Constantine Colony,
Bezer'ej,
February 2376
It was much, much worse at night.
Night cut you off from any reference, any reassurance,
and nights here on Bezer'ej were far blacker than any Shan Frankland
had seen on light-polluted Earth.
Once the lights that danced in the blackness were the
product of her optic nerve playing electrical tricks. But these lights
were real.
They were coming from her hands.
The display was mainly blue and violet, flashing
occasionally from her fingertips. It was almost as bad as her claws.
And it wasn't something any human should have had, but Shan wasn't any
human, not any more. Don't think of it as a parasite,
Aras told her. Think of it as a beneficial
relationship. It can be.
Aras had five hundred years to get used to carrying c'naatat,
being c'naatat,
living with all that c'naatat meant; and
she had been infected for a matter of months. He meant well. He did it
to save her life. But it was hard waking up to a new body every day.
She studied the pattern of lights again and wondered if
there was language within it, as there was for the native bezeri. She
also wondered if her c'naatat had done it
to teach her a lesson for hubris, for her contempt for the organic
illuminated computer screens grown into the hands of combat troops. You'll never put one of those
bloody things in me.
But here she was, with that and plenty more. The
symbionts had almost certainly scavenged the component genes at random,
unaware of her beliefs and her guilt. She was just an environment to be
preserved with whatever came to hand. If they had purpose beyond that,
she wasn't sure that she wanted to know about it.
Shan put her fingers to her head and felt through the
hair. There wasn't the slightest trace of unevenness in the bone, no
evidence that her skull had been shattered by an alien weapon. C'naatat
was efficient. It seemed to enjoy doing
a tidy job.
Small wonder that some of her former crewmates from Thetis
thought she was a paid mule for
manufactured alien biotech. The truth was messy and unconvincing, but
truth often was, and it didn't matter. The crew knew the broad detail,
and so did the colonists of Constantine who gave her asylum, and it
would only be a matter of time before the matriarchs of Wess'ej found
out what Aras had done to save her.
And then all hell would break loose.
She buried her head under her blanket and tried to
sleep, but the lights persisted, and she fell into dreams of drowning
in a locked room that was scented like a forest.
There are
countless constellations, suns, and planets: we see only the suns
because they give light; the planets remain invisible, for they are
small and dark. There are also numberless earths circling around their
suns, no worse and no less than this globe of ours.
GIORDANO
BRUNO,
Dominican monk and philosopher,
burned at the stake by the Inquisition
in February 1600
"Is it true?"
Eddie Michallat concentrated on the features of the
duty news editor twenty-five light-years away, courtesy of CSV Actaeon's
comms center. The man was real and it
was happening now, in every sense of the
word.
For nearly a year he had been beyond BBChan's reach on
Bezer'ej. But the glorious isolation was over. Isenj instantaneous
communications technology meant there was now no escape from the
scrutiny of News Desk. In the way of journalists, they had already
given it an acronym, as noun, verb and adjective--ITX.
"Poodle-in-the-microwave job," Eddie said dismissively. "Urban myth.
People talk the most incredible crap when they're under
stress."
He waited a few seconds for the reply. The borrowed
isenj communications relay was half a million miles from Earth, and
that meant the last leg in the link was at light speed, the best human
technology could manage. The problem with the delay was that it gave
Eddie more time to stoke his irritation.
"That never stopped you filing a story before."
How the hell would he know? This man--this boy,
for that was all he appeared to be--had
probably been born fifty years after Thetis
had first left Earth. Eddie enjoyed mounting the occasional high horse.
He saddled up.
"BBChan used to be the responsible face of
netbroadcast," he said. "You know--stand up a story properly before you
run it? But maybe that's out of fashion these days." One, two, three, four, five.
The boy-editor persisted with the blind focus of a missile. "Look,
you're sitting on a completely fucking shit-hot twenty-four carat
story. Biotech, lost tribes, mutiny, murder, aliens. Is there anything
I've left out?"
"There wasn't a mutiny and Shan Frankland didn't murder
anyone." She's just a good copper, Eddie
wanted to say, but it was hardly the time. "And the biotech is pure
speculation." My speculation. Me and my big mouth.
"We don't know what it is. We don't know if it makes you invulnerable.
But you got the aliens about right. That's something."
"The Thetis crew was
saying that Frankland's carrying this biotech and that she's pretty
well invulnerable to injury and disease, and--"
Eddie maintained his dismissive expression with some
difficulty, a child again, cowering at the sound of a grown-ups' row: it's
all my fault. He always worried that it
was. "Oh God, don't give me the undead routine, will you? I don't do
infotainment."
"And I don't do the word �no.' Stand up that story."
The kid was actually trying to get tough with him. It
wasn't easy having a row with someone when you had time to count to
five each time. But Eddie was more afraid of the consequences of this
rumor than the wrath of a stranger, even one who employed him.
"Son, listen to me," he said. "You're twenty-five years
away as the very, very fast crow flies, so
I don't think you're in any position to tell me to do sod all."
He leaned forward, arms folded on the
console, and hoped the cam was picking up a shot that gave him the
appearance of looming over the kid. "I'm the only journalist in 150
trillion miles of nothing. Anything I file
is exclusive. And I decide what I file. Now run along and finish your
homework."
Eddie flicked the link closed without waiting for a
response and reassured himself that there really was nothing that 'Desk
could do to him any more. He was here. Actaeon had no
embeds embarked. BBChan could
sack him, and every network on Earth would be offering him alternative
employment. It wasn't bravado. It was career development.
Ironically, the stories he had filed months ago were
still on their way home at plain old light speed: the stories he would
file now, would ITX, would beat them by years. He was scooping himself
and it felt wonderful. It struck him as the journalistic equivalent of
masturbation.
"I wish I could get away with that," said the young
lieutenant on comms duty. He hovered just on the edge of Eddie's field
of vision. "Why didn't you tell him you were on your way to see the
isenj?"
"Because all news editors are tossers," Eddie said. He
felt around in his pockets for the bee-cam and his comms kit. "If you
tell them what story you're chasing, they decide in their own minds how
it's going to turn out. Then they bollock you for not coming back with
the story they imagined. So you don't tell them anything until you're
ready to file. Saves a lot of grief."
"Wise counsel," said the lieutenant, as if he
understood.
From Actaeon's bridge,
Eddie could still see the dwindling star that was EFS Thetis,
heading back to Earth with the remnant
of the Constantine mission, a party of isenj delegates and their
ussissi interpreters. So vessels weren't titled European Federal Ship
these days, then. A nice bland CSV, a harmless Combined Service Vessel,
purged of any reference to territory to avoid offending the recent
multinational alliance between Europe and the Sinostates. He had
seventy-five years left to amaze the viewing public with the latest in
alien contact before the real thing showed up on their doorstep. Thetis
was a much older, slower ship than the Actaeon.
And Thetis had been the
state of the art just over a year ago. Time was flying obscenely and
confusingly fast.
"It's not like he can send someone out to relieve you
of duty, is it?" said the lieutenant. He seemed to have badged Eddie as
a maverick hero, an understandable reaction for a young man enmeshed in
the strict hierarchies of navy life. No, there was nothing News Desk
could do out here: Shan Frankland had taught him that. When you were on
your own, without backup, you had to make your own decisions and stand
by them. "Is Frankland really as bad as they say? Did she really sell
you out? Did she let people die?"
"Who's saying?"
"Commander Neville."
"Look, the commander's been through a lot lately. I'd
take some of her observations with a pinch of salt. You can't lose your
kid without losing some sanity too." I'm just an
observer. No, he wasn't. He was involved in this. He had been
involved in it right from the time he had decided there were some
stories about Shan that he was never going to file. "Lindsay had a
sickly, premature kid. That's what you get if you're not used to low
oxygen. You've got to remember the colony's medical facilities are
pretty primitive."
A pause. "But presumably Frankland's aren't."
"Are you trying to interrogate me, son?"
"Just making conversation."
"Word of advice. Never try to get information out of a
hack. We wrote the book on wheedling. I can't give you any information
on Frankland because I don't have any." Well,
technically, I don't. It suddenly struck him that he was calling
all younger males son, just as Shan did, a
copper's kind patronage with its edge of threat. "No, Frankland
probably saved a lot of lives. But maybe she's proof that it isn't
what's true that makes historical record, it's who gets their story in
first."
A blood sample from Shan here, and a cell culture
there, and maybe David Neville might have survived more than a few
weeks. But releasing that biotech into the human population was a price
Shan Frankland refused to pay, regardless of what it cost her. Eddie
knew that now.
And he still felt guilty that he believed, however
briefly, that she had been carrying the biotech for money. He wondered
whether he would have made the same choice if placed in the same
dilemma.
"Come on," he said to the young officer, who was
hanging on his pronouncements like a disciple. "Take me down to the
shuttle bay. I'm going to have tea with the isenj foreign minister."
Aras crunched down to the cliffs on a
paper-thin crust of light snow. He still worried when Shan was out
after nightfall. But she could come to no harm. She couldn't freeze to
death, and she couldn't drown, and she couldn't die even if she fell
and broke her neck.
And neither could he.
But she was uneasy. He could smell that even from a
hundred meters away. She was where he had hoped to find her, sitting
near the cliff edge again, looking down at the glittering darkness of a
sea half illuminated by Wess'ej in its gibbous phase.
He concentrated, willing his visual range to expand. A
human would hardly have spotted her. A wess'har's low-light vision
would have picked her out. But on top of that, Aras had his infrared
sensitivity, gleaned from the isenj by his c'naatat,
and Shan was at that moment a shimmering golden ghost of bright-hot
exposed skin and darker, cooler garments.
The c'naatat produced a
fever during its active phases. He could see it. She wouldn't be
feeling the cold at all.
"Time to eat," he said quietly. "Still watching for the
bezeri?"
She smiled, a brief flash of hotter, whiter light
flaring in a mask of amber. "I wanted to wave to them." She peeled off
her gloves, held out her hands and flexed them. Brilliant violet lights
flickered briefly under the skin. "I think I can guess where I picked
that up."
She was bothered by it. She feigned calm well enough to
fool a human but not enough to evade a wess'har sense of smell. Her
expression, her posture, her voice; all said she was fine. But her
scent said otherwise.
"It might not be from the bezeri," he said, as if that
made a difference. "C'naatat is often
unpredictable. I've been around bezeri for many years and never
absorbed any of their characteristics."
"As far as you know, of course. Well, could be worse.
At least it's not their tentacles, eh?" She flexed her fingers again
and stared at them. The lights, as intense now as anything the bezeri
emitted, added to her illuminated image. "Shouldn't I talk to them? I
feel I owe them an explanation."
Aras thought the bezeri probably had all the
explanation they needed or wanted. However much Shan thought she could
protect them, however ashamed she was of her own species' short history
on Bezer'ej, the bezeri themselves were still raw from losing an infant
to human violence. Aras wondered how the humans--the gethes,
the carrion-eaters--who flew into
violent
outrage themselves at the harming of a child could think another
species would behave any differently.
It was just as well that the bezeri were soft-bodied,
confined to the sea, and without real weapons beyond their piercing
mouth-parts. Shan's apologies would mean little to them.
He held his hand out to her. "Here. They're not coming.
They haven't been near the surface for weeks. Let's eat."
It was like watching a child who was scarred by a fire
of your making, a constant rebuke to your carelessness, except that he
had done this deliberately. She was trying to cope with her c'naatat
and finding it hard. What choice did I have? She would have died if
I hadn't
infected her. But he knew how it felt to wake wondering what
alterations that the microscopic symbiont was making to your body. He
had seen c'naatat develop in others, and
no two experienced exactly the same changes.
That was the least of her problems. In time--and she
would have plenty of that--she would have to cope with the lonely
reality of having everyone she knew age and die, leaving her alone,
except for him. He knew where his duty lay. He owed her that much.
But she was right. It could have been worse.
She could have found herself reliving other beings'
memories.
"I'm starving," she said. C'naatat
demanded a lot of energy while it was rearranging the genetic
furniture. "I could murder some nice thick lentil soup. And some of
those little rolls with the walnut bits in."
"We'll see what the refectory has to offer."
They walked back to Constantine across a plain that was
starting to push blue-gray grass through the snow. Usually Aras managed
to see only what was truly there: tonight, once again, the images of
what had once been were intruding on the present.
Shan walked through wilderness. But Aras walked along
the vanished perimeter of an isenj city called Mjat and down what had
been a main thoroughfare flanked by homes. There was less than nothing
left, but he remembered exactly where it had been. He hadn't needed to
see the gethes' clever geophys images of
the ghost of a civilization to recall those roads, because he had
mapped them.
And he had destroyed them.
He had washed the cities with fire and cut down isenj
and set loose the reclamation nanites that devoured the deserted homes.
It had been five hundred years ago by the Constantine calendar, but he
remembered it all, and not only from his own viewpoint. Back then he
had had no idea that isenj had genetic memory.
"I'm sorry," he said. "But I had to do it."
Shan seemed to think he was talking to her. "Stop
apologizing." She thrust her arm through his. "It's okay."
Apart from a brief, violent escape of contained rage
when she had found out she was infected, she had shown neither
self-pity nor recrimination. He admired that about her. It was very
wess'har. It would make it far easier for her to adapt to her new world. Could be worse.
Aras walked the invisible central plaza of Mjat. Worse could
have been genetic memory, and that
was perhaps worst of all, worse than claws or vestigial wings or a
million other scraps of genetic material that c'naatat
had picked up, tried on for size, and then sometimes discarded.
Now he was clear of Mjat and back in the small world of
humans, his home for the best part of two centuries. Wess'ej, the
planet where he had been born, hung in the sky as a huge crescent moon,
and he didn't miss it at all.
The biobarrier crackled slightly as they passed through
into Constantine's shielded, controlled environment. Aras trod
carefully to avoid the overwintering kale that was shrouded in
snow-like sculptures.
Wess'har had no sculpture, no poetry, no music. He
almost understood those concepts now, but not entirely. There was a
great deal of human DNA in him: c'naatat
had probably found it in shed skin cells and bacteria and taken a fancy
to it, but it had not helped him grasp the human fondness for what was
clearly unreal. He had often wondered why the symbiont had devoted so
much energy to altering his appearance and fashioning a makeshift human
out of him.
It took him some time to realize that it had given him
yet another refinement to help him--its world--survive. It was trying
to
help him to fit into human society. It seemed to know he was outcast
from his own forever.
It knew how badly he needed to belong.
Malcolm Okurt had not signed up for this. He
told Lindsay Neville so. He took it as a personal slight, he said, and
it was bad enough having to crew a vessel with civilians
without getting dragged into politics as
well. He was the only person Lindsay knew who could spit the words out
like that. At chill-down, his orders were to follow up the Thetis
mission. Nobody mentioned anything about
aliens, especially not four separate civilizations.
"I thought you'd want to get out of here as fast as you
could," he said.
Lindsay paused, and not for effect. "I've got
unfinished business. I lost my kid here."
Okurt knew that well enough. She just wanted to remind
him that she needed a wide berth at times. She didn't feel the pain at
all, not right then. She made sure she didn't because if she did then
she would fall apart, and as she told Okurt, she had a task to complete.
She steadied herself and glanced at her bioscreen, the
living battlefield computer display grown into the palm of her hand.
She couldn't switch off the light, but she had disabled the monitor
functions because it depressed her to see the unchanging bio signs of
her comrades in chill-sleep. It made them look as if they were dead.
Okurt must have been watching her gaze. "They phased
those out years ago," he said. "Unreliable."
So nobody had them any more, nobody except her and a
few Royal Marines who were on their way home. She turned her hand palm
down on the table.
When Okurt was agitated he had a habit of spinning his
coffee cup in its saucer, and he was doing it now. "We might have been
able to help, had we been allowed access."
"I know." She was drawing parallel lines on the pad in
front of her, darker and deeper and harder with each stroke. "Do you
have current orders regarding Frankland?"
"We're backing off for the time being. No point getting
into a pissing match with the wess'har, not if we want to do business
with them. If she's got what you say she's got, there'll be other ways
to acquire it. I've got enough on my plate trying to keep the isenj
sweet without the wess'har noticing we're kissing both their arses."
"I can't help thinking this double game is going to be
the proverbial hiding to nothing."
"It's diplomacy. Evenhandedness. Like arming both sides
in a war."
"The wess'har don't deal in gray areas."
"Well, they'll get fed up with the isenj taking pot
shots at them sooner or later and then an offer of assistance might be
appreciated."
"And who's going to negotiate with them?"
"I pulled the winning ticket."
"Oh. I take it the isenj aren't privy to this."
"Of course not. And it wasn't my idea. Thanks to the
bloody EP or ITX or whatever they're calling it today, I don't have the
luxury of making my own decisions. I've got politicians and chiefs of
staff second-guessing me a comms call away. I might as well be a bloody
glove-puppet. And don't tell me ITX is a boon to mankind. It's a pain
in the arse."
Lindsay wondered how different things would have been
if Thetis had been able to get instant
messages and instructions back from Earth. It might have made matters
worse. She wondered if it would have saved Surendra Parekh: somehow she
doubted it. Somewhere there was a bezeri parent who had lost a child
because of the biologist's arrogant curiosity about cephalopods, and
for a split second she felt every shade of that alien pain.
No, she was content that Shan had let the wess'har
execute the woman.
But that didn't excuse her allowing David to die. She
took the rising bubble of pain and crushed it into herself again.
"At least we'll probably go down as the most
economically viable mission in history," said Okurt. "Instant comms,
new territory, maybe even immortality in a bottle. That's what
exploration's really about. Unless Frankland's already acquired the
biotech for a specific corporation, of course."
"She said she wasn't paid to get the tech. I'm inclined
to believe her. She's not like that."
"Come on, everybody's like
that sooner or later."
"Not her. She's EnHaz. An environmental protection
officer. As far as she's concerned, she's on a personal mission to
cleanse the bloody universe. And she loathes corporations, believe me.
Enough to let terrorists loose on them. Enough to be
a terrorist."
"Well, whatever EnHaz was, I've got my orders--detain
her, as and when, for unauthorized killing of a civilian and for being
a potential biohazard. That'll do for now."
Despite her hatred, Lindsay fought back an urge to
correct Okurt about Frankland's involvement. It might have been her
weapon that shot Parekh, but she hadn't fired it, whatever she claimed.
The woman would have said anything to protect her pet wess'har, Aras.
Lindsay had confronted him once: she had no doubt he would have killed
her too without losing a second's sleep over it.
"I want Frankland," she said. "But I want her for the
right reasons. This isn't vengeance."
She dug her stylus into the paper. She hadn't written a
single word, just black lines. When she caught Okurt staring, she
tapped the border of the smartpaper and the surface plumped up into
pristine white nothingness again.
"I'm sure it isn't," he said, eyeing her in evident
disbelief. She put the stylus back in her breast pocket. Actaeon's wardroom was
comfortable and quiet, with all the refinements that fifty years of
further development could make in a ship. You could hardly hear the
constant rush of air or feel the vibration of machinery that had
permeated Thetis. But it was still too
small for two commanders. All the security she had once derived from
knowing her exact place in the service hierarchy had evaporated. Out of
rank, and out of time: she wanted to be busy.
"I can't sit around filing reports forever," she said. "You need an
extra pair of hands."
"What I need is to get this base set up on Umeh, and I
need people who've had alien contact experience. And I don't mean Eddie
bloody Michallat, either. I won't have BBChan running the show, even if
they do think they're a government department."
"The isenj like Eddie. He might be your best route to
Frankland too. Even she liked him in the end."
It was too painful to say Shan.
It was the way you referred to a friend.
"She's just one woman," Okurt said. "How much trouble
can a disgraced copper be?"
"Find out why she was demoted in the first place before
you dismiss her." Lindsay was surprised he hadn't heard the gossip.
Buzzes like that usually flew round a ship fast: the antiterrorist
officer who went native. Yes, Shan had enjoyed quite a checkered
career. "Civvy police dip in and out of uniform discipline as and when
it suits them, and she doesn't know the meaning of rules of engagement.
So don't give her an inch. She wasn't always in EnHaz--she's ex–Special
Branch. You name it, she's done it."
"Get it in perspective. She's just another plod with a
few more brain cells. She isn't special forces."
"Don't say I didn't warn you." Lindsay reached in her
jacket and pulled out her sidearm. She laid it on the table. Okurt said
nothing but his eyes were a study in amazement. "Promise me this. If
we're ever in a position to take her, let me do it. I let her walk away
once and I regretted it. I won't make that mistake again."
Okurt still stared at the weapon. "Perhaps you should
stow that in the armory," he said.
"No thanks." She slipped it back into her jacket. "Trust me. I've
never been more controlled. There's only one person who
needs to worry about me." A plod with a few more brain
cells.
No, Okurt didn't have a clue about Shan Frankland.
TO:
Foreign Office, Federal European Union
FROM: CDR.
MALCOLM OKURT,
CSV Actaeon
We have been
unable to detain Superintendent Frankland as she has been granted
protection by the wess'har authorities. The best intelligence we have
is that she is still on CS2. Under the circumstances, I believe we have
no option but to let the matter rest for the time being: pressing the
issue will compromise any later negotiations we might have with the
wess'har regarding landings on CS2. The BBChan embed here says that we
should start calling the planet by the name Bezer'ej when dealing with
the wess'har, and Asht when talking to the isenj, but not CS2 or
Cavanagh's Star 2. Apparently it smacks of colonialism and might offend
the local population.
It was hard being nothing more than an
extra pair of hands.
Shan stabbed the shovel into the frost-hardened ground
and turned another spadeful of soil. She made a few rough calculations.
Another fifty square meters and she'd be done.
The claws were really getting on her nerves now. She
kept catching them on the handle of the spade, snagging her pants,
scratching her face. She couldn't quite get the hang of them. Sometimes
they were worse than the lights.
But they weren't worse than the nightmares.
The sensations persisted into waking. She was in a room
enveloped in a smell like a forest floor. She couldn't see anyone, but
she knew somebody was there. The sequence of events was jumbled: but
however it manifested, the events were the same--searing loneliness,
the
wild panic of trying not to breathe and then inhaling a lungful of icy
water, followed by agonizing pain between her shoulder blades.
And she had thought she was coping pretty well, all
things considered. The dream symbolism was unoriginal except for the
smell. Maybe I'm not as tough as I think,
she decided. An unbroken night's sleep would have been welcome. And nobody needs a copper out
here.
The ground was almost too hard to dig, but she wanted
to make an early start, a manual start, to
prove that she had no intention of freeloading on the Constantine
colony's generosity. And they don't need to learn how
to control a riot or secure a crime scene or keep yourself from going
barmy with boredom during a month-long surveillance. They don't need me
at all.
It was just as well that the wess'har thought she might
come in useful one day. Otherwise she was just a mouth that needed
feeding, and there were no shops here. If she didn't plant it and grow
it, she didn't eat it. Suddenly all those dreams she had once
cherished--a patch of soil to cultivate when she turned in her warrant
card, a little more time to herself--seemed painfully ironic. She'd got
exactly, literally, all too bloody
generously what she had wished for. She rammed the spade hard into the
soil again.
The sun--Cavanagh's Star to humans, Ceret to
wess'har--was making little impression on the frost at this time of the
morning. Shan stopped and leaned on the shovel. Josh Garrod was making
his way towards her, stumbling over the furrows that frozen water had
burst and broken.
He was in a hurry. That wasn't encouraging; there was
nothing to rush for here. She started towards him, sensing that there
was some emergency and responding to ingrained police training, but he
waved her back with both hands. He had her grip slung over his shoulder
on a strap.
Maybe it was good news that couldn't wait. She doubted
it.
When he reached her he was puffing clouds of acrid
anxiety. Her altered sense of smell, another little retro-fit provided
by her c'naatat, confirmed her fears. She
had never seen the stoic colony leader in a flat panic before.
"You've got to get out." He pulled the bag off his back
and held it out to her to take it. "I'll show you where to go--"
"Whoa, roll this back a bit," she said, but she already
knew what he was going to say. "Just tell me why."
"They're here," he said. "They know. They're searching
Constantine for you."
"Wess'har?"
"I'm afraid so."
There was the merest kick of adrenaline and then a
sudden, cold, alien focus. "Where's Aras?" It had only been a matter of
time. There was no monopoly of information. But she had expected a
little more breathing space before the matriarchs discovered what Aras
had done to her. Now she didn't even have time to wonder how.
"They've taken him. He told me to hide you. I promised
him, Shan. Don't make me break that."
"Well, you've done your bit." She took the grip from
him and slung it across her shoulder, then started walking back towards
Constantine, shovel in hand.
Josh grabbed her shoulder. "You're not going back."
Shan glared at his hand. He withdrew it. "I bloody well
am."
"You can hide out--"
"Yeah, 'course I can." Aras didn't deserve this. She
owed him. She quickened her pace. "Good idea."
"Shan, they'll execute you. You know that."
"They'll have a job on their hands then, won't they?
I'm a bit hard to kill. You might have noticed."
Josh broke into a run to keep up with her. She was a
lot taller than the native-born, and now faster on her feet, too. "It's
a big planet," he puffed. "They'll never find you."
"You reckon? We found you,
and we were twenty-five light-years away. Sorry, Josh--I only know one
way to deal with this, and that's to go and meet it. If it takes me,
fine, and if I take it, that's great too, but I won't spend the rest of
my life looking over my shoulder. Because that's going to be a bloody
long time."
He didn't know her at all. He should have realized that
she would never leave Aras. It was more than the biological links that c'naatat
had forged between them: it was every
bond of loyalty she had known as a police officer, stronger than
family, and then--then there was something more besides, something she
hadn't felt before. It was primeval, foreign, urgent. It was an
overwhelming compulsion to defend.
She wondered if it was a remnant of the Suppressed
Briefing. Perhaps there was still stuff that the Foreign Office had
drug-programmed into her subconscious to be accessed later that she
still didn't know about. It was as persistently irritating as a
half-forgotten name or song, itching away in the back of her mind but
refusing to be remembered clearly.
No, this was different.
Josh stumbled after her across the frost-hard ruts of
soil, sidestepping planted areas despite his panic. Ahead of them the
half-buried skylight domes of Constantine shimmered in the weak
sunlight; on the horizon, the idyll of a terrestrial farm was
shattered. Beyond the biobarrier the wess'har had erected to contain
Constantine's ecology, the silver and blue early spring wilderness of
Bezer'ej was a constant reminder that humans were temporary visitors
here.
Out of habit, Shan reached behind her back and
remembered she'd left her handgun in her room. She felt the fabric of
her bag. Her fingers found the comforting outline of a pack of
cartridges and a couple of small grenades that she didn't like to leave
lying around. But in her mind's eye she could see the gun still sitting
on the table beside her bed.
"Shit," she said aloud. She'd assumed you didn't need a
weapon when you were digging. It was the sort of mistake she never
normally made. "Shit."
"I put it inside your grip," Josh said, suddenly
revealing that he knew her a lot better than she thought he did. "I
thought you might need it."
Neither of them said gun. "Good
thinking," said Shan.
She had expected to find a full-scale rummage team
scouring Constantine. There were certainly enough wess'har troops
stationed at the Temporary City on the mainland to provide one. But
they were wess'har, and they didn't think like humans and they
certainly hadn't read the police manual on apprehending suspects. She
was surprised to see just three of them ambling round the underground
galleries of the buried colony, giving the impression--an inaccurate
one, she knew--that they were lost.
They held lovely gold instruments. Their weapons, like
everything else in their functional culture, looked good. Two of the
wess'har were males, but the other was a young female, bigger and
stronger than her companions, a junior matriarch.
None of them looked at all like Aras.
It was easy to forget he was wess'har too. He was still
strikingly alien: nobody would have mistaken him for a human. But his
face and body had been resculpted by c'naatat
with the human genes it had scavenged during his years of contact with
the colonists at Constantine. From the relatively slender, pale
elegance of a long-muzzled wess'har it had built an approximation of a
man--huge and hard, with a face that was at once a beast's and a
human's.
But these were pure wess'har, looking for all the world
like paramilitary seahorses. She gestured to Josh to leave, and focused
on the female walking along the gallery opposite her, high above the
main street of Constantine and almost level with the roof of the church
of St. Francis. Shan ran up the winding stairway after her, two steps
at a time.
"You looking for me?" she called.
The female spun round and froze. It was never a good
idea to startle someone who was armed, least of all a wess'har. But the
creature cocked her pretty chess piece head to one side and stared.
"Are you the gethes Shan
Frankland?"
"Who's asking?"
"I don't understand."
"Yeah, I'm Superintendent Frankland." As if her rank
might make a difference: it was simply habit. "And who the fuck are
you?"
"I am Nevyan." The junior matriarch blinked rapidly and
Shan was momentarily distracted by those unnerving four-lobed pupils
set in gold irises. "You will come with us. The matriarchs know you are
infected."
"Where's Aras?"
"In the Temporary City."
"I want to see him."
"Ask Mestin."
"I'm asking you."
"Ask Mestin." Nevyan was frozen in that characteristic
wess'har wait-and-see reaction. Her irises snapped open and shut again.
She smelled intimidated but she was holding her ground pretty well.
"She is senior matriarch here."
"Okay, then we'll go to see Mestin." They stood and
looked at each other, and Shan took a guess that Nevyan had absolutely
no idea about humans, and knew even less about her. "And this has
nothing to do with any of the people here. You understand? You leave
them out of this."
"I was told to find you and Aras Sar Iussan. I have no
orders regarding the colony."
The two males had wandered up behind Nevyan now,
watching. Weapons at their sides, they appeared satisfied there was
going to be no violence. Shan kept her eyes fixed on Nevyan's until the
junior matriarch broke the gaze and began walking towards the ramp that
led up and out of the subterranean settlement. Shan fell in behind her.
How old was she in human terms? A teenager, a young woman? Shan
couldn't tell yet.
One thing was for sure.
She hadn't been around long enough to know that
prisoners--even compliant ones--needed searching.
Mestin decided she would hand over command of
the Temporary City with not one pang of regret.
The last year had been a hard one. She had not expected
it to be so difficult; Bezer'ej was normally a quiet tour of duty,
somewhere to contemplate and study while the business of maintaining
the cordon around the planet went on unnoticed, carried out by her
husbands and children. And four years of her service had been just
that, until the new humans came, and the isenj tried to follow them,
and the fighting had started. We will be home soon, she
thought. Home, and maybe nothing more arduous to do than making
decisions for the city of F'nar and educating her children. If the
gethes stay away.
She sat out in the garden, well-wrapped against the
cold with her dhren pulled up over her
head and shoulders. The opalescent fabric shaped itself obligingly
around her jaw to shut out the wind. The first
thing I shall do is walk around the whole perimeter of F'nar, right
around the city. It was not that she disliked Bezer'ej. It was
unspoiled and exotic and beautiful, but it was not home, and she needed
home very badly right then.
She couldn't take her eyes off the moon, off Wess'ej.
Somewhere--right on the limb of the illuminated part, right there--was
home, F'nar, one of the thousand
modest city states of Wess'ej, warm and peaceful and in balance with
the world.
Mestin stared at the imagined point until F'nar slipped
into the darkness and night fell on it. She had done this every
evening, cloud cover allowing, waiting for the time that her tour of
duty would be over. She wondered how Aras had managed to spend so many
years here without the comfort of fellow wess'har. At least she had all
her clan with her, working together.
Aras had nothing.
There was no point putting it off any longer. He was
sitting alone in a room in the depths of the Temporary City, under
arrest, waiting for her. In another room sat Shan Frankland, the gethes
matriarch. Mestin didn't know quite what
to make of Frankland.
The woman had stayed here before for two days, in
hiding from the rest of the humans. The matriarchs on Wess'ej had even
held a meeting with her and judged her a useful ally. Yes, a gethes
had been to Mestin's city while she and
her family stayed here fending off isenj attacks. It galled her.
But that was before they realized why her fellow humans
wanted her so badly.
So Frankland was now c'naatat.
It was something the gethes found very
desirable, in that greedy and desperate way of theirs, and something
that Shan Chail would apparently not
surrender to them. They said she feared what it would do to human
society: Mestin wondered if she simply wanted a higher price.
The wind was biting and she felt the peck of ice
crystals on her face. Nevyan, her daughter, walked up to her clutching
her dhren tight around her. It was a
nervous tic. The fabric would shape itself to whatever garment Nevyan
arranged it to be, and needed no clutching or pinning.
"They're waiting," she said.
"I know."
"They offered no resistance."
"I didn't think Aras would try to avoid facing the
consequences. But I'm surprised the gethes
was so cooperative."
"She was more concerned about Aras." Nevyan said. There
was a long pause: Mestin didn't fill it. "It surprises me. And she has
just one bag of possessions, like us. She doesn't seem like…a gethes."
The light from the open hatchway created a pool of
yellow illumination across the ground. Mestin stood watching the silver
grasses shaking as some creature--probably an udza,
in this weather--prowled in search of prey driven to ground level by
the
winds. There was a brief frozen silence, then a sudden yip from
something that had not escaped the udza. Everything here seemed
to devour
everything else. It was a violent and unforgiving world for all its
beauty.
"They'll kill him," Nevyan said. She smelled of
agitation: she was competent, promising, but she was still very young
and unused to hard decisions. That would have to change. "But how can
you kill a c'naatat? Didn't they survive
terrible--"
"That's not our problem. All we're to do is to take
them back to Wess'ej, to F'nar, and let Chayyas decide what happens
next. It's her responsibility. Neither mine nor yours."
"But he's the last of the c'naatat
troops, even if he's been foolish. They saved us."
Mestin hadn't actively disliked humans before the Thetis
arrived. The small colony that had been
allowed to live here since before she was born had proved passive and
harmless, a curiosity set on creating a society that honored something
called God. But their benign nature had ill-prepared her for the humans
who had come in the Thetis with their
weapons and their greed. They'll bring another war upon us,
she thought. In the end, humans were all gethes,
all carrion-eaters. Aras Sar Iussan might have found them less
repellent, but perhaps he had now become too like them to be objective.
"I'll talk to them now." Mestin threw her dhren
back and walked down into the Temporary
City, Nevyan at her heels.
Aras seemed unrepentant. He sat on the resting ledge
cut out of the wall of the room Nevyan had set aside to hold him,
smelling of no emotion in particular. His hands were folded in his lap.
Mestin wondered if there was anything that could really frighten him
any more. Perhaps he was looking forward to the end, having lived alone
far too long, because that was surely what would happen to him: Chayyas
would have him killed--somehow.
Nevyan was right. He was the last of the c'naatat
troops, and--war hero or not--the
unending problem of isolating the symbiont would die with him. It was
for the best. She thought it would be the kindest solution for the gethes
female too.
Aras looked up at Mestin and said nothing, and carried
on saying nothing until she turned and left. What would she have asked
him, anyway? Why he had committed such an act of madness? It was
irrelevant. Wess'har cared only about what was done, not what was
intended. Motivation was a human excuse, a sophistry, a lie. But she
could think of no reason why a wess'har who had spent his whole life
ensuring that c'naatat didn't spread would
suddenly give it willingly to an alien.
Outside the room that held Shan Frankland, Mestin
hesitated before stepping over the threshold. There was a scent, but
she was too unfamiliar with gethes to
identify a state of mind from it.
This gethes had changed.
Mestin had seen her when she had been brought in for brief sanctuary,
and at the time she had struck her as much taller and more aggressive
than the colonists, but a human nonetheless--fidgeting, soft and
confused. She didn't match the self-assured picture that conversations
with Aras had created. But now she seemed still and purposeful. She was
leaning casually against the wall of the room, but she straightened up
slowly when Mestin came in and thrust her hands into her garments. Her
long black hair was pulled back and tied with a length of rough brown
fabric. She didn't seem afraid either.
"This is the only cell I've ever been in that hasn't
got a door," Shan said.
"Do you remember me, Shan Chail?"
"Mestin. Yes. And that's your daughter? The youngster
who brought us in?"
"Nevyan. Yes."
"Where's Aras? Is he all right?"
"He's unharmed."
"What's going to happen to him?"
"Shouldn't you be concerned about what will happen to you?"
Shan appeared unmoved and made that quick hunching
action with her shoulders. Mestin had seen Aras do the same. "If you
have me, then you don't need him, do you?"
"He has committed a foolish act. You're a different
matter."
"Meaning?"
"You have uses. You know that. That's why you were
allowed to remain."
"How did you find out about me?"
"We can monitor gethes
voice transmissions between the Actaeon
and your homeworld. There's been much talk of your condition. Is it
true it would give you great status and wealth in your society?"
"You know perfectly well that Actaeon's
skipper was ordered to detain me as a biohazard. Does that sound like
status to you?"
Mestin still couldn't work out if Shan was afraid. She
tried to stare into her gray alien eyes: apparently you could judge a
human's condition that way, but she looked and saw only single, empty,
black pupils that told her nothing. "You made no attempt to evade us."
"Where would I run? And what would you have done to the
colonists if I had? Back home we'd say you had me bang to rights."
Mestin gave up trying to understand and turned towards
the door. Chayyas would have to sort it out in the next few days.
"Hey, what happens now?" Shan called after her.
Mestin turned round. "I have no idea," she said. "And I
imagine nobody else has either. We have no deviance so we don't know
how to punish. And we've never found an alien infected with c'naatat--not
in our lifetimes."
There was a pause. "Yeah, I think I know what happened
the last time you did," said Shan.
"You'd know more about Aras's actions at Mjat than I
would."
"Look, he's not going to make a habit of this, is he?
Let him go."
All the gethes seemed to
worry about was Aras. Her protectiveness towards males almost made
Mestin warm to her, but she decided to end the debate. She had a
suspicion she was being dragged into a bargaining session. "You have
been fed, yes? Now do you have everything you need?"
Shan gave her an odd flash of her teeth: no wonder
ussissi were wary of humans. She indicated her bag in the corner of the
cell, a shapeless dark blue fabric sack with straps that attached to
the shoulders very much like a wess'har pack. Nevyan was right. If it
contained everything she owned, it was an oddly modest amount for an
acquisitive gethes.
"I always travel well-equipped," she said, and her
occasional blinking had stopped completely. Her eyes were disturbingly
pale and liquid. "I've got everything I need."
Mestin held her fixed gaze for a few more seconds and
thought for once that she had understood everything the gethes
had said.
Aras had a dream again, of fire and of hatred
and of angry sorrow. It wasn't his own. It wasn't even the inherited
memory of the victims of Mjat, because that was a waking recollection,
a real event from his captors' experience that he could verify because
he had been part of it. This was another sort of fire and emotion
altogether.
Dreaming was not a wess'har characteristic and neither
were long periods of sleep. But when he dozed briefly, vivid dreams
came to him from his altered genome, sometimes the almost-human face of
an Earth ape, sometimes a closed door, and sometimes red and gold fire.
And the alien emotion that accompanied it all was throat-stopping rage.
This time he was looking through a distorted frame,
like a heat haze or clear shallow water, and the fire came towards him
in a great arc and filled his field of vision. There was no burning.
But a gut-panic almost took his legs from underneath him. Then he woke.
He was leaning against the polished wall of a chamber
in Chayyas's home in F'nar, where Mestin had brought him to await the
senior matriarch's judgement. The images and feelings were still vivid
in his head and his throat. It was the anger that disturbed him most.
This had to be Shan's memories. He was behind her eyes.
He had no sense of location, only a vague darkness, but he could feel a
great racking sob fighting to be free of his chest and the pressure of
something smooth and hard gripped fiercely in his hand--her
hand--and a painful constriction in his
throat and eyes. And then he heard a man's voice. Are you going to sit there all
fucking night or are you going to frigging well go and do something
about it?
They were angry, violent words but he had no sense of
them being wielded to wound her. Then the pressure in his chest and
throat burst and there was a massive rush of cold and energy into his
limbs. Then, nothing. It left him feeling as if he had been jerked out
of the world and dumped in a void.
Aras had gone through this sequence, waking and
sleeping, at least a dozen times since he had contaminated Shan and had
in turn been contaminated by her. Whatever else c'naatat
had snatched from her, it seemed to think this was useful. It was an
angry and violent event. It was consistent too, and from what he knew
of humans' fluid, inaccurate, ever-rewriting memories, that meant she
had replayed it many times to herself.
He hoped he would be able to ask her about the events
that had burned it into her. But the chances were that he would not see
her again, and the thought left him aching with desolation.
He straightened up and looked out the window onto the
terraced slopes of the caldera that cradled F'nar. The sun had not yet
risen above the horizon but the nacreous coating on all the
deliberately irregular little houses built into the west-facing slope
looked luminous.
The City of Pearl, the humans called it; the few
colonists from Constantine who had seen F'nar had viewed it through
religious eyes and pronounced it a miracle, and named it accordingly
after a passage in one of their holy books. But Shan, in her pragmatic
way, had called it insect shit, for that was what the coating actually
was. He liked her pragmatism.
It was all a matter of perception.
Aras didn't believe in miracles, although if one were
about to present itself its timing would have been excellent. He was
not afraid of dying. At several points in his artificially long life he
had bitterly regretted being unable to die. What he feared most now was
loss. He had put Shan in this position without her consent, and now she
would be left alone to suffer the same loneliness that he had, and he
would lose the one close relationship he had felt able to form in
centuries. It was…unfair.
Aras paced slowly round the room, measuring the
dimensions in footsteps. Whatever happened to him, they would not harm
Shan. She was too useful. She would be fine. She would be safe.
He took some comfort from that, but not
much. Would he have to advise Chayyas on how to have him killed? Human
explosives might do the job best. Anything less immediate and
catastrophic would only give his c'naatat
time to regroup and keep him alive.
He heard Chayyas coming a full minute before she
appeared in the room. He could hear the swish of her long dhren
against the flagstones and the scrabbling
footsteps of the ussissi aide trying to keep pace with her. When she
entered the room, she filled it, and not only with her size and
presence: she exuded the sharp scent of agitation. A human would have
tried to present a controlled façade, but any wess'har could smell
another's state of mind. There was no point in putting on a brave face.
"Aras, you put me in an impossible position," she said,
without greeting. She shimmered. She had a very fine dhren, as
luminous as the city itself. "I have
no idea what to do with you."
"Is Shan Frankland well? Is she still at Fersanye's
home?"
"She has eaten this morning and asks after you
repeatedly."
That made him feel much worse. "I didn't plan this."
"Why did you do it, then? Why did you corrupt the order
of things? Did you want a companion that badly?"
"She was dying. The isenj fired on her, and that was a
conflict of my making so I couldn't stand by and let her die." He
paused. It was a cheap shot to raise the matter, but it was relevant.
"And it never troubled your forebears to alter the balance when you
needed us as soldiers to defend this world."
"What was done in the past isn't a justification for
doing it in the present."
"Then you must look at the circumstances," he said. "And I will not
plead for my life. Do what you judge best."
"Aras, nobody has ever deliberately harmed the common
good. I have no idea whether a penalty is appropriate. But if we were
to destroy all traces of c'naatat, it
would save much harm in the future, and not just for us."
Even now that angered him, although he had a random
thought that his anger--his wess'har anger--was mere irritation
compared
to Shan's inner rage. "I can't accept that. You can destroy me, and you
can even destroy Shan Chail, but how can
you justify wiping out the life-form in its natural place? It's part of
Bezer'ej. We have no right to end its existence because it's
inconvenient for us. That makes us no better than the isenj. Or the gethes."
"Then I would have to weigh one people's welfare
against the benefits to all the other species," said Chayyas. "Just as
I might have to with the gethes."
"And you might want to utilize c'naatat
again one day--for the benefit of all other species, of course."
Sarcasm was lost on a wess'har. Aras had learned it
from humans. There was a part of him, the part gleaned from alien
genes, that found it very satisfying. Chayyas took the comment at its
literal face value and turned to the ussissi who was shuffling from
foot to foot at the entrance to the chamber.
"Fetch Mestin," she said. "Tell her I want to talk to
her. I'll go to her if she prefers."
The ussissi shot off without a word. Chayyas appeared
pained, and the scent of anxiety had not diminished. If anything, it
was more pungent. She turned to go. "Whatever happens, we haven't
forgotten what you did for us all, and how much we owe you."
It was the first time in his very long life that anyone
had ever thanked Aras for his military service.
"Better late than never," he said, and was more than
satisfied with Chayyas's parting expression of incomprehension.
I once had
difficulty accepting that Satan was as real as God, but now I see what
c'naatat brings with it, I'm as sure as I can be
that evil is an entity. If this parasite is not the temptation of the
Devil, then I don't know what is. It is sin in its every facet. If we
knew how, we should destroy it. For the time being we should simply be
thankful that the wess'har have the wisdom to control its spread, and
that we have our faith to prevent our temptation by this false eternity.
BENJAMIN
GARROD,
addressing Constantine Council 2232
It was nicknamed the Burma Road, for
reasons nobody could now recall. The passage ran in a complete ellipse
through the midsection of Actaeon, and at
the end of a watch, you had two choices: to join the flow of joggers
pounding round it or stay out of the way. Lindsay chose to run.
She hadn't needed to run on Bezer'ej. Heavy mundane
work and high gravity had been exercise enough to keep her bones and
muscles healthy. But there was little to do on board Actaeon
that put any physical stress on her.
Besides, she needed the boost of endorphins to lift her mood. She
concentrated on her breathing and settled into a steady pace in the
knot of runners already on their fifth or sixth circuit.
Nobody acknowledged anyone else. They were all in their
own separate worlds, rankless in shorts or pants of defiantly
nonuniform colors. It didn't feel like running. Lindsay felt as if she
was fleeing the ship with a calm and orderly crowd. She wondered if the
treadmill in one of the gyms might have been a better idea.
"Your--samples--are still--clear," said a breathless voice
right behind her.
Oh, how she hated people who tried to make conversation
while they were running. And it was one of the ship's medics, too,
Sandhu or something. "What d'you mean?"
"Nothing weird," said Sandhu, and that was it. Lindsay
fumed. Then she dropped a stride and drew alongside him. She caught his
arm insistently and they dropped out of the pack, leaving the other
joggers to disappear around the curve of the Burma Road.
They stared at each other, catching their breath.
"Want to explain that?" Lindsay asked.
"I thought you'd like to know we haven't found anything
unusual in your samples."
Everyone had routine tests once a month. It was normal
procedure on missions. "Why should there be?"
"Well, you never knew when Frankland acquired her
biological extras, did you? And you said she was iffy about physical
contact, so let's assume it's transmissible somehow."
"You think I might have picked up a dose, then?
Couldn't someone have told me this? Don't I have to consent?"
"Biohaz procedure. Standard."
"Biohaz my arse. Serious money, more like."
"You have no idea how serious," said Sandhu. He
adjusted his shorts and jogged off up the Burma Road again, leaving her
staring at his wobbling backside.
So they were going to try every avenue to isolate the
biotech.
Lindsay pushed herself away from the bulkhead and broke
into a jog again. Okurt should have told her they were checking her
out. If they had found anything, what would they have done to her? She
shuddered and tried to lose herself in physical exertion.
That was the good thing about running: it helped you
think things through.
How were they going to get to Shan Frankland?
Lindsay concentrated on each stride. The solution would
come to her in its own good time. She thought for a moment how odd it
was to see daylight in a windowless, skyless tunnel of metal and
composites. The continuous strip of daylight lamp ran above her head
like a glimpse of an explosion ripping open the deck above, a
detonation frozen in time.
She was one lap short of completion when she ran into
the very last person she had ever expected to see again. She ran into
him quite literally: he stepped out of a hatchway and she cannoned into
him. He steadied himself and smiled, but it wasn't affectionate or
friendly or even welcoming.
It was Mohan Rayat.
There were definitely things going on that nobody
was telling her.
Shan had never been much good at waiting.
She lay on the thin mattress of folded cloth, staring
at the open doorway and straining to listen for the sounds of anyone in
Fersanye's household who might try to stop her leaving. There was no
door handle to try, because there was no door.
The wess'har had taken the hint that she needed her
space but they still had no concept of privacy. It was unnerving trying
to wash or use the latrine when you couldn't lock a door. The cold
water that streamed from the ceiling when she yanked on a chain
snatched her breath for a few seconds and then--she imagined--c'naatat
kicked in and made her breathe normally
again. It was still painfully icy. Dream-images of drowning in that
dark room crowded in on her and she fought back panic.
There were distant sounds of clattering glass and
double-voiced conversations, and she could actually hear the speech
patterns clearly now. While she dressed, she pursed her lips and said
"wess'har" very quietly, just to try, and was caught out by the sudden
emergence of two sounds, word and overtone. Oh my
God. Even her voice was changing.
Habit made her take her handgun out of her belt and
check the clip. Nevyan, you'll never make a
copper. Fancy not searching me. The 9mm was very old technology,
barely changed in centuries, but it worked, and it didn't need
recharging. If you maintained it religiously it never broke down. Then
she reached in her grip and took out a directional-blast grenade.
Royal Marine Sergeant Adrian Bennett--shy, loyal, but
lethal Ade--had shown her how to use one in an idle moment. She had no
idea why he'd left her a couple of the devices when the detachment
pulled out. Perhaps he knew she might need one, and he'd been proved
right. There was no point pissing about now. The only thing that
mattered was securing a deal for Aras.
Shan tucked the grenade inside her jacket and went in
search of an exit. She passed males and children on the way, but they
simply looked at her and let her pass. Perhaps they thought there was
nothing a single gethes could do on her
own in a strange city.
One of the males stepped into her path. "Fersanye
offers food," he said, struggling with English.
Shan took it at face value. "I'm going for a walk," she
said. "Sve l'bir. Okay?"
Outside, an alley lined with ashlars curved away in
both directions. The tem flies hadn't
coated the shaded surfaces. The stone was still honey-gold, dappled in
light and dark by the sun piercing a mesh of vines overhead, and
therefore probably too cool to attract them.
"Ah well," she muttered, and cast around to decide on a
direction. Either way would take her to the end of the terrace, and she
could then at least look up and get her bearings. Or she could follow
concentrations of noise. Wess'har made plenty of that.
The first noise she latched on to was a skitter
skitter skitter. She drew her weapon, a
pure reflex, and a ussissi came round the curve of the wall and stared
up at her, and then at the weapon.
She replaced the gun in the back of her belt,
embarrassed at her excess. The ussissi's gaze followed her hand. "I
want to see Chayyas Chail," she said, and
was surprised to hear herself manage the beginnings of an overtone
again. And the language, wess'u, was starting to emerge from nowhere, a
word here, a phrase there. "Can you show me her house?"
"Perhaps you should go tomorrow," said the ussissi. "Call her first."
"Thanks, but no. Show me."
It seemed to work: the ussissi must have been
accustomed to the imperious direction of females a lot taller than him.
He said nothing, turned round again and pattered ahead of her, sounding
like a dog scrabbling on tiles.
The belts of scarlet beaded cloth that trailed from his
shoulders slapped against the ashlars as he kept close to the walls. He
didn't turn round to see if she was keeping up with him. Framed by the
light from the window at the head of a flight of stairs, the creature
made her think of a white rabbit, and she stopped the analogy right
there.
This wasn't some quaint children's fantasy. She was a
long way from home and there would be no waking up from curious dreams
to transport her back to familiarity. For the first time in her adult
life, Shan was surrounded by beings as hard, as ruthless and as
intelligent as she was, and maybe even more so. It unsettled her. All
her natural advantages were gone.
And nobody deferred to her rank or uniform, either. She
was going to have to do this the hard way.
"Are you coping with the facilities here?" asked the
ussissi suddenly.
"If you mean the toilets, yes. I'm more agile than I
look."
He made a clicking sound and said nothing more. There
were windows every few meters along the inner length of the stair wall,
and Shan was aware of faces at some of them, long gold and copper
wess'har faces, startling flower eyes, all staring. Some might have
remembered her from her last visit to the city. All must have known who
she was. There weren't that many wess'har-human hybrids around, after
all.
She could even pick out some more words. She could hear
the patterns emerging, and they seemed far less incomprehensible than
they had the previous day. She could hear rhythm, familiarity, and then
another recognizable word leaped out, shocking and reassuring at the
same time. G'san. New weapon.
She was picking it up. "And what might that new weapon
be?" she asked, smug at her growing skill.
The ussissi didn't even glance back at her. "You," he
said.
She drew level with him at the end of a terrace and
found herself on the halfway level of the curving walkways that lined
the caldera. They were all neatly edged with irregular low walls that
made Shan think instantly of accidents. Maybe they did fall down those
slopes sometimes. No wess'har would have been looking for anyone to
sue, though, even if they had lawyers, which she knew even without
asking that they didn't.
The basin was about four kilometers across, and the
slope directly opposite them was draped with a faint haze. If the
circumstances had been happier, it would have been a perfect summer
morning, and if there had been a railing to lean upon, she would have
leaned on it and taken it all in. But there was no rail. A couple of
wess'har youngsters walked past at a respectful distance from the edge
and glanced back at her in silent curiosity before looking away and
going about their business.
The children--what little she had seen of them--unsettled
her. It was that quiet appraising glance that they all had: they seemed
more adult than the adults. She looked down at the ussissi, who was
also gazing at the view, although he had surely seen plenty of it
before.
He raised an arm. "Across there," he said. "Do you see?
Follow the line of the upper terraces and you will see a water-course.
The buildings to the left are Chayyas's rooms."
Shan squinted into the light. The building didn't look
like any presidential palace she'd ever seen. It was just a rambling
collection of wess'har holes in the rock like all the others, although
it was carefully random in its form and so not
like any of them.
It would take her less than an hour to stroll over for
a visit. "Thanks. I think I can find that by myself."
"Tomorrow," the ussissi reminded her. "You should tell
her you're coming."
"Of course," Shan lied, and didn't care. If wess'har
didn't knock, then neither would she.
Navigating around F'nar was relatively easy. Stand
anywhere, and if the heat haze permitted you could see every part of
the city. Wess'har didn't plant screens of trees, just as they never
had blinds or curtains--or doors. External doors seemed only to be a
weather precaution, or a barrier to tem
flies trying to get inside the house to continue their exquisitely
decorative shitting.
Water tinkled around her down glass drainage pipes,
their sunward side crusted with pearl. She touched the surface. She
found her fingertips smeared with what looked like a shimmering
cosmetic. She sniffed. It was fresh tem
shit, but as shit went, it was remarkably pretty and odorless: somehow,
she had almost expected an exotic fragrance. She rinsed her hand under
the running water and wiped it on her pants.
The glass pipes were everywhere. Wess'har seemed
obsessed with the material. They were a transparent people in every
sense, transparent to each other and transparent in language. At least
that was something she didn't have to worry about here. She knew she
didn't have to brace herself for what she might find behind a locked
door.
Every space between the houses and every patch of soil
that wasn't filled by a home was crammed with growing things. She
almost thought green things. But they were
purple and red and silver and white. As she walked, planning her
confrontation with Chayyas, she saw wess'har tidying the plants and
removing leaves and stalks. Ahead of her a male was carefully pressing
tufts of brilliant carmine into a narrow strip of red-gold soil that
ran along the front of his home.
Shan paused. He looked up at her, all glittering
four-pupiled eyes, with an amazement that she could smell. He began
trilling and fluting. She recognized the word gethes,
and she also recognized c'naatat, but she
couldn't quite pick out the meaning. He stood up and came up so close
to her that she stepped back. They didn't seem to have an idea of
personal space; he was way too close for her liking.
She tried a smile to indicate she didn't feel
threatened, and then realized he probably didn't understand a display
of teeth any better than the ussissi. The trilling followed her as she
walked away.
By the time she got to the end of the terrace, marked
by a particularly lovely cascade of water fringed by purple-black moss,
there were more wess'har waiting for her to pass, making fluting,
incomprehensible comments. Christ, she wished she could summon up more
of the language. There was the faintest hint of agitation: nothing
threatening, just a mild anxiety that was almost excitement.
Shan had no idea what was going on. She paused and
looked around at them. Maybe they were holding her responsible for
Aras's plight. That terrace really wasn't very wide at all. It was a
long way down. I'd only break bones, she
thought. A few internal injuries. But it'll hurt
like hell.
But still nobody stopped her or searched her.
The wess'har might have been a mighty military presence
in the system, capable of destroying civilizations, but they had no
idea about security at home. She walked cautiously into the winding
passage that led from the entrance to Chayyas's clan home, alert for
threats, completely unable even now to override her training. A couple
of males--Chayyas's cousins or husbands or sons--simply stared and
parted
like grain before her as if she had a right to be there.
Yes, they really needed to sharpen up if they were
going to resist human incursion. They needed to learn about locks.
But then a ussissi trotted up to her. The creature was
just chest tall, and she caught it by the ornate chrome-yellow fabric
wrap that hung draped across one shoulder. It looked like another male,
a little smaller than the females. She drew it to her and leaned down,
so close they were almost nose-to-nose.
"You speak English?" she asked. The meerkat-like things
all appeared to speak several languages. "You know who I am. Take me to
Chayyas."
The ussissi stared into her face. She revised her view
that they were covered in amber fur. She could see that his skin was
finely divided by thousands of barely visible folds, like crepe paper,
like a very minutely detailed Fortuny pleated gown. The needle teeth,
though, were exactly what she had taken them for at first sight. Her
face was perilously close to them. She held on.
"Chayyas," she said. "Now."
There was a moment's hesitation. "This way," he said.
She followed him through three more interconnecting doorways and down a
flight of shallow stairs.
"Chayyas Chail will be most
upset," the ussissi said, his voice like a child's.
"I'm pretty pissed off myself."
"You should ask for audience. I could arrange it. I am
Vijissi, the matriarch's…" He searched for a word. "…diplomat."
"Well, I'm not diplomatic, and I'm not big on patience
either. I'll see her now, thanks."
Vijissi stopped at a portal and poked his head round
it. He jerked it back. Shan crouched level with the creature, knowing
he wouldn't bite a chunk out of her now. He smelled of feathers and
clean wildness. "Is she in?"
"She is, Chail."
"Thanks. Now go, please." She didn't want the
unfortunate ussissi around if firing started. She felt for the grenade
in her jacket. "This is personal."
The ussissi hesitated for a second but scuttled away,
and it was the first time she had noticed they had two pairs of legs
under those robes. That explained their characteristic scrabbling
footsteps. Then she walked into the chamber.
Chayyas stood gazing at moving images of a landscape
that seemed to be set in the stone of the wall. The matriarch was long
and gold and hippocampine, with that pretty muzzle and tufted mane that
Shan was beginning to recognize as highly individual features. They
didn't all look the same to her now.
"What are you doing here?" Chayyas looked up,
unconcerned. "I didn't summon you."
"You really ought to do something about your security,
for a start," Shan said. "I'll tell you that for free. But I've come
for Aras."
"Aras is detained."
"I know. But it's me you want. I'm the gethes."
Shan stepped closer. Chayyas probably
didn't know how humans smelled at the best of times. Could the
matriarch know she was gambling? More to the point, did she
know herself whether she was gambling?
"Well, I'm here. That solves the problem of the biohazard getting into
the human population. Let Aras go."
"We have already neutralized you by confining you to
Wess'ej. Why should I make concessions?"
"Because it's the right thing to do. He did it for me.
I'm the risk, not him."
"That is the problem. He doesn't behave as a wess'har.
He puts personal and individual whims above the common good."
"Okay, let me put it another way. You have one chance
to learn what it takes to deal with humankind and I'm it." Shan reached
behind her back and down her spine into her waistband the way she had a
thousand times before, feeling the body-warmed composite and wrapping
her fingers round it. She pulled the gun out in a practiced arc and
held it two-handed to Chayyas's left temple. Chayyas didn't move. There
was no reason why she should know what a gun looked like.
"You have lights in your skin," said the matriarch.
"It's the gun you need to look at, sweetheart."
"Will that kill me?"
"Indeed it could."
"Why do you want to do that?"
"It's the sort of thing humans do if they want to
achieve an end. I want you to let Aras go."
"Or you'll kill me."
"Perhaps."
"My bloodline lives on. I don't fear death."
The safety was off. "Neither do I. But you know you
need the intelligence I can provide. Leave Aras out of it and you have
my full cooperation. Harm him, and you're going to have to guess your
way out of this. You can't even stop me bringing a weapon into your
home. How are you going to cope with an army?"
Chayyas's scent began to take on a more acidic note. "I
don't bargain with gethes."
"I'm the one who might spread this thing to humans.
Without me, there's no threat."
Chayyas didn't quite smell of fear. The pupils of her
amber eyes were just slits, a faint black cross on a cabochon topaz.
"Is that weapon less powerful than the isenj one that struck you?"
"Probably," said Shan, listening to herself as if she
were standing outside her own body. Where the
hell am I going with this? She sat down and put the gun on the
table, safety still off, within easy reach. Then she took the grenade
from her jacket and turned it round so Chayyas could see it. "But this
isn't. Once I pull this pin, you have a
count of ten to get out of this room before it blows. This will
fragment me. You know what that means. Not even c'naatat
can repair me then. Problem solved." What the hell am I saying?
Chayyas said nothing and looked at the grenade as if it
was just a fascinating toy. She thinks I'm
bluffing. Shan flicked her thumb under the cap, suddenly struck
by the completely irrelevant fact that her claws were looking almost
like normal nails now. Am I? And bluffing
was something she couldn't afford to do, not with a matriarch.
It was all happening too fast. She hadn't planned this
at all well. I have to mean it.
She drew the pin out all the way. "Ten," she said. "Nine." Chayyas
still stared. "Eight." Shan shut her eyes. "Seven." And
then it seemed that Chayyas suddenly understood, because there was a
rush of air and acid and a massively powerful grip closed round her
hand and the grenade, pinning both to the table, and almost crushed
bone. Shan opened her eyes in shock and pain.
Chayyas held on grimly. "Replace that pin," she said. "Now."
The matriarch's anger seethed like
boiling vinegar in the air. The pain was all-consuming but Shan held
her position.
"Let Aras go." Jesus, I can't
hold this thing much longer. "Let him go."
The matriarch's pupils snapped from flower to cross and
back again.
Shan held on and Chayyas held on. Shan hoped her eyes
wouldn't start watering from the pain. If her hand went numb and she
dropped the damn thing…
Chayyas stared at the little dial on the cap of the
grenade. "Reset the pin."
"I thought you weren't afraid to die."
"I have children in this
house."
Chayyas had her eyes fixed on Shan's and Shan didn't
break the gaze. The matriarch's grip slackened a fraction, but it still
held. And so did Shan's stare. You look away first--you're dead.
Her old sergeant's voice spoke up, unbidden: don't
step aside, don't blink, don't apologize. Shan had stopped bar
brawls just by walking into the room in the right way. But her sergeant
hadn't taught her any wisdom that dealt with aliens. She fell back on
instinct.
"We could be here a long time," said Chayyas.
"If that's what it takes," said Shan, eyes beginning to
water with the effort. Jesus, it hurt. "Punishing Aras won't serve any
useful purpose."
And then Chayyas blinked, as if distracted by the
mention of Aras. She looked away. Shan felt an exultant surge of animal
triumph and pulled both hand and grenade clear. For a second she could
have sworn she smelled something like ripe mangoes--both heady-sweet
and
grassy at once--filling the space between them. It took all the effort
she could muster to hold the grenade steady enough to replace the pin.
The violet lights rippled, exaggerating the tremor.
"There's no purpose I can think of," said Chayyas.
Shan stood up and pocketed the grenade, hoping that the
c'naatat would deal quickly with any
bruising. She didn't want Chayyas to know how much pain she had put her
through. "I want custody of him," she said, nursing her crushed hand in
her pocket.
Chayyas, still seated, was staring alternately at the
gun and at Shan. She was holding her fingers tip to tip, flexing them:
they were all the same length, with three knuckles in each, giving them
an arachnid look. "He's your jurej. Take
him."
"What's that? Jurej?"
"Male."
"I'm sorry?"
Chayyas blinked flowers. Shan, in control of the
universe for a few brief moments, fell back into the confused world of
the visiting alien.
"Neither of you can have another," said Chayyas. "And
there are no unmated adults in wess'har society. He's your
responsibility."
"Hang on, I'm not sure I--"
Chayyas was fixed on the gun. "You wanted our asylum.
You behave wess'har. Therefore you are
wess'har." She reached her thin many-jointed hand towards the 9mm and
picked it up. "This won't kill you?"
"Steady on," said Shan. "The safety's off."
"Are you afraid?"
The challenge was unintended, she knew, but she
couldn't back down. Something foreign and primeval was overriding her
common sense. She'd seen it too often in drunks, in flashpoint fights,
in murders.
"No," she said, suddenly completely unable to say that
enough was enough and that they should all go about their business.
She had no reason to fear death now. It was life--this
out-of-control, alien life--that was starting to scare her.
Chayyas took the gun in her hand, and Shan wondered how
she knew how to aim. The she wondered how she knew how to start
squeezing the trigger. Something said you're
okay, it's only pain, and despite all her hard-wired instinct to
fling herself to the floor, Shan managed to brace herself before a
point-blank shot deafened her.
She fell.
The isenj city of Jejeno, capital of the Ebj
landmass, was all that there was.
From the time that Eddie Michallat looked out of the
shuttle hatch when the vessel landed on Umeh to the time he reached the
center of the city, he saw nothing--nothing--but
buildings speckled with pinpricks of light that were winking out as the
sun came up.
The complete absence of any open space disoriented him.
He had grown used to unbroken horizons on Bezer'ej even in a year. It
spoke to something primeval in him; he wanted
to miss the wilderness.
He let his bee-cam capture it all. It danced close to
his head as he leaned out of the open door of the ground transport,
because there were no windows. Isenj didn't appear to like watching the
scenery go by. Maybe it was too depressingly monotonous for them.
Still, they were enough like humans to need light when
it got dark, and to make buildings, and to use a language. And that was
close enough.
The isenj did indeed like Eddie. He made sure of it.
Eddie listened to them politely and didn't dismiss them. He relayed
what they said and felt, no more, no less. He didn't stare at them as
if they were monsters, and they responded by letting him visit their
world and see what they'd built, the first civilian to set foot on Umeh
after the Actaeon advance party had landed.
They even let him file a live piece at the shuttleport
to record the moment. It was the first rule of journalism: look after
your contacts, and they'd look after you. He applied it with relish.
Jejeno boiled with isenj. They parted in front of the
transport like shoals of fish and closed again behind it, apparently
unconcerned and intent on whatever business they were about. As Eddie
watched, one of them tripped and fell, and a small depression opened in
the living sea for just a second; then it was filled again. He never
saw the isenj get up. He never saw any other isenj take any notice
either. Maybe he was mistaken.
He craned his neck as far as he could, until the
imagined point in the crowd was far behind him and the ussissi
interpreter, Serrimissani, tugged on his sleeve.
"It happens," she said. "Concentrate on your task."
Eddie wished himself into a state of belief that the
fallen isenj had picked itself up and carried on walking, but something
told him that was not the case. Forget it. This
isn't Earth. He adjusted his respirator and wondered if he was
wasting the bee-cam's memory on this unchanging vista. Just how much
cityscape did people need to see?
But it was all there was. Viewers needed to know that.
On the other hand, it might have been rush hour, or Mardi Gras, and he
had no way of knowing if these crowds were a permanent event or not.
All he knew was that he felt suffocated.
He pulled back from the open door and turned to
Serrimissani, who looked for all the world like a malevolent
Riki-Tiki-Tavi.
"Crowded," said Eddie. It was a gross understatement. "Where do they
grow their food?"
"Everywhere they can," said the ussissi. Her voice was
muffled by the mask she was wearing over her snout. It looked like a
piece of clear plastic and reminded Eddie rather too much of the
various transparent carnivores of Bezer'ej, sheets of clear film that
would fall on you from the sky, or drag you down into water, and digest
you. "In buildings. Revolting."
"Vegetables?"
"Growths. Fungus."
She might have meant truffles, Eddie thought, trying to
put the visit in the brightest context. He had a feeling she didn't. He
settled for nutritional yeast.
The buildings pressing in on him gradually changed from
low-rises to tower blocks, a fact he took as an indication that he was
getting closer to the center of the city. It was a dangerous assumption
to make in an alien culture, but building high meant some sort of
priority: it certainly wasn't a matter of getting a prettier view of
the landscape.
The tight-packed crowds moved past him at a more sedate
pace, slow enough for isenj to stop and stare in at him, and he waved
and then wondered if the gesture had another meaning here. Their
piranha-spider faces betrayed nothing. Looking past them, he could
recognize nothing in the built environment that suggested shops or
offices. There were just façades intricately decorated with symbols and
patterns, carved and painted.
In front of one of the buildings there was an island in
the river of streaming isenj: some appeared to be standing still,
pressed together and waiting by a doorway. It was closed. He turned to
the interpreter.
"Queuing for food," said Serrimissani, without waiting
for his question. "There's sufficient, but the logistics of
distribution are unwieldy."
"What do the isenj make of humans?"
Serrimissani fixed him with a predator's expressionless
black eyes. He could almost see her digging for scorpions and crunching
them up between those needle teeth. "They can see kinship with you.
They enjoy complex organizations."
"What do you think of
them?"
"They honor their debts."
"How much do you get paid for interpreting? Sorry. Is
that a rude question?"
"They do not employ me. I have food and somewhere to
rest, just as I have on Wess'ej."
"You work both sides of the line? And the isenj trust
you to be here?"
"What could I do that they would not trust? This is not
a conflict of knowledge, so I cannot spy. Nor is it a war where the
wess'har take the conflict into their enemies' territory. So I do my
job and threaten no one. How do you get paid?"
It was a good question. Eddie hadn't had a raise in
seventy-six years, and it still irritated him that the BBChan personnel
department had decided that he wasn't entitled to service increments
because he'd been in cryosuspension for most of that time. Hell, he'd
worked with people who seemed to spend their whole career in comas and
they still got raises.
But then he hadn't been around to spend his pay, and it
had earned plenty of interest. He was surprised how little it suddenly
meant to him. Perhaps that was how rich people felt all the time. His
stomach felt oddly displaced. "I get tokens that I can exchange for
food and other things that I need."
"Want."
"Sorry?"
"Humans want many things but they need much less than
they think," said the ussissi. "I accept the philosophy of Targassat,
having lived among the wess'har. Beware acquisitiveness, Mr. Michallat.
It will take you hostage."
Eddie savored the moment of being lectured in
asceticism by a mongoose. It almost dispelled the aching bewilderment
at realizing he was rich and none the better for it. The transport came
to a halt.
Serrimissani turned her head very slowly. There was no
wet gloss to her eyes; they looked matte as velvet, sinister, utterly
void. "Are you ready?"
Eddie caught the bee-cam and pocketed it. "I've
interviewed Minister Ual before. I'm ready."
The ministry--and Eddie had no other word for it--was
conspicuous in the unbroken wall of buildings by the fact that it was
very, very plain. There were no extravagant designs, either painted or
carved. As he walked through the door and into the reception hall, the
first thing that struck him was that it was empty.
It was also vast. It was at least twelve meters high and lined with
smooth aquamarine stone, a stark and cool contrast to the hot rusts and
ambers and purples outside.
There seemed to be nobody around. Then he heard
movement, and Serrimissani tugged at his sleeve and bobbed her head in
the direction of one of the archways off to one side. An isenj
appeared. There was an exchange of high-pitched sounds.
Eddie occupied himself by letting the bee-cam wander
around the hall. So status bought you space, did it? Yes, isenj were a
lot like humans.
"Ual is ready to see you and asks if you would like
refreshment," Serrimissani said.
"Not the fungus."
"Water flavored with something that the Actaeon
provided."
"God, I hope it's coffee."
There were moments when Eddie knew he had touched
common ground with the isenj. It was easy to expect them to be utterly
alien because they looked unlike anything he'd ever imagined. But their
attitudes seemed much less alien than those of the wess'har.
He sat and waited. A thought struck him. What
about snakes? What about jellyfish? Here he
was mentally arguing the finer points of difference with himself: but
he was talking, yes talking, with aliens
who had communal lives and built cities and had wars over concepts he
understood. The only reason he could even begin to misunderstand them
was that they were so very similar to him and that they could exist in
an environment so like his own in universal terms as to be identical.
So he had no chance of even starting to grasp the nature of other forms
of alien life. And he was suddenly gripped with sadness at his own
limitations.
Serrimissani nudged him irritably. "You are
distracted," she said. "Ual is waiting."
Eddie struggled to regain excitement. Chin up.
You're talking to your third species of alien
interviewee. Be glad.
"Sorry," he said. "A tear for all the things that are
beyond me." And he ached to recall who said that. It defined humanity.
An isenj aide showed them into another polished
water-colored chamber, and Minister Ual was seated on a dais in the
center of it, as if to emphasize the luxurious, privileged distance
around him. Eddie was ushered to a box covered with layers of something
soft and yielding; as near, he thought, as they could get to a chair.
He smiled at Ual.
Isenj were as appealing as only spiders with piranha
faces could be. But they were sociable and polite and generous.
Minister Ual was enjoying a cup of something fluid, lapping it from a
shallow vessel with the ease of a Mandarin potentate. His ovoid bulk
glittered with hundreds of smooth, transparent green beads strung on
quill-like projections from his body, and he rattled like a chandelier
when he moved. Eddie hoped the noise wouldn't play hell with the mike.
Ual had one other characteristic that Eddie could not
ignore. He had a vague scent of the woods, like a forest floor after
rain. It was not unpleasant, but neither was it a fragrance that Eddie
associated with government ministers.
Serrimissani wasn't needed. Ual had made speaking
English his priority, despite the effort it took to control his
breathing enough to force out recognizable English words. The ussissi
stayed in the room nonetheless, watching the bee-cam wander round the
interviewee, and Eddie tried to crush the fear that she might pounce on
it and crunch it up. She reminded him too much of snakes and Kipling.
He looked back at Ual. There were no eyes that he could see to make
contact with.
"The enclosed environment outside Jejeno is small, but
I believe it will be more comfortable for your fellows than living on
board Actaeon indefinitely," Ual said.
There was a rhythmic gulping between every word, like someone learning
to speak again after a crude laryngectomy. Eddie struggled silently for
him with every syllable. "Once it is established, the environment will
be cooler, more moist and more breathable. It will be soothing for you,
and we will learn a great deal about biospheres into the bargain."
"Is that how you see the human-isenj relationship
developing?"
"Mutual aid is a good basis for any bargain. You will
benefit from improved communications. We're open to ideas for improved
food production and we want to learn about terraforming. You've now
seen our most pressing problem for yourself, in every street."
Eddie hesitated before asking the next question, but it
had to be asked. The bee-cam responded to his discreet hand signal for
a close-up of Ual's face. "Is population control not an option?"
"It's more complex than that. No two states can agree
upon a common policy for fear of being overrun by their neighbor.
There's a psychological element to this, you see, as well as a
biological one. The more overcrowded we became, the higher the death
rate. The higher the death rate, the more fertile we become and the
more reluctant people are to limit their families, in case their line
should die out."
"Improved food production won't solve that."
"Not long-term. But resettlement will. It will reduce
the collective anxiety."
"You colonized your moon--Tasir Ve?"
"Tasir Var."
"Did that work?"
"Evidently not. We hope you'll help us restore its
ecology too."
"So what was behind the drive to settle on Bezer'ej?"
"I think we've learned a great deal since we
overexploited Tasir Var. The next world will be more carefully planned,
more managed."
"You've got deep-space capability. Why not look further
afield than this system and avoid conflict with the wess'har?"
"We had deep-space
capability, but it's a resource-intensive project to maintain. We're
fortunate that you may soon be in a position to help us maintain our
more remote instant communications relays because we can no longer
reach them ourselves. Food and environmental cleansing are our
priorities now. It's another area where we might find mutual advantage
in cooperation."
"Joint missions?"
"You have a similar drive to expand. Why else would you
all be here? And you think you're eternal. It's hard to imagine your
whole species and history being trapped on a world that will eventually
be destroyed by its own sun. No, Mr. Michallat, I do believe humans and
isenj will be partners, and both will benefit." Ual tapped a limb on
the glassy surface of the low table between them, indicating the cup
and the bowl. A little fragment of quill fell to his lap and he reached
down to sweep it aside. Eddie wondered what happened when a
bead-bearing quill broke off.
Serrimissani stared at Ual, and Eddie saw the concept
of disdain expressed as perfectly as any adept Indian kathkali
dancer could ever mime. After an
eloquent delay, she trotted forward to fill both vessels from their
respective jugs. She did not look amused. He could see her little teeth
glittering between slightly parted lips.
"Let us drink up, Mr. Michallat. Will you be
transmitting this interview soon?"
Eddie nodded and drained his coffee, which was tepid by
now. And it wasn't wardroom quality. "As soon as I edit it."
"You'll cut out parts? It was very short."
"Actually, I probably won't omit any detail. I just
have to package it with some attractive shots. Would you mind if I
traveled a little further and recorded some different images?"
"If you can find any," Ual said.
Eddie loved him instantly and totally for his candor.
He would swap Ual for a human politician any day. On the way back to
the shuttle, he replayed the footage on the smartpaper the Actaeon
had given him and marked appropriate
sequences. Ual was right. It all looked much the same to him. No wonder
they called those shots wallpaper.
"Ah well," he said. He could only report what he saw.
Serrimissani watched his fingers moving across the
smart-paper. "Are you going to make a habit of this?"
"I have to. It's called a series."
"I think you have already recorded all you need to
know."
"I do believe you're right," said Eddie. That was what
worried him. "Look at it this way: I don't see it as my job to
interpret the isenj to Earth audiences, but there aren't any other
hacks around to tell a different side of the story, so that means I
have to be doubly careful that I don't just tell mine. I'll be a
window, nothing more, as far as I can be."
The ussissi gave him a look that might have been
sympathy or pity: he only knew that it made him feel like a scorpion, a
snack-size one.
"A window should ask more open questions," she said.
Shan's world was silent except for the numb
ringing in her own ears.
Faces--wess'har and ussissi--that were clustered in a
circle above her jerked back and parted.
For a few moments all she could see was their mouths
opening and closing erratically. Her eardrums felt as if someone had
shoved a rod through them. A few moments later the sound suddenly
rushed back in. "Li sevadke!" said a
reedy child-animal voice with its own echo. "Ur,
jes'ha ur!"
Shan struggled to sit up. She could see properly now:
Vijissi, Chayyas, and a wess'har male she didn't know, and they were
giving her plenty of space. Chayyas was shaking her head occasionally,
as if trying to dislodge something: the close-quarters discharge must
have hurt her ears too.
Shan tried to put her hands back behind her to prop
herself up but fell back on one elbow. The back of her head hurt like
hell. She reached around, expecting to feel an exit wound, sticky
blood, gritty bone: but it was all in place.
Chayyas had put a bullet in her. Shan just couldn't
quite work out where yet. That was the
problem with custom-enhanced hollow-tip rounds: terrific stopping
power, the very best she could get made. She just hadn't planned on one
stopping her.
"Can you hear us?" Vijissi asked. "You hit your head
when you fell back."
That explained a lot. Her left shoulder hurt too. She
fumbled, feeling for wounds, and realized the shot had penetrated her
upper chest. It had probably clipped her lung, judging by the taste of
blood: she'd seen enough bodies in postmortem to work that out.
But c'naatat was practiced
at injuries. It had played this game before, when an isenj round had
penetrated her skull and Aras had bled his hand into her open wound to
repair her. This was just meat, nothing as complex as a brain injury. Easy
peasy. The symbiont flaunted its skill. It
was patching her up before their eyes.
"I can hear you," Shan said at last. She tried to stand
up but thought better of it. Her audience rustled further away from
her. Chayyas smelled scared, but she didn't say anything. Shan turned
her head with painful difficulty.
It was a scene she'd seen many times before as a police
officer. But it had always been someone else's blood sprayed over a
wall, never hers. She stared at the spatters: the matriarch and her
diplomat stared too.
So they were afraid of her blood.
Vijissi edged round her, bobbing his head, apparently
staring at her jacket as if he didn't quite believe what was going on
beneath it.
"So it is true," he said,
then looked away. "I mean no offense. But it's one thing to know this
can happen and another to see it with your own eyes."
Shan scrambled onto all fours and her sense of balance
kicked in. All she had now was a headache, a stiff neck, and a strange
smell of dust in her nostrils. Her gun was on the table. She reached
for it and shoved it back in her waistband. And her jacket was ruined; that
pissed her off. She could repair herself,
but she couldn't get a new jacket out here.
Chayyas kept her distance, shutter pupils snapping from
open petals to slits. "An astonishing thing," she said at last, very
quiet, almost distracted. "Extraordinary."
"Yeah, terrific. It's my party trick." If Chayyas was
testing the efficiency of her c'naatat, it
was a bloody stupid way to do it. But it had shaken her, that was
clear. Shan examined the singed hole in her jacket for a few moments
then gave up. She stared at her hands: there were no flickering lights.
"Had your fun now? Can I go?"
"I had to see."
"You've seen." She gestured at the wall, suddenly more
concerned whether the bioluminescence had stopped for good than the
events of the last few minutes. "Are you going to clean this up, or do
you expect me to do it?"
Vijissi kept looking towards Chayyas as if he were
expecting some action from her. Shan had a feeling there was something
else going on, something she didn't quite understand, and Chayyas
seemed subdued. Maybe she'd never seen anyone's body parts splattered
across the furnishings. It did tend to spoil your day.
Chayyas went to the door. A brief blast of double-song
at painful volume made Shan's ears ring again. Then there was the sound
of many rapid footsteps fading down the passage, and Chayyas stalked
back into the chamber. She could understand get
the fuck out of here in any language. She also knew she had
Chayyas's reluctant but undivided attention.
"I hope you understand your side of the deal," Chayyas
said. "Because we'll hold you to it. You are wess'har now. You'll help
us fight if need be. You'll do your duty as a matriarch. We expect a
great deal from you, Shan Frankland--possibly more than you are capable
of giving."
Chayyas had suddenly become very still, not just at
rest as a relaxed human might be, but utterly immobile. Shan had seen
Aras do that a few times when he had been taken aback or alarmed. It
was a strange thing to see. It was the small detail that made them more
alien. I can do it, Shan
thought. I can bloody well do anything right now.
The relief of being in one piece was flooding her with elation and
confidence, and she was ashamed of that. It was weakness. She shouldn't
have been afraid. "I'll take Aras if I may." Take him where? She had no
idea, but it felt like time to stalk out having won the argument.
Vijissi tugged on her sleeve. "I think the phrase is �quit while
you are ahead,' " he whispered, and
pulled her sleeve meaningfully in the direction of the door.
She followed Vijissi deeper into the maze of rooms that
made up Chayyas's residence, feeling as if she were walking a heaving
deck, and wondering how she would recount the events to Aras. And her
jacket--shit, how was she going to get that repaired? There were
suddenly a lot of wess'har about, mostly males, but also some females.
They stared at her. She thought the novelty of seeing her alien face
might have worn thin by now.
Vijissi peered round doors and jerked his head back,
chittering to himself, until he found a room that appeared to suit his
needs and he beckoned Shan in.
It was empty. Three connecting doors led off deeper
into Chayyas's maze, one of them covered with a vine-patterned
damask-like fabric in peacock and royal blues. Vijissi sat her down on
a ledge cut into the wall and made a semblance of a stop gesture with
both paws. Hands, she reminded
herself. Not paws. Shan sniffed hard,
trying to get rid of the rasping smell and dappled shape of dust.
Scents now felt like textures and looked like colors, and colors had
flavors and texture and sound. She had noticed a growing synesthesia
over the past months; it didn't appear to be a wess'har characteristic.
"You wait here until I find Aras," said Vijissi. "I
would not be proud that you forced Chayyas to back down." Shan couldn't
tell from his tone if he was being spiteful or simply helping her
through the uncertain territory of wess'har politics. "You have made a
very dangerous move."
"Oh, because she'll have my arse some day?" She was
back on familiar ground for a few moments. So someone new had her on
their bugger-about list. So what? "She can come and have a go if she
thinks she's hard enough."
"I thought you might have understood what you were
doing."
"I did. I was bargaining for Aras."
"We can smell it, you know. They can all
smell it." Vijissi sniffed in a rapid
staccato like a little machine gun. Shan tried too, but the rasping
dusty odor seemed to have temporarily numbed her newly acquired
wess'har sense of smell. "That was very foolish indeed, but maybe you
are more ambitious than we thought."
"What, for Chrissakes?"
"You have deposed her. Chayyas has surrendered her
authority."
Wess'har politics
and governance would leave a human politician speechless. Political
office isn't sought. It's imposed on the most dominant and able
females--without votes, without campaigns, without structure, and
without parties. The ruling group of matriarchs that appears to evolve
in each city state has the task of ensuring that the day-to-day
decisions made by households--all run by females, who are outnumbered
five to one by males--are reflected in the wider domains of
international relations and major infrastructure projects. There is no
economy or constitution as we understand them. Consensus appears to
take place by osmosis. And woe betide the leader who seriously fails in
her duty: she's likely to be killed.
EDDIE MICHALLAT, BBChan,
From Our Extrasolar Correspondent
"Look, I didn't know. I had no bloody
idea. Will you listen to me, for
Chrissakes?"
Shan had a habit of pacing around that now annoyed
Mestin very much. Her rooms were small and the woman took up a lot of
ground: she would have to learn to be still. Shan paused in front of
Nevyan, fists on hips, shaking her head occasionally, no doubt
astonished at her own foolish actions. Mestin decided she would make it
a priority to find alternative accommodation for her. A few months ago
she might have cuffed her. But this was now neither subordinate female
nor gethes. This was a dominant matriarch,
whatever her external appearance.
"How many times do we have to tell you that what you
intend is of no consequence?" said Mestin. "You've challenged Chayyas
and she has ceded dominance. That's all there is to know."
"Just because I faced her down over the grenade?"
"It's pheromonal. She can't help her reaction." Mestin
was aware of Nevyan beside her: she was staring at Shan, utterly
mesmerized. "You said yourself that you noticed your own scent when it
happened."
"Jesus H. Christ," said Shan. "Just because I got
stroppy with her? So what are you going to do when a human army shows
up and gives you a frosty look? Surrender?"
"They are wholly human and so we have no biochemistry
in common. You, however, are not."
The reminder seemed to silence Shan. She dropped her
arms to her sides and sat down on the bench that Nevyan had piled with dhren
fabric to make it comfortable for her. "I
take it an apology would be out of the question?"
"The reaction has taken place. Chayyas has lost her
hormonal dominance. Intended or not, you're now senior matriarch in
F'nar."
Shan held up both hands, palms out. The claws were
gone, Mestin noted. C'naatat was even more
bizarre than she had realized. "No," Shan said. "Abso-bloody-lutely not.
I'll have a crack at most things, but not
politics. And I don't have the right to do it, let alone the training."
"Then you leave us in temporary disarray, and you have
no right to do that either."
"Then give me a solution."
"Where's your grenade?"
"Aras took it off me for safekeeping. What about you?
Don't you want the job?"
Shan still knew far less about wess'har than Mestin had
imagined. She was still ascribing human motivation to them. "Nobody
seeks seniority. It is a duty, not a prize."
"Okay, will you do it?"
"If necessary."
"What do we do, then? Slug it out?"
"You can simply ask me."
"Why didn't you tell me that earlier?"
"You misunderstand our ways. You would have thought I
was seeking an advantage."
"Very well, Mestin--please will you take over in place
of Chayyas? There. Is that it?"
Mestin cocked her head in deference and felt both
relief that she had stopped an unpredictable alien from shaping F'nar's
future and dread that she had taken on a task she felt barely able to
handle. Nevyan would smell that at once. She wondered if Shan had
enough of a command of her rapidly changing hybrid senses to know that
too.
"I'll announce the decision." Mestin stood up and
trilled at the top of her voices for Aras to come and join them. He
loomed in the open doorway, far too big for a male and far too alien,
Vijissi behind him. He had a little blue glass bowl of netun jay
in one hand and an expectant scent;
that was inevitable, she accepted. Whatever form he had taken, Aras was
still enough of a wess'har male to find a strong and aggressive female
completely irresistible.
His eyes never left Shan.
Neither did Nevyan's. Mestin was beginning to feel
invisible. She was also concerned that her daughter, who was hers to
educate, was settling on a gethes as a
role model.
"Thanks," said Shan, and took the netun
jay from Aras. She smiled at him, all teeth, completely
distracted for a brief moment while her gaze went from his hips up to
his face. Then she seemed to realize she was doing it and looked away,
her expression suddenly neutral. "You okay?"
"Of course," he said.
Mestin interrupted. "You'll still need to stay on
Wess'ej for your own protection. And you have utility for us. You did
agree to serve this world without reservation."
"Yeah, I did." Shan bit cautiously into one of the
cakes and then ate the rest of it in one mouthful. She was still
glancing occasionally at Aras, and it was a very different eye movement
from the one she used when she looked at Mestin. It didn't bode well.
"Am I under house arrest?"
"I have no idea what that is, but you're free to go
where you please on the planet. Where you'll live is another matter. I
have empty rooms--"
"I have rooms too," said Aras.
"Make what arrangements you wish." Mestin didn't know
quite what c'naatat could do between
species, but the warning had to be given. Shan was paying Aras too much
attention. "But please don't breed. I know it's cruel to say that, but
you both know the dangers."
"Whoa, what--" Shan began.
Aras cut her off. "We understand the burden we carry,"
he said.
Shan simply looked at him and her lips pursed as if she
was about to speak, but in the end she said nothing. Mestin guessed
that Shan had little idea what was happening to her and that she
had--for once--been surprised into silence. The two c'naatat
exchanged glances. Mestin could detect nothing beyond Aras's agitation
and arousal.
It was unimportant. As long as they were bonded, she
cared little how they felt about it. Two unmated adults would create
unrest in F'nar society, c'naatat or not.
She watched them go and turned to Vijissi.
"I would like you to look after Shan
Chail when she appears to require it," she said. "And whether
she welcomes that aid or not."
Vijissi paused, bit on a netun
with a dramatic snap of his teeth, and hissed like escaping steam.
"I shall," he said.
Utility. Aras
considered the word. Without reservation.
There was a time when he had been told that too--several lifetimes ago,
and not quite in those words, but it had been just as unqualified, and
equally simple to accept. Difficult times made those decisions easy.
He thought of Cimesiat and all the other c'naatat
troops who had made the honorable
decision to end their abnormal lives, and wondered if he would have
agreed so readily if he were asked to serve again today.
Shan was subdued. She walked a little way behind him.
As they passed along the pearl-walled terraces to his old home,
wess'har paused to greet him with trills, pointing him out to their
children. C'naatat troops had been heroes.
Nobody here forgot that.
And he was the last of them.
"You're really angry with me, aren't you?" Shan said.
"No. Not at all." He glanced over his shoulder: she
smelled very good indeed, wess'har good, and that was a fragrance that
had not beckoned him in centuries. He tried to ignore it. It wasn't
fair on her. "But you've been here less than sixty hours and you've
already destabilized the city government and ousted a senior matriarch.
I dread to think what you could achieve in a season."
"Is that a joke?"
"Yes." Maybe he could sit her down and explain things
to her. Perhaps Nevyan might. "Why did you confront Chayyas?"
Shan made that puffing noise of annoyance. "To stop her
frying you, of course. Did I have an alternative?"
"Perhaps waiting to see
what would happen?"
"Yeah, and it was me she
put a hole through." There was a slight tremor in her voice. "I made
the choice and I'll live with it."
Silence. But her anger only made her more powerfully
appealing. They carried on their way around the caldera, a progress
slowed by more wess'har stopping Aras to say how significant,
how wonderful, it was to see him. Most had
never actually seen a c'naatat before, let
alone one as extraordinarily different as Aras. Their hero-worship
stopped short of actually touching him.
His rooms were at the far end of the top terrace and
looked out not only on F'nar but also to the arid bronze landscape
outside the caldera. It had taken him years to cut it out of the
escarpment a little at a time and line it with stone fragments. When he
pushed on the entrance door, thick with the deceptive glamor of
undisturbed tem deposits, he half expected
to see a family in residence. But he suspected nobody would occupy a c'naatat's
home, however long it had been
abandoned.
It was empty. It was also completely clean and smelled
of freshness and water. Someone had been in to prepare it for him.
There were evem tubers on the open shelves
and a variety of boxes beside them.
Shan followed him in. "How long did you say you'd been
away?" she asked.
He calculated briefly. "Just over a hundred and twelve
years."
"You've certainly got a loyal home help."
"I don't know who did this and I probably never will."
Shan seemed overtaken by delighted surprise. "Humans
break into empty houses and loot them. Wess'har break in, do the
housework and leave groceries." She laughed, a totally artless peal of
laughter. It was rare to hear her do that. "You lot are going to put
the likes of me out of work. Amazing."
"We have a sense of communal responsibility."
She wasn't mocking them, he knew. But she still had a
lot to get used to. He slung his pack onto the hip-high chest that
served as a table and pulled out a knife, glad that she had brightened
for the moment.
"I'll cook dinner and then we'll talk, yes?"
Shan watched him warily. "Yeah. I do have a few
questions."
F'nar was not Aras's home. He wondered if he should
have headed north, to Iussan on the Baral plain, where he had been
born--born normal--and where people hid
their homes as carefully as he had hidden Constantine from view. It was
devout Targassati country; or at least it had been, centuries ago,
before he left for the last time. F'nar society was less rigorous and
more conspicuous in its habits. It was soft. You didn't have to look
hard for evidence of its existence. But it was probably a more sensible
choice of home for humans easing their way into wess'har life.
Shan appeared to have worked out that there were few
rooms by human standards. While he sliced the evem,
she paced from room to room as if calculating something. He had
excavated only as much space as he needed, and that meant a main room
where the living and cooking and reading was done, a cleansing room,
and a small alcove for storage.
"Mmm," said Shan, looking round with a carefully blank
expression. "Studio living. Nice."
It was a warm evening and he was already missing the
crisp winter in Constantine. He left Shan to examine the vegetables and
fruit and went to clean himself in the washroom while the evem
soaked in broth. When he came back out,
squeezing the water from his long braid, she was attempting to make
sense of the foods in the crate. It was clear that being helpless
wasn't something she was used to. She couldn't even activate the
cooking range: she peered at it from every angle and her face became
flushed.
"I have a hell of a lot to learn," she said. "And not
just wess'u."
"You serve those raw," he said helpfully, and took a
bunch of green bulbs from her. "Why not watch me?"
"I should be making myself useful."
Aras prised her fingers off the cooking implements and
steered her towards one of the benches. "Sit and watch."
"I know you're pissed off with me. I can't do more than
apologize."
"I am not angry with you."
It wasn't anger she could smell, but he had to pick his moment to
explain that to her. This wasn't it. "My actions brought us to this
point. Not yours."
He was ashamed of chiding her for impatience. She had
been willing to trade her life for his, however foolish that was. And
he had been a fool too: he had robbed her of normality and peace and
home when he thought he was saving her life.
"But you came for me," he said.
"Eh?"
"You didn't abandon me. You were as good as your word."
Shan looked down at nothing in particular. She did that
to disguise the times her eyes betrayed her apparent calm. She wasn't
very good at it, although gethes might
have been fooled. It was the same look she had when he had first told
her about being a prisoner of war, a kind of painful embarrassment.
"Yeah, well, I never could stay out of a fight, could I?"
"It was a very dangerous and foolish thing to do."
"You're welcome. Glad I could help."
"Why do you take such risks for me?"
"You're a good man, Aras. You're also my only friend."
He watched the evem as it
simmered and rolled slowly in the currents of the yellow-stained water.
He recalled sitting on a plain on Bezer'ej telling Shan about the c'naatat
parasite for the first time, ready to
cut her throat with his tilgir if she
looked likely to betray the knowledge to the scientists of Thetis.
She never knew the thought had crossed his mind. She
had trusted him. Not confessing that to her carved a constant pain in
his chest.
He glanced back at her. Her normal don't-piss-me-about
expression, as Eddie called it--set jaw, unblinking gaze--melted for a
few seconds into a slight smile. Why her? Why save her?
Mestin had asked him, and he wasn't sure
until that moment. Now he knew. She filled almost every void in his
distorted life: his instinctive needs, so long suppressed, were being
met. She was a little girl, an isanket, in
need of care and education; she was an equal, a house-brother who could
provide comradeship; and she was--whether she knew it or not--an isan,
a physically powerful matriarch who was
the source of protection and life in the family.
And she knew what it was to be isolated and alone. It
was a heady combination.
Aras struggled not to dwell on the idea. "Chayyas would
have exacted a very high price from you," he said. "Mestin's will be
even higher."
"I expect I'll get my money's worth out of her, too.
Both of us are in over our heads. Level playing field. I find that
reassuring." She made an impatient gesture towards the range. "Come on,
dinnertime. Isan's orders." Ah. He would have to
discuss it. "You don't have to be isan if
you don't want to."
"I'm happy to cook."
"Isans don't cook."
"What are these responsibilities Mestin says I have,
then?"
"To make decisions for the household, to participate in
the running of the city, and to protect your males." Mestin seemed to
think they had already coupled: it had been the usual way of
transmitting c'naatat. "The other matters
need not bother you."
"Why?"
"They are of a sexual nature."
Shan made a noncommittal sound and looked away. He
wasn't sure how to interpret that. He was also sure he wasn't going to
ask. She watched him prepare the vegetables and tubers, repeating the
name of each in wess'u as best she could, and she was an isanket
again and he stopped thinking of what
couldn't be.
Bezer'ej was in its full phase that night, a wonderful
pale blue and terra-cotta moon streaked with silver. After dinner, Aras
spent a long time on the terrace staring at it and wondering what Josh
and his family were doing now. He hoped they would all understand why
he had left. He longed to return, but Shan was here, and all his
instincts anchored him to where she was.
He tried not to think of Mestin's household, of
Chayyas's household, full of children and love and normality, and it
hurt. On Bezer'ej there were no reminders of what he had sacrificed. He
needed to go back.
Aras went back inside the house. Shan had settled down
on a pile of sek covers in the corner of
the room with her jacket rolled up under her head, one hand gripping it
as if she thought someone might snatch it from her while she slept. He
could see no lights and no claws: c'naatat
had tired of the changes for its own inexplicable reasons. Her hands
were human again.
Her boots--very clean, shiny from constant buffing,
black--were standing neatly against the wall. If she hadn't been
resting
on the jacket, he would have tried to repair it before she woke. She
set great store by being neatly dressed. The bullet hole in the jacket
bothered her.
Aras listened to her rhythmic breathing for a while and
studied the lines of the muscles that ran over her shoulder and down
her arm. Maybe he would work out what to say to her by the morning. A
few strands of her hair had escaped from the fabric tie that held it in
a tail, and he thought better of smoothing it back from her face. "Teh chail, henit has teney?"
he said quietly. No, he had no idea how they were going to work this
out. "Do you really think of me as a man? Or am I one of your helpless
animals like the gorilla?"
He almost wished she hadn't told him that story. But he
would have discovered it anyway, along with the flames and the sickened
rage that were already surfacing alongside his own memories. The more
traumatic and significant the event, the more likely it was to filter
through. Failing to help the primate had definitely gouged a permanent
scar in her mind.
Shan looked exhausted rather than peaceful. She
twitched occasionally in her sleep, making small sounds of nothing in
particular.
He wondered if she were having the same dreams as him.
I really quite
like humans. They understand the need for mutually beneficial
agreements. I have no doubt that they will benefit enormously from our
communications technology--access to which we will of course
control--and
we will be grateful for their assistance in resuming deep space travel.
If they are offended by being treated as a means of transport, then
they don't show it. Are we allying with a dangerous power? I think not.
When we have their technology, when we fully understand terraforming,
when we have relieved our resource pressures enough to resume our own
exploration program, then we are free to end our agreements with them.
PAR PARAL UAL,
addressing fellow state leaders at
the Northern Isenj Nations Assembly
Lindsay fastened the belt on her fatigues
and tidied her hair, relying on the distorted reflection in the console
screen to check that everything was in order. She felt as she thought
she looked: an aeon older.
It was the most useful thing she could do with the
screen at the moment. The recreation network terminal was down again, a
consequence of her trying to dock her personal unit with it. Life in
space certainly wasn't like it was in the movies. There was never a
handy universal computing platform around when you needed one.
There were two more serious matters that she couldn't
get out of her mind. One was the first cogent thought that consumed her
three seconds after waking each day, and that was that David was dead;
and the other was that Rayat was back. He was supposed to be on board Thetis,
on his way home with the rest of the
payload, six Royal Marines and the isenj party. He wasn't. He was here,
and she wanted to know who else was now
embarked in Actaeon, and why.
She wanted to go and seek him out. But her natural
caution told her to establish more facts before she went plunging in.
Eddie might know something. He could wheedle information out of
anybody, even information Okurt thought he might be keeping to himself.
She tried activating the bioscreen but she was still getting flat
lines; it looked as if her marine detachment was still on board Thetis,
long out of range. Detachment. There were
only six of them. But they were still a detachment, and six Royal
Marines--six Booties--were a considerable
asset.
Eddie appeared to have adapted perfectly well to life
on board Actaeon. The man settled into
spaces as easily and smugly as a cat. He was wandering down the main
passage that ran the whole port side of Actaeon's
main section when she saw him, pausing at every network niche to slot
his datacard forlornly into the port. She wondered if she'd crashed the
whole rec network.
"Did you know Rayat was on board?" she said without
preamble.
Either Eddie wasn't much of a poker player or he was
covering a lie. He registered surprise with a frown. "But he was
chilled down on Thetis. He should be…er…"
He stared blankly at the bulkhead for a few seconds, flipping his card
over and over between his fingers, but the maths had clearly defeated
him. "Well, a few months down the road home now."
"I thought so too. I saw him about an hour ago."
"I hear a lot of things on this ship, but not that. Did
he say why?"
"We're not exactly chummy. He said hi and he walked
away."
"And you didn't ask him why he was back? Is it all of
the payload? The marines? What?"
"Like I said, he just said hi and walked off."
"You'd make a poxy journalist, doll."
"I was caught off guard." She had the feeling that
Eddie had delivered the worst insult he could muster. He was the sort
of man who'd interview his doctor on his deathbed. She struggled to
regain his respect. "I'm seeing Okurt shortly and I intend to ask. If
they've brought anyone inboard, one of us should know about it, and
it's not me."
"Paranoia is healthy. Makes you think creatively. So
what's he here for?"
"Because they're getting obsessed with that biotech
Shan's carrying. He's come back for that, I reckon."
Eddie looked visibly pained. "Oh shit."
"You know more about this than you're telling me, don't
you?"
"I doubt it. Are you telling me everything you
know?"
"I don't know who to tell what these days." She gripped
Eddie's forearm discreetly, not sure herself if it were a friendly
gesture or one of desperation. "Are you giving samples to the doc?"
"Always do."
"Well, they're checking for Shan's biohaz."
Eddie still wore his I'm-your-chum smile, but it was
thinning away to transparency. "And if you found you had it, what would
you do?"
"Run, I think. Run like hell." She was starting to
wonder if there was anybody who could be trusted with it. She hadn't
got quite as far as asking herself how far she would go to stop it
falling into the wrong hands--and there were plenty of those grasping
around. "If you hear anything, promise me you'll tell me."
"If that works both ways, I will."
She just gave him a blank look and went on her way. She
didn't find it easy to lie. If he knew what she had in mind for Shan,
she had no doubt he would get word to her. He admired the woman: he
made no secret of it.
Lindsay settled in the corner of the wardroom for the
morning briefing and thought it was an informally sloppy place to do
business. But this wasn't her ship; it was Okurt's. She decided to aim
for invisibility, a hard task in her out-of-date uniform. She didn't
even speak the way the rest of the crew did. Two or three generations
of separation from mainstream human culture were audible as well as
visible.
And there was the other problem, of course. Nobody knew
what to say to a woman who had lost her baby anyway.
Okurt seemed excited. He was spinning his coffee cup in
its saucer again and Lindsay wanted to slap his hand away from it. But
he stopped of his own accord when his staff of a dozen officers filed
in.
Two of them sat either side of her, a little too close
for comfort. She found it hard to brush hips with strangers now. She
tried to shrink.
"We've received instructions to attempt to reopen
negotiations with the wess'har authorities," said Okurt.
There was silence. None of them were trained in
diplomacy, Lindsay thought, and diplomacy as humans understood it
wouldn't work on wess'har. She'd dealt with them just enough to know
that.
"They don't negotiate," she said.
"I know it's not going to be easy."
"How are the isenj going to take this?"
"They're not privy to this."
Lindsay went back to staring at her hands. There was
quite a lot the isenj weren't privy to. There were times in life when
alarm bells started ringing insistently in your head and wouldn't stop.
She wondered if anyone else could hear them like she did then. Okurt
certainly did, but she knew he would follow the orders of politicians
who were 150 trillion miles away from the fallout.
"I plan to make contact with F'nar in the next few
weeks," he said. "I have no idea how their political hierarchies
operate or even what their geopolitical structures are. Could you help
out, Commander?"
Lindsay looked up. "They might prefer to talk to a
woman. It's a matriarchal society."
"Are you volunteering?"
There was a chance it would get her close enough to
Shan. She stifled her excitement and paused a beat before saying,
"Okay." Again, she was conscious of Okurt's gaze resting just a
suspicious second too long on her and she clung to a facade of
professional calm. I'm going to have the bitch.
The prospect almost outweighed the reappearance of
Rayat, but not quite. The briefing seemed longer and slower than usual.
She caught herself carving her stylus into the smart-paper again and
made a deliberate effort to take notes until the meeting broke up and
she and Okurt were alone in the wardroom.
"Is there something you want to tell me, Malcolm?"
His bemusement looked genuine enough. "Something on
your mind?"
"Why is Dr. Mohan Rayat here and not in the fridge in Thetis?"
Okurt didn't turn a hair. "We were instructed to
retrieve the whole team plus the detachment. Everyone who had any
contact with Frankland, just in case they had any contamination."
It threw her. She really hadn't guessed. She fought the
urge to check her bioscreen. "For their own well-being, of course."
"You know damn well why."
"Ah, a word from our sponsors, eh?"
"As far as they're concerned, we're just cooperating
with their requests. Don't push it." He glanced over his shoulder,
casual, apparently unconcerned, and then lowered his voice. "And if I
had the slightest suspicion that they were carrying this thing, I
wouldn't be letting the commercial medical team crawl all over them."
"I'm not with you."
"If you were chief of staff, what precautions would you
take here?"
"Defensive?"
"Political."
Lindsay didn't need to think that long. "I'd probably
want to look at that biotech for our own military purposes before we
handed it over."
"I'm glad to see your strategic common sense is alive
and well."
Lindsay felt she had at least judged Okurt about right.
For all his grumbling and cynicism, he was at his core a sailor, an
officer, a man who put his ship's company first and looked after his
own. So here was another agenda. She wondered how many more there might
be, and if Okurt was aware of them all.
"Are those your real orders?" she asked. No,
not that. Don't let Shan be right. "Cut-and-come-again troops?"
"I still answer to the Defense Discipline Act. Not
shareholders." His almost constant half smile evaporated for a few
moments: the lines around his mouth collapsed into worry, into concern,
but he snapped them back into place again. "And whatever we do with it,
it'll be in the hands of our federal interests, not hawked round the
international marketplace by multinationals. That stays within this
wardroom. Okay?"
"Okay."
"We'll take her. Don't worry."
He didn't need to say who her
was. Lindsay feigned casual indifference. "Want me to get to work on
that?"
"You know how I feel about your involvement."
"I can get to her. I know better than anyone how to do
it."
Okurt looked into her eyes for a while, no doubt
scouring for signs of crazed vengeance. She made sure he didn't find
any.
"Okay," he said. "This place is a sieve. So only you
and I know, and that's it. Understood?"
"Never heard you mention a thing," she said.
"And maybe you're not ideal for diplomatic contact."
"Fair enough."
It didn't make her feel brave or clever. She was
deceiving a good man. But however decent, sensible, and deserving of
loyalty Okurt might be, Shan Frankland had the edge on him: she'd been right.
Lindsay knew that if she was going to get to Shan,
she'd have to go through Okurt sooner or later. She needed his trust.
"Is the whole payload thawed out?"
"All of them. The only life on Thetis
now is the isenj and their ussissi support team, and they're still out
cold."
So she had her Royal Marines back on board, and she had
Eddie, and Eddie could find out God's unlisted number if he put his
mind to it.
Both Eddie and Shan had taught Lindsay a valuable
technique common to both journalists and detectives. If you had enough
individual pieces of the model--however small, however innocuous,
however incomprehensible on their own--you could recreate the picture
on
the box.
She had a feeling she had been handed the solution to
all her problems in kit form, minus the instructions and any idea of
what she was making.
It was no problem. She had time.
"Go on," said Eddie. Back in the reserve
turbine room, they were a hundred meters away from curious ears. The
bridge repeater panels flickered and danced, projecting a rainbow of
colors onto the lad's face. "Can't do any harm, can it?"
The young lieutenant--Barry Yun--was that most cherished
of finds, a bloke in the know who wanted to be helpful. Yun was bored
and he thought Eddie had lived a glamorous and exciting life. It was
amazing what you could achieve just by being able to tell a good yarn.
"All right," said Yun. "They retrieved the Thetis
crew. The thing's so slow we could catch
up and board her."
"Why?"
"System failure. Safety."
"Unsafe for humans but safe for isenj and ussissi?"
Yun's lips moved silently for a second. Eddie felt a
warm glow of triumph. Make 'em think you already
know the lot. A couple of real facts, just the right degree of a
smile, and a bit of timing, and they usually supplied the rest.
"Okay," Yun said. "I thought it was a stupid story too.
Reliable buzz says it's this biotech. Do you know what some people are
offering for this stuff?"
"No. Amaze me."
"I had to patch the CEO of Holbein through to the boss
on his scramble line, not that it's secure on ITX, of course. He wasn't
asking what the weather was like on Umeh either."
"All this on a rumor?"
"Pretty strong rumor if you listen. They're scouring
everyone who's been in contact with Frankland. Even you."
Eddie held out his palms. "Look. No hair."
"They even unzipped the body bags. No stone left
unturned. They were talking about how they could get access to the
colonists."
"And who's they?"
"The R and D consortium team."
"And you know this how, exactly?"
"I cover a lot of comms watches. Plus they're not too
careful what they say in front of the stewards, and I'm always nice to
the stewards." I know, thought Eddie. "You're a man
after my own heart," he grinned.
Yun proved it. "So what really happened to the two in
the body bags, then?"
"Okay…Parekh was executed for killing an alien kid.
Dissected it, counter to all orders not to touch specimens. And Galvin
went off-camp against express orders too and got caught in the cross
fire with the isenj. So the moral of the story out here is to do as
you're told."
"I hope Hereward's well
cannoned up when she arrives, then. If any of us are still left."
The thought don't react
flashed through Eddie instantly. "I thought Hereward
was a survey ship," he lied, knowing the vessel hadn't even been on the
CAD screen when he'd left Earth.
"Look, we have big spaceships and small spaceships.
There isn't enough of a space navy to build specialized hulls like the
domestic fleet. They just strap on more armaments to whatever's flying.
We're lucky they haven't sent a sodding submarine."
"I just hope they've told the isenj that she's coming."
Yun just raised his eyebrows. "Classified," he said.
It was so classified that Lindsay hadn't thought to
mention it. Maybe she hadn't been told either. It was a massively
provocative act to launch another vessel into a disputed area. These
species had been at each other for centuries: did the FEU really think
another twenty-five years would see them kiss and make up? And a ship
called Hereward suggested Albion had
fallen out with the Alliance des Galles again. The FEU had never been a
happy family.
But he didn't think the wess'har--or the isenj, come to
that--would give a damn which European tribe was in the ascendant.
They'd just lock and load.
"I wouldn't mind seeing my old mates," Eddie said,
trying not to look too interested in the Hereward
even though it was burning holes in him. "Or is that classified too?"
"They should be out of quarantine on Thursday. I
imagine they'll gravitate towards the wardroom, seeing as there's beer
available."
But Rayat was already out. That told Eddie something,
but he wasn't sure what. He decided not to push his luck. He'd gleaned
plenty from Yun for the time being.
He rather wished he hadn't. The shitty thing about
knowing stuff out here was that it mattered,
whereas on Earth you knew you were a cog, a nothing, a player in the
game. You weren't actually responsible for the sequelae of information
that was awkward and had consequences--not unless you were doing an
investigative piece, and then it was up to the Shan Franklands of the
world to go and take action on the strength of your allegations. You
could go down the pub for a beer and start on something new and
interesting the next day. Nobody really got hurt.
Out here he wasn't a cog. He was the entirety of the
media: he was the populace: and he was society. He was all the people
who weren't wearing a uniform, military or corporate. The information
he gathered had real, immediate consequences beyond embarrassing
headlines and calls for ministerial resignation.
That meant he had to be very careful how he used it.
"Barry, are we carrying much in the way of armament?"
he asked.
"Depends what you mean by much."
"More than just demolition ordnance and a bit of
close-in protection."
Yun's eyebrows danced briefly again. "Oh, plenty more.
We can't exactly nip back and pick up anything we've forgotten to pack."
"Shit," said Eddie.
If he rose early enough, Aras could tend to his
crops before anyone else was about in the fields. He could see well
enough in the pre-dawn light to hoe safely around young plants. It was
also cooler and more like Bezer'ej at that hour.
He was missing Bezer'ej. On Bezer'ej, he had no
reminders of his enforced celibacy.
At the entrance of one home he passed, a young father
was leaning against the doorway, savoring the breeze, a child clutched
to his chest. Aras could hear him humming a single note under his
breath, the sound Shan called purring,
distracted by his thoughts as he suckled the baby. When he saw Aras he
simply nodded acknowledgment.
Aras felt a stab of sorrow but returned the nod and
hurried on. It was another reason he was going to find the time in
F'nar hard to pass. The human infants in Constantine triggered no
instinct in him. All he could detect was their frustration and rage. He
didn't like them much: raw, unshaped gethes,
all demand and self-absorption, barely tolerable until they learned
that they had to fit in with the rest of the world.
No wonder so many humans never managed that.
Aras took the hoe from his pack and assembled it with
its narrowest blade. There was ripe yellow-leaf to be harvested. He
squeezed the top of the leaf in his hand and it crumpled like soft
fabric. The foliage had softened and turned from red to gold, all its
toxins safely drained back to its roots. It was ready to eat.
Toxins didn't trouble him but he harvested at the
appointed time. There was more yellow-leaf to pick today than he
needed, so he would take it back to the food stores at the Exchange of
Surplus Things. That was the way it worked. The Christians in
Constantine had also operated a communal food system, but theirs seemed
to require that someone tallied all the produce and checked that
everyone was contributing their share and not consuming more than they
were entitled to. I thought I understood them.
He had lived in the company of humans longer than he
had his own kind. His body housed human genes gleaned from bacteria,
viruses and skin cells. But the blood-to-blood contact with Shan had
brought with it a far more fundamental experience of what it was to be
human, and it was shocking. I never understood them at all.
Aras hefted the hoe. The handle felt like…felt like a
weapon, a stick of some kind. Not his: hers.
When he squeezed it he could feel outrage, horror, a sense of knowing
something that had changed her world forever.
He abandoned the hoeing and concentrated on recalling
the memory. Whatever it was, he needed to know what had marked her so
much that it surfaced above the images of waterfalls of fire and the
pleading ape.
Human genetic memories didn't feel at all like isenj
ones. Eddie had once shown him how moving pictures were assembled, and
Aras found parallels between that technology and the assorted memories
that had lodged in his brain. Isenj memories were complete, accurate,
realtime sequences; humans' were snatched and distorted, like spooling
through scraps of spliced footage at high speed and having both blank
sections and sudden vivid freeze-frames.
And isenj memories felt like the past. Shan's felt like
now.
He concentrated. Sitting in the dark on a hard
bench, a heavy baton in hand. It was Shan. There was an
overwhelming sense of disbelief and shock. Do
something about it. Balance the score a bit. A door swings open in a
sudden shaft of yellow light and it's someone she knows, someone she
respects, telling her to sort it. A massive cold surge of adrenaline
and then a blank and that baton feels part of her arm, all sweet animal
rage. There's a man's face, and he grins but then he stops smiling and--
Aras felt the repeated downward swings of the baton so
vividly that it was all he could do to hold onto the hoe. Then he
dropped it. Relief as intense as quenched thirst flooded him. He fell
to his knees and struggled to find his own thoughts again. No, this was
nothing like the mind of an isenj.
Whoever Shan had beaten, she had savored every moment
of it.
It disturbed him. He didn't want to think of his isan--and
he admitted to himself that he saw her
as that now--as a torturer. It was an unpleasant thought for anyone: it
was especially unbearable for him. He busied himself piling the
yellow-leaf into a rolling crate and wheeled it down into the network
of passages that moved items around the city and to other settlements.
The pipework above his head throbbed with the intermittent flow of
water to the irrigation systems.
There was one barge resting at the loading point,
already partly filled with evem, and he
laid his bundle of yellow-leaf on top of it before pulling down the
cover and inspecting the route information displayed on the top, a few
glyphs fingered into the soft surface. Iussan,
Baral. So the weather was dry enough back home to start digging
up last year's evem early. Why had Shan delighted in
breaking a man's bones with her baton?
Aras climbed back to the top of the entrance shaft and
found three children--an isanket and two
boys--standing and staring at his collection of terrestrial crops. One
boy kept putting his arm through the prickling biobarrier and
inspecting his skin. The other two were much more interested in the
plants, but they acknowledged Aras with sober nods like adults would.
He thought of Josh's daughter Rachel, all giggles and carefree
silliness.
"Aras Sar Iussan, this is new," said the isanket,
pointing.
"It's called tea," he
said. "Humans dry the leaves and make an infusion from it for drinking.
Its closest relatives are grown for their beauty, but the tea plant has
both qualities, so Targassat would approve of it."
"Is it pleasant?"
"You would find it bitter. Humans enjoy it. This is for
Shan Chail."
The isanket looked hard at
the glossy leaves as if absorbing every detail of them, which she was.
Then she tipped her head politely and walked off, the two boys trailing
obediently behind her as they would throughout the rest of their lives.
Aras tried to recall his first isan's
face and failed. He felt no guilt at that: Askiniyas had been dead
nearly five hundred years, one more c'naatat
host who had decided it was better to return to the cycle by her own
hand. Sometimes, when people talked of the sacrifices of c'naatat
troops, they often forgot the
matriarchs who had transmitted the symbiont to their males out of duty,
some unaware of the true nature of c'naatat,
others not.
Askiniyas hadn't known. Nor had his house-brothers
until his infection traveled through them all. I started it. It was my fault.
Ben Garrod might have been right. Josh's ancestor
claimed there were punishments meted out by the unseen being called
God, and if there was a punishment for infecting your entire family
through copulation, then Aras felt he had truly been punished by his
endless celibacy.
It was time to be getting back. He dismantled the hoe
and put it in his pack, reluctant to hold the handle tightly again in
case he relived the moment when Shan began breaking bones and gloried
in it.
Whatever had driven her to torture rather than kill,
her explosive, vengeful anger was now within his very cells.
He would have to handle it carefully.
I care not for a
man's religion whose dog and cat are not the better for it.
ABRAHAM
LINCOLN
Shan sat on the toilet with her chin
resting in her hands, savoring a moment of privacy.
It wasn't a perfect lavatory bowl and there wasn't a
seat to speak of, but it was hers, and it worked, and it required no
special technique or physical agility to make use of it as a wess'har
latrine did. She'd had enough of going native. She was determined to be
a good wess'har citizen but she drew the line at their plumbing and
their furniture. She had her toilet: and now there was a half-built
settee out on the terrace, which she would finish when she sorted out
how to make proper mitered corners. Then she'd make a bed, a nice comfy
bed.
She heard the front door open and close.
"Shan?"
"In here, Aras."
A pause. She hoped he hadn't taken it to mean come
in. "I have yellow-leaf. Lots of it."
"Lovely. Great."
"Are you unwell?"
"I'm fine."
"Are you--"
"Look, I'm fine," she said. "I won't be long. Give me a
few minutes."
Poor sod: it wasn't his fault. She felt bad about
wanting a few moments to herself, but…her flash-to-bang
time, as Ade Bennett called it, was perilously short these days.
Josh had probably averted her meltdown by sending specs for a
Constantine-style toilet bowl to an obliging wess'har craftsman.
The bowl the jurej had
fashioned was ice-clear aquamarine glass, and too disturbingly
transparent to be ideal for a toilet. But she learned to look away. And
now she had a real toilet door too, and suddenly she felt a lot less
like rounding on Aras and snarling at him. Poor sod.
The nightmares weren't helping her mood either. She was
still drowning, still being jerked awake by a searing pain in her back
and a devastating sense of abandonment.
"You were up early," said Aras. He sounded as if he
were moving around the room. "Are you still having problems sleeping?" Oh, please. Just a couple of
minutes. "It's probably c'naatat
shaking down." She stood up and took a deep breath. She could always
retreat here again. "Bound to be a few glitches."
When she opened the door, Aras was standing at the
spigot, peering into the bunch of yellow-leaf he was rinsing. He placed
a finger carefully into the soft crumpled leaves, lifted something out
with his claw and set it on the windowsill. "Just a banic," he
said. "It'll go about its business
when it dries out."
He seemed preoccupied. It was mainly the silence that
told her so. In the few weeks they had been sharing a single,
suffocating room, partitioned by curtains, silence had been one thing
he wasn't good at. Aras liked talking. He had been through five hundred
years of solitary, relatively speaking, and now he had a listener who
was just like him, except that he was from a species that needed to
huddle and chatter, and she liked her own company. You can't imagine what he's been
through, she told herself. Patience. Just
a bit of patience.
She found herself staring at his broad back and noting
how nicely it tapered into his waist. The sudden realization that it
wasn't just xeno-anatomical curiosity made her face burn. She thought
of Mestin warning her not to breed, and wondered if the matriarch had
spotted what she had only just discovered. Oh no. Not that. Get a grip, you
silly bitch.
"You don't look well, isan."
She reminded herself how much she despised Lindsay
Neville for getting pregnant in a careless moment. "I'd rather you
called me Shan," she said.
"Very well." Aras put the bowl of yellow-leaf on the
table and picked up his hoe from the corner. He hefted it in his hand,
staring down the length of the handle as if something terrible were
crawling up it towards him. "I need to ask you a question."
"Okay."
"When I grip this," he said, "I have vivid recall of an
incident. You had a weapon like this."
Shan nodded. Of course she did. "My baton," she said. "A truncheon.
I've still got one in my kit."
"You beat someone with it."
"Well, that doesn't narrow it down much." She was about
to make a joke of it but Aras didn't smell amused. He reeked of
agitation. She tried again. "Yes, I used a baton, and I used it a lot.
If you're churning up my memories, you'll know that."
"I see this one over and over again. You were very
upset and a man was shouting at you to do something about it, and then
you were looking at another man and you started beating him with the
baton. You broke his bones. I heard it. He wasn't armed."
It sounded like a rebuke. And it was an indictment of
her approach to policing that she was genuinely having trouble pinning
down what he was recalling, but she was embarrassed to say so. She
struggled. "Sorry, I don't recognize what you've remembered. Lots of
blokes have shouted at me over the years. And I've smacked quite a few
of them. Hard."
"But I keep picking up pieces of it."
"Sorry."
"You were sitting on a bench in the dark when a man
came in and told you not to sit there all fucking
night."
For a few more seconds it was as much of a puzzle as
before: and then it flooded back with a sickening wave of adrenaline.
Shan knew exactly where she was, but she didn't want
to know.
She'd battled to come to terms with the images from
that night. After a few years of seeing them behind every locked door
and trying to stop them crowding into her mind between the time she
closed her eyes and the time she fell asleep, she had succeeded in
burying the detail.
The pervading dread of doors had never left her,
though. Like all terrible things she had seen and couldn't then erase,
they became more persistent the more she tried to stop thinking of them.
"I need to know…Shan." Aras's voice was quiet and
almost apologetic now. "I need to know what marked you so, and I also
need to know why you tortured a man. It bothers me. I find it hard to
accommodate."
It was a shabby slate-blue door that had previously
been dark green because she could see where the paint had flaked off.
There were some doors you could kick in, cheap doors with fragile
locks; there were others you needed a dynamic ram or a couple of
plastic rounds to tackle. She preferred a good kick. It psyched you up
for what followed.
"I don't think you're in any position to judge me,
Aras."
"Perhaps not, but I must know."
The lock took one all-out kick. The detective inspector
with her said he was impressed that she could do the physical stuff as
well as a bloke. He let her go ahead.
