suing the
pants off Galapharma, one of the oldest and largest. We alleged
conspiracy to devalue for the purpose of hostile acquisition,
sabotage, industrial espionage, theft and subsequent malicious use of
data, subornation of Rampart employees, and a lengthy laundry list of
other major torts. Pursuant to Statute 129 of the Interstellar
Commerce Code, Rampart demanded as redress the maximum damages set by
law—namely, all assets tangible and intangible of Galapharma
Amalgamated Concern, including their 5,345 booming planetary
colonies.
If we won,
Gala belonged to us. If we lost, the best we could hope for was that
Commonwealth prosecutors could make an assortment of criminal charges
against the big Concern stick. The odds of that happening were slim.
Important evidence had vanished, and crucial witnesses were dead or
had disappeared. The one man who might have fingered Galapharma for
its crimes was also the principal material . witness in Rampart's
civil suit; and Oliver Schneider had struck an immunity deal that
precluded any obligation to give testimony under the criminal
statutes.
If Gala
won, its lawyers would waste no time slapping Rampart with a colossal
civil countersuit, stunting the growth and profitability of its small
rival for years to come—if not destroying it outright.
As
Rampart's interim Chief Legal Officer, I had been in total charge of
orchestrating our case, always working behind the scenes. Not that
I'd asked for the job! I'd fought like a wildcat to avoid it. But my
father, Simon Frost, and my big sister Eve—Rampart's Chairman
of the Board and CEO, respectively—had leaned on me, inviting
my scrutiny of certain inescapable facts.
My older
brother, Daniel, the former Rampart corporate counsel and secretary,
could hardly head up the litigation. An unindicted Galapharma
coconspirator, Dan was kept doped to the eyeballs and under heavy
guard in a fishing lodge up in the Ontario North Woods, where he
stubbornly professed his complete innocence.
None of
the subordinate officers in Rampart's legal department were deemed
capable of directing a complex, unprecedented civil action such as
this one. To bring in an outside team of litigators was not an
option, either. There were aspects of the case that didn't bear close
scrutiny: for instance, the strong probability that Dan had
engineered our mother's death, acting under orders from Galapharma.
And there
was also the secret Haluk connection, political dynamite now that the
blue buggers were legitimate trading partners of the Commonwealth ...
Simon and
Eve maintained that only one candidate for Rampart legal battlemaster
had it all—being a major stakeholder in the Concern, a trusted
member of the family, and a highly trained lawyer (although
nonpracticing) familiar with every aspect of the case.
Yours
truly, Asahel Frost.
Trying to
wriggle out of the fast-closing trap, I reminded them that I was not
a member of the Commonwealth bar and could not be quickly qualified
by any string-pulling finagle of theirs. Even though my citizenship
had been restored through a technicality, the felonies I'd been
framed for were still on my record. In the eyes of the law I was
still a convict on probation. In the eyes of the media I was a
misfit—a charismatic one, though!—the black sheep of a
distinguished family, a notorious loudmouth with eccentric political
leanings. There was no way I could represent Rampart before the
Judicial Tribunal in person.
No
problem, said Simon and Eve. What they needed was not Rumpole of the
Bailey or Perry Mason, but rather my expertise in rousting corporate
outlaws, gained during my aborted career as an enforcement officer
with the Interstellar Commerce Secretariat. A staff of talented
associates would handle the actual pleading before the court. If
necessary, the underlings could be coached by me every step of the
way through cerebral chips.
I shifted
into whine mode. Hadn't I already risked my life half a dozen times
to obtain crucial evidence supporting Rampart's case against
Galapharma? Hadn't I rescued Eve from kidnappers that would have
demicloned her and seized control of Rampart? Hadn't I saved Simon
himself from a fate worse than death in the infamous prison known as
Coventry Blue? Wasn't that fucking good enough? I didn't want to
spend years on a convoluted legal case. I had other plans for my
life.
"Like
what?" my father had bellowed. "Stirring up a fresh
hornet's nest with the damned Reversionist Party? Or maybe reverting
to beach bum status on that boondock South Seas planet back in the
Perseus Spur?"
I invited
him to go to hell. He suggested that I perform a sexual act on
myself. The discussion trended downhill from there.
Simon and
I have a long history of horn-locking, beginning from the time
fifteen years ago when I refused on principle to join the family
starcorp. Now he castigated my selfishness and lack of filial
loyalty. He dredged up my fancy-pants doctorate from Harvard Law
School that I'd more or less tricked him into paying for.
Finally,
in a fit of bogus cowhand vituperation, the old coot allowed as how
if'n I let Rampart—i.e., him—down, I was nothing but a
chicken-livered pecker-ass bastard with a yellow streak so wide it
lapped plumb around to my brisket bone.
I was
about to tell Simon to stuff his John Wayne act where the sun doesn't
shine when my sister Eve ordered us both to shut up. Then she made a
single point that stabbed me to the heart and put an abrupt end to my
weaseling.
"Asa,
have you forgotten that our mother's murder was instigated by
Galapharma's chairman? Dan only acted as Alistair Drummond's
cat's-paw. We probably couldn't prove Drummond's complicity in the
crime even if we found he was still alive, but his Concern is still a
legitimate target. Do you want some kind of justice for Mom, or don't
you?"
Aw,
shit... Damned right I did.
So I caved
in.
And worked
my tail off for two solid years. When the case went to the judges at
long last, I figured we had an excellent chance of winning.
——
I guided
my horse Billy along Bear Head Canyon trail, approaching the
undistinguished peak we call Copper Mountain. At 2,071 meters, it's
the tallest of a scrub-covered range near the southern boundary of
the Sky Ranch.
When we
were kids, my brother and sisters and I were forbidden to go up
Copper because of a dangerous abandoned gold mine on its eastern
slope. So of course we made that our favorite secret spot. It was our
hideout when we played outlaw, and the den of xeno monsters when we
pretended to be Zone Patrol troopers. Just inside the mine entrance,
I'd once killed a blacktail rattlesnake that had menaced my little
sister, Bethany. Another time, my brother, Dan, risked his neck
exploring a tumbledown side tunnel and found a glittering chunk of
mineral that he declared was real gold. Dan was always the lucky
one—until he grew up and succumbed to the temptations of a
lunatic Scotsman.
Who might
or might not be buried deep inside that very gold mine.
Three
years ago, in a last ditch effort to salvage his faltering
conspiracy, Alistair Drummond had narrowly missed killing my family
and the rest of the Rampart Board of Directors by blowing up the main
house of the Sky Ranch. He tried to escape by driving up Copper
Mountain in a Range Rover, and when I came after him, he almost
managed to nail me before taking refuge in the abandoned mine. I used
a Harvey blaster to bring down a landslide on top of him.
Trouble
was, we'd never found Drummond's body in the rubble-filled mine
shaft.
The horse
carried me toward the gap that separates Copper Mountain from Bear
Head Peak to the west. I reined in before the going got too rough,
pulled a set of power oculars out of my saddlebag, and swept them
over the brush-covered flanks of Copper. Of course I found nothing
unusual; even the site of the great slide and the subsequent
excavation were on the opposite side of the mountain.
"What
do you think, Billy? Did the damned mine have another way out? Us
kids never found one, and we explored the hell out of that old hole
in the ground."
The horse
kept his opinion to himself.
I sighed
and put the ocs away. To hell with Alistair Drummond. To hell with
everything connected to Galapharma and the trial. This was my time to
kick back and drift. I turned the mount around so I could concentrate
my attention on the sunset beyond Bear Head. The western sky was
slashed with crimson and purple streaks of cirrus cloud. The color
faded slowly as I sat in my saddle, deliberately emptying my mind.
Billy did a different sort of emptying, then nipped at some fresh
greenery. A bat chased a flying bug through the chaparral. The high
country was very quiet.
After
a while the horse left off browsing, nickered softly, and cocked his
ears. He was listening to something upslope. I heard it, too—an
irregular metallic
tink-tink tinkety-tink that sounded almost
like a spoon handle rattling faintly in a thick coffee mug:
completely unnatural. A minute later a spherical black thing about
the size of a golf ball came creeping down the steep rocky trail on
thin jointed legs. Its two rat-eyes glowed in the dusk and its
sensors swiveled busily.
A SPYder.
It tippy-toed to within four meters of my fascinated horse and came
to a halt.
"Good
evening, Citizen Asahel Frost," it said. "I am not here to
threaten or harm you. Please confirm this by drawing your own
weapon."
The
robot's voice was a human transmission. The controller had probably
been tracking me by satellite from the moment I left the house. The
Sky Ranch doesn't bother with ground-based optical dissimulator
technology, although it has a full arsenal of intruder deterrents and
multiphase alarm sensors.
"You're
trespassing," I said, obediently pulling a Finnila Bodyguard
photon carbine from its gun boot on the saddle. The weapon switched
itself on automatically and scanned the thing that confronted me.
Device
is unarmed, my gun reported. I activated the targeter anyhow.
"I
repeat!" said the SPYder. "I am not here to threaten or
harm you."
"Goody.
But you weren't invited, either. Give me one reason why I shouldn't
fry your tiny Tootsie Roll."
"That
would be illegal," the machine said smugly, "since you've
passed nineteen meters beyond the boundary of the Sky Ranch into
public lands."
"Maybe
I have," I conceded, lowering the gun. The perimeter in this
remote and rugged area was unfenced and unmarked, the scanner units
that guarded it were hard to spot, and I'd deactivated the saddle
alarm days ago so it wouldn't bug me when I strayed off the spread.
"Who are you and why are you stalking me?"
"Jordan
Sensenbrenner of the
Wall Street Journal here! Would you care
to comment on today's Rampart-Galapharma verdict by the Commonwealth
Judiciary Tribunal?"
My jaw
dropped. "A decision already? My God—it's only been ten
days! How did the judges rule?"
"You
mean you haven't heard about it?"
"I've
been totally incommunicado. Getting some much-needed peace and quiet.
You want to tell me what happened?"
The
SPYder's voice went cagey. "Perhaps you don't know about Simon
Frost's sensational announcement, either. The
Journal would
definitely like to hear your reaction to that."
"My
saddle has a datalink and display. Why don't you pass along what
you've got. When did the verdict come down?"
"Mmm
... Maybe we should talk quid pro quo. You give me a decent statement
for attribution, I'll have our comsat download the
Journal
articles we'll be posting later tonight on our site. They contain
full details of the court decision given an hour ago, along with your
father's announcement. Deal?"
Damn
webcrawlers had more nerve than a sperm whale's wisdom tooth. This
one was starting to annoy me, so I lifted the Finnila and blasted a
rock just a mite to the left of it.
The SPYder
skittered sideways and instantly deployed a miniature force-field.
"You can't do that! I claim media privilege! I'm just trying to
do my job!"
"I
can do whatever I please—provided I don't give a damn about the
consequences. You're trying to pressure me, Jordan Sensenbrenner.
There are people who'd tell you that's not a very smart thing to do."
"I
assure you I didn't mean—"
"That
puny shield your bot is wearing can stop a laser bolt but not a gross
physical assault. Suppose I kick your expensive little toy down a
coyote hole and roll a rock on top? Or maybe stomp it till it's
crippled and smother it in some of the horse apples Billy just
dropped? Would that make your editor happy?"
The SPYder
dropped its defensive shield. It was groveling time. "Citizen
Frost, perhaps this interview got off on the wrong foot—"
"It's
not an interview yet, only a close encounter of the Wild West kind
... However, I admit I'm anxious to hear the big news before it hits
the PlaNet. I suppose I could call the folks down at the ranch and
ask them to patch me into Rampart Tower in Toronto, but it might take
a few minutes to organize the relay. So I'd be much obliged if you'd
just pass on the information out of the goodness of your heart, no
strings attached. Don't you think your boss at the
Journal would
consider that a wise move?"
"Oh,
very well," the SPYder grumped. It told me the satellite's
access code.
I
uncovered the unit on the saddle pommel, activated the antenna and
expanded the viewscreen, entered the data and tapped sat download. A
moment later I was reading the
Journal copy quoting the
judges' unanimous decision.
Galapharma
AC was found guilty on all charges, with no appeal to be entertained
by the Tribunal.
Compensatory
and punitive damages owed by Gala to Rampart were still to be
assessed, but the consensus among legal scholars was that the
greatest pharmaceutical and genetic technology company in the galaxy
was fucked to a finality. The Tribunal would probably order
Galapharma to be turned over lock, stock, and barrel to Rampart,
instantly lofting my family's firm into the exalted company of the
Big Seven.
Some
observers attributed Rampart's victory to the brilliant litigation
strategy of its unofficial CLO, the dashing and unconventional Asahel
Frost. He was also rumored to have personally apprehended the
principal material witness for the prosecution, using highly
unorthodox methods.
I finished
reading and eyed the SPYder. "Very nice, Jordan. You may quote
me as being personally gratified by the verdict, which affirms my
faith in the CHW judiciary system. All corporate entities, most
especially those of high status whose actions influence the very
integrity of the Commonwealth, must conform scrupulously to the
dictates of the law."
"Have
you yourself always done so, Citizen Frost?" Sensenbrenner
inquired blandly. "There's been speculation that the witness
Oliver Schneider was—"
"Next
question."
"Perhaps
you ought to read your father's statement first."
I skipped
through the sidebar articles and trial commentary, scanning for
Simon's name. I found the piece, read the headline, and uttered a
shocked expletive.
.
RAMPART CHAIRMAN,
JUBILANT OVER GALAPHARMA VERDICT, DECLARES HE WILL STEP DOWN IN FAVOR
OF MAVERICK SON
.
by Jordan Sensenbrenner
.
Toronto,
Earth, 19 April 2236—In the wake of today's historic verdict
favoring Rampart Concern, its Chairman of the Board, Simon Frost, 88,
declared: "This is the happiest moment in my life." After
congratulating his legal team on its success, he made a sensational
announcement.
"During
the past few years," Frost said, "Rampart has not only
repulsed a criminal hostile takeover attempt but also managed to
thrive and expand. We've risen from a closely held Interstellar
Corporation to an Amalgamated Concern, thanks largely to the efforts
of a brilliant group of top executives headed by my daughter Eve
Frost, Rampart's CEO. I'm proud to have played a role in this
expansion, just as I'm proud to be a cofounder of Rampart.
"Back
in 2183, when my brother Ethan and our partner Dirk Vanderpost and I
went out to the Perseus Spur to seek our fortunes, we never dreamed
that a day like this would come. It was enough that our little
Starcorp could meet its payroll and keep the Haluk and Qastt pirates
from stealing our cargoes.
"Well,
times change. Today both of those races are CHW trading partners. The
Spur boasts 219 prosperous Rampart Worlds, with more being opened to
human colonization and economic development every month. I'm tickled
pink that I lived to see that happen.
"Now
that Rampart has weathered its greatest crisis and come out on top,
I've decided that it's time for me to step down from active corporate
leadership and make way for younger blood. I intend to retire as
Chairman of the Board. And I hereby nominate my son Asahel Frost to
take my place. Without him, Rampart would have succumbed to
Galapharma's hostile takeover ploy. Without him, we would never have
won our civil judgment against Gala.
"I haven't
consulted Asa yet, so this is going to be a bit of a surprise to him.
But I'm confident that he'll accept the chairmanship, just as I'm
confident that Rampart Concern will continue to prosper in the years
to come."
——
Having
delivered the antimatter warhead, the article continued with a
summary of my roller-coaster career. Sensenbrenner glossed over my
stint as a Divisional Chief Inspector in the ICS, where I had been
one of the valiant, overworked band charged with ferreting out
wrongdoing among the Big Businesses that effectively control the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds. In contrast, the details of my
conviction, my dismissal from the enforcement arm of the Commerce
Secretariat, and my disenfranchisement were presented in lip-smacking
detail. He had even interviewed a few of my more vengeful
acquaintances on the planet Kedge-Lockaby, who painted a revolting
and accurate picture of me in my days as a drunken Throwaway.
My rescue
of Eve from her kidnappers and my alleged apprehension of Oliver
Schneider in an illicit raid on the Qastt planet Dagasatt were
described more cautiously to skirt the libel laws. (I was a citizen
again by then.) The article was silent on my role in the presumed
demise of Alistair Drummond.
Katje
Vanderpost's mind-boggling gift to me of her Rampart quarterstake had
lifted me into the ranks of the political movers and shakers. The
writer seemed to have no idea why I'd dedicated almost all of the
obscenely large income from my mother's stake to projects of the
underdog Reversionist Party. (I'd made a promise to carry on her own
sponsorship, since party principles coincided with youthful ideals I
had mothballed while serving in the ICS.) Jordan did concede that I'd
made a notable splash for ten entertaining months, attacking the
Commonwealth Assembly's craven symbiosis with Big Business, until the
Galapharma trial forced me to put my political life on hold.
The
article ended with speculation on what course I'd choose to follow
next.
If they
only knew ...
"I
can't answer that question yet," I told Sensenbrenner. "I'm
going to have to think long and hard about it. But you can quote me
on this: I will do nothing that will contravene the Reversionist
Guiding Principles, nor do I intend to completely abandon politics."
I couldn't resist adding, "Perhaps it's possible that under my
leadership, Rampart Concern could modify its operations to reflect
the philosophy of Reversionism."
Wow—heresy!
The reporter couldn't keep the expectation of a major scoop out of
his voice.
"But...
most Reversionists favor drastically limiting the political influence
of the Hundred Concerns—in effect, destroying the galactic
economic structure!"
I laughed.
"I admit that some party zealots might feel that way. My own
views on the subject are not nearly so radical. Nevertheless, for
nearly two centuries Big Business has exploited the stars with only
minimal checks and balances by the Commonwealth. I want the Hundred
Concerns made more accountable to the Assembly. To the elected
representatives of humanity at large. I'd like to see laissez-faire
interstellar economics reined in or even abolished, along with the
laws that enable human business interests to do just about anything
they please if it means increased profits for their stakeholders. I
also favor just treatment of nonstargoing Indigenous Sapient races
whose worlds are colonized and developed by humanity. And closer
regulation of trade with interstellar alien civilizations that might
not be fully committed to ... interspecies goodwill."
"Are
you speaking about the Kalleyni, the Joru, the Y'tata, and the Qastt,
Citizen Frost? Or about the Haluk?"
"No
further comment at this time."
"As
chairman of Rampart, do you really believe you could implement your
Reversionist ideals?"
"If I
took the position, I could try. My late uncle, Ethan Frost, who
headed Rampart in the beginning, was one of the first galactic
entrepreneurs to give Insap workers human-equivalent wages and decent
working conditions. I'm convinced his policy was the principal reason
Rampart prospered in the Perseus Spur, while Galapharma and the other
oppressive outfits who tried to make a go of it failed and had to
withdraw."
"But
the majority of economists and financial authorities don't believe
that approach would be practical in the longer-settled Orion Arm
worlds, much less in the Sagittarius Whorl—"
I flapped
a dismissive hand at the SPYder. "Stop. I won't argue the point
with you now. I told you that I don't know yet what I'm going to do
with my life. Maybe I'll accept the Rampart chairmanship. Maybe I'll
go back to being gadfly-in-chief for the Reversionists. Maybe I'll do
something completely different. Right about now I feel like flying
away to some quiet little planet where nobody knows my name. The
Galapharma trial left me worn down to a nubbin. Simon's proposal
couldn't have come at a worse time. I need to re-tune my perspective
before I commit myself."
"How
long before you—"
"That's
enough," I said. "End of interview." I turned Billy
away and started back down the trail. The high clouds had lost their
color and the first stars were popping out in the east.
The
SPYder came scuttling after me. "Citizen Frost! Just a few more
words! When do you expect to return to Toronto? Would you grant the
Journal an in-depth interview concerning your political
ambitions? Or discuss the direction Rampart Concern might take under
your—"
Casually,
I shifted in the saddle, raised the carbine and fired from the hip,
drilling the little machine through one of its glowing eyes. It
exploded in a brief puff of smoke and plasma. Billy didn't even
flinch.
Then I
started back to the ranch house. I figured it wouldn't be long before
my father showed up.
——
I
half expected Eve to accompany Simon, the better to coerce me. But
when I arrived an hour or so later I found him alone in the big
living room of the fully restored main house, staring into a blaze of
pinon logs in the big fireplace and sipping his usual bourbon and
branch water. A magslate, the logo of the
Wall Street Journal
shining on its viewer, lay on the polished petrified-wood coffee
table behind him. The late edition had been posted. I presumed that
my interview with Sensenbrenner was in it.
Looking
glum, Simon nodded but didn't speak as I came through the open French
doors, still covered with trail dust.
I took off
my stained old Stetson hat and Pendleton blanket jacket and went to
the sideboard where the drinks were. Passing by the Maker's Mark
Limited Edition, Hirsch Pot Still, and other upmarket tarantula juice
that my father fancied, I helped myself to my favorite blue-collar
tipple: Jack Daniel's, straight up. A single shot sufficed to
demonstrate that I hadn't reverted to the lush life. After tossing it
down I drew a tall draft beer from the keg of Dortmunder tucked in a
compartment of the sideboard, sat on one of the leather couches in
front of the hearth, and began to haul my boots off.
Simon
stood watching me out of hooded green eyes. His hair was light brown
with a prominent widow's peak, just like mine. I'd inherited his
thin-bridged nose, too, and the wide mouth with downturned corners
that was capable of blooming in a megawatt smile. He'd taken full
advantage of modern medical science and genengineering to stave off
time's ravages, and usually gave an impression of indomitable
physical vigor.
But not
today.
He
was dressed in one of his semiformal riverboat gambler suits rather
than the tailored ranchman outfits he usually sported, perhaps
signaling the special character of the occasion. He seemed tired and
wary, and the black broadcloth of his suit emphasized his abnormally
wan aspect. I recalled being taken aback when the
Journal article
gave his age. People—including me—tended to forget how
old Simon Frost really was.
"They
were having a victory bash at Rampart Tower when I left," he
said to me at last. His voice was just a bit too loud.
"Everybody
was toasting you—even the people who pissed and moaned the
loudest when Evie and I appointed you acting legal chief and gave you
free rein. The whole gang agreed we never would have won a
nonappellate verdict without your leadership. I suppose
congratulations are in order."
I thought:
Well, thanks all to hell, Pop! But I said nothing.
He
continued. "You were the best one for the job and you did it.
'Muff said. And now there's another job needs doing ..." He let
the words trail off, as if daring me to turn him down flat.
Oh, no you
don't, you old buzzard. This time we play by Helly's rules.
I finally
got rid of the boots, put my feet up on the low table, took a deep
swallow of beer, and slid forward on the cushions so my rump was
almost level with my shoulders. "I'm surprised Evie didn't come
with you."
"The
quick verdict caught her by surprise. She's four days out, en route
to the Spur, and didn't want to backtrack. There's some sort of
conkbuster situation connected to the Cravat facility expansion. Zed
couldn't seem to get a handle on it so she decided to take care of
the matter personally. She'll return to Toronto as soon as the flap
is resolved and help you and the other legal eagles work out the
petitions for redress."
"Sam
Yamamoto and Marcie Kirov are perfectly capable of supervising
that—along with all the other post-trial stuff," I told
him. "I got you your damned verdict. Don't expect me to shovel
up after the circus parade."
A
long silence, broken only by the faint cries of nighthawks. The doors
were still open to the patio, and I could smell the perfume of the
hundred-year-old wisteria growing on the
cenador next to the
barbecue pit. Miraculously, the explosion that destroyed the main
house had spared the rustic dining shelter and the adjacent gardens,
as well as most of the trees and ranch outbuildings.
I said,
"How'd you know where I was?"
"A
pushy
Wall Street Journal reporter told me. He found you with
a Big Eye satellite three days ago. Figured you might give him an
interview on your trial strategy once the verdict was in. Seems you
didn't try very hard to keep undercover once you got out here. Right
after I issued my statement at the media conference, this
Journal
joker was all over me wanting an exclusive follow-up. Said he
intended to contact you here at the Sky Ranch, too. I told him lotsa
luck getting through the security umbrella. But I reckon he did."
"A
SPYder robot tracked me down as I was riding outside the perimeter
this evening. I gave a few quotable remarks before I zapped the bot
to smithereens with my Finnila. It was giving me attitude."
"Goddammit,
Asa! What's the sense antagonizing the legitimate media? It's not
like the webster was from a tabloid."
"The
real question," I said, pushing myself upright and looking him
dead in the eye, "is why the hell you chose to offer me the
Rampart chairmanship via a media release instead of putting it to me
privately, in person. Do you really think it's an offer I can't
refuse?"
"More
like a trial balloon," said the crafty old bastard, "to see
how the Hundred Concerns might react to the idea. Especially Adam
Stanislawski and his venture-credit hardheads at Macrodur. Rampart
will need them more than ever after the Gala consolidation. I wanted
to float the idea of you as my replacement while your reputation is
still sky-high and shiny."
"As
opposed to it taking a dive into the cesspool if I get involved in
politics again? ... And what about my standing felony convictions?
Ollie Schneider's ready to make a deposition about the trumped-up
charges, but it'll take forever for a reversal to work through the
courts."
"That's
a dead issue, boy. Even if it can't be proved that you were framed,
anyone with half a brain figures Gala dry-gulched you so's you
wouldn't be able to use your position in the ICS to stymie the
takeover. As for your flaming lefty politics, if you just soft-pedal
things a little—"
I uncoiled
and climbed up from the couch, invading his private space until we
were nearly nose-to-nose in front of the fireplace. "Let me tell
you something, Simon," I said quietly. "My Reverse
principles are still very much alive. I won't soft-pedal them, no
matter what decision I make concerning Rampart. And I'm going to do
something about the Haluk situation, too."
"Send
out more hothead media releases denouncing the trade agreement?"
He gave a snort of derisive laughter. "Fat lot of good that'll
do. The deal's done, and Rampart's in the Haluk Consortium with both
feet."
I said,
"Those slippery Haluk bastards are making fools of us,
pretending they've given up their aggressive expansion policy.
They're already pressuring the Assembly to grant them more Rampart
Mandate worlds immediately."
Simon
shrugged and sipped his drink. "So long as the xenos pay a good
price in ultraheavy elements, they'll likely get what they want."
I let
loose a flare of temper. "And that's just dandy for you and for
the other Concerns in the consortium, isn't it! Business as usual.
Everybody wallows in profits, never looking beyond the bottom line.
Meanwhile, nobody's quite sure just how much expanding the Haluk
intend to do! How many of them are out there in that star-cluster,
anyhow, champing at the bit to emigrate to the Milky Way? ... We
don't know! They don't allow visitors to their cluster and they
vaporize trespassers. And your consortium doesn't give a rat's ass
about the Haluk's long-range intentions so long as trade keeps
booming."
"Zone
Patrol and the SXA will keep an eye out for funny stuff. It's not the
consortium's responsibility to monitor a sovereign alien race."
"No,"
I agreed. "So perhaps someone else will have to look into the
matter."
A faint
expression of alarm flitted behind his eyes. "Who'd be nutty
enough to do that? Don't tell me you—"
"I
can't believe you've forgotten what the Haluk did!" I yelled.
Simon blinked and backed away from me. "Marooning me on that
goddamn comet... collaborating with Drummond's goons ... snatching
Rampart World colonists and using them as slave labor and lab rats!
And what about those two hundred human templates on Dagasatt that got
blown to hell along with the Haluk demiclones? The Haluk were
manufacturing fake humans to spy on us, and nobody seems to care
why."
"Industrial
espionage," he opined. "To infiltrate Rampart and Gala—why
else? They were desperate to obtain our PD32:C2 genen vector. The
demiclone spies were gonna help 'em get more of the stuff in some
scheme or other. But now they can buy the vector from Rampart on the
open market, so the demiclone thing is a dead issue."
"You
think so, do you?"
"Yes,
dammit, I do!" He did a double take at my skeptical sneer.
"What? You think the blue-balls put demi moles into some human
government agency? You still think they're cooking up a fuckin' war?"
"We've
got lots of good stuff the Haluk want besides PD32:C2. Why should
they buy it in dribs and drabs for a whopping high price over a long
period of time if they can take it for free? And get unlimited
lebensraum besides?"
"Horse
puckey," Simon scoffed.
"They've
hated and feared humanity ever since we came into the Perseus Spur
and stopped their colonial expansion cold. They covet our superior
technology and envy our ability to stay awake and active all year
'round. That kind of mind-set didn't evaporate when they signed a
couple of treaties two years ago."
"Wouldn't
be the first time in history that old enemies kissed and made up,"
Simon said reasonably. "Hey—look at you and me! The
Haluk've tried to make amends for the past. Agreed to pay reparations
to the families of the kidnapped engineers and template victims. Paid
Rampart for deprivation of employee services and the damage done on
Cravat, too."
"And
that's supposed to wipe the slate clean? I suppose you don't give a
damn that Haluk are flooding into the Perseus Spur by the millions.
The fifteen new T-2 worlds they were granted by the Assembly last
year are already bursting at the seams."
He
finished off his drink. "They pay through the snoot for Rampart
Mandate planets. So why not?"
"If
their long-range expansion strategy includes forcible penetration of
the Milky Way," I said in a low voice, "there are lots of
reasons why not."
"Nobody
believes they'd make war except you, son. And you don't have one
smidgen of proof to back it up."
I
enumerated what I considered to be valid evidence. "
Uno:
the ruthless way they went after PD32:C2 to erase their allomorphism.
Dos: their refusal to allow unrestricted inspection of their
home worlds or Spur colonies by humanity.
Tres: the vastly
overpopulated planets of their home star-cluster. And if they
continue to eradicate their allomorphic trait and no longer have half
their people in hibernation at any given time, they'll need even more
room! ... Do you have any idea how many top-line transports the Haluk
have purchased from Bodascon over the past couple of years? Nearly
three hundred! And that doesn't count the starships they're building
on their own, copying human high technology"
"That's
not proof, that's unsupported inference—worthless as a bucket
of mule piss."
"I'll
find evidence that not even the ostriches in the Assembly can ignore.
Don't think I haven't been working on it! And now that the Gala case
is won, I intend to work even harder."
Simon
turned his back on me and headed for the booze table. He uncorked the
bottle of rare old Hirsch bourbon and half filled his Waterford
tumbler. No water to dilute it this time. He moved toward the open
French doors. "Let's step outside. I need a breath of fresh air,
and you could use cooling down yourself."
I padded
reluctantly after him, bringing my beer. The patio flagstones were
chilly, and a cutting breeze came from the west. Discreet gas-flame
lanterns mounted on low posts had come on automatically at dusk,
giving soft illumination to the expanse of irrigated lawn, the
surrounding gardens, and the driveways that led to the other
buildings. The main house stood on a rise and had a magnificent view
of the mountains that completely surrounded the ranch. Now, with
night having fallen and no moon, the sky was crowded with incredible
numbers of stars and banded by the Milky Way. The Perseus Spur, at
the galactic rim fourteen thousand light-years from Earth's solar
system, was visible if you looked carefully to the north; but the
small Haluk Cluster that lay seventeen thousand light-years farther
out from the Spur's tip was hidden by intervening dustclouds. No one
had known it existed until human explorers crossed the Black Gap.
My father
gave a sigh that was just short of being theatrical. "Damn, that
sky's a pretty sight. I never get tired of high-desert nights."
"I
do," I said evenly, "when I'm standing on a cold stone
pavement in my stocking feet."
He
chuckled uneasily. Then came a very long silence while he lowered the
level of his costly panther pee and I finished off my beer. His voice
was somber when he finally said, "Do you really hate me so much,
Asa? That you'd abandon Rampart when it needs you, just to get even
with your old man?"
"I
don't hate you, Simon. You and I just have different priorities. We
always have. A long time ago you tried to bully me into accepting
yours. When I rebelled, you washed your hands of me ... until you
were desperate for my help."
"That's
true enough. And you came through like a champ, several times over.
I'm damn grateful."
"Then
let it go at that." I couldn't keep the bitterness out of my
tone. "It's not true that Rampart needs me now. Eve has done a
marvelous job as CEO during the past three years. She's restructured
top management and gained the full confidence of the Macrodur
financiers. There's no reason to believe that she and her team won't
be able to handle the Gala consolidation just as competently,
provided you continue as chairman and give her the benefit of your
experience. There's nothing inherently rotten in Galapharma, you
know. Its basic corporate infrastructure is sound. Alistair Drummond
was a megalomaniac and a crook, but he was also a brilliant
businessman. And he was right to believe that Rampart and Galapharma
are ideal corporate harness mates. All Eve has to do is weed out the
handful of bad apples who were direct participants in the conspiracy,
and integrate Gala's management into Rampart's."
"You
make it sound simple—but it's not. Your sister's an outstanding
executive officer and she's come far in a very short time. But she's
still just a beginner in the top Concern ranks, about to start
swimming with some very large sharks. She wants you to be part of
Rampart just as much as I do."
"I
doubt it."
He looked
at me with what seemed to be genuine puzzlement. "What's that
supposed to mean?"
"You
read my interview with the
Journal reporter. Eve has, too, by
now. Did you think I was just playing mind-games with the guy when I
talked about the Reversionist Principles—and possibly applying
them to Rampart if I accept the chairmanship?"
He didn't
reply.
"Come
on back inside," I said. "My feet are freezing—as you
know damned well—and I haven't had my supper yet. Starry vistas
don't make me choke up the way they used to."
He
followed me and closed the French doors behind us. "I wouldn't
mind a little snack myself. I'll talk to Rosalia."
"Chili
con carne and a big salad for me. She knows what I like."
"I'll
just have me some shrimp nachos with Navajo sheep cheese and salsa."
He
contacted the cook through the old-fashioned intercom. Domestic
robotics had been taboo in the original Sky Ranch main house because
my late mother Katje believed that they deprived human beings of jobs
and had the potential to invade privacy. When Simon rebuilt after the
explosion, he restored the place exactly as it had been before.
I stood on
the hearth and warmed my feet, declining his offer of another shot of
whiskey and accepting more beer. Then we arranged ourselves on
opposite sides of the petrified wood table and waited for the food.
"So
you really did mean it," Simon said tentatively, "when you
threatened to screw up Rampart's Insap policy if you became
chairman."
"Not
screw up. Modify humanely. Preindustrial natives should get more than
a few jobs when their planet is exploited by humanity. They deserve a
stake in the profits. Plus subsidized education options for those
races that can take advantage of them. Anything short of that is
unjust—and I'm not alone in believing that's true."
"Dammit,
Asa, it's just not practical! Usually it takes years before a newly
developed world starts showing a profit. What about our human
stakeholders and the Macrodur finance people? You think they'll just
lie down, roll over, and let you scratch their rummies when you
spring this crackpot scheme on 'em? And what the hell will happen
when Insaps on our new ex-Galapharma Orion Arm worlds decide they
want the same deal as the Perseus planets?"
"We
give it to them. In a prudent manner, over a reasonable period of
time. Education first, then stakeholdership."
"It
won't work! Way back when interstellar commerce first got going, a
few limp-weenie outfits tried to organize human-alien cooperatives
and suchlike shit. The Insaps got uppity ideas, wanted a bigger and
bigger piece of the enchilada. First thing you know, the humans had
full-blown worker insurrections to deal with. Preindustrial xenos
can't be treated like human beings! Some of 'em are barely rational.
Others are stuck at the tribal or feudal social level and only
respect an iron fist. Some have goofy counterproductive customs that
preclude any kind of discipline. Most don't understand free
enterprise at all!"
"I
didn't say I thought the modification would be easy. Perhaps the
policy won't be feasible with marginally sapient peoples. But if I
become Rampart chairman, the board members will have to accept the
policy."
"Even
if it throws the Concern into chaos?"
"I'll
do my utmost to see that doesn't happen. But yes— I'm willing
to take a huge risk in hopes that Rampart's example will spread to
others of the Hundred Concerns. If you and Eve and the board of
directors are afraid I'll fail, then forget about me. Keep your
chairmanship. I'll do what I can to promote Reversionism in other
ways."
I sat back
then waiting for the bluster, the combination of wheedling and
threats that he'd used to bulldoze me in the past. Either that or
he'd withdraw the nomination forthwith.
All he
said was, "Son, I can't retain the chairmanship. I'm no good for
it anymore. I'm too old."
I couldn't
help a snort of disbelieving laughter. "You're healthy as a
horse! You could carry on for another twenty years."
A slight,
rueful smile lifted his thin lips. "Nothing wrong with me
physically. I'm old inside my skull. Tired. Running out of steam and
moxie. It happens ... But I'm smart enough to recognize that I'm past
it, and that it's time for me to step down. Rampart'll get a new
chairman one way or t'other. Eve doesn't want the job, and neither
does Gunter Eckert or Caleb Millstone. They're happy where they are.
You refuse, what might happen is we'd have to accept Ellington or
some other Macrodur nominee because of the twenty percent stake they
got from me in the venture credit scheme."
"Well,
shit," I muttered, mainly because I couldn't think of anything
else to say.
"Adam
Stanislawski likes you," Simon said. "Ellington does, too.
Most of the other Macrodur wheels were mighty impressed with your
legal tactics against Gala." He scowled and looked away. "Of
course, that was before you came out with that chuckleheaded
interview in the
Journal—all in living color, no less,
posed against an Arizona sunset with a carbine in your armpit like
Wyatt-fuckin'-Earp. God knows what the Macrodur directors think about
you now."
"The
reporter posted our live conversation?" I was aghast. According
to stubborn tradition, conservative news media such as the
Journal
nearly always reported news in a readonly format. Sensational
video clips were for the tabloids.
"Ee-yup,"
Simon drawled, nodding at the magslate on the coffee table. "Check
it out if you like. You sure come off as one trigger-happy cowpoke,
son,"
"Rats!"
I didn't bother to pick up the slate. Jordan Sensen-brenner had got
the last laugh after all. "I guess I did shoot myself in the
foot this time. Sorry. I'll take full blame for my idiocy, try to
smooth things over with Macrodur if I can."
"Do
it soon." The brief flash of amusement faded from Simon's face
and he looked draggle-tail weary.
"I'll
go to Toronto tomorrow," I said. "And I hereby swear off
impromptu interviews—at least until I decide what to do about
your proposal."
"You
better make up your mind pretty damned quick."
"I
won't be stampeded, Pop. You know me better than that." His eyes
lit up as I made rare use of the paternal familiar. "When I gave
that interview, I was pretty certain I'd reject your offer. Now..."
I shook my head. "You'd still want me, knowing what I'd do with
the chairmanship?"
"I
figure you're bound and determined to give Reverse activism a try.
But I don't think for a minute you'd run Rampart into the ground just
to make some quixotic philosophical point. Shit—maybe you're
right and the Hundred Concerns are wrong! Stranger things have
happened."
"I
need time to think," I insisted. "There are things I could
accomplish in the political arena that might be difficult to pull off
if I were a mere businessman."
"It'll
be half a year at least before the Galapharma dismantling protocol is
finalized and the Concerns merge," Simon pointed out. "I
guess I can hold the fort that long. Nothing much can happen till
then."
"I
guess not."
Clairvoyance
has never been my strong suit, nor Simon's, either.
"So
take a nice long vacation," he urged me. "God knows you
earned it."
"I
might go out to Kedge-Lockaby for a couple of months. I'll be fairly
safe from media harassment there. The locals in the Out Islands
aren't fond of busybodies. I can drive my submarine and scuba-dive
and weigh the options. If you need my input for something of cosmic
importance, my next door neighbor on Eyebrow Cay has a subspace
communicator. He'll know how to find me. You remember him: Mimo
Bermudez."
A nod.
"The old smuggler. Nearly as squirrelly as you."
"My
best friend. Another man with quixotic principles."
We sat in
silence for a time, watching the fire. Then, on impulse, I asked him,
"Did you ever hear of another elderly smuggler named Barky
Tregarth? He operated out in the Spur over forty years ago, peddling
contraband weaponry and materiel to the Haluk and Qastt."
"Damn!
I haven't thought about Barky for years. How'd you hear about him?
From Bermudez?"
"Yes."
And Karl Nazarian had known about the old crook, too.
Simon's
brow wrinkled thoughtfully. "Hamilcar Barca Tregarth, teller of
tall tales! Spun this crazy yarn about going to the Haluk Cluster on
a bet, back when Galapharma owned the Spur. Said he ran rings around
their patrols, then managed to sweet-talk the Haluk leadership into
letting him land on one of their major worlds to refuel. Even claimed
the aliens gave him the key to the city because he reminded 'em of
some legendary Haluk hero. The poor bastard never did collect on the
bet—and it was a sizable one. Seems nobody believed his story
when he got back to the Spur. The souvenir he claimed he got from the
Haluk could've come from anywhere."
"Did
you meet Tregarth personally?"
"Once.
Before his alleged trip. I had a drink with the guy in a saloon on
Hadrach, maybe half a dozen years after Rampart got the Perseus
Mandate. Jesus, he was a piece o' work! Sharp as a Buck knife and
talk an arm and leg off you. My Lord, Barky'd be over a hundred
twenty years old if he's still alive."
"Do
you think his story about going to the Haluk Cluster might have been
true?"
"Most
folks thought he was lying in his teeth. Especially those in on the
bet. But Barky sure as shit ran a lot of guns to the eleven Blueberry
colonies in the Spur when Rampart was just getting started. Zone
Patrol finally nabbed his ass— when?—maybe just after the
turn of the century. Somebody broke him out of the Tyrins slammer
before he came to trial. He was Thrown Away in absentia. Never
operated in the Spur again." Simon eyed me dubiously. "What's
your interest in Barky Tregarth, anyhow?"
I was
saved from having to answer by a gentle knocking at the inner door of
the living room. It opened and the cook, Rosalia Alejo-Mertz, came in
with a food-laden serving cart. "I hope you two are hungry,"
she said. "I brought some extra things I happened to have
cluttering up the kitchen. Spit-roasted turkey slices, duck liver
pate, and wild strawberry shortcake."
In an
instant Simon forgot about Barky Tregarth. "Rosie, you angel!
Me'n Asa are hungry enough to eat a folded tarp and burp grommets!"
We
began helping ourselves to huge portions of everything. Rosie smiled
at us benignly and left us to our supper. Time for further
distraction away from the Barky Hunt. I said, "Tomorrow I intend
to have a little chat with Adam Stanislawski at Macrodur, see if I
can do damage control for the
Journal gaffe."
"Good
idea," Simon said. "At least get his reaction to your
nomination, so we know where we stand."
I spooned
chili into my face and talked with my mouth full. "I've decided
to make a surprise visit to Galapharma Tower, too."
Simon
stopped short in the act of devouring his fifth shrimp nacho. "Why?"
he asked suspiciously.
Oops.
Maybe I shouldn't have mentioned that. A Freudian slip? My wise old
pal Mimo Bermudez would have called it seeking Big Daddy's approval
even as I spit in his eye.
"It's
something I've been planning for some time, contingent on our winning
the court case. There's an informal request I want to put to their
top brass—preferably Lorne Buchanan, the CEO—while
they're still reeling from the verdict. If Gala gives me what I want,
I'm ready to promise that Rampart will mitigate bloodshed among
Gala's management during the consolidation. Maybe try to stave off
criminal prosecution, too."
My
father's eyes narrowed. "Informal request? What the fuck
kind
of informal request?" "I'd rather not say."
Because it involved sharp practice at best, and trade-treaty
violations at worst. But it did have the potential for uncovering
Haluk double-dealing, so I reckoned the risk was worth it.
Simon
exploded. "Dammit, Asa! You're not the boss hand of this outfit
yet. Tell me what you're up to!"
Well, I'd
opened my big yap.
"I'm
going to suggest that Gala immediately give me everything they have
concerning the allomorph trait eradication and demiclone procedures
that they developed for the Haluk. Most specifically, I want the
genetic marker that Emily Konigsberg incorporated into the
demicloning process. The thing that ID's the fake humans. The marker
was Drummond's secret way of keeping tabs on the Haluk scheme. Emily
told Eve that the alien leader, the Servant of Servants, knew nothing
about the marker. I also want complete details about the clandestine
demiclone labs that were in operation prior to the Dagasatt blowup.
Karl Nazarian and his crew obtained some intelligence about them from
the data-dump of
Chispa Dos, that starship I stole from the
Galapharma agent. But it needs verification from another source
before we can present it as hard evidence."
Speechless
with consternation, Simon gaped at me. I plowed on.
"I
also want to know how many imitation human beings those demiclone
labs produced. Someone at Galapharma knows! Its security people were
in charge of most of the demi facilities, and its agents tracked
every gram of PD32:C2 illegally sold to the aliens."
Simon
relaxed in premature relief. "All those incriminating Gala files
were sealed by the Secretariat for Xenoaffairs as part of the new
Haluk nonaggression pact."
"I
intend to unseal them—very carefully—and pass on selected
excerpts to an influential friend of mine in the Commonwealth
Assembly. Efrem Sontag is Chairman of the Xenoaffairs Oversight
Committee. He'd go along with immunity for the Gala execs involved if
I asked him to."
"What
the fuckin'
hell do you hope to accomplish?" Simon
exclaimed furiously.
"You
were wrong when you said I was the only one dubious about the Haluk.
Sontag has already initiated a secret probe of demiclone shenanigans,
based on intelligence supplied by me right after the Dagasatt affair.
He also believes that SXA's cover-up deal with the aliens stank to
high heaven, even if it did pave the way for the new trade treaty."
"But...
Christ on a crutch! Something like this could swamp the consortium if
the Haluk find out!"
"Nonsense.
The aliens won't like it, but they'll hardly stop buying human
products. You're going to have to trust me on this, Pop.
We need
this information. I know Gala was supposed to have surrendered
all the incriminating data to Xenoaffairs, but you can bet your left
nut that somebody in the Concern kept copies—just in case Gala
won the civil case and it needed an ace in the hole sometime in the
future. As an edge against other consortium members, maybe. Or even
against the Haluk themselves. Alistair Drummond didn't trust our
needy blue buddies either."
"Couldn't
you hold off until—"
"No.
Right now, I'm in a perfect position to exert pressure on
Galapharma's top officers, while they're afraid of losing their
precious jobs and stakeholdings. If I wait for the consolidation, it
could be too late. Gala will wipe the computers clean rather than
take a chance that Rampart would discover the data. They could be
doing it right now."
"Maybe
it's done."
"No—they'd
wait until the trial verdict was in."
"You
really got a wild blue hair up your ass, don't you, boy?"
"I'm
convinced the Haluk are mortally dangerous, yes."
"God
almighty!" My father shook his head. "All right. Put your
goddamn request to Lorne Buchanan. Nobody else. He's got the most to
lose in the consolidation, and he has the power to get what you want
if anyone does."
"I
promise to use the utmost discretion. I'll get Ef Sontag to promise
the same. We won't go public unless we have proof of malicious intent
by the Haluk."
Simon
pushed his plate of food away, shaking his head, and got to his feet.
"You just can't leave things be, can you? Always lookin' to stir
up trouble."
"Where
the Haluk are concerned, damn right I am. But I'll do it as quietly
as possible now—for Rampart's sake. I'm not trying to dissolve
the Haluk trade treaty, and I certainly don't intend to force them
back into their overcrowded star-cluster. But I do aim to make sure
they behave if they move into our neighborhood."
"Arrogant,
self-righteous young prick!" Simon growled. "Who elected
you Speaker of the Commonwealth Assembly?"
"Nobody,"
I said. "Frankly, I'd rather be a beach bum on Kedge-Lockaby.
But if I decide to give Rampart's chairmanship a pass, I may just
turn into the meanest goddamn Reversionist beach bum you and the
Assembly and the Hundred Concerns and the Haluk ever met."
"I've
lost my appetite," my father said unhappily, heading for the
door. "I'm going to bed."
"You
can always fire me," I called after him. "By law, I'd
revert instantly to Throwaway status. I'd be out of the galactic
poker game for keeps and out of your corporate hair."
"Nope,"
Simon Frost said. "Gonna let my bet on you ride. God help us
all."
The door
closed behind him.
I decided
it was high time for some more of Jack Daniel's best. Maybe even a
double.
——
Later,
when it was a reasonable hour on Kedge-Lockaby's Eyebrow Cay, I
called Mimo Bermudez on the ranch's sub-space com. He'd seen the
Journal posting and congratulated me on Rampart's legal
triumph while being tactful about Simon's notion to promote me beyond
my station.
Then we
got around to the reason for my call: the Barky Hunt. Mimo had
promised to make discreet inquiries about the ancient gunrunner among
doddering members of the Spur underworld. My friend's courtly Mexican
manners had thus far precluded his asking me for an explanation.
"I
found several people who knew Tregarth in the old days," Mimo
said, "even a few who had participated in the original wager
that supposedly sent him off on his incredible journey. All but one
of those that I spoke to branded Tregarth a bare-faced liar with an
overly fertile imagination. The exception was a certain
vejarron
named Clifton Castle who once worked as a fence on Tyrins. After
Tregarth escaped from the lockup there, he contacted Castle and sold
him an extremely rare jewel to finance his flight back to the Orion
Arm. It was a exotic fossil cabochon set in platinum—beyond a
doubt Haluk in origin. Tregarth claimed it had been a gift from the
official of a planet he visited in the Haluk Cluster."
"He
might also have got it from one of their Spur colonies."
"That's
always a possibility. Clifton Castle had another interesting piece of
information. Tregarth made a condition that the fossil not be resold
for one month, saying he hoped to buy it back—at a premium, of
course—since it was his only souvenir of the great adventure."
"Pawning
the thing. Did Barky redeem it?"
"Yes,
three weeks later. Castle sent it by registered StelEx to the planet
Famagusta in Sector 5. This happened in the year 2201."
"I
don't suppose this Castle knows whether Barky is still alive."
"He
had no idea. I could send out more feelers, but as you know, my
principal sources are in the Perseus Spur, not the inner Orion Arm.
You might have better luck consulting our mutual friend, Chief
Superintendent Jake Silver. Tregarth might be in the CCID database."
"Maybe
I'll talk to Jake. I'm heading for Toronto tomorrow."
My
pal's dark eyes peered from thoughtful slits. "You've never told
me why you're so anxious to find this geriatric
contrabandista"
"Mimo,
it's better you don't know."
He shook
his frowsy head in chagrin. "Helly, Helly, Helly. It's rather
obvious, isn't it? You still believe that the Haluk intend to wage
war on humanity."
"I
think they might—if their population pressure is exceptionally
severe. This guy Tregarth might be dead or he might be a total
shuck-and-jive artist, the biggest liar since Baron Munchausen. On
the other hand, he might just know more about our mysterious blue
buddies than any other human being. I want to talk to him."
"And
then what?"
I smiled
at the SS com screen. "I've got a sabbatical coming, while the
Galapharma settlement is sorted out and I decide whether to accept
the Rampart chairmanship. I told my father I'd spend the time loafing
on K-L—but it might be more fun to take my modified Y770
starship on a grand tour."
"Caracoles!"
The semiretired Smuggler King of the Perseus Spur immediately
guessed what I had in mind and was appalled. "Please tell me
you're joking!"
"Of
course I am," I lied.
"I'm
relieved to hear it. You realize that a private individual who
traveled to the Haluk Cluster would violate both the nonaggression
pact and the trade treaty with that race, laying himself open to
sanctions from both the Xenoaffairs and Interstellar Commerce
Secretariats. Every asset the individual possessed might be
seized—and he himself would not only be disenfranchised, but
probably also incarcerated without possibility of parole."
"Unless
the illegal expedition was accomplished without the individual being
caught. And the individual came back with significant intelligence
data."
"Why
you?" my old friend exclaimed in exasperation.
"Who
else?" I retorted. "I've got the inclination and time to
spare. I've also got the ship."
My
personal blitzboat was named
Makebate—an old word
meaning "troublemaker." She was a Rampart executive
perquisite, the only expensive toy I'd allowed myself during the two
tedious years of brain-bending legal work associated with the
Galapharma trial. I'd managed to take only rare brief jaunts in her
to visit my friends on Kedge-Lockaby in the Spur. A chance remark of
Mimo's at a luau on Eyebrow Cay three months ago had planted the seed
for the Barky Hunt... and what might follow if it was successful and
the old crook really did have important information about the Haluk
Cluster worlds.
Returning
to Toronto for the climactic part of the trial, I had arranged for
Rampart Fleet Maintenance technicians to modify
Makebate while
I was grounded. Her fuel bunkers had been greatly enlarged and her
weaponry significantly beefed up. She now carried state-of-the-art
sublight drive dissimulators for stealthy near-planet maneuvering and
orbital concealment. I was having special bodycount gadgetry
installed that would make clandestine fly-by census scans of hostile
planets feasible, and I also intended to look for warships. The
Commonwealth seemed content to believe that massive Haluk purchases
of astrogational equipment were intended for use in colonial
transports; I thought that notion was pure bovine excrement.
Mimo
sighed. "Always the cowboy! I had hopes that your stint as
Rampart's Chief Legal Officer would have mellowed you."
"Tourism
can be amusing and educational," I said. "Wanna come along?
I could use some human company. Talking to the ship's computer gets
boring after a few days. And there's always the possibility of a good
fight."
"And
a quick death. Or worse, if you're captured."
I just
grinned at him. "I'm going to count blue noses and look for blue
battleboats whether or not the Barky Hunt works out. Come on! It'll
be a hoot."
"Unfortunately
I have a previous engagement in the tank."
It took me
a moment to realize what he was saying. "The—The tank?"
"I'd
accompany you to the Haluk Cluster if I could, Helly, if only to keep
you out of trouble. After all, I'm a much better shot with a photon
cannon! I'm also curious how the Haluk manage to mine transactinides,
given their technology lag. But this old body of mine is in need of
serious repair. I must go into dystasis in Rampart Central's big
hospital on Seriphos, since the doctors at the Big Beach don't have
the resources to deal with my case."
I tried
not to show my dismay. Mimo was a man in late middle age, but as far
as I knew, he was healthy. "So. It's something serious?"
"It
is," he said gently. "A flare-up of an old problem.
However, the prognosis is good. All that's necessary is a grotesque
amount of money to pay for the sixteen-week procedure.
No importa
dos cojones." His standard disclaimer: It doesn't matter two
balls' worth.
Of course
money was no problem to Mimo. Decades of smuggling fine liquor, Cuban
cigars, premium coffee, and other luxuries past Rampart excise
collectors had made him one of the wealthiest private individuals in
the Perseus Spur. But I felt a pang of guilt as I recalled the
threadbare state of Kedge-Lockaby's modest little hospital. I should
have done something about that a long time ago, now that I had the
means. K-L had been good to me.
And so had
Captain Guillermo Bermudez Obregon.
I
said, "You have a nice long soak in the tank, Meem. Cure what
ails you. With luck, I'll be there on Seriphos waiting for your
rollout. I'll ferry you back to K-L and wait on you hand and foot
while you convalesce. I owe you,
amigo."
"All
you owe me is staying alive." He was no longer meeting my gaze.
"For the sake of prudence, I've sent a small package to your
office in Rampart Tower via StelEx. You should find it waiting when
you arrive tomorrow. Please take good care of what's inside. Do what
must be done if... circumstances warrant."
I felt a
cold breath of irrational dread and pushed it aside, knowing that
Mimo was going to be fine. The hospital at Rampart Central on
Seriphos had the finest genetic engineering therapy department in
Zone 23, and I'd pull strings to make certain that Mimo had Ultra
Important Patient status.
The rest
of our conversation was little more than gossip about our mutual
friends on Eyebrow Cay. Eventually we told each other good-night and
signed off.
I left the
com center and shuffled through the darkened ranch house toward my
bedroom, brooding about mortality and about two very different old
men and the influences they'd had on my life.
It had
been a busy day. Tomorrow would be even busier in Toronto. If Lorne
Buchanan yielded to my pressure, I'd have to touch base with Efrem
Sontag and arrange for him to take charge of the sensitive
information.
And
there was Jake Silver. Maybe he and I could have dinner, perhaps
catch the acclaimed new production
of Macbeth at the Winter
Garden Theater, if he hadn't already seen it. Both of us were
Shakespeare buffs. The Bard had a keen understanding of the criminal
mind, and so did Jake and I.
As it
happened, I never got to see the play. The damned criminal minds were
already cooking up a different sort of melodrama.
Starring
me.
Chapter 3
Chief
Superintendent Jacob Silver of the Commonwealth Criminal
Investigation Department was a man done wrong by fate, who managed to
crawl out of life's manure pile with a rose in his teeth.
He
reminded me a bit of myself.
Banished
to the outermost Perseus Spur for daring to blow the whistle on a
superior who'd taken a big bribe from the Carnelian Concern, the
powerful producer of electronic weapons and devices, Jake Silver had
been demoted to the tiny Public Safety Force of freesoil
Kedge-Lockaby. He'd been stuck in this dead-end office on a minor
resort world and Throwaway haven for nearly ten years before I
arrived in 2229, newly disenfranchised and determined to pickle my
brain in ethanol as a prelude to suicide.
Jake had
no difficulty ferreting out the true identity of the derelict who
called himself Helmut Icicle when I applied for K-L resident status.
During my slow rehabilitation, he occasionally called upon my ICS
expertise to outwit visiting corporate connivers—most notably a
gang of Native American sharpies from Infinitum, the monster
entertainment Concern, who tried to seize control of K-L's casino. A
takeover would have deprived the little planet's schools of their
principal source of revenue. I showed Jake how to legally spike the
redskins' guns, and he and I became cautious friends.
He risked
his professional neck to help me during Rampart's fight with
Galapharma. So I made a promise—rashly improbable at the
time—to do my damnedest to get him posted back to Earth. I was
able to come through for Jake when Simon and Eve pressured me to head
up the legal case against Gala. Rampart itself didn't have the
political clout to bring the Super back to his family in Toronto, but
its prestigious venture-credit stakeholder, Macrodur Concern, sure as
hell did.
Macrodur
is the proverbial 400-kilo gorilla, the largest and most connected of
the Big Seven Concerns by reason of its monopoly on computer
products. I made Jake Silver's reinstatement—with promotion—at
CCID headquarters a condition of my acceptance of the interim CLO
gig. Macrodur wanted me as chief architect of the case against Gala
just as badly as Rampart did. The gorilla leaned. The fix went in.
The upshot
was that Jake Silver returned to a cushy staff job in the capital cop
shop. He and I had a celebratory dinner at Truffles, then for two
years we mostly went our separate ways.
——
Using the
ranch's secure landline, I called him before breakfast on the morning
after the big verdict, announcing myself to his assistant as "Helmut
Icicle, confidential informant."
The face
that appeared on my vidphone display was leaner than it had been on
K-L and more mastifflike. The jowls drooped and the shrewd, watchful
eyes peered from deep pouches that were not disfiguring but seemed
oddly appropriate to a watchdog lawman. Chief Superintendent Jacob
Silver was now fifty-six years old, no longer the sweaty, sartorially
challenged mess I'd known on K-L's Big Beach. He wore a black
cashmere sweater vest over an expensive pink designer shirt, and his
gray hair was carefully styled.
Jake's
greeting, however, had all its old familiar charm.
"Mother-o'-pearl!"
he groaned. "If it isn't Hell-Butt, the conquering shyster and
tsar of
tsuris. I smell trouble... Don't tell me! Payoff day
is here. You want reciprocity for engineering my transfer, and I have
to put my decrepit cock on the block for you again and risk losing my
pension."
"I
need a very small favor," I soothed him. "Nothing to
jeopardize your desk-riding posterior. How are Marie and the kids and
the grandkids?"
His
forbidding features relaxed into a rare broad smile. "They
couldn't be better, thanks to you. Nice going, shooting down
Galapharma." He chortled wickedly. "On the other hand, that
interview in the
Wall Street Journal sure made you look like a
horse's patoot. You gonna hook up with Rampart permanently now?"
"I'm
thinking about it. I may postpone the decision indefinitely.
Meanwhile, I'm doing some private investigating. I need to find a
guy."
Jake
rolled his eyes. "Here it comes ..."
"Hamilcar
Barca Tregarth," I said. "Nicknamed Barky. Disenfranchised
for gunrunning and peddling embargoed high tech to aliens around
2201. He used to operate in the Spur but fled to the inner Orion Arm
or maybe the Sag Whorl after escaping custody on Tyrins. He might
still be alive."
"That's
it?" Jake seemed disappointed.
"Locate
Barky Tregarth for me, Super. I'll be grateful. Buy you a steak
tonight at Carman's. Also treat you to
Macbeth if you're free.
Got two good seats."
" 'By
the pricking of my thumbs,'" Jake quoted the Scottish play,"
'something wicked this way comes!' I hope that's not you, Hell-Butt."
"Absolutely
not. I am a paragon of corporate probity. For the moment, anyhow."
"Okay.
I accept your offer to dine. Sorry about the Shakespeare, but Marie
and I saw the production last week. Bring one of your ladies and give
her a treat. Micklewhite and Dorsey are outstanding as Lord and Lady
M. The set designers got the holo FX right without screwing up the
traditional mise-en-scene."
"Always
a good thing."
"You
want to hold a minute, I'll check the roster of lowlifes for
Tregarth. We might hit an instant jackpot. Why is his name familiar?"
He turned
away from the phone to consult his computer.
I
considered his suggestion about feminine companionship only
momentarily. My sex life had been pretty arid during the trial, due
to the long hours of grinding work. When I did take a rare break, it
had invariably been a casual fling with one of the politically active
sophisticates I'd met through the Reversionist Party. Their partisan
intensity had been a welcome distraction from the legal fray.
But now,
with the trial over and my imprudent blabbering a hot topic on the
capital grapevine, the last thing I needed was the company of a
political woman. I'd go to the play alone.
Jake
Silver was emitting a ruminative humming sound as he searched for my
quarry. Finally: "Last domicile of record for our chum is on
Manala, Sector 4. It's one of those aster-oidal fueling way stations
located at the rim of the Sagittarius Whorl, almost out in Red Gap.
Nasty shithole, as I recall, but handy to the trans-ack producers.
Eleven years ago one H. B. Tregarth was nabbed and fined a whopper
for violating the Y'tata high-tech weaponry trade interdiction. He
left Manala and hasn't been arrested since, or compelled to submit a
verifying DNA sample for any other reason. He's not in the rolls of
the officially deceased, either—which may or may not prove
anything. He might have died without a genetic assay. Most Throwaways
do. As far as the Commonwealth of Human Worlds is concerned, your
Barky doesn't exist."
"Rats.
I was afraid this wouldn't be easy."
Jake
glowered at me. "You really
really need to find him?"
"Yes."
"May
I ask why?"
All I said
was, "Is there any unofficial way you can track him down?"
"There
are always ways. They can take time, which I don't have, and cost
money, of which I am chronically short. Why don't you hire one of the
big tracer outfits? Or—" He broke off. You could almost
see the legendary lightbulb clicking on above his head. "Wait a
second, now. Tregarth last came to our attention peddling
actinic-beam weaponry from a Carnelian subsidiary to the Y'tata. It
occurs to me there's something quick and dirty I could try."
"Do
it."
"Meet
me in the lobby of CCID HQ about 1730 hours. Bring an open-ended
blind EFT card. If my idea pans out, maybe you can use the card to
buy something besides a night on the town."
He ended
the call and I went to breakfast, whistling "Empty Saddles in
the Old Corral."
——
Rosalia
served me huevos rancheros and a honey-sweet Chilean watermelon the
size of a grapefruit, remarking that my father had already left for
Toronto in his private hopper. Not in a good mood.
"Too
bad," I remarked. "I hope it wasn't something I said."
I'd
already talked to Jane Nelligan at Rampart Tower, a couple of time
zones ahead of Arizona, asking her to get a status report on the
refit job on
Makebate and make appointments with Adam
Stanislawski and Lorne Buchanan. She called back as I was finishing
my second cup of coffee, and I answered on my pocket phone.
"Chairman
Stanislawski has a very crowded schedule today," she said
briskly. "He can see you for fifteen minutes at noon in his
office at Macrodur Tower if that'll suffice. Otherwise he's not
available till Monday."
Jane is
always brisk, as well as tactful and awesomely efficient. Since I am
nothing of the sort, I value her as a pearl beyond price. She is
married to the head vet at the Sunder-land Racecourse, has twin sons
in business school at Commonwealth UT, and copes like a steely eyed
drill sergeant with the forty-six gung-ho lawyers who comprise
Rampart's Toronto-based legal staff.
I told
Jane that a noon touch-and-go at Macrodur was dandy. All I wanted to
do was get Adam's reaction to my nomination. Unless I missed my
guess, his opinion was going to coincide with my own and save me a
lot of aggravation with Simon and Eve.
"Lorne
Buchanan's gatekeepers were reluctant to accommodate you," Jane
continued. "I took the liberty of taking your father's name in
vain since you told me the meeting was urgent. That did the trick.
Citizen Buchanan prefers to come to you. He won't be in his office
today."
"I
can't imagine why."
"I've
made the appointment for 1430 hours in our penthouse conference room.
Citizen Buchanan will stay as long as need be. His security people
insist on sweeping the place for bugs before the meeting. They want
to check you out personally, too. I couldn't get them to budge on the
stipulation."
I laughed.
"Perfectly acceptable. See that Rampart InSec returns the
courtesy to El Queso Grande himself and his flunkies. Also, alert
Karl Nazarian to expect one psy-chotronic interrogation subject
following Buchanan's meeting with me."
"Himself?"
Jane's eyes widened.
"Yep.
And I want the results before the end of the afternoon."
"Right...
The final fuel-bunker and radiation barrier modifications of your
starship were completed last week. The survey instrumentation is
installed, except for a Carnelian LRIR-1400J scanner that seems to be
on permanent back order."
"Tell
the mechanics to find one any which way and plug it in immediately. I
don't care if they have to steal it off a Carney dock or buy it on
the goddamn black market."
"Very
well." She turned away from the phone video pickup, then
returned holding a StelEx letterpak. "This arrived less than an
hour ago, marked 'personal and confidential.' The sender is your
friend, Captain Bermudez."
"Would
you please open it?"
She did.
"A small e-slate requiring your ID for activation. And this."
She held
up a platinum neck chain holding two gold wedding rings.
I felt my
breath catch. Mimo had been holding the rings for me ever since they
were rescued from the stomach of a house-eating sea toad. They had
belonged to me and my former wife, Joanna DeVet.
I told
Jane, "Please put the rings and the slate in my office safe."
"Right.
There have been more messages for you since we spoke earlier, most of
them from the media. I gave them the standard referral to our public
affairs department. Geraldo Gonzalez also called and said it was very
important that you and he talk before you, urn, quote, flit off to
some godforsaken boonie planet, unquote."
Gerry
chaired the Reversionist Nominating Committee, the group empowered to
select the single Commonwealth Assembly delegate the party was newly
entitled to, following the latest poll of CHW citizens. The committee
had been deeply divided on my tentative candidacy, in spite of the
fact that I was their principal financial resource and had also
brought them the publicity that had finally gained the party its lone
seat. However, certain Reverse stalwarts felt I wasn't
anti-Big-Business enough to be their standard bearer. Others
contended I was too flaky. Both points were valid.
After
reading last night's
Journal, Gerry and his crew were probably
scared to death that I'd accept the Rampart chairmanship, mutate
instantly into a capitalist swine, and cut off all their lovely
money.
"I'll
give Gonzalez half an hour. Make the appointment for 1300 in my
office. Anything else?"
"Bethany
Frost heard you were coming in. She wants to talk to you briefly
about your brother, Dan."
"Rats."
This I didn't need. "Maybe for a few minutes in my office, if
there's time after I finish with Buchanan. But I'm off to meet Jake
Silver around 1715. Two for dinner, just me for the show. Cancel the
second Shakespeare ticket. Jake begged off."
"I'll
take care of it. Is there anything else you need me to arrange before
you arrive? A limo and security escort for the restaurant and
theater?"
"Nope.
I'll wear my Anonyme and take the Path just like an ordinary citizen.
Media stalkers will never notice me in the capital crush. I'm in
disguise." I held the phone at arm's length so she could check
me out.
I'd seen
no reason to conform to Rampart Concern's dress code during my stint
as Chief Legal Officer, since I rarely left the tower. My customary
work attire of ratty jeans, scuffed boots, and tired western-wear
shirts had scandalized Jane Nelligan sadly, although she never said a
disapproving word. Today, however, I'd donned a featherweight
charcoal worsted business suit with a matching silk turtleneck, a
muted aquamarine scarf, and a silver neck brooch inset with a small
nugget of turquoise. The only vestige of maverickhood I'd allowed
myself were a pair of well-polished, low-heel, pointy-toed, Tony Lama
cowboy boots in black mokcrok, peeking out from beneath my elegantly
creased trousers.
"Unbelievable,"
Jane murmured. "You'll certainly impress Stanislawski and
Buchanan. If they recognize you at all."
"Oh,
they will," I said dryly. "I can guarantee that."
I said
goodbye and finished my coffee. Then I exited the ranch house through
the kitchen, kissing Rosalia the cook on her cheek as I passed by.
It
was a beautiful Arizona morning, clear and cool, with the sun shining
over Buzzard Roost Mesa and warblers singing their hearts out among
the ponderosa pines. I heard the faint whinny of a horse from over by
the stock barns. Maybe it was Billy, saying
hasta la vista.
Empty
saddles in the old corral.
Carrying a
briefcase full of executive paraphernalia, I trudged down the
manicured gravel path to the hopper pad, where my Garrison-Laguna
hoppercraft waited. No pilot. I almost always do my own driving. It's
a control thing.
Control.
I'd fallen
asleep last night brooding about it, and when I woke my mind was
firmly made up. It wasn't going to take me months to decide on my
future—assuming I had any when my Haluk excursion was over. I
knew for certain that I'd never again relinquish control of my life
to any person or any institution. Not to Rampart Amalgamated Concern.
Not to the Reversionist Party.
The head
seat at Rampart's boardroom table had never been a viable career
choice for me. It was true that I'd be in a powerful position to
advance Reversionist ideals if I became Rampart's chairman. Setting
the agenda and having a tie-breaking vote on the board could
significantly affect company policy. But the personal independence
that had always been so important to me would be lost if I took
Simon's place. I'd be fenced in by constant decision-making, forced
to weigh every action and utterance because it could influence the
lives and fortunes of billions of people, poisoned by creeping
expediency, morphing inevitably into the kind of corporate drone I
professed to despise.