She couldn't see what was happening at first. It took
her a few seconds to look down on the floor at what one of the two
middle-aged men was recording on a top-of-the-line camera. It took
another second to register what she was looking at and then she lost
all professional control and slammed one of the men into the wall, face
first.
It was the wrong house. No credit and ID cloning kit,
just fucking weirdo porn, said the DI. He was pissed off. It was a
fucking bum tip, he said, but they might as well nick the lot of them,
not that it would be worth the paperwork for the sentences they'd get.
He looked into her face, and she didn't want him to see the tears in
her eyes. "Don't be such a fucking girl," he said. "You'll see a lot
worse."
But she never had.
Now Aras was staring into her face. "What's wrong?" he
asked. "You look--"
"You've got no other memories of this? Nothing at all?"
Aras was going to wring it out of her. She couldn't
even manage the words, not even twenty years later. She was as ever
torn between unbearable pain and anger, and she chose anger because she
knew how to wield that without crumbling. Her sympathetic sergeant, the
man who'd found her sitting on the shaking edge of tears in the
darkened locker room, knew that much about her. Go
on, he'd said. Do something about it if
you feel that strongly. It's not as if it was a kid or anything, He'll
only get six months' suspended, tops. Even the score.
She did. She had never exhausted herself beating the
shit out of someone before or since. She didn't care if she was
suspended, charged, sacked: all she cared about was justice.
But nobody saw anything, even if the
desk sergeant kept wandering by the holding cell to check that she was
coping. The guy was decitizenized anyway. Unpleasant things could
happen to people with sufficient criminal record. They'd offended once
too often and their rights were formally abrogated. Nobody was going to
stop her. No lawyer would take it on.
Aras was still staring into her face, bewildered. If
she looked anything like she did that night, he would be seeing her
anew.
"Here." She handed him her swiss. He knew how to use
it. She gathered herself up into the woman everyone seemed to think she
was, the one who could cope because she didn't have feelings like the
rest of them. It was self-pitying, she knew, but she wanted Aras to
understand she had her limits of endurance as well. "Read for yourself.
Look up snuff and squish.
I don't imagine Josh kept material like that in his bloody little Eden,
did he? I didn't think so. Okay, here's your primer in human depravity.
There are humans who are entertained and aroused by watching children
and animals tortured and killed, so they make movies of it. It's quite
an industry. Take a look at my files."
Aras said nothing. He held the swiss flat on his palm,
and she had no doubt he would read it: wess'har weren't squeamish.
Perhaps he understood the very worst about humans anyway.
"You wanted to know," she said. "And I didn't torture
him. I crippled him, and I did it as
efficiently as I could without killing him, because I wanted him to
have plenty of time to think about it. And I'd do it again in an
instant, just as you did at Mjat, because it needed doing. Now read
those fucking files, and never mention it to me again."
Shan shut the front door behind her a little too hard,
sending flakes of pearl shivering to the ground, and walked down onto
the terraces. Mindless physical displacement sometimes helped put her
back together again. A couple of wess'har nodded politely to her as she
passed and she tried to smile back, but her scent must have told them
she was in turmoil. Yeah, don't be such a fucking
girl. It was a lifetime ago.
And it wasn't Aras's fault. Nothing was. He was just a
bystander with her memories playing out in his head, when God only knew
what pain of his own was already there. She wondered when some of that
was going to well up unbidden in her. She wondered if it would be worse
than the images that were resurrected and fresh in her mind now, and
whether it would replace them and so in a way erase them, bury them,
make them go away again.
She got as far as the fields and busied herself
inspecting the swelling peppers and the tops of the sweet potatoes. It
wasn't necessary to go to all this trouble. She could survive on just
about anything, and knowing Aras had put so much effort into trying to
provide her with familiar foods simply made her feel all the worse for
taking out her frustrations on him.
She squatted down. The smell of wet soil put her back
in her recurring nightmare, the water flooding into her mouth and nose.
She shook it off.
No, she wasn't losing it. She was adjusting.
It was a life, a body, a future no human had ever had to face, and she
was doing just fine, all things considered. "Chail, neretse?" said a
double-voice behind her. Have you seen this?
A wess'har male--one of Fersanye's neighbors, she thought--beckoned to
her. She was starting to recognize them all now. He led her over to
another patch of soil a little distance away. Aras tended scattered
plots everywhere, wess'har style, to make the planting look more
random, less obtrusive. The biobarrier crackled against her skin as she
stepped through the invisible bulwark between Wess'ej and a little
piece of Earth.
This plot was dotted with sapling bushes with glossy,
emerald-green serrated leaves. They looked like camellias. She didn't
think Aras would grow anything as irrelevant as decorative flowers.
The male--Tlasias? Tasilas?--was fascinated. "What is tea?"
he asked.
"It's a drink," she said.
Her wess'u was serviceably fluent now. Tlasias appeared
to understand her. He touched the leaves and inspected them. "But how?
You extract the juices?"
"You make…" She searched for a word for infusion. She
didn't know one yet. "A solution from the dried leaves."
Then the penny dropped. She was looking at tea plants. Camellia
sinensis. Aras was growing tea for her,
and he hadn't told her. It was a surprise. Tlasias, like every other
wess'har, had no concept of giving people surprises. He'd blown it.
It didn't diminish the pleasure one bit. She almost
winced at the extra weight of guilt it placed on her, because she had
not only given Aras a hard time for reminding her of her demons, but
she had also bitched at him while he was making extraordinary efforts
to please her. He knew how much she loved tea. She had enough left from
Constantine to make a dozen more pots. She was eking it out, saving it
for special occasions.
She took a deep breath. "The Chinese say that it's
better to be deprived of food for three days than of tea for one.
That's how much gethes enjoy it." She used
the word almost without thinking. There was no wess'u alternative for human.
It was the generic name they gave all
things that ate carrion, a verb, a reflection of their world view that
you were what you did, not what you believed or intended or looked
like. "And it's kind of Aras to grow it for me."
Tlasias gathered his tools and walked off towards the
city. Shan brushed her hands against the leaves of the tea plants,
disappointed that they didn't emit that elusive, tarry perfume of the
fermented leaf. She could wait. It was a singularly thoughtful gift.
Guilt had never been a defining emotion for her, except
for the gorilla and all the other victims she couldn't--no, hadn't--saved.
She'd never felt guilty about
anything she had done. It was things not done that ate away at her.
She felt guilty now. She was guilty of impatience with
Aras and of taking miracles for granted. There wasn't a human being
alive--or dead--who cared about her well-being as much as one misfit
alien with a stack of problems of his own.
When she walked back up the winding terraces to the
house the sun was nearly overhead, and ferociously hot. Wess'har going
about their business stopped to splash themselves with water from the
open conduits that ran everywhere from terrace to terrace. Then they
shook themselves unselfconsciously like dogs, spraying water everywhere
and attracting a cloud of tem flies to the
fresh puddles. The flies, for all their magnificent droppings, were
insignificant, drab gray things with dull wing membranes. It didn't
seem right somehow.
Shan didn't think she could do that canine shake, but
the cold water looked like a good idea. She stopped and stuck her head
under the torrent. For the merest fraction of a second it was bliss.
Then it was a dark room and every moment of misery and
fear she had dreamed and half remembered on waking for the past few
months. And she knew suddenly what it was.
Like those optical illusions that only formed an image
out of a random pattern when you stopped trying to focus on them, she
could now see her newly inherited memories. She was in an isenj prison
as clearly as if she had been there herself. Although she was aware it
wasn't happening to her, she was being held head down in water, trying
not to gulp it into her lungs but unable to resist succumbing to the
reflex to breathe.
She knew what was coming next. She put her hands flat
on the burning pearl wall to stop herself pitching forward as a ripping
sensation tore up her back and forced a surprised cry from her.
They said you couldn't recreate pain in your memory.
They were wrong.
Someone stopped to trill concern at her but she waved
them away without looking up. It took her a long time to draw herself
together sufficiently to carry on walking. She couldn't understand why
she hadn't made sense of it before. It was everything in Eddie's
interview, the material he cut and kept for her alone, except it was
detailed and personal. She knew now exactly what the isenj had done to
Aras while he was their prisoner.
Her first instinct was to find the bastard who did it
and sort them. But that bastard would be long dead by now. The second
wave of emotion was to go to Aras and crush him to her chest and
promise she'd make it right for him, just as she'd wanted to make it
right for the mutilated rabbits and the kitten she'd stumbled on in
that house behind the shabby blue door. But it was too late for them.
And the unimaginable time stretching ahead of her was suddenly
something she would have gladly traded for time stretching back to
change the past.
If she forgot the caged gorilla signing a mute plea for
help and the house with the blue door and a thousand other things she
had seen, then she wasn't Shan Frankland any longer. It was time to
come to terms with them. But it was hard. She wondered how Aras was
going to handle the shit churning up from the mud in her memories. It
wasn't as if he didn't have enough of his own.
F'nar looked incongruously glamorous through the filter
of her nightmare. It was full of unforgiving creatures who would wipe
out a planet without debate but she knew that there was nothing to fear
behind the few doors they had. The relief of that thought was so sudden
and intense that it felt like finding something precious you were sure
had been lost for good. Shit. Aras had her swiss.
It was the first time it had left her hand or pocket in nearly thirty
years except for repairs. It was like letting him browse through her
soul, but he could do that anyway whether he wanted to or not, the poor
sod. She'd make him a good strong cup of tea and get him to talk about
his experiences. After five hundred years he probably needed catharsis
more than she ever would.
It was a bugger how things stuck in your mind. Don't
be such a fucking girl. You'll see a lot worse.
But she never had. She was sure of that.
Lindsay didn't need to look at the bioscreen in
her palm to see that some of her Royal Marine detachment were up and
about on board Actaeon.
Adrian Bennett was standing at the back of the huddle
of officers chatting over their drinks at the wardroom bar, trying to
catch the steward's attention. He was a sergeant. Sergeants, even
Extreme Environment Warfare Cadre commandos like Bennett, did not
drink in the commissioned officers'
wardroom. The Thetis party had been barred
from the other messes to slow the rumor machine, and his discomfort at
being on unfamiliar social terrain showed as he shuffled his boots and
folded and unfolded his arms.
Lindsay wanted to rush up and hug him. He was familiar
and safe and reliable. He was from her world. Instead, she paused long
enough to think what Shan Frankland might have done, and then stepped
forward through the braying group of lieutenants and lieutenant
commanders, who should have had the plain bloody good manners to clear
the service area.
"Steward," she said loudly over their heads. The man
looked up, startled. She had never used her three gold rings as
imperiously before. "Would you get Sergeant Bennett a beer? And one for
me please." No movement from the junior officers at the bar: she stared
at one of them, a victim picked at random. "I'd write for you all too,
but you're obviously just finishing your drinks."
There was a second's silence. It took them a while to
understand. Then the officers parted as if a downdraft had hit them and
left.
"Yes, ma'am," said the steward. For a brief and
glorious moment Lindsay understood what it was to be Shan, to have presence,
and it felt good.
She reached out for the glasses on the mock-mahogany
bar and put one in Bennett's hand. "I can't tell you how good it is to
see you."
"They told us we were restricted to the wardroom and
Juliet deck."
"You don't have to explain yourself. Get that beer down
you."
He raised the glass, looking bemused. "Cheers, Boss."
The informal title caught her off guard. Bennett didn't
use it when addressing her very often: she was normally ma'am.
But he called Shan Frankland Boss all the time, even though she
was a
civilian and had no authority over him other than the flimsy mandate
handed to her by a politician too many years in the past.
Lindsay responded anyway.
"Cheers, Ade." It wasn't the done thing to address a
non-commissioned rank by first name, but she didn't care. This wasn't
her navy any longer. He was one of seven people in the universe who she
could almost regard as a friend. There could have been eight, but she
put that idea out of her mind. "I never got the chance to thank you for
stopping me getting myself killed."
Bennett looked blank. "Not with you, Boss."
"You didn't start a firefight when the wess'har kicked
us off Bezer'ej."
"Prudence." It wasn't a word he normally used. She
wondered if he were raising his verbal game to fit better into the
wardroom. "No point dying when you can wait and fight another day."
"I didn't think you were bottling out of a fight.
Really I didn't."
Bennett just gave her a nervous half smile and busied
himself with his beer. "They'd have torn us up for arse-paper anyway,"
he said quietly.
That was one of Shan's eloquent assessments of threat.
Lindsay wondered if that was where Bennett had picked up the phrase;
he'd taken a lot of ribbing from the detachment about his obvious
affection for Shan. But she doubted it had gone further than a thought.
Shan was too focused and too unforgiving to do anything as messy or
weakly human as screwing a subordinate. No personal discipline.
That was Shan's verdict when she found out Lindsay was unexpectedly
pregnant. The comment still hurt.
"So you're not immortal, then," Lindsay said. Bennett's
expression was blank. She tried again. "You haven't picked up
Frankland's biotech."
"None of us have."
"They're not leaving any stone unturned."
"I thought as much." Suddenly his expression wasn't
I'm-a-simple-soldier, the studied lack of political art that he
normally wore. Faint lines creased the bridge of his nose. "So you're
coming back to Bezer'ej with us."
"Sorry?"
"I wasn't told not to tell
you, Boss."
Shan dropped that sort of oblique information a lot
better. But Bennett had made his point, however inelegantly. It was
clear he didn't like keeping things from her, and Lindsay struggled to
think of some way to repay that loyalty. He'd answer a direct question
from a superior officer.
"Okay, what return trip to Bezer'ej, Ade?"
"We've been tasked to find a backdoor route back to the
surface if the front door approach doesn't work."
"To do what, exactly?"
"Retrieve samples."
"What samples? And if you manage to get down to the
surface without being blown to kingdom come, how are you going to get
off again?"
"Haven't got down to that level of detail yet, and I'm
not sure that extracting us features in the CO's plans."
"Let's talk about the samples. What? Where?"
"Colony."
"Jesus, you can't just walk into Constantine and ask
them for specimens, Ade. You'll have wess'har all over you like a rash.
The colonists don't want us there either, remember."
Bennett said nothing. He looked embarrassed and stared
down into his beer. He might have had a modest education, but he was no
fool. Oh God. He's trying to tell me
something.
She waited for him to look up again and reveal what he
was struggling with, but he just kept his eyes down. He said colony, not colonists.
"Spit it out, Ade."
"Exhumation," he said.
It was another word she never thought he used. He
probably thought it was a kind way to say it.
There was only one body buried at Constantine; the
colonists preferred to leave their dead for consumption by
rock-velvets, the slow and beautiful black sheets of plush tissue that
lived on carrion. She hadn't wanted that end for David. Aras had made a
stained glass memorial to stand at her son's grave.
"I'm sorry, Boss," said Bennett. "I thought you ought
to know."
The harder Lindsay tried not to hear, the less she
could see of the black and yellow chevrons of a fire escape hatch on
which she had fixed her gaze. She couldn't feel her stomach or legs.
What little progress she had made through her grief was now reversed
and she was staring over a precipice.
"Why?" She wasn't sure if she had actually said the
words aloud. "Why dig up my baby? For God's sake, can't they--"
"They're just checking everyone they can get to who
might have been contaminated," said Bennett kindly. "Honestly, they
really haven't a clue what it is or where they can find it, other than
Superintendent Frankland and maybe Aras. Neither of them is going to
hand out samples."
The chevrons assumed a more normal focus but Lindsay
was still fixed on them. She had to control this. She could not
fall apart now.
"They seem convinced about accidental contamination as
a vector," she said. She fell back on dispassionate words to buffer the
pain. "Come on. Let's work this through. What do we know?"
"Hugel says she called it a plague. And nobody who
knows Shan would buy the idea that she'd carry biotech for money."
He'd slipped and called her Shan. Lindsay noticed, but
she was more preoccupied with replaying the painful memory of the last
time she had seen Shan. She'd been screaming at her, demanding to know
why she hadn't used whatever she had to save David, to help. And Shan's
refusal came back to her--measured, detached, the words of a copper
giving a relative the bad news. I have an infection. It would
run riot in the general population.
Shan might just have been lying, of course, but Lindsay
doubted it. If she had set up anything, she would have also set up a
route to hand over the biotech or whatever it was to her masters. She
wasn't a woman who left things to chance. But she was stranded, in
exile among aliens. No, she hadn't planned this.
Lindsay shook herself out of it. She forced a smile. It
hurt so much she thought Bennett might hear her tearing apart inside.
"Let's have another beer, Ade."
"I'm so sorry. I really am. It's sick. We could refuse,
Boss, really we could."
"No, we'll do it," she said. The pain fell away: the
shivering ice in her gut was starting to feel like a comfort, a beacon.
"We'll do more than that. We'll actually find whatever this is. And
when we do, we won't be handing it over to any corporation. This isn't
a recreational drug. This is a weapon."
Bennett hadn't finished his beer. He liked his beer,
she knew, so he wasn't enjoying being the bearer of bad news.
"Commander Okurt will rip me a new one for telling you."
"You leave me to worry about him." She gave his arm a
squeeze, another little familiarity that wasn't allowed between ranks.
He stared at her hand as if it had burned him. "One way or another,
he's letting me in on this."
Lindsay managed to maintain her collected façade until
she got back to the cabin she shared with the civilian engineer
overseeing the construction of the habitat at Jejeno. Natalie Cho
wasn't there. She heaved herself onto her bunk, pulled down the
soundproofed shutter, and let go of the sobbing that had been
threatening to overwhelm her for the last half hour.
The cabin was the only available accommodation for a
woman, short of putting her in with the female ratings, and they would
have liked that even less than she would. Natalie wasn't all that
enthusiastic about sharing either. The two women retreated to the
privacy of the sealed bunks if they happened to have downtime that
coincided.
Pulling down the shutter felt like sealing the lid on
her own coffin. She put her palm against the bulkhead to reassure
herself that it wasn't pressing down on her, and the aftershock of Ade
Bennett's revelation struck her yet again. They were so desperate for
this bloody biotech that they would even dig up her son's body, just in
case. They would dig him up without even telling her. Her baby.
Lindsay tried to stifle the sobs. But nobody could hear
her behind that shutter anyway. She wondered whether Shan wept in
private too, or whether her police duties had numbed her emotions so
much that she had no tears left for anyone, even behind closed doors.
Lindsay could picture her in any number of situations; but she could
never conjure up an image of Shan grieving or consumed by fear or even
overwhelmed by love.
And that was what she
would have to emulate. She would have to be Shan, and put aside normal
humanity, and just get the job done.
A switch had been thrown somewhere inside Lindsay. The
biotech had at first seemed wonderful, capable of being harnessed for
its medical benefits. Then it had quickly grown into a commodity she
resented pursuing; and now it had emerged as a monstrous threat that
made men and women--normal people--abandon
all decency.
The wess'har seemed to be able to take breathtaking
technology in their stride without taking Pandora's box, upending it,
and shaking every last woe and demon out of it. She'd hoped humanity
might have grown up too, but it hadn't.
It was a weapon, a costly privilege, a bringer of
social chaos. It was everything Shan had said it was. Lindsay
understood why Shan wouldn't hand it over, not even for a child's life.
It didn't lessen the grief or the pain one bit, but she finally
understood that it was the only choice the woman had.
Lindsay wondered whether Shan had agonized over the
decision or acted without a single flicker of emotion. It didn't
matter. Lindsay almost sympathized now.
But that didn't matter either. It simply meant that
now--even more than ever--she had to kill and destroy Shan Frankland.
The construction of the biosphere at Jejeno had
given Eddie a break from endless shots of isenj buildings. News Desk
had really liked the urban dystopia theme because it was alien: alien
was big at the moment, apparently. The viewing figures were at an
all-time high. Nobody cared why as long as they stayed that way.
He let the bee-cam wander round the construction site
getting charming shots of isenj laborers and suited humans working
together to lay foundations. He wondered how many isenj had been
displaced to create this free space in a city where space was the
scarcest resource.
"Several thousand," said Serrimissani, translating the
bubbling and chittering of an isenj worker. "And all happy to move,
because humans will be valuable friends." Move where? Eddie
mentally conjured up the shot of Umeh from the orbital station and
could recall only a few patches on the planet that looked unpopulated.
They were deserts and ice plains. But then isenj were as physically
adaptable as cockroaches--
He wished he hadn't thought that, not in those terms.
Not cockroaches. It was biologically true
and ethically unacceptable.
"Can I talk to the site foreman about materials?" he
said, and shook himself out of his liberal guilt. He ambushed a
civilian steering a loader laden with bales of translucent green rope
at a sedate pace along a path where the foundations had already set
hard. "Hey, is this the plumbing?"
The bee-cam danced attendance round the driver's head.
She was making a valiant effort not to look directly at it. "It's the
deckhead," she said, bobbing her head slightly as if dodging imaginary
bullets. "The roof. We web the lines across the framework and apply
some chemical and current, and bang, it spreads out in a film and seals
the dome."
"When's that due to happen? Can I get some shots of
that?"
The driver pointed towards a man in a vivid orange
coverall. "Ask the foreman," she said. Then she leaned a little further
towards him. "Look, this biotech thing that woman's carrying. Is it
true that it makes you live forever?"
"I wouldn't know," Eddie replied, rather too fast. "And
if it did, the likes of us wouldn't be able to afford it, would we?"
"Yeah," said the driver. But her expression said that
she thought it might be worth saving up for.
Eddie shook off the dull burn in his gut that mention
of Shan's little refinements always seemed to give him lately. It was
one more weight on the scale of burdensome knowledge that was
disturbing his sleep: he hadn't yet mentioned Here-ward
to Lindsay. If she knew about it, then she hadn't traded information
with him as they'd both agreed they would. But if she hadn't known
about Rayat, then it was possible that she might have been out of the
loop completely. He'd give her the benefit of the doubt for the time
being.
Eddie concentrated on being busy. A full schedule of
filming for the next few days always made him feel purposeful and
alive. Not that he cared if News Desk thought he was slacking, of
course. Boy Editor was no longer pressing him on biotech stories: Eddie
had heard that there were people who really, really wanted knowledge of
it to stay off the air until they had managed to secure it for
themselves. Time was when nobody, not even governments, could get away
with leaning on BBChan. Times had obviously changed.
He cadged a lift back to the back to the grounded
shuttle and sweet-talked the pilot into letting him have a comms
channel to watch the news. His news.
"You see your own material when you edit it," she said,
as if she were going to put up a verbal fight. "Why'd you want to see
it broadcast as well?"
"It's more real when it's broadcast."
"Yeah."
"And I want to see if they've hacked it about."
She considered him carefully. "Okay."
Eddie tended to lose track of Earth time zones even
though he had several clock displays set on the editing screen he
carried with him. He unrolled it to check: he was early for the evening
European bulletin. The pilot made a "wow" noise at the sight of the
near obsolete tech and peered at it as if it were a valuable antique,
which--when he finally got home--it probably would be, if it hadn't had
PROPERTY OF BBCHAN coded into every
component.
Eddie caught the tail end of a call-in debate instead.
A man in a suit (and they never changed with time, he noted) was being
interrupted by an angry taxpayer.
"They're going to overrun us," said the caller, his
irate face framed in an insert in the corner of the screen. "You've
seen the reports on the news. Just take a look at what their own
planet's like. And you're letting them land here?"
"I can assure you--" the suit began, but he was shouted
down by the studio audience. Global comms or not, nothing could equal
the collective anger of humans in the same room within sniffing range
of each other's pheromones. Eddie was glad to see that some old TV
formulas had survived. The interviewer struggled to restore some sort
of order, but even with the bee-mikes in the studio silenced, Eddie
could still pick up the clamor of voices. The trails for upcoming shows
were already running in the icon slot on the screen.
"I think they were talking about our generous hosts,"
said the pilot.
"I think you're right," said Eddie. "I don't need to
see the news now, thanks."
He rolled up his screen and slipped it into his pocket.
He was experiencing the first few seconds after a car crash, when
something had been done that could not be undone, however much it
wasn't your fault, and however strongly you willed time to run back.
"Window," he said, and the pilot looked at him as if he
were mad.
This isn't an
issue solely for the European and Sinostates governments. Who consulted
the people of the Pacific Rim, or the Americas, or Africa when the
invitation was made to the isenj? In exchange for the bauble of instant
communications over stellar distances, one arrogant alliance may have
handed over the Earth. They attempt to shame us into silence by
accusing us of xenophobia: but sometimes you have to say, "My people
come first, and I will not apologize for that."
JEAN ARLENE,
President, African Assembly
Asajin was dead. Mestin hadn't known her
well but she noted her disposal with regret. Her four jurej've
walked through the fields carrying the dhren-wrapped body on a
pallet and Mestin's
heart went out to them. Other wess'har who were harvesting yellow-leaf
stopped and glanced before going about their business.
Mestin was managing F'nar the only way she knew, by
walking about the city, seeing what was happening and what people were
saying, with Nevyan and Siyyas at her heels. She was conscious that it
was a theoretical hierarchy and that there was no true hormonal
dominance to warrant the two junior matriarchs bothering to defer to
her: she was only dominant because a gethes--unpredictable,
unfathomable Shan Frankland--had ceded her rights. The common good
would
hold a consensus together, but Mestin worried that she would lack the jask,
the ferociously protective decisiveness,
to make the right choices in a true crisis.
She was not afraid of her peers turning on her. She was
afraid of failure. Failure was something she felt Wess'ej would not be
able to afford in the coming years.
Mestin stared after the sad little party disappearing
into the shimmering amber heat haze. The males would leave their dead isan
out on the plain for the real gethes, the many native species
that ate dead
flesh, and come back to face an uncertain future.
"Who will take them?" she asked. Asajin had died
earlier that morning and it was high time other matriarchs came forward
to give homes to the children and oursan
to the males. Nobody liked splitting up a family. It was a difficult
calculation to work out which male would fit in best to which
household. Once they were mated again, it would be all harmony and
contentment but there was a brief, awkward time when matriarchs would
ponder over which genetic qualities they might add to the family mix.
Mestin thought they had better be quick about it. The
males looked in poor condition, dull-skinned and lacking a decent sheen
to their hair. Asajin had been ill for some time; her jurej've
had not had the frequency of oursan they needed to stay fit.
The youngest
one, still suckling a child, looked worst of all.
"I will," said Nevyan.
Mestin thought of stopping and arguing with her
daughter but decided against it. "What's in them that you would add to
the clan, then?"
"It's more that they're in need of an isan,"
Nevyan said. "And if I'm to follow you
one day, then I must learn duty."
Nevyan had never shown signs of bonding with any junior
male in particular, and there had been much speculation about what she
was looking for in a jurej. Mestin had
always thought another shot of genes from the confident Fersanye clan
would have done the line no end of good, as well as cementing a clan
bond. But Nevyan had to make her own choices.
Siyyas said nothing. There was no scent at all to add a
silent comment on the conversation; and Siyyas was not the isan
her sharp-minded, perceptive aunt the
matriarch-historian Siyyas Bur was. So much for genetics, Mestin
thought.
"Most considerate, not to break up a family," said
Mestin. However warmly the males and their children would be welcomed
into new clans, separating house-brothers was painful. Establishing a
household anew with an unmated isan was a
pragmatic and compassionate move. It wasn't what she had wanted for
Nevyan, but she was proud of her. Nevyan would one day make far better
choices for F'nar than she ever could.
"I can join them in Asajin's home," Nevyan said. "There's no purpose
in taking them from the environment they know. What
will Shan make of this? It would be good for her to learn how things
are done here."
Mestin did then stop and turn. Her daughter was leaving
home, in a sentence, in a decision taken as they strolled around the
city. She was accepting four new husbands and their children, males she
hardly knew. But that was irrelevant because once they had mated and
the oursan bond had been formed, wess'har
biochemistry would ensure that they would be what she wanted and would
defend against all threats. And they would consider her their perfect isan
for the rest of their lives.
From what Mestin knew of gethes,
she didn't think Shan Frankland would understand it at all.
"Why does it matter to you what Shan Frankland thinks?"
It wasn't a challenge: Mestin was genuinely curious. Nevyan had given
the woman a dhren, but that wouldn't make
a matriarch out of a gethes. "Do you need
her approval?"
"She has characteristics we'll all need in the years to
come," said Nevyan.
"You can't acquire them by oursan."
"Then I'll learn them by observation."
The thought of Frankland becoming a cousin-by-mating
wasn't as distasteful as Mestin imagined. She couldn't think of any of
her jurej've who would agree to the act of
oursan with an alien, with or without c'naatat, but the
human definitely had an edge
that spoke of a capacity for survival.
It was a pity not to be able to absorb those genes into
the clans.
They waited in silence, watching for the return of the
former jurej've of Asanjin Selit Giyadas,
who would be surprised to find themselves accepted wholesale into the
household of Nevyan Tan Mestin but would accept it and--eventually--be
completely happy with the arrangement. The males came back into view,
almost appearing to reform into solidity from fragments shattered by
the mirage of hot summer air. They were walking faster now. One carried
the pallet; another clutched the dhren and
other fabric.
There was no point wasting good textiles. Even the
colonists of Constantine spared the rockvelvets the extra task of
digesting the clothes of their dead. They had that much in common.
Nevyan suddenly exuded a cloud of anxiety. Mestin
wanted to hold her and comfort her, but the uncertainty was something
her child had to face. And now she becomes an
isan. She wouldn't be coming home tonight. It was a cause for
rejoicing. By the morning, she wouldn't miss her family. She would be
immersed in a new reality.
Mestin thought humans would all have been a lot happier
if their copulation resulted in the stable bond that oursan
ensured wess'har. Fersanye, who was more
scientifically minded, said their promiscuity was a consequence of
their need to propagate their genes through offspring. Mestin decided
it was part of their innate greed to always have something extra, and
preferably something that belonged to someone else.
She wondered if Shan Frankland had some of that sexual
acquisitiveness in her. C'naatat would be
a hard lesson for her if she had.
Marine Ismat Qureshi had rigged a temporary
securing bar across the hatch that separated the Kilo deck cargo area
from rest of Actaeon.
It made Lindsay feel better. There was no indication on
any safety repeater or state-board to say that the hatch was locked.
The bar simply stopped anyone walking in on them. She wanted to
brainstorm this plan to infiltrate Bezer'ej in private, without
observers, and without Okurt realizing she was maneuvering into a
position where he had to allow her to lead the mission.
She stared at the flaccid bag of fabric on the deck and
tried to get the idea straight in her mind. And the Royal Marines were
all staring at her: Barencoin, Bennett, Qureshi, Chahal, Webster and
Becken, all Extreme Environment Warfare Cadre, all relaxed, all
apparently unconcerned by the nightmare lying at her feet.
"Dear God," she said. She prodded it with her boot. It
was a white, man-sized quilt: it looked like fabric, but it acted like
a gel pack. When the fabric moved, the surface rippled with embedded
softglass, throwing up slow billows of black like oil welling through
milk. There was one totally black area that showed small currents of
white when she kicked it gently. It reminded her rather unpleasantly of
a bull's-eye target.
It certainly didn't look much like transport.
Qureshi, leaning against the hatch as if her slight
weight would add to the bar's effectiveness, folded her arms. "We never
said it was comfortable, ma'am."
It was a Once-Only suit.
Lindsay knew how they worked, more or less, but she had
hoped never to test one. There were far better ways to escape a
stricken vessel and far more efficient lifeboats, but ships kept a few
of the suits stowed away on board just in case. And it really was the
absolute, final, last of last resorts. It
was bailout when all else failed.
Its design dated from the first days of manned space
flight. Even the name was borrowed from another primitive emergency
escape suit that mariners had used centuries before.
And it looked it.
"So you just zip yourself into this bag."
"No, you put your spacesuit on before you get in. Then
you pull the pin and the insulating foam fills the inner skin."
"Oh, that's totally reassuring. And then
I plummet towards the planet?"
"We like to think of it as guided descent," said
Bennett. "You can steer and orientate."
"Forgive me, but I'm still thinking of it as getting
into a glorified sleeping bag and dropping into empty space from orbit.
High orbit."
"You've done your pilot training," said Qureshi. "If
you've parachuted and ejected, this isn't that much worse. Not really."
"Have you done this?"
Qureshi nodded, looking bemused, as if everyone did a
spot of free-fall through a planet's atmosphere now and then. Extreme
environment commandos did. "We've all done it from a hundred kay,
anyway. It doesn't make you feel any more sick than a spacewalk. More
or less."
"I seem to recall something about reaching supersonic
velocity," said Lindsay.
"Correct," said Chahal. "And we're all alive to tell
the tale."
Lindsay chewed her lip thoughtfully. "I don't need to
point out that this thing doesn't take off again, do I?"
"That's why they call it a Once-Only," said Bennett,
and Lindsay wasn't sure if he was being stolidly literal or sarcastic.
"But I have an idea for that too."
"Go ahead."
"The colony ship. Christopher.
They said they mothballed it, remember?"
"You reckon it's feasible?"
"Maybe not the vessel itself, not without a lot of
prep, but it's still got a couple of tillies." It was an odd archaic
word for a runabout vehicle, and Bennett was the only one who used it
to mean shuttles. "And they're built to start first time. So we land,
do the biz, and shoot through. Job done."
"Provided we don't land looking like barbecue
briquettes."
Bennett joined in the ritual boot-prodding of the
crumpled suit. "I know it looks like liquid, ma'am, but once it's
activated, it's a heat-shield--all that black and white stuff
automatically positions itself where you need it, black stuff to burn
off at the hot-spots, white stuff to deflect all round. As long as you
get shot of it as fast as you can once you land, it's as safe as
houses."
Lindsay's image was of houses falling down in
disrepair, then hard landings in a soft suit. "Why do you need to dump
the shield?"
"Because it goes on getting hotter after you've landed,
ma'am." Bennett's expression was silent wonder at how she ever made
commander. "A lot hotter. Remember you're
coming in through atmosphere."
"Oh," said Lindsay. She thought of the suit moving
patches of black and white stuff around,
unbidden. "At least I'll plunge to my doom looking like art."
Wherever they were planning to land, whatever their
task at the end of it, the Once-Only was the most stealthy system they
had. Actaeon hadn't come equipped for
covert missions. But she had come with
plenty of ordnance, even if she hadn't been expecting to deal with a
massively equipped wess'har defense force.
The armory held a lot of what Chahal called "insurance
ordnance"--tactical nukes, neuts, emergency BNOs, chems, FAEs, and even
ultra-yield conventionals, and plenty of interesting modes to deploy
them together. On Earth that made you a world power; out here it would
just irritate the wess'har for a few hours. And there were no resupply
chains twenty-five light-years from home.
Lindsay rubbed her forehead. "Okay. You do this all the
time. I don't."
Bennett appeared to be watching her calculate the odds. "If we were
going to land, ma'am, that's our only
way past their defnet. It's the smallest possible profile." He was
trying hard to convince her. "We've removed all the survival kit to
make room for--well, whatever we tool up with."
"I prefer to work backwards from objectives," Lindsay
said. She knew damn well what her objectives were now. The problem was
what objectives she would have to feign to get the hardware, personnel
and access she needed to get within killing range of Shan.
There was also the small matter of what it would
actually take to kill the woman. She had no idea. It wasn't a bullet,
silver or otherwise. If the miraculous survival of Shan's alien friend
was anything to go by, it wasn't a serious crash either.
"I can see one small snag," said Lindsay.
"What?" asked Bennett.
"How do we get into orbit around Bezer'ej for the drop
without triggering the wess'har defnet? It's going to take a shuttle,
and the shuttle is bigger than the isenj fighters. That means they will
see us coming."
"Thought of that," said Webster. "Maiale."
"I'm lost now."
"Chariots. Means pig in Italian. Um…1939 to 1945 World
War? Ring any bells, ma'am?"
"Bennett's the history man, not me."
"They were like torpedoes, one-or two-man submarine
transport to ferry diver commandos around. They sat astride them.
Quicker than swimming to the target." Webster was an inventive woman.
"So we use a powered tow to take us the final leg from the shuttle to
the point where we use the suits' systems to descend. That gives us
longer on oxygen before we're drawing on the suit's supply. We can
adapt one of the small cargo tugs to pull us in, maybe with extra O2.
We're talking a total load of maybe two to three thousand kilos. That's
doable. Chaz and I have modeled it a few times."
They all called each other by harmless kids' nicknames:
Chaz, Izzy, Barkers. They weren't harmless at all. Lindsay tried to
visualize speeds and distances. "Well that sounds like even more fun.
And if we land, and achieve our objective, how do we get out through
the defnet again?"
"It's a gamble," said Chahal. "But I suspect it looks
for incoming, not outgoing, and if these vessels were allowed to land
on Bezer'ej in the first place, chances are it's tagged them as
friendly anyway."
"And if you're wrong?"
"Then we're fucked, ma'am, but at least we won't know
much about it." This was my idea, Lindsay
thought. I must be out of my skull. "If
you're all up for it--"
The hatch juddered against the metal bar Qureshi had
jammed across it. Then there was silence.
"Who is it?" Lindsay yelled. The marines gathered up
the Once-Only suit with smooth efficiency and bundled it into the
nearest locker. Lindsay walked slowly up to the hatch and nodded at
Qureshi to release the magnetic clamp.
The hatch swung open. It was Mohan Rayat.
There were things you thought you would say when you
caught up with someone like Rayat. Lindsay hadn't rehearsed them quite
as often as she had various denouements with Shan, but she thought
she'd have a line. She didn't.
"Dr. Rayat," she said. "Anything we can do for you?"
She had always wanted him to look like a weasel caught
in headlights, but he didn't. He could meet her eyes, which she thought
was the confidence of a man at ease with being a total shit.
"I think we can do something for each other," he said. "Am I
interrupting something?"
"Training," she said.
The marines stood around in that
I'm-relaxed-but-I-could-turn-nasty pose that Rayat seemed to provoke.
Qureshi looked especially hostile. Maybe her leg was playing her up,
and she still blamed Rayat for causing the skirmish where she acquired
the wound. Rayat didn't look as if he was leaving of his own accord.
"If you have a point to make, then make it," said
Lindsay. "We're busy."
Rayat stared pointedly at Qureshi. "It's a confidential
matter."
"There's nothing I keep from the detachment," said
Lindsay, and knew it was an empty gesture. "If I can hear it, so can
they."
"All right, we have a mutual objective."
"I don't think so."
"Based on what premise?"
"You work for a pharmaceutical corporation and we work
for our country. No mutuality there, I suspect."
Rayat shrugged. "Actually, I'm paid by the Federal
European Treasury."
"You work for Warrenders."
"I imagine they think so too. Anyway, Warrenders ceased
trading about ten years ago. Takeover by Holbein."
Lindsay wished once again that she had Shan's quick,
savage tongue. "I wouldn't believe you if you told me what time it
was," she managed. But he had been revived for a reason, and before the
others: she doubted if it was for health screening. They could have
done that without reviving anybody at all, she was certain. Whatever it
was, Rayat needed to be conscious for it, and the rest of the party had
been revived to preserve the story or…she wasn't sure what else. She
almost didn't want to imagine.
"I'm sure you're capable of carrying out security
checks," Rayat said calmly. "Confirm what I've said and then get back
to me. We both want to secure whatever Frankland's carrying for our own
government, and I need the means of access, and you need my technical
expertise."
"Why would we need a pharmacologist, exactly?"
"That's not my only area of expertise."
It was very easy to say absolutely nothing while Rayat
turned and stepped back through the hatch. She couldn't think of a
single damned word. Qureshi barred the hatch behind him again.
The Treasury? What the
hell would the Treasury want with that biotech, let alone Rayat?
"Do you know, I wouldn't even like that bloke as pet
food," said Becken. "You believe him, ma'am?"
"I'll check," said Lindsay.
"How did he know what we've been tasked with?" asked
Qureshi. There's no such thing as
confidential. Another fragment of Shan's rough-and-ready
political analysis surfaced in Lindsay's memory. "Either Warrenders or
Holbein or whoever are better informed than we think, or the Defense
Ministry is talking to the Treasury."
"Yes, but are they telling each other the truth?" said
Bennett.
There were always divisions within governments, between
departments, onion-skinned and Byzantine, sometimes openly hostile and
sometimes waging covert cold wars with each other. If Rayat was telling
the truth about his paymaster, Lindsay still couldn't assume they were
all on the same side.
She went back to her cabin to barricade herself in her
bunk and ponder the missing elements of her puzzle. Treasury?
It had to be a patents thing. The
biotech would be a massively profitable commodity. Governments needed
revenue: there was only so much tax you could levy on an aging
population and companies that could up sticks and move to a cheaper tax
zone at will, leaving more unemployment in their wake.
But they could have secured ownership through the
Defense Ministry. Why did they need Rayat? Why wasn't he talking
directly to Okurt instead of her? It had to be another of his scams.
It was the sort of puzzle that Shan Frankland would
have shaken apart in no time at all. It was a complete sod, as Becken
would say, that Lindsay couldn't ask her to help her plan her own
destruction.
The little red swiss sat on the table and Aras
wondered if he dared pick it up again.
He didn't know humans at all. He was certain of that
now.
Shan always carried the instrument even though it
couldn't link with any of the data devices on Wess'ej. She said its
blades, probes and various devices were still useful. Aras suspected
she carried it much as little Rachel Garrod had clutched a frayed piece
of her baby blanket until she was five, and nobody could part her from
it. Given the material that was stored in the swiss, he found Shan's
attachment to it disturbing. He would have wanted to throw it as far
from him as possible and never look into it again.
It wasn't just the file on the men who made
entertainment of suffering women, children and animals. There was more
deviance and misery in Shan's files than he could take in at one
sitting. There were people who tortured their own children to death, or
raped them; there were those who mutilated total strangers for
unfathomable reasons; and there were so many different forms of murder
that he simply stopped running the files long before he got to the
robberies and thefts and frauds and something called public
disorder.
Shan had done many different things in her career. She
told him they moved police officers from department to department
frequently, because there were some duties that could destroy you in
time. Aras wondered if it was already too late for her. He laid the
swiss down on the table.
He knew humans did most of those things. But crime had
been historic generality in Constantine's archives. It hadn't been the
personal and detailed experience of a woman he knew and cared about. He
thought of Mjat, and although that had been a terrible time, it was
exceptional: it was also necessary. He hadn't done it for amusement or
because he had abdicated responsibility for his actions. The wess'har
in him said motive didn't matter, but his human influence said it
mattered very much indeed.
Eventually he picked up the swiss again and opened
files at random on its fragile bubble screen. There was very little in
there that told him anything personal about Shan Frankland. He found
some music and a few images of what appeared to be comrades of hers in
dark uniforms, laughing and shouting, brandishing glasses of yellow
foaming liquid at whoever was recording the image. There was nothing
that looked like family or lovers. There were a lot of lists too: lists
of tasks to complete, and lists of names and numbers.
Then it struck him that it told him exactly what she
was. What wasn't in there hadn't happened, or hadn't mattered to her.
Aras now knew what the flames in his dreams were. Riots. He
was astonished that she and others had
to deal with them face-to-face, with only a transparent shield and
small weapons. It was war: the obvious response was to wipe out the
source population completely and stop the threat for all time. But
humans seemed not to want to find absolute ends to their problems.
Shan's footsteps outside grew louder, distinctive and
unlike anyone else's in F'nar. He put the swiss down and waited for her
to open the door. She had stormed out angry, and he expected her to
return in the same state because she seemed to be perpetually irritated
lately. An angry isan was something that
still made him cower. Whatever c'naatat
had made of him, he would always be at his core a wess'har male, a
provider and a carer and a seeker of approval, nothing without an isan
to focus upon.
The door made a slight sigh of air as it opened. Shan
came up behind him, smelling of no emotion in particular--just
pleasantly female--and put her hands on his shoulders and squeezed
gently. He held his breath. It wasn't the sort of gesture he had come
to expect from her at all.
"Sorry," she said quietly. "I don't normally lose my
rag like that."
No anger, then. Aras had no idea whether to reach up
and clasp her hands or just sit very, very still. Eventually he slid
one hand up from his lap and placed it over hers. She didn't react.
"You've seen some very ugly things," he said. "I think
I understand your reaction."
She made a small puff of contempt. "Why didn't you tell
me what happened to you as a POW?" She pronounced it pee-oh-double-you,
a phrase he had never heard said aloud, but he knew what it meant.
"I've got your memories. They're…well…"
"I tried. You were preoccupied with c'naatat
at the time."
"I'm sorry. Really I am. I had no idea. I would have
handled things a bit more sensitively."
"I have your memories too. Riots. You were truly
frightened of the petrol bombs."
"Yeah." She shifted slightly. "That's the problem with
a transparent shield. You see the flames hit. However many times it
happened, I never lost the feeling I was going to shit myself. I
suppose the most vivid memories surface first." Suddenly she slid her
hand free of his and stepped back, as if she'd woken up to something
she was doing in a dream. "I'm sorry if I've added to your problems."
"I think we're even. Is that the right phrase?"
"Very apt. What else is bubbling up?"
"I find lot of regret and anger. And violence, much of
which you don't regret."
"Now you know me for what I am, then."
"I have no difficulties with that. Do you?"
"It's what I had to do," she said. "Come on. Cup of
tea. That'll sort anything out." She took
her precious supply of dried tea from the shelf and put some water to
boil on the range. "Kind of you to plant the tea bushes, by the way.
Some bloke down in the fields showed them to me. I don't think he meant
to spoil the surprise."
"There are some things you seem to need in order to be
happy. I'll obtain them for you if I can."
"Are you happy, Aras?"
"I find F'nar a difficult place to be."
Shan paused with the jug in one hand and the glass jar
of broken dead leaves in the other. She looked unusually soft and sad
for once. For a moment he thought he might ask the one question that
had been on his mind, whether he liked it or not, for the last few
weeks. No. It wasn't fair. She couldn't
even tell what she was picking up on his scent. She mistook it for
anxiety.
"How do wess'har react when you tell them what happened
to you?" she asked.
"I've never told them. Not the details."
"Why not?"
"Embarrassment. Shame."
"Have you never told anyone?"
"No. There are too many things I wouldn't want them to
know."
"That's not very wess'har."
"Neither am I."
"Look, I'm going to live out most of it in my head
anyway, aren't I? You need to get it out of your system. Tell me."
"I did shameful things." It wasn't that he didn't want
her to know. He didn't want to hear himself say it. "Things I regret."
"We all have. Jesus, you know
what I've done. We can swap horror stories later. Come on. I need to
hear everything."
She said everything, and so he took her at her word.
Wess'har were nothing if not literal. He glanced at her swiss, still
propped on the table, and noted the time when he started. Shan seemed
to be struggling to keep her eyes focused on his and from time to time
she blinked rapidly. She was still holding the jar in one hand.
The isenj were not especially inventive torturers
compared to humans but they made up for a lack of originality with
persistence. Aras described flayings and brandings and beatings. He
described broken bones and asphyxiation and freezing. It was random and
angry violence rather than a strategy calculated to achieve an end,
just outpourings of communal rage concentrated on one man, the
destroyer of Mjat, because they couldn't get at the whole wess'har
race. But she had seen it, and experienced it, and that somehow made it
far easier to pour out a history he had kept secret for generations.
He didn't break down until he described his attempts at
hunger strikes and how they'd force-fed him.
"They made me eat flesh," he said. His throat was
closing, tightening, thinning out the overtones from his voice. He
envied humans their ability to surrender totally to sobbing, but
wess'har couldn't weep.
"Is that what hurt you most?" said Shan. Her voice was
hoarse. "Is that your shame, Aras?"
"Yes."
"Wess'har flesh?"
"No."
It had been meat--animal meat. It was only a small
concern to gethes, but not to wess'har. He
raised his eyes from the swiss, where he had been focusing his
concentration, and looked at Shan.
Their combined scents of agitation were too
overwhelming for him to pick out any cues and all he had to go by was
her facial expression. But she just looked surprised. He wondered if it
was shared revulsion, but it wasn't; she simply could not see why that
had gnawed at his conscience for so many years.
It wounded him. Surely she of all humans would
understand why it was a terrible, disgusting thing to live with. Any
wess'har would. It was why he could never tell them.
He checked the chronometer on the swiss. He had been
talking without pause for nearly two hours.
"You didn't have a choice," she said. No, there was no
revulsion there at all. She might have been exceptional, but her
instincts were still gethes. "You didn't
kill to eat, and you didn't give the isenj information. There's nothing
to be ashamed of." She put down the jar and took his hands in hers.
"What do you need to hear, Aras?"
"I don't understand."
"What would you most like to have someone say to you
now, and mean it, to make you feel better about yourself?"
His jaw worked uncertainly. And there was Ben Garrod in
his head again, Josh's first ancestor, talking of sin
and repentance and forgiveness.
Ben said Aras needed to repent for things like Mjat, but he thought of
the bezeri and couldn't find that in himself at all. But there was a
vivid taste of death in his mouth, not from Mjat so much as the
anonymous being whose flesh had been forced into his mouth.
"I want to be forgiven," he said at last. "Ben Garrod
said his god could do that."
"I don't think his god's going to be able to get back
to you any time soon," she said quietly. "So I'll do it. I forgive you,
Aras Sar Iussan. Now let it go." She tidied his hair back from his face
where a few strands had worked loose from his braid. "Where I come
from, you'd be a hero."
"Not being able to die isn't heroism. And I had no
information to give the isenj, so there's no glory in that." He felt a
little better now. "Anyway, as you might say, the things they did to me
made me stronger. They tried to drown me, and my c'naatat
adapted me, and now I can walk under water with the bezeri."
"Did your people try to rescue you?"
"No. The isenj liked to say that even savages like them
went back for their own."
That revelation really did appear to distress her. Her
pupils grew wide and black. "God, you people have an incredibly
ruthless streak. Even by my standards."
"Perhaps now you understand why I wish you hadn't made
yourself available to the matriarchs. You'll be used."
"Hey, I've worked for politicians before.
Twenty-four-carat grade A liars and megalomaniacs. You think your
matriarchs can top that? Piece of piss, believe me."
"No, it won't be." He'd worked out that dismissal of
difficulty from its context. "And I know you dislike being told you
don't understand, but you really don't. Perhaps as more of my memories
filter through, you'll regret volunteering for slavery."
Shan had that pained-patience look that he had seen her
adopt when Lindsay Neville had made errors. "Aras, when you start
getting more of my memories bubbling to
the surface, you'll know what fuels me and why I had no other option."
She paused, jaw muscles twitching, as if she were reluctant to let the
words escape. "And it's not just because I'm attached to you, although
God knows that was near the top of the list. It's responsibility. I
can't walk away when I know I can do something, because I'd tear myself
apart afterwards. I don't have another option."
Yes, he'd known that early on, even before the c'naatat
had snatched components from her blood
and brain and bone and buried them in him. He knew she was angry and
trying very, very hard to be perfect and put the world right for
somebody. Who? He didn't know.
She smelled good. What would happen if she put the
world right for him? Would she fall apart without her impossible
objective, or would she become satisfied with life, undriven, alive for
the moment? No. He needed to stop thinking
that way.
"This is depressing," he said, and stood up. "Work it
off, that's what you say, isn't it? Stay busy."
They went out to the terrace to inspect the
half-finished sofa. Shan shook out the blue material, ahhing in
delight at the color. "Wonderful
peacock blue," she said. To an unaltered human it would have looked
white. "Is this the same stuff dhrens are
made from?"
"No, it won't automatically shape or clean itself. It's
just inert fabric."
"That's the best thing about having some wess'har
genes. Every shade of blue looks more amazing." She gave him a sad
smile, the sort that said she was remembering something else she
regretted. "Yeah, I went completely ballistic when I found my eyesight
had changed, didn't I? I'm really sorry I tore into you."
"I should have told you that I'd infected you instead
of letting you find out for yourself."
"It doesn't matter any more. Don't even think about it."
They worked on the sofa together. It was a very
unwess'har thing, a sofa, but Shan insisted she would adopt any custom
they asked except put up with their hard, unforgiving furniture. The
next item on her list was a mattress. They stretched the fabric taut
over the layers of sek wadding and pinned
it to the frame, then stood back to admire it.
"Chippendale might be spinning in his grave," she said. "But my arse
will be the judge of quality." She sank down into the
cushioned seat and let her head loll back on the padded backboard, eyes
shut. It was as if they had never discussed torture and their shared
nightmares. "Oh. Bliss. This, and a cup of tea, and a good movie.
Heaven."
Aras wasn't sure where he could acquire a good movie.
They sat side by side on the sofa and stared out across the basin of
F'nar, dazzled by the pearl roofs and hazy gold walls. There was the
tinkle of water from the irrigation conduits.
"Lovely," said Shan. She slipped her arm through his.
"Lovely," Aras echoed, and wondered what it was like to
be able to eat other beings and not be scarred by it.
Why have the
humans abandoned our comrades and the isenj on their ship
Thetis? They have not admitted they have done
this, but we know. We fear they plan to harm us, whether by neglect or
active violence. Shall we tell the matriarchs? And if they cannot deal
with the humans, shall we ask the World Before for their aid? The
humans must learn that if you harm one ussissi, you harm us all, and we
will fight.
CALITISSATI,
interpreter to Jejeno consulate,
to F'nar ussissi colony
Mestin's most junior husband, Sevaor, held out
a perfectly amethyst glass bowl as if he expected Shan to take it.
"Mestin will come to you soon," he said. "Drink this
while you wait."
Shan took the cup and peered in. The liquid in it was
speckled with small brown fragments. Whatever it was, it couldn't
poison her and it made sense to accept hospitality.
"An infusion," said Sevaor. He was enchantingly gold,
glittering, wood-scented. "Gethes like
infusions."
"As do I," said Shan, and instantly regretted her
sarcasm. "Thank you."
She sipped. It tasted like turpentine. Sevaor was
standing way too close for her comfort, and she stepped back
discreetly. He closed the gap. She stepped back again.
Wess'har had evolved from burrow-dwelling creatures,
and they didn't just tolerate being crammed together--they seemed to
crave it. Combined with their eye-watering candor, it made them
challenging neighbors.
Shan finished her turpentine tea and stood waiting for
Mestin. They weren't big on seating either. The house rang with the
double-voiced noise of youngsters and adults. She put the glass bowl on
the perilously uneven window ledge and admired the exquisite pools of
lavender light that it cast on the floor. Like the buried colony of
Constantine, the warren of rooms and alleys that made up the terraced
city of F'nar were somehow illuminated by natural light. She still
hadn't found out how they did it.
Mestin strolled in to the lobby with the rolling gait
of an overconfident sailor. All the females seemed to walk like that.
"We go down," she said abruptly, and beckoned Shan to follow her.
And she meant down, too.
Shan followed Mestin down a corridor that ran from the Exchange of
Surplus Things deep into the ground beneath the city, on another field
trip that Mestin assured her would help her fully understand what her
new responsibilities were.
She tried to link the tunneling habit to a species
mind-set. Once you knew that humans were monkeys, things fell into
place. Perhaps she'd get a better insight into the wess'har psyche from
picking the right animal parallel. Maybe badgers, she
thought. Blennies. Kakapo. No, they were
all endearing, appealing. Wess'har were aesthetically attractive, but
they weren't any more cute than the needle-teethed ussissi. Trapdoor
spiders. Yes, that was more like it. Scorpions.
Mestin's Spartan helmet of hair was silhouetted against
the faint light filtering up from the tunnel ahead. Shan followed her
step for step. The lighting rose gently like a sudden sunrise as they
walked through a modest doorway.
"Jesus," said Shan.
Above her head, to both sides of her, and as far as her
eye could see, there were racks and tunnels and recesses. A few were
filled with machinery. For a brief moment she lost her up-down
orientation, like standing in an Escher engraving. She felt cocooned by
a felt-lined silence. There were no echoes at all when she spoke.
Some of the warehoused machines were clearly fighter
craft, the kind she had seen on Bezer'ej, and some appeared industrial.
Others made no sense to her at all. They were simply organic shapes of
differing colors with detail worked into them that could have been
controls. She could read wess'har script now, and that was no easy task
for a human used to orderly lines of characters. The curved side of one
machine bore the apparently random swirls and patches of text,
ideograms strung out in fishbone diagrams and flowcharts. It made
sense--eventually.
The inscription read TEMPLATE
CRAFT.
"Each wess'har city has something like this," said
Mestin. "I think you would call it insurance. And I felt you needed to
see it to understand why we're so alarmed by the gethes."
The underground hangars almost explained how an
apparently agricultural society managed to mount such an impressive
reinforcement of the garrison on Bezer'ej, the Temporary City.
"Where's your industrial capacity? I've seen nothing
but agriculture." Shan reached out and put her hand on the blue-gray
hull nearest to her. It was as clean and impressive as an exhibit in a
military museum. "This takes scale and urbanization."
"You ask interesting questions for a police officer."
"I was planning to be an economist before I was drafted
into the police. Manpower shortage, you see. But I sort of stayed.
Where does this all come from?"
"The World Before."
"I don't understand."
"Our ancestors came to this planet ten thousand years
ago. We did not arrive empty-handed."
If you could ever get used to shocks, then Shan was
becoming accustomed to them. Just as she thought she had a complete
picture of the wess'har, just as she was confident she had the measure
of them, knew them, they would drop a
bombshell into the conversation.
"You never told me you weren't native to this planet,"
she said.
"You never told me you were the descendants of apes."
"It just didn't occur to me."
"Nor me. I brought you down here to show you the
limited defenses at our disposal, not to give you a history lesson."
Mestin walked ahead, glancing from side to side as if she were in a
market doing her shopping. There were enough cans of serious beans here
to make somebody very uncomfortable indeed. "I realize you're not a
soldier, but you can understand force as well as anyone."
"But where do you build these ships?"
"Grow is probably the more
accurate description. Many came with our ancestors and we have modified
them. This is the same base technology as dhren.
But it isn't inexhaustible."
Shan thought of the first time she had metAras. It
hadn't been a happy meeting: her military support team had managed to
shoot down his craft. But he had walked away from the crash--her first
clue that he had an extraordinary physiology. And when she went to
inspect the wrecked metal airframe the next day, it had crumbled and
scattered like dust beneath her boots. It was a rare instance of a
pilot being repaired and the aircraft dying and decomposing. Smart
metals.
And there was Actaeon,
knocking herself out to get hold of c'naatat
when there were these industrial riches to be plundered.
Mestin looked as if she was scanning Shan's face for a
reaction. And? Shan took the hint.
"Are you telling me that you're running out of kit?"
"Correct," said Mestin. "But we can adapt what we still
have to counter the isenj. They're limited by their population
problems. We're limited by the inverse--we are too few. But if you add
an extra enemy to that, you can see our dilemma."
Shan thought of the annihilated, erased, utterly
destroyed city of Mjat that had once stood coast-to-coast on the
wilderness of an island that now housed Constantine. And these
machines--or their originals, anyway--were older than the first human
cities. "You're not doing too badly for your size," she said.
"We will be too thinly stretched if gethes
come in large numbers."
"Well, they won't." They?
Assimilation had ambushed Shan and it hadn't met much resistance.
"Economics meets physics. Too far, too expensive, and too bloody hard
for that much heavy lift. But a few with a foothold in this system
could expand over the years, and you do think long-term, don't you?" "Bloody." In Mestin's
mouth, the word was softened by a chord of multiple notes. "Bloody."
"And then there's the Sarajevo factor. It can take just
one human to destabilize local politics."
"We noticed." Mestin might have been capable of irony,
or she might not. Either way, it stung. "What is Sarajevo?"
"Forget it," said Shan. She felt for a moment that the
whole situation was her fault. If only she had--no, that was stupid.
The
real damage had been done two centuries ago when Constantine was
settled; and contact with the isenj had happened seventy-five years
after she left Earth. Whatever she'd done or hadn't done, it couldn't
have prevented this moment. The two women now stood staring at the
smoothly curved fuselage of a craft that was so gently blue, so much
like the skin of a grape, that Shan imagined it would feel moist and
velvety to her touch.
"So what else can you do?" she asked. "Reclamation
nanites, biobarriers--that implies you have some sort of biological
engineering capability."
Mestin inclined her maned head and looked even more
disturbingly like a Spartan soldier; and Shan now knew that the two
cultures also shared an unforgiving attitude to warfare as well as
their mutual frugality and iron discipline. "Yes, our ancestors were
skilled at bioweapons. We have never used the technology in that
capacity. Not yet."
"Ah," said Shan, mindful of the word yet,
and feeling that she had found the snake in
Eden that Josh always talked about. "But you could."
"Potentially," said Mestin.
They walked a little further down the passage in
silence. Shan reasoned that even snakes were entitled to defend
themselves. But bioweapons went beyond her all-encompassing view that
it didn't matter much how you died in battle. Bioweapons smacked of
secret labs and all the terrible things she knew went on behind locked
doors.
It disturbed her; Mestin must have smelled that,
because she froze.
"Doesn't sound very wess'har, creating bioweapons,"
said Shan. "The ultimate interference with the natural order."
"A weapon of last resort," said Mestin, wafting citrus.
Shan had to remind herself that she was still the ranking female,
hormonally speaking. Mestin seemed to be finding it hard not to defer
to her. "The pathogens themselves come to no harm. Just the targets."
Wess'har morality had a seductive logic all its own. "Did gethes
give that much thought to the fate of
cavalry horses?"
"I'm not arguing. I'm just trying to make sense of
this. So you all left the World Before and came here, then."
"No, some left. Most stayed."
Bang. Another bombshell. Why hadn't she realized that? Because
she hadn't asked. Because she didn't
know the question needed asking. It was probably all sitting in the
massive wess'har archive that she was struggling to read. She was
working backwards in the timeline, and slowly.
"You're going to have to spell this out," said Shan.
"Spell?"
"Explain in detail. Please."
"We are Targassati. We wanted to lead a simpler life
and we no longer wanted to take part in what you call international
politics. It was an obligation we did not feel we could justify. So we
left."
Shan waited. Mestin just looked at her.
"Come on. And?"
"And?"
"The World Before is still…er…going strong?"
"Yes."
"So you have contact with them. What do they--"
"No. No contact. The ussissi move between worlds, but
we remain separate."
"Hostile?"
"Irrelevant."
"I would have thought they'd be handy reinforcements,
at the very least."
Mestin's eyes--darker than Chayyas's, more like amber
bead--showed narrowed crosshairs, mere slits of pupil. "If we need to
ask for help, there might be a price, as you say. We do not welcome
interference or change."
"I understand," said Shan, who had seen more change in
fifteen months than was decent, and quite liked the idea of stagnation
for a while. She tried to imagine what the World Before might be like
if the wess'har here represented the ecowarriors. "Look, if you're
short on manpower and arms, conventional warfare isn't sustainable. You
know that. That's why you used c'naatat
troops in the past. I think you might have to look at unpalatable
choices again. And I'm not just talking about germ warfare."
"From what you have seen here, do you think we have a
problem?"
"I'm not a military analyst, but if you can't replace
hardware at the rate you're losing it, then you're stuffed."
"Do you recall Chayyas said more might be asked of you
than you were capable of giving?"
"It was a hard conversation to forget."
"Then I'm asking you to help us find an immediate
solution to the gethes problem."
"Boy, that phrase has an unpleasantly familiar ring to
it."
"I don't understand."
"Just as well. Look, this is years away. You have time
to come up with some ideas."
"But what would you do,
Shan? What would you do if you perceived a genuine threat to your
world?"
"I'm not the best person to ask. I'd only give you a
gut reaction, not a considered political option. I'm not known for my
restraint."
"What is war but emotional response backed up by
weaponry?"
It wasn't a bad point. Shan started seeing the gaps in
the hangar, the places where ships were no longer stored. There were a
lot more gaps than there were occupied berths.
She thought about it. "Personally, I'd pop round their
house and give them a bloody serious warning. And maybe a demonstration
of how very unreasonable I could be if they really
pissed me off."
"We would wish to deal with the threat directly too.
But we have such limited military resources these days. We need to make
it impossible for gethes to get a foothold
in this system."
It seemed a very benign discussion. They were actually
talking about killing humans. It didn't feel that much of a chasm to
cross. "Come on, you're not going to be able to send a task force to
Earth without help from someone, are you?"
"No. The other option is what you would call
bioweapons. If we have enough intact human DNA, we can create a barrier
weapon. It need only be created and deployed once."
"Poison Earth?"
"Poison Bezer'ej."
"Ah." Shan wondered what was happening to her brain. It
was suddenly obvious. "You want my DNA."
"Yes."
"Why didn't you extract it from Aras?"
"C'naatat. A dangerous
organism to handle, and we have found no way of separating it from its
host. If we could have done so, things would be very different now,
would they not? We would also have isenj DNA. We would be able to use c'naatat
at will."
"Well, I'm not exactly a regular human any longer. I'm
not sure what help I can be."
"But you were normal a
matter of a season or so ago. Do you have any material that predates
your contamination?"
Now that was science that Shan understood only too
well. Forensic evidence. Hair, saliva,
GSR, semen. She could do as thorough a job on crime scene as any SOCO.
"Let's have a look through my grip," she said. "I keep my kit clean but
I'd bet there are some hairs hanging around." She hadn't used her
cold-weather suit since she first landed on Bezer'ej: they could scour
that for cells.
"You give this up easily under the circumstances."
"I'd like to think of it as razor wire. If you don't
climb over it, you won't get hurt."
"You're a pragmatic woman."
"And you really don't have any isenj DNA?"
"We don't take prisoners," said Mestin.
"What about asking the ussissi to acquire some?"
"We will not compromise them by asking them to act for
us aggressively."
Shan tried to conceive of a society where the entire
defense industry could be halted by the desire not to embarrass an
ally. The challenge with wess'har was to understand that they had just
two settings--completely benign and psychotic--with nothing in between.
"It's not how we'd handle things back home."
"The ussissi are neutral."
"God, you really are going to need some help to deal
with gethes, aren't you? Okay. Count me
in." She paused. "What happens to the colonists in Constantine if you
flood the planet with antihuman pathogens or whatever?"
Mestin cocked her head a few times. "I would rather
remove them all."
It was Josh and Deborah and James and Rachel, not a
seething mass of anonymous faces. Shan tried to adjust to her new
kinship. There's no reason why they have to share
your morality. Stay out of it. "What about moving them here?
Like you did the gene bank?"
Mestin looked genuinely thoughtful, her long muzzle and
sharply tilted head reminding Shan too much of a baffled Afghan hound.
"Yes, if they represent a strain of acceptable humans, it might be wise
to propagate them. There might be no other gethes
left in time, after all."
Shan had to think about that last sentence.
She wasn't entirely sure she had understood it. Then
she knew she bloody well had, and that small expression of a monumental
threat was more chilling than a wess'har battle fleet heaving into view.
"What if they won't move?"
"Then they die," said Mestin, as if Shan would be
equally unmoved by the prospect.
Shan could almost smell her own citrussy waft of
anxiety. "Maybe I can put the relocation idea to them in due course."
Something told Shan she was going to have trouble
explaining this to Aras. It wasn't a topic that had ever cropped up in
conversation. He had warned her about the matriarchs and how she would
be enslaved, but she had taken it as an
expression of his bitterness about exile.
For some reason, justifying herself to Aras bothered
her more than the fact that she was about to teach an alien race how to
be efficient terrorists against her own species.
Shan walked up to the nearest fighter and glanced at
Mestin for approval to climb up on it. As soon as she laid her hand on
it, the canopy opened: a faint, single, pure note ran from discomfort
below her threshold of hearing up the scale until she could no longer
hear it. It made the back of her throat itch. The cockpit was alive
with a soft bluish glow.
"How did I do that?" Shan asked.
"You must have more wess'har genes than you thought."
Shan stared down into the cockpit, one continuous
surface covered with the diagrammatic writing and points of light. The
smell of the materials--harshly grassy, like burning tangerine
peel--stopped her dead.
She was perfectly aware of where she was but she was
also watching her hands--no, Aras's hands--punching rapidly across the
controls while a flare of flame wiped out the landscape that was
spinning ever larger in the viewplate. Sick physical panic gripped her.
Then she smashed into the plate and everything was blackness and pain
and heat and her teeth felt as if they had been driven up into her
sinuses.
She straightened up and scrambled down the side of the
craft, dropping the last meter and landing on her feet with a thud.
Around her it was all orderly, soft-lit calm again. She shut her eyes
for a moment, and suddenly the drowning dream and all that went with it
was vivid and now.
"He crashed," she said at last. "Aras crash-landed in
one of those things. I just saw it."
Mestin took her sleeve carefully and steered her away
from the fighter. The gesture surprised her. It was an oddly
compassionate act for a matriarch.
"I had heard that c'naatat
can pass on memory," said Mestin. "Is it difficult, coping with that?"
"Not any more," said Shan. No, she could handle it. She
prided herself on her professional core of ice. She was the copper who
didn't faint at her first autopsy, who never vomited at the smell of
decomposition, and who could look at evidence even strong men preferred
not to see. It didn't mean she didn't care: it just meant that, after a
while, she forgot how to.
She wondered if that was why she hung onto the pain of
the gorilla and the blue door, just so she could be in thrall to
impotent anger again and reassure herself occasionally that she was
alive and feeling.
Shan inhaled deeply through her nose and suppressed the
agonizing shock of crashing in enemy territory. "You know what happened
to him? What the isenj did to him?"
"No, but I can imagine," said Mestin. "They were brutal
times. Even the isenj admit that."
Mestin kept steering her away from the craft, the
slightest pressure of her hand on her back. Shan wanted to shrug the
touch away but decided it might be provocative. If Mestin could scent
that she was bothered by the touch, it had not deterred her.
"You think I'm weak, don't you?" Shan said.
"I do not," said Mestin. "I wonder how I would fare
alone in your world. I wonder how I would react to my body being
colonized and altered by a parasite. I'm not sure I would acquit myself
particularly well." She tapped her hand against the hard shape of the
gun that Shan kept tucked into the back of her waistband. "Do you fear
us?"
"Habit. No offense meant." Shan reached back under her
jacket and adjusted the gun again, embarrassed. She wondered why she
couldn't recall the borrowed memory of Aras firing that weapon into the
skull of Surendra Parekh. She could certainly remember her own oblique
view of the execution. Perhaps it hadn't been traumatic enough for Aras
to make the same impression as the other events in his life. "I'm a
copper, remember. A police officer."
"I know what police do. And I know what you
have done. I have seen the record of your
conversation with Michallat."
Ah, the unbroadcast interview. Eddie hadn't quite got
her to admit she had aided ecoterrorists, but it was a close-run thing.
She hoped Mestin hadn't picked up the implication that Minister Perault
had perhaps conned her into accepting her mission. "Yeah. I don't piss
about."
"I think you are very clever, very persistent and very
violent."
Shan almost dropped her gaze. "Whatever it takes to do
the job."
"But only if you think the job is worth doing. That is
why we like you."
Shan was suddenly uncomfortable. She wasn't used to
being patted, not by anybody who valued their teeth, and she wasn't
expecting to be told she was liked. She
felt her scalp prickle. Mestin must have smelled her agitation.
"For a physically fearless person you are easily
unsettled by small matters," Mestin said. She sniffed discreetly, as if
to say I know. "Let me tell you this. If
it were not for c'naatat, I would be happy
for you to be a cousin-by-mating. I trust you. Nevyan respects you
greatly."
Shan wasn't sure she had understood the matriarch
right. Cousin-by-mating? Ah, in-law.
Sister-in-law. Some of her best friends were c'naatat
but she wouldn't want her brother to marry one, so to speak. It wasn't
offensive. Shan knew the risks. They were no different for wess'har,
except that they could be relied upon to do the sensible thing with the
symbiont--most of the time, anyway.
Mestin walked ahead of her, back towards the exit,
trilling wordlessly under her breath. Shan followed the matriarch's
rustling steps with her eyes fixed on the neat stripe of tufted gold
hair down her nape. It was another moment when her world shivered into
semifocus: another moment when she knew that she didn't really
understand what wess'har were, and what they did when she wasn't
around. It made her feel utterly alone. It made her want the comfort of
Aras's company.
She tried to make light conversation to jolly herself
along. "I think cousin-by-mating is a nice way of describing someone
who marries into your family," she said. "Wess'u is a very pragmatic
language."
Mestin glanced back at her in a half turn but carried
on walking. "It doesn't mean that at all," she said.
"I don't think I understand." "Oursan," she said, as if
Shan ought to have known what that meant. They were back on the surface
again, among irregular strips of red and magenta crops. "Nevyan was
supposed to be educating you."
"Maybe we haven't got to that page yet," said Shan,
feeling unpleasantly embarrassed again but unsure exactly why. There
was a niggling awareness at the back of her mind, like a Suppressed
Briefing. Whatever scraps of memory were surfacing from Aras, this one
was shot with anxiety.
She was pondering the feeling as she walked back up the
terraces when she nearly trod on a vine as thick as a ship's cable. It
was covered in velvety scales and pink-flushed gold, like a ripe peach.
When she crouched to touch it, it shot off at speed and its furred
leaves--or what had looked like leaves--scattered in all directions,
emitting high-pitched squeals. The surprise made her overbalance onto
her backside.
The vine-thing paused at a distance and the leaves
scuttled back to it and attached themselves again. She sat in complete
humiliation on the flagstones, heart pounding. A male wess'har walked
by and stared down at her. "Genadin," he said,
nodding in the direction of the creature. "With babies."
Nothing was obvious here. She sat and gathered her
composure for a few moments and started rehearsing how she would tell
Aras that she had signed up to help the wess'har war machine.
But it could wait.
She had to sort out her uneasy relationship with him
first.
Nobody gave a second glance to Lindsay and
Eddie while they chatted in a corner of the hangar deck. They were old
mates, isolated and lonely. They had personal issues to discuss. There
was nothing sinister about it.
Eddie wasn't so sure. She hadn't said a word to him
about Hereward, and he was now certain
every senior officer would have known about the deployment. Well, if
that was the game she was playing, fine. It disappointed him, but at
least he was now on familiar territory and using a fine-honed skill in
which he had complete confidence--pickpocketing the brain of a
reluctant
interviewee without their feeling a thing.
"You okay?" he asked.
"Bearing up." She kept fiddling with her right shoulder
board, picking invisible specks off the gold braid rings. "Eddie, I
need to ask you something."
He folded his arms. "I'm a journalist. Think of me as
your priest."
"It's serious."
Ah, maybe she was going to come clean. He hoped so. He
didn't like to think of her as prey. "Okay. Ask."
"If I got you transport, would you be willing to ask
for access to the wess'har?"
It was the last thing he expected to hear, and no
mention of Hereward. He summoned up all
his acting skills. "I'd probably bite your arm off in the rush."
"We need someone to break the ice. You're neutral."
"They still want to negotiate diplomatic relations with
them, eh?"
"I know. Fat chance. But if we knew how they were
thinking, we might get the approach right."
She was lying her arse off. She was an amateur.
It wasn't the first time Eddie had been
approached--obliquely, charmingly--to gather data. In a simpler age
they
called it spying, and it was the sort of thing that got journalists
shot or worse in unsympathetic foreign countries.
"I think this is bullshit," he said. "It's got nothing
to do with diplomacy. What do you really want?"
Her head dropped and she sighed. If she was acting, it
was convincing. "Okay, I might as well tell you. You started this
biotech rumor running and now I've got to clean up the mess. I need to
make sure the pharmaceutical lads don't get hold of it. I haven't a
clue what we're looking for, but if you hear anything that would help
me keep it out of circulation, I'd be grateful. And so might human
civilization, whether it knows it or not yet."
It hurt. It was true. He wished for the hundredth time
that he hadn't gone hunting that story, but it was too late. "Lin, I'm
in enough shit as it is. BBChan's under a lot of government and
commercial pressure for me to find happy space stories. Seems they hold
me responsible for giving people the impression that the Cockroach
Cluster is on its way to take over the Earth."
"Okay, it's not fair of me to dump this on you. Forget
it."
"Now that's not fair. The
one thing you can't do to a journalist is let me halfway in. You're
waging some interagency feud with the Department of Trade or whoever
and you expect me to line up as cannon fodder. You tell me the truth,
or you can piss off and do your own dirty work."
"I didn't say this was a departmental power struggle."
Eddie spread his arms and gave her a theatrically
slack-jawed look. "A wild guess. Now for Chrissakes tell me." Come
on, say Hereward. You
know I'll get it out of you sooner or later. "I know you're not
giving me the full picture."
"Okay, but this is between you and me."
"Whoa. This is where I don't do off-the-record. When
people say that, they really want to leak something without taking
responsibility for it. And even if I do keep it to myself, once I know
something it colors all my decisions from then on, doesn't it? So think
hard before you open your mouth."
Lindsay paused three beats. He counted them. "Okay.
Rayat claims he's working for the Treasury and he says he wants to
prevent access to the biotech as well."
"Really?"
"I checked."
"Makes sense. All we need is a plummeting death rate
and we've got an economic crisis that's going to make the pensions
collapse of 2136 look like a small overdraft."
Lindsay seemed diverted by the comment for a moment. "I'm telling
you the truth."
"Maybe, but isn't there something you left out?"
She fidgeted with her shoulder boards again as if her
rank was bothering her. "There's always detail, Eddie."
"Try Hereward."
She looked genuinely blank. "I honestly haven't a clue
what you mean."
"Really. You're a senior officer here and you didn't
know that we've diverted a logistics support vessel, probably armed, to
this sector?"
"No, I bloody well didn't." She couldn't fake that
reddening face. Okurt was going to get a stream of high-grade vitriol,
that much was clear. "How do you know?"
"Don't make me say it. It's the one ethic we still hold
dear in my trade."
"Bastard," she said, but she was looking away and it
was obvious she didn't mean him. "What the hell is he playing at? He
didn't bother to tell me he was looking for ways to exhume David's body
for research either. You'll forgive me if I have a tantrum at being
left out of the loop again."
"You really didn't know, did you?"
" 'Course I bloody didn't."
"I don't think the aliens have been told either. Any of
them. How to piss off two opposing technologically advanced powers in
one go--it's economy of stupidity, anyway. What if they gang up on us?"
"We might realize that, and
I think even Okurt might, but he's not calling the shots, remember.
He's on the Foreign Office choke-chain."
"And what are you going to do when the locals find out?"
"How are they going to hear about it?"
"There's no such thing as monopoly of information. Lots
of people have to be involved with diverting a ship. Victualling,
fueling, canceling other deployments, you name it. It'll leak
Earth-side through families, and then it'll be on the news, and either
the wess'har or the isenj will pick it up off an intercepted feed."
"We'll see."
"I hate to use words like gunboat diplomacy, but surely
someone's noticed we're not the most powerful species in the universe
any longer?"
"Don't ask me to fathom politicians."
"Okay. If you can get me clearance to visit Wess'ej,
I'll see what I can see. But just be aware I'm not working for you or
anyone else. I'm doing this for me and I'll make the call based on what
I think is right."
Lindsay looked studiously blank. "Shan would be proud
of you."
"Call me," he said, and walked away wondering if she
had stitched him up. He was damned if he was going to be manipulated.
He slid down the ladder to the next deck below, just like a seasoned
spacefarer, and caught his hand on a rail. "Bitch," he said, not sure
if he was referring to his scraped hand or Lindsay. She had made him
feel guilty.
But she was right about one thing. He was neutral, more
or less. He liked the isenj and he liked the wess'har and he was
hard-wired to attack his own government; but he trusted nobody.
Suspicion was a great leveler.
And he pondered on what he had done with information in
the past, and what he continued to do with it, and he thought of a
little known place called San Carlos Water with a heavy heart.
There was a time
when wess'har made their soldiers immortal. They have not done it for
many years. But they can do it again, and that is why you should not
underestimate a small army. Make friends with them while you can.
MINISTER
UAL, in an explanatory note
to the FEU Foreign Office.
Something small and wet thudded onto
Shan's back like someone had gobbed on her.
Her hand reached for her gun without her conscious
brain getting involved. The last time someone had spat at her while she
was on duty, she'd rounded on the perpetrator, dragged him bodily from
the crowd and introduced him to the business end of her truncheon. She
hated anyone messing up her uniform; and she certainly didn't like
anyone coming up behind her. But when she looked back there was nobody,
just the empty alleyway washed and beaded in pearl. She let go of the
gun.
She strained to look over her shoulder and pulled up
her shirt to check what had hit her. She couldn't see anything. She
could smell a sweet almondlike scent and wondered if it was sap from a
plant higher up the terraces. Come on, nobody's going to gob
on you here. It was something she was going to have to get used
to, and she found it hard to accustom herself to pleasant things. She
was always waiting for them to peel back their deceptive skins and
reveal their teeth.
It was a shame Aras wasn't comfortable in F'nar. He
just seemed to be getting more and more agitated each day. Shan was
starting to like the place, and not just because she had no choice. She
could walk down the terraces and alleys and everyone acknowledged her:
they knew who she was, and why she was there, and she was starting to
know them. It was like being the beat bobby in an idyllic village.
The only difference was that she was never going to be
called upon to rattle door handles or break up a pub brawl. Apart from
their abrupt tone--and that was only unedited frankness--there was
nothing personally violent or antisocial about individual wess'har. How
they made that sudden leap from peaceful citizen to apparent psychopath
still bewildered her.
As she walked round the curve of the caldera, clutching
a gift for newlywed Nevyan, she passed two young males utterly
engrossed in playing with their children, rumbling and purring as the
little ones tried their hand at planting tufts of red grass in the gaps
between the paving. The males were taking sporadic bites from chunks of
lurisj, the closest that wess'har had to a
mood-altering narcotic. They were simply relaxed and happy, a world
away from human drunks and junkies and all the violence that
accompanied them.
Then Shan thought about Mjat, and the whole coast
around Constantine scoured clean of isenj, and tried to reconcile the
two images. She thought briefly of the ease with which Aras had put two
rounds through Parekh's head, and then how he had rescued a tiny banic
from drowning in the washed vegetables. He
was an alien all right. An alien. And there she
was, catching herself looking at him in the way she had once looked at
Ade Bennett. It was getting more insistent. It wasn't like her at all.
She was still conscious of moisture on her back and
twitching her shoulders involuntarily when she got to Nevyan's new
house, a warren of excavated rooms that previously had been Asajin's.
She looked down at the woven container of netun
jay in her hand and took a breath. Wess'har didn't give gifts.
But they liked their food, and it seemed as good a way as any to wish
Nevyan well in her new life. Besides, she had questions to ask her that
she didn't feel she could put to Mestin.
Shan raised her hand to knock on the door, but wess'har
didn't knock so neither would she. It didn't feel right, though. You
only barged in like that with a warrant, or sometimes without one if
you felt like it. Fit in, she told
herself, and pressed silently on the pearl-encrusted door. It swung
open and she walked in.
Her gaze went instinctively to the point in the frozen
scene where she least wanted it to go.
"O-oh shit," she said. "Shit.
Sorry!"
She came out a lot faster than she went in, slammed the
door and stood against it with her free hand to her mouth in an
involuntary spasm of sheer animal embarrassment. She really
should have knocked. She shook herself
back into a semblance of composure and waited outside.
The door opened again. Nevyan, now in her matriarch's dhren,
wafted not a trace of agitation and
simply cocked her head in that canine gesture of concentration. It was
down to the shape of wess'har pupils, Aras said. They did it
automatically to get a better focus on the object of their curiosity,
and Shan--red-faced and uncharacteristically embarrassed--was
apparently
worth extra scrutiny.
"What's wrong?" said Nevyan. There was absolutely no
indication whatsoever that she was offended by being disturbed during
an intimate moment with her new males. Yeah, and
all four of them, Shan thought. Jesus H.
Christ.
"I'll knock in future," Shan said, finding it painful
to meet her eyes. They were vivid citrine, quite unlike her mother's.
"You're upset. Why?"
"You're not bothered by…um…"
"By what?" Nevyan was now starting to smell agitated.
Shan wasn't sure whether it was because she wanted badly to understand
or because Nevyan wanted her approval. She was painfully aware of the
kid's deference to her. "Have I done something wrong?"
Shan shook her head rapidly. "No. Don't worry. Human
thing. Not your problem." She lapsed into English, because wess'u just
didn't have the words for it. She held out the netun
jay. "I came to wish you well. You know. Wedding?"
Nevyan took the cakes and bobbed her head
enthusiastically. "This is kind, this is very kind. I know how
important this is to humans."
"You're welcome," Shan said. Nevyan seized her arm and
led her back into the house. Her males--her jurej've--didn't
seem at all offended by being interrupted at a critical moment. It was
as if she had walked in while they were watching their favorite TV
show, a minor interruption to an entertainment that could be resumed
later.
In the kitchen the jurej've
trilled and fluted as they prepared a meal, no more transfixed by her
than the kids were. Time was when she could gather a crowd just by
walking along the terraces. I'm one of the tribe
now, she thought. One looked up. "Shan
g'san," he said, cocking his head in amusement. A wess'har joke.
It was the first she'd heard, or at least the first she'd understood.
She smiled. They now seemed unperturbed by her display of teeth.
But their scent of cedar and sandalwood put her on
edge, and she wasn't sure why, although she was damned certain that
what she'd seen of their anatomy was alarming enough. One of the males
wrapped himself around Nevyan, trilling enthusiastically.
"Later, Lisik," she snapped, and cuffed him. Shan
looked away. Nevyan turned back to her. "He'll make a good and useful
husband when he calms down."
Shan rapidly revised her estimate that Nevyan was going
on seventeen. Wess'har didn't appear to grow up; they switched almost
overnight from one life phase to another, and Nevyan was now the
complete matriarch. It was disturbing to think of her having husbands
who needed a good slap to stop them mounting her in front of house
guests. "How unlike the life of our own dear queen," Shan muttered, and
sat down at the long table in the kitchen, careful to keep her elbows
clear of the exquisite rainbow glass bowls and pots.
Nevyan thrust the basket of cakes towards her. "Eat,
then," she said, and placed a couple of netun
on a plate in front of them. It was a gesture you made to family, and
Shan liked the feel of that. She bit into the cake with a careful eye
on the new males. Yes, she'd seen too much now to ever think of them as
harmless seahorses again.
The netun were crisp, and
the runny, clove-scented filling escaped down her chin with an audible pop.
Lisik was at her side immediately,
clutching a cloth as if to wipe her face, and she held up her hand
defensively.
"Thanks. I can do it myself."
Lisik made a noncommittal chik
sound and went back to pressing some sticky yellow mixture into flat
trays.
Another male was preoccupied with suckling a tiny
infant no longer than Shan's hand.
It reminded her of a stick insect. The male had slipped
his garment off his shoulders to feed it, and what flesh she could see
looked smooth and lightly muscled. The baby was clinging to his skin
with those long jointed fingers.
She knew that wess'har males gestated and suckled but
she hadn't actually seen it, and that made it very different. Her mouth
filled with saliva as if she were going to be sick. Her stomach
somersaulted. She had once again been punched hard with the reminder
that this was not Earth, and these were not humans, and that what she
was seeing was the reality of Aras Sar Iussan, who she had almost
thought of as a man.
She wiped her lips and chin carefully, wondering what
it was like to sleep with a man who could breast-feed. It was a thought
she hadn't invited and didn't want to entertain.
Perhaps Aras couldn't. C'naatat
had made a lot of changes to him.
Nevyan's husband adjusted his position and ran a
careful finger over the infant's head while it suckled, oblivious of
Shan's attention. It squirmed closer to him. Shan wondered if she had
any real understanding of Aras, whether she had his memories or not. It
was amazing how much you couldn't see when you were absolutely
determined not to, even in one room.
It was equally hard not to look at these males, even
though they had no physical features she found consciously attractive
beyond the aesthetic. She inhaled that seductive scent of sandalwood
and now cedar, suddenly aware of the pressure of the hard bench against
parts of her anatomy that hadn't seen much action in a while. Seductive.
That was exactly what it was;
pheromones.
"Are they bothering you?" Nevyan asked, making a
chin-jutting gesture in her husbands' direction. "You seem very upset."
"Not at all," Shan said, and finally accepted that her
talent for ducking behind a veneer of disinterested menace was sod all
use on Wess'ej. "I need to ask you some questions."
"Police questions?"
"God, no."
"I can't follow all your English. Please--"
"Sorry. It's personal. I need advice."
Nevyan's pupils flashed cross-flower-cross as the penny
dropped and she realized she could be helpful to what she regarded as
the alpha female. Shan had seen her do exactly the same to Mestin in
the past. "Ask, if you think I can be of use."
"Okay. I'm disturbed by changes in my body." "C'naatat?"
"Specifically, urges."
"To do what?"
"What you were doing when I came in."
"I don't understand why that disturbs you."
"Because Aras is--different. Not my species."
"Then he didn't infect you
by copulation. My mistake."
"I was unconscious at the time," Shan said stiffly,
ambushed by her copper's hard-wired suspicion. "He told
me he transferred blood from his hand into my wound."
"Then that is what he did," said Nevyan.
Shan fought down a flush of adrenal panic. She was a
copper, and she thought the worst before she thought the best. Rape,
child abuse, and bestiality: all rapists, nonces and sheep-shaggers
wanted hanging, garroting, and gassing, the bastards. But what did that
make her, wondering what it would be like to fuck an alien? Where was
that nice safe line between human and everything else? Oh God.
"I'm not someone who gives in to my body," Shan said. "It does what
I tell it. I need to know how to stop these thoughts."
Nevyan made a long, low trilling sound. "Why do you
have to?"
"Because it's getting on my nerves and we don't have
that sort of relationship. I don't want to worry about offspring and I
don't want--" She was going to say love.
Love was dependence, and dependence weakened you. "We're friends. I
think he'd be appalled if he knew."
Nevyan was absolutely immobile. She didn't even blink.
Whatever Shan had said, it had put her in that alarmed, uncertain,
frozen state.
"What?" said Shan, irritated.
"Mestin explained to you about hormonal dominance. You
smell like a wess'har, enough to provoke reaction from us."
"I don't like where this is going."
"I suspect you're reacting to each other. Aras is
certainly reacting to you. Everyone knows that."
"Well, I bloody well didn't."
Shan folded her arms and remembered just in time that there was no
chair back to lean against. "He's agitated and irritable, I know that."
Nevyan looked at Shan and Shan looked back at Nevyan.
Shan struggled with the baffled silence, then rolled a netun
back and forth on the plate with her
forefinger like a game of table soccer. She knew the kid wasn't trying
to drag an embarrassing admission of further ignorance out of her, but
it felt like it.
"I don't even look wess'har," she said at last.
"You behave like us in many ways and you smell like us.
How you appear is largely irrelevant, even to Aras, I suspect."
"And how do I smell?"
"Like a dominant isan."
"Do your males react to
me?"
"No, because they're now bonded to me. But they know
you're receptive."
"I'm not some bloody brood mare."
"What's that?"
"Oh, never mind. Is all this obvious to Aras?"
"Yes."
"Oh shit."
Nevyan made that impatient side-to-side head movement. "I don't know
why you have so much difficulty with this. Do what you
need to do. After that, you will both be perfectly content. Unmated
adults don't exist in our society."
Shan would never have tolerated that amount of lip from
any human subordinate. Her annoyance must have hit Nevyan's olfactory
system pretty hard, because the junior matriarch locked position again.
"Is that why you took on Asajin's family?" Shan asked.
"Yes, because they would have died without an isan,"
Nevyan said. Her tilted head rather than
her tone told Shan it was the proverbial bleedin' obvious answer. "Do
you not understand oursan?"
"No."
"Ah." It came out as a forlorn trill on a falling note,
like birdsong. Lrrrrr. "This is how we
are. Males need the genetic material of the female to repair their
tissues. I transfer it through cells in my body to theirs, and I take
in some of their genes too, and we all share it. It keeps them well.
It's also pleasurable."
Shan couldn't imagine having sex with a complete
stranger as an act of charity. "You seem okay with all this."
"Why wouldn't I be? That is the nature of oursan
as well as my duty. We're bonded. It's
very nice. It feels very good up here." And she touched her forehead
with one many-jointed finger.
Shan felt an urge to giggle but didn't find it at all
funny. Nevyan, distracted briefly by the high wavering wail of the
infant now fully fed, glanced at her males with such obvious pride and
delight that the air around her was filled with the powdery musk of her
contentment. Then she looked back at Shan. Her pupils were just a
cross, faint rutilations in yellow quartz.
"You are certainly distressing Aras," she said. "Ask
him to explain it to you. You know enough about wess'har males now to
understand how hard he finds this."
Shan decided she would rather have faced an armed mob
without backup than ask Aras to explain the facts of wess'har life to
her. She stood up to go. "Well, that's going to be fun," she said
flatly.
Nevyan trilled. She found something amusing. Shan
glanced back, instinctively and humanly annoyed.
Nevyan stiffened. "You have an aumul
on your back," she said. "Let me remove it."
She reached between Shan's shoulder blades and then
held her hand where Shan could see it. Nestled in it was a very large
red and white striped slug, and it smelled of almonds, and it was
making melodic plinking noises like a musical box.
"Is it dangerous?" Shan asked. You could never take
anything for granted here, not even musical slugs.
"No."
"What does it do for an encore?"
"It scours the tem
deposits at night looking for organic waste before it sets hard."
"It eats shit?"
"I will learn that word."
Nevyan placed the aumul
carefully on the flagstones and it shot off across the floor at speed
like an Arsenal scarf caught in a high wind. Shan had liked it better
when she was totally unfamiliar with this alien world. Being lulled
gently into thinking you belonged here made it even more disturbing
when you thought you recognized something--and then realized it was
absolutely, totally and wholly unlike your expectations.
That was Aras too.
Shan took a slow walk back home, looking for courage on
the way.
There was fish on the menu today and that
cheered Lindsay up no end.
It was cod in a garlicky tomato sauce. The
culture-grown fillets were a regular portion-controlled shape that no
real cod would ever have achieved in nature, as was the way with
muscle-protein production systems. But that didn't matter. It was cod.
Lindsay tucked in with all the gastronomic enthusiasm that only people
cooped up on long deployments in isolated places could fully understand.
Or it might have been the battlefield mood-killers that
Sandhu had prescribed for her. David was dead; nothing would make her
forget that, except for those few brief seconds on waking each day. But
the drugs provided a soothing erasure of grief for the time being. She
was sad, but it was--she imagined--as she would be in a few years'
time,
having come to terms with her loss and the changes it had made in her,
but not disabled by it any longer.
The drug had been developed to halt plummeting morale
in combat. Lindsay wondered if they ever thought it would be used to
help a grieving mother kill a woman who had once been her friend.
She savored the thick tomato sauce. And this time she did
hear Rayat come up behind her.
He made quite a point of acknowledging people sitting
nearby. She felt a pleasant flood of satisfaction: she must have made
him think twice about startling an unstable woman with a weapon.
"Mind if I join you?" he said.
"It's a free country."
Rayat sat down opposite her. "Yes, we keep it that way,
don't we?" He appeared to have a pile of beans and spinach in a
carry-out container. It looked like he was used to eating alone in his
cabin. "I was thinking about what you said."
"Um."
"Have you been thinking
about what might happen if you were successful in cornering this
biotech for the military?"
Lindsay shrugged. "Drop the games. Please."
"Have you?"
"I'd be stupid if I hadn't, and I'm not stupid."
"I don't think you like the idea any more than my boss
does."
"And I don't want to know who your boss is, thanks."
"I have something to share with you."
"In exchange for what?" She glanced up and Eddie was
standing at the servery. He looked back and made a discreet warding
gesture at her, the forefinger of each hand overlapping in a cross. Watch
that bastard. She almost laughed.
"Troops and transport," said Rayat.
"You could ask Okurt."
"Okurt's orders aren't the same as mine."
"Or mine?"
"I think you're rightly terrified by this thing and you
can see the threat it represents. You know that's why Frankland did
what she did to you."
The cod didn't taste so good now. Lindsay shunted it
around her plate and then put the fork down. "Okay. Let's talk about
this somewhere else."
"My cabin, ten minutes?"
"You're a charmer," she said, and picked up the fork
again. Rayat took his lonely container of beans and left. Eddie was
engrossed in a conversation by the salads with Lieutenant Yun. Lindsay
cleared her plate and left a decent interval before getting up to leave.
Eddie, engrossed or not, turned his head immediately
and caught her eye. Well? And she could
only think of one response, the gesture that Shan used so often to
indicate her low opinion of a colleague. Thumb and forefinger held
together in a loose fist, she made a rapid stroking motion. He's a
wanker. Eddie grinned, but it was the
studied camaraderie of a man keeping an eye on her.
She grinned back. But she wasn't planning to share any
of this with Eddie.
Shan felt incompetent for the first time in her
life, and it hurt.
When she got back to the one-room house and leaned
against the iridescent door, it opened and she almost fell in. It
wasn't the entrance she wanted to make. Aras filled the doorway.
"You've been a long time," he said.
"We got talking," she said.
"Are you hungry?"
Shan followed him to the table and looked over the dish
of evem. "I could do with a cup of tea,
please."
Aras shook the jar of tea to indicate the falling level
of the leaves. "The bushes will be ready for harvest in four hundred
days, and this won't last. I could ask Josh for more supplies."
She ignored him. "Nice and strong, please."
"You're upset."
"Yeah, everyone keeps saying that," she snapped. "It's
been a bit of an educational morning."
Aras said nothing and watched the water boil, which was
another thing you could do with relative ease if you lived forever. She
flopped onto the sofa and tried to frame the words. It took longer than
she expected.
She wasn't prepared to spend another day sneaking
glances at his extraordinarily appealing man-shaped back and buttocks.
And she had no intention of giving in randomly to instincts like
Lindsay Neville had done. If she was going to go through with this--and
Aras must have been suffering untold misery in his isolation--then
she'd
do it logically and responsibly.
There were worse ways to spend her time. Aras was a
striking, magnificent creature. But tigers and peacocks were beautiful
too: it didn't mean it was okay to consider screwing them. She wondered
what was happening to her cherished view of nonhuman animals as equals.
"Nevyan seems very happy with her new family," Shan
began. She accepted the proffered bowl of tea with relief.
Aras shrugged. "It's natural. They're bonded."
"Yeah, they were bonding pretty well when I walked in."
She didn't get a reaction so she carried on. "Is that it? They have a
quickie and it's happy ever after?"
Aras seemed to understand quickie
perfectly well. "I can see why gethes find
it peculiar. We bond for life. We need no sanction or law to achieve
that." Gethes. Thanks. "So this
is oursan, is it?"
"Yes. We have cells that exchange our DNA, bond us to
our isan, and give us pleasure, just as
you secrete oxytocin. And you consume methamphetamine. These substances
make you feel affectionate and euphoric. The same applies to oursan."
Shan thought back to her drug squad training. It didn't
help. "You get an emotional high from screwing?"
"Inelegantly put, but yes."
"Where are the cells?"
"In our genitalia."
Shan felt her hand go involuntarily to her forehead in
embarrassment. "I walked in on Nevyan having sex with her new husbands."
Aras looked puzzled. His scent of sandalwood was
especially strong right then. "But they all have children."
"So?"
"Males never have sex after they've fathered children.
The sanil atrophies and forms the
gestational pouch."
She could work out what a sanil
was. She wondered why he didn't just say penis.
"Aras, atrophied isn't the word I'd have
used."
This really wasn't going as she'd planned. He looked
completely and utterly bewildered. If he had tilted his head any
further, she would have thrown a stick for him to fetch. Right then she
didn't want any more random images that blurred the line between Aras
the man and Aras the animal. "You must be mistaken."
"I know what I saw, for Chrissakes. Do I need to draw a
picture? Anyway, they were having it away. End of story."
Aras's head straightened up smartly and there was a
definite flash of comprehension. "No," he said, evidently relieved.
"That wasn't sex. That was oursan."
Shan fought to remain detached. He must have smelled
that she was agitated: he was pumping clouds of tension himself. But
her stand-back-I'm-a-police-officer persona took over and projected
complete, glacial, accidental calm. "Look, I know I don't get out much
lately, but if that's not shagging it's doing a bloody good
impersonation of it." "Oursan," Aras repeated,
as if she were deaf. He paused for a second and then unfastened his
long tunic, completely unself-conscious. He took in a deep breath and
pointed. "That is for oursan,"
he said, "and this is for sex."
"Ah," said Shan. "Ah."
She thought she had seen just about everything in the
course of her police career but now she knew that she definitely
hadn't. Her shock must have been
tangible. But she couldn't even blink, let alone look away.
Aras must have noticed her oh-my-God expression. "I
apologize," he said. "Once I'm back among wess'har, I forget the taboos
of humans. I shouldn't have done that."
"I think it made an eloquent point," said Shan
hoarsely. Oh shit. Oh, shit… "It's okay."
"This one is for reproduction, for sex
as you say. The other is for oursan.
Horizontal transmission." And he fastened his tunic again.
Shan couldn't quite maintain glacial.
She tried. She battled another totally humorless urge to giggle and
very nearly won. "I've heard it called a few things, but that's a new
one on me."
"I can explain it further if you like. Genes
transferred from one organism to another, not just from parent to
offspring--"
"Draw me a picture." She choked on suppressed laughter. "I'm sorry.
This isn't how it looks."
"You're mocking me."
"No, I'm just very embarrassed. I'm sorry--"
Aras dropped his head for a moment and then walked past
her and out of the door without a word. He closed it firmly behind him,
just one shade short of slamming it.
"Shit," said Shan. "Our
first fight. Oh, terrific."
Men could rot in hell before she'd run after them. She
busied herself trying to make proper right angles on the frame of the
new bed, sawing and swearing each time she offered up a piece of efte
and it still didn't fit. No, men were a
pain in the arse: necessary recreation, but not one of them warranted
changing your routine, your priorities or your name.
But Aras wasn't a man.
He was an alien who happened to look a lot like a man
and even had some human characteristics. He was also an alien who had
suffered terrible isolation for an unimaginable time. And despite
herself, she cared about him: and she had given up caring about people
a lifetime ago. Aras was outside the corrupt circle of humanity, a
clean soul despite his wars, an innocent…animal. She could forgive an
animal anything.
Shan realized that she still wasn't sure how she
thought of him, or how that sat with the sensation she experienced when
she touched the hard muscle of his back. It felt just like when she
touched Ade Bennett. It felt primevally good. But Aras isn't human.
And neither was she. Not any more.
If you were a sheep-shagger, maybe that was okay provided you were also
part sheep.
"Oh, fuck it," she said, and swept up the dust and
shavings from the floor before going in search of him.
There weren't that many places Aras could have gone.
She didn't have to search bars for him--not that she would have, of
course--and she didn't have to ring round each of his friends to see if
he was sprawled on their sofa with a Scotch in his hand, bemoaning the
inconsistencies of women and why they were such rotten heartless
bitches. He wasn't human. But he
was terribly alone, and he was her only friend, and she wanted very
badly to erase his pain as well as her own.
Aras was working on their patch of allocated land. Shan
could see him kneeling among the plants, picking out something and
putting it in a pile beside him. He didn't look up as she approached.
She knew that he was aware she was there: he could smell her easily at
that distance, especially in her current state of mind.
"Okay, sorry," she said. She knelt down beside him. "Are you still
talking to me?"
Aras paused, folded his hands in his lap and looked at
her, head still slightly lowered.
"Oursan is a sensitive
subject for me. I don't handle it well these days."
"I've been told I have all the sensitivity of a
lump-hammer. You might have noticed I'm not good at girly things."
"You never asked to be put in this position."
"I know, but I am." If she didn't say it now, she never
would. "Let's try it. I mean, we can avoid reproducing, right? Regard
it as a favor for a friend. A bit of normality." Normality. She was
twenty-five light-years from home, playing house with an invulnerable
alien war criminal and carrying a bizarre parasite that tinkered with
her genome when the fancy took it. Just over a year ago she'd packed a
bag and set off for a few days' duty at Mars Orbital, expecting to be
home by the end of the week, her biggest worry being that the
supermarket would deliver early and forget to reset her security alarm.
And now she could never go home again. Normality.
"It might not make you happy," said Aras. "There
are…anatomical issues."
"Oh, I noticed. You got a better idea?"
"Knowing you as I do, I fear you will dislike the
emotional changes that come with it."
"Maybe by then I won't care."
Shan stood up and held out her hand. He stood and took
it. She thought for a brief moment of the gorilla, with its
leather-glove hands signing a plea for rescue that she never understood
until it was too late. The dividing line between human and nonhuman had
always seemed arbitrary to her until now.
Aras was both sides of that line, and it kept moving.
There's a time to
take chances and a time to consolidate. This medical technology could
simply wipe our competitors off the map. It's worth every resource we
can spare to find it, isolate it, and develop it. And then we can sell it.
And I know who'll buy at any price.
Holbein CEO HANA
SOBOTKA,
to Board of Directors.
If anyone had any doubt about Dr. Mohan
Rayat's true calling, his cabin would have dispelled it immediately.
He had commandeered more comms kit and links than a
simple Treasury drone or even a pharmacologist would ever need. And he
had his own single cabin.
"How did you pass yourself off as a pharmacologist?"
said Lindsay. "You fooled the Thetis
payload pretty damn well."
"I am a pharmacologist,"
said Rayat. "It's easier to train a scientist to be an intelligence
officer than vice versa. And believe me, there's plenty for a scientist
to do in the intelligence services."
"I'll bet." Lindsay decided she could always explain
away her meeting with him as a shipboard affair. Being caught in the
heads with him had at least given her a cover story. But it wasn't one
she could use on Eddie Michallat. "Come on. What is it?"
"I don't trust easy," said Rayat. "But you're a
professional and I'm desperate. Take a look at this."
Lindsay watched the triptych of screens above Rayat's
pull-down desk. There was a 3-D chart and two separate cascades of
numbers and telemetry. The projection 15cm in front of the central
screen was a part-formed globe with latitude and longitude lines. A
crust of colored images was forming on it as if an unseen child were
coloring the image in a book.
"What am I looking at?"
"The telemetry from both the original pre-colony bot
ship that landed on CS2 and from Christopher,
the manned colonization vessel that followed it a few years later."
Rayat leaned across and tapped the center screen to zoom in on the
chart. "And this is Bezer'ej. I think you'll recognize this coastline."
It was a chain of islands. There was Constantine, if
she could call the whole island that, partway down the chain. There
were six in all, and she discovered for the first time that they had
names: Constantine, Catherine, Charity, Clare, Chad, and Christopher. Saints.
It had never occurred to her to ask
during the year that they were down there. They had never been allowed
to leave the island.
She could see the small cluster of dots that indicated
the colony. But there was another dot emerging on Christopher, the
southernmost island in the chain. She wondered if it was some aberrant
data from the geophys scans, a trace of one of the isenj cities that
the wess'har had annihilated.
LANDING SITE appeared
on the screen behind the jigsaw section of globe.
Well, that had to be wrong. She knew where the mission
vessel had landed, because it was laid up at Constantine. She hadn't
seen it, but Josh Garrod had mentioned it and Ade Bennett was counting
on it being there.
"I can't guess," she said at last. "Other than the
discrepancy between landing sites."
"Got it," said Rayat.
"An error?"
"No, I don't think so. It would have to be a very
large, complex error. This telemetry is clearly about two landings in
different places." Rayat prodded the image and it melted around his
finger and reformed again. "The bot ship landed--here. It should have
built the habitat--here. But the Christopher
ended up--over here."
"Why?"
"There's something there on the island of Christopher.
They switched landing sites, or it was switched for them."
Lindsay thought of the ease with which the wess'har had
remotely immobilized Thetis in orbit when
the ship first came to the Cavanagh's Star system. Diverting a vessel
would have been simple for them.
"And what do you think is
on Christopher Island, then?"
Rayat shrugged. "Biotech research facility. Nice and
remote, away from the wess'har homeworld in case things go wrong."
"You're making an assumption that they think like we
do. Given their rather negative attitude to our attempt at research
activities on the planet, I'd say that's highly unlikely."
Rayat was so conciliatory that it alarmed her more than
his usual dismissive manner. He lowered his voice and counted points on
his fingers. "One, they can manipulate environments. Two, they can wipe
away every trace of millions of isenj and their cities. And three--I
don't have to remind you about Frank- land's astonishing recovery.
Trust me, they're quite capable."
Lindsay wasn't convinced. "Assuming you're right, what
are we going to do about it? Walk in? This is a level of incursion we
can't back up with firepower."
If Rayat was losing patience with her, he was showing
no sign of it. He must have needed her assistance badly. She knew damn
well he despised her as a weakling, a cocktail-party officer; but she
also knew that Okurt's orders were at odds with his. They were all
scrambling for a piece of the biotech action and anxious to stop the
other getting it.
"It's a jigsaw," Rayat said. "We know, more or less,
what it does. We have a good idea of where it is, apart from being in
the tissues of our two chums. So every extra piece of the picture
counts."
"And you want some help acquiring it."
"Eddie's a resourceful man."
Lindsay tried very hard to lock her expression. Maybe
Rayat knew she had already approached Eddie, but she couldn't imagine
how. No, he was just thinking the obvious thing. There was nothing like
a neutral journalist as a convenient vector for information.
"He won't spy," she said.
"He just has to do his job as normal. You know how
excited reporters get about digging. They're like a dog chasing a
car--they love the pursuit, not the capture."
"Actually, I think Eddie's a lot smarter than that."
"You're fond of him."
"He's a friend. And he's good at what he does."
"Are you prepared to co-opt him?"
Lindsay felt a small pang of guilt and then felt very,
very clever. Rayat didn't know she'd already
tried.
"He's got the best chance of all of us of being allowed
to land on Wess'ej," she said. "What are you putting into the pot,
apart from a vague location?"
"You know what I am. Let's just say I'm untrammeled by
rules of engagement."
"I think I know what you mean." No,
I'll be the one to shoot her, Lindsay
thought. "Let me think about it."
Rayat displayed no sign of triumph. He just nodded a
few times, looking at the screen. Then he picked up his carton of beans
and speared the contents with staccato stabs of his fork, seeming
genuinely hungry.
"This seems an enormous amount of effort to expend on
so little hard evidence," said Lindsay, just testing the water.
"You have no idea how much excitement this damn thing
has generated," said Rayat. "And sooner or later, it'll be in the
public domain. I--we need to get in and put it out of reach of commerce
and foreign governments as early as we can. One contamination, one
slip, and God only knows where it might end."
Lindsay met his eyes and tried to work out who was
actually behind them. She hadn't traded anything in the conversation:
he had revealed plenty.
If he was telling the truth, of course. And she didn't
have Shan Frankland's police gut-instinct for spotting the lies among
the facts. She'd have to take her chances. It meant using Eddie. It
might even mean harming Eddie. It also meant colluding with a man she
loathed and mistrusted.
"Deal," she said. "Let's do it."
MESSAGE TO:
EDDIE MICHALLAT,
CSV Actaeon
SENDER: Duty News Editor, West European
Hub
Eddie, this is
great stuff. Keep it coming. Nobody's seen this level of public
interest in the space program for decades, maybe centuries. And forget
that other matter--not considered in the public interest, if you
understand me. Someone upstairs got a security notice slapped on their
desk. I'll see what I can do
about your performance-related bonus. Let me get this straight: you
want it all to go to the World Forest Project?
Mestin got a message she hadn't been
expecting. Actaeon's senior male, the one
called Okurt, had sent a request for Eddie Michallat to be allowed to
visit Wess'ej. Mestin knew of Michallat. He wasn't a soldier and he
wasn't a scientist. She had no idea what use he was to the gethes.
The governing matriarchs gathered in the communal
kitchen just off the main library, chewing lurisj.
Nevyan sat with one of her newly inherited children, an isanket,
on her lap: both of them were watching
Shan carefully. Shan had a red glass cup in her hand and was staring
down into the contents. She looked very unhappy.
"What's a journalist?" asked Fersanye.
Shan still seemed to be contemplating plunging into the
cup. "They find out things and tell everyone about them," she said.
"Especially when you don't want them to."
Humans had a strange view of information. Mestin tried
to engage Shan's interest. "Like the ussissi."
"That's one way of putting it. Facts are known as news.
When new things happen, journalists tell the world about them. They
gather and disseminate information, sometimes accurately, sometimes
not."
The concept of not being able--or willing--to relay data
objectively was a difficult one for wess'har. Mestin wished Shan would
look up. "But should we allow Eddie Michallat to come here?"
"Eddie's good at his job," said Shan. "But he can cause
problems. Not always intentionally, but you don't care about motive, do
you? It was his asking questions about c'naatat
that made it public knowledge."
"That doesn't matter. Everyone here knows about it."
"Matters to me," said Shan, in English. "You're not the
FEU's most wanted."
"Yes or no?" said Nevyan.
Shan glanced up just for a moment as if she were
surprised by Nevyan's tone. "Yes, with conditions. You let me talk to
him. You don't have any conversations with him without me present,
because you can't lie properly. And we control where he goes in F'nar.
I reckon he might be useful. I have no doubt Okurt and company had the
same thought, hence my caution."
It seemed an odd catalogue of precautions. Michallat
was one unarmed gethes who needed a
ussissi pilot to land him here and another to transfer him to an isenj
vessel to get back to his ship. His capacity for threat seemed limited.
"We can kill him and have done with it if anything
seems amiss," said Fersanye.
Shan was still intent on the contents of the cup, from
which she was not drinking. There was something very wrong with her.
From time to time she wiped her palm across her forehead. She looked
red-faced and shiny. "You don't understand how gethes
use information," she said. "We--they conceal things, so they never
have
a complete picture of a situation. Information is currency. But you
don't understand currency either, do you? It has value. If you have it,
you have power and you can exchange it for things you want."
"You know how to use it," said Nevyan.
"I do indeed. There's not a lot of difference between
detectives and journalists. Just the warrant card, the pension, and the
right to use force."
"What's wrong with your beverage?" asked Mestin.
"It's water," said Shan.
"What else would you drink?"
"A nice cup of tea, proper builders'tea that you can
stand the spoon up in." It was an incomprehensible reply, but Mestin
thought the ambiguity was small price to pay for her general clarity of
thought. Shan sat up and made a never mind
gesture with her hand. "Eddie might be coming simply to make a program
about wess'har. He might also be coming to gather military
intelligence, willingly or not, because the military are as adept as
police are at using journalists for their own purposes."
"Does Michallat know that?"
"Of course he does. It's all part of the game. But we
can play that game too. It's called propaganda. What do you want to
achieve?"
"For all gethes to leave
this sector and to stay away," said Mestin.
"Then you do something called saber-rattling.
You let him see your armaments and you suggest there are plenty more
where they came from. The gethes already
know you don't lie and you don't bluff."
"But we would be lying and
bluffing," said Nevyan.
"I know. Good, isn't it? Leave it to me."
Nevyan lowered the isanket,
Giyadas, to the floor. The child walked briskly over to Shan to stand
gazing into her face. It was clear that Shan had no idea what to do
with the child and no interest in communicating with her.
Giyadas just wanted to take in every detail of the
alien: the isanket was responding to
Nevyan's intense reaction to her. Shan, defeated by the steady stare,
just looked increasingly wretched and began fidgeting. Then those
violet lights in her hands started up again, without warning, and
Giyadas stood riveted. It was a very impressive show. Even Fersanye was
fascinated.
"Oh shit," said Shan. "Not
again." She looked at her hands as if they were covered in filth and
then glanced down at Giyadas. "Show's over, kid," she said, and got up
and walked out.
"She can't be ill," said Mestin. It was extraordinary:
this female seemed to have no interest in children at all. "C'naatat
don't develop diseases. I'll talk to
her. Nevyan, respond to Actaeon and tell
them Michallat may land here."
Mestin found Shan sitting outside the house beside a
water conduit, one hand trailing in the cool water, staring into the
distance. Mestin took care to sit down in the exact pose beside her.
She had noticed Shan did the same when she was at ease with someone she
was talking to, just like a ussissi. She hoped it would soothe her.
"You look unpleasant," Mestin said. "You seem to be
very hot for no reason."
"That's what c'naatat does
when it's messing you around. I'm under construction."
"You don't look very different."
"It seems to target what troubles you most. Aras
obviously had a thing about his external appearance. Seems my problems
are all internal." She flexed her hands, sparking visibly violet lights
even in the strong sunshine. "I'm sorry if I was offensive."
"Will you be able to deal with Michallat when he
arrives?"
"Oh yeah. I can handle Eddie. And I've never fouled up
yet--not unintentionally, anyway."
"They'll be able to smell your anxiety across the
caldera. What's wrong?"
"Just developing my relationship with Aras."
"Ah, he's upset you. Now take my advice, a quick cuff--"
"No, I'll never raise my hand to him. He's had enough
for one lifetime. We just have some logistics problems to iron out."
"I don't understand a word you're saying."
"Good." Shan turned to face her, suddenly very earnest,
and there was a faint waft of dominance coming from her. The ussissi
said there was a gethes fruit that smelled
very similar, called mango. Mestin
wondered whether Shan realized she could walk into any of the
city-states scattered across Wess'ej and take over as dominant
matriarch on the strength of that dominance signal alone: but either
she didn't know, or she didn't care.
"I'm not at my best right now," said Shan. "I just have
a few things to iron out. And I really don't mean to come between you
and your daughter. I know it pisses you
off." Shan dropped the word straight into the middle of the wess'u
sentence. Mestin had tried to use some of her unique vocabulary
herself, but Shan had said it wasn't a good idea. "I'll talk to her
about it if you like."
"Nevyan admires you. Her view of the world is nearer
yours than mine. She feels the World Before was not entirely wrong, and
that Targassat abdicated responsibility through nonintervention."
"She likes to kick arse."
"She's very dedicated to ideas."
"I've been reading up on the World Before. There's not
a lot of information, is there?"
"Perhaps the ussissi have more. Ask Vijissi."
"Poor little sod seems terrified of me."
"Then ask his pack female. She won't be."
"If your cousins are what you say they are, you really
need to think about talking to them again."
"There will be a price, and that will be involvement in
their policies."
"It might be worth paying. You're not the only ones
with something to lose from human incursion."
Shan eased herself to her feet as if something was
hurting her, smiled unconvincingly and walked off down the terrace.
Mestin watched her go, noting that oddly rigid human gait of hers. For
a gethes, she was an impressive figure,
all control and purpose, with a complete confidence she had not lost
despite being surrounded by taller, stronger females.
Mestin had come to like her. She accepted her
responsibilities. It agitated her to see her own daughter fixing on her
for a role model, but there were far worse isan've
to emulate than Shan Frankland.
In the end, she might be all that stood between Wess'ej
and the gethes.
It hurt like hell.
But it was hurting less each time, and that gave Shan
hope that c'naatat was getting the idea
that she would keep doing the damage until it repaired her properly and
permanently.
She eased herself up on her elbow and tried to ignore
the sticky warmth of blood beneath her. There wasn't that much now, not
really. It was her brand new mattress she was concerned about.
"I hurt you again," said Aras. "I'm sorry."
"It's not going to kill me, is it?" She didn't want to
distress him. For a very big creature, he was doing a credible job of
trying to disappear into the dhren fabric
that served as a sheet. He looked as if he was expecting a slap across
the face. Then he turned his back to her, and she wondered for a moment
if he was crying, but wess'har didn't have tear ducts, not even an
altered wess'har like Aras.
She studied his back. The muscles were not quite as a
human's: what would have been the lats inserted much higher in the
spine. Down his backbone was a thick dark line with finer stripes
radiating from it on both sides, like the markings of an okapi in
negative. But it was still an impressive back.
"Come on, buck up," she said, and leaned on his
shoulder to make him face her again. His skin felt like sueded silk,
with a slight drag against her fingertips, and a little cooler than
hers. "It's no big deal."
Aras gave her a look of wounded disappointment, like a
parent who had caught a much-loved child stealing. "I know how painful
it is."
"I overreact sometimes."
"My nervous system connects to yours. I feel what you
feel. Don't lie to me."
"No point faking it, then, eh?"
"Sorry?"
"Stupid joke." She eased herself on to one side and
squeezed his hand in hers. "Remember what Ade Bennett used to say--it's
only pain."
Aras looked dubious. It was exactly the same expression
she had seen on Sergeant Bennett's earnest face, under vastly different
circumstances.
"This isn't right," he said.
"Hey, we're from different species. It's a miracle
we've got enough matching tackle between us to get this far. It's
improving, anyway--the bugs have had to reroute a lot of plumbing." She
had no intention of giving up on this now. It was a task: it would be
completed, no matter what. "Besides--if you can feel it, it means I've
got oursan cells now, doesn't it?"
"The more you try to be humorous, the more serious the
situation. Remember that c'naatat need no oursan. Our
health doesn't depend on it."
"You want to spend another five hundred years taking
cold showers?" Aras had been deprived of everything that made him
wess'har. Shan was determined to give something of it back to him. She
was the only female who ever could, and that meant she was obliged. "I
didn't think so. And I don't think I do either."
He kept his eyes fixed on hers as if he were daring her
to say forget it, this is too painful, too
difficult, let's just be friends. But that was all.
"I must tell you something," he said. "Things burden
me, things I have thought but never told you."
"Okay." Well, there was plenty she hadn't told him as
well, not yet. Bioweapons. "What?"
"I was prepared to kill you back on Bezer'ej when I
first told you about c'naatat. In case you
betrayed me."
Shan shrugged. "I'd have done the same in your
position."
"You're not upset?"
"Not at all. I suggested you do it, remember? Anything
else?"
Aras paused as if he hadn't expected that answer at all
and was scrambling for a new thread. "I'd like to be kissed," he said.
It wasn't what she was expecting to hear either.
"Kissed?" said Shan. There. A rebuke for her impersonal
technique. "Seriously?"
"Sometimes I'd see Josh and Deborah kiss when they
didn't realize I could see them. It seemed very intimate. Wess'har
don't kiss."
Shan reassured herself she'd heard right. As requests
for sexual favors went, it was shocking only because it was so
harmless. She'd shown a few men the door in her time. They got the
wrong idea about a tall, strong girl with handcuffs and a short fuse,
and she wasn't into that sort of thing.
She was suddenly so touched by his innocence and
desperation that she could feel tears threatening to embarrass her. He
really needed someone with a heart. But she'd do the job as best she
could. He seemed far more in need of simple intimacy than thrills.
"No problem," she said, humbled.
After a while she nodded off. She still slept during
darkness, although her wess'har genes were rapidly turning that into
naps. Wess'har didn't sleep continuously. Their not-sleeping kept her
awake anyway most nights; F'nar was a natural amphitheater, and the
enveloping sound of their randomly busy lives and the occasional
yawling tremolo of matriarchs declaring their territories made sure her
c'naatat got on with the job of reworking
her melatonin cycles.
She snapped awake. Completely
awake. These days she never woke with a stiff shoulder or a fuzzy head
or a brief failure to recollect if it was the weekend or not. She woke
cleanly and instantly, ready to function. It was still dark and Aras
was sitting with his chin resting on his hands, reading from the
display that occupied a door-sized chunk of one wall.
"Please look at this," he said, not turning to her.
Shan stood behind him and started reading. The
fish-bone diagram was a wess'u summary of concerns raised by ussissi in
F'nar and one of the other wess'har city-states, Pajatis. The nonlinear
structure of the script felt much more natural now, but she still had
to consciously translate each word from the vast wess'har vocabulary
she was assimilating. Key words didn't yet leap out and sock her in the
eye like a casual glance at an English document would.
But there were still a few phrases on the screen that
got her attention fast.
One was retrieved soldiers from
Thetis.
"Oh shit," she said. There were a lot of things the
complex wess'u lexicon didn't stretch to, and expletives were most of
them. "I hope that's not what I think it is."
The other phrase that added to the sinking sensation in
her gut was concern among the matriarchs of
Pajatis.
Shan was so occupied with F'nar that she hadn't yet
thought to ponder on how the rest of the Wess'ej world felt about the gethes
situation. She was English again, the
center of the empire, and foreigners were just a detail of the
landscape. Besides, she knew that F'nar was held responsible for
dealing with off-world policy.
But if every city-state was full of Mestins and
Chayyases, and they now wanted to have their say, things were becoming
a little too interesting.
Aras inhaled her anxiety scent pointedly. "Yes, I was
worried by that too."
"If they're recalling Royal Marines, it's not because
they're short of cooks," said Shan. She read on, tilting her head this
way and that. "Oh Christ. All the humans?
They've extracted the bloody payload as well?"
"It was foolish to leave the ussissi behind with the
isenj. Very foolish. They jump to suspicious thoughts quickly."
"They obviously know us well, then. So where's Thetis?"
"Still on course for Earth, apparently."
"I think I'm with the ussissi on this one. There's
something really odd about this." She read on, struggling with
technical terms. "What's chak velhanan geth'sir?"
"Human manifestation in moving light."
"Holograms?"
"Television news."
"Oh my God. Let's see that. Come on."
Shan had watched several days' worth of news from Actaeon's
intercepted ITX links home when she
arrived, but she had tired of it rapidly. She didn't care what was
happening on a planet she could never see again, and there were far
more pressing things to deal with in her new world. But that had been a
mistake. TV news was her only snout, the
only informant she had out here. She leaned across Aras and touched the
areas of screen that would summon the material that had added to the
ussissis' anxiety.
There was plenty of it.
It was mainly protests. Protests always looked the
same: they certainly did if you were the one behind the riot shield
trying to maintain order. People milled around the grand doorways of
embassies, consulates and government buildings, some in tropical
climates, some in snow, but they were chanting and stamping and raising
their fists about one unifying thing. Aliens.
And they weren't clamoring to be the first to shake their hands.
"There are many stories from Eddie here about the
isenj," said Aras. "I think he's upset people." He leaned back, and
Shan could have sworn his expression was one of vindication. "I told
you that your people were foolish to take the isenj back to Earth, but
I had no idea you would tear yourselves apart without their aid."
"Yeah, I don't think there was global consensus on the
invitation somehow." Shan could add up. She added two and two and came
up with the same total of ten that the ussissi probably had. The isenj
delegation wasn't going to be universally welcome: and so the humans
had pulled their own kind off the vessel carrying them.
"If we were stupid enough to blow Thetis
to Kingdom come, how do you think the ussissi would react?" she asked.
She thought of their Beatrix Potter dressed-up-animal charm and their
little girly voices and their savage, serious teeth.
"They would react very badly indeed," said Aras. "Every
single one of them."
The isenj are
what they are. I just filmed what was there. I wasn't being selective,
I wasn't editing for effect and I wasn't filtering in any way. But what
was shown was repellent. I was accused of racism and xenophobia because
I gathered news--not even news by any definition, just shots we call
GVs, general views--that made humans distrust and dislike the isenj.
What responsibility did I have? Should I have selected material that
showed them in a light that humans thought of as good? Should I even
have attempted to? In the end I just pointed the camera. Our culture
isn't ready to admit that we can legitimately dislike difference.
Rejecting cultural differences that we can't tolerate is the last taboo
among those of us who call ourselves liberals, one that we can't even
discuss. It's simple: we don't want to share space with the isenj.
Personally, I liked them and I still do. They're very human in many
ways. But they'll be the end of our way of life, and that's not
something I'm prepared to be shamed into giving up.
EDDIE MICHALLAT's Constantine diaries
Eddie had never been used to sleepless
nights. These days he was experiencing them more often, and it wasn't
the round-the-clock activity that passed his temporary cabin in Actaeon.
Today his head was buzzing with the
insistent fatigue of insomnia. I could forget about
Hereward.
News would get out sooner or later and absolve him of
responsibility for doing something. I'm not
scrabbling around for stories any more: I can sit on it. He
repacked his grip for the third time that morning and checked his hair
again. The kid in Environmental Controls hadn't made a bad job of
cutting it. Eddie refused to have it clipped as short as a marine's,
just as he wouldn't affect paramilitary garments like some wannabe war
correspondent. Ade Bennett had called it looking
warry. He was a reporter, for
Chrissakes. He had to be clear about that. But you know about
Hereward.
That was the trouble with knowledge and information. It
didn't heal and it didn't sort itself out, and even doing nothing with
it might have consequences. And you know it's a bad move.
He really did care what happened here. He couldn't root
for the home team because he wasn't sure who the home team was any
more, not this far out, and not this unwelcome. And he thought about a
couple of paragraphs in a history book on journalism in wartime; he
remembered a place called San Carlos Water, from a forgotten war
between what had been Britain and Argentina, and there and then he made
a choice that was personal rather than professional.
It was the problem with getting older in this game.
Your conscience grew like your prostate, an inconvenience that woke you
up at night but was seldom serious enough to kill you.
It had taken Eddie a week to get clearance for the trip
to F'nar. He suspected that he wouldn't have received it at all had
Shan not exerted her influence at one end and Lindsay at the other.
That alone told him he was being used. Okurt allowed the ussissi
shuttle to dock, only the faintest expression of resentment betraying
his reluctance.
"Journos are like children," Eddie told the commander
cheerfully. "We get away with murder because nobody thinks we're
dangerous."
"Oh, I think you're
dangerous," said Okurt, and personally dogged the hatch closed behind
him.
It was a day for staring and being amazed. Eddie set
the beecam to divert on any significant movement, and just to be on the
safe side he dusted off the manual cam and packed that too. The bee-cam
had been fine on Bezer'ej. Any movement in the wilderness that caught
its attention was worth filming, but in a city there were too many
distractions and he didn't want to spend all his time barking orders to
bring it to heel. He'd let it roam.
Being searched by the ussissi pilot on boarding reduced
him to helpless giggles, and the bee-cam captured it all. Eddie thought
it might make a light piece to end today's package. The pilot watched
the cam in that same predatory way that Serrimissani did, then gave him
a long stare and went forward to the cockpit.
Eddie slid his hand into his holdall to check that the
precious cargo was intact. His fingers slid over three real glass
bottles of wine, paper-wrapped amber jaggery sugar, a flask of live
yeast, six bars of lavender oil soap and a big bag of tea leaves, some
of the roving correspondent's universal currencies that could buy you
rescue in any country. Cigarettes rated the highest exchange rate, of
course, but spacecraft and illegal combustibles never mixed.
The booty wasn't to placate any locals, even if they
had any use for the commodities, but gifts for Shan. He'd missed her.
She wasn't the most lovable person he'd ever met but he did enjoy her
company, and--privately and perversely--he liked people who couldn't be
bought, threatened or flattered, especially by him.
The shuttle landed on an anonymous stretch of stony
soil devoid of anything Eddie could recognize as an airstrip. It looked
like the middle of nowhere, and he had seen plenty of nowheres with
more infrastructure than this. A wess'har male was waiting for him. The
creature was pacing round a vehicle that looked like a futon wearing a
valance. It didn't inspire confidence.
Eddie glanced at the departing ussissi, who was still
keeping an eye on the bee-cam. At least he didn't hang around for a tip.
He followed the driver's lead and sat on the futon. It
shaped itself up round him: the flapping valance became a rigid
hover-craft skirt. He felt better already. The vehicle skimmed
alarmingly over rocks and hummocks, and what looked like soft
sage-colored moss rolled underneath him in dry waves. There was no road
that he could see.
"We go overland because of pictures," the wess'har
driver said, like two voices were talking at once. "We build roads
underneath, so nothing to picture. Understand?"
"Fine," said Eddie. "Thanks." The bee-cam hovered
happily, immune to the swoops and climbs of the vehicle as it swept
along in an unnatural quiet. The wess'har's openness took him aback.
He'd known too many human minders over the years whose main goal had
been to stop him recording anything at all, an aim often reinforced by
a gun. "Can I film anything I want?"
"If your eyes can see it, you can make images."
"I love this place already."
They were skimming between larger clumps of vegetation
now, not trees but growths that looked like huge yellow bromeliads,
gold and fleshy and covered with crawling things that were striped in
red and white. The land rose gently ahead. The vehicle slowed to
walking pace and then it rested on the ridge.
"You look, gethes. Look
now."
"Wow. Oh wow. Sweet Jesus
H. Christ."
The city of F'nar nearly blinded Eddie.
It was beauty made solid. The color and the light and
the sheer impossibility of it took his words away and he almost fell
out of the passenger seat to stand and stare.
He'd have to redo the soundtrack later. He didn't want
to sound like a tourist.
"F'nar," said the driver. "Shan
Chail said you say fuck me when you
see it, you be so amazed."
"How long have you been speaking English?"
"Four days."
"Well, I say fuck me,
then." He checked that the bee-cam was equally riveted by the view and
got out the hand cam, just to be doubly sure of getting those first
shots. "The City of Pearl indeed."
The vehicle could take Eddie no further than the center
of F'nar. He stood at the bottom of the caldera and stared up at row
upon row of terraces dotted with vegetation, an inside-out ziggurat or
hanging garden: the pearl coating iced almost every surface. He was
fresh out of words. He followed his wess'har minder and started to
climb the terraces, trying to nod politely at any wess'har whose
disturbing patterned eyes he caught.
It was typical of Shan to be living as far from the
center as it was possible to get. Eddie, leg muscles screaming for a
rest, paused for breath outside an iridescent door set in a wall of
ash-lars whose irregular lines were almost obscured by the ubiquitous
pearl-pebbled coating. It eased open.
"Eddie," she said. "Just in time for tea."
Shan, filling the doorway, looked well. She looked
different somehow, and even more dauntingly athletic than he
remembered, but she still looked fundamentally human. Eddie held out
his arms to hug her. It was an instinctive gesture, but she didn't move.
"I'm not after any epithelial cells," he said,
remembering.
"I'm sure you're not." But she didn't concede even a
restrained embrace. He had no doubt he would be screened before
departing. If they didn't, he'd ask them to. He didn't want to be the
vector for any more catastrophic change in human society. Aras was
arranging bowls and food on a table, and gave him a respectful nod. He
didn't look happy to see him, but then it was hard to tell with the
wess'har. He was a grim, quiet, frighteningly large creature.
Eddie smiled anyway, and opened his holdall and pulled
out the efte fiber bag of rare gifts.
"Look, Shazza--wine, soap, and enough yeast and sugar to get some brew
going," he said proudly. "And tea."
She didn't smile and he wasn't sure if he'd gone too
far by letting one of his many nicknames for her slip out. At least he
hadn't called her Genghis to her face.
Then she grinned, almost girlish. "Thanks. I can't get drunk, but
you'll never know how welcome that tea is."
"Ha, you're not pregnant, are you?"
"Not even slightly funny, Eddie." Whoops. He switched fast. "Nice sofa.
Isn't white going to get grubby, though?"
She did laugh then, and Eddie was relieved if puzzled.
Aras gave him a sympathetic look. "She'll explain later," he said.
Eddie followed Shan out onto a terrace that wrapped
round the cliffside. He forced himself to look away from the dazzling
cityscape: how quickly could he get to the main point of his visit?
There were ways of imparting sensitive information and Shan could grasp
the oblique as well as anyone. He just wanted to get it over with.
"This is just the most amazing view I've ever seen in
my entire life."
"Beautiful, isn't it?" She still seemed wary. "It's
insect shit."
"Sorry?"
"The nacreous coating. It's a deposit left by little
buzzy things. Not real insects, of course, but it's what fills the
niche here."
"Shit doesn't look that good on Earth."
"Yeah, I thought that too."
"So you're okay, then."
"Yeah. Great."
"Good." They sat down on the ledge that ran round the
terrace and Eddie leaned back against the wall, not caring whether it
was feces or the finest creation of Ottoman tile-makers. It stunned him
with excitement.
Shan had her arms folded loosely across her chest,
sleeves rolled back. Light flickered. He glanced over his shoulder to
see what was making the reflection dancing on her hands, and then he
realized there was nothing, not even that fabulous city below, that was
causing it. The light was in her hands,
under the skin.
"Oh Christ," he said, and stared.
"It's really handy when you can't find your keys." She
looked resigned. "And every copper needs their own blue flashing light,
eh?"
"What is it, for God's sake?"
"Bioluminescence."
"Does it go with the recovery from fatal head wounds?"
"All part of the package. But let's not talk about it
right now."
He struggled for calm. He had more pressing matters,
that was true. "Can we get the interview over with first? Then we can
socialize."
"Ask away. Don't be offended if I tell you to sod off."
She said it with a smile. "Nothing personal. You're all right, son."
He grabbed the bee-cam out of the air beside him and
stuffed it in his pocket to make his point. I'm
not recording this. Trust me. Her gaze followed his hand. He
really didn't want to say out loud that he was doing this as a favor.
That would have been amateurish.
"Just one question, Shan. Any comment on the fact that
the FEU has diverted the Hereward to
Cavanagh's Star? I might eventually ask the same question of the isenj,
because they're unaware too." He couldn't believe he was sacrificing a
story for a second time. He was going soft. But he had made his
decision. "I also hear there may be a few more to follow."
Shan closed her eyes. It was a few seconds before she
spoke. He sneaked another look at her hands. The lights had stopped.
"If you're pissing me about, Eddie, you know what I'll
do, don't you?"
"I've nothing to gain from this."
"You're sure?"
"Unimpeachable source."
"Okurt, maybe?"
"No. Someone much lower down the food chain."
"And why are you telling me?"
"Because I think it's a provocative act and I think
it's wrong."
"Shit," she said, and closed her eyes again. He knew it
was a hot story, but he hadn't expected her to react quite so strongly.
"Fucking idiots. And you want what, exactly?"
"Not to make matters worse than they are."
Shan got up and made as if to pat him on the shoulder,
but stopped short. He had expected bright anger: instead she looked
suddenly exhausted. "There goes my retirement again," she said. "You
haven't broadcast this yet, have you? We would have heard."
"I'm not sure if I ever will."
"When will you tell the isenj?"
"I have no idea. I hadn't thought that far ahead."
"So what do you want in
exchange?"
"I'm not trading favors, Shan. I really thought you all
had a right to know."
"And I don't know how else to say thanks."
Eddie smiled weakly. It was hard being instrumental in
history. But he had blown the secret now. He had to live with the
consequences.
"It was the Falklands," he said.
"Eh?"
"Nothing. Nothing at all."
Shan gave him exactly fifteen more seconds and then
said, "Excuse me for a while." She disappeared into the house and a few
moments later Aras came out with a tray of bowls and cups and sat down
pointedly next to Eddie. It was compulsory hospitality: he wasn't going
anywhere for the time being.
Aras held out a cup to Eddie with an unfathomable
expression. He held it in both hands, and Eddie could see that he had
claws. The sun was full in his face: the irises of his otherwise
charcoal-black eyes revealed not those weird four-lobed wess'har
pupils, but single and almost reassuring oval ones. Eddie had never
looked at him that closely before. And he'd never been alone with him,
never with the alien between him and the only exit.
"Please, make yourself at home," said the Destroyer of
Mjat, and handed him a cup of tea.
TO : Chancellor's PPS, Central
Treasury, Federal European
Union
FROM: Undersecretary, Federal
Intelligence
RESTRICTED
Dr. Rayat's priority must be to deny this
biological agent both to the commercial concerns on board and to
defense personnel. There has been some disagreement over your modeling
methods, but all our forecasts confirm that the economic impact of a
declining death rate would be felt within two years, initially through
pressure on pensions. That presupposes that there is not serious
economic fallout in the stock and currency markets were the agent to
become commercially available. While we realize the Defense Ministry is
not a commercial concern, there is still an unacceptably high risk that
the agent would spread into the wider population. Rayat has
authorization to take whatever steps he feels are appropriate to
prevent this agent from contaminating the human population.
In the Exchange of Surplus Things, sitting
on crates of fruit or standing silently against walls, the matriarchs
of forty city-states waited for Mestin and Shan to find a place among
them and make their case.
Shan stood a little to the front of Mestin with her
hands clasped behind her back, head slightly bowed, spectacularly alien
in that matte black uniform. Blue and violet lights reflected on the
back of her garment from her hands: everyone had heard about her
strange c'naatat adaptations.
Matriarchs and ussissi stared at her. Her smooth black
hair was exotically unusual in a sea of gold and amber, and Mestin
heard a distant comment that it was hard to tell the creature's gender
by sight. She wore her hair long like a male and she was a head shorter
than a female. If you were within scent range
of her, you'd know, thought Mestin. She hoped nobody would
provoke Shan to anger and unleash that dominance pheromone of hers
again: it would cause chaos, and that was one thing they could not
afford right now.
Mestin draped her dhren
carefully so that it flowed round her arms and formed a long-sleeved
tunic. It was curious how Shan admired what she called the opalescence
of the fabric and yet shied away
from wearing it: she said she didn't have the build to carry it off,
whatever that meant. Mestin wondered if she herself had the defensive
spirit, the jask, to carry off a decision
to take F'nar--and with it Wess'ej--into a state of war with a new
enemy.
She looked around. There were nearly a thousand small
cities scattered across the planet, and if their matriarchs were not
present, they would be watching and hearing through the communications
network anyway.
Vijissi had settled near Shan, sitting back on his
haunches. She shifted a little, as if to keep at constant distance: he
shuffled a little closer each time. He was taking his instruction to
look after her very seriously. Mestin suspected he liked her more than
he would admit.
"We will bar Bezer'ej to the gethes
for all time," Mestin said. "Shan Chail has
provided sufficient tissue for us to create a biological deterrent that
will confine itself to gethes. We will
seek a similar deterrent for the isenj, because we may now have a
source, and then we can remove the Temporary City to leave the bezeri
in peace."
In her peripheral vision, Mestin noted that Shan's head
had jerked up a fraction and then fallen again. She was surprised by
something. Mestin would ask her later.
"What will you do with the gethes
already on Bezer'ej?" asked Bur of Pajatis.
"We'll offer them a chance to resettle here in a
controlled environment," said Shan. "They're harmless."
"And if they refuse?"
Mestin saw that Shan had her fingers meshed tightly
behind her back. But there was no scent at all, just the sporadic
violet lights. "Then they'll die," she said calmly.
"We offer troops if landings and military action
becomes necessary," said Bur. "We all will."
Then they simply began leaving the hall. Shan seemed
baffled and turned to Mestin. "Is that it?"
"Did you expect more?"
"I thought a war summit might take more than a few
minutes."
"There is consensus," Mestin said. "Beyond detail,
there normally is."
"We never get past the detail," said Shan.
They were alone with the surplus produce in the hall,
except for a male who was stacking pallets of yellow-leaf. It was a
record harvest this year.
"What did I say that surprised you?" Mestin said.
"That you had a source of isenj DNA." She simply didn't
smell of anything other than that alien musk, and that was softened by
her newly acquired wess'har scent. Her voice seemed tight somehow. Some
of the overtones were inaudible.
"I thought you might ask Eddie Michallat, seeing as he
has easy access to Umeh."
"Ah." That gethes breath
of sound that implied anything from amusement to disgust. "Okay."
"Is there a problem?"
"I can't see Eddie agreeing to collect tissue samples,
or even how he's going to do it, but I'll ask anyway."
"Have you told Aras about this?"
"Not yet. But if he's on the network, he'll know now,
though, and I'm going to have a very difficult conversation with him."
"How are relations between you? He seems content."
"Pretty good," said Shan. "At least they were. I'll
know when I get home."
"Why did you not mention it to him?"
"Because I knew he would be concerned about his friends
in Constantine, and that he didn't approve of bioweapons, and that he
would probably have influenced my decision."
"You don't seem a person who is easily persuaded."
"You don't know how much I want him to be happy," said
Shan, and gave Mestin one of those odd, tight-lipped smiles that
weren't smiles at all. They were quite the opposite.
She was still flashing sporadic violet light as she
walked out of the hall. Mestin could have sworn she saw a faint burst
of yellow-green as well.
But she didn't smell of anything at all.
Aras had taken Eddie to the underground bunkers
as Shan had told him to, and had also made a great effort to say
nothing that might indicate there was not an infinite supply of
armaments. Eddie was very satisfied with the pictures he got. The scale
and perspective of the tunnels delighted him. He seemed to enjoy making
images attractive.
Eddie's bee-cam flitted everywhere, recording the craft
and machinery. Shan had said there was nothing on them that could
provide the gethes' military analysts with
the slightest information they could use to defeat them. Aras was not
used to wars where enemies didn't know what the opposing force
intended, possessed, or thought. He kept his counsel.
"Bloody hell," said Eddie. "Has every city got
something like this?"
"Yes," said Aras. It was true. He didn't have to
volunteer the fact that they feared it would still not be enough.
"Can you fly these things?"
"That one," said Aras. He put his hand on the airframe
of the fighter and the canopy parted.
Eddie made a sharp sucking sound and pressed his
fingers against his ears.
"I flew one on Bezer'ej, and I crashed in one, which is
how I came to fall into the hands of the isenj."
"I know what they did to you, Aras. I'm sorry. I don't
know what to say."
"There's nothing to say."
"They don't seem a sadistic people, but who's to tell?"
"It was five hundred years ago. What were your kind
doing to each other then?"
Eddie looked as if he were calculating, eyes focused on
an imaginary point above him. "The 1800s." He shrugged. "To be honest,
we're still torturing each other now, so it's not a valid question. Do
you feel a little more forgiving of them, then?"
Aras had no inclination to forgive. It seemed
irrelevant to his wess'har side and undeserved to his human one. He
wondered how he could deal with the painful realization that Shan had
not told him she had cooperated on bioweapons. "I don't forgive. The
isenj might have changed. But I can only judge by their actions, and at
the moment, they still breed to destruction, and they will still do the
same on Bezer'ej. So I will still kill them to stop them doing so. Was
that your question?"
"You don't regret Mjat."
"It was unpleasant, but I would do it again under the
same circumstances, just as you would attack those who caused death and
suffering to your own allies."
"I'm not judging you, Aras. Just asking."
"Humans always judge." Aras had cut Eddie some slack,
as Shan put it, by not calling him gethes.
He rather liked Eddie, even though he had that flat, bitter odor common
to flesh-eating creatures. Perhaps he had started to get in the habit
of granting forgiveness where none was deserved.
"What about revenge?" Eddie asked.
"That's not the same as balance."
"A matter of degree?"
"Probably. I think you call it reasonable force."
"There are many humans who would find your force
against the isenj unreasonable."
"Then they should talk to the bezeri. They numbered bil
lions before the isenj came. Their population has only recovered to a
few hundred thousand or so now. They breed slowly. They spawn in only a
few places around the island chain and they won't change that, even
though it makes them vulnerable." It was another reason why Parekh had
deserved to die: the dead infant was a rare and precious being. He
didn't have to justify that to Eddie Michallat. "But don't feel obliged
to suppress the story. Your people should be told what we did to the
isenj. They need all the facts."
Eddie gave him a careful look, and Aras wondered if he
thought he might be indulging in what Shan called propaganda.
The best translation she could come up with was fact-weapon, or, more
probably, lie-weapon. But this was completely true. It was merely the
timing that made it effective.
"If the bezeri are that intelligent, why don't they
just spawn somewhere else away from landmasses?" Eddie asked.
"They value place," said Aras. "I could have shown you
a map made long before I came here, a map of sand compressed between
two sheets of azin shell. Why do maps
matter to them? Because they can only exist in certain parts of the
ocean, in certain mineral concentrations. If you can't manipulate your
environment, then you must work with it. There are other places they
could go, just a few, but these are their spawning grounds and this is
where they choose to congregate."
"I just wondered if they could move. It's not very
smart, choosing a situation that makes you vulnerable."
"And that would justify their fate?"
"No, but if you can just change your behavior and avoid
a lot of grief--"
"I seem to recall humans do stupid things that make
them vulnerable every day. They consume things they know will hasten
their deaths and they live in places they know are likely to be
stricken by disaster. Perhaps that justifies their fate too."
"Now that you put it in those terms, I see my error."
"Don't mock me, Eddie."
"I didn't mean to. It's just very harsh."
"Do you blame Ailuropoda
melanoleuca for being wholly reliant on bamboo?"
"What?"
"The black and white bear you find so appealing. The
panda."
"Not at all. Bloody tragic. We destroyed their habitat.
It's not as if they had any choice."
"Actually, they are capable of eating small animals,
and do. Nobody blames them for having evolved into a very restricted
niche. Perhaps that's because they're pretty and their image makes fine
toys, whereas the bezeri remind you of an item on the menu."
"Hey, I didn't make the rules."
"And why do humans
encourage their children to love other creatures in an iconic form, and
then to abuse them in the flesh?"
"You've lost me, mate."
"Animal toys. I remain confused by that habit."
"You ask too many hard questions," said Eddie. "And
coming from a journalist, that's high praise."
They walked back up to the surface and wandered through
the fields. Eddie tripped over a genadin
and it fled while he tried to track it with his camera. It was a
pleasant evening. Tem flies danced over a
sun-baked rock, laying another coating of pearl.
"Can I ask you something personal, Aras?"
"And Mjat wasn't?"
"I mean about you and Shan. Are you two an item now?"
"What does that mean?"
"Are you dating?" he smiled. Aras realized he was
teasing kindly, innocently. "Playing house?"
"If you are asking if I'm fucking
her, yes. That's the right word, isn't it? She's my isan and
I'm bonded to her. And I'm happy to be
so."
"Shitty death," said Eddie, face fallen, all shock. "You and her?"
"Simple congratulations would suffice. That, or a set
of attractive wineglasses, according to Shan."
Eddie looked uncertain whether to laugh or not. Aras
enjoyed playing that verbal game with humans. They never knew if he was
being naively literal or making a joke at their expense. Sometimes he
wasn't sure himself.
"What's this thing you're both carrying, then?"
"A parasite."
"What?"
"Perhaps it's best described as a symbiont."
"Not biotech?"
"We didn't create it, if that's what you mean." He
thought of Shan, and what she had done, and judged that a bit of saber-
rattling was in order whether he liked it
or not. He didn't enjoy these mind-games; Shan was a master at it. He
did his best, without lying. "We can create biological weapons, but
this was not one of them."
"I do fully understand what the risks are if it gets
into the human population."
"I think understanding that and not being tempted by it
are entirely different states of mind."
"How is Shan coping with it?"
"She was angry. Now she has come to terms with it. It's
much easier to accept when there are two of you."
"They're hell-bent on getting hold of it, Aras."
"They can't. It exists in me, and it exists in Shan,
and Actaeon has access to neither of us.
It's an organism native to an isolated part of Bezer'ej--and you have
no
access there either."
"I hope not," said Eddie. "You know they even wanted to
exhume Lin's kid to check him out for it?"
Aras hissed to himself, and then wondered how Actaeon's
people imagined they could take on the
wess'har defenses and reach the plain outside Constantine where he had
set the stained glass headstone to mark David Neville's tiny grave.
The isenj had landed, and he had cut them down. The
last landing had nearly cost his isan her
life.
He had no intention of letting invaders touch the soil
of Bezer'ej again. He decided Shan might have felt the same way.
She should still have told him.
Actaeon's armory
was aft of the habitat section and Lindsay needed Okurt's security
approval to enter it on her own.
He handed the manual key-stick over to her with a
sullen expression. "Here," he said. "I've even cleared the weapons
technicians out. Rayat's boss's boss has spoken to my boss's boss so
I'm playing nice. But let me tell you I think it stinks."
Lindsay wasn't cut out for this keeny-meeny
stuff, as Becken called it. She was a team player. She liked
cooperating with fellow officers and delegating to subordinates and
having meetings. She wasn't Shan.
She clenched the key in her hand, and suddenly realized
she hadn't thought of David once that day.
"I'll take responsibility for this," she said. "Wess'har seem only
to want to punish those directly involved in
anything. Executing Parekh saved the Thetis
mission."
Okurt exploded briefly. "Oh Christ, don't go all
frigging Titus Oates on me, Lin." He shook his head. "I'm driving this
bloody tub. I don't think that gets me off the hook with the wess'har."
"We have to be ready to do this."
"If you're thinking of using serious ordnance on
anyone's planet, we're going to have to get out of here bloody fast
afterwards. What about Umeh Station, for Chrissakes?"
Lindsay felt a pang of guilt. Okurt had no idea what he
didn't know. Her strategy ended at destruction. His had to take account
of the safety of civvy and service personnel, a half-finished base and
a ship.
"It's a priority."
"Yeah, that's been made clear to me. Just make sure we
get this tech."
"We will. Rayat obviously knows what he's doing."
"Lin, love, you're a good managerial officer but
sometimes you really haven't got a clue." Okurt turned to go, but then
he stopped. "What happens if they crack our coded ITX? We can't
encrypt."
"Maybe they already have."
He strode off. Lindsay stood in the armory lobby
staring out at the space where Okurt had been. When you were stuck
halfway up a cliff, all you could hope for was to scramble higher.
Wess'har, isenj and ussissi didn't encode, encrypt or play spook games:
if they were monitoring all the ITX channels, they would be hearing
some nonsensical conversations. She hoped their cultural ignorance of
cryptography would buy some confidentiality.
The weapons compartment looked remarkably dull
considering that it was Armageddon's supermarket. She waited for
Bennett and Rayat to join her.
"Come on, then," said Rayat behind her. He was very
good at appearing on cue. Voices carried in passages. "Let's see the
kit."
"What are we doing?"
"Assessing our options. For when we have a target."
"To do what?"
"Asset denial." Rayat was consulting his handheld. Then
Bennett stepped over the hatch coaming into the lobby. "Let's have your
excellent sergeant's view of what we can transport."
Some of the bombs looked like cartoon bombs, with
pointed noses and red stripes. And some didn't. Some of the racked
ordnance here looked like IT equipment, anonymous and box-shaped. Rayat
was messaging rapidly from that handheld and then reading, his lips
almost moving. Then he looked up, evidently relieved.
"I want to know if we can get at least six ERDs down to
the surface in the Once-Onlies," he said.
Bennett looked at Lindsay for a nod. He got it. Lindsay
was trying to recall what ERDs were.
"Yes," said Bennett.
"Expand on that."
"Yes, we can do it. They're about twenty or thirty
kilos each. If you're asking should we, I'd say no."
"I'm not asking."
Lindsay finally remembered what ERDs were. She knew
them as neutron bombs, not enhanced radiation devices. "Oh no, not that,"
she said. "No."
Rayat walked over to racks with handles that pulled
down and out, like mortuary drawers made of steel bars. He pressed the
handle and they powered open with a pneumatic ee-uurrrr
sound.
There were just little things inside, smaller than
Lindsay remembered from her weapons engineering ad-qual course. They
were about the size of an old-style A-Triple-F fire extinguisher, no
more than a meter long, blunt-nosed. They looked exactly the same as
the BNO "Beano" bombs, anti-biohaz neutralization ordnance, except for
the turquoise-colored bands on the screw-plate. And they were
the same, except for the BNO's
cobalt-salting component. Beanos had been banned for Earth-side use,
but they were stand-by worst-scenario kit in sealed environments.
It was all deceptively banal. They were stock items and
they were ultra-shielded, safe to handle and easy to use. It was just
being on the receiving end of one that made them nasty.
"You can't use neutron weapons on Bezer'ej," she said. "Or Beanos."
"Why?" asked Rayat. "If we need to destroy organic
material, this is the best way to do it."
Lindsay thought of Shan. She thought of her own agenda
of assassination, not retrieval. She had no idea if Shan would succumb
to radiation alone. "It's a landlord bomb. Kill the tenants and the
woodworm, leave the building standing."
"Ah, that's if you need to
leave the building standing. We don't. Not necessarily. This is still a
damn big bomb with a kiloton yield."
"We can't deploy tacticals and expect the wess'har not
to go apeshit."
"And they're not going to
go apeshit if we trash the place with conventional ordnance like FAEs?"
Rayat looked at Bennett as if to tell him to clear off. It wasn't the
sort of thing that worked well with Royal Marines. Bennett just stood
there, boots planted in the deck.
"You want me to thin out, ma'am?" asked Bennett,
looking at Rayat, lips pressed tight.
"Yes, go and have a cuppa," she said. It wasn't fair to
burden Bennett with the detail. It put him in the position of having to
judge if her orders were reasonable. She was pretty sure they wouldn't
be.
She dogged the hatch closed after him.
"What's your problem with this?" said Rayat. "What's
the point of getting hold of some of the biotech if you leave the rest
where it is?"
"I find nukes a bit extreme. Maybe it's a girl thing."
"Why so squeamish?"
"Well, putting aside the reaction of the Wess'ej armed
forces, it's an act of war, whether there's a lab facility on
Christopher or not."
"So is landing in someone else's sovereign territory
with armed troops."
"And the environmental damage will really
provoke the matriarchs."
"And you think massively destructive conventional
ordnance is more ecofriendly, do you? Ask the German Federation or
Vietnam. Or the Afghani Collective." Rayat slapped his palm flat on the
dull lovat casing, and Lindsay flinched irrationally. "This is the
whole point of ERDs. Localized tactical kill. You wait forty-eight
hours and then you can walk in."
"You can't walk in after a BNO's sprayed cobalt all
over the place. Not for a few years, if I recall my course notes."
"All we need is a big scouring blast and a big burn and
whatever survives that will be cleaned up by the neutron emission. We
don't really need Beanos."
"You know a lot about this."
"If you'd worked on biotech projects, you'd want to
know the fire drill too. But a straight ERD will do the job just fine."
He must have caught the distaste on her face. "I can do all this. You
leave the ordnance to me. We can leave your Royal Marines out of the
messy ethics too."
Rayat was right. It was all chilly logic, and Lindsay
was kidding herself if she thought that simply removing Shan Frankland
was the end of the matter, or that her arrest would not provoke some
reaction from the matriarchs. They wouldn't care how it was done. The
legal niceties of ethical and unethical weapons were a hypocritical
human preoccupation.
If there was a separate source of this contagion, then
it had to be destroyed too.
"You sure you know what…um…Spook HQ is planning to do
with your sample of Shan Frankland?" said Lindsay.
Rayat nodded. "Sticking it somewhere safe, in case we
ever need it really badly."
"That makes sense," said Lindsay. The hell it did: the
intelligence services employed no more paragons of virtue than any
other large organization.
Rayat could sterilize Bezer'ej, if he was right about
the location. But she would eradicate Shan Frankland.
"Okurt's furious," said Lindsay.
"What's your phrase? Face aft and salute. He'll carry
out his orders."
"I would have preferred a way of keeping him and Actaeon out
of this."
"Do you really think the wess'har will give a toss
about which monkey did what?"
"Yes," said Lindsay, and she thought of the moment when
she dutifully cleared up a surprisingly small pool of blood and
body-bagged Surendra Parekh, executed by--no, not by Shan, by Aras.
Two hollow-tip enhanced 9mm rounds to the
head, and that was the end of it. Dissecting a live alien child should
have got them all killed. It hadn't. Morality was different out here.
"They care about personal responsibility."
She followed Rayat out of the armory and locked the
hatch again. They went their separate ways.
Neither of them had discussed the obvious fact: even if
the wess'har didn't hold Actaeon to
account, they would certainly come after Dr. Mohan Rayat and Commander
Lindsay Neville. And they would be angrier than anyone had seen
them--at
least since the erasure of Mjat.
They were his friends.
In Constantine, Aras had seen them born, and he had
seen them grow, and he had seen them marry. They had raised families.
He had eaten at their tables. And he had also watched them die.
He knew he would watch them die again, and he wondered
if it would really matter how that came about, naturally or hastened by
conflict.
Eddie was asleep on the sofa that Shan had sacrificed
as a temporary bed for him. He still couldn't get used to the idea that
Aras and Shan saw the cover as brilliant blue when all he could see was
white. Aras stretched out on a sek
mattress on the terrace, hands meshed behind his head, staring up at
the stars and waiting for Shan to return. It had been an unpleasantly
challenging day even by comparison with recent events.
The sound of familiar heavy boots carried on the still
air and then became slower and softer as Shan walked carefully past
Eddie and through the house to the terrace.
"I bet you're bloody angry with me," Shan said. She
stood over Aras, hands on hips. "Go ahead. Bawl me out."
He couldn't pick up any scent from her: that was odd,
and it threw him for a few seconds. "I can't be angry with you,"
he said. "But I'm angry that you didn't
tell me what you were thinking of doing, and only because we have
shared so much that I expected you to tell me your plans."
Shan knelt down and kissed his forehead, more like a
benevolent parent than a lover. "If I'd told you, and you tried to talk
me out of it, I'd have had a very hard time."
"But you would still have done it."
"Sorry, but yes."
"Opposition has never concerned you before."
"Yeah, but you're different." Her lips moved as if she
was about to say something, but she paused. It was one of those few
times when she looked completely vulnerable. Then she braced her
shoulders visibly, composed her expression, and again became someone
else entirely. "I'm sorry I didn't tell you what I was doing. Fancy a
quickie, then?"
"It might wake Eddie."
"Eddie's been here three nights and I'm getting a bit
restless."
"Then we will keep the noise down."
Human ecstasy was a more intense and overwhelming
sensation than the wess'har state of our,
but it was fleeting. It was still a fine experience. Shan fell asleep
briefly, head on his shoulder, and he thought about Constantine.
The news would devastate the colonists.
Shan woke with a start. "Bugger. What time is it?"
"You've only been sleeping for a matter of minutes."
She sat up and raked her fingers through her hair
before tying it back into a tail. "I'm going to head back to
Constantine next week and get them used to the idea that they're
leaving."
"I'll do it."
"No, it's my call. You can come too, but I do the
business."
"Why?"
"Because they'll hate the person who does it, and that
won't even shift the needle for me. But they're your friends. Besides,
it was my idea."
Aras let out a long sigh that he had learned more than
a century before from Ben Garrod. "They have worked so very hard."
"You can't think that way, sweetheart. This is a long
game."
"You seem to be accepting c'naatat
very well lately."
"Best thing that ever happened to me."
"A change of view."
"It just dawned on me that you were right. The more
injury I'm exposed to, the stronger I get." She looked at her hands and
flexed them, sending not only blue and violet light sparkling through
her fingers, but also reds and greens and golds. "And I can control this
now." She gave him a big grin, and that
wasn't very Shan. "Can you detect any scent from me?"
"Only your female enthusiasm."
"I've got my scent reactions under control too. Makes
life a lot easier. I don't accidentally depose matriarchs now. Hey, I
might even be able to play poker with Mestin. Can you imagine how much
better I would be as a copper these days? Doesn't bear thinking about."
She looked as if she wanted him to share her
satisfaction. He had hoped she would say that her delight at being host
to the parasite was connected to him, but it seemed it was all about
how much more efficient it would make her for her mission in life,
whatever that was. She never said what she felt about the inescapably
permanent partnership with him.
It was foolish. Wess'har only cared about what was
done, not what was intended: and she certainly treated him as if she
cared for him, even if her manner was brisk. It was just the nagging
little human part of him that wanted reassurance. He tried not to
listen to its insecure voice. He knew that the unique biochemical bonds
oursan generated were as strong for her as
they were for him. It was enough.
"If you were on your own, you might feel differently,"
he said.
"Sorry. I wasn't making light of what you've been
through. I just try to make the best of a bad job." She screwed her
eyes shut. "That's not a criticism. But isn't that what you're doing
too?"
"Making the best of a bad job?"
"Well, you don't have much choice either. I'm the only
female c'naatat around."
"Did you ever ask why
you're the only female c'naatat? It was a choice. I
made it."
Shan stared at him and was silent. Not having those
scent cues made it hard now to work out what was happening. He fell
back on human body language. That didn't help much either.
"I've hurt you and I really didn't mean to," she said.
Her voice was level, her expression neutral. "I'm still working out
what I am right now. That's not easy when you're used to being certain
about yourself."
"I have experienced this, remember."
"But you didn't enjoy it."
"There were a few compensations, but not many."
"I'm finding it quite invigorating."
"You're a solitary person. I had family and friends and
I lost them all. I'm sure it looks very different to you."
"Ouch," said Shan. But she didn't expand on that, and
there was still no scent from her at all. She got to her feet, pulled
on her clothes and went back into the house.
He regretted offending her. But there was no point
apologizing for saying what was true and obvious.
Eddie was scheduled to return to Actaeon
in the morning. It seemed appropriate to
have a final dinner with him: Shan had no idea when--or if--he would
ever
be back, despite the fact that he seemed remarkably able to talk
everyone into allowing him free access.
And she still had a task to set him. She hadn't thought
of a way to ask him to collect tissue samples from the isenj, or even
how he might do it, but she'd think of something when the time came.
There was always the risk that he would be offended and she would lose
his goodwill and with it his propaganda: but the stakes were high. A
working bio-deterrent against isenj would mean peace for the bezeri
without further lives being lost or resources being committed.
And Eddie wasn't the only one whose heart and mind she
feared she might risk losing.
Aras wasn't actually ignoring her, but he did seem
preoccupied. She knew she'd wounded him. It upset her, but it had been
necessary.
Sod it, he was wess'har. He had to be used to females
going their own way on things. A year ago he was a miracle of
creation's diversity, a rare kindred spirit: now he was a partner who
had opinions on how she should do her job and who--to be frank--got on
her proverbial tits at times. He was turning into a regular man.
"Are you listening, Shan?" said Eddie, drumming his
fingers on the table.
"Sorry. Miles away." She glanced at Aras, who was
topping up plates and cups, and caught his eye. There was no hint of
anger: he simply gave her a slight smile--the best approximation of a
human one that he ever managed--and added a few slices of bread to her
plate.
"I was saying that the isenj stand to gain from a human
presence on Umeh. They're really interested in terraforming."
"Well, they've fucked their own environment," Shan
said. "So why stop there?"
"For them, it isn't actually devastated," Eddie said. "Just
overcrowded. They have to spend a lot on maintaining it, but they
do manage to feed and breathe with a certain degree of ease."
"They destroyed everything they didn't need for their
own use," Aras said suddenly "It's a world that revolves around their
needs."
"Well, plenty of humans back home take that view too.
But we're only shipping back twenty isenj in Thetis.
How much of a problem can they cause? I'm still astonished by the
reaction. You'd think people would regard it as a miracle, really."
"They breed," said Aras.
"That's plague language."
"I heard that word used on the news too."
Shan didn't join in. She'd had enough of debate. They
both knew what she thought and she was still wondering at what point
she should ask Eddie to do a little job for her.
"Ual thinks humans have a fixation with vermin," said
Eddie.
"Define vermin," said Aras.
"An animal in an environment where it isn't wanted and
that can breed in large enough numbers to cause disruption to health,
agriculture, or commerce."
"Ah," said Aras, and paused for a heartbeat. "Like
humans, then."
Shan stifled a laugh. Aras had the timing of a stand-up
comedian. But it wasn't funny. It was true.
"I suppose that's one way of looking at it," said Eddie.
"Every species' way of looking at it, except yours."
"We're not all like that."
"Enough of you are." Aras leaned across the table and
Eddie flinched visibly, but all the wess'har did was clasp his hand
around the bottle of wine and tip it at an angle, like a sommelier
presenting a fine vintage for inspection by a connoisseur. "Wine could
well be an icon for your species. No wonder you base societies and
ritual upon it. It's the fruit of polluted excess. The yeast colony
gorges itself on saccharides until it dies poisoned by its own
excretion. It doesn't know how to stop and it consumes itself to death."
"We can learn to do differently," said Eddie.
"Show me the evidence. Show me in a million years where
humans have changed."
"Constantine. The colonists."
"Their instinctive greed is controlled by their fear.
They recognize they have these instincts, and they believe that by
suppressing them they will appease their god, but they still have them.
And their greed is for time. They want to live forever."
A strong citrus waft of agitation underlined his words.
Had he been human, Shan would have dismissed the argument as too much
alcohol over dinner, the sort of embarrassment that you slept off and
that none of the other guests mentioned again, at least not in front of
you. But he was sober, as he always would be, and she had never heard
him voice the slightest criticism of the colonists. It stood in stark
contrast to his fears for them the night before.
Eddie seemed to have noted that too. "Do I detect a
real anti-human movement here?"
Aras stiffened. "It's not about species. It's what you do.
Do you know what I despise most about you?"
His tone, as ever, was deceptively even, like a priest giving
absolution to a monster and trying hard not to let his personal
revulsion show. "Your unshakable belief that you're special,
that somehow all the callousness and
careless violence that your kind hand out to each other and to other
beings can be forgiven because you have this…this great human spirit.
I have viewed your dramas and your
literature, you see. I have lost count of the times that I have seen
the humans spared by the aliens because, despite humanity's flaws, the
alien admires their plucky spirit and
ability to strive. Well, I am that alien,
and I don't admire your spirit, and your
capacity to strive is no more than greed. And unlike your god, I don't
love you despite your sins."
Shan leaned over the table between them. "Come on, you
two. Break it up, for Chrissakes." She began gathering the plates. It
cut across the tension. "This isn't the time or the place for a row.
And I'm tired."
Aras took hold of the plates with a carefully blank
expression and tugged just enough for her to relinquish her hold on
them. Eddie couldn't have noticed, but the wess'har smelled of seething
anger. He wandered off and began rinsing the plates. Shan gestured to
Eddie to leave the table and sit down on the sofa.
"Sorry," said Eddie. "When did he turn into
Rochefoucauld?"
"Maybe I'm a bad influence," Shan said. "Me and my
sunny view of human nature, maybe."
"He's right, though, isn't he?"
He was. And something had changed that night, something
she had always known was fragile, but it was a cold moment nonetheless.
A chill spread from her lower gut and into her thighs, a sensation she
had felt before only when she was physically terrified. A sheet of
flame spreading down the transparent riot
shield she held in front of her as petrol and glass crashed and ignited
in her face. It couldn't touch her then, but it scared her. And
it couldn't touch her now, not even if it really did burn her.
There were humans, and there were aliens, and she was
standing on an ice floe and drifting away from humanity. The gap
opening up in front of her would now never close.
But there was work still to do. "I won't dress this up,
Eddie," Shan said. "Are you prepared to provide something for me?"
"Information? Okay. I'll do my best."
"Bit more concrete than that."
A pause. "I ought to say no. But try me."
"I'll do a trade. Here's some information in exchange
for material. I'll give you the wess'har war forecast for the next few
months and you pick up a sample for me if you can."
"Sample of what?"
"Isenj DNA. You being so chummy and all that."
"Now why does that worry me?"
"Because you know what a clever and nasty bunch of
bastards the wess'har are, and that they've got big sisters who are
even worse."
"Oh, I need more facts than that, Shazza."
"Okay. They're going to seed Bezer'ej with a persistent
artificial pathogen that's selective against humans. They used my DNA
to create it. It's a bloody great keep-out sign."
Eddie still had his half glass of wine in his hand, and
he was inspecting the contents with unnatural diligence. "And they want
an isenj sample to do the same."
"Spot on."
"And what if the matriarchs decide to use it as an
offensive weapon?"
"Well, Earth will be fucked anyway if we really piss
them off, but look at it this way--they could have creamed Umeh ten
times over, but the isenj didn't try to invade them, so they didn't
attack them on their home ground. If humans show the same good sense, I
don't think it's an issue."
"It's that word think that
I don't like."
"Eddie, given time, they'll find how to extract it from
my genome. I've got a dash or two of isenj in me. That's how I acquired
a genetic memory, via Aras." She flashed her illuminated hands. "And a
bit of bezeri too. So you might say we're family."
"How did you get c'naatat?"
"Aras gave me a transfusion of his blood when I was
shot. It saved my life. So--are you going to do it or not?"
"You give me your word it won't be used as a weapon?"
"You'd trust me, would you?"
"Are we going to get a word in between us that isn't a
bloody question?"
"Deal."
"You're an immensely persuasive woman."
"Seriously, Eddie. You've got a pretty good
appreciation of what's a threat to these people and what isn't. Will
you help?"
"I'll do what I can."
"Thanks. I mean it."
"Don't thank me. Like I said before, it's Falklands
time."
"I didn't understand that."
"Twentieth century war history. You might want to read
it sometime. I've seen accounts from British naval officers of how they
sat on board warships in the Falkland Islands combat zone listening to
the radio. There they were, in a place called San Carlos Water, just
waiting for more Argentine air attacks, and the news was broadcasting
information on what the British battle plans were. The government
briefed reporters about everything. And there were these sailors,
listening to this, knowing the plans were blown, and just waiting for
incoming. Now, I don't know who was more to blame for making that
information public, the politicians or the journalists, but that was
the day reporters couldn't pretend we were neutral observers any
longer." He scratched his cheek as if he were suddenly embarrassed by
his impassioned speech. "It's hard to prove it changed events, and
perhaps it didn't, but I always wondered what I
would have put first. There are only so many times that you can stand
back and say you were only doing your job."
Shan wondered if Eddie were acting. He seemed in his
own private world, thinking aloud and wrestling with personal demons.
The fact that he was inclined to wrestle at all endeared him to her.
But if this was all part of his professional sleight of hand, she would
kill him.
And she realized that she was being wess'har-literal
when she thought that.
The wess'har were at the start of a siege, one
potentially more serious than the last isenj war. So few of them, and
so many humans and isenj waiting to take their place: but if Eddie
needed that knowledge of their growing desperation to ensure his
compliance and sympathy, she wasn't going to give it to him just yet.
"What do I need to do?" he said.
"Any biological material. Fluids--"
"We're not that chummy."
"--or anything they shed."
Eddie mouthed a silent ah
as if he remembered something. "Why don't they ask the ussissi to do
this? They're in and out of isenj space like a fiddler's elbow."
"Wess'har would never ask them to compromise their
neutrality. They do their own dirty work."
"Explains why they need you so much."
"I wouldn't piss around with the ussissi either. I get
the feeling it's like breaking up a pub fight involving soldiers. Take
one on, and you've got to take them all on."
Eddie drained his glass. He studied the nonexistent
dregs for a moment and then glanced over his shoulder to check where
Aras was.
"They really are after your arse, you know," he said
quietly. "I know you're not someone who likes hiding, but I'd keep my
head down if I were you."
"I appreciate the concern."
"They've killed the story back home."
"What, me?"
"C'naatat. One minute I had
News Desk screaming for a story and I tell them to shove it, the next I
hear we don't talk about the subject. Commercial or government
pressure. Sad day for journalism, even if I didn't want the story to
run."
"Do you think they believe the threat's real, Eddie?"
"In what sense?"
"We're 150 trillion miles away. It must look like a
movie to them. All the pictures, none of the problems. If the wess'har
start on us--and I'm using the term us
loosely--you know they won't stop, don't you?"
"Mjat made a big impression on me, Shan. I do know."
"You make sure they do, too," she said.
Eddie paused and then smiled knowingly. "You know,
Shan, you're bloody good at this."
She smiled back. "You know, Eddie, I was being sincere
for once."
His smile faded and so did hers. They both dropped
their gaze. "I'll sleep out on the terrace tonight," he said. "Nice
warm night. And I'd love to stare up at those stars." He nodded in
Aras's direction. "Besides, I think you have some diplomatic relations
to restore with your old man."
"I reckon," said Shan.
She waited for him to close the external door behind
him. Then she allowed herself a grin.
Yes, she really was bloody
good at it.
If we believe a
thing to be bad, and if we have a right to prevent it, it is our duty
to try to prevent it and to damn the consequences.
Viscount Lord ALFRED
MILNER, 1854–1925
"This is one of the hardest things I've
ever had to do," said Shan.
No, it wasn't; it wasn't at all, not by a long chalk.
The only hard thing about it was standing before the altar of St.
Francis in the buried heart of Constantine colony. She could feel the
exquisite light from the stained glass window at her back burning right
through her. It wasn't the right place for a Pagan to be, not even a
lapsed one like her.
She looked from face to worried face in the
congregation, people she knew and who once trusted her.
"You have to leave Constantine," Shan said. "You have
to move everybody out."
There wasn't so much as a murmur. She wasn't prepared
for that. All her training and instinct was targeted towards meeting
resistance. Right then she wasn't sure exactly what she was meeting, so
she carried on. She could see Josh in her peripheral vision. She
couldn't see Aras.
"The political situation is extremely tense," she said. "Earth's
sent another vessel to this system without seeking permission
from either the wess'har or the isenj. You know the wess'har even
better than I do, probably. They're taking extreme action."
There was a sigh from somewhere near the front. And
still there were no questions.
"They're going to block landings permanently by the
only means they have. Basically, they're going to seed this planet with
organisms that will kill humans and isenj. And that means you too, I'm
afraid. The good news is that if you agree to leave, you can start
again on Wess'ej. There'll be a habitat for you." Their faces were
stricken. Maybe I didn't express that very well.
"So, any questions?"
"How long do we have?" asked a woman in the front pew.
It was Sabine Mesevy, the botanist from the Thetis
mission who had found religion and opted to stay. Shan hadn't spotted
her, and that was bad, because Shan was used to taking in every detail
of a crowd.
"Two months, tops," Shan said. "There'll be plenty of
help to get you packed up and shipped out. I'm sorry this had to
happen."
Mesevy wasn't giving up. "Won't our biobarrier protect
us?"
"They're shutting it down. They don't want to hand over
a potential foothold to either side."
"They could land with full biohaz protection."
"Maybe, but it's one thing to work in a sealed lab and
another to live in one. This planet would be no more use to them than
Earth's moon."
"Is it just the planet that humans might be interested
in?"
Shan hesitated. "I suspect not."
Nobody said anything further. Shan found herself
irritated and wanting to get on with the evacuation. The silence
continued and it had a sound of its own. She began counting a full
minute.
When she glanced at the floor, there was a brilliant
shaft of ruby and emerald light from the stained glass window slanting
between her boots as she stood with her legs slightly apart. The light
from Cavanagh's Star was somehow channeled down into the colony: every
day, the image of St. Francis, surrounded by the creatures of Earth and
Bezer'ej and Wess'ej, came to life at sunrise.
She wondered if they would try to dismantle the window
and take it with them to their new refuge. She hoped they would.
Sixty seconds. She looked up, and it was as if the
silent moment had become permanent.
"I'll leave you to talk, then," she said. "You'll have
more questions. I'll be at Josh's house when you're ready to ask them."
It was a long walk down that aisle. It felt as long as
the walk through the Thetis mission
compound to tell the payload that Surendra Parekh had been executed for
causing the death of a bezeri infant.
Parekh didn't mean to do it. And I didn't plan to give the
bastards a stronger incentive for coming here.
She was almost at the end of the aisle when a man she
vaguely recognized stepped out in front of her. Her reflexes said threat.
Her c'naatat
said no problem.
"We're not going," said the man. "We're not leaving.
This is our home. Don't you understand that?"
Shan was taller, harder, and armed. He didn't seem to
care. "That's too bad," she said. "You have no choice."
"How can you side with them? You're human."
She'd heard that challenge before. He was an inch too
close, and his fists were clenched. "What I do doesn't matter," she
said quietly. "They'll do it with me or without me. This is your one
chance to go."
"We can't leave all we've worked for. We were born
here. We don't know anywhere else."
He moved, probably not intending violence, but it was
enough for Shan to reach out and seize his forearm with a gloved grip
that might have hurt. It certainly rooted him to the spot.
"You'll do it," she said. "Your forefathers did it, and
so can you."
"You can't force us."
She let go of his arm. They were surrounded by crowded
silence. "Look, love, one way or another, you're not going to be here
in three months' time. You can start again, or you can end up like
Mjat."
Shan stared at him, unblinking, arms at her sides,
until he stepped back and sat down in the pew, shaking visibly. There
were kids sitting next to him. They looked transfixed by her.
She looked back to the rest of the colonists. "Just
don't do anything bloody stupid, okay? No heroics."
That was the trouble with people who thought they were
going to heaven. They just didn't take death seriously enough.
The sight of smoke-blue grassland around the
Temporary City was as emotional as a homecoming. Aras was glad to be
out of F'nar: Shan might have enjoyed its urban intricacy, but he felt
hemmed in by it even now that he could walk its terraces almost as a
proper jurej.
The Temporary City itself was looking less temporary
than ever. The reinforcement of the garrison was visible. Will we listen to the bezeri if
they say something we don't agree with? He watched a transport
vessel landing, settling slowly on yielding legs. Wess'har were capable
of trampling benignly over the wishes of others. Sometimes he felt that
was right. Sometimes he wasn't so sure.
The bezeri had not forgotten their routine. He had only
to stand for a while on the cliffs above the bay and ripple a sequence
of lights from his lamp for a bezeri patrol pod to half surface. The
patrols kept an eye on bezeri who might swim too near to the surface in
curiosity and beach themselves. The constant military traffic across
the region must have given them a great deal to be curious about. The Mountain to the Dry Above?
the lights asked. I will visit Constantine later,
Aras signaled back. First I need to speak to you
all.
Constantine was set on an island. For the bezeri, it
was one of a number of steep peaks rising out of their marine
territories and into the Dry Above, as alien and hostile to them as
space was to a human. He waded out into the water and eased himself
into the open sac of the pod before suspending his respiration and
letting the water flood in and engulf him. It was the price he had to
pay for getting a lift. It wasn't pleasant, but he couldn't drown. He
had the isenj to thank for that.
The pressure was uncomfortable in the depths of the
bezeri settlement. The local sea tasted of dead pifanu
and mud. Light danced everywhere, complex patterns and colors of
conversations and songs between one bezeri and another. Aras could
recognize a few concept sequences, but without the signaling lamp that
interpreted for him, he was deaf and mute even after so many years. He
turned it over in his hands.
A group of massive fluid shapes eased out of an opening
in a carefully molded tower of shell and mud and came to a halt a few
meters from him, blue and lime points of brilliant light rippling
across their mantles. There is something wrong,
the lights said. More humans want to come here,
said Aras. If they came, would they prevent
the isenj returning?
Their horizons might have been limited by the sea, but
the bezeri understood political alliances. Aras chose his next
signal-words carefully. Do you doubt we can keep you
safe?
The patterns of light now formed ornate orange and red
concentric circles. There are too few of you and
you must put yourselves first. We must choose the option that keeps the
isenj at bay. If we could choose freely, we would like both humans and
isenj to stay away.
Aras calculated again. Do you
understand the differences between the humans of the Mountain to the
Dry Above and the newcomers?
Clouds of silt billowed as one of the bezeri jerked its
tentacles up to its body. What we understand is
that the isenj fouled our cities with their excretions and that if they
come again, we will all die.
Aras paused to search for a neutral answer. He needed
to know what they wanted, not what they would agree to, whatever Mestin
had ordered. He signaled carefully. If more
humans come to the Dry Above, they may find something here that will be
used to cause trouble to other people in other worlds. We will create a
barrier here that will stop both humans and isenj settling. We will
remove the humans from the Dry Above and we will also remove the
Temporary City in time. You will abandon us. No. You won't need us here. You fear you will lose control
of this system. Yes. Then our only choice is to rely
on your science.
The bezeri elders paused in the dark waters for a
moment and then swept away in a burst of green light. Aras steadied
himself against their expelled water by clutching an outcrop of esken
and waited, but nobody else came to talk
to him. The pilot shimmered scarlet and amber. I think you should go now.
On the trip back to the surface, Aras wondered if he
now contained the characteristics of so many life-forms that he had
forgotten what it meant to be any one of them. Why should the bezeri
care about what happened on dry land, let alone other planets? All they
could rely on was their memories. All they remembered that the isenj
had once had settlements here and that they had fouled the water.
Asking them to address the problems of other species that they would
never see when they perceived an immediate and very real threat to
their daily lives was futile.
Maybe wess'har spent too much time now worrying about
their responsibilities. Perhaps they didn't have as many duties as they
thought. But that was human thinking: all rights, no responsibilities.
He shook the idea off, disgusted.
What had they said? If we could
choose freely, we would like both humans and isenj to stay away.
Mestin had given them what they wanted. In hindsight, Shan had acted
correctly in donating her genes.
Aras was still trying to define what had disturbed him
so much about the sequence of events. Shan had not deceived him: she
had simply taken the straightest path through a complex situation to
arrive at the correct result. Intent was irrelevant. Only action
mattered.
It was the action that worried him. Wess'har had not
been ideologically pure enough to destroy that knowledge of bio-weapons
any more than they had declined the utility of c'naatat
in a personal crisis.
And he hadn't had the will not to use it to save Shan's
life, because his wants mattered more in those few minutes than his
principles.
He headed up the beach and towards Constantine,
wondering what had happened to his sense of right and wrong.
Josh ladled more soup into Aras's bowl than he
thought he would ever be able to tackle. Huge butter beans broke the
brilliant orange surface like fat white islands, and Aras prodded them
with his spoon. There was a sense of relief about the Garrod family:
the last time they had seen Aras was when Nevyan had arrested him.
Excessive food was a substitute for expressing affection, so he
accepted it as such. It was good to know they still welcomed him even
if he brought bad news. Deborah and James simply smiled at him from
time to time: Rachel, now six, studied him intently.
"I realize how terrible this must be for you," Aras
said.
Josh shrugged. Nothing seemed to panic him. "I feel a
certain sense of relief that this world will be quarantined. I've been
worried about access to c'naatat since the
day your people detected Thetis for the
first time."
"They can't take it. They can't land here now. They
will always focus on access to me, or to Shan
Chail."
Josh hadn't mentioned Shan at all. The lack of
reference to her was conspicuous, and Aras felt a pang of annoyance
that the colonists might now resent or even hate his isan, but
he knew she would say that she didn't give a fuck.
He tore off a chunk of bread and dipped it in the soup.
The meal fell silent. Josh's home was a perfect haven, cut into the
rock just like a wess'har home, with soft filtered sunlight streaming
down through the roof-dome that doubled as a solar panel. The thought
of this place being abandoned and erased by nanites saddened Aras. But
the colonists had never intended to stay here forever, just long enough
to wait out the dark days until Earth was ready to be restored again.
He suddenly thought they were insane to come here. The
construction work had been backbreaking, and he had played his part.
He'd looked very different in those days.
"You must find this very sad after investing so much
labor," he said.
"Material things can be remade," said Josh. "And we
will rebuild."
"If I can help, I will."
"I would rather you helped me tear down than build."
"I don't understand."
"There are things we can take and things we can't. I
want to destroy everything in the church that we can't take with us." So much for material things
having no meaning, Aras thought. The more he discussed their
beliefs with them, the less sense they made. But it wasn't the time to
debate with them. Their faith would be the only thing that would keep
them going through the crushing misery of being uprooted and having to
start again on a world they didn't know.
"I know you have always told us to stay away from
Christopher Island," Josh said carefully. It was another island in the
chain that was home to Constantine. Once it had been called Ouzhari. It
was all black grass in spring, a plant unique to the island. "And
that's the only place c'naatat can be
found, yes?"
"I didn't realize you knew," Aras said.
"I didn't," said Josh. "Not for sure."
It was the first time--the only time--that Josh had ever
tricked him. The sensation was unpleasant. Josh was a decent man and
Aras knew he had no reason to doubt his integrity. But it hurt. They
sat in silence and busied themselves with the soup.
They had named the island after St. Christopher,
another of these not-quite-gods that they made out of men and women.
They had beatified all six islands in the chain: Constantine,
Catherine, Charity, Clare, Chad, and Christopher. Aras had learned
about saints. He still thought it might have been more appropriate for
the c'naatat island to be named St.
Charity, given the nature of her martyrdom. Saints needed to suffer. It
was one of those dark needs of humankind.
The first robotic mission to Bezer'ej had landed on
Christopher, and Aras had relocated it as far up the chain as possible
with the help of wess'har comrades long since dead. The colonists knew
exactly what c'naatat was. They had no
interest in it, almost to the point of dread. Some of them regarded it
as the devil's temptation, whatever that
meant. The kind of eternal life they were looking for involved
something called the bliss of God, not resistance to disease and injury
until you lost everyone you ever cared for. No, they were no threat.
They pitied him. He would never go to
heaven.
Josh closed his eyes for a second. He might have been
praying. Humans thought aloud to God, and Aras had never worked out how
they expected their deity to pick its way between their billions of
conflicting needs and desires.
He opened his eyes. "You'll hold on to the gene bank,
of course."
"Whatever happens," said Aras, "I will ensure the
species bank is preserved. Whether it will ever return to Earth, I
can't say. But we won't hand over any of those people or plants to Actaeon."
"Are you really removing the biobarrier?"
"You know why we have to."
"They really would wipe us out too, then."
"Yes."
Josh looked him in the eye for several long seconds.
Aras could see his ancestor Ben in him. Aras felt sorrow and fear for
them all, but he didn't feel guilty and he didn't feel repentent. For a
moment he thought that Josh had finally seen him for the alien he truly
was: neither a miracle nor a guardian nor anything sent by divine
providence to help them carry out their task, but an alien with a
radically different morality.
"I understand," Josh said, and Aras knew he didn't. A
gulf had opened up between them. It had always been there, paper-thin,
but now it was a canyon and widening fast.
Aras stayed in Constantine for two more days. He made
sure he visited the school and walked as many of the subterranean
streets as he could. The spring crops were sprouting: two of the rats
he had liberated from the Thetis's
pharmacologist had produced a litter because the colony's children
hadn't quite worked out how to sex them, never having experienced live
animals larger than insects before. It was all normal and full of
unspecified hope.
Josh's son James was taking good care of Black and
White, two of the lab rats that Aras had taken a particular liking to.
Aras played hand-chasing games with them for a while, but they weren't
as nimble as they had been. Rats aged fast. Shan had warned him they
would die in another year or so, and that he shouldn't get upset
because that was normal for rats.
Above ground, all that was visible of the settlement
were the discreet domes of skylights and the carefully arranged patches
of crops. The air was scented with damp green fertility.
He paid a visit to the church of St. Francis. GOVERNMENT WORK IS
GOD'S WORK.
The inscription had been one of his earliest memories
of the colony. He had watched bots carve it years before any humans
arrived on the planet. They had been gethes
then. He had stopped them using other creatures for food and turned
them into acceptable humans. I had a choice. I was still the
custodian of Bezer'ej. It would have been no trouble to kill them
before they woke from chill-sleep.
But he hadn't. And he hadn't let Shan die either. He
didn't regret either decision. Regret was pointless and human. It had
nothing to do with reality.
Aras would have to turn the reclamation nanites loose
in the tunnels and galleries. They would reduce all artefacts to dust
as efficiently as they had wiped out all traces of the shattered isenj
settlements on Bezer'ej. It was a pity about the window, though.
He walked up the aisle of the church and studied the
stylized figure in a brown robe. He had assembled most of the image: he
could take it apart again. The colonists would need something of this
place to take with them, and it was as iconic and representative of
their purpose as anything he could imagine.
Shan came up behind him. He caught a pleasant breath of
her distinctive skin-scent, a smooth, mouth-filling smell of sawn wood
underlaid by a human bittersweet musk.
"You okay?" she asked.
"I am."
"I'm sorry. I really am. Not for them, but for you."
He sized up the window, working out how he would
dismantle the many leaded pieces of glass and record their positions so
he might reassemble them in F'nar. "It will further help them get to
their heaven," he said.
"Are you taking the piss?"
"Not at all. I mean it. The more they have to do things
they find hard, the better their god loves them, it seems. I still
don't understand the value of suffering."
"Yeah, it beats me too."
"I shall stay and help them depart. It's the right
thing to do."
Shan slipped her arm through his and they stood looking
at the stained glass saint who had loved all creation, and his
entourage of animals, some of which might have eaten him had he fallen
into their grasp. Aras suspected an alyat
would have overlooked St. Francis's respect for it if there had been a
lean hunting season.
Shan was looking intently at the window too. Aras
didn't have to ask why. It was the areas of blue glass that spoke to
her. When she first saw them, they had looked white: humans couldn't
see the colors as wess'har did. Then she saw them for the color they
were, and knew what he had done to save her. She'd been enraged and
terrified.
"It's beautiful," she said. Clearly the association was
no longer painful. "And I still don't know how the sunlight gets down
here."
"I could show you."
"Later." Her eyes moved over the image. "You're going
to save it, aren't you?"
"Yes."
"Good. I'm glad." She squeezed his arm. "I'll hang on
here, then. If there's any dissent, I'll handle it."
"They're taking it hard." He was glad she would be
around. She seemed to relish restoring compliance: he saw it only as a
necessity. "It will make it easier having you here."
"I might have to do things that you'll find hard to
accept. I don't want it to drive us apart."
"Shan, you're my isan and
I'm bound to you, whatever you do or say."
He felt all her muscles tense. "You sound as if you
wish you weren't."
"No. I'm perfectly content."
"Look, when the dust has settled, let's take a few days
out of F'nar and get ourselves straight again. Perhaps we could visit
Baral." She reached into her jacket, took out the small red cylinder of
her swiss and pressed it into his hand. "No point my carrying this.
Nevyan's given me a new communications thing. I don't think I'm ever
going to get the hang of it somehow."
The antiquated swiss was no use to him either. And it
was full of details of the demons that drove her, the terrible things
that gethes did. But he knew how much it
meant to her and that she was giving it to him as a gesture. He
suspected she would never use the word love,
but he understood nevertheless.
"I shall take good care of it," he said.
A pause. "I'd better be off, then." She gave him a
brisk kiss on the cheek and strode back down the aisle, boots echoing.
Yes. A few days of quiet--without matriarchs and Eddie
and all the tension that had accompanied them since the day they
met--might be good for them both. Aras watched her go and marveled at
how unconcerned she seemed. Then he walked to the bell tower and took
hold of the long ropes of hemp and efte
attached to the six glass bells.
Ben Garrod had never believed that bells could be made
from glass. Humans had limited technology in that area. But he had been
delighted by the sound they made when struck. It was a wavering note
rather than a low metallic gong, but it carried for miles and it had an
ethereal quality that the humans liked.
It was a sound that generations of colonists had grown
up hearing. Aras had no idea why Josh insisted on destroying them now
and not leaving them to the nanites.
Aras glanced up into the top of the tower that housed
the bells. In daylight the brilliant blue was visible, and if he stood
at the right position in the aisle he could look up and see the curved
transparent shapes through the beams of the roof. He was still staring
up, remembering the effort of making them, when he scented Josh coming
through the church.
The man looked tired. "Let's do it," he said. "One last
time."
"We could remove them," Aras said.
"No," said Josh. "No nanites, either. I want to see
them gone now. No looking back."
Josh took one rope in both hands and gave it an all-out
downward tug, tipping the bell back on itself and drawing a long,
plaintive note from it. Then he stopped and placed another rope in
Aras's hand.
"Just pull this when I indicate," he said.
Aras had never cared to learn the complex sequences of
ringing that the colonists took great care to practice. He rang now
because Josh wanted him to; that was the least he could do for him,
even though their friendship was now feeling strained. Using only two
bells, the ringing had none of the magnificent tonal complexity of what
they called plain hunt or rounds, but perhaps the
tolling of two bells was
more apt than peals that were celebratory in tone.
The sound vibrated in Aras's throat. He felt he could
taste it.
Josh paused for breath. "They used to use church bells
as an alarm signal," he said. "There was a war in Europe when they
stopped churches ringing their bells for the whole six years of the
war, because if the bells rang, it was a warning that England had been
invaded." He stared up the length of the thick beige rope, and Aras
could have sworn he was in tears. "It's just material, Aras. We don't
need these things to know God."
They rang solemnly for five more minutes. Then Josh
brought his bell to a dead stop and showed Aras how to do the same.
"I've collected the items from the altar," Josh said.
It was a strangely dispassionate way of describing the carved image of
his tortured dead deity. Aras still found their fixation with redeeming
physical agony a disturbing one. "I'll bar the door behind me so we
don't have any accidents."
"Are you absolutely sure you want me to do this? It
seems unnecessary. The nanites will--"
"I want them destroyed here, please."
"It makes no difference how they are eradicated."
"Yes, it does. We need a harsh reminder that we have
burned our bridges. It makes us move forward."
Aras gave him time to clear the building. Then he
climbed the fragile ladder that led to the top of the tower and
squeezed into the gap between the vault of the roof and the headstock
to which the bells were attached. He took out his tilgir.
It had been a pleasure and an education to make those
bells. It was fitting that he should now be the last person to touch
them.
It took a while to hack through the rope and composite
pins that secured the crowns to the headstock. There was creaking. Then
gaps began opening, and with a sudden lurch all six bells dropped in
close sequence down the well of the tower in a brief, unnatural silence
that ended in a cacophony of bouncing shards that churned in a
glittering eruption of sapphire and cobalt fragments like a missile
piecing the surface of a frozen sea.
The agonizing noise calmed in seconds into tinkling,
then into nothing at all. The bells of St. Francis were finally silent.
The erasure of Constantine had begun.
Humans lie even
to themselves. They promote the idea that all intelligent
beings--intelligent by their narrow definition--are all the same within
and will behave the same if exposed to the same environment. They fear
to admit that there are varied characteristics that define each race
and species. If they still have not managed to erase great differences
within their own species, how can they believe they can achieve it with
nonhumans? And yet they will labor on under the willingly shared lie
that all beings will be reasonable and behave like humans if they are
treated like humans. Logic and history tells us we will behave like
isenj, or like wess'har, or like ussissi. We all behave as we are.
SIYYAS BUR, matriarch historian
Okurt wasn't unlikable. He wasn't as
quietly impressive as the Royal Marines from Thetis,
but neither was he the sarcastic buffoon that he seemed to have created
as a defensive shell. Eddie thought the current situation was a lot to
ask of a man who had never been properly trained for alien contact.
He expected to be debriefed as soon as he put one foot
through the last of the inner hatches. But there was polite restraint
from everyone. It was a full twelve hours before Okurt left a message
inviting him to lunch in the wardroom with the senior staff.
Meals were the backbone of the day. Okurt believed that
his staff should have one meal where they didn't have to operate a
console with one hand and snatch a snack in the other. "We are not a
grazing animal," he told Eddie. "Officers dine."
There were disposable napkins and matching shatterproofs. The table
itself looked like solid naval oak until you stood up too quickly and
caught it with your leg to discover it was tough, feather light blown
composite with a convincing grain, and that it stowed up flat into a
bulkhead. It was sweetly patriarchal. Okurt sat at the head of the
table like a father waiting to carve the Sunday roast.
It would have been a nice ordinary lunch if Eddie
hadn't had a long list of unpleasant news he needed to impart to Actaeon
and her masters.
"You do seem to be getting on well with the isenj,"
said Okurt. "Still using an interpreter?"
"Not with Ual," Eddie said. "Very fluent. It's a
struggle for him to make the sounds, but he knows exactly what he's
saying."
"Shout."
"Eh?"
" �If they fail to understand, shout: and do not
dissemble, because God is your authority.' " Okurt laughed. "Old advice
to those taking on the white man's burden in the colonies."
"Good if you're talking to people with pointed sticks.
Bad if they have missiles."
"We could do with fostering some enthusiasm for the
space program, seeing as it pays us." Okurt passed round sliced protein
that might have been soy but could just as easily have been
cell-culture chicken. The parallel of bountiful provision by the
government's hand was not lost on Eddie. "I hear the views of F'nar
raised approval a bit. Staggeringly pretty. Shame the inhabitants would
rather blow our heads off than let us visit."
Lindsay picked at her chicken salad, or perhaps it was
a soy salad after all, and looked preoccupied. Eddie thought it was
time to put her out of her misery. It was a matter of things being best
hidden in plain sight.
"Can I ask you a question, Malcolm?" Eddie liked to
give his quarry a sporting hundred-meter start. "I hear from reliable
defense sources back home that the Hereward
has changed course."
Lindsay looked up at him. It was convincing shock. It
was a shock that he had mentioned it, of course, but it did the job
just fine. She hadn't told Okurt that Eddie knew about it. Maybe she
hadn't even told him that she knew. Okurt
made a commendable show of looking unperturbed.
"It's true the Hereward is
being deployed to this sector, Eddie, yes. Your sources are correct.
Might I ask how and when?"
"Sources. The only item in
my professional code of honor. That's all you need to know."
"How widely have you discussed this?" Okurt asked.
"We haven't reported it yet." Eddie smiled. Well, that
was true. Okurt would know that anyway. "Come on. You don't pay me."
"Do the isenj know?" A sloppy admission, very sloppy.
So he was more worried about the isenj than the wess'har, and that was
a view Eddie couldn't share after the events of the last week. But then
Okurt was just a field officer, not a politician. "Would you like me to
ask them?"
Okurt managed a smile and pushed the jug of instant
Chardonnay-flavored drink down the oak-alike table. Lindsay fielded it
and poured, a study in displacement activity.
"It's only a support vessel," Okurt said at last. "And
it won't be here for twenty-five years."
"A well cannoned-up support vessel, though. Never mind.
Plenty of time to get back in everyone's good books." Eddie sliced his
hydroponic tomato purely as stage timing. "Because the wess'har know
about it, and they're mobilizing."
Okurt and Lindsay both stopped chewing for a split
second at exactly the same time.
"I imagine you're going to tell us all about it," said
Okurt.
"Yes, because I'd like to be out of here before they're
ready to roll. I'm old-fashioned that way. I like to keep my entrails
inside my body cavity."
Okurt was shunting bits of chicken around his plate
with his fork. Despite being lightweight composite, the crockery still
carried a gold rim and the ship's huntsman crest. Eddie couldn't help
noticing that the huntsman was being ripped apart by his own hounds.
"They interpreted it as a hostile act, and it was bad
timing after extracting all the human crew from Thetis,"
said Eddie.
"Why?"
"The ussissi have gone ballistic. The paranoid little
buggers think we're shaping up to destroy the ship because of the
opposition back home to bringing isenj to Earth."
Lindsay said nothing. She took another pull at the
glass of not-wine that Eddie now wished were hundred-proof navy rum. He
could have done with a real drink.
"Want to see my rushes?" said Eddie.
It wasn't quite the same game he had played before. He
liked juggling with information, flushing out who knew what, as much as
Shan clearly enjoyed the challenge of interrogation. But he just needed
to be clear--in his heart of hearts--why he was playing.
He was helping to avert disaster. He was trying to stop
humans making a big mistake and getting into a fight with another
species that would actually win, and win well. He was saving the last
of a civilization of intelligent squid.
He hadn't abandoned his professional standards at all.
"Yes, we would," said Okurt.
Eddie unrolled his screen and set it on the console
table that ran down the length of the short bulkhead. The assembled
senior staff watched the raw footage like they were staring at a road
crash.
"I tried to get as close as I could," said Eddie
modestly.
The bee-cam was staring down into the cockpit of a huge
and enigmatic fighter craft. If he had sent the cam up its tailpipe it
wouldn't have told a human the first thing about how it worked and what
it could do. In fact, it didn't even appear to have
a tailpipe.
"There are a thousand wess'har cities down there, and
they've all got a box of kit like this," said Eddie. He was watch ing
faces while they watched his shots: he had hit the spot, and hard. "And
I don't want to worry you, but Wess'ej is just the outpost of a larger
wess'har civilization about five light-years away. The ones on Wess'ej
are the namby-pamby lefty liberals and hippies. The others are a lot
less tolerant."
"What's that?" asked the weapons officer. He was
looking at a brightly colored 3-D map of wilderness crisscrossed by
regular lines and angles, giving the impression of plans for a rigidly
designed road network that someone was hoping to build on a greenfield
site. It was Olivier Champciaux's geophys data from Bezer'ej, the
material that had made even Shan Frankland nervous and that Champciaux
hadn't been willing to let him broadcast for copyright reasons. Eddie
didn't give a stuff about copyright now.
"That's a geophys scan of part of Bezer'ej. It was an
isenj city. A big one." Timing was part of the show. Eddie paused and
spread butter on a bread roll. "And that's all that's left of it after
a visit from the Wess'ej Liberal Party."
There was a collective murmur of unease. This
propaganda business was easy. Eddie
wondered why he hadn't made it his life's work.
"Do they know you spied on them?" said Okurt.
"They knew. They just didn't give a shit. You can be
that confident when you've got an arsenal like theirs."
"I don't suppose I could ask you for this material to
show to the joint chiefs before you broadcast it, could I?"
"If it keeps my entrails in place, you're welcome,"
said Eddie. He left the playback running. There was the usual jerk and
blur as the recording changed to another session's shooting, and the
cam rested on an idyllic wide shot of F'nar's shimmering terraces.
Shan, back to camera, walked into frame and stood with hands on hips.
Then she turned her head, appeared to notice she was in shot and
stepped aside. The mike picked up a brief "Sorry."
Eddie saw Lindsay's reaction. She leaned forward a
fraction, no more.
"Sorry, Lin," said Eddie.
"No problem," said Lindsay. "So she lives there, now,
eh?"
"Yeah."
Okurt didn't appear interested in Shan, which was odd
given his shopping list. "Is there anything else? Not that you haven't
kept us absorbed so far."
"Yeah, the wess'har are about to plow in the salt." It
was a neat line. Eddie got the attention he had planned, with eight
heads all turned towards him in uniformed synchrony. "They've developed
a biological agent that's specific against humans and they're about to
spread it around Bezer'ej to make sure we're never going to land there.
They're really very freaked about the risk to the bezeri. Oh, and
they're kicking the colony off the planet. So they took the news about Hereward
really well, all things considered."
"You told them."
"And I flushed out a lot about their capability. Better
to find out now."
Okurt gave Eddie the sort of look that made him think
he might check under his bunk before turning in each night for the
foreseeable future.
"And what about this biotech?" said Lindsay.
"You'll never get it."
"I didn't think they'd hand it over."
"I mean that it's a natural organism from Bezer'ej, and
you're never going to get there anyway now. A fluke. There's no tech to
steal or buy or borrow. The only route to it is a chunk out of Shan or
Aras, and I think you can calculate the odds of getting that."
Lindsay's expression didn't flicker. "We could offer to
help evacuate the colony," she said. "Might give us some access."
"Don't bother," Eddie said. "Shan's doing it
personally. You know what she's like for getting stuck in."
He thought he saw Lindsay's expression brighten, but he
was mistaken. She drained her glass and went on picking at the remains
of her salad. Eddie, satisfied that he had drawn a very accurate
picture of the risks of provoking wess'har wrath, dubbed the footage
across to a chip and handed it to Okurt.
"Knock yourself out, Commander," he said. "As long as
my arse is out of firing range."
Eddie walked back to his cabin, feeling that he had
done the right thing for once, albeit with a little more theater than
the fearsomely wonderful Mestin might have thought decent. Shan would
have appreciated it, though. They came from the same school of psyching
out the opposition. He respected that.
He swung his legs up on his bunk and began wondering if
his nerve would hold long enough to get a sample of DNA from an isenj.
"How much of this am I supposed to know I've
heard?" asked Okurt.
Lindsay wasn't moving. She was leaning against his
cabin hatch. If Okurt was going to leave before she'd had her say, he'd
have to go through her.
"All you need to know is that I'm detaining a wanted
person and that I've requested access to a shuttle. We have a very
narrow window for this, and it might be the only one we ever get."
Okurt spun his coffee cup on the table, looking past it
in defocus at the status board but not appearing to see that either.
"And even if you can land, how do you plan to get off the planet? We
can't retrieve you. You know that."
"Dr. Mesevy's still down there. We can merge in with
the colonists when they're evacuated." She had the story ready. He had
no way of checking it. "She'll help."
"There are only a thousand or so of them. Don't you
think they'd spot a stranger or six, especially rather fit ones with
very short hair and palm-bioscreens?"
"Depends how we embark. We can also get access to the
original colony mission shuttles and fly out."
"Just like that, eh?"
"Have you ever worked with Royal Marines before,
Malcolm?"
"No, I haven't."
"If it can be done, they'll do it."
"Your chances are still close to zero."
"We're prepared to take casualties. The priority is to
get her."
"I still don't see how you're going to take her. She's
effectively on home turf."
"We don't have to. We just need a good stash of tissue
samples."
Okurt suddenly recovered his focus. "My orders said alive.
You'll have to have a bloody good reason
for bringing her back in kit form, if you get out at all. Unless, of
course, Dr. Rayat has overriding orders."
"He does, but you don't need to know."
Okurt had his back to her now, refilling his cup. "Okay, next
question. Suppose you do get to her and--God knows how--take
a chunk. And you can't get the shuttles airborne. How are you going to
get the material off Bezer'ej?"
"Remote sample collection bot. Six kilos,
self-propelling." Waiting had paid off. She was cold and detached now,
a million miles from the sobbing mother who had heard the news from Ade
Bennett that they were going to exhume her baby. "You were looking at
that to get a sample from David's body. You must have thought it was
feasible too."
Okurt turned slowly to face her. "I know I should have
told you. I'm sorry."
"But you didn't. Now I'm telling you how it's going to
be. I'm landing at Constantine by Once-Onlies with the detachment and
we're going to find Shan Frankland, neutralize her and get a sample off
the planet. Either we lift clear and you can have a shuttle rendezvous
with us at a safe distance, or you can intercept that sample. Job done."
"We can't extract you if it all goes tits up."
"I said we know that."
"The wess'har will go completely fucking crazy."
"They're cranking up to war anyway. We'll be out on our
ear so we might as well use what time we have left to acquire
that--that
parasite, bug, whatever--for our own use." She had to cover the
armaments she wanted to take, hiding the real plan in plain sight. The
only hard bit was showing the right side of the puzzle to the audience
of the moment without an inconsistency alerting them to the fact that
she was planning something else entirely. "Dr. Rayat has commandeered
appropriate ordnance."
Okurt was spinning his cup in its saucer, first
clockwise, then anti-clockwise: his hand slipped and it tumbled to the
floor, bouncing a couple of times. Lindsay didn't field it. He left it
where it rolled.
"God help us if you screw this up," he said. "I should
stop you taking tactical weapons."
"The armory inventory is locked down."
"I still have my key-code and I can still count."
"Forget what you counted. It's just for insurance."
Lindsay kept her face carefully blank and hoped a red flush at her
throat wasn't giving the game away. She'd fastened her shirt to the
top. "Just in case."
Okurt turned away and consulted his screen. "I'd better
work out how we're going to get you near enough to the drop zone," he
said. "And that's not a given."
It was very hard not to run down to the barracks, the
small makeshift mess that the marines had set up in compartments
vacated by building materials for the biodome on Umeh. They carried
their Royal Marine-ness with them wherever they went.
Lindsay wanted to sprint
down there. Instead she swung herself through hatches with controlled
excitement.
All she had to do was monitor traffic movements around
Bezer'ej to get a when. She was going to
get Shan Frankland and her plague. It even made it worth working with
Mohan Rayat again.
She leaned round the hatch and found Webster, Qureshi
and Chahal sitting around the table having a contest to see who could
eat a whole bar of nutty sideways in one go. They turned to her looking
like startled hamsters.
"Stand to," she said. "It's time for postcards from
Bezer'ej."
Lindsay spread the Once-Only suit on the hangar
deck again. She wanted to see Rayat's face. It was worth it.
"You don't have to come."
He swallowed discreetly, but hard. "Oh yes I do." Twelve square kilometers.
Lindsay had kicked that figure around for days. That was the surface
area of Christopher Island. Rayat, consulting his database, was
confident that six ERDs would do the job, a combined six-kiloton blast
and lethal rain of neutrons. She hoped they were right about the
location.
"You're taking a marine's place," said Becken. He
wasn't pleased that Lindsay had decided they had eight bodies and six
suits, and that his and Webster's weren't going to be filling them.
There were barely tolerable spooks and there were bad spooks, and
Lindsay could see the detachment had decided with one mind that Rayat
was the latter.
Rayat smiled politely. "I really do have a job to do,
gentlemen. And ladies."
Qureshi looked studiously blank. "You don't have to
operate it, Doctor. Webster can rig an emulator that'll take telemetry
from my suit, and all you have to do is sit tight and not puke." She
gave him an unnaturally controlled smile in return. "It'll mirror my
suit's position but it'll be offset by ten meters to avoid collisions.
You'd better hope I don't land on a cliff."
Lindsay had to hand it to Rayat. In the teeth of a gale
of hatred and contempt, he looked wholly unruffled. It was something he
had in common with Shan. "You land me on Constantine and get me to my
location, and I'll solve the rest of our problems." Twelve square kilometers.
They had a shuttle ready to eject them and the maiale
at five thousand kay from the planet, provided that the wess'har didn't
detect the vessel. The maiale would tow them to two hundred kay before
they unhitched and began the descent. It all looked fine on paper.
"Retrieval bot?" Lindsay had to preserve the illusion.
"Check," said Rayat.
"ERDs?"
"Yeah, all with delay timers."
"That's comforting."
Qureshi watched Rayat and Lindsay wheel the big dull
green tubes across the deck and heave them into the shuttle. The
Once-Onlies, hanging from their deployment rail like some weird new
fashion, sagged as the ERDs were loaded into them.
"Is that it?" asked Qureshi. Explosives were her
speciality. She stood behind Rayat, peering into her appointed suit
with its tiny, terrible payload. "I'd be happier if I knew what was
going on in there."
"Just ERD," said Rayat, emphasizing each letter. "We
detain our infected comrade Frankland, or useful parts thereof, and
destroy the source of this organism. That mission objective is now
ranked classification ten. Happy?"
"No," said Qureshi. "I reckon the whole ship knows
about it by now."
Bennett's face was a grim study in betrayal. "Easy
peasy," he said flatly, and Lindsay couldn't work out if his you're
dead look was directed at her, or at
Rayat, or both. "Home in time to watch the footie, I reckon." He'd
liked Shan. He'd liked her too much. She wondered if she could rely on
him.
It was hard enough juggling the various cover stories
in her own mind: and she was struggling to ensure that she presented
the right set of facts to the right audience. She had to look as if she
planned to get a sample of c'naatat off
the surface right up to the last minute.
And Ade Bennett still planned to get one of the
colony's ancient shuttles into the air. He'd spent hours poring over
manuals and working out a route and timings to the mothballed craft.
She doubted anyone could manage it, but at least the marines could seek
evacuation with the colonists. She wouldn't.
"You confirmed Frankland's still on Bezer'ej?" asked
Rayat.
"Best intelligence we have is from the ussissi on Umeh,
and they say she is." Lindsay thought there might have been the
faintest hint of disbelief on Rayat's face. "They're not secretive, any
of them. They don't think information matters. They seem to base
everything on physical superiority and they think nobody can take on
the wess'har."
"They're probably right," said Rayat.
Bennett checked the seals on his spacesuit and ran his
glove across the visor of his helmet, tucked under one arm. He wasn't
looking at Rayat: he was looking at Lindsay.
"You okay, Ade?" she asked.
"No, ma'am, I'm not," he said. "But I'm not paid to be
okay about things. I'm paid to front up and earn it."
"You can refuse what you
think is an unlawful order."
"You'd have to give me that order first, ma'am," said
Bennett. "And then I'll have to decide if it's one step beyond that
line. Won't I?"
BBChan 77896
"World in Focus" 0700 The Alliance of the Americas today lodged a
diplomatic protest against FEU plans to allow a party of
extraterrestrials to land in Europe. Following weeks of violent
clashes between police and demonstrators, the Sinostates are understood
to be considering withdrawing their support for the landing. AoA
spokesman Luis Carreira said today: "We're fully prepared to use
military means to prevent an unauthorized landing if the FEU doesn't
heed the very real concerns of governments worldwide."
Aras was happy. When he was happy, distractedly
happy, he made sporadic urrrr noises under
his breath, like someone riffling through the pages of a crisp-paged
book at high speed. It was also the sound he made when he was enjoying oursan.
Shan combed carefully through his hair and began
braiding it, relieved at his temporary good mood. It didn't take much
to keep him happy. On close inspection, it wasn't at all like human
hair: instead of smooth shafts, it was more like threads of feather,
with minute wispy vanes and barbs that curled down the length of each
strand. She rolled it between her fingertips and admired the bronze
highlights.
He stopped urrrring. "Two
months is a very short time for them," he said quietly.
"I think that was based on matriarch packing time, not
human." When she turned to pick up a length of hemp tape to tie the
braid in place, her boots crunched on something. She stooped to look.
"Where's all this bloody blue glass coming from?"
"I must have trodden it in from the bell tower," said
Aras.
The fragments were beautiful, like vicious little
high-grade sapphires. When Shan picked one up to examine the color, it
cut her palm and left a small speck of blood that stopped flowing
immediately. The blue light in her hands fluttered behind the shards as
if trying to match the exact shade and then died down again.
"Did it upset you, smashing the bells like that?" she
asked.
"I thought it an odd request. I don't understand why he
felt the need to obliterate them with such violence. If he wanted to
ensure they were never used again, the nanites would have done that.
But he said they had to burn bridges."
"If he likes dramatic gestures, why didn't he do it
himself?"
"I didn't ask."
"They're all as mad as fucking hatters anyway," Shan
said, and finished the braid.
She wanted it over and done with. She would always love
Bezer'ej in the way that you could when you were somewhere desolate for
a day trip and you could go home to familiarity later. But it wasn't
home, not even with Aras, and not even here in Josh's soothing, gold,
buried house with its soft light and calming silence.
She wasn't sure what home was any more.
"A few of them are digging in to stay," Shan said. Aras
stiffened. She smoothed down his hair and arranged the braid carefully
down his back. "They didn't think we'd salt the planet. It was hard to
tell them we'd already started."
"But you did."
"Of course."
There was no turning back now. On the four landmasses
in the southern hemisphere, troops from the Temporary City were
dropping units of the bioagent that would spread on the air and water,
propagate, and then go into a dormant state on surfaces as soon as the
optimum concentration had been reached. It would take about fifty or
sixty days to complete. Then they would come north and begin seeding
the remaining land-masses, including the continent that broke up into a
chain of islands with saints' names.
The clock was ticking.
"Clever buggers," said Shan. "I spoke to the bloke who
designed it. He said he studied some of Constantine's archive files on
anthrax to achieve long-term dormancy. And I said to him, blimey, do
you know how much you would be worth to the military back home? He
wasn't amused."
"You think of us as blokes
now. Is your assimilation that complete?"
"It must be. I've not lost any sleep knowing I'm a
weapon. That's a pretty good indicator."
There was one more thing she had to do, one of many,
but it was personal rather than part of the evacuation. Aras trailed a
few paces after her as she walked down to the shore to the Place of
Memory of the First and the Place of Memory of the Returned, shrines to
the bezeri explorers who had beached their craft to explore the Dry
Above. Some never made it back.
It meant a long walk through Constantine's fields. It
meant walking through the scattered patches of crops in full leaf and
flower, past people who had once learned to trust her and who were now
probably wondering why they ever bothered.
She tried to imagine what it was like to have to leave
behind everything--everything--you had ever
known or worked for. Then she remembered that she had.
It was tough shit. This was for the bezeri.
At the water's edge Aras handed her the signaling lamp
that translated speech into the patterns of lights the bezeri used to
communicate. "Reckon I need it?" she asked, flexing her fingers and
sending a kaleidoscope of colors dancing under the skin. Aras had
learned when she was joking and when she was not, and he simply cocked
his head a little. She didn't want him to accompany her. It was only
the second time she had ventured into the bezeri's submarine world.
The other time had been to return the body of a dead
infant, killed because Surendra Parekh had ignored an order not to take
specimens.
Shan didn't need breathing apparatus now. It would be
unpleasant, but she knew she couldn't drown. The isenj had done her a
favor even if they hadn't known it when they had tried a dozen and more
ways to kill a c'naatat-infected wess'har.
She stripped off her uniform down to her briefs, not
wanting to walk back in sodden clothing, and steeled herself for the
coming moment of complete animal terror as water flooded her lungs.
She glanced over her shoulder first. Aras was sitting
on the shore, elbows braced on his drawn-up knees, chin resting on his
hands. She felt suddenly stupid. It was hard to maintain an image of
silent menace in a pair of pale blue panties and a dog tag.
"Nothing to see here, folks," said Shan. "Move along.
Break it up."
Aras didn't smile. He pointed past her. There was the
faintest suggestion of lime-green light in the shallows. The bezeri
patrol was watching. She walked towards it. And contrary to popular
myth, she stepped clean through the surface of the water. She couldn't
walk on the damn stuff at all.
The sea was achingly cold despite the balmy day. The
cold stopped her breathing for a couple of seconds and then c'naatat
overrode her weak human reflexes and
forced her lungs into action. Currents tugged at her as she got in
chest-deep. The pressure squeezed her ribs. Just dive.
She plunged in. She couldn't stop herself taking a
great gulp of air before going under; nor could she stop herself
holding her breath until the need to surrender to the reflex
overwhelmed her and she inhaled. She screamed for air but there was no
sound, just the endless sucking gasp that didn't have a beginning or
end. She couldn't stop her arms flailing. I'm not dying I'm not dying I'm
not dying I can't die I can't die I can't--
And then she felt something like cool water, separate
from the sea, trickling over her from the top of her head and through
the core of her. Her breathing stopped. It
stopped. And she wasn't dead, not unless dead was a long way
from what she expected it to be, which was black oblivion.
She let her eyes adjust to the low light and the
distortion of the water. Then she realized she was flat on her back.
She eased herself into a crouch, straightened up and looked around for
the signaling lamp, which had settled into the sand a few meters away.
The water in front of her blackened and moved. Then it
was as if someone had suddenly switched on the Christmas lights in a
shopping center. There was a wall of color. She had forgotten how big
the adult bezeri could grow. Why are you here? they
asked.
She fumbled with the lamp. Her voice vibrated in her
ears, and wess'u seemed to translate a lot better than English ever
had. I once promised you I would maintain an
exclusion zone around this world. It was the job I came to do. But the wess'har are
withdrawing. How can you help? They're leaving a weapon that
will protect you, and it was made from my body.
There was a silent moment. The great gelatinous shapes,
trailing tentacles that were striped with rippling gold and carmine,
hung in front of her. We know you would kill your own
kind for us.
There was no tone in the translation and she wasn't
sure if they were complimenting her on her solidarity with them or
saying they didn't trust her an inch.
She picked her response carefully. I'm sorry we've caused you so
much grief.
They knew sorry. They'd
seen the word from her before. She held out both hands and concentrated
until the luminescence in them danced. That
got a reaction. The bezeris' lights flared and the lamp spluttered a
burst of what sounded like static. She wondered if it was the bezeri
for well, bugger me.
She had to explain it. I have
something of you in me. I'm like Aras now.
Silence. They just hung there, watching. I just wanted to know how you
felt.
Still nothing. Then one glided forward and stopped a
meter short of her. It--he--loomed almost twice as high as Aras,
tentacles trailing almost straight down. If we
had weapons like the wess'har, we would fight your kind, and the isenj.
But we do not. Until then, we must rely on the courage of people we
cannot see.
It was an ambiguous answer. What was she expecting,
absolution? Was any of it her fault? It felt like it. She felt ashamed
to be human. It was time to go. Goodbye.
Perhaps they didn't have a word for farewell. The lamp
was silent. She backed off a few steps and then turned and walked back
the way she had come, navigating by rocks and plant growth. She didn't
look behind again. A little further up the slope, she struck out with
her arms and legs and summoned up some primeval human instinct to swim
that she had never used before.
When her head was clear of the surface, she choked on
air again. She knelt on all fours on the beach, coughing and retching
up water. She could feel that her briefs were halfway off one hip and
she wondered what the lads from her relief at Western Central would
have said if they could have seen her, if any of them had still been
alive. They would have laughed themselves sick.
Aras's boots came into view. She retched again,
coughing out mucus and seawater in long strings.
"It's sheer glamor that attracted you to me, isn't it?"
she said, and tried to grin. But the remnant of the sea wanted out, and
fast.
Aras put her jacket over her shoulders and sat with his
arm round her back while she recovered her breath and her underwear
dried.
"That wasn't as bad as you expected," he said,
forestalling any comment from her that it had actually been bloody
terrifying. "In time, you'll control it."
It was another tick on the list, another
life-threatening event that her new body had treated as a learning
opportunity. She had long known it, but this was the first time she had
genuinely felt that she wasn't human.
And if she was no longer human, she had no need to be
ashamed any more.
Eddie could sleep anywhere when he had to, and
a pallet on the construction site at Jejeno provided a sounder night's
sleep than a bunk on a vessel that was one big target roundel in his
mind's eye. He didn't want to say as much. He worried that he made
things happen just by saying them.
He got up and splashed his face in the fountain.
"Oi, don't you know there's a bleedin' shower over
there?" said a worker in a hard hat and coverall. He jerked his thumb
to help Eddie better locate the facilities.
"Ah, silly me," said Eddie. "Thank you so much."
It was hard doing laundry in the shower, but he managed
to wash and rinse his change of shirt and smalls and left them draped
over a bot to dry. It made him feel quite the correspondent again: news
editors, anchored to their desks, had no idea about the messy logistics
of being in the field. He entertained a brief fantasy about dumping Boy
Editor in the middle of a war zone where the local food was beyond
human digestion. It gave him a warm feeling. It was exactly where he
was now.
"You look untidy," said Serrimissani when she collected
him to escort him to see Ual.
Eddie checked his distorted reflection in a polished
metal plate. He did his shirt up a little higher. It seemed to placate
the ussissi, and she trotted ahead of him in silence. He opened his
screen to check the news while he walked.
"Keep up," she said, not turning. She had a predator's
hearing, the sort that listened for small things burrowing. Shan had
told him about their taste in snacks. It didn't surprise him one bit.
The headlines didn't help. The diplomatic row--and Eddie
normally found that an amusing mental image--was intensifying. It was
all unspecific threat, typical of frightened people led by even more
frightened politicians who wanted to look like they were Doing
Something About It. Eddie wasn't sure if the Americas or the Rim states
could actually take out Thetis. But even
if they could, they had a long wait ahead before they could see the
whites of her eyes.
Eddie tried to work out how long it would be before Thetis
came within range of Earth vessels,
trying to juggle seventy-five-year transit times against near
light-speed, and gave up. There weren't that many deep space vessels
about even now: they cost money, and space was neither a popular
tourist destination nor a vote-getter. It was the main reason why they
were using an old knacker like Thetis
instead of saving twenty-five years by sending a modern vessel to pick
them up.
A group of isenj laborers walked across his path like a
badly adjusted film sequence, all jerks and twitches. His hard-wired
reaction to quick, staccato movement said spider
and he tried to think person. But he
failed. Maybe they were failing to make that conceptual leap on Earth,
too.
They had left little dusty tracks across the Instaroad
that had been rolled out to stop the bots digging even deeper gouges
into the soil. Eddie paused and looked down. It looked like someone had
shattered a flowerpot and left some of the fragments of black plastic
behind. Oh, he thought. Oh.
There was only one movement between involvement and
noninvolvement. Eddie paused before making it. They said time wasn't
linear and that all things really happened at once but that you just
saw it sequentially. Eddie knew that was bollocks. Once he had taken
this step, there was no quantum state that would untake it for him.
He uncapped the urine sampler and scooped up the black
fragments. He was pretty sure he knew what they were. He hoped they
would do.
Serrimissani had realized he wasn't keeping up and
scuttled back to chivvy him. She followed his wrist action with
scorpion-eater's eyes as he closed the cap on the vial and popped it
into the top pocket of his shirt.
"Don't hold us up," she said. "Minister Ual is waiting
for you."
"Sorry," he said.
She didn't say anything else. He walked behind her at
double time like a Greenjacket. When they got into the ground car, she
stared out of the open door as if to avoid conversation.
The boundaries of the site were marked by no more than
chevron tape strung between waist-high poles, but the isenj treated
them like fortifications. The crush started right outside. As soon as
the car was past the tape, it had to press slowly through the throng.
Eddie remembered the isenj who he thought he had seen fall and wondered
if he'd ever got up again.
They didn't seem to be a brutal or thoughtless people.
But it was very hard to stop a crowd moving, even an orderly one that
seemed to have its own unspoken rules of flow and speed.
Ual greeted Eddie at the door of his office, covering
ground like a piece of badly designed furniture on castors.
"I'm sorry that things are still so tense back home,"
said Eddie.
"You're not responsible for your governments," said the
minister, still sucking in and wheezing out the alien words through a
hole in his throat somewhere.
They sat in his fine plain aquamarine office and sipped
something that might have been coffee. It was too liquid for Eddie to
choke on. But he thought he might, and he didn't feel clever and he
didn't feel in control. He took an occasional but discreet glance at
Ual's coat of projections strung with beads--red ones today--and
wondered
what perverse universe created a species with quills that was also
doomed to live at very close quarters.
"We will be careful not to react," said Ual. "We are
not the ussissi. And we truly want a mutually helpful relationship with
humans."
Serrimissani wasn't in earshot but Eddie still winced. "Do your
people know what's been on our news?"
"Yes, but it's not their preoccupation. It's a long way
away and they have problems here and now to cope with."
"We really do have a lot in common." Yes, and
you're using it to kill them. "If it's
any comfort, we behave the same with members of our own species. We
don't take kindly to strangers."
"It's a wise precaution."
"Are you in direct contact with the FEU foreign
minister?"
"Not as directly as I am with you. He sends general
messages, I send general replies. All encouraging words about
technology and understanding. I don't believe he is ready for a
real-time exchange, as you call it. I imagine he has people around him
who I don't see but who want to check every word in and every word out."
"You're absolutely right."
"And yet you have no such problem."
"I'm a journalist. We're not here to make politicians
happy. Quite the opposite, in fact."
If Ual was a two-faced weasel, it would make what Eddie
had to do so much less painful. Eddie had no idea yet whether isenj
were enough like humans to play nasty little games, or whether they
were like the wess'har and the ussissi--aggressively frank and literal
because they not only didn't know how to lie but felt sufficiently
confident not to need to. Weasels. Eddie decided he
would see animals differently in future, if he ever got home. Maybe
weasels had something to tell him.
"We understand your natural fear of overcrowding," said
Ual. Now that was for the bee-cam, for sure. "I wish your people would
be reassured that what we want is your help to learn your technologies,
so we can address our own problems. Your planet is not our target. I do
believe you should stop people reading those books by Mr. Wells."
Eddie laughed. "He was a journalist too. We're a
lovable bunch."
"There is a predisposition among your trade to make
trouble," said Ual, and made a gargling sound like a fast-emptying
drain.
"I take it you wouldn't mind if I broadcast our
conversation?"
Ual looked at him--he imagined--with amusement. Eddie had
no idea, really: isenj had no discernible eyes.
" �Every mike is a live mike,' " said Ual. "That is
correct, is it not?"
It was always satisfying to play the game with a
professional. The key to self-respect was self-awareness: as long as
you knew the game was on, it didn't hurt at all. Ual had learned it
rather well.
There was a small glassy ping,
and one of Ual's decorative beads bounced and rolled on the
smooth-polished floor. Eddie fielded it deftly.
It had a fragment of quill still attached.
"Split ends are a bugger," said Eddie, and held it out
on his palm, willing Ual not to take it back.
"I have many," Ual said. "Do keep it. I think you call
it corundum. We have mined a very great deal of it over the years."
"Rubies?" Eddie was briefly distracted: the stone was
just tumbled, neither faceted nor polished into a cabochon. He'd never
seen a plain stone. And those green beads might
have been emeralds. "Thank you. But don't tell too many humans
about these, eh? It plays to our most excessive fantasies."
He kept the bead and the quill in his palm until he was
clear of the ministerial offices and waiting for the car outside with
Serrimissani. Then he uncurled his fingers and breathed properly again.
Serrimissani was looking the other way, but as he tightened the cap of
the vial, she jerked round and stared.
"Look what Ual gave me," said Eddie, having no choice.
Serrimissani looked him over as if she was searching
discreetly for evidence. She reminded him of Shan, who always kept
watch on what was happening around her even if she was also looking you
straight in the eye. Coppers could do that.
"Is that all he gave you?" asked Serrimissani, and got
into the car before he could frame an answer. He was expecting her
general irritability to erupt into a lecture on how he should not
interfere with the affairs of other nations, but she just studied her
text pad, with an occasional yawn that ended in a slight whine and a
snap of jaws, much like a fox's.
She was not on anyone's side, and his actions were his
own to take, and to justify.
"D'you know, I've never parachuted," said Rayat.
"Shut up," said Barencoin.
The Once-Only suits hung from a sliding rail in the
shuttle bay, ready to be fired out into space by a pressure jet when
the aft hatch opened. Lindsay felt like a silk cocoon waiting to be
dropped into seething water. She debated whether to kill the
suit-to-suit comms but they needed to be able to hear each other.
They had plain old radios too: no AI comms, automatic
switching or multiples. It was back to basic radio procedure. She hoped
she could remember it.
Barencoin appeared to have stopped Rayat's muttering.
He was surprisingly discourteous for a Royal Marine. And he was goading
Bennett mercilessly. She wondered if it was nerves.
"DZ IN THIRTY SECONDS," said the pilot over their
headsets. I'm going to die, thought
Lindsay.
"DZ IN TWENTY SECONDS." I'm not coming back. I didn't
think about that.
"DZ IN FIFTEEN SECONDS." I only thought about going.
Sorry, Eddie.
"TEN." At least…
"NINE." …I'll be…
"EIGHT." …near David.
"SEVEN."
"Ade, hold my hand…." said Barencoin.
"SIX."
"Ade, I want to pee…."
"FIVE."
"Cork it."
"FOUR."
"Ade, are we there yet?"
"THREE."
"Fuck you, Mart."
"TWO."
"Shut it," said Lindsay.
"ONE. DZ. GREEN LIGHT. AWAY."
And she thought she fell.
Foam exploded into the suit's inner skin and in seconds
she was encased in a soft but insistent molded cradle of polysilicate.
And she kept falling, but her brain said she should have landed by now.
She could see the thin line that tethered her to the maiale; if she had
been able to summon up the courage, she could have looked back and
followed the other section of tether to see Bennett and the others,
strung like beads from the tow-line.
Humans needed a floor. They needed it more than they
needed a definite up and down. This was not flying; this was not
banging out of an aircraft through the canopy; this was not an EVA with
a safety line rigged to the hull. This was complete, unconnected,
disembodied physical terror, made all the worse because she had no
reassurance of gravity.
It was all she could do not to be sick. She shut her
eyes. Her suit, like all of them, had its own autopilot, but it was
very hard to trust that when you were in a foam-filled plastic bag that
you hoped would withstand reentry temperatures. She could hear the
quiet, almost casual chitchat between the marines. Barencoin had
stopped teasing Bennett. They were all business now.
"Sunray this is Labros Two, over," said Qureshi's voice
in her ear.
"Uh…this is Sunray, over," said Lindsay.
"Just checking Sunray, out."
"I'm here too," said Rayat, but nobody responded.
"Sunray, focus on the planet until suit rotation," said
Qureshi. "Not long to go, out."
Time seemed to pass in fits and starts. Two hundred
kilometers was a bloody long way, and a bloody long time. She felt the
sudden push as the suit detached from the tether and switched to its
internal navigation: 150 kay. One moment she was looking at the one
suit she could actually see--whose?--and the next Bezer'ej was filling
her field of view and there wasn't much black left.
Then the suit flipped her over on her back.
That was good, because she now had the black
heat-shield deployed where it was meant to be, but it was also bad,
because she was staring back into a void and she couldn't see any
reference point. She started to count. They were at fifty thousand
meters, more or less.
"Sunray, this is Sunray Minor, here comes the tough
bit, out," said Bennett, and Lindsay started feeling…warm. It might
have been her imagination.
In the thin layer of elastomerics and softglass a
matter of inches from her spine and vital organs, the core temperature
was reaching 100C. On the surface the suit was meteor-hot. Don't
think about it. She was prepared to nuke
herself to destroy Shan Frankland, but the thought of burning up on
reentry was one step too far. It was slow.
She couldn't touch the ERD or the bot stowed in her
suit because the foam had embraced them as closely as it had her.
"Sunray Minor, this is Sunray," she said shakily. The
vibration and g of reentry was beginning to become unbearable. She
didn't care if they knew she was scared. The only people who wouldn't
have been bricking it then were either mad or Shan Frankland. "I--I'm
having telemetry issues here. How's the approach, over?"
"Sunray, this is Sunray Minor, we're on the nose, out,"
said Bennett, and she would never have guessed that he had once reached
Mach 1 with just foam and liquid glass between him and incineration.
"Not long now."
Lindsay had stopped looking out of her limited
faceplate view and shut her eyes. She had contemplated death in her
shuttered coffin of a bunk and now she was trying another shroud on for
size. She wasn't thirty yet. It wasn't fair.
She was just thinking that Shan Frankland would have
told her that there was nothing about life that was fucking fair, so
she should buck up and get on with it, when she was jerked so hard that
her teeth threatened to shatter. It was the chute deploying at ten
thousand meters. She blinked. There were clouds. There were flashes of
iridescence. God, please let the landing zone be
right, I don't fancy falling into the quicksand….
In a minute or so she would be--
The wind was punched out of her lungs. She rolled, not
because she had remembered her ejection training but because she hadn't
been expecting to hit the ground right then. She struggled to breathe.
It was solid ground, and the head-up display in her helmet said she was
one kay from Constantine. As she rolled she felt a lot lighter. The
heat-shield had detached.
"Sunray at target, over," she called at last.
"Sunray Minor at target, over."
"Sunray Minor, what's your location, over?" She
couldn't look at her palm display until she was free of the suit.
"Sunray Minor, two south from target, no visuals yet,
out."
"Labros Two, three south-south-west of Constantine,
out," said Qureshi's voice.
"Labros Three, south-south-west of target also, I have
visual of Labros Two, out," said Chahal.
There was a pause, more puffing, and then Barencoin's
voice. "Labros Four at target, no visual of Sunray Minor. Wait
one…Sunray, I'm right next to you, over."
"Labros Five, this is Sunray--where are you, Rayat?
Over."
"Oh shit…"It was his voice all right, for all the
shaking in it. So much for Webster's emulator. He wasn't near Qureshi
at all.
"Sunray Minor, I have Labros Five, out," said Bennett's
voice.
Then she lost him. There was a lull. There was a clamor
of exertion in her earpiece, and Qureshi's voice. "Oh bollocks," she
said, abandoning voice procedure. "Shit."
Then the puffing stopped dead as if the mike had been
cut. Lindsay waited.
"Sunray here, I've lost voice--Labros Two, Labros Three,
this is Sunray, respond, over."
Nothing. Chahal was gone too.
But at least they were all down. They were in one
piece, more or less. The elation was so great that she tried to leap to
her feet, but the remains of the suit wouldn't let her, and there was
the small matter that she and Barencoin were several kilometers from
the rest of them.
It wasn't far under the circumstances, but time
mattered. It would slow them a little, and the more time they spent on
the radio, the greater their chance of being picked up.
It took a while to peel out of a Once-Only. It was like
unpacking electronics: the foam was reluctant to part. Lindsay cracked
the seal on her helmet and pushed up the visor to breathe Bezer'ej's
thin air. She was still easing open the suit when she heard Barencoin,
somewhere outside her field of vision, say, "Oh." Oh wasn't a very
marine-like word. But she understood why he said it. She was trying to
get her other arm free through the horse-collar-shaped opening when the
bright Bezer'ej sky was obscured by Josh Garrod.
He was aiming a very, very
old rifle straight into her face. Firearms warranted respect regardless
of antiquity.
Now she had a good idea of what Qureshi had decided was
bollocks.
"Get up, Commander," he said. "I'm fully prepared to
break the Sixth Commandment."
FIRE CONTROL
PARTY MEET AT THE MAIN PUMPING STATION IMMEDIATELY. CRAFT INTERCEPTED
IN EXCLUSION ZONE. IF ISENJ CAN BREACH DEFNET, SO MAY OTHERS. COLLECT
ARMS AND PATROL ISLAND. DO NOT INFORM ARAS OF PATROL INTENTION. REPEAT,
DO NOT INFORM. HE SHOULD NOT BE EXPOSED TO RISK.
JOSH GARROD to council members,
via pager
It was an old rifle but it was very clean,
and that meant it probably worked.
Lindsay could see that just fine. Josh jerked the
barrel in a gesture to hurry up and she scrambled out of the Once-Only. No. It doesn't end like this.
Her plan had been defeated by farm-hands. No,
we've come too far.
"Okay, Josh," she said. "Take it easy."
Barencoin had a museum-piece rifle trained on him too.
It had to be a humbling experience for a commando of his caliber. But
paratroops had always been vulnerable in descent; and they could get
their arms free fast, unlike the detachment, who were effectively
shrink-wrapped. The Once-Only was designed to save your life, not to be
shed easily in combat situations.
Barencoin struggled out of the suffocating suit and
stood looking remarkably resigned. It took him several minutes.
"How the hell did you land in those?" Josh asked. "And
what have you come for?"
Martin Tyndale, a man Lindsay had always associated
with fretting about broad bean crops, was rummaging through one
charred, crumpled suit casing, making the foam crackle and squeak.
There were small wisps of smoke rising from what looked like shiny
puddles of black oil. What remained of the detached portions of the
heat-shields were still shedding heat.
"Lots of metal stuff in here that I don't feel too
confident about," he called.
"Arms?"
Lindsay took her helmet off very slowly. She hadn't
survived free-fall from space to get her head blown off by an antique,
and she still might salvage the mission. Martin was fumbling with the
retrieval bot.
"Don't," Lindsay said. "It might go off." The chances
of his finding the right manual detonation sequence were remote but she
had a feeling that bad luck was going to be the order of the day. "It's
explosive."
"Have you come for Shan?" Josh asked.
"Yes," said Lindsay.
"You won't take her, or the parasite."
Lindsay gambled. Eddie had always said the truth had
enormous shock value. "I haven't come to take her, I've come to destroy
her and c'naatat so that it never gets
into the human population."
Barencoin was a little behind her, so she didn't see
his expression, but she knew that he would be concealing his opinion
rather well. They'd all been suckered into her private mission.
Succeeding didn't make her feel good.
Josh simply looked at her, without hatred and without
fear.
"The organism's on Christopher, isn't it?" she said.
"Doesn't matter. You're not having it. It's an
abomination. We should have destroyed it. We considered burning the
island."
Lindsay saw the options flash up in front of her like
numbered cards. "I think I can help with that."
"How?"
"We have a device that will destroy all life on the
island in a controlled burn. At temperatures you
can't create."
Josh's aim didn't waver. Lindsay wondered if he was
hoping to shoot her anyway for being a sinner, a fornicator, a paid
killer. "You brought weapons here?"
"Frankland's a tough bitch to kill. You might have
noticed."
"You hate her that much. God forgive you."
"I hate her, but this is about neutralizing a
biohazard."
"Sounds like vengeance to me," said Josh. "And that's
not for man to dispense."
"Sounds like a clean job. As long as she lives, someone
will be after what she's got. They'll never risk chasing Aras, but
they'll keep taking a crack at her, and they won't stay away from here
forever."
Lindsay wondered how long Josh could hold that rifle
steady. The barrel hadn't moved a hair. He looked as if he was
physically digesting her words.
"And you, a soldier, want to destroy c'naatat
even though you would have so many
military uses for it," he said at last. I'm not a soldier. I'm a naval
officer. It was a silly thing to care about right then. "I know
exactly how it'll be used, thanks. That's why I want all sources
eradicated. And I know you have some regard for Frankland, but she
doesn't want it getting loose any more than we do."
Barencoin cut in. "Those weren't our orders, ma'am.
We're supposed to detain her alive."
"Shut up," she said without turning. "Josh, if you can
get us to Christopher, we'll carry out a burn of the island. I've got
three marines in the field anyway. You got lucky catching us, but
you'll never take them, and you know it. This way we all get what we
want. What's it to be?"
Josh had very unsettling pale eyes. He looked like a
man who had a temper that he controlled with care, and his gaze
reminded her all too much of Shan's. "You have one marine left, then,
because we captured two a little way from here. Those suits really are
a liability, aren't they?"
"Ah." She was running out of bargaining chips. "You're
not as bucolic as you look, are you?"
"And you want Superintendent Frankland."
They stood absolutely still, absolutely silent. Don't
blink. Don't speak first. Lindsay tried to
play Eddie and Shan, praying their respective professional tactics
would work for her. It was a bad time to discover prayer.
"These weapons of yours," said Josh. "These bombs. Are
you certain they'll only burn the island?"
"They're enhanced radiation devices. I know that sounds
shocking, but the radiation is the short-lived kind. The detonation
will be confined to the island."
Josh stood unblinking but not focusing on her. He was
taking his time.
"It's just one island against the future of many
worlds," he said at last. "And it is only
on Christopher, Commander, nowhere else. But it's all sinful
destruction in the end." He let out a long breath. "I'll take you to
Christopher. And I'll bring you back. How you retrieve Shan Frankland
is a matter for you."
"Is she in Constantine?"
"No. Temporary City. Our transport is being organized
from there."
"Thank you, Josh."
"I shall pay for this. I should have told Aras, but he
would do something foolish, and I don't want his safety put at risk."
Barencoin was suddenly right on Lindsay's shoulder, and
she realized she had never really noticed what a big man he was.
"Ma'am, I want to remind you our orders were to detain her, nothing
else," he said quietly.
"Marine, this is a direct order," she said. She wasn't
at all sure he'd follow it. "You will rendezvous with Sergeant
Bennett's party at the preagreed point, retrieve the remaining devices
from Rayat, give them to me, and then you will capture and detain
Superintendent Frankland."
"And then?"
"You let me worry about that."
She could do it herself. She could make sure Rayat set
the damn ERDs himself and then she would do what was needed with Shan.
There was no point asking any of the marines to go beyond their rules
of engagement. Because you know they'll defy
you. No, it was the right thing to do. If anyone was going to
breach the regs, it would be her. It was an officer's responsibility. Liar. They won't follow you and
you know it.
"If you use your radios beyond this island, they might
detect you," Josh said.
Barencoin was tapping his finger against his hand, eyes
fixed on a point just past Lindsay. Then he looked intently at his
palm. "Got Ade," he said. "He'll leave the devices for you at these
coordinates in twenty minutes."
Lindsay tried to give Josh a reassuring and knowing
smile. "Morse," she said. "Out of use for centuries. But not for us. As
long as you've got something to make a sound or a light with, you're in
business."
"We'll send a scoot to collect them," Josh said. "We
won't attract as much attention."
"I need the other three devices. Six in all."
"Very well."
Lindsay paused and then cracked the remaining seals on
her spacesuit and heaved herself out of it, leaving it in the scrubby
blue grass of the wild sector of Constantine's island like a shed skin.
No point declining Josh's help. As she looked at Barencoin, the only
indication that he was deeply unhappy with the mission was his
expression of intense concentration.
"You sure you know what you're doing with those ERDs,
Boss?" asked Barencoin. "Let Izzy set the damn things."
"Of course I do," said Lindsay. "If infantry can set
them, then Rayat can too."
The wess'har appeared to be occupied with loading
colonists and their baggage. There were none around as they made their
way through the crops and the wild grass down to the cove where Josh
kept a couple of RIBs, ancient shallow-draft powerboats.
His son James stood guard with a rifle. The sight of a
teenage boy with a weapon he clearly knew how to use was disturbing.
Lindsay's view of the colonists as hand-wringing, passive eccentrics
had been shattered.
"How did you know we were coming?" she asked James.
"You looked like shooting stars," he said. "We could
see you for ages."
If the colonists had seen them coming, then maybe Shan
had too. She hoped so.
Josh came back on a scoot with a man she didn't know,
and one she knew too well. Rayat was balancing three meter-long
cylinders on his scoot. They waded out into the shallows and piled them
into the boat with the other devices. The boat settled alarmingly low
in the water. Five for Christopher. And one
for Shan Frankland.
Lindsay looked at Rayat with as much contempt as she
could muster. It wasn't up to one of Shan's cauterizing glances, but
she felt it sincerely. They stared at each other for a moment and then
scrambled to opposite ends of the vessel.
It was a bumpy, spray-sodden and uncomfortable journey
to Christopher at forty knots: it took nearly two hours. The nine-meter
RIB--the rigid inflatable whose design hadn't changed in three hundred
years--had just enough room for the scoots, Josh, another colonist
called Jonathan, Rayat, and herself. They traveled in silence.
It was a long time to spend thinking about how she
would get to Shan, or not, and whether she was now going to die at all,
something she had thought was inevitable.
What she wanted more than anything right then--apart
from being dry--was to visit David's grave and sit by the beautiful
stained glass headstone that Aras had made.
Rayat said they could set the device timers for up to
twenty-four hours, but Lindsay wanted to be gone from here inside six.
She wondered if she would have time to find David's grave. It was
probably out of the question if they were going to find Shan.
But she had a feeling that Shan would come to find her
when she found out what they had done.
Shan had two messages on her wess'har comms
device that morning and she almost erased one by accident. She liked
the swiss better. The virin was intuitive
for a wess'har, but she was still fumbling with it.
It was like a bar of transparent glycerine soap with
images that appeared both within it and on its surface. When Shan
wasn't concentrating on her hands, the lights would flicker from them
and shine confusingly through the virin,
triggered by her subconscious desire to communicate. Operating the
device required a full hand grip with as many finger positions as a
three-dimensional guitar. It was exactly what she should have expected
for a culture that wrote in fish-bone diagrams rather than a linear
style.
She hated it. But it could access the wess'har
archives, and the swiss could not.
One message was from a ussissi crew, reporting scan
contact with one of Actaeon's shuttles six
thousand kilometers from Bezer'ej. They'd warned it off: the pilot had
claimed navigation problems, and they followed it all the way back to Actaeon
just to be certain. The other was from
Nevyan, wishing her well and asking how things were with Aras.