I couldn't
do it. My skills were adversarial, not executive. I'd been a
competent cop, a cunning legal strategist, and a damned fine
vigilante. But I was no organization man. No way, no how.
Serious
politics wasn't an option, either. It was one thing to play
grandstanding left-wing firebrand as I'd done two years earlier,
trumpeting radical ideas without taking responsibility for their
implementation, happily twisting establishment tails while the
tabloid media egged me on: Asahel Frost—another rich man with a
big mouth and a bee in his bonnet, convinced he has the answers to
the galaxy's ills!
I still
thought my answers were good ones. However, serving as the sole
Assembly Delegate of a fledgling splinter party was simply not a
practical course of action. Why, I'd have to learn tact and
diplomacy. Legislative horsetrading. The art of graceful compromise.
Me?
Who was I
kidding? Even the best and brightest Liberal Party lawmakers, such as
my friend Sontag, endured a perpetual uphill battle in an Assembly
dominated by Conservative creatures of the Hundred Concerns. An
amateur like me didn't have a prayer.
There was
a more appropriate way for me to advance the Reversionist cause. I
intended to discuss it with Gerry Gonzalez today.
Whistling
"Happy Trails to You," I climbed into my flying machine,
entered the destination in the navigator, and let myself be whisked
off to Toronto.
——
You
pronounce it "Trawna" unless you're a hopeless clodhopper
or belong to an alien race, in which case you or your mechanical
translator doggedly voice every vowel and consonent. While
Torontonians snicker.
The city
was born as a native "place of meetings" where two rivers
flowing into Lake Ontario flanked a convenient marshy plain.
Scattered tribes came there to swap furs and copper and shell beads.
It became a small French trading post in 1720, and later it was
briefly the capital of British Canada. Waves of immigration in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries brought steady economic growth and
a uniquely cosmopolitan character that made Toronto a popular choice
for the United Nations' permanent headquarters, then for the capital
of the Commonwealth of Human Worlds as the commercialization of the
stars began.
By the
year 2236 the conurbation sprawled across 20,000 square kilometers
above the northern shore of the lake. Its population was about
seventeen million—most of them human. Viewed at night from
space, Toronto proclaims itself with a triumphant blaze of light,
beyond any doubt the largest and most prosperous city on the planet
Earth.
The
original mosquito-plagued trading ground between the Humber and Don
Rivers remains the city center, augmented now by scores of artificial
islands out in the lake. A semipermeable force-umbrella 40 kilometers
in diameter fends off inconvenient weather phenomena. Toronto's heart
bristles with hundreds of multihued crystal towers crammed with
offices and apartments, interconnected by skyways and the
computerized highroad network. Beneath the surface streets lie
rapid-transit and service subways, along with the unique warren of
underground pedestrian walks known as the Path.
Many of
the modern buildings stand astride venerable Canadian structures that
have been carefully preserved. Churches, grand hotels, theaters, and
picturesque old shopping precincts and restaurants are hedged by
clear piers and buttresses that support the soaring towers.
Sometimes
the new hovers pleasingly over the old. The massive Commonwealth
Assembly House rises on sturdy glassy stilts above the old Ontario
Parliament buildings; historic BCE Place is comfortably embraced by
Omnivore Concern's fanciful obelisk; Macrodur Tower benevolently
engulfs St. James Cathedral. But in other cases the overall effect is
more ominous. Carnelian's ugly needle of beef-bouillon-colored silica
glass, entangled in a dozen skyways, overwhelms the stately old City
Hall, while the 400-story ithyphallic monstrosity that houses
Galapharma seems on the point of crushing the Queen's Quay Terminal.
Rampart
Tower, only thirty-five years old and innocent of historic
underpinnings, is a relatively modest blue-and-white skyscraper
across the street from Grange Park. It is neither distinguished nor
ugly, a mere hundred stories high, served by three vehicle skyways
and having a hopper pad for aerial access. Before Rampart attained
Concern status, it only occupied the top fifteen floors, leasing out
the rest. The expanded firm now filled the entire building. God knew
what would happen after the consolidation.
The
conference room where I would meet Lorne Buchanan today was a
circular chamber at Rampart Tower's summit. My offices and the rest
of the Legal Department occupied the ninety-sixth floor. The place I
called home while I resided in the capital was a small clutch of
rooms on the lake side of the seventy-third floor, identical to the
suites housing transient junior executives, except for a hologram
mounted over the fake fireplace that depicted a yellow submarine
named
Pernio II, chugging wistfully along the surface of a
sapphire alien lagoon.
I hated my
Rampart Tower apartment. But I'd resisted Simon's urgings that I get
myself a more suitable dwelling in The Beaches or one of the other
upscale parts of town. No use bothering, I told him. I wasn't
planning to stay.
He'd never
believed me.
——
The sky
was leaden and a combination of cold rain and sleet was falling when
my aircraft arrived at the southern outskirts of Toronto Conurbation
ATZ. I gave Traffic Control my destination, Macrodur Tower's upper
landing shelf, and was promptly shunted into a holding formation over
the dull green lake while computers sequenced my hopper—and
about four dozen others—to touch down in the identical place.
It was
already quarter to twelve. I'd been delayed by a traffic-vector
glitch in Chicago airspace. I got on the phone to warn Stanislawski's
secretary that I might not be able to make the appointment unless I
jumped the line.
"I'll
arrange priority routing," she told me. "You'll be landing
in a restricted area. Please wait in your aircraft until a transport
capsule arrives."
Beneath
the force-field, Toronto's central district was sheltered from the
icy rain. But occasionally, vagaries of cold air-flow and high
humidity conspired to produce weird artificial clouds under the
protective roof. It was happening today. Although it was high noon,
the fielded part of the city was sunk in heavy twilight. Swags of
mist hung spookily around the illuminated towers and hid the tips of
the loftier ones.
The
engineers at Macrodur's skyport dealt efficiently with the nuisance,
clearing the air with infrared beacons. My hopper settled onto a
sequestered pad, alphanumerics and transponder ID discreetly masked
by security electronics from the moment I exited controlled airspace.
Not a living soul was in sight, in spite of the fact that scores of
aircraft were taking off and landing.
A VIP
transport capsule with one-way windows came gliding out to meet me
and extruded a boarding tunnel that docked with the door of my
hopper. A robot voice requested an iris scan to confirm my identity.
I showed it my eyeball, then climbed in as instructed.
The
skyport, like the rest of the building's gold and white exterior, was
exquisitely designed. But once inside the tower walls, the visitor
was conveyed through corridors and anti-grav transit tubes that were
uniformly mushroom-colored, blank, and claustrophobic, lacking any
directional signs. All I saw as I sped toward Stanislawski's offices
were anonymous carts and capsules traveling on unfathomable errands.
The doors leading off the access platforms were unmarked, giving no
hint of what lay beyond them.
I had
visited Macrodur Tower—but not the chairman's lair—numbers
of times over the past couple of years. Worrywart financial mavens
concerned about Macrodur's investment in Rampart periodically
commanded me to explain my more bizarre tactics during the Galapharma
trial. Sometimes Adam Stanislawski attended the interrogations; more
often he didn't. But he had always expressed complete confidence in
me, and on one occasion had gone out of his way to reaffirm his
personal decision to grant Rampart the venture credit it had so
desperately needed. His action had paved the way for Rampart's
upgrade to Concern status and finally forced the hand of Galapharma's
lunatic CEO, Alistair Drummond, contributing to his downfall.
The
Macrodur chairman's access platform was as featureless as all the
others. There were no obvious security features guarding the great
man, who admitted me to his private office himself. Three walls of
the large room were covered with alternating strips of dark wood
paneling and buff grass-cloth. The fourth wall, behind a vast
Victorian partners desk, was an enormous window. Heavy drapes of dark
green monk's cloth framed the eerie scene outside. The pictures on
the walls were nonholographic, romantic terrestrial landscapes with
the exception of a woman's portrait in oils above the green marble
fireplace. No modern data-processing or communication equipment was
in evidence, but I suspected that most of the antique cabinets,
presses, and escritoires furnishing the room had been gutted and
stuffed with cyber-ware.
"Filthy
day," said Adam Stanislawski. "Let's sit by the fire and
have some coffee."
He was in
his mid-sixties, of stocky build, and had abundant white hair and a
grandfatherly mustache, in defiance of alpha male corporate chic. His
hyacinth-blue eyes were small, alive with intelligence, humor, and
fuck-not-with-me authority.
"Thank
you for seeing me, sir," I said, taking a designated chair. Adam
is one of the few persons I know who naturally rates an honorific.
"My
pleasure, Helly. I believe you take your coffee black these days."
He handed me a plain stoneware cup of steaming brew.
For the
sake of politeness I took a sip. "I won't waste your time with
preliminaries. You're aware that my father has proposed me to succeed
him as Rampart's chairman. I'd like to know what you think of the
idea."
Adam
Stanislawski snapped the ball back to me without hesitation. "It
sucks. Like the Great Sagittarian Mother of All Black Holes."
I burst
out laughing. "Would you care to elaborate?"
"The
chairman of an Amalgamated Concern is responsible for the long-term
direction of the firm. He or she must have a coherent vision of the
firm's future. But having a vision isn't enough. A successful
chairman needs the force of character to make that vision a reality."
Zing!
A perfect gut-shot. I started to speak, but he held up a hand and
forged on.
"You'd
like to steer Rampart hi a completely new direction, beginning
immediately. That won't work. I'm not saying your dream of Insap
small-stakeholdership is foolish or impossible. Only that it's
premature and currently inappropriate. Marrying Rampart and
Galapharma is going to be godawfully difficult. The new Concern will
not merely be the sum of the parts of the previous two. The
transition requires a generalissimo who can identify and encourage
those executives who'll be the most effective leaders for the future.
He'll have to scrutinize every major project and decide whether it
should be retained, modified, or discarded. Rampart's new chairman
will have to be a hard-nosed evaluator. Even a hatchetman. This is
not a job for"—he smiled good-humoredly—"a
spontaneous paladin."
"Or a
rogue cowboy," I said, drinking more coffee.
"You're
both of those things, Helly Frost. Someday in the far distant future
you might make a good Rampart Chairman of the Board. But not now."
"Not
ever," I said.
"Have
you ever thought of becoming Rampart's syndic? I should think that
job would suit your talents rather well."
The
Corporate Syndic was a glorified lobbyist, the principal liaison
between a Concern or Starcorp and the Commonwealth Assembly. At
present, my cousin Zared Frost held the position, in addition to that
of Chief Operating Officer. The latter job took most of his
attention, and also required his residency on the planet Seriphos in
the Perseus Spur. He was a competent syndic, but an unspectacular
one.
"The
idea's interesting," I told Stanislawski. "The position
certainly has more appeal to me than the chairmanship. But perhaps
Simon would be a better choice, given his long years of experience."
The
Macrodur chairman shook his head. "Your father's day is done.
When Rampart consolidates with Galapharma, your corporate syndic will
have to be a vigorous person, able to stand up to the pressures of
capital politics. Think about it seriously, Helly."
I smiled
noncommitally. "I will. But right now I'd like to know who you
think would make the best chairman for Rampart."
Without
hesitation Adam Stanislawski said, "Gunter Eckert, your Chief
Financial Officer. He's a founding stakeholder and one of the best
intellects on the Rampart team. I know he doesn't want the job. But
he'll take it and do it well. I'd like our director, John Ellington,
to be vice chairman, a close adviser to Gunter without additional
voting authority. The two of them, working with your older sister,
will keep the reorganized Concern on track. If you like, I'll pass on
my considered opinion to Simon and Eve."
The
"opinion" of the 400-kilo gorilla.
"I'd
appreciate it if you would, sir."
Adam
Stanislawski rose from his chair. Taking the cue, I did, too,
figuring that our short meeting was over. I felt relieved and
vindicated. Better get one thing straight, however.
"I
don't plan to give up my Rampart directorship," I said. "Or
my notion to apply Reversionist principles to the Concern's relations
with nonstargoing Insaps. Even if I don't become Corporate Syndic, I
intend to exert continuous pressure on the other directors. Rampart
is going to initiate experimental programs on suitable worlds where
fuller Insap economic participation is most feasible."
"Good!
I'll be watching with interest." He shot me an oblique look. We
hadn't started for the door yet. "And I'll keep an eye on your
other activities, too."
"My
financial support of the Reversionist party will continue, but I'm no
longer interested in becoming an Assembly Delegate."
"That's
not the kind of activity I was referring to."
Uh-oh...
Adam
Stanislawski went to the window. The view was stupendous, a forest of
jewel-bright spires glittering with countless points of light, the
arching high roads and their streaming traffic, controlled swarms of
aircraft—the whole wrapped in glowing bands of mist.
"I
have the reputation of being a straight-arrow," the Macrodur
chairman said. "Galapharma's vicious raid on Rampart bugged the
hell out of me. So when your sister Eve proposed her venture-credit
arrangement, I was receptive. Helping a feisty little outfit poke a
sharp stick in Alistair Drummond's greedy eye sounded like a great
idea. But I'm a practical businessman, too. Macrodur never would have
taken a stake in Rampart unless I'd been convinced that the
investment was a good one. The deciding factor was the potentially
huge Haluk market for your genen vector, PD32:C2."
"I
realize that."
"I've
heard that you have a private vendetta against the Haluk. That you're
looking for a way to discredit them and abrogate the new treaties. Is
it true?"
"I
believe that the Haluk can't be trusted, and that our treaties with
them are severely flawed—especially since there's no provision
for close human inspection of their planets. The Haluk almost
certainly have a severe overpopulation problem in their star-cluster
that's being made worse by eradication of their allomorphism. The
severity of the problem deserves investigation."
"Ah."
A restrained nod.
"The
only recourse the aliens have is to move into the Milky Way," I
went on. "To do that without destroying their economy, they need
our advanced starship technology, as well as human expertise in other
scientific areas. If the Haluk were content to migrate to our galaxy
in a peaceful and civilized manner, there'd be no problem. My
personal experience with them suggests they'd prefer a more drastic
solution to their predicament."
"But
you have no concrete proof of hostile intent."
"I
have presumptive evidence. It's kept under conditions of the most
stringent security by Assembly Delegate Efrem Sontag, an old friend
of mine from Harvard Law School. I hope to obtain more proof, working
very discreetly as a private citizen. I have a certain talent for
clandestine operations. Since no one else seems interested in
analyzing Haluk ways and means, I'm taking on the job by default."
"I
see. Let me be frank, then. Macrodur and its affiliates will never do
anything to impede your investigations—provided you keep me
personally informed of verifiable dangers to the Commonwealth."
Well,
who'da thunk it!
"You
surprise me," I said evenly.
"If
you knew me better, Helly, perhaps you wouldn't be surprised. But
don't assume that other Concerns share my point of view. If you are
seen to
openly endanger the new trade treaty, you risk lethal
retaliation. Most specifically, from agents of Carnelian and Sheltok,
the Concerns that have the most to lose."
"I
understand."
"I
wonder if you do, entirely." Stanislawski was staring out the
window with his hands clasped behind his back. "The ultraheavy
transactinide elements vital to antimatter fuels and other
high-energy applications are devilishly difficult to obtain. For the
most part, they're found on R-class Sagittarian worlds—appalling
planets in recurrent-nova systems where humans can't survive, even in
full armor. Mining these elements robotically from orbit is becoming
increasingly expensive, as the more accessible lodes are worked out.
And now, suddenly, a new source of these crucial energy products has
unexpectedly opened up. By some astrophysical fluke, the Haluk
Cluster is also rich in the ultraheavies, perhaps because it's a tiny
captive galaxy rather than a true satellite of the Milky Way. So, in
a certain sense, the Haluk have us over a barrel."
"A
nice metaphor," I remarked cynically, "that most people
take care not to examine too closely."
"I
won't belabor the point." Stanislawski took me gently by the
elbow and steered me toward the door. "The Haluk trade treaty
with humanity is mutually beneficial. Antimatter energy is vital to
the continuing growth of interstellar commerce. Remember that."
"I'm
not a loose cannon, Adam," I said softly. "Just an ex-cop
who can't resist analyzing evidence when it's shoved into my face."
"I
appreciate that. Which is why I won't stop you from gathering more of
that evidence." His blue eyes twinkled benignly. "You do
realize that if I wanted to stop you, I would. Decisively."
"Oh,
yeah."
He
opened the door for me. A transport capsule waited. "You know,
Helly, thus far in our exploitation of the stars, we've been very
lucky. We've never come up against an alien race with the inclination
and the capability to successfully wage war on us. That good
luck has made us complacent. Complacency is bad policy—for a
business, and for a government." He shook my hand. "It was
good to talk to you ... Let me know what Barky Tregarth has to say,
if you find him." He stepped back and the featureless door slid
shut, leaving me alone on the platform with my wild surmise.
——
Geraldo
Gonzalez met with me in my office at Rampart Tower and went away
doubly relieved when I told him I would continue my lavish funding of
the Reversionist party and promotion of its ideals, while not
demanding the Assembly seat in return. I wasn't surprised when he
admitted that the Nominating Committee preferred him for the new
post.
I strongly
advised Gerry against squandering our lone vote in futile causes. He
said I was a fine one to talk. We parted amiably, after agreeing that
I deserved a long holiday, untroubled by political hassles.
When he
was gone I opened my office's wall safe and took out the slim StelEx
package from Mimo Bermudez that I had not yet had time to examine. I
tipped out the encrypted slate and the two plain gold wedding bands
on their chain. The larger ring fit exactly over the small one. The
fact that I'd kept them had convinced both my big sister, Eve, and
Matilde Gregoire, a woman I'd once asked to live with me, that I was
still in love with my former wife.
I'd denied
it. But it was I who had divorced Joanna DeVet following my frame-up
and criminal conviction, even though she had been willing to share my
exile in the Perseus Spur. Crushing humiliation and despair made it
impossible for me to accept her sacrifice.
Joanna had
never remarried. She was still a professor of political science,
teaching at the central campus of Commonwealth University only a few
blocks north of Rampart Tower. It might as well have been 14,000
light-years.
Eve, wed
only to her job but a soppy sentimentalist all the same, had urged me
again and again to call Joanna. But I could not bring myself to do
it, any more than I could analyze the reason why.
Setting
the rings aside, I opened Mimo's slate. The letter on the small
screen was what I half expected. My friend had sent me a copy of his
last will and testament. Since I was due to go to the meeting with
Lorne Buchanan in just a few minutes, I only scanned the document
briefly. The principal legatees were the schools and hospital of
Kedge-Lockaby's Big Beach continent, which would receive his
substantial fortune in semi-ill-gotten gains.
But Mimo
had left his beautiful bungalow on Eyebrow Cay to me, along with the
rest of the island.
——
Lorne
Buchanan and I, our bodies certified to harbor no nano-eavesdropping
devices, met alone in the equally bug-free premises of the spacious
Rampart conference room. We quickly came to an agreement that was
mutually gratifying.
He was a
young man, only in his mid-forties. His build was athletic, his brow
clear and wide, his jaw forthright and spade-shaped, and his manner
confident. Only the smallest whiff of fear lurking in his deeply
shadowed eyes acknowledged the fatal quagmire that now threatened to
pull him under. He had been Gala's Chief Operating Officer before
becoming CEO upon the death of Alistair Drummond. He was a doer, not
a schemer, whose Concern responsibilities had principally involved
overseeing commodity production on the thousands of Gala worlds in
the Orion Arm.
Lorne
Buchanan swore to me—offering to confirm the fact by submitting
to the truth machines—that he had had no direct involvement
either in Gala's illegal Haluk adventure or in the dirty tricks of
the Rampart takeover conspiracy. He claimed to have advised Drummond
against a Haluk alliance from the time the scheme was first broached.
Buchanan stopped short of calling his former boss a stone nutcase,
but the inference was there. Other members of the Galapharma board,
he said, were furious and frightened at the mess Drummond had gotten
them into. After Drummond's violent demise, the board had elected
Buchanan in a vain hope of salvaging the situation.
When I
dangled my deal, Lorne Buchanan swallowed it hook, line, and sinker.
He readily agreed to affirm the agreement by undergoing psychotronic
interrogation by my trusted associate, Karl Nazarian, before leaving
Rampart Tower.
I wanted
truthful answers from him to the following questions:
——
1. Are you a Haluk demiclone? Can you identify any
demiclones now working in Galapharma AC?
2. Are you willing to obtain and hand over to Delegate
Efrem Sontag all information pertaining to the allomorph trait
eradication and demiclone procedures developed by Galapharma for the
Haluk, including details and locations of all clandestine demiclone
labs that were or are now in operation, plus the total number of
human-Haluk demiclones produced there?
3. Are you willing to obtain and hand over to Delegate
Son-tag the secret genetic marker identifying a Haluk-human
demiclone?
4. Are you willing to obtain and hand over to Delegate
Son-tag all information available on the supervision of Haluk
demiclone labs by Galapharma Security personnel?
5. Are you willing to ensure that Delegate Sontag alone,
and no other person, government agency, corporation, or media data
retrieval system gains access to this information—preferably by
destroying all traces of it personally?
——
Lorne
Buchanan declared emphatically that he was not a Haluk ringer, nor
did he know anyone else who was. As I had suspected, the "sealed"
data concerning the Haluk still resided in Galapharma's computers
under heavy encryption. He was certain he could obtain everything I
requested, send it to Sontag, and obliterate all traces of it from
the Gala database.
In return
I agreed to give him a document carrying my personal iridographic
seal, stating that Rampart would not cooperate in any criminal
prosecution against him or designated close associates. Furthermore,
we would hire him as Assistant Chief Operating Officer in the
consolidated Concern, and continue his employment for a minimum
period of ten years or until he chose to vacate the position.
Jane
Nelligan brought the document to the conference room. Buchanan and I
eyeballed it. The Gala CEO zapped a copy to his personal attorney and
I sent others to the offices of Simon, Eve, and Efrem Sontag. Then I
handed Jane the questions for Karl Nazarian and she courteously
escorted the visitor away to the torture chamber.
Lorne
Buchanan would fulfill his promises scrupulously. Sadly, he would not
live long enough enjoy the perks of the trade-off. There was another
question I should have added to that list of his:
——
6. To the best of your knowledge, is
Alistair Drummond dead?
——
"Helly!
Felicitations on winning the Galapharma verdict!"
"Thanks,
Ef."
"I
presume you want me to forego wisecracks about your loony-tune
interview in the
Wall Street Journal."
"I
spoke from my heart of hearts," I retorted, "and shot from
the hip. As the king said,
Honi soft qui merde y pense."
"That's
mal ypense."
"It's
all shit to me, pal... For your information, I have declined the
Rampart chairmanship. Neither will I seek a seat in the Assembly.
Gerry Gonzalez will hoist high the banner of Reversionism among you
and your colleagues. Be kind to him."
I had
reached my friend Sontag in his hopper. He was flying home alone to
his home on Lake Simcoe following the early Friday adjournment of the
Assembly. After he had secured our call with Phase XII encryption, I
filled him in on details of the deal I had struck with Lorne
Buchanan.
Ef was
cautiously enthusiastic. "If Buchanan comes through with
everything he promised, we'll end up with enough solid data to
finally make a presentation to my committee. Then the matter can be
opened to debate on the Assembly floor. Perhaps I can even force a
special review of the no-inspection clause of the nonaggression pact.
The existence of sizable human-Haluk demiclone factories alone is
prima facie evidence of some sort of questionable intent by the
aliens. During the treaty talks, the Haluk Servant of Servants
maintained that only a handful of human transforms had been created.
As I recall, his explanation was ingenious but not very plausible
from a human point of view.
"The
fakes were supposedly going to serve as some sort of goodwill envoys
on Haluk planets in their star-cluster, where we humans are viewed as
big bad boogymen. The Haluk fed that ridiculous story to Galapharma
to get the demiclone project going in the first place. I'm sure
Alistair Drummond didn't believe a word of it. But it was expedient
for him to accept it, just as it was expedient for Concern-connected
bureaucrats in Xenoaffairs and Interstellar Commerce to do the same
when they drew up the treaties."
We briefly
discussed legal aspects of Buchanan's material—mostly ways our
political enemies might attempt to discredit it. Then I told Ef my
plan for pumping Barky Tregarth about life in the Haluk
Cluster—provided I could locate the old Throwaway. I said
nothing about going extragalactic myself, but Mama Sontag didn't
raise any dummies.
"I
like the idea of checking out Haluk demographics through an
informant," he said. "Even if he's disenfranchised, his
deposition
sub duritia would be admissible if it pertains to
the security of the Commonwealth. Ask Tregarth about the Haluk
military-industrial capability. Ask him for details of their
production of transactinides. But don't even think about buzzing off
to the Haluk Cluster yourself to verify Barky's story."
I started
to deny I had any such notion, but he cut me off.
"Don't
try to bullshit me, Helly. A snoop job like that would violate the
nonaggression pact. I wouldn't be able to use any evidence you
gathered."
"Not
in a formal Assembly inquiry, perhaps. But it could still be useful
poop for you to leak to the media, sway public opinion, pressure the
other Delegates—"
"I
can't be seen to condone your breaking Commonwealth law."
"Not
even the asinine ones? I can tell the difference, you know. I'm a
Juris Doctor from Harvard, just like you."
He
shook his head wearily. I was testing his patience with my lame
humor. "And
I'm a politician with a certain reputation
for probity, working in a government almost entirely under the
control of galactic Big Business. The public respects my integrity,
and so do the media. My square-shooter image is the source of my
power and I can't do anything to endanger it. Why do you think I've
been so cautious about waiting for the appropriate time to present
the evidence you've already gathered? Two years ago you weren't a
credible source. Today, by some miracle, you very nearly are ...
unless you fuck yourself, pulling some idiotic stunt."
Ouch. "Can
we at least agree that you'll hold off asking your big question on
the Assembly floor until I question Barky Tregarth?"
"You
don't know how long it will take to find him. And what if the man's a
washout?"
I just had
to give it one last try. "Look. A quick survey of selected Haluk
Cluster worlds would take me ten weeks maximum. I've got the ship and
the equipment, and I can do the job. Ten weeks, Ef! I could release
the information to the media anonymously. Sure, the Haluk and the
consortium will suspect that I'm the secret source—but so what?
They won't be able to prove anything."
"Helly,
the Assembly is on the verge of approving the sale of fifty more
Rampart Mandate T-2 worlds to the Haluk. It'll happen in June, just
before summer recess. Less than eight weeks from now."
I voiced a
heart-felt "Fuck!" No one at Rampart Tower had said a word
to me about this.
"It
gets worse. A new bill that would let the aliens buy three hundred
more Rampart worlds will come out of committee and be put to a
vote shortly after the new session begins in late August. All of the
Conservatives and many of the incoming new Liberals will vote for it.
There's been a tremendous push from Sheltok and Bodascon and the
other consortium members to give these additional Haluk colonies the
green light. The only chance I have of preventing the bill's passage
is by preventing its introduction: killing it in committee. To do
that we've got to ignite a firestorm of public opinion on the PlaNet
that even the most venal Delegates can't ignore."
"Can
you kill the fifty-planet giveaway?"
"Impossible.
It would be terrible strategy to open the Haluk inquiry just before
the summer recess. We have to concentrate all our efforts on
scuppering the second bill. Ideally, the evidence should be placed
before my Xeno Oversight Committee when the Assembly reconvenes. And
you should be prepared to testify personally. We won't use
psychotronic interrogation on witnesses before the committee—but
it may be necessary when the inquiry moves to the Assembly floor."
"I
understand."
Efrem
Sontag and I stared at each other in silence. We were the same age
but he looked ten years older. The image on my office communicator
showed a slightly built unhandsome man with lank dark hair, oversized
ears, and the scorching eyes of an indomitable fighter. In spite of
his membership in the principal minority party, he was one of the
most powerful Assembly Delegates, a true untouchable, the scourge of
fellow legislators who dwelt cozily in the pockets of the Hundred
Concerns.
The
inquiry he was about to orchestrate would touch off one of the
biggest political rows in the history of the Commonwealth. While the
Concerns screamed bloody murder at the prospect of Haluk trade
disruption, the tabloid media would joyfully fan the flames of
controversy. We hoped that the Commonwealth citizenry would be
sufficiently alarmed at the notion of Haluk doppelganger spies that
they would pressure their Delegates interactively over the PlaNet,
overriding the influence of the Concerns and forcing a review of the
dubious treaties.
And what
would the Haluk do then, poor things? Cave in, confess all, permit
full inspection of their worlds, and promise to behave in the future
if we let them continue to colonize the Milky Way?
Maybe. If
the heat was turned high enough.
I said,
"It's in your hands now, Ef. I have a few reliable people who've
worked with me that I'd like you to consider taking on board. People
with reputations above reproach like Karl Nazarian, and Beatrice
Mangan of the ICS Forensic Division."
"I'd
welcome their help."
"I'll
do my best to get Barky Tregarth's deposition for you quickly.
Meanwhile, take very good care of yourself, old buddy."
Sontag
uttered a brief laugh that had no humor in it. "The Concerns
wouldn't dare send their thugs after me."
"I'm
not worried about the Concerns. The problem could be Haluk demiclones
operating right here in Toronto. Fake humans."
He gazed
at me for a moment in shocked silence. "Are you serious?"
"Dead
serious. I've met a few who were masquerading as Galapharma Security
personnel. They were extremely convincing. The Haluk are at least as
intelligent as we are. And they have a really steep learning curve."
His
expression remained neutral, but I knew he was finding it hard to
believe that a disguised alien entity could successfully pose as a
human being over a significant period of time.
I said,
"One of the most important pieces of data we're supposed to
obtain from Lorne Buchanan is the gene market that identifies
demiclones. Pass that information on to Bea Mangan as soon as
possible. Then get her to secretly test all of your close associates
for creeping Halukitis." I hesitated, hating to say what had to
come next. "And test Liliane, too."
Sontag
exclaimed, "Are you out of your mind, Helly?"
"All
you need for a proper DNA assay is a snotty Kleenex or a hair with a
live follicle. Neither your wife nor your staff people have to know
they're being checked out. Dammit, Ef, the demiclone moles are out
there! I'm sure of it. The Haluk ringers who penetrated Gala Security
are probably long gone, but there have to be others holed up for the
long haul."
"I'll
get on it," he said grimly. "God—you really know how
to spoil a man's day."
"Think
how useful it would be to our case," I said, "if you found
Haluk spies in sensitive government positions."
"Useful!"
He made a face.
"I'll
talk to you again as soon as I know anything useful."
"Have
a safe Barky Hunt," he said.
"You
keep safe, too, Ef. No joke."
"I
know." He ended the call.
I sat
quietly at my desk for some time after that, alone in my familiar
messy office with suitcoat, vest, and neck scarf discarded. Running
over the events of the afternoon. Feeling both drained and
exhilarated at what I'd accomplished in a few brief hours.
It was
almost as good as lying on a tropical beach on far Kedge-Lockaby.
My desk
clock said 16:42. In less than an hour I'd be meeting Jake Silver.
Should I put off my younger sister, Beth, or do my family duty?
Maybe she
hadn't shown up.
I touched
the intercom. "Jane, did Lorne Buchanan finish his psychotronic
session with Karl Nazarian?"
"It
went very well. All responses were positive and there was very little
discomfort because of the cooperative mindset of the subject. Citizen
Buchanan left the tower about ten minutes ago with his entourage. He
asked me to tell you that the requisite data will be transferred to
Delegate Sontag's office immediately under conditions of strictest
security."
"Outstanding.
Um ... do I have anyone waiting in reception?"
"Your
sister Bethany has been here for over two hours," Jane said,
with a hint of reproach. "I informed her that a meeting today
might not be possible, but you would do your best to see her."
Rats.
"Send
her in, please."
Rising
from the desk, I opened the door to my seldom-used clothes closet to
expose the full-length mirror and began reknotting my scarf.
Beth
wafted in. "Good afternoon, Asa." Her voice was almost
inaudible, a bad sign. The quieter she spoke, the more pissed off she
was likely to be.
"Please
sit down," I said. "Forgive me spiffying myself up. I have
to rush out of here in a few minutes for an urgent appointment."
"It's
quite all right." She refused my offer of coffee and sat
silently for several minutes while I finished dressing.
Bethany
Frost was wearing a smart walking suit of teal silk tweed with
shimmering greenish highlights. Dark blue ankleboots, a matching
handbag, and a choker of heavy gold links inset with a myriad of tiny
diamonds completed the ensemble. As always, in spite of her
high-fashion clothes, she managed to look ephemeral, like some
delicate butterfly that the slightest breath of wind would crumple.
Beth is not as petite as Eve, but like her, has the fine bone
structure and fair coloring of our late mother, Katje Vanderpost.
I call
Beth my little sister because she was born seven years after Eve and
has always looked more youthful than her years. She is actually two
years older than I. Her intellect is sharp as a scalpel, with a
mathematical bent, but her emotional temperament is unstable. For
nearly ten years she served Rampart as its Assistant Chief Financial
Officer under Gunter Eckert, until our brother Daniel's fall from
grace drove her to a nervous breakdown and she retired from the
business world. She and her husband, a cybernetic researcher named
Carter Berg, and two teenage children.
Beth and I
were never particularly affectionate toward one another. When we were
small children, she and I were rivals for the quasimateraal
attentions of Big Sister Eve, who for some reason enjoyed the company
of a brash baby buckaroo rather than Beth's tiresome coy brilliance.
Beth retaliated by bestowing her sibling loyalty on Daniel, two years
Eve's senior. In adulthood the brother and sister remained very
close.
When I
refused to join Rampart after finishing law school, Beth concluded
that I was a traitor to the family. She had always believed me guilty
of the trumped-up charges that destroyed my career in the
Interstellar Commerce Secretariat. During Galapharma's rough wooing
of Rampart, she had sided with those who favored a sellout.
Beth
remained stubbornly convinced of Dan's innocence, in spite of all Eve
and I had done to prove that our brother was a secret collaborator in
Alistair Drummond's conspiracy and directly responsible for our
mother's death.
I went
back to my desk and we stared at each other without speaking. It was
an old ploy of Beth's to put one on the defensive. Her huge blue eyes
were full of unshed tears, but with the tyranny of the meek, she
waited me out until I was forced to break the silence.
"What
can I do for you, sis?"
She
whispered, "Let Dan go."
"That's
not possible."
"It's
killing him, Asa—penned up like a dog in that damned wilderness
lodge up in the Kenora! Snow on the ground six months of the year,
nothing but moose and mosquitoes and loons the rest of the time. And
that filthy medication the InSec people use to keep him docile ...
Dan can't hurt anyone. Let him go home to Norma and Jamie."
"Norma
sees Dan every weekend. Jamie could visit his father if he chose to."
But he didn't. My nephew, a busy young microsurgeon, was convinced of
his father's guilt and made only rare trips to isolated Kingfisher
Lodge in the far northern reaches of Ontario.
Norma
Palmer, Dan's wife, a long-time Conservative party Delegate in the
Assembly, was a more enigmatic figure. She had always kept aloof from
the rest of the family, and now used her political influence to keep
the media away from her luckless husband. It was plain that Norma
still loved Dan, doubtful that she would have approved her
sister-in-law's desire to set him free.
"The
trial's over," Beth persisted. "The tabloid hacks will back
off once consolidation of Rampart and Galapharma begins and find
other fish to fry. Let Dan come back to Toronto and have a normal
human existence. He promises to live very quietly, without rocking
your precious Rampart boat."
"It's
impossible."
"Why?"
she whispered ominously. "Because you and Eve say so?"
"Because
of what Dan did. The way he colluded with Alistair Drummond's
criminal tactics during the takeover fight. Our brother is a crook,
Beth. He could sabotage the consolidation. By rights, he should be
facing criminal prosecution."
"Alistair
Drummond lied to Dan! The merger tactics were never supposed to
involve illegal activity. It was to be strictly business, with only a
little computer snooping to smooth the way. Dan knew nothing about
the sabotage, Qiu's death, Eve's kidnapping, any of that. And he
swears that he never did anything to harm our poor mother. I believe
him."
"Then
let him tell his story to the machines," I said coldly, "and
see if they do."
"You
know those horrible devices can cause brain damage! When you were on
trial for malfeasance, your lawyer wouldn't let you submit to them.
Why should Dan?"
"We've
been over this before. The reason Dan won't undergo psychoprobing is
because he's guilty. For the love of God, Beth—he confessed to
Simon and me while he was flying us to Coventry Blue at gunpoint! He
extorted our voting proxies from us by threatening to have us
transmuted into alien sex slaves!"
"That's
absurd," she said. "That story is so ridiculous not even a
child would believe it. Dan convinced you two that there was nothing
further to be gained by opposing the Galapharma merger. You and Simon
gave him your proxies willingly, then you reneged and came storming
down to the Sky Ranch because—"
"That's
not true. Dan's lying, manipulating you."
"Asa,
he's our
brother. A good husband and father. A man who worked
faithfully for Rampart for over twenty years, making it strong."
"Who
sold out when Pop wouldn't appoint him CEO." I rose from my
seat. "I'm sorry, Beth. I know you love Dan, but he's a
dangerous man—perhaps as crazy as Drummond himself. The proof
that he had our mother killed is overwhelming. But Dan shows
absolutely no remorse, only denial. We've done the best we can for
him, under the circumstances."
"Is
that your final decision?"
"Mine,
Simon's, and Eve's. Now I'm afraid I have to leave. And so do you."
I crossed
to the closet and got my Anonyme anorak, a garment esteemed by shy
skulkers such as minor celebs, unfaithful spouses, and urban
misanthropes. The thing is available in a several fashion colors. Its
privacy-field visor is guaranteed to be proof against any scanner. My
anorak even boasted a special feature, a comfy light armor lining—not
that I needed that kind of protection anymore. With Alistair Drummond
presumably gone where the goblins go, and the Haluk still unaware of
my plan to cramp their style, no one had a motive to whack me. My
greatest enemies nowadays were media busybodies.
I slipped
the anorak on, drew up the open hood, and flicked the switch. Presto!
No face. The tiny force-field is unnoticeable to the wearer. You can
even eat and drink through it—although I didn't intend to
insult Carman's mouth-watering menu by doing so.
Beth
remained in her chair, posed as rigidly as a statue. Her voice was
still low-pitched and calm, but tears coursed down her cheeks,
ruining her flawless makeup.
"All
Dan wanted was the best for Rampart. He was deceived. He would have
made a wonderful CEO, but our father chose Eve instead. His precious
pet! Simon is an arrogant, misguided fool. And you, Asa ... you're—"
I opened
the office door. Jane Nelligan was at her desk.
"Please
see that my sister Beth gets safely home," I said. "It
would be best if you can contact Dr. Berg and advise him that his
wife is feeling upset and needs him. Failing that, have one of the
InSec officers take her home in a hopper." I lowered my voice.
"Make a note. Her visitation rights and phone access to Daniel
Frost are suspended until Eve or I say otherwise. And now I'm outta
here."
"Bastard!"
Beth screamed. "You fucking heartless bastard!"
My
sister's furious shouts continued as I hurried to the bank of
ordinary inertialess elevators that serve Rampart Tower and descended
to the underground thoroughfare called the Path.
Chapter 4
The
force-umbrella sheltering the capital is proof against high wind and
precipitation, but it doesn't modify the ambient air temperature or
humidity. So millions of office workers, junior execs, bureaucrats,
and other downtowners seeking to avoid chilly or overly hot weather
walk from place to place along an extensive system of subterranean
concourses that has been a Toronto fixture for over 250 years.
The Path
connects rapid transit subway stations with every commercial and
government tower in the central core. Its multiple levels comprise a
virtual underground city of bright tunnels having sections of moving
walkway, shopping malls, and jogging lanes. The Path's busier
corridors are lined with fast-food eateries, amusement arcades, and
service establishments. There are even miniature parks where flowers
and trees grow under artificial light, fountains contribute
beneficial neg-ions, and the city's famous black squirrels cadge
handouts from people having lunch on patches of grass. Nothing with
wheels or antigrav lifts—except city cops on bicycles and the
personal powerscooters of the disabled—is allowed in the Path's
pedestrian-friendly network. It invites those interested in a casual
stroll as well as bustling, single-minded commuters.
The
Path has its own folklore, too. Certain little-traveled parts of the
system to the north are alleged to be haunted by the ghosts of Thrown
Away panhandlers and unlicensed vendors, cleared out in a pitiless
sweep thirty years ago. A mazelike area near the university subway
station is fraught with urban legends of suicidal lovers, a berserk
sweeper bot that attempts to suck up the unwary, and the Headless
Professor—behind whose privacy visor lies
nothing. The
lowest levels, shut off behind locked access hatches, are a labyrinth
of disused shopping corridors dating from the previous century, old
service tunnels, ancient sewers, and modern storm drains. They
supposedly form a Dark Path frequented by the lawless, the
desperately poor, and uncountable hordes of giant rats.
During my
recent term of legal servitude, I would sometimes take a break and
hike long distances in Underground Toronto. I enjoyed the infectious
vitality of the Path and the human diversity of its denizens. Some of
them walked shrouded in anonymity, as I always did; but the majority
went about their business with the boisterous self-confidence of a
youthful elite fortunate to have good jobs in the most exciting city
on Earth.
Fair
numbers of aliens mingled with humanity on the Path. The city center
had embassies for four of the five star-going Insap races. (The
grotesque Kalleyni, who found Earth gravity oppressive, kept a
legation at Luna Landing— a fortunate thing for human dignity,
since they were such appalling practical jokers.) A stroller on the
Path might expect to encounter towering Joru in elegant
black-and-white habits, irascible little Qastt, pale Y'tata under
strict orders from their protocol people to take their charcoal pills
and an-tiflatulence medication, and—most numerous of all—the
Haluk. They had flocked to the human capital in droves after the
signing of the treaties. Their blue-skinned trade attaches lobbied
relentlessly in the halls of government, and their commercial reps
infested the executive suites of half the Hundred Concerns, wheeling
and dealing.
The Haluk
were the only aliens who adopted human clothing during their Earth
sojourn. I had never been able to get used to the sight of them,
striding boldly through the underground thoroughfares, always in
groups of three or more, dressed in expensive high-style outfits.
Members of the Joru, Y'tata, and Qastt races lived in apartments
scattered throughout the central city; but all of the Haluk resided
in their embassy, which comprised the top two-thirds of the enormous
Macpherson Tower on Edward Street, just across from the headquarters
of Sheltok, the Big Seven energy Concern.
Like the
restricted Haluk planets, their embassy was strictly off limits to
humanity.
——
Thanks to
my sister Beth, I was late for my meeting with Chief Superintendent
Jake Silver.
I took the
McCaul Street leg of the Path north to the edge of the university
campus, then turned east beneath the teeming government area until I
reached CCID Tower on College Street. An escalator brought me into
the historic lobby, which is part of the original Toronto police
headquarters. I found Jake fidgeting and glaring at his wrist
chronometer. He was wearing a natty camel-colored overcoat and a
black beret.
I sidled
up to him and deactivated my visor. "Yikes! The fuzz!"
He gave me
a dirty look. "It's about time. You know what happens to people
who come late for a reservation at Carman's? Come on. We'll save time
walking outside."
He strode
through the front doors, with me trailing apologetically after. I
turned my privacy visor back on. "Don't get all in a snit, Jake.
They won't throw you out of the place if you're with me. I'm a star!
Rich, too."
"Wiseass.
When was the last time you had dinner at Carman's?"
"Recently,"
I prevaricated. But I actually hadn't been there for over two years,
back when I was still a political wannabe, wining and dining Liberal
party Delegates sympathetic to Reverse notions, hoping they would
allow me to address their open committee sessions and badmouth the
Haluk.
"Did
you get a line on Barky Tregarth?" I inquired.
"I'll
answer that," Jake said, "when I have a tumbler of
Clynelish scotch in my fist and my steak is smiling up at me. You
better pray that the maitre d' is in one of his good moods."
"Is
Albert still there?"
"He
is. And merciless to the tardy."
The
restaurant was only a couple of blocks away, on Alexander Street.
Damp cold struck through my anorak, making me wish the garment had
environmental controls instead of armor. April can really be the
cruelest month in middle North America. Down on the Path, daffodils
and tulips were in exuberant bloom. Aboveground, it still felt like
winter.
Jake and I
charged along the crowded sidewalk without speaking until the traffic
signal at Yonge Street caught us. VIP cars and taxis were in a state
of gridlock, as usual, waiting to get onto the computerized high-road
ramps. The City Council's latest proposal to ban private ground
vehicles from central-core streets had once again been shot down by
the Hundred Concerns.
"Have
a hard day, Chief Superintendent?" I asked Jake neutrally.
"The
usual. Squabbling with a Zone Patrol liaison, chewing out the idiot
droids in Data Processing, accepting shit with a smile from the
powers that be." He paused. "And renewing an old and very
unsavory acquaintance, thanks to you. I got what you wanted, but
you're probably not going to like it."
He didn't
say another word until we reached the 275-year-old steak house. We
were twenty minutes late, but Albert's austere face lost its scowl as
I hove into view, shucking my anorak. An attendant took it and Jake's
overcoat.
"Helly!"
The maitre d' beamed at me. According to Rampart's standard operating
procedure, Jane Nelligan had booked the table in the Concern's name,
not my own. "Welcome back! I was afraid you'd forgotten us."
"Never.
I've just been working my butt to the bone, forced to live on junk
food."
Albert
nodded. "The trial of the century! Your name is on everyone's
lips."
Everyone
who reads the
Wall Street Journal, anyhow. I gave a wry smile
as I slipped him a fat gratuity. "How about a spot in a very,
very quiet corner?"
"Certainly."
He'd make certain that no newshounds or table hoppers annoyed us
during dinner. It was all part of Carman's service.
More than
one head turned as we were conducted through the crowded main room,
where copper and pewter pans and utensils hung thickly from the
ceiling like metallic bats. The air was filled with the smell of
pricey broiled meat and garlic toast.
Our table
was secluded, in one of the cellarlike annex rooms. We perused
leather-bound menus while sipping aperitifs. I had a dry sherry while
Jake knocked back a double of the fiery Highland single malt that was
his favorite.
"Seems
a pity to anesthetize your taste buds with that kiltie coffin varnish
in a restaurant like this," I murmured. "What the hell
proof is it, anyhow?"
"A
hundred twenty-two cask strength, sonny-boy, and only an ignorant
Arizona shitkicker would insult this nectar of the gods. All my years
exiled on K-L, I only managed to get two bottles of Clynelish from
the local bootleggers. Now I'm back on the Blue Marble, I'll make up
for lost opportunities—especially since you're paying."
"I
apologize. Have another wee dram."
"Damn
right I will. And I expect a decent wine with the meal, too."
So I got
us a noble Haut-Brion '21. Jake ordered a grilled T-bone, potatoes
Lyonnaise, and sauteed morels garnished with Aeolian krill—which
he Insisted were kosher. I decided on a flash-seared Wagyu filet, a
side of asparagus with mustard miso, and a salad of nittany ears. He
had an appetizer of artichoke-stuffed ravioli. I chose tiny
last-of-the-season Quilcene oysters, definitely not kosher.
"You
want to tell me what you found out about Barky Tregarth?" I
asked him after his second double scotch arrived.
"Give
you a little back-story first. Long time ago, when I was young like
you and full of the same sort of sappy ideals, I got the goods on a
superior of mine named Ram Mahtani. A tipoff and a data-trail seemed
to show that Ram had taken juice—probably from the Carnelian
Concern—to quash an investigation into violations of the Y'tata
high-tech weaponry embargo. Mahtani had always been a decent boss to
me. And he was a devoted family man with a daughter who had lots of
medical problems. So before I filed a report with Internal Affairs, I
asked him if he had an explanation for the suspicious behavior."
I said,
"Oops."
"Exactly.
I used to be a hopeless softy. Anyhow, overnight the incriminating
data disappeared in a convenient computer crash, and my tipster
changed his story. Poof went the case against Mahtani. Three weeks
later I was bounced from Criminal Investigation, transferred to
Public Safety, and outward bound to a jerkwater world in the Perseus
Spur. Ram Mahtani took early retirement from CCID the following year
and became a highly paid security consultant for Carnelian."
"Sad."
I nibbled on a garlicky breadstick.
"I
remembered Ram when you asked me about Barky Tregarth. It's an open
secret that Carnelian wholesalers in remote Sectors wink at
contraband transactions. Their security people are alleged to keep a
secret roster of trustworthy smugglers. I contacted
Mahtani—anonymously, of course. He told me that Tregarth is
very much alive. I said that my client had a business proposition for
him and wasn't out to nail him. Mahtani might or might not have
believed that. His price for Barky's current alias and address is two
million in untraceable funds."
"Holy
shit!"
"I
told you you wouldn't like it."
"Like
it? I haven't
got it."
"Come
on. You own a quarterstake in Rampart, for chrissake. Two mil isn't
chump change, but it wouldn't even fuel that muscle starship of yours
for a round-trip to the Spur."
"Rampart
pays my fuel bills. I do get a sizable draw—a salary—as a
corporate officer, but I've been treating it like Monopoly money,
funneling almost all of it off to needy Re-versionist causes as soon
as it hits my account. I've done the same with the income from my
Rampart quarterstake."
"Tell
the party to give some of it back."
"It's
probably spent. You know pols."
The
succulent little oysters arrived. I gave them my full attention for
the few minutes it took to wolf them down.
Jake said,
"So you really can't hack the bribe? I thought all you Frosts
were richer than God."
"I
have some money of my own, but I was planning to use it to grease
Tregarth." And for other upcoming expenses. "You think this
Mahtani might haggle?"
"The
man's no street-corner fink, Helly. Two megabux was his price. And
you might want to think very seriously about why he set it so high."
I gave a
gloomy nod. "To see how badly some anonymous party wants old
Barky."
"Here."
Jake took a tiny notepad from his inner breast pocket, tore out a
page and handed it to me. "Mahtani's contact number."
The piece
of paper had a phone code scrawled on it. "An ultrasecure
routing server, I presume."
"Of
course ... And there's something else you should consider before you
deal with this joker. He's a top-notch professional investigator and
he has Carnelian resources to back him up. If you pay him, even with
a blind EFT, he might be able to track you down and screw up your
operation."
"Yeah.
Gran dinero leaves big footprints."
All I
needed was a Carnelian bloodsucker snatching Barky before I could
milk him. Or interrogating him after the fact, which would be even
worse—provided the guy did have crucial information about the
Haluk. Adam Stanislawski's warning about lethal retaliation from
threatened Haluk Consortium Concerns was still vivid in my memory.
The question was, did Ram Mahtani know enough about Barky's past to
make the Haluk connection?
Rats.
Maybe I'd have to forget about the old gunrunner. Unless I could
spike Mahtani's guns, get what I wanted while simultaneously warning
him off...
The waiter
appeared with our main course. We waited until he had finished
arraying the planks with their sizzling chunks of meat and the
various side dishes.
I said to
Jake, "I just had a brilliant idea. I'm going to try a loanshark
for that two mil. A very large shark that Mahtani might not want to
mess with."
Jake
shrugged. He tucked in with gusto while I entered a code into my
pocket phone. It was one that I had never had occasion to use before,
and I held my breath wondering whether the call would go through.
But a
familiar face finally appeared on the small screen. We stared at each
other for a moment and then I lifted the instrument to my ear,
cutting off the video.
"What
is it, Helly?"
"Sorry
to disturb you at home, sir. I have an urgent need for a large sum of
untraceable credit. Naturally I will personally repay the loan at a
future date, along with whatever interest you deem appropriate."
"I
see," Adam Stanislawski said. "How much?"
"Two
million, right now."
"Very
well."
"Can
you load a blind EFT card so that the hidden source of the funds will
be Macrodur, not A. E. Frost, Esquire?"
"Yes.
Is this payment going directly to the person I mentioned at the end
of our visit this afternoon?"
Crafty old
Adam. "Unfortunately not. It's a bribe to a go-between, a highly
placed informant in Carnelian who knows the whereabouts of this
person. The informant might be able to do me damage—but
probably wouldn't dare go up against you."
"The
name."
"Ram
Mahtani."
"I
understand completely."
"Let
me level with you: I can't afford this steep a bribe, even if I
wasn't scared stiff of Mahtani."
Stanislawski
laughed. "I can afford it. And I'm not afraid. Plug your card
into the phone."
I
complied. The instrument's data strip indicated a transfer of funds,
triple the amount I'd requested.
"A
contribution to the war chest," said the Macrodur chairman. "If
Tregarth comes through, you'd better bring him back to Earth for
safekeeping. Tell him I'll personally make it worth his while."
"Will
do. Thanks for the vote of confidence, sir."
He nodded
and broke off.
"So
that's how the simple folk do business," Jake marveled.
"You
ought to know," I said, very quietly.
He sat
still, his fork poised halfway to his mouth. The faintest trace of
guilt shadowed his eyes. Then he calmly resumed eating.
Gotcha,
Jake. How else would Adam Stanislawski have known about the Barky
Hunt?
I picked
up the phone again, engaging maximum encryption, a voice disguiser,
and a masked code of my own to accommodate the server-link to
Mahtani.
A
robot voice said,
Code entered. Please hold.
I put the
phone down and we ate and drank in silence for a few minutes. Jake
didn't meet my gaze. The Bordeaux was splendid and my chunk of
pampered Japanese cattle flesh so tender that it surrendered to the
knife with hardly any pressure. I only managed to gobble a few subtly
flavored quivering slices before my phone, sitting on the table
beside the asparagus, began to blink.
I picked
up and said, "Yes."
"Do
you accept my terms?" a disguised voice inquired. The view
screen remained blank.
"I
have the EFT card ready."
"Transmit
the agreed-upon honorarium."
I
sent the
mordida winging through the ether. Words popped up
instantly on my instrument's readout strip.
——
BARNEY
CORNWALL-PHLEGETHON, ZONE 3
——
"It
has been my pleasure to assist you," said Mahtani, or whomever.
"The information is accurate, as of today. Good evening."
And he was
gone.
I showed
the phone to Jake. "Where is this place? I've never heard of
it."
He munched
a 'shroom redolent of shallots, wine, and exotic Crustacea before
answering.
"It's
a hollow asteroid in a Sheltok Sagittarian system. One of the way
stations for Shel UH carriers traveling from assorted R-class
hellmouths in Zone 1 to the Orion Arm. Over the years, it attracted
small-time human operators who traded with the local Joru and Y'tata
worlds. The place expanded internally—sort of like an old tree
getting hollowed out by more and more termite galleries. Now
Phlegethon is a entrepot for all kinds offences and sleazy little
trading outfits. Some are even legitimate."
"Sounds
like a perfect place for Barky."
"Let's
see if his Barney Cornwall alias computes," Jake said.
He pulled
out his own personal communicator, a police jobbie with more bells
and whistles than mine, unfolded it, and summoned information from
the CCID database. There was no trace of Barky Tregarth's revised
moniker in any official listing.
"Can
you get direct access to the Phlegethon resident census through
Sheltok?" I asked.
"Officially,
no. Unofficially ..." He entered a confidentiality override
code, but gave a muttered curse of disappointment. "No one using
the Cornwall or Tregarth names is on the asteroid's roster. Mahtani
could have jerked us around, but I don't think so. He has a certain
reputation to maintain. I think old Barky is lying low. You'll just
have to go to Phlegethon and start digging." He grinned at me.
"I'd lay odds that he'll know somebody's looking for him, too."
"It
figures," I said. "What else can you tell me about that
part of the galaxy? How about checking the ZP crime stats for Zone
3?"
He did so.
"Hmm ... There's been a severe outbreak of piracy in those parts
during the last couple of years. Twenty-one Sheltok megacarriers
vanished without a trace, and others had close calls. I can get
details from Zone Patrol."
"I'd
be obliged."
His search
indicated that the energy-ship attacks had been laid at the doorstep
of Y'tata freebooters, denounced—but of course!—as
outlaws by the righteous Y Federation. Jake popped me a data-dime
with full particulars and I filed it for later study.
"There
could have been other hijackings that Sheltok didn't report to ZP,"
Jake said. There was something elusive in his tone that I didn't pick
up on immediately. "Just rumors."
I nodded.
Sheltok might have good reasons of their own not to publicize the
attacks, especially if they'd been skimping on fleet security. It was
unusual for Y'tata crooks to be hijacking transactinides so
aggressively. They were an ancient race of nearly humanoid albinos,
with about a thousand planetary colonies on both sides of Red Gap.
But their population was nearly stable, and they seemed content to
piddle along with their relatively low-tech interstellar
civilization, only occasionally resorting to piracy. Since they owned
long-established ultraheavy element sources of their own in the
Whorl, their marauders usually targeted freighters with more
generalized cargoes ...
For a
while we ate in silence. I finished my main course and began on the
salad. The nittany ears were crisp and tart, just the way I like
them.
After a
time Jake said casually, "You planning to head for the Sag?"
"In a
few days, maybe. If Barky's inside that Sagittarian rock, I'll find
him and wring him dry. Whether he has any useful information for me
is another matter."
"He
might run," Jake said. "Mahtani is sure to warn him that
someone's very anxious to meet him."
"I'm
betting he'll stay put, take precautions, and see what the deal is. I
would, if I was in his position."
"Whole
lotta money to pay, long way to go, on an off chance."
I gave him
a cynical look. "Adam Stanislawski already knows why I'm
interested in Barky Tregarth. No need to pump me, Jake."
He grinned
sheepishly. "What can I say?"
Not much,
I thought.
"You're
wondering what
my price was," Jake went on. "The
answer is: zero, zilch, zippo. You know I owe the Big M even more
than I owe you. For my posting home. The agreement was, if I ever
came across anything that might affect Macrodur significantly, I was
to pass it along. Your peculiarly urgent need to interview Tregarth,
a guy who once engaged in illicit trade with the Haluk, tripped the
alarm."
"You're
a smart cop, Chief Superintendent."
"And
you're a crazy hotdogger. When you get on somebody's case,
meshugeneh
things happen. I remember Helly's Comet. I remember Cravat and
Dagasatt. So you won't tell me what you want with Barky. But I happen
to know that the guy's only claim to fame is a drunken boast that he
once went to the Haluk Cluster and got back to tell the tale."
"Bull's-eye."
I refilled his empty wineglass.
He eyed me
with what might have been real concern. "You're not planning to
go after Tregarth alone, are you? It wouldn't be wise. The old kocker
didn't pick a dump like Phlegethon as a retirement haven. He's still
on the job."
There were
people I might have asked to join me on the Barky Hunt: a smart young
bodybuilder and an ex-ZP officer who'd started as hired hands and
later became my friends; a small group of retired Rampart security
agents recruited by Karl Nazarian to assist my semilegal campaign
against Galapharma; even several private investigators I'd worked
with during my Reversionist period. But Ivor Jenkins was far away in
the Perseus Spur, operating his own gym on Seriphos, and Ildiko Szabo
had taken over the wholesale flower business of her aging parents in
Hungary. I'd lost touch with Karl's Over-the-Hill Gang during the
long trial, and the Pi's were experienced in ferreting out capital
chicanery, not crewing deep-space rumbles.
Going
after Barky Tregarth alone seemed a perfectly feasible option.
Phlegethon would certainly cater to Joru traders as well as Y'tata,
since both races lived in that sector of the galaxy. This fact had
suggested to me a way I might visit the place under cover. I had no
intention of telling Jake Silver about my scheme, however.
"Thanks
for the warning, Chief Super. Actually, I'm planning to muster my
usual task force of space dreadnaughts and a brigade of commandos for
the Barky bust. You can't afford to take chances with senile
gunrunners."
"Not
Tregarth, you putz. His friends. I'm serious."
"Y'tata
pirates? Or are you talking about Carnelian's thugs? Or Sheltok's?"
"All
of the above—and maybe a wild card as well." He paused for
an uncomfortable beat. "There might be funny business going on
out there involving the Haluk."
My jaw
sagged. "Why didn't you say so before?" I demanded, none
too politely. "You know you can set your own price."
Jake
winced. "I suppose I deserve that... But what I know, you can
have for free. God knows it's little enough. A single report, about
eighteen months ago, kept ex-database by special order of Xenoaffairs
to avoid distressing our new blue trading partners. A patrol cruiser
responded to an emergency call—the attempted hijack of a
Sheltok trans-ack carrier in the Zone 3 section of Red Gap. The
patrol captain claimed that they scanned four bandits during the
attack. Three were typical Y'tata pirates. The fourth ship was a hell
of a lot faster, with a slightly different fuel signature. It hung
back during the firefight, then broke off and ran with the others.
ZPV conformation scan of number four was futzed by weaponry EMI
during the encounter, but the bandit wasn't human. Or Joru or
Kalleyni, either. The fuel signature might have been Haluk."
"In
the Sagittarius Whorl? That's crazy! Too far from their Spur
colonies, way beyond their lines of supply."
Jake sawed
away at the remains of the T-bone. "I heard about it from a
half-drunk ZP Assistant Deputy Commissioner at a fuckin' cocktail
party. We were discussing the Haluk expansion in the Perseus Spur.
Their starships are all over Zone 23 now, scoping out potential
colonies, trading with the Rampart worlds. Blueberry scouts have even
been seen in the outer Orion Arm—and mere was this one
anomalous spotting in the Sag, which might or might not have been
Haluk."
"It
makes no sense. Why would they go there? And why throw in with Y'tata
trans-ack nabbers? The Haluk don't need to steal ultraheavy elements.
They
sell them, for chris-sake. The notion's ridiculous on the
face of it."
"Right.
Whole lotta ridiculous shit going down these days. I'm glad I'm just
a simple desk cop who doesn't have to worry about such things."
The waiter
materialized. "Can I interest you gentlemen in our dessert
menu?"
"What
d'you think, Jake?" I inquired. "This might be our last
meal together for quite a spell."
"Coffee
and cognac," the Chief Super said. "I don't suppose you
have any Ferrand Reserve Ancestrale?"
"Of
course. An excellent choice."
"Two,"
I said.
The waiter
nodded and went away.
"Figuring
to get in one last lick before riding into the sunset?" I asked
Jake sadly. The cognac was one of Earth's finest, and the price was
cosmological.
"I
guess that's up to you, Helly. Serve me right if you shit-canned our
friendship."
"Problem
with that, I haven't got very many. Friends, that is." And he
hadn't really done me any harm by telling Macrodur about the Barky
Hunt. Maybe just the opposite.
"How
about I pay for the Ferrand?" he suggested. "Peace
offering."
"Peace
is good," I said.
When the
waiter returned with the cognac and coffee, we drank to it.
——
I saw Jake
off on the Yonge Street subway, which would whisk him to his home in
German Mills in about fifteen minutes, then started down the Path to
the Winter Garden Theater, a twenty-minute walk south of Carman's
restaurant.
The
commuter rush had slackened a little now that the day-shift workers
from the towers had left and those on the evening watch were settled
in, but there were still throngs of pedestrians heading for downtown
attractions: shopping, nightlife, amusement, fine dining, and most
especially the innumerable watering holes where congenial
companionship of one sex or another awaited trolling lonelies.
I got onto
a very crowded moving walkway. Many of its riders were striding along
to enhance their groundspeed, but I stood still at the far right
side, since I was in no particular hurry. I was jostled often and
hard by impatient passers, but thought nothing of it until a
particularly sharp jab insulted my left hip and made me grunt with
pain. The guy who did it sped past without an apology. He was small
and slightly built, wearing a bomber jacket and carrying a bulky
portfolio of the type favored by commercial artists.
I stepped
off the conveyor at a Jolie Jacqueline lingerie shop, cursing mildly.
My assailant had left the moving walkway ahead of me and was skipping
nimbly across the mainstream of pedestrian traffic on the opposite
side of the concourse. He disappeared into a corridor leading to the
Bodascon Tower escalators.
There was
a small hole in the side of my anorak that looked almost like a stab
from an icepick. The armored lining was visible and the edges of the
hole seemed wet. What the hell had Bomber Jacket hit me with—a
large pen or some other sharp artist's implement? Mellow with
expensive alcohol and the heavy dinner, it never occurred to me that
the poke hadn't been accidental. My survival instincts, which had
been on red alert during the perils of the late Galapharma takeover,
were rusty after nearly three years of disuse.
I looked
up at the opulent window display of silk and lace in Jolie
Jacqueline. A thought came to me, a way to repay Jake's favor while
simultaneously playing a mild practical joke to point up his
treachery. I stepped into the shop.
"May
I be of assistance, m'sieu?" A saleswoman of a certain age,
wearing a little black dress, approached me with an encouraging
smile. Her name badge said annette. She did a very creditable French
accent.
I flicked
off my intimidating privacy visor in a gesture of civility. "Would
you please show me your very nicest nightgown and peignoir set? I'm
not sure of the size, but I think I can eyeball it."
"Of
course. Let me bring you several choices."
I followed
Annette to a counter. The items she showed me were very pricey
indeed. I selected an ensemble in cherry-red silk chiffon with lots
of lace inserts, gave her my corporate EFT card, and consulted my
phone dex for the home address of Chief Superintendent Jake Silver
and his wife of twenty-eight years.
"I'd
like the package gift-wrapped and sent to Marie Warrener, 163 Linden
Crescent, German Mills, Markham."
"Certainly,
m'sieu. Will there be an enclosure?"
I
took one of the tiny cards she offered and wrote,
From your
adoring Snuggle-Puppy, Jake.
While
Annette wrapped Marie's present, I wandered idly around the small
shop, indulging a fantasy or two. There were no other customers in
Jolie Jacqueline. The place had a boudoir decor with soft lights,
gauzy hangings, discreetly semitransparent holograms of lovely ladies
modeling sexy underthings, and a lot of gold-framed mirrors. In one
of the angled ones I caught a close-up glimpse of my own back.
Right at
rump level, the Anonyme's outer fabric had been perforated twice
more. Around each small hole was a dampish corona.
I felt my
throat tighten. Those earlier jostlings on the walkway had been less
vigorous attempts to stab me. The wet spots suggested that Bomber
Jacket had tried to inject me with an unknown substance, probably
poison.
Damn!
Think, Hetty, think. Get your sozzled brain back in gear.
A random
attack by a psycho? It had been known to happen, even in beautiful
cosmopolitan Toronto.
Had Ram
Mahtani traced me after all and taken out a contract on my life now
that he had his money? Impossible. The time frame was too tight and
the motive wasn't there.
Had Jake
Silver sold out my ass to somebody other than Stanislawski? No way.
It made sense that Jake would nark on me to Macrodur in a manner that
did me no particular harm. That he'd be an accessory to my murder was
inconceivable.
Think,
Hetty, think.
Bomber
Jacket could have trailed me from the moment I left Rampart Tower. If
he was a real pro, he could have ID'ed me easily through a body
language analysis, in spite of the concealing Anonyme. Everybody has
a distinctive walk, individual arm and head mannerisms. During my
brief political fling the media had made countless holovids of me. My
motion signature would be easily obtainable.
So who
genuinely wanted me dead?
The minor
villains in Galapharma had been neutralized long ago. If Gala's
ex-CEO, Alistair Drummond, was still alive, he was certainly crazy
enough to come after me out of revenge. But Bomber Jacket himself
wasn't Drummond. My old nemesis was a tall Scotsman with a princely
bearing, not a skittering runt. And why would Drummond have waited so
long?
The
only others who had any motive for killing me shouldn't have known
yet that I was an immediate threat to their galactopolitical
ambitions. But maybe the Haluk had other reasons for wanting me out
of the picture. The article in the
Journal would have reminded
them that I was now at leisure and once again in a position to cause
them serious trouble in the Commonwealth Assembly.
And if
there were still Haluk demiclone agents in Galapharma's woodwork,
they might have learned about Lorne Buchanan's transfer of
incriminating data from the Concern's computer to that of Efrem
Sontag.
I let out
an involuntary snarl of disgust. My night at the theater was a scrub.
I'd have to get back to the safety of Rampart Tower as quickly as
possible, then lie low until I could take off for the Sagittarius
Whorl—
"Is
there another way I can be of assistance, m'sieu?"
Annette
had snuck up on me. "No thanks. I was just checking a rip in my
jacket."
I turned
my visor back on and drifted to the door. Blank-faced, I carefully
studied the crowd outside. There was no sign of Bomber Jacket. I
exited the shop and walked a few meters away to put a solid wall at
my back, then took out my phone and called Rampart Internal Security.
"InSec.
Duty Officer Callahan."
"This
is Asahel Frost, Sean. I need a squad to come and get me. I'm on the
Path between Bodascon and Daimler Towers. Someone just tried to stab
me. Three times. My jacket armor saved me."
Sean
Callahan stifled an exclamation. "I understand. I'll have bike
patrol cops get to you immediately. Just activate your personal
emergency beacon. Meanwhile, my situation team will take a hopper to
Bodascon skyport and—"
"No.
I don't want Bodascon Security involved." The colossal aerospace
Concern was a prominent member of the Haluk Consortium. "Or
Toronto Public Safety, either. This has got to be kept quiet. Now
listen carefully. Put three of your plainclothes people on the subway
at Osgoode. Let them come up the loop from the south. I'll backtrack
north on the Path and meet them at College Station."
"The
subway!" Callahan was incredulous. "It would really
be safer If you remained right where you are, under police guard, and
we flew in. If you don't want a touch at Bodascon skyport we could
come via Daimler."
"The
hit man ran up into Bodascon. He could call for reinforcements from—"
I shut my mouth. I hadn't seen any Haluk pedestrians for a long time,
but their embassy was only a couple of blocks away. However, I didn't
want to share my suspicion of the aliens with a low-level employee
like Callahan.
"Sir?"
I said, "I
think the perp is long gone. I'm safer moving with the crowd than
standing still. The call is mine to make, Sean. Have your troops meet
me at College Station. We can all take a nice slow taxi ride to
Rampart Tower. Frost out."
I started
back the way I'd come, not using the moving walkway and staying near
a wall whenever possible. There were only two short blocks to go. The
crowds were thicker, but the hustle and bustle seemed entirely
normal. I made it to the subway intersection without incident and
turned east. Access to the transit station above was via an
escalator. I got on a rising step just behind a young woman in a red
coat who carried a Bergdorf shopping bag.
We'd
nearly reached the upper level when I felt a stinging sensation in my
left calf. Almost instantly my body's voluntary muscles began to
freeze. I felt myself toppling toward the woman. She made a dismayed
noise.
"Whoa!
Easy there, Fred. We gotcha, ol' buddy."