Nevyan was a nice kid. Shan sat on a packing crate at
the entrance to the Temporary City, watching the loading of
Constantine's essential impedimenta and composing a reply with
difficulty. C'naatat clearly thought that
skill with a virin was low on its priority
upgrades list.
A very young male, Litiat, came up to her, smelling
submissive and agitated. He beckoned to her.
"The gethes want to speak
with you," he said.
"Josh?"
"No, a gethes. Okurt."
"He knows I'm here, then." Thanks,
Eddie, she thought. But that didn't matter: they couldn't touch
her. She wondered what last-minute bargain Okurt was trying to strike,
and rather relished the prospect of a verbal tussle. She didn't envy
him his task.
Litiat led her to the screen in the lobby of the
Temporary City and stood back at a respectful distance. Shan stood,
arms folded, hands concealed, and waited for Okurt's image to resolve.
He looked a lot thinner than she remembered from the last video link.
She wondered if she looked very different to him.
"What can I do for you?" she asked.
"Good morning, Superintendent. You're evacuating
Constantine?"
"You know we are."
"I'm formally offering assistance."
"Oh yeah. You would. Thanks, but we've got a lift."
Okurt paused. "I wondered if you might reconsider your
position regarding returning home."
Shan paused too, just a couple of seconds longer. "Okay, I've
considered it. I'm just fine here, thanks."
"I assure you no action will be taken against you if
you cooperate. And the asset wouldn't be made available to commercial
interests."
"And that's supposed to reassure me, is it?"
"We could make it worth your while. You would be able
to free up your considerable personal assets on Earth as well."
"D'you know, son, it's been years
since anyone tried to threaten me with losing my pension." He really
didn't get it at all. "So they've frozen my funds. I'm on a planet 150
trillion miles from home and there's no shopping mall here. Try again."
"It doesn't have to be this way."
"Commander, nothing could induce me to turn myself in.
And you can tell that to whoever put you up to asking me. Haven't you
got the picture yet?"
Okurt was fidgeting: he was moving almost out of frame
at times, shifting in his seat and leaning back. He was working up to
saying something.
"Anything else?" said Shan. Okurt paused just one
fraction of a second too long. You could spot that sort of thing with
ITX: there was no transmission delay. He looked grim. Shan felt he was
trying to keep her talking, fishing for something else. Her copper's
instinct was fine-tuned and she was proud of it. It had now started
screaming in her ear. "Want to apologize for letting a shuttle stray a
bit close?"
"Perhaps I should simply apologize and leave you to
your task."
"No, hang on, you've got my interest now. I'd hazard a
guess that you don't know something you need to know, and you're
checking. Now, what could that be?" No response: if she'd been Okurt,
she'd have been off the link by now, but he was desperate to know something.
It was just like old times, an
interrogation, and she was good at that. She let her instinct drive.
"You're checking. What would you be checking? Something you can't
verify by technology. So…let me see…" She dared not blink. She needed
to see every muscle, every twitch of his face. "I reckon…ah, you want
to know if something got through. Something you can't contact or
verify. You tried to do something daft, didn't you? What was it?"
"The pilot was off course. He's got no nav beacons he
can log into out here."
"Oh, please. Don't insult my fucking intelligence.
Haven't I explained the wess'har mentality to you? Make a bloody good
note of this--they don't have rules of engagement. It's total war or
nothing with them. Just go. Go home.
Whatever it is you're doing, just stop and leave now.
You have no idea who you're provoking."
She punched the link closed and sat for a couple of
moments with her forehead in her hands. Litiat hovered.
"Get Aras," she said quietly. "I think Actaeon
is about to take us over the brink."
Christopher was the smallest and southernmost
island in the chain. It was flat and black.
The wind had dropped a little but billowing storm
clouds were beginning to gather. As the boat drew closer to the shore,
Lindsay could see that the blackness was actually grass, and the
shoreline was pure white sand. Shafts of sunlight punched through the
cloud, making the sand look almost illuminated. It was extraordinarily
beautiful in its unnatural palette of monochromes. It looked like ideal
landing terrain.
More detail emerged as the distance closed. There were
small thickets of purple foliage now, looking funereal against the
glossy black grass that was swaying like a crop in the breeze. Twelve square kilometers.
Then a thought that should have been obvious struck her
a little too late.
"If we land, are we going to be infected too?" she
asked.
Rayat looked up from the text pad in his hand. "The
only tests we have for this are going to be pretty conclusive."
"Sorry?"
"We'll shoot you. If you survive, you've caught it.
Then we'll have to try something more permanent. We have six on board."
He looked at Josh. "Ever been tempted, Mr. Garrod?"
"That's not the kind of eternal life we seek," said
Josh, still with a white-knuckled grip on his elderly rifle even after
several hours of being buffeted by waves. "We know what it does."
"And you knew about it, Rayat, didn't you?" said
Lindsay. Maybe it was the prospect of imminent death that had clarified
her thinking and sharpened her memory. "That's what you were always
looking for off-camp."
Rayat, still unperturbed, said nothing and steadied
himself on the plank athwart the boat. He was first out, picking his
way through the surf and up the beach. Lindsay had every intention of
following his every move even if Josh shot her. She didn't trust him
then, and she didn't trust him now, whatever he said and whoever he was
working for.
"Get back here and help get these scoots ashore," Josh
yelled. "Now."
It took all four of them to lift the scoots and carry
them to dry land. It was the sort of thing the Booties did well, but
they were a hundred kay behind her, and she hoped they were ready to
blend into the beige mass of colonists and get to safety.
"I'd suggest placing the devices in a three-by-two
pattern, maximum two kay apart," said Rayat. "Purely for coverage."
"You've got five to play with," said Lindsay. "One's
for insurance." She beckoned to Jonathan to help her lift one clear of
the scoot's floor plate.
"I'll set them to ground-burst. On their legs, about a
meter."
"You sure they'll burn hot enough?"
"Thousand meter fireball each, down to a depth of three
meters. Charcoal." Rayat shrugged. "I would have preferred double the
number for certainty, but believe me, this won't be a popular tourist
destination for a while."
Josh and Jonathan had their heads bowed, both absorbed
in their own worlds. Then Lindsay realized they were praying. She found
it more uncomfortable to realize that than to contemplate detonating
neutron devices. Josh looked up again.
"We do a terrible thing," he said. "It's to prevent
something worse. But let's recognize the sin we're committing, shall
we? We have to answer to God, and I also have to answer personally to
Aras in this world. He will vent his rage."
"Let's get on with it," said Lindsay.
It was a small island, easily covered by two scoots in
less than an hour. It was also exquisitely beautiful, and the knowledge
that she was helping devastate it was starting to eat away at her. The
two scoots stayed within visual range of each other. It would have been
a pleasant excursion had the pillion riders not been carrying rifles.
The black grass flattened beneath them like dark sea,
and Lindsay found herself holding her breath. It was pointless but
instinctive: if she were going to be contaminated, it was too late to
stop breathing. She didn't even know if the organism was airborne
anyway.
"Josh," she said, uncomfortable at having him sitting
close up behind her. "I still think Rayat's planning to get a sample
off the planet."
"And were your orders any different?"
"No. We were told to grab it for the military and stop
commercial companies getting it."
"So you deceive your own comrades too."
"Yes, I do. Much as it sticks in my throat to admit it,
Frank- land was right. It's a plague."
"Be sure that's why you're doing this," said Josh, and
they lapsed into silence.
It took under an hour to place and prime all the
devices. Lindsay held onto hers. She had grenades, but she hadn't come
this far to take chances. Shan had to be obliterated. They stopped the
scoots on the beach and got their breath back.
It really was a lovely spot.
The four destroyers of Christopher stood on the idyllic
white beach, taking in a magnificent pre-storm cloudscape as dramatic
as any William Blake woodcut. Four was an apocalyptic number; and the
shafts of sun piercing the cloud were so unnaturally sharp and bright
that Lindsay feared seeing the hand of God reaching through in cartoon
retribution. She glanced at Rayat. I have to be right about this. "So
this is what they mean by limited damage," she said.
"Yes, it's beautiful here. It's a terrible and
necessary shame."
They walked down the perfection of Christopher's icing-
sugar sand and pushed the boat back into the water.
She was sure why she was
destroying Eden. Wasn't she?
There's risk
inherent in trying to reverse-engineer the isenj ITX relay. If we
examine it and make our own prototype, we'll be independent of them. If
we screw up and damage it, they'll know all about it. Ripping off new
allies is suicidal. Let's wait.
Professor S. D. GALLAGHER,
special adviser to Secretary of State for Technology
Shan was angry. She had been angry all the
way back to Constantine from the Temporary City and she wasn't
bothering to conceal her scent.
The boat journey hadn't helped her mood. Vijissi had
insisted on coming with them: Mestin had ordered him to look after her,
he said, and so he would.
It was rather touching. He moved closer and Aras
thought for a second that he was going to rub against her legs like a
flattering cat. He didn't. He just sat very close, looking in the same
direction as her.
It was a gesture of solidarity. Ussissi mirrored each
other, whole packs moving as one. Shan appeared to realize that,
because she almost smiled and sat still for a few moments as well.
It was the only thing she would have to smile about for
a while.
Aras couldn't imagine how any gethes
could land. They were technically limited, even compared to the isenj.
And the defense net was now set to destroy--not immobilize--any
incoming
craft that came in range and didn't transmit a friendly signal. "Why do
you think they would target Constantine?"
"They're looking for me," she said. She was fidgeting,
meshing her gloved fingers hard together and stretching the fabric
taut. "They think I'm there."
He walked behind her through the fields and down the
ramp into Constantine. There were small groups of men in beige and
taupe work clothes carrying crates and studying pieces of hemp paper.
The final check was being carried out before Constantine was abandoned
forever.
But they couldn't find Josh. And nobody would tell them
where he was.
"I don't like this," said Shan. Aras was surprised how
very fast she could move now. "Where's Josh? Something's gone bloody
wrong."
"I fear he might be trying to solve a problem without
bothering us."
Shan stopped abruptly and he nearly collided with her. "Do you know
something I don't?"
"Nothing, except Josh. He can be foolhardy."
"I'll give him foolhardy."
They reached Josh's house. Shan shoved the door open
and went from hall to kitchen. They found Deborah, Rachel, and James
packing. James flinched visibly. Deborah and the little girl just
froze, bewildered.
Shan fixed on James immediately. There was something in
his reaction that triggered the hardened police officer in her. Aras
knew that persona was in there: he had simply never seen it. "Deborah,
take Rachel and get in the bedroom."
"Shan, what--"
"Just fucking do it. Now."
Deborah snatched up Rachel and the door slammed behind her. Shan
rounded on James. They had never seen her like this, and neither had
Aras. "Where's your father?"
"He's not here."
"You've got three seconds to tell me." Shan was
nose-to-nose with the boy, leaning over him, white-faced and
terrifying. "What's happened?"
James stood his ground in silence. Shan grabbed his
collar and slammed him to the wall, cracking the back of his head
against it. "You tell me and you tell me now."
"No."
She drew back her arm and backhanded James so hard
across the face that he fell. No, Aras had never, ever
seen her like this. She dragged the boy to his feet again and pressed
him to the wall. His nose was bleeding. Aras wondered if he should
intervene before she killed him.
"Now," she said. She had
her forearm pressed across his throat. There was blood on her gloves.
"Plenty more where that came from."
James struggled to speak. "Dad's trying to protect you."
"I don't need protection."
"They landed soldiers." He could hardly get the words
out. "They landed. We saw them."
Shan slackened her lock a second before Aras would have
pulled her off James. "You tell me everything you know."
"They landed the soldiers from Thetis,
and Miss Neville. The soldiers are here. Dad's taken Miss Neville and
Dr. Rayat."
"You've disarmed marines?"
"They came on parachutes in these cocoons. We tracked
them all the way down."
Shan was all cold fury. "Fucking idiot. That's just great.
We've got bloody Royal Marine commandos
on site plus my biggest fan and that little shit Rayat. Why?"
"They're trying to stop anyone getting hold of c'naatat."
"Where's Josh taken them?"
"To Christopher Island."
"Shit. Aras, let the
Temporary City know we've got a breach on Christopher."
Aras could hear Shan but he was instantly not quite
there, not quite hearing. Josh had gone to the only environment where
the c'naatat organism existed naturally.
He had taken two gethes with him. Aras
couldn't imagine what game he was playing. James's chin was trembling.
"Why?" Shan asked.
James seemed on the edge of tears. He was just a child. "To destroy
it for good."
Shan marched James to the door by the scruff of his
neck. "Take me to the marines."
"You're on your own now," said Josh.
Lindsay stumbled into the shallows and lost her
footing. If Barencoin hadn't stepped in and hauled her to her feet
again, she felt she would never have had the strength to stand upright.
Bennett stood on the shore, rifle clutched across his chest, with an
expression that said he was rapidly losing what little enthusiasm he
had for the mission.
Rayat tumbled out after her. Nobody made a move to help
him but Barencoin watched him carefully. Lindsay checked the seal on
her rifle, making sure the water hadn't seeped in to the targeting
mechanism. Josh stood in the bobbing vessel as if he was looking for a
reason not to leave.
"What are you going to do now?" Lindsay asked.
"When your bombs detonate, I'll go and answer to Aras."
"And you trust him, do you?"
"He was my great-great-great-grandfather's friend,"
said Josh. "I suspect he merely tolerates me." He paused and pulled his
messaging device from his pocket. He frowned at the small screen and
let out a long breath. "My wife says Shan has paid us a visit. She's on
her way to question your soldiers."
That was just fine. Lindsay looked at her watch and
then at the bioscreen in her palm: even if Shan got any information out
of Qureshi or Chahal, it was too late for her to do anything about it.
And they could pass on a message for her, at just the perfect time. Come and get me.
We can see no
activity on Ouzhari but we will continue to scout the area. We have no
idea what to look for. We are reluctant to land because of the
quarantine of the island. Inform us if you wish us to breach it.
Ussissi reconnaissance pilot
to Temporary City
Aras's instinct to defer to a large, angry
female had kicked in completely. He trailed behind Shan and the
stumbling, terrified James, knowing he would find it hard to intervene
now. They reached the drying barn. Inside, two soldiers he knew as
Qureshi and Chahal were sitting on the dusty floor, cross- legged,
looking unconcerned while Martin Tyndale stood over them with a rifle.
In the corner was a mound of glossy white fabric
streaked and smeared with black charring.
"What's that?" asked Aras.
"Landing craft," said Martin. "One-man suits." His
expression said he was thinking the same as Aras. It was unbelievable.
"You got to hand it to them. They've got guts to attempt that."
Aras was shocked. He had no idea that humans were that
reckless for their own safety. That was
why they hadn't detected them.
Shan dropped James and shoved him over to Aras, then
took her gun out of her waistband and held it on the two marines. "Have
you searched them?" she asked.
"We've got their rifles," said Martin.
"Sweetheart, these are Royals. Booties." She stopped
two meters from them. Her tone was incongruously kind. "Come on,
fellers. You know the drill. Face down, on the floor, hands behind your
heads, and don't piss me about." The marines obeyed without a word. She
beckoned Martin forward. "If they move, shoot. Got that?"
"Got it," he said.
Shan handed her virin to
Aras and then body-searched both the marines, gun still in one hand. It
took a little time. She retrieved knives, lengths of sharp-edged wire,
ammunition, flares and tubes of plastic explosive. She handed the haul
item by item to Martin.
"Hands behind your back now," she said quietly, and
handcuffed and hobbled them with reactive tape that would contract
further with movement. Then she pulled them into a sitting position.
"And that," she said to nobody in particular, "is why you always
do a proper body search."
Shan suddenly reacted to Chahal. He was just looking at
her hands. No, he was looking at her watch,
or trying to. She squatted down in front of him.
"What is it, Chaz?" she said. "Late for tea?"
"Marine Balwant Singh Chahal, Three-seven Commando,
number five nine oblique eight seven seven six alpha."
"Okay, I get the idea. I know it'll take me a lot
longer to get an answer out of you than Jimmy here, but I will
get there in the end."
Silence. She was staring into Chahal's face, no
malevolence or anger visible at all, just sorrow. Qureshi was staring
straight ahead and past her. Aras wondered how far Shan would go. He
knew all too well how far she had been prepared to go in the past.
But that was with criminals. These were elite soldiers.
She respected them.
"Where's the rest of the detachment?"
"Marine Balwant--"
"Give it a rest. What's so important about the time?
What are Lin and Rayat up to?" Now Qureshi was staring at her hands. It
was the lights: violet shimmered across her fingers as they curled
round the 9mm weapon. Shan flicked a glance at Qureshi. She didn't miss
a thing, Aras thought. She was still a good copper.
"Yeah, I light up too, just like you do. Is that bioscreen still
working? If I take a look, will I pick up Lin's signal?"
She moved behind Chahal and jerked his arms up,
twisting his wrist so she could see the illuminated screen grown into
the cells of his palm. It was hurting him; Aras could smell it. The
marine didn't react.
"Ah," said Shan. "No readout from Webster or Becken.
Well, that's two we don't have to worry about. And we've got Bennett
and Barencoin still on the loose, I see. Lin's pumping, though. Look at
that heart rate. What's she up to?"
Qureshi shifted a little. "It's 1600 or thereabouts.
You're too late."
Chahal let out a hiss under his breath but Shan didn't
move. She glanced at Qureshi. "What's Lin done, Izzy?"
"You'll see soon enough," said Qureshi. "I'm really
sorry. And we did come to take you."
"Fair enough," said Shan. "Nothing personal."
The virin that Aras was
holding for her burst into light and color. The message was from the
Temporary City. In the transparent layers of the device, Aras saw
reconnaissance shots. A ussissi auxiliary unit was searching the seas
around the southernmost islands.
The marines exchanged glances, and Shan was watching
them. She seemed obsessed with the element of time. She walked slowly
round the two marines and Aras wondered if she was going to kick one of
them, putting the boot in as she called
it. He had many half-formed memories from her, and that was a common
one.
"So, you're trying to work something out," said Shan. "Did Lin get
there or not? So I'm guessing time matters to you because
there's an extraction planned, which means she's taking a sample, or
something is going to happen later, and I reckon that means a device of
some sort." She stopped in front of Chahal and pressed the muzzle of
the gun carefully against his forehead, right between his eyebrows. She
would shoot him: Aras was sure of it. The
humans might not have been aware of her state of mind, but even without
a scent to guide him, he could see the tension in her muscles and the
blood absent from her face.
"Commander Neville had bombs," said James suddenly.
Evidently he also believed she would fire her weapon.
Chahal was simply looking down into his lap now, jaw
muscles twitching every so often. "What sort?" said Shan.
"Radiation bombs," said James. "They're going to burn
the island. And then she's coming for you."
"Nukes? She's got nukes with her? Oh, fuck."
Aras had expected Shan to erupt at that
point, but she was still all white-faced control. "Izzy, I've got a
terrific memory for detail. Ade once told me you were EOD trained.
Well, you don't get ordnance that's much more explosive than this, so
you can come and help us dispose of them."
Chahal looked up. "That contravenes the--"
"Chaz, shut up," said Shan gently. "You can report me
to the Hague when you get back." She still had her gun to his head.
"Are you in voice contact with Lin?"
Chahal's eyes flickered. "I have audio implants."
Shan straightened up and stepped back. Then she walked
round behind him, gun still targeted at his head, and released the tape
round his wrists. "Give her a bell. Tell her Shan wants to see her. Go
on. Call the bitch."
Chahal paused and then pressed points on his wrist and
palm. He was muttering under his breath: Aras could hardly hear him.
Whatever implants these soldiers had, they were sensitive. Shan had
once joked--or maybe not joked, perhaps--that she would never copulate
with Sergeant Bennett because the whole detachment would hear. Aras
finally understood exactly what she meant.
Chahal then went silent, as if listening. He looked up
not at Shan, but at her gun.
"Commander Neville says she'll meet you."
Shan looked grim. She had stopped blinking completely.
It was an unnerving thing to watch. "Tell me what she really said."
"She said, �Come and get me.' "
Small wonder Chahal had tried to paraphrase it. Aras
watched Shan's jaw clench and lock. He interrupted.
"She's trying to provoke you, isan,"
he said.
"She's doing a fucking good job of it."
"You can't afford anger."
"I'll settle for some rough justice, then."
Aras caught Shan's arm carefully. "The ussissi will
carry out the search for the weapons. But you stay here."
She almost shook him off, then appeared to relent and
put her hand on top of his. But she still had her gun in the other. And
it was still held on Chahal.
"I never sent a junior officer in to do the dirty
work," she said. "And I'm not going to start now."
"I will accompany Qureshi."
"No. It might be a booby-trap for me."
"I will have my way on this, isan.
Once the ussissi have located the devices from the air, I'll ensure she
deals with them. No risks."
"You're very confident of that."
"You forget what I was." He was a soldier. He had been
a fine one, too. He had forgotten none of it. "You stay here."
"And you forget what I
was. EnHaz. Environmental crimes unit. I'm going to have that stupid
little cow because she's prepared to trash the environment to get me.
Now let me get on with my job."
"Listen to me. This is not necessary."
"Like the time you listened to me when I told you not
to go after the isenj?"
"And you nearly died because you insisted on coming
with me."
"I learned a lesson or two. I'll fire first this time."
Aras knew he could never force Shan to do anything. And
he was running out of time arguing with her. "Promise me you'll be
prudent."
"Okay. Prudence it is." Shan turned back to Chahal. "Tell her I'll
see her at Constantine. Remind her that I know the
tunnels, and she doesn't, and I'm in a fucking bad mood. And warn
Bennett and Barencoin to stay out of it."
Chahal's lips moved and Shan appeared to be listening
intently to him. She turned his palm over with one hand and said, "Show
me where they are." She was checking the location coordinates to verify
that Lindsay and the others were actually on the island and not just
decoying her. Then she retaped his hands and called Martin over.
"Give me one of their rifles," she said.
Aras had rarely experienced indecision, but he was
experiencing it now.
Shan could wait. She could
wait until he got back, and then they could tackle Lindsay and her
marines together, or--better still--they could leave them and wait for
the pathogen to dispatch them. It would take a week or two, but the
result would be the same.
No, Shan would never wait. Nobody could make her. He
wanted to protect his isan, his isanket, his
comrade-in-arms. But he was
Bezer'ej's custodian, and he still had his ancient duty.
"Let Vijissi go with you," he said at last. "Please?"
"Okay. If it makes you happy." She turned to Martin. "Make that two
rifles."
Qureshi did a credible job of matching their pace all
the way down to the beached boats on the shore. Aras had his fingers
tight around her upper arm just in case she tried to make a run for it,
although he had no idea why flight would solve any problems. All he
knew was that Shan had told him marines were supposed to escape if they
could and harass the enemy. He didn't enjoy thinking of them as enemies.
"What are you going to do with Josh when you find him?"
said Shan.
It was a question he hoped she wouldn't ask because he
didn't want to ask it himself. Josh had betrayed him. Josh had helped gethes
who were intent on--on what? Securing c'naatat or destroying
it? They didn't seem to
have a single purpose. But either way they were a threat to Shan and to
Bezer'ej.
"I have no idea."
Shan strode on. "I know you're upset about James. I'm
sorry I had to do that."
"He's a child. Did you have to hit him?"
"You're going soft."
"I don't shy away from necessary force."
"Anyone can bomb strangers. But sometimes you have to
hurt your friends."
It was savage, and it was true: and he feared she
despised him. Sometimes she was more wess'har than he was. But the
drive to protect and nurture the young was powerful and he couldn't
completely override it. "He's still a child."
Shan stood on the shingle, hands on hips, looking out
to sea. There were no lights visible from shallow-swimming bezeri. "I'm
an equal opportunities bastard," she said. "I don't care how old they
are, how disabled they are, or what sex, culture or religion they are.
I'll get answers out of them. I'm very fair that way."
She gave him an unconvincing smile in the way that she
did when she wanted him to believe everything was all right when it
wasn't.
Aras dragged one of the shallow-draft rigid inflatables
down to the beach. Its engine started easily, as if it were warm from
recent use. He climbed into the boat and pulled Qureshi in after him.
She was heavier than her slight frame suggested, but she was still a
very small female compared to his isan.
Aras looked back at Shan. "Be careful," he said. "They're still
marines first, friends second."
"You be careful of Josh," Shan said. "He's stiffed you
once. He'll do it again."
"I've known six generations of his family," Aras said. "I know his
beliefs. Why would he do this?"
"Because, sweetheart, deep down he's a shit-house like
every human," she said, and held her hand up in a parting gesture.
Then, almost as if she had thought of something, she pulled the virin
from her pocket and lobbed it into the
boat. "You'll need this. See you back at the Temporary City."
There was a following wind. They would make good time.
The boat bounced over the surface, whipping spray into the air,
creating a sense of a storm that wasn't there.
Qureshi was uneasy. She was scanning the horizon with
an increasingly furrowed brow.
"What's wrong?" Aras said. "Looking for something?"
"I wouldn't go charging in if I were you, sir," said
Qureshi. "How close are we to Christopher now?"
"Fifty kilometers. If you know when the bombs will
explode, you must tell me."
"You're already too late," said Qureshi, and leaned
back against the gunwale with her handcuffed wrists between her legs,
eyes closed.
Aras was leaning on the wheel and keeping an eye out
for craft from the Temporary City when three rapid flashes of
brilliant, burning, blue-white light caught his peripheral vision.
"What's that?" he asked.
Qureshi jerked her head round. She registered shock,
instant acidic shock. "Oh shit," she said quietly. "Turn around, sir.
It's too late."
A solid column like a gray efte
tree had grown suddenly out of the sea to the south. The head of it
blossomed into a canopy. Aras had never seen anything like it, except
in gethes books. Qureshi had scrambled on
to her knees to stare at the spectacle.
"Oh, my bezeri," Aras said. It was his first thought:
he thought of the beautiful black-grass island and he thought of the
massive shock wave transmitting itself through the sea. "My poor
bezeri. I promised them. I promised them."
Qureshi looked utterly defeated. He half hoped that she
would give him an acceptable explanation that wouldn't confirm his
worst fears. He wanted her to say that it was okay, that humans he had
watched over and protected for generations hadn't betrayed his foolish
trust and that it could all be put right again.
Wess'har were brutally pragmatic. His hope lasted less
than a second.
The billowing canopy was flattening and spreading.
Aras had not experienced helplessness for five hundred
years. He was the guardian of Bezer'ej, of the bezeri, and of the
island the humans called Christopher. And he'd failed. He didn't even
know how.
He grabbed the marine's face in his hands and jerked it
up to make her look at him. Qureshi's eyes said that she didn't expect
to survive the next few minutes, but she maintained her composure.
"Do you know what you've done? Do you?" His wess'har
instinct that told him to freeze and evaluate before reacting to a
threat suddenly couldn't override a growing pressure in his chest and
throat that felt remarkably like reliving one of Shan's rages. Aras
wanted to lash out. It was an alien emotion in every sense but it
almost consumed him until he let the sensible wess'har numbing reflex
kick in. "You've poisoned the island. You've poisoned the water."
He loosened his grip so suddenly and completely that
Qureshi almost tipped over the gunwale of the shallow craft. He grabbed
her before she fell. She wouldn't have survived long in the water with
her wrists bound.
She hadn't actually done anything. She had just landed
in hostile territory, serving her nation, as he had once done. It was
wrong to punish her.
Aras took out the virin
and looked for the latest reconnaissance images. The high aerial view
was from a patrol craft. Aras couldn't see the island at all; it was a
mass of flame and plumed tumbling smoke and filth. The cloud of debris
sucked up from the blast was drifting south over the sea.
He could feel the swell building as the shock wave
pushed out from the island.
"It's neutron bombs, sir. I know it's terrible, but
they're designed for minimal long-term fallout."
Aras couldn't take his eyes off the cube of images. "Is
this supposed to comfort the bezeri?"
"It might not be as bad as you think, sir. I'm really
sorry." EVACUATE said the virin.
Aras stood at the wheel again, swung the boat to
starboard and opened the throttle. He felt the first spots of heavy
rain on his face. It was the promise of a downpour.
The fallout would drop into the sea in the embrace of
rain. In the short term, Qureshi need not have worried too much about
contamination.
The bezeri, sensitive to pollution, slow breeding, a
fragile population at best, would feel it first.
He hoped--no, he prayed, in
case the gethes thing called God could
hear, and act--that they would flee.
Ouzhari no longer
exists. The landmass has been obliterated almost to the waterline. We are also detecting high
levels of cobalt in the fallout from the detonations. It has entered
the sea and spread north with the currents to other island coastal
areas. You must expect great loss of life among marine species. The gethes lied to you. The poison
from the bombs will linger for
years.
Lindsay looked at her watch and checked
the bioscreen in her palm.
"It's done," she said. "Christopher's neutralized."
She had imagined they would have to crawl
commando-style through passages to infiltrate the underground colony.
But Josh must have called ahead. The ancient shuttle
had been prepared: Bennett looked over the cockpit and shrugged,
apparently satisfied at its readiness. When they came through the main
thoroughfare, there were a couple of men dragging a crate between them,
and they simply glanced at Lindsay, the marines and Rayat, and went
about their business.
Bennett and Barencoin, rifles ready, overlapped and
covered each other, checking entrances, looking up at the galleries,
still as wary as their training in urban warfare made them.
"Would they booby-trap the place?" asked Rayat. Lindsay
wouldn't give him a rifle and he was edgy. He was carrying the last ERD
in a bergen across his back. It was quite a feat of endurance; and he
didn't look especially robust. "You never know with these types."
"We'll find out the hard way," said Bennett. "Want to
walk ahead?"
It wasn't at all like Bennett to be insolent. Barencoin
was silent. Lindsay didn't trust Rayat enough to have him armed with
the shuttle a long sprint away. She had no idea what an intelligence
officer's skills might be. She wasn't going to test them.
And she hadn't visited David's grave. She wouldn't have
time now. She'd never see it again; and that hurt. But the pain was
good, because it kept her motivated.
From time to time the sound of falling soil stopped
them in their tracks but it was just the walls crumbling. Lindsay
stared at the trickle of gold granules.
"I think they've started with the nanites," said Rayat. "Let's hope
the whole place doesn't fall in on us."
"It won't if you shut up," said Barencoin.
They stopped at St. Francis. The magnificent stained
glass was gone, leaving a clean window-shaped hole. Lindsay adjusted
her ballistic jacket, thinking that it felt insubstantial, and checked
her rifle. She could feel Bennett's gaze boring into her.
"You ever been hit by a round, ma'am?" he asked.
"No," she said. "You know damn well I haven't. But I
can give as good as I get."
"Ma'am, it'll still bloody hurt even with the jacket."
"She'll have a 9mm pistol, not an elephant rifle."
"She'll have whatever she took off Izzy and Chaz." He
gestured with his own rifle. "If she uses one of these buggers on you,
you'll know it. And if she gets a head-shot in, no jacket is going to
save you. This is all about timing now." He held up four candle-sized
sticks of dark green metal. He'd made his own private plans, then.
"Stun grenades. One's enough to immobilize a room. I think it might
take two to slow her down. Once we get her on the deck, we restrain her
and get to the shuttle."
"We need her down and disoriented for at least ten
seconds," said Barencoin. "Look." He demonstrated the titanium
composite straps he'd borrowed from engineering. Snap,
snap, snap: they locked in place automatically. They were what
you used to secure odd-shaped loads in the cargo bay. "This all depends
on getting her in a confined space. If you're too close to her when it
happens, you'll be on your back for a while too."
"And if we can't get her positioned right?"
"We'll shoot."
"Right. That'll be about as effective as a chocolate
teapot."
"It'll slow her down. That's all we need."
"And you make damn sure you're gloved. She's a
biohazard."
Barencoin tapped one gloved hand on his helmet with a
carefully blank expression. Bennett was looking at him as if he had
said something out of turn. Lindsay could read him too easily now; he
didn't like the idea of hurting Shan. He'd definitely go soft. She'd
have to watch him.
"Problem, Ade?"
He shook his head. "Just remember that Shan's used to
using a gun and she's trained to avoid situations where she might be
jumped. Don't get too confident."
She wouldn't. If she had to walk up to her and detonate
the ERD on the spot, she'd do it. Barencoin had almost certainly told
Bennett that she planned to kill Shan.
Or he might have thought it was a ploy to convince Josh
she was serious. Either way, she still wasn't sure she could rely on
either marine to help her do it when push came to shove.
She swallowed hard and lowered her voice. She really
hated deceiving them. They deserved better. "And if anything goes
wrong, you get the hell out, okay? Even if that means evacuating with
the civvies. Just run. Promise me that."
They waited.
The interesting thing about a colony of galleries and
tunnels, especially one that was now empty of people and
sound-deadening materials, was how far sound carried. Lindsay stood in
the center of the main passage, looking up and round her, now with a
clear plan to run into the church when Shan found her. It was a warren
of rooms but she knew her way in and out. And Bennett had his stun
grenades.
She thought she heard boots. She held her breath.
Then the sound stopped. Maybe it was a colonist. It was
a good way to get your head blown off, but it was too late to yell at
them to keep clear. Then the footsteps got louder and resolved into two
sets, one heavy, one light, and Lindsay raised her rifle a second after
the two marines did.
It was a woman in colony-standard beige overalls
leading a small redheaded boy. They looked surprised but not shocked.
"You need to clear this area, ma'am," said Barencoin,
dipping his barrel a little. "It's not safe."
The woman shrugged. "We're staying." She took a tighter
grip on the boy's hand. "The wess'har aren't going to get rid of us and
neither are you."
And she walked on, the child gazing back wide-eyed over
his shoulder at the intruders. Barencoin shook his head. "Silly cow.
They'll all be dead in a month."
Lindsay thought of the ERD. They'd be dead sooner than
that. She wanted to go after the woman and tell her to save her son, to
run, to join the others and get off the planet. But she drew on the
kind numbness of Sandhu's medication and concentrated on her rifle.
Shan had to be coming
She had to.
Lindsay glanced over her shoulder, first one way, then
the other, to check that Bennett and Barencoin were still in alcoves on
either side of the passage. Then she moved into the center of the main
route through the colony, defying her, presenting a target. Come and get me, bitch. I don't
need to live through this. If she was out there. No,
Shan couldn't resist it.
Lindsay wasn't entirely sure what happened next. One
second she was on her feet, looking up and around at the empty
galleries, rifle ready, and the next, something hit her hard at knee
height from nowhere and she was on her back. Her rifle went flying.
Something landed hard on her chest and pinned her down. She was looking
into a mouthful of needle teeth and then she saw the rest of the
ussissi and its weapon.
"Give me a clear shot, Vijissi," said Shan's voice. "Get off her."
And Shan was suddenly standing over her with a rifle--an
FEU issue rifle--pointed into her face. Lindsay couldn't work out where
she had come from. Shan didn't say a word: and Lindsay had expected an
awful lot of words from her. Shan just looked into her eyes with that
soulless, unbreakable gray stare, pressed the barrel to her
forehead--and then there were shots, and a shriek, and it wasn't
her own.
Lindsay thought Shan had fired. She was hammered into
the ground and for a moment she thought she was dying because she
couldn't breathe. Her ears rang.
The moment was both forever and instantly over.
Lindsay couldn't get up. She floundered on the paving
and tried to reach for her rifle but could do nothing but watch. She
watched Bennett empty his magazine into Shan, and she watched her drop
next to her, facing away.
Then there was silence except for the aftershock of the
rifles' report in her ears.
"Shit," said Lindsay. She got up far enough on one arm
to see the ussissi crumpled on the ground. They'd dropped them both.
Then Shan moved. She rolled over onto her stomach and
reached into her belt and returned five shots.
Nothing came back at her. Shan got to her feet,
unsteady, stumbling, but she was still moving, gun raised, and that was
when Barencoin came out firing.
And Shan was still standing.
She was standing right up to the point when she fired
again and Barencoin fell. Bennett rugby-tackled her to the ground and
almost had her pinned flat when she head-butted him and sent him
sprawling backwards.
Barencoin scrambled over to them and threw his weight
on her. Between them, they managed to flip her face down and get the
straps on. There was a lot of swearing and grunting.
"Fuck me," said Barencoin. He sat back and nursed his
knee. His pants were soaked with blood and he fumbled in his belt,
pulled out a primed needle-pack and slammed it into his thigh. Then he
let out a long sigh and took the dressing that Bennett was holding out
to him. "Fuck me, Ade, she should be dead. You all right?"
"So much for using the stun grenades," Bennett panted.
There was blood streaming from his nose and spattered across his face.
His helmet hadn't been much use against Shan's lowtech approach to
self-defense.
Lindsay managed to stand up and retrieve her rifle. She
limped over to the three of them, feeling as if her ribs had been
smashed. Shan was still struggling weakly, face contorted with pain,
also bloodied, and struggling for breath. Her trousers, waist to knee,
were peppered with holes, and there were a few in her jacket. Bennett
had obviously assumed she was wearing her ballistic vest.
"Is that hers?" Lindsay demanded. "Is that blood from
her? Show me."
Bennett was crouched over Shan, all concern. He looked
up at Lindsay and his expression was one she hadn't seen
before--absolute loathing. He looked very different, not like good old
Ade at all, and it wasn't just the mess across his face.
"No, it's my fucking
blood," he said. He wiped the back of his glove across his nose and
succeeded in smearing the blood still further. "She nutted me. She's
not even bleeding from wounds. Look." He indicated the ground and the
near wall. "Just the initial spatter. Are you clear? You were pretty
near her."
"Nothing on me, and I haven't got any open wounds
anyway." Lindsay tried to turn Shan over with her boot, but Bennett
raised his arm to block her. She really wasn't in command any more. She
wondered if she ever had been.
"You leave her, okay?" he snapped. He turned back to
Shan again and put his hand under her head. "Easy, ma'am. You'll be
okay. I'm sorry. I'm really sorry."
"You arsehole," Shan hissed at him. "You frigging
idiot. Don't you see what you've done?"
Lindsay thought that Bennett had finally realized, and
was now ashamed. It didn't matter. They had her. She
had her.
Barencoin was silent, adjusting the dressing on his leg
but watching her with clear distaste. Rayat emerged from the passage.
He looked down at Shan, wide-eyed. "How many rounds did it take to stop
her?" he asked. "My God. Think of what--"
"And you can fuck off, too," Shan said. For a woman
with an awful lot of holes in her, she was remarkably vocal. "You shot
Vijissi, you fucking bastards." But she had to be in agony. Lindsay
took a roll of gaffer tape from her leg pocket and ripped a length off.
"He's still alive," said Bennett. "He'll be okay."
"You shit--"
"I'm going to shut you up once and for all," Lindsay
said. "Hold her head, Mart."
"No, she won't be able to--" Bennett began, but
Barencoin cut him off.
"She'll bring the whole bloody wess'har cavalry down on
us, mate," said Barencoin. "We'll take it off later."
For a moment Lindsay thought Shan would sink her teeth
in Barencoin's arm, but she was seriously weakened despite her stream
of vigorous invective. The tape cut off her last expletive, which began
with c.
Now that she was immobilized and silenced, Lindsay took
out a first-aid wipe and scrubbed at Shan's face. It wasn't concern.
She was looking for a wound, any abrasion at all, but there wasn't a
mark on her and it was Bennett's blood
after all.
Shan's expression was murderous. It wasn't cowed, and
that both bothered Lindsay and gratified her, because there was no
honor in defeating a weak enemy.
But Shan could still give her that look, and it made
her remember how much of a disappointment she had been to her mother.
Bennett was fiddling with the fracture dressing that he
had placed across the bridge of his nose to stop the bleeding and
reduce the inevitable swelling. Shan had given him one hell of a crack.
Rayat crouched down next to Shan and started assembling
a sample vial. "Let's get some tissue samples off her now just in case."
He put one hand flat on the floor for a second. Lindsay
stamped down hard on it, heel first. He bit back a cry and glared up at
her. Barencoin swung his rifle on him and looked rather keen to see if
it still worked.
"Let's not," said Lindsay. "Let's get the shuttle going
instead."
Barencoin started limping down the passage, herding
Rayat ahead. Bennett hung back. Barencoin and Rayat stopped too.
"Go on, Ade," she said. "Get moving, all of you."
"I'll help you carry her," said Bennett. "You won't be
able to do it on your own."
There was no point continuing the charade any longer.
Lindsay took out the grenades from her belt-pack. She would have
preferred the remaining ERD to be certain, but that woman and her son
had disappeared into the warren around them. The grenades would do just
fine. She started setting the timers. "Get out of here, Ade. Now."
"What are you doing, ma'am?"
"We can't hand her over. Surely you can see that."
Lindsay didn't want to meet Shan's eyes again. It was one step too far.
She had never killed anyone face-to-face: she'd given orders to launch,
to take, to
open fire, but she had never done a
soldier's job, never this close up. "We'll all end up like her. Get
shot up, then back in the fight. Over and over. And that's just the
start. She has to die, Ade. She went to a lot of trouble to keep c'naatat
out of our hands, and for once I agree
with her."
"That's government property," said Rayat. "You can't.
You've got orders."
"I couldn't give a toss," Lindsay said. "Come on, Ade.
Get back to the shuttle. I'll be with you right away."
Bennett looked remarkably calm. He was a man who had
always grappled with physical fear, and overcame it anew each time. It
was one of the things Shan had said she liked about him. He had guts.
Now he raised his rifle and aimed at Lindsay. She
looked just past the barrel and into his eyes, because he wasn't a big
man, and all she could see was dried and drying blood from his eyebrows
down to his chin. The dressing across his nose looked almost comical, a
racoon's mask: his determination didn't.
"Disarm the grenades, please, ma'am."
"That's an order, Sergeant. Leave us."
"No ma'am. You put the grenades down and you put your
rifle down on the ground and back away. Or I'll fire."
"Bennett, don't be stupid. Back off. It's an order.
Last chance." Lindsay tried to stare him out. It wasn't working. The
grenades felt uncomfortable in her hands. "I have to do this."
"Ma'am, I won't let you murder an unarmed civilian. Not
even if it was Rayat." There was an ominous whirr from his rifle as the
automatic targeting tried to accommodate the close range, and he showed
no sign whatsoever of lowering it. "You can't order me to breach the
convention. So help me, I'll slot you right now if you don't put those
bloody things down and step away from her."
"I don't think he's joking," said Rayat. "And we don't
have all day."
"Piss off, sir," said Bennett without breaking his
gaze. But Rayat was right. The sergeant wasn't backing down. It struck
Lindsay that they might just have been waiting for an excuse to shoot
her. And then Shan would be free.
Lindsay thought briefly of pulling the pins anyway,
right now. She had factored that into her plans too. It was a sacrifice
worth making.
She looked at the small, dull metal levers and thought,
yes, now, on the count of three.
But she didn't.
She tried to move her hands, but she just stared at the
grenades.
She had visualized it so many times. But when it came
to it, she couldn't do it, not even for David. She wanted to live.
"Okay," she said, and lowered both devices to the
floor. Barencoin limped forward and picked them up. For an ill-advised
moment, Lindsay let herself look at Shan; and her expression, even with
a length of tape over her mouth, said it all. You don't have the guts.
Shan would have pulled the pins. Lindsay knew that. But
she wasn't Shan, and now she knew she never would be, not even when it
really, really mattered. It was a moment of self-revelation that she
would never forget however hard she tried.
"Let's get her in the shuttle and put some distance
between us and the wess'har," Lindsay said, trying to sound brisk and
efficient. "Because when they find out, they're going to be furious."
"More furious than they'll be for torching
Christopher?" asked Barencoin, without using the word ma'am.
It wasn't working out as she planned.
She would have to come up with something else, and fast.
There ought to be
a room in every house to swear in. Under certain circumstances,
profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer.
MARK TWAIN
The first bezeri to be washed up on Chad
Island--to the north of Christopher--was a juvenile female.
The cobalt in the gethes'
bombs had poisoned the air and the land--and the sea. It was an
especially filthy weapon. It was designed to poison for many years to
come, a grotesque twist on the sleeping pathogen that his wess'har
comrades were spreading. It killed indiscriminately.
Aras knelt down and laid his hand on the gelatinous
mantle of the bezeri. There were already tiny keteya
swarming over it, seizing the chance of a meal. And his heart broke.
He had never understood what humans had meant by that,
but he knew now. There was a definite sensation of pain deep in his
chest, a pressure that made breathing unpleasant, and it ran all the
way up the back of his throat into his mouth. Why did they do this?
He stood up and looked out across the bay. The cloud
cover meant that he should have been able to see some light from bezeri
near the surface, but there was nothing. He had walked into the water
several times and used the signaling lamp, but they didn't come.
Aras knew how vulnerable they were to poisons in the
water. Their settlements were clustered near landmasses. The slightest
chemical changes were dangerous: isenj pollution had nearly destroyed
them. It was very easy to kill bezeri without planning to.
Aras battled with the pressure of sorrow that
threatened to crush his chest and thought of all the years he had spent
watching the bezeri recover their numbers, never as great as before the
isenj arrived, but a recovery nonetheless. The isenj hadn't planned to
kill bezeri any more than the gethes had.
Surendra Parekh hadn't set out to kill bezeri either.
He had balanced that crime with two shots from Shan's
old but efficient hand-weapon. He wondered what it would take to
balance this crime, and he began to see it would take a great deal of
balancing indeed, and more than he could carry out alone.
And then there was Josh. Aras was staring at the water
but not seeing it. Why did he betray me?
Josh was another gethes
who probably hadn't planned to kill bezeri. He never meant to
do it. Aras could almost hear him now.
He would repent. He would seek forgiveness from God.
But it was none of his
god's business to forgive this.
Aras wasn't minded to leave Josh's punishment to his
god. He'd do it himself. He had forbidden the ussissi and the Cetekas
clan to touch him. Find him. Hold him. Wait for me
to get back.
After nearly two hundred years of living alongside
them, Aras had finally understood a fundamental aspect of humans. For a
moment he feared it had become clear because the Shan-parts of him had
clarified it.
Difference made others invisible to gethes.
Was she like that? No. She
behaved differently, whatever went on in her mind.
The sea was still dark gray and lightless. There were
no bezeri to be seen.
Aras recalled a game he used to play with little Rachel
Garrod. She called it hide and seek. Sometimes he would find her
huddled in a corner with a garment over her head, and she was
astonished that he could see and find her, because she could not see
him. Adult gethes behaved similarly. They
believed other species had no individuality, no sense of self, simply
because they couldn't see it, measure it, or experience it; and if they
could not conceive of it, it could not exist. Perhaps wess'har, used to
feeling fleetingly what another felt through oursan,
could stretch their imaginations a little further.
Aras knew that the bezeri female who now lay rotting at
his feet had felt and feared, because that was what all life did in one
way or another. And even if she had neither complex language nor the
ability to conjure up abstract concepts--and she did, he knew
she did--then her life would be no less
valid because of that. That was what
separated his kind from gethes. Gethes thought their
imaginary god had made them unique, both as individuals and as a
species, even if they no longer believed in him.
The keteya were leaving
visible holes in the bezeri's mantle now. Aras wondered what would
happen to them, too.
For a moment he wished the gethes
had succeeded in grabbing c'naatat for
themselves. He would have delighted in seeing them reach extinction in
their own filth and excess.
But many others would have died with them, and he shook
the vengeance away. It was a uselessly violent thought, and he hadn't
lavished one like that even upon the isenj. The thought felt like
Shan's. He understood her various angers a lot better now.
He stood over the bezeri until she started to fall
apart under the small but persistent assaults of the keteya. It
was getting dark. He had been there
on the shore for hours, and it occurred to him that Shan would be
worrying about him. She would be back by now. She would have found
Lindsay Neville and killed her. The marines wouldn't touch her. He was
sure of that.
Shan could always imagine what it was like to be behind
someone else's eyes. He thought of the gorilla, and was glad that she
could still feel pain for the being, and for all things that were even
less like her than the ape. He hadn't misjudged her at all, not from
the very first time he had met her. He would go back to Constantine and
find her, and then he would seek some comfort from the one human who
had ever justified his affection and loyalty.
A light caught his eye.
It was faint, and green. He had never seen that single,
unchanging color before: it defied the signal lamp's translation. The
device stayed silent. Then the light was joined by others.
Aras scrambled back up the cliff as fast as he could to
get a better vantage point. When he turned and looked down onto the
darkening water, he could see light upon light, all green, all
unchanging, but growing in intensity and number
His signal lamp started to crackle. He couldn't make
out any words.
The lights flared. They were brighter than he had ever
seen now, even brighter than the communal songs that rippled through
the water for weeks at a time; and still he didn't understand them.
The sea was on fire with green light. He stared at it,
lost, remembering the wess'har who saw the lights many years before and
who first understood when the bezeri were calling out help us.
The signal lamp spat out a stream of loud static, and
his own moment of revelation was terrible. The bezeri weren't calling
for help this time.
They were screaming.
We have had no
contact from Shan Frankland or Vijissi. They might be keeping radio
silence because they still seek the human invaders. We would also ask
for confirmation of the identity of an unidentified vessel that has
left Constantine and is heading for Wess'ej. It is not on our schedule
even though it responded with nonhostile code.
(Operations overseer, Temporary City)
In zero g, the shattered rounds that were
easing out of Shan's body simply drifted in front of her. It was like
watching a film of yourself being shot, run backwards. Eddie would have
been amazed by it.
Shan had wondered if she would ever get used to c'naatat's
thorough healing procedures and now
she knew she would never have the chance to.
She couldn't.
Vijissi was curled up in a ball beside her, panting. He
was badly hurt. Shan nudged him with her shoulder, making him drift
back against the bulkhead, and he opened his black hunter's eyes and
focused on her. She hoped he'd make it. To his right, just in her
peripheral vision, Ade Bennett was still fussing with the tape over his
broken nose, checking carefully with the mirror of his camo compact
held very close to his face. Shan had never taken him for a vain man.
He looked upset.
Then he noticed she was looking his way. He snapped the
compact shut. "How you feeling?" he said. He swung as close to her as
he dared. "You still in pain?"
She stared at him. It was all she could do while gagged
but she knew she could always convey a command without opening her
mouth. He shot a few nervous glances in Lindsay's direction and then
began easing the tape off.
"Leave that," said Lindsay, looking up from the
tracking screen.
Bennett took no notice whatsoever and peeled the last
of the tape clear. It hurt. He winced as if he could tell. Shan looked
into his earnest hazel eyes and the grubby dressing that separated
them. They were almost nose-to-nose.
"Piss off," she said.
If she'd head-butted him again, he couldn't have looked
more wounded. He cared what she thought of him. He probably thought
he'd done the honorable thing and faced down his superior officer to
save her life. Under normal circumstances, it would have been an heroic
act. But he really should have let Lindsay fragment her. It just made
things a whole lot messier now.
"I'm really sorry, Boss," he said to her. "Really I am.
But I'll make damn sure they treat you right."
"I bet," said Shan, and she could have sworn his eyes
looked a little glassy.
"Here we go," said Barencoin. The shuttle was tiny: one
main compartment forward, propulsion section midships, and two aft
service compartments leading on to a small open cargo bay. Shan could
hear everything. "Isenj codes, ussissi pilot. That's our escort.
Twenty-eight minutes to intercept once we break course. On your mark."
"Okay. Get us out of Wess'ej space."
"Very good, ma'am."
Shan pushed herself away from the bulkhead with her
feet and rolled slowly to get a better look. Lindsay was leaning over
Barencoin, looking at the readouts.
"I need a pee," Shan said. She kept thinking about the
grenades. Barencoin had them: she could see them tucked neatly into
pockets on his webbing. It would be a damn shame to blow them on this
fragile ship and take two good men with her, but she had run out of
options. She just needed to get her hands and legs free, and she had
less than twenty-eight minutes to do it. She tried not to think of Aras
but it was impossible. "Does this thing have heads?"
Lindsay drifted over to her. Shan expected a boot in
the face or something equally eloquent. It never came.
"You shot me point-blank," said Lindsay. "Aren't you
supposed to shout something like, �Stop--armed police'?"
"No, I was trying to kill you," said Shan. "And I don't
normally miss at that range. Not unless some bastard shoots me first,
of course."
"How many people have you
killed?"
Shan paused to count. "Eight."
"Including Parekh?"
"Maybe. I forget."
Lindsay had never believed that. And now she looked
scared. Shan thought she might be scared of her. Then it became clear. Oh,
it's not about revenge. Not entirely, anyway.
"Can't you wait half an hour?" Lindsay asked. Her tone
was quiet, her expression seeking something.
"When a girl's got to go, she's got to go."
"Not going to try anything stupid, are you? You know I
need to hand you over."
Lindsay had always found it hard to meet her gaze. Shan
had spent a professional lifetime cultivating that gorgon's stare and
she knew it worked, especially on Lindsay. But she was looking into
Lindsay's eyes now, and it was very clear she was thinking something
she wanted Shan to realize. Ah.
Lindsay might have been gutless when it came to it, but
she knew Shan wasn't.
"You know you can trust me to be sensible," said Shan. Go on,
Lin, do something right for once. "I know
how much I'm worth."
Lindsay almost looked relieved. "I'll take you aft."
"I can do that," said Bennett, who clearly didn't trust
Lindsay any further than he could spit. "I--"
"Sod off," said Shan. "I still have my dignity."
They didn't even have to take her alive to get a tissue
sample. She had to be gone, really gone.
And there were ways to be gone forever out here.
For exactly five vivid and painful seconds, she thought
of Aras again and it was unbearable. Then she switched off, as she
always had.
"I come too," said Vijissi suddenly. He heaved himself
straight and pulled himself hand over hand to the hatch. "She is not to
be trusted."
Shan gave Lindsay an imperceptible nod. Lindsay
shrugged, clearly playing along. "If you bite, I'll shoot you, you
little bastard," she said. She fumbled with the locking straps and
released Shan's legs. For a second Shan thought of putting the boot in,
but it would only have satisfied her temper, not achieve her objective.
She behaved.
Vijissi looked like it would take all his effort to
accompany them a few meters. He trailed the two women through the
propulsion section, through a barely hip-wide passage, and into the aft
section that opened onto the cargo bay with its loading hatches on
deck, deckhead, and three bulkheads. They were all closed. Through the
pressure hatch, it was a black void.
Lindsay hit the hatch lock behind her. "What are you
planning?" she asked.
"You know damn well or you wouldn't have secured that
hatch," said Shan. She turned slightly and gestured with her bound
hands. "They'll never find a small cold object in space. It's about as
dead as anyone can get. And it's quick. They reckon less than twelve
seconds." But twelve seconds sounded like a long time right then. Where's
my last noble thought? Why am I just walking
through this? Where's my fear and regret and panic? "Get this
off me."
"No."
"If I go, I go with dignity, not fucking trussed up
like some chicken."
"I'm sorry."
Vijissi struggled into animation. It seemed to have
dawned on him a little late that Shan was planning an exit through the
air lock.
"No!" He settled beside her. Zero g made his panic slow
and undramatic. "No, I promised Mestin I would always look after you--"
"It's too late, mate." No, no, no, I don't want to die,
and I want to see Aras again, and it's not the way I wanted to end it,
and--
Then the other Shan took over, the one who always knew
what to do in a crisis. "Free my hands," she ordered.
Lindsay hesitated.
Then she relented and reached for Shan's wrists. Shan
thought a final punch might have been satisfying, but there was no
adequate amount of revenge she could ever exact for detonating ERDs on
Christopher.
Lindsay seemed confident that the ERDs had detonated.
Shan hoped Aras had been a long way from the explosions, but if he had
survived, he'd be alone, and she knew he dreaded loneliness more than
death. My poor bloody Aras. It wasn't fair
to him.
The comms panel beside them lit up. Bennett was on the
squawk box.
"Hey, what's happening back there?" he demanded. He
must have seen the lock status show up on the panel. And they'd taken
longer than he'd allowed for. "Commander? Come on, bloody well--"
"Stay out of this Ade," said Shan. "Do me a favor and
tell Aras I'm sorry and I didn't abandon him."
"Christ, you--"
Lindsay shut off the sound. Shan wondered if Bennett
had heard her, and if he could still hear her now. And then she looked
round at the locked hatch behind them, and she could see his face
pressed to the plate, all horror. She really wished she hadn't. She
turned quickly back to the cargo bay.
"I've never doubted your integrity," Lindsay said, and
moved like a swimmer to the manual controls that would open both the
aft hatch and all the cargo bay doors.
It was the compliment that hurt, not the hatred. Shan
almost weakened. She had one last weapon. It was personal and it was
vengeful. It struck her as very telling that in her last moments she
still wanted to lash out and wound. So that's what I am, then,
she thought. And here's something to remember me
by.
"Now this is how you do
it, girlie," Shan said, and stood as tall as she could manage. "Next
time you lose your bottle and you can't pull that pin, think of me.
Because you'd give anything to be just like me, wouldn't you? And you
never will. I'm all the guts and conviction you'll never have."
Lindsay said nothing, not with her mouth anyway. Her
face crumpled for a second. Gotcha, thought Shan.
Lindsay would have plenty of time to think on that until she died old
and disappointed by her own inadequacies. It was better than a punch.
Bruises healed. I would have been dead by now
anyway. Old age back home, or here with an isenj round in my skull.
Borrowed time. And it's run out. Quit whining.
Then Shan stopped thinking. It was down to her
brain-stem now, the lungfish-lemur-monkey within, and she let it do the
panicking rush to destruction for her, because every second she
examined the situation was a second closer to turning back and
surrendering. The bezeri had died for this. Her life didn't matter a
damn, except to her.
And to Aras. Stop it.
The cargo bay hatch opened and Shan stepped over the
coaming. The opening in the bulkhead was closing in two sections, top
to bottom, like a pair of scissors.
Vijissi shot through after her.
"For Chrissakes, Vijissi, get back now,"
Shan yelled.
But Vijissi tried to look after Shan to the very last,
and as the deckhead opened and the escaping atmosphere whipped her
hair, her lungs began struggling and he grabbed her hand hard in his
oddly soft paw. So this it, Shan thought.
She really was dying. It didn't feel that momentous, just
disappointing. She gripped Vijissi, not wanting to look into his face.
It was agonizingly cold. Her chest hurt. She had
seconds.
She pushed out from the open hatch and let go of
Vijissi and didn't see where he went, because she had screwed her eyes
up tight to shut out the bottomless, distanceless, silent void that had
no up or down or near or far.
She was holding out in vacuum longer than any human.
That was something. It felt like walking under the sea to apologize to
the bezeri for the last time, only much, much colder.
Her last thought before her lungs gave up straining for
one final breath and the final blackness engulfed her was that she had
never told Aras that she loved him. I think I do. Maybe he knows anyway. Maybe--
I can assure you
I had no idea what Commander Neville was planning. Her orders were only
to detain one of our own citizens, Superintendent Frankland. I greatly
regret the events on Bezer'ej and I fully appreciate the likelihood
that this will be viewed as an outright act of war by the wess'har
authorities. Your offer of asylum for those members of the
Actaeon crew who want it is a generous one and we
will evacuate to Jejeno any personnel who wish to leave.
Message from the FEU foreign minister
to Minister PAR PARAL
UAL
"He lies," said Ual.
Eddie thought of the urine vial in his inside pocket
and the way the ruby bead and the fragment of quill rattled, pricking
his conscience. He hadn't let the container out of his sight. He wasn't
sure if he'd ever be able to hand it over to Shan now.
He was stranded on Umeh. But it was still a safer haven
than Actaeon.
"Why do you think that?" he asked.
Ual shimmered with emerald beads. "How did he expect to
take this Frankland off Bezer'ej if they landed by dropping in cloth
suits?"
"You know a lot."
"There are no restricted frequencies on what you call
ITX. That concept is one we have to learn from you, I think. Unless you
speak in that odd code some of you employ, all hear everything if they
choose to listen."
"And you do." Eddie was still finding it hard to come
to terms with the fact that enemies could share an open ITX relay.
Humans wouldn't. But then if there was a serious threat of the wess'har
trashing the thing in a fit of pique, and the isenj couldn't nip out to
repair it…no, he was starting to grasp how they thought. Nobody
poisoned a shared water supply. "I would like to broadcast a story on
this. Can you confirm how serious the situation is?"
There was a cup of coffee and a bowl of some isenj
beverage on the polished cube of a table between them. Ual didn't seem
to be in a drinking mood. Even without a facial expression to guide
him, Eddie knew the minister was scared.
"The ussissi are saying the environmental damage to
that area of Bezer'ej is severe and that the bezeri are dying in very
large numbers," said Ual. "You will recall what happened when we did
the same thing unintentionally. Your kind appear to have used a very
unpleasant device indeed, one containing cobalt, a persistent poison to
add to the initial destruction."
Eddie didn't know much about physics, although he had
an extensive mental catalog of things that people could use to kill
each other. He checked his database. Salted bombs, especially cobalt,
were at the far unethical end of ordnance, a terrorist's weapon. They
were ultra-dirty.
"They weren't leaving anything to chance, then," said
Eddie quietly, ashamed beyond belief. He could hardly believe it of
Lindsay. He still found it hard to accept how ruthless women could be.
"I have to tell this story, Ual. People on Earth need to know what
we've done."
"Humans have no difficulty saying negative things about
their own kind, then."
"I certainly don't. But sometimes the likes of me are
the only ones who will tell hard truths."
"And why are you asking me for help?"
"For facts I might not know."
"Your masters might not broadcast them."
Eddie was caught off guard. He had grown up in a world
where information couldn't be suppressed easily. There were simply too
many routes and too many connections between people and nations for
anyone to control it, except…except if you were isolated on one end of
a line 150 trillion miles from home. They could cut him off.
He couldn't call anyone except via that ITX line, and
the FEU was controlling the Earth end of that. There was no chance of
placing the story elsewhere or slipping a note to someone down the pub.
If he had a story, it went through BBChan, and BBChan was reliant on
the FEU relay. The station could make all the brave stands it wanted,
but if it didn't receive the information, he was stuffed.
"I took my eye off the ball," he said. "But I'll find a
way through."
"I think you might not need to," said Ual. He leaned
forward, rattling musically like fine crystal, and pushed the now tepid
coffee towards Eddie. "And I assume you will stay. I enjoy our chats.
This isn't a sensible time to return to Actaeon."
"Thanks," said Eddie. "I know."
The ground car was waiting outside the ministry, parked
so close to the entrance that when he opened the front door he could
step straight into its open side without walking on pavement.
Serrimissani was waiting inside the vehicle, absorbed by moving images
on her text pad.
"You exceed even the isenj's crimes," she said. She
wasn't her usual impatient, stroppy self: she seemed very subdued
indeed. "What have you started, gethes?"
Eddie bristled. "Don't lump me in with them," he
snapped. "I am not crew. I am not military. I'm an
independent civilian and
I'm as disgusted as you are."
She stared at him. And then, overtaken by an impulse,
he squeezed past her, the back of his hand brushing against that odd
stiffly ridged coat for the first time, and stumbled out through the
car's other side opening onto the street and into the tight-packed
crowds of isenj.
He almost fell, but the press of bodies held him up and
he regained his balance. So many isenj stopped in their tracks that the
river came to a halt at his point in the stream. He heard a chattering
commotion from a distance where the flow had not stopped as fast, a
motorway pile-up in the making. He wondered if any isenj had been
crushed or trampled. But there was nothing he could do except move or
not move with them.
For the first time, he walked the roads of Jejeno. He
had no choice. This was not a crowd. It was a current and he drifted on
it. The scent of wet wood and leaves, incongruously sylvan for a world
with no forests or open land to speak of, filled his mouth. He couldn't
speak their language and he had no idea where he was going. He looked
down on the top of thousands of spider heads.
The chattering and rasping was rising in volume. "Anyone here speak
English?" he shouted. Oh, you
tourist. You swore you'd never say that. He was near the
ministry. There might be government staff in the throng. They might
speak--
"Why you do this attack?" rasped a voice behind him.
Eddie tried to turn his head. The isenj sounded about
three or four meters away. "I don't know. They're afraid of c'naatat.
Lots of humans would want it."
"Fool," said the voice.
"Don't you want it?"
"Look around you," said the isenj. "Fool."
It was a great moment in television, but Eddie couldn't
get his arm free to release the bee-cam from his pocket. He accepted it
as a lesson in reality. This moment was about him, and not an event to
be filtered through a lens into distant entertainment.
And how was he going to get out of the crowd?
"Michallat," called Serrimissani. There was an exchange
of chittering. He craned his neck as far as he could. Serrimissani was
clambering over the mass of isenj like a sheepdog running across the
tiled backs of a tight-packed flock. "Move diagonally. Swing round."
He tried. He changed direction. It was like being a
container ship. He could turn, and he could stop, but it was a big
U-turn and a long time stopping. Serrimissani caught up with him, the
angry mongoose again, and seized his sleeve to steer him. The cacophony
around him was deafening now.
The ussissi held onto him until they had eased around a
full arc and the car and the ministry building were in sight again. She
shoved him the last meter and he fell into the open car.
As he was scrambling to his knees, Serrimissani cuffed
him hard across the back of the head and he felt hot needles plunge
into his shoulder. He yelled out.
She had bitten him. She was enraged.
Eddie rolled over and hoisted himself backwards onto
the seat by his triceps. He hurt all over, especially his head and
shoulder.
"Next time it will be your throat," she hissed. "Never
do that again. You cause chaos. You cause
injury. Your kind will never learn to control your impulses."
"I'm sorry," he said. He felt his shoulder: it was wet
with something he suspected was his own blood rather than her saliva.
He wondered what you could catch from a ussissi bite.
"Take me back to Umeh Station," he said. "I want to
hear what you all have to say. I want to show humans back on Earth what
you think of us, in case it helps bring us to our senses."
Serrimissani gave him her scorpion-snack look and
stared deliberately out of the opening. Then she turned back to him.
"I am afraid for you," she said. "And you should fear
us too."
"Will your people talk to me on camera?"
"Let us hope you continue to be useful to the isenj, or
there will be no gethes left alive in this
system by the end of the season."
Eddie took that as a yes.
The ussissi were one now: they prowled around
the quiet disorder of Constantine's evacuation, oddly synchronized in
their movements, sniffing through the final ranks of colonists who were
waiting to embark from the Temporary City. High-pitched chattering
filled the air but the humans were silent.
Aras stood and watched from a distance. All he wanted
was Josh Garrod and Dr. Mohan Rayat, but he wanted Josh more. He had
never felt quite like this. Wess'har were not vengeful. They would
balance, and do the job without hesitation as he had done at Mjat, but
they didn't invest emotion in the act. Now Aras not only wanted to hurt
Josh: he needed to.
He wasn't proud of it. It was a human legacy. But he
felt no guilt either.
And where was Shan? She still hadn't called in. He
would have to search for her. He was beginning to worry, even though
she was the one person other than himself who had least to fear from
violence.
The ussissi were still searching, staring up into
faces, comparing features to the images in their virin've.
Aras was reminded of pictures from Constantine's history archive, of
dogs set to guard humans. He didn't want to dwell on the parallels. He
was responsible for the humans being here and he was ultimately
responsible for Shan becoming a magnet for human greed. He hadn't set
the bombs, but his actions had led to this point. He had to clear up
the mess he had made. No, Josh betrayed me. He
betrayed the bezeri. He could have chosen otherwise.
Aras had been watching the search of the line for a
while when someone new joined it and approached one of the ussissi.
It was Josh Garrod.
He wasn't making any attempt to slip unnoticed into the
queue. The ussissis' single, constant, chittering voice stopped
abruptly and they all stared as one at Josh.
For a moment Aras thought they were going to disobey
him and rip the man apart where he stood. They were certainly agitated
enough to do it. But they didn't, and simply surrounded him as if he
might make a run for it. The other colonists made a sudden and large
space around them. Josh spotted Aras and moved towards him, one arm
outstretched as if in plea.
When Aras saw Josh's face--stricken, anguished, drained
of blood--something in him welled up and took him over in a way it
hadn't when he destroyed Mjat. This was a man he had held as a newborn,
whose father and grandfather and ancestors right back to Ben Garrod had
been his friends. They had almost been his family. He had come as close
to loving them as kin as a wess'har ever could. And now in an instant
they had smashed everything he had struggled to restore for five
hundred years.
He grabbed Josh by his collar. His eyes hurt, as if
there was an unbearable pressure building inside them, and he had never
felt that before. He tried to shake the sensation aside. It was
constricting his throat.
"Why did you betray me? Why did you do this?" Motive
didn't matter, but a part of him needed an answer. "Tell me. I thought
we shared the same purpose. I thought you were my friend."
Josh's voice was almost a sob. "We didn't know what was
in the bomb, Aras. We didn't know."
"You took the gethes there
to carry out their desecration. You knew.
How could you do this?"
"But we didn't know they were going to use such a
persistent poison." Josh's breath was coming fast, scented with the
sourness of an empty stomach that was almost more pungent than the
acrid scent of panic. "They told us it would dissipate in days, or we'd
never have helped them. We'd never have risked the bezeri like that. We
thought that burning the island was better than allowing c'naatat
to be exploited. Tell us what we can do
now to help. Anything. Just tell us."
Josh sagged against Aras's grip. Aras believed every
word of his repentance.
But words weren't enough to soothe his pain. He envied
Shan her profanities. A ussissi seized his other sleeve, trying to pull
him away from Josh.
"We will do this," she said. "This will distress you.
Just go."
Aras shook the ussissi off. He let go of Josh and stood
looking at him and almost drowning in the pain that was threatening to
overwhelm him. And he felt Josh's anguish and regret too, because Josh
was a good man who had never wavered from a path of respect and
noninterference until the gethes drove him
to it.
"I'm sorry, my friend." Josh appeared to be weeping. He
put his hand out to touch Aras, something he had always avoided for
fear of contamination. Aras stepped back. It was too late for that now.
"We never meant this to happen. God forgive us."
Aras knew that and it made no difference. His human
side wanted to comfort Josh but his wess'har mind--and he was still
wess'har, however altered--said that the man's apologies and tears and
true intent counted for nothing.
Aras felt himself reach for his tilgir
and pull it from its sheath as if he was going to do some harmless
pruning. "I truly cared for your community, and I truly cared for you."
He should have let him pray first, he knew, but prolonging the agony
wasn't the wess'har way. "Now I have to balance. I'm sorry. I am so
very, very sorry."
Josh opened his lips as if to speak and Aras swung the
blade two-handed, right to left. Josh fell and the only sound was two
thuds as he hit the ground.
The silence around Aras was complete and lasted three
seconds.
Then it dissolved into small cries, and then screams,
and the ussissi turned as one and rushed at the huddle of colonists,
scattering them.
They were simply holding them back. But it all fell
into chaos, children crying and screaming, men running. Aras stood
looking down at Josh's body, only half aware of the panic and noise
around him. He wasn't about to repent and he felt no guilt.
He was wess'har. He had done what he should have done
many, many years ago.
But it hurt him in a way that shooting Surendra Parekh
never had. He could feel shaking starting in the pit of his stomach and
the pain in his eyes had grown from prickling to stabbing.
The ussissi female trotted up to him, head lowered in
appeasement.
"Go," she said. "We will deal with this."
This time he accepted her help. "Be careful of the
blood," he said. He noticed he had a great spray of it down his tunic
and he could smell it. "He has been to Ouzhari. Or I might have caught
him with my claws." He doubted that even c'naatat
could survive decapitation, but Aras was taking no chances. "Burn his
body."
Fire was a prudent move. But Aras also remembered all
that Ben Garrod had told him about Hell, and the image distressed him.
Aras walked down to the cliffs again and searched for
the lights. His tilgir dangled from his
hand. He'd clean it later.
It wasn't unknown for the bezeri to go deep at times of
threat and crisis. He hoped that was what they had done, but he doubted
it in that core of him that understood and accepted reality. He'd
watched the single, unbroken mass of green light fade and die, and that
was what he knew had happened to the bezeri.
Those were the ones who had died quickly, closest to
the fallout from Actaeon's bombs. There
were other bezeri settlements further from the chain, but in time the
contamination would travel further and drop silently into the sea with
each rainstorm. It would seal the fate of the remaining bezeri
population and the other life on which they fed and depended. They were
tied to place. They could never flee.
Now there was Rayat to hunt down.
Aras would have a go, as
Shan called it. He would also have a go at
that little female, the one Shan called Lin, if Shan had not already
killed her. It had been her doing as well. Perhaps he would turn Rayat
over to the ussissi. It would appease their rage for a while.
And where was Shan? Isan
or not, he would give her a piece of his mind for worrying him so.
He was still contemplating how much he needed her to
tell him it would all be fine when one of the young Cetekas males
approached him, reeking of anxiety. He thought for a moment that the
boy had heard--or seen--that he had balanced the crimes of Josh Garrod.
The boy stopped three meters short of him.
"What is it?" asked Aras. It would be more dead bezeri,
he knew. They would congregate around stricken comrades rather than
flee, just like the ussissi, but quite unlike humans or even wess'har.
They would come to the source of the pollution. "How many this time?"
The boy looked puzzled. "I was told to let you know the
ussissi are talking about a ship."
"What ship?"
"A small vessel that left here some hours ago. One of
their Umeh-based pilots has been asked to rendezvous with it and
transfer passengers. His destination is Actaeon.
He is hesitant."
Aras was silenced by how wrong his expectation had
been. He knew at that moment that his carefully reconstructed world of
relative normality had been fleeting and was now crumbling apart. He
knew what the boy was going to say before he said it. He could feel his
freeze instinct gripping him even before the words emerged.
"They have a prisoner," said the boy.
Aras wanted to scream. He tried to form a sound. But
nothing came out.
Had he known, he would not have given Josh such a quick
end.
Lindsay sat in the aft section with her head in
her hands for at least ten minutes before unlocking the inner hatch and
hauling herself back down the passage into the forward compartment.
She was shaking. Her mind was completely empty, unable
to grasp anything. She hoped it would stay that way for a while.
She tried to think of David for a moment and found she
couldn't recall his face or his smell. She wished she had kept the
clothing he had been buried in.
Aras had interred him, and now Aras would know what it
felt like to lose someone you loved.
Bennett and Barencoin were talking very quietly,
head-to-head in the two cockpit seats. Rayat was staring at the port
bulkhead, turning his text pad over and over in his hands.
They stopped instantly as if someone had thrown a
switch.
"So it was all for bloody nothing," said Rayat. "You
have no idea what you've thrown away."
"I do," said Lindsay. "And it wasn't." Neither marine
said a word. That was frightening. "How long to rendezvous?"
"Eleven minutes," said Barencoin, not looking up from
the steeple of his fingers.
"You killed her," said Bennett.
He seemed remarkably subdued for a man who had seen the
object of his affections step calmly to her death. He was fingering the
bridge of his nose, still covered with the pressure dressing. He hadn't
cleaned his face: the blood had dried into flaky streaks from nostrils
to chin. Perhaps he was making a point.
"It was her choice," said Lin. "If you'd let me set the
bloody grenades, she'd have been spared this."
Bennett didn't answer. He turned away and took out his
camo compact again and seemed to be checking his nose. For some reason
it was really bothering him. Lindsay was starting to realize the
intensity of his crush on the late superintendent. She'd butted him
with every scrap of force and venom she could muster. It wasn't quite
the romantic memory a man could hang on to in the dark days ahead.
"I wish the sodding pilot would get on the voice
channel," said Barencoin, and not to her. "I think he's shitting
himself and waiting for incoming. I expect the wess'har know we're
off-planet by now. There's a hell of a lot of chat from them on the ITX
but I can't understand a word of it."
Lindsay leaned back on the bulkhead out of habit,
because nobody needed to lean anywhere in zero g. It was hard to find
you were hated even more than Mohan Rayat.
She could hear Bennett and Barencoin talking in very
low voices. She caught the words bloody hero.
They might have been saying that they weren't going to play the bloody
hero to save her arse, but she doubted it.
She knew damn well who they were talking about.
"Gethes shuttle," said a
voice from the ancient console. "We are from Umeh. I am Litasi."
"Shuttle Charlie five niner echo, Umeh shuttle this is
Shuttle Charlie five niner echo," said Barencoin. "About time, over."
The ussissi wasn't any better at radio procedure than
Rayat. "I have a problem, gethes," said
the little reedy voice. "What have you done?"
"Umeh shuttle, I've got a 9mm round in my right quad
and I want to go home," said Barencoin. He looked at Lindsay: it was
her job to do the diplomacy. "Want to talk to our boss, over?" There
was no response, just the vague background sounds of cockpit activity.
He eased himself out of his seat with some difficulty. The medication
was wearing off. "Over to you, ma'am." He pronounced the ma'am
with the clear meaning of arsehole. "Don't forget to ask what's
happened
to Izzy and Chaz."
It was coming her way. She never thought it was going
to be easy. What was really bothering her was that she almost felt
regret that Shan was gone. She didn't want to feel that at all.
"This is Commander Lindsay Neville, European Federal
Navy. What's your problem, pilot?"
"We are neutral, perhaps in a way you cannot
comprehend."
"I know that."
"But we are not fools."
"Spit it out."
"What?"
"Come to the point of this conversation."
"You have used cobalt weapons and there is talk that
your prisoners are Shan Chail and Vijissi."
Lindsay paused. And this was the point at which she
knew hell was about to shrug its shoulders and wander out for a spot of
bother. She heard the word cobalt. For
some reason it was more insistent than prisoners.
"We have no prisoners," she said at last. "They're
dead. What did you say about cobalt?"
"You destroyed Ouzhari with a poisoned bomb. The bezeri
are dying in great numbers. Now repeat what you said about prisoners."
There was a very long silence. It was what Eddie called
dead air. Lindsay felt her face become numb
but her lips moved and she heard her own voice above the pounding in
her temples.
"We used neutron devices. That's to confine the damage
to the island. The area should be pretty well clear in a couple of
days."
"You lie. And I ask again, where are your prisoners?"
"They're dead." It slipped out. She was more fixed on
the word cobalt. "They're gone."
The line went almost completely silent save for a
slight crackling sound. "Gethes, I cannot
receive you. You ask too much."
Lindsay turned and looked at Rayat. It was all tumbling
out of control too fast. "You heap of shit," she said. "That was
your straight ERD? What the hell have
you got us into?" And before she knew what she was doing, she had spun
to aim a roundhouse punch at him, a touch too fast in zero g. Barencoin
caught her as her fist cracked against Rayat's face with half the force
she had wished for. He grabbed her arm. "You bastard. You lied,
you bastard."
Rayat looked unconcerned. "You're naive, Commander.
Never take vague assurances about technology. Remember how Frankland
insisted on checking the camp defense cannon herself?" He pushed
himself further away, as if reassured that Barencoin would stop her
reaching for a weapon next. "And you punch straight
for power, not round. You're confusing it with a slap.
I would have thought you'd seen Frankland do that
properly, too." I don't need reminding.
Lindsay held her free hand away in concession.
Barencoin still had a tight grip on Lindsay's other forearm: a small
cockpit was a dangerous place for a brawl.
"Cobalt? Fucking floor-cleaners?" he said. It was their
tag for BNOs. He let go of her arm. "Oh boy. Are we in the shit now."
Litasi's voice interrupted. "I suggest you set a course
for your mother-ship now. Or perhaps the isenj will accept you on Umeh."
Lindsay struggled to stop her voice cracking. "You work
for the isenj."
"And you have killed a ussissi. You make your way there
alone."
"We didn't kill him. He…"
"What, gethes?"
"He chose to stay with Shan Frankland."
There was more dead air, dead dead
air. Lindsay wished more than ever that she'd had the balls to pull
those pins and blow her and Shan and anyone nearby to pieces. She'd
been duped into using salted nuclear weapons. She'd unleashed an
environmental catastrophe. She had all kinds of questions but right
then the sheer enormity of the disaster overwhelmed her. The fact that
she'd denied c'naatat to humanity was
lost, buried under the tumbling rocks of realization.
"Will you accept a surrender?" said Bennett suddenly.
"Ade?" said Lindsay. Even Barencoin looked shocked. "What the hell
are you doing?"
"Not you," said Bennett. "Me.
Pilot, I want to surrender to the wess'har authorities. Will you take
me inboard?"
"Why?"
"I want to be tried for involvement in the death of two
civilian prisoners."
"Ade, for fuck's sake," said Barencoin. "It was that
stupid cow, not you. We stay together and we find Izzy and Chaz."
Bennett pulled his bottle-green beret from his jacket. "Sorry,
mate." He shaped it on his head and hauled himself over to the
hatch. He turned to look at Lindsay. "You going to stop me, ma'am?"
She had no idea what he was playing at. It wasn't a
generous gesture to save them. She knew what he felt for Shan. This was
revenge. She just didn't know how or why.
"They'll cut your bloody throat the minute you land,"
she said. "We nuked Bezer'ej."
"Fine by me, ma'am," said Bennett.
Barencoin let go of her. "If we wait any longer, we'll
have a wess'har patrol up our chuff. Let's thin out. Now."
It was just Bennett. He could go, for whatever stupid
sentimental reason he had to sacrifice himself. They could make it back
to Actaeon under their own steam now. She
knew it. One fewer pair of lungs to exhaust the oxygen. Fine. She had
to concentrate on something.
"We accept his surrender," said the child's voice that
Lindsay knew belonged to a creature that could tear out her throat. "We
will transfer him to the appropriate authority."
Lindsay turned to Bennett. "Sod off, then." He didn't
matter. It was Rayat she needed to fix. She couldn't even begin to
imagine what to do with him now, or what his objective really was. "Get
a move on."
Bennett saluted her mechanically. "You can't even swear
like her," he said. He adjusted his beret and pulled back the handle
that opened the hatch to the lobby. Then he stepped in and closed it
behind him. He appeared to be fumbling with it and there was a hiss of
air on the intercom.
Lindsay stared through the softglass at him, uneasy.
"Bastard," she said.
The next minute was a very, very long one. Eventually
there was a faint scraping along the hull: the ussissi shuttle was
docking, forming a temporary seal with the top hatch. Bennett began
wiping his face clean of dried blood with the antiseptic pad from his
medical kit, checking in the mirror of his camo compact like a girl.
"Ready," said the ussissi pilot. "Pressure equalized."
Lindsay wondered why Bennett was so preoccupied with
his face. Then he peeled off the dressing from the bridge of his nose,
starting carefully at his left cheekbone. And he raised two fingers to
her in the gesture of defiance that had been Albion's way of saying fuck
you since Agincourt nearly a thousand years
before.
There wasn't a mark on him: no hint of swelling eyes or
deviated septum or even a split lip to show that he'd been smashed in
the face.
And the dressings weren't that
effective.
She'd missed something. Shan had been cut, or Shan had
healed instantly, but Lindsay had missed a critical break in her skin.
"Oh no," said Lindsay. "You bastard."
"You'll pay for Shan," said Bennett. "Don't you worry
about that, ma'am. You'll pay, one way or another."
She tried to force the hatch manually. He watched her
for a couple of seconds and then held a cigar-sized tube to the glass:
foam sealant. He'd jammed the wheel.
"I'm a regular gadget shop," he said. All she could do
was watch him as he climbed the ladder and disappeared with something
she wanted to destroy more than anything else in creation.
Rayat turned to look. Lindsay bit her lip so hard that
she could taste hot, wet saltiness. She didn't want him to know what
she'd just seen, ever. It would all start again.
"What a complete balls-up," Rayat hissed, and turned
away again. "I told you we should have
taken samples."
Bennett was right, though. They couldn't even swear
like Shan Frankland.
Be not afraid of
them that kill the body, and after that have no more that they can do. Luke 12:4
Mestin had been thinking about the outrage
for half a day. People came and went in the Exchange of Surplus Things
and glanced at her briefly. They were more distracted by the terrible
images of Ouzhari on the public screen that spread the full width of
the end wall.
The island had always been black. The unique grass
there made it so. But the land was a different black now, the dull
dirty charcoal aftermath of a huge fiery explosion. The sky looked hazy
and overcast.
"Destroy them," she said at last, more to herself than
the matriarchs beside her.
It wasn't a huge task. The gethes
had one ship: but it was in orbit around Umeh, and that meant ignoring
an ancient courtesy. Wess'har had never breached the isenj homeworld.
The isenj had been in the Ceret system before wess'har arrived, and for
a very long time.
Fersanye and Chayyas waited with Mestin, but every so
often they glanced at Nevyan. She was all acid agitation, tugging at
her dhren occasionally, more like a
nervous gethes. She was examining a
pannier of ripe jay but appearing not to
see them.
"What about those in the ship who are not
responsible for this attack?" said Fersanye.
"It's a warship," said Mestin. "But we will give them
warning to disembark the uninvolved."
"But Actaeon is orbiting
Umeh."
"Then we shall ask them to withdraw from orbit to a
safe distance first."
Nevyan turned very slowly from the jay
and stood over her mother. "You simply don't understand gethes.
They won't be polite and move themselves
to be killed more tidily."
Her scent had started to shift. It made Mestin uneasy,
and Fersanye sat utterly still.
"If Actaeon is destroyed
that close to Umeh, there will be debris," said Mestin. "This is not
the doing of the isenj."
"That is irrelevant," said Nevyan. "I say they should
take the consequences of their ill-chosen alliance."
The silence around the matriarchs--and Nevyan, formally
or otherwise, had entered that cadre--was total. Those wess'har
bringing
in produce and taking it away were halted in their tracks. Matriarchs
seldom wrangled: rapid consensus was embedded in their genes.
But Mestin stood up. Nevyan was shorter, smaller. She
was still her isanket in many ways.
"It's wrong to punish the isenj, even by accident," she
said.
Nevyan stood her ground. "You never spend enough time
learning from Shan Chail. We can't defend
ourselves with our hands bound. This is a gethes
trick--a human shield, they call it. Like hostages. A
reliance on the niceness and decency of your enemy, their fear
of what will
happen to the innocent." And suddenly her rasping sour-leaf scent was
swamped by a massive, throat-closing burst of dominance. Mestin stepped
back.
It was over. She was no longer senior matriarch of
F'nar. It had been a brief duty.
Nevyan jiggled her head, realizing what she had done,
but she was now fully dominant and didn't seem uncomfortable with it.
Mestin saw a stranger for the first time. "I have to contact Shan," she
said. "We have heard nothing from her for many hours."
"Vijissi was supposed to look after her," said Mestin. "If there had
been problems, he would have let us know."
"I still need to talk with her. I need her
knowledge."
A gethes mother might have
taken offense, but Mestin was proud that her daughter was pragmatic
enough to take her lessons where she could. She had long suspected the
girl would be a better matriarch than she could. It was sad to know she
couldn't teach her enough for the changing times, but Shan could fill
the gaps, and she resented the human not one bit.
They returned to Nevyan's home to sit in the main room
and wait for news.
And it came.
They heard a ussissi running down the terrace outside,
a rapid scrabbling over stones, and when he burst into the room Mestin
watched Nevyan freeze for a brief moment. Then she stood. The ussissi
came to a halt at her feet, looking up.
"Shan Chail is dead," he
said. "And Vijissi too. The gethes took
them." His lips were pulled back and all his teeth were visible. "We
want balance. We want revenge."
Nevyan took the news in silence and walked out slowly
to stand on the terrace, Mestin a little behind her. The new matriarch
of F'nar looked down on her new responsibility and let out a piercing
territorial cry that rang round the caldera, note over note, for a
count of ten. The sound echoed off the walls of the basin: the
disembodied voice continued for a while after Nevyan closed her mouth
and lowered her head.
Then she turned round, looking past Mestin, and
beckoned the ussissi forward with one gesture of her arm. Even without
that heavy, overwhelming scent, she was suddenly the most extreme, most
dominant female her mother had ever seen.
"Make contact with the World Before," said Nevyan Tan
Mestin.
This is a
dreadful place. They call it Mar'an'cas and
it's no more than a rock. We'll have to rely heavily on the hydroponics
to grow enough food. It's an island: Mum says it's like Alcatraz was,
to keep up away from everyone on Wess'ej. I don't even know if we'll
have food to spare for Black and White. I can't believe what
happened to Dad. I can't believe Aras did it. The world's ending, and
God isn't answering my prayers.
JAMES GARROD,
in his private journal
"They will pay for this," said Nevyan.
Mestin said nothing. In the past three seasons, the
blockade of Bezer'ej had fallen to the isenj, and a gethes--no,
an isan--she
thought of as invincible had made the greatest error of all.
It didn't surprise her that Shan
Chail had sacrificed herself to thwart the gethes.
Right or wrong, she always liked to have the last word.
And it broke Mestin's heart, as she knew it had broken
Nevyan's. That was another English phrase that was worthy of acceptance
into wess'u because it was perfect in its description of agony.
The Exchange of Surplus Things, the largest single room
in F'nar, was packed with utterly silent matriarchs and ussissi from at
least half the city states of Wess'ej. Nevyan walked to the front of
the hall. Mestin remained where she was with Fersanye, Chayyas, Siyyas
and Prelit.
Nevyan trailed a scent of pungent dominance through the
crowd. It was what Vijissi had called mangoes.
Mestin would miss him more than she could say.
"We have no choice now," said Nevyan. "Will you commit
your males with ours?" She was standing on a crate so she could be
seen; despite her great courage and drive, Nevyan was shorter than the
average female. She was Shan's height. "I have work for them to do. And
I have called on the World Before to help us deal with this threat once
and for all."
Wess'har didn't respond as a mob even though they were
communal. There was a quiet murmur. A ussissi scrambled onto a crate to
peer through the forest of tall females.
"Think carefully before you call for assistance," she
said.
"We can't deal with gethes
alone," said Nevyan. "Not while they have allies in the isenj."
"We know the World Before through our kin there. You
don't. They are very different to you."
"They are still wess'har."
"Indeed they are, but they're far stronger even than
Wess'ej, and if you're wrong, and if they don't behave as you would,
you may end up paying a high price for their aid."
Nevyan did appear to consider the ussissi's words
carefully. "Have you an alternative?"
"No."
"And neither have I."
And the room began to empty.
Shan would have said that they didn't do it that way on
Earth. There would have been intrigue, skirmishes, riots, angry mobs,
and headlines in the news.
But it had taken only a few moments earlier in the day
for Nevyan Tan Mestin to depose her mother as senior matriarch of
F'nar. She had now launched the first assault on the gethes and
broken millennia of isolation from
the World Before.
There was no pain in it for Mestin. She was proud. It
was the only warm thing in her at that moment to ease her mourning and
fear. Nevyan stepped down off the crate as if she were embarrassed at
having needed it. But her scent of dominance was stronger than ever.
"I told Aras," she said.
Mestin felt relief and dread simultaneously. The two isan've
stood in the center of the empty hall
and silently accepted everything that had happened.
"I would have found that hard," said Mestin.
"As did I," said Nevyan. "You can't imagine his grief."
Mestin followed her from the hall and into a late
summer evening that was perfectly beautiful and scented with the
fragrance of aumul've. The tem flies were swarming on
the last warm stones
left after Ceret's setting: they would be moving further south now to
follow the warm weather.
The deaths of tens of thousands of bezeri and Shan
Chail and Vijissi would take a great deal
of balancing. Mestin wondered if Nevyan would start with the displaced
colony or even the human base on Umeh.
No. She would begin with Actaeon.
The isenj would learn to pick their friends more
carefully.
It was an old long-range fighter, but it was
serviceable. Nevyan had watched it climb into the clear sky the day
before and now she was tracking its advance towards the gethes ship Actaeon.
The pilot was one of her jurej've,
Cidemnet. Mestin didn't think it was kind to send one of her new family
into battle so soon after accepting them, but Nevyan said it was
important that she demonstrated she would commit her own males to the
war. She sat down in front of the screen and Lisik brought them bowls
of tea. It was unpleasantly bitter, and
Mestin couldn't understand what Shan had found so desirable about it.
She would still have drunk it gladly if Shan had been there to share
it. She missed her already.
"We could have sent a drone missile and destroyed the
ship by now," said Mestin.
"And we would have lost the opportunity to add an
important message," said Nevyan. "Besides, they have had time to
disembark more noncombatants and civilians,
whatever that distinction might mean. We'll deal with them in due
course."
Unlike gethes, whose wars
were fought in secret, any wess'har could access the channel and follow
Nevyan's conduct of the mission. They could watch what Nevyan was
seeing; they could hear her conversations with the fighter. They would
also be able to hear any exchange with the gethes.
They had nothing to hide.
Mestin knew they were as baffled by her tactics as she
was. It didn't matter. Nevyan seemed grimly confident of the lessons
she had learned from Shan Chail.
She touched the console. The screen showed Cidemnet's
forward view from his cockpit, just the ochre disk of Umeh. The gethes
ship in orbit around it wasn't even a
speck but the display in front of Cidemnet across his field of view
showed a moving constellation of lights, ussissi and isenj vessels and
the larger target that was CSV Actaeon.
"Contact Actaeon," she
said. "Let me speak to the commander."
It took a while. When Malcolm Okurt's voice crackled
into the chamber, it sounded surprised. There was no image. The
disembodied voice was disturbing. Then it was joined by a shimmering
image of a gethes with a thin face and
every fidgeting sign of agitation.
"Am I speaking to the wess'har chief of staff?" he
asked. He was expecting a soldier.
"I am Nevyan Tan Mestin, matriarch of F'nar. Shan
Frank- land was my friend."
Mestin thought it was an odd way to identify yourself.
Okurt paused too. "Ma'am, we're genuinely sorry for the events of the
last forty-eight hours. I can assure you we had no knowledge of the
intent to use such extreme measures."
"But you brought them here, so you must have considered
it."
"Purely defensive, ma'am. If there's anything we can do
to help deal with the contamination, we're at your disposal."
"Are you taking the piss?"
Nevyan asked.
Okurt looked completely stunned by her sudden command
of colloquial English. "Sorry?"
"Don't lie to me. You sent troops to Bezer'ej with
aggressive intent. The bezeri are dying in great numbers. Two of my
friends are dead. And you talk of helping us to clean up."
"Our mission was to detain Frankland, not to kill her,
and certainly not to cause devastation to the environment. My colleague
exceeded her orders. I believe we can come to some understanding if we
can meet and talk this through."
Nevyan cocked her head in amazement and shot Mestin a
glance. The gethes really hadn't
understood them at all. "No discussion," said Nevyan. "Who's
responsible?"
Okurt paused again. "As commanding officer, I am."
"Responsibility is personal."
"The individuals who carried out the attack will be
disciplined when they return to this ship, but the buck stops with me.
You understand that phrase, I take it."
"I do."
"I'm really very sorry about Superintendent Frankland."
"And so are we. But only actions matter, and I regret
what I must do just as you regret what you have done, and the end will
not be altered by either."
Mestin was getting agitated too. Why was Nevyan
spending so long talking with this creature? Cidemnet didn't need time
to maneuver. His missiles were aimed and locked: this was entirely
superfluous. It was a game. Wess'har didn't play games.
Okurt's face stopped moving and his voice sounded a
little higher in pitch although it was steady. It was a sign of
nervousness.
"I know you have a small vessel on station observing
us, ma'am."
"Yes, a single fighter. It's more than five thousand
years old. It still works."
Clearly he didn't think one ancient, distant fighter
was more than a gesture, but he was confused, that was clear. "Ma'am,
are you threatening us?"
"No. I'm targeting you. This is the act of balance for
your crimes. Launch."
Cidemnet let loose three warheads. Okurt's transmission
cut off halfway through words that sounded like stand
to and Mestin saw the three trails of light spread in the sudden
image of Cidemnet's viewplate. Actaeon now
had less than the time it took to boil two cups of water to make that
strange, bitter tea.
Nevyan had not only launched an attack on the gethes,
but had also sent them a message that
she could do so with the least of her arsenal. Mestin now understood
the game her daughter had learned to play, taught by Shan Frankland and
Eddie Michallat.
A tiny pinpoint of white light flared briefly against
the disk of Umeh, then another, and another.
"You can come home now, Cidemnet," said Nevyan.
STAND TO--VESSEL
CONTACT. OPS ROOM, BRIDGE: VESSEL
ON SCREEN VISUAL, RED 300, MOVING LEFT TO RIGHT: PWO, OFFICER OF THE
WATCH, THREE CONTACTS INCOMING, UP THE CHUFF, RANGE 450 KAY, SPEED
THIRD LIGHT. BRACE BRACE BRACE. SECOND CONTACT INCOMING. BRACE BRACE BRACE STAND TO. Voice traffic
downlinked to FEU Fleet Command
from CSV Actaeon. No further transmission
received.
There were so many fragments from the
shattered hull of Actaeon that isenj
actually froze their constant river of movement to watch the fireballs
streaking across the sky above Jejeno even during daylight.
A couple had crashed into the suburbs of Tivsk on the
next landmass. There were a lot of casualties, the sort of numbers you
couldn't avoid in crowded places. If Actaeon
hadn't been easing out of orbit, running up her engines after the last
emergency evacuation to Umeh, it would have been far worse.
It was quite a display. Eddie watched it too. It
continued into the dusk. If you dissociated it from the circumstances,
it was spectacularly beautiful. But he couldn't do that sort of
mind-trick, not any more.
He kept wondering if what he had told Malcolm Okurt
about c'naatat had been the root cause of
this. He had been so sure he was doing the right thing. But he had told
him--and Lindsay Neville--where it was, and where Shan might be found.
It
was an agonizing thought. He didn't want it in his head.
Umeh Station boiled with angry ussissi. Shan had summed
it up succinctly, as she always did: take on one ussissi, and you took
on all of them.
Eddie hadn't realized he had made such an impact on
them. Apparently they admired his pluck for facing them after the
destruction of Ouzhari.
So they had sought him out first to tell him that Shan
Frank- land and Vijissi were dead.
They had become a pack. They roamed among the workers
and military personnel in the biodome, sniffing and darting away. Eddie
had never seen that before. It made them look like hunting animals,
like mongooses on to a cobra. It seemed only a matter of time before
they attacked.
Even Serrimissani joined then for a while, weaving
around and becoming one part of a single, increasingly angry creature.
Eddie sat on a trestle made up of a sheet of greenhouse
composite and two stacks of pallets that would eventually become
composting bins if Umeh Station was ever completed. He should have been
very glad that he had decided against returning to Actaeon:
but all he could think about was Shan.
"Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ."
Eddie said it so many times that the words didn't sound like English
any more, just a mantra, a sound, a song in a foreign language. "Shan. Shan."
Serrimissani had gathered her belongings in a sack. She
lowered her head as if something was raining down on it. "This is the
last place I would want to be at this moment."
"You're leaving?"
"The gethes have killed Shan Chail and Vijissi.
There may be more
retribution, and they may target every human here." She took Eddie's
arm. "If you have sense, you will come with me. I am returning to
Wess'ej. Come with me and beg forgiveness of the matriarchs, and
perhaps they will spare you. You have done a favor for them." She
looked up anxiously. "And you have been honest. Come on."
"The humans didn't kill them. Not actual murder."
"And would they still be alive had they not been
captured?"
"Yes."
"Then spare me your sophistry."
Eddie reached for the urine vial in his pocket and
pressed it against his chest to make sure it was still there with its
single ruby-beaded quill. He'd hand it over. He wouldn't have the
slightest trouble doing that now.
Eddie had run for his life a few times. It was always
several hours after everyone else had come up with the idea first.
There was something about seeing a world through a camera lens that
made you feel less vulnerable: added to the detachment of being a
reporter, it made for a poor sense of mortality. Journalists in danger
zones got killed with depressing frequency. Eddie didn't plan on
joining them, not because he was scared--and he was, oh God yes he was--but
because he hadn't told his story yet.
He owed Shan that much. He wanted to know everything.
He hoped they wouldn't execute Ade Bennett before he could talk to him.
"Okay," he said. "When we get the evacuation warning,
I'll come."
"Warning? They will not warn you. You didn't warn them.
The vengeance will come, and soon."
Eddie pulled out the bee-cam. "Tight on me until
further notice, divert for explosive and sudden movement," he told it.
"And upload every five minutes." He didn't want to die with an unfiled
story in the system. He hoped the isenj link would relay his material
now that Actaeon was no more than a
spectacular shower of false meteors.
He quickened his pace behind Serrimissani. At least she
had come back for him; he'd had native guides abandon him in the middle
of riots. As they walked, they saw ground cars trundling materials
towards the Jejeno sphere. One slowed down and an orange-suited foreman
leaned out of the cab.
"Want a lift?" he asked.
"I'm leaving," Eddie said. "But thanks. Have you had a
security alert yet?"
"No. Why?"
"I don't think Jejeno is going to be the safest place
to be after what happened earlier."
"What?"
"Doesn't matter. There's a war starting. Don't be here
when it does."
The foreman shrugged and heaved himself back into the
seat. Eddie and Serrimissani walked on, quickening their pace. Isenj
were obviously starting to work out who would be next after Actaeon:
there was a definite thinning out of
the crowds in the neighborhoods closest to the sphere, and some isenj
were carrying bundles on their flat heads, children trailing behind
them in orderly lines. They knew the wess'har well enough to have come
to the same conclusion as Serrimissani.
"And where will your humans go now that Actaeon
is destroyed?" Serrimissani asked. They
flagged down an isenj vehicle and she chattered at the driver. "They
are stranded here."
"Is Lin back yet? Where's the shuttle?"
"I would not waste concern on her."
"I was thinking of Mart Barencoin, actually." Shan
liked the marines. She would have wanted them kept out of the
aftermath. "How can I check what's happened--"
"Think of your own safety." Serrimissani reached down
and pulled Eddie up into the seat, and they sat in silence until they
came to the outskirts of the airport. The driver was anxious to get as
far away from Jejeno as he could, and taking them to the terminal
seemed to be asking for more time than he was willing to spare. They
began a brisk walk up the main approach road, dodging isenj workers who
seemed simply to be going about their tasks.
Eddie motioned the bee-cam to get shots of them. "How
many of them will still be alive next week?" he asked.
"If the wess'har attack, they will only target the
sphere. If the isenj stay clear of it, very few will die. There will be
substantial disruption, though." It sounded like a few traffic jams:
but Eddie imagined water pipes spurting and power lines cut and fires
raging and food shortages. And very high casualties. There was no room
in this tight-packed infrastructure to have any sort of emergency
without the isenj suffering too. Ual would be busy in his serene
aquamarine offices.
He thought again of Shan and wondered if anyone had
broken the news to Aras. His grief would be terrible.
"Jesus, I still can't believe she's gone," he said, not
caring if the bee-cam picked it up. It shot back to concentrate on his
face, intruding into his own grief, a fitting punishment for his
calling. "Oh God. Oh God."
"She was a good wess'har," Serrimissani said. "She
accepted Targassat. To die to preserve the balance of life is a
commendable act."
It seemed that every ussissi on Umeh had the same
premonition of war as they did. Anxious little faces and chattering
teeth greeted them as they pushed through the lobby and out onto the
apron nearest the ussissi shuttle. One had already left, packed to just
above safe lading weight. They were loyal creatures if they had a
personal charge to care for, but they weren't stupid.
"I have to make some calls," said Eddie.
"We must go."
"I need to ask Ual for a few favors. The ministry is at
least fifteen kay from here. Even if they start bombing now--"
"You have until this evening. I will stay with you, in
case you become foolish and try to get more stories that end up killing
you."
"You're a doll," Eddie said, and meant it. Yes, they
were loyal, dog-loyal. But Serrimissani didn't understand, and nor did
it appear that she was interested in doing so. She stared at the vessel
filling up with ussissi. So did Eddie.
"Sinking ship," he said.
"It will fly," said Serrimissani.
"I meant--never mind. Rats leaving sinking ships--they're
supposed to be the first to know when a ship is in trouble." He was
gibbering. He always did that when fighting down emotions that
threatened to overwhelm him. "Doesn't matter."
"What are rats?" she asked.
Eddie thought hard. "Another kind of people."
His mind was a mess of fragments, personal fears,
professional worries, loss, confusion. But he centered on what he was
at his core--a reporter. It anchored him again and he felt calmer. If
Ual's link was denied to him, he could ask the matriarchs of F'nar to
hack into the ITX link. He had to get that story filed: it was the
least he owed Shan Frankland.
He had once made a mistake and thought she was like
everyone else, available at the right price, but he'd been wrong. And
he was glad he had the chance to tell her so.
Everyone needed heroes. He still had his, intact and
immutable, and now he always would.
Aras suddenly realized he was kneeling on the
floor, and he had no idea how long he had been there. His forehead was
on his knees, his hands tucked in under his chest.
It hurt too much to move. It certainly hurt to think.
"Actaeon has been
destroyed," said Nevyan gently. "I made certain of it."
He knew he was back on Wess'ej. He heard her but the
pressure in his throat had taken over. He had forgotten about Josh and
he had forgotten about the bezeri and he had forgotten about his
failure to protect Bezer'ej after so many, many years of standing
sentinel.
They had taken his isan.
Shan was gone. He couldn't move for grief.
He tried to focus on the pain. It was a trick he had
learned when he was a prisoner of the isenj, when he couldn't die but
wanted to very badly, when every second was infinite. He found that if
he concentrated on the pain, on the moment, the enormity of the
unspecified void ahead of him was pushed to one side.
"Can he hear us?" It was Mestin's voice.
"I think so. Leave us. I'll stay with him for the
while."
Aras tried not to think of Shan and failed. She
consumed him. And he thought of Askiniyas, and he hadn't seen her or
held her for centuries. There had been a time when he couldn't summon
up her face or scent despite his perfect wess'har recall, but now she
was vivid--and astonishingly alien. But he wanted Shan. He wanted to
hold her.
They had even denied him the comfort of cradling her
body one last time.
Wess'har males who lost their isan
remated or else they died. He could do neither. And he didn't want to.
He never wanted to move beyond this grief even though it was burning
him alive.
"You can come and stay with us," said Nevyan.
He couldn't form any words. Even breathing was an
effort.
"Or we can bring you whatever you need. You need not
see anyone until you want to." Nevyan moved, sending a cloud of very
dominant scent into the air, and knelt down beside him. The smell
triggered a primeval urge to placate her, but he felt as if he would
fall apart, limb from limb, if he tried to move. "We have had messages
from their leaders. They want to talk and apologize. But I have sent
word to the World Before. I await their reply."
Nevyan waited an uncharacteristically long time for a
senior matriarch. She waited, kneeling, but Aras was frozen. She's gone. She's dead.
"Eddie has asked to live in F'nar. He'll be alone here.
I doubt he will ever get home."
Aras struggled to think. His mind was trapped in a loop
of reliving the first realization that Shan was gone. He could not
imagine the pain ever stopping. It kept rolling over him again and
again.
"I think you and Eddie could be a great comfort to each
other," Nevyan persisted. "Shall I tell him he's welcome?"
Aras wanted oblivion. If he could have moved, he would
have gone and taken the grenades Shan kept as bizarre souvenirs and
laid upon them and died.
He forced his head up.
"She's c'naatat," said
Nevyan. "You must not lose hope. We have no idea what the parasite's
limits are."
Aras hated Nevyan suddenly for that suggestion. C'naatat
was remarkable: but it could not bring
back the dead. That was a conjuring trick for the humans'god. He
managed to pound his fists on the stone floor. He felt the skin tear
and the blood flow, albeit briefly. The pain helped.
They always seemed to think a c'naatat
couldn't feel pain. They were wrong.
"We'll bring her body home," Nevyan said. "We'll find
her. Every wess'har has the right to return home to the cycle. She'll
be taken back into the world, however long we have to search."
Aras thought how much it would have meant to Shan to be
spoken of as a wess'har. He wanted to see her body. He wanted to hold
her one last time. He didn't give a damn about the cycle. He wanted his
isan.
Nevyan was still staring at Shan's few personal items
on a shelf that was rapidly taking on the appearance of a human shrine.
She put her hand out towards an imperfect emerald glass bowl but
stopped short of touching it.
"I would like something of her," she said. "She made
this, yes?"
Aras couldn't form the words, but he didn't feel the
urge to stop her. He still had more of Shan than anyone would ever
touch. He had her memories, the very fabric of her, genetic material he
had not even begun to see expressed yet.
Nevyan placed the bowl in the folds of her dhren
and clutched it to her like a child. "She
shaped me, Aras. She was my friend. She taught me that you can't
withdraw from the world and you can't run from threats. You must engage
them and not spend your life in dread of their coming. And this view
will guide me now that I have succeeded Mestin." What will I do without her? How
will I carry on?
"Aras, I know you can hear me," said Nevyan. "I shall
send Eddie to you. And then there are the other humans. There's the
soldier, Bennett. He asks to talk to you."
Bennett would never have harmed Shan. Whatever he
claimed, he would never have killed her. Aras knew it. He needed to
talk to him. But it would have to wait.
He sat back on his heels. It was the most effort he had
managed to muster in days. It was a primeval survival reflex gone
haywire, from the tunnel-dwelling past when keeping still when faced
with an unseen threat might be the difference between living and dying
for the proto-wess'har. Aras was always surprised when it caught him
out like this. The last time had been when Askiniyas took her own life.
He now had two isan've who
had been suicides in extreme circumstances. It was too much to ask of a
wess'har male.
"Bring them here," he said.
Bennett was a soldier. Eddie was a soldier too, except
he could fight with words, and gethes were
very vulnerable to those.
He would need them both if he was going to exact his
own balance for the death of Shan Frankland.
A spokesman for
the FEU Foreign Office said they regretted the incident and would
revise the guidelines for future missions. But the spokesman declined
to comment on whether any formal protest would be lodged over the fate
of CSV Actaeon. Meanwhile protests
continued against the planned landing of isenj delegates from the EFS
Thetis. The veteran ship is still more than
seventy years away from the solar system but the Sino-European Space
Commission admits it has carried out a feasibility study into whether a
mission can be launched to retrieve the vessel and speed its journey
home with modern propulsion systems. "We have so much to learn
from the isenj, and bridges to build," said technology minister
Francois Teilhard. "We would rather that happened as quickly as
possible."
BBCHan bulletin.
"Come on," said Eddie "You can patch me
through to my News Desk, can't you?"
He had drilled down as far as the Defense Ministry
comms control desk, and he suspected he'd only made it that far because
he was on Minister Ual's private link. Ual was proving to be a reliable
and valuable friend. Eddie was laboring under no illusions that it was
his witty repartee ensuring the minister's cooperation.
"Mr. Michallat, this is a military communications
channel," said the woman on the other end of his precious and fragile
life-line. She was very chic and dark, a little too exotic for the drab
uniform of an army major. She reminded him of Marine Ismat Qureshi. "We
don't feed into the entertainment networks from here."
"You did all the time it suited you, though."
"I appreciate your frustration."
"I need to let my people know I'm alive. They think I
was on--in--Actaeon when she was hit."
"And it's clear you're still on Umeh."
"It's clear to you, but not to them. Maybe you could make it
clear."
"Wait one."
The screen flicked to the holding menu of warnings
about confidentiality, federal security and dire penalties if any one
of a thousand rules and regulations was breached.
Eddie didn't want to be polite at all. He wanted to
scream that the news they were currently broadcasting was bollocks,
less than half a story because it didn't mention why the wess'har had
fired on Actaeon with three massive
missiles that shattered her backbone and broke her into fragments in
minutes.
He knew that because the wess'har had provided the
information via Serrimissani. He also knew the Defense Ministry didn't
have all the data because there were no survivors from Actaeon
to file a sitrep or take part in a
wash-up. All they had were the last transmissions from the ship and
reports from the surface of Umeh about the magnificent fireworks
display that meant all hands were lost.
That meant 106 out of nearly 500 men and women,
civilians and service personnel. Everyone else had been evacuated to
Umeh Station during what the military delicately called the period
of tension, as if the threat of war was
some sort of minor back pain.
Someone back at BBChan had to be asking why the
wess'har attacked. He knew they wouldn't swallow whatever pat answer
they had been fed. But one thing reassured him. The news about Actaeon
had leaked fast, in hours rather than
days or months. It was the price of ITX. Once the routine of instant
messages and telemetry between remote stations and Earth had become
established, a lot of people in dull support jobs noticed when they
suddenly stopped. And those people talked, both to their contacts at
Umeh Station and to their chums back on Earth.
Eddie had been afraid that ITX's exclusivity would mean
all news would be suppressed. He should never have underestimated the
power of the human mouth.
The warning menu dissolved and the glamorous but
inflexible major was back in frame again.
"Mr. Michallat, I can certainly pass on a message to
your employers. You'll appreciate that we have quite a bit on our hands
at the moment."
Eddie's brain started scrambling for a message that
would let News Desk know that the information the Defense Ministry
spokesweasels were pumping out was incomplete. Okay, they knew that
anyway. It was part of the game. But they didn't know exactly what they
were omitting and--unlike on Earth--the opposing forces' view from the
Cavanagh system would be channeled through the Cerberuslike DM liaison
desk. They couldn't just call the wess'har for a comment.
He hadn't been this cut off even during the Greek war.
He had been able to buy the protection of a militia minder, complete
with armored car, and drive the damn story over the nearest safe border.
Now that was a thought. He'd have to work on that as a
backup plan.
"Thank you," said Eddie. Inspiration suddenly struck
him so hard that he had to squeeze his nails into his palm to stay
dead-pan. "Can you tell them I have a Belgrano to file?"
"Spell that."
"Bravo Echo Lima Golf Romeo Alpha November Oscar."
Eddie hoped his gambling wasn't visible. He was banking on nobody being
familiar with three-hundred-year-old incidents during a war even the
military had forgotten. But News Desk would look it up. Think. Think.
"Bloody Expensive Living, Gratuities,
Research And Nobbling Officials. I'm out of barter items, love. I want
to file my expenses to replace them for when I get home."
There was a pause. Major Gorgeous was making notes,
lips moving slightly as she keyed in the acronym. Then she smiled
coldly. "You journalists," she said. "You really are callous bastards,
aren't you?"
Eddie managed a convincingly guilty shrug. "Not the
first war I've been in," he said. "How about you?"
"I'll see this is relayed immediately and get back to
you. Good day, Mr. Michallat."
Eddie held his aw-don't-be-hard-on-me expression until
he was sure the connection was cut. Then he punched the air in brief
triumph. That was one fucking amazing
God-given stroke of genius. He had no idea that he could bluff that
well or lie that fast. Belgrano? Jesus. It was as if
everything he had ever done,
however minor, had been designed to lead up to that point in time.
Serrimissani was at his shoulder immediately. "We have
to go."
"One more hour."
"We can return when the wess'har have finished with
Umeh Station."
"What if they don't attack?"
"Then we come back and find it intact."
"I need to know if News Desk got the message."
"What is Belgrano?"
"It was a ship, but I made up the acronym on the spot.
Nothing to do with my expenses." Oh, he was pleased
with himself. "Provided the teenage morons running News Desk spot that
I've sent a spoof message, they'll know something's wrong."
"More wrong than one of their warships being destroyed?"
"Spare me the sarcasm. This is journalist maths. If
they spot the problem, they'll look up Belgrano.
I'm just hoping the Defense Ministry is sufficiently ignorant, badly
educated, and European enough not to have any knowledge of an event in
an obscure British war."
"Which is?"
"An Argentine warship that was sunk by a British
submarine, HMS Conqueror, and there was a
big row over whether or not it represented a threat to the British
forces. That's irrelevant. What matters is that it started a major
bust-up between the military, the government and the media of the day
about what really happened. If my colleagues make the connection, that
ought to be enough to let them know there's an even bigger fucking
story behind this one."
He was going to wait until the walls came crashing
down, even if that meant making Serrimissani leave without him. For
foul-tempered ferrets, they had an unshakable sense of devotion. He
liked them. Right then, he liked every species except Homo sapiens. Just like Shan.
The thought caught him unawares and his spirit sank
briefly before he dragged it back up by its collar again, assuring it
he was going to do right by her. He owed it to her to fight.
The Defense Ministry was cutting it fine.
Serrimissani had already started circling him like an
impatient sheepdog when the FEU menu screen appeared and paged him. He
waited three seconds and hit the control.
It was Major Gorgeous.
"Mr. Michallat," she said, "I have a message from a Mr.
Chetwynd at BBChan Foreign Desk. He says your expenses claim gives them
some cause for concern and he wants to know if you're trying to claim
for…" She looked down, apparently at a screen. "…more Conqueror
brand whisky, given the argument you
had over it last time. He'll be back in touch when he can, but in the
meantime not to hand out too many more bribes."
Eddie felt relief wash over him like a warm shower.
"What a tight-fisted bastard," he said grimly, and
convincingly.
"As are you all," said the major, and the menu screen
replaced her lovely but unlovable face.
Serrimissani was at eye-level with him. "We go now,"
she said. "Do you have your answer?"
"Oh, I do," he said, and began cramming his text pad
and editing screen in his bag. "Thank God for BBChan researchers."
Yes, they now knew damn well what he had meant. Conqueror.
Round about now, fellow journalists he had neither
known nor worked with would be calling contacts and harassing media
spokespersons and challenging ministers.
They would be asking what the hell they hadn't
been told about how CSV Actaeon came to be
blown to kingdom come while
in apparently friendly space. And they wouldn't rest until they had
heard from the BBChan man on the scene. Him.
"Ready when you are, doll," said Eddie.
Nevyan was settling comfortably into the role
of senior matriarch. Mestin watched the expression on Eddie Michallat's
face as he came into the large kitchen and looked expectantly at her,
only to be waved towards Nevyan.
"Don't be embarrassed, Mr. Michallat," said Mestin. "Political power
here is not the same commodity as it is for gethes.
My daughter has precedence now, and
we're all content with that."
"You really ought to invade Earth sometime," said
Eddie. She knew enough of humans now to realize he was being flip-
pant. "It would make our life a hell of a lot simpler."
Nevyan had Giyadas with her. Isanket've
needed to learn how to conduct themselves, and there was no reason not
to start early. The child sat patiently on the floor at Nevyan's side
with her head against her legs, watching Eddie with unblinking eyes. He
was trying not to watch the child, and not succeeding.
"You have asked for asylum
here," said Nevyan. "Is that the correct word?"
"Yes. I don't want to live among the human community,
either here or on Umeh."
"Are you going to find it difficult living among us and
remaining on good terms with the isenj?"
"I'm a journalist. I'm professionally neutral. But if
you're asking if I'm going to be a spy in your camp, try this for
size." He put his hand inside his garment and took out a small
transparent container. He held it at the level of his ear and rattled
it. "A quill. Ironically, from the seat of government."
He held it out and Nevyan took it.
"It's too late for the bezeri," she said.
"I know, and I'm sorry. But it's not too late for the
rest of Bezer'ej. The vast majority of life will survive. This is for
them." Right answer, thought
Mestin. Giyadas craned her neck to peer at the container as Nevyan
turned it over in her hands.
"What is the bead?" she asked.
"Ruby," he said. "Corundum. Valuable, where I come
from. Keep it. It's not my color."
Nevyan trilled to summon Lisik and handed the vial to
him. "Take this to Sevaor," she said. Then she concentrated on Eddie
again. "If you stay here, I would appreciate it if you would provide
company for Aras."
"How is he?"
"Grieving."
"Sorry. Stupid question. Is he going to want me around?"
"It will be easier for him to be with a human than with
a family here that reminds him of his loss."
"Suppose he wants to be alone?"
"He has spent too long alone. He needs friendship now,
even if he doesn't see that." She paused. "He has executed Joshua
Garrod. I believe that is troubling him too."
Mestin, keeping a silent watch on the exchange,
couldn't interpret Eddie's mood until that point. He was too much of a
jumble of emotions and agitation to detect any scent clearly. Then
overwhelming panic roiled off him, pungent as human sweat. He swallowed
hard and the knobbly lump at the front of his neck moved visibly.
He seemed to be chewing on unspoken words. His jaw
moved. It was a few seconds before sound emerged.
"Oh," he said.
"The soldier called Bennett is here too. He
surrendered. He'll be useful."
"I can't imagine him surrendering."
"He claims to have caused Shan's death. He saw her die."
"Ade? Never. He had a big crush on her. He might have
screwed up, but--look, can I talk to him?"
"Ask Aras. You should go to him now. You know where his
home is."
"Thank you." Eddie still seemed shaken. "I appreciate
your kindness."
"And we appreciate your willingness to help."
"There's one more thing I want to ask of you. I need to
send back reports. I can't let that garbage about Actaeon
go unchallenged, and I reckon people back home are asking questions now
about what really started the conflict. When they let me tell the
story, I want to have the stuff ready to file. I owe it to Shan,
especially if Ade will talk to me about it."
"Professionally neutral," said Nevyan. "Wasn't that
your claim?"
"I was lying," said Eddie. "Sometimes neutrality is
just an excuse for being spineless."
Eddie had clearly scored highly with Nevyan. She patted
his arm. Mestin sent Serrimissani with Eddie, just to make sure he
reached Aras's home in one piece. Humans had poor memories, and she
couldn't rely on him to remember the way. She was also worried he might
not cope with the steps and terraces with their sheer drops into
nothing. Humans didn't have good balance, either.
Giyadas was trilling spineless,
spineless, spineless under her breath, trying out the word with
overtones and then trying to limit herself to one note. The weight of
the last few days settled on the adults while the child delighted in
the novelty of new alien words.
"What a strange language English can be," said Nevyan. "He'll never
learn wess'u. He'll never be able to pronounce it, anyway."
"It's English you most need him to speak," said Mestin. "Because
it's the humans who need to listen."
Eddie hesitated before knocking on the lovely
pearl door. He knew it was shit, but it didn't make it any less
magical. And knowing Aras well didn't make it any easier to work out
what to say to him.
The door opened. Aras, grim and huge, filled the
opening. He didn't look any different, but then Eddie wasn't sure he
would show signs of not eating or sleeping.
And he knew wess'har couldn't weep.
"I don't know what to say to you," Eddie said. "I'm
truly sorry, and I miss her too, and I won't presume to tell you I know
how you must feel, because I don't."
Aras said nothing, but held out his arm in a gesture to
invite Eddie inside.
Eddie stood in the center of the Spartan room, afraid
to sit down in case he was taking a seat that had been Shan's. He
waited for Aras to indicate a place on the incongruously human sofa.
"Thanks for taking me in," he said.
"Shan was very fond of you."
It was painfully touching. Eddie knew she enjoyed their
verbal sparring but he had no idea that the relationship generated any
degree of warmth at her end. She was good at holding people at arm's
length. "It's all my fault," he said. "If you want to kill me, I
wouldn't blame you."
"As always, you confuse knowledge with action," said
Aras.
"If I had kept my mouth shut, they wouldn't have known
she had the damn thing. I even told them where to find her. And it."
"No. If you had kept those things to yourself, they
would still have found out in time, and pursued us, but you would have
been long dead, and so oblivious of the events."
Aras had an accidental talent for making Eddie feel
better. Eddie hoped he could return the favor. But he had a feeling
that the questions he needed to ask Aras would simply scrape at wounds
so fresh and raw that the pain would overwhelm him.
They didn't talk much for the rest of the day. Aras
busied himself cooking, which Eddie took as displacement activity, but
he was glad of it because it was good food. Aras didn't eat anything.
He just gave Eddie a pile of sek blankets,
showed him the sofa and went out.
Eddie thought he might be going into the center of the
city on some errand or other, but as he watched from the terrace,
taking in a vista that had still not yet palled for him, he saw a
figure walking out into the dry plain.
He hoped Aras wasn't going to do anything stupid.
But Aras was c'naatat, and
that made killing yourself a very tall order. Eddie still decided he
would keep an eye on him.
The room was stark despite the odd touches of human
upholstery--a bed against one wall, the sofa, a padded stool. Eddie
looked around. There was almost no storage. It was like being back in
the cabins at Thetis camp. He rummaged in
the one cupboard and found some glass bowls, Shan's carefully folded
formal uniform jacket, thin-woven hand towels, and two hand grenades.
It didn't really surprise him. She liked to be ready for emergencies.
It was painful to realize that she wouldn't come
striding through the door and give him a stream of inventive and
good-natured abuse. He thought of how she'd taken a laser cutter to
Rayat's desk when he'd argued about some trivia, and he smiled, and it
hurt. He'd miss her.
Aras was going to have a very hard time of it.
Eddie picked up the grenades, prayed that they were
disarmed, and put them in his bag. Fragmentation was the one thing he
knew that could kill c'naatat troops.
There was no point taking chances.
He spent the rest of the afternoon playing with the
insubstantial-looking translucent console at the far end of the room.
He worked out how to get images, sound, and data from the wess'har
archives, but the tuning defeated him.
He was still fiddling around when Aras, silent and
unexpected, walked up behind him and showed him where the data streams
from Earth could be found.
"Thanks," said Eddie. "Are you okay? Want to talk?"
"No."
At least Eddie could watch the news. He wasn't sure he
wanted to. There was nothing worse than being spitting mad and 150
trillion miles away from being able to do anything about it.
He watched the news anyway, curled up on the eccentric
white sofa while Aras disappeared onto the terrace.
"I can listen," Eddie called. "And I don't mean an
interview."
Aras grunted noncommittally from a distance. Eddie
turned back to the screen to wander through his favorite news channels.
He was glad he did. The European Federal Union's junior
defense secretary was having a hard time. His boss had gone to ground,
leaving him to deal with reporters covering a space war for the very
first time. Eddie could sense their excitement.
People always tut-tutted about journalists being pushy
and rude and disrespectful. But Eddie thought there was nothing finer
than the sight of a minister being doorstepped and harried all the way
from his shiny office door to his overpriced privilege of a
chauffeur-driven limo by a pack of reporters.
It was democracy. He loved it. He could take all the
abuse and slammed doors in the world because, when it came down to it, this
was what the job was really about.
It was about being one of the last ordinary people left
with enough clout to put those in power on the spot and make them
account for themselves.
Shan would have loved it too.
Serrimissani had slotted into the gap left by
Vijissi without asking or being asked. She wanted to be useful. She sat
on the steps of the terrace beside Mestin and Nevyan without comment as
they waited for a response from the World Before.
The wess'har populations no longer spoke the same
language, but the ussissi moved between the worlds and could make
contact and translate. Shan had found it hard to work out how the
ussissi could work with such differing cultures without being a conduit
for any of them. Mestin would have sent her out with them to learn and
understand, but it was too late now.
"They're wess'har, like us," said Nevyan. "However
differently they live, they will share our basic drive for cooperation.
And they will not be gethes."
"What do you want them to do if they accept our
approach?" asked Mestin.
"To tell us what's possible in confining the gethes
to their own system, and what support
they will give us to achieve that."
"So we're back to the policing
that Targassat so despised?"
"She felt we sought out cultures for interference
because we believed we were morally superior, and that it would
over-stretch us and cost us our own civilization. This
is a response to outright aggression."
"Outcomes, isanket, not
motives. And perhaps she was just wrong."
"And perhaps she was right for the times, but not for
now."
"You don't need to comfort yourself about betraying a
dead woman's ideals." It seemed they were being driven by respect for
opinionated and exceptional matriarchs who were no longer around to
enforce their own philosophies. "You make your own judgments. The will
of Wess'ej supports you. It's time to act."
And if it wasn't, it was too late to step back.
Nijassi, a member of Vijissi's pack, came scrambling up
the steps. "There is a message," he said. "It has taken time to find
the right people to ask the questions, but we have an answer."
"And?" Nevyan stood up and shook down her dhren
as if she were heading somewhere to
receive a visit.
"They will arrange a conference by screen as soon as
they have spoken to the various cities."
"This isn't an answer. What did they actually say? What
were the words?"
Nijassi sat back on his haunches as if he had forgotten
to note the most important part of the message. He seemed to have taken
it as understood.
"They said that what threatens us threatens them. And
threat is now. They will come."
When our defense
personnel die in action, we want to hear the truth. We can handle it.
We might even think their lives were worth sacrificing. But what we
can't handle is lies. CSV Actaeon was the first vessel to
be sunk--if that word can
apply--in a war in space. Before we rush to condemn the alien forces
that destroyed her, we need to ask what made them attack after living
peacefully with humans for nearly two hundred years. Why won't the
government let us hear from the one independent observer who can talk
openly to all the parties in this tragic conflict? We challenge the FEU
president to let us talk to Eddie Michallat, unedited and unrestricted.
If we're going to live with aliens, we need to understand them before
it's too late.
Editorial comment, "Europe Now"
Aras wondered how long it would be before
even a c'naatat succumbed to lack of
nourishment.
He really didn't feel like eating. It was more than
simply being off his food. Food was communal: he had cooked for Shan,
and Shan was no longer there to enjoy it. She had not been there for
nearly seven days now and she would never be there again.
There were no stages of grieving for wess'har, no
denial or bargaining. First they were paralyzed by grief and shock, and
then they accepted it. Males remated and the pain was soothed, but not
wholly forgotten. So did females. Aras had to find his own solution,
and for a second time.
But he was mired in human anger.
He spent the morning wondering how many scores he would
feel obliged to settle before his life was too miserable to be faced.
"Aras," said Eddie. He stood at the door to the terrace
and called him. He seemed scared to come within Aras's reach, as if he
would receive a blow. It was a shame. The human was doing his best to
support him, misguided though it was. "Aras, Nevyan's at the door.
She's brought someone to talk to you."
It was Sergeant Bennett in his camouflage battle dress,
even though there was no longer any point in concealment, and he was
wearing that odd flat green fabric headdress that he called a beret.
Nevyan gestured the soldier forward
silently. He saluted Aras.
"Sir," he said. It sounded like sah. "I
need to talk to you urgently."
Aras stood back and let them walk in. Bennett simply
stood in the center of the room with his hands clasped behind his back,
legs a little apart. They called it standing easy.
It certainly didn't look like there was any ease about it.
This man had shot his isan.
He had also stopped Lindsay Neville from killing her.
Aras didn't know what to make of him, but he had once liked him a lot
more than he had liked Josh, and he needed his skills and knowledge.
"Go on," said Aras. He didn't sit down either.
Bennett put his hand in the expandable pocket on his
trouser leg and took out Shan's gun. He handed it to Aras on the flat
of his palm. "She would have wanted you to have it, sir."
Aras took it and turned it over in his hands. He'd used
the weapon before. He had executed Surendra Parekh with it. It hadn't
done Shan much good. Pain, the real physical pain of grief, gripped at
his chest.
"She asked me to tell you that she was sorry and that
she hadn't abandoned you," said Bennett. "You would have been very
proud of her, sir."
Aras wanted to hear it and yet he didn't. "Tell me what
happened," he said. "Everything." He turned to Eddie. "And you need to
hear it too. Because you will tell the gethes,
and I know you will tell the truth."
It was a hard story to hear. Bennett kept stopping. He
related it like a report, but he was struggling to keep his voice
steady.
"And you shot her," said Aras.
"It took nearly the whole magazine to bring her down,"
he said. "She wouldn't give up. It took two of us to restrain her and
even then she head-butted me. Hard."
"Do you expect sympathy? She admired you. She trusted
you."
"I mention it simply because she was so bloody brave,
sir."
"And she--" Aras stopped. He couldn't say it. He needed
to sit. Eddie stepped in smartly.
"I think we want to know if she really…jettisoned
herself of her own free will, Ade."
Bennett's jaw worked silently for a few seconds. "She
did, but not that she had much of a choice. She told Commander Neville
what she thought of her, and just stepped out into space, and the
ussissi wouldn't leave her." He swallowed and his whole throat seemed
to move. "It was horrible but I'm glad I was there. Some people
disappoint you. They're all mouth. Shan wasn't. She got on and did it.
I just wanted you to know that."
There was a silence. It went on for a while, and Nevyan
seemed to be having the most difficulty with it. She was almost
billowing acid agitation. She stood up and peered into Bennett's face.
"Can you give me any location?" she said. "We want to
retrieve her body. And Vijissi. They deserve to come home."
Bennett held out his hand. The palm was illuminated
green, showing flat lines and numbers. "It records a lot. There'll be a
month's worth of location data in there. You'll have a job on your
hands, though, even with the coordinates."
"Then it's a job I should be getting on with," said
Nevyan.
"I still don't understand why you surrendered," said
Eddie. "You didn't kill Shan. You didn't help her much, but you know it
wasn't your doing. Had enough of the FEU shunting you around to
nursemaid corporations or something?"
Bennett hadn't taken his eyes off Aras. He held his
hand out to him, palm up, fist clenched. He nodded towards the tilgir
on Aras's belt.
"Want to take a slice out of me, sir?"
"That won't bring her back."
"That's not quite what I meant. Please. Just cut me."
Eddie looked completely stunned. No,
thought Aras. No, not that. But he took
his knife and he caught Bennett's arm and drew the blade down from the
inside of his elbow to the faint blue vessels on his wrist. It was a
shallow cut. It was all it needed.
Blood welled for a moment and stopped. Then the cut
settled into a red line, and then a pink one, and then it was as if he
had never been cut.
"Oh shit," said Eddie. "Here we go again."
"See, I told you she nutted me," said Bennett. "I mean hard,
too. Blood everywhere, right across my
face and hers, and I thought it was all mine because there wasn't a
mark on her when we looked. It was an accident. She didn't know she'd
infected me."
Aras stared. It was one more difficulty he didn't need.
It was the sort of problem Shan would have made him feel better about
had she been here to advise him.
He needed her. And he didn't need a human c'naatat
soldier to worry about.
"Sir, I thought it might be best for everyone if I went
deep for a bit," Bennett said, looking rather modest for a man who had
kept his nerve under unthinkable circumstances. "And I did tell
Commander Neville I took a piss-poor view of what happened to Shan, but
it was probably bloody daft of me to let her know I was infected.
Anyway, here I am, sir. Can you tell me if the rest of the detachment
are okay?"
Eddie interrupted. "I'll find out," he said. "In the
meantime, take a seat. I'm sure you'll come in very handy."
The pearl icing of F'nar looked perfectly
wonderful in heavy rain.
Eddie stood at the door to the terrace, watching the
downpour wash in great waves down the walls of the caldera. The glass
conduits were almost singing. At some points the city looked like a
designer water feature, the torrent rolling across the iridescence in
swirls and channels and creating an abstract animation. Eddie had sent
the bee-cam in, fully weather-jacketed, to capture footage while he
waited.
It was now five days since he had become the most
sought-after interviewee on four planets. It wasn't a position a
journalist ever expected to find himself in. He watched angry debates
and call-ins with people demanding that he be allowed to speak, and
still the call didn't come.
He had interviewed Bennett. It was one of the best he'd
ever done, and he reckoned so himself. Bennett had an endearingly frank
quality and a matter-of-fact manner that made the telling of Shan
Frankland's last grand gesture something of a show-stopper. She would
have liked that.
But Eddie couldn't use it. The whole story hinged on c'naatat.
If he ran the line on Shan's death
before he conveyed the enormity of the attack on Christopher--on
Ouzhari--then nobody would hear the detail. They would be working out
how feasible immortality might be for them. Once again one of Shan
Frankland's moral stands would have to remain a secret.
She hadn't been able to admit even to him that she had
once sacrificed her career and reputation to protect a bunch of
ecoterrorists with whom she sympathized. He knew anyway. Whether anyone
agreed with her or not, there was something heart-stoppingly admirable
about a woman who would put everything on the line--her life
included--for a principle.
Eddie was going to make sure she had prime-time if it
was the last thing he ever did. He'd just wait a while.
There was no interview with Lindsay Neville or Mohan
Rayat, of course. He wanted that most of all. But he could wait for
that too.
Eddie walked back into the house and stood in front of
the screen, now sliced into five different news channels. Then he hit
the message key: still nothing. No incoming calls from Earth. Call
me, you tossers. Eddie wondered what Ual
made of the FEU's poor handling of the row. He needed the diplomatic
channels to stay open, at least until he had filed.
Maybe it didn't matter. By not being able to speak,
Eddie had become a silent nod to growing speculation that humans had
started the war. Yes, they were using the word war
on every channel. The legal niceties of declaration had gone by the
board, even on BBChan bulletins. If your loved ones had died, you
needed to hear that it was a war. Nobody wanted to hear that they'd
been killed in a diplomatic misunderstanding.
Eddie went back to the door and watched the rain
punching through ever-changing rainbows for a long time.
"Does it piss down like this all the time?" asked
Bennett. Eddie hadn't even heard him come up behind him. "Been walking
round F'nar, getting accustomed to the layout. Pretty. Very pretty."
"Heard from the others yet?"
"Izzy and Chaz are on Mar'an'cas, but Izzy's bioscreen
packed up so I'm messaging Chaz. I think they quite like setting up the
colonists' camp there. Something good they can do. And Sue, Jon and
Barkers are on Umeh."
"And Lindsay's okay?"
"Not interested in her," said Bennett. "Maybe you could
ask Nevyan if we could get them all over here. They wouldn't do
anything stupid, I'd see to that. When things calm down a bit, of
course."
"As POWs?"
"Why?"
"You want to be deserters? Even this far from a
court-martial? Otherwise we have to explain why you've cut loose."
"Come on, they'd never try to take me here."
"It's not about that, really. If the c'naatat
story goes fully public, then who's
going to give a shit about a few dead squid?"
"Or Shan," said Bennett.
They stood and shared a homebrew beer. It hadn't
fermented long enough but it was more a symbol than an expression of
the brewer's art. Bennett was politely tactful.
"Interesting," he said.
"You can't get drunk any more anyway," said Eddie. "So
Shan said."
The front door opened and let in a blast of damp air.
Aras had come back from the fields with a basket of muddy vegetables.
He dumped them in the bowl under the spigot, rinsed them, and then went
to the lavatory and locked the door.
"That's not good," said Eddie. He wanted Aras to talk,
at least to Bennett if not to him. He walked up to the door and tapped
very gently with his knuckles.
"How are you feeling, mate?" he asked.
There was no answer.
"Aras, come and have something to eat."
"Later," said Aras.
Eddie went out onto the terrace again and began working
out how he might get a story off Wess'ej. He couldn't think of any
route that didn't involve ITX and bribery. Bennett busied himself
cleaning his rifle.
Eddie was still coming up with nothing and feeling
increasingly frustrated when he heard Aras moving around inside the
house. There was the sound of a container easing open and then a sharp
slam as something else was opened and closed.
The sounds of rummaging became more rapid and frantic.
Eventually they stopped and Aras came slowly out onto the terrace.
"You have taken something of mine, Eddie."
It hadn't been a bad premonition. There wasn't much of
anything to take from Aras, being wess'har: just the grenades.
"It's no good looking for them," Eddie said. He was
suddenly scared. Aras could have torn him apart with little effort, and
in his current state of mind there was every chance he would. Bennett
stood back, watching them carefully. "You won't find them."
"Eddie, how can you do this to me?"
"Because I care what happens to you."
"I can't stand another day like this. I have lived long
enough and I have nothing left now. If you had any respect for me you'd
stop this stupid game, so give me the grenades."
Eddie had nowhere to run. He stood with his arms held
away from his sides, thinking where he'd left his bag. It was stowed
under the sofa. He edged between Aras and the door. His stomach was
churning. Aras twitched and Eddie almost leaped back, but he stood his
ground. "I'm not going to let you kill yourself."
Aras was still for a moment. Then he seized Eddie by
his collar and thrust him so hard against the wall that it hammered the
breath out of him and he thought Aras was finally going to kill him.
"Let me go, Eddie. Let me
die."
Eddie gasped for breath. "Fuck you, no. No.
You want to do it--you do it alone."
"Give them to me. Sergeant Bennett, will you
give them to me?"
Bennett walked slowly forward, one careful pace at a
time. "I'm not helping you, mate."
"Why? What's it to either of you?"
Eddie choked. "She wouldn't have wanted you to do it.
And you're the last bit of her left."
Bennett finally came close enough to lay both hands on
Aras's arm, very slowly, very gently. "Come on," he said. "Eddie's
right. I know what you're going through, remember. I know better than
Eddie, anyway. You help me through it and I'll help you. Okay?" My fault, Eddie thought. My fault. Aras didn't let
go. He didn't even
look at Bennett.
"I failed the bezeri," said Aras. "I killed Josh
Garrod. And now I've lost her. How can I carry on?"
"Because it's not finished. It's just starting. She's
not here to sort it. But you are."
Bennett's hands tightened on Aras's arm. "Aras, just
let it go. Come on. I know it's hard. Come on."
Aras was pressing so hard on his chest that Eddie
thought he would black out. Then he let him go, and Eddie slid down the
damp pearl wall. Aras sat down slowly beside him.
"I need to lay her to rest," he said.
"You leave that to Nevyan. She's got the ussissi
searching."
"Is there more than this life, Eddie?"
"No, mate. Only what we do. That's why it's important
that you hang on."
"You have your focus, Eddie. You want to tell the story
and shame your government, and you'll always find one to shame. I'm not
sure of my purpose beyond vengeance."
"Then do it for Shan. Even if it's only revenge, the
end result is the same."
"I shouldn't have hurt you," Aras said. "I apologize."
"It's okay," said Eddie. He gave Bennett a go
away look. I'm fine. We
need to talk. Bennett shrugged and went back in the house.
They sat in the puddles on the terrace for a long time.
Eddie didn't want to leave him sitting there alone. After a while he
looked at his exotic, man-beast face and saw something he knew couldn't
be, but was.
There were definite tears in Aras's eyes. C'naatat had relented and
handed him one new adaptation that he had wanted so badly for so long.
He wept for his isan.
Eddie joined him.
I see no case
against coming to the aid of Wess'ej. They have been provoked. Their
allies have been invaded and slaughtered. The ussissi are calling on us
to intervene to save their kin as well. It will be a long-term
commitment but now we all know what is at stake, the end is inevitable.
Now or later is meaningless: the gethes will
invade again. And if they do not, then they still commit acts on their
own world that we cannot tolerate. The word gethes is from our distant
past. If we forget what it means,
then we forget what we are at our core. It's the antithesis of all
things that are wess'har.
SARMATAKIAN
VE,
adviser to the council of matriarchs of Eqbas Vorhi,
commonly known as the World Before
Minister Ual called Eddie in the early
hours with the best news he had heard in recent weeks.
Aras shook his shoulder to wake him. He stumbled to the
console and tried not to think what would happen to this odd friendship
if Ual found out about the quill. Eddie suspected the wily statesman
would think it was fair game, nothing personal at all.
"Pressure from one direction can be deflected," Ual
said, wheezing and sucking. "But pressure from two sides can crush. I
have your link."
"Thank you," said Eddie. He motioned to Aras to find
BBChan 56930, the current primary news feed. He had to nudge him: Aras
was fixed on Ual's image, unblinking. "How did you manage that?"
"I told your Foreign Office that I was most
disappointed that humans were taking a dim view of a race who would
help them establish instant communications across galaxies. I also said
it would ease my own electorate's fear of aliens if humans were seen to
admit their failings."
"A stylish threat, sir."
"No threat," said Ual. "You have a full hour, and I
think the phrase is live to air." He made
that rattling bubble that Eddie liked to think was a giggle but could
as easily have been a curse. "And I do not
care for your news editor."
"I'll buy you a beer one day, Minister. Thank you."
Eddie had a half-hour package ready to run. It opened
with the patrol craft recce footage of Ouzhari burning. It ended with
Ade Bennett's eyewitness account.
"Shall I leave you to it?" asked Aras.
"No, you stay right here." Eddie pulled on a fresh
shirt and hoped his stubble would make him look authentically warry
rather than a man who'd been dragged out of bed and caught on the hop.
He set the bee-cam on the console and pulled two stools into place.
"Because when this lot finishes running, you're on. I'm interviewing
you."
"What do you want me to do?"
"I'll ask you questions and you answer them as you see
fit. They might not sound like kind questions, but don't get angry on
air. You can punch me later."
"This sounds very negative."
"You know when you tore into me at dinner that time?"
"I was very rude. I meant to be."
"And it would have been great TV. Just say what you
think."
"What game is this, then?"
"Showing them what they're taking on. Conveniently
running back-to-back with scenes of destruction caused by gungho
humans."
"Is this a substitute for drama, Eddie, or have you
become a propagandist for us?"
"I'm treading a fine line. But all I'm doing is showing
people things that they're not here to see for themselves. How they
process it is down to them."
Eddie keyed in his code and found that it still worked.
He could begin his transmission at any time with a sixty second
stand-by so the current anchor could get the bulletin out of the
segment and manage a reasonable throw to a live OB from 150 trillion
miles away. He could see the output from the split feed from Umeh
Station.
He didn't even have to talk to News Desk.
"Thirty seconds," he said to nobody in particular, and
smoothed down his shirt.
Lindsay Neville walked through the crowded
biodome of Umeh Station and found a path had cleared for her.
It wasn't the sort of leeway granted to Shan Frankland
by dint of her commanding presence. The evacuees just didn't look like
they wanted close contact with the woman who had carried out an act of
war against a militarily superior neighbor.
And Okurt and his senior officers had died in Actaeon.
She was now the ranking officer in a
ship of chaos.
She had the feeling she wasn't going to be popular. It
was hard to be loved and respected when you had stranded nearly four
hundred people a long way from home without the prospect of rescue.
"There's Jon," said Barencoin. He put his thumb and
forefinger between his lips and whistled so loudly that Lindsay jumped.
"Oi, Jon! Over here!" He grinned, but not at her. "And there's Sue. The
old firm again, eh?"
"I want you lot to keep Rayat on a leash for the time
being," said Lindsay.
Barencoin inhaled slowly. "He's your problem now,
ma'am," he said. "He's not going anywhere. None of us are ever again, I
reckon. If you'll excuse me, I'm going to find a doctor to get this
bloody round out of my leg before the meds wear off."
He limped off into the milling crowd to be reunited
with his two comrades. If Lindsay thought she'd have marine backup, she
was mistaken. She wandered into one of the construction huts and asked
for the duty foreman. It was time to make a start on creating some
order and purpose. She was going to be here a long time.
"Well, that was fucking clever." The young engineer
sitting behind the makeshift desk just glanced up at her once. He was
checking inventories. "You're the military genius who nearly got us all
fried, eh?"
"I'm not even going to discuss that," said Lindsay
wearily. "We need some organization here."
"We've got nearly four hundred people in a
half-finished habitat. It's enough water, lavatories, and food
facilities that we need. You offering?"
There was no point pulling rank. Civilians didn't jump
for her. "Okay," she said. "You get on with the logistics and I'll
round up my personnel. Then we can sit down and talk sensibly later."
"And bring a shovel," said the engineer. He jabbed his
thumb over his shoulder without looking up. "Have a look at the news.
You're on. Or at least your handiwork is."
Lindsay cast around and found the small screen obscured
by piles of insulation sheeting. She was going to leave: she didn't
have time for this. But she didn't. She watched. She watched because
she heard Eddie's familiar voice over images that she should have
recognized but didn't.
Lindsay watched Eddie's news special with detached
horror. She had lived these events. They looked much worse on screen.
Stripped of the emotion of experiencing them, she saw only what history
would see: destruction, anger, panic and a huge gamble taken on what
humans might have done had they got hold of an organism called c'naatat.
Viewed cold, it seemed a very slim risk. What have I done?
It gave her an unpleasant feeling in her mouth, the
sensation that the sides of her palate just above her teeth were
closing together like Scylla and Charybdis. She wasn't sure if it was
adrenaline or nausea.
Eddie was now interviewing Aras. "Who do you see as the greater
threat now--isenj or human?"
"The isenj managed to destroy
almost the entire bezeri population. Humans--gethes--finished
the job, as you would say. I have no great
love for either species." "Do you feel the alliance
between the two has increased tension here on Wess'ej?" "Of course it has. The isenj are
native to this system, but you're not, and you have no right to be
here. As long as you have a base within striking distance of us, we
will not rest easy. We have seen what a handful of you can do." "And your people have a
reputation for all-encompassing military solutions." "If you're referring to the
cleansing of Bezer'ej, yes, we act decisively."
It was extraordinary. There was no mention of Shan.
There was no mention of c'naatat. Eddie
had skirted neatly, round it but the question hung there: why bomb the
bloody place? Lindsay wondered what game he was playing. Maybe his
bosses had warned him off. She was angry. It named her and it named
Rayat and made them both look like war criminals.
"It wasn't like that at all," she said angrily at the
screen. "Eddie, you bastard. Tell them why I did it."
"Yeah, I'd love to know,"
muttered the engineer.
Lindsay turned and walked out. She'd done the right
thing, but the wrong way. She'd wiped out--no, she had almost
wiped out--a dangerous organism that
humans simply couldn't be trusted to handle. And she couldn't tell
anyone right then, or maybe ever. All they saw was her crime and her
stupidity.
It was just like Eddie had said about Shan and that
business with Green Rage. It was Rochefoucauld's classic example of
perfect courage, a massive private sacrifice that won you no worshipers.
For the first time, Lindsay knew exactly how it felt to
be Shan Frankland.
Ceret was rising. The tem
flies, swarming before moving south to hotter climates for the winter
season, battled for position on the first sun-warmed stones.
"It's still the prettiest damn thing I've ever seen,"
said Eddie. "It's not a bad place to be marooned."
Eddie had more of a choice than he had realized. F'nar
was not the only city of pearl, just one of a chain of settlements and
cliffs and other convenient surfaces that stood on the tems'
migration path. Aras said he regretted not
showing all of them to Shan.
The tem flies were on the
move now, great black clouds of smoke across the face of Ceret. If you
looked at them long enough, you could pick out images that resembled
animals or plants or landscapes.
Children enjoyed the game of recognition. Nevyan waited
with Giyadas for an especially large cloud of flies to sweep across the
setting red disk of the sun.
"Great shot," said Eddie, like a fond uncle. The
bee-cam was diligently recording it all. He'd use that the next time he
got an uplink.
Giyadas, absorbing English at an alarming rate, watched
him intently.
"Great shot," she said, accentless.
Mestin had promised to send Serrimissani to fetch them
when the message came through from the World Before. She was waiting by
the screen, an unusual act of patience for her. There was a vague
promise of help in the recognition of a common threat, but Eddie had
heard that before on Earth. Had it been the matriarchs of F'nar who had
said it, he would have believed it.
But not even the ussissi knew how the World Before
would really react to a plea for help from a band of outcasts who had
cut themselves off thousands of years ago because they didn't want to
get involved.
There was always the chance they would come back and
tell them to piss off.
"Have you seen pictures of them?" asked Eddie.
Nevyan jiggled her head like an Indian dancer. "No."
"You're pretty short on curiosity for a clever species."
"Curiosity leads to exploration, and we never planned
to go back. But I am curious, Eddie."
"You'll find out soon enough."
They all would.
Bennett had persuaded Aras to come out and see the
swarming. Aras was sitting with his head bowed, absorbed in the
contents of a small red cylinder whose fragile screen was strung
between filaments. It was Shan's swiss. He never put it down now.
Bennett simply sat and watched him. They had a lot in common. If Aras
was going to survive his grief, it would be Bennett who would be most
help to him. A bloody shame, thought
Eddie. Poor sods.
Serrimissani was suddenly among them, agitated, urgent. "They are
responding," she said. "Right now. Come."
Eddie wasn't the last inside. Aras was reluctant to
watch and shook his head. Bennett waited with him.
"Call me when I can do something useful," he said, and
held the swiss in both hands as if it would break. When it did, there
would be nobody left who knew how to repair it or where to find the
parts.
The rest of them--Nevyan and Mestin's families and
Eddie--stood and watched the image from a city that was
well-proportioned and softened by planting, but very, very urban.
For once Eddie was not alone in his bewilderment and
wonder.
The whole of F'nar had ground to a halt. The signal had
been made available to everybody: there were no secrets among wess'har.
The usual backdrop of domestic noise, of scraping glass utensils and
caterwauling matriarchs, had ceased. For the first time Eddie could
hear the trickling water from thousands of glass conduits around the
caldera. It was as heart-stopping as a total eclipse.
They were all looking at their screens, wherever they
were, because that was what he was doing too. They were looking for the
first time at kin they hadn't seen in ten thousand years.
And the face in the image was almost wholly alien.
The wess'har genome was as flexible as thread, always
adapting, reshaping. It was what made them such a perfect host for c'naatat.
And in ten thousand years, both
branches of the family had gone their own distinctive ways.
"That's a wess'har?" Eddie asked.
"Yes," said Serrimissani. "A matriarch."
The scarcely recognizable creature had a ussissi
interpreter, and that much they could all identify. It was the ussissi
who spoke after a stream of double-voiced but unintelligible sound
emerged from the female who looked little like the isan've
Eddie had now started to see as normal.
"Tell the gethes we are
coming," said the ussissi, repeating the words of his matriarch. "Tell
them that we too believe in balancing, and that the bezeri will have
justice, even if none are left to witness it. What threatens you
threatens us."
Nevyan had her long arms crossed over her chest in that
odd nervous gesture the females seemed to have. "So it's done," she
said. And she simply turned and walked out on to the terraces again.
Eddie went after her.
"Is that it?" he said. "What next?"
"We will arrange liaison now. It will take a little
time. And you have much to do."
"Yeah, I've got some stories to broadcast, when the
time's right. You've seen the news. Earth's boiling. So I'm busy. What
will you do?"
Nevyan pulled her dhren up
around her neck. "I have important work to occupy me."
"What exactly?"
Nevyan cocked her head, taking in Aras and Bennett, who
were just sitting on a low wall and not talking.
"I'm going to find my friend," said Nevyan. "And I'm
going to bring her home."
Look for the third volume in The
Wess'har Wars, coming soon.
Thanks go to Charlie Allery, Debbie Button,
Bryan Boult and Chris "TK" Evans, for thorough and critical reading; to
Dr. Ian Tregillis and Mark Allery for technical advice; to Dr. Farah
Mendlesohn for cheerleading; to my editor, Diana Gill, never fazed by
wild plot changes; and to my father, George, who taught me the value of
thorough preparation.
KAREN
TRAVISS is a former defense
correspondent and TV and newspaper journalist. She's now a political
public relations manager and has also been a press officer for the
police, an advertising copywriter, and a journalism lecturer. She has
served in both the Royal Navy Auxiliary Service and the Territorial
Army. A graduate of the Clarion science fiction and fantasy workshop,
her work has appeared in Asimov's, Realms of
Fantasy, and On Spec. She lives in
Wiltshire, England.
Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive
information on your favorite HarperCollins authors
"[A] satisfyingly complex tale of human/alien
interaction on a colony planet which, at times, evokes the earlier
moral fables of Le Guin…at other times the revisionist critique of
expanding human empires…and at times the union of romance with SF that
we see in the work of Catherine Asaro or Lois McMaster Bujold. The fact
that Traviss manages to keep these sometimes conflicting modes in
balance, mostly through her strong sense of character, suggests that
she's a writer worth watching."
Locus
"In Shan Frankland, Karen Traviss has created a
tough, interesting, believable character…City of
Pearl is science fiction with teeth."
Gregory Frost, author of Fitcher's
Brides
"A fascinating cast of characters involved in a
richly complex situation…Her people are convincingly real…Traviss has
created a vivid assortment of alien races, each with distinctive
characteristics and agendas…She brings a rare combination of insight
and experience that will greatly contribute to our field."
James Alan Gardner, author of Expendable
Crossing The Line
CROSSING THE LINE
KAREN TRAVISS
For Richard D. Ryder,
Andrew Linzey, and all those who question where we have drawn the line.
Constantine Colony,
Bezer'ej,
February 2376
It was much, much worse at night.
Night cut you off from any reference, any reassurance,
and nights here on Bezer'ej were far blacker than any Shan Frankland
had seen on light-polluted Earth.
Once the lights that danced in the blackness were the
product of her optic nerve playing electrical tricks. But these lights
were real.
They were coming from her hands.
The display was mainly blue and violet, flashing
occasionally from her fingertips. It was almost as bad as her claws.
And it wasn't something any human should have had, but Shan wasn't any
human, not any more. Don't think of it as a parasite,
Aras told her. Think of it as a beneficial
relationship. It can be.
Aras had five hundred years to get used to carrying c'naatat,
being c'naatat,
living with all that c'naatat meant; and
she had been infected for a matter of months. He meant well. He did it
to save her life. But it was hard waking up to a new body every day.
She studied the pattern of lights again and wondered if
there was language within it, as there was for the native bezeri. She
also wondered if her c'naatat had done it
to teach her a lesson for hubris, for her contempt for the organic
illuminated computer screens grown into the hands of combat troops. You'll never put one of those
bloody things in me.
But here she was, with that and plenty more. The
symbionts had almost certainly scavenged the component genes at random,
unaware of her beliefs and her guilt. She was just an environment to be
preserved with whatever came to hand. If they had purpose beyond that,
she wasn't sure that she wanted to know about it.
Shan put her fingers to her head and felt through the
hair. There wasn't the slightest trace of unevenness in the bone, no
evidence that her skull had been shattered by an alien weapon. C'naatat
was efficient. It seemed to enjoy doing
a tidy job.
Small wonder that some of her former crewmates from Thetis
thought she was a paid mule for
manufactured alien biotech. The truth was messy and unconvincing, but
truth often was, and it didn't matter. The crew knew the broad detail,
and so did the colonists of Constantine who gave her asylum, and it
would only be a matter of time before the matriarchs of Wess'ej found
out what Aras had done to save her.
And then all hell would break loose.
She buried her head under her blanket and tried to
sleep, but the lights persisted, and she fell into dreams of drowning
in a locked room that was scented like a forest.
There are
countless constellations, suns, and planets: we see only the suns
because they give light; the planets remain invisible, for they are
small and dark. There are also numberless earths circling around their
suns, no worse and no less than this globe of ours.
GIORDANO
BRUNO,
Dominican monk and philosopher,
burned at the stake by the Inquisition
in February 1600
"Is it true?"
Eddie Michallat concentrated on the features of the
duty news editor twenty-five light-years away, courtesy of CSV Actaeon's
comms center. The man was real and it
was happening now, in every sense of the
word.
For nearly a year he had been beyond BBChan's reach on
Bezer'ej. But the glorious isolation was over. Isenj instantaneous
communications technology meant there was now no escape from the
scrutiny of News Desk. In the way of journalists, they had already
given it an acronym, as noun, verb and adjective--ITX.
"Poodle-in-the-microwave job," Eddie said dismissively. "Urban myth.
People talk the most incredible crap when they're under
stress."
He waited a few seconds for the reply. The borrowed
isenj communications relay was half a million miles from Earth, and
that meant the last leg in the link was at light speed, the best human
technology could manage. The problem with the delay was that it gave
Eddie more time to stoke his irritation.
"That never stopped you filing a story before."
How the hell would he know? This man--this boy,
for that was all he appeared to be--had
probably been born fifty years after Thetis
had first left Earth. Eddie enjoyed mounting the occasional high horse.
He saddled up.
"BBChan used to be the responsible face of
netbroadcast," he said. "You know--stand up a story properly before you
run it? But maybe that's out of fashion these days." One, two, three, four, five.
The boy-editor persisted with the blind focus of a missile. "Look,
you're sitting on a completely fucking shit-hot twenty-four carat
story. Biotech, lost tribes, mutiny, murder, aliens. Is there anything
I've left out?"
"There wasn't a mutiny and Shan Frankland didn't murder
anyone." She's just a good copper, Eddie
wanted to say, but it was hardly the time. "And the biotech is pure
speculation." My speculation. Me and my big mouth.
"We don't know what it is. We don't know if it makes you invulnerable.
But you got the aliens about right. That's something."
"The Thetis crew was
saying that Frankland's carrying this biotech and that she's pretty
well invulnerable to injury and disease, and--"
Eddie maintained his dismissive expression with some
difficulty, a child again, cowering at the sound of a grown-ups' row: it's
all my fault. He always worried that it
was. "Oh God, don't give me the undead routine, will you? I don't do
infotainment."
"And I don't do the word �no.' Stand up that story."
The kid was actually trying to get tough with him. It
wasn't easy having a row with someone when you had time to count to
five each time. But Eddie was more afraid of the consequences of this
rumor than the wrath of a stranger, even one who employed him.
"Son, listen to me," he said. "You're twenty-five years
away as the very, very fast crow flies, so
I don't think you're in any position to tell me to do sod all."
He leaned forward, arms folded on the
console, and hoped the cam was picking up a shot that gave him the
appearance of looming over the kid. "I'm the only journalist in 150
trillion miles of nothing. Anything I file
is exclusive. And I decide what I file. Now run along and finish your
homework."
Eddie flicked the link closed without waiting for a
response and reassured himself that there really was nothing that 'Desk
could do to him any more. He was here. Actaeon had no
embeds embarked. BBChan could
sack him, and every network on Earth would be offering him alternative
employment. It wasn't bravado. It was career development.
Ironically, the stories he had filed months ago were
still on their way home at plain old light speed: the stories he would
file now, would ITX, would beat them by years. He was scooping himself
and it felt wonderful. It struck him as the journalistic equivalent of
masturbation.
"I wish I could get away with that," said the young
lieutenant on comms duty. He hovered just on the edge of Eddie's field
of vision. "Why didn't you tell him you were on your way to see the
isenj?"
"Because all news editors are tossers," Eddie said. He
felt around in his pockets for the bee-cam and his comms kit. "If you
tell them what story you're chasing, they decide in their own minds how
it's going to turn out. Then they bollock you for not coming back with
the story they imagined. So you don't tell them anything until you're
ready to file. Saves a lot of grief."
"Wise counsel," said the lieutenant, as if he
understood.
From Actaeon's bridge,
Eddie could still see the dwindling star that was EFS Thetis,
heading back to Earth with the remnant
of the Constantine mission, a party of isenj delegates and their
ussissi interpreters. So vessels weren't titled European Federal Ship
these days, then. A nice bland CSV, a harmless Combined Service Vessel,
purged of any reference to territory to avoid offending the recent
multinational alliance between Europe and the Sinostates. He had
seventy-five years left to amaze the viewing public with the latest in
alien contact before the real thing showed up on their doorstep. Thetis
was a much older, slower ship than the Actaeon.
And Thetis had been the
state of the art just over a year ago. Time was flying obscenely and
confusingly fast.
"It's not like he can send someone out to relieve you
of duty, is it?" said the lieutenant. He seemed to have badged Eddie as
a maverick hero, an understandable reaction for a young man enmeshed in
the strict hierarchies of navy life. No, there was nothing News Desk
could do out here: Shan Frankland had taught him that. When you were on
your own, without backup, you had to make your own decisions and stand
by them. "Is Frankland really as bad as they say? Did she really sell
you out? Did she let people die?"
"Who's saying?"
"Commander Neville."
"Look, the commander's been through a lot lately. I'd
take some of her observations with a pinch of salt. You can't lose your
kid without losing some sanity too." I'm just an
observer. No, he wasn't. He was involved in this. He had been
involved in it right from the time he had decided there were some
stories about Shan that he was never going to file. "Lindsay had a
sickly, premature kid. That's what you get if you're not used to low
oxygen. You've got to remember the colony's medical facilities are
pretty primitive."
A pause. "But presumably Frankland's aren't."
"Are you trying to interrogate me, son?"
"Just making conversation."
"Word of advice. Never try to get information out of a
hack. We wrote the book on wheedling. I can't give you any information
on Frankland because I don't have any." Well,
technically, I don't. It suddenly struck him that he was calling
all younger males son, just as Shan did, a
copper's kind patronage with its edge of threat. "No, Frankland
probably saved a lot of lives. But maybe she's proof that it isn't
what's true that makes historical record, it's who gets their story in
first."
A blood sample from Shan here, and a cell culture
there, and maybe David Neville might have survived more than a few
weeks. But releasing that biotech into the human population was a price
Shan Frankland refused to pay, regardless of what it cost her. Eddie
knew that now.
And he still felt guilty that he believed, however
briefly, that she had been carrying the biotech for money. He wondered
whether he would have made the same choice if placed in the same
dilemma.
"Come on," he said to the young officer, who was
hanging on his pronouncements like a disciple. "Take me down to the
shuttle bay. I'm going to have tea with the isenj foreign minister."
Aras crunched down to the cliffs on a
paper-thin crust of light snow. He still worried when Shan was out
after nightfall. But she could come to no harm. She couldn't freeze to
death, and she couldn't drown, and she couldn't die even if she fell
and broke her neck.
And neither could he.
But she was uneasy. He could smell that even from a
hundred meters away. She was where he had hoped to find her, sitting
near the cliff edge again, looking down at the glittering darkness of a
sea half illuminated by Wess'ej in its gibbous phase.
He concentrated, willing his visual range to expand. A
human would hardly have spotted her. A wess'har's low-light vision
would have picked her out. But on top of that, Aras had his infrared
sensitivity, gleaned from the isenj by his c'naatat,
and Shan was at that moment a shimmering golden ghost of bright-hot
exposed skin and darker, cooler garments.
The c'naatat produced a
fever during its active phases. He could see it. She wouldn't be
feeling the cold at all.
"Time to eat," he said quietly. "Still watching for the
bezeri?"
She smiled, a brief flash of hotter, whiter light
flaring in a mask of amber. "I wanted to wave to them." She peeled off
her gloves, held out her hands and flexed them. Brilliant violet lights
flickered briefly under the skin. "I think I can guess where I picked
that up."
She was bothered by it. She feigned calm well enough to
fool a human but not enough to evade a wess'har sense of smell. Her
expression, her posture, her voice; all said she was fine. But her
scent said otherwise.
"It might not be from the bezeri," he said, as if that
made a difference. "C'naatat is often
unpredictable. I've been around bezeri for many years and never
absorbed any of their characteristics."
"As far as you know, of course. Well, could be worse.
At least it's not their tentacles, eh?" She flexed her fingers again
and stared at them. The lights, as intense now as anything the bezeri
emitted, added to her illuminated image. "Shouldn't I talk to them? I
feel I owe them an explanation."
Aras thought the bezeri probably had all the
explanation they needed or wanted. However much Shan thought she could
protect them, however ashamed she was of her own species' short history
on Bezer'ej, the bezeri themselves were still raw from losing an infant
to human violence. Aras wondered how the humans--the gethes,
the carrion-eaters--who flew into
violent
outrage themselves at the harming of a child could think another
species would behave any differently.
It was just as well that the bezeri were soft-bodied,
confined to the sea, and without real weapons beyond their piercing
mouth-parts. Shan's apologies would mean little to them.
He held his hand out to her. "Here. They're not coming.
They haven't been near the surface for weeks. Let's eat."
It was like watching a child who was scarred by a fire
of your making, a constant rebuke to your carelessness, except that he
had done this deliberately. She was trying to cope with her c'naatat
and finding it hard. What choice did I have? She would have died if
I hadn't
infected her. But he knew how it felt to wake wondering what
alterations that the microscopic symbiont was making to your body. He
had seen c'naatat develop in others, and
no two experienced exactly the same changes.
That was the least of her problems. In time--and she
would have plenty of that--she would have to cope with the lonely
reality of having everyone she knew age and die, leaving her alone,
except for him. He knew where his duty lay. He owed her that much.
But she was right. It could have been worse.
She could have found herself reliving other beings'
memories.
"I'm starving," she said. C'naatat
demanded a lot of energy while it was rearranging the genetic
furniture. "I could murder some nice thick lentil soup. And some of
those little rolls with the walnut bits in."
"We'll see what the refectory has to offer."
They walked back to Constantine across a plain that was
starting to push blue-gray grass through the snow. Usually Aras managed
to see only what was truly there: tonight, once again, the images of
what had once been were intruding on the present.
Shan walked through wilderness. But Aras walked along
the vanished perimeter of an isenj city called Mjat and down what had
been a main thoroughfare flanked by homes. There was less than nothing
left, but he remembered exactly where it had been. He hadn't needed to
see the gethes' clever geophys images of
the ghost of a civilization to recall those roads, because he had
mapped them.
And he had destroyed them.
He had washed the cities with fire and cut down isenj
and set loose the reclamation nanites that devoured the deserted homes.
It had been five hundred years ago by the Constantine calendar, but he
remembered it all, and not only from his own viewpoint. Back then he
had had no idea that isenj had genetic memory.
"I'm sorry," he said. "But I had to do it."
Shan seemed to think he was talking to her. "Stop
apologizing." She thrust her arm through his. "It's okay."
Apart from a brief, violent escape of contained rage
when she had found out she was infected, she had shown neither
self-pity nor recrimination. He admired that about her. It was very
wess'har. It would make it far easier for her to adapt to her new world. Could be worse.
Aras walked the invisible central plaza of Mjat. Worse could
have been genetic memory, and that
was perhaps worst of all, worse than claws or vestigial wings or a
million other scraps of genetic material that c'naatat
had picked up, tried on for size, and then sometimes discarded.
Now he was clear of Mjat and back in the small world of
humans, his home for the best part of two centuries. Wess'ej, the
planet where he had been born, hung in the sky as a huge crescent moon,
and he didn't miss it at all.
The biobarrier crackled slightly as they passed through
into Constantine's shielded, controlled environment. Aras trod
carefully to avoid the overwintering kale that was shrouded in
snow-like sculptures.
Wess'har had no sculpture, no poetry, no music. He
almost understood those concepts now, but not entirely. There was a
great deal of human DNA in him: c'naatat
had probably found it in shed skin cells and bacteria and taken a fancy
to it, but it had not helped him grasp the human fondness for what was
clearly unreal. He had often wondered why the symbiont had devoted so
much energy to altering his appearance and fashioning a makeshift human
out of him.
It took him some time to realize that it had given him
yet another refinement to help him--its world--survive. It was trying
to
help him to fit into human society. It seemed to know he was outcast
from his own forever.
It knew how badly he needed to belong.
Malcolm Okurt had not signed up for this. He
told Lindsay Neville so. He took it as a personal slight, he said, and
it was bad enough having to crew a vessel with civilians
without getting dragged into politics as
well. He was the only person Lindsay knew who could spit the words out
like that. At chill-down, his orders were to follow up the Thetis
mission. Nobody mentioned anything about
aliens, especially not four separate civilizations.
"I thought you'd want to get out of here as fast as you
could," he said.
Lindsay paused, and not for effect. "I've got
unfinished business. I lost my kid here."
Okurt knew that well enough. She just wanted to remind
him that she needed a wide berth at times. She didn't feel the pain at
all, not right then. She made sure she didn't because if she did then
she would fall apart, and as she told Okurt, she had a task to complete.
She steadied herself and glanced at her bioscreen, the
living battlefield computer display grown into the palm of her hand.
She couldn't switch off the light, but she had disabled the monitor
functions because it depressed her to see the unchanging bio signs of
her comrades in chill-sleep. It made them look as if they were dead.
Okurt must have been watching her gaze. "They phased
those out years ago," he said. "Unreliable."
So nobody had them any more, nobody except her and a
few Royal Marines who were on their way home. She turned her hand palm
down on the table.
When Okurt was agitated he had a habit of spinning his
coffee cup in its saucer, and he was doing it now. "We might have been
able to help, had we been allowed access."
"I know." She was drawing parallel lines on the pad in
front of her, darker and deeper and harder with each stroke. "Do you
have current orders regarding Frankland?"
"We're backing off for the time being. No point getting
into a pissing match with the wess'har, not if we want to do business
with them. If she's got what you say she's got, there'll be other ways
to acquire it. I've got enough on my plate trying to keep the isenj
sweet without the wess'har noticing we're kissing both their arses."
"I can't help thinking this double game is going to be
the proverbial hiding to nothing."
"It's diplomacy. Evenhandedness. Like arming both sides
in a war."
"The wess'har don't deal in gray areas."
"Well, they'll get fed up with the isenj taking pot
shots at them sooner or later and then an offer of assistance might be
appreciated."
"And who's going to negotiate with them?"
"I pulled the winning ticket."
"Oh. I take it the isenj aren't privy to this."
"Of course not. And it wasn't my idea. Thanks to the
bloody EP or ITX or whatever they're calling it today, I don't have the
luxury of making my own decisions. I've got politicians and chiefs of
staff second-guessing me a comms call away. I might as well be a bloody
glove-puppet. And don't tell me ITX is a boon to mankind. It's a pain
in the arse."
Lindsay wondered how different things would have been
if Thetis had been able to get instant
messages and instructions back from Earth. It might have made matters
worse. She wondered if it would have saved Surendra Parekh: somehow she
doubted it. Somewhere there was a bezeri parent who had lost a child
because of the biologist's arrogant curiosity about cephalopods, and
for a split second she felt every shade of that alien pain.
No, she was content that Shan had let the wess'har
execute the woman.
But that didn't excuse her allowing David to die. She
took the rising bubble of pain and crushed it into herself again.
"At least we'll probably go down as the most
economically viable mission in history," said Okurt. "Instant comms,
new territory, maybe even immortality in a bottle. That's what
exploration's really about. Unless Frankland's already acquired the
biotech for a specific corporation, of course."
"She said she wasn't paid to get the tech. I'm inclined
to believe her. She's not like that."
"Come on, everybody's like
that sooner or later."
"Not her. She's EnHaz. An environmental protection
officer. As far as she's concerned, she's on a personal mission to
cleanse the bloody universe. And she loathes corporations, believe me.
Enough to let terrorists loose on them. Enough to be
a terrorist."
"Well, whatever EnHaz was, I've got my orders--detain
her, as and when, for unauthorized killing of a civilian and for being
a potential biohazard. That'll do for now."
Despite her hatred, Lindsay fought back an urge to
correct Okurt about Frankland's involvement. It might have been her
weapon that shot Parekh, but she hadn't fired it, whatever she claimed.
The woman would have said anything to protect her pet wess'har, Aras.
Lindsay had confronted him once: she had no doubt he would have killed
her too without losing a second's sleep over it.
"I want Frankland," she said. "But I want her for the
right reasons. This isn't vengeance."
She dug her stylus into the paper. She hadn't written a
single word, just black lines. When she caught Okurt staring, she
tapped the border of the smartpaper and the surface plumped up into
pristine white nothingness again.
"I'm sure it isn't," he said, eyeing her in evident
disbelief. She put the stylus back in her breast pocket. Actaeon's wardroom was
comfortable and quiet, with all the refinements that fifty years of
further development could make in a ship. You could hardly hear the
constant rush of air or feel the vibration of machinery that had
permeated Thetis. But it was still too
small for two commanders. All the security she had once derived from
knowing her exact place in the service hierarchy had evaporated. Out of
rank, and out of time: she wanted to be busy.
"I can't sit around filing reports forever," she said. "You need an
extra pair of hands."
"What I need is to get this base set up on Umeh, and I
need people who've had alien contact experience. And I don't mean Eddie
bloody Michallat, either. I won't have BBChan running the show, even if
they do think they're a government department."
"The isenj like Eddie. He might be your best route to
Frankland too. Even she liked him in the end."
It was too painful to say Shan.
It was the way you referred to a friend.
"She's just one woman," Okurt said. "How much trouble
can a disgraced copper be?"
"Find out why she was demoted in the first place before
you dismiss her." Lindsay was surprised he hadn't heard the gossip.
Buzzes like that usually flew round a ship fast: the antiterrorist
officer who went native. Yes, Shan had enjoyed quite a checkered
career. "Civvy police dip in and out of uniform discipline as and when
it suits them, and she doesn't know the meaning of rules of engagement.
So don't give her an inch. She wasn't always in EnHaz--she's ex–Special
Branch. You name it, she's done it."
"Get it in perspective. She's just another plod with a
few more brain cells. She isn't special forces."
"Don't say I didn't warn you." Lindsay reached in her
jacket and pulled out her sidearm. She laid it on the table. Okurt said
nothing but his eyes were a study in amazement. "Promise me this. If
we're ever in a position to take her, let me do it. I let her walk away
once and I regretted it. I won't make that mistake again."
Okurt still stared at the weapon. "Perhaps you should
stow that in the armory," he said.
"No thanks." She slipped it back into her jacket. "Trust me. I've
never been more controlled. There's only one person who
needs to worry about me." A plod with a few more brain
cells.
No, Okurt didn't have a clue about Shan Frankland.
TO:
Foreign Office, Federal European Union
FROM: CDR.
MALCOLM OKURT,
CSV Actaeon
We have been
unable to detain Superintendent Frankland as she has been granted
protection by the wess'har authorities. The best intelligence we have
is that she is still on CS2. Under the circumstances, I believe we have
no option but to let the matter rest for the time being: pressing the
issue will compromise any later negotiations we might have with the
wess'har regarding landings on CS2. The BBChan embed here says that we
should start calling the planet by the name Bezer'ej when dealing with
the wess'har, and Asht when talking to the isenj, but not CS2 or
Cavanagh's Star 2. Apparently it smacks of colonialism and might offend
the local population.
It was hard being nothing more than an
extra pair of hands.
Shan stabbed the shovel into the frost-hardened ground
and turned another spadeful of soil. She made a few rough calculations.
Another fifty square meters and she'd be done.
The claws were really getting on her nerves now. She
kept catching them on the handle of the spade, snagging her pants,
scratching her face. She couldn't quite get the hang of them. Sometimes
they were worse than the lights.
But they weren't worse than the nightmares.
The sensations persisted into waking. She was in a room
enveloped in a smell like a forest floor. She couldn't see anyone, but
she knew somebody was there. The sequence of events was jumbled: but
however it manifested, the events were the same--searing loneliness,
the
wild panic of trying not to breathe and then inhaling a lungful of icy
water, followed by agonizing pain between her shoulder blades.
And she had thought she was coping pretty well, all
things considered. The dream symbolism was unoriginal except for the
smell. Maybe I'm not as tough as I think,
she decided. An unbroken night's sleep would have been welcome. And nobody needs a copper out
here.
The ground was almost too hard to dig, but she wanted
to make an early start, a manual start, to
prove that she had no intention of freeloading on the Constantine
colony's generosity. And they don't need to learn how
to control a riot or secure a crime scene or keep yourself from going
barmy with boredom during a month-long surveillance. They don't need me
at all.
It was just as well that the wess'har thought she might
come in useful one day. Otherwise she was just a mouth that needed
feeding, and there were no shops here. If she didn't plant it and grow
it, she didn't eat it. Suddenly all those dreams she had once
cherished--a patch of soil to cultivate when she turned in her warrant
card, a little more time to herself--seemed painfully ironic. She'd got
exactly, literally, all too bloody
generously what she had wished for. She rammed the spade hard into the
soil again.
The sun--Cavanagh's Star to humans, Ceret to
wess'har--was making little impression on the frost at this time of the
morning. Shan stopped and leaned on the shovel. Josh Garrod was making
his way towards her, stumbling over the furrows that frozen water had
burst and broken.
He was in a hurry. That wasn't encouraging; there was
nothing to rush for here. She started towards him, sensing that there
was some emergency and responding to ingrained police training, but he
waved her back with both hands. He had her grip slung over his shoulder
on a strap.
Maybe it was good news that couldn't wait. She doubted
it.
When he reached her he was puffing clouds of acrid
anxiety. Her altered sense of smell, another little retro-fit provided
by her c'naatat, confirmed her fears. She
had never seen the stoic colony leader in a flat panic before.
"You've got to get out." He pulled the bag off his back
and held it out to her to take it. "I'll show you where to go--"
"Whoa, roll this back a bit," she said, but she already
knew what he was going to say. "Just tell me why."
"They're here," he said. "They know. They're searching
Constantine for you."
"Wess'har?"
"I'm afraid so."
There was the merest kick of adrenaline and then a
sudden, cold, alien focus. "Where's Aras?" It had only been a matter of
time. There was no monopoly of information. But she had expected a
little more breathing space before the matriarchs discovered what Aras
had done to her. Now she didn't even have time to wonder how.
"They've taken him. He told me to hide you. I promised
him, Shan. Don't make me break that."
"Well, you've done your bit." She took the grip from
him and slung it across her shoulder, then started walking back towards
Constantine, shovel in hand.
Josh grabbed her shoulder. "You're not going back."
Shan glared at his hand. He withdrew it. "I bloody well
am."
"You can hide out--"
"Yeah, 'course I can." Aras didn't deserve this. She
owed him. She quickened her pace. "Good idea."
"Shan, they'll execute you. You know that."
"They'll have a job on their hands then, won't they?
I'm a bit hard to kill. You might have noticed."
Josh broke into a run to keep up with her. She was a
lot taller than the native-born, and now faster on her feet, too. "It's
a big planet," he puffed. "They'll never find you."
"You reckon? We found you,
and we were twenty-five light-years away. Sorry, Josh--I only know one
way to deal with this, and that's to go and meet it. If it takes me,
fine, and if I take it, that's great too, but I won't spend the rest of
my life looking over my shoulder. Because that's going to be a bloody
long time."
He didn't know her at all. He should have realized that
she would never leave Aras. It was more than the biological links that c'naatat
had forged between them: it was every
bond of loyalty she had known as a police officer, stronger than
family, and then--then there was something more besides, something she
hadn't felt before. It was primeval, foreign, urgent. It was an
overwhelming compulsion to defend.
She wondered if it was a remnant of the Suppressed
Briefing. Perhaps there was still stuff that the Foreign Office had
drug-programmed into her subconscious to be accessed later that she
still didn't know about. It was as persistently irritating as a
half-forgotten name or song, itching away in the back of her mind but
refusing to be remembered clearly.
No, this was different.
Josh stumbled after her across the frost-hard ruts of
soil, sidestepping planted areas despite his panic. Ahead of them the
half-buried skylight domes of Constantine shimmered in the weak
sunlight; on the horizon, the idyll of a terrestrial farm was
shattered. Beyond the biobarrier the wess'har had erected to contain
Constantine's ecology, the silver and blue early spring wilderness of
Bezer'ej was a constant reminder that humans were temporary visitors
here.
Out of habit, Shan reached behind her back and
remembered she'd left her handgun in her room. She felt the fabric of
her bag. Her fingers found the comforting outline of a pack of
cartridges and a couple of small grenades that she didn't like to leave
lying around. But in her mind's eye she could see the gun still sitting
on the table beside her bed.
"Shit," she said aloud. She'd assumed you didn't need a
weapon when you were digging. It was the sort of mistake she never
normally made. "Shit."
"I put it inside your grip," Josh said, suddenly
revealing that he knew her a lot better than she thought he did. "I
thought you might need it."
Neither of them said gun. "Good
thinking," said Shan.
She had expected to find a full-scale rummage team
scouring Constantine. There were certainly enough wess'har troops
stationed at the Temporary City on the mainland to provide one. But
they were wess'har, and they didn't think like humans and they
certainly hadn't read the police manual on apprehending suspects. She
was surprised to see just three of them ambling round the underground
galleries of the buried colony, giving the impression--an inaccurate
one, she knew--that they were lost.
They held lovely gold instruments. Their weapons, like
everything else in their functional culture, looked good. Two of the
wess'har were males, but the other was a young female, bigger and
stronger than her companions, a junior matriarch.
None of them looked at all like Aras.
It was easy to forget he was wess'har too. He was still
strikingly alien: nobody would have mistaken him for a human. But his
face and body had been resculpted by c'naatat
with the human genes it had scavenged during his years of contact with
the colonists at Constantine. From the relatively slender, pale
elegance of a long-muzzled wess'har it had built an approximation of a
man--huge and hard, with a face that was at once a beast's and a
human's.
But these were pure wess'har, looking for all the world
like paramilitary seahorses. She gestured to Josh to leave, and focused
on the female walking along the gallery opposite her, high above the
main street of Constantine and almost level with the roof of the church
of St. Francis. Shan ran up the winding stairway after her, two steps
at a time.
"You looking for me?" she called.
The female spun round and froze. It was never a good
idea to startle someone who was armed, least of all a wess'har. But the
creature cocked her pretty chess piece head to one side and stared.
"Are you the gethes Shan
Frankland?"
"Who's asking?"
"I don't understand."
"Yeah, I'm Superintendent Frankland." As if her rank
might make a difference: it was simply habit. "And who the fuck are
you?"
"I am Nevyan." The junior matriarch blinked rapidly and
Shan was momentarily distracted by those unnerving four-lobed pupils
set in gold irises. "You will come with us. The matriarchs know you are
infected."
"Where's Aras?"
"In the Temporary City."
"I want to see him."
"Ask Mestin."
"I'm asking you."
"Ask Mestin." Nevyan was frozen in that characteristic
wess'har wait-and-see reaction. Her irises snapped open and shut again.
She smelled intimidated but she was holding her ground pretty well.
"She is senior matriarch here."
"Okay, then we'll go to see Mestin." They stood and
looked at each other, and Shan took a guess that Nevyan had absolutely
no idea about humans, and knew even less about her. "And this has
nothing to do with any of the people here. You understand? You leave
them out of this."
"I was told to find you and Aras Sar Iussan. I have no
orders regarding the colony."
The two males had wandered up behind Nevyan now,
watching. Weapons at their sides, they appeared satisfied there was
going to be no violence. Shan kept her eyes fixed on Nevyan's until the
junior matriarch broke the gaze and began walking towards the ramp that
led up and out of the subterranean settlement. Shan fell in behind her.
How old was she in human terms? A teenager, a young woman? Shan
couldn't tell yet.
One thing was for sure.
She hadn't been around long enough to know that
prisoners--even compliant ones--needed searching.
Mestin decided she would hand over command of
the Temporary City with not one pang of regret.
The last year had been a hard one. She had not expected
it to be so difficult; Bezer'ej was normally a quiet tour of duty,
somewhere to contemplate and study while the business of maintaining
the cordon around the planet went on unnoticed, carried out by her
husbands and children. And four years of her service had been just
that, until the new humans came, and the isenj tried to follow them,
and the fighting had started. We will be home soon, she
thought. Home, and maybe nothing more arduous to do than making
decisions for the city of F'nar and educating her children. If the
gethes stay away.
She sat out in the garden, well-wrapped against the
cold with her dhren pulled up over her
head and shoulders. The opalescent fabric shaped itself obligingly
around her jaw to shut out the wind. The first
thing I shall do is walk around the whole perimeter of F'nar, right
around the city. It was not that she disliked Bezer'ej. It was
unspoiled and exotic and beautiful, but it was not home, and she needed
home very badly right then.
She couldn't take her eyes off the moon, off Wess'ej.
Somewhere--right on the limb of the illuminated part, right there--was
home, F'nar, one of the thousand
modest city states of Wess'ej, warm and peaceful and in balance with
the world.
Mestin stared at the imagined point until F'nar slipped
into the darkness and night fell on it. She had done this every
evening, cloud cover allowing, waiting for the time that her tour of
duty would be over. She wondered how Aras had managed to spend so many
years here without the comfort of fellow wess'har. At least she had all
her clan with her, working together.
Aras had nothing.
There was no point putting it off any longer. He was
sitting alone in a room in the depths of the Temporary City, under
arrest, waiting for her. In another room sat Shan Frankland, the gethes
matriarch. Mestin didn't know quite what
to make of Frankland.
The woman had stayed here before for two days, in
hiding from the rest of the humans. The matriarchs on Wess'ej had even
held a meeting with her and judged her a useful ally. Yes, a gethes
had been to Mestin's city while she and
her family stayed here fending off isenj attacks. It galled her.
But that was before they realized why her fellow humans
wanted her so badly.
So Frankland was now c'naatat.
It was something the gethes found very
desirable, in that greedy and desperate way of theirs, and something
that Shan Chail would apparently not
surrender to them. They said she feared what it would do to human
society: Mestin wondered if she simply wanted a higher price.
The wind was biting and she felt the peck of ice
crystals on her face. Nevyan, her daughter, walked up to her clutching
her dhren tight around her. It was a
nervous tic. The fabric would shape itself to whatever garment Nevyan
arranged it to be, and needed no clutching or pinning.
"They're waiting," she said.
"I know."
"They offered no resistance."
"I didn't think Aras would try to avoid facing the
consequences. But I'm surprised the gethes
was so cooperative."
"She was more concerned about Aras." Nevyan said. There
was a long pause: Mestin didn't fill it. "It surprises me. And she has
just one bag of possessions, like us. She doesn't seem like…a gethes."
The light from the open hatchway created a pool of
yellow illumination across the ground. Mestin stood watching the silver
grasses shaking as some creature--probably an udza,
in this weather--prowled in search of prey driven to ground level by
the
winds. There was a brief frozen silence, then a sudden yip from
something that had not escaped the udza. Everything here seemed
to devour
everything else. It was a violent and unforgiving world for all its
beauty.
"They'll kill him," Nevyan said. She smelled of
agitation: she was competent, promising, but she was still very young
and unused to hard decisions. That would have to change. "But how can
you kill a c'naatat? Didn't they survive
terrible--"
"That's not our problem. All we're to do is to take
them back to Wess'ej, to F'nar, and let Chayyas decide what happens
next. It's her responsibility. Neither mine nor yours."
"But he's the last of the c'naatat
troops, even if he's been foolish. They saved us."
Mestin hadn't actively disliked humans before the Thetis
arrived. The small colony that had been
allowed to live here since before she was born had proved passive and
harmless, a curiosity set on creating a society that honored something
called God. But their benign nature had ill-prepared her for the humans
who had come in the Thetis with their
weapons and their greed. They'll bring another war upon us,
she thought. In the end, humans were all gethes,
all carrion-eaters. Aras Sar Iussan might have found them less
repellent, but perhaps he had now become too like them to be objective.
"I'll talk to them now." Mestin threw her dhren
back and walked down into the Temporary
City, Nevyan at her heels.
Aras seemed unrepentant. He sat on the resting ledge
cut out of the wall of the room Nevyan had set aside to hold him,
smelling of no emotion in particular. His hands were folded in his lap.
Mestin wondered if there was anything that could really frighten him
any more. Perhaps he was looking forward to the end, having lived alone
far too long, because that was surely what would happen to him: Chayyas
would have him killed--somehow.
Nevyan was right. He was the last of the c'naatat
troops, and--war hero or not--the
unending problem of isolating the symbiont would die with him. It was
for the best. She thought it would be the kindest solution for the gethes
female too.
Aras looked up at Mestin and said nothing, and carried
on saying nothing until she turned and left. What would she have asked
him, anyway? Why he had committed such an act of madness? It was
irrelevant. Wess'har cared only about what was done, not what was
intended. Motivation was a human excuse, a sophistry, a lie. But she
could think of no reason why a wess'har who had spent his whole life
ensuring that c'naatat didn't spread would
suddenly give it willingly to an alien.
Outside the room that held Shan Frankland, Mestin
hesitated before stepping over the threshold. There was a scent, but
she was too unfamiliar with gethes to
identify a state of mind from it.
This gethes had changed.
Mestin had seen her when she had been brought in for brief sanctuary,
and at the time she had struck her as much taller and more aggressive
than the colonists, but a human nonetheless--fidgeting, soft and
confused. She didn't match the self-assured picture that conversations
with Aras had created. But now she seemed still and purposeful. She was
leaning casually against the wall of the room, but she straightened up
slowly when Mestin came in and thrust her hands into her garments. Her
long black hair was pulled back and tied with a length of rough brown
fabric. She didn't seem afraid either.
"This is the only cell I've ever been in that hasn't
got a door," Shan said.
"Do you remember me, Shan Chail?"
"Mestin. Yes. And that's your daughter? The youngster
who brought us in?"
"Nevyan. Yes."
"Where's Aras? Is he all right?"
"He's unharmed."
"What's going to happen to him?"
"Shouldn't you be concerned about what will happen to you?"
Shan appeared unmoved and made that quick hunching
action with her shoulders. Mestin had seen Aras do the same. "If you
have me, then you don't need him, do you?"
"He has committed a foolish act. You're a different
matter."
"Meaning?"
"You have uses. You know that. That's why you were
allowed to remain."
"How did you find out about me?"
"We can monitor gethes
voice transmissions between the Actaeon
and your homeworld. There's been much talk of your condition. Is it
true it would give you great status and wealth in your society?"
"You know perfectly well that Actaeon's
skipper was ordered to detain me as a biohazard. Does that sound like
status to you?"
Mestin still couldn't work out if Shan was afraid. She
tried to stare into her gray alien eyes: apparently you could judge a
human's condition that way, but she looked and saw only single, empty,
black pupils that told her nothing. "You made no attempt to evade us."
"Where would I run? And what would you have done to the
colonists if I had? Back home we'd say you had me bang to rights."
Mestin gave up trying to understand and turned towards
the door. Chayyas would have to sort it out in the next few days.
"Hey, what happens now?" Shan called after her.
Mestin turned round. "I have no idea," she said. "And I
imagine nobody else has either. We have no deviance so we don't know
how to punish. And we've never found an alien infected with c'naatat--not
in our lifetimes."
There was a pause. "Yeah, I think I know what happened
the last time you did," said Shan.
"You'd know more about Aras's actions at Mjat than I
would."
"Look, he's not going to make a habit of this, is he?
Let him go."
All the gethes seemed to
worry about was Aras. Her protectiveness towards males almost made
Mestin warm to her, but she decided to end the debate. She had a
suspicion she was being dragged into a bargaining session. "You have
been fed, yes? Now do you have everything you need?"
Shan gave her an odd flash of her teeth: no wonder
ussissi were wary of humans. She indicated her bag in the corner of the
cell, a shapeless dark blue fabric sack with straps that attached to
the shoulders very much like a wess'har pack. Nevyan was right. If it
contained everything she owned, it was an oddly modest amount for an
acquisitive gethes.
"I always travel well-equipped," she said, and her
occasional blinking had stopped completely. Her eyes were disturbingly
pale and liquid. "I've got everything I need."
Mestin held her fixed gaze for a few more seconds and
thought for once that she had understood everything the gethes
had said.
Aras had a dream again, of fire and of hatred
and of angry sorrow. It wasn't his own. It wasn't even the inherited
memory of the victims of Mjat, because that was a waking recollection,
a real event from his captors' experience that he could verify because
he had been part of it. This was another sort of fire and emotion
altogether.
Dreaming was not a wess'har characteristic and neither
were long periods of sleep. But when he dozed briefly, vivid dreams
came to him from his altered genome, sometimes the almost-human face of
an Earth ape, sometimes a closed door, and sometimes red and gold fire.
And the alien emotion that accompanied it all was throat-stopping rage.
This time he was looking through a distorted frame,
like a heat haze or clear shallow water, and the fire came towards him
in a great arc and filled his field of vision. There was no burning.
But a gut-panic almost took his legs from underneath him. Then he woke.
He was leaning against the polished wall of a chamber
in Chayyas's home in F'nar, where Mestin had brought him to await the
senior matriarch's judgement. The images and feelings were still vivid
in his head and his throat. It was the anger that disturbed him most.
This had to be Shan's memories. He was behind her eyes.
He had no sense of location, only a vague darkness, but he could feel a
great racking sob fighting to be free of his chest and the pressure of
something smooth and hard gripped fiercely in his hand--her
hand--and a painful constriction in his
throat and eyes. And then he heard a man's voice. Are you going to sit there all
fucking night or are you going to frigging well go and do something
about it?
They were angry, violent words but he had no sense of
them being wielded to wound her. Then the pressure in his chest and
throat burst and there was a massive rush of cold and energy into his
limbs. Then, nothing. It left him feeling as if he had been jerked out
of the world and dumped in a void.
Aras had gone through this sequence, waking and
sleeping, at least a dozen times since he had contaminated Shan and had
in turn been contaminated by her. Whatever else c'naatat
had snatched from her, it seemed to think this was useful. It was an
angry and violent event. It was consistent too, and from what he knew
of humans' fluid, inaccurate, ever-rewriting memories, that meant she
had replayed it many times to herself.
He hoped he would be able to ask her about the events
that had burned it into her. But the chances were that he would not see
her again, and the thought left him aching with desolation.
He straightened up and looked out the window onto the
terraced slopes of the caldera that cradled F'nar. The sun had not yet
risen above the horizon but the nacreous coating on all the
deliberately irregular little houses built into the west-facing slope
looked luminous.
The City of Pearl, the humans called it; the few
colonists from Constantine who had seen F'nar had viewed it through
religious eyes and pronounced it a miracle, and named it accordingly
after a passage in one of their holy books. But Shan, in her pragmatic
way, had called it insect shit, for that was what the coating actually
was. He liked her pragmatism.
It was all a matter of perception.
Aras didn't believe in miracles, although if one were
about to present itself its timing would have been excellent. He was
not afraid of dying. At several points in his artificially long life he
had bitterly regretted being unable to die. What he feared most now was
loss. He had put Shan in this position without her consent, and now she
would be left alone to suffer the same loneliness that he had, and he
would lose the one close relationship he had felt able to form in
centuries. It was…unfair.
Aras paced slowly round the room, measuring the
dimensions in footsteps. Whatever happened to him, they would not harm
Shan. She was too useful. She would be fine. She would be safe.
He took some comfort from that, but not
much. Would he have to advise Chayyas on how to have him killed? Human
explosives might do the job best. Anything less immediate and
catastrophic would only give his c'naatat
time to regroup and keep him alive.
He heard Chayyas coming a full minute before she
appeared in the room. He could hear the swish of her long dhren
against the flagstones and the scrabbling
footsteps of the ussissi aide trying to keep pace with her. When she
entered the room, she filled it, and not only with her size and
presence: she exuded the sharp scent of agitation. A human would have
tried to present a controlled façade, but any wess'har could smell
another's state of mind. There was no point in putting on a brave face.
"Aras, you put me in an impossible position," she said,
without greeting. She shimmered. She had a very fine dhren, as
luminous as the city itself. "I have
no idea what to do with you."
"Is Shan Frankland well? Is she still at Fersanye's
home?"
"She has eaten this morning and asks after you
repeatedly."
That made him feel much worse. "I didn't plan this."
"Why did you do it, then? Why did you corrupt the order
of things? Did you want a companion that badly?"
"She was dying. The isenj fired on her, and that was a
conflict of my making so I couldn't stand by and let her die." He
paused. It was a cheap shot to raise the matter, but it was relevant.
"And it never troubled your forebears to alter the balance when you
needed us as soldiers to defend this world."
"What was done in the past isn't a justification for
doing it in the present."
"Then you must look at the circumstances," he said. "And I will not
plead for my life. Do what you judge best."
"Aras, nobody has ever deliberately harmed the common
good. I have no idea whether a penalty is appropriate. But if we were
to destroy all traces of c'naatat, it
would save much harm in the future, and not just for us."
Even now that angered him, although he had a random
thought that his anger--his wess'har anger--was mere irritation
compared
to Shan's inner rage. "I can't accept that. You can destroy me, and you
can even destroy Shan Chail, but how can
you justify wiping out the life-form in its natural place? It's part of
Bezer'ej. We have no right to end its existence because it's
inconvenient for us. That makes us no better than the isenj. Or the gethes."
"Then I would have to weigh one people's welfare
against the benefits to all the other species," said Chayyas. "Just as
I might have to with the gethes."
"And you might want to utilize c'naatat
again one day--for the benefit of all other species, of course."
Sarcasm was lost on a wess'har. Aras had learned it
from humans. There was a part of him, the part gleaned from alien
genes, that found it very satisfying. Chayyas took the comment at its
literal face value and turned to the ussissi who was shuffling from
foot to foot at the entrance to the chamber.
"Fetch Mestin," she said. "Tell her I want to talk to
her. I'll go to her if she prefers."
The ussissi shot off without a word. Chayyas appeared
pained, and the scent of anxiety had not diminished. If anything, it
was more pungent. She turned to go. "Whatever happens, we haven't
forgotten what you did for us all, and how much we owe you."
It was the first time in his very long life that anyone
had ever thanked Aras for his military service.
"Better late than never," he said, and was more than
satisfied with Chayyas's parting expression of incomprehension.
I once had
difficulty accepting that Satan was as real as God, but now I see what
c'naatat brings with it, I'm as sure as I can be
that evil is an entity. If this parasite is not the temptation of the
Devil, then I don't know what is. It is sin in its every facet. If we
knew how, we should destroy it. For the time being we should simply be
thankful that the wess'har have the wisdom to control its spread, and
that we have our faith to prevent our temptation by this false eternity.
BENJAMIN
GARROD,
addressing Constantine Council 2232
It was nicknamed the Burma Road, for
reasons nobody could now recall. The passage ran in a complete ellipse
through the midsection of Actaeon, and at
the end of a watch, you had two choices: to join the flow of joggers
pounding round it or stay out of the way. Lindsay chose to run.
She hadn't needed to run on Bezer'ej. Heavy mundane
work and high gravity had been exercise enough to keep her bones and
muscles healthy. But there was little to do on board Actaeon
that put any physical stress on her.
Besides, she needed the boost of endorphins to lift her mood. She
concentrated on her breathing and settled into a steady pace in the
knot of runners already on their fifth or sixth circuit.
Nobody acknowledged anyone else. They were all in their
own separate worlds, rankless in shorts or pants of defiantly
nonuniform colors. It didn't feel like running. Lindsay felt as if she
was fleeing the ship with a calm and orderly crowd. She wondered if the
treadmill in one of the gyms might have been a better idea.
"Your--samples--are still--clear," said a breathless voice
right behind her.
Oh, how she hated people who tried to make conversation
while they were running. And it was one of the ship's medics, too,
Sandhu or something. "What d'you mean?"
"Nothing weird," said Sandhu, and that was it. Lindsay
fumed. Then she dropped a stride and drew alongside him. She caught his
arm insistently and they dropped out of the pack, leaving the other
joggers to disappear around the curve of the Burma Road.
They stared at each other, catching their breath.
"Want to explain that?" Lindsay asked.
"I thought you'd like to know we haven't found anything
unusual in your samples."
Everyone had routine tests once a month. It was normal
procedure on missions. "Why should there be?"
"Well, you never knew when Frankland acquired her
biological extras, did you? And you said she was iffy about physical
contact, so let's assume it's transmissible somehow."
"You think I might have picked up a dose, then?
Couldn't someone have told me this? Don't I have to consent?"
"Biohaz procedure. Standard."
"Biohaz my arse. Serious money, more like."
"You have no idea how serious," said Sandhu. He
adjusted his shorts and jogged off up the Burma Road again, leaving her
staring at his wobbling backside.
So they were going to try every avenue to isolate the
biotech.
Lindsay pushed herself away from the bulkhead and broke
into a jog again. Okurt should have told her they were checking her
out. If they had found anything, what would they have done to her? She
shuddered and tried to lose herself in physical exertion.
That was the good thing about running: it helped you
think things through.
How were they going to get to Shan Frankland?
Lindsay concentrated on each stride. The solution would
come to her in its own good time. She thought for a moment how odd it
was to see daylight in a windowless, skyless tunnel of metal and
composites. The continuous strip of daylight lamp ran above her head
like a glimpse of an explosion ripping open the deck above, a
detonation frozen in time.
She was one lap short of completion when she ran into
the very last person she had ever expected to see again. She ran into
him quite literally: he stepped out of a hatchway and she cannoned into
him. He steadied himself and smiled, but it wasn't affectionate or
friendly or even welcoming.
It was Mohan Rayat.
There were definitely things going on that nobody
was telling her.
Shan had never been much good at waiting.
She lay on the thin mattress of folded cloth, staring
at the open doorway and straining to listen for the sounds of anyone in
Fersanye's household who might try to stop her leaving. There was no
door handle to try, because there was no door.
The wess'har had taken the hint that she needed her
space but they still had no concept of privacy. It was unnerving trying
to wash or use the latrine when you couldn't lock a door. The cold
water that streamed from the ceiling when she yanked on a chain
snatched her breath for a few seconds and then--she imagined--c'naatat
kicked in and made her breathe normally
again. It was still painfully icy. Dream-images of drowning in that
dark room crowded in on her and she fought back panic.
There were distant sounds of clattering glass and
double-voiced conversations, and she could actually hear the speech
patterns clearly now. While she dressed, she pursed her lips and said
"wess'har" very quietly, just to try, and was caught out by the sudden
emergence of two sounds, word and overtone. Oh my
God. Even her voice was changing.
Habit made her take her handgun out of her belt and
check the clip. Nevyan, you'll never make a
copper. Fancy not searching me. The 9mm was very old technology,
barely changed in centuries, but it worked, and it didn't need
recharging. If you maintained it religiously it never broke down. Then
she reached in her grip and took out a directional-blast grenade.
Royal Marine Sergeant Adrian Bennett--shy, loyal, but
lethal Ade--had shown her how to use one in an idle moment. She had no
idea why he'd left her a couple of the devices when the detachment
pulled out. Perhaps he knew she might need one, and he'd been proved
right. There was no point pissing about now. The only thing that
mattered was securing a deal for Aras.
Shan tucked the grenade inside her jacket and went in
search of an exit. She passed males and children on the way, but they
simply looked at her and let her pass. Perhaps they thought there was
nothing a single gethes could do on her
own in a strange city.
One of the males stepped into her path. "Fersanye
offers food," he said, struggling with English.
Shan took it at face value. "I'm going for a walk," she
said. "Sve l'bir. Okay?"
Outside, an alley lined with ashlars curved away in
both directions. The tem flies hadn't
coated the shaded surfaces. The stone was still honey-gold, dappled in
light and dark by the sun piercing a mesh of vines overhead, and
therefore probably too cool to attract them.
"Ah well," she muttered, and cast around to decide on a
direction. Either way would take her to the end of the terrace, and she
could then at least look up and get her bearings. Or she could follow
concentrations of noise. Wess'har made plenty of that.
The first noise she latched on to was a skitter
skitter skitter. She drew her weapon, a
pure reflex, and a ussissi came round the curve of the wall and stared
up at her, and then at the weapon.
She replaced the gun in the back of her belt,
embarrassed at her excess. The ussissi's gaze followed her hand. "I
want to see Chayyas Chail," she said, and
was surprised to hear herself manage the beginnings of an overtone
again. And the language, wess'u, was starting to emerge from nowhere, a
word here, a phrase there. "Can you show me her house?"
"Perhaps you should go tomorrow," said the ussissi. "Call her first."
"Thanks, but no. Show me."
It seemed to work: the ussissi must have been
accustomed to the imperious direction of females a lot taller than him.
He said nothing, turned round again and pattered ahead of her, sounding
like a dog scrabbling on tiles.
The belts of scarlet beaded cloth that trailed from his
shoulders slapped against the ashlars as he kept close to the walls. He
didn't turn round to see if she was keeping up with him. Framed by the
light from the window at the head of a flight of stairs, the creature
made her think of a white rabbit, and she stopped the analogy right
there.
This wasn't some quaint children's fantasy. She was a
long way from home and there would be no waking up from curious dreams
to transport her back to familiarity. For the first time in her adult
life, Shan was surrounded by beings as hard, as ruthless and as
intelligent as she was, and maybe even more so. It unsettled her. All
her natural advantages were gone.
And nobody deferred to her rank or uniform, either. She
was going to have to do this the hard way.
"Are you coping with the facilities here?" asked the
ussissi suddenly.
"If you mean the toilets, yes. I'm more agile than I
look."
He made a clicking sound and said nothing more. There
were windows every few meters along the inner length of the stair wall,
and Shan was aware of faces at some of them, long gold and copper
wess'har faces, startling flower eyes, all staring. Some might have
remembered her from her last visit to the city. All must have known who
she was. There weren't that many wess'har-human hybrids around, after
all.
She could even pick out some more words. She could hear
the patterns emerging, and they seemed far less incomprehensible than
they had the previous day. She could hear rhythm, familiarity, and then
another recognizable word leaped out, shocking and reassuring at the
same time. G'san. New weapon.
She was picking it up. "And what might that new weapon
be?" she asked, smug at her growing skill.
The ussissi didn't even glance back at her. "You," he
said.
She drew level with him at the end of a terrace and
found herself on the halfway level of the curving walkways that lined
the caldera. They were all neatly edged with irregular low walls that
made Shan think instantly of accidents. Maybe they did fall down those
slopes sometimes. No wess'har would have been looking for anyone to
sue, though, even if they had lawyers, which she knew even without
asking that they didn't.
The basin was about four kilometers across, and the
slope directly opposite them was draped with a faint haze. If the
circumstances had been happier, it would have been a perfect summer
morning, and if there had been a railing to lean upon, she would have
leaned on it and taken it all in. But there was no rail. A couple of
wess'har youngsters walked past at a respectful distance from the edge
and glanced back at her in silent curiosity before looking away and
going about their business.
The children--what little she had seen of them--unsettled
her. It was that quiet appraising glance that they all had: they seemed
more adult than the adults. She looked down at the ussissi, who was
also gazing at the view, although he had surely seen plenty of it
before.
He raised an arm. "Across there," he said. "Do you see?
Follow the line of the upper terraces and you will see a water-course.
The buildings to the left are Chayyas's rooms."
Shan squinted into the light. The building didn't look
like any presidential palace she'd ever seen. It was just a rambling
collection of wess'har holes in the rock like all the others, although
it was carefully random in its form and so not
like any of them.
It would take her less than an hour to stroll over for
a visit. "Thanks. I think I can find that by myself."
"Tomorrow," the ussissi reminded her. "You should tell
her you're coming."
"Of course," Shan lied, and didn't care. If wess'har
didn't knock, then neither would she.
Navigating around F'nar was relatively easy. Stand
anywhere, and if the heat haze permitted you could see every part of
the city. Wess'har didn't plant screens of trees, just as they never
had blinds or curtains--or doors. External doors seemed only to be a
weather precaution, or a barrier to tem
flies trying to get inside the house to continue their exquisitely
decorative shitting.
Water tinkled around her down glass drainage pipes,
their sunward side crusted with pearl. She touched the surface. She
found her fingertips smeared with what looked like a shimmering
cosmetic. She sniffed. It was fresh tem
shit, but as shit went, it was remarkably pretty and odorless: somehow,
she had almost expected an exotic fragrance. She rinsed her hand under
the running water and wiped it on her pants.
The glass pipes were everywhere. Wess'har seemed
obsessed with the material. They were a transparent people in every
sense, transparent to each other and transparent in language. At least
that was something she didn't have to worry about here. She knew she
didn't have to brace herself for what she might find behind a locked
door.
Every space between the houses and every patch of soil
that wasn't filled by a home was crammed with growing things. She
almost thought green things. But they were
purple and red and silver and white. As she walked, planning her
confrontation with Chayyas, she saw wess'har tidying the plants and
removing leaves and stalks. Ahead of her a male was carefully pressing
tufts of brilliant carmine into a narrow strip of red-gold soil that
ran along the front of his home.
Shan paused. He looked up at her, all glittering
four-pupiled eyes, with an amazement that she could smell. He began
trilling and fluting. She recognized the word gethes,
and she also recognized c'naatat, but she
couldn't quite pick out the meaning. He stood up and came up so close
to her that she stepped back. They didn't seem to have an idea of
personal space; he was way too close for her liking.
She tried a smile to indicate she didn't feel
threatened, and then realized he probably didn't understand a display
of teeth any better than the ussissi. The trilling followed her as she
walked away.
By the time she got to the end of the terrace, marked
by a particularly lovely cascade of water fringed by purple-black moss,
there were more wess'har waiting for her to pass, making fluting,
incomprehensible comments. Christ, she wished she could summon up more
of the language. There was the faintest hint of agitation: nothing
threatening, just a mild anxiety that was almost excitement.
Shan had no idea what was going on. She paused and
looked around at them. Maybe they were holding her responsible for
Aras's plight. That terrace really wasn't very wide at all. It was a
long way down. I'd only break bones, she
thought. A few internal injuries. But it'll hurt
like hell.
But still nobody stopped her or searched her.
The wess'har might have been a mighty military presence
in the system, capable of destroying civilizations, but they had no
idea about security at home. She walked cautiously into the winding
passage that led from the entrance to Chayyas's clan home, alert for
threats, completely unable even now to override her training. A couple
of males--Chayyas's cousins or husbands or sons--simply stared and
parted
like grain before her as if she had a right to be there.
Yes, they really needed to sharpen up if they were
going to resist human incursion. They needed to learn about locks.
But then a ussissi trotted up to her. The creature was
just chest tall, and she caught it by the ornate chrome-yellow fabric
wrap that hung draped across one shoulder. It looked like another male,
a little smaller than the females. She drew it to her and leaned down,
so close they were almost nose-to-nose.
"You speak English?" she asked. The meerkat-like things
all appeared to speak several languages. "You know who I am. Take me to
Chayyas."
The ussissi stared into her face. She revised her view
that they were covered in amber fur. She could see that his skin was
finely divided by thousands of barely visible folds, like crepe paper,
like a very minutely detailed Fortuny pleated gown. The needle teeth,
though, were exactly what she had taken them for at first sight. Her
face was perilously close to them. She held on.
"Chayyas," she said. "Now."
There was a moment's hesitation. "This way," he said.
She followed him through three more interconnecting doorways and down a
flight of shallow stairs.
"Chayyas Chail will be most
upset," the ussissi said, his voice like a child's.
"I'm pretty pissed off myself."
"You should ask for audience. I could arrange it. I am
Vijissi, the matriarch's…" He searched for a word. "…diplomat."
"Well, I'm not diplomatic, and I'm not big on patience
either. I'll see her now, thanks."
Vijissi stopped at a portal and poked his head round
it. He jerked it back. Shan crouched level with the creature, knowing
he wouldn't bite a chunk out of her now. He smelled of feathers and
clean wildness. "Is she in?"
"She is, Chail."
"Thanks. Now go, please." She didn't want the
unfortunate ussissi around if firing started. She felt for the grenade
in her jacket. "This is personal."
The ussissi hesitated for a second but scuttled away,
and it was the first time she had noticed they had two pairs of legs
under those robes. That explained their characteristic scrabbling
footsteps. Then she walked into the chamber.
Chayyas stood gazing at moving images of a landscape
that seemed to be set in the stone of the wall. The matriarch was long
and gold and hippocampine, with that pretty muzzle and tufted mane that
Shan was beginning to recognize as highly individual features. They
didn't all look the same to her now.
"What are you doing here?" Chayyas looked up,
unconcerned. "I didn't summon you."
"You really ought to do something about your security,
for a start," Shan said. "I'll tell you that for free. But I've come
for Aras."
"Aras is detained."
"I know. But it's me you want. I'm the gethes."
Shan stepped closer. Chayyas probably
didn't know how humans smelled at the best of times. Could the
matriarch know she was gambling? More to the point, did she
know herself whether she was gambling?
"Well, I'm here. That solves the problem of the biohazard getting into
the human population. Let Aras go."
"We have already neutralized you by confining you to
Wess'ej. Why should I make concessions?"
"Because it's the right thing to do. He did it for me.
I'm the risk, not him."
"That is the problem. He doesn't behave as a wess'har.
He puts personal and individual whims above the common good."
"Okay, let me put it another way. You have one chance
to learn what it takes to deal with humankind and I'm it." Shan reached
behind her back and down her spine into her waistband the way she had a
thousand times before, feeling the body-warmed composite and wrapping
her fingers round it. She pulled the gun out in a practiced arc and
held it two-handed to Chayyas's left temple. Chayyas didn't move. There
was no reason why she should know what a gun looked like.
"You have lights in your skin," said the matriarch.
"It's the gun you need to look at, sweetheart."
"Will that kill me?"
"Indeed it could."
"Why do you want to do that?"
"It's the sort of thing humans do if they want to
achieve an end. I want you to let Aras go."
"Or you'll kill me."
"Perhaps."
"My bloodline lives on. I don't fear death."
The safety was off. "Neither do I. But you know you
need the intelligence I can provide. Leave Aras out of it and you have
my full cooperation. Harm him, and you're going to have to guess your
way out of this. You can't even stop me bringing a weapon into your
home. How are you going to cope with an army?"
Chayyas's scent began to take on a more acidic note. "I
don't bargain with gethes."
"I'm the one who might spread this thing to humans.
Without me, there's no threat."
Chayyas didn't quite smell of fear. The pupils of her
amber eyes were just slits, a faint black cross on a cabochon topaz.
"Is that weapon less powerful than the isenj one that struck you?"
"Probably," said Shan, listening to herself as if she
were standing outside her own body. Where the
hell am I going with this? She sat down and put the gun on the
table, safety still off, within easy reach. Then she took the grenade
from her jacket and turned it round so Chayyas could see it. "But this
isn't. Once I pull this pin, you have a
count of ten to get out of this room before it blows. This will
fragment me. You know what that means. Not even c'naatat
can repair me then. Problem solved." What the hell am I saying?
Chayyas said nothing and looked at the grenade as if it
was just a fascinating toy. She thinks I'm
bluffing. Shan flicked her thumb under the cap, suddenly struck
by the completely irrelevant fact that her claws were looking almost
like normal nails now. Am I? And bluffing
was something she couldn't afford to do, not with a matriarch.
It was all happening too fast. She hadn't planned this
at all well. I have to mean it.
She drew the pin out all the way. "Ten," she said. "Nine." Chayyas
still stared. "Eight." Shan shut her eyes. "Seven." And
then it seemed that Chayyas suddenly understood, because there was a
rush of air and acid and a massively powerful grip closed round her
hand and the grenade, pinning both to the table, and almost crushed
bone. Shan opened her eyes in shock and pain.
Chayyas held on grimly. "Replace that pin," she said. "Now."
The matriarch's anger seethed like
boiling vinegar in the air. The pain was all-consuming but Shan held
her position.
"Let Aras go." Jesus, I can't
hold this thing much longer. "Let him go."
The matriarch's pupils snapped from flower to cross and
back again.
Shan held on and Chayyas held on. Shan hoped her eyes
wouldn't start watering from the pain. If her hand went numb and she
dropped the damn thing…
Chayyas stared at the little dial on the cap of the
grenade. "Reset the pin."
"I thought you weren't afraid to die."
"I have children in this
house."
Chayyas had her eyes fixed on Shan's and Shan didn't
break the gaze. The matriarch's grip slackened a fraction, but it still
held. And so did Shan's stare. You look away first--you're dead.
Her old sergeant's voice spoke up, unbidden: don't
step aside, don't blink, don't apologize. Shan had stopped bar
brawls just by walking into the room in the right way. But her sergeant
hadn't taught her any wisdom that dealt with aliens. She fell back on
instinct.
"We could be here a long time," said Chayyas.
"If that's what it takes," said Shan, eyes beginning to
water with the effort. Jesus, it hurt. "Punishing Aras won't serve any
useful purpose."
And then Chayyas blinked, as if distracted by the
mention of Aras. She looked away. Shan felt an exultant surge of animal
triumph and pulled both hand and grenade clear. For a second she could
have sworn she smelled something like ripe mangoes--both heady-sweet
and
grassy at once--filling the space between them. It took all the effort
she could muster to hold the grenade steady enough to replace the pin.
The violet lights rippled, exaggerating the tremor.
"There's no purpose I can think of," said Chayyas.
Shan stood up and pocketed the grenade, hoping that the
c'naatat would deal quickly with any
bruising. She didn't want Chayyas to know how much pain she had put her
through. "I want custody of him," she said, nursing her crushed hand in
her pocket.
Chayyas, still seated, was staring alternately at the
gun and at Shan. She was holding her fingers tip to tip, flexing them:
they were all the same length, with three knuckles in each, giving them
an arachnid look. "He's your jurej. Take
him."
"What's that? Jurej?"
"Male."
"I'm sorry?"
Chayyas blinked flowers. Shan, in control of the
universe for a few brief moments, fell back into the confused world of
the visiting alien.
"Neither of you can have another," said Chayyas. "And
there are no unmated adults in wess'har society. He's your
responsibility."
"Hang on, I'm not sure I--"
Chayyas was fixed on the gun. "You wanted our asylum.
You behave wess'har. Therefore you are
wess'har." She reached her thin many-jointed hand towards the 9mm and
picked it up. "This won't kill you?"
"Steady on," said Shan. "The safety's off."
"Are you afraid?"
The challenge was unintended, she knew, but she
couldn't back down. Something foreign and primeval was overriding her
common sense. She'd seen it too often in drunks, in flashpoint fights,
in murders.
"No," she said, suddenly completely unable to say that
enough was enough and that they should all go about their business.
She had no reason to fear death now. It was life--this
out-of-control, alien life--that was starting to scare her.
Chayyas took the gun in her hand, and Shan wondered how
she knew how to aim. The she wondered how she knew how to start
squeezing the trigger. Something said you're
okay, it's only pain, and despite all her hard-wired instinct to
fling herself to the floor, Shan managed to brace herself before a
point-blank shot deafened her.
She fell.
The isenj city of Jejeno, capital of the Ebj
landmass, was all that there was.
From the time that Eddie Michallat looked out of the
shuttle hatch when the vessel landed on Umeh to the time he reached the
center of the city, he saw nothing--nothing--but
buildings speckled with pinpricks of light that were winking out as the
sun came up.
The complete absence of any open space disoriented him.
He had grown used to unbroken horizons on Bezer'ej even in a year. It
spoke to something primeval in him; he wanted
to miss the wilderness.
He let his bee-cam capture it all. It danced close to
his head as he leaned out of the open door of the ground transport,
because there were no windows. Isenj didn't appear to like watching the
scenery go by. Maybe it was too depressingly monotonous for them.
Still, they were enough like humans to need light when
it got dark, and to make buildings, and to use a language. And that was
close enough.
The isenj did indeed like Eddie. He made sure of it.
Eddie listened to them politely and didn't dismiss them. He relayed
what they said and felt, no more, no less. He didn't stare at them as
if they were monsters, and they responded by letting him visit their
world and see what they'd built, the first civilian to set foot on Umeh
after the Actaeon advance party had landed.
They even let him file a live piece at the shuttleport
to record the moment. It was the first rule of journalism: look after
your contacts, and they'd look after you. He applied it with relish.
Jejeno boiled with isenj. They parted in front of the
transport like shoals of fish and closed again behind it, apparently
unconcerned and intent on whatever business they were about. As Eddie
watched, one of them tripped and fell, and a small depression opened in
the living sea for just a second; then it was filled again. He never
saw the isenj get up. He never saw any other isenj take any notice
either. Maybe he was mistaken.
He craned his neck as far as he could, until the
imagined point in the crowd was far behind him and the ussissi
interpreter, Serrimissani, tugged on his sleeve.
"It happens," she said. "Concentrate on your task."
Eddie wished himself into a state of belief that the
fallen isenj had picked itself up and carried on walking, but something
told him that was not the case. Forget it. This
isn't Earth. He adjusted his respirator and wondered if he was
wasting the bee-cam's memory on this unchanging vista. Just how much
cityscape did people need to see?
But it was all there was. Viewers needed to know that.
On the other hand, it might have been rush hour, or Mardi Gras, and he
had no way of knowing if these crowds were a permanent event or not.
All he knew was that he felt suffocated.
He pulled back from the open door and turned to
Serrimissani, who looked for all the world like a malevolent
Riki-Tiki-Tavi.
"Crowded," said Eddie. It was a gross understatement. "Where do they
grow their food?"
"Everywhere they can," said the ussissi. Her voice was
muffled by the mask she was wearing over her snout. It looked like a
piece of clear plastic and reminded Eddie rather too much of the
various transparent carnivores of Bezer'ej, sheets of clear film that
would fall on you from the sky, or drag you down into water, and digest
you. "In buildings. Revolting."
"Vegetables?"
"Growths. Fungus."
She might have meant truffles, Eddie thought, trying to
put the visit in the brightest context. He had a feeling she didn't. He
settled for nutritional yeast.
The buildings pressing in on him gradually changed from
low-rises to tower blocks, a fact he took as an indication that he was
getting closer to the center of the city. It was a dangerous assumption
to make in an alien culture, but building high meant some sort of
priority: it certainly wasn't a matter of getting a prettier view of
the landscape.
The tight-packed crowds moved past him at a more sedate
pace, slow enough for isenj to stop and stare in at him, and he waved
and then wondered if the gesture had another meaning here. Their
piranha-spider faces betrayed nothing. Looking past them, he could
recognize nothing in the built environment that suggested shops or
offices. There were just façades intricately decorated with symbols and
patterns, carved and painted.
In front of one of the buildings there was an island in
the river of streaming isenj: some appeared to be standing still,
pressed together and waiting by a doorway. It was closed. He turned to
the interpreter.
"Queuing for food," said Serrimissani, without waiting
for his question. "There's sufficient, but the logistics of
distribution are unwieldy."
"What do the isenj make of humans?"
Serrimissani fixed him with a predator's expressionless
black eyes. He could almost see her digging for scorpions and crunching
them up between those needle teeth. "They can see kinship with you.
They enjoy complex organizations."
"What do you think of
them?"
"They honor their debts."
"How much do you get paid for interpreting? Sorry. Is
that a rude question?"
"They do not employ me. I have food and somewhere to
rest, just as I have on Wess'ej."
"You work both sides of the line? And the isenj trust
you to be here?"
"What could I do that they would not trust? This is not
a conflict of knowledge, so I cannot spy. Nor is it a war where the
wess'har take the conflict into their enemies' territory. So I do my
job and threaten no one. How do you get paid?"
It was a good question. Eddie hadn't had a raise in
seventy-six years, and it still irritated him that the BBChan personnel
department had decided that he wasn't entitled to service increments
because he'd been in cryosuspension for most of that time. Hell, he'd
worked with people who seemed to spend their whole career in comas and
they still got raises.
But then he hadn't been around to spend his pay, and it
had earned plenty of interest. He was surprised how little it suddenly
meant to him. Perhaps that was how rich people felt all the time. His
stomach felt oddly displaced. "I get tokens that I can exchange for
food and other things that I need."
"Want."
"Sorry?"
"Humans want many things but they need much less than
they think," said the ussissi. "I accept the philosophy of Targassat,
having lived among the wess'har. Beware acquisitiveness, Mr. Michallat.
It will take you hostage."
Eddie savored the moment of being lectured in
asceticism by a mongoose. It almost dispelled the aching bewilderment
at realizing he was rich and none the better for it. The transport came
to a halt.
Serrimissani turned her head very slowly. There was no
wet gloss to her eyes; they looked matte as velvet, sinister, utterly
void. "Are you ready?"
Eddie caught the bee-cam and pocketed it. "I've
interviewed Minister Ual before. I'm ready."
The ministry--and Eddie had no other word for it--was
conspicuous in the unbroken wall of buildings by the fact that it was
very, very plain. There were no extravagant designs, either painted or
carved. As he walked through the door and into the reception hall, the
first thing that struck him was that it was empty.
It was also vast. It was at least twelve meters high and lined with
smooth aquamarine stone, a stark and cool contrast to the hot rusts and
ambers and purples outside.
There seemed to be nobody around. Then he heard
movement, and Serrimissani tugged at his sleeve and bobbed her head in
the direction of one of the archways off to one side. An isenj
appeared. There was an exchange of high-pitched sounds.
Eddie occupied himself by letting the bee-cam wander
around the hall. So status bought you space, did it? Yes, isenj were a
lot like humans.
"Ual is ready to see you and asks if you would like
refreshment," Serrimissani said.
"Not the fungus."
"Water flavored with something that the Actaeon
provided."
"God, I hope it's coffee."
There were moments when Eddie knew he had touched
common ground with the isenj. It was easy to expect them to be utterly
alien because they looked unlike anything he'd ever imagined. But their
attitudes seemed much less alien than those of the wess'har.
He sat and waited. A thought struck him. What
about snakes? What about jellyfish? Here he
was mentally arguing the finer points of difference with himself: but
he was talking, yes talking, with aliens
who had communal lives and built cities and had wars over concepts he
understood. The only reason he could even begin to misunderstand them
was that they were so very similar to him and that they could exist in
an environment so like his own in universal terms as to be identical.
So he had no chance of even starting to grasp the nature of other forms
of alien life. And he was suddenly gripped with sadness at his own
limitations.
Serrimissani nudged him irritably. "You are
distracted," she said. "Ual is waiting."
Eddie struggled to regain excitement. Chin up.
You're talking to your third species of alien
interviewee. Be glad.
"Sorry," he said. "A tear for all the things that are
beyond me." And he ached to recall who said that. It defined humanity.
An isenj aide showed them into another polished
water-colored chamber, and Minister Ual was seated on a dais in the
center of it, as if to emphasize the luxurious, privileged distance
around him. Eddie was ushered to a box covered with layers of something
soft and yielding; as near, he thought, as they could get to a chair.
He smiled at Ual.
Isenj were as appealing as only spiders with piranha
faces could be. But they were sociable and polite and generous.
Minister Ual was enjoying a cup of something fluid, lapping it from a
shallow vessel with the ease of a Mandarin potentate. His ovoid bulk
glittered with hundreds of smooth, transparent green beads strung on
quill-like projections from his body, and he rattled like a chandelier
when he moved. Eddie hoped the noise wouldn't play hell with the mike.
Ual had one other characteristic that Eddie could not
ignore. He had a vague scent of the woods, like a forest floor after
rain. It was not unpleasant, but neither was it a fragrance that Eddie
associated with government ministers.
Serrimissani wasn't needed. Ual had made speaking
English his priority, despite the effort it took to control his
breathing enough to force out recognizable English words. The ussissi
stayed in the room nonetheless, watching the bee-cam wander round the
interviewee, and Eddie tried to crush the fear that she might pounce on
it and crunch it up. She reminded him too much of snakes and Kipling.
He looked back at Ual. There were no eyes that he could see to make
contact with.
"The enclosed environment outside Jejeno is small, but
I believe it will be more comfortable for your fellows than living on
board Actaeon indefinitely," Ual said.
There was a rhythmic gulping between every word, like someone learning
to speak again after a crude laryngectomy. Eddie struggled silently for
him with every syllable. "Once it is established, the environment will
be cooler, more moist and more breathable. It will be soothing for you,
and we will learn a great deal about biospheres into the bargain."
"Is that how you see the human-isenj relationship
developing?"
"Mutual aid is a good basis for any bargain. You will
benefit from improved communications. We're open to ideas for improved
food production and we want to learn about terraforming. You've now
seen our most pressing problem for yourself, in every street."
Eddie hesitated before asking the next question, but it
had to be asked. The bee-cam responded to his discreet hand signal for
a close-up of Ual's face. "Is population control not an option?"
"It's more complex than that. No two states can agree
upon a common policy for fear of being overrun by their neighbor.
There's a psychological element to this, you see, as well as a
biological one. The more overcrowded we became, the higher the death
rate. The higher the death rate, the more fertile we become and the
more reluctant people are to limit their families, in case their line
should die out."
"Improved food production won't solve that."
"Not long-term. But resettlement will. It will reduce
the collective anxiety."
"You colonized your moon--Tasir Ve?"
"Tasir Var."
"Did that work?"
"Evidently not. We hope you'll help us restore its
ecology too."
"So what was behind the drive to settle on Bezer'ej?"
"I think we've learned a great deal since we
overexploited Tasir Var. The next world will be more carefully planned,
more managed."
"You've got deep-space capability. Why not look further
afield than this system and avoid conflict with the wess'har?"
"We had deep-space
capability, but it's a resource-intensive project to maintain. We're
fortunate that you may soon be in a position to help us maintain our
more remote instant communications relays because we can no longer
reach them ourselves. Food and environmental cleansing are our
priorities now. It's another area where we might find mutual advantage
in cooperation."
"Joint missions?"
"You have a similar drive to expand. Why else would you
all be here? And you think you're eternal. It's hard to imagine your
whole species and history being trapped on a world that will eventually
be destroyed by its own sun. No, Mr. Michallat, I do believe humans and
isenj will be partners, and both will benefit." Ual tapped a limb on
the glassy surface of the low table between them, indicating the cup
and the bowl. A little fragment of quill fell to his lap and he reached
down to sweep it aside. Eddie wondered what happened when a
bead-bearing quill broke off.
Serrimissani stared at Ual, and Eddie saw the concept
of disdain expressed as perfectly as any adept Indian kathkali
dancer could ever mime. After an
eloquent delay, she trotted forward to fill both vessels from their
respective jugs. She did not look amused. He could see her little teeth
glittering between slightly parted lips.
"Let us drink up, Mr. Michallat. Will you be
transmitting this interview soon?"
Eddie nodded and drained his coffee, which was tepid by
now. And it wasn't wardroom quality. "As soon as I edit it."
"You'll cut out parts? It was very short."
"Actually, I probably won't omit any detail. I just
have to package it with some attractive shots. Would you mind if I
traveled a little further and recorded some different images?"
"If you can find any," Ual said.
Eddie loved him instantly and totally for his candor.
He would swap Ual for a human politician any day. On the way back to
the shuttle, he replayed the footage on the smartpaper the Actaeon
had given him and marked appropriate
sequences. Ual was right. It all looked much the same to him. No wonder
they called those shots wallpaper.
"Ah well," he said. He could only report what he saw.
Serrimissani watched his fingers moving across the
smart-paper. "Are you going to make a habit of this?"
"I have to. It's called a series."
"I think you have already recorded all you need to
know."
"I do believe you're right," said Eddie. That was what
worried him. "Look at it this way: I don't see it as my job to
interpret the isenj to Earth audiences, but there aren't any other
hacks around to tell a different side of the story, so that means I
have to be doubly careful that I don't just tell mine. I'll be a
window, nothing more, as far as I can be."
The ussissi gave him a look that might have been
sympathy or pity: he only knew that it made him feel like a scorpion, a
snack-size one.
"A window should ask more open questions," she said.
Shan's world was silent except for the numb
ringing in her own ears.
Faces--wess'har and ussissi--that were clustered in a
circle above her jerked back and parted.
For a few moments all she could see was their mouths
opening and closing erratically. Her eardrums felt as if someone had
shoved a rod through them. A few moments later the sound suddenly
rushed back in. "Li sevadke!" said a
reedy child-animal voice with its own echo. "Ur,
jes'ha ur!"
Shan struggled to sit up. She could see properly now:
Vijissi, Chayyas, and a wess'har male she didn't know, and they were
giving her plenty of space. Chayyas was shaking her head occasionally,
as if trying to dislodge something: the close-quarters discharge must
have hurt her ears too.
Shan tried to put her hands back behind her to prop
herself up but fell back on one elbow. The back of her head hurt like
hell. She reached around, expecting to feel an exit wound, sticky
blood, gritty bone: but it was all in place.
Chayyas had put a bullet in her. Shan just couldn't
quite work out where yet. That was the
problem with custom-enhanced hollow-tip rounds: terrific stopping
power, the very best she could get made. She just hadn't planned on one
stopping her.
"Can you hear us?" Vijissi asked. "You hit your head
when you fell back."
That explained a lot. Her left shoulder hurt too. She
fumbled, feeling for wounds, and realized the shot had penetrated her
upper chest. It had probably clipped her lung, judging by the taste of
blood: she'd seen enough bodies in postmortem to work that out.
But c'naatat was practiced
at injuries. It had played this game before, when an isenj round had
penetrated her skull and Aras had bled his hand into her open wound to
repair her. This was just meat, nothing as complex as a brain injury. Easy
peasy. The symbiont flaunted its skill. It
was patching her up before their eyes.
"I can hear you," Shan said at last. She tried to stand
up but thought better of it. Her audience rustled further away from
her. Chayyas smelled scared, but she didn't say anything. Shan turned
her head with painful difficulty.
It was a scene she'd seen many times before as a police
officer. But it had always been someone else's blood sprayed over a
wall, never hers. She stared at the spatters: the matriarch and her
diplomat stared too.
So they were afraid of her blood.
Vijissi edged round her, bobbing his head, apparently
staring at her jacket as if he didn't quite believe what was going on
beneath it.
"So it is true," he said,
then looked away. "I mean no offense. But it's one thing to know this
can happen and another to see it with your own eyes."
Shan scrambled onto all fours and her sense of balance
kicked in. All she had now was a headache, a stiff neck, and a strange
smell of dust in her nostrils. Her gun was on the table. She reached
for it and shoved it back in her waistband. And her jacket was ruined; that
pissed her off. She could repair herself,
but she couldn't get a new jacket out here.
Chayyas kept her distance, shutter pupils snapping from
open petals to slits. "An astonishing thing," she said at last, very
quiet, almost distracted. "Extraordinary."
"Yeah, terrific. It's my party trick." If Chayyas was
testing the efficiency of her c'naatat, it
was a bloody stupid way to do it. But it had shaken her, that was
clear. Shan examined the singed hole in her jacket for a few moments
then gave up. She stared at her hands: there were no flickering lights.
"Had your fun now? Can I go?"
"I had to see."
"You've seen." She gestured at the wall, suddenly more
concerned whether the bioluminescence had stopped for good than the
events of the last few minutes. "Are you going to clean this up, or do
you expect me to do it?"
Vijissi kept looking towards Chayyas as if he were
expecting some action from her. Shan had a feeling there was something
else going on, something she didn't quite understand, and Chayyas
seemed subdued. Maybe she'd never seen anyone's body parts splattered
across the furnishings. It did tend to spoil your day.
Chayyas went to the door. A brief blast of double-song
at painful volume made Shan's ears ring again. Then there was the sound
of many rapid footsteps fading down the passage, and Chayyas stalked
back into the chamber. She could understand get
the fuck out of here in any language. She also knew she had
Chayyas's reluctant but undivided attention.
"I hope you understand your side of the deal," Chayyas
said. "Because we'll hold you to it. You are wess'har now. You'll help
us fight if need be. You'll do your duty as a matriarch. We expect a
great deal from you, Shan Frankland--possibly more than you are capable
of giving."
Chayyas had suddenly become very still, not just at
rest as a relaxed human might be, but utterly immobile. Shan had seen
Aras do that a few times when he had been taken aback or alarmed. It
was a strange thing to see. It was the small detail that made them more
alien. I can do it, Shan
thought. I can bloody well do anything right now.
The relief of being in one piece was flooding her with elation and
confidence, and she was ashamed of that. It was weakness. She shouldn't
have been afraid. "I'll take Aras if I may." Take him where? She had no
idea, but it felt like time to stalk out having won the argument.
Vijissi tugged on her sleeve. "I think the phrase is �quit while
you are ahead,' " he whispered, and
pulled her sleeve meaningfully in the direction of the door.
She followed Vijissi deeper into the maze of rooms that
made up Chayyas's residence, feeling as if she were walking a heaving
deck, and wondering how she would recount the events to Aras. And her
jacket--shit, how was she going to get that repaired? There were
suddenly a lot of wess'har about, mostly males, but also some females.
They stared at her. She thought the novelty of seeing her alien face
might have worn thin by now.
Vijissi peered round doors and jerked his head back,
chittering to himself, until he found a room that appeared to suit his
needs and he beckoned Shan in.
It was empty. Three connecting doors led off deeper
into Chayyas's maze, one of them covered with a vine-patterned
damask-like fabric in peacock and royal blues. Vijissi sat her down on
a ledge cut into the wall and made a semblance of a stop gesture with
both paws. Hands, she reminded
herself. Not paws. Shan sniffed hard,
trying to get rid of the rasping smell and dappled shape of dust.
Scents now felt like textures and looked like colors, and colors had
flavors and texture and sound. She had noticed a growing synesthesia
over the past months; it didn't appear to be a wess'har characteristic.
"You wait here until I find Aras," said Vijissi. "I
would not be proud that you forced Chayyas to back down." Shan couldn't
tell from his tone if he was being spiteful or simply helping her
through the uncertain territory of wess'har politics. "You have made a
very dangerous move."
"Oh, because she'll have my arse some day?" She was
back on familiar ground for a few moments. So someone new had her on
their bugger-about list. So what? "She can come and have a go if she
thinks she's hard enough."
"I thought you might have understood what you were
doing."
"I did. I was bargaining for Aras."
"We can smell it, you know. They can all
smell it." Vijissi sniffed in a rapid
staccato like a little machine gun. Shan tried too, but the rasping
dusty odor seemed to have temporarily numbed her newly acquired
wess'har sense of smell. "That was very foolish indeed, but maybe you
are more ambitious than we thought."
"What, for Chrissakes?"
"You have deposed her. Chayyas has surrendered her
authority."
Wess'har politics
and governance would leave a human politician speechless. Political
office isn't sought. It's imposed on the most dominant and able
females--without votes, without campaigns, without structure, and
without parties. The ruling group of matriarchs that appears to evolve
in each city state has the task of ensuring that the day-to-day
decisions made by households--all run by females, who are outnumbered
five to one by males--are reflected in the wider domains of
international relations and major infrastructure projects. There is no
economy or constitution as we understand them. Consensus appears to
take place by osmosis. And woe betide the leader who seriously fails in
her duty: she's likely to be killed.
EDDIE MICHALLAT, BBChan,
From Our Extrasolar Correspondent
"Look, I didn't know. I had no bloody
idea. Will you listen to me, for
Chrissakes?"
Shan had a habit of pacing around that now annoyed
Mestin very much. Her rooms were small and the woman took up a lot of
ground: she would have to learn to be still. Shan paused in front of
Nevyan, fists on hips, shaking her head occasionally, no doubt
astonished at her own foolish actions. Mestin decided she would make it
a priority to find alternative accommodation for her. A few months ago
she might have cuffed her. But this was now neither subordinate female
nor gethes. This was a dominant matriarch,
whatever her external appearance.
"How many times do we have to tell you that what you
intend is of no consequence?" said Mestin. "You've challenged Chayyas
and she has ceded dominance. That's all there is to know."
"Just because I faced her down over the grenade?"
"It's pheromonal. She can't help her reaction." Mestin
was aware of Nevyan beside her: she was staring at Shan, utterly
mesmerized. "You said yourself that you noticed your own scent when it
happened."
"Jesus H. Christ," said Shan. "Just because I got
stroppy with her? So what are you going to do when a human army shows
up and gives you a frosty look? Surrender?"
"They are wholly human and so we have no biochemistry
in common. You, however, are not."
The reminder seemed to silence Shan. She dropped her
arms to her sides and sat down on the bench that Nevyan had piled with dhren
fabric to make it comfortable for her. "I
take it an apology would be out of the question?"
"The reaction has taken place. Chayyas has lost her
hormonal dominance. Intended or not, you're now senior matriarch in
F'nar."
Shan held up both hands, palms out. The claws were
gone, Mestin noted. C'naatat was even more
bizarre than she had realized. "No," Shan said. "Abso-bloody-lutely not.
I'll have a crack at most things, but not
politics. And I don't have the right to do it, let alone the training."
"Then you leave us in temporary disarray, and you have
no right to do that either."
"Then give me a solution."
"Where's your grenade?"
"Aras took it off me for safekeeping. What about you?
Don't you want the job?"
Shan still knew far less about wess'har than Mestin had
imagined. She was still ascribing human motivation to them. "Nobody
seeks seniority. It is a duty, not a prize."
"Okay, will you do it?"
"If necessary."
"What do we do, then? Slug it out?"
"You can simply ask me."
"Why didn't you tell me that earlier?"
"You misunderstand our ways. You would have thought I
was seeking an advantage."
"Very well, Mestin--please will you take over in place
of Chayyas? There. Is that it?"
Mestin cocked her head in deference and felt both
relief that she had stopped an unpredictable alien from shaping F'nar's
future and dread that she had taken on a task she felt barely able to
handle. Nevyan would smell that at once. She wondered if Shan had
enough of a command of her rapidly changing hybrid senses to know that
too.
"I'll announce the decision." Mestin stood up and
trilled at the top of her voices for Aras to come and join them. He
loomed in the open doorway, far too big for a male and far too alien,
Vijissi behind him. He had a little blue glass bowl of netun jay
in one hand and an expectant scent;
that was inevitable, she accepted. Whatever form he had taken, Aras was
still enough of a wess'har male to find a strong and aggressive female
completely irresistible.
His eyes never left Shan.
Neither did Nevyan's. Mestin was beginning to feel
invisible. She was also concerned that her daughter, who was hers to
educate, was settling on a gethes as a
role model.
"Thanks," said Shan, and took the netun
jay from Aras. She smiled at him, all teeth, completely
distracted for a brief moment while her gaze went from his hips up to
his face. Then she seemed to realize she was doing it and looked away,
her expression suddenly neutral. "You okay?"
"Of course," he said.
Mestin interrupted. "You'll still need to stay on
Wess'ej for your own protection. And you have utility for us. You did
agree to serve this world without reservation."
"Yeah, I did." Shan bit cautiously into one of the
cakes and then ate the rest of it in one mouthful. She was still
glancing occasionally at Aras, and it was a very different eye movement
from the one she used when she looked at Mestin. It didn't bode well.
"Am I under house arrest?"
"I have no idea what that is, but you're free to go
where you please on the planet. Where you'll live is another matter. I
have empty rooms--"
"I have rooms too," said Aras.
"Make what arrangements you wish." Mestin didn't know
quite what c'naatat could do between
species, but the warning had to be given. Shan was paying Aras too much
attention. "But please don't breed. I know it's cruel to say that, but
you both know the dangers."
"Whoa, what--" Shan began.
Aras cut her off. "We understand the burden we carry,"
he said.
Shan simply looked at him and her lips pursed as if she
was about to speak, but in the end she said nothing. Mestin guessed
that Shan had little idea what was happening to her and that she
had--for once--been surprised into silence. The two c'naatat
exchanged glances. Mestin could detect nothing beyond Aras's agitation
and arousal.
It was unimportant. As long as they were bonded, she
cared little how they felt about it. Two unmated adults would create
unrest in F'nar society, c'naatat or not.
She watched them go and turned to Vijissi.
"I would like you to look after Shan
Chail when she appears to require it," she said. "And whether
she welcomes that aid or not."
Vijissi paused, bit on a netun
with a dramatic snap of his teeth, and hissed like escaping steam.
"I shall," he said.
Utility. Aras
considered the word. Without reservation.
There was a time when he had been told that too--several lifetimes ago,
and not quite in those words, but it had been just as unqualified, and
equally simple to accept. Difficult times made those decisions easy.
He thought of Cimesiat and all the other c'naatat
troops who had made the honorable
decision to end their abnormal lives, and wondered if he would have
agreed so readily if he were asked to serve again today.
Shan was subdued. She walked a little way behind him.
As they passed along the pearl-walled terraces to his old home,
wess'har paused to greet him with trills, pointing him out to their
children. C'naatat troops had been heroes.
Nobody here forgot that.
And he was the last of them.
"You're really angry with me, aren't you?" Shan said.
"No. Not at all." He glanced over his shoulder: she
smelled very good indeed, wess'har good, and that was a fragrance that
had not beckoned him in centuries. He tried to ignore it. It wasn't
fair on her. "But you've been here less than sixty hours and you've
already destabilized the city government and ousted a senior matriarch.
I dread to think what you could achieve in a season."
"Is that a joke?"
"Yes." Maybe he could sit her down and explain things
to her. Perhaps Nevyan might. "Why did you confront Chayyas?"
Shan made that puffing noise of annoyance. "To stop her
frying you, of course. Did I have an alternative?"
"Perhaps waiting to see
what would happen?"
"Yeah, and it was me she
put a hole through." There was a slight tremor in her voice. "I made
the choice and I'll live with it."
Silence. But her anger only made her more powerfully
appealing. They carried on their way around the caldera, a progress
slowed by more wess'har stopping Aras to say how significant,
how wonderful, it was to see him. Most had
never actually seen a c'naatat before, let
alone one as extraordinarily different as Aras. Their hero-worship
stopped short of actually touching him.
His rooms were at the far end of the top terrace and
looked out not only on F'nar but also to the arid bronze landscape
outside the caldera. It had taken him years to cut it out of the
escarpment a little at a time and line it with stone fragments. When he
pushed on the entrance door, thick with the deceptive glamor of
undisturbed tem deposits, he half expected
to see a family in residence. But he suspected nobody would occupy a c'naatat's
home, however long it had been
abandoned.
It was empty. It was also completely clean and smelled
of freshness and water. Someone had been in to prepare it for him.
There were evem tubers on the open shelves
and a variety of boxes beside them.
Shan followed him in. "How long did you say you'd been
away?" she asked.
He calculated briefly. "Just over a hundred and twelve
years."
"You've certainly got a loyal home help."
"I don't know who did this and I probably never will."
Shan seemed overtaken by delighted surprise. "Humans
break into empty houses and loot them. Wess'har break in, do the
housework and leave groceries." She laughed, a totally artless peal of
laughter. It was rare to hear her do that. "You lot are going to put
the likes of me out of work. Amazing."
"We have a sense of communal responsibility."
She wasn't mocking them, he knew. But she still had a
lot to get used to. He slung his pack onto the hip-high chest that
served as a table and pulled out a knife, glad that she had brightened
for the moment.
"I'll cook dinner and then we'll talk, yes?"
Shan watched him warily. "Yeah. I do have a few
questions."
F'nar was not Aras's home. He wondered if he should
have headed north, to Iussan on the Baral plain, where he had been
born--born normal--and where people hid
their homes as carefully as he had hidden Constantine from view. It was
devout Targassati country; or at least it had been, centuries ago,
before he left for the last time. F'nar society was less rigorous and
more conspicuous in its habits. It was soft. You didn't have to look
hard for evidence of its existence. But it was probably a more sensible
choice of home for humans easing their way into wess'har life.
Shan appeared to have worked out that there were few
rooms by human standards. While he sliced the evem,
she paced from room to room as if calculating something. He had
excavated only as much space as he needed, and that meant a main room
where the living and cooking and reading was done, a cleansing room,
and a small alcove for storage.
"Mmm," said Shan, looking round with a carefully blank
expression. "Studio living. Nice."
It was a warm evening and he was already missing the
crisp winter in Constantine. He left Shan to examine the vegetables and
fruit and went to clean himself in the washroom while the evem
soaked in broth. When he came back out,
squeezing the water from his long braid, she was attempting to make
sense of the foods in the crate. It was clear that being helpless
wasn't something she was used to. She couldn't even activate the
cooking range: she peered at it from every angle and her face became
flushed.