A man two
steps below came up beside me and took hold of my arms to support me.
Another guy joined him immediately. Stiff as a board from the
injected paralytic, I felt small objects being shoved into each of my
armpits. All of a sudden I wasn't falling anymore; I was floating.
The faces
of my assailants were unremarkable. The first wore a black leather
car coat and blue jeans. The other had a brown fleece jacket over a
business suit and carried a sport duffelbag on a shoulder strap,
which must have concealed the injector. The pair worked together, one
at my side and the other on the step below, clamping my upper arms
firmly to my body and keeping a tight grip on my elbows. The
anti-grav devices in my pits made manhandling me a snap.
Boozy
fumes wafted from somewhere. I presumed one of the goons had spritzed
it onto me to enhance the charade of drunkenness. The woman in the
red coat stared over her shoulder with ill-concealed disgust, and so
did a few rub-beraeckers on the adjacent descending escalator. Thanks
to the Anonyme, no one could see the twisted expression of fury on my
face.
"We'll
take care of him," Black Leather told the woman glibly. "Not
to worry. Sorry if he bumped into you."
"Poor
old Fred," Brown Fleece added. "He had a really bad day,
y'know? Lost a major client, then tried to kill the pain with too
many vodka martinis."
The woman
turned her back on us. Some of the other stair riders looked
sympathetic.
"You
just take it easy, mate," Black Leather told me in a jovial
voice. "Try not to throw up on these nice people. We'll get you
safe to a taxi and home to beddy-bye."
"What're
drinking buddies for?" Brown Fleece chimed in. "You're
gonna be okay, except for a helluva hangover tomorrow."
I tried to
speak. Couldn't produce more than a breathy croak.
My
cowboy-booted feet floated a centimeter off the ground as the
escalator reached the subway station level. There were no Rampart
Security personnel existing the standing train. Probably they'd be
along on the next one, for all the good it would do me.
I wafted
between the pair of abductors like a human balloon. They steered me
onto another escalator going up to the street, continuing their
solicitous patter. I was just another upper-class lush being helped
along by friends.
Outside,
we crossed Dundas Square. Pedestrians averted their eyes. A bike cop
gave us the once-over, decided all was cool. We moved along the
sidewalk, turned into a narrow lane amidst a row of small historic
houses that huddled beneath a stubby business tower. The crowd
thinned immediately and the streetlighting became less intense.
A Mercedes
limousine was parked illegally at the exit of an underground parking
lot. Its doors opened as one of my captors zapped it with a remote
control. They removed the lifting devices under my arms and eased me
into a forward-facing seat in the capacious passenger section. Black
Leather got in beside me. Brown Fleece tossed his duffel in front and
slipped behind the wheel, leaving the sliding privacy panel open. The
car doors shut.
Fleece
addressed the car navigator. "Enter Ottawa Highroad eastbound.
Go to Express Lane Six. Go to Peterborough 122. Exit highroad
northbound and revert to manual control."
En
route, said the car.
We were
off, circling around Ryerson Tower and hanging a right to the on-ramp
of the highroad. A longish wait in line until it was our turn to
accelerate—then up, up and away, thirty meters above the
teeming city on an elevated twelve-lane ribbon, our limousine guided
precisely into the far-left express lane where motorists in a hurry
paid a premium toll to travel at speeds of 300 kph. Unfortunately,
because of tonight's heavy volume of traffic, the express lane was
limited to a mere 230 kph, while the five nonpremium east-bound lanes
limped along at 170.
Any hope I
might have entertained that my kidnappers were human melted away when
Leather said something to Fleece in the Haluk language. Fleece
laughed—not human-style, but in the throttled-puppy mirth idiom
of the blue aliens.
Black
Leather reached into the right sleeve of my Anonyme and flicked the
switch. The visor blinked off and the security catch unlocked. He
pushed off my hood and spoke to me in Standard English.
"If
you make a very strong effort, you'll be able to blink your eyes. I
suggest you do it as often as possible to avoid desiccated corneas.
You should voluntarily swallow your saliva, too, unless you enjoy
drooling. The drug has no other unpleasant side effects. The rest of
your autonomic nervous system should remain safely operational until
we give you the antidote later." He smiled. "Much later."
I managed
a grunt, then blinked and swallowed.
It wasn't
hard to do, it was rather easy. And my previously numb toes and
ringers and tongue were starting to tingle.
Hello!
They'd
shot me with a toxin that preserved consciousness, going for the leg
after my armored anorak had foiled the body hits. A jab in the lower
calf would have worked nicely on somebody wearing conventional
executive footgear.
But I was
a cowboy.
The
injector had penetrated the tough leather of my boot with difficulty.
It must have been slightly deflected and failed to deliver the entire
dose. I'd taken in enough chemical to paralyze me, but the stuff
might already be starting to wear off.
I sat
absolutely still. We were traveling through the rainy night, out from
under the force-umbrella now, soaring over Toronto's eastern suburbs.
I speculated briefly upon the reason why my captors hadn't taken me
to the Haluk embassy or even Oshawa Starport out in Lake Ontario
rather than heading out of town toward Peterborough.
North of
the interchange at kilometer 122 were roads leading into the
Kawarthas, a picturesque region of lakes, rolling woodlands, and
pretty little towns: Bridgenorth and scores of other dormitory
exurbs, modest art colonies and resorts like Fenelon Falls where my
friend Bea Mangan and her husband had a technocottage, enclaves of
stunning affluence such as Mount Julian, where top Concern executives
maintained pseudorustic pieds-a-terre on Stony Lake.
Come to
think of it, when he wasn't hunkered down at Galapharma HQ in
Glasgow, Alistair Drummond had lived up in the Kawarthas, too ...
The
demiclones talked freely to each other in the difficult Haluk
language, confident that their paralyzed prisoner, like so many lazy
translator-addicted Earthlings, was unable to understand them.
Mistake.
——
During my
politically active phase, when I was eloquently disparaging the
secretiveness of the Haluk before one of the commerce committees and
it looked as though the Delegates were starting to take me seriously,
the Servant of Servants of Luk made a diplomatic gesture intended to
defuse a deteriorating public relations situation.
The
Haluk leader proposed a guided tour of Artiuk, their principal colony
in the Perseus Spur, to show that his race had nothing to hide. The
invitation was extended to twelve influential members of the
committee, three media representatives from
Newsweek, Cosmos
Today, and the
Times ... and me, badass motormouth
celebrity. Because of delicate Haluk cultural inhibitions, no
audiovisual recording devices would be allowed; but we visitors would
be able to dictate copious notes into handheld computers.
The SSL's
invitation was eagerly accepted.
Alone
among my human colleagues, I chose to take a sleep-course in the
Haluk language during the eight-day trip out to the Spur. It was
something I'd been meaning to do for a long time: know thine enemy,
and all that. The other members of the group opted for the greater
convenience and
efficiency of mechanical translators. I
intended to wear one, too; but I'd hatched a vague plan to discard
the thing conspicuously at some point during the tour, hoping to
provoke our Haluk hosts into making imprudent comments in the belief
that I wouldn't understand them.
As it
happened, my subterfuge wasn't necessary. The translators worn by us
humans malfunctioned almost from the first moment we set foot on
Artiuk—perhaps because its solar system was in the throes of a
sudden ionic storm, perhaps for another reason altogether. Whatever
the source of the problem, the fritzed-out devices reduced Haluk
speech to incomprehensible gibberish, and they could not be repaired
with the tools available on the alien world.
This might
have put a serious damper on our visit, had not the Servant of
Servants graciously provided each one of us with an English-speaking
Haluk escort. These high-ranking officials of his personal staff
subsequently accompanied us everywhere and filtered all conversations
between us and the Artiuk locals.
The Haluk
facial structure is not conducive to emotional display. I was able to
discern that the instant translations the guides provided us were
often very creative.
As I'd
expected, the "fact-finding tour" turned out to be little
more than a puff job. It revealed only superficial aspects of Haluk
life and absolutely nothing about their military-industrial
capability. We were allowed close contact only with gracile-phase
humanoid individuals.
"It
would be depressing for you to meet the poor lepido-dermoids, much
less view the dormant testudinals," our hosts said, gently
reproving curious members of the delegation. "And besides, there
are no longer very many nongracile Haluk residing on Artiuk, thanks
to the miracle of your PD32:C2 genetic engineering vector, which has
changed our lives so marvelously by eradicating the curse of
allomorphism."
So we saw
what the Haluk wanted us to see: performances of dissonant Haluk
music, displays of beautiful Haluk artwork, timid Haluk children at
crowded primary schools who presented us with bouquets of alien
flowers, Haluk agronomists operating impressive hydroponic farms that
grew produce mildly poisonous to the human digestive tract. It was
all very edifying, and to sophisticated human galaxy trotters, duller
than belly-button lint.
Unless one
happened to understand what the non-English-speaking Haluk were
actually saying about their distinguished visitors.
The adults
hated our collective entrails because we had cruelly stalled Haluk
emigration to the Milky Way and charged extortionate prices for
PD32:C2 and other vital technology. The poor little Haluk kids were
scared rigid of us because the adults had told them that humans were
cannibals who ate misbehaving children.
I did my
best to share eavesdropped intelligence with the Assembly Delegates
and the reporters, but my well-known anti-Haluk bias bent my
credibility. In the end the relentless hospitality of the Servant of
Servants and his minions won the hearts of our group.
When we
returned to Earth, the media special reports were glowing. A month
later the Haluk treaties were ratified by the Assembly.
From my
alarmist point of view, the trip had been worse than useless. All I'd
really gained was a superficial knowledge of an abstruse alien
tongue, most of which faded from my mind almost immediately.
But not
all of it.
——
Under
computer control, the limousine roared along the storm-lashed
elevated road. The rain was now mixed with ice pellets. Brown Fleece
relaxed behind the wheel, lit a cigarette—the vice had spread
like wildfire among the blue aliens resident on Earth—and spoke
in the Haluk language to the leather-jacketed demiclone seated at my
right.
"Blah
blah will be up a copulatory orifice because we are so late. One
fears the road
blah blah blah. It is the last day of the
normal human work
blah and
blah blah blah"
Black
Leather said, "One might as well be fighting the
blah back
home on
[some Haluk planet]. Great Almighty Luk help our
blah
posteriors if we
blah blah blah"
Fleece:
"One is carefully watching the
blah blah. At present the
sky road is
blah all the way to Peterborough."
Leather:
"Thank Almighty Luk ..."
The
demiclones were complaining about Friday night traffic. Welcome to
the club.
Fleece
said, "One presumes that our next
blah blah will be to
take the brother."
What!
Leather:
"Ru Balakalak will decide. The angry human
blah still
strongly resists that idea. He
blah blah blah. And he thinks
the brother lacks
blah blah."
I exerted
all my willpower to avoid flinching in dismay. Were these turkeys
referring to my disreputable brother Daniel?
Fleece:
"This one believes the revised plan using the brother is
superior. And the
blah younger sister would
blah blah blah
his disappearance."
Leather:
"Perhaps. The brother is surely more easily
blah than the
appalling human
blah. But does he possess
blah blah to
accomplish
blah blah blah!"
Fleece:
"Maybe not, if one can trust
blah of the angry human
blah."
Leather:
"Curse all humans! The plan itself is excellent but
blah blah
of it stinks like lepido nose wax. This one will continue to urge
strongly that a Haluk
blah blah be used, rather than any human
blah."
Fleece:
"Who will listen to one? Ru Balakalak leads. He is a stubborn
[epithet] and favors the quickest
blah blah in order to
please the Servant of Servants. The danger
blah blah blah."
Leather:
"[Epithet.] One wishes we would
blah blah blah and
put an end to it."
Fleece:
"We are not ready. One knows that. When we are ready, it will
happen."
There
followed an interval of portentous silence, during which I felt my
guts twisting into a granny knot. Were they talking about an attack
against humanity? And what kind of plan would they have that would
involve me, my wretched brother, my sister Beth, and another human? I
was trying to sort this out when my thoughts were suddenly
interrupted by a resounding Haluk curse from Black Leather.
"Are
we slowing down?" he called out to his compatriot. "We
are!"
Up
front, Brown Fleece was studying the navigation display, which was
not visible from the passenger compartment. "Almighty Luk! The
blah indicates a
blah blahl" He broke into a
tirade of alien vituperation.
Black
Leather spoke impatiently to the car in Standard English. "Navigator,
why is traffic decelerating?"
The
robot voice said,
A vehicle on-board computer has malfunctioned
catastrophically and caused a multiple-car accident with injuries at
kilometer 100.4. All six eastbound lanes are blocked at that point.
A sea of
red brakelights glowed in the sleet storm outside as the marvelous
automated speedway reverted to ox-road status. Pavement deicing
equipment had kicked in, adding clouds of steam to the atmospheric
melange.
"Exit!"
Leather commanded his associate. "Hurry, before we are
blah\"
But we had
just passed the ramp at Enniskillen. Fleece asked the navigator,
"What is our next exit option?"
Exit
80, the Lindsay-Clarington freeway, fifteen kilometers ahead.
Estimated time of arrival at this exit is now approximately 21:10
hours.
Black
Leather spat more exotic obscenities and smacked his fist furiously
against the refreshment console just in front of our seat. Our speed
was now less than 40 kph and still dropping. We were going to be hung
up for over an hour, creeping at a snail's pace toward the next exit
together with hundreds of other luxury vehicles and their fuming
occupants.
I wiggled
my toes. The tingling had faded.
"Can
we not summon an aircraft to
blah us out of this
fex-pletiveJT' Black Leather asked his companion.
The
limousine, of course, could be programmed to exit the highroad all by
itself if we were evacuated via hopper. Perhaps other trapped bigwig
motorists were also considering that extreme option, although private
aircraft were forbidden to land on the highroad, and the storm made
the prospect of being winched into the sky through the roof hatch an
uninviting one.
Fleece
said, "One doubts that would save significant time, since our
blah blah aircraft are
blah at Mount Julian."
Leather
groaned.
"[Convoluted expletive.] Then we are truly
blah,
my friend."
"One
must
blah blah our delay." Fleece began to speak in an
undertone into the driver's communicator.
Muttering,
the alien sitting on my right opened the refreshment console and took
out a packet of cigarettes. The limo was rolling more and more
slowly. At speeds of less than 10 kph it would be possible to unlock
the doors manually from the inside.
I flexed
the fingers of my left hand. They worked. So did the other muscles of
that arm, which I tensed gingerly without making any suspicious
motion. The paralyzing agent seemed to have almost worn off.
Right.
Wait for the moment.
Slower.
Slower.
Now.
Black
Leather was holding a flameless electric lighter to his smoke. I
slammed a roundhouse left hook into his face, singeing my knuckles on
the glowing cigarette tip as I drove it and the red-hot lighter
against his mouth.
He let out
a hideous cry and clawed at me like a madman. I slammed his head down
onto the console and flicked the lock switch. In the front seat,
Brown Fleece whirled around, gabbling in Haluk. He was too far away
to reach me. I tore open my door, dropped outside onto the road
shoulder, picked myself up, and stumbled toward the inner guardrail.
Fleece was
opening his own door as I vaulted over the barrier onto the median
safety catwalk that separated the eastbound highroad lanes from the
westbound. It was very cold. Traffic was now nearly at a standstill
on our side, and vapor from melting pavement ice swirled amidst the
driving sleet. Crouching low, I raced back the way we'd come,
forgetting that I would be silhouetted against the headlights of
oncoming cars. I still wore my Anonyme anorak. With the hood off I
was half blinded by the torrent of stinging sleet pellets. They
hissed against the vehicle surfaces like a nest of rattlesnakes,
almost drowning out the roar of turbo engines powering the
automobiles of more fortunate motorists in the open westbound lanes.
Solid
ground lay thirty meters below the catwalk grating, hidden by mist
and the purple glow of the powerful anti-gravity reticulum that
buoyed up the ribbon of reinforced pavement. The AG field was
generated by machinery housed in huge pylons situated every 500
meters along the highroad. The only emergency exits for pedestrians
were inside those pylons. Under normal conditions, auto breakdown
service and ambulance evacuation for accident victims were
accomplished by Highroad Authority hoppercraft. The police used
hoppers, too.
Over the
noise of the westbound traffic and the storm I heard ominous sharp
pinging sounds. A volley of stun-darts zipped around me, striking the
ceramalloy stanchions and railings.
Running
flat-out along the catwalk, I managed to pull up my armored anorak
hood an instant before one of the darts struck the back of my skull
and bounced off. The impact caused me to see stars momentarily and
stagger with pain.
I
recovered my senses, belatedly realized that the unimpeded stretch of
catwalk was a perfect shooting gallery, and flung myself back over
the railing onto the shoulder. Bobbing and swerving, I darted like a
cockroach into the six lanes of crawling cars, now spaced precisely
three meters apart by the traffic-control computer. A few startled
drivers honked and flashed their headlights frantically. Most of them
ignored me.
Brown
Fleece was galloping along the shoulder, showing no inclination to
follow me out among the moving cars. Darts loaded with sleepy-juice
flew through the sleet-streaked headlight beams like supercharged
fireflies, missed me, and ricocheted off the vehicles.
Nobody
opened a car door and invited me inside to safety.
My bruised
head hurt like hell. The sleet was changing to heavy flakes of wet
snow and visibility was terrible.
Another
dart hit me in the back of my armored jacket. I thanked God that my
vulnerable legs were shielded by the surrounding cars. All I could do
was continue to zigzag through the traffic jam, taking small comfort
from the realization that Brown Fleece certainly had orders to take
me alive. His weapon was probably an Ivanov stun-pistol that
typically fired small missiles with a limited range. It would be
virtually impossible for the Haluk demiclone to use the gun's
none-too-reliable autotargeter system while taking snap shots in a
storm.
I was
moving faster than Fleece, but for a time he nearly kept pace with
me, not having to lose ground by dodging. Two more darts hit my right
arm and upper body, painful but not incapacitating. There was a lull
in firing when he might have replaced the magazine, then the pops
came faster and more furiously. All of the darts missed. I had pulled
well ahead of him.
Less than
a hundred meters away was one of the massive pylon structures, barely
visible in the thickening snow. If I reached it I could escape down
the emergency stairway that spiraled through its interior. Perhaps
the alien wouldn't follow. Some of the motorists might have reported
the running gun battle to the police by now, if only because of
superficial damage done to their expensive vehicles by the fusillade
of stun-darts.
I
heard a distant shout in the Haluk language and understood only one
word:
coming.
I didn't
dare look over my shoulder, but I had a bad feeling that Black
Leather had pulled his scorched shit together and joined the chase.
Slush was beginning to accumulate underfoot in spite of the deicing
grid.
Run,
Helly, run! It's not far now. Don't slow down ...
But I was.
Residual chemicals circulating in my bloodstream had diminished my
stamina. My lungs were on fire, my vision was going blurry and weird,
and my leg muscles were seizing up.
Rats.
The two
Haluk behind me were shouting back and forth to each other. No one in
the soundproofed vehicles would hear them, much less catch the alien
intonation. Brown Fleece had once again stopped shooting at me with
the Ivanov. Maybe he was out of ammo.
I quit
jinking among the cars and did a straight sprint, tearing along the
line of glowing little eyes that divided lane five from lane four,
squinting into the misty headlight glare. Snow pelted my face. My
mind was empty of all thought except attaining the shelter of the
massive pylon that arched above the road ahead of me, floodlit and
crowned with ruby aircraft-warning lights.
I was only
forty meters away when I skidded on a slippery patch, lost my
footing, and crashed to the slushy pavement right in front of a
slow-moving Volvo taxi. I rolled aside just in time to avoid being
crushed, then heard a sudden loud noise followed by shrill female
screaming.
My fall
had apparently saved me. I hauled myself up and saw that the
safety-glass windshield of the Acura sedan next in line had been
holed and spiderwebbed by a missile. The hysterical woman behind the
wheel cowered away from the empty front passenger seat, where a slim
black object with a distinctive shape was embedded in the headrest.
It was a magnum stun-flechette from an Allenby SM-440 or some other
high-powered carbine. Black Leather had brought in heavy artillery.
"Lady,
get down!" I yelled. She dropped out of sight, still wailing, as
her car moved on. A second flechette barely missed my head and soared
over the traffic into the darkness beyond lane one.
I took a
dive myself, scrambling along on hands and knees, hugging the shelter
of the slow-rolling automobiles. Then Black Leather changed his
tactics. Big darts began to whiz beneath the vehicles, clanging
occasionally against their undercarriages and wheels. The flechettes
were no danger to the cars' self-sealing tires or sturdy chassis, but
I wasn't at all sure that the thin armor of my anorak would protect
me from them.
Was
Leather using a warm-body scope or a light magnifier to spot me? The
capability of either one would have been stretched to the limit in a
snowstorm, with the target skittering among closely packed moving
cars whose engines radiated infrared, on a heated pavement swirling
with vapor. Maybe he wasn't trying to hit me at all, but hoping to
flush me out of the traffic so his buddy could shoot me on the side
of the road.
I went
into a crouch and duckwalked ludicrously between the lanes, splashing
through icy slop, doing my best to shield my legs under the skirts of
the anorak. God only knows what the passing motorists thought about
the wacky spectacle. Not a one had attempted to intervene personally.
In their place I'd have opted for noninvolvement, too.
The firing
stopped. So did I, a few minutes later.
I'd made
it—sort of.
I was
beneath the gargantuan pylon structure at last, shuddering with cold,
squatting between creeping streams of traffic in lane five and the
express lane. All I had to do now was cross the exposed shoulder,
pass through an opening in the inner guardrail, and climb three steps
onto a small platform where there was a door in the pylon wall. The
illuminated sign above it said:
——
EMERGENCY EXIT ONLY
USE PHONE TO SUMMON ASSISTANCE
——
If only!
The phone was on the wall right beside the door. As I contemplated
the useless instrument in bemusement, a single small Ivanov stun-dart
smacked into it and rattled onto the platform.
Wonderful.
Brown Fleece was back in the game, probably shooting from the median
catwalk, daring me to make a run for it.
What an
idiot. If he hadn't given himself away, I might have dashed right
across his field of fire. I tried without success to spot him in the
blowing snow and steam clouds outside the pylon archway, but I
figured that the dumb xeno couldn't be very far away. And his pal—
A magnum
flechette hummed past my head like a wasp. Its trajectory indicated
that Black Leather was firing from the same lane divider I was parked
on. A sudden gust of wind tore the mist and I saw him, his body
eerily illuminated by the lights of cars passing on either side. He
was no more than twenty-five meters away, with his carbine stock
against his cheek.
I was a
sitting duck.
"The
next dart will take you down, Frost!" he shouted. "Get up!
On your feet! Now!"
Why didn't
he just nail me where I was?
...
Because he was afraid that I'd convulse as the magnum load of toxin
hit me, fall under the wheels of a car and be injured or killed. The
earlier wild firing had been a panic response. Leather definitely
intended to herd me onto the road shoulder, where Brown Fleece would
drop me safely with the Ivanov.
An idea.
I turned
away from Black Leather, ignoring his shouts, and studied the
oncoming traffic in the express lane. A Volkswagen Lady Bug trundled
past, followed by one of those ass-dragger Maseratis—scant
shelter for a cowering fugitive. Behind the Italian car came an
enormous black Dodge Bighorn sport utility vehicle with chrome
rollbars and noseguards and great deep-tread balloon tires. It was
the kind of transport that intrepid wilderness travelers favor for
jaunts to Hudson Bay or the Canadian tundra. Silly role-players used
them for city commuting.
"Stand
up, Frost!" Black Leather yelled. He sent another flechette over
my head, missing me by a whisker. "On your feet, dammit!"
Instead, I
began to squirm and moan as though I'd been nicked, crumpling onto
the wet pavement. The Maserati passed by. As the lumbering SUV drew
even with me, I rolled sideways beneath it, caught hold of an
ice-encrusted shock absorber inside the monstrous right front wheel,
hooked one leg over a transmission bracket and hoisted myself off the
ground.
Screamed
my lungs out. Then shut up abruptly.
I could
hear the two Haluk demiclones bellowing incomprehensibly at each
other in their own language. Would the ruse work? Only if Fleece,
over on the catwalk and hopefully closer to me than Leather, took the
bait.
Someone
came running, splashing through snow saturated with meltwater. Legs
clad in sodden suit trousers trotted along the shoulder, close beside
the slow-moving juggernaut. Brown Fleece shouted: "One does not
see him! Perhaps he is beneath, being dragged by the
blah!"
Oh, yeah!
I let go and fell unharmed between the four great wheels. Lay still a
moment, then rolled quickly onto the shoulder as the big black SUV
moved on. It was no trick at all avoiding the Toyota estate wagon
creeping along behind it. Brown Fleece hadn't seen me. He was still
scuttling along, Ivanov in hand, trying to peer under the chassis of
the Dodge behemoth.
Black
Leather did spot me and yelled a sharp warning to his buddy.
Too late.
I tackled Fleece. We both went down hard, less than half a meter from
the stream of traffic. The stun-pistol flew from his hand and
disappeared among the cars. We wrestled on the shoulder pavement for
a few moment before he managed to slither out of my grasp. He bounced
to his feet, leaving me sprawled in the slush, and fetched me a nasty
kick in the head. When he tried to stomp my face I seized his foot in
midair with both hands, twisted viciously, and felt a satisfying
crackle of anklebones. He howled and fell.
Fleece
rolled in the direction of the guardrail, trying to rise in spite of
his injured ankle, roaring with pain and rage. I lay much closer to
the express lane traffic. I was having trouble standing myself. I'd
bashed both knees badly during the tackle, and the kick in the head
had rattled my neurons.
Fleece
made a flying leap, knocked me onto my back, straddled my body,
pinned my right arm, and began to batter my face with both fists.
Spiking him in the kidney with my left mid-knuckle didn't do him much
harm; the fleece jacket was excellent padding. I bucked up my hips,
throwing him unexpectedly forward and forcing him to brace himself
against falling by extending his arms. Then I caught him in the
crotch and squeezed his genitals with all my strength. He screamed
and writhed sideways into the express lane, clutching himself, just
as a big Daimler towncar cruised sedately by.
Both left
wheels went over his neck. The towncar deviated not a millimeter from
its computerized vector. Its cocooned occupants might not even have
seen what had happened. They would have felt only a minimal double
bump.
In the
stormy sky to the southwest a small constellation of fuzzy blue
lights was intermittently visible, flying at a low altitude.
Chapter 5
I was
dazed, hurting, soaked, and half frozen. My face was one huge bruise,
my hands were flayed, and the rest of me felt like it'd been stomped
by Cape buffalo.
With
difficulty, I pulled Brown Fleece back onto the shoulder and
.crouched beside him. Blood leaked from his mouth. His head was
impossibly twisted to one side, the jaw dislocated and the windpipe
crushed. The pupils of his eyes were totally dilated, and a growing
stench indicated that his sphincters had relaxed. When I thought to
check his mangled throat for a pulse, I couldn't find any. The alien
spirit that had animated his humanoid flesh had fled.
... But
the unknown man whose DNA had been stolen to disguise Fleece was
probably still alive, floating comatose in a dystasis tank on an
exotic world, forced to share his genes again and again in order to
create more perfidious replicas of himself.
I felt no
sense of triumph at Brown Fleece's demise. Instead, there was a
flashback. To the last time I'd killed Haluk who masqueraded as human
beings.
On the
planet Dagasatt, I'd found hundreds of demiclone subjects in paired
tanks in a secret laboratory. Many of the Haluk floaters were already
transformed into perfect human replicas, while the pathetic human
templates had partially morphed into Haluk form, a side effect of the
genen procedure that precluded rejection of their DNA by the alien
receptors.
I shot
each demiclone in the head. It was not a part of my life I was proud
of, but I had no regrets, either.
Before I
could rescue the captive human templates on Dagasatt, alien gunships
arrived and leveled the facility with heavy blasters. I escaped the
holocaust; but I still walked through that damned laboratory in my
nightmares, staring in disbelief at the paired tanks with their
Halukoid humans and humanoid Haluk ...
Enough. It
was time to deal with the nightmare at hand.
For the
first time, I realized that the alien I had nicknamed Black Leather
was no longer shooting at me. The reason why was sporadically visible
up in the snowy air. The blue pulsing lights were mounted on a
squadron of cop-hoppers coming out from the Highroad Authority
barracks in Pickering. My surviving assailant now had other things on
his mind besides the capture of Asahel Frost. He was probably
hotfooting it back along the median catwalk to his limousine. If he
had any brains at all, he'd already disposed of his Allenby
stun-carbine through one of the drainage openings in the road
shoulder.
The
eastbound lanes of cars were finally beginning to accelerate
slightly. Their dark-tinted side windows hid the occupants from my
sight. Were the riders gaping at the scene beside the road as they
glided by? Or had they done the sensible thing and activated their
windows' projection option, substituting images of some pleasant
landscape for the tedious reality of a creeping mass of vehicles
bogged down on a stormy night?
The fuzzy
blue lights in the sky came closer.
The cops
were going to nab me.
Black
Leather would reach his limo safely, escape the traffic jam, and
vanish into the unmonitored maze of country lanes around the Kawartha
Lakes. Meanwhile, the Highroad Authority would haul me off to the
nearest Justice Center. A media circus would strike up the band as I
attempted to explain my abduction, my great escape, and my subsequent
lethal brawl with a well-dressed individual—undoubtedly
possessed of impeccable credentials—whose true nature and
motivation I didn't dare reveal.
Perhaps
the police would believe I had acted in self-defense. Or they might
just charge me with manslaughter.
I waited
numbly for spotlights to stab down from the hoppers. Nothing
happened. Four aircraft sailed over the pylon and continued moving in
the direction of the distant accident scene.
I couldn't
believe my luck. If the woman with the shattered windshield or any of
the other motorists had reported shooting on the highroad, the news
apparently had not yet been passed on by dispatchers to the cops in
the air.
Time to
hit the trail, buckaroo.
Adrenaline
generated during the fight still kept me warm, but every bone in my
body seemed to be aching, particularly my skull. I got up and started
for the pylon platform, only to stop short as I realized what I was
leaving behind: the only existing tangible evidence of a Haluk
masquerading as a human being, evidence that had eluded me and my
investigators for over three years. If I abandoned the demiclone
corpse, it would almost certainly be taken to the closest county
morgue. Brown Fleece's alien confederates would retrieve his remains
with laughable ease.
That
wasn't going to happen if I could prevent it.
I unzipped
my anorak and rumbled for my pocket phone. Punched up the code that
would connect me to the computer of my private hopper. I could
program it to come and get me once I got down off the highroad. Even
a few hundred meters away from the pylon the airspace would be
unrestricted.
The
phone said,
We are sorry. The code you have entered is temporarily
ex-operational.
Rats! The
damned Haluk must have sabotaged it, perhaps to make sure I didn't
use the aircraft to escape their dragnet. My car was probably ex-op,
too.
Right. So
I entered the personal code of my friend and associate Karl Nazarian.
Karl was a
charter Rampart Starcorp stakeholder and its first security chief at
the operating HQ on the planet Seriphos in the Perseus Spur. My
father made the huge mistake of putting him out to pasture after long
years of service, installing a hotshot named Oliver Schneider in his
place. Schneider sold out to Galapharma and became their main mole
inside Rampart.
I came
along and drafted Karl Nazarian to assist in the search for my
missing sister Eve. The veteran security man helped make that
operation a success, and continued the good work in subsequent covert
actions that culminated in the capture of the material witness
Schneider and the indictment of Galapharma. Since then Karl had
shared my private investigations of the Haluk.
When
Rampart became an Amalgamated Concern and I agreed to become Acting
Chief Legal Officer, I saw to it that Karl was appointed Vice
President for Special—i.e., spooky—Projects, a post that
Simon had originally dragooned me into accepting. Karl reported only
to me. During the pretrial phase of the Galapharma case, he
supervised "discoveries" for my cadre of legal eagles,
helping to organize—and edit—ultrasensitive pieces of
evidence. When that work was done, he and his small staff of
trustworthy cronies occupied themselves gathering information about
the shady machinations of the big businesses that called themselves
the Haluk Consortium. Not that I was in a position to do anything
with the intelligence during the trial, other than pass on the
juicier bits to Ef Sontag.
Karl was
the only person I would have trusted to do the delicate psychotronic
interrogation of Lorne Buchanan. I'd confided my early hopes for the
Barky Hunt to him, too. And now I desperately needed his help again.
"Nazarian
here." The gnarled face, like a topographic map of Armenia
divided by a rocky cleaver of a nose, gazed at me from the phone
screen. "Good God, Helly, you look like a drowned rat. A
thoroughly buggered-up drowned rat."
"I
feel even worse. I'm sitting on the shoulder of the Ottawa Highroad
in a snowstorm, next to the corpse of a Haluk demiclone."
"That's
fantastic! You're certain it's a Haluk?"
"Absolutely.
The demi's mine if I can sneak him out of here before the county
mounties spot us. It could happen any minute. Can you come and do an
evac in your hopper? Mine's ex-op."
A shocked
silence, then: "I'm not in Toronto Conurb. I'm nearly 1,200
kilometers away, out in the Kenora at Kingfisher Lodge."
I knew
what that had to mean. "Oh, shit—not Dan!"
"I'm
afraid so. Your brother flew the coop a couple of hours ago. He had
help. Four of the six guards are dead. The survivors can't tell us
much. The lodge just wasn't secured for a massive armed assault. An
BMP blast took out the sensors and the rest of the electronics. A
single large hopper carrying a dozen bandits did the job in less than
ten minutes."
"Karl,
there's a good chance that Dan didn't escape. He might have been
kidnapped by Haluk."
"Christ!"
"My
sister Beth could also be in danger. The aliens might try to nab her,
too. She'll need round-the-clock security."
"I'll
get InSec over to her place immediately. What kind of a cluster-fuck
have we got going here?"
"The
situation is even worse than you might think. Earlier this evening
two Haluk demiclones snatched
me. Bold as brass. The bastards
took me right off the Underground Path in the midst of the Friday
night crush. They talked to each other about some plan involving Dan
and maybe Beth. I couldn't make any sense of it. My knowledge of the
Haluk language is too rusty. I managed to get out of their limousine
when the Ottawa Highroad shut down with a multicar accident. One of
the alien goons is with me here, stone cold dead on the tarmac. The
other one skipped out."
"Oh,
boy. More demiclone operatives! Just what we were afraid those blue
bastards would do—"
"Listen,
Karl. You know how vital it is for us to hang on to this corpse and
get it to Bea Mangan for a genetic assay. But I can't use regular
Rampart Security for transport. There's no way I could explain this
situation to them. And if we're caught with the stiff, Rampart itself
could face criminal charges. I killed the Haluk accidentally, in
self-defense, but body-snatching is a felony, and interfering with
the scene of a fatality could lead to a charge of obstruction of
justice, at the very least. You got any thoughts?"
"You
say you want to take the body to Mangan right away?"
"I'll
check with her first, but I know she won't have any scruples about
cooperating. This is the break we've been waiting for. The smoking
gun that proves the Haluk are infiltrating humanity."
"Then
call Bea herself for a lift," Karl advised. "Her place in
Fenelon Falls is—what?—only fifty klicks or so north of
the highroad. She's sure to have a hopper at her disposal. Or her
husband Charlie will."
"Damn.
I should have thought of that. The Haluk punched out my lights and
I'm kinda nebular at the moment."
"Is
there anything else I can do to help?"
I tried to
think. It wasn't easy. "Cover me with Sean Callahan at Rampart
Tower InSec. Just before the Haluk grabbed me down on the Path I
phoned Sean and asked for help. He sent a situation team, but too
late to do any good. Tell him I'm with you—that my emergency
turned out to be a false alarm. He'll be suspicious, but there's
nothing we can do about that."
"Listen,
Helly, if you can't reach Bea Mangan, call me again. I'll get to you,
but it could take a while."
"Let's
hope it doesn't come to that. I think you should return to Toronto as
soon as possible. We'd better meet at Bea's place. I don't want to go
back to my apartment just yet. Haluk might have the place staked out.
Hasta luego." I ended the call.
The cold
was beginning to get to me. My hood had come off again and melting
snow ran from my hair into my two blackened eyes. I wiped them,
cringing at the pain, pulled the hood up, and summoned Mangan's
personal code from the dex. The phone buzzed.
"Pick
it up," I prayed. "Please, Bea." I stared at the small
blank screen, shivering hard now, and waited. After five buzzes a
robot voice asked me if I wished to continue my attempt to reach
Beatrice Mangan directly, or if I wished to go to voice mail and
leave a message. I told it, "Try again." The robot hadn't
said she was unavailable; for some reason she just wasn't choosing to
answer. Busy people did that all the time.
The
buzzes resumed, and every five seconds the artificial voice cut in
again. I kept saying, "Try again," and watched the display
that said stand by for connection. Snowflakes fell on me and the
demiclone corpse, coating us with tiny points of light that sparkled
in the sweeping car headlights.
Beatrice
Mangan, who held the rank of Chief Superintendent in the ICS Forensic
Division, was a respected expert in molecular biology and the
criminal aspects of genetic engineering. She was also an old friend
from my days in the enforcement arm of the Interstellar Commerce
Secretariat, one of the few people who had not believed the
trumped-up charges that led to my disgrace and dismissal.
I had
drawn her into the Galapharma conspiracy almost from the beginning of
my own involvement. She helped me to nail Bronson Elgar, Galapharma
assassin and master of dirty tricks—who unfortunately proved to
be completely human. Later, she'd continued to lend her expertise to
my quest for evidence that Haluk demiclones were wearing Earthling
bodies with nefarious intent.
Bea had
shared my frustration when every likely lead dug up by Karl and his
associates petered away into failure or uncertainty. The efficient
robotic cleaners so ubiquitous in modern society made it almost
impossible to find castoff bits of incriminating DNA in starships or
buildings that we knew had harbored faux humans. The biosamples
Karl's people did manage to glean had been too badly damaged by
mechanical housekeepers to be conclusive.
But now I
had a whole demiclone corpse for Bea to analyze—if she'd just
answer her goddamn phone!
All she
had to do to prove conclusively that Fleece was a Haluk in disguise
was take cellular material from him, run it through a fine-spectrum
genome analyzer, and compare its DNA profile to the genetic marker
data that Lorne Buchanan had just turned over to Efrem Sontag. By
consulting the population database, she could also ascertain the
identity of the human template who had been used to engineer Fleece's
transformation. Along with our other evidence, the demiclone corpse
would tangibly demonstrate to the Commonwealth Assembly that Haluk
were infiltrating humanity.
What
Fleece's body wouldn't necessarily prove was malicious intent,
although we could show that the Haluk leader had lied when he claimed
that all of the living demiclones had gone to the Haluk Cluster to
serve as goodwill ambassadors. Getting more concrete evidence of
alien evil-doing might take a long time, unless—
The
interminable buzzing stopped.
"Bea?
Thank God! I'd about given up."
"Helly?"
a nonrobotic voice said. "That is you, isn't it? Your code is
security-blanked and the video pickup on your phone isn't working
very well." Bea Mangan's gentle round face, framed with a
loosely wound turban of white toweling, smiled at me. She'd been
taking a bath.
"It's
probably melted snow blurring the sensor. I'm sitting on the side of
the Ottawa Highroad in a blizzard, and I have a wonderful present for
you. The only catch is, you have to come and collect it—and me,
too. Do you have a hopper available? I'm not far from the Clarington
interchange."
"Charlie
and I can be there in fifteen minutes."
"No.
It would be best if your husband knew nothing about this—at
least for the time being. It's a matter that relates to our... alien
extracurricular activities."
She stared
in silence for a moment. "Tell me your exact location."
I gave it
to her, trying to keep my voice from quavering. "Bea? Bring
along a thermos of hot coffee and an electric blanket, will you?
Maybe some painkillers and antibiotic goop, too."
"Oh,
my. What
have you been up to?"
"We'll
also need a body bag." I punched out using a frigid finger, the
color of which closely approximated Haluk blue.
I made one
last phone call, to the voice-mail option of Efrem Sontag's
ultrasecure private code, and left a request for him to allow Bea
Mangan unlimited access to the computer files obtained from Lorne
Buchanan. I told him I had finally obtained a valid biosample from a
Haluk demiclone for Bea to analyze, but gave no other details. I
asked him not to call me; I would call him.
Then,
groaning with the effort, I grasped Brown Fleece by the wrists. It
took nearly all my dwindling strength to drag him to the pylon
platform and get him through the emergency exit door onto the upper
landing of the open spiral staircase. There was no way I could carry
him down, but I'm not squeamish and Fleece was beyond caring, so I
folded him over the stairwell railing and let him fall thirty meters
to the bottom of the shaft. Then I lugged him off into the snow.
We hid
together in a nearby thicket, me shivering convulsively and he taking
it easy, until Bea Mangan's hopper arrived. She was flying very low,
without navigation lights, to avoid being seen from the highroad.
Snow was falling thickly. I staggered out to greet her, arms wide,
using my last erg of energy, and fell flat on my face. By then I was
so deeply hypothermic that I suspect my internal temperature nearly
matched Fleece's. Her scanner found me anyhow.
She used
an antigrav tote to hoist me into the aircraft's passenger
compartment, stripped off most of my icy clothes, wrapped me in the
electric blanket, and clamped my chilled fingers around a cup of
steaming coffee. I made pitiful noises as the thawing process began.
"You
belong in a hospital, Helly. I'll call Charlie and he can have an
ambulance—"
"N-N-N-Noo!"
I groaned, through chattering teeth. Her husband, Charles White, was
a family practitioner in the small resort community of Fenelon Falls.
He was aware that Bea had given me unofficial help gathering evidence
of the Galapharma conspiracy, but he knew nothing about the Haluk
demiclones.
"I'm
going to have Charlie look at you, whether you like it or not,"
she insisted stubbornly. "You need a full-body scan."
Which
would turn up the needle puncture in my calf and suspicious drug
residuals in my blood. Perhaps Dr. White would have to be let in on
the secret after all.
"Go
get your present, Bea." I jerked my head in the direction of the
thicket. "Over under the little trees. Sorry if he's a trifle
stinky."
"First,
you get dosed with analgesic. It may make you drowsy."
She
held a device tipped with a glass knob to my jugular.
Ooh. Fly me
to the moon. Then she smeared my damaged face and hands with
antibiotic and pressed prickly bruise-diffuse pads gently around my
eyes. A not quite painful tingling ensued. I could feel the swelling
begin to subside.
"Feel
better?"
"Much.
Got the body bag?"
She nodded
resignedly. "Who's the deceased?"
"Don't
know his name. But he's a genuine twenty-four karat totally authentic
Haluk demiclone. I killed him... didn't mean to. Mighty convenient
for a comprehensive DNA assay, though."
"Jesus,
Mary, and Joseph!" she said.
"I
don't think he's part of their congregation. Check with Great
Almighty Luk."
Bea was
dressed in an orange snowmobiler's suit with a fur ruff around the
hood. She slipped a pair of protective plastic mitts over her gloves
and went to get the corpse.
Pain free
at last, I sipped caffeine-laden elixir and felt warmth and life seep
back into my anatomy. In a few minutes Bea returned with the loaded
tote floating behind her and stowed the sealed body bag in the
hopper's cargo compartment. Then we lofted into the sky. She kept the
running lights off and flew low until we were safely away from the
highroad.
I finished
the coffee, drew the blanket close about me, and allowed myself a
nasty smile, thinking about Black Leather. He'd have a hell of a lot
of explaining to do once he reached Mount Julian. Not only had he
lost me, but he'd also let his fellow demiclone fall into the hands
of the one person in a position to do serious dirt to the alien
cause.
My
eyes were drifting shut, but I resisted sleep. Something important
about the town of Mount Julian ...
What?
Other
thoughts swirled in my punchy mind: I'd have to leave Earth as soon
as possible ... stay out of reach of Haluk kidnappers and consortium
thugs ... at Phlegethon, go in without giving away my identity ...
disguised ... mustn't let Barky know I'm the guy who paid off Ram
Mahtani... need some gimmick to get me close to him... trade goods...
meanwhile, Karl works with Bea and Ef Sontag ... coordinates the
search for my brother.
Poor old
Dan! Once, I was the prodigal son, he was the golden boy with high
hopes of someday heading up Rampart. Now the Haluk had taken him—
Suddenly,
I thought I knew where.
"Bea?"
I mumbled.
"Yes,
Helly."
"Do
something very important for me. My phone ... inside pocket. Find
Karl Nazarian's personal code in the dex. Call him as soon as you get
to your house. Tell him you have me and the dead demiclone safe. Tell
him... urgent he takes an armed security team to Alistair Drummond's
former country home in Mount Julian. Place might be a hive of Haluk
... maybe they're taking my kidnapped brother Dan there ... old
bastard
himself might still be alive ... crazy as a bedbug,
working with the blueberries. Tell Karl."
"I'll
tell him everything you said," Bea Mangan said, "even
though it doesn't make much sense. Rest now, Helly. It's the best
thing for you."
So I did.
——
I woke up
in a quaintsy-poo guest room, tucked in a four-poster bed beneath a
flowery comforter. I was wearing an honest-to-God flannel nightshirt,
and there were small adhesive medical sensors stuck to my forehead,
sternum, and inner left wrist, which I peeled off and dropped into
the wastebasket. The old-style bedside alarm clock with external
bells read 7:13. The turquoise pin from my neck scarf, my pocket
phone, wallet, and wrist chronometer were there on a bedstand. I
ascertained from the latter that it was Saturday evening. I'd just
about slept the clock around.
Rolling
off the bed, I lurched over to the chintz-curtained windows and
opened the blinds. Gray twilight. A soft rain was falling and the
snow had all melted away. The cottage garden had patches of pink
daffodils, purple and white crocuses with their petals clenched, and
yellow forsythia bushes. Green-painted wrought-iron furniture stood
on a patch of winter-sere lawn faintly tinged with new growth. Beyond
a screen of balsams and budding maple trees, Sturgeon Lake was a
silver glimmer beneath a cloudy sky.
The
bedroom door opened behind me. I turned around and there was Dr.
Charles White, looking benign and reassuring in an open-necked shirt,
khaki pants, and a tattered brown cardigan. He was a tall man, skinny
as a rail, with skin the color of polished teak and eyes that were a
startling sea-green. His tightly curled dark hair was worn in a
sculptured style, with long sideburns like the cheekpieces on a Roman
helmet.
"Ah,
Helly. So you're finally up and about." He pronounced it
a-boot
in the good old Canadian way. "The med monitors showed you
perking along in fine fettle before you eighty-sixed the poor little
things. How do you feel?"
The mirror
above the dresser showed me a sandy-srubbled face, slightly
purplish-green around the eyes, but unlikely to frighten timid
toddlers.
"Good
enough. Thanks for the repair job, Charlie. I presume I'm pretty much
okay?"
"You're
normal except for scabs on your knuckles and healing contusions.
There'll be no lingering side effects from the paralyzing agent. The
needle only grazed your calf, gave you a minimal dose."
"Lucky
me." I checked my bare shank. A faint red line was the only
souvenir of my narrow escape.
He
tactfully didn't ask what kind of fine mess I'd gotten myself into
this time. "Fresh clothes for you in the closet. Your business
suit was ruined but the handmade cowboy boots survived with a little
attention from the valet machine. The syringe puncture in the left
boot is repaired. I've got supper downstairs, pizza and
spinach-tomato salad. Karl and I have already eaten, but we'll keep
you company with coffee and homemade German chocolate cake."
"Pizza
and salad would be marvelous, and you know I'm a sucker for Bea's
cake. Is she here?"
He shook
his head. "She went to her lab in Commerce Tower to do some
work. Don't worry about your deceased friend. I'm Deputy Coroner for
Victoria County. The body is tucked away in our little hospital
morgue with a John Doe tag on its toe, and none of the staff saw Bea
and me bring it in. It'll be secure for as long as need be."
I
hesitated. "What did Bea tell you about the guy?"
"That
he drugged and kidnapped you. That he's important. That overzealous
parties in the Secretariat for Xenoaffairs might try to take his body
away, and we have to prevent that."
"I
didn't mean for you to get involved in this, Charlie. It could be a
massive crock of shit."
He
shrugged and smiled and headed for the door. "Well, I'm
involved. So don't worry about it."
"Give
me a few minutes to dress," I said. "I'll be right down."
I shucked
the nightshirt, emptied my bladder, slapped depilatory gel on my
face, and had a quick shower. The clothes my host had provided were
just my style: Levi's, a black roll-neck tee, and a red wool
buffalo-plaid overshirt.
Before
I left the guest bedroom I entered Bea's personal code in my phone.
She didn't answer. Then I called a guy named Cosmo Riendeau, the
night supervisor at Rampart Fleet Maintenance at Oshawa Starport. For
special consideration, he and his crew had been expediting the
off-ticket refit of the good ship
Makebate.
"She's
ready to rumble when you are, Helly," Riendeau told me
cheerfully. "We tracked down an LRIR-1400J scanner for you in
Chicago, scheduled to be installed in an Astrophysical Survey vessel.
Bribery triumphed and it'll be here tomorrow. I tested the new
dissimulator and weaponry systems myself. That buggy of yours is now
one righteous bandit-killer."
I resolved
to send the perennially funds-strapped survey a replacement scanner,
plus a corporate donation, as soon as possible. "The ship's gig
all refitted, too?"
"Absolutely.
Extra shielding and new cannons. The provisions and the personal gear
you ordered are stowed, and the fuel bunkers are topped.
Makebate's
new range is forty-kay lights at a conservative fifty ross
cruising pseudo-vee— twenty-eight thou if you put the pedal to
the metal and exceed eighty. Of course, from now on you'll have to
eat and sleep on the flight deck. The only accommodations we didn't
rip out for the jumbo fuel-cell installation were the captain's head
and a little snack bar. It's gonna be pretty claustrophobic."
Cosmo
Riendeau and his team had no notion why I'd had the starship modified
so radically. There had been no alternative when I conceived my
aborted exploration of the Haluk Cluster, 17,200 light-years from the
closest Rampart refueling depot in the Perseus Spur; but now the
ship's extreme range gave me a tactical advantage in tracking Barky
Tregarth to Zone 3. Normally, a Y-770 speedster like
Make-bate
would have been obliged to make three pit stops to cover the
9,600 lights to Phlegethon at top ross. Rampart owned no planets
along the route to the inner galactic arm where I might have refueled
with a reasonable expectation of confidentiality, and unfriendly
folks would have been able to follow my progress easily if I'd used
commercial facilities. But now I could approach Barky's world from a
totally unexpected direction if I wanted to, with fuel to spare for
the trip back to Earth.
I said,
"Nice going, Cosmo. There'll be a juicy bonus for you and the
gang, subject to keeping zipped lips about the refit details per our
original agreement."
"Goes
without saying," Riendeau said. "That's a joke."
I gave an
obligatory chuckle. "One final thing: Have you or your people
noticed any outsiders poking around the shop during the past couple
of days, maybe asking questions about when my ship would be ready?"
"Nobody
came during the night shift. I can check the day and swing crews.
Call you back."
"Do
that. And get hold of Monte Gill at Fleet Security and tell him to
post armed guards at
Makebate's bay until I fly her out of
there."
"You
got 'em."
I thanked
Riendeau and ended the call, then went downstairs to the cottage
kitchen. Through the window, a Rampart hopper was visible on the pad
beyond the rainswept garden: Karl Nazarian's ride. He was sitting at
the table with Charlie White, drinking coffee. A delicious-looking
cake, only minimally dissected, sat on a platter covered with a glass
dome.
"You
look pretty decent, considering," Karl said.
"There's
nothing wrong with me that food won't fix."
"Drink
lots of water, too," Charlie ordered. He had already laid out
the salad and a pitcher of icewater, and he now took a plate holding
three huge wedges of steaming pepperoni pizza out of the microwave
and gave it to me.
"Yes,
Doctor. Thank you, Doctor." I picked up a dripping slice,
corraled the cheese strings, and started chomping. Even warmed over,
it was very good. I was both famished and thirsty.
Karl said,
"A few things happened while you were sleeping."
Charlie
gave us a tactful look. "Why don't I let you two discuss your
business in private."
"Don't
go," I said. "You're part of the Baker Street Irregulars
now by virtue of the body-snatching. Accessory to a felony. You might
as well know the rest of the story. Just let me get an update on
current events from Karl first."
The doctor
nodded and sat down again. He uncovered the cake, cut three generous
pieces, and passed them around.
Karl said
to me, "Your sister Beth is safe. She hasn't left her house. I
personally told her that Dan had escaped with the help of unknown
confederates, and she seemed genuinely surprised. Pleased, at first,
but the fact that four of Dan's InSec guards were killed cooled her
jets a little. She's promised not to go to the media or otherwise
impede our investigation. I suspect she might be rethinking Big
Brother's protestations of innocence."
I doubted
it. "We'll have to keep Beth well guarded or even get her
offworld. The two Haluk thugs who bagged me last night had some sort
of plans for her ... What about Dan himself? Did you check out
Alistair Drummond's old place in Mount Julian?"
Karl's
expression turned grim. "I had a Rampart incident team hop over
there as soon as Bea called me last night. They were there within an
hour. By then the firefighters had pretty much gotten things under
control."
I yelped
around a mouthful of pizza. "A fire—"
"The
big old wood-frame main house was totally destroyed, right down to
the foundations. The battalion chief said the place went up like a
bomb. It must have happened just about the time you first contacted
me from the highroad. There were no human remains found. Or Haluk. A
sophisticated accelerant that generated a very high-temperature burn
was used to torch the house. All that's left is white ash and slag."
"Damn!
The demi who got away must have sounded the alarm. A fire would have
ensured that there were no bits and pieces of incriminating DNA left
behind."
"I
went out to the scene myself this morning and interviewed the arson
investigation people. Talked to the neighbors—such as there are
in an upscale area like that. The property has extensive grounds, a
wooded perimeter with a security fence, beam-guarded frontage on
Stony Lake. It's not easy for unauthorized persons to get close to
it. The adjacent homes are owned by wealthy types or corporations
that use them mostly in summer. No one saw anything unusual
immediately preceding the fire. Of course, there was a minor blizzard
raging at the time. A caretaker woman who lives in a place half a
kilometer down the shore says the house was inhabited for at least
the past two months. She thought she might have seen a hoppercraft
landing on the property yesterday afternoon, when the weather was
better."
"Who's
the owner of record?" I asked.
"Livonia
Holdings SC, a Carnelian subsidiary, bought it from Galapharma after
Alistair Drummond's death. About a year ago Livonia leased the place
to S'yoma tib Katatosi—a Y'tata trading company—after
installing a heavy-duty ventilation system. The Y's wanted it for an
executive vacation retreat. An entity that I reached at the Y'tata
embassy claims that the Katatosi outfit is only sporadically in
residence on Earth. Conveniently absent at present. The entity was of
the opinion that Katatosi
might have sublet the house to some
human business clients. The place was automatically supplied with
food and the like by RoboGrocer and kept clean by Livonia-programmed
domestic bots. There was no live-in human help."
"Uh-huh.
What about the security system?"
"That
fed to a Y outfit in Toronto that alerted the local fire crew. The
Y'tata security entities refused to give me any specifics."
"This
suggestion of a Y'tata-Haluk connection could be significant, Karl.
When I talked to Jake Silver about the Barky Hunt Friday night, he
told me about a suppressed ZP report about collaborating pirates of
the same two races operating in Zone 3, hijacking transactinide
carriers."
"Zone
3?" Karl's expression was incredulous. "Haluk in the
Sagittarius Whorl? That doesn't sound likely."
"I
didn't think so, either. But Jake's source said that the Haluk
presence was deliberately hushed up by Xenoaffairs. Maybe the
blueballs are encouraging Y'tata freebooters to steal ultraheavy
elements so that there'll be a shortage."
"To
increase the profitability of their own trans-ack trade with us?"
"Maybe.
Barky Tregarth is supposed to be hanging out in Zone 3, too. Jake got
me a solid lead on him that I intend to check out as soon as
possible. If the Haluk are operating in the Sag, I'll bet Barky knows
about it."
"There's
more bad news," Karl said, "maybe unconnected to this
business. Lorne Buchanan is dead. Apparently a suicide."
"My
God! The secret Galapharma file data—"
"Relax.
Everything pertaining to the Haluk was transferred to Efrem Sontag on
Friday evening, just as Buchanan had agreed. His body was found
Saturday morning in his Rosedale house. There was no note. He had
apparently shot himself in the head with an antique Glock handgun."
"The
poor bastard didn't kill himself," I declared. "You know
that as well as I do, Karl! The Haluk found out what he'd done and
murdered him. Maybe to discourage other Galapharma executives from
coming forward with evidence against them."
"We'll
never prove it."
"Probably
one of those security people Buchanan brought to Rampart Tower—"
I started to say.
"Any
demis in the bunch will be long gone by the time we're able to check
their DNA. It's a dead end, Helly. Now that they know we can spot
them with the genetic marker, they'll be ultracautious."
"Shit.
I hoped we'd be able to keep the Haluk in the dark about that—at
least for a little while longer."
The good
doctor had been looking more and more dismayed as the mystifying
two-way conversation proceeded. I said, "Charlie, it's about
time we put you into the picture."
He
said, "Did I understand you to say that
Haluk were
responsible for your abduction yesterday? And for Buchanan's murder?"
"Yep.
They probably kidnapped my brother Daniel, too."
"That's
appalling! Why haven't you notified the Secretariat for Xenoaffairs?"
"Because
SXA is hand in glove with the consortium and the other members of the
Hundred Concerns who have a vested interest in keeping the Haluk
happy. SXA knows very well that I have a hard-on for our devious blue
brethren. As we lawyers would say, I am not a credible accusant."
"Then
inform CCID—"
"There's
something else, Charlie. Bea's probably working to prove it even as
we speak. The Haluk who tried to nab me were demiclones. They had
been illegally engineered into perfect human replicas."
"What!
And the dead man in my morgue—"
"Is
almost certainly an alien. Bea will know for certain when she
finishes her genetic assay. The Haluk have been using demiclones as
secret agents against humanity for several years now—predating
their treaties with us."
"I
can't believe that no one in authority knows about this!"
"People
in Xenoaffairs and Interstellar Commerce almost certainly have proof
of demiclone activity on Earth and on other human worlds that they've
concealed from the public and the Commonwealth Assembly. But no one
in SXA or ICS will blow the whistle because high officials in both
secretariats are creatures of Big Business. Mustn't endanger the
profits of the Haluk Consortium."
I'd
finished the pizza and salad, and now I started on the slab of German
chocolate cake. "Let me tell you the story, Charlie. It's a real
seven-ply gasser."
——
The scheme was hatched from a
miscegenation of deluded idealism and corporate greed. It started
with a crackpot idea conceived by a naive woman who hoped to foment
peace and love between the Haluk and humanity by means of genetic
engineering.
Emily
Blake Konigsberg was a brilliant and very attractive scientist who
worked for Galapharma in the years before its unscrupulous CEO
decided to take over the Rampart worlds. Emily and Alistair Drummond
became lovers. In the course of their pillow talk she told him about
her great dream.
Emily was
keenly interested in the Haluk and deplored the fact that our two
races were enemies. As you know, the Haluk bitterly resented the fact
that we halted their aggressive expansion into the Perseus Spur,
forced them to accept a humiliating armistice, and declined to share
our advanced technology with them. It was Emily's belief that the
refusal of the Haluk to even consider detente was largely rooted in
their envy of our stable physiology. She was probably right.
Humanity
was spawned on a relatively benign planet. Aside from some relatively
minor seasonal glitches, we're physically and mentally operational
all year round. But the Haluk evolved on a world with a highly
eccentric orbit that annually carried it into a region of intense
solar radiation. The result was allomorphy, an adaptation that
originally enabled the race to survive.
For about
two hundred days each year, while the home planet was sufficiently
distant from its sun, the ancestral Haluk existed as smart, active,
sexual, somewhat humanoid individuals called gracilomorphs. But then,
as the orbiting world approached the zone of strong solar radiation,
Haluk bodies underwent protective changes. For about sixty days,
during their lepidodermoid phase, they became increasingly
thick-skinned and sluggish. They lost their sexuality. Their brains
began to power down, leaving them incapable of high mental function.
Finally, in a climactic Big Change, the lepidos morphed into a
coffinlike testudinal phase. They slept inside radiation-resistant
golden chrysalids for 140 days. When the home planet once again swung
away from its ferocious sun, gracile Haluk awakened from estivation
and emerged from their protective shells to carry on their
interrupted lives.
Eventually
the Haluk achieved interstellar travel. On new planets, allomorphy
was no longer a survival trait but instead a tremendous inconvenience
that slowed racial progress. Millennia passed. As the Haluk expanded
throughout their star-cluster, the allomorphic cycles of individuals
lost their ancestral synchrony. This lessened the annual nuisance
somewhat. At least they weren't all asleep at the same time. But
their civilization—and most particularly their science—suffered
a great disadvantage compared to that of other stargoing sapients.
Especially
humans.
The Haluk
entered the Milky Way Galaxy at the tip of the Perseus Spur and
established eleven colonial planets. At the time, the only local race
having starships were the Qastt, and they were easily subjugated. But
when humanity extended its powerful hegemony to the Spur, Haluk
expansion was stopped cold by our superior technology.
So they
hated and feared us and refused to trade or enter into normal
diplomatic relations.
Emily
Konigsberg told her lover, Drummond, that she was convinced Haluk
hostility could be mitigated and the race's great potential realized
if their allomorphy were to be eradicated. It was her opinion that
the job could be done easily through advanced techniques of genetic
engineering. She sincerely believed that Commonwealth policy denying
this technology to the Haluk was immoral. If Galapharma Concern could
see its way clear to bypass CHW strictures—that is, work with
her to set up genen therapy programs among the blue aliens—a
great wrong would be righted.
Alistair
Drummond didn't have an altruistic bone in his body, but he liked
Konigsberg's idea all the same. The Haluk Cluster was rumored to
possess abundant supplies of valuable transactinide elements, which
the aliens had heretofore adamantly refused to trade. Galapharma
stood to make enormous profits in the therapy venture, doing well by
doing good.
So
Alistair entered into secret negotiations with the Haluk leader, the
Servant of Servants of Luk, and the deal was done. Emily set up a
genetic engineering lab on the principal Haluk Spur colony, Artiuk,
staffed entirely by Galapharma personnel. The project achieved
success by inserting human genes into the Haluk. Modified alien
individuals remained in the active, brainy, gracile phase
permanently. And because the therapy also modified Haluk germ
cells—so did their offspring.
The great
achievement was doubly illegal under Commonwealth law, which forbade
meddling with the genetic heritage of a sovereign race, to say
nothing of sharing human DNA with aliens. This didn't bother Alistair
Drummond. Galapharma was one of the almighty Big Seven Concerns. He
figured that if they were caught, they could pressure the
Commonwealth Assembly to legalize the scheme retroactively since it
was good for business.
Eventually,
that's just what happened.
It was a
minor embarrassment to Emily Konigsberg that the only viral vector
suitable for allomorph eradication therapy was not one under patent
to Galapharma Amalgamated Concern. PD32:C2 was an exclusive product
of Gala's small rival, Rampart Starcorp, which had obtained the CHW
mandate to the Perseus Spur after Galapharma withdrew in 2176. The
vector could not be grown under laboratory conditions or synthesized;
its sole source was the planet Cravat, owned by Rampart.
PD32:C2
could be purchased on the open market, of course—cautiously, so
Rampart would not know that the stuff was being resold at an enormous
markup—or it could be stolen. Gala agents and Haluk pirates
pursued both courses of action, while Alistair Drummond tried to
engineer a hostile takeover of Rampart in order to regain control of
the Spur planets—especially Cravat—that Galapharma had so
imprudently let slip out of its hands.
At the
same time, the wily CEO encouraged other large Concerns—Sheltok,
Carnelian, Bodascon, and Homerun— to join the illicit Haluk
trading partnership. There was safety in numbers, and plenty of
profits to go around. The Haluk were hungry for all kinds of advanced
human technology and willing to pay through the nose.
Emily and
Alistair were no longer romantically involved. Her idealistic pursuit
of a "greater good" allowed her to turn a blind eye to the
commercial shenanigans orchestrated by her ex-lover while she
expanded the therapy program, training Haluk scientists to build and
operate dynamic stasis units. The aliens were very quick learners.
Too damn
quick—but none of the human conspirators had any inkling of the
awful truth.
One day
the Servant of Servants of Luk proposed a new genetic enterprise to
Emily. He had conceived a plan that would open a great new era in
Haluk-human relations. Its fulfillment required "a small number"
of demiclones. These Haluk in human guise were to become special
cultural envoys to the populous planets of the Haluk Cluster,
supposedly soothing the intense xenophobia that had poisoned any hope
of rapprochement between the two races from the time of their first
encounter over a hundred years earlier.
Emily
Konigsberg was dubious about this bizarre notion. Demicloning, like
other extreme forms of genetic engineering, had long been outlawed in
the Commonwealth of Human Worlds. But eventually she gave in to the
Servant's pressure and even contributed her own DNA to the project.
When
Alistair Drummond found out about the demiclones, he was furious. He
believed the Servant actually intended to use fake humans to spy on
the Concerns and gain trade advantages. Drummond's first inclination
was to shut down the demiclone project, but he relented after the
Servant hinted that serious consequences would ensue. By then,
illegal trade with the Haluk had generated immense profits that
Galapharma and its Concern collaborators were reluctant to forfeit.
Drummond
hatched a ploy to minimize the danger of industrial espionage. He
ordered Konigsberg to incorporate a genetic marker into the demiclone
procedure without Haluk knowledge. In addition, the sole genen
facility producing the clones was placed under strict human
supervision, on a remote human world. Galapharma itself undertook to
supply the luckless donors of human DNA.
Alistair
Drummond's precautions worked well enough ... until the aliens
learned how to perform the complex demiclone procedure without the
help of human scientists, built secret labs of their own, and
discovered how easy it was to defeat the sporadic DNA testing of
employees that was supposed to prevent Haluk ringers from
infiltrating the human race.
——
As I
reached this point in my narrative, my pocket phone trilled. It was
Cosmo Riendeau. I excused myself from the table and went to answer
the call in the cottage's living room, urging Karl to continue the
story while I was gone.
Cosmo's
report was disturbing. "Only one outsider took an interest in
your starship, Helly—a very pretty young woman from the
accounting department in Rampart Tower. She showed up here in Oshawa
yesterday, around noon, and apparently had the proper pass and
personal ID. This cutie told Ole Wiren, the day-shift supervisor,
that she was at the port to reconfigure a billing procedure for our
number crunchers. She said she was on lunch break and ever so curious
about the big starships, and she begged Ole for a quick tour. He
admits he came down with instant beaver fever and showed her around."
"She
saw
Makebate."
"I'm
afraid so. Your boat was obviously something special—not just
another freighter or ExSec cruiser. Ole told her your starship was
almost ready to leave the barn—even let slip that we'd done a
fuel-cell augmentation. Sorry, Helly. The whole team knew your refit
was supposed to be hush-hush, but that chick played poor Ole like a
Stradivarius."
"Probably
no harm done," I lied. "Did the woman give her name?"
"Dolores
da Gama. I pulled her image and voice-signature off the shop entry
security monitor for you. Hold on while I feed a dime."
He
inserted a data disklet into his phone and a talking image popped
onto my screen. Da Gama was stacked like a brick shithouse and had
wide-set dark eyes, pouty lips, and long black hair with a white
blaze at the left temple. She talked her way past the laxly guarded
entrance to Rampart Fleet Maintenance using a voice as sweet and
seductive as fireweed honey. If Dolores was a demiclone, her original
must have been a real hottie.
I cut off
the replay. "Thanks for the information, Cosmo. I'll look into
this, but I'm sure everything's okay."
"Anything
else I can do for you, Helly?"
"I'd
like to lift off sometime early next week. Think you'd have time to
rig simple arm and leg restraints on the copilot's chair—plus
an exterior lock on the John door?"
"Prisoner
transport, eh?"
"Something
like that."
"I'll
attend to it personally."
I thanked
him and hit the End pad, then used the phone to access Rampart's
roster of accounting personnel.
There was
no Dolores da Gama. Why wasn't I surprised?
I sent a
copy of her mug shot to Sean Callahan at InSec and told him to pass
it along to his supervisor. I doubted that the lovely lady would
press her luck and try another incursion, but Rampart Tower's
doorkeepers had to be put on alert.
And I had
to get out of town before a fresh set of demiclone thugs came
sniffing after me.
However,
there was still unfinished business to be taken care of with Simon,
Ef Sontag, and a few other people. I also needed to assemble certain
items crucial to a successful Barky Hunt that probably wouldn't be
available off-Earth.
I sat for
a few minutes, thinking, then made two brief calls. The first was to
Tony Becker, Rampart's brilliant but testy Vice President for
Biotechnology, who grumped and bitched and asked questions that I
didn't intend to answer. He only agreed to put together what I needed
when I used both a carrot and a stick: the promise of a hefty bribe,
plus a half-joking threat to have him fired if he didn't come
through.
The second
call went to Halimeda Opper, a venerable and trustworthy Reversionist
party stalwart who was a media production designer by profession. She
heard me out, then referred me to a theatrical supply house in
Mississauga that would have exactly what I required.
——
I returned
to the kitchen and helped myself to a second piece of German
chocolate cake. Next to snickerdoodle cookies and rozkoz flan, it's
my favorite confection. Karl was regaling Charlie with accounts of
our more recent adventures with the Haluk—demiclone and au
naturel—on Dagasatt and on the journey back to Earth following
my capture of Oliver Schneider. I lowered my eyes modestly during the
heroic parts, which seemed a lot more fun in retrospect than they'd
been at the time.
When Karl
wound down, Charlie said, "I'm still not clear on the aliens'
motivation. Trade between humanity and the Haluk is regularized. On
the face of it, we're friends. So why the continuing demiclone
espionage?"
"Why
indeed," I murmured. "Perhaps the Haluk have a hidden
agenda that involves more than taking care of business. Perhaps
they've had that agenda from the inception of the demiclone scheme!
What if their moles have dug deep into the inner operations of the
Hundred Concerns? What if they're rooting around inside our
scientific establishment, our law enforcement agencies, and our
government?"