"I have a hell of a lot to learn," she said. "And not
just wess'u."
"You serve those raw," he said helpfully, and took a
bunch of green bulbs from her. "Why not watch me?"
"I should be making myself useful."
Aras prised her fingers off the cooking implements and
steered her towards one of the benches. "Sit and watch."
"I know you're pissed off with me. I can't do more than
apologize."
"I am not angry with you."
It wasn't anger she could smell, but he had to pick his moment to
explain that to her. This wasn't it. "My actions brought us to this
point. Not yours."
He was ashamed of chiding her for impatience. She had
been willing to trade her life for his, however foolish that was. And
he had been a fool too: he had robbed her of normality and peace and
home when he thought he was saving her life.
"But you came for me," he said.
"Eh?"
"You didn't abandon me. You were as good as your word."
Shan looked down at nothing in particular. She did that
to disguise the times her eyes betrayed her apparent calm. She wasn't
very good at it, although gethes might
have been fooled. It was the same look she had when he had first told
her about being a prisoner of war, a kind of painful embarrassment.
"Yeah, well, I never could stay out of a fight, could I?"
"It was a very dangerous and foolish thing to do."
"You're welcome. Glad I could help."
"Why do you take such risks for me?"
"You're a good man, Aras. You're also my only friend."
He watched the evem as it
simmered and rolled slowly in the currents of the yellow-stained water.
He recalled sitting on a plain on Bezer'ej telling Shan about the c'naatat
parasite for the first time, ready to
cut her throat with his tilgir if she
looked likely to betray the knowledge to the scientists of Thetis.
She never knew the thought had crossed his mind. She
had trusted him. Not confessing that to her carved a constant pain in
his chest.
He glanced back at her. Her normal don't-piss-me-about
expression, as Eddie called it--set jaw, unblinking gaze--melted for a
few seconds into a slight smile. Why her? Why save her?
Mestin had asked him, and he wasn't sure
until that moment. Now he knew. She filled almost every void in his
distorted life: his instinctive needs, so long suppressed, were being
met. She was a little girl, an isanket, in
need of care and education; she was an equal, a house-brother who could
provide comradeship; and she was--whether she knew it or not--an isan,
a physically powerful matriarch who was
the source of protection and life in the family.
And she knew what it was to be isolated and alone. It
was a heady combination.
Aras struggled not to dwell on the idea. "Chayyas would
have exacted a very high price from you," he said. "Mestin's will be
even higher."
"I expect I'll get my money's worth out of her, too.
Both of us are in over our heads. Level playing field. I find that
reassuring." She made an impatient gesture towards the range. "Come on,
dinnertime. Isan's orders." Ah. He would have to
discuss it. "You don't have to be isan if
you don't want to."
"I'm happy to cook."
"Isans don't cook."
"What are these responsibilities Mestin says I have,
then?"
"To make decisions for the household, to participate in
the running of the city, and to protect your males." Mestin seemed to
think they had already coupled: it had been the usual way of
transmitting c'naatat. "The other matters
need not bother you."
"Why?"
"They are of a sexual nature."
Shan made a noncommittal sound and looked away. He
wasn't sure how to interpret that. He was also sure he wasn't going to
ask. She watched him prepare the vegetables and tubers, repeating the
name of each in wess'u as best she could, and she was an isanket
again and he stopped thinking of what
couldn't be.
Bezer'ej was in its full phase that night, a wonderful
pale blue and terra-cotta moon streaked with silver. After dinner, Aras
spent a long time on the terrace staring at it and wondering what Josh
and his family were doing now. He hoped they would all understand why
he had left. He longed to return, but Shan was here, and all his
instincts anchored him to where she was.
He tried not to think of Mestin's household, of
Chayyas's household, full of children and love and normality, and it
hurt. On Bezer'ej there were no reminders of what he had sacrificed. He
needed to go back.
Aras went back inside the house. Shan had settled down
on a pile of sek covers in the corner of
the room with her jacket rolled up under her head, one hand gripping it
as if she thought someone might snatch it from her while she slept. He
could see no lights and no claws: c'naatat
had tired of the changes for its own inexplicable reasons. Her hands
were human again.
Her boots--very clean, shiny from constant buffing,
black--were standing neatly against the wall. If she hadn't been
resting
on the jacket, he would have tried to repair it before she woke. She
set great store by being neatly dressed. The bullet hole in the jacket
bothered her.
Aras listened to her rhythmic breathing for a while and
studied the lines of the muscles that ran over her shoulder and down
her arm. Maybe he would work out what to say to her by the morning. A
few strands of her hair had escaped from the fabric tie that held it in
a tail, and he thought better of smoothing it back from her face. "Teh chail, henit has teney?"
he said quietly. No, he had no idea how they were going to work this
out. "Do you really think of me as a man? Or am I one of your helpless
animals like the gorilla?"
He almost wished she hadn't told him that story. But he
would have discovered it anyway, along with the flames and the sickened
rage that were already surfacing alongside his own memories. The more
traumatic and significant the event, the more likely it was to filter
through. Failing to help the primate had definitely gouged a permanent
scar in her mind.
Shan looked exhausted rather than peaceful. She
twitched occasionally in her sleep, making small sounds of nothing in
particular.
He wondered if she were having the same dreams as him.
I really quite
like humans. They understand the need for mutually beneficial
agreements. I have no doubt that they will benefit enormously from our
communications technology--access to which we will of course
control--and
we will be grateful for their assistance in resuming deep space travel.
If they are offended by being treated as a means of transport, then
they don't show it. Are we allying with a dangerous power? I think not.
When we have their technology, when we fully understand terraforming,
when we have relieved our resource pressures enough to resume our own
exploration program, then we are free to end our agreements with them.
PAR PARAL UAL,
addressing fellow state leaders at
the Northern Isenj Nations Assembly
Lindsay fastened the belt on her fatigues
and tidied her hair, relying on the distorted reflection in the console
screen to check that everything was in order. She felt as she thought
she looked: an aeon older.
It was the most useful thing she could do with the
screen at the moment. The recreation network terminal was down again, a
consequence of her trying to dock her personal unit with it. Life in
space certainly wasn't like it was in the movies. There was never a
handy universal computing platform around when you needed one.
There were two more serious matters that she couldn't
get out of her mind. One was the first cogent thought that consumed her
three seconds after waking each day, and that was that David was dead;
and the other was that Rayat was back. He was supposed to be on board Thetis,
on his way home with the rest of the
payload, six Royal Marines and the isenj party. He wasn't. He was here,
and she wanted to know who else was now
embarked in Actaeon, and why.
She wanted to go and seek him out. But her natural
caution told her to establish more facts before she went plunging in.
Eddie might know something. He could wheedle information out of
anybody, even information Okurt thought he might be keeping to himself.
She tried activating the bioscreen but she was still getting flat
lines; it looked as if her marine detachment was still on board Thetis,
long out of range. Detachment. There were
only six of them. But they were still a detachment, and six Royal
Marines--six Booties--were a considerable
asset.
Eddie appeared to have adapted perfectly well to life
on board Actaeon. The man settled into
spaces as easily and smugly as a cat. He was wandering down the main
passage that ran the whole port side of Actaeon's
main section when she saw him, pausing at every network niche to slot
his datacard forlornly into the port. She wondered if she'd crashed the
whole rec network.
"Did you know Rayat was on board?" she said without
preamble.
Either Eddie wasn't much of a poker player or he was
covering a lie. He registered surprise with a frown. "But he was
chilled down on Thetis. He should be…er…"
He stared blankly at the bulkhead for a few seconds, flipping his card
over and over between his fingers, but the maths had clearly defeated
him. "Well, a few months down the road home now."
"I thought so too. I saw him about an hour ago."
"I hear a lot of things on this ship, but not that. Did
he say why?"
"We're not exactly chummy. He said hi and he walked
away."
"And you didn't ask him why he was back? Is it all of
the payload? The marines? What?"
"Like I said, he just said hi and walked off."
"You'd make a poxy journalist, doll."
"I was caught off guard." She had the feeling that
Eddie had delivered the worst insult he could muster. He was the sort
of man who'd interview his doctor on his deathbed. She struggled to
regain his respect. "I'm seeing Okurt shortly and I intend to ask. If
they've brought anyone inboard, one of us should know about it, and
it's not me."
"Paranoia is healthy. Makes you think creatively. So
what's he here for?"
"Because they're getting obsessed with that biotech
Shan's carrying. He's come back for that, I reckon."
Eddie looked visibly pained. "Oh shit."
"You know more about this than you're telling me, don't
you?"
"I doubt it. Are you telling me everything you
know?"
"I don't know who to tell what these days." She gripped
Eddie's forearm discreetly, not sure herself if it were a friendly
gesture or one of desperation. "Are you giving samples to the doc?"
"Always do."
"Well, they're checking for Shan's biohaz."
Eddie still wore his I'm-your-chum smile, but it was
thinning away to transparency. "And if you found you had it, what would
you do?"
"Run, I think. Run like hell." She was starting to
wonder if there was anybody who could be trusted with it. She hadn't
got quite as far as asking herself how far she would go to stop it
falling into the wrong hands--and there were plenty of those grasping
around. "If you hear anything, promise me you'll tell me."
"If that works both ways, I will."
She just gave him a blank look and went on her way. She
didn't find it easy to lie. If he knew what she had in mind for Shan,
she had no doubt he would get word to her. He admired the woman: he
made no secret of it.
Lindsay settled in the corner of the wardroom for the
morning briefing and thought it was an informally sloppy place to do
business. But this wasn't her ship; it was Okurt's. She decided to aim
for invisibility, a hard task in her out-of-date uniform. She didn't
even speak the way the rest of the crew did. Two or three generations
of separation from mainstream human culture were audible as well as
visible.
And there was the other problem, of course. Nobody knew
what to say to a woman who had lost her baby anyway.
Okurt seemed excited. He was spinning his coffee cup in
its saucer again and Lindsay wanted to slap his hand away from it. But
he stopped of his own accord when his staff of a dozen officers filed
in.
Two of them sat either side of her, a little too close
for comfort. She found it hard to brush hips with strangers now. She
tried to shrink.
"We've received instructions to attempt to reopen
negotiations with the wess'har authorities," said Okurt.
There was silence. None of them were trained in
diplomacy, Lindsay thought, and diplomacy as humans understood it
wouldn't work on wess'har. She'd dealt with them just enough to know
that.
"They don't negotiate," she said.
"I know it's not going to be easy."
"How are the isenj going to take this?"
"They're not privy to this."
Lindsay went back to staring at her hands. There was
quite a lot the isenj weren't privy to. There were times in life when
alarm bells started ringing insistently in your head and wouldn't stop.
She wondered if anyone else could hear them like she did then. Okurt
certainly did, but she knew he would follow the orders of politicians
who were 150 trillion miles away from the fallout.
"I plan to make contact with F'nar in the next few
weeks," he said. "I have no idea how their political hierarchies
operate or even what their geopolitical structures are. Could you help
out, Commander?"
Lindsay looked up. "They might prefer to talk to a
woman. It's a matriarchal society."
"Are you volunteering?"
There was a chance it would get her close enough to
Shan. She stifled her excitement and paused a beat before saying,
"Okay." Again, she was conscious of Okurt's gaze resting just a
suspicious second too long on her and she clung to a facade of
professional calm. I'm going to have the bitch.
The prospect almost outweighed the reappearance of
Rayat, but not quite. The briefing seemed longer and slower than usual.
She caught herself carving her stylus into the smart-paper again and
made a deliberate effort to take notes until the meeting broke up and
she and Okurt were alone in the wardroom.
"Is there something you want to tell me, Malcolm?"
His bemusement looked genuine enough. "Something on
your mind?"
"Why is Dr. Mohan Rayat here and not in the fridge in Thetis?"
Okurt didn't turn a hair. "We were instructed to
retrieve the whole team plus the detachment. Everyone who had any
contact with Frankland, just in case they had any contamination."
It threw her. She really hadn't guessed. She fought the
urge to check her bioscreen. "For their own well-being, of course."
"You know damn well why."
"Ah, a word from our sponsors, eh?"
"As far as they're concerned, we're just cooperating
with their requests. Don't push it." He glanced over his shoulder,
casual, apparently unconcerned, and then lowered his voice. "And if I
had the slightest suspicion that they were carrying this thing, I
wouldn't be letting the commercial medical team crawl all over them."
"I'm not with you."
"If you were chief of staff, what precautions would you
take here?"
"Defensive?"
"Political."
Lindsay didn't need to think that long. "I'd probably
want to look at that biotech for our own military purposes before we
handed it over."
"I'm glad to see your strategic common sense is alive
and well."
Lindsay felt she had at least judged Okurt about right.
For all his grumbling and cynicism, he was at his core a sailor, an
officer, a man who put his ship's company first and looked after his
own. So here was another agenda. She wondered how many more there might
be, and if Okurt was aware of them all.
"Are those your real orders?" she asked. No,
not that. Don't let Shan be right. "Cut-and-come-again troops?"
"I still answer to the Defense Discipline Act. Not
shareholders." His almost constant half smile evaporated for a few
moments: the lines around his mouth collapsed into worry, into concern,
but he snapped them back into place again. "And whatever we do with it,
it'll be in the hands of our federal interests, not hawked round the
international marketplace by multinationals. That stays within this
wardroom. Okay?"
"Okay."
"We'll take her. Don't worry."
He didn't need to say who her
was. Lindsay feigned casual indifference. "Want me to get to work on
that?"
"You know how I feel about your involvement."
"I can get to her. I know better than anyone how to do
it."
Okurt looked into her eyes for a while, no doubt
scouring for signs of crazed vengeance. She made sure he didn't find
any.
"Okay," he said. "This place is a sieve. So only you
and I know, and that's it. Understood?"
"Never heard you mention a thing," she said.
"And maybe you're not ideal for diplomatic contact."
"Fair enough."
It didn't make her feel brave or clever. She was
deceiving a good man. But however decent, sensible, and deserving of
loyalty Okurt might be, Shan Frankland had the edge on him: she'd been right.
Lindsay knew that if she was going to get to Shan,
she'd have to go through Okurt sooner or later. She needed his trust.
"Is the whole payload thawed out?"
"All of them. The only life on Thetis
now is the isenj and their ussissi support team, and they're still out
cold."
So she had her Royal Marines back on board, and she had
Eddie, and Eddie could find out God's unlisted number if he put his
mind to it.
Both Eddie and Shan had taught Lindsay a valuable
technique common to both journalists and detectives. If you had enough
individual pieces of the model--however small, however innocuous,
however incomprehensible on their own--you could recreate the picture
on
the box.
She had a feeling she had been handed the solution to
all her problems in kit form, minus the instructions and any idea of
what she was making.
It was no problem. She had time.
"Go on," said Eddie. Back in the reserve
turbine room, they were a hundred meters away from curious ears. The
bridge repeater panels flickered and danced, projecting a rainbow of
colors onto the lad's face. "Can't do any harm, can it?"
The young lieutenant--Barry Yun--was that most cherished
of finds, a bloke in the know who wanted to be helpful. Yun was bored
and he thought Eddie had lived a glamorous and exciting life. It was
amazing what you could achieve just by being able to tell a good yarn.
"All right," said Yun. "They retrieved the Thetis
crew. The thing's so slow we could catch
up and board her."
"Why?"
"System failure. Safety."
"Unsafe for humans but safe for isenj and ussissi?"
Yun's lips moved silently for a second. Eddie felt a
warm glow of triumph. Make 'em think you already
know the lot. A couple of real facts, just the right degree of a
smile, and a bit of timing, and they usually supplied the rest.
"Okay," Yun said. "I thought it was a stupid story too.
Reliable buzz says it's this biotech. Do you know what some people are
offering for this stuff?"
"No. Amaze me."
"I had to patch the CEO of Holbein through to the boss
on his scramble line, not that it's secure on ITX, of course. He wasn't
asking what the weather was like on Umeh either."
"All this on a rumor?"
"Pretty strong rumor if you listen. They're scouring
everyone who's been in contact with Frankland. Even you."
Eddie held out his palms. "Look. No hair."
"They even unzipped the body bags. No stone left
unturned. They were talking about how they could get access to the
colonists."
"And who's they?"
"The R and D consortium team."
"And you know this how, exactly?"
"I cover a lot of comms watches. Plus they're not too
careful what they say in front of the stewards, and I'm always nice to
the stewards." I know, thought Eddie. "You're a man
after my own heart," he grinned.
Yun proved it. "So what really happened to the two in
the body bags, then?"
"Okay…Parekh was executed for killing an alien kid.
Dissected it, counter to all orders not to touch specimens. And Galvin
went off-camp against express orders too and got caught in the cross
fire with the isenj. So the moral of the story out here is to do as
you're told."
"I hope Hereward's well
cannoned up when she arrives, then. If any of us are still left."
The thought don't react
flashed through Eddie instantly. "I thought Hereward
was a survey ship," he lied, knowing the vessel hadn't even been on the
CAD screen when he'd left Earth.
"Look, we have big spaceships and small spaceships.
There isn't enough of a space navy to build specialized hulls like the
domestic fleet. They just strap on more armaments to whatever's flying.
We're lucky they haven't sent a sodding submarine."
"I just hope they've told the isenj that she's coming."
Yun just raised his eyebrows. "Classified," he said.
It was so classified that Lindsay hadn't thought to
mention it. Maybe she hadn't been told either. It was a massively
provocative act to launch another vessel into a disputed area. These
species had been at each other for centuries: did the FEU really think
another twenty-five years would see them kiss and make up? And a ship
called Hereward suggested Albion had
fallen out with the Alliance des Galles again. The FEU had never been a
happy family.
But he didn't think the wess'har--or the isenj, come to
that--would give a damn which European tribe was in the ascendant.
They'd just lock and load.
"I wouldn't mind seeing my old mates," Eddie said,
trying not to look too interested in the Hereward
even though it was burning holes in him. "Or is that classified too?"
"They should be out of quarantine on Thursday. I
imagine they'll gravitate towards the wardroom, seeing as there's beer
available."
But Rayat was already out. That told Eddie something,
but he wasn't sure what. He decided not to push his luck. He'd gleaned
plenty from Yun for the time being.
He rather wished he hadn't. The shitty thing about
knowing stuff out here was that it mattered,
whereas on Earth you knew you were a cog, a nothing, a player in the
game. You weren't actually responsible for the sequelae of information
that was awkward and had consequences--not unless you were doing an
investigative piece, and then it was up to the Shan Franklands of the
world to go and take action on the strength of your allegations. You
could go down the pub for a beer and start on something new and
interesting the next day. Nobody really got hurt.
Out here he wasn't a cog. He was the entirety of the
media: he was the populace: and he was society. He was all the people
who weren't wearing a uniform, military or corporate. The information
he gathered had real, immediate consequences beyond embarrassing
headlines and calls for ministerial resignation.
That meant he had to be very careful how he used it.
"Barry, are we carrying much in the way of armament?"
he asked.
"Depends what you mean by much."
"More than just demolition ordnance and a bit of
close-in protection."
Yun's eyebrows danced briefly again. "Oh, plenty more.
We can't exactly nip back and pick up anything we've forgotten to pack."
"Shit," said Eddie.
If he rose early enough, Aras could tend to his
crops before anyone else was about in the fields. He could see well
enough in the pre-dawn light to hoe safely around young plants. It was
also cooler and more like Bezer'ej at that hour.
He was missing Bezer'ej. On Bezer'ej, he had no
reminders of his enforced celibacy.
At the entrance of one home he passed, a young father
was leaning against the doorway, savoring the breeze, a child clutched
to his chest. Aras could hear him humming a single note under his
breath, the sound Shan called purring,
distracted by his thoughts as he suckled the baby. When he saw Aras he
simply nodded acknowledgment.
Aras felt a stab of sorrow but returned the nod and
hurried on. It was another reason he was going to find the time in
F'nar hard to pass. The human infants in Constantine triggered no
instinct in him. All he could detect was their frustration and rage. He
didn't like them much: raw, unshaped gethes,
all demand and self-absorption, barely tolerable until they learned
that they had to fit in with the rest of the world.
No wonder so many humans never managed that.
Aras took the hoe from his pack and assembled it with
its narrowest blade. There was ripe yellow-leaf to be harvested. He
squeezed the top of the leaf in his hand and it crumpled like soft
fabric. The foliage had softened and turned from red to gold, all its
toxins safely drained back to its roots. It was ready to eat.
Toxins didn't trouble him but he harvested at the
appointed time. There was more yellow-leaf to pick today than he
needed, so he would take it back to the food stores at the Exchange of
Surplus Things. That was the way it worked. The Christians in
Constantine had also operated a communal food system, but theirs seemed
to require that someone tallied all the produce and checked that
everyone was contributing their share and not consuming more than they
were entitled to. I thought I understood them.
He had lived in the company of humans longer than he
had his own kind. His body housed human genes gleaned from bacteria,
viruses and skin cells. But the blood-to-blood contact with Shan had
brought with it a far more fundamental experience of what it was to be
human, and it was shocking. I never understood them at all.
Aras hefted the hoe. The handle felt like…felt like a
weapon, a stick of some kind. Not his: hers.
When he squeezed it he could feel outrage, horror, a sense of knowing
something that had changed her world forever.
He abandoned the hoeing and concentrated on recalling
the memory. Whatever it was, he needed to know what had marked her so
much that it surfaced above the images of waterfalls of fire and the
pleading ape.
Human genetic memories didn't feel at all like isenj
ones. Eddie had once shown him how moving pictures were assembled, and
Aras found parallels between that technology and the assorted memories
that had lodged in his brain. Isenj memories were complete, accurate,
realtime sequences; humans' were snatched and distorted, like spooling
through scraps of spliced footage at high speed and having both blank
sections and sudden vivid freeze-frames.
And isenj memories felt like the past. Shan's felt like
now.
He concentrated. Sitting in the dark on a hard
bench, a heavy baton in hand. It was Shan. There was an
overwhelming sense of disbelief and shock. Do
something about it. Balance the score a bit. A door swings open in a
sudden shaft of yellow light and it's someone she knows, someone she
respects, telling her to sort it. A massive cold surge of adrenaline
and then a blank and that baton feels part of her arm, all sweet animal
rage. There's a man's face, and he grins but then he stops smiling and--
Aras felt the repeated downward swings of the baton so
vividly that it was all he could do to hold onto the hoe. Then he
dropped it. Relief as intense as quenched thirst flooded him. He fell
to his knees and struggled to find his own thoughts again. No, this was
nothing like the mind of an isenj.
Whoever Shan had beaten, she had savored every moment
of it.
It disturbed him. He didn't want to think of his isan--and
he admitted to himself that he saw her
as that now--as a torturer. It was an unpleasant thought for anyone: it
was especially unbearable for him. He busied himself piling the
yellow-leaf into a rolling crate and wheeled it down into the network
of passages that moved items around the city and to other settlements.
The pipework above his head throbbed with the intermittent flow of
water to the irrigation systems.
There was one barge resting at the loading point,
already partly filled with evem, and he
laid his bundle of yellow-leaf on top of it before pulling down the
cover and inspecting the route information displayed on the top, a few
glyphs fingered into the soft surface. Iussan,
Baral. So the weather was dry enough back home to start digging
up last year's evem early. Why had Shan delighted in
breaking a man's bones with her baton?
Aras climbed back to the top of the entrance shaft and
found three children--an isanket and two
boys--standing and staring at his collection of terrestrial crops. One
boy kept putting his arm through the prickling biobarrier and
inspecting his skin. The other two were much more interested in the
plants, but they acknowledged Aras with sober nods like adults would.
He thought of Josh's daughter Rachel, all giggles and carefree
silliness.
"Aras Sar Iussan, this is new," said the isanket,
pointing.
"It's called tea," he
said. "Humans dry the leaves and make an infusion from it for drinking.
Its closest relatives are grown for their beauty, but the tea plant has
both qualities, so Targassat would approve of it."
"Is it pleasant?"
"You would find it bitter. Humans enjoy it. This is for
Shan Chail."
The isanket looked hard at
the glossy leaves as if absorbing every detail of them, which she was.
Then she tipped her head politely and walked off, the two boys trailing
obediently behind her as they would throughout the rest of their lives.
Aras tried to recall his first isan's
face and failed. He felt no guilt at that: Askiniyas had been dead
nearly five hundred years, one more c'naatat
host who had decided it was better to return to the cycle by her own
hand. Sometimes, when people talked of the sacrifices of c'naatat
troops, they often forgot the
matriarchs who had transmitted the symbiont to their males out of duty,
some unaware of the true nature of c'naatat,
others not.
Askiniyas hadn't known. Nor had his house-brothers
until his infection traveled through them all. I started it. It was my fault.
Ben Garrod might have been right. Josh's ancestor
claimed there were punishments meted out by the unseen being called
God, and if there was a punishment for infecting your entire family
through copulation, then Aras felt he had truly been punished by his
endless celibacy.
It was time to be getting back. He dismantled the hoe
and put it in his pack, reluctant to hold the handle tightly again in
case he relived the moment when Shan began breaking bones and gloried
in it.
Whatever had driven her to torture rather than kill,
her explosive, vengeful anger was now within his very cells.
He would have to handle it carefully.
I care not for a
man's religion whose dog and cat are not the better for it.
ABRAHAM
LINCOLN
Shan sat on the toilet with her chin
resting in her hands, savoring a moment of privacy.
It wasn't a perfect lavatory bowl and there wasn't a
seat to speak of, but it was hers, and it worked, and it required no
special technique or physical agility to make use of it as a wess'har
latrine did. She'd had enough of going native. She was determined to be
a good wess'har citizen but she drew the line at their plumbing and
their furniture. She had her toilet: and now there was a half-built
settee out on the terrace, which she would finish when she sorted out
how to make proper mitered corners. Then she'd make a bed, a nice comfy
bed.
She heard the front door open and close.
"Shan?"
"In here, Aras."
A pause. She hoped he hadn't taken it to mean come
in. "I have yellow-leaf. Lots of it."
"Lovely. Great."
"Are you unwell?"
"I'm fine."
"Are you--"
"Look, I'm fine," she said. "I won't be long. Give me a
few minutes."
Poor sod: it wasn't his fault. She felt bad about
wanting a few moments to herself, but…her flash-to-bang
time, as Ade Bennett called it, was perilously short these days.
Josh had probably averted her meltdown by sending specs for a
Constantine-style toilet bowl to an obliging wess'har craftsman.
The bowl the jurej had
fashioned was ice-clear aquamarine glass, and too disturbingly
transparent to be ideal for a toilet. But she learned to look away. And
now she had a real toilet door too, and suddenly she felt a lot less
like rounding on Aras and snarling at him. Poor sod.
The nightmares weren't helping her mood either. She was
still drowning, still being jerked awake by a searing pain in her back
and a devastating sense of abandonment.
"You were up early," said Aras. He sounded as if he
were moving around the room. "Are you still having problems sleeping?" Oh, please. Just a couple of
minutes. "It's probably c'naatat
shaking down." She stood up and took a deep breath. She could always
retreat here again. "Bound to be a few glitches."
When she opened the door, Aras was standing at the
spigot, peering into the bunch of yellow-leaf he was rinsing. He placed
a finger carefully into the soft crumpled leaves, lifted something out
with his claw and set it on the windowsill. "Just a banic," he
said. "It'll go about its business
when it dries out."
He seemed preoccupied. It was mainly the silence that
told her so. In the few weeks they had been sharing a single,
suffocating room, partitioned by curtains, silence had been one thing
he wasn't good at. Aras liked talking. He had been through five hundred
years of solitary, relatively speaking, and now he had a listener who
was just like him, except that he was from a species that needed to
huddle and chatter, and she liked her own company. You can't imagine what he's been
through, she told herself. Patience. Just
a bit of patience.
She found herself staring at his broad back and noting
how nicely it tapered into his waist. The sudden realization that it
wasn't just xeno-anatomical curiosity made her face burn. She thought
of Mestin warning her not to breed, and wondered if the matriarch had
spotted what she had only just discovered. Oh no. Not that. Get a grip, you
silly bitch.
"You don't look well, isan."
She reminded herself how much she despised Lindsay
Neville for getting pregnant in a careless moment. "I'd rather you
called me Shan," she said.
"Very well." Aras put the bowl of yellow-leaf on the
table and picked up his hoe from the corner. He hefted it in his hand,
staring down the length of the handle as if something terrible were
crawling up it towards him. "I need to ask you a question."
"Okay."
"When I grip this," he said, "I have vivid recall of an
incident. You had a weapon like this."
Shan nodded. Of course she did. "My baton," she said. "A truncheon.
I've still got one in my kit."
"You beat someone with it."
"Well, that doesn't narrow it down much." She was about
to make a joke of it but Aras didn't smell amused. He reeked of
agitation. She tried again. "Yes, I used a baton, and I used it a lot.
If you're churning up my memories, you'll know that."
"I see this one over and over again. You were very
upset and a man was shouting at you to do something about it, and then
you were looking at another man and you started beating him with the
baton. You broke his bones. I heard it. He wasn't armed."
It sounded like a rebuke. And it was an indictment of
her approach to policing that she was genuinely having trouble pinning
down what he was recalling, but she was embarrassed to say so. She
struggled. "Sorry, I don't recognize what you've remembered. Lots of
blokes have shouted at me over the years. And I've smacked quite a few
of them. Hard."
"But I keep picking up pieces of it."
"Sorry."
"You were sitting on a bench in the dark when a man
came in and told you not to sit there all fucking
night."
For a few more seconds it was as much of a puzzle as
before: and then it flooded back with a sickening wave of adrenaline.
Shan knew exactly where she was, but she didn't want
to know.
She'd battled to come to terms with the images from
that night. After a few years of seeing them behind every locked door
and trying to stop them crowding into her mind between the time she
closed her eyes and the time she fell asleep, she had succeeded in
burying the detail.
The pervading dread of doors had never left her,
though. Like all terrible things she had seen and couldn't then erase,
they became more persistent the more she tried to stop thinking of them.
"I need to know…Shan." Aras's voice was quiet and
almost apologetic now. "I need to know what marked you so, and I also
need to know why you tortured a man. It bothers me. I find it hard to
accommodate."
It was a shabby slate-blue door that had previously
been dark green because she could see where the paint had flaked off.
There were some doors you could kick in, cheap doors with fragile
locks; there were others you needed a dynamic ram or a couple of
plastic rounds to tackle. She preferred a good kick. It psyched you up
for what followed.
"I don't think you're in any position to judge me,
Aras."
"Perhaps not, but I must know."
The lock took one all-out kick. The detective inspector
with her said he was impressed that she could do the physical stuff as
well as a bloke. He let her go ahead.
She couldn't see what was happening at first. It took
her a few seconds to look down on the floor at what one of the two
middle-aged men was recording on a top-of-the-line camera. It took
another second to register what she was looking at and then she lost
all professional control and slammed one of the men into the wall, face
first.
It was the wrong house. No credit and ID cloning kit,
just fucking weirdo porn, said the DI. He was pissed off. It was a
fucking bum tip, he said, but they might as well nick the lot of them,
not that it would be worth the paperwork for the sentences they'd get.
He looked into her face, and she didn't want him to see the tears in
her eyes. "Don't be such a fucking girl," he said. "You'll see a lot
worse."
But she never had.
Now Aras was staring into her face. "What's wrong?" he
asked. "You look--"
"You've got no other memories of this? Nothing at all?"
Aras was going to wring it out of her. She couldn't
even manage the words, not even twenty years later. She was as ever
torn between unbearable pain and anger, and she chose anger because she
knew how to wield that without crumbling. Her sympathetic sergeant, the
man who'd found her sitting on the shaking edge of tears in the
darkened locker room, knew that much about her. Go
on, he'd said. Do something about it if
you feel that strongly. It's not as if it was a kid or anything, He'll
only get six months' suspended, tops. Even the score.
She did. She had never exhausted herself beating the
shit out of someone before or since. She didn't care if she was
suspended, charged, sacked: all she cared about was justice.
But nobody saw anything, even if the
desk sergeant kept wandering by the holding cell to check that she was
coping. The guy was decitizenized anyway. Unpleasant things could
happen to people with sufficient criminal record. They'd offended once
too often and their rights were formally abrogated. Nobody was going to
stop her. No lawyer would take it on.
Aras was still staring into her face, bewildered. If
she looked anything like she did that night, he would be seeing her
anew.
"Here." She handed him her swiss. He knew how to use
it. She gathered herself up into the woman everyone seemed to think she
was, the one who could cope because she didn't have feelings like the
rest of them. It was self-pitying, she knew, but she wanted Aras to
understand she had her limits of endurance as well. "Read for yourself.
Look up snuff and squish.
I don't imagine Josh kept material like that in his bloody little Eden,
did he? I didn't think so. Okay, here's your primer in human depravity.
There are humans who are entertained and aroused by watching children
and animals tortured and killed, so they make movies of it. It's quite
an industry. Take a look at my files."
Aras said nothing. He held the swiss flat on his palm,
and she had no doubt he would read it: wess'har weren't squeamish.
Perhaps he understood the very worst about humans anyway.
"You wanted to know," she said. "And I didn't torture
him. I crippled him, and I did it as
efficiently as I could without killing him, because I wanted him to
have plenty of time to think about it. And I'd do it again in an
instant, just as you did at Mjat, because it needed doing. Now read
those fucking files, and never mention it to me again."
Shan shut the front door behind her a little too hard,
sending flakes of pearl shivering to the ground, and walked down onto
the terraces. Mindless physical displacement sometimes helped put her
back together again. A couple of wess'har nodded politely to her as she
passed and she tried to smile back, but her scent must have told them
she was in turmoil. Yeah, don't be such a fucking
girl. It was a lifetime ago.
And it wasn't Aras's fault. Nothing was. He was just a
bystander with her memories playing out in his head, when God only knew
what pain of his own was already there. She wondered when some of that
was going to well up unbidden in her. She wondered if it would be worse
than the images that were resurrected and fresh in her mind now, and
whether it would replace them and so in a way erase them, bury them,
make them go away again.
She got as far as the fields and busied herself
inspecting the swelling peppers and the tops of the sweet potatoes. It
wasn't necessary to go to all this trouble. She could survive on just
about anything, and knowing Aras had put so much effort into trying to
provide her with familiar foods simply made her feel all the worse for
taking out her frustrations on him.
She squatted down. The smell of wet soil put her back
in her recurring nightmare, the water flooding into her mouth and nose.
She shook it off.
No, she wasn't losing it. She was adjusting.
It was a life, a body, a future no human had ever had to face, and she
was doing just fine, all things considered. "Chail, neretse?" said a
double-voice behind her. Have you seen this?
A wess'har male--one of Fersanye's neighbors, she thought--beckoned to
her. She was starting to recognize them all now. He led her over to
another patch of soil a little distance away. Aras tended scattered
plots everywhere, wess'har style, to make the planting look more
random, less obtrusive. The biobarrier crackled against her skin as she
stepped through the invisible bulwark between Wess'ej and a little
piece of Earth.
This plot was dotted with sapling bushes with glossy,
emerald-green serrated leaves. They looked like camellias. She didn't
think Aras would grow anything as irrelevant as decorative flowers.
The male--Tlasias? Tasilas?--was fascinated. "What is tea?"
he asked.
"It's a drink," she said.
Her wess'u was serviceably fluent now. Tlasias appeared
to understand her. He touched the leaves and inspected them. "But how?
You extract the juices?"
"You make…" She searched for a word for infusion. She
didn't know one yet. "A solution from the dried leaves."
Then the penny dropped. She was looking at tea plants. Camellia
sinensis. Aras was growing tea for her,
and he hadn't told her. It was a surprise. Tlasias, like every other
wess'har, had no concept of giving people surprises. He'd blown it.
It didn't diminish the pleasure one bit. She almost
winced at the extra weight of guilt it placed on her, because she had
not only given Aras a hard time for reminding her of her demons, but
she had also bitched at him while he was making extraordinary efforts
to please her. He knew how much she loved tea. She had enough left from
Constantine to make a dozen more pots. She was eking it out, saving it
for special occasions.
She took a deep breath. "The Chinese say that it's
better to be deprived of food for three days than of tea for one.
That's how much gethes enjoy it." She used
the word almost without thinking. There was no wess'u alternative for human.
It was the generic name they gave all
things that ate carrion, a verb, a reflection of their world view that
you were what you did, not what you believed or intended or looked
like. "And it's kind of Aras to grow it for me."
Tlasias gathered his tools and walked off towards the
city. Shan brushed her hands against the leaves of the tea plants,
disappointed that they didn't emit that elusive, tarry perfume of the
fermented leaf. She could wait. It was a singularly thoughtful gift.
Guilt had never been a defining emotion for her, except
for the gorilla and all the other victims she couldn't--no, hadn't--saved.
She'd never felt guilty about
anything she had done. It was things not done that ate away at her.
She felt guilty now. She was guilty of impatience with
Aras and of taking miracles for granted. There wasn't a human being
alive--or dead--who cared about her well-being as much as one misfit
alien with a stack of problems of his own.
When she walked back up the winding terraces to the
house the sun was nearly overhead, and ferociously hot. Wess'har going
about their business stopped to splash themselves with water from the
open conduits that ran everywhere from terrace to terrace. Then they
shook themselves unselfconsciously like dogs, spraying water everywhere
and attracting a cloud of tem flies to the
fresh puddles. The flies, for all their magnificent droppings, were
insignificant, drab gray things with dull wing membranes. It didn't
seem right somehow.
Shan didn't think she could do that canine shake, but
the cold water looked like a good idea. She stopped and stuck her head
under the torrent. For the merest fraction of a second it was bliss.
Then it was a dark room and every moment of misery and
fear she had dreamed and half remembered on waking for the past few
months. And she knew suddenly what it was.
Like those optical illusions that only formed an image
out of a random pattern when you stopped trying to focus on them, she
could now see her newly inherited memories. She was in an isenj prison
as clearly as if she had been there herself. Although she was aware it
wasn't happening to her, she was being held head down in water, trying
not to gulp it into her lungs but unable to resist succumbing to the
reflex to breathe.
She knew what was coming next. She put her hands flat
on the burning pearl wall to stop herself pitching forward as a ripping
sensation tore up her back and forced a surprised cry from her.
They said you couldn't recreate pain in your memory.
They were wrong.
Someone stopped to trill concern at her but she waved
them away without looking up. It took her a long time to draw herself
together sufficiently to carry on walking. She couldn't understand why
she hadn't made sense of it before. It was everything in Eddie's
interview, the material he cut and kept for her alone, except it was
detailed and personal. She knew now exactly what the isenj had done to
Aras while he was their prisoner.
Her first instinct was to find the bastard who did it
and sort them. But that bastard would be long dead by now. The second
wave of emotion was to go to Aras and crush him to her chest and
promise she'd make it right for him, just as she'd wanted to make it
right for the mutilated rabbits and the kitten she'd stumbled on in
that house behind the shabby blue door. But it was too late for them.
And the unimaginable time stretching ahead of her was suddenly
something she would have gladly traded for time stretching back to
change the past.
If she forgot the caged gorilla signing a mute plea for
help and the house with the blue door and a thousand other things she
had seen, then she wasn't Shan Frankland any longer. It was time to
come to terms with them. But it was hard. She wondered how Aras was
going to handle the shit churning up from the mud in her memories. It
wasn't as if he didn't have enough of his own.
F'nar looked incongruously glamorous through the filter
of her nightmare. It was full of unforgiving creatures who would wipe
out a planet without debate but she knew that there was nothing to fear
behind the few doors they had. The relief of that thought was so sudden
and intense that it felt like finding something precious you were sure
had been lost for good. Shit. Aras had her swiss.
It was the first time it had left her hand or pocket in nearly thirty
years except for repairs. It was like letting him browse through her
soul, but he could do that anyway whether he wanted to or not, the poor
sod. She'd make him a good strong cup of tea and get him to talk about
his experiences. After five hundred years he probably needed catharsis
more than she ever would.
It was a bugger how things stuck in your mind. Don't
be such a fucking girl. You'll see a lot worse.
But she never had. She was sure of that.
Lindsay didn't need to look at the bioscreen in
her palm to see that some of her Royal Marine detachment were up and
about on board Actaeon.
Adrian Bennett was standing at the back of the huddle
of officers chatting over their drinks at the wardroom bar, trying to
catch the steward's attention. He was a sergeant. Sergeants, even
Extreme Environment Warfare Cadre commandos like Bennett, did not
drink in the commissioned officers'
wardroom. The Thetis party had been barred
from the other messes to slow the rumor machine, and his discomfort at
being on unfamiliar social terrain showed as he shuffled his boots and
folded and unfolded his arms.
Lindsay wanted to rush up and hug him. He was familiar
and safe and reliable. He was from her world. Instead, she paused long
enough to think what Shan Frankland might have done, and then stepped
forward through the braying group of lieutenants and lieutenant
commanders, who should have had the plain bloody good manners to clear
the service area.
"Steward," she said loudly over their heads. The man
looked up, startled. She had never used her three gold rings as
imperiously before. "Would you get Sergeant Bennett a beer? And one for
me please." No movement from the junior officers at the bar: she stared
at one of them, a victim picked at random. "I'd write for you all too,
but you're obviously just finishing your drinks."
There was a second's silence. It took them a while to
understand. Then the officers parted as if a downdraft had hit them and
left.
"Yes, ma'am," said the steward. For a brief and
glorious moment Lindsay understood what it was to be Shan, to have presence,
and it felt good.
She reached out for the glasses on the mock-mahogany
bar and put one in Bennett's hand. "I can't tell you how good it is to
see you."
"They told us we were restricted to the wardroom and
Juliet deck."
"You don't have to explain yourself. Get that beer down
you."
He raised the glass, looking bemused. "Cheers, Boss."
The informal title caught her off guard. Bennett didn't
use it when addressing her very often: she was normally ma'am.
But he called Shan Frankland Boss all the time, even though she
was a
civilian and had no authority over him other than the flimsy mandate
handed to her by a politician too many years in the past.
Lindsay responded anyway.
"Cheers, Ade." It wasn't the done thing to address a
non-commissioned rank by first name, but she didn't care. This wasn't
her navy any longer. He was one of seven people in the universe who she
could almost regard as a friend. There could have been eight, but she
put that idea out of her mind. "I never got the chance to thank you for
stopping me getting myself killed."
Bennett looked blank. "Not with you, Boss."
"You didn't start a firefight when the wess'har kicked
us off Bezer'ej."
"Prudence." It wasn't a word he normally used. She
wondered if he were raising his verbal game to fit better into the
wardroom. "No point dying when you can wait and fight another day."
"I didn't think you were bottling out of a fight.
Really I didn't."
Bennett just gave her a nervous half smile and busied
himself with his beer. "They'd have torn us up for arse-paper anyway,"
he said quietly.
That was one of Shan's eloquent assessments of threat.
Lindsay wondered if that was where Bennett had picked up the phrase;
he'd taken a lot of ribbing from the detachment about his obvious
affection for Shan. But she doubted it had gone further than a thought.
Shan was too focused and too unforgiving to do anything as messy or
weakly human as screwing a subordinate. No personal discipline.
That was Shan's verdict when she found out Lindsay was unexpectedly
pregnant. The comment still hurt.
"So you're not immortal, then," Lindsay said. Bennett's
expression was blank. She tried again. "You haven't picked up
Frankland's biotech."
"None of us have."
"They're not leaving any stone unturned."
"I thought as much." Suddenly his expression wasn't
I'm-a-simple-soldier, the studied lack of political art that he
normally wore. Faint lines creased the bridge of his nose. "So you're
coming back to Bezer'ej with us."
"Sorry?"
"I wasn't told not to tell
you, Boss."
Shan dropped that sort of oblique information a lot
better. But Bennett had made his point, however inelegantly. It was
clear he didn't like keeping things from her, and Lindsay struggled to
think of some way to repay that loyalty. He'd answer a direct question
from a superior officer.
"Okay, what return trip to Bezer'ej, Ade?"
"We've been tasked to find a backdoor route back to the
surface if the front door approach doesn't work."
"To do what, exactly?"
"Retrieve samples."
"What samples? And if you manage to get down to the
surface without being blown to kingdom come, how are you going to get
off again?"
"Haven't got down to that level of detail yet, and I'm
not sure that extracting us features in the CO's plans."
"Let's talk about the samples. What? Where?"
"Colony."
"Jesus, you can't just walk into Constantine and ask
them for specimens, Ade. You'll have wess'har all over you like a rash.
The colonists don't want us there either, remember."
Bennett said nothing. He looked embarrassed and stared
down into his beer. He might have had a modest education, but he was no
fool. Oh God. He's trying to tell me
something.
She waited for him to look up again and reveal what he
was struggling with, but he just kept his eyes down. He said colony, not colonists.
"Spit it out, Ade."
"Exhumation," he said.
It was another word she never thought he used. He
probably thought it was a kind way to say it.
There was only one body buried at Constantine; the
colonists preferred to leave their dead for consumption by
rock-velvets, the slow and beautiful black sheets of plush tissue that
lived on carrion. She hadn't wanted that end for David. Aras had made a
stained glass memorial to stand at her son's grave.
"I'm sorry, Boss," said Bennett. "I thought you ought
to know."
The harder Lindsay tried not to hear, the less she
could see of the black and yellow chevrons of a fire escape hatch on
which she had fixed her gaze. She couldn't feel her stomach or legs.
What little progress she had made through her grief was now reversed
and she was staring over a precipice.
"Why?" She wasn't sure if she had actually said the
words aloud. "Why dig up my baby? For God's sake, can't they--"
"They're just checking everyone they can get to who
might have been contaminated," said Bennett kindly. "Honestly, they
really haven't a clue what it is or where they can find it, other than
Superintendent Frankland and maybe Aras. Neither of them is going to
hand out samples."
The chevrons assumed a more normal focus but Lindsay
was still fixed on them. She had to control this. She could not
fall apart now.
"They seem convinced about accidental contamination as
a vector," she said. She fell back on dispassionate words to buffer the
pain. "Come on. Let's work this through. What do we know?"
"Hugel says she called it a plague. And nobody who
knows Shan would buy the idea that she'd carry biotech for money."
He'd slipped and called her Shan. Lindsay noticed, but
she was more preoccupied with replaying the painful memory of the last
time she had seen Shan. She'd been screaming at her, demanding to know
why she hadn't used whatever she had to save David, to help. And Shan's
refusal came back to her--measured, detached, the words of a copper
giving a relative the bad news. I have an infection. It would
run riot in the general population.
Shan might just have been lying, of course, but Lindsay
doubted it. If she had set up anything, she would have also set up a
route to hand over the biotech or whatever it was to her masters. She
wasn't a woman who left things to chance. But she was stranded, in
exile among aliens. No, she hadn't planned this.
Lindsay shook herself out of it. She forced a smile. It
hurt so much she thought Bennett might hear her tearing apart inside.
"Let's have another beer, Ade."
"I'm so sorry. I really am. It's sick. We could refuse,
Boss, really we could."
"No, we'll do it," she said. The pain fell away: the
shivering ice in her gut was starting to feel like a comfort, a beacon.
"We'll do more than that. We'll actually find whatever this is. And
when we do, we won't be handing it over to any corporation. This isn't
a recreational drug. This is a weapon."
Bennett hadn't finished his beer. He liked his beer,
she knew, so he wasn't enjoying being the bearer of bad news.
"Commander Okurt will rip me a new one for telling you."
"You leave me to worry about him." She gave his arm a
squeeze, another little familiarity that wasn't allowed between ranks.
He stared at her hand as if it had burned him. "One way or another,
he's letting me in on this."
Lindsay managed to maintain her collected façade until
she got back to the cabin she shared with the civilian engineer
overseeing the construction of the habitat at Jejeno. Natalie Cho
wasn't there. She heaved herself onto her bunk, pulled down the
soundproofed shutter, and let go of the sobbing that had been
threatening to overwhelm her for the last half hour.
The cabin was the only available accommodation for a
woman, short of putting her in with the female ratings, and they would
have liked that even less than she would. Natalie wasn't all that
enthusiastic about sharing either. The two women retreated to the
privacy of the sealed bunks if they happened to have downtime that
coincided.
Pulling down the shutter felt like sealing the lid on
her own coffin. She put her palm against the bulkhead to reassure
herself that it wasn't pressing down on her, and the aftershock of Ade
Bennett's revelation struck her yet again. They were so desperate for
this bloody biotech that they would even dig up her son's body, just in
case. They would dig him up without even telling her. Her baby.
Lindsay tried to stifle the sobs. But nobody could hear
her behind that shutter anyway. She wondered whether Shan wept in
private too, or whether her police duties had numbed her emotions so
much that she had no tears left for anyone, even behind closed doors.
Lindsay could picture her in any number of situations; but she could
never conjure up an image of Shan grieving or consumed by fear or even
overwhelmed by love.
And that was what she
would have to emulate. She would have to be Shan, and put aside normal
humanity, and just get the job done.
A switch had been thrown somewhere inside Lindsay. The
biotech had at first seemed wonderful, capable of being harnessed for
its medical benefits. Then it had quickly grown into a commodity she
resented pursuing; and now it had emerged as a monstrous threat that
made men and women--normal people--abandon
all decency.
The wess'har seemed to be able to take breathtaking
technology in their stride without taking Pandora's box, upending it,
and shaking every last woe and demon out of it. She'd hoped humanity
might have grown up too, but it hadn't.
It was a weapon, a costly privilege, a bringer of
social chaos. It was everything Shan had said it was. Lindsay
understood why Shan wouldn't hand it over, not even for a child's life.
It didn't lessen the grief or the pain one bit, but she finally
understood that it was the only choice the woman had.
Lindsay wondered whether Shan had agonized over the
decision or acted without a single flicker of emotion. It didn't
matter. Lindsay almost sympathized now.
But that didn't matter either. It simply meant that
now--even more than ever--she had to kill and destroy Shan Frankland.
The construction of the biosphere at Jejeno had
given Eddie a break from endless shots of isenj buildings. News Desk
had really liked the urban dystopia theme because it was alien: alien
was big at the moment, apparently. The viewing figures were at an
all-time high. Nobody cared why as long as they stayed that way.
He let the bee-cam wander round the construction site
getting charming shots of isenj laborers and suited humans working
together to lay foundations. He wondered how many isenj had been
displaced to create this free space in a city where space was the
scarcest resource.
"Several thousand," said Serrimissani, translating the
bubbling and chittering of an isenj worker. "And all happy to move,
because humans will be valuable friends." Move where? Eddie
mentally conjured up the shot of Umeh from the orbital station and
could recall only a few patches on the planet that looked unpopulated.
They were deserts and ice plains. But then isenj were as physically
adaptable as cockroaches--
He wished he hadn't thought that, not in those terms.
Not cockroaches. It was biologically true
and ethically unacceptable.
"Can I talk to the site foreman about materials?" he
said, and shook himself out of his liberal guilt. He ambushed a
civilian steering a loader laden with bales of translucent green rope
at a sedate pace along a path where the foundations had already set
hard. "Hey, is this the plumbing?"
The bee-cam danced attendance round the driver's head.
She was making a valiant effort not to look directly at it. "It's the
deckhead," she said, bobbing her head slightly as if dodging imaginary
bullets. "The roof. We web the lines across the framework and apply
some chemical and current, and bang, it spreads out in a film and seals
the dome."
"When's that due to happen? Can I get some shots of
that?"
The driver pointed towards a man in a vivid orange
coverall. "Ask the foreman," she said. Then she leaned a little further
towards him. "Look, this biotech thing that woman's carrying. Is it
true that it makes you live forever?"
"I wouldn't know," Eddie replied, rather too fast. "And
if it did, the likes of us wouldn't be able to afford it, would we?"
"Yeah," said the driver. But her expression said that
she thought it might be worth saving up for.
Eddie shook off the dull burn in his gut that mention
of Shan's little refinements always seemed to give him lately. It was
one more weight on the scale of burdensome knowledge that was
disturbing his sleep: he hadn't yet mentioned Here-ward
to Lindsay. If she knew about it, then she hadn't traded information
with him as they'd both agreed they would. But if she hadn't known
about Rayat, then it was possible that she might have been out of the
loop completely. He'd give her the benefit of the doubt for the time
being.
Eddie concentrated on being busy. A full schedule of
filming for the next few days always made him feel purposeful and
alive. Not that he cared if News Desk thought he was slacking, of
course. Boy Editor was no longer pressing him on biotech stories: Eddie
had heard that there were people who really, really wanted knowledge of
it to stay off the air until they had managed to secure it for
themselves. Time was when nobody, not even governments, could get away
with leaning on BBChan. Times had obviously changed.
He cadged a lift back to the back to the grounded
shuttle and sweet-talked the pilot into letting him have a comms
channel to watch the news. His news.
"You see your own material when you edit it," she said,
as if she were going to put up a verbal fight. "Why'd you want to see
it broadcast as well?"
"It's more real when it's broadcast."
"Yeah."
"And I want to see if they've hacked it about."
She considered him carefully. "Okay."
Eddie tended to lose track of Earth time zones even
though he had several clock displays set on the editing screen he
carried with him. He unrolled it to check: he was early for the evening
European bulletin. The pilot made a "wow" noise at the sight of the
near obsolete tech and peered at it as if it were a valuable antique,
which--when he finally got home--it probably would be, if it hadn't had
PROPERTY OF BBCHAN coded into every
component.
Eddie caught the tail end of a call-in debate instead.
A man in a suit (and they never changed with time, he noted) was being
interrupted by an angry taxpayer.
"They're going to overrun us," said the caller, his
irate face framed in an insert in the corner of the screen. "You've
seen the reports on the news. Just take a look at what their own
planet's like. And you're letting them land here?"
"I can assure you--" the suit began, but he was shouted
down by the studio audience. Global comms or not, nothing could equal
the collective anger of humans in the same room within sniffing range
of each other's pheromones. Eddie was glad to see that some old TV
formulas had survived. The interviewer struggled to restore some sort
of order, but even with the bee-mikes in the studio silenced, Eddie
could still pick up the clamor of voices. The trails for upcoming shows
were already running in the icon slot on the screen.
"I think they were talking about our generous hosts,"
said the pilot.
"I think you're right," said Eddie. "I don't need to
see the news now, thanks."
He rolled up his screen and slipped it into his pocket.
He was experiencing the first few seconds after a car crash, when
something had been done that could not be undone, however much it
wasn't your fault, and however strongly you willed time to run back.
"Window," he said, and the pilot looked at him as if he
were mad.
This isn't an
issue solely for the European and Sinostates governments. Who consulted
the people of the Pacific Rim, or the Americas, or Africa when the
invitation was made to the isenj? In exchange for the bauble of instant
communications over stellar distances, one arrogant alliance may have
handed over the Earth. They attempt to shame us into silence by
accusing us of xenophobia: but sometimes you have to say, "My people
come first, and I will not apologize for that."
JEAN ARLENE,
President, African Assembly
Asajin was dead. Mestin hadn't known her
well but she noted her disposal with regret. Her four jurej've
walked through the fields carrying the dhren-wrapped body on a
pallet and Mestin's
heart went out to them. Other wess'har who were harvesting yellow-leaf
stopped and glanced before going about their business.
Mestin was managing F'nar the only way she knew, by
walking about the city, seeing what was happening and what people were
saying, with Nevyan and Siyyas at her heels. She was conscious that it
was a theoretical hierarchy and that there was no true hormonal
dominance to warrant the two junior matriarchs bothering to defer to
her: she was only dominant because a gethes--unpredictable,
unfathomable Shan Frankland--had ceded her rights. The common good
would
hold a consensus together, but Mestin worried that she would lack the jask,
the ferociously protective decisiveness,
to make the right choices in a true crisis.
She was not afraid of her peers turning on her. She was
afraid of failure. Failure was something she felt Wess'ej would not be
able to afford in the coming years.
Mestin stared after the sad little party disappearing
into the shimmering amber heat haze. The males would leave their dead isan
out on the plain for the real gethes, the many native species
that ate dead
flesh, and come back to face an uncertain future.
"Who will take them?" she asked. Asajin had died
earlier that morning and it was high time other matriarchs came forward
to give homes to the children and oursan
to the males. Nobody liked splitting up a family. It was a difficult
calculation to work out which male would fit in best to which
household. Once they were mated again, it would be all harmony and
contentment but there was a brief, awkward time when matriarchs would
ponder over which genetic qualities they might add to the family mix.
Mestin thought they had better be quick about it. The
males looked in poor condition, dull-skinned and lacking a decent sheen
to their hair. Asajin had been ill for some time; her jurej've
had not had the frequency of oursan they needed to stay fit.
The youngest
one, still suckling a child, looked worst of all.
"I will," said Nevyan.
Mestin thought of stopping and arguing with her
daughter but decided against it. "What's in them that you would add to
the clan, then?"
"It's more that they're in need of an isan,"
Nevyan said. "And if I'm to follow you
one day, then I must learn duty."
Nevyan had never shown signs of bonding with any junior
male in particular, and there had been much speculation about what she
was looking for in a jurej. Mestin had
always thought another shot of genes from the confident Fersanye clan
would have done the line no end of good, as well as cementing a clan
bond. But Nevyan had to make her own choices.
Siyyas said nothing. There was no scent at all to add a
silent comment on the conversation; and Siyyas was not the isan
her sharp-minded, perceptive aunt the
matriarch-historian Siyyas Bur was. So much for genetics, Mestin
thought.
"Most considerate, not to break up a family," said
Mestin. However warmly the males and their children would be welcomed
into new clans, separating house-brothers was painful. Establishing a
household anew with an unmated isan was a
pragmatic and compassionate move. It wasn't what she had wanted for
Nevyan, but she was proud of her. Nevyan would one day make far better
choices for F'nar than she ever could.
"I can join them in Asajin's home," Nevyan said. "There's no purpose
in taking them from the environment they know. What
will Shan make of this? It would be good for her to learn how things
are done here."
Mestin did then stop and turn. Her daughter was leaving
home, in a sentence, in a decision taken as they strolled around the
city. She was accepting four new husbands and their children, males she
hardly knew. But that was irrelevant because once they had mated and
the oursan bond had been formed, wess'har
biochemistry would ensure that they would be what she wanted and would
defend against all threats. And they would consider her their perfect isan
for the rest of their lives.
From what Mestin knew of gethes,
she didn't think Shan Frankland would understand it at all.
"Why does it matter to you what Shan Frankland thinks?"
It wasn't a challenge: Mestin was genuinely curious. Nevyan had given
the woman a dhren, but that wouldn't make
a matriarch out of a gethes. "Do you need
her approval?"
"She has characteristics we'll all need in the years to
come," said Nevyan.
"You can't acquire them by oursan."
"Then I'll learn them by observation."
The thought of Frankland becoming a cousin-by-mating
wasn't as distasteful as Mestin imagined. She couldn't think of any of
her jurej've who would agree to the act of
oursan with an alien, with or without c'naatat, but the
human definitely had an edge
that spoke of a capacity for survival.
It was a pity not to be able to absorb those genes into
the clans.
They waited in silence, watching for the return of the
former jurej've of Asanjin Selit Giyadas,
who would be surprised to find themselves accepted wholesale into the
household of Nevyan Tan Mestin but would accept it and--eventually--be
completely happy with the arrangement. The males came back into view,
almost appearing to reform into solidity from fragments shattered by
the mirage of hot summer air. They were walking faster now. One carried
the pallet; another clutched the dhren and
other fabric.
There was no point wasting good textiles. Even the
colonists of Constantine spared the rockvelvets the extra task of
digesting the clothes of their dead. They had that much in common.
Nevyan suddenly exuded a cloud of anxiety. Mestin
wanted to hold her and comfort her, but the uncertainty was something
her child had to face. And now she becomes an
isan. She wouldn't be coming home tonight. It was a cause for
rejoicing. By the morning, she wouldn't miss her family. She would be
immersed in a new reality.
Mestin thought humans would all have been a lot happier
if their copulation resulted in the stable bond that oursan
ensured wess'har. Fersanye, who was more
scientifically minded, said their promiscuity was a consequence of
their need to propagate their genes through offspring. Mestin decided
it was part of their innate greed to always have something extra, and
preferably something that belonged to someone else.
She wondered if Shan Frankland had some of that sexual
acquisitiveness in her. C'naatat would be
a hard lesson for her if she had.
Marine Ismat Qureshi had rigged a temporary
securing bar across the hatch that separated the Kilo deck cargo area
from rest of Actaeon.
It made Lindsay feel better. There was no indication on
any safety repeater or state-board to say that the hatch was locked.
The bar simply stopped anyone walking in on them. She wanted to
brainstorm this plan to infiltrate Bezer'ej in private, without
observers, and without Okurt realizing she was maneuvering into a
position where he had to allow her to lead the mission.
She stared at the flaccid bag of fabric on the deck and
tried to get the idea straight in her mind. And the Royal Marines were
all staring at her: Barencoin, Bennett, Qureshi, Chahal, Webster and
Becken, all Extreme Environment Warfare Cadre, all relaxed, all
apparently unconcerned by the nightmare lying at her feet.
"Dear God," she said. She prodded it with her boot. It
was a white, man-sized quilt: it looked like fabric, but it acted like
a gel pack. When the fabric moved, the surface rippled with embedded
softglass, throwing up slow billows of black like oil welling through
milk. There was one totally black area that showed small currents of
white when she kicked it gently. It reminded her rather unpleasantly of
a bull's-eye target.
It certainly didn't look much like transport.
Qureshi, leaning against the hatch as if her slight
weight would add to the bar's effectiveness, folded her arms. "We never
said it was comfortable, ma'am."
It was a Once-Only suit.
Lindsay knew how they worked, more or less, but she had
hoped never to test one. There were far better ways to escape a
stricken vessel and far more efficient lifeboats, but ships kept a few
of the suits stowed away on board just in case. And it really was the
absolute, final, last of last resorts. It
was bailout when all else failed.
Its design dated from the first days of manned space
flight. Even the name was borrowed from another primitive emergency
escape suit that mariners had used centuries before.
And it looked it.
"So you just zip yourself into this bag."
"No, you put your spacesuit on before you get in. Then
you pull the pin and the insulating foam fills the inner skin."
"Oh, that's totally reassuring. And then
I plummet towards the planet?"
"We like to think of it as guided descent," said
Bennett. "You can steer and orientate."
"Forgive me, but I'm still thinking of it as getting
into a glorified sleeping bag and dropping into empty space from orbit.
High orbit."
"You've done your pilot training," said Qureshi. "If
you've parachuted and ejected, this isn't that much worse. Not really."
"Have you done this?"
Qureshi nodded, looking bemused, as if everyone did a
spot of free-fall through a planet's atmosphere now and then. Extreme
environment commandos did. "We've all done it from a hundred kay,
anyway. It doesn't make you feel any more sick than a spacewalk. More
or less."
"I seem to recall something about reaching supersonic
velocity," said Lindsay.
"Correct," said Chahal. "And we're all alive to tell
the tale."
Lindsay chewed her lip thoughtfully. "I don't need to
point out that this thing doesn't take off again, do I?"
"That's why they call it a Once-Only," said Bennett,
and Lindsay wasn't sure if he was being stolidly literal or sarcastic.
"But I have an idea for that too."
"Go ahead."
"The colony ship. Christopher.
They said they mothballed it, remember?"
"You reckon it's feasible?"
"Maybe not the vessel itself, not without a lot of
prep, but it's still got a couple of tillies." It was an odd archaic
word for a runabout vehicle, and Bennett was the only one who used it
to mean shuttles. "And they're built to start first time. So we land,
do the biz, and shoot through. Job done."
"Provided we don't land looking like barbecue
briquettes."
Bennett joined in the ritual boot-prodding of the
crumpled suit. "I know it looks like liquid, ma'am, but once it's
activated, it's a heat-shield--all that black and white stuff
automatically positions itself where you need it, black stuff to burn
off at the hot-spots, white stuff to deflect all round. As long as you
get shot of it as fast as you can once you land, it's as safe as
houses."
Lindsay's image was of houses falling down in
disrepair, then hard landings in a soft suit. "Why do you need to dump
the shield?"
"Because it goes on getting hotter after you've landed,
ma'am." Bennett's expression was silent wonder at how she ever made
commander. "A lot hotter. Remember you're
coming in through atmosphere."
"Oh," said Lindsay. She thought of the suit moving
patches of black and white stuff around,
unbidden. "At least I'll plunge to my doom looking like art."
Wherever they were planning to land, whatever their
task at the end of it, the Once-Only was the most stealthy system they
had. Actaeon hadn't come equipped for
covert missions. But she had come with
plenty of ordnance, even if she hadn't been expecting to deal with a
massively equipped wess'har defense force.
The armory held a lot of what Chahal called "insurance
ordnance"--tactical nukes, neuts, emergency BNOs, chems, FAEs, and even
ultra-yield conventionals, and plenty of interesting modes to deploy
them together. On Earth that made you a world power; out here it would
just irritate the wess'har for a few hours. And there were no resupply
chains twenty-five light-years from home.
Lindsay rubbed her forehead. "Okay. You do this all the
time. I don't."
Bennett appeared to be watching her calculate the odds. "If we were
going to land, ma'am, that's our only
way past their defnet. It's the smallest possible profile." He was
trying hard to convince her. "We've removed all the survival kit to
make room for--well, whatever we tool up with."
"I prefer to work backwards from objectives," Lindsay
said. She knew damn well what her objectives were now. The problem was
what objectives she would have to feign to get the hardware, personnel
and access she needed to get within killing range of Shan.
There was also the small matter of what it would
actually take to kill the woman. She had no idea. It wasn't a bullet,
silver or otherwise. If the miraculous survival of Shan's alien friend
was anything to go by, it wasn't a serious crash either.
"I can see one small snag," said Lindsay.
"What?" asked Bennett.
"How do we get into orbit around Bezer'ej for the drop
without triggering the wess'har defnet? It's going to take a shuttle,
and the shuttle is bigger than the isenj fighters. That means they will
see us coming."
"Thought of that," said Webster. "Maiale."
"I'm lost now."
"Chariots. Means pig in Italian. Um…1939 to 1945 World
War? Ring any bells, ma'am?"
"Bennett's the history man, not me."
"They were like torpedoes, one-or two-man submarine
transport to ferry diver commandos around. They sat astride them.
Quicker than swimming to the target." Webster was an inventive woman.
"So we use a powered tow to take us the final leg from the shuttle to
the point where we use the suits' systems to descend. That gives us
longer on oxygen before we're drawing on the suit's supply. We can
adapt one of the small cargo tugs to pull us in, maybe with extra O2.
We're talking a total load of maybe two to three thousand kilos. That's
doable. Chaz and I have modeled it a few times."
They all called each other by harmless kids' nicknames:
Chaz, Izzy, Barkers. They weren't harmless at all. Lindsay tried to
visualize speeds and distances. "Well that sounds like even more fun.
And if we land, and achieve our objective, how do we get out through
the defnet again?"
"It's a gamble," said Chahal. "But I suspect it looks
for incoming, not outgoing, and if these vessels were allowed to land
on Bezer'ej in the first place, chances are it's tagged them as
friendly anyway."
"And if you're wrong?"
"Then we're fucked, ma'am, but at least we won't know
much about it." This was my idea, Lindsay
thought. I must be out of my skull. "If
you're all up for it--"
The hatch juddered against the metal bar Qureshi had
jammed across it. Then there was silence.
"Who is it?" Lindsay yelled. The marines gathered up
the Once-Only suit with smooth efficiency and bundled it into the
nearest locker. Lindsay walked slowly up to the hatch and nodded at
Qureshi to release the magnetic clamp.
The hatch swung open. It was Mohan Rayat.
There were things you thought you would say when you
caught up with someone like Rayat. Lindsay hadn't rehearsed them quite
as often as she had various denouements with Shan, but she thought
she'd have a line. She didn't.
"Dr. Rayat," she said. "Anything we can do for you?"
She had always wanted him to look like a weasel caught
in headlights, but he didn't. He could meet her eyes, which she thought
was the confidence of a man at ease with being a total shit.
"I think we can do something for each other," he said. "Am I
interrupting something?"
"Training," she said.
The marines stood around in that
I'm-relaxed-but-I-could-turn-nasty pose that Rayat seemed to provoke.
Qureshi looked especially hostile. Maybe her leg was playing her up,
and she still blamed Rayat for causing the skirmish where she acquired
the wound. Rayat didn't look as if he was leaving of his own accord.
"If you have a point to make, then make it," said
Lindsay. "We're busy."
Rayat stared pointedly at Qureshi. "It's a confidential
matter."
"There's nothing I keep from the detachment," said
Lindsay, and knew it was an empty gesture. "If I can hear it, so can
they."
"All right, we have a mutual objective."
"I don't think so."
"Based on what premise?"
"You work for a pharmaceutical corporation and we work
for our country. No mutuality there, I suspect."
Rayat shrugged. "Actually, I'm paid by the Federal
European Treasury."
"You work for Warrenders."
"I imagine they think so too. Anyway, Warrenders ceased
trading about ten years ago. Takeover by Holbein."
Lindsay wished once again that she had Shan's quick,
savage tongue. "I wouldn't believe you if you told me what time it
was," she managed. But he had been revived for a reason, and before the
others: she doubted if it was for health screening. They could have
done that without reviving anybody at all, she was certain. Whatever it
was, Rayat needed to be conscious for it, and the rest of the party had
been revived to preserve the story or…she wasn't sure what else. She
almost didn't want to imagine.
"I'm sure you're capable of carrying out security
checks," Rayat said calmly. "Confirm what I've said and then get back
to me. We both want to secure whatever Frankland's carrying for our own
government, and I need the means of access, and you need my technical
expertise."
"Why would we need a pharmacologist, exactly?"
"That's not my only area of expertise."
It was very easy to say absolutely nothing while Rayat
turned and stepped back through the hatch. She couldn't think of a
single damned word. Qureshi barred the hatch behind him again.
The Treasury? What the
hell would the Treasury want with that biotech, let alone Rayat?
"Do you know, I wouldn't even like that bloke as pet
food," said Becken. "You believe him, ma'am?"
"I'll check," said Lindsay.
"How did he know what we've been tasked with?" asked
Qureshi. There's no such thing as
confidential. Another fragment of Shan's rough-and-ready
political analysis surfaced in Lindsay's memory. "Either Warrenders or
Holbein or whoever are better informed than we think, or the Defense
Ministry is talking to the Treasury."
"Yes, but are they telling each other the truth?" said
Bennett.
There were always divisions within governments, between
departments, onion-skinned and Byzantine, sometimes openly hostile and
sometimes waging covert cold wars with each other. If Rayat was telling
the truth about his paymaster, Lindsay still couldn't assume they were
all on the same side.
She went back to her cabin to barricade herself in her
bunk and ponder the missing elements of her puzzle. Treasury?
It had to be a patents thing. The
biotech would be a massively profitable commodity. Governments needed
revenue: there was only so much tax you could levy on an aging
population and companies that could up sticks and move to a cheaper tax
zone at will, leaving more unemployment in their wake.
But they could have secured ownership through the
Defense Ministry. Why did they need Rayat? Why wasn't he talking
directly to Okurt instead of her? It had to be another of his scams.
It was the sort of puzzle that Shan Frankland would
have shaken apart in no time at all. It was a complete sod, as Becken
would say, that Lindsay couldn't ask her to help her plan her own
destruction.
The little red swiss sat on the table and Aras
wondered if he dared pick it up again.
He didn't know humans at all. He was certain of that
now.
Shan always carried the instrument even though it
couldn't link with any of the data devices on Wess'ej. She said its
blades, probes and various devices were still useful. Aras suspected
she carried it much as little Rachel Garrod had clutched a frayed piece
of her baby blanket until she was five, and nobody could part her from
it. Given the material that was stored in the swiss, he found Shan's
attachment to it disturbing. He would have wanted to throw it as far
from him as possible and never look into it again.
It wasn't just the file on the men who made
entertainment of suffering women, children and animals. There was more
deviance and misery in Shan's files than he could take in at one
sitting. There were people who tortured their own children to death, or
raped them; there were those who mutilated total strangers for
unfathomable reasons; and there were so many different forms of murder
that he simply stopped running the files long before he got to the
robberies and thefts and frauds and something called public
disorder.
Shan had done many different things in her career. She
told him they moved police officers from department to department
frequently, because there were some duties that could destroy you in
time. Aras wondered if it was already too late for her. He laid the
swiss down on the table.
He knew humans did most of those things. But crime had
been historic generality in Constantine's archives. It hadn't been the
personal and detailed experience of a woman he knew and cared about. He
thought of Mjat, and although that had been a terrible time, it was
exceptional: it was also necessary. He hadn't done it for amusement or
because he had abdicated responsibility for his actions. The wess'har
in him said motive didn't matter, but his human influence said it
mattered very much indeed.
Eventually he picked up the swiss again and opened
files at random on its fragile bubble screen. There was very little in
there that told him anything personal about Shan Frankland. He found
some music and a few images of what appeared to be comrades of hers in
dark uniforms, laughing and shouting, brandishing glasses of yellow
foaming liquid at whoever was recording the image. There was nothing
that looked like family or lovers. There were a lot of lists too: lists
of tasks to complete, and lists of names and numbers.
Then it struck him that it told him exactly what she
was. What wasn't in there hadn't happened, or hadn't mattered to her.
Aras now knew what the flames in his dreams were. Riots. He
was astonished that she and others had
to deal with them face-to-face, with only a transparent shield and
small weapons. It was war: the obvious response was to wipe out the
source population completely and stop the threat for all time. But
humans seemed not to want to find absolute ends to their problems.
Shan's footsteps outside grew louder, distinctive and
unlike anyone else's in F'nar. He put the swiss down and waited for her
to open the door. She had stormed out angry, and he expected her to
return in the same state because she seemed to be perpetually irritated
lately. An angry isan was something that
still made him cower. Whatever c'naatat
had made of him, he would always be at his core a wess'har male, a
provider and a carer and a seeker of approval, nothing without an isan
to focus upon.
The door made a slight sigh of air as it opened. Shan
came up behind him, smelling of no emotion in particular--just
pleasantly female--and put her hands on his shoulders and squeezed
gently. He held his breath. It wasn't the sort of gesture he had come
to expect from her at all.
"Sorry," she said quietly. "I don't normally lose my
rag like that."
No anger, then. Aras had no idea whether to reach up
and clasp her hands or just sit very, very still. Eventually he slid
one hand up from his lap and placed it over hers. She didn't react.
"You've seen some very ugly things," he said. "I think
I understand your reaction."
She made a small puff of contempt. "Why didn't you tell
me what happened to you as a POW?" She pronounced it pee-oh-double-you,
a phrase he had never heard said aloud, but he knew what it meant.
"I've got your memories. They're…well…"
"I tried. You were preoccupied with c'naatat
at the time."
"I'm sorry. Really I am. I had no idea. I would have
handled things a bit more sensitively."
"I have your memories too. Riots. You were truly
frightened of the petrol bombs."
"Yeah." She shifted slightly. "That's the problem with
a transparent shield. You see the flames hit. However many times it
happened, I never lost the feeling I was going to shit myself. I
suppose the most vivid memories surface first." Suddenly she slid her
hand free of his and stepped back, as if she'd woken up to something
she was doing in a dream. "I'm sorry if I've added to your problems."
"I think we're even. Is that the right phrase?"
"Very apt. What else is bubbling up?"
"I find lot of regret and anger. And violence, much of
which you don't regret."
"Now you know me for what I am, then."
"I have no difficulties with that. Do you?"
"It's what I had to do," she said. "Come on. Cup of
tea. That'll sort anything out." She took
her precious supply of dried tea from the shelf and put some water to
boil on the range. "Kind of you to plant the tea bushes, by the way.
Some bloke down in the fields showed them to me. I don't think he meant
to spoil the surprise."
"There are some things you seem to need in order to be
happy. I'll obtain them for you if I can."
"Are you happy, Aras?"
"I find F'nar a difficult place to be."
Shan paused with the jug in one hand and the glass jar
of broken dead leaves in the other. She looked unusually soft and sad
for once. For a moment he thought he might ask the one question that
had been on his mind, whether he liked it or not, for the last few
weeks. No. It wasn't fair. She couldn't
even tell what she was picking up on his scent. She mistook it for
anxiety.
"How do wess'har react when you tell them what happened
to you?" she asked.
"I've never told them. Not the details."
"Why not?"
"Embarrassment. Shame."
"Have you never told anyone?"
"No. There are too many things I wouldn't want them to
know."
"That's not very wess'har."
"Neither am I."
"Look, I'm going to live out most of it in my head
anyway, aren't I? You need to get it out of your system. Tell me."
"I did shameful things." It wasn't that he didn't want
her to know. He didn't want to hear himself say it. "Things I regret."
"We all have. Jesus, you know
what I've done. We can swap horror stories later. Come on. I need to
hear everything."
She said everything, and so he took her at her word.
Wess'har were nothing if not literal. He glanced at her swiss, still
propped on the table, and noted the time when he started. Shan seemed
to be struggling to keep her eyes focused on his and from time to time
she blinked rapidly. She was still holding the jar in one hand.
The isenj were not especially inventive torturers
compared to humans but they made up for a lack of originality with
persistence. Aras described flayings and brandings and beatings. He
described broken bones and asphyxiation and freezing. It was random and
angry violence rather than a strategy calculated to achieve an end,
just outpourings of communal rage concentrated on one man, the
destroyer of Mjat, because they couldn't get at the whole wess'har
race. But she had seen it, and experienced it, and that somehow made it
far easier to pour out a history he had kept secret for generations.
He didn't break down until he described his attempts at
hunger strikes and how they'd force-fed him.
"They made me eat flesh," he said. His throat was
closing, tightening, thinning out the overtones from his voice. He
envied humans their ability to surrender totally to sobbing, but
wess'har couldn't weep.
"Is that what hurt you most?" said Shan. Her voice was
hoarse. "Is that your shame, Aras?"
"Yes."
"Wess'har flesh?"
"No."
It had been meat--animal meat. It was only a small
concern to gethes, but not to wess'har. He
raised his eyes from the swiss, where he had been focusing his
concentration, and looked at Shan.
Their combined scents of agitation were too
overwhelming for him to pick out any cues and all he had to go by was
her facial expression. But she just looked surprised. He wondered if it
was shared revulsion, but it wasn't; she simply could not see why that
had gnawed at his conscience for so many years.
It wounded him. Surely she of all humans would
understand why it was a terrible, disgusting thing to live with. Any
wess'har would. It was why he could never tell them.
He checked the chronometer on the swiss. He had been
talking without pause for nearly two hours.
"You didn't have a choice," she said. No, there was no
revulsion there at all. She might have been exceptional, but her
instincts were still gethes. "You didn't
kill to eat, and you didn't give the isenj information. There's nothing
to be ashamed of." She put down the jar and took his hands in hers.
"What do you need to hear, Aras?"
"I don't understand."
"What would you most like to have someone say to you
now, and mean it, to make you feel better about yourself?"
His jaw worked uncertainly. And there was Ben Garrod in
his head again, Josh's first ancestor, talking of sin
and repentance and forgiveness.
Ben said Aras needed to repent for things like Mjat, but he thought of
the bezeri and couldn't find that in himself at all. But there was a
vivid taste of death in his mouth, not from Mjat so much as the
anonymous being whose flesh had been forced into his mouth.
"I want to be forgiven," he said at last. "Ben Garrod
said his god could do that."
"I don't think his god's going to be able to get back
to you any time soon," she said quietly. "So I'll do it. I forgive you,
Aras Sar Iussan. Now let it go." She tidied his hair back from his face
where a few strands had worked loose from his braid. "Where I come
from, you'd be a hero."
"Not being able to die isn't heroism. And I had no
information to give the isenj, so there's no glory in that." He felt a
little better now. "Anyway, as you might say, the things they did to me
made me stronger. They tried to drown me, and my c'naatat
adapted me, and now I can walk under water with the bezeri."
"Did your people try to rescue you?"
"No. The isenj liked to say that even savages like them
went back for their own."
That revelation really did appear to distress her. Her
pupils grew wide and black. "God, you people have an incredibly
ruthless streak. Even by my standards."
"Perhaps now you understand why I wish you hadn't made
yourself available to the matriarchs. You'll be used."
"Hey, I've worked for politicians before.
Twenty-four-carat grade A liars and megalomaniacs. You think your
matriarchs can top that? Piece of piss, believe me."
"No, it won't be." He'd worked out that dismissal of
difficulty from its context. "And I know you dislike being told you
don't understand, but you really don't. Perhaps as more of my memories
filter through, you'll regret volunteering for slavery."
Shan had that pained-patience look that he had seen her
adopt when Lindsay Neville had made errors. "Aras, when you start
getting more of my memories bubbling to
the surface, you'll know what fuels me and why I had no other option."
She paused, jaw muscles twitching, as if she were reluctant to let the
words escape. "And it's not just because I'm attached to you, although
God knows that was near the top of the list. It's responsibility. I
can't walk away when I know I can do something, because I'd tear myself
apart afterwards. I don't have another option."
Yes, he'd known that early on, even before the c'naatat
had snatched components from her blood
and brain and bone and buried them in him. He knew she was angry and
trying very, very hard to be perfect and put the world right for
somebody. Who? He didn't know.
She smelled good. What would happen if she put the
world right for him? Would she fall apart without her impossible
objective, or would she become satisfied with life, undriven, alive for
the moment? No. He needed to stop thinking
that way.
"This is depressing," he said, and stood up. "Work it
off, that's what you say, isn't it? Stay busy."
They went out to the terrace to inspect the
half-finished sofa. Shan shook out the blue material, ahhing in
delight at the color. "Wonderful
peacock blue," she said. To an unaltered human it would have looked
white. "Is this the same stuff dhrens are
made from?"
"No, it won't automatically shape or clean itself. It's
just inert fabric."
"That's the best thing about having some wess'har
genes. Every shade of blue looks more amazing." She gave him a sad
smile, the sort that said she was remembering something else she
regretted. "Yeah, I went completely ballistic when I found my eyesight
had changed, didn't I? I'm really sorry I tore into you."
"I should have told you that I'd infected you instead
of letting you find out for yourself."
"It doesn't matter any more. Don't even think about it."
They worked on the sofa together. It was a very
unwess'har thing, a sofa, but Shan insisted she would adopt any custom
they asked except put up with their hard, unforgiving furniture. The
next item on her list was a mattress. They stretched the fabric taut
over the layers of sek wadding and pinned
it to the frame, then stood back to admire it.
"Chippendale might be spinning in his grave," she said. "But my arse
will be the judge of quality." She sank down into the
cushioned seat and let her head loll back on the padded backboard, eyes
shut. It was as if they had never discussed torture and their shared
nightmares. "Oh. Bliss. This, and a cup of tea, and a good movie.
Heaven."
Aras wasn't sure where he could acquire a good movie.
They sat side by side on the sofa and stared out across the basin of
F'nar, dazzled by the pearl roofs and hazy gold walls. There was the
tinkle of water from the irrigation conduits.
"Lovely," said Shan. She slipped her arm through his.
"Lovely," Aras echoed, and wondered what it was like to
be able to eat other beings and not be scarred by it.
Why have the
humans abandoned our comrades and the isenj on their ship
Thetis? They have not admitted they have done
this, but we know. We fear they plan to harm us, whether by neglect or
active violence. Shall we tell the matriarchs? And if they cannot deal
with the humans, shall we ask the World Before for their aid? The
humans must learn that if you harm one ussissi, you harm us all, and we
will fight.
CALITISSATI,
interpreter to Jejeno consulate,
to F'nar ussissi colony
Mestin's most junior husband, Sevaor, held out
a perfectly amethyst glass bowl as if he expected Shan to take it.
"Mestin will come to you soon," he said. "Drink this
while you wait."
Shan took the cup and peered in. The liquid in it was
speckled with small brown fragments. Whatever it was, it couldn't
poison her and it made sense to accept hospitality.
"An infusion," said Sevaor. He was enchantingly gold,
glittering, wood-scented. "Gethes like
infusions."
"As do I," said Shan, and instantly regretted her
sarcasm. "Thank you."
She sipped. It tasted like turpentine. Sevaor was
standing way too close for her comfort, and she stepped back
discreetly. He closed the gap. She stepped back again.
Wess'har had evolved from burrow-dwelling creatures,
and they didn't just tolerate being crammed together--they seemed to
crave it. Combined with their eye-watering candor, it made them
challenging neighbors.
Shan finished her turpentine tea and stood waiting for
Mestin. They weren't big on seating either. The house rang with the
double-voiced noise of youngsters and adults. She put the glass bowl on
the perilously uneven window ledge and admired the exquisite pools of
lavender light that it cast on the floor. Like the buried colony of
Constantine, the warren of rooms and alleys that made up the terraced
city of F'nar were somehow illuminated by natural light. She still
hadn't found out how they did it.
Mestin strolled in to the lobby with the rolling gait
of an overconfident sailor. All the females seemed to walk like that.
"We go down," she said abruptly, and beckoned Shan to follow her.
And she meant down, too.
Shan followed Mestin down a corridor that ran from the Exchange of
Surplus Things deep into the ground beneath the city, on another field
trip that Mestin assured her would help her fully understand what her
new responsibilities were.
She tried to link the tunneling habit to a species
mind-set. Once you knew that humans were monkeys, things fell into
place. Perhaps she'd get a better insight into the wess'har psyche from
picking the right animal parallel. Maybe badgers, she
thought. Blennies. Kakapo. No, they were
all endearing, appealing. Wess'har were aesthetically attractive, but
they weren't any more cute than the needle-teethed ussissi. Trapdoor
spiders. Yes, that was more like it. Scorpions.
Mestin's Spartan helmet of hair was silhouetted against
the faint light filtering up from the tunnel ahead. Shan followed her
step for step. The lighting rose gently like a sudden sunrise as they
walked through a modest doorway.
"Jesus," said Shan.
Above her head, to both sides of her, and as far as her
eye could see, there were racks and tunnels and recesses. A few were
filled with machinery. For a brief moment she lost her up-down
orientation, like standing in an Escher engraving. She felt cocooned by
a felt-lined silence. There were no echoes at all when she spoke.
Some of the warehoused machines were clearly fighter
craft, the kind she had seen on Bezer'ej, and some appeared industrial.
Others made no sense to her at all. They were simply organic shapes of
differing colors with detail worked into them that could have been
controls. She could read wess'har script now, and that was no easy task
for a human used to orderly lines of characters. The curved side of one
machine bore the apparently random swirls and patches of text,
ideograms strung out in fishbone diagrams and flowcharts. It made
sense--eventually.
The inscription read TEMPLATE
CRAFT.
"Each wess'har city has something like this," said
Mestin. "I think you would call it insurance. And I felt you needed to
see it to understand why we're so alarmed by the gethes."
The underground hangars almost explained how an
apparently agricultural society managed to mount such an impressive
reinforcement of the garrison on Bezer'ej, the Temporary City.
"Where's your industrial capacity? I've seen nothing
but agriculture." Shan reached out and put her hand on the blue-gray
hull nearest to her. It was as clean and impressive as an exhibit in a
military museum. "This takes scale and urbanization."
"You ask interesting questions for a police officer."
"I was planning to be an economist before I was drafted
into the police. Manpower shortage, you see. But I sort of stayed.
Where does this all come from?"
"The World Before."
"I don't understand."
"Our ancestors came to this planet ten thousand years
ago. We did not arrive empty-handed."
If you could ever get used to shocks, then Shan was
becoming accustomed to them. Just as she thought she had a complete
picture of the wess'har, just as she was confident she had the measure
of them, knew them, they would drop a
bombshell into the conversation.
"You never told me you weren't native to this planet,"
she said.
"You never told me you were the descendants of apes."
"It just didn't occur to me."
"Nor me. I brought you down here to show you the
limited defenses at our disposal, not to give you a history lesson."
Mestin walked ahead, glancing from side to side as if she were in a
market doing her shopping. There were enough cans of serious beans here
to make somebody very uncomfortable indeed. "I realize you're not a
soldier, but you can understand force as well as anyone."
"But where do you build these ships?"
"Grow is probably the more
accurate description. Many came with our ancestors and we have modified
them. This is the same base technology as dhren.
But it isn't inexhaustible."
Shan thought of the first time she had metAras. It
hadn't been a happy meeting: her military support team had managed to
shoot down his craft. But he had walked away from the crash--her first
clue that he had an extraordinary physiology. And when she went to
inspect the wrecked metal airframe the next day, it had crumbled and
scattered like dust beneath her boots. It was a rare instance of a
pilot being repaired and the aircraft dying and decomposing. Smart
metals.
And there was Actaeon,
knocking herself out to get hold of c'naatat
when there were these industrial riches to be plundered.
Mestin looked as if she was scanning Shan's face for a
reaction. And? Shan took the hint.
"Are you telling me that you're running out of kit?"
"Correct," said Mestin. "But we can adapt what we still
have to counter the isenj. They're limited by their population
problems. We're limited by the inverse--we are too few. But if you add
an extra enemy to that, you can see our dilemma."
Shan thought of the annihilated, erased, utterly
destroyed city of Mjat that had once stood coast-to-coast on the
wilderness of an island that now housed Constantine. And these
machines--or their originals, anyway--were older than the first human
cities. "You're not doing too badly for your size," she said.
"We will be too thinly stretched if gethes
come in large numbers."
"Well, they won't." They?
Assimilation had ambushed Shan and it hadn't met much resistance.
"Economics meets physics. Too far, too expensive, and too bloody hard
for that much heavy lift. But a few with a foothold in this system
could expand over the years, and you do think long-term, don't you?" "Bloody." In Mestin's
mouth, the word was softened by a chord of multiple notes. "Bloody."
"And then there's the Sarajevo factor. It can take just
one human to destabilize local politics."
"We noticed." Mestin might have been capable of irony,
or she might not. Either way, it stung. "What is Sarajevo?"
"Forget it," said Shan. She felt for a moment that the
whole situation was her fault. If only she had--no, that was stupid.
The
real damage had been done two centuries ago when Constantine was
settled; and contact with the isenj had happened seventy-five years
after she left Earth. Whatever she'd done or hadn't done, it couldn't
have prevented this moment. The two women now stood staring at the
smoothly curved fuselage of a craft that was so gently blue, so much
like the skin of a grape, that Shan imagined it would feel moist and
velvety to her touch.
"So what else can you do?" she asked. "Reclamation
nanites, biobarriers--that implies you have some sort of biological
engineering capability."
Mestin inclined her maned head and looked even more
disturbingly like a Spartan soldier; and Shan now knew that the two
cultures also shared an unforgiving attitude to warfare as well as
their mutual frugality and iron discipline. "Yes, our ancestors were
skilled at bioweapons. We have never used the technology in that
capacity. Not yet."
"Ah," said Shan, mindful of the word yet,
and feeling that she had found the snake in
Eden that Josh always talked about. "But you could."
"Potentially," said Mestin.
They walked a little further down the passage in
silence. Shan reasoned that even snakes were entitled to defend
themselves. But bioweapons went beyond her all-encompassing view that
it didn't matter much how you died in battle. Bioweapons smacked of
secret labs and all the terrible things she knew went on behind locked
doors.
It disturbed her; Mestin must have smelled that,
because she froze.
"Doesn't sound very wess'har, creating bioweapons,"
said Shan. "The ultimate interference with the natural order."
"A weapon of last resort," said Mestin, wafting citrus.
Shan had to remind herself that she was still the ranking female,
hormonally speaking. Mestin seemed to be finding it hard not to defer
to her. "The pathogens themselves come to no harm. Just the targets."
Wess'har morality had a seductive logic all its own. "Did gethes
give that much thought to the fate of
cavalry horses?"
"I'm not arguing. I'm just trying to make sense of
this. So you all left the World Before and came here, then."
"No, some left. Most stayed."
Bang. Another bombshell. Why hadn't she realized that? Because
she hadn't asked. Because she didn't
know the question needed asking. It was probably all sitting in the
massive wess'har archive that she was struggling to read. She was
working backwards in the timeline, and slowly.
"You're going to have to spell this out," said Shan.
"Spell?"
"Explain in detail. Please."
"We are Targassati. We wanted to lead a simpler life
and we no longer wanted to take part in what you call international
politics. It was an obligation we did not feel we could justify. So we
left."
Shan waited. Mestin just looked at her.
"Come on. And?"
"And?"
"The World Before is still…er…going strong?"
"Yes."
"So you have contact with them. What do they--"
"No. No contact. The ussissi move between worlds, but
we remain separate."
"Hostile?"
"Irrelevant."
"I would have thought they'd be handy reinforcements,
at the very least."
Mestin's eyes--darker than Chayyas's, more like amber
bead--showed narrowed crosshairs, mere slits of pupil. "If we need to
ask for help, there might be a price, as you say. We do not welcome
interference or change."
"I understand," said Shan, who had seen more change in
fifteen months than was decent, and quite liked the idea of stagnation
for a while. She tried to imagine what the World Before might be like
if the wess'har here represented the ecowarriors. "Look, if you're
short on manpower and arms, conventional warfare isn't sustainable. You
know that. That's why you used c'naatat
troops in the past. I think you might have to look at unpalatable
choices again. And I'm not just talking about germ warfare."
"From what you have seen here, do you think we have a
problem?"
"I'm not a military analyst, but if you can't replace
hardware at the rate you're losing it, then you're stuffed."
"Do you recall Chayyas said more might be asked of you
than you were capable of giving?"
"It was a hard conversation to forget."
"Then I'm asking you to help us find an immediate
solution to the gethes problem."
"Boy, that phrase has an unpleasantly familiar ring to
it."
"I don't understand."
"Just as well. Look, this is years away. You have time
to come up with some ideas."
"But what would you do,
Shan? What would you do if you perceived a genuine threat to your
world?"
"I'm not the best person to ask. I'd only give you a
gut reaction, not a considered political option. I'm not known for my
restraint."
"What is war but emotional response backed up by
weaponry?"
It wasn't a bad point. Shan started seeing the gaps in
the hangar, the places where ships were no longer stored. There were a
lot more gaps than there were occupied berths.
She thought about it. "Personally, I'd pop round their
house and give them a bloody serious warning. And maybe a demonstration
of how very unreasonable I could be if they really
pissed me off."
"We would wish to deal with the threat directly too.
But we have such limited military resources these days. We need to make
it impossible for gethes to get a foothold
in this system."
It seemed a very benign discussion. They were actually
talking about killing humans. It didn't feel that much of a chasm to
cross. "Come on, you're not going to be able to send a task force to
Earth without help from someone, are you?"
"No. The other option is what you would call
bioweapons. If we have enough intact human DNA, we can create a barrier
weapon. It need only be created and deployed once."
"Poison Earth?"
"Poison Bezer'ej."
"Ah." Shan wondered what was happening to her brain. It
was suddenly obvious. "You want my DNA."
"Yes."
"Why didn't you extract it from Aras?"
"C'naatat. A dangerous
organism to handle, and we have found no way of separating it from its
host. If we could have done so, things would be very different now,
would they not? We would also have isenj DNA. We would be able to use c'naatat
at will."
"Well, I'm not exactly a regular human any longer. I'm
not sure what help I can be."
"But you were normal a
matter of a season or so ago. Do you have any material that predates
your contamination?"
Now that was science that Shan understood only too
well. Forensic evidence. Hair, saliva,
GSR, semen. She could do as thorough a job on crime scene as any SOCO.
"Let's have a look through my grip," she said. "I keep my kit clean but
I'd bet there are some hairs hanging around." She hadn't used her
cold-weather suit since she first landed on Bezer'ej: they could scour
that for cells.
"You give this up easily under the circumstances."
"I'd like to think of it as razor wire. If you don't
climb over it, you won't get hurt."
"You're a pragmatic woman."
"And you really don't have any isenj DNA?"
"We don't take prisoners," said Mestin.
"What about asking the ussissi to acquire some?"
"We will not compromise them by asking them to act for
us aggressively."
Shan tried to conceive of a society where the entire
defense industry could be halted by the desire not to embarrass an
ally. The challenge with wess'har was to understand that they had just
two settings--completely benign and psychotic--with nothing in between.
"It's not how we'd handle things back home."
"The ussissi are neutral."
"God, you really are going to need some help to deal
with gethes, aren't you? Okay. Count me
in." She paused. "What happens to the colonists in Constantine if you
flood the planet with antihuman pathogens or whatever?"
Mestin cocked her head a few times. "I would rather
remove them all."
It was Josh and Deborah and James and Rachel, not a
seething mass of anonymous faces. Shan tried to adjust to her new
kinship. There's no reason why they have to share
your morality. Stay out of it. "What about moving them here?
Like you did the gene bank?"
Mestin looked genuinely thoughtful, her long muzzle and
sharply tilted head reminding Shan too much of a baffled Afghan hound.
"Yes, if they represent a strain of acceptable humans, it might be wise
to propagate them. There might be no other gethes
left in time, after all."
Shan had to think about that last sentence.
She wasn't entirely sure she had understood it. Then
she knew she bloody well had, and that small expression of a monumental
threat was more chilling than a wess'har battle fleet heaving into view.
"What if they won't move?"
"Then they die," said Mestin, as if Shan would be
equally unmoved by the prospect.
Shan could almost smell her own citrussy waft of
anxiety. "Maybe I can put the relocation idea to them in due course."
Something told Shan she was going to have trouble
explaining this to Aras. It wasn't a topic that had ever cropped up in
conversation. He had warned her about the matriarchs and how she would
be enslaved, but she had taken it as an
expression of his bitterness about exile.
For some reason, justifying herself to Aras bothered
her more than the fact that she was about to teach an alien race how to
be efficient terrorists against her own species.
Shan walked up to the nearest fighter and glanced at
Mestin for approval to climb up on it. As soon as she laid her hand on
it, the canopy opened: a faint, single, pure note ran from discomfort
below her threshold of hearing up the scale until she could no longer
hear it. It made the back of her throat itch. The cockpit was alive
with a soft bluish glow.
"How did I do that?" Shan asked.
"You must have more wess'har genes than you thought."
Shan stared down into the cockpit, one continuous
surface covered with the diagrammatic writing and points of light. The
smell of the materials--harshly grassy, like burning tangerine
peel--stopped her dead.
She was perfectly aware of where she was but she was
also watching her hands--no, Aras's hands--punching rapidly across the
controls while a flare of flame wiped out the landscape that was
spinning ever larger in the viewplate. Sick physical panic gripped her.
Then she smashed into the plate and everything was blackness and pain
and heat and her teeth felt as if they had been driven up into her
sinuses.
She straightened up and scrambled down the side of the
craft, dropping the last meter and landing on her feet with a thud.
Around her it was all orderly, soft-lit calm again. She shut her eyes
for a moment, and suddenly the drowning dream and all that went with it
was vivid and now.
"He crashed," she said at last. "Aras crash-landed in
one of those things. I just saw it."
Mestin took her sleeve carefully and steered her away
from the fighter. The gesture surprised her. It was an oddly
compassionate act for a matriarch.
"I had heard that c'naatat
can pass on memory," said Mestin. "Is it difficult, coping with that?"
"Not any more," said Shan. No, she could handle it. She
prided herself on her professional core of ice. She was the copper who
didn't faint at her first autopsy, who never vomited at the smell of
decomposition, and who could look at evidence even strong men preferred
not to see. It didn't mean she didn't care: it just meant that, after a
while, she forgot how to.
She wondered if that was why she hung onto the pain of
the gorilla and the blue door, just so she could be in thrall to
impotent anger again and reassure herself occasionally that she was
alive and feeling.
Shan inhaled deeply through her nose and suppressed the
agonizing shock of crashing in enemy territory. "You know what happened
to him? What the isenj did to him?"
"No, but I can imagine," said Mestin. "They were brutal
times. Even the isenj admit that."
Mestin kept steering her away from the craft, the
slightest pressure of her hand on her back. Shan wanted to shrug the
touch away but decided it might be provocative. If Mestin could scent
that she was bothered by the touch, it had not deterred her.
"You think I'm weak, don't you?" Shan said.
"I do not," said Mestin. "I wonder how I would fare
alone in your world. I wonder how I would react to my body being
colonized and altered by a parasite. I'm not sure I would acquit myself
particularly well." She tapped her hand against the hard shape of the
gun that Shan kept tucked into the back of her waistband. "Do you fear
us?"
"Habit. No offense meant." Shan reached back under her
jacket and adjusted the gun again, embarrassed. She wondered why she
couldn't recall the borrowed memory of Aras firing that weapon into the
skull of Surendra Parekh. She could certainly remember her own oblique
view of the execution. Perhaps it hadn't been traumatic enough for Aras
to make the same impression as the other events in his life. "I'm a
copper, remember. A police officer."
"I know what police do. And I know what you
have done. I have seen the record of your
conversation with Michallat."
Ah, the unbroadcast interview. Eddie hadn't quite got
her to admit she had aided ecoterrorists, but it was a close-run thing.
She hoped Mestin hadn't picked up the implication that Minister Perault
had perhaps conned her into accepting her mission. "Yeah. I don't piss
about."
"I think you are very clever, very persistent and very
violent."
Shan almost dropped her gaze. "Whatever it takes to do
the job."
"But only if you think the job is worth doing. That is
why we like you."
Shan was suddenly uncomfortable. She wasn't used to
being patted, not by anybody who valued their teeth, and she wasn't
expecting to be told she was liked. She
felt her scalp prickle. Mestin must have smelled her agitation.
"For a physically fearless person you are easily
unsettled by small matters," Mestin said. She sniffed discreetly, as if
to say I know. "Let me tell you this. If
it were not for c'naatat, I would be happy
for you to be a cousin-by-mating. I trust you. Nevyan respects you
greatly."
Shan wasn't sure she had understood the matriarch
right. Cousin-by-mating? Ah, in-law.
Sister-in-law. Some of her best friends were c'naatat
but she wouldn't want her brother to marry one, so to speak. It wasn't
offensive. Shan knew the risks. They were no different for wess'har,
except that they could be relied upon to do the sensible thing with the
symbiont--most of the time, anyway.
Mestin walked ahead of her, back towards the exit,
trilling wordlessly under her breath. Shan followed the matriarch's
rustling steps with her eyes fixed on the neat stripe of tufted gold
hair down her nape. It was another moment when her world shivered into
semifocus: another moment when she knew that she didn't really
understand what wess'har were, and what they did when she wasn't
around. It made her feel utterly alone. It made her want the comfort of
Aras's company.
She tried to make light conversation to jolly herself
along. "I think cousin-by-mating is a nice way of describing someone
who marries into your family," she said. "Wess'u is a very pragmatic
language."
Mestin glanced back at her in a half turn but carried
on walking. "It doesn't mean that at all," she said.
"I don't think I understand." "Oursan," she said, as if
Shan ought to have known what that meant. They were back on the surface
again, among irregular strips of red and magenta crops. "Nevyan was
supposed to be educating you."
"Maybe we haven't got to that page yet," said Shan,
feeling unpleasantly embarrassed again but unsure exactly why. There
was a niggling awareness at the back of her mind, like a Suppressed
Briefing. Whatever scraps of memory were surfacing from Aras, this one
was shot with anxiety.
She was pondering the feeling as she walked back up the
terraces when she nearly trod on a vine as thick as a ship's cable. It
was covered in velvety scales and pink-flushed gold, like a ripe peach.
When she crouched to touch it, it shot off at speed and its furred
leaves--or what had looked like leaves--scattered in all directions,
emitting high-pitched squeals. The surprise made her overbalance onto
her backside.
The vine-thing paused at a distance and the leaves
scuttled back to it and attached themselves again. She sat in complete
humiliation on the flagstones, heart pounding. A male wess'har walked
by and stared down at her. "Genadin," he said,
nodding in the direction of the creature. "With babies."
Nothing was obvious here. She sat and gathered her
composure for a few moments and started rehearsing how she would tell
Aras that she had signed up to help the wess'har war machine.
But it could wait.
She had to sort out her uneasy relationship with him
first.
Nobody gave a second glance to Lindsay and
Eddie while they chatted in a corner of the hangar deck. They were old
mates, isolated and lonely. They had personal issues to discuss. There
was nothing sinister about it.
Eddie wasn't so sure. She hadn't said a word to him
about Hereward, and he was now certain
every senior officer would have known about the deployment. Well, if
that was the game she was playing, fine. It disappointed him, but at
least he was now on familiar territory and using a fine-honed skill in
which he had complete confidence--pickpocketing the brain of a
reluctant
interviewee without their feeling a thing.
"You okay?" he asked.
"Bearing up." She kept fiddling with her right shoulder
board, picking invisible specks off the gold braid rings. "Eddie, I
need to ask you something."
He folded his arms. "I'm a journalist. Think of me as
your priest."
"It's serious."
Ah, maybe she was going to come clean. He hoped so. He
didn't like to think of her as prey. "Okay. Ask."
"If I got you transport, would you be willing to ask
for access to the wess'har?"
It was the last thing he expected to hear, and no
mention of Hereward. He summoned up all
his acting skills. "I'd probably bite your arm off in the rush."
"We need someone to break the ice. You're neutral."
"They still want to negotiate diplomatic relations with
them, eh?"
"I know. Fat chance. But if we knew how they were
thinking, we might get the approach right."
She was lying her arse off. She was an amateur.
It wasn't the first time Eddie had been
approached--obliquely, charmingly--to gather data. In a simpler age
they
called it spying, and it was the sort of thing that got journalists
shot or worse in unsympathetic foreign countries.
"I think this is bullshit," he said. "It's got nothing
to do with diplomacy. What do you really want?"
Her head dropped and she sighed. If she was acting, it
was convincing. "Okay, I might as well tell you. You started this
biotech rumor running and now I've got to clean up the mess. I need to
make sure the pharmaceutical lads don't get hold of it. I haven't a
clue what we're looking for, but if you hear anything that would help
me keep it out of circulation, I'd be grateful. And so might human
civilization, whether it knows it or not yet."
It hurt. It was true. He wished for the hundredth time
that he hadn't gone hunting that story, but it was too late. "Lin, I'm
in enough shit as it is. BBChan's under a lot of government and
commercial pressure for me to find happy space stories. Seems they hold
me responsible for giving people the impression that the Cockroach
Cluster is on its way to take over the Earth."
"Okay, it's not fair of me to dump this on you. Forget
it."
"Now that's not fair. The
one thing you can't do to a journalist is let me halfway in. You're
waging some interagency feud with the Department of Trade or whoever
and you expect me to line up as cannon fodder. You tell me the truth,
or you can piss off and do your own dirty work."
"I didn't say this was a departmental power struggle."
Eddie spread his arms and gave her a theatrically
slack-jawed look. "A wild guess. Now for Chrissakes tell me." Come
on, say Hereward. You
know I'll get it out of you sooner or later. "I know you're not
giving me the full picture."
"Okay, but this is between you and me."
"Whoa. This is where I don't do off-the-record. When
people say that, they really want to leak something without taking
responsibility for it. And even if I do keep it to myself, once I know
something it colors all my decisions from then on, doesn't it? So think
hard before you open your mouth."
Lindsay paused three beats. He counted them. "Okay.
Rayat claims he's working for the Treasury and he says he wants to
prevent access to the biotech as well."
"Really?"
"I checked."
"Makes sense. All we need is a plummeting death rate
and we've got an economic crisis that's going to make the pensions
collapse of 2136 look like a small overdraft."
Lindsay seemed diverted by the comment for a moment. "I'm telling
you the truth."
"Maybe, but isn't there something you left out?"
She fidgeted with her shoulder boards again as if her
rank was bothering her. "There's always detail, Eddie."
"Try Hereward."
She looked genuinely blank. "I honestly haven't a clue
what you mean."
"Really. You're a senior officer here and you didn't
know that we've diverted a logistics support vessel, probably armed, to
this sector?"
"No, I bloody well didn't." She couldn't fake that
reddening face. Okurt was going to get a stream of high-grade vitriol,
that much was clear. "How do you know?"
"Don't make me say it. It's the one ethic we still hold
dear in my trade."
"Bastard," she said, but she was looking away and it
was obvious she didn't mean him. "What the hell is he playing at? He
didn't bother to tell me he was looking for ways to exhume David's body
for research either. You'll forgive me if I have a tantrum at being
left out of the loop again."
"You really didn't know, did you?"
" 'Course I bloody didn't."
"I don't think the aliens have been told either. Any of
them. How to piss off two opposing technologically advanced powers in
one go--it's economy of stupidity, anyway. What if they gang up on us?"
"We might realize that, and
I think even Okurt might, but he's not calling the shots, remember.
He's on the Foreign Office choke-chain."
"And what are you going to do when the locals find out?"
"How are they going to hear about it?"
"There's no such thing as monopoly of information. Lots
of people have to be involved with diverting a ship. Victualling,
fueling, canceling other deployments, you name it. It'll leak
Earth-side through families, and then it'll be on the news, and either
the wess'har or the isenj will pick it up off an intercepted feed."
"We'll see."
"I hate to use words like gunboat diplomacy, but surely
someone's noticed we're not the most powerful species in the universe
any longer?"
"Don't ask me to fathom politicians."
"Okay. If you can get me clearance to visit Wess'ej,
I'll see what I can see. But just be aware I'm not working for you or
anyone else. I'm doing this for me and I'll make the call based on what
I think is right."
Lindsay looked studiously blank. "Shan would be proud
of you."
"Call me," he said, and walked away wondering if she
had stitched him up. He was damned if he was going to be manipulated.
He slid down the ladder to the next deck below, just like a seasoned
spacefarer, and caught his hand on a rail. "Bitch," he said, not sure
if he was referring to his scraped hand or Lindsay. She had made him
feel guilty.
But she was right about one thing. He was neutral, more
or less. He liked the isenj and he liked the wess'har and he was
hard-wired to attack his own government; but he trusted nobody.
Suspicion was a great leveler.
And he pondered on what he had done with information in
the past, and what he continued to do with it, and he thought of a
little known place called San Carlos Water with a heavy heart.
There was a time
when wess'har made their soldiers immortal. They have not done it for
many years. But they can do it again, and that is why you should not
underestimate a small army. Make friends with them while you can.
MINISTER
UAL, in an explanatory note
to the FEU Foreign Office.
Something small and wet thudded onto
Shan's back like someone had gobbed on her.
Her hand reached for her gun without her conscious
brain getting involved. The last time someone had spat at her while she
was on duty, she'd rounded on the perpetrator, dragged him bodily from
the crowd and introduced him to the business end of her truncheon. She
hated anyone messing up her uniform; and she certainly didn't like
anyone coming up behind her. But when she looked back there was nobody,
just the empty alleyway washed and beaded in pearl. She let go of the
gun.
She strained to look over her shoulder and pulled up
her shirt to check what had hit her. She couldn't see anything. She
could smell a sweet almondlike scent and wondered if it was sap from a
plant higher up the terraces. Come on, nobody's going to gob
on you here. It was something she was going to have to get used
to, and she found it hard to accustom herself to pleasant things. She
was always waiting for them to peel back their deceptive skins and
reveal their teeth.
It was a shame Aras wasn't comfortable in F'nar. He
just seemed to be getting more and more agitated each day. Shan was
starting to like the place, and not just because she had no choice. She
could walk down the terraces and alleys and everyone acknowledged her:
they knew who she was, and why she was there, and she was starting to
know them. It was like being the beat bobby in an idyllic village.
The only difference was that she was never going to be
called upon to rattle door handles or break up a pub brawl. Apart from
their abrupt tone--and that was only unedited frankness--there was
nothing personally violent or antisocial about individual wess'har. How
they made that sudden leap from peaceful citizen to apparent psychopath
still bewildered her.
As she walked round the curve of the caldera, clutching
a gift for newlywed Nevyan, she passed two young males utterly
engrossed in playing with their children, rumbling and purring as the
little ones tried their hand at planting tufts of red grass in the gaps
between the paving. The males were taking sporadic bites from chunks of
lurisj, the closest that wess'har had to a
mood-altering narcotic. They were simply relaxed and happy, a world
away from human drunks and junkies and all the violence that
accompanied them.
Then Shan thought about Mjat, and the whole coast
around Constantine scoured clean of isenj, and tried to reconcile the
two images. She thought briefly of the ease with which Aras had put two
rounds through Parekh's head, and then how he had rescued a tiny banic
from drowning in the washed vegetables. He
was an alien all right. An alien. And there she
was, catching herself looking at him in the way she had once looked at
Ade Bennett. It was getting more insistent. It wasn't like her at all.
She was still conscious of moisture on her back and
twitching her shoulders involuntarily when she got to Nevyan's new
house, a warren of excavated rooms that previously had been Asajin's.
She looked down at the woven container of netun
jay in her hand and took a breath. Wess'har didn't give gifts.
But they liked their food, and it seemed as good a way as any to wish
Nevyan well in her new life. Besides, she had questions to ask her that
she didn't feel she could put to Mestin.
Shan raised her hand to knock on the door, but wess'har
didn't knock so neither would she. It didn't feel right, though. You
only barged in like that with a warrant, or sometimes without one if
you felt like it. Fit in, she told
herself, and pressed silently on the pearl-encrusted door. It swung
open and she walked in.
Her gaze went instinctively to the point in the frozen
scene where she least wanted it to go.
"O-oh shit," she said. "Shit.
Sorry!"
She came out a lot faster than she went in, slammed the
door and stood against it with her free hand to her mouth in an
involuntary spasm of sheer animal embarrassment. She really
should have knocked. She shook herself
back into a semblance of composure and waited outside.
The door opened again. Nevyan, now in her matriarch's dhren,
wafted not a trace of agitation and
simply cocked her head in that canine gesture of concentration. It was
down to the shape of wess'har pupils, Aras said. They did it
automatically to get a better focus on the object of their curiosity,
and Shan--red-faced and uncharacteristically embarrassed--was
apparently
worth extra scrutiny.
"What's wrong?" said Nevyan. There was absolutely no
indication whatsoever that she was offended by being disturbed during
an intimate moment with her new males. Yeah, and
all four of them, Shan thought. Jesus H.
Christ.
"I'll knock in future," Shan said, finding it painful
to meet her eyes. They were vivid citrine, quite unlike her mother's.
"You're upset. Why?"
"You're not bothered by…um…"
"By what?" Nevyan was now starting to smell agitated.
Shan wasn't sure whether it was because she wanted badly to understand
or because Nevyan wanted her approval. She was painfully aware of the
kid's deference to her. "Have I done something wrong?"
Shan shook her head rapidly. "No. Don't worry. Human
thing. Not your problem." She lapsed into English, because wess'u just
didn't have the words for it. She held out the netun
jay. "I came to wish you well. You know. Wedding?"
Nevyan took the cakes and bobbed her head
enthusiastically. "This is kind, this is very kind. I know how
important this is to humans."
"You're welcome," Shan said. Nevyan seized her arm and
led her back into the house. Her males--her jurej've--didn't
seem at all offended by being interrupted at a critical moment. It was
as if she had walked in while they were watching their favorite TV
show, a minor interruption to an entertainment that could be resumed
later.
In the kitchen the jurej've
trilled and fluted as they prepared a meal, no more transfixed by her
than the kids were. Time was when she could gather a crowd just by
walking along the terraces. I'm one of the tribe
now, she thought. One looked up. "Shan
g'san," he said, cocking his head in amusement. A wess'har joke.
It was the first she'd heard, or at least the first she'd understood.
She smiled. They now seemed unperturbed by her display of teeth.
But their scent of cedar and sandalwood put her on
edge, and she wasn't sure why, although she was damned certain that
what she'd seen of their anatomy was alarming enough. One of the males
wrapped himself around Nevyan, trilling enthusiastically.
"Later, Lisik," she snapped, and cuffed him. Shan
looked away. Nevyan turned back to her. "He'll make a good and useful
husband when he calms down."
Shan rapidly revised her estimate that Nevyan was going
on seventeen. Wess'har didn't appear to grow up; they switched almost
overnight from one life phase to another, and Nevyan was now the
complete matriarch. It was disturbing to think of her having husbands
who needed a good slap to stop them mounting her in front of house
guests. "How unlike the life of our own dear queen," Shan muttered, and
sat down at the long table in the kitchen, careful to keep her elbows
clear of the exquisite rainbow glass bowls and pots.
Nevyan thrust the basket of cakes towards her. "Eat,
then," she said, and placed a couple of netun
on a plate in front of them. It was a gesture you made to family, and
Shan liked the feel of that. She bit into the cake with a careful eye
on the new males. Yes, she'd seen too much now to ever think of them as
harmless seahorses again.
The netun were crisp, and
the runny, clove-scented filling escaped down her chin with an audible pop.
Lisik was at her side immediately,
clutching a cloth as if to wipe her face, and she held up her hand
defensively.
"Thanks. I can do it myself."
Lisik made a noncommittal chik
sound and went back to pressing some sticky yellow mixture into flat
trays.
Another male was preoccupied with suckling a tiny
infant no longer than Shan's hand.
It reminded her of a stick insect. The male had slipped
his garment off his shoulders to feed it, and what flesh she could see
looked smooth and lightly muscled. The baby was clinging to his skin
with those long jointed fingers.
She knew that wess'har males gestated and suckled but
she hadn't actually seen it, and that made it very different. Her mouth
filled with saliva as if she were going to be sick. Her stomach
somersaulted. She had once again been punched hard with the reminder
that this was not Earth, and these were not humans, and that what she
was seeing was the reality of Aras Sar Iussan, who she had almost
thought of as a man.
She wiped her lips and chin carefully, wondering what
it was like to sleep with a man who could breast-feed. It was a thought
she hadn't invited and didn't want to entertain.
Perhaps Aras couldn't. C'naatat
had made a lot of changes to him.
Nevyan's husband adjusted his position and ran a
careful finger over the infant's head while it suckled, oblivious of
Shan's attention. It squirmed closer to him. Shan wondered if she had
any real understanding of Aras, whether she had his memories or not. It
was amazing how much you couldn't see when you were absolutely
determined not to, even in one room.
It was equally hard not to look at these males, even
though they had no physical features she found consciously attractive
beyond the aesthetic. She inhaled that seductive scent of sandalwood
and now cedar, suddenly aware of the pressure of the hard bench against
parts of her anatomy that hadn't seen much action in a while. Seductive.
That was exactly what it was;
pheromones.
"Are they bothering you?" Nevyan asked, making a
chin-jutting gesture in her husbands' direction. "You seem very upset."
"Not at all," Shan said, and finally accepted that her
talent for ducking behind a veneer of disinterested menace was sod all
use on Wess'ej. "I need to ask you some questions."
"Police questions?"
"God, no."
"I can't follow all your English. Please--"
"Sorry. It's personal. I need advice."
Nevyan's pupils flashed cross-flower-cross as the penny
dropped and she realized she could be helpful to what she regarded as
the alpha female. Shan had seen her do exactly the same to Mestin in
the past. "Ask, if you think I can be of use."
"Okay. I'm disturbed by changes in my body." "C'naatat?"
"Specifically, urges."
"To do what?"
"What you were doing when I came in."
"I don't understand why that disturbs you."
"Because Aras is--different. Not my species."
"Then he didn't infect you
by copulation. My mistake."
"I was unconscious at the time," Shan said stiffly,
ambushed by her copper's hard-wired suspicion. "He told
me he transferred blood from his hand into my wound."
"Then that is what he did," said Nevyan.
Shan fought down a flush of adrenal panic. She was a
copper, and she thought the worst before she thought the best. Rape,
child abuse, and bestiality: all rapists, nonces and sheep-shaggers
wanted hanging, garroting, and gassing, the bastards. But what did that
make her, wondering what it would be like to fuck an alien? Where was
that nice safe line between human and everything else? Oh God.
"I'm not someone who gives in to my body," Shan said. "It does what
I tell it. I need to know how to stop these thoughts."
Nevyan made a long, low trilling sound. "Why do you
have to?"
"Because it's getting on my nerves and we don't have
that sort of relationship. I don't want to worry about offspring and I
don't want--" She was going to say love.
Love was dependence, and dependence weakened you. "We're friends. I
think he'd be appalled if he knew."
Nevyan was absolutely immobile. She didn't even blink.
Whatever Shan had said, it had put her in that alarmed, uncertain,
frozen state.
"What?" said Shan, irritated.
"Mestin explained to you about hormonal dominance. You
smell like a wess'har, enough to provoke reaction from us."
"I don't like where this is going."
"I suspect you're reacting to each other. Aras is
certainly reacting to you. Everyone knows that."
"Well, I bloody well didn't."
Shan folded her arms and remembered just in time that there was no
chair back to lean against. "He's agitated and irritable, I know that."
Nevyan looked at Shan and Shan looked back at Nevyan.
Shan struggled with the baffled silence, then rolled a netun
back and forth on the plate with her
forefinger like a game of table soccer. She knew the kid wasn't trying
to drag an embarrassing admission of further ignorance out of her, but
it felt like it.
"I don't even look wess'har," she said at last.
"You behave like us in many ways and you smell like us.
How you appear is largely irrelevant, even to Aras, I suspect."
"And how do I smell?"
"Like a dominant isan."
"Do your males react to
me?"
"No, because they're now bonded to me. But they know
you're receptive."
"I'm not some bloody brood mare."
"What's that?"
"Oh, never mind. Is all this obvious to Aras?"
"Yes."
"Oh shit."
Nevyan made that impatient side-to-side head movement. "I don't know
why you have so much difficulty with this. Do what you
need to do. After that, you will both be perfectly content. Unmated
adults don't exist in our society."
Shan would never have tolerated that amount of lip from
any human subordinate. Her annoyance must have hit Nevyan's olfactory
system pretty hard, because the junior matriarch locked position again.
"Is that why you took on Asajin's family?" Shan asked.
"Yes, because they would have died without an isan,"
Nevyan said. Her tilted head rather than
her tone told Shan it was the proverbial bleedin' obvious answer. "Do
you not understand oursan?"
"No."
"Ah." It came out as a forlorn trill on a falling note,
like birdsong. Lrrrrr. "This is how we
are. Males need the genetic material of the female to repair their
tissues. I transfer it through cells in my body to theirs, and I take
in some of their genes too, and we all share it. It keeps them well.
It's also pleasurable."
Shan couldn't imagine having sex with a complete
stranger as an act of charity. "You seem okay with all this."
"Why wouldn't I be? That is the nature of oursan
as well as my duty. We're bonded. It's
very nice. It feels very good up here." And she touched her forehead
with one many-jointed finger.
Shan felt an urge to giggle but didn't find it at all
funny. Nevyan, distracted briefly by the high wavering wail of the
infant now fully fed, glanced at her males with such obvious pride and
delight that the air around her was filled with the powdery musk of her
contentment. Then she looked back at Shan. Her pupils were just a
cross, faint rutilations in yellow quartz.
"You are certainly distressing Aras," she said. "Ask
him to explain it to you. You know enough about wess'har males now to
understand how hard he finds this."
Shan decided she would rather have faced an armed mob
without backup than ask Aras to explain the facts of wess'har life to
her. She stood up to go. "Well, that's going to be fun," she said
flatly.
Nevyan trilled. She found something amusing. Shan
glanced back, instinctively and humanly annoyed.
Nevyan stiffened. "You have an aumul
on your back," she said. "Let me remove it."
She reached between Shan's shoulder blades and then
held her hand where Shan could see it. Nestled in it was a very large
red and white striped slug, and it smelled of almonds, and it was
making melodic plinking noises like a musical box.
"Is it dangerous?" Shan asked. You could never take
anything for granted here, not even musical slugs.
"No."
"What does it do for an encore?"
"It scours the tem
deposits at night looking for organic waste before it sets hard."
"It eats shit?"
"I will learn that word."
Nevyan placed the aumul
carefully on the flagstones and it shot off across the floor at speed
like an Arsenal scarf caught in a high wind. Shan had liked it better
when she was totally unfamiliar with this alien world. Being lulled
gently into thinking you belonged here made it even more disturbing
when you thought you recognized something--and then realized it was
absolutely, totally and wholly unlike your expectations.
That was Aras too.
Shan took a slow walk back home, looking for courage on
the way.
There was fish on the menu today and that
cheered Lindsay up no end.
It was cod in a garlicky tomato sauce. The
culture-grown fillets were a regular portion-controlled shape that no
real cod would ever have achieved in nature, as was the way with
muscle-protein production systems. But that didn't matter. It was cod.
Lindsay tucked in with all the gastronomic enthusiasm that only people
cooped up on long deployments in isolated places could fully understand.
Or it might have been the battlefield mood-killers that
Sandhu had prescribed for her. David was dead; nothing would make her
forget that, except for those few brief seconds on waking each day. But
the drugs provided a soothing erasure of grief for the time being. She
was sad, but it was--she imagined--as she would be in a few years'
time,
having come to terms with her loss and the changes it had made in her,
but not disabled by it any longer.
The drug had been developed to halt plummeting morale
in combat. Lindsay wondered if they ever thought it would be used to
help a grieving mother kill a woman who had once been her friend.
She savored the thick tomato sauce. And this time she did
hear Rayat come up behind her.
He made quite a point of acknowledging people sitting
nearby. She felt a pleasant flood of satisfaction: she must have made
him think twice about startling an unstable woman with a weapon.
"Mind if I join you?" he said.
"It's a free country."
Rayat sat down opposite her. "Yes, we keep it that way,
don't we?" He appeared to have a pile of beans and spinach in a
carry-out container. It looked like he was used to eating alone in his
cabin. "I was thinking about what you said."
"Um."
"Have you been thinking
about what might happen if you were successful in cornering this
biotech for the military?"
Lindsay shrugged. "Drop the games. Please."
"Have you?"
"I'd be stupid if I hadn't, and I'm not stupid."
"I don't think you like the idea any more than my boss
does."
"And I don't want to know who your boss is, thanks."
"I have something to share with you."
"In exchange for what?" She glanced up and Eddie was
standing at the servery. He looked back and made a discreet warding
gesture at her, the forefinger of each hand overlapping in a cross. Watch
that bastard. She almost laughed.
"Troops and transport," said Rayat.
"You could ask Okurt."
"Okurt's orders aren't the same as mine."
"Or mine?"
"I think you're rightly terrified by this thing and you
can see the threat it represents. You know that's why Frankland did
what she did to you."
The cod didn't taste so good now. Lindsay shunted it
around her plate and then put the fork down. "Okay. Let's talk about
this somewhere else."
"My cabin, ten minutes?"
"You're a charmer," she said, and picked up the fork
again. Rayat took his lonely container of beans and left. Eddie was
engrossed in a conversation by the salads with Lieutenant Yun. Lindsay
cleared her plate and left a decent interval before getting up to leave.
Eddie, engrossed or not, turned his head immediately
and caught her eye. Well? And she could
only think of one response, the gesture that Shan used so often to
indicate her low opinion of a colleague. Thumb and forefinger held
together in a loose fist, she made a rapid stroking motion. He's a
wanker. Eddie grinned, but it was the
studied camaraderie of a man keeping an eye on her.
She grinned back. But she wasn't planning to share any
of this with Eddie.
Shan felt incompetent for the first time in her
life, and it hurt.
When she got back to the one-room house and leaned
against the iridescent door, it opened and she almost fell in. It
wasn't the entrance she wanted to make. Aras filled the doorway.
"You've been a long time," he said.
"We got talking," she said.
"Are you hungry?"
Shan followed him to the table and looked over the dish
of evem. "I could do with a cup of tea,
please."
Aras shook the jar of tea to indicate the falling level
of the leaves. "The bushes will be ready for harvest in four hundred
days, and this won't last. I could ask Josh for more supplies."
She ignored him. "Nice and strong, please."
"You're upset."
"Yeah, everyone keeps saying that," she snapped. "It's
been a bit of an educational morning."
Aras said nothing and watched the water boil, which was
another thing you could do with relative ease if you lived forever. She
flopped onto the sofa and tried to frame the words. It took longer than
she expected.
She wasn't prepared to spend another day sneaking
glances at his extraordinarily appealing man-shaped back and buttocks.
And she had no intention of giving in randomly to instincts like
Lindsay Neville had done. If she was going to go through with this--and
Aras must have been suffering untold misery in his isolation--then
she'd
do it logically and responsibly.
There were worse ways to spend her time. Aras was a
striking, magnificent creature. But tigers and peacocks were beautiful
too: it didn't mean it was okay to consider screwing them. She wondered
what was happening to her cherished view of nonhuman animals as equals.
"Nevyan seems very happy with her new family," Shan
began. She accepted the proffered bowl of tea with relief.
Aras shrugged. "It's natural. They're bonded."
"Yeah, they were bonding pretty well when I walked in."
She didn't get a reaction so she carried on. "Is that it? They have a
quickie and it's happy ever after?"
Aras seemed to understand quickie
perfectly well. "I can see why gethes find
it peculiar. We bond for life. We need no sanction or law to achieve
that." Gethes. Thanks. "So this
is oursan, is it?"
"Yes. We have cells that exchange our DNA, bond us to
our isan, and give us pleasure, just as
you secrete oxytocin. And you consume methamphetamine. These substances
make you feel affectionate and euphoric. The same applies to oursan."
Shan thought back to her drug squad training. It didn't
help. "You get an emotional high from screwing?"
"Inelegantly put, but yes."
"Where are the cells?"
"In our genitalia."
Shan felt her hand go involuntarily to her forehead in
embarrassment. "I walked in on Nevyan having sex with her new husbands."
Aras looked puzzled. His scent of sandalwood was
especially strong right then. "But they all have children."
"So?"
"Males never have sex after they've fathered children.
The sanil atrophies and forms the
gestational pouch."
She could work out what a sanil
was. She wondered why he didn't just say penis.
"Aras, atrophied isn't the word I'd have
used."
This really wasn't going as she'd planned. He looked
completely and utterly bewildered. If he had tilted his head any
further, she would have thrown a stick for him to fetch. Right then she
didn't want any more random images that blurred the line between Aras
the man and Aras the animal. "You must be mistaken."
"I know what I saw, for Chrissakes. Do I need to draw a
picture? Anyway, they were having it away. End of story."
Aras's head straightened up smartly and there was a
definite flash of comprehension. "No," he said, evidently relieved.
"That wasn't sex. That was oursan."
Shan fought to remain detached. He must have smelled
that she was agitated: he was pumping clouds of tension himself. But
her stand-back-I'm-a-police-officer persona took over and projected
complete, glacial, accidental calm. "Look, I know I don't get out much
lately, but if that's not shagging it's doing a bloody good
impersonation of it." "Oursan," Aras repeated,
as if she were deaf. He paused for a second and then unfastened his
long tunic, completely unself-conscious. He took in a deep breath and
pointed. "That is for oursan,"
he said, "and this is for sex."
"Ah," said Shan. "Ah."
She thought she had seen just about everything in the
course of her police career but now she knew that she definitely
hadn't. Her shock must have been
tangible. But she couldn't even blink, let alone look away.
Aras must have noticed her oh-my-God expression. "I
apologize," he said. "Once I'm back among wess'har, I forget the taboos
of humans. I shouldn't have done that."
"I think it made an eloquent point," said Shan
hoarsely. Oh shit. Oh, shit… "It's okay."
"This one is for reproduction, for sex
as you say. The other is for oursan.
Horizontal transmission." And he fastened his tunic again.
Shan couldn't quite maintain glacial.
She tried. She battled another totally humorless urge to giggle and
very nearly won. "I've heard it called a few things, but that's a new
one on me."
"I can explain it further if you like. Genes
transferred from one organism to another, not just from parent to
offspring--"
"Draw me a picture." She choked on suppressed laughter. "I'm sorry.
This isn't how it looks."
"You're mocking me."
"No, I'm just very embarrassed. I'm sorry--"
Aras dropped his head for a moment and then walked past
her and out of the door without a word. He closed it firmly behind him,
just one shade short of slamming it.
"Shit," said Shan. "Our
first fight. Oh, terrific."
Men could rot in hell before she'd run after them. She
busied herself trying to make proper right angles on the frame of the
new bed, sawing and swearing each time she offered up a piece of efte
and it still didn't fit. No, men were a
pain in the arse: necessary recreation, but not one of them warranted
changing your routine, your priorities or your name.
But Aras wasn't a man.
He was an alien who happened to look a lot like a man
and even had some human characteristics. He was also an alien who had
suffered terrible isolation for an unimaginable time. And despite
herself, she cared about him: and she had given up caring about people
a lifetime ago. Aras was outside the corrupt circle of humanity, a
clean soul despite his wars, an innocent…animal. She could forgive an
animal anything.
Shan realized that she still wasn't sure how she
thought of him, or how that sat with the sensation she experienced when
she touched the hard muscle of his back. It felt just like when she
touched Ade Bennett. It felt primevally good. But Aras isn't human.
And neither was she. Not any more.
If you were a sheep-shagger, maybe that was okay provided you were also
part sheep.
"Oh, fuck it," she said, and swept up the dust and
shavings from the floor before going in search of him.
There weren't that many places Aras could have gone.
She didn't have to search bars for him--not that she would have, of
course--and she didn't have to ring round each of his friends to see if
he was sprawled on their sofa with a Scotch in his hand, bemoaning the
inconsistencies of women and why they were such rotten heartless
bitches. He wasn't human. But he
was terribly alone, and he was her only friend, and she wanted very
badly to erase his pain as well as her own.
Aras was working on their patch of allocated land. Shan
could see him kneeling among the plants, picking out something and
putting it in a pile beside him. He didn't look up as she approached.
She knew that he was aware she was there: he could smell her easily at
that distance, especially in her current state of mind.
"Okay, sorry," she said. She knelt down beside him. "Are you still
talking to me?"
Aras paused, folded his hands in his lap and looked at
her, head still slightly lowered.
"Oursan is a sensitive
subject for me. I don't handle it well these days."
"I've been told I have all the sensitivity of a
lump-hammer. You might have noticed I'm not good at girly things."
"You never asked to be put in this position."
"I know, but I am." If she didn't say it now, she never
would. "Let's try it. I mean, we can avoid reproducing, right? Regard
it as a favor for a friend. A bit of normality." Normality. She was
twenty-five light-years from home, playing house with an invulnerable
alien war criminal and carrying a bizarre parasite that tinkered with
her genome when the fancy took it. Just over a year ago she'd packed a
bag and set off for a few days' duty at Mars Orbital, expecting to be
home by the end of the week, her biggest worry being that the
supermarket would deliver early and forget to reset her security alarm.
And now she could never go home again. Normality.
"It might not make you happy," said Aras. "There
are…anatomical issues."
"Oh, I noticed. You got a better idea?"
"Knowing you as I do, I fear you will dislike the
emotional changes that come with it."
"Maybe by then I won't care."
Shan stood up and held out her hand. He stood and took
it. She thought for a brief moment of the gorilla, with its
leather-glove hands signing a plea for rescue that she never understood
until it was too late. The dividing line between human and nonhuman had
always seemed arbitrary to her until now.
Aras was both sides of that line, and it kept moving.
There's a time to
take chances and a time to consolidate. This medical technology could
simply wipe our competitors off the map. It's worth every resource we
can spare to find it, isolate it, and develop it. And then we can sell it.
And I know who'll buy at any price.
Holbein CEO HANA
SOBOTKA,
to Board of Directors.
If anyone had any doubt about Dr. Mohan
Rayat's true calling, his cabin would have dispelled it immediately.
He had commandeered more comms kit and links than a
simple Treasury drone or even a pharmacologist would ever need. And he
had his own single cabin.
"How did you pass yourself off as a pharmacologist?"
said Lindsay. "You fooled the Thetis
payload pretty damn well."
"I am a pharmacologist,"
said Rayat. "It's easier to train a scientist to be an intelligence
officer than vice versa. And believe me, there's plenty for a scientist
to do in the intelligence services."
"I'll bet." Lindsay decided she could always explain
away her meeting with him as a shipboard affair. Being caught in the
heads with him had at least given her a cover story. But it wasn't one
she could use on Eddie Michallat. "Come on. What is it?"
"I don't trust easy," said Rayat. "But you're a
professional and I'm desperate. Take a look at this."
Lindsay watched the triptych of screens above Rayat's
pull-down desk. There was a 3-D chart and two separate cascades of
numbers and telemetry. The projection 15cm in front of the central
screen was a part-formed globe with latitude and longitude lines. A
crust of colored images was forming on it as if an unseen child were
coloring the image in a book.
"What am I looking at?"
"The telemetry from both the original pre-colony bot
ship that landed on CS2 and from Christopher,
the manned colonization vessel that followed it a few years later."
Rayat leaned across and tapped the center screen to zoom in on the
chart. "And this is Bezer'ej. I think you'll recognize this coastline."
It was a chain of islands. There was Constantine, if
she could call the whole island that, partway down the chain. There
were six in all, and she discovered for the first time that they had
names: Constantine, Catherine, Charity, Clare, Chad, and Christopher. Saints.
It had never occurred to her to ask
during the year that they were down there. They had never been allowed
to leave the island.
She could see the small cluster of dots that indicated
the colony. But there was another dot emerging on Christopher, the
southernmost island in the chain. She wondered if it was some aberrant
data from the geophys scans, a trace of one of the isenj cities that
the wess'har had annihilated.
LANDING SITE appeared
on the screen behind the jigsaw section of globe.
Well, that had to be wrong. She knew where the mission
vessel had landed, because it was laid up at Constantine. She hadn't
seen it, but Josh Garrod had mentioned it and Ade Bennett was counting
on it being there.
"I can't guess," she said at last. "Other than the
discrepancy between landing sites."
"Got it," said Rayat.
"An error?"
"No, I don't think so. It would have to be a very
large, complex error. This telemetry is clearly about two landings in
different places." Rayat prodded the image and it melted around his
finger and reformed again. "The bot ship landed--here. It should have
built the habitat--here. But the Christopher
ended up--over here."
"Why?"
"There's something there on the island of Christopher.
They switched landing sites, or it was switched for them."
Lindsay thought of the ease with which the wess'har had
remotely immobilized Thetis in orbit when
the ship first came to the Cavanagh's Star system. Diverting a vessel
would have been simple for them.
"And what do you think is
on Christopher Island, then?"
Rayat shrugged. "Biotech research facility. Nice and
remote, away from the wess'har homeworld in case things go wrong."
"You're making an assumption that they think like we
do. Given their rather negative attitude to our attempt at research
activities on the planet, I'd say that's highly unlikely."
Rayat was so conciliatory that it alarmed her more than
his usual dismissive manner. He lowered his voice and counted points on
his fingers. "One, they can manipulate environments. Two, they can wipe
away every trace of millions of isenj and their cities. And three--I
don't have to remind you about Frank- land's astonishing recovery.
Trust me, they're quite capable."
Lindsay wasn't convinced. "Assuming you're right, what
are we going to do about it? Walk in? This is a level of incursion we
can't back up with firepower."
If Rayat was losing patience with her, he was showing
no sign of it. He must have needed her assistance badly. She knew damn
well he despised her as a weakling, a cocktail-party officer; but she
also knew that Okurt's orders were at odds with his. They were all
scrambling for a piece of the biotech action and anxious to stop the
other getting it.
"It's a jigsaw," Rayat said. "We know, more or less,
what it does. We have a good idea of where it is, apart from being in
the tissues of our two chums. So every extra piece of the picture
counts."
"And you want some help acquiring it."
"Eddie's a resourceful man."
Lindsay tried very hard to lock her expression. Maybe
Rayat knew she had already approached Eddie, but she couldn't imagine
how. No, he was just thinking the obvious thing. There was nothing like
a neutral journalist as a convenient vector for information.
"He won't spy," she said.
"He just has to do his job as normal. You know how
excited reporters get about digging. They're like a dog chasing a
car--they love the pursuit, not the capture."
"Actually, I think Eddie's a lot smarter than that."
"You're fond of him."
"He's a friend. And he's good at what he does."
"Are you prepared to co-opt him?"
Lindsay felt a small pang of guilt and then felt very,
very clever. Rayat didn't know she'd already
tried.
"He's got the best chance of all of us of being allowed
to land on Wess'ej," she said. "What are you putting into the pot,
apart from a vague location?"
"You know what I am. Let's just say I'm untrammeled by
rules of engagement."
"I think I know what you mean." No,
I'll be the one to shoot her, Lindsay
thought. "Let me think about it."
Rayat displayed no sign of triumph. He just nodded a
few times, looking at the screen. Then he picked up his carton of beans
and speared the contents with staccato stabs of his fork, seeming
genuinely hungry.
"This seems an enormous amount of effort to expend on
so little hard evidence," said Lindsay, just testing the water.
"You have no idea how much excitement this damn thing
has generated," said Rayat. "And sooner or later, it'll be in the
public domain. I--we need to get in and put it out of reach of commerce
and foreign governments as early as we can. One contamination, one
slip, and God only knows where it might end."
Lindsay met his eyes and tried to work out who was
actually behind them. She hadn't traded anything in the conversation:
he had revealed plenty.
If he was telling the truth, of course. And she didn't
have Shan Frankland's police gut-instinct for spotting the lies among
the facts. She'd have to take her chances. It meant using Eddie. It
might even mean harming Eddie. It also meant colluding with a man she
loathed and mistrusted.
"Deal," she said. "Let's do it."
MESSAGE TO:
EDDIE MICHALLAT,
CSV Actaeon
SENDER: Duty News Editor, West European
Hub
Eddie, this is
great stuff. Keep it coming. Nobody's seen this level of public
interest in the space program for decades, maybe centuries. And forget
that other matter--not considered in the public interest, if you
understand me. Someone upstairs got a security notice slapped on their
desk. I'll see what I can do
about your performance-related bonus. Let me get this straight: you
want it all to go to the World Forest Project?
Mestin got a message she hadn't been
expecting. Actaeon's senior male, the one
called Okurt, had sent a request for Eddie Michallat to be allowed to
visit Wess'ej. Mestin knew of Michallat. He wasn't a soldier and he
wasn't a scientist. She had no idea what use he was to the gethes.
The governing matriarchs gathered in the communal
kitchen just off the main library, chewing lurisj.
Nevyan sat with one of her newly inherited children, an isanket,
on her lap: both of them were watching
Shan carefully. Shan had a red glass cup in her hand and was staring
down into the contents. She looked very unhappy.
"What's a journalist?" asked Fersanye.
Shan still seemed to be contemplating plunging into the
cup. "They find out things and tell everyone about them," she said.
"Especially when you don't want them to."
Humans had a strange view of information. Mestin tried
to engage Shan's interest. "Like the ussissi."
"That's one way of putting it. Facts are known as news.
When new things happen, journalists tell the world about them. They
gather and disseminate information, sometimes accurately, sometimes
not."
The concept of not being able--or willing--to relay data
objectively was a difficult one for wess'har. Mestin wished Shan would
look up. "But should we allow Eddie Michallat to come here?"
"Eddie's good at his job," said Shan. "But he can cause
problems. Not always intentionally, but you don't care about motive, do
you? It was his asking questions about c'naatat
that made it public knowledge."
"That doesn't matter. Everyone here knows about it."
"Matters to me," said Shan, in English. "You're not the
FEU's most wanted."
"Yes or no?" said Nevyan.
Shan glanced up just for a moment as if she were
surprised by Nevyan's tone. "Yes, with conditions. You let me talk to
him. You don't have any conversations with him without me present,
because you can't lie properly. And we control where he goes in F'nar.
I reckon he might be useful. I have no doubt Okurt and company had the
same thought, hence my caution."
It seemed an odd catalogue of precautions. Michallat
was one unarmed gethes who needed a
ussissi pilot to land him here and another to transfer him to an isenj
vessel to get back to his ship. His capacity for threat seemed limited.
"We can kill him and have done with it if anything
seems amiss," said Fersanye.
Shan was still intent on the contents of the cup, from
which she was not drinking. There was something very wrong with her.
From time to time she wiped her palm across her forehead. She looked
red-faced and shiny. "You don't understand how gethes
use information," she said. "We--they conceal things, so they never
have
a complete picture of a situation. Information is currency. But you
don't understand currency either, do you? It has value. If you have it,
you have power and you can exchange it for things you want."
"You know how to use it," said Nevyan.
"I do indeed. There's not a lot of difference between
detectives and journalists. Just the warrant card, the pension, and the
right to use force."
"What's wrong with your beverage?" asked Mestin.
"It's water," said Shan.
"What else would you drink?"
"A nice cup of tea, proper builders'tea that you can
stand the spoon up in." It was an incomprehensible reply, but Mestin
thought the ambiguity was small price to pay for her general clarity of
thought. Shan sat up and made a never mind
gesture with her hand. "Eddie might be coming simply to make a program
about wess'har. He might also be coming to gather military
intelligence, willingly or not, because the military are as adept as
police are at using journalists for their own purposes."
"Does Michallat know that?"
"Of course he does. It's all part of the game. But we
can play that game too. It's called propaganda. What do you want to
achieve?"
"For all gethes to leave
this sector and to stay away," said Mestin.
"Then you do something called saber-rattling.
You let him see your armaments and you suggest there are plenty more
where they came from. The gethes already
know you don't lie and you don't bluff."
"But we would be lying and
bluffing," said Nevyan.
"I know. Good, isn't it? Leave it to me."
Nevyan lowered the isanket,
Giyadas, to the floor. The child walked briskly over to Shan to stand
gazing into her face. It was clear that Shan had no idea what to do
with the child and no interest in communicating with her.
Giyadas just wanted to take in every detail of the
alien: the isanket was responding to
Nevyan's intense reaction to her. Shan, defeated by the steady stare,
just looked increasingly wretched and began fidgeting. Then those
violet lights in her hands started up again, without warning, and
Giyadas stood riveted. It was a very impressive show. Even Fersanye was
fascinated.
"Oh shit," said Shan. "Not
again." She looked at her hands as if they were covered in filth and
then glanced down at Giyadas. "Show's over, kid," she said, and got up
and walked out.
"She can't be ill," said Mestin. It was extraordinary:
this female seemed to have no interest in children at all. "C'naatat
don't develop diseases. I'll talk to
her. Nevyan, respond to Actaeon and tell
them Michallat may land here."
Mestin found Shan sitting outside the house beside a
water conduit, one hand trailing in the cool water, staring into the
distance. Mestin took care to sit down in the exact pose beside her.
She had noticed Shan did the same when she was at ease with someone she
was talking to, just like a ussissi. She hoped it would soothe her.
"You look unpleasant," Mestin said. "You seem to be
very hot for no reason."
"That's what c'naatat does
when it's messing you around. I'm under construction."
"You don't look very different."
"It seems to target what troubles you most. Aras
obviously had a thing about his external appearance. Seems my problems
are all internal." She flexed her hands, sparking visibly violet lights
even in the strong sunshine. "I'm sorry if I was offensive."
"Will you be able to deal with Michallat when he
arrives?"
"Oh yeah. I can handle Eddie. And I've never fouled up
yet--not unintentionally, anyway."
"They'll be able to smell your anxiety across the
caldera. What's wrong?"
"Just developing my relationship with Aras."
"Ah, he's upset you. Now take my advice, a quick cuff--"
"No, I'll never raise my hand to him. He's had enough
for one lifetime. We just have some logistics problems to iron out."
"I don't understand a word you're saying."
"Good." Shan turned to face her, suddenly very earnest,
and there was a faint waft of dominance coming from her. The ussissi
said there was a gethes fruit that smelled
very similar, called mango. Mestin
wondered whether Shan realized she could walk into any of the
city-states scattered across Wess'ej and take over as dominant
matriarch on the strength of that dominance signal alone: but either
she didn't know, or she didn't care.
"I'm not at my best right now," said Shan. "I just have
a few things to iron out. And I really don't mean to come between you
and your daughter. I know it pisses you
off." Shan dropped the word straight into the middle of the wess'u
sentence. Mestin had tried to use some of her unique vocabulary
herself, but Shan had said it wasn't a good idea. "I'll talk to her
about it if you like."
"Nevyan admires you. Her view of the world is nearer
yours than mine. She feels the World Before was not entirely wrong, and
that Targassat abdicated responsibility through nonintervention."
"She likes to kick arse."
"She's very dedicated to ideas."
"I've been reading up on the World Before. There's not
a lot of information, is there?"
"Perhaps the ussissi have more. Ask Vijissi."
"Poor little sod seems terrified of me."
"Then ask his pack female. She won't be."
"If your cousins are what you say they are, you really
need to think about talking to them again."
"There will be a price, and that will be involvement in
their policies."
"It might be worth paying. You're not the only ones
with something to lose from human incursion."
Shan eased herself to her feet as if something was
hurting her, smiled unconvincingly and walked off down the terrace.
Mestin watched her go, noting that oddly rigid human gait of hers. For
a gethes, she was an impressive figure,
all control and purpose, with a complete confidence she had not lost
despite being surrounded by taller, stronger females.
Mestin had come to like her. She accepted her
responsibilities. It agitated her to see her own daughter fixing on her
for a role model, but there were far worse isan've
to emulate than Shan Frankland.
In the end, she might be all that stood between Wess'ej
and the gethes.
It hurt like hell.
But it was hurting less each time, and that gave Shan
hope that c'naatat was getting the idea
that she would keep doing the damage until it repaired her properly and
permanently.
She eased herself up on her elbow and tried to ignore
the sticky warmth of blood beneath her. There wasn't that much now, not
really. It was her brand new mattress she was concerned about.
"I hurt you again," said Aras. "I'm sorry."
"It's not going to kill me, is it?" She didn't want to
distress him. For a very big creature, he was doing a credible job of
trying to disappear into the dhren fabric
that served as a sheet. He looked as if he was expecting a slap across
the face. Then he turned his back to her, and she wondered for a moment
if he was crying, but wess'har didn't have tear ducts, not even an
altered wess'har like Aras.
She studied his back. The muscles were not quite as a
human's: what would have been the lats inserted much higher in the
spine. Down his backbone was a thick dark line with finer stripes
radiating from it on both sides, like the markings of an okapi in
negative. But it was still an impressive back.
"Come on, buck up," she said, and leaned on his
shoulder to make him face her again. His skin felt like sueded silk,
with a slight drag against her fingertips, and a little cooler than
hers. "It's no big deal."
Aras gave her a look of wounded disappointment, like a
parent who had caught a much-loved child stealing. "I know how painful
it is."
"I overreact sometimes."
"My nervous system connects to yours. I feel what you
feel. Don't lie to me."
"No point faking it, then, eh?"
"Sorry?"
"Stupid joke." She eased herself on to one side and
squeezed his hand in hers. "Remember what Ade Bennett used to say--it's
only pain."
Aras looked dubious. It was exactly the same expression
she had seen on Sergeant Bennett's earnest face, under vastly different
circumstances.
"This isn't right," he said.
"Hey, we're from different species. It's a miracle
we've got enough matching tackle between us to get this far. It's
improving, anyway--the bugs have had to reroute a lot of plumbing." She
had no intention of giving up on this now. It was a task: it would be
completed, no matter what. "Besides--if you can feel it, it means I've
got oursan cells now, doesn't it?"
"The more you try to be humorous, the more serious the
situation. Remember that c'naatat need no oursan. Our
health doesn't depend on it."
"You want to spend another five hundred years taking
cold showers?" Aras had been deprived of everything that made him
wess'har. Shan was determined to give something of it back to him. She
was the only female who ever could, and that meant she was obliged. "I
didn't think so. And I don't think I do either."
He kept his eyes fixed on hers as if he were daring her
to say forget it, this is too painful, too
difficult, let's just be friends. But that was all.
"I must tell you something," he said. "Things burden
me, things I have thought but never told you."
"Okay." Well, there was plenty she hadn't told him as
well, not yet. Bioweapons. "What?"
"I was prepared to kill you back on Bezer'ej when I
first told you about c'naatat. In case you
betrayed me."
Shan shrugged. "I'd have done the same in your
position."
"You're not upset?"
"Not at all. I suggested you do it, remember? Anything
else?"
Aras paused as if he hadn't expected that answer at all
and was scrambling for a new thread. "I'd like to be kissed," he said.
It wasn't what she was expecting to hear either.
"Kissed?" said Shan. There. A rebuke for her impersonal
technique. "Seriously?"
"Sometimes I'd see Josh and Deborah kiss when they
didn't realize I could see them. It seemed very intimate. Wess'har
don't kiss."
Shan reassured herself she'd heard right. As requests
for sexual favors went, it was shocking only because it was so
harmless. She'd shown a few men the door in her time. They got the
wrong idea about a tall, strong girl with handcuffs and a short fuse,
and she wasn't into that sort of thing.
She was suddenly so touched by his innocence and
desperation that she could feel tears threatening to embarrass her. He
really needed someone with a heart. But she'd do the job as best she
could. He seemed far more in need of simple intimacy than thrills.
"No problem," she said, humbled.
After a while she nodded off. She still slept during
darkness, although her wess'har genes were rapidly turning that into
naps. Wess'har didn't sleep continuously. Their not-sleeping kept her
awake anyway most nights; F'nar was a natural amphitheater, and the
enveloping sound of their randomly busy lives and the occasional
yawling tremolo of matriarchs declaring their territories made sure her
c'naatat got on with the job of reworking
her melatonin cycles.
She snapped awake. Completely
awake. These days she never woke with a stiff shoulder or a fuzzy head
or a brief failure to recollect if it was the weekend or not. She woke
cleanly and instantly, ready to function. It was still dark and Aras
was sitting with his chin resting on his hands, reading from the
display that occupied a door-sized chunk of one wall.
"Please look at this," he said, not turning to her.
Shan stood behind him and started reading. The
fish-bone diagram was a wess'u summary of concerns raised by ussissi in
F'nar and one of the other wess'har city-states, Pajatis. The nonlinear
structure of the script felt much more natural now, but she still had
to consciously translate each word from the vast wess'har vocabulary
she was assimilating. Key words didn't yet leap out and sock her in the
eye like a casual glance at an English document would.
But there were still a few phrases on the screen that
got her attention fast.
One was retrieved soldiers from
Thetis.
"Oh shit," she said. There were a lot of things the
complex wess'u lexicon didn't stretch to, and expletives were most of
them. "I hope that's not what I think it is."
The other phrase that added to the sinking sensation in
her gut was concern among the matriarchs of
Pajatis.
Shan was so occupied with F'nar that she hadn't yet
thought to ponder on how the rest of the Wess'ej world felt about the gethes
situation. She was English again, the
center of the empire, and foreigners were just a detail of the
landscape. Besides, she knew that F'nar was held responsible for
dealing with off-world policy.
But if every city-state was full of Mestins and
Chayyases, and they now wanted to have their say, things were becoming
a little too interesting.
Aras inhaled her anxiety scent pointedly. "Yes, I was
worried by that too."
"If they're recalling Royal Marines, it's not because
they're short of cooks," said Shan. She read on, tilting her head this
way and that. "Oh Christ. All the humans?
They've extracted the bloody payload as well?"
"It was foolish to leave the ussissi behind with the
isenj. Very foolish. They jump to suspicious thoughts quickly."
"They obviously know us well, then. So where's Thetis?"
"Still on course for Earth, apparently."
"I think I'm with the ussissi on this one. There's
something really odd about this." She read on, struggling with
technical terms. "What's chak velhanan geth'sir?"
"Human manifestation in moving light."
"Holograms?"
"Television news."
"Oh my God. Let's see that. Come on."
Shan had watched several days' worth of news from Actaeon's
intercepted ITX links home when she
arrived, but she had tired of it rapidly. She didn't care what was
happening on a planet she could never see again, and there were far
more pressing things to deal with in her new world. But that had been a
mistake. TV news was her only snout, the
only informant she had out here. She leaned across Aras and touched the
areas of screen that would summon the material that had added to the
ussissis' anxiety.
There was plenty of it.
It was mainly protests. Protests always looked the
same: they certainly did if you were the one behind the riot shield
trying to maintain order. People milled around the grand doorways of
embassies, consulates and government buildings, some in tropical
climates, some in snow, but they were chanting and stamping and raising
their fists about one unifying thing. Aliens.
And they weren't clamoring to be the first to shake their hands.
"There are many stories from Eddie here about the
isenj," said Aras. "I think he's upset people." He leaned back, and
Shan could have sworn his expression was one of vindication. "I told
you that your people were foolish to take the isenj back to Earth, but
I had no idea you would tear yourselves apart without their aid."
"Yeah, I don't think there was global consensus on the
invitation somehow." Shan could add up. She added two and two and came
up with the same total of ten that the ussissi probably had. The isenj
delegation wasn't going to be universally welcome: and so the humans
had pulled their own kind off the vessel carrying them.
"If we were stupid enough to blow Thetis
to Kingdom come, how do you think the ussissi would react?" she asked.
She thought of their Beatrix Potter dressed-up-animal charm and their
little girly voices and their savage, serious teeth.
"They would react very badly indeed," said Aras. "Every
single one of them."
The isenj are
what they are. I just filmed what was there. I wasn't being selective,
I wasn't editing for effect and I wasn't filtering in any way. But what
was shown was repellent. I was accused of racism and xenophobia because
I gathered news--not even news by any definition, just shots we call
GVs, general views--that made humans distrust and dislike the isenj.
What responsibility did I have? Should I have selected material that
showed them in a light that humans thought of as good? Should I even
have attempted to? In the end I just pointed the camera. Our culture
isn't ready to admit that we can legitimately dislike difference.
Rejecting cultural differences that we can't tolerate is the last taboo
among those of us who call ourselves liberals, one that we can't even
discuss. It's simple: we don't want to share space with the isenj.
Personally, I liked them and I still do. They're very human in many
ways. But they'll be the end of our way of life, and that's not
something I'm prepared to be shamed into giving up.
EDDIE MICHALLAT's Constantine diaries
Eddie had never been used to sleepless
nights. These days he was experiencing them more often, and it wasn't
the round-the-clock activity that passed his temporary cabin in Actaeon.
Today his head was buzzing with the
insistent fatigue of insomnia. I could forget about
Hereward.
News would get out sooner or later and absolve him of
responsibility for doing something. I'm not
scrabbling around for stories any more: I can sit on it. He
repacked his grip for the third time that morning and checked his hair
again. The kid in Environmental Controls hadn't made a bad job of
cutting it. Eddie refused to have it clipped as short as a marine's,
just as he wouldn't affect paramilitary garments like some wannabe war
correspondent. Ade Bennett had called it looking
warry. He was a reporter, for
Chrissakes. He had to be clear about that. But you know about
Hereward.
That was the trouble with knowledge and information. It
didn't heal and it didn't sort itself out, and even doing nothing with
it might have consequences. And you know it's a bad move.
He really did care what happened here. He couldn't root
for the home team because he wasn't sure who the home team was any
more, not this far out, and not this unwelcome. And he thought about a
couple of paragraphs in a history book on journalism in wartime; he
remembered a place called San Carlos Water, from a forgotten war
between what had been Britain and Argentina, and there and then he made
a choice that was personal rather than professional.
It was the problem with getting older in this game.
Your conscience grew like your prostate, an inconvenience that woke you
up at night but was seldom serious enough to kill you.
It had taken Eddie a week to get clearance for the trip
to F'nar. He suspected that he wouldn't have received it at all had
Shan not exerted her influence at one end and Lindsay at the other.
That alone told him he was being used. Okurt allowed the ussissi
shuttle to dock, only the faintest expression of resentment betraying
his reluctance.
"Journos are like children," Eddie told the commander
cheerfully. "We get away with murder because nobody thinks we're
dangerous."
"Oh, I think you're
dangerous," said Okurt, and personally dogged the hatch closed behind
him.
It was a day for staring and being amazed. Eddie set
the beecam to divert on any significant movement, and just to be on the
safe side he dusted off the manual cam and packed that too. The bee-cam
had been fine on Bezer'ej. Any movement in the wilderness that caught
its attention was worth filming, but in a city there were too many
distractions and he didn't want to spend all his time barking orders to
bring it to heel. He'd let it roam.
Being searched by the ussissi pilot on boarding reduced
him to helpless giggles, and the bee-cam captured it all. Eddie thought
it might make a light piece to end today's package. The pilot watched
the cam in that same predatory way that Serrimissani did, then gave him
a long stare and went forward to the cockpit.
Eddie slid his hand into his holdall to check that the
precious cargo was intact. His fingers slid over three real glass
bottles of wine, paper-wrapped amber jaggery sugar, a flask of live
yeast, six bars of lavender oil soap and a big bag of tea leaves, some
of the roving correspondent's universal currencies that could buy you
rescue in any country. Cigarettes rated the highest exchange rate, of
course, but spacecraft and illegal combustibles never mixed.
The booty wasn't to placate any locals, even if they
had any use for the commodities, but gifts for Shan. He'd missed her.
She wasn't the most lovable person he'd ever met but he did enjoy her
company, and--privately and perversely--he liked people who couldn't be
bought, threatened or flattered, especially by him.
The shuttle landed on an anonymous stretch of stony
soil devoid of anything Eddie could recognize as an airstrip. It looked
like the middle of nowhere, and he had seen plenty of nowheres with
more infrastructure than this. A wess'har male was waiting for him. The
creature was pacing round a vehicle that looked like a futon wearing a
valance. It didn't inspire confidence.
Eddie glanced at the departing ussissi, who was still
keeping an eye on the bee-cam. At least he didn't hang around for a tip.
He followed the driver's lead and sat on the futon. It
shaped itself up round him: the flapping valance became a rigid
hover-craft skirt. He felt better already. The vehicle skimmed
alarmingly over rocks and hummocks, and what looked like soft
sage-colored moss rolled underneath him in dry waves. There was no road
that he could see.
"We go overland because of pictures," the wess'har
driver said, like two voices were talking at once. "We build roads
underneath, so nothing to picture. Understand?"
"Fine," said Eddie. "Thanks." The bee-cam hovered
happily, immune to the swoops and climbs of the vehicle as it swept
along in an unnatural quiet. The wess'har's openness took him aback.
He'd known too many human minders over the years whose main goal had
been to stop him recording anything at all, an aim often reinforced by
a gun. "Can I film anything I want?"
"If your eyes can see it, you can make images."
"I love this place already."
They were skimming between larger clumps of vegetation
now, not trees but growths that looked like huge yellow bromeliads,
gold and fleshy and covered with crawling things that were striped in
red and white. The land rose gently ahead. The vehicle slowed to
walking pace and then it rested on the ridge.
"You look, gethes. Look
now."
"Wow. Oh wow. Sweet Jesus
H. Christ."
The city of F'nar nearly blinded Eddie.
It was beauty made solid. The color and the light and
the sheer impossibility of it took his words away and he almost fell
out of the passenger seat to stand and stare.
He'd have to redo the soundtrack later. He didn't want
to sound like a tourist.
"F'nar," said the driver. "Shan
Chail said you say fuck me when you
see it, you be so amazed."
"How long have you been speaking English?"
"Four days."
"Well, I say fuck me,
then." He checked that the bee-cam was equally riveted by the view and
got out the hand cam, just to be doubly sure of getting those first
shots. "The City of Pearl indeed."
The vehicle could take Eddie no further than the center
of F'nar. He stood at the bottom of the caldera and stared up at row
upon row of terraces dotted with vegetation, an inside-out ziggurat or
hanging garden: the pearl coating iced almost every surface. He was
fresh out of words. He followed his wess'har minder and started to
climb the terraces, trying to nod politely at any wess'har whose
disturbing patterned eyes he caught.
It was typical of Shan to be living as far from the
center as it was possible to get. Eddie, leg muscles screaming for a
rest, paused for breath outside an iridescent door set in a wall of
ash-lars whose irregular lines were almost obscured by the ubiquitous
pearl-pebbled coating. It eased open.
"Eddie," she said. "Just in time for tea."
Shan, filling the doorway, looked well. She looked
different somehow, and even more dauntingly athletic than he
remembered, but she still looked fundamentally human. Eddie held out
his arms to hug her. It was an instinctive gesture, but she didn't move.
"I'm not after any epithelial cells," he said,
remembering.
"I'm sure you're not." But she didn't concede even a
restrained embrace. He had no doubt he would be screened before
departing. If they didn't, he'd ask them to. He didn't want to be the
vector for any more catastrophic change in human society. Aras was
arranging bowls and food on a table, and gave him a respectful nod. He
didn't look happy to see him, but then it was hard to tell with the
wess'har. He was a grim, quiet, frighteningly large creature.
Eddie smiled anyway, and opened his holdall and pulled
out the efte fiber bag of rare gifts.
"Look, Shazza--wine, soap, and enough yeast and sugar to get some brew
going," he said proudly. "And tea."
She didn't smile and he wasn't sure if he'd gone too
far by letting one of his many nicknames for her slip out. At least he
hadn't called her Genghis to her face.
Then she grinned, almost girlish. "Thanks. I can't get drunk, but
you'll never know how welcome that tea is."
"Ha, you're not pregnant, are you?"
"Not even slightly funny, Eddie." Whoops. He switched fast. "Nice sofa.
Isn't white going to get grubby, though?"
She did laugh then, and Eddie was relieved if puzzled.
Aras gave him a sympathetic look. "She'll explain later," he said.
Eddie followed Shan out onto a terrace that wrapped
round the cliffside. He forced himself to look away from the dazzling
cityscape: how quickly could he get to the main point of his visit?
There were ways of imparting sensitive information and Shan could grasp
the oblique as well as anyone. He just wanted to get it over with.
"This is just the most amazing view I've ever seen in
my entire life."
"Beautiful, isn't it?" She still seemed wary. "It's
insect shit."
"Sorry?"
"The nacreous coating. It's a deposit left by little
buzzy things. Not real insects, of course, but it's what fills the
niche here."
"Shit doesn't look that good on Earth."
"Yeah, I thought that too."
"So you're okay, then."
"Yeah. Great."
"Good." They sat down on the ledge that ran round the
terrace and Eddie leaned back against the wall, not caring whether it
was feces or the finest creation of Ottoman tile-makers. It stunned him
with excitement.
Shan had her arms folded loosely across her chest,
sleeves rolled back. Light flickered. He glanced over his shoulder to
see what was making the reflection dancing on her hands, and then he
realized there was nothing, not even that fabulous city below, that was
causing it. The light was in her hands,
under the skin.
"Oh Christ," he said, and stared.
"It's really handy when you can't find your keys." She
looked resigned. "And every copper needs their own blue flashing light,
eh?"
"What is it, for God's sake?"
"Bioluminescence."
"Does it go with the recovery from fatal head wounds?"
"All part of the package. But let's not talk about it
right now."
He struggled for calm. He had more pressing matters,
that was true. "Can we get the interview over with first? Then we can
socialize."
"Ask away. Don't be offended if I tell you to sod off."
She said it with a smile. "Nothing personal. You're all right, son."
He grabbed the bee-cam out of the air beside him and
stuffed it in his pocket to make his point. I'm
not recording this. Trust me. Her gaze followed his hand. He
really didn't want to say out loud that he was doing this as a favor.
That would have been amateurish.
"Just one question, Shan. Any comment on the fact that
the FEU has diverted the Hereward to
Cavanagh's Star? I might eventually ask the same question of the isenj,
because they're unaware too." He couldn't believe he was sacrificing a
story for a second time. He was going soft. But he had made his
decision. "I also hear there may be a few more to follow."
Shan closed her eyes. It was a few seconds before she
spoke. He sneaked another look at her hands. The lights had stopped.
"If you're pissing me about, Eddie, you know what I'll
do, don't you?"
"I've nothing to gain from this."
"You're sure?"
"Unimpeachable source."
"Okurt, maybe?"
"No. Someone much lower down the food chain."
"And why are you telling me?"
"Because I think it's a provocative act and I think
it's wrong."
"Shit," she said, and closed her eyes again. He knew it
was a hot story, but he hadn't expected her to react quite so strongly.
"Fucking idiots. And you want what, exactly?"
"Not to make matters worse than they are."
Shan got up and made as if to pat him on the shoulder,
but stopped short. He had expected bright anger: instead she looked
suddenly exhausted. "There goes my retirement again," she said. "You
haven't broadcast this yet, have you? We would have heard."
"I'm not sure if I ever will."
"When will you tell the isenj?"
"I have no idea. I hadn't thought that far ahead."
"So what do you want in
exchange?"
"I'm not trading favors, Shan. I really thought you all
had a right to know."
"And I don't know how else to say thanks."
Eddie smiled weakly. It was hard being instrumental in
history. But he had blown the secret now. He had to live with the
consequences.
"It was the Falklands," he said.
"Eh?"
"Nothing. Nothing at all."
Shan gave him exactly fifteen more seconds and then
said, "Excuse me for a while." She disappeared into the house and a few
moments later Aras came out with a tray of bowls and cups and sat down
pointedly next to Eddie. It was compulsory hospitality: he wasn't going
anywhere for the time being.
Aras held out a cup to Eddie with an unfathomable
expression. He held it in both hands, and Eddie could see that he had
claws. The sun was full in his face: the irises of his otherwise
charcoal-black eyes revealed not those weird four-lobed wess'har
pupils, but single and almost reassuring oval ones. Eddie had never
looked at him that closely before. And he'd never been alone with him,
never with the alien between him and the only exit.
"Please, make yourself at home," said the Destroyer of
Mjat, and handed him a cup of tea.
TO : Chancellor's PPS, Central
Treasury, Federal European
Union
FROM: Undersecretary, Federal
Intelligence
RESTRICTED
Dr. Rayat's priority must be to deny this
biological agent both to the commercial concerns on board and to
defense personnel. There has been some disagreement over your modeling
methods, but all our forecasts confirm that the economic impact of a
declining death rate would be felt within two years, initially through
pressure on pensions. That presupposes that there is not serious
economic fallout in the stock and currency markets were the agent to
become commercially available. While we realize the Defense Ministry is
not a commercial concern, there is still an unacceptably high risk that
the agent would spread into the wider population. Rayat has
authorization to take whatever steps he feels are appropriate to
prevent this agent from contaminating the human population.
In the Exchange of Surplus Things, sitting
on crates of fruit or standing silently against walls, the matriarchs
of forty city-states waited for Mestin and Shan to find a place among
them and make their case.
Shan stood a little to the front of Mestin with her
hands clasped behind her back, head slightly bowed, spectacularly alien
in that matte black uniform. Blue and violet lights reflected on the
back of her garment from her hands: everyone had heard about her
strange c'naatat adaptations.
Matriarchs and ussissi stared at her. Her smooth black
hair was exotically unusual in a sea of gold and amber, and Mestin
heard a distant comment that it was hard to tell the creature's gender
by sight. She wore her hair long like a male and she was a head shorter
than a female. If you were within scent range
of her, you'd know, thought Mestin. She hoped nobody would
provoke Shan to anger and unleash that dominance pheromone of hers
again: it would cause chaos, and that was one thing they could not
afford right now.
Mestin draped her dhren
carefully so that it flowed round her arms and formed a long-sleeved
tunic. It was curious how Shan admired what she called the opalescence
of the fabric and yet shied away
from wearing it: she said she didn't have the build to carry it off,
whatever that meant. Mestin wondered if she herself had the defensive
spirit, the jask, to carry off a decision
to take F'nar--and with it Wess'ej--into a state of war with a new
enemy.
She looked around. There were nearly a thousand small
cities scattered across the planet, and if their matriarchs were not
present, they would be watching and hearing through the communications
network anyway.
Vijissi had settled near Shan, sitting back on his
haunches. She shifted a little, as if to keep at constant distance: he
shuffled a little closer each time. He was taking his instruction to
look after her very seriously. Mestin suspected he liked her more than
he would admit.
"We will bar Bezer'ej to the gethes
for all time," Mestin said. "Shan Chail has
provided sufficient tissue for us to create a biological deterrent that
will confine itself to gethes. We will
seek a similar deterrent for the isenj, because we may now have a
source, and then we can remove the Temporary City to leave the bezeri
in peace."
In her peripheral vision, Mestin noted that Shan's head
had jerked up a fraction and then fallen again. She was surprised by
something. Mestin would ask her later.
"What will you do with the gethes
already on Bezer'ej?" asked Bur of Pajatis.
"We'll offer them a chance to resettle here in a
controlled environment," said Shan. "They're harmless."
"And if they refuse?"
Mestin saw that Shan had her fingers meshed tightly
behind her back. But there was no scent at all, just the sporadic
violet lights. "Then they'll die," she said calmly.
"We offer troops if landings and military action
becomes necessary," said Bur. "We all will."
Then they simply began leaving the hall. Shan seemed
baffled and turned to Mestin. "Is that it?"
"Did you expect more?"
"I thought a war summit might take more than a few
minutes."
"There is consensus," Mestin said. "Beyond detail,
there normally is."
"We never get past the detail," said Shan.
They were alone with the surplus produce in the hall,
except for a male who was stacking pallets of yellow-leaf. It was a
record harvest this year.
"What did I say that surprised you?" Mestin said.
"That you had a source of isenj DNA." She simply didn't
smell of anything other than that alien musk, and that was softened by
her newly acquired wess'har scent. Her voice seemed tight somehow. Some
of the overtones were inaudible.
"I thought you might ask Eddie Michallat, seeing as he
has easy access to Umeh."
"Ah." That gethes breath
of sound that implied anything from amusement to disgust. "Okay."
"Is there a problem?"
"I can't see Eddie agreeing to collect tissue samples,
or even how he's going to do it, but I'll ask anyway."
"Have you told Aras about this?"
"Not yet. But if he's on the network, he'll know now,
though, and I'm going to have a very difficult conversation with him."
"How are relations between you? He seems content."
"Pretty good," said Shan. "At least they were. I'll
know when I get home."
"Why did you not mention it to him?"
"Because I knew he would be concerned about his friends
in Constantine, and that he didn't approve of bioweapons, and that he
would probably have influenced my decision."
"You don't seem a person who is easily persuaded."
"You don't know how much I want him to be happy," said
Shan, and gave Mestin one of those odd, tight-lipped smiles that
weren't smiles at all. They were quite the opposite.
She was still flashing sporadic violet light as she
walked out of the hall. Mestin could have sworn she saw a faint burst
of yellow-green as well.
But she didn't smell of anything at all.
Aras had taken Eddie to the underground bunkers
as Shan had told him to, and had also made a great effort to say
nothing that might indicate there was not an infinite supply of
armaments. Eddie was very satisfied with the pictures he got. The scale
and perspective of the tunnels delighted him. He seemed to enjoy making
images attractive.
Eddie's bee-cam flitted everywhere, recording the craft
and machinery. Shan had said there was nothing on them that could
provide the gethes' military analysts with
the slightest information they could use to defeat them. Aras was not
used to wars where enemies didn't know what the opposing force
intended, possessed, or thought. He kept his counsel.
"Bloody hell," said Eddie. "Has every city got
something like this?"
"Yes," said Aras. It was true. He didn't have to
volunteer the fact that they feared it would still not be enough.
"Can you fly these things?"
"That one," said Aras. He put his hand on the airframe
of the fighter and the canopy parted.
Eddie made a sharp sucking sound and pressed his
fingers against his ears.
"I flew one on Bezer'ej, and I crashed in one, which is
how I came to fall into the hands of the isenj."
"I know what they did to you, Aras. I'm sorry. I don't
know what to say."
"There's nothing to say."
"They don't seem a sadistic people, but who's to tell?"
"It was five hundred years ago. What were your kind
doing to each other then?"
Eddie looked as if he were calculating, eyes focused on
an imaginary point above him. "The 1800s." He shrugged. "To be honest,
we're still torturing each other now, so it's not a valid question. Do
you feel a little more forgiving of them, then?"
Aras had no inclination to forgive. It seemed
irrelevant to his wess'har side and undeserved to his human one. He
wondered how he could deal with the painful realization that Shan had
not told him she had cooperated on bioweapons. "I don't forgive. The
isenj might have changed. But I can only judge by their actions, and at
the moment, they still breed to destruction, and they will still do the
same on Bezer'ej. So I will still kill them to stop them doing so. Was
that your question?"
"You don't regret Mjat."
"It was unpleasant, but I would do it again under the
same circumstances, just as you would attack those who caused death and
suffering to your own allies."
"I'm not judging you, Aras. Just asking."
"Humans always judge." Aras had cut Eddie some slack,
as Shan put it, by not calling him gethes.
He rather liked Eddie, even though he had that flat, bitter odor common
to flesh-eating creatures. Perhaps he had started to get in the habit
of granting forgiveness where none was deserved.
"What about revenge?" Eddie asked.
"That's not the same as balance."
"A matter of degree?"
"Probably. I think you call it reasonable force."
"There are many humans who would find your force
against the isenj unreasonable."
"Then they should talk to the bezeri. They numbered bil
lions before the isenj came. Their population has only recovered to a
few hundred thousand or so now. They breed slowly. They spawn in only a
few places around the island chain and they won't change that, even
though it makes them vulnerable." It was another reason why Parekh had
deserved to die: the dead infant was a rare and precious being. He
didn't have to justify that to Eddie Michallat. "But don't feel obliged
to suppress the story. Your people should be told what we did to the
isenj. They need all the facts."
Eddie gave him a careful look, and Aras wondered if he
thought he might be indulging in what Shan called propaganda.
The best translation she could come up with was fact-weapon, or, more
probably, lie-weapon. But this was completely true. It was merely the
timing that made it effective.
"If the bezeri are that intelligent, why don't they
just spawn somewhere else away from landmasses?" Eddie asked.
"They value place," said Aras. "I could have shown you
a map made long before I came here, a map of sand compressed between
two sheets of azin shell. Why do maps
matter to them? Because they can only exist in certain parts of the
ocean, in certain mineral concentrations. If you can't manipulate your
environment, then you must work with it. There are other places they
could go, just a few, but these are their spawning grounds and this is
where they choose to congregate."
"I just wondered if they could move. It's not very
smart, choosing a situation that makes you vulnerable."
"And that would justify their fate?"
"No, but if you can just change your behavior and avoid
a lot of grief--"
"I seem to recall humans do stupid things that make
them vulnerable every day. They consume things they know will hasten
their deaths and they live in places they know are likely to be
stricken by disaster. Perhaps that justifies their fate too."
"Now that you put it in those terms, I see my error."
"Don't mock me, Eddie."
"I didn't mean to. It's just very harsh."
"Do you blame Ailuropoda
melanoleuca for being wholly reliant on bamboo?"
"What?"
"The black and white bear you find so appealing. The
panda."
"Not at all. Bloody tragic. We destroyed their habitat.
It's not as if they had any choice."
"Actually, they are capable of eating small animals,
and do. Nobody blames them for having evolved into a very restricted
niche. Perhaps that's because they're pretty and their image makes fine
toys, whereas the bezeri remind you of an item on the menu."
"Hey, I didn't make the rules."
"And why do humans
encourage their children to love other creatures in an iconic form, and
then to abuse them in the flesh?"
"You've lost me, mate."
"Animal toys. I remain confused by that habit."
"You ask too many hard questions," said Eddie. "And
coming from a journalist, that's high praise."
They walked back up to the surface and wandered through
the fields. Eddie tripped over a genadin
and it fled while he tried to track it with his camera. It was a
pleasant evening. Tem flies danced over a
sun-baked rock, laying another coating of pearl.
"Can I ask you something personal, Aras?"
"And Mjat wasn't?"
"I mean about you and Shan. Are you two an item now?"
"What does that mean?"
"Are you dating?" he smiled. Aras realized he was
teasing kindly, innocently. "Playing house?"
"If you are asking if I'm fucking
her, yes. That's the right word, isn't it? She's my isan and
I'm bonded to her. And I'm happy to be
so."
"Shitty death," said Eddie, face fallen, all shock. "You and her?"
"Simple congratulations would suffice. That, or a set
of attractive wineglasses, according to Shan."
Eddie looked uncertain whether to laugh or not. Aras
enjoyed playing that verbal game with humans. They never knew if he was
being naively literal or making a joke at their expense. Sometimes he
wasn't sure himself.
"What's this thing you're both carrying, then?"
"A parasite."
"What?"
"Perhaps it's best described as a symbiont."
"Not biotech?"
"We didn't create it, if that's what you mean." He
thought of Shan, and what she had done, and judged that a bit of saber-
rattling was in order whether he liked it
or not. He didn't enjoy these mind-games; Shan was a master at it. He
did his best, without lying. "We can create biological weapons, but
this was not one of them."
"I do fully understand what the risks are if it gets
into the human population."
"I think understanding that and not being tempted by it
are entirely different states of mind."
"How is Shan coping with it?"
"She was angry. Now she has come to terms with it. It's
much easier to accept when there are two of you."
"They're hell-bent on getting hold of it, Aras."
"They can't. It exists in me, and it exists in Shan,
and Actaeon has access to neither of us.
It's an organism native to an isolated part of Bezer'ej--and you have
no
access there either."
"I hope not," said Eddie. "You know they even wanted to
exhume Lin's kid to check him out for it?"
Aras hissed to himself, and then wondered how Actaeon's
people imagined they could take on the
wess'har defenses and reach the plain outside Constantine where he had
set the stained glass headstone to mark David Neville's tiny grave.
The isenj had landed, and he had cut them down. The
last landing had nearly cost his isan her
life.
He had no intention of letting invaders touch the soil
of Bezer'ej again. He decided Shan might have felt the same way.
She should still have told him.
Actaeon's armory
was aft of the habitat section and Lindsay needed Okurt's security
approval to enter it on her own.
He handed the manual key-stick over to her with a
sullen expression. "Here," he said. "I've even cleared the weapons
technicians out. Rayat's boss's boss has spoken to my boss's boss so
I'm playing nice. But let me tell you I think it stinks."
Lindsay wasn't cut out for this keeny-meeny
stuff, as Becken called it. She was a team player. She liked
cooperating with fellow officers and delegating to subordinates and
having meetings. She wasn't Shan.
She clenched the key in her hand, and suddenly realized
she hadn't thought of David once that day.
"I'll take responsibility for this," she said. "Wess'har seem only
to want to punish those directly involved in
anything. Executing Parekh saved the Thetis
mission."
Okurt exploded briefly. "Oh Christ, don't go all
frigging Titus Oates on me, Lin." He shook his head. "I'm driving this
bloody tub. I don't think that gets me off the hook with the wess'har."
"We have to be ready to do this."
"If you're thinking of using serious ordnance on
anyone's planet, we're going to have to get out of here bloody fast
afterwards. What about Umeh Station, for Chrissakes?"
Lindsay felt a pang of guilt. Okurt had no idea what he
didn't know. Her strategy ended at destruction. His had to take account
of the safety of civvy and service personnel, a half-finished base and
a ship.
"It's a priority."
"Yeah, that's been made clear to me. Just make sure we
get this tech."
"We will. Rayat obviously knows what he's doing."
"Lin, love, you're a good managerial officer but
sometimes you really haven't got a clue." Okurt turned to go, but then
he stopped. "What happens if they crack our coded ITX? We can't
encrypt."
"Maybe they already have."
He strode off. Lindsay stood in the armory lobby
staring out at the space where Okurt had been. When you were stuck
halfway up a cliff, all you could hope for was to scramble higher.
Wess'har, isenj and ussissi didn't encode, encrypt or play spook games:
if they were monitoring all the ITX channels, they would be hearing
some nonsensical conversations. She hoped their cultural ignorance of
cryptography would buy some confidentiality.
The weapons compartment looked remarkably dull
considering that it was Armageddon's supermarket. She waited for
Bennett and Rayat to join her.
"Come on, then," said Rayat behind her. He was very
good at appearing on cue. Voices carried in passages. "Let's see the
kit."
"What are we doing?"
"Assessing our options. For when we have a target."
"To do what?"
"Asset denial." Rayat was consulting his handheld. Then
Bennett stepped over the hatch coaming into the lobby. "Let's have your
excellent sergeant's view of what we can transport."
Some of the bombs looked like cartoon bombs, with
pointed noses and red stripes. And some didn't. Some of the racked
ordnance here looked like IT equipment, anonymous and box-shaped. Rayat
was messaging rapidly from that handheld and then reading, his lips
almost moving. Then he looked up, evidently relieved.
"I want to know if we can get at least six ERDs down to
the surface in the Once-Onlies," he said.
Bennett looked at Lindsay for a nod. He got it. Lindsay
was trying to recall what ERDs were.
"Yes," said Bennett.
"Expand on that."
"Yes, we can do it. They're about twenty or thirty
kilos each. If you're asking should we, I'd say no."
"I'm not asking."
Lindsay finally remembered what ERDs were. She knew
them as neutron bombs, not enhanced radiation devices. "Oh no, not that,"
she said. "No."
Rayat walked over to racks with handles that pulled
down and out, like mortuary drawers made of steel bars. He pressed the
handle and they powered open with a pneumatic ee-uurrrr
sound.
There were just little things inside, smaller than
Lindsay remembered from her weapons engineering ad-qual course. They
were about the size of an old-style A-Triple-F fire extinguisher, no
more than a meter long, blunt-nosed. They looked exactly the same as
the BNO "Beano" bombs, anti-biohaz neutralization ordnance, except for
the turquoise-colored bands on the screw-plate. And they were
the same, except for the BNO's
cobalt-salting component. Beanos had been banned for Earth-side use,
but they were stand-by worst-scenario kit in sealed environments.
It was all deceptively banal. They were stock items and
they were ultra-shielded, safe to handle and easy to use. It was just
being on the receiving end of one that made them nasty.
"You can't use neutron weapons on Bezer'ej," she said. "Or Beanos."
"Why?" asked Rayat. "If we need to destroy organic
material, this is the best way to do it."
Lindsay thought of Shan. She thought of her own agenda
of assassination, not retrieval. She had no idea if Shan would succumb
to radiation alone. "It's a landlord bomb. Kill the tenants and the
woodworm, leave the building standing."
"Ah, that's if you need to
leave the building standing. We don't. Not necessarily. This is still a
damn big bomb with a kiloton yield."
"We can't deploy tacticals and expect the wess'har not
to go apeshit."
"And they're not going to
go apeshit if we trash the place with conventional ordnance like FAEs?"
Rayat looked at Bennett as if to tell him to clear off. It wasn't the
sort of thing that worked well with Royal Marines. Bennett just stood
there, boots planted in the deck.
"You want me to thin out, ma'am?" asked Bennett,
looking at Rayat, lips pressed tight.
"Yes, go and have a cuppa," she said. It wasn't fair to
burden Bennett with the detail. It put him in the position of having to
judge if her orders were reasonable. She was pretty sure they wouldn't
be.
She dogged the hatch closed after him.
"What's your problem with this?" said Rayat. "What's
the point of getting hold of some of the biotech if you leave the rest
where it is?"
"I find nukes a bit extreme. Maybe it's a girl thing."
"Why so squeamish?"
"Well, putting aside the reaction of the Wess'ej armed
forces, it's an act of war, whether there's a lab facility on
Christopher or not."
"So is landing in someone else's sovereign territory
with armed troops."
"And the environmental damage will really
provoke the matriarchs."
"And you think massively destructive conventional
ordnance is more ecofriendly, do you? Ask the German Federation or
Vietnam. Or the Afghani Collective." Rayat slapped his palm flat on the
dull lovat casing, and Lindsay flinched irrationally. "This is the
whole point of ERDs. Localized tactical kill. You wait forty-eight
hours and then you can walk in."
"You can't walk in after a BNO's sprayed cobalt all
over the place. Not for a few years, if I recall my course notes."
"All we need is a big scouring blast and a big burn and
whatever survives that will be cleaned up by the neutron emission. We
don't really need Beanos."
"You know a lot about this."
"If you'd worked on biotech projects, you'd want to
know the fire drill too. But a straight ERD will do the job just fine."
He must have caught the distaste on her face. "I can do all this. You
leave the ordnance to me. We can leave your Royal Marines out of the
messy ethics too."
Rayat was right. It was all chilly logic, and Lindsay
was kidding herself if she thought that simply removing Shan Frankland
was the end of the matter, or that her arrest would not provoke some
reaction from the matriarchs. They wouldn't care how it was done. The
legal niceties of ethical and unethical weapons were a hypocritical
human preoccupation.
If there was a separate source of this contagion, then
it had to be destroyed too.
"You sure you know what…um…Spook HQ is planning to do
with your sample of Shan Frankland?" said Lindsay.
Rayat nodded. "Sticking it somewhere safe, in case we
ever need it really badly."
"That makes sense," said Lindsay. The hell it did: the
intelligence services employed no more paragons of virtue than any
other large organization.
Rayat could sterilize Bezer'ej, if he was right about
the location. But she would eradicate Shan Frankland.
"Okurt's furious," said Lindsay.
"What's your phrase? Face aft and salute. He'll carry
out his orders."
"I would have preferred a way of keeping him and Actaeon out
of this."
"Do you really think the wess'har will give a toss
about which monkey did what?"
"Yes," said Lindsay, and she thought of the moment when
she dutifully cleared up a surprisingly small pool of blood and
body-bagged Surendra Parekh, executed by--no, not by Shan, by Aras.
Two hollow-tip enhanced 9mm rounds to the
head, and that was the end of it. Dissecting a live alien child should
have got them all killed. It hadn't. Morality was different out here.
"They care about personal responsibility."
She followed Rayat out of the armory and locked the
hatch again. They went their separate ways.
Neither of them had discussed the obvious fact: even if
the wess'har didn't hold Actaeon to
account, they would certainly come after Dr. Mohan Rayat and Commander
Lindsay Neville. And they would be angrier than anyone had seen
them--at
least since the erasure of Mjat.
They were his friends.
In Constantine, Aras had seen them born, and he had
seen them grow, and he had seen them marry. They had raised families.
He had eaten at their tables. And he had also watched them die.
He knew he would watch them die again, and he wondered
if it would really matter how that came about, naturally or hastened by
conflict.
Eddie was asleep on the sofa that Shan had sacrificed
as a temporary bed for him. He still couldn't get used to the idea that
Aras and Shan saw the cover as brilliant blue when all he could see was
white. Aras stretched out on a sek
mattress on the terrace, hands meshed behind his head, staring up at
the stars and waiting for Shan to return. It had been an unpleasantly
challenging day even by comparison with recent events.
The sound of familiar heavy boots carried on the still
air and then became slower and softer as Shan walked carefully past
Eddie and through the house to the terrace.
"I bet you're bloody angry with me," Shan said. She
stood over Aras, hands on hips. "Go ahead. Bawl me out."
He couldn't pick up any scent from her: that was odd,
and it threw him for a few seconds. "I can't be angry with you,"
he said. "But I'm angry that you didn't
tell me what you were thinking of doing, and only because we have
shared so much that I expected you to tell me your plans."
Shan knelt down and kissed his forehead, more like a
benevolent parent than a lover. "If I'd told you, and you tried to talk
me out of it, I'd have had a very hard time."
"But you would still have done it."
"Sorry, but yes."
"Opposition has never concerned you before."
"Yeah, but you're different." Her lips moved as if she
was about to say something, but she paused. It was one of those few
times when she looked completely vulnerable. Then she braced her
shoulders visibly, composed her expression, and again became someone
else entirely. "I'm sorry I didn't tell you what I was doing. Fancy a
quickie, then?"
"It might wake Eddie."
"Eddie's been here three nights and I'm getting a bit
restless."
"Then we will keep the noise down."
Human ecstasy was a more intense and overwhelming
sensation than the wess'har state of our,
but it was fleeting. It was still a fine experience. Shan fell asleep
briefly, head on his shoulder, and he thought about Constantine.
The news would devastate the colonists.
Shan woke with a start. "Bugger. What time is it?"
"You've only been sleeping for a matter of minutes."
She sat up and raked her fingers through her hair
before tying it back into a tail. "I'm going to head back to
Constantine next week and get them used to the idea that they're
leaving."
"I'll do it."
"No, it's my call. You can come too, but I do the
business."
"Why?"
"Because they'll hate the person who does it, and that
won't even shift the needle for me. But they're your friends. Besides,
it was my idea."
Aras let out a long sigh that he had learned more than
a century before from Ben Garrod. "They have worked so very hard."
"You can't think that way, sweetheart. This is a long
game."
"You seem to be accepting c'naatat
very well lately."
"Best thing that ever happened to me."
"A change of view."
"It just dawned on me that you were right. The more
injury I'm exposed to, the stronger I get." She looked at her hands and
flexed them, sending not only blue and violet light sparkling through
her fingers, but also reds and greens and golds. "And I can control this
now." She gave him a big grin, and that
wasn't very Shan. "Can you detect any scent from me?"
"Only your female enthusiasm."
"I've got my scent reactions under control too. Makes
life a lot easier. I don't accidentally depose matriarchs now. Hey, I
might even be able to play poker with Mestin. Can you imagine how much
better I would be as a copper these days? Doesn't bear thinking about."
She looked as if she wanted him to share her
satisfaction. He had hoped she would say that her delight at being host
to the parasite was connected to him, but it seemed it was all about
how much more efficient it would make her for her mission in life,
whatever that was. She never said what she felt about the inescapably
permanent partnership with him.
It was foolish. Wess'har only cared about what was
done, not what was intended: and she certainly treated him as if she
cared for him, even if her manner was brisk. It was just the nagging
little human part of him that wanted reassurance. He tried not to
listen to its insecure voice. He knew that the unique biochemical bonds
oursan generated were as strong for her as
they were for him. It was enough.
"If you were on your own, you might feel differently,"
he said.
"Sorry. I wasn't making light of what you've been
through. I just try to make the best of a bad job." She screwed her
eyes shut. "That's not a criticism. But isn't that what you're doing
too?"
"Making the best of a bad job?"
"Well, you don't have much choice either. I'm the only
female c'naatat around."
"Did you ever ask why
you're the only female c'naatat? It was a choice. I
made it."
Shan stared at him and was silent. Not having those
scent cues made it hard now to work out what was happening. He fell
back on human body language. That didn't help much either.
"I've hurt you and I really didn't mean to," she said.
Her voice was level, her expression neutral. "I'm still working out
what I am right now. That's not easy when you're used to being certain
about yourself."
"I have experienced this, remember."
"But you didn't enjoy it."
"There were a few compensations, but not many."
"I'm finding it quite invigorating."
"You're a solitary person. I had family and friends and
I lost them all. I'm sure it looks very different to you."
"Ouch," said Shan. But she didn't expand on that, and
there was still no scent from her at all. She got to her feet, pulled
on her clothes and went back into the house.
He regretted offending her. But there was no point
apologizing for saying what was true and obvious.
Eddie was scheduled to return to Actaeon
in the morning. It seemed appropriate to
have a final dinner with him: Shan had no idea when--or if--he would
ever
be back, despite the fact that he seemed remarkably able to talk
everyone into allowing him free access.
And she still had a task to set him. She hadn't thought
of a way to ask him to collect tissue samples from the isenj, or even
how he might do it, but she'd think of something when the time came.
There was always the risk that he would be offended and she would lose
his goodwill and with it his propaganda: but the stakes were high. A
working bio-deterrent against isenj would mean peace for the bezeri
without further lives being lost or resources being committed.
And Eddie wasn't the only one whose heart and mind she
feared she might risk losing.
Aras wasn't actually ignoring her, but he did seem
preoccupied. She knew she'd wounded him. It upset her, but it had been
necessary.
Sod it, he was wess'har. He had to be used to females
going their own way on things. A year ago he was a miracle of
creation's diversity, a rare kindred spirit: now he was a partner who
had opinions on how she should do her job and who--to be frank--got on
her proverbial tits at times. He was turning into a regular man.
"Are you listening, Shan?" said Eddie, drumming his
fingers on the table.
"Sorry. Miles away." She glanced at Aras, who was
topping up plates and cups, and caught his eye. There was no hint of
anger: he simply gave her a slight smile--the best approximation of a
human one that he ever managed--and added a few slices of bread to her
plate.
"I was saying that the isenj stand to gain from a human
presence on Umeh. They're really interested in terraforming."
"Well, they've fucked their own environment," Shan
said. "So why stop there?"
"For them, it isn't actually devastated," Eddie said. "Just
overcrowded. They have to spend a lot on maintaining it, but they
do manage to feed and breathe with a certain degree of ease."
"They destroyed everything they didn't need for their
own use," Aras said suddenly "It's a world that revolves around their
needs."
"Well, plenty of humans back home take that view too.
But we're only shipping back twenty isenj in Thetis.
How much of a problem can they cause? I'm still astonished by the
reaction. You'd think people would regard it as a miracle, really."
"They breed," said Aras.
"That's plague language."
"I heard that word used on the news too."
Shan didn't join in. She'd had enough of debate. They
both knew what she thought and she was still wondering at what point
she should ask Eddie to do a little job for her.
"Ual thinks humans have a fixation with vermin," said
Eddie.
"Define vermin," said Aras.
"An animal in an environment where it isn't wanted and
that can breed in large enough numbers to cause disruption to health,
agriculture, or commerce."
"Ah," said Aras, and paused for a heartbeat. "Like
humans, then."
Shan stifled a laugh. Aras had the timing of a stand-up
comedian. But it wasn't funny. It was true.
"I suppose that's one way of looking at it," said Eddie.
"Every species' way of looking at it, except yours."
"We're not all like that."
"Enough of you are." Aras leaned across the table and
Eddie flinched visibly, but all the wess'har did was clasp his hand
around the bottle of wine and tip it at an angle, like a sommelier
presenting a fine vintage for inspection by a connoisseur. "Wine could
well be an icon for your species. No wonder you base societies and
ritual upon it. It's the fruit of polluted excess. The yeast colony
gorges itself on saccharides until it dies poisoned by its own
excretion. It doesn't know how to stop and it consumes itself to death."
"We can learn to do differently," said Eddie.
"Show me the evidence. Show me in a million years where
humans have changed."
"Constantine. The colonists."
"Their instinctive greed is controlled by their fear.
They recognize they have these instincts, and they believe that by
suppressing them they will appease their god, but they still have them.
And their greed is for time. They want to live forever."
A strong citrus waft of agitation underlined his words.
Had he been human, Shan would have dismissed the argument as too much
alcohol over dinner, the sort of embarrassment that you slept off and
that none of the other guests mentioned again, at least not in front of
you. But he was sober, as he always would be, and she had never heard
him voice the slightest criticism of the colonists. It stood in stark
contrast to his fears for them the night before.
Eddie seemed to have noted that too. "Do I detect a
real anti-human movement here?"
Aras stiffened. "It's not about species. It's what you do.
Do you know what I despise most about you?"
His tone, as ever, was deceptively even, like a priest giving
absolution to a monster and trying hard not to let his personal
revulsion show. "Your unshakable belief that you're special,
that somehow all the callousness and
careless violence that your kind hand out to each other and to other
beings can be forgiven because you have this…this great human spirit.
I have viewed your dramas and your
literature, you see. I have lost count of the times that I have seen
the humans spared by the aliens because, despite humanity's flaws, the
alien admires their plucky spirit and
ability to strive. Well, I am that alien,
and I don't admire your spirit, and your
capacity to strive is no more than greed. And unlike your god, I don't
love you despite your sins."
Shan leaned over the table between them. "Come on, you
two. Break it up, for Chrissakes." She began gathering the plates. It
cut across the tension. "This isn't the time or the place for a row.
And I'm tired."
Aras took hold of the plates with a carefully blank
expression and tugged just enough for her to relinquish her hold on
them. Eddie couldn't have noticed, but the wess'har smelled of seething
anger. He wandered off and began rinsing the plates. Shan gestured to
Eddie to leave the table and sit down on the sofa.
"Sorry," said Eddie. "When did he turn into
Rochefoucauld?"
"Maybe I'm a bad influence," Shan said. "Me and my
sunny view of human nature, maybe."
"He's right, though, isn't he?"
He was. And something had changed that night, something
she had always known was fragile, but it was a cold moment nonetheless.
A chill spread from her lower gut and into her thighs, a sensation she
had felt before only when she was physically terrified. A sheet of
flame spreading down the transparent riot
shield she held in front of her as petrol and glass crashed and ignited
in her face. It couldn't touch her then, but it scared her. And
it couldn't touch her now, not even if it really did burn her.
There were humans, and there were aliens, and she was
standing on an ice floe and drifting away from humanity. The gap
opening up in front of her would now never close.
But there was work still to do. "I won't dress this up,
Eddie," Shan said. "Are you prepared to provide something for me?"
"Information? Okay. I'll do my best."
"Bit more concrete than that."
A pause. "I ought to say no. But try me."
"I'll do a trade. Here's some information in exchange
for material. I'll give you the wess'har war forecast for the next few
months and you pick up a sample for me if you can."
"Sample of what?"
"Isenj DNA. You being so chummy and all that."
"Now why does that worry me?"
"Because you know what a clever and nasty bunch of
bastards the wess'har are, and that they've got big sisters who are
even worse."
"Oh, I need more facts than that, Shazza."
"Okay. They're going to seed Bezer'ej with a persistent
artificial pathogen that's selective against humans. They used my DNA
to create it. It's a bloody great keep-out sign."
Eddie still had his half glass of wine in his hand, and
he was inspecting the contents with unnatural diligence. "And they want
an isenj sample to do the same."
"Spot on."
"And what if the matriarchs decide to use it as an
offensive weapon?"
"Well, Earth will be fucked anyway if we really piss
them off, but look at it this way--they could have creamed Umeh ten
times over, but the isenj didn't try to invade them, so they didn't
attack them on their home ground. If humans show the same good sense, I
don't think it's an issue."
"It's that word think that
I don't like."
"Eddie, given time, they'll find how to extract it from
my genome. I've got a dash or two of isenj in me. That's how I acquired
a genetic memory, via Aras." She flashed her illuminated hands. "And a
bit of bezeri too. So you might say we're family."
"How did you get c'naatat?"
"Aras gave me a transfusion of his blood when I was
shot. It saved my life. So--are you going to do it or not?"
"You give me your word it won't be used as a weapon?"
"You'd trust me, would you?"
"Are we going to get a word in between us that isn't a
bloody question?"
"Deal."
"You're an immensely persuasive woman."
"Seriously, Eddie. You've got a pretty good
appreciation of what's a threat to these people and what isn't. Will
you help?"
"I'll do what I can."
"Thanks. I mean it."
"Don't thank me. Like I said before, it's Falklands
time."
"I didn't understand that."
"Twentieth century war history. You might want to read
it sometime. I've seen accounts from British naval officers of how they
sat on board warships in the Falkland Islands combat zone listening to
the radio. There they were, in a place called San Carlos Water, just
waiting for more Argentine air attacks, and the news was broadcasting
information on what the British battle plans were. The government
briefed reporters about everything. And there were these sailors,
listening to this, knowing the plans were blown, and just waiting for
incoming. Now, I don't know who was more to blame for making that
information public, the politicians or the journalists, but that was
the day reporters couldn't pretend we were neutral observers any
longer." He scratched his cheek as if he were suddenly embarrassed by
his impassioned speech. "It's hard to prove it changed events, and
perhaps it didn't, but I always wondered what I
would have put first. There are only so many times that you can stand
back and say you were only doing your job."
Shan wondered if Eddie were acting. He seemed in his
own private world, thinking aloud and wrestling with personal demons.
The fact that he was inclined to wrestle at all endeared him to her.
But if this was all part of his professional sleight of hand, she would
kill him.
And she realized that she was being wess'har-literal
when she thought that.
The wess'har were at the start of a siege, one
potentially more serious than the last isenj war. So few of them, and
so many humans and isenj waiting to take their place: but if Eddie
needed that knowledge of their growing desperation to ensure his
compliance and sympathy, she wasn't going to give it to him just yet.
"What do I need to do?" he said.
"Any biological material. Fluids--"
"We're not that chummy."
"--or anything they shed."
Eddie mouthed a silent ah
as if he remembered something. "Why don't they ask the ussissi to do
this? They're in and out of isenj space like a fiddler's elbow."
"Wess'har would never ask them to compromise their
neutrality. They do their own dirty work."
"Explains why they need you so much."
"I wouldn't piss around with the ussissi either. I get
the feeling it's like breaking up a pub fight involving soldiers. Take
one on, and you've got to take them all on."
Eddie drained his glass. He studied the nonexistent
dregs for a moment and then glanced over his shoulder to check where
Aras was.
"They really are after your arse, you know," he said
quietly. "I know you're not someone who likes hiding, but I'd keep my
head down if I were you."
"I appreciate the concern."
"They've killed the story back home."
"What, me?"
"C'naatat. One minute I had
News Desk screaming for a story and I tell them to shove it, the next I
hear we don't talk about the subject. Commercial or government
pressure. Sad day for journalism, even if I didn't want the story to
run."
"Do you think they believe the threat's real, Eddie?"
"In what sense?"
"We're 150 trillion miles away. It must look like a
movie to them. All the pictures, none of the problems. If the wess'har
start on us--and I'm using the term us
loosely--you know they won't stop, don't you?"
"Mjat made a big impression on me, Shan. I do know."
"You make sure they do, too," she said.
Eddie paused and then smiled knowingly. "You know,
Shan, you're bloody good at this."
She smiled back. "You know, Eddie, I was being sincere
for once."
His smile faded and so did hers. They both dropped
their gaze. "I'll sleep out on the terrace tonight," he said. "Nice
warm night. And I'd love to stare up at those stars." He nodded in
Aras's direction. "Besides, I think you have some diplomatic relations
to restore with your old man."
"I reckon," said Shan.
She waited for him to close the external door behind
him. Then she allowed herself a grin.
Yes, she really was bloody
good at it.
If we believe a
thing to be bad, and if we have a right to prevent it, it is our duty
to try to prevent it and to damn the consequences.
Viscount Lord ALFRED
MILNER, 1854–1925
"This is one of the hardest things I've
ever had to do," said Shan.
No, it wasn't; it wasn't at all, not by a long chalk.
The only hard thing about it was standing before the altar of St.
Francis in the buried heart of Constantine colony. She could feel the
exquisite light from the stained glass window at her back burning right
through her. It wasn't the right place for a Pagan to be, not even a
lapsed one like her.
She looked from face to worried face in the
congregation, people she knew and who once trusted her.
"You have to leave Constantine," Shan said. "You have
to move everybody out."
There wasn't so much as a murmur. She wasn't prepared
for that. All her training and instinct was targeted towards meeting
resistance. Right then she wasn't sure exactly what she was meeting, so
she carried on. She could see Josh in her peripheral vision. She
couldn't see Aras.
"The political situation is extremely tense," she said. "Earth's
sent another vessel to this system without seeking permission
from either the wess'har or the isenj. You know the wess'har even
better than I do, probably. They're taking extreme action."
There was a sigh from somewhere near the front. And
still there were no questions.
"They're going to block landings permanently by the
only means they have. Basically, they're going to seed this planet with
organisms that will kill humans and isenj. And that means you too, I'm
afraid. The good news is that if you agree to leave, you can start
again on Wess'ej. There'll be a habitat for you." Their faces were
stricken. Maybe I didn't express that very well.
"So, any questions?"
"How long do we have?" asked a woman in the front pew.
It was Sabine Mesevy, the botanist from the Thetis
mission who had found religion and opted to stay. Shan hadn't spotted
her, and that was bad, because Shan was used to taking in every detail
of a crowd.
"Two months, tops," Shan said. "There'll be plenty of
help to get you packed up and shipped out. I'm sorry this had to
happen."
Mesevy wasn't giving up. "Won't our biobarrier protect
us?"
"They're shutting it down. They don't want to hand over
a potential foothold to either side."
"They could land with full biohaz protection."
"Maybe, but it's one thing to work in a sealed lab and
another to live in one. This planet would be no more use to them than
Earth's moon."
"Is it just the planet that humans might be interested
in?"
Shan hesitated. "I suspect not."
Nobody said anything further. Shan found herself
irritated and wanting to get on with the evacuation. The silence
continued and it had a sound of its own. She began counting a full
minute.
When she glanced at the floor, there was a brilliant
shaft of ruby and emerald light from the stained glass window slanting
between her boots as she stood with her legs slightly apart. The light
from Cavanagh's Star was somehow channeled down into the colony: every
day, the image of St. Francis, surrounded by the creatures of Earth and
Bezer'ej and Wess'ej, came to life at sunrise.
She wondered if they would try to dismantle the window
and take it with them to their new refuge. She hoped they would.
Sixty seconds. She looked up, and it was as if the
silent moment had become permanent.
"I'll leave you to talk, then," she said. "You'll have
more questions. I'll be at Josh's house when you're ready to ask them."
It was a long walk down that aisle. It felt as long as
the walk through the Thetis mission
compound to tell the payload that Surendra Parekh had been executed for
causing the death of a bezeri infant.
Parekh didn't mean to do it. And I didn't plan to give the
bastards a stronger incentive for coming here.
She was almost at the end of the aisle when a man she
vaguely recognized stepped out in front of her. Her reflexes said threat.
Her c'naatat
said no problem.
"We're not going," said the man. "We're not leaving.
This is our home. Don't you understand that?"
Shan was taller, harder, and armed. He didn't seem to
care. "That's too bad," she said. "You have no choice."
"How can you side with them? You're human."
She'd heard that challenge before. He was an inch too
close, and his fists were clenched. "What I do doesn't matter," she
said quietly. "They'll do it with me or without me. This is your one
chance to go."
"We can't leave all we've worked for. We were born
here. We don't know anywhere else."
He moved, probably not intending violence, but it was
enough for Shan to reach out and seize his forearm with a gloved grip
that might have hurt. It certainly rooted him to the spot.
"You'll do it," she said. "Your forefathers did it, and
so can you."
"You can't force us."
She let go of his arm. They were surrounded by crowded
silence. "Look, love, one way or another, you're not going to be here
in three months' time. You can start again, or you can end up like
Mjat."
Shan stared at him, unblinking, arms at her sides,
until he stepped back and sat down in the pew, shaking visibly. There
were kids sitting next to him. They looked transfixed by her.
She looked back to the rest of the colonists. "Just
don't do anything bloody stupid, okay? No heroics."
That was the trouble with people who thought they were
going to heaven. They just didn't take death seriously enough.
The sight of smoke-blue grassland around the
Temporary City was as emotional as a homecoming. Aras was glad to be
out of F'nar: Shan might have enjoyed its urban intricacy, but he felt
hemmed in by it even now that he could walk its terraces almost as a
proper jurej.
The Temporary City itself was looking less temporary
than ever. The reinforcement of the garrison was visible. Will we listen to the bezeri if
they say something we don't agree with? He watched a transport
vessel landing, settling slowly on yielding legs. Wess'har were capable
of trampling benignly over the wishes of others. Sometimes he felt that
was right. Sometimes he wasn't so sure.
The bezeri had not forgotten their routine. He had only
to stand for a while on the cliffs above the bay and ripple a sequence
of lights from his lamp for a bezeri patrol pod to half surface. The
patrols kept an eye on bezeri who might swim too near to the surface in
curiosity and beach themselves. The constant military traffic across
the region must have given them a great deal to be curious about. The Mountain to the Dry Above?
the lights asked. I will visit Constantine later,
Aras signaled back. First I need to speak to you
all.
Constantine was set on an island. For the bezeri, it
was one of a number of steep peaks rising out of their marine
territories and into the Dry Above, as alien and hostile to them as
space was to a human. He waded out into the water and eased himself
into the open sac of the pod before suspending his respiration and
letting the water flood in and engulf him. It was the price he had to
pay for getting a lift. It wasn't pleasant, but he couldn't drown. He
had the isenj to thank for that.
The pressure was uncomfortable in the depths of the
bezeri settlement. The local sea tasted of dead pifanu
and mud. Light danced everywhere, complex patterns and colors of
conversations and songs between one bezeri and another. Aras could
recognize a few concept sequences, but without the signaling lamp that
interpreted for him, he was deaf and mute even after so many years. He
turned it over in his hands.
A group of massive fluid shapes eased out of an opening
in a carefully molded tower of shell and mud and came to a halt a few
meters from him, blue and lime points of brilliant light rippling
across their mantles. There is something wrong,
the lights said. More humans want to come here,
said Aras. If they came, would they prevent
the isenj returning?
Their horizons might have been limited by the sea, but
the bezeri understood political alliances. Aras chose his next
signal-words carefully. Do you doubt we can keep you
safe?
The patterns of light now formed ornate orange and red
concentric circles. There are too few of you and
you must put yourselves first. We must choose the option that keeps the
isenj at bay. If we could choose freely, we would like both humans and
isenj to stay away.
Aras calculated again. Do you
understand the differences between the humans of the Mountain to the
Dry Above and the newcomers?
Clouds of silt billowed as one of the bezeri jerked its
tentacles up to its body. What we understand is
that the isenj fouled our cities with their excretions and that if they
come again, we will all die.
Aras paused to search for a neutral answer. He needed
to know what they wanted, not what they would agree to, whatever Mestin
had ordered. He signaled carefully. If more
humans come to the Dry Above, they may find something here that will be
used to cause trouble to other people in other worlds. We will create a
barrier here that will stop both humans and isenj settling. We will
remove the humans from the Dry Above and we will also remove the
Temporary City in time. You will abandon us. No. You won't need us here. You fear you will lose control
of this system. Yes. Then our only choice is to rely
on your science.
The bezeri elders paused in the dark waters for a
moment and then swept away in a burst of green light. Aras steadied
himself against their expelled water by clutching an outcrop of esken
and waited, but nobody else came to talk
to him. The pilot shimmered scarlet and amber. I think you should go now.
On the trip back to the surface, Aras wondered if he
now contained the characteristics of so many life-forms that he had
forgotten what it meant to be any one of them. Why should the bezeri
care about what happened on dry land, let alone other planets? All they
could rely on was their memories. All they remembered that the isenj
had once had settlements here and that they had fouled the water.
Asking them to address the problems of other species that they would
never see when they perceived an immediate and very real threat to
their daily lives was futile.
Maybe wess'har spent too much time now worrying about
their responsibilities. Perhaps they didn't have as many duties as they
thought. But that was human thinking: all rights, no responsibilities.
He shook the idea off, disgusted.
What had they said? If we could
choose freely, we would like both humans and isenj to stay away.
Mestin had given them what they wanted. In hindsight, Shan had acted
correctly in donating her genes.
Aras was still trying to define what had disturbed him
so much about the sequence of events. Shan had not deceived him: she
had simply taken the straightest path through a complex situation to
arrive at the correct result. Intent was irrelevant. Only action
mattered.
It was the action that worried him. Wess'har had not
been ideologically pure enough to destroy that knowledge of bio-weapons
any more than they had declined the utility of c'naatat
in a personal crisis.
And he hadn't had the will not to use it to save Shan's
life, because his wants mattered more in those few minutes than his
principles.
He headed up the beach and towards Constantine,
wondering what had happened to his sense of right and wrong.
Josh ladled more soup into Aras's bowl than he
thought he would ever be able to tackle. Huge butter beans broke the
brilliant orange surface like fat white islands, and Aras prodded them
with his spoon. There was a sense of relief about the Garrod family:
the last time they had seen Aras was when Nevyan had arrested him.
Excessive food was a substitute for expressing affection, so he
accepted it as such. It was good to know they still welcomed him even
if he brought bad news. Deborah and James simply smiled at him from
time to time: Rachel, now six, studied him intently.
"I realize how terrible this must be for you," Aras
said.
Josh shrugged. Nothing seemed to panic him. "I feel a
certain sense of relief that this world will be quarantined. I've been
worried about access to c'naatat since the
day your people detected Thetis for the
first time."
"They can't take it. They can't land here now. They
will always focus on access to me, or to Shan
Chail."
Josh hadn't mentioned Shan at all. The lack of
reference to her was conspicuous, and Aras felt a pang of annoyance
that the colonists might now resent or even hate his isan, but
he knew she would say that she didn't give a fuck.
He tore off a chunk of bread and dipped it in the soup.
The meal fell silent. Josh's home was a perfect haven, cut into the
rock just like a wess'har home, with soft filtered sunlight streaming
down through the roof-dome that doubled as a solar panel. The thought
of this place being abandoned and erased by nanites saddened Aras. But
the colonists had never intended to stay here forever, just long enough
to wait out the dark days until Earth was ready to be restored again.
He suddenly thought they were insane to come here. The
construction work had been backbreaking, and he had played his part.
He'd looked very different in those days.
"You must find this very sad after investing so much
labor," he said.
"Material things can be remade," said Josh. "And we
will rebuild."
"If I can help, I will."
"I would rather you helped me tear down than build."
"I don't understand."
"There are things we can take and things we can't. I
want to destroy everything in the church that we can't take with us." So much for material things
having no meaning, Aras thought. The more he discussed their
beliefs with them, the less sense they made. But it wasn't the time to
debate with them. Their faith would be the only thing that would keep
them going through the crushing misery of being uprooted and having to
start again on a world they didn't know.
"I know you have always told us to stay away from
Christopher Island," Josh said carefully. It was another island in the
chain that was home to Constantine. Once it had been called Ouzhari. It
was all black grass in spring, a plant unique to the island. "And
that's the only place c'naatat can be
found, yes?"
"I didn't realize you knew," Aras said.
"I didn't," said Josh. "Not for sure."
It was the first time--the only time--that Josh had ever
tricked him. The sensation was unpleasant. Josh was a decent man and
Aras knew he had no reason to doubt his integrity. But it hurt. They
sat in silence and busied themselves with the soup.
They had named the island after St. Christopher,
another of these not-quite-gods that they made out of men and women.
They had beatified all six islands in the chain: Constantine,
Catherine, Charity, Clare, Chad, and Christopher. Aras had learned
about saints. He still thought it might have been more appropriate for
the c'naatat island to be named St.
Charity, given the nature of her martyrdom. Saints needed to suffer. It
was one of those dark needs of humankind.
The first robotic mission to Bezer'ej had landed on
Christopher, and Aras had relocated it as far up the chain as possible
with the help of wess'har comrades long since dead. The colonists knew
exactly what c'naatat was. They had no
interest in it, almost to the point of dread. Some of them regarded it
as the devil's temptation, whatever that
meant. The kind of eternal life they were looking for involved
something called the bliss of God, not resistance to disease and injury
until you lost everyone you ever cared for. No, they were no threat.
They pitied him. He would never go to
heaven.
Josh closed his eyes for a second. He might have been
praying. Humans thought aloud to God, and Aras had never worked out how
they expected their deity to pick its way between their billions of
conflicting needs and desires.
He opened his eyes. "You'll hold on to the gene bank,
of course."
"Whatever happens," said Aras, "I will ensure the
species bank is preserved. Whether it will ever return to Earth, I
can't say. But we won't hand over any of those people or plants to Actaeon."
"Are you really removing the biobarrier?"
"You know why we have to."
"They really would wipe us out too, then."
"Yes."
Josh looked him in the eye for several long seconds.
Aras could see his ancestor Ben in him. Aras felt sorrow and fear for
them all, but he didn't feel guilty and he didn't feel repentent. For a
moment he thought that Josh had finally seen him for the alien he truly
was: neither a miracle nor a guardian nor anything sent by divine
providence to help them carry out their task, but an alien with a
radically different morality.
"I understand," Josh said, and Aras knew he didn't. A
gulf had opened up between them. It had always been there, paper-thin,
but now it was a canyon and widening fast.
Aras stayed in Constantine for two more days. He made
sure he visited the school and walked as many of the subterranean
streets as he could. The spring crops were sprouting: two of the rats
he had liberated from the Thetis's
pharmacologist had produced a litter because the colony's children
hadn't quite worked out how to sex them, never having experienced live
animals larger than insects before. It was all normal and full of
unspecified hope.
Josh's son James was taking good care of Black and
White, two of the lab rats that Aras had taken a particular liking to.
Aras played hand-chasing games with them for a while, but they weren't
as nimble as they had been. Rats aged fast. Shan had warned him they
would die in another year or so, and that he shouldn't get upset
because that was normal for rats.
Above ground, all that was visible of the settlement
were the discreet domes of skylights and the carefully arranged patches
of crops. The air was scented with damp green fertility.
He paid a visit to the church of St. Francis. GOVERNMENT WORK IS
GOD'S WORK.
The inscription had been one of his earliest memories
of the colony. He had watched bots carve it years before any humans
arrived on the planet. They had been gethes
then. He had stopped them using other creatures for food and turned
them into acceptable humans. I had a choice. I was still the
custodian of Bezer'ej. It would have been no trouble to kill them
before they woke from chill-sleep.
But he hadn't. And he hadn't let Shan die either. He
didn't regret either decision. Regret was pointless and human. It had
nothing to do with reality.
Aras would have to turn the reclamation nanites loose
in the tunnels and galleries. They would reduce all artefacts to dust
as efficiently as they had wiped out all traces of the shattered isenj
settlements on Bezer'ej. It was a pity about the window, though.
He walked up the aisle of the church and studied the
stylized figure in a brown robe. He had assembled most of the image: he
could take it apart again. The colonists would need something of this
place to take with them, and it was as iconic and representative of
their purpose as anything he could imagine.
Shan came up behind him. He caught a pleasant breath of
her distinctive skin-scent, a smooth, mouth-filling smell of sawn wood
underlaid by a human bittersweet musk.
"You okay?" she asked.
"I am."
"I'm sorry. I really am. Not for them, but for you."
He sized up the window, working out how he would
dismantle the many leaded pieces of glass and record their positions so
he might reassemble them in F'nar. "It will further help them get to
their heaven," he said.
"Are you taking the piss?"
"Not at all. I mean it. The more they have to do things
they find hard, the better their god loves them, it seems. I still
don't understand the value of suffering."
"Yeah, it beats me too."
"I shall stay and help them depart. It's the right
thing to do."
Shan slipped her arm through his and they stood looking
at the stained glass saint who had loved all creation, and his
entourage of animals, some of which might have eaten him had he fallen
into their grasp. Aras suspected an alyat
would have overlooked St. Francis's respect for it if there had been a
lean hunting season.
Shan was looking intently at the window too. Aras
didn't have to ask why. It was the areas of blue glass that spoke to
her. When she first saw them, they had looked white: humans couldn't
see the colors as wess'har did. Then she saw them for the color they
were, and knew what he had done to save her. She'd been enraged and
terrified.
"It's beautiful," she said. Clearly the association was
no longer painful. "And I still don't know how the sunlight gets down
here."
"I could show you."
"Later." Her eyes moved over the image. "You're going
to save it, aren't you?"
"Yes."
"Good. I'm glad." She squeezed his arm. "I'll hang on
here, then. If there's any dissent, I'll handle it."
"They're taking it hard." He was glad she would be
around. She seemed to relish restoring compliance: he saw it only as a
necessity. "It will make it easier having you here."
"I might have to do things that you'll find hard to
accept. I don't want it to drive us apart."
"Shan, you're my isan and
I'm bound to you, whatever you do or say."
He felt all her muscles tense. "You sound as if you
wish you weren't."
"No. I'm perfectly content."
"Look, when the dust has settled, let's take a few days
out of F'nar and get ourselves straight again. Perhaps we could visit
Baral." She reached into her jacket, took out the small red cylinder of
her swiss and pressed it into his hand. "No point my carrying this.
Nevyan's given me a new communications thing. I don't think I'm ever
going to get the hang of it somehow."
The antiquated swiss was no use to him either. And it
was full of details of the demons that drove her, the terrible things
that gethes did. But he knew how much it
meant to her and that she was giving it to him as a gesture. He
suspected she would never use the word love,
but he understood nevertheless.
"I shall take good care of it," he said.
A pause. "I'd better be off, then." She gave him a
brisk kiss on the cheek and strode back down the aisle, boots echoing.
Yes. A few days of quiet--without matriarchs and Eddie
and all the tension that had accompanied them since the day they
met--might be good for them both. Aras watched her go and marveled at
how unconcerned she seemed. Then he walked to the bell tower and took
hold of the long ropes of hemp and efte
attached to the six glass bells.
Ben Garrod had never believed that bells could be made
from glass. Humans had limited technology in that area. But he had been
delighted by the sound they made when struck. It was a wavering note
rather than a low metallic gong, but it carried for miles and it had an
ethereal quality that the humans liked.
It was a sound that generations of colonists had grown
up hearing. Aras had no idea why Josh insisted on destroying them now
and not leaving them to the nanites.
Aras glanced up into the top of the tower that housed
the bells. In daylight the brilliant blue was visible, and if he stood
at the right position in the aisle he could look up and see the curved
transparent shapes through the beams of the roof. He was still staring
up, remembering the effort of making them, when he scented Josh coming
through the church.
The man looked tired. "Let's do it," he said. "One last
time."
"We could remove them," Aras said.
"No," said Josh. "No nanites, either. I want to see
them gone now. No looking back."
Josh took one rope in both hands and gave it an all-out
downward tug, tipping the bell back on itself and drawing a long,
plaintive note from it. Then he stopped and placed another rope in
Aras's hand.
"Just pull this when I indicate," he said.
Aras had never cared to learn the complex sequences of
ringing that the colonists took great care to practice. He rang now
because Josh wanted him to; that was the least he could do for him,
even though their friendship was now feeling strained. Using only two
bells, the ringing had none of the magnificent tonal complexity of what
they called plain hunt or rounds, but perhaps the
tolling of two bells was
more apt than peals that were celebratory in tone.
The sound vibrated in Aras's throat. He felt he could
taste it.
Josh paused for breath. "They used to use church bells
as an alarm signal," he said. "There was a war in Europe when they
stopped churches ringing their bells for the whole six years of the
war, because if the bells rang, it was a warning that England had been
invaded." He stared up the length of the thick beige rope, and Aras
could have sworn he was in tears. "It's just material, Aras. We don't
need these things to know God."
They rang solemnly for five more minutes. Then Josh
brought his bell to a dead stop and showed Aras how to do the same.
"I've collected the items from the altar," Josh said.
It was a strangely dispassionate way of describing the carved image of
his tortured dead deity. Aras still found their fixation with redeeming
physical agony a disturbing one. "I'll bar the door behind me so we
don't have any accidents."
"Are you absolutely sure you want me to do this? It
seems unnecessary. The nanites will--"
"I want them destroyed here, please."
"It makes no difference how they are eradicated."
"Yes, it does. We need a harsh reminder that we have
burned our bridges. It makes us move forward."
Aras gave him time to clear the building. Then he
climbed the fragile ladder that led to the top of the tower and
squeezed into the gap between the vault of the roof and the headstock
to which the bells were attached. He took out his tilgir.
It had been a pleasure and an education to make those
bells. It was fitting that he should now be the last person to touch
them.
It took a while to hack through the rope and composite
pins that secured the crowns to the headstock. There was creaking. Then
gaps began opening, and with a sudden lurch all six bells dropped in
close sequence down the well of the tower in a brief, unnatural silence
that ended in a cacophony of bouncing shards that churned in a
glittering eruption of sapphire and cobalt fragments like a missile
piecing the surface of a frozen sea.
The agonizing noise calmed in seconds into tinkling,
then into nothing at all. The bells of St. Francis were finally silent.
The erasure of Constantine had begun.
Humans lie even
to themselves. They promote the idea that all intelligent
beings--intelligent by their narrow definition--are all the same within
and will behave the same if exposed to the same environment. They fear
to admit that there are varied characteristics that define each race
and species. If they still have not managed to erase great differences
within their own species, how can they believe they can achieve it with
nonhumans? And yet they will labor on under the willingly shared lie
that all beings will be reasonable and behave like humans if they are
treated like humans. Logic and history tells us we will behave like
isenj, or like wess'har, or like ussissi. We all behave as we are.
SIYYAS BUR, matriarch historian
Okurt wasn't unlikable. He wasn't as
quietly impressive as the Royal Marines from Thetis,
but neither was he the sarcastic buffoon that he seemed to have created
as a defensive shell. Eddie thought the current situation was a lot to
ask of a man who had never been properly trained for alien contact.
He expected to be debriefed as soon as he put one foot
through the last of the inner hatches. But there was polite restraint
from everyone. It was a full twelve hours before Okurt left a message
inviting him to lunch in the wardroom with the senior staff.
Meals were the backbone of the day. Okurt believed that
his staff should have one meal where they didn't have to operate a
console with one hand and snatch a snack in the other. "We are not a
grazing animal," he told Eddie. "Officers dine."
There were disposable napkins and matching shatterproofs. The table
itself looked like solid naval oak until you stood up too quickly and
caught it with your leg to discover it was tough, feather light blown
composite with a convincing grain, and that it stowed up flat into a
bulkhead. It was sweetly patriarchal. Okurt sat at the head of the
table like a father waiting to carve the Sunday roast.
It would have been a nice ordinary lunch if Eddie
hadn't had a long list of unpleasant news he needed to impart to Actaeon
and her masters.
"You do seem to be getting on well with the isenj,"
said Okurt. "Still using an interpreter?"
"Not with Ual," Eddie said. "Very fluent. It's a
struggle for him to make the sounds, but he knows exactly what he's
saying."
"Shout."
"Eh?"
" �If they fail to understand, shout: and do not
dissemble, because God is your authority.' " Okurt laughed. "Old advice
to those taking on the white man's burden in the colonies."
"Good if you're talking to people with pointed sticks.
Bad if they have missiles."
"We could do with fostering some enthusiasm for the
space program, seeing as it pays us." Okurt passed round sliced protein
that might have been soy but could just as easily have been
cell-culture chicken. The parallel of bountiful provision by the
government's hand was not lost on Eddie. "I hear the views of F'nar
raised approval a bit. Staggeringly pretty. Shame the inhabitants would
rather blow our heads off than let us visit."
Lindsay picked at her chicken salad, or perhaps it was
a soy salad after all, and looked preoccupied. Eddie thought it was
time to put her out of her misery. It was a matter of things being best
hidden in plain sight.
"Can I ask you a question, Malcolm?" Eddie liked to
give his quarry a sporting hundred-meter start. "I hear from reliable
defense sources back home that the Hereward
has changed course."
Lindsay looked up at him. It was convincing shock. It
was a shock that he had mentioned it, of course, but it did the job
just fine. She hadn't told Okurt that Eddie knew about it. Maybe she
hadn't even told him that she knew. Okurt
made a commendable show of looking unperturbed.
"It's true the Hereward is
being deployed to this sector, Eddie, yes. Your sources are correct.
Might I ask how and when?"
"Sources. The only item in
my professional code of honor. That's all you need to know."
"How widely have you discussed this?" Okurt asked.
"We haven't reported it yet." Eddie smiled. Well, that
was true. Okurt would know that anyway. "Come on. You don't pay me."
"Do the isenj know?" A sloppy admission, very sloppy.
So he was more worried about the isenj than the wess'har, and that was
a view Eddie couldn't share after the events of the last week. But then
Okurt was just a field officer, not a politician. "Would you like me to
ask them?"
Okurt managed a smile and pushed the jug of instant
Chardonnay-flavored drink down the oak-alike table. Lindsay fielded it
and poured, a study in displacement activity.
"It's only a support vessel," Okurt said at last. "And
it won't be here for twenty-five years."
"A well cannoned-up support vessel, though. Never mind.
Plenty of time to get back in everyone's good books." Eddie sliced his
hydroponic tomato purely as stage timing. "Because the wess'har know
about it, and they're mobilizing."
Okurt and Lindsay both stopped chewing for a split
second at exactly the same time.
"I imagine you're going to tell us all about it," said
Okurt.
"Yes, because I'd like to be out of here before they're
ready to roll. I'm old-fashioned that way. I like to keep my entrails
inside my body cavity."
Okurt was shunting bits of chicken around his plate
with his fork. Despite being lightweight composite, the crockery still
carried a gold rim and the ship's huntsman crest. Eddie couldn't help
noticing that the huntsman was being ripped apart by his own hounds.
"They interpreted it as a hostile act, and it was bad
timing after extracting all the human crew from Thetis,"
said Eddie.
"Why?"
"The ussissi have gone ballistic. The paranoid little
buggers think we're shaping up to destroy the ship because of the
opposition back home to bringing isenj to Earth."
Lindsay said nothing. She took another pull at the
glass of not-wine that Eddie now wished were hundred-proof navy rum. He
could have done with a real drink.
"Want to see my rushes?" said Eddie.
It wasn't quite the same game he had played before. He
liked juggling with information, flushing out who knew what, as much as
Shan clearly enjoyed the challenge of interrogation. But he just needed
to be clear--in his heart of hearts--why he was playing.
He was helping to avert disaster. He was trying to stop
humans making a big mistake and getting into a fight with another
species that would actually win, and win well. He was saving the last
of a civilization of intelligent squid.
He hadn't abandoned his professional standards at all.
"Yes, we would," said Okurt.
Eddie unrolled his screen and set it on the console
table that ran down the length of the short bulkhead. The assembled
senior staff watched the raw footage like they were staring at a road
crash.
"I tried to get as close as I could," said Eddie
modestly.
The bee-cam was staring down into the cockpit of a huge
and enigmatic fighter craft. If he had sent the cam up its tailpipe it
wouldn't have told a human the first thing about how it worked and what
it could do. In fact, it didn't even appear to have
a tailpipe.
"There are a thousand wess'har cities down there, and
they've all got a box of kit like this," said Eddie. He was watch ing
faces while they watched his shots: he had hit the spot, and hard. "And
I don't want to worry you, but Wess'ej is just the outpost of a larger
wess'har civilization about five light-years away. The ones on Wess'ej
are the namby-pamby lefty liberals and hippies. The others are a lot
less tolerant."
"What's that?" asked the weapons officer. He was
looking at a brightly colored 3-D map of wilderness crisscrossed by
regular lines and angles, giving the impression of plans for a rigidly
designed road network that someone was hoping to build on a greenfield
site. It was Olivier Champciaux's geophys data from Bezer'ej, the
material that had made even Shan Frankland nervous and that Champciaux
hadn't been willing to let him broadcast for copyright reasons. Eddie
didn't give a stuff about copyright now.
"That's a geophys scan of part of Bezer'ej. It was an
isenj city. A big one." Timing was part of the show. Eddie paused and
spread butter on a bread roll. "And that's all that's left of it after
a visit from the Wess'ej Liberal Party."
There was a collective murmur of unease. This
propaganda business was easy. Eddie
wondered why he hadn't made it his life's work.
"Do they know you spied on them?" said Okurt.
"They knew. They just didn't give a shit. You can be
that confident when you've got an arsenal like theirs."
"I don't suppose I could ask you for this material to
show to the joint chiefs before you broadcast it, could I?"
"If it keeps my entrails in place, you're welcome,"
said Eddie. He left the playback running. There was the usual jerk and
blur as the recording changed to another session's shooting, and the
cam rested on an idyllic wide shot of F'nar's shimmering terraces.
Shan, back to camera, walked into frame and stood with hands on hips.
Then she turned her head, appeared to notice she was in shot and
stepped aside. The mike picked up a brief "Sorry."
Eddie saw Lindsay's reaction. She leaned forward a
fraction, no more.
"Sorry, Lin," said Eddie.
"No problem," said Lindsay. "So she lives there, now,
eh?"
"Yeah."
Okurt didn't appear interested in Shan, which was odd
given his shopping list. "Is there anything else? Not that you haven't
kept us absorbed so far."
"Yeah, the wess'har are about to plow in the salt." It
was a neat line. Eddie got the attention he had planned, with eight
heads all turned towards him in uniformed synchrony. "They've developed
a biological agent that's specific against humans and they're about to
spread it around Bezer'ej to make sure we're never going to land there.
They're really very freaked about the risk to the bezeri. Oh, and
they're kicking the colony off the planet. So they took the news about Hereward
really well, all things considered."
"You told them."
"And I flushed out a lot about their capability. Better
to find out now."
Okurt gave Eddie the sort of look that made him think
he might check under his bunk before turning in each night for the
foreseeable future.
"And what about this biotech?" said Lindsay.
"You'll never get it."
"I didn't think they'd hand it over."
"I mean that it's a natural organism from Bezer'ej, and
you're never going to get there anyway now. A fluke. There's no tech to
steal or buy or borrow. The only route to it is a chunk out of Shan or
Aras, and I think you can calculate the odds of getting that."
Lindsay's expression didn't flicker. "We could offer to
help evacuate the colony," she said. "Might give us some access."
"Don't bother," Eddie said. "Shan's doing it
personally. You know what she's like for getting stuck in."
He thought he saw Lindsay's expression brighten, but he
was mistaken. She drained her glass and went on picking at the remains
of her salad. Eddie, satisfied that he had drawn a very accurate
picture of the risks of provoking wess'har wrath, dubbed the footage
across to a chip and handed it to Okurt.
"Knock yourself out, Commander," he said. "As long as
my arse is out of firing range."
Eddie walked back to his cabin, feeling that he had
done the right thing for once, albeit with a little more theater than
the fearsomely wonderful Mestin might have thought decent. Shan would
have appreciated it, though. They came from the same school of psyching
out the opposition. He respected that.
He swung his legs up on his bunk and began wondering if
his nerve would hold long enough to get a sample of DNA from an isenj.
"How much of this am I supposed to know I've
heard?" asked Okurt.
Lindsay wasn't moving. She was leaning against his
cabin hatch. If Okurt was going to leave before she'd had her say, he'd
have to go through her.
"All you need to know is that I'm detaining a wanted
person and that I've requested access to a shuttle. We have a very
narrow window for this, and it might be the only one we ever get."
Okurt spun his coffee cup on the table, looking past it
in defocus at the status board but not appearing to see that either.
"And even if you can land, how do you plan to get off the planet? We
can't retrieve you. You know that."
"Dr. Mesevy's still down there. We can merge in with
the colonists when they're evacuated." She had the story ready. He had
no way of checking it. "She'll help."
"There are only a thousand or so of them. Don't you
think they'd spot a stranger or six, especially rather fit ones with
very short hair and palm-bioscreens?"
"Depends how we embark. We can also get access to the
original colony mission shuttles and fly out."
"Just like that, eh?"
"Have you ever worked with Royal Marines before,
Malcolm?"
"No, I haven't."
"If it can be done, they'll do it."
"Your chances are still close to zero."
"We're prepared to take casualties. The priority is to
get her."
"I still don't see how you're going to take her. She's
effectively on home turf."
"We don't have to. We just need a good stash of tissue
samples."
Okurt suddenly recovered his focus. "My orders said alive.
You'll have to have a bloody good reason
for bringing her back in kit form, if you get out at all. Unless, of
course, Dr. Rayat has overriding orders."
"He does, but you don't need to know."
Okurt had his back to her now, refilling his cup. "Okay, next
question. Suppose you do get to her and--God knows how--take
a chunk. And you can't get the shuttles airborne. How are you going to
get the material off Bezer'ej?"
"Remote sample collection bot. Six kilos,
self-propelling." Waiting had paid off. She was cold and detached now,
a million miles from the sobbing mother who had heard the news from Ade
Bennett that they were going to exhume her baby. "You were looking at
that to get a sample from David's body. You must have thought it was
feasible too."
Okurt turned slowly to face her. "I know I should have
told you. I'm sorry."
"But you didn't. Now I'm telling you how it's going to
be. I'm landing at Constantine by Once-Onlies with the detachment and
we're going to find Shan Frankland, neutralize her and get a sample off
the planet. Either we lift clear and you can have a shuttle rendezvous
with us at a safe distance, or you can intercept that sample. Job done."
"We can't extract you if it all goes tits up."
"I said we know that."
"The wess'har will go completely fucking crazy."
"They're cranking up to war anyway. We'll be out on our
ear so we might as well use what time we have left to acquire
that--that
parasite, bug, whatever--for our own use." She had to cover the
armaments she wanted to take, hiding the real plan in plain sight. The
only hard bit was showing the right side of the puzzle to the audience
of the moment without an inconsistency alerting them to the fact that
she was planning something else entirely. "Dr. Rayat has commandeered
appropriate ordnance."
Okurt was spinning his cup in its saucer, first
clockwise, then anti-clockwise: his hand slipped and it tumbled to the
floor, bouncing a couple of times. Lindsay didn't field it. He left it
where it rolled.
"God help us if you screw this up," he said. "I should
stop you taking tactical weapons."
"The armory inventory is locked down."
"I still have my key-code and I can still count."
"Forget what you counted. It's just for insurance."
Lindsay kept her face carefully blank and hoped a red flush at her
throat wasn't giving the game away. She'd fastened her shirt to the
top. "Just in case."
Okurt turned away and consulted his screen. "I'd better
work out how we're going to get you near enough to the drop zone," he
said. "And that's not a given."
It was very hard not to run down to the barracks, the
small makeshift mess that the marines had set up in compartments
vacated by building materials for the biodome on Umeh. They carried
their Royal Marine-ness with them wherever they went.
Lindsay wanted to sprint
down there. Instead she swung herself through hatches with controlled
excitement.
All she had to do was monitor traffic movements around
Bezer'ej to get a when. She was going to
get Shan Frankland and her plague. It even made it worth working with
Mohan Rayat again.
She leaned round the hatch and found Webster, Qureshi
and Chahal sitting around the table having a contest to see who could
eat a whole bar of nutty sideways in one go. They turned to her looking
like startled hamsters.
"Stand to," she said. "It's time for postcards from
Bezer'ej."
Lindsay spread the Once-Only suit on the hangar
deck again. She wanted to see Rayat's face. It was worth it.
"You don't have to come."
He swallowed discreetly, but hard. "Oh yes I do." Twelve square kilometers.
Lindsay had kicked that figure around for days. That was the surface
area of Christopher Island. Rayat, consulting his database, was
confident that six ERDs would do the job, a combined six-kiloton blast
and lethal rain of neutrons. She hoped they were right about the
location.
"You're taking a marine's place," said Becken. He
wasn't pleased that Lindsay had decided they had eight bodies and six
suits, and that his and Webster's weren't going to be filling them.
There were barely tolerable spooks and there were bad spooks, and
Lindsay could see the detachment had decided with one mind that Rayat
was the latter.
Rayat smiled politely. "I really do have a job to do,
gentlemen. And ladies."
Qureshi looked studiously blank. "You don't have to
operate it, Doctor. Webster can rig an emulator that'll take telemetry
from my suit, and all you have to do is sit tight and not puke." She
gave him an unnaturally controlled smile in return. "It'll mirror my
suit's position but it'll be offset by ten meters to avoid collisions.
You'd better hope I don't land on a cliff."
Lindsay had to hand it to Rayat. In the teeth of a gale
of hatred and contempt, he looked wholly unruffled. It was something he
had in common with Shan. "You land me on Constantine and get me to my
location, and I'll solve the rest of our problems." Twelve square kilometers.
They had a shuttle ready to eject them and the maiale
at five thousand kay from the planet, provided that the wess'har didn't
detect the vessel. The maiale would tow them to two hundred kay before
they unhitched and began the descent. It all looked fine on paper.
"Retrieval bot?" Lindsay had to preserve the illusion.
"Check," said Rayat.
"ERDs?"
"Yeah, all with delay timers."
"That's comforting."
Qureshi watched Rayat and Lindsay wheel the big dull
green tubes across the deck and heave them into the shuttle. The
Once-Onlies, hanging from their deployment rail like some weird new
fashion, sagged as the ERDs were loaded into them.
"Is that it?" asked Qureshi. Explosives were her
speciality. She stood behind Rayat, peering into her appointed suit
with its tiny, terrible payload. "I'd be happier if I knew what was
going on in there."
"Just ERD," said Rayat, emphasizing each letter. "We
detain our infected comrade Frankland, or useful parts thereof, and
destroy the source of this organism. That mission objective is now
ranked classification ten. Happy?"
"No," said Qureshi. "I reckon the whole ship knows
about it by now."
Bennett's face was a grim study in betrayal. "Easy
peasy," he said flatly, and Lindsay couldn't work out if his you're
dead look was directed at her, or at
Rayat, or both. "Home in time to watch the footie, I reckon." He'd
liked Shan. He'd liked her too much. She wondered if she could rely on
him.
It was hard enough juggling the various cover stories
in her own mind: and she was struggling to ensure that she presented
the right set of facts to the right audience. She had to look as if she
planned to get a sample of c'naatat off
the surface right up to the last minute.
And Ade Bennett still planned to get one of the
colony's ancient shuttles into the air. He'd spent hours poring over
manuals and working out a route and timings to the mothballed craft.
She doubted anyone could manage it, but at least the marines could seek
evacuation with the colonists. She wouldn't.
"You confirmed Frankland's still on Bezer'ej?" asked
Rayat.
"Best intelligence we have is from the ussissi on Umeh,
and they say she is." Lindsay thought there might have been the
faintest hint of disbelief on Rayat's face. "They're not secretive, any
of them. They don't think information matters. They seem to base
everything on physical superiority and they think nobody can take on
the wess'har."
"They're probably right," said Rayat.
Bennett checked the seals on his spacesuit and ran his
glove across the visor of his helmet, tucked under one arm. He wasn't
looking at Rayat: he was looking at Lindsay.
"You okay, Ade?" she asked.
"No, ma'am, I'm not," he said. "But I'm not paid to be
okay about things. I'm paid to front up and earn it."
"You can refuse what you
think is an unlawful order."
"You'd have to give me that order first, ma'am," said
Bennett. "And then I'll have to decide if it's one step beyond that
line. Won't I?"
BBChan 77896
"World in Focus" 0700 The Alliance of the Americas today lodged a
diplomatic protest against FEU plans to allow a party of
extraterrestrials to land in Europe. Following weeks of violent
clashes between police and demonstrators, the Sinostates are understood
to be considering withdrawing their support for the landing. AoA
spokesman Luis Carreira said today: "We're fully prepared to use
military means to prevent an unauthorized landing if the FEU doesn't
heed the very real concerns of governments worldwide."
Aras was happy. When he was happy, distractedly
happy, he made sporadic urrrr noises under
his breath, like someone riffling through the pages of a crisp-paged
book at high speed. It was also the sound he made when he was enjoying oursan.
Shan combed carefully through his hair and began
braiding it, relieved at his temporary good mood. It didn't take much
to keep him happy. On close inspection, it wasn't at all like human
hair: instead of smooth shafts, it was more like threads of feather,
with minute wispy vanes and barbs that curled down the length of each
strand. She rolled it between her fingertips and admired the bronze
highlights.
He stopped urrrring. "Two
months is a very short time for them," he said quietly.
"I think that was based on matriarch packing time, not
human." When she turned to pick up a length of hemp tape to tie the
braid in place, her boots crunched on something. She stooped to look.
"Where's all this bloody blue glass coming from?"
"I must have trodden it in from the bell tower," said
Aras.
The fragments were beautiful, like vicious little
high-grade sapphires. When Shan picked one up to examine the color, it
cut her palm and left a small speck of blood that stopped flowing
immediately. The blue light in her hands fluttered behind the shards as
if trying to match the exact shade and then died down again.
"Did it upset you, smashing the bells like that?" she
asked.
"I thought it an odd request. I don't understand why he
felt the need to obliterate them with such violence. If he wanted to
ensure they were never used again, the nanites would have done that.
But he said they had to burn bridges."
"If he likes dramatic gestures, why didn't he do it
himself?"
"I didn't ask."
"They're all as mad as fucking hatters anyway," Shan
said, and finished the braid.
She wanted it over and done with. She would always love
Bezer'ej in the way that you could when you were somewhere desolate for
a day trip and you could go home to familiarity later. But it wasn't
home, not even with Aras, and not even here in Josh's soothing, gold,
buried house with its soft light and calming silence.
She wasn't sure what home was any more.
"A few of them are digging in to stay," Shan said. Aras
stiffened. She smoothed down his hair and arranged the braid carefully
down his back. "They didn't think we'd salt the planet. It was hard to
tell them we'd already started."
"But you did."
"Of course."
There was no turning back now. On the four landmasses
in the southern hemisphere, troops from the Temporary City were
dropping units of the bioagent that would spread on the air and water,
propagate, and then go into a dormant state on surfaces as soon as the
optimum concentration had been reached. It would take about fifty or
sixty days to complete. Then they would come north and begin seeding
the remaining land-masses, including the continent that broke up into a
chain of islands with saints' names.
The clock was ticking.
"Clever buggers," said Shan. "I spoke to the bloke who
designed it. He said he studied some of Constantine's archive files on
anthrax to achieve long-term dormancy. And I said to him, blimey, do
you know how much you would be worth to the military back home? He
wasn't amused."
"You think of us as blokes
now. Is your assimilation that complete?"
"It must be. I've not lost any sleep knowing I'm a
weapon. That's a pretty good indicator."
There was one more thing she had to do, one of many,
but it was personal rather than part of the evacuation. Aras trailed a
few paces after her as she walked down to the shore to the Place of
Memory of the First and the Place of Memory of the Returned, shrines to
the bezeri explorers who had beached their craft to explore the Dry
Above. Some never made it back.
It meant a long walk through Constantine's fields. It
meant walking through the scattered patches of crops in full leaf and
flower, past people who had once learned to trust her and who were now
probably wondering why they ever bothered.
She tried to imagine what it was like to have to leave
behind everything--everything--you had ever
known or worked for. Then she remembered that she had.
It was tough shit. This was for the bezeri.
At the water's edge Aras handed her the signaling lamp
that translated speech into the patterns of lights the bezeri used to
communicate. "Reckon I need it?" she asked, flexing her fingers and
sending a kaleidoscope of colors dancing under the skin. Aras had
learned when she was joking and when she was not, and he simply cocked
his head a little. She didn't want him to accompany her. It was only
the second time she had ventured into the bezeri's submarine world.