"To
what end?" He asked the question, but an intelligent man like
Charlie White had to know the answer already. I spelled it out
anyhow.
"Maybe
the Haluk aren't willing to wait patiently while the Commonwealth
Assembly doles out small numbers of new Milky Way worlds for them to
colonize. I have this theory that population pressure back in the
Haluk Cluster is dire—otherwise, why would they have made the
desperate and difficult step of jumping to our galaxy in the first
place? The only Spur colony of theirs I ever visited seemed
conspicuously lacking in elbow room. The school I toured was
jam-packed with youngsters. Now that allomorphy can be eradicated
in
the germ line, parents no longer pass on the allomorph trait to
their offspring. Pretty soon everybody'll be wide awake back there in
the Haluk Cluster, as well as in their Spur colonies. If they already
have an overpopulation problem, doing away with allomorphy will make
that problem worse."
"You
believe the Haluk intend to seize planets in our galaxy by force?"
Charlie said.
"I
think it's a strong possibility. So do Karl and Bea and a few other
voices crying in the wilderness."
"The
difficulty," Karl interposed, "has been proving Haluk
hostile intent beyond a shadow of a doubt. Placing concrete evidence
before the Commonwealth Assembly so the matter must be openly
debated—not swept under the rug, the way the Hundred Concerns
and corrupt elements in SXA and ICS would prefer. Up until now, we've
never even been able to prove conclusively that demiclones exist."
Charlie
said, "The body in my morgue—"
"Is a
corpus delicti," I said. "The legal meaning of that term
has nothing to do with a cadaver. It means 'the body of the
crime'—the substantial proof that an illegal act has been
committed."
Charlie
nodded slowly. His lucent green eyes had a detached thousand-meter
stare, looking into a future almost too alarming to contemplate. "If
only the Haluk weren't so intelligent! It's said that they haven't
simply purchased our high technology—they've improved on it."
"That's
a fact." Karl looked bleak as he cut himself another hunk of
cake. It was almost gone. "Some of their star-ships are equal to
the best we have. Most are inferior. But the technology gap will
close as they obtain advanced production machinery from us. There's
still an embargo against selling weapons to the Haluk, but you know
how effective that will be. Gunnmning to the Insaps is a fine old
human institution, tremendously profitable."
"They'll
wage war on us," I said, "unless we expose their hostile
intent. Force them to allow human inspection of their worlds on pain
of full trade interdiction."
"Force
them?" Charlie White exclaimed. "In heaven's name, how?"
"I'm
working on it," I said.
"Do
the Haluk know that?"
"Probably,"
I admitted.
"Maybe
that's why they tried to kidnap you," Charlie said.
I'd pretty
much come to the same conclusion. "Yeah. But I'm damned if I can
figure why they didn't just kill me outright. Why take me alive? I
don't have possession of the crucial evidence against them. Efrem
Sontag does, and he'll back up the data and secure it so immaculately
that not even I can touch it. It's still too early in the game for us
to have finalized our anti-Haluk strategy, so I can't spill any great
secrets under psychotronic interrogation. And why would they need to
snatch my brother Dan and sister Beth along with me?"
Charlie
just shook his head.
Outside,
the shades of night had fallen. Patio lights gleamed in the rain and
reflected on the smooth sides of Karl's big hoppercraft. I ate the
last piece of chocolate cake.
Charlie
made fresh coffee and we sat around drinking it and waiting, not
saying much.
Finally,
about 2100 hours, Bea Mangan's hopper wafted down and parked beside
Karl's. She came in through the back door, looking tired but pleased
with herself, and dropped a magslate on the table in front of me.
"Here's the report, Helly. I've already sent a copy of it to
Delegate Son-tag."
Charlie
helped his wife off with her coat, heated water, and put a couple of
peppermint teabags into a big china cup labeled C
10H
19OH.
I pulled out a chair for Bea and apologized for the fact that we'd
scoffed up all the cake. She said she'd eaten supper at the cafeteria
in Commerce Tower. After she had relaxed for a few minutes and sipped
some of the calming brew, I asked the pertinent question.
"What
did your genetic assay show? Speak freely. Charlie knows the score
now."
Bea gave
me a reproachful look. "Helly, I thought we—"
I said,
"Your husband is in this thing up to his neck, just like the
rest of us. He deserves to know what's really going on."
"It's
for the best," Charlie said to her. "At least now I know
the importance of that bod stashed in my morgue under false
pretenses."
"So—is
he a demiclone?" I asked Bea.
"He
is," she said, "provided the data Lorne Buchanan sent to
Sontag are correct. The so-called marker incorporated by Emily
Konigsberg is actually a unique suite of introns— multiple
noncoding sequences of DNA—occurring on four different
chromosomes, plus a single mutant exon from the complex controlling
telomeric proteins. The genetic profile of the individual you
nicknamed Brown Fleece contains both the intron suite and the mutant
exon typical of demiclones."
"What
are telomeric proteins?" I asked.
Dr.
Charlie said, "Telomeres are ribbonlike appendages on the ends
of chromosomes. Each time a cell divides—and those in the
normal human body split about seventy times before kicking the
bucket—the telomeres diminish a little. Youthful cells have
long telos. Old worn-out cells have shorter ones. Tinkering with the
genes that influence telo proteins is one of the important ways that
dystasis therapy brings about cell rejuvenation and healing. There's
an enormous scientific literature on the subject."
Bea said,
"Brown Fleece's telomeres seem to be of an appropriate length
for a human male of his apparent age. It's quite possible that the
exon mutation's effect is negligible."
I frowned.
"Then why would Konigsberg bother to include it in the demiclone
marker group at all? Wouldn't the intron suite adequately label fake
humans?"
"It
would," she said. "Emily was
forced to include the
exon—for a very odd reason that I'm going to tell you about."
"What
does this mutant thing do?" Karl asked.
"Apparently
nothing," Bea said, "if we're to judge by Brown Fleece. In
the biosample I briefly studied, the telomeric proteins seem
completely normal."
"Isn't
there any way to check it out more intensively?" I asked.
"One
would have to do some rather time-consuming research," she said,
"in vitro tissue culture of cells from different parts of the
demiclone body—artificial acceleration of cell division to
determine whether the overall aging process or specific bodily
functions were being significantly affected. Perhaps the exon is a
protogene—one that's effectively dormant until it's switched on
by some external factor. In that case, a researcher might not uncover
the mutation's effect unless she found the relevant trigger. Perhaps
Haluk scientists have already noticed this rogue exon and researched
it. However, given their relative backwardness in molecular biology,
I'd be inclined to doubt it."
"Me,
too," I said. All this was more genetics than I really wanted to
hear about right now, even though I suspected it might be important.
Bea took a
long drink of the mint tea and sighed. "Let's move on to the
other interesting—and very puzzling—thing I discovered.
Do you remember the Haluk cadaver that was sent to Tokyo University
by Rampart? This happened several years ago, just before Eve was
abducted."
Karl and I
nodded. I explained to Charlie: "The body was a gracile. It
looked like a normal allomorph, but it wasn't. It had human DNA mixed
with the Haluk. During the long period of hostility, human
researchers had very little opportunity to study the Haluk genome. So
when Rampart captured a Qastt pirate vessel that had a Haluk suicide
aboard, it sold the body to Tokyo University for a nice price. That
particular corpse unexpectedly provided the first proof that Haluk
allomorphism was being erased by unauthorized genen therapy. Bea had
it briefly but was unable to do much research."
"That's
right," she said. "The body was returned to the Haluk as a
provision of the new trade treaty, supposedly for religious
interment. The Secretariat for Xenoaffairs confiscated and sealed the
Japanese researchers' data and mine for policy reasons that weren't
made clear to the scientific community ... Perhaps you
don't know
that officially the Haluk genome remains pegged at its
pre-allomorph-trait eradication status. Fresh research by human
scientists into Haluk biology is now allowed only with SXA
permission. And no permits have been issued."
I gave a
cynical smile. "Right. The Haluk—and our goddamn
government—don't want to publicize the fact that human genes
were used illegally to wipe out allomorphism. That's why the Tokyo
study was never published. My father obtained a precis of it by
twisting academic arms, but the full report was quashed."
"Nevertheless,"
Bea said demurely, "I managed to obtain a copy of it two years
ago, as did a number of other people in my line of work. Today, when
I finished assaying Brown Fleece, I compared his genetic profile to
that of the Tokyo Haluk. I did this for technical reasons, to see how
much of the redundant human DNA in the Tokyo body might have survived
in a demiclone. Of course, the Toyko Haluk didn't contain the intron
marker suite typical of demiclones ... but the body
did have
the mutant telomere exon."
"What
the hell does that mean?" I demanded. I was beginning to feel
very confused. All this science was giving me a headache—or
perhaps it was too much German chocolate cake.
Bea said,
"I think we can presume that every nonallomorphic Haluk
possesses this small exon mutation. Older studies of Haluk genetics
confirm that the altered gene is not present in Haluk possessing the
allomorph trait. Nor has the mutation ever been noted in human
beings. I have to conclude that the exon is an artifact. Emily
Konigsberg created it."
Karl's
bushy brows rose quizzically. "She added a little something
extra to
both the trait eradication and the demiclone genen
procedures?"
"Apparently
so," Bea said, "but there's no documentation for it in her
research materials. I haven't been able to read everything in the
secret Galapharma files yet, of course. But there was an extensive
section dealing with allotrait eradication that I did study
carefully. I found no reference to insertion of the mutant exon.
Konigsberg must have concealed it within another gene-resequencing
procedure, keeping it secret from both Haluk authorities and the
Galapharma technicians. Later, when the demiclone project was
established, she was forced to describe the mutant exon in the marker
group. It would be detectable, you see, when Gala checked its
employees' DNA to be sure they weren't Haluk spies."
And a
mighty sloppy job they did of that, too ...
"So
Emily's magic exon occurs in nonallos and demiclones both," I
said, "and we have no notion why. Aren't most mutations
harmful?"
"Not
necessarily," Bea said. "Given the highly idealistic
temperament of Konigsberg, it doesn't seem likely that the exon would
be deleterious. She wouldn't want to harm her Haluk friends. The
mutation is probably neutral—or even beneficial."
"For
who?" I murmured. "Humans or Haluk?"
A silence.
Finally, I
said, "This new information bugs the hell out of me. What if
that damned woman figured out a way to increase the Haluk lifespan,
or make them super-healing, or something?"
"That's
extremely unlikely," Bea said mildly. "But I could
discreetly consult my forensic colleagues. Perhaps some of them would
agree to quietly undertake some tissue-culture experiments, using
biosamples from Brown Fleece. They wouldn't have to know the subject
was a Haluk demiclone in order to investigate the effects of the
mutation."
"Go
ahead," I said. "But for God's sake stress the need for
secrecy."
"I
don't think we have to worry about their discretion." She
paused. "However, there's another kind of secrecy we should be
very concerned about. Have you considered that there might be
demiclone spies in Efrem Sontag's office? His association with you
and his skeptical attitude toward the Haluk Consortium are
well-known."
"Sontag
and his staff and even his family will have to be vetted," I
said. "He's already agreed to it. We'll obtain DNA samples
without the other subjects' knowledge and you can do the assays."
I glanced apologetically at Karl and Charlie. "You'll have to
test us, too, Bea."
"Oh,
I've already done that, Helly." She smiled into her cup of
peppermint tea. "I took biosamples from you to the lab and
compared them with the Vital Stat database. You three are absolutely
authentic. But I'm afraid you'll have to take
me on faith—at
least for the time being." "We'll risk it," I said.
——
Not long
afterward, Karl and I boarded his hopper and took off into the rainy
night sky. For no reason other than an old security chief's love of
arcane gadgetry, he had installed a sophisticated intruder-defense
system in his small home in Port Perry, south of Fenelon Falls. It
was the kind of setup that would hold off even the most determined
Haluk kidnappers, far superior to that in my Rampart Tower apartment.
I asked Karl if I could stay with him, and he readily agreed. He was
a widower and lived alone except for a ten-kilo purebred, bluepoint
Ragdoll cat named Max. The cat even liked me.
"It'll
just be for three days," I said, "while we work out a
long-range game plan with Sontag based on all this new evidence.
After that, I'm off to a Sagittarian asteroid named Phlegethon. Barky
Tregarth is supposed to be holed up there—literally. The
friggin' place is an orbiting rabbit warren. Hollow."
Karl
turned in the pilot's seat and regarded me with amazement. "But
you can't go now—not after what's happened!"
"Sure
I can." I was scrolling through the hopper's music library.
Mostly classical, dammit, and heavy on Khachaturian. Finally, I found
a Cal Tjader collection and called up "Running Out."
Apropos, no?
"You're
needed here!" Karl protested.
"No,
I'm not. You need Cassius Potter, Hector Motlaletsie, and Lotte
Dietrich." They were the retired Rampart security agents who had
worked closely with us in the Perseus Spur during the Galapharma
takeover attempt. The three were among the few people fully cognizant
of the Haluk demiclone threat.
"My
Over-the-Hill Gang?"
"Sign
'em on again," I told him. "They'll come running if you
explain the situation. We're going to need Lotte's computer expertise
to analyze the archival material we got from Lorne Buchanan. She'll
know how to validate its authenticity for Sontag, in case SXA tries
to discredit the chain of evidence later. Cassius and Hector will
have an even more sensitive mission: collecting biosamples from every
Delegate in the Commonwealth Assembly. They should all be tested. So
should as many of the Delegates' aides as we can grab DNA from. If
any demiclones are found, we leave them in place—then let
Sontag blow 'em sky-high when he starts his committee hearings."
"You
should be here for those. You've
got to be here! You're a
principal witness."
"My
Barky Hunt won't take long. Maybe not even two weeks. Five days to
reach Phlegethon, maybe a few more to track the old gunrunner down
and hook him up to the truth machines I'm packing on
Makebate. If
he comes up aces, I'll transmit the results of his interrogation to
you immediately via encrypted subspace com, then hightail it back to
Earth with Barky lashed to the copilot's chair."
"And
what if something goes wrong? Nothing that superannuated crook is
likely to tell you is worth risking your life for."
"That's
not true." I told him about the upcoming Assembly vote that
would permit the sale of fifty T-2 Rampart Mandate planets to the
Haluk, as well as the bill that would be introduced in the next
session opening an additional three hundred worlds to the aliens.
"Sontag thinks it would be bad strategy to attack the
fifty-planet bill by introducing the demiclone evidence during the
final eight weeks of this Assembly session. I don't agree. Maybe
Barky Tregarth can help me change Ef's mind."
Karl was
quietly appalled at the political news. "I never dreamed that
the pro-Haluk faction was pushing ahead so fast! T-2 worlds ... not
as desirable as T-l 's, but bad enough. Isn't there anything you
could do as a Rampart director to stall the sale?"
"Me?"
I let loose a cynical cackle. "Not a prayer. The Rampart board
would vote me down in a landslide if I tried to block either deal. A
huge credit infusion right now is just what the doctor ordered to
grease the wheels of the Galapharma consolidation. The only way to
force an open-door treaty on the Haluk and slow their influx is by
discrediting them in the Assembly."
"We
already have the evidence to do that, using Brown Fleece and the new
Galapharma material. Dammit, Helly! Galloping off after a long shot
like Barky Tregarth is reckless and irresponsible. To say nothing of
bloody dangerous!"
"My
life's in danger if I stay on Earth," I pointed out. "So I
might as well go. At least there won't be any Haluk demiclones
gunning for my butt around Sagittarius."
"Jesus
Christ," he muttered darkly. "Why not just admit you're hot
to trot on a new offworld adventure after two years of boring legal
shit?"
"There's
that," I admitted, grinning.
He turned
away and stared out the side window of the hopper. Cal Tjader was
playing his great Latin take on "'Round Midnight."
"So
follow your damned cowboy instincts," Karl said softly. "If
you end up dead, the rest of us will carry on the crusade somehow."
"I
know," I said quietly. "I'm counting on it."
"The
bad hats will be expecting you at Phlegethon, you know."
"That's
why I'm going there in fancy dress. I'll disguise myself as a Joru
trader. A very
short Joru trader. And I'll have trade goods
that no Haluk-oriented smuggler can resist. I twisted Tony Becker's
arm and he's putting the stuff together for me." I told Karl
what merchandise I planned to offer and he laughed. "If I give a
decent performance, none of the local wiseguys will connect my Joru
persona with the guy in Toronto who paid big money to learn the
whereabouts of one Hamilcar Barca Tregarth."
Karl
thought about it. "Hmm. This goofy idea could actually work."
I flashed
a confident grin. "Of course it will. And you know what?
Masquerading as an alien might even be fun!"
What an
idiot I was.
Chapter 6
Tony
Becker, Rampart Vice President for Biotechnology, was an
ultraefficient executive and a fine scientist who didn't suffer
fools—or cowboys—gladly. He was scrupulously upright,
loyal, hardworking, and couldn't stand the sight of a certain
flamboyant black-sheep lawyer who used his family name and fortune to
make political waves.
Tony was
also the only one I would have trusted to put together my Barky bait.
When I
coerced him into cooperating with me, I made it clear that I needed
the crucial materials no later than 0400 hours on Wednesday morning,
the day I intended to leave Earth from Oshawa Starport. Tony
grudgingly promised to meet the deadline but said he'd probably have
to bring the trade goods to the Rampart pilot's lounge at the last
minute.
The
starport serving the Human Commonwealth capital had such heavy
traffic that landings and departures were firmed up two days ahead of
time. To keep Haluk agents off balance, I planned to usurp the
liftoff slot of another Rampart ship scheduled to depart at 0440. It
was a fairly common ploy of impatient VIP executives. The bumped
vessel would be banished to the end of the line and endure a
forty-eight-hour delay. Taking its place,
Makebate would be
entered into the starport computer record only at the last minute.
Promptly
at four in the morning I sat alone in Rampart's pilot lounge in the
central module of the lake-island platform, waiting for Tony. Through
the observation window I could see the cloudy sky brightening in the
east. Every few minutes a massive starship lofted silently off one of
the thirty-six floating cradles that encircled the tower structure,
then vanished into the overcast under sublight drive.
Makebate
was on the conveyor already, moving along the underwater tunnel
from our shoreside maintenance facility to her designated cradle. At
0430 I'd have to be on her flight deck, going through the final
checklist of procedures for liftoff, or else forfeit my slot.
The wall
chronometer showed 0410 hours, and still no Tony Becker. I couldn't
believe the prickly bastard would screw me, but it wouldn't be any
surprise if he shaved the time to the bone just to make me squirm.
Phone him?
Nope. I just cursed and waited.
At 0415
the pork sausage patties, scrambled eggs, and fried tomatoes Karl had
given me for breakfast did a fandango in my gut. For some reason, the
notion of postponing the Phlegethon trip for two days was
unthinkable. If the Biotech vice president didn't show, I'd leave
without the trade goods and think up a new way to entice my quarry
into range. As for Tony Becker... would I really have him fired if he
failed me, as I'd threatened? Would I dismiss a valued Rampart
executive, a tireless charity fund-raiser, a devout churchgoer, a
staunch family man, merely because he'd refused to be an accomplice
in my cockamamie scheme?
You're
damned right I would.
But he
strolled into the pilot lounge at 0419, blase as you please. I
climbed to my feet and said, "Hey, Tony. Almost missed you."
Becker
was a round-faced blond man in his late thirties who wore a white
track suit that was not only immaculately clean,
but pressed. He
looked at me as though I were something that needed scraping off his
pristine athletic shoes, then thrust a padded fabric lunch pak into
my hands. It was the kind of thing small children took to school,
imprinted with images of the cartoon character Daffy Duck.
"Here,"
he said snippily. "One of my kids contributed the deceptive
packaging. Do you have
any idea how tough it was to get this
material put together? You'd better be damned sure nobody ever traces
this unethical stunt of yours back to me."
The Daffy
pack contained only two items. One was a semiobsolete Macrodur
magslate with a chipped case and a dirty screen. The other item was
an important-looking little technical container about the size of a
sandwich box that had built-in refrigeration and self-destruct units
and biohazard symbols stuck on all sides. I tipped it carefully out
of the pack onto a coffee table.
"Here's
the key." Tony handed me a dime.
Inside the
box were six smaller self-refrigerating biocontainers nested in
contour padding. I opened one and found a sealed, unlabeled vial
nearly full of viscous purplish liquid.
Tony
Becker said, "The viral vector is the real thing, with an
admixture of harmless contaminants and stain in the culture to make
it look exotic. It'll pass any test. The slate contains a complicated
production protocol that I faked up, using data from our own Spur
factories, and translated into Joru. It'll serve your purposes.
However, I should warn y»u that a really competent
biotechnician will probably suspect that the alien manufacturing
procedures are bogus. They're too efficient."
"That's
okay," I said, "so long as the vector itself passes
muster."
"I
told you it would, didn't I?" Tony snapped.
I handed
him a plastic card. It represented five hundred shares of Rampart
Preferred, signed over from my personal stakeholding. "A
tangible token of my appreciation, as I promised. But perhaps your
tender conscience won't allow you to accept a bribe."
I swear
that he hissed at me. Then he snatched the card, shoved it into his
belt wallet and stomped off, leaving me grinning. I took a last look
at the small vial before putting it away with the others. What looked
like runny grape jelly was actually the genetic engineering vector
PD32:C2. Barky Tregarth would be led to believe the vials were
samples— from a brand new source of the invaluable virus
located on a Joru planet.
I
locked up the container, slung the Daffy pack over my shoulder, and
dashed to the transporter. I arrived at
Makebate's cradle with
two whole minutes to spare.
——
The early
part of my voyage to Phlegethon was spent in dress rehearsal for my
upcoming role as a Joru. I strode masterfully about the cramped
flight deck practicing xeno gestures, dressed in flowing
black-and-white brocaded robes reminiscent of those worn by medieval
Dominican friars, doing my best to convey the impression that I was a
third of a meter taller and weighed an additional 45 kilos. (A few
shrimpy Joru were my height, 193 cm.) My stage presence had to
reflect the almighty chutzpah of a person who believed, as every
supremely self-confident male Joru did, that the sun, moon, and stars
shone out of his cloaca.
The
costume I had purchased at the Mississauga theatrical supply
establishment recommended by Halimeda Opper was elaborate and
expensive, intended for human actors impersonating Joru in close-up
holo performances. The fabric and accessories seemed authentic at
close inspection. My body, beneath the voluminous robes, was modified
by a padded suit that gave it additional bulk in the right places. I
also wore soft-armor longjohns and had additional armor in the hood
of the costume. My hands were enclosed in six-fingered gloves—the
prosthetic extra digits were even capable of movement—that
simulated hairy orange paws adorned with heavy golden rings. I
slipped small armor pads into the gloves to guard the backs of my
hands.
Disguising
my head and face was trickier, requiring the use of recontouring
makeup appliances, bulging faux eyes with vertical pupils, skin
texturizer, and a bald cap sporting a knobby crest and tufts of
apricot fur.
Alien
oxygen-concentrating equipment hid the lower part of my face—and
made the entire impersonation feasible, since Joru had peculiar
narrow jaws that were impossible to simulate on a normal human skull.
The mask wasn't operational, of course. Instead it was fitted with a
special internal translator device that modified my whispered
utterances into the alien language and broadcast them through an
annunciator at normal volume.
I
also wore an earpiece that would decipher Joru in case any member of
that race tried to speak to me in the mother tongue. A second
pendant-model translator, clipped to my collar in the usual fashion,
could be activated to
retranslate my Joru words back into
appropriately florid Standard English; I wasn't a good enough actor
to reproduce the mechanical idiom on my own.
After
getting my moves down pat and polishing my conversational candences,
I used the ship's computer library to brush up my knowledge of Joru
culture. I also created a personal legend that was loosely based on a
Joru criminal I'd known in the old days.
My
new identity was that of Gulowjadipallu Gulow, a native of the planet
Didiwa in Sector 7 in the inner Orion Arm. I had three wives,
fourteen offspring, and a pet
wulip back home. I was a
professional middleman, an information broker, as were so many other
members of my urbane and discreet race. I was semiretired, but still
kept a paw in when a truly unique opportunity presented itself.
Because I was rich and my time was so valuable, I traveled in a late
model star-ship of human manufacture. No one at Phlegethon would scan
it closely because I'd leave it in orbit, hidden in its impenetrable
dissimulator field, and dock at the asteroid in my ordinary-looking
ship's gig.
With luck,
minions of Ram Mahtani or other unfriendlies would never see through
my elaborate camouflage; and Barky Tregarth, even forewarned and
wary, wouldn't suspect my true identity until it was too late.
——
Four
days out of Earth, as I was traversing Red Gap, between the Orion Arm
and Sagittarius, I picked up a distress call on the generalized
subspace communication channel. At the time,
Makebate was
outside the normal shipping vectors, streaking through faintly
glowing drifts of interstellar gases slightly below the galactic
plane. There wasn't a star within 350 light-years, and no solid
matter larger than a mouse turd within 100.
The
automated beacon-style subspace signal was so faint it almost missed
me. But
Makebate's gonzo receiving equipment managed to pull
one of the flashes into dimensional focus, enabling us to lock on. I
only hesitated for a moment before transmitting a beamed response.
"Vessel
in distress," I said, "do you copy on Channel 6113?"
"...
We copy on Channel 6113. Thank you for responding."
The voice
was human with a heavy ethnic accent, indicating that its owner was
Earth-born and probably used his ancestral tongue at home in
preference to Standard English. Lots of people were like that,
defying the language police.
My
instrumentation showed that the com beam was very weak. The starship
sending the SOS traveled anonymously, as was common in regions
frequented by pirates. I, of course, was anonymous, too. My
rangefinder placed the other ship 154 light-years away in the
direction of the Sag, well out of scanner range.
"State
the nature of your emergency, vessel in distress," I said.
"Responding
starship, please identify yourself."
The hell I
would. With a focused SS com linkage established, the other ship
could now calculate my hyperspatial pseudovector with precision. If
it was an innocent, I'd do my best to help. If it was a trolling
buccaneer playing games, attempting to entice me within striking
distance, I'd teach it a painful lesson.
I
repeated, "Please state the nature of your emergency. My name is
Hugo. I'm a human trader who prefers to remain incognito at this
time." This was a coy admission that I was a smuggler. A few of
them, like my pal Mimo Bermudez, were not entirely devoid of humane
impulses. "I will attempt to contact Zone Patrol on your behalf
if you wish."
Abruptly,
the vessel in distress deactivated its ID blank-out. The data display
on my console showed its registration and ICS-approved itinerary.
SBC-11942 was a Sheltok bulk trans-ack carrier en route from Shamiya
in the Sag to the big fuel-plant complex on Lethe in Zone 8 of the
Orion Arm.
"Citizen
Hugo, this is Ulrich Schmidt, master of the
Sheltok Eblis. We
are under attack by a fleet of sixteen bandits. Our ULD engines are
disabled and we are operating under minimum subluminal
drive—effectively dead in the void. Our AM torpedoes are
exhausted. We have diverted nearly all remaining power to our
defensive shields. Uh ... I estimate that we can hold out for two
more hours, then we will have to surrender."
"I
understand. What can I do to help?"
"The
initial attack severely damaged our communication system. Our SS com
input is too weak to reach Sheltok Fleet Security on Lethe or any of
our Sagittarian units. We have also been unsuccessful in attempts to
contact Zone Patrol. Please notify the patrol of our situation if you
can."
"I
copy that and will comply, Captain Schmidt," I said. Then I
added mendaciously: "My long-range scanner picked up a ZP heavy
cruiser in my slice of hyperspace less than half an hour ago. It
might be able to reach you in time to drive off the bandits. Do you
have a racial ID on them?"
"It's
the
verftuchte Haluk again! No doubt about it. I hoped to
outwit them by vectoring below the galactic plane on
this trip,
but they found us anyhow. Twenty of the pig-dogs! I popped four with
AM torpedos before they needled my engines."
"Haluk?
Are you sure of that identification, Cap'n?" I tried to keep the
excitement out of my voice. The Barky Hunt had paid off already.
"Of
course I'm sure,
du Scheisskopfl Do you think I'm the first
carrier to be ambushed by these
doppelgurkeri fuckers? They're
bleeding Sheltok dry in Zones 3 and 4."
"Well,
that's a rotten shame, but it sure as hell ain't my fault."
Schmidt
was instantly contrite. "I'm sorry I lost my temper, Hugo.
Please—if you aren't able to contact Zone Patrol within ... a
viable time frame, then I request that you tell Lethe what happened
to us, as soon as you are able to do so."
"You
just hang tough, pardner. I'll do my best to set the patrol onto
those fuckin' blue scrotes. Good luck! Hugo out."
"Thank
you, Hugo.
Sheltok Eblis is out."
I'd lied
to Schmidt just in case his emergency was a hoax. I hadn't scanned a
ZP starship for over thirty hours, and that one had been back in Zone
8 of the Orion Arm, nearly 2,200 light-years away. The patrol has
precious few high-ross vessels, and they use them to guard heavily
traveled regular shipping lanes, not the godforsaken underbelly of
Red Gap.
But
not to worry, Cap'n!
Makebate could substitute nicely for a ZP
heavy cruiser. And I was bored and ready for some Lone Ranger action.
——
Roaring
down the hype at max pseudovee, I arrived at the ambush scene well
within Schmidt's estimated two-hour limit. Still, it was a near
thing. The shields of the great eight-kilometer-long carrier were
flickering crimson by then, and they wouldn't have held up much
longer.
The
bandits were so intent on savaging
Eblis that it took them
forever to spot me coming at them from down under, among the dust
clouds. When one of them finally scanned
Makebate, the whole
bunch broke off their bombardment, engaged ULD, and sheered away in
sixteen different directions. They were driving speedy small
starships that looked something like Bodascon Y600 knockoffs,
ornamented with those odd cobalt-blue running lights the Haluk are
fond of. They had plenty of horsepower to fly rings around a
slow-moving leviathan like
Eblis, but were hardly a match for
my souped-up sled and its extravagant weapon systems.
I played
reasonably fair—aside from misrepresenting myself as Zone
Patrol—sending warning shots from my actinic cannons at the
Haluk ships and calling for them to throw in the towel or sincerely
regret it. They kept running, most of them too panicked by my scary
conformation and superior speed even to fire on me. I made a
recording of each pirate ship's image and fuel signature before
wasting it. It took me almost two hours to chase down the last of the
sixteen, by which time I'd lost my appetite for one-sided combat—not
that I had any alternative to slaughtering them. If I gave them a
pass, they'd just find fresh prey.
There
was no way to tell if the doomed Haluk had sent subspace alarms to
their base. I was already having uneasy second thoughts about the
wisdom of my knight-errancy, but I put my worries aside, figuring I
hadn't really compromised the Phleg operation. If the Haluk high
command recognized
Makebate from a pirate's description—so
what? They already knew I was prowling the galaxy; the lovely Dolores
da Gama had seen to that. But they didn't know my destination or my
mission, and they certainly had no idea I'd be doing a turn in Joru
disguise.
Look on
the bright side, Helly! I told myself. You did your good deed for the
day.
And now I
had proof of Haluk freebootery in the inner galactic whorl to add to
the pile of accumulating evidence against them, plus some interesting
questions that needed answers:
Were Haluk
trans-ack pirates operating out of an independent base in the Sag, or
were they using Y'tata facilities? Was it possible that the Haluk had
formed a secret alliance with the frolicksome albino farters? Were
the hijackings intended to create an artificial shortage of
ultraheavy elements, or did the Haluk have other motives for grabbing
the stuff?
Perhaps
Barky Tregarth would know.
If he
didn't, I might just be forced to nab me a Y pirate out of some low
Phlegethon dive and hook him to the truth machine. It would be a
nasty interrogation for both of us. Sometimes aliens didn't survive
psychotronic questioning. (Occasionally humans didn't, either.) And
unless I corked the victim securely, the stress of the procedure
would generate a stomach-churning stench. Maybe I could grill the Y
while wearing a space suit...
I
returned to the immediate vicinity of the derelict trans-ack carrier
and dropped out of hyperspace. The region was still boiling with
ionic crud from the earlier bombardment, futzing the big ship's
scanners, but to be on the safe side I erected
Makebate's
dissimulator before hailing Captain Schmidt on short-range RE I
didn't want him or his crew to get a close look at me.
"Sheltok
Eblis, this is your old pal Hugo. Do you copy? The bandits are
gone and won't be back. You can relax now."
A Germanic
expletive came out of my com speaker, and then the viewer showed an
agitated middle-aged man in the ugly marigold-colored Sheltok
uniform. He had brush-cut hair and a thick neck.
"You
destroyed the Haluk pirates! All sixteen! Who are you?
What are
you?"
I had the
recorder going again. I ignored the skipper's demand that I turn on
my flightdeck video. "Captain Schmidt, congratulations on your
survival. Do you have any casualties?"
"No,
Gott sei Dank! But it was a close call for the engineers when
our ULD powerplant was disabled. We—We are very grateful for
your assistance, Hugo."
"Are
you aware," I said formally, "that Sheltok management has
suppressed information about Haluk pirate attacks against ultraheavy
element carriers? The media and the general public know nothing about
them."
The
captain's hooded blue eyes looked away.
"Ach, it's a
political thing, you know? Anyone who speaks of it..." He
trailed off, shaking his head.
"How
long have Haluk bandits been attacking Sheltok ships?"
But he was
too shrewd to fall into my clumsy trap. "I know what you're
trying to do," he growled. "You think you'll sell my
admission to the web-tabloid muckrakers. Wouldn't they pay a pretty
penny for a sensational story like this! Well, you won't get any more
out of me, whoever the hell you are. What good is it to be rescued
from killer pirates if one ends up Thrown Away for corporate
disloyalty, eh? Answer me that!"
"If
criminal behavior by the Haluk is brought into the open, they can be
pressured to cease and desist. You could avenge the other victims and
prevent—"
He
interrupted me with a scornful laugh. "I thought before that you
were a fool, Hugo. Now I know it for a fact. Sheltok will stamp out
these Haluk vermin and their renegade Y'tata confederates without
having its affairs smeared across the filthy media. Meanwhile, the
situation must be kept under wraps so as not to undermine public
confidence in the Concern. Do you understand?"
"I
only want to help."
He
suddenly sounded very tired. "Then call Lethe on your subspace
communicator and ask them to send a tug for us. Send it soon, Hugo.
Eblis out."
The viewer
went dark. And that was that.
I did as
Schmidt asked, in a roundabout fashion. As I resumed my interrupted
voyage, I contacted Karl Nazarian on the SS com and fed him the
recorded information I'd gathered on the pirate attack.
"Sixteen
Haluk bandits attacking one bulk carrier?" he marveled. "Good
grief. It almost sounds as though your war has already started."
"Pass
this fresh intelligence along to Ef Sontag. Then find a way to
anonymously relay
Eblis's request for a tug to Shel-tok Tower.
Their external security people will take it seriously if they're
given the coordinates of the derelict."
"What
about informing Zone Patrol?"
"Don't
bother. The report would only be suppressed. The carrier captain let
slip that Haluk attacks are common out here. Sheltok's just keeping
it quiet so as not to rock the consortium applecart ... Do you have
any good news for me?"
"Well,
there are no demiclones on Sontag's staff or in his family. Hector
and Cassius are skulking around the Assembly dining rooms, pinching
used water glasses and half-eaten croissants. So far, no Delegates
test positive. Lotte has analyzed and recollated all of the Gala
secret files. She's working with Sontag's people to mesh the new data
with the old. Bea Mangan found six scientists willing to do
tissue-culture research with the mystery gene."
"That's
great."
"Other
news: Simon nominated Gunter Eckert to be the new Rampart chairman
and John Ellington to be VC. The board will vote when Eve returns
from the Spur next week. Not a trace of your brother Dan. However,
one of the injured guards recovered enough to help InSec make up
computer-model images of three of Dan's abductors. Let me show them
to you. I think you'll find them interesting."
Three male
faces, side by side, flashed onto the com display. Two of the men
were totally nondescript; but there was something disturbingly
familiar about the third, and I felt a sudden dry sensation in my
throat.
"Karl,
is it my imagination, or does the guy in the middle look a little
like Alistair Drummond? Remove the mustache, add more flesh to the
cheeks, and lose the eye bags, give him a designer haircut..."
"The
resemblance isn't very close, but I spotted it, too."
"Drummond
and the
Haluk!? The aliens washed their hands of him—all
but betrayed him to us!"
"Yes,"
said Karl. "The resemblance is probably coincidental. But I
wanted to show it to you anyhow. Give you some food for thought."
"Thanks
all to hell," I grumbled. "Anything else?"
"The
weather in Toronto is sensational—twenty-three degrees celsius,
bright sunshine, balmy spring breezes. The Conurb Council turned off
the force-field umbrella for the first time this year."
"Wish
I was there."
"No,
you don't," said Karl Nazarian.
He bid me
goodbye and I resumed my interrupted journey to Phlegethon. A day or
so later I arrived at the asteroid without further incident.
——
From space
the little world looked like nothing much— perhaps a pitted and
decaying pumpkin, dull orange-black in color, with a handful of tiny
orbiting craft floating around it like fruit flies. Here and there
amber lights shone out of craters in the surface. What seemed to be
scores of deformed silver minnows nibbling the pumpkin rind—together
with numbers of smaller noshmates—were actually huge
transac-tinide carriers and lesser starships, either taking on fuel
or docked nose-to-ground while their crews rested and recreated
inside the not so heavenly body.
I have
been told that the original Phlegethon of Greek mythology was a fiery
river in Hades. Sheltok Concern owned a dozen or so similar way
stations with brimstony names—Gehenna, Styx, Sheol, Tophet,
Avernus, Niflheim, and the like—that served vessels bound to or
from the terrible R-class worlds where ultraheavy elements are mined.
Compared to the genuine inferno of the Sagittarian arm of the Milky
Way—nearly lifeless, seething with deadly gamma and x-radiation
blasted out from the galactic hub, clogged by colossal interstellar
dust clouds and minefields of cosmic debris, and infested with
malignant little black holes and the weird oscillating novae that
generate stable transactinide elements—dreary Phlegethon was a
Garden of Eden.
My
computer told me that the asteroid was only 163 kilometers in
diameter. It followed a distant orbit about a melancholy blood-orange
sun near the outer margin of the Whorl. The other planets in its
solar system were tired gas giants and waterless desert worlds. What
made Phlegethon appealing to starfarers was the fact that it was not
composed of solid rock or sterile meteoric metal, as are most
asteroids. Phleg was a carbonaceous chondrite.
CC's are
as common as comets in our galaxy. Most of them are smaller than a
bread box, a mixture of iron and magnesium silicates, other minerals,
and generous amounts of dihydrogen oxide, plus lots of simple organic
compounds—including amino acids, the building blocks of life.
Little CC's, falling as meteorites, can seed the oceans of newborn
worlds and cook up primordial soup. Large CC's, judiciously carved
and riddled, are the best possible interstellar way stations.
Warm one
of these lumps up with an internal powerplant to melt the embedded
ice, provide light and enough artificial gravity inside so denizens
and visitors can walk about in reasonable comfort, crack some of the
organic compounds to release nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon dioxide for
a breathable atmosphere in the tunnels, and you have an instant space
station. Add fertilizing trace elements to the pulverized asteroidal
substance and you can build yourself a garden in space, for an
asteroidal carbonaceous chondrite is nothing but a big ball of rocky
dirt. Carbon-based foodstuffs will grow like mad in an enhanced CC.
So will marijuana, magic mushrooms, coca shrubs, dilly beans,
pseudopoon, rakka, hebenon, and a host of other recreational narcotic
plants. Phlegeton grew those, but it was also noted for its succulent
salad veggies, suzyberries, sweet melons, and barley.
Yep,
barley. For beer. The place had five microbreweries.
Even
though Phlegethon was Sheltok property, it operated as a freesoil
world. There were none of the usual arrival formalities when my gig
docked at one of the small-craft mooring facilities. I came through
the airlock carrying only a locked titanium case hanging at my hip on
a baldric. It contained the contents of the Daffy pack and a Hogan
H-18 miniaturized low-power psychotronic interrogation device that
would enable me to learn whether Barky knew anything at all useful.
If he did, I'd take him back to
Makebate and attach him to
really efficient truth machines for more serious discussion.
I'd be
returning regularly to my starship to sleep and get a decent meal. My
costume's mask had ports for drinking through a straw and the
insertion of small edibles, and Joru readily consumed many kinds of
human alcoholic beverages and snack foods; but I wasn't going to give
up my favorite rib-stickin' ranch-type vittles for the duration. My
other personal needs would be take care of in the asteroid's public
conveniences, omniracial cubicles of the type that are
blast-sterilized after every use.
Hidden
under my robes was a collection of special equipment that included
both a stun-gun and a Kagi blue-ray blaster, restraint cuffs in
several sizes, antigravity supporters similar to the ones Black
Leather and Brown Fleece had used on me during my abduction, and a
projector capable of generating a movable small force-field
hemisphere. My flexible body armor would protect me from stun-darts
and most types of photon pistols, but I really hoped I wouldn't get
into a gunfight. The damned six-digit paws didn't enhance trigger
dexterity.
The
arrival-departure lobby of Phlegethon was a roughhewn cavern, very
well lit, swarming with people of four races. Humans were the most
numerous, but there were plenty of Y'tata and Joru. A few groups of
ponderous Kalleyni slouched about, giggling and gaping at the
goofy-looking humanoid entities.
Gravity in
this part of the asteroid was about seven-eighths terrestrial, enough
to put a good bounce in your step. The air was chilly, humid, and
smelled faintly of formaldehyde, one of the simple organic compounds
abundant in the asteroidal substance. A thin mist hung about the
light fixtures. I could hear the dull roar of powerful ventilation
equipment.
The floor
appeared to be wet tarmac, cambered for drainage and punctuated by
openings covered by ceramalloy grates. The walls and ceiling, so
heavily pocked and cratered that they resembled gritty dark Swiss
cheese, were covered by a transparent sealant that had cracked in
numerous areas, allowing meltwater and gases to seep through. You
could see embedded chunks of dirty ice everywhere. A rat's nest of
exposed cables, pipes, and utility ducts decorated the ceiling.
At regular
intervals around the chamber perimeter were large tunnels topped with
directional signs. They served as pedestrian thoroughfares, or gave
access to elevators and the small network of transport capsules.
Other openings in the lobby wall, stoppered by glass doors with heavy
gaskets, led to Sheltok offices, the better human-style hotels, and
the quarters of legitimate trading establishments.
I wasn't
interested in the latter.
As I stood
in a small alcove studying a holographic map of the place, a young
Y'tata sidled up to me. His wrinkled albino skin was an unhealthy
gray and the beady red eyes were crusted with matter. He was dressed
in light green pants, a long-sleeve green shirt, and a copper-scaled
kilt and vest. The garments were typical of a Y starship crew member,
but they were shabby and tarnished.
"Hey,
Mr. Joru, welcome to Phleg! You maybe need a guide? I'm your main
man. Whataya say?" He spoke in Standard English, as aliens are
obliged to do on human worlds—at least when humans are likely
to be listening. Y'tata translation devices have a snappy command of
semi-obsolete English slang.
"Go
away," I said shortly. I figured him for a maroony, one of those
unfortunate wretches who can be found on almost any galactic way
station, dumped off for some infraction of ship's discipline and
trying to earn enough credit through odd jobs to get back to their
home world. Human and Y maroonies were the most common, although
Qastt castaways were coming on strong in the Perseus Spur now that
they'd signed a trade treaty with the CHW.
"I'm
Sh'muz. Good name for a fast talker, hey? Or doesn't that translate?
Ha-ha! I can help you find abso-fuckin'-lutely
anything you
need. How's about a comfy high-oxygen hotel with nice hard beds? A
restaurant with
juwulimopsh like your dear old mothers used to
cook? Hey, you into sex for hire? Primo dope? Honest Injun gambling?"
I stared
haughtily at the entity in the condescending manner of my kind. Joru
and Y'tata shared roughly the same region of the inner galaxy, where
for over twenty thousand terrestrial years they were the only
stargoing Insaps. Their relationship had been one of contemptuous
toleration until the advent of the appalling Commonwealth of Human
Worlds, with its superior technology and policy of relentless racial
aggrandizement. A sense of mutual humiliation had drawn the Joru and
Y'tata closer together.
But not
too close.
For Y'tata
digestive processes generate peculiarly malodorous gases that once
served as a useful deterrent to predators on their planet of origin.
The effluvia are a rank offense to the sensibilities of the
fastidious Joru, whose breathing equipment concentrates oxygen from
the ambient atmosphere of exotic worlds and tends to amplify smells
as well. On Earth and the larger human colonies, there are laws
requiring Y'tata visitors to avert the danger of backfiring by taking
special medication; but minor settlements like Phlegethon that make a
special effort to attract alien customers tend to be more easygoing.
With a little extra effort, your average Y-on-the-street can control
himself in most interracial social situations.
Sh'muz was
doing his best not to offend, but not really succeeding. I was much
taller and probably scary-looking, making the creature nervous.
Maybe it
was the olfactory assault that overcame my common sense. At any rate,
I committed what eventually proved to be a major blunder. Stepping
back a few paces from the worst of the fug, I muttered, "There
is only one way in which you might assist me, disgusting noisome
entity. Do you know where I might find a human trader named Barney
Cornwall?"
Sh'muz
blinked his red eyes rapidly, a mannerism indicating both
disappointment and despair. "Never heard of the bugger." He
perked up. "But I know a Bernie Cohen! Any kinda contraband you
wanna buy or sell, Bernie's the guy. I can take you to his burrow in
the Bazaar right now."
"Thank
you, no." I began to move away.
"Look—I'll
ask around, see if anybody ever heard of this Barney Cornwall. Get
right back to you. You got a phone code? How about the name of your
hotel?"
"No!
Begone, obnoxious person!"
Sh'muz had
no intention of letting go of a live one. "I'll find the guy for
you, trust me. I got contacts! How's about we meet in about ten
hours, see what shakes? There's this bar, La Cucaracha Loca, a human
joint but all kinda entities welcome. On Level 4, near the
heavy-craft refueling bays. Midnight. Whataya say?"
The
answer to that one was:
Oh, shit. I'd carefully worked out
stratagems for introducing Barky Tregarth's alias into conversations
with Phlegethon locals, in hopes of luring him to my bait. None of my
tactical scenarios included a clown like Sh'muz trumpeting Barney
Cornwell's name about the asteroid like some flatulent town crier.
"Please
do not exert yourself on my account," I said firmly. "I am
not really interested in meeting Trader Cornwall after all. Is that
clear? Forget him and forget me!"
"Aww
..." Utter dejection. The pathetic Y'tata maroony was probably
counting on the tip for eating money.
I opened a
pouch in my baldric, extracted a human hundred-dollar bill, and
handed it over. "Please leave me alone. Here is a little
something to tide you over until you find another client to guide."
The
Y'tata's eyes blazed like the taillights of a BMW as he registered
appreciation.
"Hey—thanks
a bunch, Mr. Joru! You're a prince. Or prime minister. Or whatever!
I'll find Cornwall if I hafta tear this orbiting garbage heap apart.
Don't forget! Cucaracha Loca. Twenty-five hundred hours. Be there!"
He dashed
away into the crowd, leaving me cursing in a miasma.
——
I got on
an elevator and headed down.
The
uppermost levels of Phlegethon were devoted to fuel storage areas,
starship repair shops, Sheltok offices, and traveler amenities. Below
were situated enormous ultrase-cure warehouse caverns, many with
access tunnels opening to the surface, labeled only with anonymous
alphanumerics. Some of the merchandise locked inside might have been
legitimate trade goods; a larger percentage was undocumented
contraband. Sheltok's port officials didn't care what went into and
out of the storerooms; they simply charged extortionate rent and
collected stiff entrance and exit fees on every transshipment.
Beneath
the storage levels the elevator passed farm galleries lit by dazzling
vapor lights, alternating with blocks of environmental utilities. In
the denser core of the asteroid, where embedded ice and volatile
organic chemicals were at a minimum, were apartment warrens for the
permanent inhabitants and the catacombs where shady traders
congregated.
The more
prosperous of these hucksters conducted business in an area called
the Bazaar, on Level 32. Here hundreds of chambers had been carved
out of the asteroid's interior substance. Some were no-frill holes in
the wall that bordered on the squalid, wide open to passersby, crude
excavations fitted out with desks, computers, com equipment, and a
few stools. Others, with sample merchandise on display, were fully
enclosed and as elaborately tarted up as the small retail stores in
Toronto's Underground Path. Both kinds of outfits were swarming with
customers.
A
directory, divided into categories, was posted next to the elevator.
I consulted it and made a list of arms traders. There were over a
dozen of them, peddling everything from Kalleynian ceremonial
tail-sabres to antimatter torpedoes. Since guns and materiel had been
Barky Tregarth's area of expertise in the Perseus Spur, I hoped he
was still in the same game here in the Sag. It would certainly fit
neatly with his interest in the Haluk.
I visited
each merchant of death in turn, beginning with the humans. Most of
them brushed me off almost immediately when they discovered the
esoteric nature of my trade goods. To those who showed an interest, I
delivered my spiel, which went something like this:
——
merchant
of death: What you want? I'm a busy man, Joru, so make it quick. None
of your damned time-wasting yackety-yak.
helly
as joru: I have some extremely valuable merchandise on offer, of a
most unusual nature. It does not readily fit into any category listed
in the Bazaar directory; but since the material has a certain
strategic value, I wish to sound out your interest.
mod:
Extremely valuable? ...
haj:
[Taking a single small biocontainer out of his baldric case while
simultaneously allowing his sleeve to fall back, revealing an arm
holster containing a Kagi pistol with a glowing ready-light] Allow
me to open this refrigerated cylinder. Ah—there! The contents
are a genetic engineering viral vector known as PD32:C2.
mod:
Never heard of it. And I don't deal in biological warfare items. Get
lost.
haj:
This viral vector is of special interest to the Haluk race. They pay
the human corporation Rampart Concern enormous sums for it.
mod:
[Slight lessening of hostility] Oh. That stuff.
haj:
Precisely. In the Perseus Spur a similar small vial of this precious
substance would bring 250,000 on the black market—twice as much
if sold directly to the blue-skinned ones.
mod:
[In disbelief] Haifa million bucks for one of those little
ampules? You shittin' me, high pockets?
haj:
That is still twenty percent less than Rampart retail. But here is an
interesting thing: this PD32:C2 was not manufactured by Rampart! It
comes from an entirely new viral source on a certain Joru world. The
simpletons there do not realize that the vector they are producing
for the genetic modification of livestock is identical to the
substance so desperately coveted by the Haluk. This vial I have shown
you is only a sample. I have access to unlimited quantities—and
my price is a mere 120,000 per vial.
mod:
[Shaking head] Yon should be peddling this stuff in the
Perseus Spur, fella. Around these parts ... it could be really hard
to move. Nobody's gonna give a guy like you anything like the kind of
deal you quoted. Maybe not even a tenth the price.
haj:
[Seeming not to understand the implied invitation to dicker] One
hears rumors. Very persistent rumors of a clandestine Haluk presence
in this Sagittarian zone, in association with individuals of the
putrid Y'tata race. And so, rather than travel from my home base on
Didiwa to the forbiddingly remote Perseus Spur, where Haluk trade
operations are spied upon by arrogant agents of Rampart Concern and
the Human Commonweal, and I or my agents might be imperiled, I
traversed Red Gap to this place of... peculiar reputation, where I
had never before done business. Even though Phlegethon is a
possession of Sheltok Concern—may diseased
maslaw defecate
upon their corporate earnings report!—I understand that it is
possible here to engage in confidential undertakings without personal
hazard. I confess that I hoped to find knowledgeable and enterprising
persons in this asteroid who might have access to the far-ranging
Haluk.
mod:
/
Uncomfortably} I've heard the rumors about Haluk pirates
going after Sheltok carriers in the Sag. Far as I know, they're just
rumors. No blueberry bandits ever drop in here to fuel up or hit the
casinos.
haj:
I must speak frankly now. The name of a certain human who has been
known to trade with the Haluk was suggested to me by a colleague on
Didiwa. I confess that I originally came to Phlegethon hoping to make
contact with this trader—but no human I have spoken to thus far
seems to know him. Or if they do, they will not reveal his
whereabouts to a Joru. I would pay an extremely generous finder's fee
to the person who steered me to him.
mod:
What's this joker's name?
haj:
He is called Barney Cornwall.
mod:
[Elaborately casual] Mmm. The name's sort of familiar. I seem
to remember that he's a hard guy to get a hold of. Comes and goes,
you know?
haj:
You do have his acquaintance, then?
mod:
I didn't say that.
haj:
[Taking a dilapidated magslate out of the baldric case] This
device contains the complete manufacturing sequence for the Joru
vector production facility. Of course, the verbal portions are in the
Joru language, but that should not prove too much of an obstacle. In
order to prove the authenticity of my merchandise, I am willing to
allow a cooperative person to copy this manufacturing data and pass
it on to the man Cornwall.
mod:
How about handing over one of those sample vials? For all I know, you
could be peddling grape jelly.
haj:
[Insulted] It is the true PD32:C2, only from a new source! I
vow it upon my honor as a Joru! The virus will pass any test. If you
wish, we can take it to a bioassay establishment immediately. I note
that there is one listed in the Bazaar's directory.
mod:
Well... maybe that won't be necessary.
——
At this
moment of truth I would tell the arms peddler that he could buy the
sample for fifty kay and resell it to Cornwall for whatever the
traffic would bear. He would laugh scornfully and accuse me of
playing a confidence game. I would become furiously indignant at the
insult, grab up my things, and storm out of the place.
Four
dealers called me back before I got out the door, calmed my wounded
feelings, and eventually persuaded me to let them have a freebie
along with a dime copy of the magslate contents, citing their
excellent reputation among the local entrepreneurs and their strong
hope of being able to track down Barney Cornwall. I promised to phone
the next day.
After
making my pitch to the last trader, I returned to
Makebate,
stripped off my disguise, and had a long hot shower. Then I
reconstituted some barbecued baby back ribs, a baked potato, some
Blue Lake green beans, and a handful of snickerdoodle cookies, and
ate them seated in my command chair while listening to quiet jazz
selections by Bill Evans and Marian McPartland.
By and
large I was well satisfied with the day's masquerade. Surely one of
the four traders who had taken a sample would pass it on to Barky
Tregarth—or at least contact him with news of the sensational
find. Then my only challenge would be figuring out a safe way to
snatch him and do the preliminary interrogation. I hoped the old man
wouldn't be too frail to withstand the rigors of interrogation. Maybe
he'd spill his guts for a payoff, as Adam Stanislawski had suggested.
Then all I'd have to verify was the general truth of his statements.
I put on
another recording—surf breaking on a barrier reef, rustling
mint-palms, crooning elvis-birds—reclined in the chair and fell
asleep. I dreamed of my tropical island on Kedge-Lockaby, 23,600
light-years away, and my new yellow submarine, which I'd hardly had a
chance to break in.
In the
"morning" I ate a big breakfast, since I'd get almost
nothing to eat while in costume. It took nearly an hour and a half to
restore my Joru makeup. Then I climbed into the gig and returned to
the asteroid. On the way in I phoned the four arms dealers.
Two of
them said they'd had no luck finding Barney Cornwall. They offered to
return my vector samples. The other two, shiftier than the first
pair, told me they were still looking. I should call again tomorrow.
Or maybe the next day.
Rats.
I'd have
to try my shtick on the other contraband merchants. There were nearly
a hundred of them in the Bazaar, trading in everything from scandium
fuel catalyst to Kalleyni pornography, and lots more were doing
business in bars of public corridors. Even if I confined myself to
humans and Y'tata, those races were far and away the most numerous
among the dealers. I was in for a long and unpleasant haul.
Y'tata
offensiveness went without saying. And if yesterday's experience held
true, the human traders would be spectacularly rude. Interspecies
harmony wore thin in the galactic boondocks, especially between
humanity's lower orders and the snotty Joru, who had a rep for
pennypinching. It wasn't much fun being an alien after all...
I left the
docked gig and reentered the asteroid's big lobby, thinking depressed
thoughts, for the first time facing the possibility that my clever
scheme was a piece of shit. Maybe Ram Mahtani had suckered me out of
Stanislawski's big bribe after all. Maybe Barky Tregarth had been
dead for years. Or if he was alive, maybe Ram had warned the old
geezer to run for his life. Maybe I was a self-deluding asshole off
on a futile snipe-hunt, and I should have listened to Karl and stayed
home on Earth making use of the evidence we already had—
"Hey,
Mr. Joru! Missed you last night at Cucaracha Loca."
I whirled
about and found Sh'muz. His garb was cleaner and his complexion had
lost some of its terminal lividity. A little money, a little hope of
cashing in further on a good thing, can do that.
"I
told you that I do not require your services," I har-rumphed.
"Sure
you do," he retorted breezily. "I found somebody you might
really wanna meet."
"What!
Are you saying you found Barney Cornwall?"
"An
entity who knows him." He paused, then rubbed his digits
together in a gesture nearly universal among sapient beings.
"Of
course I'll pay you for the information." I named a sum that
would buy a ticket to any Y'tata planet within Zone 3. "You say
'entity.' Does this mean that your source is not a human?"
"Y'tata
starship captain. Independent operator." Sh'muz meant pirate.
"He'll want to be paid, too. Lots more than me."
"That
part of the transaction need not concern you. When and where may I
meet this person?"
He twirled
his eyes in the Y gesture equivalent to a wry human shrug. "You
coulda done it last night if you'd met me in La Cuca. Come tonight.
Same time, midnight. I'll do the introduction, you pay me, I
skedaddle."
"You
are
absolutely certain that this person can put me in contact
with Barney Cornwall?"
"Hey—is
the Pope Catholic?"
I huffed
disdainfully through my mask. "That Standard English slang
phrase does not translate into Joru, but I presume it is affirmative.
Very well. Expect me at the drinking establishment at 2500 hours."
Sh'muz
gave a jaunty farewell bounce—fortunately without losing
control—and skipped away into the throng. I stood there for a
while, thinking. It seemed a good idea to retrieve the two samples of
PD32:C2—after all, they were Rampart property—so I did
so, giving modest tips to the honest gun merchants. Then I scoped out
La Cucaracha Loca and its immediate environs, with a view to
abduction.
The bar
was close to Phlegethon's busy fueling bays, a handy little oasis for
transient starfarers and the contraband traders who wheeled and
dealed with them. Loud Latin jazz played over an uproar of voices.
The place served only human beverages and snacks, and was packed with
human, T'tata, and Joru drinkers. Even a few grotesque Kalleyni
squatted in a corner where the gravity was turned low, slurping
beakers of corrosive White Lightning and shrieking mirthfully at
their own jokes.
I ordered
a martini. I hate martinis, but that's what Joru drink in human
dives; martinis with extra olives because that's the best part of the
drink. The aliens poke the gin-soaked fruit through the eating ports
of their masks and chew rapturously. I wasn't ready to suffer that
much for my art.
The
bartender said, "Something wrong with the olives?" He was a
tough-looking human with a pencil-thin mustache and sallow skin.
"They
are exquisite," I assured him, "but I am feeling a trifle
indisposed. Please direct me to the relief facility."
He looked
at me funny, as though this were a question I should know the answer
to. "In the rear, in the alley. Pay for your drink before you
go."
The dimly
lit alley-passage backed on numbers of other grogshops, cheap
cabarets, and modest eateries in the immediate vicinity. It contained
two refuse-recycling units, a triplex latrine with an exterior
puke-basin, haphazard stacks of empty crates, and a stock-delivery
elevator. The latter was in use.
Leaning
against the toilet cubicle near the basin, I fumbled with my mask and
moaned, pretending to be unwell, and watched a human worker bring
barrels of beer out of the lift and tote them into one of the other
pubs. When he was gone I summoned the elevator myself and surveyed
the interior. The control pads were labeled with the names of several
beverage and food supply outfits located on lower levels. The only Up
button wore a little sign that said dock 0-6.
Well,
well.
I pressed
it and made a short ascent. When the door slid open I found myself in
an area where medium-sized freighters and the lighters that served
larger starships were discharging cargo and taking it aboard.
Roboporters loaded with container pods were zipping all over the
place. A human stevedore maneuvered a train of small cars carrying
crates of familiar terrestrial booze into a kind of cage next to my
elevator and began off-loading them. Unfortunately, he spotted me in
the open elevator car.
"Hey,
Joru! Whatcha doing in there?"
When
caught flatfooted in suspicious circumstances, act blotto. "Aargh.
I—I fear I am confused by strong drink. I am seeking my vessel,
the
Julog- Will. It appears I have come to the wrong dock."
"Yeah,
well, you get the hell back downstairs and find the right fuckin'
lift. This is a human dock. Joru ships tie up at D-3 and D-4."
I
apologized and returned to where I had started. Back in La Cucaracha
Loca, I treated myself to a shot of Jack Daniel's. The bartender
looked at me askance, since Joru don't drink whiskey, but I didn't
give a damn. It was celebration time.
I'd
found a way to remove Barky Tregarth unobtrusively from Phlegethon.
All I had to do was lure him to La Cuca, slip him a mickey, take him
into the alley, lose my Joru disguise, and get us both up to Dock
G-6.
Makebate's gig would come for us on autopilot if I
summoned it with my phone-link. The dock was so busy that I doubted
if anyone in authority would notice another small orbiter craft
nosing in among the lighters and picking up two human crew members.
Yes. It
was going to work... provided that Sh'muz and his pirate pal weren't
scamming me.
I went
back to my starship to get things ready.
——
I arrived
half an hour early for the rendezvous, just because it seemed like a
good thing to do, and sat unobtrusively at the end of the bar nearest
the front door. The Latin music was less raucous than it had been
during my earlier visit. Sh'muz and a formidable-looking entity who
was clearly his informant were sitting together at one of the little
tables, drinking beer. Y'tata love beer. The maroony had a longneck
bottle of Bud, and the large ugly Y in the shiny skipper's uniform
had just picked up his freshly arrived stein of draft and started to
drink it down.
But the
brew didn't suit the alien starship captain's taste. He puckered up
his pasty face in revulsion, slammed the mug down on the table,
splashing poor Sh'muz, and roared, "Waitress! This overpriced
belly-wash is flat!"
"That's
our top-line house microbrew," the overworked human server said
over her shoulder. "You want more carbonation, blow bubbles in
it. Just be sure you sue your north end—or I'll have our
bouncer cork you so tight you'll never whistle 'Dixie' again."
This
provoked general merriment among the non-Y'tata patrons. A human
starship crewman called out, "That's telling him, Gigi! Fuckin'
Y bum-tootler."
Actually,
members of the intestinally challenged race frequenting La Cucaracha
Loca that night seemed mostly to be on their good behavior. No alien
flatus defiled the atmosphere, which smelled of tobacco smoke, grass,
hops, popcorn, bacon sandwiches, and the odd but not unpleasant aroma
of Kalleyni slime. But storm clouds, so to speak, were on the
horizon.
"Insolent
human shitwit!" yelled the Y'tata skipper to the starman,
surging to his feet and flipping up the back of his copper-studded
vest in challenge. "Step outside and I'll toot you right off the
friggin' asteroid!"
A barroom
brawl wouldn't serve my purposes. I rapidly pushed my way to the
scene of the confrontation and placed myself between insulter and
insultee. Even though I'm a Joru midget, I was considerably larger
than either the Y skipper or the human starship crewman with the big
mouth.
"If
you please, dispenser of beverages!" I thundered to the barkeep,
waving a large-denomination bill. "Serve both of these worthy
entities some Pilsner Urquell. Include a thirty percent gratuity for
yourself and the female server, and let tranquility and good
fellowship be restored."
Gigi the
waitress brought open bottles of the pricey premium brew with crystal
glasses upended over the mouths. She handed one to the appreciative
human spacer, who said, "Wow! I always wanted to try this
stuff."
I
appropriated the second Urquell and sat down at the table of the two
Y'tata. "Allow me to do the honors, Captain," I said
suavely, easing the golden liquid into the tilted glass and creating
a moderate head of creamy foam. "I pray you will enjoy this most
excellent variety of beer with my heartfelt compliments. It is brewed
only in a single city on Earth."
The
skipper glared at me suspiciously as he reassumed his seat. It took
the Pilsner glass from my hand, upended it, and downed the beer in a
single heroic chug. "Good bubbles. I'll have another one, Joru."
I signaled
Gigi, who nodded and went off.
"This
is Captain B'lit," said Sh'muz. He'd turned a whiter shade of
pale during the face-off and his voice still quavered slightly.
"I am
Gulow," I said. "I hope to do business with you tonight,
Captain."
"How
much is it worth to you?" the skipper inquired insolently.
I lowered
my voice almost to the point of inaudibility. The other bar patrons
were ignoring us now that the danger of a pong assault had abated.
"If you are truly an acquaintance of the human trader Barney
Cornwall," I said, "and are able to introduce me to him
promptly, so that I may offer him certain rare merchandise, I will
vouchsafe an appropriate emolument." I named a sum that made
Sh'muz gasp.
"Double
it," sneered BTit, "and you got a deal."
"The
aforesaid generous price is firm," I said stonily. "Vulgar
haggling is beneath the dignity of the Joru."
"Cheapskate,"
muttered BTit. His second Urquell arrived and he took his time
pouring and sipping it. Finally: "How do you figure to pay?"
"By
means of preloaded blind EFT cards issued by a human financial
institution. Once activated, the cards are negotiable on any human
world and many alien ones, with no questions asked."
"Hmm.
This rare merchandise you want to sell to Cornwall ..." The
skipper was elaborately casual. "You got it in there?" A
pink claw pointed at the locked metal case hanging on my baldric.
"Certainly
not," I said. "The most valuable thing I have to sell,
Captain BTit, is information. And it is most securely guarded. As is
my own person." I let him see the arm holsters up my sleeves.
"Do not take me for a fool. Furthermore, I will require proof of
Barney Cornwall's identity before I pay you."
"Ask
him yourself, you Joru prick," the Y skipper said.
"He's
sitting over there in the corner. He owns the goddamn joint!
C'mon—I'll introduce you."
The two
Y'tata and I moved through the closely packed patrons. The man in the
corner had an unusual area of empty space around his table. He sat
with his back to the wall, nursing a stein of microbrew, and watched
our approach with an ironic smile.
It was a
setup. But what kind? I decided I'd have to carry on according to
plan.
The man
who might have been Hamilcar Barca Tregarth didn't look at all like
the doddering centenarian I'd envisioned. In fact, he might have been
fifty years old or even younger, with shoulder-length brown hair and
unlined, rather handsome features. If he really was the man I was
looking for, he'd been very extensively—and expensively—
rejuvenated. He wasn't tall but his build was solidly muscular, shown
to advantage by a tailored jumpsuit of dark blue leather, zipped open
to the waist to reveal a trendy fishnet T-shirt. Around his neck hung
a heavy platinum chain with a large pendant. When we were closer, I
was able to identify the stone in the pendant as an exotic fossil the
size of a plum. I'd seen its like before, in the Perseus Spur...
"Hey,
Barney," said the Y skipper.
"Hey,
BTit. Been a long time."
The Y'tata
winked one piggy red eye. "This is the guy."
I did my
Joru thing. "Do I have the pleasure of addressing Barney
Cornwall?"
"Pleasure?"
The man in the blue jumpsuit gave a hard laugh. "We'll have to
see about that."
"Before
we go any further," I said firmly, "I must tell you that a
certain associate on my home world recommended Trader Cornwall as the
person most likely to know the true value of... certain extremely
specialized goods I am offering for sale. You must forgive me if I
verify your identity."
"What!"
BTit exclaimed. "You want a DNA profile? It's Barney Cornwall in
the flesh, you Joru dipstick! Every big-time freebooter in the Sag
knows him. Now pay me!"
"Me,
too," Sh'muz whispered. "Please?"
I took a
pair of EFT cards out of my baldric and programmed them with the
agreed amounts, flapped a wait-a-bit paw at the two Y'tata, and
addressed the man at the table. "There is a simple way to prove
you are Barney Cornwall. Please tell me your other nickname."
His dark
eyes turned to slits and I felt a brief touch of uneasiness. But
after a prolonged pause, he smiled again and said softly, "Some
people call me Barky."
"The
very answer I had hoped for! Thank you for enduring my necessary
gaucherie in a civilized manner." I handed EFT cards to each of
the Y'tata. "And now I must insist that you two entities depart
forthwith." Sh'muz scuttled off, but B'lit continued to stand
there, smirking insolently. "Go!" I roared. Grabbing the
copper epaulets of his uniform vest, I spun him about and gave him a
propelling knee in the backside.
Bad move.
He laughed, then retaliated as only a Y'tata can, strolling out of
the place in a fusillade of farts as patrons rushed to get out of his
way, groaning and cursing. But an instant later some sort of powerful
exhaust fan kicked in and quickly sucked up the reek. I suppose there
was a special sensor for social errors in this sort of place. The
bartender cried, "Drinks on the house!" and any potential
exodus was nipped in the bud.
Barky
Tregarth was unperturbed. He indicated the seat opposite him and
said, "Sit down." When I did, he stared at me in silence
for several minutes, finishing his stein of beer. Then he gave a
little nod, as though satisfied by his inspection, and placed a small
object on the table between us.
It was one
of the biocontainers of doctored PD32:C2 I'd handed out to the arms
dealers the day before.
"Terrific
bait!" he said. "The real thing. I had it checked out.
And that's a damned good xeno disguise, too."
My innards
turned to ice. I sat without moving. He'd made me as a human and a
fraud, probably knew I was Ram Mahtani's mystery client. But did he
know who I really was? And was there still a chance I could pull off
the abduction?
He
continued, "I knew you were looking for me as soon as your
Y'tata bud contacted Captain B'lit yesterday. I had to check you out,
after a warning that I got from a friend on Earth, so I had one of my
people zap your paw with a diagnosticon in the seventh gun shop you
visited yesterday. A medical body scanner, you know? You never
noticed the gadget sitting on the counter. It said the skin of your
hand wasn't alive. Imagine that! So you're not a Joru, and there's no
new source of PD32:C2, and I'm kinda pissed off 'cause I was really
hoping somebody had the fuckin' key to El Dorado for sale."
"There's
still a lot of money to be made," I said, and started to open my
baldric pouch.
"Hold
still," Barky hissed. "You wouldn't be dumb enough to reach
for a gun, would you? An associate of mine at the table behind you
has you targeted. And I know about the Kagi and the Ivanov stashed up
your sleeves."
But do you
also know about my body armor? And my force-field generator?
"I'm
reaching for another EFT card," I explained. "A very
friendly sort of weapon. May I?"
He
inclined his head and I pulled the little slip of plastic out and
passed it across the table. It was Adam Stanislawski's last minute
contribution to the war chest. Barky Tregarth's eyebrows rose as he
checked the load readout. "A nice sum. Not El Dorado, but...
nice. What do you want?"
"Information
only. Confirmed psychotronically."
He
laughed. "I'm just a gunrunner and innkeeper. Moderately
prosperous in my old age. What do I know worth that kind of money?"
I leaned
forward and pointed to the pendant hanging around his neck. "Where
did your jewelry come from?"
He sat
stock still, then said, "So that's it."
"I've
seen that kind of fossil before, on the planet Artiuk, a Haluk colony
in the Spur. Some of the local officials and other dignitaries I met
on a visit there wore the pendants as badges of honor. But you didn't
get yours in a Haluk Spur colony, did you, Barky?"
"No,"
he said calmly.
"It
was given to you in the Haluk Cluster, wasn't it? That's why you were
so anxious to redeem it from Clifton Castle, the fence who lent you
the money you needed to escape from Tyrins, thirty-five years ago."
"You
seem to know a lot about me."
"I
have no animus against you. I'm not at all interested in your shady
business career. But I do want to know what you saw when you visited
the Haluk Cluster. I want any information you have on their
population density, the total number of inhabited planets, the
demographic pressures that drove them to emigrate to the Perseus
Spur. I want to know how big a supply of transactinide elements they
have out there in their cluster, and how they mine ultraheavies,
given their inferior technology. And I'd like to know what they're
doing
here, in the Sag."
"Who
are you?" Barky Tregarth asked.
"My
name isn't important, but I do have some important friends. One of
them is responsible for the stake on that EFT card. I believe that
the Haluk are still hostile to humanity and plan to invade our
galaxy. Part of their strategy involves attacks on our starships.
That's going on right here and now, in the Sagittarius Whorl. Haluk
bandits are hijacking trans-ack carriers, and Sheltok Concern is
doing a big cover-up, pressured by other members of the Haluk
Consortium who do business with the aliens. The Haluk scheme for
domination also involves infiltration—a conquest from within.
My friends and I have proof that Haluk masquerading as human beings
have wormed their way into the Hundred Concerns. They may even have
spies in our government. We need more evidence to support our
contention that the Haluk represent a serious threat to human
security. When we get it, we'll put it before the Commonwealth
Assembly. Public opinion will force the Delegates to reexamine the
Haluk nonaggression pact and their trade treaty."
Barky was
still holding the nonactive EFT card, doing the old gambler's trick
of "walking" it from one finger to another. "Politics!"
He gave a bleat of derisive laughter. "Fuck that. I'm a
Throwaway—a noncitizen. The Commonwealth says I don't exist.
Why should I give a hoot in hell if blueberry raiders heist trans-ack
carriers? In the Sag, Sheltok charges stargoing aliens and
independent human operators twice as much for fuel as it charges
Concern ships. So the Haluk even the score, with a little help from
the Y'tata. Big deal."
"I
think they're planning to wage war, Barky. Interrupting our supply of
vital fuel elements is only part of their strategy"
"That's
a crock of shit. The Haluk want to trade, not fight."
"Are
they buying weapons from you?"
"Sure!
It's no big thing. So do the real Joru, and the Kalleyni, and the Y.
I'm the biggest gun-peddler on Phleg. And you know where I get my
merchandise? From Carnelian, and from over a dozen other Concerns who
wink at contraband trafficking. What do those corporate ass-wipes in
Toronto care where the stuff goes, as long as the price is right? As
for your war idea, I think it's crapola. There aren't enough Haluk
fighting ships in the Sag to wage war on the Kalleyni fruit
fleet—much less the Human Commonwealth."
"Do
you know how many Haluk ships are operating here?"
He held up
the EFT card between two fingers. "Will the blueberries know I
sold 'em out if I talk to you?"
"No,"
I lied. "Whatever I learn from you will only be used back on
Earth. For political purposes, as you said. My friends and I have no
interest whatsoever in shutting down your Phlegethon operation or
halting your trade with the Haluk. Even if we did, how could we? The
asteroid is Sheltok property. CCID and the Secretariat enforcers have
no authority here unless Sheltok grants it. That won't happen."
"I
can't compromise my Haluk tie-in."
"You
don't have to. Any questions I ask that you don't want to
answer—don't. We can still do business."
"Maybe."
He was twiddling the card again, apparently weighing the pros and
cons. As he'd observed, it was a nice amount of money.
I said,
"If you talk to me, you'll be just another confidential source.
CHW can't touch you. As you pointed out, you're an important man here
on Phlegethon."
"Damn
straight," said Barky Tregarth, grinning. "You try anything
cute, you're one dead Joru fucker."
I nodded
submissively. "I have a Hogan miniature psychotronic
interrogation device in my case—useless for prying the truth
out of reluctant subjects, but it will indicate whether a cooperative
person is telling the truth. You can sit right here and tell me about
your adventure in the Haluk Cluster—that's the thing I'm most
interested in—then add whatever else you wish to tell me about
Haluk activity in the Sag. I can check your veracity with a single
question: 'Is everything you've said the truth?' If the machine
confirms your reply, I'll activate the plastic. You'll be richer by
four million. What do you say?"
"What
the hey! Why not? You know, it's kinda gratifying to finally find
somebody who believes that I made the Big Trip."
A waitress
came up behind me and asked if we wanted another round of drinks.
Barky gave
her a big smile. "Another stein of Peg-Leg for me, Lola. And my
friend ..."
"Jack
Daniel's," I said. "Straight up."
"I
thought Joru didn't like whiskey," the waitress said. "It
is an acquired taste," I replied over my shoulder, "and
I've just acquired it."
——
It was not
so much the great distance to the Haluk Cluster that had deterred
exploration by the Commonwealth of Human Worlds so much as the
uselessness of the enterprise. The implacably hostile aliens wanted
nothing to do with humanity, and in the early days of human galactic
exploration the Haluk backed up their antipathy with enough firepower
to deter CHW survey ships and curious adventurers.
Later,
after Galapharma AC began to exploit the Perseus Spur and faced
attacks from Haluk colonies there, the big Concern and Zone Patrol
got tough. Humans and Haluk fought a brief interstellar battle near
the human colony of Nogawa-Krupp, and the aliens were soundly
defeated. Facing the potential annihilation of their eleven colonial
planets, the Haluk signed an armistice. One of its terms halted their
Milky Way expansion; another precluded human exploration of the Haluk
Cluster.
Barky
Tregarth figured he had a chance of making the trip and coming back
alive because he was a smuggler, not a representative of a Concern or
CHW. The Haluk desperately needed the superior technical equipment
made by humanity, and the only way to get it was through contraband
dealers like Barky. Most human outlaw traders dealt with the Haluk in
deep space; but a handful of the most favored made brief visits to
Haluk Spur colonies.
One of the
favored ones was Barky.
Without
telling his wagering pals, he prevailed upon a Haluk business
acquaintance on Artiuk to provide him with a letter of introduction.
Then he returned to his base on the freesoil planet Yakima-Two, a
notorious smuggler hangout, and made his wager. It was a very large
one.
He
fitted his starship, which was over twice the size of
Makebate,
with oversized fuel cells as I had done, and still had enough
room left in the hold for a cargo that he thought would ensure him a
warm welcome once he arrived. He loaded his ship with high-end
computers, force-field generators, portable antimatter powerplants,
programmable virtual-reality ticklesuits, a single Bodascon ULD
engine of the latest type, and 1,500 Japanese silk kimonos in subtle
colors, size
okii, highly coveted by Haluk males as wedding
garments.
Then he
set off where no human had gone before.
Even
thirty-five years ago the scanner technology on Barley's ship was
hugely superior to that of the Haluk. He managed to elude all of
their patrols, he found the solar system where the cousin of his
Artiuk acquaintance resided, and after some very fast talking he was
allowed to come landside in his gig.
The
cousin, whose name was Ratumiak, was on the personal staff of the
planetary governor and a person of considerable influence. He advised
Barky to forget any notion of selling his valuable cargo. Instead,
the smuggler presented everything to the governor as a gift. On
Ratumiak's advice, Barky told the Haluk official the barebones truth:
that he had made the trip on a bet.
The
governor thought that was hilarious.
He
compared Barky's lunatic exploit to a similar jaunt by a legendary
Haluk hero and declared that the bold human voyager would be treated
as an honored guest. Barky got a grand tour of the Haluk world and
asked a lot of questions about the alien civilization. His roguish
sense of humor, snarky jabs at Commonwealth policies, and shocking
tales of Concern corruption made a great hit with his hosts, who
showered him with gifts—some of great intrinsic value,
including a diamond ear-stud from Ratumiak and the fossil set in
platinum given to him by the governor.
Barky had
a marvelous time during his eighteen-day stay and didn't mind that
most Haluk looked on him as an entertaining freak. Amazingly, a few
Haluk females found him sexually appealing, and taught him several
astonishing things he would later find useful in his love-life. When
it was time to depart, he was bid a cordial farewell and warned never
to return to the Haluk Cluster under pain of death.
He set off
for the Milky Way and had nearly made it back safely to his base on
Yakima-Two when he was attacked by a human pirate ship. Its scanners
were even better than Barky's, and its ship faster and better armed.
The bandits forced Barky to surrender, boarded, and stole all of the
Haluk gifts except the fossil, which Barky managed to detach from its
chain and conceal in a bodily orifice. Then the pirates stole his
ship, too.
He was set
adrift in a lifeboat and eventually rescued by a Rampart freighter,
which dropped him off on Hadrach, from which he made his way home to
Yakima-Two and the heartbreaking discovery that he wasn't going to
collect on the big bet.
——
"That
was really an unfortunate happenstance," I said as he finished
his tale. "Losing your ship on top of everything."
"Oh,
I got that back a year or so later with a little help from my
friends," he said. "I knew who'd taken it, you see. But the
alien jewelry and stuff were long since disposed of." He
shrugged. "Then I got busted by the patrol and jugged on Tyrins.
I think you know the rest of the story." The ironic smile again.
"I escaped, knocked around the galaxy, ended up here, got lucky.
Just imagine my surprise when the Haluk snowed up in the Sag. They
hadn't forgotten me, either. We do good business. I intend to keep on
doing good business." The smile turned cold, and once again I
felt the frisson of uneasiness.
The
waitress came up behind me again and asked if we'd like another
round.
"A
Peg-Leg for me, Lola," Barky said. He seemed relaxed and
amiable. "And some of my private-stock whiskey for my friend,
here. The Wild Turkey Single-Barrel." She left us, and he said
to me, "You'll really get a kick out of it. Best I ever tasted."
"I've
heard of it, never tried it."
He held
out the EFT card. "You ready to validate this now?"
"Just
a few more questions. Did the Haluk planet you visited seem heavily
populated?"
"You
better believe it. High-rise buildings packed to the rafters in the
cities, affluent folks in the suburbs living in little cottages on
handkerchief-sized plots. Ratumiak told me his planet had a
population of nearly twelve thousand million. Other worlds were even
worse."
"How
many inhabited worlds were there in the cluster?"
"Around
thirty thousand, Ratty said. Ideally, Haluk need T-2 worlds. They'd
already colonized all of those, plus all of the T-l's and a fewT-3's
that weren't too hopeless. But they'd really run out of suitable
land. That's why they made the big jump to our galaxy, even though it
was a terrible drain on the economy."
I
had already done the horrifying calculation in my head. Twelve
billion times thirty thousand equals ...
360 trillion Haluk? It
was forty times the population of galactic humanity!
"Uh—do
you know how they manage to mine transactinides without sophisticated
robotics?"
His
expression turned grim. "The lepidos do it. You know, the
thick-skinned intermediate racial morph. Even in heavy armor, the
poor bastards don't live long on R-class planets. They're convicts.
Gracile-phase cons work in the orbiting collection stations until
they go lep. Then it's down to the mines. A lepido miner turns up its
toes, the supers retrieve the armor, send somebody else down."
"Appalling."
He
shrugged. "Different strokes for different folks. It's gotta be
a dandy crime deterrent."
"Do
the Haluk have a large supply of ultraheavy elements?"
"Don't
have a clue."
"Would
you say they're highly industrialized?"
"You
bet. Not up to human standards when I was in the cluster, but I
understand that's changed. Haluk are quick on the uptake. They're
good at copying our technology. Even make improvements on the
original."
Well, we
had proof of that already. One of my friends had compared Haluk
ingenuity to that of the preindustrial Japanese.
"Drinks,
gents." Lola the waitress set them down.
I
thanked her over my shoulder. "One last question, Barky."
Then I'd hook him to the little machine and—
zotz! I'd
modified my earlier plan slightly. Instead of slipping him a mickey,
I'd modified the interrogation device to deliver a taser bolt. If I
acted fast, I could have both of us behind a hemispherical
force-field shield within seconds. Then out the back door and into
the elevator...
"Try
the Wild Turkey," he urged. "Let me know what you think."
I sipped
the exquisite bourbon through my mask's integral straw—not the
best way to savor one of Earth's premium spirits, but the bouquet
came through with a vengeance. "Superb," I said. "One
of the best I've ever tasted."
"I
think so, too. What's your last question?"
"What
are the Haluk doing here in the Sagittarius Whorl?"
"Grabbing
transactinides. They figure if we start experiencing a shortage, they
can jack up their prices."
"It
seems logical," I said. "Are you ready to undergo the truth
test?" I took out the little machine and set it on the table
right next to the EFT card. Barky had put it down when his fresh
schooner of beer arrived.
"I
don't think I'd better," he said, pushing the card toward me.
"Our deal is off, Citizen Frost. But it was fun talking to you."
He raised his voice. "Lola!"
Oh, shit.
The force-field projector was in a pocket behind my robe's front
scapular drape. I tried to reach for it, but my arm suddenly wasn't
working. Neither were my leg muscles when I tried to jump to my feet.
Earlier, when I'd been forced to visualize the failure of my grand
scheme, Ram Mahtani had played the villain's part. But Ram wasn't the
one who had worked with Barky Tregarth to play me for a sucker.
The
waitress named Lola came around the table and for the first time I
got a good look at her. She was drop-dead gorgeous, with glossy black
hair that had a white blaze at the left temple.
"Dolores
da Gama?" I managed to whisper. "You slipped me a mickey?"
"It
seemed the simplest course," the demiclone said complacently,
"with all the body armor you're wearing. The drug is a harmless
and effective way to bring you down."
Barky was
standing beside her. "My bouncers will take him to your starship
gig. It was great doing business with you, Lola. You make a pretty
good waitress. Sure you don't want a job?"
Dolores da
Gama laughed richly and gave him a playful smack on his taut,
leather-covered buns. I felt strong hands grip me, hoist me upright,
move me toward the rear door. Dolores was utilizing my own abduction
scheme.
"Why
..." I gasped. "Why ... want me alive?"
"We'll
think of something wonderful, sweetie." Her smile was megawatt
bright in my fading vision.
"How...
find me here?"
"Your
gunfight with our corsairs. One of the pilots transmitted your
starship conformation and fuel-trace signature to our base on Amenti
before you blasted her out of the sky. Your ship is unique. We sent
out other corsairs to track you to Phlegethon."
We
were in the elevator, going up. I was seeing the world through a
shrinking tunnel embedded in fog. "But how did ...
you get
here so quick?"
"I
left Earth the day after you escaped from us. So did other Haluk
agents. The massive fuel-bunker refit on your ship showed your intent
to undertake a long, stealthy voyage. It was a toss-up which way
you'd go—either the Spur, for a penetration of our cluster, or
the Whorl. We believed you might have found out about our campaign
against Sheltok. Other Haluk were waiting for you near Seriphos and
Tyrins, in case you topped off your tanks at either planet before
leaving the galaxy. I drew the Sag assignment and went to Amenti with
my assistants. And suddenly, there you were. Potting our people in
cold blood. You're a ruthless man, Asahel Frost."
"What
happen ...
real Dolores? You show her ... any bloody
compassion?"
We
were out of the elevator, heading for a gig. I had no doubt that a
fast Haluk starship was waiting in orbit, hidden with a dissimulator
field a little less efficient than
Makebate's.
My head in
its Joru makeup wobbled helplessly. In another minute I'd pass out,
and she seemed to know it. "You're about to experience what
Dolores did. It won't be unpleasant. But before you sleep, here's a
little extra information to give you pleasant dreams. We have another
reason for stealing transactinides: our ships will need extra fuel
for the invasion."
"I
knew that," I said, and faded to black.
Chapter 7
I expected
they would take me to their secret base on Amenti—an asteroid
station abandoned nearly eighty years ago by Sheltok—or even to
a Haluk colony in the Perseus Spur. Instead, as I discovered much
later, they brought me back to Toronto, to the commercial and
residential tower where they had established their embassy and secure
living quarters.
There I
was demicloned. Twice. The complicated process took about seven
months. When I was finally released from the dystasis tank it was
mid-November, although I didn't learn the date right away.
I had the
superficial appearance of a Haluk, a side effect of the preliminary
phase of the demiclone process. The disorienting discovery didn't
prevent me from executing the Helly Frost replica who shared my
recovery room—the demiclone who had lived most of his life as a
Haluk. But another perfect duplicate of me was already at large,
committing God knows what sort of crimes in my name. The first
impostor was a renegade human being, collaborating with the aliens.
I hadn't
had much time to speculate on the identity of Fake Helly I. When the
medical device monitoring Fake Helly II flat-lined, it triggered an
alarm. Rather slow on the uptake, four blue-skinned xenos took their
own sweet time coming to the recovery room to see what had happened.
None wore translators. Two of the Haluk were meditechs, the same ones
who had attended me and Fake Helly II while we recuperated from
dystasis. The other pair were uniformed embassy guards armed with
Ivanov stun-pistols.
The aliens
stood in a close group, about ten feet away from me. They had me
backed up against the tall windows. I'd opened the drapes earlier to
determine my whereabouts, and outside was a nightscape of downtown
Toronto, a glittering forest of colored glass towers.
The taller
guard barked at me in his own language. "Human! Do not move!"
I
understood. With two laser targeting dots shining on my sternum, it
was easy. I stood still.
The
female medic, Avilik, darted to the bed where the dead demiclone lay
and checked out the corpse with a diagnosticon. She uttered a
horrified expletive, then came away from the bed and spoke to me in
the Haluk tongue. "Wah! What have you done? Ru Balakalak is not
only dead, he is
blah blah!”
"Yeah.
He sure as hell is," I replied in English. My tongue felt funny
and my teeth seemed to be too far apart. The larynx was mine, but it
was laboring under some exotic handicap. My voice was gravelly and
deeply resonant, almost Louis Armstrongesque. I continued in
execrable Halukese. "This one did it! Ru Balakalak will not live
again by dystasis. This one thinks that is very, very good!" I
switched back to English. "And fuck you all very much."
The four
of them exclaimed, "Wah!"
Then
Avilik began to jabber rapidly with her male colleague, whose name
was Miruviak. I only understood one word in ten of the agitated
conversation, but the general tenor seemed to be that some maximal
manure would impact the rotor when the Servant of Servants found out
about the catastrophe. Damage control was the order of the day.
I was
stark naked. My general bodily contour was still sturdily human, not
nearly so willowy as that of normal Haluk males. I had a narrow waist
and four-fingered hands without nails. My skin was sky-blue, except
for the parts of me smeared with my own blood. My chest, arms, and
upper legs were patterned with intricate ridges almost like glossy
scars, some of them nicely marked with gold. I had seen my face
briefly in a mirror before the aliens found me. By human standards I
was hideous. I had short silvery hair. My normally green eyes were
now a brilliant sapphire, with huge irises and no visible whites. My
eye sockets were slightly smaller than those of a true Haluk, but any
ordinary human observer would take me for a genuine blueberry.
Hey, all
Haluk look alike.
I held a
bloody towel to the streaming wound at the back of my neck. It marked
the place where I'd hacked out a small shocker device, implanted in
the skin at the base of my skull for the purpose of controlling me.
It hadn't.
Avilik and
Miruviak finished talking and stared at me balefully. The big guard
rapped out a question to them in unintelligible Halukese. Probably:
"Should I stun this fucker's ass now?"
"Don't
shoot!" said Avilik. "Don't hurt him!"
Her
male partner asked a question that I only understood part of.
"Blah
blah him now with
blah blah Avilik said, "Yes. Be
careful and slow. He
blah blah but we must
blah and
make a new demiclone."
Miruviak
carried a small case, which he snapped open, revealing a shiny little
instrument with a pistol grip, a cylindrical metal body, and a short
barrel tipped with a glass knob. Bea Mangan had used one of those on
me, the night she'd picked me up in the snowstorm. The thing was a
hypodermic injector, the kind without a needle that squirts powerful
little jets of liquid right through unbroken skin and clothing. It
was probably full of a gentler sort of knockout juice.
"Human?"
Miruviak said to me gently. "One will not hurt you. Only
blah
blah sleep."
He started
toward me. In order to inject the drug he had to touch me with the
glass knob. The guards still had me targeted. They held their Ivanovs
two-handed, in the approved human combat style. I suppose Haluk
demiclones had bought the stun-guns on the thriving Toronto black
market. No aliens were permitted to carry arms on Earth.
Miruviak
was coming at me from the right. Haluk faces are hard to read because
of the ridged patterns, but it seemed to me that he was distinctly
nervous at the prospect of putting down a brute my size.
The
big guard must have thought so, too.
"Blah Vumilak and
this one
blah put our guns to his head
blah blah. He is
too large and strong
blah blah blah."
"Be
silent," Avilik told Big Guy. She acted like the boss of the
outfit. "The human is frightened and
blah. He is also
feeble from
blah blah in dystasis and
blah blah. You
shoot
blah blah blah."
Yeah. Only
as a last resort. Okay, let's boogie ...
I touched
my bloody nape, let out a groan, and did a little stagger dance that
took me back against the windowsill. Cringed away and whimpered in
broken Halukese, "No! Do not do it. No dystasis!"
Clutched
the sopping scarlet towel tightly at one end.
Miruviak
was closing in, making soothing sounds. I turned toward him and
whip-snapped the towel sharply in his face, then flung the gory thing
at the guards.
Eeeuw!
They couldn't help flinching. By the time they'd recovered, I'd
grabbed the startled medic by both skinny wrists and pulled him
against me as a shield. The guards fired their stun-guns. Miruviak
took two bolts in the back and sagged, dropping the injector.
I picked
up his slight form and threw it at the guards. Avilik was screaming
unheeded orders. The unconscious medic's body hit both Haluk and sent
them sprawling. Scooping up the injector, I took a headlong dive and
skidded across the slick parquet floor toward the floundering pile of
aliens. Found a uniformed leg. Pressed the injector ball against a
thigh and shot the high-velocity jet right through the cloth. The
smaller guard let out a squawk and dropped his Ivanov. I grabbed it.
Big Guy
was on his back, still entangled in the cold-cocked medic, waving his
weapon and cursing. He fired a dart at the ceiling and another at the
wall. A third barely missed my head. Then I shot him in the ribs and
he subsided.
Avilik
gave a wail and ran for the door. Firing from the floor, I popped her
in the shoulder. She folded into a crumpled heap.
Intense! I
stayed down for a while, drained of the raging hormones that had let
me override my tank-induced debility. Avilik had been correct when
she opined I was feeble from dystasis and scared stiff. I'd also
suffered considerable blood loss. But I was a husky human male, not a
Haluk, and under certain dire circumstances we can do great and
wondrous deeds. I breathed deeply, psyched myself up, and got to my
feet. Washed-up Supercop pulls his fraying shit together once again,
spurred by the realization that time's a-wasting.
Get out of
this goddamn place, Helly. And do it pronto.
I made my
rubber-leggedy way to the door and tried it. It was locked. Somebody
had to have a key-card. I knelt beside Avilik. If she was the boss
... yes! An encoded red-striped plastic slip was in an outer pocket
of her smock. I turned off all the room lights from the switch plate
beside the door, unlocked it, and cracked it open the merest
nanoskosh. Then I did my patented reconnoiter from knee height.
Nobody ever expects to see a person peeking from down there.
The
recovery room door was one of three opening into a small foyer at the
end of a long corridor. The other two doors nearby bore Haluk
ideographs that I couldn't decipher. There were more doors down the
hall, all closed, and an alcove midway along that I hoped might
contain an elevator. No one was in sight.
I closed
the door again and locked it, turned the lights back on. Then I
started undressing Big Guy. He had a nice Breitling wrist chronometer
that I strapped on. His spiffy gray uniform with black accents would
be a tad snug for my human physique, but at least my wrists wouldn't
stick out of the tunic arms like a scarecrow's, and the boots looked
like they'd fit my funny feet. He wore grubby alien underwear, which
I eschewed.
Big Guy's
family jewels made a modest bulge in his drawers and seemed more
meager than my own newly acquired exotic equipment. Maybe that
explained Avilik's appreciative remarks earlier...
Before
I put the clothes on I took a fast shower. My damned neck gouge was
still leaking—I found out later that dystasis puts
anticoagulants into the blood that take a few hours to wear off—so
I ripped a pillow cover into narrow strips and bound up the wound as
well as I could.
You try tying a pressure bandage around your
neck ...
All
dressed up, wearing Big Guy's holstered Ivanov and with the second
stun-gun tucked inside my tunic, I looked like one dangerous Haluk. I
felt on the verge of keeling over, but that was not an option.
Searching the other three bodies, I found an assortment of colored
key-cards and tucked one of each kind into my gun-belt pouch. All of
the aliens carried phones, and for a few moments I thought I'd hit
the jackpot. But when I tried to call Karl Nazarian's personal
code—one of the few I could remember offhand—I reached a
Halukese-speaker and hastily hit End. A check of the instrument's dex
showed that only a list of preprogrammed codes were accessible—and
they all had to be Haluk. I might have known there'd be no easy
access to the general telecom net.
Rats.
Without a pocket phone, and the personalized dex and datalink
facilities that went with it, you were almost nonexistent on
twenty-third-century Earth.
Well, if I
couldn't call for help, I'd have to walk out. Or ride.
Unfortunately,
the aliens weren't carrying human money or credit cards, which might
have been useful. The only other items I appropriated were the
sedative injector—returned to its case; a flashlight, wrist
restraints, and magazine pouch that were clipped to Big Guy's belt;
an alien switchblade knife I was surprised to find on Miruviak; and a
steel flask from Small Guy's inside tunic pocket that contained a
facsimile of high-proof vodka.
Science
tells us that alcohol is not a stimulant. I beg to differ. A quick
snort perked me up considerably.
After
momentary hesitation I also stole Big Guy's platinum ring inset with
a fire-opal cabochon, slipping it on my own elongated alien finger.
If I didn't have money or credit, maybe I could barter.
Before I
left the room I returned to the window and tried to orient myself.
The Haluk embassy occupied the top 210 floors of a huge structure
called Macpherson Tower, on Edward Street near Yonge, right across
from Sheltok's headquarters. My window looked south, toward Sheltok
Tower, and by comparing the two buildings I figured I was on the
180th floor, or thereabouts. Most towers in this vicinity had
automobile access ramps to the downtown skyways on the fiftieth,
100th, and 200th floors. Maybe I could commandeer a car at one of the
upper ramp portals.
That would
be my preferred plan of action. If it didn't work I'd try to descend
to the Path—provided I could pass through the security system
that sequestered the Haluk section of the tower from the
human-occupied suites below. The only other way out I could think of
was via the hopper sky-port at the tower's summit, which was used
exclusively by the alien tenants. But high-floor suites inevitably
belong to high-ranking persons. Security up there and at the skyport
was probably extra-tight. The l00th-floor auto ramp was my best hope.
I left the
recovery room, found the elevators, drew the Ivanov from my tunic,
and pressed the Down pad. The wait seemed endless.
Except for
a few signs and door designations in Halukese and a nice piece of
alien sculpture by the window at the end of the lift alcove,
everything I'd seen in the corridor looked undistinguished and
completely human—the carpeting, the light fixtures, card locks
on the doors, even the occasional potted terrestrial plant. But it
was a human-owned building, of course. The Macpherson management
would not have allowed major xenoforming.
The
elevator arrival chime sounded and I felt my muscles tense. I had
tucked my right hand into the front of my tunic, Napoleon style,
gripping the unholstered Ivanov. If the door opened on a squad of
armed Haluk coming to reinforce the two I'd chopped—worst-case
scenario—I was ready to fill the car with stun-bolts. But
disposing of the snoozers would be risky, maybe impossible.
If I got
lucky and the car held unarmed Haluk or demiclones, I'd play it by
ear. Act the aloof cop and keep my mouth shut if anyone spoke to me.
I could only guess which pad designated the 100th floor unless the
Haluk had left the original numbering intact. However, most
commercial tower elevators had a hopper or auto icon next to the pads
for the appropriate floors.
The door
slid open. Only one person was inside, a tall, thin human male.
My older
brother Daniel.
——
For a moment I was sandbagged with
shock. But his glazed eyes slid over me, hardly seeing me. I was just
another alien.
I stepped
into the elevator beside him and glanced briefly at the panel. There
were no icons designating the skyway portals, and the floors were
designated only with alien symbols. I touched the pad for the lowest
floor. A red light immediately began blinking beside a card slot that
bore a little Halukese sign. The car door remained open and the chime
pinged annoyingly.
Oops. I
wasn't ready to try out my card collection just yet. I hastily hit a
button a couple of floors above the interdicted one. The elevator
door slid shut and we descended. My brother didn't even notice that
I'd goofed. He seemed dazed.
Dan wasn't
going nearly so far as the lower floor I'd randomly chosen. The car
stopped, and when he got off I was right behind him. He slouched
along like a sleepwalker. He was dressed in black slacks, an argyle
sweater-vest, and a yellow shirt. He'd lost a lot of weight and there
were dark circles under his eyes. I wondered if he was still drugged.
We were in
a residential part of the building. A few other people passed us in
the maze of corridors, evidently coming from other banks of
elevators. They looked human and probably weren't. Some carried
attache cases and wore expensive outerwear. They appeared to be
homeward bound executives and I wondered which Concerns they'd
infiltrated. Domestic robots trundled along, carrying clean towels
and other supplies. A servitron unit popped out of a little door in
the wall, bringing room-service dinner to someone. Humanized Haluk
have to eat human food. Their exotic edibles are slightly poisonous
to the human metabolism. I caught a whiff of some savory entree that
made my empty stomach clench like a fist.
My brother
Dan still didn't realize he was being followed. He slipped a key-card
into his lock and opened the door to his apartment. I spoke in an
imitation of mechanically translated Haluk speech. "Daniel
Frost! One wishes to speak with you."
He whirled
around, threw me a look compounded of fright and fury, then quick as
a jackrabbit whipped inside and slammed the door in my face.
Well,
shit.
I sorted
through the access cards. The red one didn't work. Neither did blue,
green, or gold. I tried an important-looking jobbie with silvery
stripes: bingo.
When I
came in and closed the door behind me, Dan was standing there
vibrating with rage. "Ah, for chrissake! I just finished a
six-hour session with the damned tutors. Not even a fuckin' potty
break! Can't you xeno bastards give me a minute's peace?"
"One
must question you," I repeated.
"I'm
taking a leak before you start," he said. "You don't like
it, stun me." He disappeared into the bathroom.
I did a
quick prowl of the apartment. There were no obvious surveillance
devices, but that didn't mean the place wasn't bugged. Most likely
the aliens had only installed an-tisuicide sensors that monitored the
occupant's breathing.
The
comfortably furnished living room had an infomedia center and a
well-stocked library of slates and e-books. Tranquil pictures on the
walls, nice gas-log fireplace, even a musical keyboard. Dan liked to
noodle on the piano and faked jazz tunes rather well. The
bedroom/office contained a queen-sized bed—made with military
precision—and a computer desk. I sat down at the unit and tried
to call up a general telecom link. No luck, but no surprise, either.
The closet
held a fair selection of clothes and shoes, arranged meticulously.
Good old anal-retentive Dan. There were a couple of track suits that
might fit me. I took the roomiest one, which was navy-blue, and found
athletic shoes and a gym bag to go with it. A dresser yielded socks,
underwear, and even a baseball cap with a Toronto Blue Jays logo. I
stuffed everything into the bag.
Dan
came out of the John and did a disbelieving double take. "What
the fuck! You're stealing my
clothes,” I said, "Give
me your phone. Now." The instrument was no doubt as useless to
me as the ones carried by the Haluk; but I couldn't trust Dan not to
call on the aliens for help.
He dug in
his pocket and handed the phone over. Trained to instant obedience.
Good. If I kept a close eye on him, he wouldn't be able to raise the
alarm.
I checked
the phone dex and found only the same kind of preprogrammed codes the
Haluk phones had contained.
When I
asked the instrument if it had any extensions, it replied in the
negative.
"You
got anything to eat, Dan?" I'd dropped the Haluk diction, having
decided how I was going to handle him, but he seemed not to notice.
"In
the kitchen," he said sullenly. "But it's all human chow.
We can order in if you like."
"No
need," I said.
I
herded him ahead of me and made him open the refrigerator. Saw sliced
ham, Jarlsberg cheese, tomatoes, Grey Poupon mustard.
Perfecto! I
ordered him to build me two sandwiches and nuke them in the
microwave.
"You're
joking!" he exclaimed. His eyes were red and swollen and his
pupils tiny. He was on something, but if he'd been working with Haluk
tutors, his intellect was probably operational.
The little
dining table was maple, with matching captain's chairs. I sat down,
drew the Ivanov from inside my tunic, and put it on the table in
front of me. "I'll also have some strong coffee with sugar. A
big glass of water, too."
He moved
about following orders and finally set my repast before me. I told
him to sit down and wait, then fell on the food and drink like a
famished coyote. The last time I'd been in dystasis, in K-L's little
hospital, they'd fed me baby slop when I came out. Maybe solid food
in my empty stomach would sicken me. I didn't care.
Dan
watched, frowning and biting his lower lip, which was already raw.
I'd almost finished eating when his eyes narrowed and he figured it
out. He gave a terrified gurgle and bounded to his feet, nearly
knocking over his chair.
"You!"
he gasped. "Asa... my God, it's
you, isn't it!"
Sweat had burst out on his forehead and his eyes were bulging. He
looked like he was about to have a coronary.
"Sit
down." I picked up the stun-pistol and waved it casually. "Yes,
it's me. Take it easy, Dan. It's all right. We have to talk. They'll
be looking for me soon, but I figure I've got a little time yet."
"How
did you get away? Jesus! We were supposed to begin the tutoring
sessions for your second demiclone tomorrow. That's what—"
"Be
quiet. I need answers to some questions. Tell me: Which floor is the
skyway portal on?"
He paused
for only a moment before answering. "The two hundredth is the
only one the Haluk use. The one at the hundredth floor is closed for
security reasons. It's at the boundary between Haluk and human
occupancy. But you'll never escape through the two hundredth. It's
used by Haluk top brass. There are at least three checkpoints, and
the guards up there carry Kagi blasters."
"What
kind of security do they have at the lowest Haluk level? The
hundredth floor?"
"Double
card-locks, gold and blue, guards armed with stunners. It's the main
egress. Haluk are going in and out twenty-four hours a day."
Okay. So
would I.
"Dan,
I'm busting out of here. D'you want to come with me?"
"Yes,"
he said dully. "But I can't. And you probably can't get away,
either. They've put control implants into us."
"In
the neck. Right. I cut mine out and I can do the same for you."
He gave a
hollow laugh and tapped his breastbone. "There's another one,
Asa. In the thoracic cavity. You cross a blue checkpoint without your
attendant entering the proper code, a tiny charge detonates and
vaporizes your heart and lungs."
Rats! ...
But had the meditechs gotten around to installing the lethal gizmo in
me? Didn't I recall one of them saying they'd wait on it? Or was I
mistaken? Had they put it in before I regained consciousness?
I said,
"I'll get you out of this place. Trust me. If you give me
truthful answers to some questions, I swear I'll come back and help
you. And when you're out, and this Haluk mess is resolved, I'll let
you live with your family again ... if they want you."
Another
dismal laugh. "I'm fucked, Asa. And so are you."
"Dan,
I'm getting out, and I'm going to raise such a media stink that the
Haluk will be begging us to rewrite their treaties and let us send
inspection teams to their colonies."
"In
your dreams."
"Who
is the first demiclone?" I asked.
He stared
at me stupidly. "I don't—"
"Fake
Asahel Frost, Mark One," I prompted him. "Who's the human
male the Haluk transformed the first time around? The one out there
pretending to be me, right this very minute? The aliens didn't trust
this mutt, but they had to use him until their own boy came out of
the tank. I had half a notion the Haluk might have used you to
impersonate me, but that didn't make sense. So it's somebody else.
Who?"
Dan had
gone white. He was shaking his head. "No. They'll kill me, Asa.
I can't tell—"
I stood
up, grabbed his shirt, and hauled him halfway across the table for a
nose-to-nose. "/'// kill you, asshole, with my bare hands! But
you won't go quick. You'll scream until your goddamn voice-box is in
shreds. Tell me his name! Tell me! Tell me!" I shook him till
his eyes rolled, then pushed him backward. He crashed into his chair.
Spilled coffee spread over the table and dripped onto the floor. My
brother crouched there, numb with fear. Then he began to weep.
First the
Bad Cop, then the Good Cop.
I sat down
again. "Danny, Danny. I know what happened. They took you from
the Kenora fishing lodge and brought you here. Told you that you
could go on living if you cooperated. They needed background material
on me to make their demiclone masquerade work. Intensely detailed
stuff. So their clone could fool Eve and Delegate Sontag as well as
my associates."
"They
had me hooked to the machines for nearly three weeks," he
whispered, scrubbing at his face with the back of one hand. "I
thought I was a goner. The pain, Asa! Like every nerve in my body was
on fire. Like being wrapped in a burning net! They squeezed me dry.
Then they fixed me up, let me rest and recover. I helped fine-tune
the act of the first demiclone. They wanted me to do the same for the
second one. And you would have helped with the coaching, too. Whether
you wanted to or not."
He was
shuddering as fresh tears ran down his ravaged face. I leaned
forward, stretching my blue lips in a non-Haluk smile, and laid an
alien hand on his shoulder. "Danny, you know what they intend to
do. Colonize our galaxy by force. Destroy humanity if that's what it
takes. How does my clone fit into their scheme? Are they using him
politically, in the Assembly? Or did they wangle the fake back into
Rampart upper management?"
"Bom.
You're—
he's Rampart's president and syndic. Eve and the
others were so relieved when you reappeared after being presumed lost
in the Sagittarius Whorl that they didn't question your strange
change of heart. Cousin Zed's still Chief Operating Officer, but he's
permanently based on Seriphos now. You—I mean, the
demiclone—and Eve are effectively calling the shots from
Toronto, with Gunter Eckert and that Macrodur stooge Ellington and
the rest of the board sitting back applauding."
"Eve
has no idea she's dealing with a fake?"
"He's
very well prepared. A natural actor with compelling presence."
He flashed a twisted grin. "A lot like you, kid. It helps that
you were always such a headstrong loner, not socializing with the
rest of the family. And of course he knows the business inside out.
The Rampart-Galapharma consolidation went through like gangbusters
under his direction, and he's got the Haluk Consortium following his
lead like Mary's little lamb. The fifty new Haluk colonies in the
Spur are up and running, with settlers flooding in by the millions."
"Did
the Assembly approve the three hundred additional colonies?" I
asked grimly.
"Not
yet. The vote is expected very soon. Last I heard, maybe two weeks
from now. Your demiclone has been guiding the strategy of the other
Concern lobbyists, showing them where to exert pressure and how best
to counter Delegate Sontag's opposition. He and his Xenoaffairs
Oversight Committee threw open their meetings to the media. Released
a shitload of evidence detrimental to the Haluk and started a
slam-bang row. The accusations of demiclone spying caused a furor."
Atta boy,
Ef! "That's great. Are citizens pressuring the Assembly to
revise the Haluk treaties?"
"Sure.
But Concern lobbyists are fighting it hammer and tongs. Bringing in
their own experts to demonstrate that Son-tag's 'proof of a vast
demiclone infiltration is nothing of the sort. Only Macrodur and some
of the smaller Concerns are DNA-testing their top executives. The
other big outfits are stalling. No demiclone spies have been
uncovered yet." Dan gave me a sour look. "It doesn't help
Sontag's case that his chief witness has recanted his original
testimony and now claims that false depositions were entered under
his name."
"Chief
witness—"
"You."
Dan managed a weak chuckle.
"Who
is he?" I asked in a low, encouraging voice. "Who's the
first Fake Helly demiclone?"
He shook
his head. His eyes were darting wildly.
"I've
got to know. To stop him."
"They'll
kill me."
"You'll
tell me in the end, Dan. I'll hurt you if I have to. Save yourself
pain—"
He
screamed at me:
"What do you know about pain? My whole life
is pain!"
Return of
Bad Cop.
I
hit him a sharp backhanded blow to the face. "Bullshit! Bull!
Fucking! Shit! The worst pain you've experienced is hurt pride and
failed ambition. You're an arrogant, self-centered fuckwad, Dan. A
driven, calculating monster! You wanted Pop to make you head of
Rampart. When he didn't, you lost it completely. You hooked up with a
madman who promised to give you what you wanted. You did everything
you could to ensure that Alistair Drummond would take control of
Rampart. It was
your twisted idea to demiclone Eve.
You
dreamed up the scheme to sell Simon and me to that freakazoid
pimp in Coventry Blue... And you poisoned our mother, Dan, because
Alistair Drummond threatened to kill you if she didn't turn over her
Rampart quarterstake."
"I
didn't," he mumbled, fingering his bashed nose. It was bleeding
a little.
"You
did," I said sadly. "And that's your worst pain of all."
I waited
while he cursed and sobbed, denying it. Then I said, "It's
Alistair Drummond, isn't it? He's alive, and he's wearing my face."
Dan gave a
violent start and stared at me open-mouthed. "No! It's not him!"
But it was
all the confirmation I needed. I'd never been able to believe
Drummond was dead, and there was the tenuous bit of evidence that
he'd been present at Dan's abduction from the fishing lodge. When I
was in the tank, the Haluk leaders had discussed an unstable human
rogue with a scheme that fit the Grand Design. The Haluk had
suspected that the man might be insane. I knew for a fact that
Alistair Drummond was a charming, plausible, brilliant sociopath.
And
now he was
me.
I climbed
to my feet, picked up the Ivanov, went around the table to where my
brother cringed in his seat. "I can't waste any more time on
you. When the Haluk hook you up to the truth machines later, be sure
you tell 'em I intend to fuck their shit. I'm going to rip my skin
off Drummond and chop the rest of him into red-flannel hash."
"Asa,
they'll torture me to death with the damned machine!"
"Maybe.
But before you turn up your toes, be sure to tell the Servant of
Servants I know about his invasion plan. Tell him he better give it
up, cut his losses, and start begging the Assembly for mercy. If he
doesn't, humanity is going to chase his baby-blue ass back to the
Haluk Cluster and make damned sure that he and his people rot there
till the Big Crunch."
"Asa,
for the love of God—"
I shot Dan
with two stun-darts. He'd be unconscious for at least half a day. I
took off my uniform's weapon belt, since I'd never get out of the
building wearing it, divested it of its useful equipment, and put the
stuff in the gym bag with the change of clothes.
Then I
headed back to the elevator. Maybe my vitals would explode when I
tried to pass the checkpoint at the 100th floor, and maybe they
wouldn't. There was only one way to find out.
Going
down, I found that the gold-striped key-card did indeed give me a
green light to the lowest Haluk floor. I was on my way to freedom.
Aliens
joined me in the elevator car at lower stops, but there were no
humanoid demiclones among them. I decided they must have private
elevators. It would hardly be prudent for them to be seen entering or
leaving those set aside for the building's Haluk tenants.
Some xeno
passengers wore native garments, others were dressed like humans,
perhaps off for a night on the town. No one paid any attention to me.
I kept a position near the doors in case of an emergency.
And an
emergency happened.
The door
opened to admit another passenger, a Haluk male who wore a dull
yellow smock and carried a technical magslate. When he saw me his
pupils widened in the racial equivalent of surprise. He kept staring
as we made other stops and the car became crowded. Then he was pushed
to the rear, out of my sight.
But I knew
him. Mustard Smock! He was the one called Archiator Something, who
had shown me to the Servant of Servants and the VIP female Haluk when
I was still in the tank. Then he'd acted like the demiclone project
director or some other technical bigwig.
Was he
alert enough to spot my anatomical anomalies?
Yep.
I
felt someone grip my arm and speak in low Halukese. "Guard. Tell
me your
blah blah" Mustard Smock was asking for my ID.
The door
opened again to admit three more passengers to the nearly full car,
meditechs in pale green human-style hospital garb with diagnostic
devices hanging on cords around their necks. In his own language I
told Mustard, "Sorry. No time." Then I pulled away from him
and slipped out just as the doors were sliding shut. He tried to
squirm after me and didn't make it.
My heart
was pounding as I dashed out of the elevator alcove and flattened
myself against the wall just out of sight, expecting to hear the
chime as the door reopened. It didn't happen. Perhaps Mustard
couldn't get to the control panel in time to stop the car. Perhaps
he'd decided to brush off his suspicions and get on with his
business.
Perhaps
he'd alert security at the checkpoint.
There were
no sculptures or pretty decorations on this floor, and no windows,
either. The area had subdued lighting and there was a chill in the
air. I rejected my first instinct, which was to catch the next
elevator down to the checkpoint and try to escape before the flap and
foofaraw started.
Easy
does it, Helly, I told myself. Haluk guards
do tend to look
alike. I needed to change my clothes. Maybe find another elevator
bank.
There was
no one in the corridor. I went down a few doors before using my
master key, slipped into a dark room, and locked myself in. Then I
turned on the light and spit out an astonished expletive.
The place
was full of golden mummy-cases, standing upright in narrow
open-fronted booths. They lined the walls and were set up in close
rows like library shelves, with space to walk between them. A medical
monitoring device was attached to each elegant coffinlike chrysalis.
I knew very well what they contained—Haluk testudomorphs, the
dormant phase of the allomorphic alien race.
But Haluk
who had undergone allomorph eradication therapy with PD32:C2 didn't
hibernate. And it was common knowledge that the Haluk did not send
allomorphic members of their race to Earth. It wasn't cost-efficient
for their embassy staff and trade attaches to sleep for half a year,
and the Haluk were ordinarily very cost-efficient.
So what
were the testudos doing here?
I went
back to the door, doused the light, and did a lowboy scan of the
corridor. Empty. I opened the door opposite and found more ranks of
testudos. Racing to another chamber several doors down, I found still
more. This time I shut myself in the room and rapidly began to change
into Dan's athletic gear.
My mind
was spinning and my overloaded stomach felt queasy. There seemed only
one explanation: treated Haluk were somehow reverting to their
original allomorphic state.
Had Emily
Konigsberg done it deliberately with her mutant exon? Or was the odd
bit of DNA some sort of necessary genetic stopgap that actually
staved off a reversion process that was inevitable?
When these
testudos completed their dormant cycle and hatched into graciles,
could they be treated again? If so, what did the Haluk think about
being obligated to humanity—and especially Rampart
Concern—indefinitely?
Rampart...
the pieces of the puzzle were coming together.
I fastened
my shoes, put on the baseball cap, and pulled it low over my eyes.
Took all of the hardware out of the gym bag except the spare Ivanov
and sedative injector and stowed the stuff in the ample kangaroo
pocket below my jacket's half-mast zipper. Put the key-cards in my
pants pocket. Considered leaving the guard's uniform and boots
behind, along with the bag, injector, and extra gun, then remembered
it was damn near winter outside of Macherson Tower. So I stuffed the
uniform into the gym bag in case I needed it for warmth, and kept the
other things, too. I was still wearing the fire-opal ring.
When I
opened the door I discovered I was not alone in the corridor.
Fortunately, the Haluk lepidodermoid pushing the gurney that held a
gold chrysalis was going the other way. In their asexual intermediate
phase, the aliens are thick-skinned, ponderous, slow-witted, fit only
for simple tasks. The lepido pushing the gurney stopped at a door
beyond the lift alcove, used a key-card, and rolled its burden
inside.
I dashed
for the elevator and caught one going down almost immediately. It was
only moderately crowded. But when we reached the bottom Haluk floor,
the doors failed to open and the chime sounded its alarm. I felt my
overloaded stomach contract with fear and almost disgraced myself.
One
of the passengers said,
"Blah blah fexpletive! forgot to
blah the gold key?"
The red
light beside the card-slot was blinking. A sensor inside the car had
counted us and counted the card insertions. One short.
There were
disgusted mutters from the others, who glared at each other trying to
spot the careless twit causing the delay.
I mumbled,
"Sorry!" forced out a strangled-puppy Haluk laugh, and
plugged my card. The light went green, the doors opened and we all
emerged into a crowded lobby.
There were
eight lines at the outbound checkpoint gates. Everyone held a blue
key-card at the ready and quickly passed through. I fumbled in my
pants pocket and sorted out my own. When I inserted it, would my
heart explode? Would that hurt? How long would it take me to die?
Guards
stood beside a second group of elevator banks, those leading down to
freedom. Were they watching for a bold impostor? If I got through the
gate without popping my pump, would they seize me and escort me back
upstairs to the tank?
Inhaling
and squaring my shoulders, I pushed in the card.
The gate's
indicator light glowed green.
My heart
kept on beating and I went through. Keeping my head low, I shoehorned
myself into a crowded elevator car. A few moments later the doors
opened into the Path.
——
My first
need was to get as far away from the vicinity of Macpherson Tower as
possible. My second was to find a reasonably secluded public phone.
Using it would be dangerous. Without money, and unable to eyeball my
way into the iridoscopic ID system with my exotic irises, I would
have to recite either my personal code or the Rampart general code,
plus their authorization tags, to make a credit call. I didn't doubt
that the Haluk had access to both codes. If they'd penetrated the
telecom databank as well, they'd not only know where I'd called from,
but also whom I'd called.
It
required some serious thinking. If I attempted to contact my
relatives, friends, or close associates, I might immediately endanger
their lives.
And even
if I did reach someone, would the person believe the Halukoid geek
with the rumbly voice was me? Not bloody likely. All public vidphones
transmitted the image of the caller unless you physically blocked the
video pickup, a move justly regarded as suspicious by those answering
the phone. People in the upper echelons of society—and that
included Eve, Simon, Karl, Ef Sontag, and Bea Mangan— screened
their electronic communications carefully. They probably wouldn't
even accept a public phone call from someone who refused to show his
face.
But I
thought I knew someone who would.
Almost
instinctively, I took the Path westward beneath Dundas Street, in the
direction of the old Rampart Tower. (I'd only realize later that
Rampart would have transferred its Toronto headquarters to the
ithyphallic monolith on the waterfront that had once housed
Galapharma.) At University Avenue, I rode the escalator to the upper
level and found a suitable phone in a com bank at the St. Patrick
subway station.
Using the
Rampart code and ID tag, I called CCID Headquarters: Cop Central. I
covered the vid pickup with my hand. When the duty officer responded,
I asked for Chief Superintendent Jacob Silver. He wouldn't be working
the night shift, but I was pretty sure they'd patch me through to his
home if I stated a family emergency and gave my name and personal
code. And the police link would be secure from Haluk snoops.
"I'm
sorry," said the deskman. "Chief Superintendent Silver is
deceased. May I route your call elsewhere?"
"No—"
Stunned, I
cut him off. Stood there paralyzed.
Jake. Jake
was dead. Because of me? Because Alistair Drummond had slipped up
imperceptibly during his public playacting, and only Jake, the wise
old cop, had spotted it? And not-so-wisely confronted my demiclone?
Jake.
Rats...
I don't
know how long I stood there. My precariously stoked vitality was
swiftly draining away. Several trains entered the station, discharged
and took on passengers, glided off quietly, defying gravity. The
crowds were moderate. A clock said it was 2002 hours.
I
knew I had to get away from the public phones, so I moved to the
nearest newsstand and pretended to watch the big-screen PNN posting
of
News on the Hour. Top Story: a tsunami on Hokusai causes
heavy damage to a big Homerun Concern manufacturing facility. Oh,
yeah—and five thousand people died.
I felt
lightheaded and stupid. My belly was beginning to cramp. I could feel
a hot throbbing beneath the improvised bandage at the back of my
neck. Maybe the wound was infected with alien germs.
One thing
was certain: my weakened body had been flogged enough. It now
demanded to be horizontal. If I didn't go down soon of my own free
will, I was going to collapse.
Where the
hell could a Haluk in a track suit catch some z's?
I couldn't
rest on one of the inviting Path benches. The searchers would find
me. I had no money to patronize a spa or theater.
The
subway station sign caught my eye. st. patrick station. A church? ...
Many of them were open in the evening. Humans dozed in them all the
time, but a sleeping alien would alert a suspicious sexton. A public
database? ... Lots of people rested their eyes in the library, but
the nearest one was over a mile away, on Yonge Street. There was
another in the university campus, closer but still at least twelve
blocks away. I'd never—
Oh, shit.
They were here! The first Haluk hunters.
I spotted
them from the corner of my eye—I now had great peripheral
vision—exiting from a northbound train. Two uniformed blue
alien males and a female in casual attire. They found a vantage point
near the escalator and stood slightly apart, carefully scanning the
throng. One spoke into a handheld com device, no doubt reporting that
I was no longer near the public phones. I pulled my cap even lower
and hunched my shoulders, trying to look less conspicuous.
Right,
Helly, you moron. Why not just hunker down on the floor and put your
fat blue head between your knees and kiss your ass goodbye?
I
straightened up and readjusted the hat. Tried to look confident and
ordinary. Began to drift toward the subway turnstile, figuring to hop
over it when the next train was about to pull away, slip aboard
through the closing door and take my chances. Wondered if I had
enough energy left to make the leap.
Stopped
wondering when the female Haluk searcher spotted me and pointed me
out to her companions.
The trio
walked purposefully in my direction.
I
panicked.
There was
only one way open to me where they didn't dare follow. I dropped my
gym bag, flung myself bodily over the turnstile barrier, and landed
with a bone-jarring crash. A few people yipped and shouted. The three
Haluk broke into a canter. I rolled to the platform edge and went
over. This time the impact with the ceramalloy antigravity reflector
grid did more than shake me up. Something in my left shoulder snapped
and a white bolt of agony lanced through my brain. Broken collarbone.
I'd suffered one before on Kedge-Lockaby when I fell off my sub's
flybridge, drunk as a skunk.
Don't
pass out! One last push, Helly. Come on, you gutsy blue fucker. Get
up up up!
I
struggled back onto my feet and scrambled into the subway tunnel. It
was straight as a die, dimly lit with small yellow bulbs mounted
along the ceiling every dozen meters or so. No sign of an approaching
train.
Unzipping
my jacket halfway, I thrust my injured left arm into it in an
improvised sling. Better. I jogged clumsily along the grid side,
where there was very little clearance between the reflector area and
the wall. An uproar of voices echoed behind me. I dared a look over
my shoulder. The three Haluk weren't following.
Pain
pain pain. My shoulder. My laboring lungs. My heart thudding like a
punching bag going full tilt:
whop-a whop-a whop-a. Another
goddamned chase scene, starring me. Monotonous.
My head
ached like a sonuvabitch and I was starting to see double. My brain
was losing contact with my legs and I tripped'over a structural
member and nearly took a header. Caught at the wall with my good hand
and kept going.
There had
to be an emergency escape hatch along here somewhere. I'd seen them
myself, looking through the windows of speeding trains, inconspicuous
niches with doors in them.
A soft
breeze had begun to blow in my face and I heard a peculiar rushing
sound, not very loud. Far, far away I could see twin starry
pinpricks: train headlights. Shit. Not that ancient cliche! I tried
to move along faster and failed. Picked up my heavy feet and laid
them down. Felt giddy, sick, hopeless.
The
dancing headlights were brighter, closing in. Soon the sensors in the
lead car would take note of an unauthorized object on the grid ahead.
They would bring the train to a halt, leaving me jacklighted in front
of it like a trapped deer, waiting for the arrival of the Transit
Authority Police.
I was
staggering with pain and vertigo, ready to pack it in, when I finally
came to the niche. Almost passed it by, not recognizing my salvation.
Managed to pull open the narrow metal hatch, fell through onto my
broken shoulder, screaming, and kicked the hatch shut.
A surreal
interlude followed. The place inside was spinning, or I was,
engulfing me in a cataract of deafening sound and colored
kaleidoscopic shapes. After what seemed like a long time—but
was probably only minutes—the chaotic noise diminished into a
nearly subsonic drone and the psychedelic light show coalesced into
solid retinal images, blurry but bona fide.
I sat up,
hurting like hell, no longer suffering from incapacitating dizziness.
My refuge was a lighted utility room less than ten feet square and
about as high. The deep humming sound, which I presumed came from
hidden antigravity generators, had just enough volume to set my teeth
on edge.
The
walls of the place were crowded with pipes, conduits, and impressive
junction boxes with high-voltage warnings on them. Through bleary
eyes I saw a prehistoric nonvideo telephone on the wall beside the
exit to the tunnel, along with a cabinet labeled emergency equipment.
An iron ladder was mounted on the opposite wall. It went up to a dark
shaft in the ceiling and down through an equally dark hole in the
floor.
I opened
the cabinet and saw a large canister of foam spark-suppressant, a
pair of heavy insulated gloves, two ceram pry bars of differing
lengths, a cutting torch, several oddly shaped wrenches, and a small
first-aid kit. I took that, tucking it into my ever-handy kangaroo
pocket, and turned my attention to the ladder.
I decided
to go down, no contest. I lacked the strength to climb.
Slip,
trip, get a grip. Here's Supercop, descending into a spooky abyss
with one useless arm, wincing in agony every time he jolts his busted
bone, pursued by Haluk fiends!
I found
that I was grinning—even energized, in some weird way.
Go figure.
I must have slithered twenty meters
down the narrow shaft before I came to a less constricted space, and
then a solid floor. I pulled out the guard's flashlight and turned it
on, discovering that I was in another small chamber almost identical
to the utility room above. It had a similar equipment cabinet but
fewer conduits and pipes lining the walls. The light had burned out
and the place had a disused look to it. The exit door featured a
substantial latch, a key-card slot, and a sign that said:
——
NO UNAUTHORIZED EXIT
IF DOOR IS OPENED
WITHOUT KEY, ALARM WILL SOUND
——
I figured
it had to open out into the University Avenue segment of the
Path—useless as an escape route, even if I had been willing to
risk setting off the alarm. The hunt was on, and soon there'd be
Haluk strolling everywhere in the underground concourses. I knew what
they'd tell the cops: "Officer, have you seen our poor deranged
kinsman who wandered away from his sickroom? No, he's not dangerous
at all. Only extremely ill, suffering from delusions. We appreciate
your assistance in our urgent search."
Thus far
I'd heard no signs of pursuit from above. It would come, though.
Andale!
Going down, one more time ...
The ladder
didn't end at this level. Its uprights passed through two slots in a
solid semicircular manhole cover set into the floor against the back
wall. The cover looked old. There was a central inset ring to lift
the thing, and I gave it a puny tug. The cover didn't budge. I didn't
have the moxie to move the heavy thing.
Emergency
equipment cabinet. The longer of the two pry bars, used as a lever.
Squat. Heave very slowly, using my good right arm and my flabby leg
muscles. With a rusty screech the manhole cover tilted up a few
precious centimeters and promptly fell back into place. It probably
weighed about twenty-five kilos.
Okay.
Rest, then repeat the maneuver. This time, when the lid lifted, I
kicked the tip of the smaller pry bar into the aperture. Then I
collapsed. A smell compounded of mold and dampness wafted up through
the crack.
In a few
minutes, when I'd recovered a bit, I used both pry bars to move the
metal cover aside. It had another inset ring underneath. A long piece
of rope was knotted through it.
I felt a
prickling along my spine. The rope was new.
Below, it
was absolute blackness and a continuation of the ladder. I switched
on the flashlight. The lower shaft was twice as wide as the one I'd
previously negotiated and gleamed with moisture. Some sort of
revolting crud was growing around the ladder brackets. The powerful
little beam reflected from water that might have been another dozen
meters below. The ladder continued into it.
Above the
level of the water were two sizable circular openings. One was beside
the ladder on the west wall of the shaft, and the other was directly
opposite.
I didn't
hesitate. I replaced the short pry bar in the cabinet and closed it.
Then I positioned myself on the ladder a few rungs down and painfully
maneuvered the cover back into position, alternately levering with
the long bar and pulling on the rope. Finally, I twisted the rope
around the bar and used my body weight to help seat the cover,
millimeter by millimeter. It was very dark. I'd been afraid to prop
the flashlight on one of the ladder treads for fear my exertions
would dislodge it, and it was too thick to hold in my mouth; so it
had stayed safely in my kangaroo pouch.
Finally,
the lid dropped. So did I, nearly, as my foot slipped. But I clung to
the rope and bar with my single hand, swung back to the ladder and
wrapped my ankle around one of the uprights, sobbing with relief and
renewed pain.
When I
recovered a little, I jammed the bar through the manhole cover's ring
so its ends extended evenly on either side of the semicircular
opening and bound it in place with the rope. Now it was impossible
for anyone to lift the cover from above. Then I crept slowly
downward, dazed and exultant. The lit flashlight poking out of my
pocket gave adequate illumination. A half meter or so above the water
level, I stepped into the round opening beside the ladder. It was a
huge pipe, completely dry, made of old-fashioned cast concrete.
Perhaps one of the old storm drains.
A short
distance in from the shaft lay an empty Marlboro cigarette pack, a
Starbucks coffee cup, and the bag from a McDonald's Happy Meal. They
weren't dusty and old. They might have been dropped there yesterday.
Oh,
Christ...
No. I
wasn't ready to think about the implication of my new find. Not until
I rested and did something about the pain.
I sat down
and opened the first-aid kit. It had bandages, antibiotic ointment,
and—best of all—some powerful analgesic self-dosers. I
positioned one of the tiny pillow-shaped things on my left carotid
artery—where I hoped it was, anyhow—and jabbed sharply
with my thumb. The drug injected explosively. In a few seconds the
pain from my broken collarbone vanished. So did my other miseries.
I swabbed
the gouge at the back of my neck with antiseptic, applied antibiotic
goo, and rebandaged it as well as I could using one hand. Then I
improvised a more efficient sling. To celebrate my repair, I had a
belt of alien vodka from the steel flask. Then I started to walk.
Correction: shuffle.
I followed
the storm drain for less than half a kilometer before finding a
handmade ladder placed against a dry spillway. At the slope's top was
a flimsy grate with light faintly shining through. Using my last bit
of strength, I crept up the ladder, unhooked the grate, and emerged
at last into the Dark Path.
I saw a
ghostly subterranean concourse, eerily reminiscent of the familiar
Path I knew so well, except it was in a state of abject ruin. The
light came from portable camping glolamps someone had set out every
ten meters or so along one cracked wall. My hole opened beneath a
derelict escalator that had once led up into a long-vanished office
building. Now it dead-ended in a ceiling slab of rough plascrete,
swagged with dusty spiderwebs. A titanic structural pier made of
modern material punched through the slab. Around its base heaps of
rubble cut off the corridor on the far side of the broken stairs. On
the other side stretched a line of decayed shops, some with familiar
names. Their windows were gone and their interiors had been looted
long decades earlier. Oddly, the corridor floor in front of them was
fairly clean and dry. A couple of overhead ducts purred, drawing out
stale air.
At first
my fuddled brain didn't comprehend that the Dark Path was inhabited.
Low walls of unmortared concrete block formed about a dozen
open-fronted cubicles along the blank wall opposite the old shops.
Each space held a few pieces of furniture and stacked small container
pods. A dim night-light sat on one cinder-block wall.
I drew my
Ivanov and shambled out of my hiding place beneath the escalator like
a zombie. Saw a community kitchen in front of a ruined Taco Bell
fast-food joint, a "reading room" alcove with shelves of
slates and e-books, a billiard table and a collection of video game
machines, laundry pegged to a line outside an old public rest room.
Heard snoring...
Then a
woman's quiet voice said, "You won't need the pistol, honey."
She was sitting up in her simple bed inside the cubicle with the
night-light, watching me, not yet recognizing what kind of a creature
had invaded her secret world.
Tottering,
I let my gun hand fall and must have groaned, because she said, "I'm
Mama Fanchon. It's all right, sweetie-babe. Have you just arrived?"
Instinctively,
I knew what she meant. "The—The police are after me. And
the Haluk. I'm walking wounded, my collarbone and my neck. I
can't—can't—"
I stood
there swaying, seeing colored flashes again and hearing the cataract
work up to a roar.
——
Mama
Fanchon was putting on a robe and slippers. A moment later she turned
up her glolamp and gave a sharp cry of dismay, seeing me clearly.
"Santa! Mohammed! Leah! Sweet Lord, it's an alien!"
Muffled
curses and squeals from the cubicles. A big old white-bearded guy
whom I later learned to call Santa Claus demonstrated how he'd got
his name by bounding out of his space and covering me with a
Claus-Gewitter photon blaster. "Hoist 'em high or die,
blueberry!"
Two
adolescents advanced on me, armed with pry bars. The female shrilled,
"You heard the man! Hands up, xeno!"
"I'm
not!" I cried, consumed by despair. "Not an alien. They did
this to me. I'm human. Human, for God's sake!"
"Bite
me!" jeered the male adolescent.
"Does
anyone have a phone?" I asked politely.
Then I
crashed.
Mama
Fanchon believed me.
She knew
anatomy, being the tribal healer, and my thick neck alone was enough
to show her that I was no true Haluk. She also regularly watched
newscasts on her tiny portable TV and was aware of the accusations of
illegal demiclonery being lodged against the Haluk by certain
Delegates of the Commonwealth Assembly.
Others of
the Grange Place Tribe were less willing to accept her kindly
assessment; but Mama overruled their objections, put me to bed in her
"hospital," and tended me during the three days of my
recovery.
For part
of that time I was delirious. I'm certain that I told her my name,
also fairly sure that she recognized it and drew certain conclusions.
At one
point, when I was only partially lucid, I pleaded again for a
telephone. "Please, Mama! Have to call my sister Eve, CEO of
Rampart Concern. To warn her! He's not me. The syndic. She has to
fire him. Denounce him. Tell the Assembly he lied. The impostor. Get
me a phone! Call Eve, get her down here. Convince her. A phone. Oh,
God, Mama, please get me a phone—"
"No,
honey-lamb. You're not calling anyone, the condition you're in. If
that big-shot woman is really your sister, she won't talk to a poor
sick Haluk. Or a well one, either. You better think of somebody else
to call later on, when you feel better. Sleep now and think on it,
Helly." I slipped back into unconsciousness.
Later,
when I was back on the road to rationality, she told me her own
story. Nine years earlier, Fanchon had been a hospital nurse. She
accidentally gave the wrong medication to the son of a Bodascon
Concern executive, and the child nearly died. Thrown Away, her every
asset confiscated to settle the massive civil judgment against her,
she had no relatives or friends willing to support her or pay for a
ticket to a remote planet where she might have made a new life.
So she
descended into the Dark and began another sort of career as a member
of the Grange Place Tribe. There were twelve of them—eight
disenfranchised adults, three runaway children who had fled abusive
families, and one man wanted for the murder of his unfaithful wife.
They lived together, defending themselves against human predators and
the violent insane who stalked parts of the underworld. Their food
and supplies were gleaned by "shopping"—the tribal
euphemism for scavenging and clandestine requisition—in the
Bright Path, which they visited during quiet hours. They'd left the
rope on the manhole cover that I'd found. They'd also disconnected
the door alarm and broken the light in the utility room, which was
only one of many exits into the other world.
Fanchon's
nursing skills came to be valued by other Dark Path dwellers because
she was willing to help others without asking for payment. Many
patients gave her gifts anyway. She always shared them with her
tribe.
——
When I
woke up at last with a mind that was fully clear, Mama Fanchon was
the first person I saw, a woman in a red turtleneck sweater and
padded goosedown vest, sitting in a folding chair just outside the
hospital cubicle, smoking a briar pipe, knitting, and watching a
soundless Maple Leafs hockey game on her small television.
Behind
her, in the communal kitchen, Santa Claus was grilling some sort of
spicy meat and toasting buns. The aroma was inviting. He was dressed
in a wool shirt and dirty Carhartt insulated overalls, with a striped
canvas apron tied over them. Next to the two-burner Gaz stove stood a
table spread with clean newsprint. It was set with mismatched plates
and cups and also held a restaurant-sized jar of kosher pickles, a
bunch of spotty bananas, and a box of Krispy Kreme doughnuts.
"How
are you feeling, Helly?" Mama Fanchon inquired. She put her
knitting away and came to stand over me, hands on her ample hips. "Is
the bone-brace treatment working? The medicine was a bit past its
expiration date, but no one's been shopping in a clinic for nearly a
month. Not since Johnny Guitar fell into the cistern under Spadina
Chinatown and broke both legs."
"I
feel much better, Mama Fanchon," I said. Unzipping the sleeping
bag, I sat up. I was naked as a jaybird. Same color, too. "Need
to use the facilities. I can walk. May I have my clothes?"
"I
think someone had better go along with you, in case you need help."
She called out: "Mohammed!"
A skinny
teenage boy with sunken eyes and four missing front teeth came into
the cubicle. Like the others, he wore winter clothing. The Dark Path
was cold. My Ivanov stun-pistol was stuck in his belt.
The kid
glowered at me. "So the Haluk's awake. About time." I
recalled that he'd helped with my care while I was flat on my back,
passing in and out of consciousness. He was a lot stronger than he
looked. Young Mohammed adored Mama Fanchon and didn't trust me one
micron's worth.
She was
rummaging in one of the storage pods and said to the boy, "Supper
will be ready soon, angel. Please get Helly a nice warm jacket from
the hope chest, and take him to the rest room after I check him out.
Eeyore finally found a new power cell for my diagnosticon. Isn't that
wonderful?"
She waved
the device expertly around my bod while Mohammed went off. "Very,
very good! Your collarbone is just fine now. It'll be tender for a
week or so, but it's stronger than ever. Put your clothes on,
honey-bunch. You can eat at the table with us tonight." She left
the cubicle.
"Polish
sausages almost ready!" Santa Claus called out. My mouth began
to water. Three or four other members of the tribe drifted toward the
kitchen.
Mohammed
stood by while I pulled on my track suit and stuffed my feet into
sneakers without bothering with socks. He handed me an Eddie Bauer
car-coat with the price code still attached. The "hope chest"
had nice merchandise.
Trailed by
the armed boy, I trudged off to what had once been a public lavatory.
Now most of the white tiles were cracked and stained black with
mildew, and the mirrors were so cloudy that they were almost opaque;
but someone had reconnected the water with jury-rigged plastic
piping, and the old-timey tank toilets and sinks worked.
Mohammed
scowled as I relieved myself. "You can't be human. Not with
those"
I
shrugged. "I told you, it's what happens when Haluk genetic
engineers build a demiclone from your DNA. First they inoculate you
with some Haluk genes. You end up looking like an alien on the
outside."
"I'd
kill myself!" the boy declared.
"When
I get my life sorted out, I'll go back into the vat and get fixed.
Look just like my old self again." I finished my business, had a
fast wash, and slipped off the coat. "How's the wound on my neck
looking?"
"Got
a dry scab. The scab's purple. You're healthy, man ... I mean, Mr.
Haluk! Time for you to hit the road." He touched the pistol and
his face was like polished golden marble.
"You're
not hanging out here anymore. No matter what Mama Fanchon says."
"No,"
I agreed. "I'm very grateful for your help, Mohammed. And for
Mama's, and all the rest of the tribe's. But I won't try to stay with
you. There's something I have to do, a place I have to go. I'll need
help to find it, though, traveling the Dark Path."
"Where?"
he asked suspiciously.
I gave him
an address in ultrafashionable Cabbagetown, just east of the city's
central core, where once upon a time poor Irish immigrants grew their
favorite veggies right in their front gardens.
"It's
a long way," he said, looking dubious. "Can't get there
direct. The DP's broken at Yonge. You'd have to detour south to the
Inner Harbor, come back north through the Parliament Street drains."
"Will
you take me?"
He
laughed.
"I'll
make it worth your while. When I'm a man again."
"Horseshit,"
Mohammed scoffed.
"My
name is Asahel Frost. Once I was a convicted criminal and a
Throwaway, just like Mama and the others. Then I became the Chief
Legal Officer of Rampart Concern. I was rich and important. That's
why the Haluk stole my identity. Do you watch the news on Mama's TV?
Did you ever see the man who uses my name? Saying what terrific
people the Haluk really are?"
"Never
watch those talking-head dudes. Boring." But the boy's gaze had
momentarily shifted. He'd seen Alistair Drummond, all right.
"The
fake Asahel Frost is a traitor," I said. "Crazy as an
outhouse rat, and just as vicious. He wouldn't give a damn if Earth
and all the human planets became alien property. I'm going to cut his
nuts off and stuff them down his lying throat."
A spark
flickered in his bruised-looking young eyes. "Who lives in
Cabbagetown?" he asked me abruptly.
I told
him.
His mouth
dropped open, showing the pathetic gaps in his teeth. Replacing them
had been beyond Mama's skill. I wondered what else had been done to
Mohammed in the world Upstairs. Who'd been responsible. Wondered
whether I might do something about it someday, just as I intended to
do something for Mama and the others if I ever became a man again.
"You're
shinin' me on." His skepticism was weakening.
"Nope.
God's own truth. I've got nowhere else to turn, Mohammed."
He
was silent, then: "The Haluk
really did... that to you?"
"They
had help from some stupid and evil human beings. But, yeah. Haluk did
it as part of their Grand Design to take over the damn galaxy. Some
nerve, huh?"
"Motherfuckers,"
he said, shaking his head. "It's for real? This alien plot?"
"It's
a nightmare, and it's for real."
"Jeez."
"I
gave Mama Fanchon the opal ring," I said. "When we get to
the place in Cabbagetown, I'll see that you get some money."
"Okay,"
he said softly. "I'll take you where you want to go. You
ruin
those blueberry fools, hear me?"
"That's
my plan," I told him. "Now let's eat."
Together,
we went back to the dim corridor where the others were already
sitting at the kitchen table.
——
The next
day, after Mama Fanchon checked me out again with the diagnosticon
and gave her reluctant approval, we were ready to leave. Santa Claus
had supplied us with a pack of food and bottles of water. He'd even
refilled my flask with some of his own brandy. I wore my dark track
suit over heavy polypro underwear from the hope chest, the new
car-coat, the Blue Jays baseball cap, and gloves. Mohammed was all in
black. He still had my Ivanov and the magazine pouch of stun-bolts. I
was armed with the exotic switchblade and the sedative injector.
(Mama didn't want that for her hospital. She preferred to use
minidosers, which were much more common and easier to steal than
high-pressure drug cartridges.)
The
whole Grange Place Tribe decided to accompany Mohammed and me as far
as the old Spadina Street utility tunnel, which was to be our
principal route south. Santa Claus led the way with his blaster. The
girl runaway named Leah was at his side, lighting the way with a
brilliant argon lantern. Most of the others had glolamps. Mama
placidly smoked her pipe, walking with the Thrown Away Omnivore
executive called Johnny Guitar, who strummed his instrument in solemn
march tempo:
brrrump, brrrump, brump-brump-brump. Before long
we were all whistling "Colonel Bogey."
Weirdly,
other troglodytic figures carrying lights of their own emerged from
shadowy side tunnels to join us as we moved through the debris-strewn
Dundas West concourse. When we reached the utility tunnel, a crowd of
almost fifty people gathered around me, smiling and shyly wishing me
good luck. I was astonished and deeply touched.
"The
word got around," Santa Claus explained. "Mohammed never
could keep his mouth shut. These other folks ... they heard you were
a Throwaway, heard what the Haluk did to you. Most of them know how
it feels to have a good life, then wake up one day to find the
universe turned upside down."
So I made
a little speech of my own, thanking them, making some wild promises
that were greeted with disbelieving hoots and spatters of applause.
Then the Dark Path people began to wander away.
Mama
Fanchon kissed me on the cheek and slipped something into my hand.
"Here's what you wanted, Helly. My pocket phone. Take it with
you. Not too many of these down here. Most of us haven't much need of
them, but sometimes other tribes call me when a person's really sick
or hurt bad."
"I
can't take this," I protested. "Let me make my call now,
right here."
"I
don't think that would be wise. Wait till you're in Cab-bagetown,
after you've checked the place for a stakeout. You'll want to be sure
your friend is at home—and I'd also suggest that you give fair
warning about your big surprise." She turned to Mohammed and
spoke sternly. "And
you won't take any money from Helly!
Not a single dollar."
He
shrugged. "I'll bring back your phone."
——
The
journey was long, tedious, dirty, cold, and frequently dangerous. Our
convoluted route covered over eight kilometers and took seventeen
hours. I was strongly reminded of my trek through the caves of
Cravat, several years earlier. But there had been no human crazies in
that little planet's underworld; Branson Elgar and his homicidal crew
had been extremely sane, and the Haluk hiding in the Cravat caverns
were unexpectedly lacking in malice.
On
Toronto's Dark Path, there were malicious denizens galore. I never
would have gotten to Cabbagetown without Mohammed.
He knew
exactly how to calm nervous tribes ready to kill any
stranger—especially one that looked like an alien—who
entered their territory. Mention of Mama Fanchon's name turned them
from enemies to cautious allies. The roving gangs of well-armed
robbers and sex criminals infesting undefended no-man's-land regions
would have been more of a challenge; luckily, we didn't encounter
large groups of outlaws during the southbound leg of our trip.
Small
groups and loners, yes.
A pair of
knife-wielding muggers sprang at us out of the dark when we were
halfway down the Spadina tunnel, just above King Street. Mohammed
stunned them neatly, and after fettering them with the plastic wrist
restraints I'd taken from the Haluk guards, he called the nearest
tribe on Mama Fanchon's phone and coolly asked for "garbage
disposal."
I didn't
ask what that meant.
We
continued on. A few minutes later a third robber dropped on me from a
ceiling beam in the ruined King Street subway station. We grappled
while my young companion danced around waving the pistol, afraid to
shoot for fear of hitting me. The thug was a raving crankhead, the
drug giving him almost superhuman strength. I finally thumbed his
eyes and he turned me loose, giving Mohammed his chance. He plugged
my frenzied attacker with three darts.
"That's
usually fatal, you know," I told him when I managed to catch my
breath. "Not that I'm complaining."
"Then
I guess we don't have to bother the disposal folks. The rats'11 take
care of him." Mohammed helped himself to the late
bandido's
money and wristwatch before resuming his interrupted guide
duties.
Our
narrowest escape happened hours later, down near the Inner Harbor,
almost directly beneath what had once been Galapharma Tower. I
presumed the structure now contained Rampart's Toronto headquarters,
or would very shortly. In either case, the place offered me no
refuge.
Au contraire ...
After a
strenuous crawl through an abandoned sewer, we had come to a very old
masonry culvert, part of some antiquated stream-diversion system
buried deep under the old quay. The tall arched tunnel was half full
of fast-moving black water. By that time I was exhausted, since we'd
been on the go with hardly a letup for nearly eight hours.
I rested
on a wide ledge with a lantern perched beside me, while Mohammed
searched with his flashlight for the improvised bridge over the
stream that existed in Dark Path folklore—and also, we hoped,
in reality.
Suddenly,
a pack of hideously diseased scavengers came rushing out of the
darkness, screaming like wildcats, intent on separating us from our
possessions. I think they were human, but the few glimpses I caught
of them in the lamplight were inconclusive. We fought. I threw four
of the smelly varmints into the rushing water, where they either
drowned or ended up dog-paddling in Lake Ontario. Mohammed used the
last of his Ivanov darts subduing the other five.
We finally
found the makeshift bridge, crossed over, and entered the Queen's
Quay Dark Path. It was an abandoned goods-delivery system that once
served waterfront buildings, now inhabited only by rats. They minded
their own business and so did we, traveling eastward for three
miserable kilometers through passages partially flooded with icy
water. We nearly perished from hypothermia before finding a friendly
tribe of genuine Indians, Throwaways from Infinitum, the gambling and
entertainment colossus, near the Parliament Street junction. They let
us dry out in front of their space heaters and gave us hot food and
coffee. My Halukoid appearance didn't seem to bother them in the
least.
The last
part of the trip was anticlimactic, 1,500 meters of dry storm
drains—we were still beneath the force-field umbrella—cramped
utility conduits with snarls of ancient fiberoptic and electrical
cable, and the walled-off subbasements of vanished public housing
units.
We arrived
in Cabbagetown shortly before midnight, emerging through a drain
grate into a small park.
"The
town house you want is in the next block," Mohammed informed me.
"Make your phone call."
I sat in
deep shadows with my back against a tree trunk. The little park was
forlorn and deserted, its shrubs leafless, the flowerbeds empty, and
the fountain turned off for the winter.
Mohammed
crouched beside me. "Go ahead," he urged. "What are
you waiting for? I want to get home tonight."
I
hesitated because I was afraid. The long, perilous journey hadn't
terrified me, but the prospect of making this phone call did. I
stalled. "How do you expect to get back to Grange Place tonight?
It's too far. Too dangerous."
"Damn
right it is, man. But only if you take the Dark Path. I'm going to
walk crosstown on the
surface, right down Dundas Street for
three klicks, till I get to Spadina and our regular bolt-hole. It'll
be a breeze, now that I don't have a fuckin' Haluk fugitive in tow.
Make the phone call!"
Dex
Assistance gave me the code. I tapped it in, keeping the viewer
inactive. Got an answer and a face.
"Yes?
Who is this, please?"
"It's
Helly," I whispered. "I need to see you immediately."
"Helly?"
"Please
listen. I'm in trouble. Serious trouble. You know what—what's
going on in the Assembly. The free-for-all about the three hundred
new Haluk planets. My own close involvement as Rampart syndic."
"Yes.
But I don't see—"
"The
demiclone spy accusations. They're true. The—The person using
my name, giving statements to the media, is an impostor. A clone.
I've been kept prisoner by the Haluk for seven months while this
other man has used my identity to discredit Efrem Sontag's
investigation."
A
protracted silence. "This isn't... some sick practical joke?"
"No.
It's true. I only escaped from the Haluk tower a few days ago. I've
been hiding in the Dark Path. Under the city."
"Good
God. And you want—"
"Your
help. Please. There's no one else I can turn to. No one who would
believe me."
"Your
voice—"
"I
know. I've been through hell. It's not the only thing about me that's
changed. But I can prove who I am. Here's a secret password:
Kashagawigamog."
"The
lake where you almost drowned when you were five years old."
"Where
Eve saved my life, then beat the shit out of me for disobeying orders
and going out in the canoe alone, without a life vest. I told you
about it when we visited that art gallery in Haliburton."
Another
interminable pause, then: "All right. I'll listen to what you
have to say. Come to my town house. Do you know where it is?"
"Yes.
I'm only a block away. I'll use the back door. You wouldn't want your
neighbors to see me coming in."
"Why
not?"
"Trust
me."
"Very
well. I'll leave the rear garden gate unlocked. Come through the
alley."
"There's
something I have to warn you about. My appearance. I don't want to
frighten you, but—"
"I
don't frighten easily. You of all people ought to know that."
"Yes.
I'm sorry. But I'd better show you what was done to me by the Haluk.
I'm not the man you remember." I activated my viewer pickup.
"Jesus
Christ," Joanna whispered.
"They
demicloned a Haluk, gave him my DNA. This— This change is a
side effect of the genen process."
Her eyes
were full of sudden tears. "Oh, Helly!"
My
name. She used my name. "It
is me, Joanna. I need you so
very much."
"Come,"
my former wife said.
So I did.
Chapter 8
I jogged
wearily toward Joanna's place with my baseball cap pulled low,
praying I wouldn't meet another night-runner who'd notice my filthy
athletic clothes and outlandish features. I figured the chance of
Haluk agents physically watching her place was vanishingly remote.
More subtle varieties of spying were possible—even satellite
eyes. But I'd had no relationship with Joanna for years, and I was
fairly certain that the aliens would have discounted her as someone
I'd call on for help. They'd be concentrating their surveillance
efforts on Karl Nazarian and my other associates, on my family, and
on Efrem Sontag.
That
night, the pleasant streets of Cabbagetown seemed almost deserted.
Paving-stone sidewalks, lamp posts that simulated gaslights, big old
trees. A two-meter-high ornamental iron fence surrounded each row of
town houses. The locked gates in front of each unit had security
boxes with viewscreens. Following inner-city guidelines, there was no
private hopper pad anywhere nearby. You didn't fly into affluent
enclaves like Cabbagetown; you drove or cycled or walked, and you
didn't leave your vehicle parked overnight in front of the house,
either.
There were
six large town houses in Joanna's row, built in the gracious style of
the previous century—gray clapboard facades, heavy white window
frames, overhanging eaves, attic dormers on the third floor, multiple
chimneys, little sheltering porticos with hanging lanterns above each
front door. The houses shared a two-story mews in the rear that had
garage space for twelve cars below, exercise and hobby rooms
upstairs.
I jogged
around onto a side street and entered the alley. The mews building
sported brass carriage lamps. A single gate beside it gave admittance
to the communal garden. The telltale on its card-lock box glowed
green, and when I tried the gate, it swung open silently.
Her back
porch light hadn't been turned on and the lower part of her house was
dark. Blinds were drawn in two illuminated rooms on the second floor.
I crept up
the steps. Before I could touch the bell pad, the door opened and I
saw a tall, slender woman silhouetted against indirect light from an
inner hall. She wore a tightly belted crimson velvet robe over a
high-necked white nightgown. Her blond hair was still long, as I had
remembered it. Freed from its chignon, a single glossy braid fell
over her right breast.
She stared
at me, austere features shadowed, eyes wide and touched with twin
sparks from the carriage lights, lips parted in a soundless cry of
trepidation. My grotesque face seen on a small phone viewer lacked
the impact of solid, atrocious reality.
"It's
me, Joanna," I said gently. "It really is me."
"Yes.
Come in." Her voice was steady. She stepped aside as I entered
and then locked the door. For a few seconds we stood still, studying
each other in the half-light like cornball characters from an old
grade-B science-fiction movie: the attractive woman in her
nightclothes and the monstrous alien intruder.
Then she
said, "Phew! Why didn't you tell me you'd been hiding in a
sewer?" Before I could reply, she strode off briskly. "Come
with me. Before we do anything else, you've got to have a long, hot
shower."
I
followed meekly through the kitchen and up the back staircase to a
sumptuous bathroom on the second floor. "Put those nasty clothes
of yours into the valet and use the disinfect setting. You'd better
program a serious germkiller bodyscrub, too. The shower has an
enormous spritz selection—although I can't say I've ever had to
use the industrial-strength option myself. There are guest toiletries
in the large cabinet. Toothbrushes and the like." She paused and
gave me a quizzical look. "Umm ... you
do still have
teeth?"
I burst
out laughing and bared them in an un-Haluk grin. They felt like my
originals, even though the spaces between them appeared to have
expanded. Then I playfully stuck my tongue out at her as well, and
instantly regretted it. Earlier, I'd vaguely felt that the organ was
a tad abnormal. Now the mirrors in the bright bathroom revealed that
it had become obscenely long and agile. I could easily touch the
underside of my chin with it. And it was colored a rich plum-purple.
"Holy
shit!" said Joanna DeVet, Morehouse Professor of Political
Science. She backed away from me into the hall. When I made a piteous
noise she forced herself to smile. "It's not such a bad tongue.
Rather handsome, as those things go. Can you unfurl it like a
chameleon and catch flies?"
"I'll
have to give that a try one of these days," I said wretchedly.
"I'm
sorry, Helly. I shouldn't joke about it. It's just so ..."
"Alien,"
I said softly.
"Yes,"
she agreed. "Are you hungry? Can you eat human food?"
"My
last meal was rat stew, dished out by feral Native Americans living
in waterfront catacombs. I'm famished."
"I
have half a tandoori chicken with spicy yogurt sauce, nan bread, and
rozkoz-poppyseed coffee cake from Granowska's." Joanna hated to
cook, but she knew the best takeout and home-delivery places in the
city.
I said,
"The chicken sounds just great."
"Is
there anything else you need, dear?"
She said
it so sweetly, with such natural, heartfelt concern, that I felt my
throat tighten and my eyes begin to fog.
Oh,
Joanna. Why had I been such a self-centered fool?
But there
was no time now for sentimentality. In spite of her composed
demeanor, my former wife was undoubtedly in a state of profound
emotional turmoil. I had to keep her calm if she was going to be of
any use to me.
Use.
That was
the only reason I'd come to her, right? Not for asylum and solace,
but for help in resuming my quixotic crusade against the Haluk. So
I'd better get on with it...
"Does
your phone have Phase XII encryption capability?" I asked.
"Yes.
I've never used
that, either." She sighed. "I
suppose we're about to go into serious cloak-and-dagger mode."
"Call
the Interstellar Commerce Secretariat Forensic Division. Ask for the
emergency voice mail of Chief Superintendent Beatrice Mangan. She's
the head of the ICS molecular biology department and an old colleague
of mine who knows all about the Haluk demiclone threat."
"Yes,
I know who she is. She was one of the most impressive witnesses
during Delegate Sontag's open committee sessions, testifying about
the demiclone corpse."
I went on.
"Show your face and transmit your iris ID, then leave a message
asking Bea to call you at home as soon as possible, max encrypt."
"Do I
mention your name?"
"Absolutely
not. You're going to have to be my mouthpiece for a while until I
gain credibility. Somehow, without telling Bea anything about me or
my situation, get her to come to your house early tomorrow. It's
imperative that she not be followed, and I don't want her to risk
coming at night. The Haluk are certain to have her under
surveillance. Ask her to bring a portable genetic assay kit with her,
and a phone with a datalink to ICS."
"I
see where you're going. Your DNA will identify you positively."
"Even
better. Bea can confirm that the Haluk embellishments in my genome
are the result of an illegal demicloning procedure."
"What
will you do then—go to the media?"
"Eventually.
There are more urgent matters to take care of. I've been in a
dystasis tank for seven months, and I need to get back up to speed on
current events before I make any drastic moves. For that I could use
your help, Joanna. If you're willing."
"Of
course. I have a large library of reference materials here. I can
provide you with whatever information you need."
"As
soon as Bea Mangan is ready to vouch for me, I intend to show myself
to Delegate Efrem Sontag and my close associate Karl Nazarian—perhaps
to Eve and my father as well. We'll work together to decide the best
way of blitzing the blueberries. Don't worry, we won't use your house
as our command post. I won't endanger you, any more than I have
already by simply coming here."
"I'm
willing to take risks, Helly," she said simply. "If it will
help you."
Her
unexpected loyalty struck me mute, shamed me.
"Joanna.
Thank you. But I've got to get out of Toronto. The capital's a hotbed
of Haluk. Everyone knows that their embassy staff and trade
delegation number in the thousands. And I'd bet the ranch that a
sizable percentage of them are out beating the bushes for me right
now."
"What
about the Haluk impostor using your identity? He's been very
plausible, you know. I certainly would never have doubted him."
"The
active Fake Helly demiclone isn't an alien. He's a transmuted human.
The Haluk made two copies of me."
"Don't
you want to expose him at once?"
"I'll
need help blowing the whistle on this guy. He's more than a Haluk
apologist and secret agent—he's dangerously insane."
"You
know that for a fact?"
"Oh,
yes. And I'm not the only one who thinks so."
"Who
in the world is this monster of depravity?"
"Alistair
Drummond, the former Gala CEO. He didn't die in Arizona."
"Good
heavens!" She thought about it for a moment. "How ...
absolutely perfect."
"I'm
sure the Haluk thought so, too, when Drummond presented his ingenious
little scheme to their leadership. They also realized that the man is
a ticking timebomb, and planned to replace him with a more
trustworthy Fake Helly as soon as possible. A Haluk demiclone. That
won't happen now. My second clone is very, very dead." I
couldn't help the grim satisfaction in my voice.
Joanna
gave me a look. Political scientists aren't slow to grasp unpleasant
tactical realities. "So the Haluk are stuck with Drummond, who
no doubt has an agenda of his own."
"Damned
right he does. When he tricked Eve and the Rampart board into making
him president of the Concern, he put himself in a position to do
immense damage. With the Galapharma consolidation, there are now
nearly six thousand planets under Rampart control. Drummond has
access to databases for all of them. He can control their starship
fleets, their internal and external defenses, even their management
rosters. For all we know, he might have put Haluk demiclone moles
into top executive positions in Rampart Tower and on significant
numbers of Rampart worlds in both the Perseus Spur and the Orion Arm.
He's had plenty of time. Personnel reshuffling during the
consolidation would have made his actions seem logical. I'm sure he's
also used his position as Corporate Syndic to promote the Haluk cause
effectively among the Assembly Delegates."
She
nodded. "He's been very ardent in his defense of the aliens,
personally appealing, utterly convincing. Certainly no one would ever
suspect him of being—" She touched the side of her head.
"A
flaming nutcase? Hardly. When he organized the Rampart takeover
conspiracy, he was motived by hubris and overweening ambition. Now, I
suspect he's out for revenge—against me, against Rampart,
perhaps even against the entire human race. We can't simply discredit
Drummond and expect him to quietly surrender. He'll find ways to
fight back the minute he realizes he and his Haluk allies are being
seriously threatened. There may be only one practical way to deal
with him."
"I
see." And she did, too. "You and your friends are going to
be facing some tricky realpolitik decisions. The Assembly vote on the
new Haluk planets is expected very soon. Perhaps within two weeks."
"We've
got to shoot that bill down, Joanna." I spoke with desperate
urgency. "The aliens can't be allowed to bring vast numbers of
colonists into the Spur. With Drummond's help, they'd find a way to
seize all of Zone 23. And that's not even the worst of it. The Haluk
have a secret base in a Sagittarian asteroid. Last April their
pirates were using it to hijack Sheltok transactinide carriers. By
now the damn place might have been expanded into a staging point for
an all-out attack against our starship fuel supply."
"Helly,
this is appalling! You'll have to go to the media at once.
Concentrating your efforts on the Assembly members themselves might
not be effective. The Hundred Concerns want the Haluk colony bill to
pass. A majority of the Delegates will bow to their pressure unless
the constituency absolutely forces them to do otherwise."
"Through
media exposure."
"Yes.
The Commonwealth constitution has provisions for a citizen referendum
under certain circumstances. But the Assembly itself must—"
I
interrupted her, suddenly overcome by a crushing fatigue that was
both physical and mental. "Later, Joanna.
Please. I
know Sontag and the others will welcome your expert advice. We'll
talk about all that tomorrow. But for now, just convince Bea Mangan
to come over here in the morning. Before I can do anything else, I
have to prove that I exist."
"I'll
call her at once." Impulsively, she extended her hand. I took it
very carefully in my inhuman blue one, bowed my head over it in an
archaic gesture of courtesy that seemed instinctive, and released it.
Joanna
blinked, then let her gaze fall. "I'll bring the food to my
little sitting room at the end of the hall." She turned away and
went down the back stairs.
I closed
the bathroom door and stripped, inserting my grimy clothes and
footgear into the valet machine as she'd instructed me. Then I
stepped into the shower and did my best to wash everything away.
It didn't
work, of course.
——
She was
waiting when I padded into the sitting room in my stocking feet. The
soaked and battered Adidas hadn't survived the valet's attentions and
the car-coat was beyond salvage; but the other clothing I'd
appropriated from Dan was fresh and clean again.
A thought
of my wayward brother had flitted briefly through my mind as I
dressed. I'd wondered if the Haluk had interrogated him yet. There
was nothing he could say that would help the aliens find me, but they
might persist in the questioning anyhow. Too bad for Dan ...
"You
smell much better," Joanna remarked. "Don't tell me you
used the lavender bath oil."
"I
needed some soothing aromatherapy," I said, trying to sound
casual. "You know I always liked lavender. It makes me feel
relaxed." And horny, worse luck.
Three
couches were grouped in a U shape before a tall holoscreen. She'd
programmed an underwater scene, blue-black tropical water with a
school of gleaming opal moon-jellies rising and falling languidly
amid ghostly spires of coral. The music was strange, soft blooming
chords that might have been Olivier Messaien.
"I
like the holo," I said. "It almost reminds me of home.
Kedge-Lockaby, that is. The freesoil Perseus world where I lived.
Except the planet's sea never evolved jellyfish."
"Is
it a very beautiful place?" Joanna asked me.
"Oh,
yes."
"And
you were happy there."
"Not
at first. Later, when I got my head back together, I was very happy."
The food
waited in a covered hotdish on a low table in front of the couches. I
sat across from her, noted the unfolded vidphone sitting beside a
carafe of coffee and a bottle of Jameson whiskey.
"Bea
Mangan hasn't returned your call yet?" I inquired.
"Yes,
she did. She'll be here tomorrow morning at seven, with the genetic
assay equipment. She said she'd take a taxi from ICS Tower."
"That
should be safe enough in daylight if she takes precautions."
"Helly
... I'm afraid she guessed the truth. I'm sorry if it upsets your
plans. I never hinted—"
"It's
all right. I might have known Bea would figure it out. After all,
she's a cop."
"She
wants to talk to you right away. She said it was extremely urgent."
"Rats."
It had to be bad news. I knocked my fist against my ridged forehead,
trying vainly to jump-start my brain. Switched the phone's viewer
option off and went through the encrypt rigmarole. Bea picked up on
the first buzz.
"Beatrice
Mangan here."
"It's
Helly. The weird voice goes with the rest of my Halukoid ensemble."
"So
the aliens subjected you to the preliminary genen procedure—"
"Yes.
And I escaped. Pardon me for not doing a vis-a-vis, but I'm really
tired of being blue and hearing about it."
Her warm,
maternal face was full of sympathy. "How awful for you. I'll do
whatever I can to help. You know that."
"Thanks,
Bea. Just verify my DNA tomorrow. After that I'll be getting in touch
with Ef Sontag and some others to work out a plan of action. I
haven't decided yet whether to go to the media right away or wait a
couple of weeks to make my big revelation just before the Assembly
vote on the Haluk colonies. In either case, I'd like you to redo my
genetic profile in public, as part of the big show."
"Helly,
that's why I wanted to speak to you immediately. Joanna mentioned the
Assembly vote, too. But you won't have two weeks to prepare for it.
Ef Sontag called me earlier this evening and told me that the
Conservatives suddenly forced cloture on the Haluk colony debate.
They passed a resolution calling for a vote on Wednesday, the day
after tomorrow."
"No!"
I whispered. "No no no."
There goes
the ball game: Haluk-300, Humans-0.
Bea said,
"On Tuesday, tomorrow, Ef and his group will be allowed to
present a summary of their opposition. He asked me to appear as an
expert witness reiterating the Brown Fleece cadaver evidence. The
pro-Haluk committee will then do their own final summation. The
Speaker will call for the vote promptly at 1000 hours on Wednesday
morning."
"I
know why the debate was squelched," I said dully. "The
Haluk leadership hit the panic button after I escaped. They were
afraid they wouldn't recapture me before I blew the lid off."
"I'm
sure you're right about that. The Servant of Servants and the entire
Haluk Council of Nine are here in Toronto. I've seen them myself in
the Assembly Chamber VIP observation gallery."
"The
Servant would be in a position to add threats to the usual Haluk
lobbying efforts with the Hundred Concerns. The corporate Syndics
squeezed the pocket Delegates to force the early vote. Shit! This
probably means that a majority of the Assembly will approve the
colonies, too."
"Ef
thought so. But I think you should talk to him, Helly. He's spending
the night in Government House with his staff, working on last ditch
tactics. Perhaps—"
"Sorry.
That's a no-go. I'm totally exhausted. Too strung out to think
straight."
The
metaphoric black pit yawned in front of me, and oblivion had never
looked so appealing. I'd go into hiding, fight the impossible fight
some other day ...
But Bea
was saying, "Why don't I go to Ef early tomorrow, break the news
about your return, and ask him to come along to Professor DeVet's
house with me?"
"If
his office has a demi mole—" I objected.
"All
of Ef's people give DNA samples every week, and he has stringent
security monitoring. There's no mole. If the Haluk do have his
offices under surveillance, it can only be the crudest kind of
corridor peeping. I can get him out of there cleanly, Helly. Trust
me."
"I do
... But damn it all to hell, Bea! What can we hope to accomplish in
one day? Ef can present me to the Assembly as Exhibit A and I can
give a nice little speech. But would it really make any difference in
the voting?"
Joanna
suddenly said, "Pocket Delegates, Helly. Rampart's own."
Stupid
stupid. I didn't get it. "What?"
On the
phone, Bea echoed, "What?"
I
activated the speaker option and Joanna spoke louder.
"There
are a substantial number of Delegates beholden to Rampart now,
following the Galapharma consolidation. Those votes can be swayed if
you undercut Drummond's influence immediately, by removing him from
the syndic post and replacing him with an ally. Can't you think of
some sneaky lawyerish way of doing it so you wouldn't have to
confront the impostor himself?"
I finally
understood what she was saying. The logjam in my cerebrum exploded in
a flash of fresh hope. "Christ! If it could only work!"
I'd
persisted in thinking of Rampart as it used to be, a beleaguered
little outfit without political influence. Before the consolidation,
the Rampart worlds of Zone 23 had rated a meager four Commonwealth
Assembly votes under the complex allocation formula that took into
consideration both population and corporate worth. With Galapharma's
pocket Delegates added in, the total would now be eighty or ninety.
It might be enough—
Bea
Mangan's incredulous voice interrupted my train of thought. "Did
I hear Professor DeVet mention Alistair Drummond?"
"He's
me," I said tersely. "Fake Helly the First. There was also
a Haluk copy of me. It died. If you want the complete scoop on Asahel
in Demicloneland, I'll tell you tomorrow."
Joanna
brought us back to the point. "How does a Concern oust its
syndic?"
"According
to Rampart's bylaws," I said, "he's customarily appointed
or dismissed by the president. A simple majority vote of the Board of
Directors can also do it. Drummond is president as well as syndic and
he won't fire himself, so that leaves the board. Gunter Eckert, the
chairman, can call an emergency meeting. But I'll tell you ladies
right now that a hardheaded old businessman like Eckert won't accept
me as the real Helly unless he sees a DNA assay done right before his
eyes and then has me interrogated with a psychotronic probe."
"Then
do it," Joanna said.
I
had to laugh at her naivete. "I don't even know Gunter's
goddamned personal code! He's certainly ex-database. But that's moot.
We'll never get him to call a meeting or watch the assay because
he'll never believe that the Asahel Frost who's President of Rampart
is an impostor. He won't
want to believe it. Neither will Eve,
or my father, or any of the other directors. Because if it's true,
and the Haluk get their shit blown out of the water, Rampart stands
to lose more than any of the other Hundred Concerns. There's no one
on the board who—"
I
shut my mouth, overcome with the abrupt realization that I was wrong.
There
was someone.
"Helly?"
Bea Mangan said anxiously.
"I
just had a thought. I'll have to follow through on it. The odds are
long, but the Rampart situation might not be completely hopeless
after all. Listen, Bea. You come here tomorrow with Ef Sontag and
your genetic profiling equipment. And I'd also like you to bring a
Hogan H-18 miniaturized low-power psychotronic interrogation device."
"Of
course. I can borrow one from Enforcement. Is there anything else?"
"Pray,"
I said, and told her goodbye.
Joanna
regarded me with a puzzled expression. I said, "Give me a
minute." Then I sat still, closed my eyes, and tried to remember
a phone code, unlisted, that I'd used only once before, months ago. A
code that might mean the difference between galactic war or peace.
Got it,
you crafty blue bastard, you!
I tapped
the pads. This time I left the viewer turned on. There was no need
for extra encryption. The man I was calling had the best personal
security in the universe.
He
answered his phone, stared at me, and said, "Good God in
heaven!"
"No,
sir," I corrected him. "Helly Frost, back from a
very
bad trip. Captured by the enemy in the Sagittarius Whorl.
Demicloned and horribly transmogrified by Haluk villains. But my
Barky Hunt wasn't a fiasco. I got the answers we were looking for. Do
you want to hear about it?"
"Yes,"
said Adam Stanislawski evenly. "If you can prove you are who you
say you are." No hesitation, no emotional dithering. He weighed
Drumrnond's Helly persona against my unlikely claim and was willing
to keep an open mind! What a guy ...
"Have
you ever heard of Joanna DeVet, Morehonse Professor of Poli Sci at
Commonwealth University?"
"The
former wife of Asahel Frost. I've read several of her books. Thought
they were brilliant."
"I'm
at her house in Cabbagetown. If you come here tomorrow morning at
about 0700 hours, I'll prove who I am with a DNA test and a truth
machine. After that I'd like you to get hold of your man John
Ellington, Vice Chairman of Rampart. Have him force Gunter Eckert to
call an immediate emergency meeting of Rampart's Board of
Directors—without the participation of the individual presently
masquerading as Asahel Frost."
Stanislawski
frowned thoughtfully, then a broad smile broke over his shrewd,
guarded features. "I see. Turning the pocket Delegates, eh?"
"There
ain't no flies on you, sir. You guessed it. It was Joanna's idea."
"Is
Professor DeVet there? Let me talk to her."
I pushed
the phone in front of her. She said, "Good evening, Citizen
Stanislawski. Thank you for your kind words about my books. I'm
rather surprised, since they condemn the coercive role of business in
galactic politics. I'm even more surprised that my former husband
should have contacted you under these extreme circumstances."
"Is
it
really Helly?"
"Absolutely.
Escaped from Haluk durance vile. They cloned him."
"I'll
be damned. Tell me how to get to your house."
She did.
"Until seven tomorrow, then, citizen."
"I'm
really looking forward to it, Professor."
She ended
the call, folded the phone, and uncovered the dish of chicken.
"Eat
your food now, while it's hot. Would you like an Irish coffee? I'm
going to have one. Maybe several. It's decaf, so it won't prevent you
from sleeping." She picked up the carafe and began filling a
glass mug.
Sleep!
With my brain fumbling to process the stunning developments of the
past half hour, there was small hope of that. But I said, "Sounds
good to me, babe."
She
partially filled both mugs from the carafe, stirred in a little
sugar, added generous measures of whiskey, inverted a spoon and used
it to carefully float a layer of heavy cream on top. We lifted the
mugs and tapped them together, simultaneously murmuring, "Cheers."
Sipped, avoiding each other's eyes.
I began
picking dutifully at the food. The baked chicken was meltingly tender
and delicious, but I had no appetite. I should have made small talk,
asked about her work at Commonwealth University, her life during the
years we'd been apart.
I
couldn't. The nearness of her, the very real possibility that I'd be
killed tomorrow by alien agents or the hirelings of Alistair
Drummond—even the lingering scent of the goddamned lavender
bath oil—had cranked up my blood pressure to the point where I
didn't even trust myself to speak to the woman seated across the
table from me.
I wanted
her so much.
Goofy old
human nature has a paradoxical instinct that sometimes asserts itself
under circumstances of impending peril: before the male Neanderthal
goes out to hunt the mammoth, before the knight sallies forth against
the invincible foe, before the Sioux warrior meets the Seventh
Cavalry, before battered Blue Supercop charges blindly into the lair
of the corporate bad guys.
But
this time around my body's urgent need to reaffirm life was doomed to
frustration. If it
was only a need, and not a symptom of
something deeper ...
Seeing my
alien hands clumsily manipulating the knife and fork, painfully
conscious of the awful face that had stared back at me from the
bathroom mirror, I was prey to a burning sense of self-loathing and
despair that was only partially associated with my horrifying
appearance. I had rejected my wife out of stupid pride, denied my
feelings for her because I had been afraid, come back to her only as
a last resort.
Persons
I'd respected had told me that I had never stopped loving Joanna:
Mimo Bermudez, Matilde Gregoire, my sister Eve. I'd denied it with
all my strength, even as I kept the two wedding rings on their
platinum chain. I was still trying to deny it, now that we were
together again and the situation was hopeless.
I was no
longer a man, and yet I was.
Joanna sat
in apparent ease, bare feet crossed at the ankles, red velvet robe
falling away from her white gown, watching the drifting moon-jellies
when it became evident that I was incapable of conversation. Finally
I couldn't eat any more. She cleared the table and put the dirty
dishes into a dumbwaiter.
"Would
you like another Irish coffee, Helly?" So polite and
compassionate toward the poor freak.
"Yes,
please. No cream this time."
She handed
the cup to me but didn't resume her seat, walking instead to the
windows overlooking the street and briefly parting the drapes. "This
is a very safe part of the city, regularly patrolled and
well-equipped with security devices. I'm sure you'll be all right
staying with me."
"Just
show me the guest room," I said. "Or I can lie down here on
one of the couches."
"You're
welcome to stay as long as you like," she insisted. "If
we're careful, there's no reason why any of your enemies should
suspect you're here. I'd also be happy to help with your ...
appointments at Rampart Tower and the Assembly tomorrow."
"I
couldn't possibly jeopardize your safety or impose on you any more
than I already have."
"But
where will you go?" She seemed genuinely concerned. "Helly,
there'll be a media frenzy! And you'll be in danger from Drummond and
the Haluk, no matter how the vote goes."
"I
have a hiding place in mind," I said brusquely. "Don't
worry about me." After I'd done what I could in Toronto, I'd go
to the place I'd thought of earlier. My first idea had been to
retreat to Karl Nazarian's fortified cottage; but I'd rejected that
idea instantly. It would be one of the first places my enemies would
look.
And Karl
might have already gone the way of Jake Silver ...
I drank
down the last of the coffee, gabbling about how grateful I was to
Joanna for her kindness. If she wanted to do more, she could provide
me with a file of news magazines and holovid newscasts. I'd spend the
night skimming them, since I doubted I'd be able to sleep.
"Poor
Helly," she said, smiling. "I'll gladly do that for you if
you wish. But there are better ways to relax." She untied her
robe, slipped it off, and tossed it onto a chair. Then she began to
undo the long golden braid of her hair.
The coffee
cup almost fell out of my hand. I said, "Joanna."
She said,
"My dear. I've missed you so very much."
"No,"
I moaned. Alien flesh, human hormones. Oh, God. I was coming alive
again. They were.
"Let
me see you." She had turned off the room lamps with a snap of
her fingers and was undoing the front buttons of her demure white
nightdress one by one. It was made of some delicate opaque fabric,
with soft lace at the wrists and collar. The only illumination came
from the opalescent sea creatures that seemed to float in the virtual
water behind her. I could see the thrust of her nipples, her shining
eyes.
"I'm
hideous," I said hoarsely. "Changed. You don't understand."
She shook
her head, the smile widening. "You're intriguing. A fantasy come
alive. Don't tell me you've never thought about such things. All
human beings have."
The gown
fell to the floor. Her wonderful body was the same as always, pale
and glowing, with an ash-blond ecu that matched her long hair. She
lowered the zipper of my track suit, removed the jacket, slipped her
cool hands under my T-shirt and lifted it.
"Oh!"
Not revolted, interested. Caressing my chest's bizarre cobalt
trapunto ridges, the twin rows of vestigial mammaries like ornate
golden buttons on a hussar's coat. "What in the world are
these?"
"Fuckin'
extras," I muttered. "The damned Haluk have litters."
She pulled the T-shirt off. "And that's not the worst of it.
Please don't—"
She was
fitting her hands around my stupid wasp waist. "That's amazing!
How in the world does it accommodate your diaphragm and digestive
tract?"
"I
don't know! Joanna, for the love of God—"
She took
my face in both hands, drew it down and kissed me, long and slow,
savoring the alien juices of my mouth, accepting the responding
thrusts of my awful tongue, crushing her body eagerly against mine,
feeling my erection but still not aware of the ultimate indignity.
"Now,"
she said at last, drawing me to the large central couch. Her eyes
were like stars. "My love. My dearest alien love."
Despairing,
desperate, on the brink, I said, "Look!"
Tore off
the rest of my clothing and let her see me naked.
"Two?"
she whispered in disbelief. "But how—"
"I
don't know!" I roared, feeling tears of frustrated lust start
from my eyes. "I don't
know!"
"Then
we'll have to experiment," she said. Her face was radiant and
her touch gentle. "The entire ensemble is more streamlined.
Elegant. Very different, of course, but actually quite beautiful."
"Beautiful....?"
"Hush
now," she said, and began the experimentation.
——
I crept
out of her bed shortly after 0500 hours, leaving her deep in sleep,
and had a quick shower. After collecting my clothes from the sitting
room and putting them on, I took the phone down to the kitchen to
make my call to Karl Nazarlan.
Once again
I cut out the video option. Before entering his personal code, I
programmed an emergency voice-mail override and activated his ringer.
Then I held my breath as the buzzing began.
Be there,
old friend. Don't be dead because of me.
His face
appeared, puffy from slumber and mad as a hornet. "Who's there?
Do you know what friggin' time it is?"
I said,
"It's five twenty-two on a dark November morning."
"Show
your face, you inconsiderate bastard!" he raged. "Hector,
if this is you calling from that goddamned deer-camp of yours, I'm
going to wring your bloody black neck."
"It's
not Hector." I tried to make my voice sound as normal as
possible. "Engage Phase XII encryption, Karl. Do it now. Someone
might be listening."
I heard
cursing, some of it in a language that might have been Armenian, then
the signals indicating that the call was secure.
"Well?"
Karl snarled. "If you know me, you know that nobody ever,
ever
taps my phone. Who the hell is this?"
"It's
Helly Frost. The real one, not the demiclone fake who's been
masquerading as me for the past half year."
"The
real—"
"Asahel
Ethan Frost, alias Helmut Icicle, alias Cap'n Helly, the
fish-flickin' fool of Eyebrow Cay, freesoil planet Kedge-Lockaby,
Zone 23, Perseus Spur."
"Oh,
my God!"
"The
Haluk bagged me out in Sagittarius and made a Helly demiclone. I
finally escaped from the xenos a few days ago—and I'm ringy,
riled, and swoll up with mad like a chuckwalla lizard trapped in a
fuckin' hobnail boot!"
"It's
you, all right," Karl conceded after a brief, incredulous
silence. "Now that I think about it, your double never did quite
come across as a proper cowboy."
"I'll
bet. The fictitious gent hi question is none other than our old chum,
Alistair Drummond."
"Christ
on a crutch! They turned Drummond into a demi of you?"
"Yeah.
I'm going to have a devil of a job taking him down, too. But I'll do
it or die trying."
"That
sneaking bastard! He did an incredible job. Played you to the hilt. I
don't mind telling you it nearly broke my heart when it seemed you
were repudiating all the evidence against the Haluk that we sweated
blood for. I had to figure you'd sold out to protect Rampart's bottom
line. You want to tell me the whole story?"
"Later.
I need your help, Karl. Right now, if you can manage it."
"Where
you calling from?"
"I'm
at my ex-wife's place in Toronto." I gave him the address, told
hun about the lack of adjacent hopper pads, pleaded with him to come
as soon as possible, as clandestinely as possible, in a ground
vehicle.
"No
problem at all. My girlfriend has a catering business. I'll borrow
one of her vans."
"Girlfriend?"
Karl had been a solitary widower for as long as I'd known him.
"Lots
of things happened while you were floating. Some good, some not so
good. What do you need? Weapons?"
"An
Ivanov Squire will suffice. I also need a phone primed with a new
personal code—use the name Helmut Icicle. Get into Rampart's
database, retrieve all my old dex listings and links, and install
them in the new phone."
"Uh-huh.
Anything else?"
"A
set of full soft body armor, size XLT; a regular Anonyme anorak in
XL; a pair of lightweight mittens; a sturdy pair of boots, size
twelve medium. Oh, yes. Another set of Joru robes. No makeup or
fright-wig necessary this time."
I told him
briefly what I hoped to accomplish that day at Rampart Tower and at
the Commonwealth Assembly. He uttered a disappointed expletive when I
told him how tight the time frame was for scrubbing the new Haluk
colonies, and wanted to know how the interactive citizen vote could
be invoked.
"I
don't know that much about it. You can ask Joanna to explain the
thing when you get here. Watch your back en route. The Haluk probably
have had you under surveillance for several days, ever since I broke
out of their embassy in Macpherson Tower."
"The
day I can't slip a tail is the day I get fitted for my halo and start
taking harp lessons. Is there anything else I can bring you?"
"No,
but there are a couple of other things you can do. Do you remember
the report I sent you on the Sheltok carrier pirate attack?"
"The
Haluk corsairs operating in the Sag? Sure. I certified it."
"Can
you access it quickly and send a copy to Ef Sontag's office?"
He didn't
reply immediately. Then: "Yes, I can do that. What else?"
"After
today's action, I'm going to hide out for a little while until things
cool off. I'll need a fast, well-armed hopper. I'd like you to
requisition one of Rampart's big Garrisons—"
"Sorry,"
Karl said. "Can't do that. Your alter ego cost me my job. A
couple of weeks before you supposedly returned from the death-traps
of Sagittarius and turned into a raving capitalist, I came down with
a mysterious virus that the Rampart medics couldn't cure. I was
bounced from my vice-presidency with a nice pension that I never
thought I'd live to spend. Big surprise! When I went to an
independent physician for treatment, the deadly bug turned up its
toes. How do you like that shit? Fake Helly and his friends were
clearing the decks."
That
explained his hesitation about the Sheltok report. He'd have to hack
it out of the Rampart database, along with my phone files. I had no
doubt that he'd do the job immaculately.
"I
suppose Lotte, Cassius, and Hector were deep-sixed along with you,"
I said.
"Correct.
They're all living in the area, retired and bored stiff. You got
something in mind?"
"I'll
need the entire staff of your old Department of Special Projects
immediately—provided I can pull off a certain ploy over at
Rampart this morning. Put your folks on alert, but warn them it's
gonna be balls-to-the-walls this time. I suspect Rampart may be
infested with other demiclones besides Fake Helly. You and your gang
may have to extract them, and the job just might begin this
afternoon."
"Christ.
Okay, I'll get on it. Anything else?"
"Can
you get hold of any kind of hopper at all?"
"Cassius
has a Tupo he keeps at Toronto Island Airport. Kind of slow and not
armed. I'm sure he'd—"
Joanna had
come into the kitchen and was listening shamelessly.
I said,
"Get it if you can, but I really need that other stuff. Come as
soon as possible. We'll sort everything out when you get here."
"Okay.
It'll be damned good to see you again, Helly."
"Oh,
no it won't," I said, and hit the End pad of my phone.
Joanna was
wearing jeans, a metallic gold turtleneck, and a loosely knit white
sweater with a shawl collar.
"You
didn't show yourself to your friend?"
"Not
everyone thinks the Haluk form is beautiful."
"All
of you isn't," she said, smiling slyly. "Only the
essentials."
"Well,
Karl Nazarian is a tough old buzzard, but I still want to reintroduce
myself to him tactfully. That goes for our other guests as well. I
may need your assistance."
"Oh,
my. Then you'd better strengthen my resolve by plying me with a pot
of strong hot coffee. You do remember how to make it? If not, I'm
open to other inducements."
"Are
you, indeed," I murmured. "Let's induce."
A taxi
carrying Beatrice Mangan and Efrem Sontag arrived shortly after
seven. As we had arranged it, I lurked in the upstairs sitting room
while Joanna gave Bea and the Delegate coffee, peppermint tea, and
muffins with Bonne Maman black cherry preserves. After about ten
minutes Joanna brought Bea up with her equipment to do the DNA test.
The astonishment of my former ICS colleague was brief and her
interest in my exotic body entirely clinical.
Joanna
stood by during the blood-drawing and cursory physical exam. I
absolutely refused to strip down.
"Damn,"
said Bea Mangan. Then she smiled at Joanna.
I
swear Bea
knew. How do women do that...?
Working
with her impressive machine on the table in front of the blank
holoscreen, Bea quickly developed a genetic profile from my
biosample, then compared it with the one in her ICS files, studying
screen after screen of esoteric data.
"Fascinating!
It's you all right, Helly, but overlaid with suppressing sequences
from your late Haluk demiclone. You're a genetic palimpsest, my man.
A human parchment with the original writing not quite erased, written
over with something terribly new."
Joanna
laughed appreciatively. "What a cogent metaphor."
"I
hate scholarly jokes," I growled, "particularly when I'm
the butt. Can a layman make sense of this analysis? Will we be able
to use it to prove my identity to people like Ef Son-tag and Adam
Stanislawski, who don't know anything about advanced biology?"
"Stanislawski?"
Bea said. "You
have been busy." "He'll be here
any minute, and so will Karl." "Oh, dear," Joanna
said. "I hope they're not hungry. Bea and Ef ate the last of the
muffins, and there's not much else in the house."
"Hospitality,"
I muttered, "is the least of our worries." Bea did
something with the machine. "Look here, then. We start over.
Enter Original Helly's DNA,
comme fa. Now enter Halukoid
Helly's DNA,
comme ca. Tap the correlation pad, then hit
pr6cis,
et voila! Go ahead, do it yourself." She walked
me through it. At the end the readout said:
——
POSITIVE MATCH PLUS 1623 ANOMALOUS CODING
SEQUENCES SUBSTITUTED FOR PORTIONS OF NORMALLY NONCODING GENETIC
MATERIAL.
DO YOU WISH CODON-BY-CODON BREAKDOWN
OF ANOMALIES? Y/N.
——
I
told it n.
"Looks
good, Bea. Thank you. Can I keep the machine with me today while I
confer with some people?"
"You
aren't getting rid of me that easily," she said. "If you
hope to use that data to convince others of your identity, you'll
need a live expert witness to vouch for it. Otherwise you might as
well be demonstrating a video game. I volunteer my unimpeachable
authority for as long as you need me. I'll operate the psychotronic
device, too, if you like."
"Bea
... there's no way I can say how grateful I am."
"Then
don't," Bea said. "Are we ready for Sontag's
show-and-tell?"
"I'd
rather wait until Stanislawski shows up. It'll save time, maybe even
reinforce plausibility. We won't wait for Karl Nazarian. He has some
necessary items to assemble and it might take him a while. You and
Joanna go down and keep Ef company. Show him the test results. I want
to sit here and pull some ideas together."
"Of
course," Bea said.
They left
me alone. I'd already been briefed by Joanna on events of the past
half year as we ate our small breakfast, following the inducements.
Seeing holovids of "myself" had been bad enough. But I was
even more shocked at how quickly the Haluk had moved to insinuate
themselves into the Commonwealth economy, dismayed at how readily
their reassurances of goodwill had been accepted, in spite of Ef
Sontag's efforts to sound the alarm. Not even Brown Fleece's
demiclone corpse had significantly swayed public opinion against the
Haluk. The Concerns had produced experts of their own who
contradicted Bea's evidence.
Ef and his
committee had done their best. Unfortunately, the fact remained that
the blue aliens were very good for business, and the Hundred Concerns
were fearful of rocking the prosperity boat. Their pocket Delegates
would vote on the Haluk colonies as they were told to, unless I could
unleash a groundswell of citizen opposition in time to make a
difference.
I began to
dictate to a small e-book. Doing my best to remember incriminating
remarks made by the two Haluk leaders as they stood in front of my
dystasis tank. Trying to recall details of Barky Tregarth's story,
Dolores da Gama's spiteful boasts, and the Sheltok skipper's damning
admissions of Haluk piracy being swept under the rug by nervous
Concern management.
The front
doorbell rang.
I looked
out the window, saw a little red Honda Civic parked in front of the
town house, and assumed that Karl had changed his mind and acquired
another set of wheels. About ten minutes later Joanna came up to the
sitting room.
"Adam
Stanislawski, the richest man in the galaxy, has arrived. Both he and
Ef Sontag have accepted the proof of your identity. You won't have to
submit to the truth machine on their behalf. On stage, Blue Boy. The
dress rehearsal audience is waiting."
With her
leading, I went down to the kitchen. Ef and Adam and Bea were sitting
at the table, where cups of coffee and tea shared space with forensic
apparatus.
Gasps at
my entrance. The two men sat still as statues.
"Good
morning, all," I said mildly. "Thanks for coming and thanks
for believing. I'm sure you're curious about the circumstances that
resulted in my physical change. In just a few minutes I'll satisfy
your curiosity and tell the whole story. But first: I hope no one is
in need of a defibrillator."
Strained
chuckles.
"No?
Excellent. There are two principal objectives I hope to accomplish
today, with your help. The first is the removal of a demiclone agent,
loyal to the Haluk, who has-been taking my place as President of
Rampart Concern and Corporate Syndic. Adam Stanislawski has pledged
to help me accomplish this. When this impostor is deposed by the
Board of Directors, I hope to have Vice-Chairman John Ellington, the
Macrodur stakeholding representative, elected syndic in his place. He
has the stature—and the motivation—necessary to pressure
Rampart's so-called pocket Delegates into a one-eighty-degree
switch."
Ef Sontag
said, "Are you certain this new syndic will obey orders?"
Adam
Stanislawski laughed. "John will do as I say."
"And
you're certain," Joanna said, "that John
is the man
you think he is."
"All
of my employees have been required to take DNA tests every week,"
Stanislawski said. "Delegate Sontag's open committee sessions
describing demiclone infiltration scared the liver out of me. I
instituted the policy at the beginning of September." The
Macrodur chairman's blue eyes did their friendly twinkle thing. "And
before you ask—I have not excluded myself from the testing.
Even though I haven't heard Kelly's story about his latest exploits,
I've decided to accept his thesis that a vast Haluk conspiracy
exists, and that it poses an immediate threat to humanity. All of
Macrodur's, er, political influence will be exerted to defeat the
Haluk colonial bill. I'll do my best to see that Rampart does the
same. You have my word on it."
The
400-kilo gorilla had spoken. Ef Sontag nodded, showing admirable
legislative sangfroid.
I said,
"Let's move along. The second objective I hope to accomplish is
the one Chairman Stanislawski just iterated. To this end I volunteer
to appear today as a witness in Ef's opposition summation in the
Assembly. Prior to my appearance, I'll undergo DNA testing and a
brief psychotronic interrogation before a conference of the news
media. I will then invite the man masquerading as Asahel Frost to
step forward and do the same thing. He won't, of course. By the way,
the impostor is a human, not •» Haluk. He's a traitor to
his race whose behavior can perhaps be explained by the fact that
he's a dangerous sociopath. His name is Alistair Drummond."
"Sonuvabitch,"
said Adam Stanislawski.
"I
have my reasons for unveiling myself to the media prior to my
appearance before the Assembly," I continued. "It's good
psychology to give the Delegates prior warning of a bombshell."
"I
agree with the tactic," said Ef Sontag. "We don't want them
so shocked by the revelation that they don't pay attention to what
you're saying."
"There's
another factor favoring media revelation," I continued. "It
will warn the general population that something dramatic will happen
during the Assembly session, and ensure that the session receives
maximum viewer exposure. Professor Joanna DeVet suggested the
possibility of an interactive citizen referendum on the colony
measure. I believe there's constitutional provision for that."
Sontag
didn't look encouraging. "In this situation, I doubt that a
majority of the Assembly Delegates would yield their voting power to
the people. The provision was designed to apply to grave emergencies,
in situations where Delegate factions appear to be hopelessly
deadlocked. A vote on new Haluk colonies might not qualify as a grave
emergency—especially in the minds of my Conservative
colleagues." He considered for a moment. "However, if the
vote goes against us tomorrow, as it very well may, there's
constitutional provision for an interactive
veto if enough
citizens express immediate disapproval. Am I right, Professor?"
Joanna
nodded. "Delegate Sontag could call for citizen participation
from the Assembly floor after the Delegate vote is tallied. Unlike
the referendum, a citizen veto poll doesn't require Assembly
approval. It can be okayed by the Speaker herself."
"She
might be amenable," Ef said, "provided sufficient numbers
of citizens had expressed opposition to the measure following the
summations. I'll be sure to mention that during our media show."
"Say
it again at the end of your summation," I urged.
Joanna
said, "You realize that a final veto tally would probably take a
couple of days, while PlaNet hits from remote worlds are collated and
verified." She looked bemused. "You know, there hasn't been
a citizen veto for sixty years. Not since legislation on the death
penalty for all Throwaways was shot down."
And if the
citizens hadn't gotten off their apathetic duffs and killed that
draconian measure, Yours Truly would not be alive today, and in a
position to make trouble ...
"Are
there any other questions or comments concerning upcoming events at
the Assembly this afternoon?" I inquired.
"Do
you really think it's wise to expose Alistair Drummond during a media
conference?" Bea Mangan queried the room at large. "I'm a
medical doctor as well as a geneticist and I did study
psychiatry—although I admit mine is very rusty by now. But it
seems to me that there's a danger of provoking this man to some very
rash actions. He might even try to disrupt the media conference.
Perhaps Assembly Security ought to be warned of that possibility."
I said,
"Good point. But I think it's necessary that Drummond's
credibility be destroyed immediately. I believe he's inserted
demiclone agents into other Concerns besides Rampart."
"I
agree," said Stanislawski, "but with one stipulation.
Expose the fraudulent Helly, but don't name Drummond." He
frowned. "There's bound to be confusion about why Helly looks
like a Haluk, when his demiclone is a human being. I know
I'm
confused."
"I
hope I can let that slide for today," I said. "There were
two duplicates made of me. The first was Drummond and the second was
a Haluk. I killed the Haluk demiclone in cold blood, while he was
unconscious. It was necessary, but I don't intend to defend my action
in a quickie media conference."
Everybody
stared at me in silence for a long beat.
Then Ef
Sontag cleared his throat tactfully. "The regular media room in
Commonwealth Assembly House is probably too small for this affair.
When we announce the purpose of the conference, every person in the
capital with media credentials will want to attend. We might have a
mob scene on our hands, even without interference from Drummond. I'm
not sure that my staff will be able to cope."
"Suppose
I have my own media-relations people liaise with them," said the
Macrodur chairman. "You and I can discuss the matter after Helly
tells us about his recent activities." He turned to me. "I'm
very interested to know how you ended up blue. Lamentable as the
condition is for you, personally, I'm inclined to believe it might be
extremely advantageous to our cause. A humanoid Haluk corpse wasn't
dramatic enough to shock people. A live Halukoid human is something
else."
I
stretched my alien lips into a smile facsimile. "My tale is next
on the docket. But first, sir, you need to get on the horn and tell
John Ellington to organize the emergency Rampart board meeting. Let's
make it 1100 hours at Rampart Tower. And please caution your stooge
very strongly to keep news of the gathering away from Fake Helly
Frost. Otherwise, we might arrive at Rampart Tower and discover that
all of the directors except the demiclone have disappeared."
"Leave
it to me," said the 400-kilo gorilla. He took a phone from the
inside pocket of his suit coat and began tapping pads.
During
the hiatus, the back doorbell rang and Joanna went to answer it. She
returned in a moment followed by a rugged elderly man wearing a white
coverall labeled c'est cheese catering service. The logo of a comical
mouse in a chef's toque was embroidered on his back.
Karl
Nazarian spotted me, did the predictable double take and said, "Aw,
shit! Aw,
shit! Is that you, Helly?"
"Yes."
"Shit,"
he said for a third time. He stood there for a moment with his face
screwed into an expression of thunderous fury. Then he put down the
sizable container and the garment bag he was carrying, came to the
table, pulled me to my feet, and embraced me in a bear hug. "We'll
get those Haluk bastards for this!"
"Yes,"
said Bea Mangan quietly. "We will."
I
introduced Karl to the group. "I was just about to regale these
good people with the adventures of Helly the Haluk. Now you can hear
the story, too. What's in the box? Weapons?"
"They're
outside in the van. This is something better." He opened the
large container and began unloading it onto the table. "My
girlfriend the caterer thought I might as well bring some of her
great home cooking. Quiche, anyone? Six different kinds. Also
pigs-in-a-blanket, croissants, brioches, walnut bread—"
"One
of everything for me," I said. "I have a feeling I'll need
to keep up my strength today."
——
By the
time I'd finished telling my story and answering questions, it was
nearly ten o'clock. We'd eaten all the food Karl had brought.
Periodically, my narrative was interrupted by phone calls, some
directed to members of the spellbound audience, some made by the
audience themselves.
Sontag
heard from his media liaison people. Superefficient Macrodur flacks
were already demanding a lightning policy briefing in anticipation of
the big show. Ef passed on information and gave orders.
John
Ellington called back, informing his boss that he had organized the
emergency Rampart board meeting. Eight of the twelve directors were
in Toronto, constituting the necessary quorum. I would do my
presentation before Gunter Eckert, my sister Eve, my father Simon,
John Ellington, Chief Finance Officer Caleb Millstone, Chief
Technical Officer Crista Wenzel, Small Stakeholder Representative
Thora Scranton, and Chief Legal Officer Satoshi "Sam"
Yamamoto.
According
to Ellington, no one at Rampart Tower knew the whereabouts of the
alleged Asahel Frost. He had not been seen in his offices for three
days.
Prompted
by my account of the Haluk leaders viewing me in the tank and
discussing the Grand Design, Bea Mangan deduced—correctly—that
Alistair Drummond was not a virtually perfect genetic replica of me
as Fake Helly Mark II had been. Since Drummond had been in dystasis
for only four weeks, he would retain substantial amounts of his own
DNA. Bea downloaded Drummond's stats from her lab at ICS. At her
suggestion, Adam ordered Macrodur sleuths to begin searching for a
verifiable biosample of the impostor— as well as for Drummond
himself.
When I
described the pirate attack on Captain Schmidt's vessel, and
mentioned that the demiclone Dolores da Gama had let slip the name of
the Haluk base in Sagittarius, both Sontag and Stanislawski went into
action.
The
Delegate told his staff to subpoena the Sheltok Chief Operations
Officer as a hostile witness during today's Assembly presentation. Ef
planned to use the report on the incident that I'd sent to Karl; but
even though that report was certified, it remained hearsay unless an
independent source corroborated it. If the Sheltok COO did that, we'd
have admissible evidence of Haluk hostility.
The
Macrodur chairman ordered a fast, heavily armed cruiser belonging to
his fleet to set off immediately from Katahdin in Zone 3. Its mission
was to perform a secret scan of the supposedly abandoned asteroid way
station called Amend. It was unlikely that the recon of the alleged
Haluk pirate base would be completed before the Assembly vote took
place, but Stanislawski wanted the evidence anyhow— and he
didn't trust Zone Patrol to obtain it.
I
concluded my recital by describing my trip through the Dark Path of
Toronto, together with an expurgated version of my reunion with
Joanna, who smiled enigmatically. The others seated at the table
burst into ironic applause at the end.
Adam
Stanislawski said, "I never heard such a crazy yarn in my life.
I believe every word of it."
I said,
"Thank you, sir."
He said,
"Call me Adam. What do you say we adjourn now, and let Helly get
on with raising a shitstorm in the Rampart boardroom?"
"I'm
coming with you," Joanna said to me. "To the tower and to
the Assembly. And don't you give me that old-fashioned look, Citizen
Stanislawski."
"Adam,"
he repeated, grinning.
"But
Joanna—" I protested.
"Any
political scientist would sell her soul to be present at these two
events," she said. "Don't you understand that there's
another
book in this? Besides, I'll make a splendid character
witness for Helly." She thought for a moment.
"Perhaps
I'd better change into something more media-appropriate."
"Beat
you to it," said Bea Mangan, rising from the table and showing
off her handsome black suit. "And I'm going to Rampart Tower,
too."
Joanna
left us, and Bea began tinkering with her genetic assay equipment.
"Speaking
of clothes," Karl Nazarian said, picking up the garment bag he'd
brought and handing it to me, "here's the body armor and the
Anonyme and the footgear you asked for. The new phone, too. But what
in the world are you planning to do with the Joru costume?"
"Wear
it into Assembly House later for the media conference," I said.
"They wouldn't let me inside, wearing an Anonyme privacy screen.
So I'll step into the galactic spotlight dressed as a shy, friendly
alien; all muffled up. Whet the crowd's curiosity: Who he? Wasn't
this conference supposed to be about Haluk? Then Ef gives the signal,
I whip off the Joru cloak and hood—"
"Eek,"
said Bea.
"And
take your place in show-biz history," Sontag said wryly. "I
have to get back to my office. There are things that need doing,
especially if we're to include that Sheltok piracy evidence in the
presentation. The media conference is scheduled for 1315 hours in the
rotunda, during the lunch recess. We'll be expected in the Assembly
chamber exactly forty-five minutes later when the session resumes.
Helly, you and Bea better not let me down—or I won't just have
egg on my face, I'll have dinosaur doo."
"I'll
get him to the church on time," Karl promised. "I have the
catering van to drive him and Joanna and Bea from here to Rampart
Tower. After the board meeting, one of my associates will be waiting
in a hopper at the tower skyport for the trip to the Assembly."
"Cassius
in his Tupo?" I asked Karl.
"He's
rounding up the Over-the-Hill Gang even as we speak. They'll be ready
if you need them."
"You
seem very well organized, Citizen Nazarian," Adam said.
Karl
shrugged. "I was VP for Spooky Projects at Rampart until
Alistair Drummond fired my ass. Helly says I may be rehired fairly
soon."
"I
hope your van has room for one more passenger. I intend to go along
to Rampart myself to keep an eye on the proceedings." The genial
glint in Adam Stanislawski's eyes turned into something ice-cold.
"And perhaps encourage a suitable outcome to the meeting."
He passed out cards. "Here's my personal code, if any of you
need to get in touch with me at any time."
I said,
"You'd all better make a note of my new code, too. If you call
the old one, you'll be talking to Alistair Drummond!"
Assorted
humorous exclamations ensued. They really weren't all that funny to
me.
Ef Sontag
looked at his wrist chronometer. "I better call me a cab, then."
Adam
offered a car key. "Take my little red Honda. It's parked out
front. When you finish with it, just tell it to go home. Don't be
deceived by its modest appearance. It's fully shielded and equipped
with enough gadgetry to tempt the ghost of James Bond."
"Can
it make a vente triple-shot no-foam latte?"
"In a
New York minute."
Ef took
the key, kissed it, and headed for the front door.
Karl
Nazarian cocked his head in sudden bright-idea mode. "Chairman,
I wonder if I could ask a favor. After today's Assembly session ends,
Helly will need to get out of town quickly to avoid the media and ...
certain other people. Our friend Cassius Potter has offered his own
private aircraft, but it's rather slow. And unarmed."
I saw what
Karl was driving at. "My safe house is some distance away. Using
a Rampart hopper isn't an option because of security considerations.
If you have one I could borrow—"
Stanislawski
poked a code into one of his cards with a cheap plastic stylus and
handed it to me. "Go to the Assembly House skyport when you're
ready to leave and give this to the dispatcher."
"Thanks
very much."
"Would
you like to tell me where you'll be staying?"
"Let's
wait till I get there. I may have to change my plans."
Karl said,
"Go get dressed, Helly. It's time to put this show on the road."
Adam
smiled at Bea Mangan. "Why don't I help carry your equipment to
the van, Chief Superintendent?"
"Not
until I've done a DNA tesf'bf you and Karl." Both men stared at
her, nonplussed. "We can't afford to take chances with
anyone,
can we?" she inquired reasonably.
I went
upstairs to find Joanna, hoping there might be time for one last
little inducement before the battle.
Chapter 9
Adam
phoned John Ellington again as we drove south to the waterfront and
the newly rechristened Rampart Tower, ordering his long-suffering
minion to notify the Internal Security officers at the VIP skyway
portal of our imminent arrival. In an unlikely vehicle.
I had to
hand it to the Rampart guards. They didn't blink an eye as a catering
van badly in need of a wash job stopped inside the elegant portico on
the 300th floor, where only executive limos and other prestigious
rolling stock usually dared venture. One man opened the passenger
door for me, while the other helped Joanna, Bea, and Adam alight from
the rear. The guards courteously took charge of Bea's equipment,
which was to be sent directly to the boardroom.
By then
John Ellington himself had arrived to escort us to our rendezvous
with corporate destiny. The vice chairman was a stocky black man
dressed in a gorgeous three-piece Italian silk suit the color of aged
bourbon, a green-striped scarf, and a golden brooch shaped like an
African mask. The mask had tiny emerald eyes.
Stanislawski
introduced Joanna and Bea by their formal titles, but pointedly left
me incognito.
I said,
"Vice Chairman, do you have the skyport access authorization
code for Citizen Nazarian and the group that will arrive later by
air?" Ellington shot me a nervous look. The privacy visor of the
Anonyme hood has that effect on some people. Then he nodded.
"Give
it to me, please."
I passed
the card to Karl through the van's window and whispered, "Catch
you soon, I hope!" We had already discussed contingency plans as
we made our way through surface traffic to the tower. Karl gave me a
little sardonic salute, then drove away into the down-ramp.
"Perhaps
you'd like to leave your things in the visitors' cloakroom and
freshen up before the meeting," Ellington said. He led us into a
spacious lobby that contained enough potted tropical greenery to
qualify as an annex of the Allan Gardens Palm House. A woman wearing
the uniform of an InSec captain approached our group, looking grave,
and addressed the vice chairman.
"I'm
sorry, sir. But this ... entity is armed." She nodded at me. "He
will not be permitted to
t, go further unless he
relinquishes his weapon."
'
I
carefully removed the small Ivanov Squire from the pocket of my dark
gray anorak and held it out in harmless display. My Halukoid hands
were concealed by dark gray matching mittens. "I prefer to keep
the weapon."
"And
he is wearing body armor," the captain pointed out. We'd all
been scanned as we came in the door.
"Thank
you," Adam Stanislawski said. "The gentleman will keep his
gun and armor. That will be all."
The
captain started to object, but Ellington made a curt gesture and she
retreated to her desk. Adam and the two women went to doff their
outerwear. The vice chairman was left standing with me.
"Looks
like we're in for a change in the weather," I said.
"Are
you speaking literally," John Ellington inquired in a snide
voice, "or figuratively?"
A
smartass. I wished I had managed to overhear more of Adam's
conversation with him when they spoke on the phone earlier. How much
did he already know?
"Are
the Rampart directors present and accounted for?" I asked.
"Eight
of us are here, including Chairman Eckert. As I told Adam, we have a
quorum." He had moderated his tone to almost courteous. After
all, I was here under the auspices of the gorilla.
I said, "I
understand that Asahel Frost will not be joining us. Was he notified
of the meeting?" A little double-checking never hurts.
"Following
Adam's explicit instructions, I didn't invite him."
"Good.
Tell the security captain, there, to alert all InSec posts in the
tower. If Asahel Frost shows up, you are to be informed instantly.
Then you'll inform
me even faster."
He stared
in frustration at my privacy visor, lips tightly compressed, before
speaking very softly. "What the hell's going on here? Some kind
of a palace coup?"
"Talk
to the captain, John, and don't get uppity."
His dark
eyes widened in outraged dignity. "Who are you?"
When I
remained silent, he shook his head, went to the security desk, and
did as I'd told him. A few minutes later the others joined us and we
entered a very large, very elegant lift that had its very own potted
palm. After Ellington plugged his card, we were whisked up another
hundred stories to the top of what had once been Galapharma Tower,
the most distinctive edifice on the capital skyline and the only one
that had earned an obscene nickname.
Alistair
Drummond's little joke. The same nickname had been applied to him.
I was
gratified to see that the redoubtable Mevanery Morgan, executive
assistant extraordinary, was still guardian of the corporate inner
sanctum. She had relocated from the Seriphos office when Rampart
attained Concern status. Morgan was not wearing her Gorgon Medusa pin
today, but the dour, suspicious expression on her face made up for
it.
Her new
computer desk was even more awesomely equipped than the old one,
situated at the center of the anteroom like the tuffet of a
controlling spider. Crimson carpeting with dramatic ocher spokes
surrounded the desk. The room's wall panels were satin-finish golden
metal alternating with dark rosewood. There were no potted palms. The
sleek Braque sculpture, Simon's pride, that had graced the former
Rampart executive reception area hadn't made the transition to the
new digs; it had been supplanted by a tortured assemblage of ruby
glass tubing that looked like the large intestine of some unfortunate
marine mammal, internally illuminated by glowing ordure. I wondered
if Rampart's new president had chosen it years ago to adorn
Galapharma Tower ...
Mevanery
Morgan greeted us solemnly and led us to the boardroom door, one of
four that opened into the anteroom. None of the doors had anything so
plebeian as an identifying sign. We trooped inside, ladies first.
John Ellington went to his place near the head of the long table, at
the right hand of Chairman Gunter Eckert. Adam Stanislawski sat down
at the table's foot without asking anyone's permission. Morgan showed
us lesser mortals to chairs on either side of Adam and then went out,
closing the door.
I noticed
that Bea Mangan's genetic assay device and the small Hogan truth
machine had arrived ahead of us. They rested on a stand beside the
door.
The wall
behind Gunter Eckert's chair had tall narrow windows that overlooked
the leaden, island-scattered waters of Lake Ontario. Beyond the
southern edge of the force-field umbrella was a fuzzy blur that might
have been either mist or falling snow.
Eve and
Simon stood near a refreshment bar at the far side of the room,
talking quietly together, their backs to the rest of us. Caleb
Millstone, the prissy CFO, Crista Wenzel, the Chief Technical
Officer, and Thora Scranton, who had represented Rampart's small
stakeholders for over two decades, sat at the boardroom table just
below John Ellington, staring at me. Three chairs on Gunter's left
were empty. The fourth was occupied by Sam Yamamoto, my friend and
colleague in Rampart's legal department, who had been my principal
associate during the Galapharma trial. I was glad Sam had been
promoted into the Chief Legal Officer slot, wondered what he was
studying so intently on the recessed computer display in front of
him.
Gunter
Eckert said, "Ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to call this
meeting to order."
Eve and
Simon came to the table and sat down in the chairs at Gunter's left,
leaving an empty seat between them—presumably in case President
Asahel Frost showed up after all. My sister did not condescend to
notice those of us at the foot of the table. She had always been a
clotheshorse, but today she was so perfectly groomed— striking
in an ivory sheath and large sapphire earrings, every hair in her
coiffure lacquered firmly in place—that she might have been an
android mannequin. A rather short one, with an attitude.
Simon was
a shocking contrast. Seven months had worked a terrible change on my
father. He had become skeletally thin, his signature denim ranchman's
outfit appeared many sizes too large for him, and his tooled leather
belt had been ratcheted to the last hole. Sunken rheumy eyes darted
restlessly from one person to another until they found my incongruous
figure and turned slitty with apprehension.
I thought:
What in God's name have they done to you, Pop?
But I knew
the answer. No doubt Simon had refused to retire, and couldn't be
forced off the Board of Directors, so Drummond and his crew had dealt
with him as they had Karl Nazarian. Unless I intervened, the
malignant virus was going to live in my father until he died.
Gunter
Eckert called the group to order, dispensed with the reading of the
minutes, and invited John Ellington to present the first order of
business.
"Before
I do that, let me introduce our guests," Ellington said. "You
all know Adam Stanislawski, Chairman and CEO of Macrodur Concern. He
requested this extraordinary meeting today. On Adam's left are Joanna
DeVet, a distinguished author and professor of political science at
Commonwealth University, and Chief Superintendent Beatrice Mangan of
the Interstellar Commerce Secretariat's Forensic Division. The man
seated at Adam's right has not been presented to me. Perhaps Chairman
Stanislawski will do the honors."
Adam said,
"The Chief Superintendent, Professor DeVet, and I are agreed on
his identity. Those gadgets over there on the cart will verify it as
well." He took me by the arm and rose to his feet, drawing me
with him. "This man is the real Asahel Frost."
Murmurs of
astonishment and indignant disbelief.
"No,"
Eve said. Her face had turned the color of ash.
Adam
plowed on. "The person who has used Kelly's name for the past
six months is an impostor. A genetically engineered demiclone of the
type described by Delegate Efrem Sontag in his committee hearings.
This afternoon Delegate Sontag will present evidence of Kelly's
identity to the news media and to the Commonwealth Assembly."
"No!"
Eve said again in a more emphatic tone. "That's impossible!"
Several of
the others loudly voiced their agreement with her opinion. But Sam
Yamamoto was smiling at me, and one of his eyes slowly closed in an
unmistakable wink.
Gunter
Eckert bellowed, "Adam, have you lost your bloody mind?"
Stanislawski
turned to Joanna and Bea with an ironic smile. "Ladies? Have I?"
Bea said,
"I tested this individual's DNA. He has been subjected to a
genen procedure and his appearance has been altered. But he's Asahel
Frost, beyond a doubt."
Joanna
rose from her chair and stood beside me, one hand resting on my
shoulder. "I know him better than any person here. Better than
Eve, better than Simon. This man is my husband."
I
felt my chest constrict in sudden breathless joy, wanted to leap and
shout and stomp and tell the Rampart board that I didn't give a hoot
in hell what they thought—what the whole goddamned galaxy
thought!—so long as
she accepted me.
All the
same, I didn't say a word, didn't move a muscle.
Eve
regarded the lot of us with cool contempt. "I don't know what
you're playing at, Adam, how you've managed to dupe these two women
and Delegate Sontag, or brainwash them—"
"Let
him prove himself," Thora Scranton demanded. "Use the truth
machine."
"Machines
can be rigged," said Gunter Eckert.
Bea Mangan
said, "Then bring in your own psychotronic device and your own
interrogator. Call the ICS and request another DNA examiner with
another assay machine. This man will pass any identity test you can
give him. He is the real Asahel Frost."
"No,"
Eve insisted. Her eyes were burning in her pale face and both hands
were clenched into fists. "No impostor could have done the
things my brother Asa did. He accomplished far more than the
Rampart-Galapharma consolidation. He made himself my good right arm!
He's kind and affirming and strong. He's never tried to undermine my
authority. Thanks to him, Rampart has become a respected member of
the Big Seven."
"Thanks
to him," I said, finally speaking up in my altered voice, "trade
with the Haluk is the bulwark of Rampart's prosperity. But it won't
last, Evie. The aliens will take it all away. The impostor has
inserted Haluk demiclones into Rampart corporate management."
"The
Faceless One speaks!" drawled Crista Wenzel.
"And
you'd better listen," Adam Stanislawski said.
Eve cried
out, "This is ridiculous! Everyone in the Concern has been
DNA-tested regularly since the Sontag committee started its flap in
August. Including me. Including Asa."
"Who
did the testing?" I demanded. "Rampart Internal Security?"
"Of
course."
"Evie—"
"Don't
call me that!" she shouted.
I said,
"Madam Chief Executive Officer, if the Rampart president is a
demiclone, don't you think InSec would be the first part of the
Concern he'd subvert? ... Have you forgotten our turncoat pal Ollie
Schneider so soon? I know how devastating this revelation is. How
shocking. Joanna showed me holovids of the impersonator inaction.
He's utterly convincing. A corporate team player—exactly the
kind of man you and Simon hoped and prayed I'd turn into after the
big trial, ready to fulfill the family 'hopes that I'd dashed over
and over again in the past. But you know in your heart that the real
Asahel Frost could never have become that man."
"I
know nothing of the sort!" she said, but the conviction that had
been so rock-solid before might have been faltering.
With the
exception of Sam Yamamoto, who was whispering into the stylomike of
his computer, the other directors were listening to Eve's and my
exchange with expressions that ranged from blank puzzlement to sick
uncertainty.
I asked
her, "Would you be willing to have independent experts assay the
DNA of every top Rampart executive? Including that of your so-called
brother Asa?"
She
lifted her chin and smiled coldly at me. "Of course. I'll
authorize it personally—
after the Haluk colony bill
passes."
"The
hell you will!" Adam Stanislawski exclaimed furiously.
"Don't
try to bully me, Chairman," Eve snapped. "Rampart is my
corporation, not yours, and I won't see its best interests
compromised. If my decision doesn't please you, put your stake on the
block and we'll buy you out."
Sadly, I
said, "Oh, Evie. Are you willing to set aside all your past
suspicions about the Haluk, all their treachery and the personal
suffering you endured at their hands? Never mind that the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds might also be in deadly danger—"
"There
is no plausible evidence of a Haluk threat to humanity," she
stated. Her voice was flat, almost without inflection. "The true
Asahel Frost has proved that to our satisfaction."
"Under
psychotronic interrogation?"
"Don't
be idiotic."
Simon
suddenly said, "Who is he?"
Everyone
looked at my father, who pointed a trembling finger at me and spoke
in an agonized rasp. "If you're Asa, then who's this crafty
sidewinder who's taken us all in, played us for fools?"
"He's
Alistair Drummond," I said.
Eve cried,
"That's a lie!" The other directors seemed petrified.
Simon's
gaunt face twisted with some devastating emotion. "Turn off your
privacy visor, you! Right this fuckin' minute! I'll know if you're
really my son!"
"Maybe
not, Pop," I said. "The Haluk have worked me over in a
dystasis tank." And to my sister: "Same as they did to you,
Eve, once upon a time on the planet Cravat."
"Quit
shilly-shallying, dammit!" Simon said. "Show us your face!"
"All
right." I pulled off my constricting mittens and flicked the
switch of the visor.
Pandemonium.
As the
room erupted, I removed the anorak and handed it to Joanna, who still
stood beside me, and whispered a few words to her.
She said,
"Are you sure?"
"Watch
him. Go over to the refreshment bar. I don't think there's any
immediate danger, but don't take your eyes off him for a minute. I
won't be in a position to do anything during the tests. I'll have to
depend on you. Can you manage?"
She folded
the Anonyme and held it tightly against her. "Yes."
Adam
Stanislawski endured the uproar for only a few minutes before
shouting, "That's enough!"
In the
ensuing silence, Gunter Eckert said, "Chief Superintendent
Mangan. Please use your machine to test this— this man's DNA."
Bea said,
"Very well." She moved the equipment cart next to my chair
and set to work.
Joanna was
helping herself to coffee. Simon sat slumped in his chair, eyes
closed, lips mumbling silently. Eve's expression was stubborn and
aloof. Adam Stanislawski wandered up to the head of the table and
spoke in an undertone to Gunter Eckert and John Ellington. Millstone,
Scranton, and Sam Yamamoto waited with expectant faces. Crista
Wenzel, the Chief Technical Officer, left her seat and took up a
position where she could observe the DNA analyzer's display.
After a
few minutes the machine confirmed my identity.
Wenzel
said to me, "Now I'd like to use the psychotronic device to
interrogate you briefly, if you please." She smiled minimally.
"Or if you don't please."
I
submitted to the hookup. When the truth machine activated, I felt an
unpleasant sensation, as though an entire hive of nanobot bees had
invaded my cranium. Wenzel asked only one question.
"Are
you Asahel Frost?"
I said,
"Yes, I am."
Zap.
Momentary blankout. Pain.
Wenzel
watched as Bea touched several control pads. The CTO studied the
display, nodded, and addressed the board. "This machine also
confirms his identity. In my opinion we have no choice but to
tentatively accept these test results, pending confirmation by an
independent examining team. I so move, and call for a second."
"I
second the motion of the CTO," said John Ellington.
Gunter
Eckert said, "Those in favor, please raise your hands."
Ellington,
Crista Wenzel, Thora Scranton.
"Those
opposed."
Eve, Caleb
Millstone, and—shit!—Sam Yamamoto.
I looked
at him. He shrugged.
Gunter
said, "Simon? Are you abstaining?"
The old
man had tears streaming down his face. He said to me, "It'll
destroy Rampart, you know. After everything we went through. The
other Concerns will wipe us off the map for screwing up the Haluk
trade."
"We're
going to face some tough times, Pop," I said. "All of us,
not only Rampart. The greed and stupidity of the Hundred Concerns
have put humanity at terrible risk. I'm going to the media this
afternoon to talk about it, and then I'll repeat my allegations
before the Assembly. Whatever this Board of Directors decides, I
don't intend to let Alistair Drummond and the Haluk win."
Simon's
green eyes blazed at me with some of their old fire. "You gonna
stick with us, then, afterward?"
I
hesitated, knowing what he was asking. Sighed. "Yes, you
blackmailing old coot. If I survive this rucking mess."
"I
vote aye," Simon said.
Eve shook
her head. "Oh, Pop. What have you done?"
"What
I had to do," he said to her coolly. "What's more, you know
it, missy! Rampart's not your child any more'n it's mine. And don't
you forget it."
The virus
hadn't sapped my father's old feistiness, or his common sense,
either.
Gunter
Eckert touched the computer display on the table in front of him. "In
the absence of our Corporate Secretary, I herewith record that the
motion has carried." His eyes swept the group. "We now face
a peculiar situation. Our election of the erstwhile Asahel Frost to
the positions of president and syndic is nullified—"
"No,
it's not," I said. "You elected Asahel Frost. I'm Asahel
Frost. I hold the offices and I still have a seat on this board, by
virtue of my quarterstake." Thus giving notice that any attempt
to vote me out would fail for lack of the required stakeholder votes,
I spoke to Yamamoto. "Do you agree with my position, Mr. Chief
Legal Officer?"
"In
my opinion, you're correct." Sam spoke blandly. "Although I
doubt there's any precedent to support you."
"You
can't do this!" Eve exclaimed. "You have no right!"
I ignored
her, wondering how Alistair Drummond had managed to turn this
intelligent, decisive woman into a deluded fool. Perhaps Simon was
right about her thinking of the Concern as a person with a life of
its own. Legally, of course, it was—but not morally/Trust a
lawyer to make the distinction.
"As
Rampart president," I said, "I exercise my right to
relinquish the office of syndic, and appoint John Ellington to fill
the vacancy. Do you accept, John?"
Almost
inaudibly: "Yes."
"I
instruct you to immediately contact those Delegates of the
Commonwealth Assembly who represent our planets. You will urge them
to vote against the upcoming measure granting the Haluk three hundred
new Perseus colonies. If your persuasions fail, you may expect the
gravest possible consequences."
"I
understand." He threw a bitter glance at Adam Stanislawski. "I
have every confidence that the Delegates will respond appropriately."
A silence.
"Is
there any other new business?" Gunter Eckert asked formally.
Simon let
out a cackle of laughter that hovered on the edge of hysteria. "The
hell with business. Let's all get on over to the Assembly chamber and
watch the friggin' fireworks!"
"It's
my intention," I declared, "to request that ICS, CCID, and
ECID teams immediately begin genetic profile comparison tests of
every person in top-echelon management and every member of the
Rampart security force. Eventually, each Rampart employee will be
tested. In Toronto this action will be supervised by Chairman Gunter
Eckert, as soon as his identity is verified by Chief Superintendent
Mangan, and by Karl Nazarian, who has already been tested by her.
Karl will resume his former position as Vice President for Special
Projects at once, appointed by me. In our Seriphos outplanet
headquarters, I will request that CCID personnel immediately test
Zared Frost, Rampart Chief Perseus Operations Officer, and Matilde
Gregoire, Vice President for Perseus Security. They will then
supervise testing of Rampart executives in that region. In our Hygeia
headquarters similar testing will be under the supervision of Orion
COO Edison Vivieros and Orion Security VP Reinhard Fournier. Does any
member of the board wish to move an objection?"
No one
spoke. Eve was staring at her clasped hands.
I said,
"Then I move this board meeting be adjourned."
"Second,"
said Thora Scranton. "Helly, are you giving out freebie tix to
your media circus over at the Assembly?"
Good old
Thora; we'd always been buddies. I showed my inhuman grin. "Anyone
interested can join the party... after Bea Mangan tests their DNA."
"Except
John," said Adam Stanislawski, "who has other business to
take care of."
Ellington
had already risen from his seat and started for the door. He said
sourly, "Stop twisting it, Adam. I told you I'd convince the
Delegates."
"I
think not," said Sam Yamamoto. He stood up suddenly at his
place, a Kagi pistol in his hand. "Come back to the table, John.
The rest of you, sit still."
Thunderstruck,
Eve whispered, "Sam?"
Adam
Stanislawski said, "Oh, shit."
"Is
Alistair Drummond on his way, Sam?" I inquired archly. "Or
did you just send out a general mole-call on your computer?"
"Guess."
"He's
a demiclone," I said.
"Shut
up!" Fake Sam shouted. He fired at me twice. The blue beams hit
me square in the chest. The people at the table cried out in horror
as I fell from my chair and landed in a heap on the floor, praying
Sam wouldn't try a head shot. A sharp smell of ozone and burnt fabric
filled the air.
I heard
starchy Caleb Millstone call Sam an unexpectedly filthy name. Lying
on my right side, I had a perfect view of the demiclone as he pulled
Simon to his feet, pressing the muzzle of the photon gun into the old
man's temple. "Everyone sit down and keep quiet! My people will
be here in a few minutes and we'll sort everything out."
Eve said,
"Oh, Asa ..."
I couldn't
see her face, but the changed timbre of her voice told me that she
had finally accepted the truth. I hoped that it wasn't too late to
matter.
John
Ellington addressed the impostor. "Do you seriously think
Mevanery Morgan is going to allow unauthorized persons access to the
executive elevator?"
Fake Sam
smiled. "She will, if the alternative is watching Simon Frost's
brain go extra-crispy." He swiveled his captive around toward
Gunter Eckert. "Call her in here, Chairman."
I wasn't
hurt, of course. My body armor had saved me. I waited for an
opportunity to make a move without endangering my father.
Eckert was
hesitating, and it made the demi nervous. "Do it now, Gunter! Do
it, damn you!"
He
brandished the Kagi for emphasis, and it shifted momentarily away
from Simon's head and pointed harmlessly at the boardroom wall behind
Eckert. I braced one arm and leg and hurled myself crabwise at the
legs of the two men— —at the same time that Joanna, still
standing behind Fake Sam at the refreshment bar, shot him in the back
with the Ivanov I'd left in my anorak pocket.
——
I phoned
Karl Nazarian, who was waiting with his gang at the Rampart Tower
skyport, and asked for his suggestions on what we should do next. Our
contingency plans hadn't included a demiclone on the Board of
Directors who would tip off his alien confederates inside the
building.
Karl told
us to call the cops.
CCID was
clearly flabbergasted at receiving a request for armed assistance
from an Amalgamated Concern—big businesses always cleaned up
their own messes—but Gunter Eckert's authority was not to be
denied. Inside of twenty minutes Rampart Tower was sealed and
swarming with Criminal Investigation personnel corraling Rampart
executives and security employees. Half an hour after that, forensic
teams from ICS and half a dozen other government agencies were
administering DNA tests.
Only a
handful of InSec demis offered armed resistance. Even fewer managed
to escape. All of the executives submitted meekly to the testing.
Karl
and his crew came from the skyport to the boardroom for instructions
shortly after CCID arrived. By the time he reached us, Bea Mangan had
already checked the DNA of Gunter Eckert and the other members of the
board, as well as that of Morgan the Gorgon, who was vastly indignant
that we should think a Haluk capable of impersonating
her.
Everyone was legitimate except snoozing Sam.
I gave
Karl custody of the unconscious demiclone, then arranged for a CCID
SWAT team to accompany him and his associates to Rampart InSec's
psychotronic lab. Karl had orders to commandeer the place and
interrogate anyone in the building whose DNA wasn't up to human
snuff. I promised to check with him after the second act of the day's
melodrama played out at Assembly House.
A felony
theft-of-identity warrant was issued for the arrest of a human John
Doe having the spurious iris-ID of Asa-hel Frost. Among other places,
the APB was transmitted to every starport on Earth. I hoped we
weren't locking the barn door after the horse had escaped. One of the
messages sent by Fake Sam had gone to my old personal code, so
Alistair Drummond knew we were hot on his trail.
As we
prepared to leave, Adam Stanislawski declared he'd had enough
up-close-and-personal excitement for one day. He intended to watch
the rest of the fun and games from the safety of his own private
suite in Macrodur Tower. Cassius Potter dropped him off there
beforeflying Bea, Joanna, and me to the media conference.
——
It took
place pretty much as Ef Sontag and I had scripted it.
We
appeared side by side, I in my concealing Joru robes, at a podium on
a small improvised dais at the very center of the rotunda that
fronted the Assembly chamber proper. Bea Mangan, her trusty
equipment, and Joanna were poised just behind us, awaiting their
cues. Experienced Macrodur flacks helped Ef's PR staff orchestrate
the technicalities.
There must
have been close to six hundred reporters crowded into the glass-domed
circular foyer, all festooned with the tools of their trade. Huge
holovid monitors had been set up in adjacent areas to accommodate the
nonmedia audience, who numbered in the thousands. Displays in the
Assembly dining rooms also showed the news conference live, at the
request of interested Delegates.
I hoped
the Servant of Servants of Luk and his entourage were paying close
attention, too. A member of Ef's committee had reported that the
Haluk were already in the building.
After
Sontag greeted the journalists and made brief introductory remarks, I
flung off my concealing black-and-white robes to dramatic effect,
standing on the dais naked to the waist while the cameras went crazy.
Ef told the crowd who I was, why I looked like a Haluk, and what I
was going to talk about today inside the Assembly chamber.
Then Bea
tested my genes and not only proved that I was Asahel Frost, but also
demonstrated that I had been subjected to illegal demiclone
therapy—presumably by the same entities whose superficial
appearance I now wore. In a touching character-witness testimonial,
Joanna declared once again that I was certainly her former husband, a
man unjustly convicted of crimes and deprived of citizenship, whom
she had never ceased to respect.
Connected
to the Hogan truth machine and interrogated by Sontag, I told the
citizens of the Confederation of Human Worlds how I had been
kidnapped by the Haluk and cloned. I described how my Evil Twin had
taken my place at Rampart so as to gain control of the genen vector
PD32:C2, and how he had used my name and reputation to promote the
Haluk cause. I disavowed the lies that had cast doubt on the evidence
presented by Sontag's committee. I dared the impostor wearing my face
to come before the media and get tested as I had been.
I did not
identify the Fake Helly demiclone as Alistair Drummond.
The
galaxy-wide audience heard a heavily edited version of the Rampart
Board of Directors meeting and my reclamation of the office of
Rampart president. Racked with pain from the continuing zaps of the
nasty little Hogan machine, which verified my every statement, I
described the measures being taken at that very moment to flush
demiclone agents from Rampart. I urged other Concerns and
Commonwealth agencies to be zealous in the DNA testing of their own
personnel.
Another
piece of intelligence I passed on was the demicloning of Sam
Yamamoto. Where—I asked rhetorically—
was my
real friend being held prisoner? Where were the other unwilling human
DNA donors whose places had been taken by Haluk spies? Were they
captives of the aliens—as blue and miserable as I—or had
they been callously executed after they had served their purpose?
I told my
listeners that the confessions being elicited from captured demis
would probably come too late to be included in Delegate Sontag's
Assembly summation. With luck, however, they might be released in
time to influence tomorrow's vote.
Keep tuned
for late news at 2200 and 2300 hours! ...
The last
thing Ef Sontag asked me was, "Are the statements you have made
here today truthful?"
I said,
"They are." And the psychotronic device socked it to me one
last time, confirming it.
Then,
while the media people cafled out questions and Ef responded to a
favored few, Bea Mangan detached me from the Hogan machine. Joanna
gave me a drink of water and some painkiller perles. She wiped my
streaming alien eyes and mopped my sweaty azure brow.
"Delegate
Sontag!" said PNN. "What reason would the Haluk have to spy
on humanity with demiclones?"
"That
matter will be addressed inside the Assembly," he replied.
"Do
you have any evidence of demiclones infiltrating or influencing the
Haluk Consortium of Concerns?" asked the
Wall Street Journal.
"Not
at this time. The matter is under scrutiny."
"Prominent
Conservative party members have stated that the Haluk trade is vital
to the continuing prosperity of the Hundred Concerns," said
The
Times. "Do you agree with that sentiment?"
"I do
not."
Next,
20/20
Interactive asked, "Will the Liberal party call for
revisions in the Haluk nonaggression and trade treaties if the new
colonies are voted down?"
"I
can't speak for other Delegates. I will personally demand such
revisions no matter how the vote goes."
He shook
his head negatively as more queries were shouted.
"We
have no more time for questions, ladies and gentlemen. It's almost
1400 hours and the afternoon session of the Assembly is about to
begin. My committee and I will be presenting new evidence supporting
a vast Haluk conspiracy against humanity. One of our witnesses will
be the genuine Asahel Frost. After we've spoken, Delegates favoring
the new Haluk colonies will summarize their position. A final vote on
the measure will be taken tomorrow at 1000 hours Toronto time."
He paused,
taking a breath, then burst into an uncharacteristically passionate
peroration. "Citizens of the Commonwealth, I urge you to observe
the upcoming Assembly session. Use the PlaNet to inform your own
Delegate of your reaction to this media conference and to the
Assembly vote. Powerful commercial forces have exerted pressure on
your Delegates, demanding that the three hundred new Haluk colonies
be approved. These forces wish to ensure that trade with that race
will continue without significant human oversight or inspection of
Haluk planets in the Milky Way. Do not let this happen. Tell your
Delegate that the Haluk cannot be trusted. Tell your Delegate that
you will not permit Haluk demiclones to infiltrate human institutions
and undermine our economy. Citizens—tell them! ... Thank you
for listening."
"A
little showboaty," I whispered to Ef as we left the dais
surrounded by a wall of security personnel, "but it's been that
kind of a day."
——
Politicians
are often keen showmen. Ef Sontag, for all his natural reticence, was
no exception. He decided it would bore our galactic audience—and
the Delegates, most of whom had been listening avidly to the news
conference one way or another—to repeat my genetic testing and
psycho-Ironic interrogation inside the Assembly chamber. So Bea and
Joanna would not be asked to testify after all.
Ef
arranged for the women to watch the proceedings from the VIP gallery.
Maybe they'd meet Simon or Thora Scranton or Crista Wenzel up there.
The other Rampart directors had declined to attend, either afraid of
being cornered by the media or engaged in damage control at Rampart
Tower.
When the
session warning-chime sounded, Ef and the six Delegates of his
committee led me into the chamber. I had discarded the remnants of
the Joru costume and was dressed once again in Dan's track suit,
complete with twin burn-holes in the breast of the jacket. We took
our places at small desks on the central testimony platform—alias
"the floor"— that stood immediately before the
Speaker's bench. Above the bench was a representation of the Great
Seal of the Commonwealth, and behind that rose a colossal holoscreen
that would show close-up images of persons addressing the Assembly.
Semicircular
tiers encompassed the chamber; inset within them were the
shell-shaped carrels of the fifteen hundred legislators. About
three-quarters of the delegates were physically present, and the rest
were participating virtually. The spectator galleries and regular
media boxes were packed. A quick flick of my desk display panned the
VIP section. I didn't see any Rampart people, but Bea and Joanna had
good seats. Most of the alien visitors occupied special loges at the
front.
I searched
carefully—and there he was: the Big Blue Cheese himself, the
Servant of Servants of Luk.
In honor
of the occasion, he'd forgone frivolous human attire and was garbed
in magnificent rainbow-hued formal regalia, topped off with the
ostentatious platinum diadem and ceremonial fossil jewelry. The SSL
was surrounded by somber figures in black robes that I took to be the
Council of Nine. No one seemed to know if their role was only
advisory or if they enjoyed genuine authority. Other Haluk in
handsome dress uniforms had to be a security force. There were at
least two dozen of them crowded into the loge.
Another
chime. Silence fell.
The
Speaker, Aziza Alameri, called the session to order and invited those
opposing the Haluk colony bill to give final testimony. There was
some procedural backing and filling. Members of Sontag's committee
presented a brief summation of their earlier arguments, then Ef
himself called the first of only two witnesses who would be asked to
support the summation.
"If
it please the Speaker and this Assembly: in evidence of ongoing Haluk
hostility toward the Commonwealth of Human Worlds, I call Citizen
Hengpin Kang, Sheltok Field Operations officer. He will testify under
subpoena via sub-space communicator from his office on the planet
Lethe in Zone 8."
The giant
holoscreen activated, and the real show began.
——
sontag:
Citizen Kang, have you been informed by Sheltok counsel of your legal
rights and obligations relative to this Assembly subpoena?
kang:
I have.
sontag:
Do you affirm that the statement you are about to make is completely
truthful?
kang:
I do.
sontag:
Are you aware that your statement may be verified
sub duritia, by
means of psychotronic interrogation, at the request of Assembly
Delegates?
kang:
I am.
sontag:
Very well. At this time the Assembly requires answers only to
selected questions. We reserve the right to depose you in more depth
at another time... My first question: Do you have personal knowledge
of pirate attacks upon Sheltok transactinide carriers traversing the
Sagittarius Whorl during the past twelve months?
kang:
I do.
sontag:
Approximately how many such attacks have taken place during that
time?
kang:
I have personal knowledge of thirty-four. Others may have taken place
that were not brought to my attention.
sontag:
How many of these attacks resulted in the hijacking of the carrier
vessel or its unexplained disappearance?
kang:
Twenty-eight.
sontag:
To which race did the pirate vessels belong?
kang:
It wasn't always possible to tell. Some of them were certainly
Y'tata. We've always had trouble with Y outlaws in Zones 3 and 4,
most of it relatively minor. But in the past year or so ... Haluk
corsairs have been positively identified in about half of the
incidents, sometimes in company with Y'tata, sometimes not.
sontag:
To the best of your knowledge, has Sheltok Concern deliberately
concealed knowledge of these Haluk attacks from Commonwealth
authorities, from the media, or from Sheltok stakeholders?
kang:
Our personnel received strict orders from Sheltok Earth management
not to discuss the Haluk attacks with the media or the general
public. I have no knowledge of whether stakeholders knew of them.
Following regulations, my staff regularly reported hostile Haluk
activity to Zone Patrol and to the Secretariat for Xenoaffairs.
sontag:
Did official action result from your reports?
kang:
None that I was ever aware of.
sontag:
In your opinion, why has this Haluk activity been concealed?
kang:
In my opinion ... so as not to inflame the citizenry against the
Haluk trade treaty and the Haluk Consortium of Concerns.
sontag:
Is it true that, approximately seven months ago, the element carrier
SBC-11942,
Sheltok Eblis, under the command of Ulrich Schmidt,
arrived at the planet Lethe and reported an attack by sixteen Haluk
pirate ships?
kang:
This is true.
sontag:
Is it true that Captain Schmidt's vessel was saved from hijacking or
destruction by the intervention of an armed cruiser, human in
conformation, whose identification was unknown?
kang:
This is true. Captain Schmidt reported that the unknown human
starship destroyed sixteen Haluk bandits. The cruiser commander
identified himself only as Hugo. Captain Schmidt assumed he was a
Good Samaritan smuggler, if you can imagine such a thing ...
sontag:
Thank you, Citizen Kang. You are excused.
[To the Assembly:] The
next witness, Asahel Frost, will also address this incident. First,
however, my committee and I will ask him to provide background
information on his personal involvement with the Haluk.
——
Sontag
read me the same caution that had been given to Kang. At the pleasure
of the Assembly I could be interrogated later, till my eyeballs
popped and blood flowed from every orifice. For now, I took a simple
oath to tell the truth and nothing but.
Then, with
Ef and his fellow Delegates prompting me, I began to relate my
adventures with the Haluk, beginning with the appearance of the
titanic Haluk starship at Helly's Comet, in support of Alistair
Drummond's scheme to seize control of Rampart Interstellar
Corporation. I described my horrific adventures on Cravat and
Dagasatt. I deplored the secret collusion of the Hundred Concerns
that had enabled the Haluk to acquire advanced astrogation technology
and other embargoed human science—including the genetic
engineering therapy that had illicitly eradicated Haluk allomorphy.
I didn't
say a word about Emily's Mystery Mutant Exon, or my suspicion that
the eradication therapy might not be permanent.
I removed my jacket and showed my
Halukoid torso— monstrously magnified on the holoscreen behind
the Speaker's bench—as evidence that the Haluk were continuing
to create demiclones. I stated that my own DNA had been stolen, and a
Haluk demiclone of me had been created for the purpose of gaining
control of Rampart, the Perseus Spur worlds under Rampart Mandate,
and the genen vector PD32:C2 necessary to suppress Haluk allomorphy.
I stated my opinion that the Haluk intended to use their Spur
colonies as jump-off points for a general invasion of our galaxy, and
then gave evidence to support my belief.
I
described my quixotic Barky Hunt, and what I had learned from
Tregarth about the severe population crunch in the Haluk Cluster. It
was hearsay, I admitted; nevertheless it provided a motive for the
obstinate, even desperate, determination of the Haluk to migrate out
of their home star-cluster.
I
admitted my personal intervention in the Haluk pirate attack upon
Sheltok Eblis, confessing that I was Hugo. I had concealed my
identity from Captain Schmidt because of personal notoriety and a
desire not to compromise my search for Barky Tregarth. I stated that
I was positive that the pirate ships were Haluk.
Ef Sontag
entered in evidence the report on the pirate attack I had sent to
Karl Nazarian, as well as Captain Schmidt's report to Hengpin Kang.
The Delegates would be able to read the documents at their leisure.
I went on
to tell how I was captured on Phlegethon, and how the demiclone agent
Dolores da Gama had boasted to me that ultraheavy fuel elements were
being stolen by the Haluk in order to cripple human starship
capability and fuel an alien invasion fleet.
Finally,
I told what I knew of the Haluk Grand Design to overwhelm humanity,
gleaned while I eavesdropped on the Servant of Servants and Council
Locutor Ru Kamik as I floated in a dystasis tank in Macpherson Tower.
I pointed a blue finger at the Servant himself—sudden close-up
of his affronted face on the holoscreen—and invited him to
submit to psychotronic interrogation and affirm that his people did
not intend to use their Perseus Spur colonies as
stepping-stones for an invasion of the Milky Way.
Then I
told Delegate Sontag and the Assembly that I had nothing further to
say, and I was excused.
Speaker
Alameri invited the Servant of Servants of Luk to comment on my
testimony.
The Haluk
leader declined the invitation to submit to a truth machine. He
consented to give a brief voluntary statement, should the Assembly
care to receive it.
The
Assembly did. So the Servant stepped onto an anti-gravity transporter
that wafted him down to the floor, where Sontag and his committee and
I were still seated. I gave a little finger-twiddle of greeting. The
Servant stonily ignored me and delivered his speech in simultaneous
translation.
"Respected
Speaker! Delegates of the Human Commonwealth! This one calls upon
Almighty Luk to endorse the truths that follow, namely:
"This
one strongly asserts the opinion that the person calling himself
Asahel Frost is an egregious liar—a scoundrel who attempts to
vilify a noble race for evil motives of his own. He has taken on a
simulacrum of Haluk form solely in order to mock and calumniate us.
May Almighty Luk punish this contemptible person as he deserves!
"Delegates
of the Human Commonwealth Assembly: this one asserts that no
Haluk-human demiclones have been created since the signing of the
Treaty of Nonaggression, which specifically forbade it. None! If
counterfeit humans exist upon the planet Earth, they are agents
created and employed by persons unknown to the Sovereign Haluk
Confederation.
"This
one further asserts that, if Haluk corsairs are indeed operating in
the Sagittarian arm of the galaxy, they do so without the
authorization of our Sovereign Haluk Confederation. Any such ships
are outlaws. We repudiate them and are eager to cooperate in their
extermination.
"In
conclusion, this one pledges to the Human Commonwealth, and to the
worthy Hundred Concerns that are the bulwark of its economy, the
eternal goodwill of all peace-loving and law-abiding Haluk people.
There is no sinister Haluk Grand Design hostile to humanity. The
Haluk do not contemplate invading the Milky Way. Such a notion is
illogical. Orderly emigration has always been our objective. Your
galaxy is huge, with countless desirable worlds having no sapient
inhabitants. Haluk settlement of some of these worlds can only
enhance galactic harmony and prosperity. The worthy Hundred Concerns
concur in this belief.
"Delegates!
We Haluk are eternally grateful to the Commonwealth of Human Worlds
for permitting us to colonize planets within your hegemony. We pledge
to cooperate with all just human laws regulating interstellar
commerce and social intercourse. We look forward to receiving from
this Assembly the three hundred additional planets so generously
proffered to us.
"The
Servant of Servants of Luk thanks you for your gracious attention.
And now, as a token of our outrage and sorrow at the insult offered
to us by the person calling himself Asahel Frost, the Haluk presence
will withdraw forthwith. Wah!"
The
Servant then proceeded to stalk out of the chamber through the
rotunda door. When I checked the gallery, the other Haluk observers
had also disappeared. Big symbolic gesture, right?
I was
mistaken. They had something else in mind.
Ef Sontag
concluded his summation, then yielded the floor to the pro-Haluk
faction.
——
What
followed was mostly a dreary anticlimax for me, three hours confined
in Ef Sontag's carrel, during which the Conservatives tried to
discredit or gloss over the new evidence presented by the opposition.
The only good thing about their summation was the fact that Assembly
rules prevented them from cross-examining me or Kang.
"We
gave it our best shot," Ef said. He'd called for water and
analgesics to soothe my splitting head. What I really wanted was a
triple shot of Jack Daniel's, but booze was contraindicated following
psychotronic torture—even the comparatively mild version
inflicted by the Hogan machine.
"How
did I
really do, Ef ?" I asked him anxiously. "The
Haluk Servant implied I was pulling a hoax. Do you think any of the
Delegates will buy that?"
He
laughed. "You looked outlandish. No denying that. But your being
blue helped our case. Only an idiot would believe that you underwent
genen therapy and turned Halukoid in order to thumb your nose at the
xenos and score political points. I can't say whether any of the
pro-Haluk Delegates will be swayed by your testimony, but I guarantee
that none of them will seriously entertain the notion that you're a
hoaxer. You were impressive, Helly."
"Impressive
enough?" I muttered. "The Servant's Big Lie routine didn't
incite any hisses or boos. I was watching some of the ranking
Conservatives during his performance. They weren't worried or even
indignant. Those pocket pols think just like the Hundred Concerns
that own them—they're confident they can sweep even the most
dangerous and uncomfortable facts under the rug, and citizens will be
too apathetic or fearful to do anything about it."
"This
time, we might have a chance of beating the odds," Ef said.
"Besides your own evidence of Haluk wrongdoing, there's Kang's
deposition. And let's hope your people can wring something nice and
damaging out of Fake Sam Yamamoto in time for the late night news
posting. It would also help if a few more clones got flushed out of
Rampart Tower and were positively ID'd as aliens."
"I'll
check with Karl right away and see what's happening," I said,
and also reminded him about the starship Adam Stanislawski had sent
to reconnoiter the presumed Haluk base at Amenti. "There's a
slim chance it might report in before the vote."
"I
almost hope the ship finds nothing," he admitted gloomily. "The
alternative is a really squirmy can of worms. A casus belli. I'm not
ready for a war, Helly."
Neither
was the Commonwealth. Zone Patrol was spread much too thinly,
especially in the Perseus Spur. If the Haluk launched an attack,
humanity's main line of defense would be the fleets of the Hundred
Concerns ...
I phoned
Karl at Rampart Tower and requested a progress report, turning on the
phone speaker so Ef could listen in. Karl said that Fake Sam was
still zonked from the two stun-darts Joanna had shot him with; he
would be fully consciousness in three more hours, whereupon his
interrogation would begin.
I said,
"There are some important questions I want you to ask him."
I enumerated them, then asked how things were progressing generally.
"The
building's in a state of lockdown. The executives and security
personnel are being held under guard in four employee cafeterias,
pending genetic profiling. Lesser personnel were allowed to leave
after being cautioned not to talk to the media under pain of job-loss
and disenfranchisement."
"Ouch,"
I said. "Whose idea was that?"
"Eve
and Gunter Eckert gave the order. The genetic profiling is moving
along as rapidly as possible, but it'll probably take all night."
"Caught
any blue fish?"
"So
far, five demiclones had been confirmed among intermediate level
InSec personnel. The big news is an exec named Amadeo Guthrie, a
Galapharma holdover. He's Deputy Chief Fleet Dispatch, and he's a
Haluk. We just finished his preliminary grilling. I didn't want to go
to full interrogation before checking with you."
"Good
one, Karl!" I enthused. "This bird will need special
handling. Who's the CCID official in charge of the Rampart
operation?"
"A
Chief Super named Gleb Khabarov. Seems sensible and efficient."
"Ask
him to witness the next phase of Guthrie's interrogation. You'll have
to squeeze this mutt hard, and I want official corroboration of the
gravity of the situation in case the clone dies on you. We need the
names of all other demiclones working in top Rampart fleet positions,
especially in the Perseus Spur. This is absolutely vital, Karl. We
can't allow Haluk agents to have any control over our starships at
this time. You're free to tell Khabarov that we're afraid of a sneak
attack, particularly on Cravat or Seriphos. When you get the names,
insist that Khabarov have the demis arrested by Spur CCID. If he
gives you any back-talk, call Adam Stanislawski."
"You
really think the Haluk might move before the vote?"
"I
don't know what the bastards will do. Call me when you get something
solid out of Guthrie. Is there any word on Alistair Drummond?"
"Nothing."
"Okay.
Talk to you in a while." I broke the connection.
Ef said,
"Scary stuff. But I think the Haluk will wait for the vote."
"I
hope you're right."
I dozed
for a while, overcome by reaction to the stress. Then I was suddenly
wide-awake again, remembering something I'd forgotten to ask Bea
Mangan. Fortunately, she and Joanna were still in the VIP gallery,
sticking it out to the bitter end.
I phoned
her and asked the question, keeping the speakerphone activated for
Ef's sake.
She
replied, "Yes, the six researchers did finish their experiments
with the mutant telomeric exon. As far as they can determine, it's a
powerful inhibitor that staves off sequence degradation. In layman's
terms, it keeps one set of genes— let's call them bad
genes—from turning off another set of good genes. Of course,
the researchers had no notion of the precise function of the good
gene/bad gene sequences. That was our little secret. Given the
limitations of the experiment, the researchers couldn't provide me
with precise timing of the turnoff. Or identify the sequence that
would be affected."
"But
we know what it has to be, don't we!"
"I
can only presume that Emily Konigsberg didn't permanently eradicate
allomorphism in the Haluk after all. I've been studying her notes for
months. By inserting human genes, she intended not only to eliminate
the trait in the engineered Haluk individual, but also in the
individual's germ line, so that offspring of treated parents would be
nonallomorphic, too. That's a complicated piece of work."
"Bea,
I think Emily's therapy is already failing." I told her about
the warehoused testudos I'd seen in Macpherson Tower.
"How
interesting." On the phone display, Bea looked both thoughtful
and apprehensive. "I wonder if the testudos will morph into
normal allomorphic graciles on schedule? They might not, you know.
They might not morph at all."
The
implications of that hit me like a kick in the stomach. "Haluk
technicians were watching the warehoused ones. Each testudo was being
biomonitored. If they
don't hatch..."
She smiled
sadly. "If I were a Haluk who had undergone therapy, I'd be very
pissed off at humanity. Paradise Lost, and all that. Do you have any
idea how many Haluk have received the treatment?"
"Jesus.
I think it started in a small way nearly eight years ago. Since the
trade treaties went into effect, millions of them must have been
treated. But wouldn't Haluk scientists have spotted the problem and
called a halt to the therapy? I mean, my God—"
"Perhaps
the reversion has only just begun," Bea said. "On the
individuals who were among the earliest treated."
I was
trying to remember something. "While I was eavesdropping on the
Haluk in dystasis, the Council Locutor, Ru Kamik, made some
derogatory remarks about Emily Konigsberg. The Haluk name for her was
Milik. Ru Kamik said, 'This one has recently heard that some of
Milik's work on the eradication of allomorphism has come under
scrutiny.' The Servant of Servants denied that anything was wrong.
But he would, wouldn't he?"
"You
know, Helly, even if a renewed course of therapy reestablishes the
nonallomorphic gracile state, the Haluk would still require periodic
treatment all throughout their lives."
I said,
"Yeah. From a limited supply of PD32:C2, harvested from one
small Perseus planet. The stuff won't grow in the lab."
"I've
heard rumors that Rampart is working hard to synthesize the viral
vector," she said, "but so far without success. Haluk
scientists are probably trying, too. Unfortunately, they aren't very
experienced in the field of designer-virus construction."
Ef Sontag
broke in. "But what does it mean, Bea, from a political
standpoint?"
"Damned
if I know," she said. "But we'll probably find out."
"Will
the human demiclones revert also?"
"Unfortunately,
no. The genes for Haluk allomorphy are completely eliminated by
demiclone therapy—not merely suppressed, as happens in the much
less drastic eradication treatment."
Ef said,
"That could have ominous implications."
"I
thought so," Bea agreed.
"What?
What?" My brain was badly in need of rebooting. I didn't have
the faintest idea what they were talking about.
"It's
rather far-fetched," Bea said. "But if the Haluk discover
that allomorph-eradication therapy is invariably fatal, they may be
tempted to go the demiclone route. All it would require is the
synthesis of PD32:C2 ... and an unlimited supply of human DNA."
——
Finally,
the interminable Assembly session adjourned. Ef 's final call for a
citizen referendum was voted down, as we had expected. But the
gesture had been made and the stage set for a potential citizen veto.
When it
was all over, he escorted me to the large skyport at the top of
Assembly House. Bea and Joanna had agreed to meet us there, and Ef
had mentioned that he intended to fly Bea Mangan to her home in
Fenelon Falls. I assumed he'd see Joanna home as well.
He called
for his private hopper and I asked dispatch to send the aircraft Adam
Stanislawski had promised to provide for me. The skyport concourse
wasn't very crowded yet and no journalists harassed us. They were
busy doing reaction coverage downstairs, where every pundit in the
capital would have opinions to express and predictions to make. Many
of the Delegates were still conferring with their staff members or
frantically consulting web pollsters to find out what kind of impact
the day's sensational events would have on their constituents. No
doubt the syndics of the Hundred Concerns—including John
Ellington—were lobbying like mad to influence tomorrow's vote.
It was a
scene neither Ef Sontag nor I wanted any part of. We'd had enough
limelight for one day.
The two
women finally emerged from the transporter and found us waiting in
the ready-room. Bea Mangan was pulling an AG tote with her equipment,
and Ef hurried to take charge of it and have it loaded aboard his
hopper.
"Did
you get lots of hot poop for your new book, Professor?" I asked
Joanna.
"Today's
action will provide at least two outstanding chapters," she
said. "But the plot is still thickening."
"That's
what I'm afraid of," I said wearily. "It can thicken
without me."
A fast
getaway was all I wanted right now, and after that the empty white
silence of the Ontario north country, where I planned to hole up
until I decided how to recreate my shattered life.
"Will
we have time to stop and shop on the way?" Joanna asked me.
I looked
at her without comprehending. "Shop?"
"Well,
it probably wouldn't be prudent to go back to my town house for
clothes and things."
When I
persisted in stupidity mode, she smiled. "My dear, I'm coming
with you to your hideout! There's so much more I need to know. The
deep background of your anti-Haluk crusade."
"Your
book's going to be about
me?" I couldn't conceal my
dismay.
"Of
course! You're a public figure, a freelance provocateur, a cage
rattler. Did you think you could do your thing and then slip offstage
without anyone taking notice? Gun-slinger comes to town, raises
righteous hell, rides off into the sunset?"
"No,
but—"
"Your
story will personalize the controversy, catch the interest of
nonacademic readers. As we say in the trade, you will be my hook. By
the way, my publisher is very interested. I called her during your
testimony. She was watching, of course. Along with almost everyone
else having PlaNet access."
"A
book sounds like a great idea," Bea said. "I'd download a
copy."
I groaned.
"Joanna, this affair isn't over. Political-science-wise, it's
hardly begun."
"But
your direct participation in it is done, isn't it?"
"God,
I hope so. I'm so tired of tilting at blue windmills! Whichever way
the vote goes tomorrow, I believe the Haluk are heading for a fall.
Their demiclones will be exposed, along with the Sagittarian piracy
and the other shit they've been pulling inside the Concerns. After
the smoke clears, the Haluk treaties will be revised. There's no real
possibility of a cover-up or a reversion to the status quo. Too many
genies have been let out of the bottle."
Ef Sontag
had returned from the baggage bot and was listening with approval. "A
book that told the entire story would help ensure that," he
said. "Joanna's right."
"Of
course I am," Professor DeVet said serenely.
"What
are your immediate plans?" Ef asked me.
"I'm
going to kick back and take it easy. After the vote, who knows?
Eventually I'll have to go back into the tank for a month or so to be
restored, but God knows when I'll get around to doing it. If you need
me, I'll be available for a few weeks, anyhow. I promised my father
to help pull Rampart back on track, but I won't let that become a
full-time job. During the Galapharma trial, I devoted nearly every
waking minute to Rampart. That'll never happen again."
"Good,"
said Joanna. "You don't owe them that."
"I
don't owe them anything," I said grimly. "They owe me. And
if Eve or anyone else starts putting stumbling blocks in my way, I'll
be out of there faster than a lobo with a knot in his tail, and
Rampart can go straight to hell."
Ef was
watching the overhead dispatch display. "Here's my hopper. Come
along, Bea. Helly, Joanna, keep safe." The two of them went off.
I threw my
former wife a look that mingled panic and confusion.
She smiled
and put a hand on my shoulder. "If you really don't want me with
you now, I'll respect that. I can take a taxi home."
"No!
I mean—" What did I mean?
"The
stress of the past days must be unbearable. I apologize for trying to
intrude. If you need quiet time alone, we can talk about the book
later."
The
dispatch display showed that the aircraft for Helmut Icicle was
ready.
I took her
hand, pulled her toward the door leading to the hopper pad. "Dammit!
I do want you to come. We'll watch the vote taken tomorrow, then see
what comes down. You can tell me what it all means from a
galactopolitical point of view."
She
laughed. "All right. But I mean it about stopping for the
clothes."
——
The ship
was a big mean-looking Mitsubishi-Kondo that wore the white and gold
Macrodur colors and the Big M corporate crest. It had full defensive
shields, significant armament, a subspace communicator, an
ultraencrypted phone link, and a well-appointed bedroom.
"How
long did you say our trip would take?" Joanna inquired in a
throaty purr.
I sighed.
"Not long enough. Besides, I'm a useless wreck, babe."
"Then
a holiday is just what you need."
"It
won't take long to get where we're going, even if we stop and shop.
This boat toddles along at three kay per. Adam lent us a lovely
ride."
We settled
in on the flight deck. "He seems like a very nice man,"
Joanna remarked. "He lives up to his reputation. No wonder the
other Concerns hate Macrodur."
"Yeah.
Imagine a businessman who doesn't put business first . . ."
We lofted
into the air, moving slowly northward under the control of Toronto
Conurb ATZ. The atmosphere was so thick with trapped mist that it was
hard to distinguish one tower from another, but our hopper was not
immediately vectored out from under the force-field. Instead, we came
to a dead stop in midair, joining multiple stalled processions of
other aircraft. A moment later the force-field's golden umbrella
winked out. The mist that had been held beneath it was torn to bits
by sudden wind, and snowflakes swirled around us.
"What
the hell?" I murmured, and began querying the navigator.
"Helly,
look!" Joanna exclaimed, pointing outside.
A train of
starship gigs was descending out of the storm toward the city center.
There must have been thirty or forty of them, large and beetle-shaped
and decorated with cobalt-blue lights.
They began
to touch down at the Macpherson Tower sky-port.
"I'll
be damned," I said. "The Haluk are leaving!"
I used the
hopper's sensitive scanner to clarify the scene and was proved right.
The aliens had somehow obtained permission to embark directly from
their tower into Earth orbit, without using Oshawa Starport.
"But
why?" Joanna asked in bewilderment. "Is this what the
Servant meant by withdrawing the Haluk presence? Is it some formal
expression of wounded dignity?"
"I
hope that's what it is," I said. But a ghost-icicle had
materialized at the back of my neck.
The aerial
exodus lasted about forty minutes, while hopper traffic above Toronto
remained totally paralyzed and the snowfall thickened, causing mild
havoc on the streets below.
I surfed
the news channels. The media were giving the amazing event a big
play, even broadcasting satellite views of a monstrous alien starship
waiting in low geosynchronous orbit for the return of its
auxiliaries. It was the flagship of the Servant of Servants. I'd seen
it myself twice before, under more ominous circumstances.
When the
last gig vanished into the sky, the force-field umbrella was turned
on again. Air traffic resumed its normal pattern. The capital of the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds went about its interrupted business and
so did we, escaping the restricted airspace of the conurbation and
rising to our cruising altitude in the ionosphere.
Had all of
the Haluk gone away?
Absolutely
not, the media reported breathlessly. Reporters' phone calls to the
official Haluk embassy codes were answered—curtly. No comments
would be forthcoming from Haluk sources until after tomorrow's
Assembly vote. The Servant's flagship was "on a meditative
cruise."
Macpherson
Tower was shielded against scanners, as were most of the commercial
and government buildings in the central city; however, persons of
Halukoid physique had been observed moving in front of undraped
windows. One enterprising media snoop even analyzed water usage in
the upper half of the tower—and concluded that Haluk toilets
were being flushed. Lots of the aliens were still in there!
Hoppers
carrying tabloid websters that attempted unauthorized landings on the
Macpherson skyport were shooed away, as always, by Haluk guards armed
with riot-batons. Elevator access was blocked, as usual, by Haluk
security personnel. Neither CCID nor the Enforcement Division of
Xenoaffairs attempted to enter the tower by force. Technically, the
top two-thirds of it was still alien soil, and no Commonwealth judge
was empowered to issue a warrant to search it.
Yet.
Half
dozing in the command seat as we soared through the sky under
autopilot, I wondered whether my brother Dan was still inside
Macpherson Tower. Was Alistair Drummond hiding there, too, along with
other blown demiclone spies who had infiltrated other establishments
in the capital? Minor genplas makeovers and iris implants would
enable them to assume alternate identities. If they avoided sensitive
occupations, demis might easily be able to fade away into the general
population—especially on the free-soil worlds. All human beings
had a genetic profile made at birth, but retesting everyone would be
prohibitively expensive.
It was
more likely that both the Haluk and their demiclone agents were
simply biding their time as we were, awaiting the outcome of the
all-important vote.
Nothing of
any importance, I believed, could happen until then.
Chapter 10
Now
arriving Timmins Municipality ATZ. Please supply next routing.
I started
awake at the sound of the navigator's voice. Joanna had also closed
her eyes during the half hour or so it had taken us to travel the
first leg of our journey. She yawned and stretched and looked out the
side window of the flight deck.
We were in
a holding pattern at ten thousand meters. We'd left the snowstorm
behind, and the clear night sky blazed with stars; there was no moon.
The total blackness of the land surface was relieved by widely
scattered patches of twinkling lights that marked small communities,
plus a single urban constellation of moderate size directly beneath
us.
"Timmins,
Ontario?" she murmured in disbelief, checking the navigation
display. "This is your secret hideout?"
Timmins
was a former mining center 180 miles north of Lake Huron, now a hub
for an assortment of wilderness recreation areas.
"It's
your one-stop shopping mall," I told her. "We're about
halfway to our destination, a place called Kingfisher Lodge, another
six hundred fifty klicks northwest of here. The lodge is a great big
comfortable house that Rampart once used for corporate junkets and
executive family holidays. Nice lake—although that'll be frozen
over by now."
I said to
the navigator, "Land at Timmins Municipal Sky-port. Proceed to
the general aviation terminal."
En
route.
"Is
the lodge very isolated?" Joanna asked.
"There's
a little town called Central Patricia about ninety kilometers west of
it, maybe four hundred souls. Otherwise, nothing but bush, a few
trails and unpaved roads. No one lives in Kingfisher Lodge during the
winter months, but it's always heated and maintained. Domestic robots
keep it clean and in good repair. It has a storehouse full of staple
foods and all kinds of other supplies. It also has an exceptionally
good security system, which is the main reason I decided to stash
myself there."
The hopper
was plunging inertialessly toward the ground. We'd land within a few
minutes. I gave Joanna the Macrodur corporate niobium credit card
that I'd found waiting for me on the hopper's instrument console.
"Use
this to buy whatever special edibles and winter clothing and personal
items you think we might need. Keep my damned wasp-waist in mind when
you buy my snow gear. And no gloves for me, either. My four weird
fingers won't fit. Stick with mittens."
"I
understand."
"Take
as long as you like to shop. We're in no hurry. As a matter of fact,
I need time to make a few important phone calls. The Timmins
e-merchants and mallearmoire services will deliver right to the
hopper. I'll stay out of sight while the stuff is stowed aboard."
"I
wonder—does the lodge have equipment for crosscountry skiing?"
She smiled in reminiscence. "It might be fun for us to do that
again ... unless you think we should stay indoors."
"No,
of course not. Why don't you buy skis and envirosuits for us. I know
there are snowmobiles at the lodge. We can play with them, too."
We flew
over Timmins at low altitude, heading for the skyport north of town.
It was only 1935 hours and the place was wide-awake.
"I've
never driven a snowmobile," Joanna said. "Is it risky?"
"Not
if you travel at a reasonable speed and stay off thin ice. The snow
won't be very deep this early in the season. Tell you what. Give me
your phone. I'll program it with my own dex and links. That way
you'll have instant access to all of Rampart's services in an
emergency. And you won't end up locked outside the security perimeter
or unable to access the in-house systems if I get stomped by a bull
moose or something."
She gave
me a sidelong glance. " 'Or something.' Are you talking about
danger from the Haluk?"
"I'm
just saying that in the wilderness, Mother Nature can get you if you
don't watch out—or even if you
do. It's only sensible to
take precautions. As the for the Haluk... I suppose they could come
after me, if they knew where to look. But I've covered our tracks
pretty well. And now that the Helly-demiclone cat is out of the bag,
they no longer have any compelling motive for shutting my mouth.
Actually, after the Servant's denials in the Assembly today, it would
be counterproductive for them to try it."
"True."
But she looked troubled as she rummaged in her shoulder bag and
handed me her phone. "I'm afraid it's just an inexpensive thing.
It doesn't even have video."
I checked
the instrument out. It was a real clunker, at least five years old.
"We'll need a model with a bit more pizzazz. Why don't you pick
up a Lucevera 4500 just like mine. I'll teach you how to make it do
some great tricks."
She tucked
the phone back into her bag with a sigh. "You probably think I'm
a hopeless Luddite. To me a phone is just something for talking into,
or accessing the odd bit of data when I'm away from my computer."
We
were on the ground now—actually hovering just above it—drifting
after a follow me bot that led us to a parking bay. Timmins had a
nice little skyport with heated pavement, but there was no
force-umbrella and the air temperature was around minus-ten Celsius.
I conversed with the general aviation desk and arranged for a short
stay undercover, then turned back to Joanna.
"Tell
me the truth, babe. Are you having second thoughts about this jaunt?
If so, you can catch a commercial flight back to Toronto in a couple
of hours."
"No.
I'm going with you," she insisted. "About our fresh food
and wine: How long will we be at the lodge?"
I hadn't
thought much about that. Besides the basic security considerations, I
had a compelling need to put distance between myself and the chaos in
Toronto while still remaining accessible for long distance
consultation. Whether I'd be able to indulge myself depended on one
of the phone calls I was about to make.
"How
long would you like to stay?" I asked Joanna.
"We
could try it for a week," she said softly, after hesitating a
moment. "I'll call my department secretary tomorrow and plead
urgent family business. It's more or less the truth."
"Are
we ... a family, Joanna?"
She
smiled sadly. "I don't know the answer to that, Helly. I don't
know
you—and I'm talking about the man inside the blue
skin, not the captivating alien who had his wicked way with me."
My laugh,
at least, was still human. "I beg your pardon, Professor. Who
seduced whom?"
She gave a
wry shrug. "I confess. You were irresistible." Her
expression became somber. "But you've changed so much over the
years we've been apart. I can sense it, even in the short time we've
been together again. Those stories you told..." Her eyes
clouded. "You're more driven, more adamant, less vulnerable.
Perhaps it's a good thing." But she didn't sound convinced.
"I
think I'm also a lot wiser than I was when I left you. It was the
worst mistake of my life. But I was devastated by what had happened.
I didn't want your pity. That, on top of everything else—"
"It
wasn't pity I felt for you then! It was love."
I had to
ask the question. "How do you feel about me now?"
"I
don't know." She looked away.
"I
love you. What I did—giving in to despair, not trusting you—was
stupid and cowardly. I'd like to start again. This damned body of
mine—"
"That's
not a factor, Helly. It's only a distraction."
"What
is a factor?"
She seemed
to take a deep breath before plunging ahead. "For one thing, I
was very disturbed when you said that you'd killed your Haluk
demiclone in cold blood. It wasn't self-defense, then? Did you really
mean what you said?"
"I
meant it."
"Will
you tell me about it?"
"I'd
rather not." I had glossed over the incident when recounting it
earlier.
"I'm
not morbidly curious. I'm trying to understand."
Understand
what goes on inside a killer's head ...
"All
right." I spoke slowly and calmly. My stiff Halukoid features
were a useful mask to hide behind. "I woke in a kind of hospital
room inside Macpherson Tower. There were alien medics tending me for
a while, and then they went away. I didn't realize at first that my
body had been transformed. When I discovered what had been done to
me, and found the unconscious demiclone lying in a bed across the
room, I knew what the Haluk were going to do with him. Even knew why
they'd let me live. I was going to be forced to tutor my double in
his role as
me. I smothered him with a pillow."
She nodded
slowly, unwilling to comment.
"It
wasn't revenge, Joanna." But as I said it, I had to wonder. "It
was mortal combat. An act of war against an enemy that intended to
use my persona to further their conspiracy against humanity."
"But
there is no war!"
"The
Haluk Grand Design is equivalent to war. And demicloning is a weapon.
I had a right and an obligation to prevent that weapon from being
used against us. Fake Helly had no right to live, any more than a dog
infected with rabies has. There was no way I could cure the demi of
his ... condition. All I could do was prevent him from using it to
harm the Human Commonwealth."
She spoke
calmly. "You killed him because he stole your identity and was
going to insinuate himself into Rampart. Not because you believed he
was going to harm anyone."
"I
admit that those notions were in my mind. But there were larger
considerations as well. You don't know the Haluk as I do, the
monstrous things they've done. What they intend to do. And you have
no idea of my real feelings about Rampart. I don't love the Concern
or live for it, the way Eve does. And I certainly would never kill
for it."
But it
wasn't my motivation that distressed Joanna so much as the state of
my conscience.
"When
you killed the clone ... didn't you feel
any remorse?"
Her tone was now almost desperate. I knew the reassurance she wanted,
but I couldn't give it to her. She had a right to the truth.
"What
I felt was revulsion," I told her. "Regret that the actions
were necessary. But I had no sense of doing wrong and certainly no
remorse. I wasn't sorry then and I'm not sorry now. Do you remember
my telling you and the others about the two hundred demiclones in the
secret lab on Dagasatt? I killed them deliberately, too, because it
seemed necessary at the time. I've had nightmares about it for years,
and I'll probably dream about snuffing Fake Helly when my overloaded
brain gets the incident fully processed. I killed because I had to,
Joanna. If you can't bring yourself to accept that—"
She
lifted her hand, touched the side of my alien face. Tears welled in
her eyes. "I'll try. I'll do my best to try to understand. When
I see what the Haluk did to you—your poor face, the lost smile
that I loved so much, the rest of your body—I'm so
sorry,
Helly! I didn't intend to make it worse for you." She threw
her arms around me, buried her head in my chest. "But it's
hard."
Hard to
love, easy to pity.
I said,
"Let it alone. Put it out of your mind, at least for a week.
Please, Joanna."
"All
right," she said, drawing away, trying to smile. "I'll
begin by applying woman's sovereign remedy: shopping."
——
While she
was inside the terminal, I retreated to the hopper's bedroom to make
the first of the phone calls. After engaging encryption, I programmed
the data-strip to identify me by my real name, sans code ID. I left
the video option engaged, then buzzed my old pal and political
antagonist Geraldo Gonzalez, the lone Delegate of the Reversionist
party. Our conversation was brief—with a predictable preamble
when he saw my face.
"Gerry,
it's Helly."
"Jesus!
... Oh, man! I watched the news conference and nearly had a heart
attack. And then your performance in the Assembly—"
"What
did you think of it? Was I credible?"
"I
sure as hell accepted your story. You know why? Because one of the
first things the impostor did when he mysteriously returned from
Sagittarius was cut off Asahel Frost's financial support of the
party! You and I haven't always seen eye-to-eye on political
strategy, but I couldn't believe you'd abandon us without an
explanation. That asshole absolutely refused to meet with me. All
he'd say was that he'd had a change of heart."
"That
was true enough, metaphorically speaking."
"So
he was a Haluk impostor! Did you manage to nab him?"
"The
demiclone has vanished," I said, not correcting his error of
fact. "God only knows what kind of a mess he left my financial
affairs in, but I wanted to assure you that my funding of the
Reversionist cause will be restored as soon as possible. Meanwhile,
I'll see that you get a generous string-free contribution directly
from Rampart."
"Thank
you ... Helly." He was still uncomfortable connecting the
identity to the blue face. Couldn't blame him.
"I'm
back on the Rampart board," I told him, "and I've taken
over as Rampart president. We're weeding Haluk demiclones out of the
Concern with the help of CCID, and we'll release their names and
their confessions as soon as possible. I intend to do everything in
my power to show up the Servant of Servants as a roaring bullshit
artist."
Gonzalez
was nodding his agreement. "Yes. Yes. Throw that lying speech of
his right back in his teeth! Jesus God— how many Haluk spies do
you suppose we're going to find hiding in the woodpile?"
A good
question. "Gerry, have the Assembly Delegates ever submitted to
DNA profiling?"
"Sontag
proposed it in mid-September, when his committee hearings were really
raising a media stink. The measure was voted down. A few Liberal
Delegates followed Sontag's example and were tested anyhow. There
were also rumors that your man Nazarian did some clandestine testing
six months ago and found zip."
"I
put him up to that. But a lot could have happened in half a year."
"Fuckin'
A. After today you can bet your life the DNA testing measure will be
reintroduced by constituent demand. Maybe I can do it myself! My
office is being deluged with mail from worried citizens—and
most of them aren't even Reverse voters. I'm not the only Delegate
getting an earful, either. The Liberals I've talked to say the volume
of negative comment is unprecedented. The Conservatives are keeping
mum and looking worried."
"Good.
That's what I wanted to hear. Well, I'll let you go now. I just
wanted to reassure you about my commitment to the party and its
principles."
"Umm
... you should know that we've taken a slightly different direction
since the Sontag committee hearings began. The push for preindustrial
Insap rights lost its popular appeal with the disclosure of the Haluk
demiclone threat. We switched our emphasis to the corrupt influence
of the Hundred Concerns—especially the Haluk Consortium—on
Commonwealth political decision-making. We blame them for letting the
Haluk situation get out of control, pushing those ineffective
treaties through. Our current push is for prompt treaty revision."
"I
agree one hundred percent. We'll talk later, Gerry."
I touched
the End pad, thinking that the Reversionist party wasn't the only one
that would have to rethink its strategy during the days ahead.
Especially
if the Haluk colony vote went the way I feared it would.
I tapped
out Karl Nazarian's code. It was several minutes before he answered.
He looked calm and assured, and somewhere along the line he'd ditched
the incongruous caterer's coverall and donned an elegant business
suit that would have done John Ellington proud. Both men had about
the same build. Maybe the vice chairman had shared.
"Do
you have time to give me a progress report?" I asked. "I'm
on my way to the safe house. With Joanna."
"I
see." The old security man kept a perfectly straight face. "Are
you going to reveal your secret bolt-hole to me?"
"Kingfisher
Lodge. Don't tell anyone else."
Karl
nodded his approval. "Yeah, that might be just about perfect.
God knows none of the paparazzi websters will find you up there. We
pretty much shut the lodge down after Dan's abduction, but there was
no important damage to the physical plant, and the fritzed security
system was repaired. Do you have portable weapons?"
"The
hopper Adam loaned me has a locker full of top-drawer assault gear.
Supplying computers to the Commonwealth must be dangerous work."
Karl
chuckled. "High-paying, anyhow. You want me to let Stanislawski
know where you are?"
"I'll
tell him myself. What's happening in Toronto? Any trace of Drummond?
I figure he's either hiding in Macpherson Tower or else the Servant
of Servants took him away in the Haluk flagship for some strenuous
debriefing."
"Maybe
not.
Makebate's gone."
"Shit—I
didn't even realize the ship had survived Phlegethon!"
"Fake
Helly drove her back to Earth, claiming he'd been held captive by
Y'tata corsairs for six weeks. Since then Drummond has taken the ship
all over the galaxy, overseeing the Rampart-Gala consolidation. He's
even been to Artiuk, the Haluk GHQ in the Spur. No telling where he's
headed now if he's driving that dazzle-boat of yours. A Macrodur
security team checked
Makebate's berth at Oshawa Starport and
found her gone. She jumped the line and lifted off for an unspecified
destination just before noon. That would have been shortly after Fake
Sam called Drummond's code from the boardroom. The ship manifest
listed a pilot named Helmut Icicle."
"That
wiseass! Thumbing his goddamn nose at me... I'm surprised he didn't
wait to see if Fake Sam regained control of the boardroom situation."
"Probably
figured it wasn't going to happen," Karl said. "Think about
it."
"Yeah.
Well, it's probably for the best if Drummond just drops out of sight.
We certainly don't want to bring him to trial. Let the galaxy believe
that an anonymous Haluk was my double."
"There's
no trace of
Makebate's fuel signature within a hundred
light-years of Earth. He's had all the time in the world to make a
clean break. Zone Patrol's on alert, and Rampart has put a hefty
price on the head of the John Doe perp who stole the starship.
Makebate is so distinctive that Drummond won't dare take her
to any important human world."
"Let's
hope he ends up on Bumfuck-Beta in the Crab Nebula," I grumped.
"What's the situation now in Rampart Tower? Have you been able
to question Fake Sam?"
"Yes.
The Haluk Grand Design is just what you suspected: a plan for
conquest by subversion. Demiclones were supposed to infiltrate
Commonwealth government agencies and the Hundred Concerns over a
period of years. According to Sam, they already have a fair number of
maggots inside the Concerns, but relatively few in the government."
"Did
you ask him about Assembly Delegates?"
"Yes,
but he had no information. I suppose it figures. Most espionage
systems are compartmentalized."
"Tell
me more about the Grand Design."
"No
real surprises. While the demiclone insertion continued, Haluk
colonies in the Milky Way were supposed to expand as rapidly as
possible. They'd build up their starship fleets, their scientific and
technical establishments, and their heavy industry, with help from
unsuspecting humanity. Eventually the Commonwealth authority
structure would be so riddled with alien subversives that it would
fall without much of a fight. Sam didn't know the precise Grand
Design timetable. That's in the hands of the Haluk Council of Nine."
"Not
the Servant of Servants?" I was surprised.
"Sam
said the SSL concocted the original scheme, but he ultimately answers
to the Nine. Their offices are hereditary and they act as
repositories of racial wisdom and conscience. They don't overrule the
Servant very often, though. He receives his authority directly from
the Haluk common people—hence his title."
"Interesting.
Did Fake Sam know whether an imminent attack on humanity is being
contemplated?"
"No.
He isn't privy to military strategy. He was trained in human
corporate law and only assumed his position a couple of months ago.
It was fortuitous that he went to Rampart rather than some other
Concern. It's not easy for the Haluk to insert ringers in really high
places without arousing suspicion, so they're forced to wait until an
appropriate opportunity presents itself. The real Sam Yamamoto was
granted an extensive leave of absence not long after you took off for
Phlegethon, with the understanding that he'd be promoted and raised
to the board on his return. It was a perfect setup for the Haluk to
plug in their man."
"Did
you find out what happened to the real Sam?"
"The
demi says he's locked up in Macpherson Tower. The Haluk kept him
alive for what the fake called 'coerced consultation.' There are
nearly three hundred other DNA donors being held prisoner there for
the same reason. Not all from Rampart."
"Christ!
... Karl, we've got to do something about them before the Haluk
decide to eliminate incriminating witnesses."
"I've
already got Hector working on it. There's no way short of a
declaration of war that CCID or ECID can search an alien embassy
without permission. But embassies have been stormed by inflamed mobs
of citizens before. I guess it all comes down to the principle you
quoted in your infamous
Wall Street Journal interview: we can
do whatever we please, so long as we don't give a damn about the
consequences."
"Kelly's
Rules," I murmured, "come back to haunt me. Okay. Do it!
Just have Hector and his hooligans wait until after Toronto's 2300
hour newscast... Did Fake Sam give you the names of other demi agents
inside Rampart?"
"So
far we have Amadeo Outline, our biggest fish, thirty-six Internal and
External security people ranging from colonel to grunt, and
forty-five relatively low-ranking personnel in the Finance and Data
Processing departments. Sam also named twelve high-ranking executives
working for other Haluk Consortium Concerns. They were the only
outsiders he could recall offhand. I've already passed that
information on to CCID and ICS. We'll get more names out of Sam
during the next interrogation session when we go to deep-probe. He's
resting now."
"Right.
Now tell me about Amadeo Guthrie."
"Pure
gold!" Karl grinned triumphantly. "He opened a secret file
in his personal computer that listed over sixty demiclones in crucial
Rampart fleet positions on Seriphos, Tyrins, Hygeia, Asklepios, and
Caduceus. Dispatchers, Fleet Security starship officers, even an
Assistant Maintenance Chief at Seriphos Starport. With luck, they're
being rounded up right now. We're getting the situation under
control."
"Karl,
I want the names of all Rampart demiclones in custody released to the
media in time for tonight's late news posting. We need to arouse
public opinion—make the invasion of Macpherson Tower morally
justifiable."
"I
can't release the names myself, Helly. I don't have the authority. If
I leaked them anonymously, only the tabloids would pick them up. You
need the information posted on legitimate media sites."
"All
right, I'll talk to Eve about it. You pass the names on to her
immediately, along with any other confession material that might make
a splash. Just one last question: When your gang did the secret DNA
testing of the Assembly Delegates, did they find any ringers?"
"Not
a one. We tested a fair number of staffers, too. They were all human
seven months ago."
"Okay.
Keep up the good work. And let me know how Hector's plan to storm the
embassy shapes up."
I ended
the call, got myself a cup of coffee from the hopper's tiny galley,
and drank it down scalding, cursing the impossibility of having a
real drink for at least two more hours. I could have used some Dutch
courage before making the call to Eve, which would determine whether
Joanna and I continued on to Kingfisher Lodge or returned to Toronto.
Under
normal circumstances, even with the Haluk out to fry my fanny, I'd
probably have stayed at Rampart Tower and worked with the others on
damage control, at least until after the Assembly vote. But I wasn't
normal—not mentally and certainly not physically. I was walking
wounded and desperately in need of a timeout. Trouble was, I was
afraid my older sister might be, too.
She picked
up on the third buzz.
"What
is it?" Her face was haggard but her hair was still perfect. She
recognized me instantly and didn't flinch.
"I'm
on my way to a safe house. I plan to stay undercover for a while
until I'm certain the Haluk aren't still gunning for me. I'll keep in
close touch with you and with Karl Nazarian and Adam Stanislawski."
"Gunter
Eckert will also want to confer with you," she said crisply.
"Will you let me have your phone code?"
I gave it
to her. "Tell Gunter I'll talk to him tomorrow, after the vote.
Till then I'm incommunicado unless the world falls down. I've got a
serious case of combat fatigue, and if I want to function tomorrow,
I'll have to get some sleep. How are you holding up, Evie?"
Her eyes
were focused firmly on mine. "I'm coping ... Asa. The police
action in the tower has quieted down. Simon has retired to his tower
suite. The other members of the Board of Directors are still here,
helping to normalize the situation in whatever way they can. John
Ellington will be wire-pulling and whip-cracking all night. I've
spent most of my time talking to Cousin Zed and Matt Gregoire on
Seriphos. Rampart ExSec starships are cooperating with Zone Patrol to
organize interstellar surveillance over the Haluk colonies. Matt
suggested we evacuate all civilians from Cravat as a precaution, and
I agreed."
"We'll
have to set up a heavy blockade around the planet. The best ships we
have."
"They're
already on their way. I understand the situation. Now."
"Evie—"
"You
can trust me, Asa. I fully accept what you told us at the board
meeting. I was duped and I feel humiliated and angry, but I'm not
dysfunctional or in a panic. I'll survive this mess and so will
Rampart. Just don't expect any warm gushes of sisterly sentiment for
a while. At the moment, my emotions are on hold. There's too much
work to be done."
"I
agree. And it sounds like you have things well in hand. One thing I
need you to take care of personally is the release of the names of
all Rampart demiclones to the media. Do it in time for the
Late
Night Toronto newscast on PNN. Karl Nazarian will give the
information to you right away."
"May
I ask why you want to do this?"
"Have
you been keeping in close touch with Karl?"
"He
sends me hourly progress reports. I've only skimmed the latest one.
The Perseus situation has occupied most of my attention."
"The
Sam Yamamoto demiclone confessed that around three hundred human DNA
donors—the real people who were exchanged for Haluk agents—are
alive and being held prisoner inside Macpherson Tower. They look just
like me."
"Oh,
dear God."
"I
want you to tell that to the media, as well as announcing the names
of our missing people. Demand that every single one of the captives
be freed immediately, unharmed. Warn the Haluk that dire things will
happen if those people are killed or taken away. After the newscast,
call up the Haluk embassy and formally reiterate your demand. Insist
that it be forwarded at once to the Servant and the Council of Nine.
If you can manage it, convince other Concern CEOs to do the same. A
lot of those captives aren't Rampart people."
"But
the Haluk will deny—"
"To
hell with them! We want to arouse public opinion. Make our citizens
receptive to the notion of a rescue raid on Macpherson."
"Asa,
you can't!"
"It'll
be a mob of outraged citizen protesters or some such thing," I
said. "Nothing to do with Rampart. Would you rather have the
captives dead?"
"No,
but—"
"You
have to do your part. Those people had their DNA stolen, just as I
did. They've lost their human appearance and their identities. Alien
interlopers have taken their places at work, lived in their homes,
invaded the lives of their families ... Can I count on you to issue
the statement, Evie?"
"Yes,"
she said, with no more hesitation.
Her old
self.
"Thank
you. There's one final thing you should know about." I told her
how Karl had been deliberately infected with a debilitating virus by
Haluk agents, and my suspicions about Simon. "Ask Karl to refer
you to the doctor who was able to cure him. It's imperative that
Simon no longer be treated by Rampart medical people."
"Those
bastards," she hissed. "Those fucking blue bastards! I'll
have Pop taken care of right now."
She cut me
off.
I sat on
the edge of the bed with my head in my hands, overcome with abruptly
released tension, trying not to vomit up the coffee I'd drunk.
Thanking God that Eve was charging ahead with her usual efficiency.
That Karl and Hector and the others would continue to fight the good
fight without me. That I didn't have to return to Toronto.
Joanna and
I could continue on to the tranquil solitude of Kingfisher Lodge.
Deliberately, I programmed my phone to accept only Cosmic Priority
emergency calls. Then I lay down to catch a few winks.
——
We arrived
at our destination in the Eastern Kenora region of Ontario just after
2115. With only starlight for illumination, it was difficult to see
any details on the ground, so while we were still at cruising
altitude I turned on the wide-scan terrain viewer with false color
enhancement to give Joanna an idea of what lay beneath us.
It was a
beautiful, forbidding landscape of rolling, snow-covered boreal
forest, laced by rivers and streams and strewn with icebound lakes.
To the south, beyond the arterial Albany River, lay the vastness of
Nipigon Wilderness Park, a rugged outdoor playground in summer,
nearly uninhabited in winter. Northward and to the east the land
flattened into dense boggy thickets of black spruce and tamarack that
extended without a single track all the way to Hudson Bay. To the
west was the little town of Central Patricia, where only
administrative personnel, service and transport people, and traders
lived all year round.
We
descended to a little over 2000 meters and hovered in preparation for
landing. I switched to a close-up view of Kingfisher Lodge itself.
The rambling one-story building was constructed of sturdy plascrete
with an attractive faux-log veneer. It was situated on the shore of a
moderate-sized body of water called Caddisfly Lake, frozen solid now
and smoothly covered with snow. Dense stands of balsam fir and white
spruce surrounded an open compound about three hundred meters wide. I
knew that the defensive perimeter extended another 400 meters into
the forest and the lake.
Aircraft
casually overflying and scanning Kingfisher Lodge would think it was
deserted, buttoned up for the season. The compound had no
ground-based dissimulator, external force-field, or any other
detectable high-tech defenses. The Kagi emplacements and less lethal
intruder deterrents were well-camouflaged among the lake rocks and
brush, as were the multiphase alarm sensors. No interior lights were
visible from the air. Two of the fieldstone chimneys gave off narrow
plumes of vapor, indicating that the heating system was functioning,
although the thermostat was probably set at a temperature level too
low for human comfort.
In
addition to the main lodge, which had at least ten bedrooms, the
establishment included a guard tower disguised as a backwoods food
cache, an equipment building, a couple of utility structures, and a
boat shed. Between the rear outbuildings and the main house was a
snow-covered circular area about ten meters in diameter, a lidded
hopper lift that gave access to an underground hangar carved from the
solid granite of the Canadian Shield. A tunnel led from the hangar to
the house. Not part of the original design, hangar and tunnel had
been added during Dan's year-round confinement, for the convenience
of the resident staff.
"Now
let me show you how we get inside our rustic fortress," I said
to Joanna. "Since this is a Macrodur hopper, it doesn't carry
any of the lodge's system links, so we'll use your new phone."
She took
the instrument out of the inside breast pocket of her suit coat and I
showed her how to call up the lodge-exterior command menu, deactivate
the antiaircraft sensors and photon weaponry, and roll back the door
covering the elevator platform of the underground hangar.
While I
guided the hopper's manual descent, she took care of the landing
preparations. Then she accessed the lodge-interior menu and tapped
more pads to switch on room lights, crank up the heat, awaken the
housebots so they could deal with our baggage, turn on the
mattress-warmer in the master suite, and start a couple of hot baths.
"This
is absolutely decadent," she said, laughing. "A backwoods
technocottage! Look: I can light a fire in something called the
master-suite snuggery. Doesn't that sound cozy? And the phone even
wants to program the stereo. Would you prefer classical or jazz?"
"Both.
How about the
Undercurrent and
Intermodulation albums
with Bill Evans and Jim Hall. Then maybe
Eine Kleine Nachtmusik."
"Perfect."
I
reengaged the perimeter defenses. We were hovering now at a little
over tree height above the underground hangar entry, which was over a
hundred meters from the house. I turned on the Mitsubishi's emergency
landing spot and saw something dash across the snowy ground and
disappear behind one of the outbuildings. Joanna saw it too.
"What
was that?" she exclaimed. "It looked like a bear."
"Small
one, maybe. Funny. I'd have thought bears would have hibernated by
now." Something else was odd about the presence of the animal,
but I was too maxed-out mentally to make sense of it. "Okay,
babe, down we go. Hit the pad to roll back the hangar elevator door."
"I
thought I already did," she said, frowning.
"The
lid's still closed. Give me the phone and I'll recheck the menu."
A blinking
red telltale. I queried it and the display read
——
HANGAR DOOR IS LOCKED. PLEASE GIVE PASSWORD.
——
Well,
damn. The thing wasn't supposed to lock until I fed it my own new
password. I tried the override and reboot, but the maneuvers didn't
succeed. The circular opening remained sealed shut.
"Rats.
Could be a computer glitch. Or maybe some jerk forgot to purge the
old password when the staff left. Well, we'll do things the
old-fashioned way for now, and I'll check the lift machinery
tomorrow."
I touched
down in an open area less than twenty meters from the back of the
house. The night was windless and pitch-black after I doused the
hopper's spotlight, the snow depth modest, and the temperature
minus-twenty Celsius.
We spent a
few minutes in the cargo bay sorting out clothes and toiletries for
our immediate needs and stuffing them into a large duffelbag. I
pulled a couple of guns out of the weapons locker—a holstered
Ivanov to discourage wandering bears, and a big ugly Talavera-Gerardi
333 actinic blaster with an autotargeting scope, in case the Haluk
slammed the perimeter defenses and started besieging the house. The
rest of the supplies and weapons could wait until tomorrow.
"Why
don't we slip into the envirosuits instead of carrying them," I
suggested to her. "It's pretty cold out there and the snow's
deep enough to ruin your nice shoes."
So we did
that, hauling the lightweight coveralls over our regular clothes and
donning heated overboots and helmets. I strapped on the Ivanov, slung
the heavy Tala-G on my back, and carried the duffel and a heavy-duty
flashlight. Joanna had her purse and a plastic grocery sack that
contained the makings for a late supper of scrambled eggs, Nova
Scotia smoked salmon, French bread, fresh Tasmanian strawberries, and
Veuve Cliquot champagne.
I used a
remote-control gorget hung around my neck to open the hopper's cargo
door and deploy the steps. Said, "Mush, you huskies! That means
you, Professor DeVet."
She
giggled and we disembarked into shin-deep snow. I used the gorget to
close up the aircraft and turn on its security system and
environmental shield. Then we stood side by side in an immense dark
silence roofed with overarching stars. It was every bit as beautiful
as Arizona.
I was
about to make a romantic remark when Joanna said, "What's that
smell? Could it be the bear?"
A very
faint disgusting odor hung in the icy air and penetrated our helmets.
It wasn't the familiar skunky perfume of bear scats, though; this
stench was as offensive as the reek of the Y'tata, although composed
of different molecules. And I knew what kind of creature had produced
it.
"Not
a bear, a wolverine. That's what we must have seen moving below the
hopper."
I turned
on the flashlight and found a line of prints that made a beeline
across the compound. We went to look at them. They were nearly as
long as a human hand but much wider. Big guy. The animal had stepped
neatly in its own tracks, placing the hind foot where the front foot
had pressed down the snow, so that each print seemed to have a double
row of five stout claws.
"That's
strange," I murmured. "The perimeter defenses let small
animals and birds get through without getting zapped. But something
as large as a wolverine should have triggered a painful warning shot
from one of the Tazegard units, then a lethal Kagi blast if the beast
kept on coming. I wonder if part of the perimeter is down?"
We paused
while I unzipped my suit and asked my phone to run a system check.
All the defensive units were on-line. The obvious explanation eluded
my fuddled brain. "I can't figure it. But I hope the critter
managed to escape the lodge perimeter while we were landing. We sure
as hell don't want a wolverine loose inside the compound."
"Why?"
"They
don't hibernate, they're powerful enough to kill a moose, and they
like to break into wilderness houses and smash things for the fun of
it. Then they spray the bits and pieces like a giant skunk and...
sometimes deface the scene of the crime in other unpleasant ways."
"Good
grief! I've never seen a wolverine. Are they very large?"
"A
big specimen can weigh nearly 30 kilos and be more than a meter long.
I've only seen one in the wild. It had reddish-black fur and looked
like a small bear. They're notoriously fierce and have the worst
temper of any North American wild animal. You don't ever want to meet
a wolverine."
"Well,
I guess not," said Joanna, looking apprehensively over her
shoulder.
Instead,
we were about to meet something a whole lot worse.
——
We had
unlocked the lodge's heavily secured back door before leaving the
aircraft, so we entered easily into a warm, brightly lit mudroom
where we were able to take off our envirosuits. I hung the hopper
gorget and the pistol belt with the Ivanov on a handy peg beside my
suit.
Joanna was
still wearing the handsome camel-colored wool ensemble and blue silk
blouse she had chosen for the earlier festivities. With her shining
hair pulled back into a braided coil, and a discreet string of pearls
at her throat, she looked like every randy student's dream of a
female academic.
Mine, too.
I was
still clad in Dan's perforated athletic garb, although I had shed the
body armor right after the media conference. I looked shabby and
ridiculous and felt like a sack of azure ordure.
A domestic
robot appeared, one of those faceless yard-high jobs with umpteen
recessed grab-arms and finicky cleaning accessories. It said, "Good
evening! May I carry your baggage?"
Someone
had pasted a label on it that read: roberta. Clever. Half the
domestic bots in the Commonwealth were named Roberta. The rest were
called Robbie.
Nevertheless,
I gratefully handed over the duffel and the weighty long gun. Joanna
kept the groceries.
"May
I know your names, sir and madam?" the machine inquired.
"I
hate these things," I muttered. "So pushy. Mom and Pop
would never have them in the house."
"Don't
hurt its feelings," Joanna admonished me. "It's only trying
to do its job." To the machine: "I'm Joanna. He's Helly.
Please follow us with the things, Roberta. Don't make any gratuitous
remarks or offer helpful comments unless we ask you to do so."
"Yes,
Joanna."
The three
of us moved into the kitchen, which wouldn't have shamed a small
hotel. Joanna began opening cabinets and inspecting appliances.
I said,
"I'd love to cook for us, but I don't think I could boil water
tonight. Can you manage?"
"Poor
baby. Of course I can. Why don't I get our little supper ready now.
The lodge has a servitron robot. It can bring the food and wine to us
when we want it. Meanwhile, you go unpack our things and relax. Just
tell me how to find our room—"
"Master
suite," I corrected her. "Go down the long hallway until
you get to a living room the size of the Commonwealth Art Gallery.
The suite's on the opposite side of the living room, down another
hall that leads into the guest-bedroom wing. Remember that your bath
awaits, madame! I'm going to have one that's lavender-flavored."
The bot
and I trundled off, while Bill Evans and Jim Hall played "Angel
Face" on the global stereo.
When
my brother Dan was in residence,
he had inhabited the master
suite—the family wanting to make him as comfortable as
possible. I'd tell Joanna about Dan's incarceration when our stay in
the lodge was over. Why infect the ambience for no good reason?
The decor
was luxuriously backwoodsy, with floors of heated stone flags
relieved by large rag rugs. Walls of dark-glazed pine were decorated
with watercolors, limited-edition photoprints of outdoor scenes and
animals, and Indian carvings. Not a stuffed critter head in the
place. Officially, no one was allowed to hunt out of Kingfisher
Lodge. All the windows were covered by armored shutters disguised as
wood. I decided I'd roll up the ones in the bedroom so we could enjoy
starlight on snow. If the wolverine came around, we'd show him a
thing or two.
With
Roberta trailing after, I passed a breakfast room, the main dining
room, a game room, a huge library, a room devoted to fly-tying
paraphernalia and fishing tackle, and a full bar with a baby grand
piano and other musical instruments. Beyond that was the main entry
hall, with one set of closed doors opening into the living room and
another, heavily secured now, leading to a large sunporch that was
used only during warm weather. A third door led to the service wing.
I opened
the doors to the living room and said, "Follow me, Roberta."
It kept
quiet. No gratuitous conversation.
The
chamber was cavernous, with a high beamed ceiling and a hideous
chandelier made of discarded caribou antlers that for some reason had
not been turned on. Most of the room was deeply shadowed. The bot and
I went about halfway across the room, to where half a dozen leather
settees were grouped around a huge fireplace fashioned of granite
blocks. The only light came from gas flames flickering among faux
paper-birch logs, and a Tiffany-style bridge lamp standing near a
liquor cart full of decanters and glassware. The stereo speakers in
this room were playing some Germanic opera that Joanna certainly had
not programmed.
She hadn't
ordered the huge living room fireplace turned on, either, or
requested the liquor cart.
"Stand
perfectly still," he said, from somewhere behind me and to my
right. "It would be a great pity if I had to double-dart you
before we had an opportunity to talk. We've never really had a decent
conversation, you and I. It's an appropriate time, don't you think?
On the brink of events that will stagger the galaxy."
It
was my voice, but overlaid with an intonation that was British or
Scottish. No trace of a cowboy twang. The theatrical diction was
way
wrong.
He stepped
out of the shadows holding an Ivanov MS-120, a model that fired darts
with extra sleepy-juice. Two shots would put an adult human out for
twelve hours. I saw a tall, husky man with breadcrust-colored hair
and a prominent widow's peak. His eyes were mean green and his mouth
thin-lipped and wide. He wore knife-creased brown slacks, a tan wool
Pendleton shirt, a cream neck scarf, and Gucci loafers. The duds were
nice, but hardly my style.
He said,
"Are you armed?"
"Only
the Tala-'G the bot's carrying. Left an Ivanov in the mudroom."
"Let's
make sure. Strip down."
"Aww—"
"Do
it!" God, he was an ornery-looking devil. Is that what people
had seen when they looked at
me! "Don't bore me with
false modesty, laddie. I've watched you floating in the tank. And a
gratifying sight it was."
He made me
give my phone to the bot and tell him where the remote control for
the hopper was. As I removed my clothes, shook them out, and then
immediately got dressed again, my fatigued mind was putting it all
together. Too late.
His
own aircraft was inside the locked hangar, secured by his password.
Not
Makebate, which was much too large to fit, but her orbiter
gig, with the starship herself parked in space, concealed by the
powerful dissimulator.
The
wolverine had snuck into the compound when he lowered the lodge
defenses for landing, then found itself trapped.
His own
"Asahel Frost" personal phone, programmed with virtually
all of the data in my own instrument, would have given him access to
the lodge. And of course he'd been here before, during Dan's
abduction. He'd know what a superb hideaway it was.
Two great
minds with but a single thought...
He told
the robot to withdraw to the opposite end of the room, after
instructing it to accept commands only from him. "As for you,
lad, please be seated. We'll wait for your lovely wife." He
indicated a couch opposite the liquor cart. "I was surprised to
see her at your side during the media conference. Her loyalty was
touching."
"Joanna
never had anything to do with you," I said. "Let her go. Do
whatever you like with me."
He poured
amber liquid from one of the decanters into a cut-glass tumbler and
sipped it, still standing, without offering me any. The Ivanov was
tucked in his belt, its two-shot ready-lights glowing. I didn't have
a prayer of rushing him, even if I'd been fit.
"I'll
do whatever I like with both of you," he said. "Your wife
will be just as valuable a negotiating piece as you. When I came here
to the lodge, I could conceive of only one way to save my neck. Now,
thanks to you, I have two alternatives—and the second is much
more attractive than the first. After tomorrow's Assembly vote—"
Joanna
screamed, "Helly! Oh, God, Helly!"
She had
entered the darkened room and seen him illuminated by the Tiffany
lamp and the flames. The man with my face.
I rose
from my seat. "No. It's not me."
She stood
transfixed, staring incredulously at the two of us, clutching the
strap of her shoulder bag as though it were a lifeline.
"Let
me introduce myself, Professor DeVet. My name is Alistair Drummond. I
am the former chairman and CEO of Galapharma AC. Please come and be
seated beside your former husband."
She
obeyed, moving like a sleepwalker, unable to take her eyes off him.
He had put down his drink and taken the Ivanov from his belt, holding
it negligently, apparently without threat.
"Please
empty your purse onto the coffee table," he said. She complied
and he stepped closer to inspect the contents—a card wallet, a
cosmetics case, a computer notebook, several stylomikes, a flat-key
folder, a handkerchief, a tiny tin of peppermint Altoids, and a
phone. He scooped up the computer and the phone and tossed them into
the darkness.
"Roberta!
Pick up the two items I dropped. Take them and the other things
you're carrying to the communication room. Leave the things there and
secure the door with my password."
"Yes,
Citizen Drummond," said the machine. No facile familiarity with
los domesticos for our Alistair. "I was instructed by
Joanna not to offer helpful comments. Will you rescind that order?"
"Yes,"
Drummond said. "What d'you have to say?"
"A
servitron containing cold champagne and hot food prepared by Joanna
is waiting in the kitchen. Shall I summon it?"
A
brilliant smile broke over Drummond's face—my face. I heard
Joanna gasp. She'd always loved my smile.
"Yes,"
Drummond said to the robot, "I'm feeling a bit peckish. Good of
you to've obliged, Professor."
Joanna
glared at him.
"Only
two place settings have been included," said the robot. "There
are adequate amounts of food and wine for three. Do you wish an extra
place setting?"
Drummond
laughed. "Yes, by all means, Roberta. And now you are
dismissed."
"Damned
fink-bot," I growled. "God, I hate those things."
——
So we ate
and drank, Joanna and I sitting side by side, Drummond lounging on
the couch opposite us. He was only slightly inconvenienced by having
to keep us covered with the stunner while shoveling down eggs and lox
and hogging most of the strawberries. He was in excellent spirits and
seemed eager to talk. Maybe megalomaniacs aren't really happy unless
they have an audience.
As Karl
had suspected, Drummond knew the game was up as soon as Fake Sam
informed him that Helly the Haluk had been accepted by the Rampart
Board of Directors. Even if Sam's demiclone security officers had
been able to take control of the boardroom and its distinguished
occupants, there was no possible way for Sam to salvage the
situation. Murdering the directors would accomplish nothing. Taking
hostages was an even more useless option. Realistically, all Sam
could have hoped to do was retreat, taking the Rampart demi
contingent with him.
Sam had
urged Drummond to immediately take refuge in Macpherson Tower. Not
bloody likely! The Scotsman was crazy but not stupid. The brilliant
stratagem he had conceived was totally buggered, and in his
Fake-Helly demi-clone condition, he was a dangerous liability to the
aliens. If he entered their embassy, he would never emerge alive.
Free, he might think of a way to blackmail the Haluk into financing a
new life for him on some comfortable freesoil world. But where could
he hide while waiting for events to ripen?
He
remembered Kingfisher Lodge.
Taking a
Rampart hopper there would have meant almost instant capture—either
by Rampart or by the aliens. Every corporate ground vehicle,
aircraft, and starship had a monitoring chip in its navigator that
sent a coded data stream directly to Fleet Security and from there to
the bean-counters in Finance. Haluk demiclones were present in both
departments.
The
only Rampart ship exempt from monitoring was
Makebate. I had
made sure of that.
Drummond
was reluctant to leave Earth for the reasons I had already noted. He
was a wanted man;
Makebate's ultra-luminal fuel-trace was easy
to identify, given enough people looking for it, as was the ship
herself; he had no outplanet hidey-hole ready to receive him; and he
wanted to stay close to the action in Toronto so he could judge his
options accurately. Therefore he did the only practical thing—took
off in the starship using ordinary sublight drive, parked in geosync
orbit, then returned to Earth immediately in the gig, staying outside
the air traffic control network.
I said,
"But you must have suspected that the day would come when the
aliens wouldn't need you anymore. Didn't you whomp up some sort of
insurance policy, the way Ollie Schneider did when he was your mole?"
"No,"
he said quietly. "It wasn't necessary."
Oh, boy.
Maybe escape hatches and fallback maneuvers were too mundane for
hubris-loaded nutcases: every contretemps a fresh challenge. Even now
he wasn't planning a getaway. He was mulling over a new scam
involving Joanna and me.
I could
hardly wait to find out what it was.
Joanna
said to Drummond, "May I ask you something?"
That
damned smile. "You may
ask." He poured the last of
the champagne into his own glass.
"How
in the world did you escape from the landslide at the Arizona gold
mine?"
"By
following rattlesnakes." He threw me a humorous look. "Spare
me the obvious comment, lad. The mine was riddled with old tunnels
and shafts. I had my little penlight, which I tied to my head with my
scarf, and I had my Lanvin actinic pistol. There was water to drink.
So I coped."
He had
crept and crawled inside Copper Mountain for nearly three days. A
couple of times he nearly died in rock-falls. One of them cut him off
from returning back the way he'd come. (And convinced searchers that
he must be lying dead beneath it.) On the third day, weak from hunger
and with the penlight battery starting to give out, he began
following what seemed like a moving stream of air, thinking it might
lead to an exit. It only brought him into a dead-end gallery.
"At
that point I thought I'd had it. There seemed nowhere else to go. I
set about exploring a jumble of large rocks and suddenly put my boot
right into a rattler nest. The snakes were rather small, but they
were striking at me viciously and I knew they were venomous. I shot
at them with the Lanvin and fried a few—but the rest fled into
a crevice among the rocks that I hadn't noticed. Every single snake
disappeared. I checked out the crevice and discovered the source of
the wind. It was rubble-choked crawlway too narrow for my body, with
sunlight at the end. I blasted rocks until the charge in the Lanvin
pistol was exhausted, and shifted the pieces with my hands. I got
out. I climbed down the mountain and followed a dirt track fifteen
kilometers to a highway. I hitchhiked to Phoenix in a ranch truck and
contacted Tyler Baldwin, the demiclone Galapharma security chief...
and told him about the idea I'd conceived while lost inside the gold
mine. He took me to the Haluk leaders. I think you can imagine the
rest."
"That's
amazing," Joanna said.
"Do
you really think so, Professor?" He'd told the story directly to
her, and as he spoke his eyes had toured her leisurely from north to
south, with several scenic detours that had made me grit my teeth in
fury.
Before she
could reply, I said, "You got lucky. But the Haluk aren't going
to give you a third chance at the jackpot, so what's your new game
plan? Holding us for ransom?"
Reluctantly,
he shifted his attention from Joanna to me. His voice was quite
courteous. "A variation on that theme. Following the Assembly
vote tomorrow—whichever way it goes—you will invite Adam
Stanislawski and the seven members of the Rampart Board of Directors
presently in Toronto to confer with you here at the lodge. The
meeting will be conducted under conditions of the utmost secrecy,
with no other persons present—"
"I
won't do it," I said.
His gaze
flickered to Joanna. "I think you will, given the proper
incentive."
"It'll
never work. You can't hold hostages here. The security's not good
enough. Remember how you grabbed Dan. Others know Joanna and I came
to the lodge. They'll be suspicious—"
"We
and our guests won't remain here," Drummond said airily. "We'll
all be aboard
Makebate, one of the fastest star-ships in the
galaxy. And one that is very well armed. A deal will be struck. I
guarantee it. If not—" He shrugged, cocked his head and
listened to the edgy music. "—at least the denouement will
be appropriately Wagnerian."
He gave us
a mocking toast and tossed down the last of the champagne.
Joanna was
staring at him with an expresion of objective interest. Her voice had
taken on a clinical tone. "That's what you really want, isn't
it? A dramatic ending. To destroy Helly and Adam and the Rampart
leadership, because they defeated you twice over."
Alistair
Drummond put down the empty champagne flute and lifted the Ivanov.
"You're a very lovely woman, Joanna. I'd like you to share my
bed tonight."
"No,
thank you," she said politely. "I'm afraid I've just
started my period."
"You
lying bitch!" Drummond snapped.
"No,
it's true. Why don't I clear away these supper things into the
servitron?" She rose from the couch, picked up a china plate,
and suddenly scaled it expertly at Drummond like a Frisbee, missing
his head by only a few centimeters. The plate smashed against the
granite fireplace.
Drummond
shot her in the breast with the Ivanov. Two darts. She fell back
against me. "Lying bloody bitch!" he shouted.
I
struggled to shift her body and get at him, but it was useless. He
popped me twice in the shoulder and I felt the world dissolve into a
red-black abyss.
The last
thing I remember was Drummond calling, "Roberta! Clean up!"
——
She was
sitting beside me on the edge of the king-sized bed, fully clothed,
wiping my face with a damp towel. When I made an inarticulate noise
she lifted my head and held a glass of water to my lips.
"Careful,
dear. Just take small sips."
I did. My
mouth felt like week-old straw in a mule stall.
She took
the water away. "Thank God you're finally awake. We've got to
act quickly before he comes, and I'm not sure how to work the damned
thing."
"What?"
I struggled to sit up. We were in a beautifully appointed bedroom. A
clock on the nightstand said it was 1333 hours. What was going to be
the most memorable day of my life was already half gone.
I
stretched my arms, flexed my legs. Except for a sore spot on my
shoulder where the darts had penetrated, I felt almost good. Maybe
I'd send the Ivanov people a testimonial.
Joanna had
left me and gone to a large pottery vase on a low dresser that held
an ornamental arrangement of dried grasses. She rummaged around in
it. "I hid it in here, in case he came in before you woke and
decided to ... search my clothes."
She pulled
out the new Lucevera 4500 she'd bought in Timmins and handed it to
me.
I said,
"Jesus Christ!"
"It
was in my inside jacket pocket all the time. Drummond never thought
that I might have been carrying two phones. Thank heaven he shot me
in the opposite boob." She made a face. "Incidentally, the
dart wound still hurts like hell. I was afraid that if I used the
phone to call the Rampart emergency code, the call would register
somehow on Drummond's own phone. That's why I waited for you to wake
up."
"No,
it wouldn't. He and I have separate phone codes. All we share is the
computer data and system-links. But I'm glad you waited. We'll call
Karl instead of arguing with ExSec. They're likely to be kinda
uptight and antsy at this point in time."
The
armored shutter on one window was open. Outside, fat snowflakes
fluttered straight down in a winter wonderland. I climbed out of bed
and checked the compound. The Mitsubishi-Kondo was gone.
"He's
moved the hopper," I said. "He must have put it into the
garage out of sight. Along with the orbiter gig."
She said,
"The door of our suite is locked and it's not ordinary wood. I
think it's made of the same armor as the shutters. The glass in the
windows looks very thick, too."
"They're
unbreakable and laser-proof. This suite was designed to be
ultrasecure. A good thing, too. We're going to lock Alistair Drummond
out of here, then make some big botheration."
I began
tapping pads.
"What
are you doing?" Joanna asked apprehensively. "Won't he know
if you access the lodge systems?"
"Not
unless he's looking at the phone display. Pray he's got it stowed in
his pocket... Hah! Gotcha. The original code for the secure-suite
lock was deactivated when the lodge was shut down. A new one hasn't
been installed. That means Drummond must have used his simple
password to engage the lock. The dumb galoot even gave the password
to that idiot robot."
Tap
tappety tap tap tap.
"I
don't understand," Joanna said. "Secure suite?"
"Never
mind. Look." I showed her the phone's data-strip. It said:
——
list
passwords: glasgow 1/1
——
"He
didn't encrypt it. Why should he? Anytime we want, we're out of here,
babe. But not yet. Definitely not yet!"
I
installed a new code for the lock—encrypted, of course—killed
the Glasgow access, and locked us in. Then I closed the window
shutter that Joanna had opened.
"We're
going to make sure our fish doesn't get away," I said. "Then
we call for help. Crawl under the bed."
While
she gaped at me in stark disbelief, I summoned another menu. This one
was for
Makebate's gig. I explained: "Both Drummond's and
my phone have links to the nav-autopilot system of the starship gig.
If I park the gig somewhere, or even leave it inside the starship, I
can call it to come pick me up—just like a car or a hopper."
"But
the gig is already here," Joanna protested. "In the
underground hangar along with the Macrodur hopper."
I
took her arm and urged her onto the floor. We both slithered under
the bed. "I'm going to send the gig home to
Makebate.
Unfortunately, I'm going to forget to open the garage door
first."
"Oh..."
"The
lodge is a very sturdy building," I reassured her. "We
should be all right. Ready?"
I
pressed the pads that would light up the gig's engines. Did the
requisite preflight rigmarole. Then I told the orbiter to lift off.
The phone began to shriek like a banshee. I could hear a tinny
computerized voice saying,
Danger. Danger. Overhead obstruction
scanned.
Liftoff aborted. Liftoff aborted.
No doubt
Alistair Drummond heard it, too.
I told the
phone, "Override alpha-three-one-one. Go!"
The
concussion did not lift the house off its foundation, nor did it
break the armor-glass windows. The hangar was carved out of bedrock
and the major force of the fuel blast was directed upward, with a
secondary Shockwave rushing along the subterranean tunnel, where it
severely damaged the deserted staff quarters wing.
We clung
together while bits of demolished machinery rained down on the
ceramalloy roof like a hailstorm from hell. The bedframe had leaped
off the floor and thumped down harmlessly. A tall chest of drawers
and a bookcase had toppled and scattered things. The ceramic bedside
lamps had crashed, and so had the vase with the grasses, a couple of
large framed pictures, and a passel of nameless sundries that had
fallen off shelves and out of cabinets in the adjacent bathroom.
"Are
you all right?" I asked Joanna.
"Yes.
My God, it was just like a bomb!"
"Exactly
like one." The clinging was very nice. "Did you really
start your period?"
"It's
a standard antirape ploy. Men are so squeamish."
"All
the same, I'm glad you threw the plate ... On your feet, babe."
We crawled
out into the mess. I opened the shutters on all three bedroom
windows. A tall column of smoke swirled from the hangar hole in the
middle distance. Not much debris was visible; it had sunk out of
sight in the deepening snow.
Next order
of business: I called Karl Nazarian's personal code.
"It's
Helly, at the lodge. Alistair Drummond's here. I've destroyed the
transportation. Send a SWAT team fast. He's armed with a Tala-G and
God knows what else. Joanna and I are barricaded in Dan's old
secure-suite. We'll be okay."
"I
copy your emergency," said the cool old cucumber. "Hold
while I talk to ExSec and dispatch the team."
I waited.
Joanna
said, "I hear something at the door."
Scratching
sounds. Then the sharp yelp of a photon gun, one with less power than
my Tala-G, perhaps a Claus-Gewitter, weapon of choice for serious
meat-hunters. Maybe Drummond didn't know how to operate the more
esoteric combat piece.
Cheeow
cheeow.
I
muttered, "Give it up, sucker. You and your Haluk goons
couldn't blast your way in here when you came for Dan. You had to
torture two guards to death to get the lock-code."
Joanna's
eyes were wide with horror. "Helly ...?"
Another
photon blast, then silence.
"I'll
explain later," I told her. Karl was back on the phone.
"The
team'll fly out of our Oshawa facility inside of half an hour,"
he said, "five hoppers and thirty personnel. You're looking at a
ninety-minute ETA. They'll try to take Drummond alive."
"Goody.
Did the Macpherson Tower raid come off?"
"You
haven't heard?"
"Drummond
was waiting for us when we arrived. Joanna and I have been
stunned-out for over twelve hours."
"Well,
shit. You missed some crazy action. Eve made her pitch to the media
and then to the Servant, who denied everything in a rebuttal
newscast. Couple hours later a mysterious armed hopper shot
sleepy-gas grenades into every floor in the top half of the tower.
Toronto Public Safety and ECID were shocked. Shocked."
I laughed.
"Let me guess. The hopper escaped. The cops entered in force to
assess damage to the embassy and injury to the poor alien occupants.
They found the Halukoid folks."
"All
safe, all removed to Toronto General Hospital—including your
brother Dan, the only human being in the place who actually looked
like one. There were no demiclones in Macpherson. They must have all
been evacuated. Of course the media had a field day. And the Servant
filed a formal protest with Xenoaffairs, claiming the cops had
kidnapped innocent Haluk, not transformed humans."
I snorted.
"Stick with the Big Lie, right to the edge of the Grand Canyon
drop-off."
"The
vote!" Joanna exclaimed. "What about the goddamned vote?"
"Did
you hear the professor's respectful query?" I asked Karl.
He said,
"The Assembly approved the three hundred new Haluk colonies by a
margin of forty-six votes. The Speaker invited a Citizen Veto Poll.
The PlaNet hits are still being tabulated and verified, but it looks
like the veto won."
Joanna and
I cheered.
"What's
more," Karl said, "there's a groundswell growing for the
recall of the Delegates who voted for the Haluk colonies. Some
Reverse spokespersons are demanding top-to-bottom reform of the
Assembly to eliminate the influence • of the Hundred Concerns.
We're living in interesting times, my friend."
"And
here
we are," I lamented, "sitting it out on the
sidelines with a homicidal maniac."
"I'll
be on my way to the lodge myself after I talk to some people. Turn on
your holovid and catch up on what's happening in the universe. Sit
tight till the cavalry arrives, and don't do anything stupid."
"Have
I ever?" I asked, and ended the call.
Joanna was
already examining the holo projector in the adjacent snuggery,
prodding its remote keypad without result. "Nothing but a blank
blue field," she mourned. "The projector seems all right,
so I suppose the antenna was damaged in the explosion."
The phone
buzzed. I looked at the display. The instrument was in intercom mode.
I said,
"Hello, Alistair. Did you enjoy the fireworks?"
"It's
not over," he said softly.
"Yes,
it is. Tell you what. I'll see that you get your real body back
before they chain you to the bed in the funny farm."
"I'm
leaving now, Frost, but we'll meet again. I doubt that the pleasure
will be mutual. I intend to have something very special waiting for
you—and for Professor DeVet. Dream about it." He ended the
call.
Leaving?
Something
medium-large sped past the windows, then reappeared and cut a sharp
right turn, kicking a rooster tail of snow against the glass.
Cursing, I
ran to check it out. The snowmobile's track led from one of the
outbuildings to the lodge. Drummond had deliberately buzzed our
suite. Now he was heading directly toward us at low speed, the twin
headlights of the sleek Ski-Doo haloed by floating ice crystals.
The
machine was classic yellow-and-black with nice scarlet flashes. The
helmeted figure in the saddle lifted a hand with two gloved fingers
extended. Peace?... V for victory? ... Nope. In the British Isles the
double-digit salute had another meaning.
Fuck you.
An instant
later a portable force-field shield enveloped the Doo in a hemisphere
of golden sparks. Drummond did a 180 and headed straight out onto the
frozen lake at maximum speed, leaving a huge white cloud of powder
snow in his wake.
I dug in
my pocket for the phone, frantically called up the lodge-exterior
menu and switched on the defenses he had deactivated. Too late. The
damned sled was traveling at nearly 200 kph and it was already
outside the perimeter and gone away.
I rushed
to the door of the suite, spoke the unlock code, and began galloping
down the hall. Joanna was right behind me as I crossed the living
room—where there was remarkably little damage from the
blast—came into the entry and took a detour into the service
wing. The com room door was wide open. My Talavera-Gerardi lay
centered on a small table, neat as a display in a gunshop.
I
swiftly checked the weapon out. It seemed completely undamaged, the
barrel was clear, and the ready display said full charge. I slung the
piece over my shoulder.
Joanna
said, "What are you going to do?"
I pushed
past her, heading for the mudroom. Our enviro-suits, helmets, and
overboots were still there. The Ivanov was gone. I propped the long
gun against the wall and began to dress.
"I'll
need to take the phone," I said. "You'll have to make a
note of the door code so you can lock yourself in the secure-suite."
"But—"
"Drummond
might double back. The exterior defenses are useless because he can
access them. When I'm gone, get back into the suite and stay there
until the SWAT team arrives."
"You
can't go after him!" she stormed. "Don't you understand?
It's what he wants you to do! He's not trying to escape. He'll be
waiting for you out there."
I tinkered
with the helmet, establishing the phone link and the system feed with
the suit and boots that I hadn't bothered with during the short trip
from the hopper to the lodge.
"Find
something to write the code on, Joanna."
"Wait,"
she said tightly. She went into the kitchen and returned with a
recipe e-book.
I read out
the alphanumerics, tucked the phone inside my suit, and zipped up.
She said,
"Don't do this, Helly. Not if you love me. Don't go after that
man to kill him." Her face was very pale, with an odd hectic
flush on the cheeks that had nothing to do with makeup. She clutched
the little book tightly in one hand, holding it at her side like a
missile ready for throwing.
"I'll
bring him back alive if I can."
Speaking
in a strained whisper: "The SWAT team can do that better than
you. Stay with me. Please don't leave me alone again."
"I
can't let Drummond get away. If he reaches Central Patricia, he could
commandeer a fast Park Service hopper and fly down to Thunder Bay
Conurb. There's a starship shuttle service at the skyport—"
"He's
not trying to get away." Her eyes were bright with moisture. "He
left your weapon when he could have taken it himself or destroyed
it... And I'm sure you'll find an operable snow machine waiting out
in the equipment building. If Drummond wanted to escape, he'd have
disabled it. He's playing a game with you, Helly. An insane game!"
"Will
you kiss me goodbye? I love you, Joanna."
She let me
embrace her, passively accepted my hard lips, the alien tongue we'd
laughed about and enjoyed. When we broke apart her tears had
overflowed.
"Goodbye,
Helly," she said, and turned and walked away.
——
Of course
Joanna was right about Drummond planning an ambush. I knew that his
chance of escaping—even as far as Thunder Bay—were
infinitesimal. The SWAT team would nab his ass as easily as a pack of
Ontario timber wolves running down a crippled caribou. Unless I got
him first.
And I
intended to.
I'd
ignored my wife's good counsel, confirmed her doubts about my
character, maybe torpedoed any chance of a permanent reconciliation.
One part of me was kicking the other part and cursing it for a
prideful fool. But I couldn't do anything else.
Cowboys...
As Joanna
had predicted, there was another shiny Ski-Doo waiting for me. Two
toys were evidently all Rampart had sprung for to entertain the
troops, but the Concern hadn't stinted on quality. The Formula 12K-XC
was the primo back-country trail sled. Its frame was scandium
alloy—the same stuff that catalyzes trans-ack starship
fuel—stronger than titanium and lighter than aluminum. To make
the machine ride even lighter—and get you out of holes when you
bogged down—it had inertial stabilizers and optional
anti-gravity enhancement. Its powerful engine was whisper-quiet. The
console was loaded with nifty gadgets, including com equipment, a
terrain scanner with warm-body capability, global positioning, an
emergency beacon, and a buddy beacon. Drummond would deactivate the
latter feature, and so would I. Buddies we weren't.
Other
goodies included a retractable bivouac enclosure that you could
shelter in if you broke down or got trapped in a blizzard, an
independent heater, trail rations, survival kit, and first-aid unit.
My sled did not have a defensive force-shield. That particular item
is not among the luxury accessories offered by the Ski-Doo folks.
Drummond had either brought his own umbrella or swiped one from the
Macrodur hopper. The Doo did have a swingaway hunter's gun-mount with
a weatherproof stretch-sheath that was barely adequate to cover my
ultramacho Tala-G. I installed the weapon, fired up the engine, and
eased out of the barn.
I hadn't
been on one of these machines for nearly ten years, but I didn't
anticipate much difficulty driving. I was in no hurry. Alistair
Drummond would wait for me in the backwoods arena of his choosing.
I
hoped to arrive at a time, and from a direction, that was
not of
his choosing.
The snow
was coming down heavier. It was now impossible to see the opposite
shore of the lake, six klicks away. I checked the scanner to be sure
my adversary wasn't lurking anywhere in the immediate vicinity—or
circling the compound to catch me from the rear. Even with a
tree-filter, there was a lot of clutter on the screen. It showed only
a single warm body blip, sans machine accompaniment, moving at a
brisk galumph through the woods on the other side of the lake. An
animal. The data strip said:
——
species:
wolverine-wt: 35.5 kilos
——
"Go
away, beastie," I murmured. "Other game is afoot."
I called
up the positioner map, selected a twenty-kilometer radius, and
studied the bright terrain-proper display. A number of narrow tracks
webbed the forest and bogs surrounding the lodge, illegally zapped a
couple of years ago by bored security guards whose duty it was to
nanny my unfortunate brother.
During
warm weather the trails were probably horrific even for iron-butt
backpackers or anglers—muddy, rough with burned-off stumps, and
mosquito-plagued. In winter, after the snow attained a reasonable
depth, they'd be handy little corridors for snowmobilers and game
poachers, hence the gun-mount on my sled. Nothing like a rack of
venison or a moose-muffle to liven up the staff menu. Nothing like a
running target to sharpen rusty marksmanship skills.
I expanded
to a 50 km overview, then 100 km. The last display included the
hamlet of Central Patricia ninety klicks to the west. A single trail,
beginning at the far side of Cad-disfly Lake, twisted and twined and
ended up there. I wondered briefly what attractions the lonely men
had found in the tiny outpost. A bar with live music and friendly
local ladies? Hey, in their shoes it would have appealed to me.
I
highlighted the C-Pat Trail, then returned to the large-scale map and
called up a holographic topo display. To check for high ground
overlooking that trail—preferably not too far away from the
lodge.
There
wasn't much. The most likely—very nearly the only!—ambush
spot I could find was a sparsely wooded granite ridge only 29 meters
above the surrounding terrain. It was situated about nine klicks from
the western lakeshore. The ridge was relatively steep and treeless on
the southern side, above the trail, and sloped gently to the north,
where the forest was thicker.
The
stretch of the C-Pat Trail next to the ridge was fairly wide and
straight, inviting a sledder to travel at speed. A couple of klicks
west of the high ground, a branch trail came in on the right. This
was a much narrower and more convoluted path leading back to the
lake, paralleling a short creek that drained a pond. Its termination
was about five kilometers north of the C-Pat trailhead.
If I were
Alistair Drummond, I'd drive across the lake and go west on the C-Pat
past Granite Ridge to the Creek Trail junction. Turn right. Trend
back eastward a klick or two behind the ridge. Leave the trail and
drive my sled ever so carefully south, upslope through patchy trees
and rocks to the overlook.
Hunker in.
Wait for Helly to come bombing along the C-Pat down yonder, gung ho
to catch up with the fleeing miscreant. Pot him like a ptarmigan.
Unless the
intended victim entered the forest on Creek Trail instead, and snuck
up behind the sniper.
——
I sped diagonally across the lake. The
ice was freeway flat and the scanner came up dead empty. From the
shore the Creek trailhead was almost invisible, clogged with brush
and a tangle of downed birch saplings. I punched the anti-gravity and
hopped over them, then started along a winding path that was barely
wide enough for a single machine. The air temperature was minus-five.
My snow-depth indicator read 34 cm. Ten of that was fresh powder, and
there'd be lots more before long.
Nearly an
hour had passed since I'd spoken to Karl Nazarian. The SWAT team
would be arriving soon. I cranked the throttle and drove as fast as I
dared. The engine was a tiger-purr, muffled by the falling white
stuff.
Twenty
minutes later I was behind Granite Ridge. The irregular ground
upslope showed no trace of a warm body. I could only presume he was
on the other side of the crest, where broken rock formed a natural
redoubt above the C-Pat. If I went farther along the Creek Trail,
looking for his sled tracks to verify that he had, in fact, chosen
this spot for the ambush, there was a chance he might scan me or hear
me. I opted to climb the ridge on foot. The scope of rny Tala-G had a
thermal targeter three times more sensitive than that of a Ski-Doo—or
a Claus-Gewitter blaster.
I called
up a compass on my visor display and took a rough bearing on my
objective. The vantage point was about a mile and a quarter
southwest. There would be adequate cover until I reached the ridge
top, where only small clumps of trees had found a footing in the
frost-fractured granite.
My boots
had a nifty feature: deployable miniature bear-paw snowshoe webs. I
spread them and started mushing. The blood singing in my ears was the
only other sound in the winter fastness. I still didn't have my old
stamina, but I made the climb without too much difficulty in the
relatively shallow snow, doing a sweep with the scope every dozen
meters, finding nothing warm—and no shield ionization
signature, either.
Just below
the ridge crest, sheltered by a group of jack pines, I rested and
turned off the heating system of my envirosuit. Every little erg
counts. Then I began to creep toward the overlook, which I estimated
was about 200 meters away, snaking through tall snow-covered rocks,
taking advantage of every bit of cover, sighting through the gun
scope every other minute, praying that Drummond was up here and that
he was concentrating his attention on the C-Pat Trail, not scanning
the ridge to his left.
In the
scope, two blips of warm.
I
flattened, sinking into the snow behind a white-capped chunk of
granite the size of a car. Changed the scope mode to amplification,
peeked out.
I saw a
crouching figure holding a long gun at the ready. His Ski-Doo waited
close by, slightly downslope among the trees. No force-field
hemisphere, of course. You can't shoot a blaster through a simple
portable shield.
I pulled
off my right mitten so I could operate the trigger and targeted
Alistair Drummond, the man wearing my body. Range, 156.2 meters.
Don't
do this, Hetty. Not if you love me. Don't go after that man to kill
him.
I'll
bring him back alive if I can.
Rats.
I switched
the gun to manual fire and blasted a pine snag six meters away from
him. He fired down at the C-Pat Trail, then sent another wild shot to
his right, decapitating a small balsam fir. He hadn't found me with
his scope and the snow made it impossible for him to judge my
position.
I waited.
Willing him to do it.
He fired
again, coming nowhere near me, then made a dash for his snowmobile.
Boarded, flicked on the shield. Safe from my photon weapon beneath
his sparkling dome, he started his machine and headed downhill toward
Creek Trail, weaving feather-light through the spindly pines. He'd
turned on the antigravity enhancer to maximize his speed on the
flurry powder.
I surged
to my feet, clambered on top of the rock, and began to mow down the
trees ahead of him, blasting the trunks near the base so they dropped
like jackstraws. Some bounced harmlessly off the force-field, others
fell to either side as I continued to aim in front of the scuttling,
turtle-shaped mass of golden sparks.
He had
nearly dropped below my line of fire when I nailed him. A perfectly
felled pine came down right across his path and the sled hit it
head-on. The force-field projector cut out as the power died. I
watched the yellow-and-black machine do a nose-flip right over the
log and begin rolling down the steepening slope. Drummond was still
in the saddle.
The
Ski-Doo disappeared in the snow. I hopped off the rock and began
floundering after it. I found him a few minutes later, under the
broken and twisted machine. It had fetched up against a tree. Both of
his legs were grotesquely entangled in the skid-frame. There was not
much blood.
I dug the
snow away from his head and opened his visor and looked into my own
face, twisted in agony. Alistair Drummond was fully conscious.
He said,
"Damn you. Damn you."
"There's
no way I can winch this thing off without hurting you," I told
him. "I'll have to go back to the lodge and find a cutting
tool."
"Why
didn't you shoot me on the ridge?" he asked.
"I
killed myself once in Macpherson Tower. Once is enough."
The
first-aid unit and survival kit were intact. I wrapped the parts of
his body that I could reach in mylar foil blankets. Did my best to
inspect his shattered legs without removing the remnants of his
envirosuit. It was still producing warmth.
"There's
bound to be a medic in the Rampart SWAT team coming up from Toronto.
It should arrive soon. I'll put up the survival tent to keep the snow
off you. Would you like a drink of water?"
"Go
to hell."
He turned
his head away and didn't say anything else. His eyes were closed.
There was a pulse in his neck, so I figured he'd either fainted or
gone into shock.
Time to
move along. I flicked the emergency beacon, erected the tent, and
turned on its heater. Then I hiked back down Creek Trail to my own
machine and returned to the lodge.
——
Joanna and
I were still trying to find a cutting torch in the shambles of the
workroom, which was in the damaged staff wing, when five blue Rampart
ExSec hoppers landed in the compound. The team leader was an
Amazonian black woman named Captain Sarah Marcus.
She had
the medical personnel and the equipment necessary to free and
evacuate Drummond. She had the good sense not to argue when I said I
was going along.
Two
aircraft landed in the creek bed, the only open space available.
Captain Marcus supervised loading the gear on AG totes, but I was the
one who led the way as we snowshoed through the cold white woods to
the place where Alistair Drummond awaited rescue.
"What
the hell is that stink?" Marcus said.
I said,
"Oh, shit," knowing.
We found
the tent torn to bits and bloody snow trampled by clawed feet and a
body with its throat torn out, defiled with foul-smelling musk.
"There
it is, Cap!" one of the troops cried, whipping out his Kagi
sidearm and taking aim. "Looks like a goddamn bear!"
I knocked
his gun arm up and the blast went harmlessly into the trees. A bulky
dark form bounded out from a tumble of rocks and dashed downhill with
surprising speed. In a moment it had vanished into the storm.
"Not
a bear," I said. "A wolverine. Leave it alone."
Captain
Marcus said, "It killed this man. We can scope it out and burn
it later, when we're airborne."
"No,"
I told her firmly. "We'll let the animal be. It's a wild thing.
It acts naturally, following its own rules. It has a right to do so.
Do you understand?"
"Yes."
She turned her back on me and began giving orders to the others, and
I tramped away downhill into the clean white falling snow.
Epilogue
The scout
ship that Adam Stanislawski had sent to Amenti, in the Sagittarius
Whorl, reported that the asteroid was the home base of an estimated
two hundred Haluk corsairs. Shortly after the incident at the Haluk
embassy was reported by the media, the Macrodur chairman dispatched a
fleet of Concern cruisers to clean out the pirate nest.
Following
the destruction of their starships, the Haluk declared war on the
Commonwealth of Human Worlds.
A force of
consisting of eighty heavy warships and 160 light starfighters lifted
off from Haluk colonial planets at the tip of the Perseus Spur and
headed for Seriphos, Rampart's local headquarters. The attackers were
intercepted in deep space by Rampart starships and Zone Patrol.
Eventually they were annihilated, although the outnumbered defenders
suffered heavy casualties. Seriphos itself was left unscathed.
Immediately
after this engagement, a second enemy fleet of equal size left the
Haluk worlds and began to encircle Cravat, sole source of the genen
vector PD32:C2. Rampart forces had been siphoned away from Cravat to
defend Seriphos, and the tide of battle began to turn toward the
aliens.
At the
same time, Rampart's powerful Fleet Scanner Satellite at Tyrins
detected nearly four thousand alien vessels en route from the Haluk
Cluster to the Perseus Spur.
I
consulted with the Rampart Board of Directors, then ordered the
Rampart defenders to incinerate every landmass on Cravat with
antimatter bombs.
Virtually
every armed Concern and Commonwealth star-ship in the galaxy,
including that of Captain Guillermo Bermudez Obregon, based on
Kedge-Lockaby, was mobilized to defend the Milky Way Galaxy. I drove
Makebate.
After
sixty-one days of righting in intergalactic space outside the Perseus
Spur, the aliens surrendered.
Mimo, who
was once again in excellent health, personally accounted for
eighty-four ship-kills. He threw a celebratory luau at his Eyebrow
Cay home, and some three dozen lowlife starship commanders who had
distinguished themselves in the late conflict attended.
So did I.
I was still blue, but no one minded. I had popped 166 of the
bastards.
——
The
defeated Haluk deposed the Servant of Servants and imprisoned him in
a monastery of Anointed Elders, where he was to undergo corrective
meditation for the rest of his life.
The
surrender agreement was eyeballed by Locutor Ru Kamik and the Council
of Nine. In it they abjectly disavowed the Grand Design and begged
the Human Commonwealth to have mercy on the Haluk people.
Magnanimous
in victory, the Commonwealth agreed to sponsor a massive research
program—contracted out to Rampart Concern—synthesizing
the vector virus PD32:C2. If, after five years, the aliens
demonstrated that they embraced peace and abandoned the pernicious
philosophy of uncontrolled population growth, the vector
manufacturing process would be made available to them, gratis. Human
inspection teams and family-planning counselors were to be welcomed
in the Haluk Cluster, as well as the Haluk colonial worlds. Normal
trade relations would be reestablished. If all went well during the
five-year period, the Commonwealth would consider systematically
granting limited numbers of Milky Way planets to the Haluk, until
their population pressures eased.
Until then
they were stuck with allomorphy and the worlds they already
inhabited.
The flawed
alloeradication therapy developed by the late Emily Blake Konigsberg
would be studied by human experts during the interim, and tweaked to
eliminate the relapse factor. Fortunately, treated Haluk individuals
who had reverted to the testudomorph state did emerge from their
chrysalids as healthy allomorphic graciles.
In another
condition of the surrender, the Haluk agreed to round up all
Haluk-human demiclones, toss them into dystasis tanks, and change
them back into normal Haluk. A few genetic transforms, including the
woman known as Dolores da Gama, eluded the dragnet and are said to be
blissfully enjoying the human condition on obscure freesoil worlds.
Nearly ten
thousand human DNA donors were rescued from the Haluk colonies, in
addition to the higher-status individuals imprisoned in Macpherson
Tower. Some of the former had floated for years, and had had five or
six alien copies made of themselves. After memory reprogramming, over
half of the donors regained their mental health, found employment,
and resumed their interrupted personal lives. The others were cared
for by the Commonwealth at Haluk expense.
The Haluk
promised to eschew mining transactinides with convict slave labor. In
another CHW-sponsored project—contracted out to Sheltok
Concern—human mining engineers traveled to the Haluk Cluster to
instruct the aliens in more civilized technology. The Haluk were apt
pupils. In time Sheltok would find itself purchasing more efficient
machinery for the Sagittarian mines, designed by Haluk—just as
Bodascon Concern would adopt certain Haluk starship innovations.
The aliens
were hardware hotshots but abysmally unskilled in biotechnology and
computer science. The new trade treaty allowed them to buy all the
human goods they wanted, with the exception of certain armaments.
Julian
May 375
Enormous
quantities of Macrodur computers were sold to the Haluk. The
manufacturers of ticklesuits and Japanese kimonos also did a roaring
business.
——
Meanwhile,
back on the planet Earth, a political upheaval was in full swing.
Many
Conservative Delegates were recalled and Reversionist candidates
elected to take their places. Geraldo Gonzalez matured into a
statesman of major stature. Together with Efrem Sontag, he sponsored
Assembly bills that eventually eliminated the longstanding domination
of CHW politics by the Hundred Concerns.
Pocket
Delegates disappeared into oblivion. Syndics found other jobs.
Corporation finks were immediately purged from the Secretariat for
Xenoaffairs, the Interstellar Commerce Secretariat, and Zone Patrol.
Over the next decade, legislation was enacted that reformed many
areas of the human governmental structure.
The
Conlegius statutes, which had given Concerns far-ranging
independent police powers, were abolished. At the suggestion of
Delegate Sontag, Karl Nazarian was appointed to a new CCID task force
overseeing Concern security reorganization.
The
Commonwealth Correction System was also revamped, eliminating the
penalty of disenfranchisement except for capital crimes. Throwaways
were invited to reapply for citizenship and carefully screened. The
scandal-ridden Coventry penitentiaries were closed down.
Corporate
ownership of the stars would persist for a long time, as the Assembly
slowly whittled away at the entrenched hegemony of Big Business and
enacted new tax measures to finance the reforms. Rome wasn't built in
a day, and neither was a galactic democracy.
Nonstargoing
Insap races were granted just wages and given educational options.
They did not become corporate stakeholders and share in the profits
of their exploited
worlds.
Their consciousness raised, some of the natives became predictably
restless. But the majority didn't give a damn, so long as the human
invaders brought in plenty of trade goods.
Beer was
an especially big hit among carbon-based life-forms.
——
After the
brief Haluk War, I spent time in dystasis and emerged with my
previous body, buffed up a little here and there. Joanna was present
for my rollout, and so were Simon—healthy as a horse—and
Eve and Beth and even Cousin Zed. Karl Nazarian and his Over-the-Hill
Gang were on hand, along with Mimo and my old comrades Ivor Jenkins
and Ildiko Szabo.
Daniel
Frost pleaded a previous engagement with his psychotherapist. He now
lived quietly with his wife in a secure house in the Ontario Cottage
Country and steadfastly denied that he had done anything wrong.
Fulfilling
my promise to Simon, I now serve as a part-time Rampart executive.
Most of my work is tedious troubleshooting. I have moments when I
sincerely wish I were a beach bum again.
I did
manage to implement Reversionist principles on many of the planets in
the Perseus Spur, but the ex-Galapharma worlds in the Orion Arm
fought my radical notions tooth and nail. Their reform may have to
wait until the Commonwealth Assembly does the job for me.
I myself
have no desire to seek public office, although I still give generous
donations to the Reversionists. A political cowboy is a sorry thing.
One of the
charitable foundations that I manage is dedicated to alleviating the
lot of the denizens of the Dark Path. Sadly, numbers of them want
nothing more than to continue on exactly as before; the trogs are
always with us. A sizable majority have been assisted by my
foundation to make new lives under one sun or another.
Mama
Fanchon Labrecque became head of the Visiting Practitioner Service of
Kedge-Lockaby's new Katje Vander-post Memorial Hospital.
Mohammed
al-Wazan is in medical school and hopes someday to join Mama. The
sadistic executive creep who used him as a boy-toy was mysteriously
shanghaied and is now a permanent maroony, in charge of
toilet-cubicle maintenance in the asteroid Phlegethon.
Santa
Claus still lives beneath Toronto. If there is profound symbolism
there, I haven't been able to figure it out.
The rest
of the Grange Place Tribe have returned to their families and are
doing as well as can be expected.
Professor
Joanna DeVet teaches political science at Commonwealth University for
three terms each year. Her book was a popular smash and provoked
unseemly jealousy among certain of her academic colleagues, even
though she donated the proceeds to charity.
We were
remarried a week after I emerged from the tank. We have a house in
the Kawartha Lakes region and an apartment in Rampart Tower. Neither
one has domestic robots.
We
vacation at the Sky Ranch and on Kedge-Lockaby. She loves my yellow
submarine. I love the way she sits a horse.
Joanna is
still trying to understand me, and claims that the natural history of
the wolverine offers significant insights into my character. I call
that piffle.
She has
also tells me that she sometimes misses Helly the Haluk.
I don't.
The End