The other time had been to return the body of a dead
infant, killed because Surendra Parekh had ignored an order not to take
specimens.
Shan didn't need breathing apparatus now. It would be
unpleasant, but she knew she couldn't drown. The isenj had done her a
favor even if they hadn't known it when they had tried a dozen and more
ways to kill a c'naatat-infected wess'har.
She stripped off her uniform down to her briefs, not
wanting to walk back in sodden clothing, and steeled herself for the
coming moment of complete animal terror as water flooded her lungs.
She glanced over her shoulder first. Aras was sitting
on the shore, elbows braced on his drawn-up knees, chin resting on his
hands. She felt suddenly stupid. It was hard to maintain an image of
silent menace in a pair of pale blue panties and a dog tag.
"Nothing to see here, folks," said Shan. "Move along.
Break it up."
Aras didn't smile. He pointed past her. There was the
faintest suggestion of lime-green light in the shallows. The bezeri
patrol was watching. She walked towards it. And contrary to popular
myth, she stepped clean through the surface of the water. She couldn't
walk on the damn stuff at all.
The sea was achingly cold despite the balmy day. The
cold stopped her breathing for a couple of seconds and then c'naatat
overrode her weak human reflexes and
forced her lungs into action. Currents tugged at her as she got in
chest-deep. The pressure squeezed her ribs. Just dive.
She plunged in. She couldn't stop herself taking a
great gulp of air before going under; nor could she stop herself
holding her breath until the need to surrender to the reflex
overwhelmed her and she inhaled. She screamed for air but there was no
sound, just the endless sucking gasp that didn't have a beginning or
end. She couldn't stop her arms flailing. I'm not dying I'm not dying I'm
not dying I can't die I can't die I can't--
And then she felt something like cool water, separate
from the sea, trickling over her from the top of her head and through
the core of her. Her breathing stopped. It
stopped. And she wasn't dead, not unless dead was a long way
from what she expected it to be, which was black oblivion.
She let her eyes adjust to the low light and the
distortion of the water. Then she realized she was flat on her back.
She eased herself into a crouch, straightened up and looked around for
the signaling lamp, which had settled into the sand a few meters away.
The water in front of her blackened and moved. Then it
was as if someone had suddenly switched on the Christmas lights in a
shopping center. There was a wall of color. She had forgotten how big
the adult bezeri could grow. Why are you here? they
asked.
She fumbled with the lamp. Her voice vibrated in her
ears, and wess'u seemed to translate a lot better than English ever
had. I once promised you I would maintain an
exclusion zone around this world. It was the job I came to do. But the wess'har are
withdrawing. How can you help? They're leaving a weapon that
will protect you, and it was made from my body.
There was a silent moment. The great gelatinous shapes,
trailing tentacles that were striped with rippling gold and carmine,
hung in front of her. We know you would kill your own
kind for us.
There was no tone in the translation and she wasn't
sure if they were complimenting her on her solidarity with them or
saying they didn't trust her an inch.
She picked her response carefully. I'm sorry we've caused you so
much grief.
They knew sorry. They'd
seen the word from her before. She held out both hands and concentrated
until the luminescence in them danced. That
got a reaction. The bezeris' lights flared and the lamp spluttered a
burst of what sounded like static. She wondered if it was the bezeri
for well, bugger me.
She had to explain it. I have
something of you in me. I'm like Aras now.
Silence. They just hung there, watching. I just wanted to know how you
felt.
Still nothing. Then one glided forward and stopped a
meter short of her. It--he--loomed almost twice as high as Aras,
tentacles trailing almost straight down. If we
had weapons like the wess'har, we would fight your kind, and the isenj.
But we do not. Until then, we must rely on the courage of people we
cannot see.
It was an ambiguous answer. What was she expecting,
absolution? Was any of it her fault? It felt like it. She felt ashamed
to be human. It was time to go. Goodbye.
Perhaps they didn't have a word for farewell. The lamp
was silent. She backed off a few steps and then turned and walked back
the way she had come, navigating by rocks and plant growth. She didn't
look behind again. A little further up the slope, she struck out with
her arms and legs and summoned up some primeval human instinct to swim
that she had never used before.
When her head was clear of the surface, she choked on
air again. She knelt on all fours on the beach, coughing and retching
up water. She could feel that her briefs were halfway off one hip and
she wondered what the lads from her relief at Western Central would
have said if they could have seen her, if any of them had still been
alive. They would have laughed themselves sick.
Aras's boots came into view. She retched again,
coughing out mucus and seawater in long strings.
"It's sheer glamor that attracted you to me, isn't it?"
she said, and tried to grin. But the remnant of the sea wanted out, and
fast.
Aras put her jacket over her shoulders and sat with his
arm round her back while she recovered her breath and her underwear
dried.
"That wasn't as bad as you expected," he said,
forestalling any comment from her that it had actually been bloody
terrifying. "In time, you'll control it."
It was another tick on the list, another
life-threatening event that her new body had treated as a learning
opportunity. She had long known it, but this was the first time she had
genuinely felt that she wasn't human.
And if she was no longer human, she had no need to be
ashamed any more.
Eddie could sleep anywhere when he had to, and
a pallet on the construction site at Jejeno provided a sounder night's
sleep than a bunk on a vessel that was one big target roundel in his
mind's eye. He didn't want to say as much. He worried that he made
things happen just by saying them.
He got up and splashed his face in the fountain.
"Oi, don't you know there's a bleedin' shower over
there?" said a worker in a hard hat and coverall. He jerked his thumb
to help Eddie better locate the facilities.
"Ah, silly me," said Eddie. "Thank you so much."
It was hard doing laundry in the shower, but he managed
to wash and rinse his change of shirt and smalls and left them draped
over a bot to dry. It made him feel quite the correspondent again: news
editors, anchored to their desks, had no idea about the messy logistics
of being in the field. He entertained a brief fantasy about dumping Boy
Editor in the middle of a war zone where the local food was beyond
human digestion. It gave him a warm feeling. It was exactly where he
was now.
"You look untidy," said Serrimissani when she collected
him to escort him to see Ual.
Eddie checked his distorted reflection in a polished
metal plate. He did his shirt up a little higher. It seemed to placate
the ussissi, and she trotted ahead of him in silence. He opened his
screen to check the news while he walked.
"Keep up," she said, not turning. She had a predator's
hearing, the sort that listened for small things burrowing. Shan had
told him about their taste in snacks. It didn't surprise him one bit.
The headlines didn't help. The diplomatic row--and Eddie
normally found that an amusing mental image--was intensifying. It was
all unspecific threat, typical of frightened people led by even more
frightened politicians who wanted to look like they were Doing
Something About It. Eddie wasn't sure if the Americas or the Rim states
could actually take out Thetis. But even
if they could, they had a long wait ahead before they could see the
whites of her eyes.
Eddie tried to work out how long it would be before Thetis
came within range of Earth vessels,
trying to juggle seventy-five-year transit times against near
light-speed, and gave up. There weren't that many deep space vessels
about even now: they cost money, and space was neither a popular
tourist destination nor a vote-getter. It was the main reason why they
were using an old knacker like Thetis
instead of saving twenty-five years by sending a modern vessel to pick
them up.
A group of isenj laborers walked across his path like a
badly adjusted film sequence, all jerks and twitches. His hard-wired
reaction to quick, staccato movement said spider
and he tried to think person. But he
failed. Maybe they were failing to make that conceptual leap on Earth,
too.
They had left little dusty tracks across the Instaroad
that had been rolled out to stop the bots digging even deeper gouges
into the soil. Eddie paused and looked down. It looked like someone had
shattered a flowerpot and left some of the fragments of black plastic
behind. Oh, he thought. Oh.
There was only one movement between involvement and
noninvolvement. Eddie paused before making it. They said time wasn't
linear and that all things really happened at once but that you just
saw it sequentially. Eddie knew that was bollocks. Once he had taken
this step, there was no quantum state that would untake it for him.
He uncapped the urine sampler and scooped up the black
fragments. He was pretty sure he knew what they were. He hoped they
would do.
Serrimissani had realized he wasn't keeping up and
scuttled back to chivvy him. She followed his wrist action with
scorpion-eater's eyes as he closed the cap on the vial and popped it
into the top pocket of his shirt.
"Don't hold us up," she said. "Minister Ual is waiting
for you."
"Sorry," he said.
She didn't say anything else. He walked behind her at
double time like a Greenjacket. When they got into the ground car, she
stared out of the open door as if to avoid conversation.
The boundaries of the site were marked by no more than
chevron tape strung between waist-high poles, but the isenj treated
them like fortifications. The crush started right outside. As soon as
the car was past the tape, it had to press slowly through the throng.
Eddie remembered the isenj who he thought he had seen fall and wondered
if he'd ever got up again.
They didn't seem to be a brutal or thoughtless people.
But it was very hard to stop a crowd moving, even an orderly one that
seemed to have its own unspoken rules of flow and speed.
Ual greeted Eddie at the door of his office, covering
ground like a piece of badly designed furniture on castors.
"I'm sorry that things are still so tense back home,"
said Eddie.
"You're not responsible for your governments," said the
minister, still sucking in and wheezing out the alien words through a
hole in his throat somewhere.
They sat in his fine plain aquamarine office and sipped
something that might have been coffee. It was too liquid for Eddie to
choke on. But he thought he might, and he didn't feel clever and he
didn't feel in control. He took an occasional but discreet glance at
Ual's coat of projections strung with beads--red ones today--and
wondered
what perverse universe created a species with quills that was also
doomed to live at very close quarters.
"We will be careful not to react," said Ual. "We are
not the ussissi. And we truly want a mutually helpful relationship with
humans."
Serrimissani wasn't in earshot but Eddie still winced. "Do your
people know what's been on our news?"
"Yes, but it's not their preoccupation. It's a long way
away and they have problems here and now to cope with."
"We really do have a lot in common." Yes, and
you're using it to kill them. "If it's
any comfort, we behave the same with members of our own species. We
don't take kindly to strangers."
"It's a wise precaution."
"Are you in direct contact with the FEU foreign
minister?"
"Not as directly as I am with you. He sends general
messages, I send general replies. All encouraging words about
technology and understanding. I don't believe he is ready for a
real-time exchange, as you call it. I imagine he has people around him
who I don't see but who want to check every word in and every word out."
"You're absolutely right."
"And yet you have no such problem."
"I'm a journalist. We're not here to make politicians
happy. Quite the opposite, in fact."
If Ual was a two-faced weasel, it would make what Eddie
had to do so much less painful. Eddie had no idea yet whether isenj
were enough like humans to play nasty little games, or whether they
were like the wess'har and the ussissi--aggressively frank and literal
because they not only didn't know how to lie but felt sufficiently
confident not to need to. Weasels. Eddie decided he
would see animals differently in future, if he ever got home. Maybe
weasels had something to tell him.
"We understand your natural fear of overcrowding," said
Ual. Now that was for the bee-cam, for sure. "I wish your people would
be reassured that what we want is your help to learn your technologies,
so we can address our own problems. Your planet is not our target. I do
believe you should stop people reading those books by Mr. Wells."
Eddie laughed. "He was a journalist too. We're a
lovable bunch."
"There is a predisposition among your trade to make
trouble," said Ual, and made a gargling sound like a fast-emptying
drain.
"I take it you wouldn't mind if I broadcast our
conversation?"
Ual looked at him--he imagined--with amusement. Eddie had
no idea, really: isenj had no discernible eyes.
" �Every mike is a live mike,' " said Ual. "That is
correct, is it not?"
It was always satisfying to play the game with a
professional. The key to self-respect was self-awareness: as long as
you knew the game was on, it didn't hurt at all. Ual had learned it
rather well.
There was a small glassy ping,
and one of Ual's decorative beads bounced and rolled on the
smooth-polished floor. Eddie fielded it deftly.
It had a fragment of quill still attached.
"Split ends are a bugger," said Eddie, and held it out
on his palm, willing Ual not to take it back.
"I have many," Ual said. "Do keep it. I think you call
it corundum. We have mined a very great deal of it over the years."
"Rubies?" Eddie was briefly distracted: the stone was
just tumbled, neither faceted nor polished into a cabochon. He'd never
seen a plain stone. And those green beads might
have been emeralds. "Thank you. But don't tell too many humans
about these, eh? It plays to our most excessive fantasies."
He kept the bead and the quill in his palm until he was
clear of the ministerial offices and waiting for the car outside with
Serrimissani. Then he uncurled his fingers and breathed properly again.
Serrimissani was looking the other way, but as he tightened the cap of
the vial, she jerked round and stared.
"Look what Ual gave me," said Eddie, having no choice.
Serrimissani looked him over as if she was searching
discreetly for evidence. She reminded him of Shan, who always kept
watch on what was happening around her even if she was also looking you
straight in the eye. Coppers could do that.
"Is that all he gave you?" asked Serrimissani, and got
into the car before he could frame an answer. He was expecting her
general irritability to erupt into a lecture on how he should not
interfere with the affairs of other nations, but she just studied her
text pad, with an occasional yawn that ended in a slight whine and a
snap of jaws, much like a fox's.
She was not on anyone's side, and his actions were his
own to take, and to justify.
"D'you know, I've never parachuted," said Rayat.
"Shut up," said Barencoin.
The Once-Only suits hung from a sliding rail in the
shuttle bay, ready to be fired out into space by a pressure jet when
the aft hatch opened. Lindsay felt like a silk cocoon waiting to be
dropped into seething water. She debated whether to kill the
suit-to-suit comms but they needed to be able to hear each other.
They had plain old radios too: no AI comms, automatic
switching or multiples. It was back to basic radio procedure. She hoped
she could remember it.
Barencoin appeared to have stopped Rayat's muttering.
He was surprisingly discourteous for a Royal Marine. And he was goading
Bennett mercilessly. She wondered if it was nerves.
"DZ IN THIRTY SECONDS," said the pilot over their
headsets. I'm going to die, thought
Lindsay.
"DZ IN TWENTY SECONDS." I'm not coming back. I didn't
think about that.
"DZ IN FIFTEEN SECONDS." I only thought about going.
Sorry, Eddie.
"TEN." At least…
"NINE." …I'll be…
"EIGHT." …near David.
"SEVEN."
"Ade, hold my hand…." said Barencoin.
"SIX."
"Ade, I want to pee…."
"FIVE."
"Cork it."
"FOUR."
"Ade, are we there yet?"
"THREE."
"Fuck you, Mart."
"TWO."
"Shut it," said Lindsay.
"ONE. DZ. GREEN LIGHT. AWAY."
And she thought she fell.
Foam exploded into the suit's inner skin and in seconds
she was encased in a soft but insistent molded cradle of polysilicate.
And she kept falling, but her brain said she should have landed by now.
She could see the thin line that tethered her to the maiale; if she had
been able to summon up the courage, she could have looked back and
followed the other section of tether to see Bennett and the others,
strung like beads from the tow-line.
Humans needed a floor. They needed it more than they
needed a definite up and down. This was not flying; this was not
banging out of an aircraft through the canopy; this was not an EVA with
a safety line rigged to the hull. This was complete, unconnected,
disembodied physical terror, made all the worse because she had no
reassurance of gravity.
It was all she could do not to be sick. She shut her
eyes. Her suit, like all of them, had its own autopilot, but it was
very hard to trust that when you were in a foam-filled plastic bag that
you hoped would withstand reentry temperatures. She could hear the
quiet, almost casual chitchat between the marines. Barencoin had
stopped teasing Bennett. They were all business now.
"Sunray this is Labros Two, over," said Qureshi's voice
in her ear.
"Uh…this is Sunray, over," said Lindsay.
"Just checking Sunray, out."
"I'm here too," said Rayat, but nobody responded.
"Sunray, focus on the planet until suit rotation," said
Qureshi. "Not long to go, out."
Time seemed to pass in fits and starts. Two hundred
kilometers was a bloody long way, and a bloody long time. She felt the
sudden push as the suit detached from the tether and switched to its
internal navigation: 150 kay. One moment she was looking at the one
suit she could actually see--whose?--and the next Bezer'ej was filling
her field of view and there wasn't much black left.
Then the suit flipped her over on her back.
That was good, because she now had the black
heat-shield deployed where it was meant to be, but it was also bad,
because she was staring back into a void and she couldn't see any
reference point. She started to count. They were at fifty thousand
meters, more or less.
"Sunray, this is Sunray Minor, here comes the tough
bit, out," said Bennett, and Lindsay started feeling…warm. It might
have been her imagination.
In the thin layer of elastomerics and softglass a
matter of inches from her spine and vital organs, the core temperature
was reaching 100C. On the surface the suit was meteor-hot. Don't
think about it. She was prepared to nuke
herself to destroy Shan Frankland, but the thought of burning up on
reentry was one step too far. It was slow.
She couldn't touch the ERD or the bot stowed in her
suit because the foam had embraced them as closely as it had her.
"Sunray Minor, this is Sunray," she said shakily. The
vibration and g of reentry was beginning to become unbearable. She
didn't care if they knew she was scared. The only people who wouldn't
have been bricking it then were either mad or Shan Frankland. "I--I'm
having telemetry issues here. How's the approach, over?"
"Sunray, this is Sunray Minor, we're on the nose, out,"
said Bennett, and she would never have guessed that he had once reached
Mach 1 with just foam and liquid glass between him and incineration.
"Not long now."
Lindsay had stopped looking out of her limited
faceplate view and shut her eyes. She had contemplated death in her
shuttered coffin of a bunk and now she was trying another shroud on for
size. She wasn't thirty yet. It wasn't fair.
She was just thinking that Shan Frankland would have
told her that there was nothing about life that was fucking fair, so
she should buck up and get on with it, when she was jerked so hard that
her teeth threatened to shatter. It was the chute deploying at ten
thousand meters. She blinked. There were clouds. There were flashes of
iridescence. God, please let the landing zone be
right, I don't fancy falling into the quicksand….
In a minute or so she would be--
The wind was punched out of her lungs. She rolled, not
because she had remembered her ejection training but because she hadn't
been expecting to hit the ground right then. She struggled to breathe.
It was solid ground, and the head-up display in her helmet said she was
one kay from Constantine. As she rolled she felt a lot lighter. The
heat-shield had detached.
"Sunray at target, over," she called at last.
"Sunray Minor at target, over."
"Sunray Minor, what's your location, over?" She
couldn't look at her palm display until she was free of the suit.
"Sunray Minor, two south from target, no visuals yet,
out."
"Labros Two, three south-south-west of Constantine,
out," said Qureshi's voice.
"Labros Three, south-south-west of target also, I have
visual of Labros Two, out," said Chahal.
There was a pause, more puffing, and then Barencoin's
voice. "Labros Four at target, no visual of Sunray Minor. Wait
one…Sunray, I'm right next to you, over."
"Labros Five, this is Sunray--where are you, Rayat?
Over."
"Oh shit…"It was his voice all right, for all the
shaking in it. So much for Webster's emulator. He wasn't near Qureshi
at all.
"Sunray Minor, I have Labros Five, out," said Bennett's
voice.
Then she lost him. There was a lull. There was a clamor
of exertion in her earpiece, and Qureshi's voice. "Oh bollocks," she
said, abandoning voice procedure. "Shit."
Then the puffing stopped dead as if the mike had been
cut. Lindsay waited.
"Sunray here, I've lost voice--Labros Two, Labros Three,
this is Sunray, respond, over."
Nothing. Chahal was gone too.
But at least they were all down. They were in one
piece, more or less. The elation was so great that she tried to leap to
her feet, but the remains of the suit wouldn't let her, and there was
the small matter that she and Barencoin were several kilometers from
the rest of them.
It wasn't far under the circumstances, but time
mattered. It would slow them a little, and the more time they spent on
the radio, the greater their chance of being picked up.
It took a while to peel out of a Once-Only. It was like
unpacking electronics: the foam was reluctant to part. Lindsay cracked
the seal on her helmet and pushed up the visor to breathe Bezer'ej's
thin air. She was still easing open the suit when she heard Barencoin,
somewhere outside her field of vision, say, "Oh." Oh wasn't a very
marine-like word. But she understood why he said it. She was trying to
get her other arm free through the horse-collar-shaped opening when the
bright Bezer'ej sky was obscured by Josh Garrod.
He was aiming a very, very
old rifle straight into her face. Firearms warranted respect regardless
of antiquity.
Now she had a good idea of what Qureshi had decided was
bollocks.
"Get up, Commander," he said. "I'm fully prepared to
break the Sixth Commandment."
FIRE CONTROL
PARTY MEET AT THE MAIN PUMPING STATION IMMEDIATELY. CRAFT INTERCEPTED
IN EXCLUSION ZONE. IF ISENJ CAN BREACH DEFNET, SO MAY OTHERS. COLLECT
ARMS AND PATROL ISLAND. DO NOT INFORM ARAS OF PATROL INTENTION. REPEAT,
DO NOT INFORM. HE SHOULD NOT BE EXPOSED TO RISK.
JOSH GARROD to council members,
via pager
It was an old rifle but it was very clean,
and that meant it probably worked.
Lindsay could see that just fine. Josh jerked the
barrel in a gesture to hurry up and she scrambled out of the Once-Only. No. It doesn't end like this.
Her plan had been defeated by farm-hands. No,
we've come too far.
"Okay, Josh," she said. "Take it easy."
Barencoin had a museum-piece rifle trained on him too.
It had to be a humbling experience for a commando of his caliber. But
paratroops had always been vulnerable in descent; and they could get
their arms free fast, unlike the detachment, who were effectively
shrink-wrapped. The Once-Only was designed to save your life, not to be
shed easily in combat situations.
Barencoin struggled out of the suffocating suit and
stood looking remarkably resigned. It took him several minutes.
"How the hell did you land in those?" Josh asked. "And
what have you come for?"
Martin Tyndale, a man Lindsay had always associated
with fretting about broad bean crops, was rummaging through one
charred, crumpled suit casing, making the foam crackle and squeak.
There were small wisps of smoke rising from what looked like shiny
puddles of black oil. What remained of the detached portions of the
heat-shields were still shedding heat.
"Lots of metal stuff in here that I don't feel too
confident about," he called.
"Arms?"
Lindsay took her helmet off very slowly. She hadn't
survived free-fall from space to get her head blown off by an antique,
and she still might salvage the mission. Martin was fumbling with the
retrieval bot.
"Don't," Lindsay said. "It might go off." The chances
of his finding the right manual detonation sequence were remote but she
had a feeling that bad luck was going to be the order of the day. "It's
explosive."
"Have you come for Shan?" Josh asked.
"Yes," said Lindsay.
"You won't take her, or the parasite."
Lindsay gambled. Eddie had always said the truth had
enormous shock value. "I haven't come to take her, I've come to destroy
her and c'naatat so that it never gets
into the human population."
Barencoin was a little behind her, so she didn't see
his expression, but she knew that he would be concealing his opinion
rather well. They'd all been suckered into her private mission.
Succeeding didn't make her feel good.
Josh simply looked at her, without hatred and without
fear.
"The organism's on Christopher, isn't it?" she said.
"Doesn't matter. You're not having it. It's an
abomination. We should have destroyed it. We considered burning the
island."
Lindsay saw the options flash up in front of her like
numbered cards. "I think I can help with that."
"How?"
"We have a device that will destroy all life on the
island in a controlled burn. At temperatures you
can't create."
Josh's aim didn't waver. Lindsay wondered if he was
hoping to shoot her anyway for being a sinner, a fornicator, a paid
killer. "You brought weapons here?"
"Frankland's a tough bitch to kill. You might have
noticed."
"You hate her that much. God forgive you."
"I hate her, but this is about neutralizing a
biohazard."
"Sounds like vengeance to me," said Josh. "And that's
not for man to dispense."
"Sounds like a clean job. As long as she lives, someone
will be after what she's got. They'll never risk chasing Aras, but
they'll keep taking a crack at her, and they won't stay away from here
forever."
Lindsay wondered how long Josh could hold that rifle
steady. The barrel hadn't moved a hair. He looked as if he was
physically digesting her words.
"And you, a soldier, want to destroy c'naatat
even though you would have so many
military uses for it," he said at last. I'm not a soldier. I'm a naval
officer. It was a silly thing to care about right then. "I know
exactly how it'll be used, thanks. That's why I want all sources
eradicated. And I know you have some regard for Frankland, but she
doesn't want it getting loose any more than we do."
Barencoin cut in. "Those weren't our orders, ma'am.
We're supposed to detain her alive."
"Shut up," she said without turning. "Josh, if you can
get us to Christopher, we'll carry out a burn of the island. I've got
three marines in the field anyway. You got lucky catching us, but
you'll never take them, and you know it. This way we all get what we
want. What's it to be?"
Josh had very unsettling pale eyes. He looked like a
man who had a temper that he controlled with care, and his gaze
reminded her all too much of Shan's. "You have one marine left, then,
because we captured two a little way from here. Those suits really are
a liability, aren't they?"
"Ah." She was running out of bargaining chips. "You're
not as bucolic as you look, are you?"
"And you want Superintendent Frankland."
They stood absolutely still, absolutely silent. Don't
blink. Don't speak first. Lindsay tried to
play Eddie and Shan, praying their respective professional tactics
would work for her. It was a bad time to discover prayer.
"These weapons of yours," said Josh. "These bombs. Are
you certain they'll only burn the island?"
"They're enhanced radiation devices. I know that sounds
shocking, but the radiation is the short-lived kind. The detonation
will be confined to the island."
Josh stood unblinking but not focusing on her. He was
taking his time.
"It's just one island against the future of many
worlds," he said at last. "And it is only
on Christopher, Commander, nowhere else. But it's all sinful
destruction in the end." He let out a long breath. "I'll take you to
Christopher. And I'll bring you back. How you retrieve Shan Frankland
is a matter for you."
"Is she in Constantine?"
"No. Temporary City. Our transport is being organized
from there."
"Thank you, Josh."
"I shall pay for this. I should have told Aras, but he
would do something foolish, and I don't want his safety put at risk."
Barencoin was suddenly right on Lindsay's shoulder, and
she realized she had never really noticed what a big man he was.
"Ma'am, I want to remind you our orders were to detain her, nothing
else," he said quietly.
"Marine, this is a direct order," she said. She wasn't
at all sure he'd follow it. "You will rendezvous with Sergeant
Bennett's party at the preagreed point, retrieve the remaining devices
from Rayat, give them to me, and then you will capture and detain
Superintendent Frankland."
"And then?"
"You let me worry about that."
She could do it herself. She could make sure Rayat set
the damn ERDs himself and then she would do what was needed with Shan.
There was no point asking any of the marines to go beyond their rules
of engagement. Because you know they'll defy
you. No, it was the right thing to do. If anyone was going to
breach the regs, it would be her. It was an officer's responsibility. Liar. They won't follow you and
you know it.
"If you use your radios beyond this island, they might
detect you," Josh said.
Barencoin was tapping his finger against his hand, eyes
fixed on a point just past Lindsay. Then he looked intently at his
palm. "Got Ade," he said. "He'll leave the devices for you at these
coordinates in twenty minutes."
Lindsay tried to give Josh a reassuring and knowing
smile. "Morse," she said. "Out of use for centuries. But not for us. As
long as you've got something to make a sound or a light with, you're in
business."
"We'll send a scoot to collect them," Josh said. "We
won't attract as much attention."
"I need the other three devices. Six in all."
"Very well."
Lindsay paused and then cracked the remaining seals on
her spacesuit and heaved herself out of it, leaving it in the scrubby
blue grass of the wild sector of Constantine's island like a shed skin.
No point declining Josh's help. As she looked at Barencoin, the only
indication that he was deeply unhappy with the mission was his
expression of intense concentration.
"You sure you know what you're doing with those ERDs,
Boss?" asked Barencoin. "Let Izzy set the damn things."
"Of course I do," said Lindsay. "If infantry can set
them, then Rayat can too."
The wess'har appeared to be occupied with loading
colonists and their baggage. There were none around as they made their
way through the crops and the wild grass down to the cove where Josh
kept a couple of RIBs, ancient shallow-draft powerboats.
His son James stood guard with a rifle. The sight of a
teenage boy with a weapon he clearly knew how to use was disturbing.
Lindsay's view of the colonists as hand-wringing, passive eccentrics
had been shattered.
"How did you know we were coming?" she asked James.
"You looked like shooting stars," he said. "We could
see you for ages."
If the colonists had seen them coming, then maybe Shan
had too. She hoped so.
Josh came back on a scoot with a man she didn't know,
and one she knew too well. Rayat was balancing three meter-long
cylinders on his scoot. They waded out into the shallows and piled them
into the boat with the other devices. The boat settled alarmingly low
in the water. Five for Christopher. And one
for Shan Frankland.
Lindsay looked at Rayat with as much contempt as she
could muster. It wasn't up to one of Shan's cauterizing glances, but
she felt it sincerely. They stared at each other for a moment and then
scrambled to opposite ends of the vessel.
It was a bumpy, spray-sodden and uncomfortable journey
to Christopher at forty knots: it took nearly two hours. The nine-meter
RIB--the rigid inflatable whose design hadn't changed in three hundred
years--had just enough room for the scoots, Josh, another colonist
called Jonathan, Rayat, and herself. They traveled in silence.
It was a long time to spend thinking about how she
would get to Shan, or not, and whether she was now going to die at all,
something she had thought was inevitable.
What she wanted more than anything right then--apart
from being dry--was to visit David's grave and sit by the beautiful
stained glass headstone that Aras had made.
Rayat said they could set the device timers for up to
twenty-four hours, but Lindsay wanted to be gone from here inside six.
She wondered if she would have time to find David's grave. It was
probably out of the question if they were going to find Shan.
But she had a feeling that Shan would come to find her
when she found out what they had done.
Shan had two messages on her wess'har comms
device that morning and she almost erased one by accident. She liked
the swiss better. The virin was intuitive
for a wess'har, but she was still fumbling with it.
It was like a bar of transparent glycerine soap with
images that appeared both within it and on its surface. When Shan
wasn't concentrating on her hands, the lights would flicker from them
and shine confusingly through the virin,
triggered by her subconscious desire to communicate. Operating the
device required a full hand grip with as many finger positions as a
three-dimensional guitar. It was exactly what she should have expected
for a culture that wrote in fish-bone diagrams rather than a linear
style.
She hated it. But it could access the wess'har
archives, and the swiss could not.
One message was from a ussissi crew, reporting scan
contact with one of Actaeon's shuttles six
thousand kilometers from Bezer'ej. They'd warned it off: the pilot had
claimed navigation problems, and they followed it all the way back to Actaeon
just to be certain. The other was from
Nevyan, wishing her well and asking how things were with Aras.
Nevyan was a nice kid. Shan sat on a packing crate at
the entrance to the Temporary City, watching the loading of
Constantine's essential impedimenta and composing a reply with
difficulty. C'naatat clearly thought that
skill with a virin was low on its priority
upgrades list.
A very young male, Litiat, came up to her, smelling
submissive and agitated. He beckoned to her.
"The gethes want to speak
with you," he said.
"Josh?"
"No, a gethes. Okurt."
"He knows I'm here, then." Thanks,
Eddie, she thought. But that didn't matter: they couldn't touch
her. She wondered what last-minute bargain Okurt was trying to strike,
and rather relished the prospect of a verbal tussle. She didn't envy
him his task.
Litiat led her to the screen in the lobby of the
Temporary City and stood back at a respectful distance. Shan stood,
arms folded, hands concealed, and waited for Okurt's image to resolve.
He looked a lot thinner than she remembered from the last video link.
She wondered if she looked very different to him.
"What can I do for you?" she asked.
"Good morning, Superintendent. You're evacuating
Constantine?"
"You know we are."
"I'm formally offering assistance."
"Oh yeah. You would. Thanks, but we've got a lift."
Okurt paused. "I wondered if you might reconsider your
position regarding returning home."
Shan paused too, just a couple of seconds longer. "Okay, I've
considered it. I'm just fine here, thanks."
"I assure you no action will be taken against you if
you cooperate. And the asset wouldn't be made available to commercial
interests."
"And that's supposed to reassure me, is it?"
"We could make it worth your while. You would be able
to free up your considerable personal assets on Earth as well."
"D'you know, son, it's been years
since anyone tried to threaten me with losing my pension." He really
didn't get it at all. "So they've frozen my funds. I'm on a planet 150
trillion miles from home and there's no shopping mall here. Try again."
"It doesn't have to be this way."
"Commander, nothing could induce me to turn myself in.
And you can tell that to whoever put you up to asking me. Haven't you
got the picture yet?"
Okurt was fidgeting: he was moving almost out of frame
at times, shifting in his seat and leaning back. He was working up to
saying something.
"Anything else?" said Shan. Okurt paused just one
fraction of a second too long. You could spot that sort of thing with
ITX: there was no transmission delay. He looked grim. Shan felt he was
trying to keep her talking, fishing for something else. Her copper's
instinct was fine-tuned and she was proud of it. It had now started
screaming in her ear. "Want to apologize for letting a shuttle stray a
bit close?"
"Perhaps I should simply apologize and leave you to
your task."
"No, hang on, you've got my interest now. I'd hazard a
guess that you don't know something you need to know, and you're
checking. Now, what could that be?" No response: if she'd been Okurt,
she'd have been off the link by now, but he was desperate to know something.
It was just like old times, an
interrogation, and she was good at that. She let her instinct drive.
"You're checking. What would you be checking? Something you can't
verify by technology. So…let me see…" She dared not blink. She needed
to see every muscle, every twitch of his face. "I reckon…ah, you want
to know if something got through. Something you can't contact or
verify. You tried to do something daft, didn't you? What was it?"
"The pilot was off course. He's got no nav beacons he
can log into out here."
"Oh, please. Don't insult my fucking intelligence.
Haven't I explained the wess'har mentality to you? Make a bloody good
note of this--they don't have rules of engagement. It's total war or
nothing with them. Just go. Go home.
Whatever it is you're doing, just stop and leave now.
You have no idea who you're provoking."
She punched the link closed and sat for a couple of
moments with her forehead in her hands. Litiat hovered.
"Get Aras," she said quietly. "I think Actaeon
is about to take us over the brink."
Christopher was the smallest and southernmost
island in the chain. It was flat and black.
The wind had dropped a little but billowing storm
clouds were beginning to gather. As the boat drew closer to the shore,
Lindsay could see that the blackness was actually grass, and the
shoreline was pure white sand. Shafts of sunlight punched through the
cloud, making the sand look almost illuminated. It was extraordinarily
beautiful in its unnatural palette of monochromes. It looked like ideal
landing terrain.
More detail emerged as the distance closed. There were
small thickets of purple foliage now, looking funereal against the
glossy black grass that was swaying like a crop in the breeze. Twelve square kilometers.
Then a thought that should have been obvious struck her
a little too late.
"If we land, are we going to be infected too?" she
asked.
Rayat looked up from the text pad in his hand. "The
only tests we have for this are going to be pretty conclusive."
"Sorry?"
"We'll shoot you. If you survive, you've caught it.
Then we'll have to try something more permanent. We have six on board."
He looked at Josh. "Ever been tempted, Mr. Garrod?"
"That's not the kind of eternal life we seek," said
Josh, still with a white-knuckled grip on his elderly rifle even after
several hours of being buffeted by waves. "We know what it does."
"And you knew about it, Rayat, didn't you?" said
Lindsay. Maybe it was the prospect of imminent death that had clarified
her thinking and sharpened her memory. "That's what you were always
looking for off-camp."
Rayat, still unperturbed, said nothing and steadied
himself on the plank athwart the boat. He was first out, picking his
way through the surf and up the beach. Lindsay had every intention of
following his every move even if Josh shot her. She didn't trust him
then, and she didn't trust him now, whatever he said and whoever he was
working for.
"Get back here and help get these scoots ashore," Josh
yelled. "Now."
It took all four of them to lift the scoots and carry
them to dry land. It was the sort of thing the Booties did well, but
they were a hundred kay behind her, and she hoped they were ready to
blend into the beige mass of colonists and get to safety.
"I'd suggest placing the devices in a three-by-two
pattern, maximum two kay apart," said Rayat. "Purely for coverage."
"You've got five to play with," said Lindsay. "One's
for insurance." She beckoned to Jonathan to help her lift one clear of
the scoot's floor plate.
"I'll set them to ground-burst. On their legs, about a
meter."
"You sure they'll burn hot enough?"
"Thousand meter fireball each, down to a depth of three
meters. Charcoal." Rayat shrugged. "I would have preferred double the
number for certainty, but believe me, this won't be a popular tourist
destination for a while."
Josh and Jonathan had their heads bowed, both absorbed
in their own worlds. Then Lindsay realized they were praying. She found
it more uncomfortable to realize that than to contemplate detonating
neutron devices. Josh looked up again.
"We do a terrible thing," he said. "It's to prevent
something worse. But let's recognize the sin we're committing, shall
we? We have to answer to God, and I also have to answer personally to
Aras in this world. He will vent his rage."
"Let's get on with it," said Lindsay.
It was a small island, easily covered by two scoots in
less than an hour. It was also exquisitely beautiful, and the knowledge
that she was helping devastate it was starting to eat away at her. The
two scoots stayed within visual range of each other. It would have been
a pleasant excursion had the pillion riders not been carrying rifles.
The black grass flattened beneath them like dark sea,
and Lindsay found herself holding her breath. It was pointless but
instinctive: if she were going to be contaminated, it was too late to
stop breathing. She didn't even know if the organism was airborne
anyway.
"Josh," she said, uncomfortable at having him sitting
close up behind her. "I still think Rayat's planning to get a sample
off the planet."
"And were your orders any different?"
"No. We were told to grab it for the military and stop
commercial companies getting it."
"So you deceive your own comrades too."
"Yes, I do. Much as it sticks in my throat to admit it,
Frank- land was right. It's a plague."
"Be sure that's why you're doing this," said Josh, and
they lapsed into silence.
It took under an hour to place and prime all the
devices. Lindsay held onto hers. She had grenades, but she hadn't come
this far to take chances. Shan had to be obliterated. They stopped the
scoots on the beach and got their breath back.
It really was a lovely spot.
The four destroyers of Christopher stood on the idyllic
white beach, taking in a magnificent pre-storm cloudscape as dramatic
as any William Blake woodcut. Four was an apocalyptic number; and the
shafts of sun piercing the cloud were so unnaturally sharp and bright
that Lindsay feared seeing the hand of God reaching through in cartoon
retribution. She glanced at Rayat. I have to be right about this. "So
this is what they mean by limited damage," she said.
"Yes, it's beautiful here. It's a terrible and
necessary shame."
They walked down the perfection of Christopher's icing-
sugar sand and pushed the boat back into the water.
She was sure why she was
destroying Eden. Wasn't she?
There's risk
inherent in trying to reverse-engineer the isenj ITX relay. If we
examine it and make our own prototype, we'll be independent of them. If
we screw up and damage it, they'll know all about it. Ripping off new
allies is suicidal. Let's wait.
Professor S. D. GALLAGHER,
special adviser to Secretary of State for Technology
Shan was angry. She had been angry all the
way back to Constantine from the Temporary City and she wasn't
bothering to conceal her scent.
The boat journey hadn't helped her mood. Vijissi had
insisted on coming with them: Mestin had ordered him to look after her,
he said, and so he would.
It was rather touching. He moved closer and Aras
thought for a second that he was going to rub against her legs like a
flattering cat. He didn't. He just sat very close, looking in the same
direction as her.
It was a gesture of solidarity. Ussissi mirrored each
other, whole packs moving as one. Shan appeared to realize that,
because she almost smiled and sat still for a few moments as well.
It was the only thing she would have to smile about for
a while.
Aras couldn't imagine how any gethes
could land. They were technically limited, even compared to the isenj.
And the defense net was now set to destroy--not immobilize--any
incoming
craft that came in range and didn't transmit a friendly signal. "Why do
you think they would target Constantine?"
"They're looking for me," she said. She was fidgeting,
meshing her gloved fingers hard together and stretching the fabric
taut. "They think I'm there."
He walked behind her through the fields and down the
ramp into Constantine. There were small groups of men in beige and
taupe work clothes carrying crates and studying pieces of hemp paper.
The final check was being carried out before Constantine was abandoned
forever.
But they couldn't find Josh. And nobody would tell them
where he was.
"I don't like this," said Shan. Aras was surprised how
very fast she could move now. "Where's Josh? Something's gone bloody
wrong."
"I fear he might be trying to solve a problem without
bothering us."
Shan stopped abruptly and he nearly collided with her. "Do you know
something I don't?"
"Nothing, except Josh. He can be foolhardy."
"I'll give him foolhardy."
They reached Josh's house. Shan shoved the door open
and went from hall to kitchen. They found Deborah, Rachel, and James
packing. James flinched visibly. Deborah and the little girl just
froze, bewildered.
Shan fixed on James immediately. There was something in
his reaction that triggered the hardened police officer in her. Aras
knew that persona was in there: he had simply never seen it. "Deborah,
take Rachel and get in the bedroom."
"Shan, what--"
"Just fucking do it. Now."
Deborah snatched up Rachel and the door slammed behind her. Shan
rounded on James. They had never seen her like this, and neither had
Aras. "Where's your father?"
"He's not here."
"You've got three seconds to tell me." Shan was
nose-to-nose with the boy, leaning over him, white-faced and
terrifying. "What's happened?"
James stood his ground in silence. Shan grabbed his
collar and slammed him to the wall, cracking the back of his head
against it. "You tell me and you tell me now."
"No."
She drew back her arm and backhanded James so hard
across the face that he fell. No, Aras had never, ever
seen her like this. She dragged the boy to his feet again and pressed
him to the wall. His nose was bleeding. Aras wondered if he should
intervene before she killed him.
"Now," she said. She had
her forearm pressed across his throat. There was blood on her gloves.
"Plenty more where that came from."
James struggled to speak. "Dad's trying to protect you."
"I don't need protection."
"They landed soldiers." He could hardly get the words
out. "They landed. We saw them."
Shan slackened her lock a second before Aras would have
pulled her off James. "You tell me everything you know."
"They landed the soldiers from Thetis,
and Miss Neville. The soldiers are here. Dad's taken Miss Neville and
Dr. Rayat."
"You've disarmed marines?"
"They came on parachutes in these cocoons. We tracked
them all the way down."
Shan was all cold fury. "Fucking idiot. That's just great.
We've got bloody Royal Marine commandos
on site plus my biggest fan and that little shit Rayat. Why?"
"They're trying to stop anyone getting hold of c'naatat."
"Where's Josh taken them?"
"To Christopher Island."
"Shit. Aras, let the
Temporary City know we've got a breach on Christopher."
Aras could hear Shan but he was instantly not quite
there, not quite hearing. Josh had gone to the only environment where
the c'naatat organism existed naturally.
He had taken two gethes with him. Aras
couldn't imagine what game he was playing. James's chin was trembling.
"Why?" Shan asked.
James seemed on the edge of tears. He was just a child. "To destroy
it for good."
Shan marched James to the door by the scruff of his
neck. "Take me to the marines."
"You're on your own now," said Josh.
Lindsay stumbled into the shallows and lost her
footing. If Barencoin hadn't stepped in and hauled her to her feet
again, she felt she would never have had the strength to stand upright.
Bennett stood on the shore, rifle clutched across his chest, with an
expression that said he was rapidly losing what little enthusiasm he
had for the mission.
Rayat tumbled out after her. Nobody made a move to help
him but Barencoin watched him carefully. Lindsay checked the seal on
her rifle, making sure the water hadn't seeped in to the targeting
mechanism. Josh stood in the bobbing vessel as if he was looking for a
reason not to leave.
"What are you going to do now?" Lindsay asked.
"When your bombs detonate, I'll go and answer to Aras."
"And you trust him, do you?"
"He was my great-great-great-grandfather's friend,"
said Josh. "I suspect he merely tolerates me." He paused and pulled his
messaging device from his pocket. He frowned at the small screen and
let out a long breath. "My wife says Shan has paid us a visit. She's on
her way to question your soldiers."
That was just fine. Lindsay looked at her watch and
then at the bioscreen in her palm: even if Shan got any information out
of Qureshi or Chahal, it was too late for her to do anything about it.
And they could pass on a message for her, at just the perfect time. Come and get me.
We can see no
activity on Ouzhari but we will continue to scout the area. We have no
idea what to look for. We are reluctant to land because of the
quarantine of the island. Inform us if you wish us to breach it.
Ussissi reconnaissance pilot
to Temporary City
Aras's instinct to defer to a large, angry
female had kicked in completely. He trailed behind Shan and the
stumbling, terrified James, knowing he would find it hard to intervene
now. They reached the drying barn. Inside, two soldiers he knew as
Qureshi and Chahal were sitting on the dusty floor, cross- legged,
looking unconcerned while Martin Tyndale stood over them with a rifle.
In the corner was a mound of glossy white fabric
streaked and smeared with black charring.
"What's that?" asked Aras.
"Landing craft," said Martin. "One-man suits." His
expression said he was thinking the same as Aras. It was unbelievable.
"You got to hand it to them. They've got guts to attempt that."
Aras was shocked. He had no idea that humans were that
reckless for their own safety. That was
why they hadn't detected them.
Shan dropped James and shoved him over to Aras, then
took her gun out of her waistband and held it on the two marines. "Have
you searched them?" she asked.
"We've got their rifles," said Martin.
"Sweetheart, these are Royals. Booties." She stopped
two meters from them. Her tone was incongruously kind. "Come on,
fellers. You know the drill. Face down, on the floor, hands behind your
heads, and don't piss me about." The marines obeyed without a word. She
beckoned Martin forward. "If they move, shoot. Got that?"
"Got it," he said.
Shan handed her virin to
Aras and then body-searched both the marines, gun still in one hand. It
took a little time. She retrieved knives, lengths of sharp-edged wire,
ammunition, flares and tubes of plastic explosive. She handed the haul
item by item to Martin.
"Hands behind your back now," she said quietly, and
handcuffed and hobbled them with reactive tape that would contract
further with movement. Then she pulled them into a sitting position.
"And that," she said to nobody in particular, "is why you always
do a proper body search."
Shan suddenly reacted to Chahal. He was just looking at
her hands. No, he was looking at her watch,
or trying to. She squatted down in front of him.
"What is it, Chaz?" she said. "Late for tea?"
"Marine Balwant Singh Chahal, Three-seven Commando,
number five nine oblique eight seven seven six alpha."
"Okay, I get the idea. I know it'll take me a lot
longer to get an answer out of you than Jimmy here, but I will
get there in the end."
Silence. She was staring into Chahal's face, no
malevolence or anger visible at all, just sorrow. Qureshi was staring
straight ahead and past her. Aras wondered how far Shan would go. He
knew all too well how far she had been prepared to go in the past.
But that was with criminals. These were elite soldiers.
She respected them.
"Where's the rest of the detachment?"
"Marine Balwant--"
"Give it a rest. What's so important about the time?
What are Lin and Rayat up to?" Now Qureshi was staring at her hands. It
was the lights: violet shimmered across her fingers as they curled
round the 9mm weapon. Shan flicked a glance at Qureshi. She didn't miss
a thing, Aras thought. She was still a good copper.
"Yeah, I light up too, just like you do. Is that bioscreen still
working? If I take a look, will I pick up Lin's signal?"
She moved behind Chahal and jerked his arms up,
twisting his wrist so she could see the illuminated screen grown into
the cells of his palm. It was hurting him; Aras could smell it. The
marine didn't react.
"Ah," said Shan. "No readout from Webster or Becken.
Well, that's two we don't have to worry about. And we've got Bennett
and Barencoin still on the loose, I see. Lin's pumping, though. Look at
that heart rate. What's she up to?"
Qureshi shifted a little. "It's 1600 or thereabouts.
You're too late."
Chahal let out a hiss under his breath but Shan didn't
move. She glanced at Qureshi. "What's Lin done, Izzy?"
"You'll see soon enough," said Qureshi. "I'm really
sorry. And we did come to take you."
"Fair enough," said Shan. "Nothing personal."
The virin that Aras was
holding for her burst into light and color. The message was from the
Temporary City. In the transparent layers of the device, Aras saw
reconnaissance shots. A ussissi auxiliary unit was searching the seas
around the southernmost islands.
The marines exchanged glances, and Shan was watching
them. She seemed obsessed with the element of time. She walked slowly
round the two marines and Aras wondered if she was going to kick one of
them, putting the boot in as she called
it. He had many half-formed memories from her, and that was a common
one.
"So, you're trying to work something out," said Shan. "Did Lin get
there or not? So I'm guessing time matters to you because
there's an extraction planned, which means she's taking a sample, or
something is going to happen later, and I reckon that means a device of
some sort." She stopped in front of Chahal and pressed the muzzle of
the gun carefully against his forehead, right between his eyebrows. She
would shoot him: Aras was sure of it. The
humans might not have been aware of her state of mind, but even without
a scent to guide him, he could see the tension in her muscles and the
blood absent from her face.
"Commander Neville had bombs," said James suddenly.
Evidently he also believed she would fire her weapon.
Chahal was simply looking down into his lap now, jaw
muscles twitching every so often. "What sort?" said Shan.
"Radiation bombs," said James. "They're going to burn
the island. And then she's coming for you."
"Nukes? She's got nukes with her? Oh, fuck."
Aras had expected Shan to erupt at that
point, but she was still all white-faced control. "Izzy, I've got a
terrific memory for detail. Ade once told me you were EOD trained.
Well, you don't get ordnance that's much more explosive than this, so
you can come and help us dispose of them."
Chahal looked up. "That contravenes the--"
"Chaz, shut up," said Shan gently. "You can report me
to the Hague when you get back." She still had her gun to his head.
"Are you in voice contact with Lin?"
Chahal's eyes flickered. "I have audio implants."
Shan straightened up and stepped back. Then she walked
round behind him, gun still targeted at his head, and released the tape
round his wrists. "Give her a bell. Tell her Shan wants to see her. Go
on. Call the bitch."
Chahal paused and then pressed points on his wrist and
palm. He was muttering under his breath: Aras could hardly hear him.
Whatever implants these soldiers had, they were sensitive. Shan had
once joked--or maybe not joked, perhaps--that she would never copulate
with Sergeant Bennett because the whole detachment would hear. Aras
finally understood exactly what she meant.
Chahal then went silent, as if listening. He looked up
not at Shan, but at her gun.
"Commander Neville says she'll meet you."
Shan looked grim. She had stopped blinking completely.
It was an unnerving thing to watch. "Tell me what she really said."
"She said, �Come and get me.' "
Small wonder Chahal had tried to paraphrase it. Aras
watched Shan's jaw clench and lock. He interrupted.
"She's trying to provoke you, isan,"
he said.
"She's doing a fucking good job of it."
"You can't afford anger."
"I'll settle for some rough justice, then."
Aras caught Shan's arm carefully. "The ussissi will
carry out the search for the weapons. But you stay here."
She almost shook him off, then appeared to relent and
put her hand on top of his. But she still had her gun in the other. And
it was still held on Chahal.
"I never sent a junior officer in to do the dirty
work," she said. "And I'm not going to start now."
"I will accompany Qureshi."
"No. It might be a booby-trap for me."
"I will have my way on this, isan.
Once the ussissi have located the devices from the air, I'll ensure she
deals with them. No risks."
"You're very confident of that."
"You forget what I was." He was a soldier. He had been
a fine one, too. He had forgotten none of it. "You stay here."
"And you forget what I
was. EnHaz. Environmental crimes unit. I'm going to have that stupid
little cow because she's prepared to trash the environment to get me.
Now let me get on with my job."
"Listen to me. This is not necessary."
"Like the time you listened to me when I told you not
to go after the isenj?"
"And you nearly died because you insisted on coming
with me."
"I learned a lesson or two. I'll fire first this time."
Aras knew he could never force Shan to do anything. And
he was running out of time arguing with her. "Promise me you'll be
prudent."
"Okay. Prudence it is." Shan turned back to Chahal. "Tell her I'll
see her at Constantine. Remind her that I know the
tunnels, and she doesn't, and I'm in a fucking bad mood. And warn
Bennett and Barencoin to stay out of it."
Chahal's lips moved and Shan appeared to be listening
intently to him. She turned his palm over with one hand and said, "Show
me where they are." She was checking the location coordinates to verify
that Lindsay and the others were actually on the island and not just
decoying her. Then she retaped his hands and called Martin over.
"Give me one of their rifles," she said.
Aras had rarely experienced indecision, but he was
experiencing it now.
Shan could wait. She could
wait until he got back, and then they could tackle Lindsay and her
marines together, or--better still--they could leave them and wait for
the pathogen to dispatch them. It would take a week or two, but the
result would be the same.
No, Shan would never wait. Nobody could make her. He
wanted to protect his isan, his isanket, his
comrade-in-arms. But he was
Bezer'ej's custodian, and he still had his ancient duty.
"Let Vijissi go with you," he said at last. "Please?"
"Okay. If it makes you happy." She turned to Martin. "Make that two
rifles."
Qureshi did a credible job of matching their pace all
the way down to the beached boats on the shore. Aras had his fingers
tight around her upper arm just in case she tried to make a run for it,
although he had no idea why flight would solve any problems. All he
knew was that Shan had told him marines were supposed to escape if they
could and harass the enemy. He didn't enjoy thinking of them as enemies.
"What are you going to do with Josh when you find him?"
said Shan.
It was a question he hoped she wouldn't ask because he
didn't want to ask it himself. Josh had betrayed him. Josh had helped gethes
who were intent on--on what? Securing c'naatat or destroying
it? They didn't seem to
have a single purpose. But either way they were a threat to Shan and to
Bezer'ej.
"I have no idea."
Shan strode on. "I know you're upset about James. I'm
sorry I had to do that."
"He's a child. Did you have to hit him?"
"You're going soft."
"I don't shy away from necessary force."
"Anyone can bomb strangers. But sometimes you have to
hurt your friends."
It was savage, and it was true: and he feared she
despised him. Sometimes she was more wess'har than he was. But the
drive to protect and nurture the young was powerful and he couldn't
completely override it. "He's still a child."
Shan stood on the shingle, hands on hips, looking out
to sea. There were no lights visible from shallow-swimming bezeri. "I'm
an equal opportunities bastard," she said. "I don't care how old they
are, how disabled they are, or what sex, culture or religion they are.
I'll get answers out of them. I'm very fair that way."
She gave him an unconvincing smile in the way that she
did when she wanted him to believe everything was all right when it
wasn't.
Aras dragged one of the shallow-draft rigid inflatables
down to the beach. Its engine started easily, as if it were warm from
recent use. He climbed into the boat and pulled Qureshi in after him.
She was heavier than her slight frame suggested, but she was still a
very small female compared to his isan.
Aras looked back at Shan. "Be careful," he said. "They're still
marines first, friends second."
"You be careful of Josh," Shan said. "He's stiffed you
once. He'll do it again."
"I've known six generations of his family," Aras said. "I know his
beliefs. Why would he do this?"
"Because, sweetheart, deep down he's a shit-house like
every human," she said, and held her hand up in a parting gesture.
Then, almost as if she had thought of something, she pulled the virin
from her pocket and lobbed it into the
boat. "You'll need this. See you back at the Temporary City."
There was a following wind. They would make good time.
The boat bounced over the surface, whipping spray into the air,
creating a sense of a storm that wasn't there.
Qureshi was uneasy. She was scanning the horizon with
an increasingly furrowed brow.
"What's wrong?" Aras said. "Looking for something?"
"I wouldn't go charging in if I were you, sir," said
Qureshi. "How close are we to Christopher now?"
"Fifty kilometers. If you know when the bombs will
explode, you must tell me."
"You're already too late," said Qureshi, and leaned
back against the gunwale with her handcuffed wrists between her legs,
eyes closed.
Aras was leaning on the wheel and keeping an eye out
for craft from the Temporary City when three rapid flashes of
brilliant, burning, blue-white light caught his peripheral vision.
"What's that?" he asked.
Qureshi jerked her head round. She registered shock,
instant acidic shock. "Oh shit," she said quietly. "Turn around, sir.
It's too late."
A solid column like a gray efte
tree had grown suddenly out of the sea to the south. The head of it
blossomed into a canopy. Aras had never seen anything like it, except
in gethes books. Qureshi had scrambled on
to her knees to stare at the spectacle.
"Oh, my bezeri," Aras said. It was his first thought:
he thought of the beautiful black-grass island and he thought of the
massive shock wave transmitting itself through the sea. "My poor
bezeri. I promised them. I promised them."
Qureshi looked utterly defeated. He half hoped that she
would give him an acceptable explanation that wouldn't confirm his
worst fears. He wanted her to say that it was okay, that humans he had
watched over and protected for generations hadn't betrayed his foolish
trust and that it could all be put right again.
Wess'har were brutally pragmatic. His hope lasted less
than a second.
The billowing canopy was flattening and spreading.
Aras had not experienced helplessness for five hundred
years. He was the guardian of Bezer'ej, of the bezeri, and of the
island the humans called Christopher. And he'd failed. He didn't even
know how.
He grabbed the marine's face in his hands and jerked it
up to make her look at him. Qureshi's eyes said that she didn't expect
to survive the next few minutes, but she maintained her composure.
"Do you know what you've done? Do you?" His wess'har
instinct that told him to freeze and evaluate before reacting to a
threat suddenly couldn't override a growing pressure in his chest and
throat that felt remarkably like reliving one of Shan's rages. Aras
wanted to lash out. It was an alien emotion in every sense but it
almost consumed him until he let the sensible wess'har numbing reflex
kick in. "You've poisoned the island. You've poisoned the water."
He loosened his grip so suddenly and completely that
Qureshi almost tipped over the gunwale of the shallow craft. He grabbed
her before she fell. She wouldn't have survived long in the water with
her wrists bound.
She hadn't actually done anything. She had just landed
in hostile territory, serving her nation, as he had once done. It was
wrong to punish her.
Aras took out the virin
and looked for the latest reconnaissance images. The high aerial view
was from a patrol craft. Aras couldn't see the island at all; it was a
mass of flame and plumed tumbling smoke and filth. The cloud of debris
sucked up from the blast was drifting south over the sea.
He could feel the swell building as the shock wave
pushed out from the island.
"It's neutron bombs, sir. I know it's terrible, but
they're designed for minimal long-term fallout."
Aras couldn't take his eyes off the cube of images. "Is
this supposed to comfort the bezeri?"
"It might not be as bad as you think, sir. I'm really
sorry." EVACUATE said the virin.
Aras stood at the wheel again, swung the boat to
starboard and opened the throttle. He felt the first spots of heavy
rain on his face. It was the promise of a downpour.
The fallout would drop into the sea in the embrace of
rain. In the short term, Qureshi need not have worried too much about
contamination.
The bezeri, sensitive to pollution, slow breeding, a
fragile population at best, would feel it first.
He hoped--no, he prayed, in
case the gethes thing called God could
hear, and act--that they would flee.
Ouzhari no longer
exists. The landmass has been obliterated almost to the waterline. We are also detecting high
levels of cobalt in the fallout from the detonations. It has entered
the sea and spread north with the currents to other island coastal
areas. You must expect great loss of life among marine species. The gethes lied to you. The poison
from the bombs will linger for
years.
Lindsay looked at her watch and checked
the bioscreen in her palm.
"It's done," she said. "Christopher's neutralized."
She had imagined they would have to crawl
commando-style through passages to infiltrate the underground colony.
But Josh must have called ahead. The ancient shuttle
had been prepared: Bennett looked over the cockpit and shrugged,
apparently satisfied at its readiness. When they came through the main
thoroughfare, there were a couple of men dragging a crate between them,
and they simply glanced at Lindsay, the marines and Rayat, and went
about their business.
Bennett and Barencoin, rifles ready, overlapped and
covered each other, checking entrances, looking up at the galleries,
still as wary as their training in urban warfare made them.
"Would they booby-trap the place?" asked Rayat. Lindsay
wouldn't give him a rifle and he was edgy. He was carrying the last ERD
in a bergen across his back. It was quite a feat of endurance; and he
didn't look especially robust. "You never know with these types."
"We'll find out the hard way," said Bennett. "Want to
walk ahead?"
It wasn't at all like Bennett to be insolent. Barencoin
was silent. Lindsay didn't trust Rayat enough to have him armed with
the shuttle a long sprint away. She had no idea what an intelligence
officer's skills might be. She wasn't going to test them.
And she hadn't visited David's grave. She wouldn't have
time now. She'd never see it again; and that hurt. But the pain was
good, because it kept her motivated.
From time to time the sound of falling soil stopped
them in their tracks but it was just the walls crumbling. Lindsay
stared at the trickle of gold granules.
"I think they've started with the nanites," said Rayat. "Let's hope
the whole place doesn't fall in on us."
"It won't if you shut up," said Barencoin.
They stopped at St. Francis. The magnificent stained
glass was gone, leaving a clean window-shaped hole. Lindsay adjusted
her ballistic jacket, thinking that it felt insubstantial, and checked
her rifle. She could feel Bennett's gaze boring into her.
"You ever been hit by a round, ma'am?" he asked.
"No," she said. "You know damn well I haven't. But I
can give as good as I get."
"Ma'am, it'll still bloody hurt even with the jacket."
"She'll have a 9mm pistol, not an elephant rifle."
"She'll have whatever she took off Izzy and Chaz." He
gestured with his own rifle. "If she uses one of these buggers on you,
you'll know it. And if she gets a head-shot in, no jacket is going to
save you. This is all about timing now." He held up four candle-sized
sticks of dark green metal. He'd made his own private plans, then.
"Stun grenades. One's enough to immobilize a room. I think it might
take two to slow her down. Once we get her on the deck, we restrain her
and get to the shuttle."
"We need her down and disoriented for at least ten
seconds," said Barencoin. "Look." He demonstrated the titanium
composite straps he'd borrowed from engineering. Snap,
snap, snap: they locked in place automatically. They were what
you used to secure odd-shaped loads in the cargo bay. "This all depends
on getting her in a confined space. If you're too close to her when it
happens, you'll be on your back for a while too."
"And if we can't get her positioned right?"
"We'll shoot."
"Right. That'll be about as effective as a chocolate
teapot."
"It'll slow her down. That's all we need."
"And you make damn sure you're gloved. She's a
biohazard."
Barencoin tapped one gloved hand on his helmet with a
carefully blank expression. Bennett was looking at him as if he had
said something out of turn. Lindsay could read him too easily now; he
didn't like the idea of hurting Shan. He'd definitely go soft. She'd
have to watch him.
"Problem, Ade?"
He shook his head. "Just remember that Shan's used to
using a gun and she's trained to avoid situations where she might be
jumped. Don't get too confident."
She wouldn't. If she had to walk up to her and detonate
the ERD on the spot, she'd do it. Barencoin had almost certainly told
Bennett that she planned to kill Shan.
Or he might have thought it was a ploy to convince Josh
she was serious. Either way, she still wasn't sure she could rely on
either marine to help her do it when push came to shove.
She swallowed hard and lowered her voice. She really
hated deceiving them. They deserved better. "And if anything goes
wrong, you get the hell out, okay? Even if that means evacuating with
the civvies. Just run. Promise me that."
They waited.
The interesting thing about a colony of galleries and
tunnels, especially one that was now empty of people and
sound-deadening materials, was how far sound carried. Lindsay stood in
the center of the main passage, looking up and round her, now with a
clear plan to run into the church when Shan found her. It was a warren
of rooms but she knew her way in and out. And Bennett had his stun
grenades.
She thought she heard boots. She held her breath.
Then the sound stopped. Maybe it was a colonist. It was
a good way to get your head blown off, but it was too late to yell at
them to keep clear. Then the footsteps got louder and resolved into two
sets, one heavy, one light, and Lindsay raised her rifle a second after
the two marines did.
It was a woman in colony-standard beige overalls
leading a small redheaded boy. They looked surprised but not shocked.
"You need to clear this area, ma'am," said Barencoin,
dipping his barrel a little. "It's not safe."
The woman shrugged. "We're staying." She took a tighter
grip on the boy's hand. "The wess'har aren't going to get rid of us and
neither are you."
And she walked on, the child gazing back wide-eyed over
his shoulder at the intruders. Barencoin shook his head. "Silly cow.
They'll all be dead in a month."
Lindsay thought of the ERD. They'd be dead sooner than
that. She wanted to go after the woman and tell her to save her son, to
run, to join the others and get off the planet. But she drew on the
kind numbness of Sandhu's medication and concentrated on her rifle.
Shan had to be coming
She had to.
Lindsay glanced over her shoulder, first one way, then
the other, to check that Bennett and Barencoin were still in alcoves on
either side of the passage. Then she moved into the center of the main
route through the colony, defying her, presenting a target. Come and get me, bitch. I don't
need to live through this. If she was out there. No,
Shan couldn't resist it.
Lindsay wasn't entirely sure what happened next. One
second she was on her feet, looking up and around at the empty
galleries, rifle ready, and the next, something hit her hard at knee
height from nowhere and she was on her back. Her rifle went flying.
Something landed hard on her chest and pinned her down. She was looking
into a mouthful of needle teeth and then she saw the rest of the
ussissi and its weapon.
"Give me a clear shot, Vijissi," said Shan's voice. "Get off her."
And Shan was suddenly standing over her with a rifle--an
FEU issue rifle--pointed into her face. Lindsay couldn't work out where
she had come from. Shan didn't say a word: and Lindsay had expected an
awful lot of words from her. Shan just looked into her eyes with that
soulless, unbreakable gray stare, pressed the barrel to her
forehead--and then there were shots, and a shriek, and it wasn't
her own.
Lindsay thought Shan had fired. She was hammered into
the ground and for a moment she thought she was dying because she
couldn't breathe. Her ears rang.
The moment was both forever and instantly over.
Lindsay couldn't get up. She floundered on the paving
and tried to reach for her rifle but could do nothing but watch. She
watched Bennett empty his magazine into Shan, and she watched her drop
next to her, facing away.
Then there was silence except for the aftershock of the
rifles' report in her ears.
"Shit," said Lindsay. She got up far enough on one arm
to see the ussissi crumpled on the ground. They'd dropped them both.
Then Shan moved. She rolled over onto her stomach and
reached into her belt and returned five shots.
Nothing came back at her. Shan got to her feet,
unsteady, stumbling, but she was still moving, gun raised, and that was
when Barencoin came out firing.
And Shan was still standing.
She was standing right up to the point when she fired
again and Barencoin fell. Bennett rugby-tackled her to the ground and
almost had her pinned flat when she head-butted him and sent him
sprawling backwards.
Barencoin scrambled over to them and threw his weight
on her. Between them, they managed to flip her face down and get the
straps on. There was a lot of swearing and grunting.
"Fuck me," said Barencoin. He sat back and nursed his
knee. His pants were soaked with blood and he fumbled in his belt,
pulled out a primed needle-pack and slammed it into his thigh. Then he
let out a long sigh and took the dressing that Bennett was holding out
to him. "Fuck me, Ade, she should be dead. You all right?"
"So much for using the stun grenades," Bennett panted.
There was blood streaming from his nose and spattered across his face.
His helmet hadn't been much use against Shan's lowtech approach to
self-defense.
Lindsay managed to stand up and retrieve her rifle. She
limped over to the three of them, feeling as if her ribs had been
smashed. Shan was still struggling weakly, face contorted with pain,
also bloodied, and struggling for breath. Her trousers, waist to knee,
were peppered with holes, and there were a few in her jacket. Bennett
had obviously assumed she was wearing her ballistic vest.
"Is that hers?" Lindsay demanded. "Is that blood from
her? Show me."
Bennett was crouched over Shan, all concern. He looked
up at Lindsay and his expression was one she hadn't seen
before--absolute loathing. He looked very different, not like good old
Ade at all, and it wasn't just the mess across his face.
"No, it's my fucking
blood," he said. He wiped the back of his glove across his nose and
succeeded in smearing the blood still further. "She nutted me. She's
not even bleeding from wounds. Look." He indicated the ground and the
near wall. "Just the initial spatter. Are you clear? You were pretty
near her."
"Nothing on me, and I haven't got any open wounds
anyway." Lindsay tried to turn Shan over with her boot, but Bennett
raised his arm to block her. She really wasn't in command any more. She
wondered if she ever had been.
"You leave her, okay?" he snapped. He turned back to
Shan again and put his hand under her head. "Easy, ma'am. You'll be
okay. I'm sorry. I'm really sorry."
"You arsehole," Shan hissed at him. "You frigging
idiot. Don't you see what you've done?"
Lindsay thought that Bennett had finally realized, and
was now ashamed. It didn't matter. They had her. She
had her.
Barencoin was silent, adjusting the dressing on his leg
but watching her with clear distaste. Rayat emerged from the passage.
He looked down at Shan, wide-eyed. "How many rounds did it take to stop
her?" he asked. "My God. Think of what--"
"And you can fuck off, too," Shan said. For a woman
with an awful lot of holes in her, she was remarkably vocal. "You shot
Vijissi, you fucking bastards." But she had to be in agony. Lindsay
took a roll of gaffer tape from her leg pocket and ripped a length off.
"He's still alive," said Bennett. "He'll be okay."
"You shit--"
"I'm going to shut you up once and for all," Lindsay
said. "Hold her head, Mart."
"No, she won't be able to--" Bennett began, but
Barencoin cut him off.
"She'll bring the whole bloody wess'har cavalry down on
us, mate," said Barencoin. "We'll take it off later."
For a moment Lindsay thought Shan would sink her teeth
in Barencoin's arm, but she was seriously weakened despite her stream
of vigorous invective. The tape cut off her last expletive, which began
with c.
Now that she was immobilized and silenced, Lindsay took
out a first-aid wipe and scrubbed at Shan's face. It wasn't concern.
She was looking for a wound, any abrasion at all, but there wasn't a
mark on her and it was Bennett's blood
after all.
Shan's expression was murderous. It wasn't cowed, and
that both bothered Lindsay and gratified her, because there was no
honor in defeating a weak enemy.
But Shan could still give her that look, and it made
her remember how much of a disappointment she had been to her mother.
Bennett was fiddling with the fracture dressing that he
had placed across the bridge of his nose to stop the bleeding and
reduce the inevitable swelling. Shan had given him one hell of a crack.
Rayat crouched down next to Shan and started assembling
a sample vial. "Let's get some tissue samples off her now just in case."
He put one hand flat on the floor for a second. Lindsay
stamped down hard on it, heel first. He bit back a cry and glared up at
her. Barencoin swung his rifle on him and looked rather keen to see if
it still worked.
"Let's not," said Lindsay. "Let's get the shuttle going
instead."
Barencoin started limping down the passage, herding
Rayat ahead. Bennett hung back. Barencoin and Rayat stopped too.
"Go on, Ade," she said. "Get moving, all of you."
"I'll help you carry her," said Bennett. "You won't be
able to do it on your own."
There was no point continuing the charade any longer.
Lindsay took out the grenades from her belt-pack. She would have
preferred the remaining ERD to be certain, but that woman and her son
had disappeared into the warren around them. The grenades would do just
fine. She started setting the timers. "Get out of here, Ade. Now."
"What are you doing, ma'am?"
"We can't hand her over. Surely you can see that."
Lindsay didn't want to meet Shan's eyes again. It was one step too far.
She had never killed anyone face-to-face: she'd given orders to launch,
to take, to
open fire, but she had never done a
soldier's job, never this close up. "We'll all end up like her. Get
shot up, then back in the fight. Over and over. And that's just the
start. She has to die, Ade. She went to a lot of trouble to keep c'naatat
out of our hands, and for once I agree
with her."
"That's government property," said Rayat. "You can't.
You've got orders."
"I couldn't give a toss," Lindsay said. "Come on, Ade.
Get back to the shuttle. I'll be with you right away."
Bennett looked remarkably calm. He was a man who had
always grappled with physical fear, and overcame it anew each time. It
was one of the things Shan had said she liked about him. He had guts.
Now he raised his rifle and aimed at Lindsay. She
looked just past the barrel and into his eyes, because he wasn't a big
man, and all she could see was dried and drying blood from his eyebrows
down to his chin. The dressing across his nose looked almost comical, a
racoon's mask: his determination didn't.
"Disarm the grenades, please, ma'am."
"That's an order, Sergeant. Leave us."
"No ma'am. You put the grenades down and you put your
rifle down on the ground and back away. Or I'll fire."
"Bennett, don't be stupid. Back off. It's an order.
Last chance." Lindsay tried to stare him out. It wasn't working. The
grenades felt uncomfortable in her hands. "I have to do this."
"Ma'am, I won't let you murder an unarmed civilian. Not
even if it was Rayat." There was an ominous whirr from his rifle as the
automatic targeting tried to accommodate the close range, and he showed
no sign whatsoever of lowering it. "You can't order me to breach the
convention. So help me, I'll slot you right now if you don't put those
bloody things down and step away from her."
"I don't think he's joking," said Rayat. "And we don't
have all day."
"Piss off, sir," said Bennett without breaking his
gaze. But Rayat was right. The sergeant wasn't backing down. It struck
Lindsay that they might just have been waiting for an excuse to shoot
her. And then Shan would be free.
Lindsay thought briefly of pulling the pins anyway,
right now. She had factored that into her plans too. It was a sacrifice
worth making.
She looked at the small, dull metal levers and thought,
yes, now, on the count of three.
But she didn't.
She tried to move her hands, but she just stared at the
grenades.
She had visualized it so many times. But when it came
to it, she couldn't do it, not even for David. She wanted to live.
"Okay," she said, and lowered both devices to the
floor. Barencoin limped forward and picked them up. For an ill-advised
moment, Lindsay let herself look at Shan; and her expression, even with
a length of tape over her mouth, said it all. You don't have the guts.
Shan would have pulled the pins. Lindsay knew that. But
she wasn't Shan, and now she knew she never would be, not even when it
really, really mattered. It was a moment of self-revelation that she
would never forget however hard she tried.
"Let's get her in the shuttle and put some distance
between us and the wess'har," Lindsay said, trying to sound brisk and
efficient. "Because when they find out, they're going to be furious."
"More furious than they'll be for torching
Christopher?" asked Barencoin, without using the word ma'am.
It wasn't working out as she planned.
She would have to come up with something else, and fast.
There ought to be
a room in every house to swear in. Under certain circumstances,
profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer.
MARK TWAIN
The first bezeri to be washed up on Chad
Island--to the north of Christopher--was a juvenile female.
The cobalt in the gethes'
bombs had poisoned the air and the land--and the sea. It was an
especially filthy weapon. It was designed to poison for many years to
come, a grotesque twist on the sleeping pathogen that his wess'har
comrades were spreading. It killed indiscriminately.
Aras knelt down and laid his hand on the gelatinous
mantle of the bezeri. There were already tiny keteya
swarming over it, seizing the chance of a meal. And his heart broke.
He had never understood what humans had meant by that,
but he knew now. There was a definite sensation of pain deep in his
chest, a pressure that made breathing unpleasant, and it ran all the
way up the back of his throat into his mouth. Why did they do this?
He stood up and looked out across the bay. The cloud
cover meant that he should have been able to see some light from bezeri
near the surface, but there was nothing. He had walked into the water
several times and used the signaling lamp, but they didn't come.
Aras knew how vulnerable they were to poisons in the
water. Their settlements were clustered near landmasses. The slightest
chemical changes were dangerous: isenj pollution had nearly destroyed
them. It was very easy to kill bezeri without planning to.
Aras battled with the pressure of sorrow that
threatened to crush his chest and thought of all the years he had spent
watching the bezeri recover their numbers, never as great as before the
isenj arrived, but a recovery nonetheless. The isenj hadn't planned to
kill bezeri any more than the gethes had.
Surendra Parekh hadn't set out to kill bezeri either.
He had balanced that crime with two shots from Shan's
old but efficient hand-weapon. He wondered what it would take to
balance this crime, and he began to see it would take a great deal of
balancing indeed, and more than he could carry out alone.
And then there was Josh. Aras was staring at the water
but not seeing it. Why did he betray me?
Josh was another gethes
who probably hadn't planned to kill bezeri. He never meant to
do it. Aras could almost hear him now.
He would repent. He would seek forgiveness from God.
But it was none of his
god's business to forgive this.
Aras wasn't minded to leave Josh's punishment to his
god. He'd do it himself. He had forbidden the ussissi and the Cetekas
clan to touch him. Find him. Hold him. Wait for me
to get back.
After nearly two hundred years of living alongside
them, Aras had finally understood a fundamental aspect of humans. For a
moment he feared it had become clear because the Shan-parts of him had
clarified it.
Difference made others invisible to gethes.
Was she like that? No. She
behaved differently, whatever went on in her mind.
The sea was still dark gray and lightless. There were
no bezeri to be seen.
Aras recalled a game he used to play with little Rachel
Garrod. She called it hide and seek. Sometimes he would find her
huddled in a corner with a garment over her head, and she was
astonished that he could see and find her, because she could not see
him. Adult gethes behaved similarly. They
believed other species had no individuality, no sense of self, simply
because they couldn't see it, measure it, or experience it; and if they
could not conceive of it, it could not exist. Perhaps wess'har, used to
feeling fleetingly what another felt through oursan,
could stretch their imaginations a little further.
Aras knew that the bezeri female who now lay rotting at
his feet had felt and feared, because that was what all life did in one
way or another. And even if she had neither complex language nor the
ability to conjure up abstract concepts--and she did, he knew
she did--then her life would be no less
valid because of that. That was what
separated his kind from gethes. Gethes thought their
imaginary god had made them unique, both as individuals and as a
species, even if they no longer believed in him.
The keteya were leaving
visible holes in the bezeri's mantle now. Aras wondered what would
happen to them, too.
For a moment he wished the gethes
had succeeded in grabbing c'naatat for
themselves. He would have delighted in seeing them reach extinction in
their own filth and excess.
But many others would have died with them, and he shook
the vengeance away. It was a uselessly violent thought, and he hadn't
lavished one like that even upon the isenj. The thought felt like
Shan's. He understood her various angers a lot better now.
He stood over the bezeri until she started to fall
apart under the small but persistent assaults of the keteya. It
was getting dark. He had been there
on the shore for hours, and it occurred to him that Shan would be
worrying about him. She would be back by now. She would have found
Lindsay Neville and killed her. The marines wouldn't touch her. He was
sure of that.
Shan could always imagine what it was like to be behind
someone else's eyes. He thought of the gorilla, and was glad that she
could still feel pain for the being, and for all things that were even
less like her than the ape. He hadn't misjudged her at all, not from
the very first time he had met her. He would go back to Constantine and
find her, and then he would seek some comfort from the one human who
had ever justified his affection and loyalty.
A light caught his eye.
It was faint, and green. He had never seen that single,
unchanging color before: it defied the signal lamp's translation. The
device stayed silent. Then the light was joined by others.
Aras scrambled back up the cliff as fast as he could to
get a better vantage point. When he turned and looked down onto the
darkening water, he could see light upon light, all green, all
unchanging, but growing in intensity and number
His signal lamp started to crackle. He couldn't make
out any words.
The lights flared. They were brighter than he had ever
seen now, even brighter than the communal songs that rippled through
the water for weeks at a time; and still he didn't understand them.
The sea was on fire with green light. He stared at it,
lost, remembering the wess'har who saw the lights many years before and
who first understood when the bezeri were calling out help us.
The signal lamp spat out a stream of loud static, and
his own moment of revelation was terrible. The bezeri weren't calling
for help this time.
They were screaming.
We have had no
contact from Shan Frankland or Vijissi. They might be keeping radio
silence because they still seek the human invaders. We would also ask
for confirmation of the identity of an unidentified vessel that has
left Constantine and is heading for Wess'ej. It is not on our schedule
even though it responded with nonhostile code.
(Operations overseer, Temporary City)
In zero g, the shattered rounds that were
easing out of Shan's body simply drifted in front of her. It was like
watching a film of yourself being shot, run backwards. Eddie would have
been amazed by it.
Shan had wondered if she would ever get used to c'naatat's
thorough healing procedures and now
she knew she would never have the chance to.
She couldn't.
Vijissi was curled up in a ball beside her, panting. He
was badly hurt. Shan nudged him with her shoulder, making him drift
back against the bulkhead, and he opened his black hunter's eyes and
focused on her. She hoped he'd make it. To his right, just in her
peripheral vision, Ade Bennett was still fussing with the tape over his
broken nose, checking carefully with the mirror of his camo compact
held very close to his face. Shan had never taken him for a vain man.
He looked upset.
Then he noticed she was looking his way. He snapped the
compact shut. "How you feeling?" he said. He swung as close to her as
he dared. "You still in pain?"
She stared at him. It was all she could do while gagged
but she knew she could always convey a command without opening her
mouth. He shot a few nervous glances in Lindsay's direction and then
began easing the tape off.
"Leave that," said Lindsay, looking up from the
tracking screen.
Bennett took no notice whatsoever and peeled the last
of the tape clear. It hurt. He winced as if he could tell. Shan looked
into his earnest hazel eyes and the grubby dressing that separated
them. They were almost nose-to-nose.
"Piss off," she said.
If she'd head-butted him again, he couldn't have looked
more wounded. He cared what she thought of him. He probably thought
he'd done the honorable thing and faced down his superior officer to
save her life. Under normal circumstances, it would have been an heroic
act. But he really should have let Lindsay fragment her. It just made
things a whole lot messier now.
"I'm really sorry, Boss," he said to her. "Really I am.
But I'll make damn sure they treat you right."
"I bet," said Shan, and she could have sworn his eyes
looked a little glassy.
"Here we go," said Barencoin. The shuttle was tiny: one
main compartment forward, propulsion section midships, and two aft
service compartments leading on to a small open cargo bay. Shan could
hear everything. "Isenj codes, ussissi pilot. That's our escort.
Twenty-eight minutes to intercept once we break course. On your mark."
"Okay. Get us out of Wess'ej space."
"Very good, ma'am."
Shan pushed herself away from the bulkhead with her
feet and rolled slowly to get a better look. Lindsay was leaning over
Barencoin, looking at the readouts.
"I need a pee," Shan said. She kept thinking about the
grenades. Barencoin had them: she could see them tucked neatly into
pockets on his webbing. It would be a damn shame to blow them on this
fragile ship and take two good men with her, but she had run out of
options. She just needed to get her hands and legs free, and she had
less than twenty-eight minutes to do it. She tried not to think of Aras
but it was impossible. "Does this thing have heads?"
Lindsay drifted over to her. Shan expected a boot in
the face or something equally eloquent. It never came.
"You shot me point-blank," said Lindsay. "Aren't you
supposed to shout something like, �Stop--armed police'?"
"No, I was trying to kill you," said Shan. "And I don't
normally miss at that range. Not unless some bastard shoots me first,
of course."
"How many people have you
killed?"
Shan paused to count. "Eight."
"Including Parekh?"
"Maybe. I forget."
Lindsay had never believed that. And now she looked
scared. Shan thought she might be scared of her. Then it became clear. Oh,
it's not about revenge. Not entirely, anyway.
"Can't you wait half an hour?" Lindsay asked. Her tone
was quiet, her expression seeking something.
"When a girl's got to go, she's got to go."
"Not going to try anything stupid, are you? You know I
need to hand you over."
Lindsay had always found it hard to meet her gaze. Shan
had spent a professional lifetime cultivating that gorgon's stare and
she knew it worked, especially on Lindsay. But she was looking into
Lindsay's eyes now, and it was very clear she was thinking something
she wanted Shan to realize. Ah.
Lindsay might have been gutless when it came to it, but
she knew Shan wasn't.
"You know you can trust me to be sensible," said Shan. Go on,
Lin, do something right for once. "I know
how much I'm worth."
Lindsay almost looked relieved. "I'll take you aft."
"I can do that," said Bennett, who clearly didn't trust
Lindsay any further than he could spit. "I--"
"Sod off," said Shan. "I still have my dignity."
They didn't even have to take her alive to get a tissue
sample. She had to be gone, really gone.
And there were ways to be gone forever out here.
For exactly five vivid and painful seconds, she thought
of Aras again and it was unbearable. Then she switched off, as she
always had.
"I come too," said Vijissi suddenly. He heaved himself
straight and pulled himself hand over hand to the hatch. "She is not to
be trusted."
Shan gave Lindsay an imperceptible nod. Lindsay
shrugged, clearly playing along. "If you bite, I'll shoot you, you
little bastard," she said. She fumbled with the locking straps and
released Shan's legs. For a second Shan thought of putting the boot in,
but it would only have satisfied her temper, not achieve her objective.
She behaved.
Vijissi looked like it would take all his effort to
accompany them a few meters. He trailed the two women through the
propulsion section, through a barely hip-wide passage, and into the aft
section that opened onto the cargo bay with its loading hatches on
deck, deckhead, and three bulkheads. They were all closed. Through the
pressure hatch, it was a black void.
Lindsay hit the hatch lock behind her. "What are you
planning?" she asked.
"You know damn well or you wouldn't have secured that
hatch," said Shan. She turned slightly and gestured with her bound
hands. "They'll never find a small cold object in space. It's about as
dead as anyone can get. And it's quick. They reckon less than twelve
seconds." But twelve seconds sounded like a long time right then. Where's
my last noble thought? Why am I just walking
through this? Where's my fear and regret and panic? "Get this
off me."
"No."
"If I go, I go with dignity, not fucking trussed up
like some chicken."
"I'm sorry."
Vijissi struggled into animation. It seemed to have
dawned on him a little late that Shan was planning an exit through the
air lock.
"No!" He settled beside her. Zero g made his panic slow
and undramatic. "No, I promised Mestin I would always look after you--"
"It's too late, mate." No, no, no, I don't want to die,
and I want to see Aras again, and it's not the way I wanted to end it,
and--
Then the other Shan took over, the one who always knew
what to do in a crisis. "Free my hands," she ordered.
Lindsay hesitated.
Then she relented and reached for Shan's wrists. Shan
thought a final punch might have been satisfying, but there was no
adequate amount of revenge she could ever exact for detonating ERDs on
Christopher.
Lindsay seemed confident that the ERDs had detonated.
Shan hoped Aras had been a long way from the explosions, but if he had
survived, he'd be alone, and she knew he dreaded loneliness more than
death. My poor bloody Aras. It wasn't fair
to him.
The comms panel beside them lit up. Bennett was on the
squawk box.
"Hey, what's happening back there?" he demanded. He
must have seen the lock status show up on the panel. And they'd taken
longer than he'd allowed for. "Commander? Come on, bloody well--"
"Stay out of this Ade," said Shan. "Do me a favor and
tell Aras I'm sorry and I didn't abandon him."
"Christ, you--"
Lindsay shut off the sound. Shan wondered if Bennett
had heard her, and if he could still hear her now. And then she looked
round at the locked hatch behind them, and she could see his face
pressed to the plate, all horror. She really wished she hadn't. She
turned quickly back to the cargo bay.
"I've never doubted your integrity," Lindsay said, and
moved like a swimmer to the manual controls that would open both the
aft hatch and all the cargo bay doors.
It was the compliment that hurt, not the hatred. Shan
almost weakened. She had one last weapon. It was personal and it was
vengeful. It struck her as very telling that in her last moments she
still wanted to lash out and wound. So that's what I am, then,
she thought. And here's something to remember me
by.
"Now this is how you do
it, girlie," Shan said, and stood as tall as she could manage. "Next
time you lose your bottle and you can't pull that pin, think of me.
Because you'd give anything to be just like me, wouldn't you? And you
never will. I'm all the guts and conviction you'll never have."
Lindsay said nothing, not with her mouth anyway. Her
face crumpled for a second. Gotcha, thought Shan.
Lindsay would have plenty of time to think on that until she died old
and disappointed by her own inadequacies. It was better than a punch.
Bruises healed. I would have been dead by now
anyway. Old age back home, or here with an isenj round in my skull.
Borrowed time. And it's run out. Quit whining.
Then Shan stopped thinking. It was down to her
brain-stem now, the lungfish-lemur-monkey within, and she let it do the
panicking rush to destruction for her, because every second she
examined the situation was a second closer to turning back and
surrendering. The bezeri had died for this. Her life didn't matter a
damn, except to her.
And to Aras. Stop it.
The cargo bay hatch opened and Shan stepped over the
coaming. The opening in the bulkhead was closing in two sections, top
to bottom, like a pair of scissors.
Vijissi shot through after her.
"For Chrissakes, Vijissi, get back now,"
Shan yelled.
But Vijissi tried to look after Shan to the very last,
and as the deckhead opened and the escaping atmosphere whipped her
hair, her lungs began struggling and he grabbed her hand hard in his
oddly soft paw. So this it, Shan thought.
She really was dying. It didn't feel that momentous, just
disappointing. She gripped Vijissi, not wanting to look into his face.
It was agonizingly cold. Her chest hurt. She had
seconds.
She pushed out from the open hatch and let go of
Vijissi and didn't see where he went, because she had screwed her eyes
up tight to shut out the bottomless, distanceless, silent void that had
no up or down or near or far.
She was holding out in vacuum longer than any human.
That was something. It felt like walking under the sea to apologize to
the bezeri for the last time, only much, much colder.
Her last thought before her lungs gave up straining for
one final breath and the final blackness engulfed her was that she had
never told Aras that she loved him. I think I do. Maybe he knows anyway. Maybe--
I can assure you
I had no idea what Commander Neville was planning. Her orders were only
to detain one of our own citizens, Superintendent Frankland. I greatly
regret the events on Bezer'ej and I fully appreciate the likelihood
that this will be viewed as an outright act of war by the wess'har
authorities. Your offer of asylum for those members of the
Actaeon crew who want it is a generous one and we
will evacuate to Jejeno any personnel who wish to leave.
Message from the FEU foreign minister
to Minister PAR PARAL
UAL
"He lies," said Ual.
Eddie thought of the urine vial in his inside pocket
and the way the ruby bead and the fragment of quill rattled, pricking
his conscience. He hadn't let the container out of his sight. He wasn't
sure if he'd ever be able to hand it over to Shan now.
He was stranded on Umeh. But it was still a safer haven
than Actaeon.
"Why do you think that?" he asked.
Ual shimmered with emerald beads. "How did he expect to
take this Frankland off Bezer'ej if they landed by dropping in cloth
suits?"
"You know a lot."
"There are no restricted frequencies on what you call
ITX. That concept is one we have to learn from you, I think. Unless you
speak in that odd code some of you employ, all hear everything if they
choose to listen."
"And you do." Eddie was still finding it hard to come
to terms with the fact that enemies could share an open ITX relay.
Humans wouldn't. But then if there was a serious threat of the wess'har
trashing the thing in a fit of pique, and the isenj couldn't nip out to
repair it…no, he was starting to grasp how they thought. Nobody
poisoned a shared water supply. "I would like to broadcast a story on
this. Can you confirm how serious the situation is?"
There was a cup of coffee and a bowl of some isenj
beverage on the polished cube of a table between them. Ual didn't seem
to be in a drinking mood. Even without a facial expression to guide
him, Eddie knew the minister was scared.
"The ussissi are saying the environmental damage to
that area of Bezer'ej is severe and that the bezeri are dying in very
large numbers," said Ual. "You will recall what happened when we did
the same thing unintentionally. Your kind appear to have used a very
unpleasant device indeed, one containing cobalt, a persistent poison to
add to the initial destruction."
Eddie didn't know much about physics, although he had
an extensive mental catalog of things that people could use to kill
each other. He checked his database. Salted bombs, especially cobalt,
were at the far unethical end of ordnance, a terrorist's weapon. They
were ultra-dirty.
"They weren't leaving anything to chance, then," said
Eddie quietly, ashamed beyond belief. He could hardly believe it of
Lindsay. He still found it hard to accept how ruthless women could be.
"I have to tell this story, Ual. People on Earth need to know what
we've done."
"Humans have no difficulty saying negative things about
their own kind, then."
"I certainly don't. But sometimes the likes of me are
the only ones who will tell hard truths."
"And why are you asking me for help?"
"For facts I might not know."
"Your masters might not broadcast them."
Eddie was caught off guard. He had grown up in a world
where information couldn't be suppressed easily. There were simply too
many routes and too many connections between people and nations for
anyone to control it, except…except if you were isolated on one end of
a line 150 trillion miles from home. They could cut him off.
He couldn't call anyone except via that ITX line, and
the FEU was controlling the Earth end of that. There was no chance of
placing the story elsewhere or slipping a note to someone down the pub.
If he had a story, it went through BBChan, and BBChan was reliant on
the FEU relay. The station could make all the brave stands it wanted,
but if it didn't receive the information, he was stuffed.
"I took my eye off the ball," he said. "But I'll find a
way through."
"I think you might not need to," said Ual. He leaned
forward, rattling musically like fine crystal, and pushed the now tepid
coffee towards Eddie. "And I assume you will stay. I enjoy our chats.
This isn't a sensible time to return to Actaeon."
"Thanks," said Eddie. "I know."
The ground car was waiting outside the ministry, parked
so close to the entrance that when he opened the front door he could
step straight into its open side without walking on pavement.
Serrimissani was waiting inside the vehicle, absorbed by moving images
on her text pad.
"You exceed even the isenj's crimes," she said. She
wasn't her usual impatient, stroppy self: she seemed very subdued
indeed. "What have you started, gethes?"
Eddie bristled. "Don't lump me in with them," he
snapped. "I am not crew. I am not military. I'm an
independent civilian and
I'm as disgusted as you are."
She stared at him. And then, overtaken by an impulse,
he squeezed past her, the back of his hand brushing against that odd
stiffly ridged coat for the first time, and stumbled out through the
car's other side opening onto the street and into the tight-packed
crowds of isenj.
He almost fell, but the press of bodies held him up and
he regained his balance. So many isenj stopped in their tracks that the
river came to a halt at his point in the stream. He heard a chattering
commotion from a distance where the flow had not stopped as fast, a
motorway pile-up in the making. He wondered if any isenj had been
crushed or trampled. But there was nothing he could do except move or
not move with them.
For the first time, he walked the roads of Jejeno. He
had no choice. This was not a crowd. It was a current and he drifted on
it. The scent of wet wood and leaves, incongruously sylvan for a world
with no forests or open land to speak of, filled his mouth. He couldn't
speak their language and he had no idea where he was going. He looked
down on the top of thousands of spider heads.
The chattering and rasping was rising in volume. "Anyone here speak
English?" he shouted. Oh, you
tourist. You swore you'd never say that. He was near the
ministry. There might be government staff in the throng. They might
speak--
"Why you do this attack?" rasped a voice behind him.
Eddie tried to turn his head. The isenj sounded about
three or four meters away. "I don't know. They're afraid of c'naatat.
Lots of humans would want it."
"Fool," said the voice.
"Don't you want it?"
"Look around you," said the isenj. "Fool."
It was a great moment in television, but Eddie couldn't
get his arm free to release the bee-cam from his pocket. He accepted it
as a lesson in reality. This moment was about him, and not an event to
be filtered through a lens into distant entertainment.
And how was he going to get out of the crowd?
"Michallat," called Serrimissani. There was an exchange
of chittering. He craned his neck as far as he could. Serrimissani was
clambering over the mass of isenj like a sheepdog running across the
tiled backs of a tight-packed flock. "Move diagonally. Swing round."
He tried. He changed direction. It was like being a
container ship. He could turn, and he could stop, but it was a big
U-turn and a long time stopping. Serrimissani caught up with him, the
angry mongoose again, and seized his sleeve to steer him. The cacophony
around him was deafening now.
The ussissi held onto him until they had eased around a
full arc and the car and the ministry building were in sight again. She
shoved him the last meter and he fell into the open car.
As he was scrambling to his knees, Serrimissani cuffed
him hard across the back of the head and he felt hot needles plunge
into his shoulder. He yelled out.
She had bitten him. She was enraged.
Eddie rolled over and hoisted himself backwards onto
the seat by his triceps. He hurt all over, especially his head and
shoulder.
"Next time it will be your throat," she hissed. "Never
do that again. You cause chaos. You cause
injury. Your kind will never learn to control your impulses."
"I'm sorry," he said. He felt his shoulder: it was wet
with something he suspected was his own blood rather than her saliva.
He wondered what you could catch from a ussissi bite.
"Take me back to Umeh Station," he said. "I want to
hear what you all have to say. I want to show humans back on Earth what
you think of us, in case it helps bring us to our senses."
Serrimissani gave him her scorpion-snack look and
stared deliberately out of the opening. Then she turned back to him.
"I am afraid for you," she said. "And you should fear
us too."
"Will your people talk to me on camera?"
"Let us hope you continue to be useful to the isenj, or
there will be no gethes left alive in this
system by the end of the season."
Eddie took that as a yes.
The ussissi were one now: they prowled around
the quiet disorder of Constantine's evacuation, oddly synchronized in
their movements, sniffing through the final ranks of colonists who were
waiting to embark from the Temporary City. High-pitched chattering
filled the air but the humans were silent.
Aras stood and watched from a distance. All he wanted
was Josh Garrod and Dr. Mohan Rayat, but he wanted Josh more. He had
never felt quite like this. Wess'har were not vengeful. They would
balance, and do the job without hesitation as he had done at Mjat, but
they didn't invest emotion in the act. Now Aras not only wanted to hurt
Josh: he needed to.
He wasn't proud of it. It was a human legacy. But he
felt no guilt either.
And where was Shan? She still hadn't called in. He
would have to search for her. He was beginning to worry, even though
she was the one person other than himself who had least to fear from
violence.
The ussissi were still searching, staring up into
faces, comparing features to the images in their virin've.
Aras was reminded of pictures from Constantine's history archive, of
dogs set to guard humans. He didn't want to dwell on the parallels. He
was responsible for the humans being here and he was ultimately
responsible for Shan becoming a magnet for human greed. He hadn't set
the bombs, but his actions had led to this point. He had to clear up
the mess he had made. No, Josh betrayed me. He
betrayed the bezeri. He could have chosen otherwise.
Aras had been watching the search of the line for a
while when someone new joined it and approached one of the ussissi.
It was Josh Garrod.
He wasn't making any attempt to slip unnoticed into the
queue. The ussissis' single, constant, chittering voice stopped
abruptly and they all stared as one at Josh.
For a moment Aras thought they were going to disobey
him and rip the man apart where he stood. They were certainly agitated
enough to do it. But they didn't, and simply surrounded him as if he
might make a run for it. The other colonists made a sudden and large
space around them. Josh spotted Aras and moved towards him, one arm
outstretched as if in plea.
When Aras saw Josh's face--stricken, anguished, drained
of blood--something in him welled up and took him over in a way it
hadn't when he destroyed Mjat. This was a man he had held as a newborn,
whose father and grandfather and ancestors right back to Ben Garrod had
been his friends. They had almost been his family. He had come as close
to loving them as kin as a wess'har ever could. And now in an instant
they had smashed everything he had struggled to restore for five
hundred years.
He grabbed Josh by his collar. His eyes hurt, as if
there was an unbearable pressure building inside them, and he had never
felt that before. He tried to shake the sensation aside. It was
constricting his throat.
"Why did you betray me? Why did you do this?" Motive
didn't matter, but a part of him needed an answer. "Tell me. I thought
we shared the same purpose. I thought you were my friend."
Josh's voice was almost a sob. "We didn't know what was
in the bomb, Aras. We didn't know."
"You took the gethes there
to carry out their desecration. You knew.
How could you do this?"
"But we didn't know they were going to use such a
persistent poison." Josh's breath was coming fast, scented with the
sourness of an empty stomach that was almost more pungent than the
acrid scent of panic. "They told us it would dissipate in days, or we'd
never have helped them. We'd never have risked the bezeri like that. We
thought that burning the island was better than allowing c'naatat
to be exploited. Tell us what we can do
now to help. Anything. Just tell us."
Josh sagged against Aras's grip. Aras believed every
word of his repentance.
But words weren't enough to soothe his pain. He envied
Shan her profanities. A ussissi seized his other sleeve, trying to pull
him away from Josh.
"We will do this," she said. "This will distress you.
Just go."
Aras shook the ussissi off. He let go of Josh and stood
looking at him and almost drowning in the pain that was threatening to
overwhelm him. And he felt Josh's anguish and regret too, because Josh
was a good man who had never wavered from a path of respect and
noninterference until the gethes drove him
to it.
"I'm sorry, my friend." Josh appeared to be weeping. He
put his hand out to touch Aras, something he had always avoided for
fear of contamination. Aras stepped back. It was too late for that now.
"We never meant this to happen. God forgive us."
Aras knew that and it made no difference. His human
side wanted to comfort Josh but his wess'har mind--and he was still
wess'har, however altered--said that the man's apologies and tears and
true intent counted for nothing.
Aras felt himself reach for his tilgir
and pull it from its sheath as if he was going to do some harmless
pruning. "I truly cared for your community, and I truly cared for you."
He should have let him pray first, he knew, but prolonging the agony
wasn't the wess'har way. "Now I have to balance. I'm sorry. I am so
very, very sorry."
Josh opened his lips as if to speak and Aras swung the
blade two-handed, right to left. Josh fell and the only sound was two
thuds as he hit the ground.
The silence around Aras was complete and lasted three
seconds.
Then it dissolved into small cries, and then screams,
and the ussissi turned as one and rushed at the huddle of colonists,
scattering them.
They were simply holding them back. But it all fell
into chaos, children crying and screaming, men running. Aras stood
looking down at Josh's body, only half aware of the panic and noise
around him. He wasn't about to repent and he felt no guilt.
He was wess'har. He had done what he should have done
many, many years ago.
But it hurt him in a way that shooting Surendra Parekh
never had. He could feel shaking starting in the pit of his stomach and
the pain in his eyes had grown from prickling to stabbing.
The ussissi female trotted up to him, head lowered in
appeasement.
"Go," she said. "We will deal with this."
This time he accepted her help. "Be careful of the
blood," he said. He noticed he had a great spray of it down his tunic
and he could smell it. "He has been to Ouzhari. Or I might have caught
him with my claws." He doubted that even c'naatat
could survive decapitation, but Aras was taking no chances. "Burn his
body."
Fire was a prudent move. But Aras also remembered all
that Ben Garrod had told him about Hell, and the image distressed him.
Aras walked down to the cliffs again and searched for
the lights. His tilgir dangled from his
hand. He'd clean it later.
It wasn't unknown for the bezeri to go deep at times of
threat and crisis. He hoped that was what they had done, but he doubted
it in that core of him that understood and accepted reality. He'd
watched the single, unbroken mass of green light fade and die, and that
was what he knew had happened to the bezeri.
Those were the ones who had died quickly, closest to
the fallout from Actaeon's bombs. There
were other bezeri settlements further from the chain, but in time the
contamination would travel further and drop silently into the sea with
each rainstorm. It would seal the fate of the remaining bezeri
population and the other life on which they fed and depended. They were
tied to place. They could never flee.
Now there was Rayat to hunt down.
Aras would have a go, as
Shan called it. He would also have a go at
that little female, the one Shan called Lin, if Shan had not already
killed her. It had been her doing as well. Perhaps he would turn Rayat
over to the ussissi. It would appease their rage for a while.
And where was Shan? Isan
or not, he would give her a piece of his mind for worrying him so.
He was still contemplating how much he needed her to
tell him it would all be fine when one of the young Cetekas males
approached him, reeking of anxiety. He thought for a moment that the
boy had heard--or seen--that he had balanced the crimes of Josh Garrod.
The boy stopped three meters short of him.
"What is it?" asked Aras. It would be more dead bezeri,
he knew. They would congregate around stricken comrades rather than
flee, just like the ussissi, but quite unlike humans or even wess'har.
They would come to the source of the pollution. "How many this time?"
The boy looked puzzled. "I was told to let you know the
ussissi are talking about a ship."
"What ship?"
"A small vessel that left here some hours ago. One of
their Umeh-based pilots has been asked to rendezvous with it and
transfer passengers. His destination is Actaeon.
He is hesitant."
Aras was silenced by how wrong his expectation had
been. He knew at that moment that his carefully reconstructed world of
relative normality had been fleeting and was now crumbling apart. He
knew what the boy was going to say before he said it. He could feel his
freeze instinct gripping him even before the words emerged.
"They have a prisoner," said the boy.
Aras wanted to scream. He tried to form a sound. But
nothing came out.
Had he known, he would not have given Josh such a quick
end.
Lindsay sat in the aft section with her head in
her hands for at least ten minutes before unlocking the inner hatch and
hauling herself back down the passage into the forward compartment.
She was shaking. Her mind was completely empty, unable
to grasp anything. She hoped it would stay that way for a while.
She tried to think of David for a moment and found she
couldn't recall his face or his smell. She wished she had kept the
clothing he had been buried in.
Aras had interred him, and now Aras would know what it
felt like to lose someone you loved.
Bennett and Barencoin were talking very quietly,
head-to-head in the two cockpit seats. Rayat was staring at the port
bulkhead, turning his text pad over and over in his hands.
They stopped instantly as if someone had thrown a
switch.
"So it was all for bloody nothing," said Rayat. "You
have no idea what you've thrown away."
"I do," said Lindsay. "And it wasn't." Neither marine
said a word. That was frightening. "How long to rendezvous?"
"Eleven minutes," said Barencoin, not looking up from
the steeple of his fingers.
"You killed her," said Bennett.
He seemed remarkably subdued for a man who had seen the
object of his affections step calmly to her death. He was fingering the
bridge of his nose, still covered with the pressure dressing. He hadn't
cleaned his face: the blood had dried into flaky streaks from nostrils
to chin. Perhaps he was making a point.
"It was her choice," said Lin. "If you'd let me set the
bloody grenades, she'd have been spared this."
Bennett didn't answer. He turned away and took out his
camo compact again and seemed to be checking his nose. For some reason
it was really bothering him. Lindsay was starting to realize the
intensity of his crush on the late superintendent. She'd butted him
with every scrap of force and venom she could muster. It wasn't quite
the romantic memory a man could hang on to in the dark days ahead.
"I wish the sodding pilot would get on the voice
channel," said Barencoin, and not to her. "I think he's shitting
himself and waiting for incoming. I expect the wess'har know we're
off-planet by now. There's a hell of a lot of chat from them on the ITX
but I can't understand a word of it."
Lindsay leaned back on the bulkhead out of habit,
because nobody needed to lean anywhere in zero g. It was hard to find
you were hated even more than Mohan Rayat.
She could hear Bennett and Barencoin talking in very
low voices. She caught the words bloody hero.
They might have been saying that they weren't going to play the bloody
hero to save her arse, but she doubted it.
She knew damn well who they were talking about.
"Gethes shuttle," said a
voice from the ancient console. "We are from Umeh. I am Litasi."
"Shuttle Charlie five niner echo, Umeh shuttle this is
Shuttle Charlie five niner echo," said Barencoin. "About time, over."
The ussissi wasn't any better at radio procedure than
Rayat. "I have a problem, gethes," said
the little reedy voice. "What have you done?"
"Umeh shuttle, I've got a 9mm round in my right quad
and I want to go home," said Barencoin. He looked at Lindsay: it was
her job to do the diplomacy. "Want to talk to our boss, over?" There
was no response, just the vague background sounds of cockpit activity.
He eased himself out of his seat with some difficulty. The medication
was wearing off. "Over to you, ma'am." He pronounced the ma'am
with the clear meaning of arsehole. "Don't forget to ask what's
happened
to Izzy and Chaz."
It was coming her way. She never thought it was going
to be easy. What was really bothering her was that she almost felt
regret that Shan was gone. She didn't want to feel that at all.
"This is Commander Lindsay Neville, European Federal
Navy. What's your problem, pilot?"
"We are neutral, perhaps in a way you cannot
comprehend."
"I know that."
"But we are not fools."
"Spit it out."
"What?"
"Come to the point of this conversation."
"You have used cobalt weapons and there is talk that
your prisoners are Shan Chail and Vijissi."
Lindsay paused. And this was the point at which she
knew hell was about to shrug its shoulders and wander out for a spot of
bother. She heard the word cobalt. For
some reason it was more insistent than prisoners.
"We have no prisoners," she said at last. "They're
dead. What did you say about cobalt?"
"You destroyed Ouzhari with a poisoned bomb. The bezeri
are dying in great numbers. Now repeat what you said about prisoners."
There was a very long silence. It was what Eddie called
dead air. Lindsay felt her face become numb
but her lips moved and she heard her own voice above the pounding in
her temples.
"We used neutron devices. That's to confine the damage
to the island. The area should be pretty well clear in a couple of
days."
"You lie. And I ask again, where are your prisoners?"
"They're dead." It slipped out. She was more fixed on
the word cobalt. "They're gone."
The line went almost completely silent save for a
slight crackling sound. "Gethes, I cannot
receive you. You ask too much."
Lindsay turned and looked at Rayat. It was all tumbling
out of control too fast. "You heap of shit," she said. "That was
your straight ERD? What the hell have
you got us into?" And before she knew what she was doing, she had spun
to aim a roundhouse punch at him, a touch too fast in zero g. Barencoin
caught her as her fist cracked against Rayat's face with half the force
she had wished for. He grabbed her arm. "You bastard. You lied,
you bastard."
Rayat looked unconcerned. "You're naive, Commander.
Never take vague assurances about technology. Remember how Frankland
insisted on checking the camp defense cannon herself?" He pushed
himself further away, as if reassured that Barencoin would stop her
reaching for a weapon next. "And you punch straight
for power, not round. You're confusing it with a slap.
I would have thought you'd seen Frankland do that
properly, too." I don't need reminding.
Lindsay held her free hand away in concession.
Barencoin still had a tight grip on Lindsay's other forearm: a small
cockpit was a dangerous place for a brawl.
"Cobalt? Fucking floor-cleaners?" he said. It was their
tag for BNOs. He let go of her arm. "Oh boy. Are we in the shit now."
Litasi's voice interrupted. "I suggest you set a course
for your mother-ship now. Or perhaps the isenj will accept you on Umeh."
Lindsay struggled to stop her voice cracking. "You work
for the isenj."
"And you have killed a ussissi. You make your way there
alone."
"We didn't kill him. He…"
"What, gethes?"
"He chose to stay with Shan Frankland."
There was more dead air, dead dead
air. Lindsay wished more than ever that she'd had the balls to pull
those pins and blow her and Shan and anyone nearby to pieces. She'd
been duped into using salted nuclear weapons. She'd unleashed an
environmental catastrophe. She had all kinds of questions but right
then the sheer enormity of the disaster overwhelmed her. The fact that
she'd denied c'naatat to humanity was
lost, buried under the tumbling rocks of realization.
"Will you accept a surrender?" said Bennett suddenly.
"Ade?" said Lindsay. Even Barencoin looked shocked. "What the hell
are you doing?"
"Not you," said Bennett. "Me.
Pilot, I want to surrender to the wess'har authorities. Will you take
me inboard?"
"Why?"
"I want to be tried for involvement in the death of two
civilian prisoners."
"Ade, for fuck's sake," said Barencoin. "It was that
stupid cow, not you. We stay together and we find Izzy and Chaz."
Bennett pulled his bottle-green beret from his jacket. "Sorry,
mate." He shaped it on his head and hauled himself over to the
hatch. He turned to look at Lindsay. "You going to stop me, ma'am?"
She had no idea what he was playing at. It wasn't a
generous gesture to save them. She knew what he felt for Shan. This was
revenge. She just didn't know how or why.
"They'll cut your bloody throat the minute you land,"
she said. "We nuked Bezer'ej."
"Fine by me, ma'am," said Bennett.
Barencoin let go of her. "If we wait any longer, we'll
have a wess'har patrol up our chuff. Let's thin out. Now."
It was just Bennett. He could go, for whatever stupid
sentimental reason he had to sacrifice himself. They could make it back
to Actaeon under their own steam now. She
knew it. One fewer pair of lungs to exhaust the oxygen. Fine. She had
to concentrate on something.
"We accept his surrender," said the child's voice that
Lindsay knew belonged to a creature that could tear out her throat. "We
will transfer him to the appropriate authority."
Lindsay turned to Bennett. "Sod off, then." He didn't
matter. It was Rayat she needed to fix. She couldn't even begin to
imagine what to do with him now, or what his objective really was. "Get
a move on."
Bennett saluted her mechanically. "You can't even swear
like her," he said. He adjusted his beret and pulled back the handle
that opened the hatch to the lobby. Then he stepped in and closed it
behind him. He appeared to be fumbling with it and there was a hiss of
air on the intercom.
Lindsay stared through the softglass at him, uneasy.
"Bastard," she said.
The next minute was a very, very long one. Eventually
there was a faint scraping along the hull: the ussissi shuttle was
docking, forming a temporary seal with the top hatch. Bennett began
wiping his face clean of dried blood with the antiseptic pad from his
medical kit, checking in the mirror of his camo compact like a girl.
"Ready," said the ussissi pilot. "Pressure equalized."
Lindsay wondered why Bennett was so preoccupied with
his face. Then he peeled off the dressing from the bridge of his nose,
starting carefully at his left cheekbone. And he raised two fingers to
her in the gesture of defiance that had been Albion's way of saying fuck
you since Agincourt nearly a thousand years
before.
There wasn't a mark on him: no hint of swelling eyes or
deviated septum or even a split lip to show that he'd been smashed in
the face.
And the dressings weren't that
effective.
She'd missed something. Shan had been cut, or Shan had
healed instantly, but Lindsay had missed a critical break in her skin.
"Oh no," said Lindsay. "You bastard."
"You'll pay for Shan," said Bennett. "Don't you worry
about that, ma'am. You'll pay, one way or another."
She tried to force the hatch manually. He watched her
for a couple of seconds and then held a cigar-sized tube to the glass:
foam sealant. He'd jammed the wheel.
"I'm a regular gadget shop," he said. All she could do
was watch him as he climbed the ladder and disappeared with something
she wanted to destroy more than anything else in creation.
Rayat turned to look. Lindsay bit her lip so hard that
she could taste hot, wet saltiness. She didn't want him to know what
she'd just seen, ever. It would all start again.
"What a complete balls-up," Rayat hissed, and turned
away again. "I told you we should have
taken samples."
Bennett was right, though. They couldn't even swear
like Shan Frankland.
Be not afraid of
them that kill the body, and after that have no more that they can do. Luke 12:4
Mestin had been thinking about the outrage
for half a day. People came and went in the Exchange of Surplus Things
and glanced at her briefly. They were more distracted by the terrible
images of Ouzhari on the public screen that spread the full width of
the end wall.
The island had always been black. The unique grass
there made it so. But the land was a different black now, the dull
dirty charcoal aftermath of a huge fiery explosion. The sky looked hazy
and overcast.
"Destroy them," she said at last, more to herself than
the matriarchs beside her.
It wasn't a huge task. The gethes
had one ship: but it was in orbit around Umeh, and that meant ignoring
an ancient courtesy. Wess'har had never breached the isenj homeworld.
The isenj had been in the Ceret system before wess'har arrived, and for
a very long time.
Fersanye and Chayyas waited with Mestin, but every so
often they glanced at Nevyan. She was all acid agitation, tugging at
her dhren occasionally, more like a
nervous gethes. She was examining a
pannier of ripe jay but appearing not to
see them.
"What about those in the ship who are not
responsible for this attack?" said Fersanye.
"It's a warship," said Mestin. "But we will give them
warning to disembark the uninvolved."
"But Actaeon is orbiting
Umeh."
"Then we shall ask them to withdraw from orbit to a
safe distance first."
Nevyan turned very slowly from the jay
and stood over her mother. "You simply don't understand gethes.
They won't be polite and move themselves
to be killed more tidily."
Her scent had started to shift. It made Mestin uneasy,
and Fersanye sat utterly still.
"If Actaeon is destroyed
that close to Umeh, there will be debris," said Mestin. "This is not
the doing of the isenj."
"That is irrelevant," said Nevyan. "I say they should
take the consequences of their ill-chosen alliance."
The silence around the matriarchs--and Nevyan, formally
or otherwise, had entered that cadre--was total. Those wess'har
bringing
in produce and taking it away were halted in their tracks. Matriarchs
seldom wrangled: rapid consensus was embedded in their genes.
But Mestin stood up. Nevyan was shorter, smaller. She
was still her isanket in many ways.
"It's wrong to punish the isenj, even by accident," she
said.
Nevyan stood her ground. "You never spend enough time
learning from Shan Chail. We can't defend
ourselves with our hands bound. This is a gethes
trick--a human shield, they call it. Like hostages. A
reliance on the niceness and decency of your enemy, their fear
of what will
happen to the innocent." And suddenly her rasping sour-leaf scent was
swamped by a massive, throat-closing burst of dominance. Mestin stepped
back.
It was over. She was no longer senior matriarch of
F'nar. It had been a brief duty.
Nevyan jiggled her head, realizing what she had done,
but she was now fully dominant and didn't seem uncomfortable with it.
Mestin saw a stranger for the first time. "I have to contact Shan," she
said. "We have heard nothing from her for many hours."
"Vijissi was supposed to look after her," said Mestin. "If there had
been problems, he would have let us know."
"I still need to talk with her. I need her
knowledge."
A gethes mother might have
taken offense, but Mestin was proud that her daughter was pragmatic
enough to take her lessons where she could. She had long suspected the
girl would be a better matriarch than she could. It was sad to know she
couldn't teach her enough for the changing times, but Shan could fill
the gaps, and she resented the human not one bit.
They returned to Nevyan's home to sit in the main room
and wait for news.
And it came.
They heard a ussissi running down the terrace outside,
a rapid scrabbling over stones, and when he burst into the room Mestin
watched Nevyan freeze for a brief moment. Then she stood. The ussissi
came to a halt at her feet, looking up.
"Shan Chail is dead," he
said. "And Vijissi too. The gethes took
them." His lips were pulled back and all his teeth were visible. "We
want balance. We want revenge."
Nevyan took the news in silence and walked out slowly
to stand on the terrace, Mestin a little behind her. The new matriarch
of F'nar looked down on her new responsibility and let out a piercing
territorial cry that rang round the caldera, note over note, for a
count of ten. The sound echoed off the walls of the basin: the
disembodied voice continued for a while after Nevyan closed her mouth
and lowered her head.
Then she turned round, looking past Mestin, and
beckoned the ussissi forward with one gesture of her arm. Even without
that heavy, overwhelming scent, she was suddenly the most extreme, most
dominant female her mother had ever seen.
"Make contact with the World Before," said Nevyan Tan
Mestin.
This is a
dreadful place. They call it Mar'an'cas and
it's no more than a rock. We'll have to rely heavily on the hydroponics
to grow enough food. It's an island: Mum says it's like Alcatraz was,
to keep up away from everyone on Wess'ej. I don't even know if we'll
have food to spare for Black and White. I can't believe what
happened to Dad. I can't believe Aras did it. The world's ending, and
God isn't answering my prayers.
JAMES GARROD,
in his private journal
"They will pay for this," said Nevyan.
Mestin said nothing. In the past three seasons, the
blockade of Bezer'ej had fallen to the isenj, and a gethes--no,
an isan--she
thought of as invincible had made the greatest error of all.
It didn't surprise her that Shan
Chail had sacrificed herself to thwart the gethes.
Right or wrong, she always liked to have the last word.
And it broke Mestin's heart, as she knew it had broken
Nevyan's. That was another English phrase that was worthy of acceptance
into wess'u because it was perfect in its description of agony.
The Exchange of Surplus Things, the largest single room
in F'nar, was packed with utterly silent matriarchs and ussissi from at
least half the city states of Wess'ej. Nevyan walked to the front of
the hall. Mestin remained where she was with Fersanye, Chayyas, Siyyas
and Prelit.
Nevyan trailed a scent of pungent dominance through the
crowd. It was what Vijissi had called mangoes.
Mestin would miss him more than she could say.
"We have no choice now," said Nevyan. "Will you commit
your males with ours?" She was standing on a crate so she could be
seen; despite her great courage and drive, Nevyan was shorter than the
average female. She was Shan's height. "I have work for them to do. And
I have called on the World Before to help us deal with this threat once
and for all."
Wess'har didn't respond as a mob even though they were
communal. There was a quiet murmur. A ussissi scrambled onto a crate to
peer through the forest of tall females.
"Think carefully before you call for assistance," she
said.
"We can't deal with gethes
alone," said Nevyan. "Not while they have allies in the isenj."
"We know the World Before through our kin there. You
don't. They are very different to you."
"They are still wess'har."
"Indeed they are, but they're far stronger even than
Wess'ej, and if you're wrong, and if they don't behave as you would,
you may end up paying a high price for their aid."
Nevyan did appear to consider the ussissi's words
carefully. "Have you an alternative?"
"No."
"And neither have I."
And the room began to empty.
Shan would have said that they didn't do it that way on
Earth. There would have been intrigue, skirmishes, riots, angry mobs,
and headlines in the news.
But it had taken only a few moments earlier in the day
for Nevyan Tan Mestin to depose her mother as senior matriarch of
F'nar. She had now launched the first assault on the gethes and
broken millennia of isolation from
the World Before.
There was no pain in it for Mestin. She was proud. It
was the only warm thing in her at that moment to ease her mourning and
fear. Nevyan stepped down off the crate as if she were embarrassed at
having needed it. But her scent of dominance was stronger than ever.
"I told Aras," she said.
Mestin felt relief and dread simultaneously. The two isan've
stood in the center of the empty hall
and silently accepted everything that had happened.
"I would have found that hard," said Mestin.
"As did I," said Nevyan. "You can't imagine his grief."
Mestin followed her from the hall and into a late
summer evening that was perfectly beautiful and scented with the
fragrance of aumul've. The tem flies were swarming on
the last warm stones
left after Ceret's setting: they would be moving further south now to
follow the warm weather.
The deaths of tens of thousands of bezeri and Shan
Chail and Vijissi would take a great deal
of balancing. Mestin wondered if Nevyan would start with the displaced
colony or even the human base on Umeh.
No. She would begin with Actaeon.
The isenj would learn to pick their friends more
carefully.
It was an old long-range fighter, but it was
serviceable. Nevyan had watched it climb into the clear sky the day
before and now she was tracking its advance towards the gethes ship Actaeon.
The pilot was one of her jurej've,
Cidemnet. Mestin didn't think it was kind to send one of her new family
into battle so soon after accepting them, but Nevyan said it was
important that she demonstrated she would commit her own males to the
war. She sat down in front of the screen and Lisik brought them bowls
of tea. It was unpleasantly bitter, and
Mestin couldn't understand what Shan had found so desirable about it.
She would still have drunk it gladly if Shan had been there to share
it. She missed her already.
"We could have sent a drone missile and destroyed the
ship by now," said Mestin.
"And we would have lost the opportunity to add an
important message," said Nevyan. "Besides, they have had time to
disembark more noncombatants and civilians,
whatever that distinction might mean. We'll deal with them in due
course."
Unlike gethes, whose wars
were fought in secret, any wess'har could access the channel and follow
Nevyan's conduct of the mission. They could watch what Nevyan was
seeing; they could hear her conversations with the fighter. They would
also be able to hear any exchange with the gethes.
They had nothing to hide.
Mestin knew they were as baffled by her tactics as she
was. It didn't matter. Nevyan seemed grimly confident of the lessons
she had learned from Shan Chail.
She touched the console. The screen showed Cidemnet's
forward view from his cockpit, just the ochre disk of Umeh. The gethes
ship in orbit around it wasn't even a
speck but the display in front of Cidemnet across his field of view
showed a moving constellation of lights, ussissi and isenj vessels and
the larger target that was CSV Actaeon.
"Contact Actaeon," she
said. "Let me speak to the commander."
It took a while. When Malcolm Okurt's voice crackled
into the chamber, it sounded surprised. There was no image. The
disembodied voice was disturbing. Then it was joined by a shimmering
image of a gethes with a thin face and
every fidgeting sign of agitation.
"Am I speaking to the wess'har chief of staff?" he
asked. He was expecting a soldier.
"I am Nevyan Tan Mestin, matriarch of F'nar. Shan
Frank- land was my friend."
Mestin thought it was an odd way to identify yourself.
Okurt paused too. "Ma'am, we're genuinely sorry for the events of the
last forty-eight hours. I can assure you we had no knowledge of the
intent to use such extreme measures."
"But you brought them here, so you must have considered
it."
"Purely defensive, ma'am. If there's anything we can do
to help deal with the contamination, we're at your disposal."
"Are you taking the piss?"
Nevyan asked.
Okurt looked completely stunned by her sudden command
of colloquial English. "Sorry?"
"Don't lie to me. You sent troops to Bezer'ej with
aggressive intent. The bezeri are dying in great numbers. Two of my
friends are dead. And you talk of helping us to clean up."
"Our mission was to detain Frankland, not to kill her,
and certainly not to cause devastation to the environment. My colleague
exceeded her orders. I believe we can come to some understanding if we
can meet and talk this through."
Nevyan cocked her head in amazement and shot Mestin a
glance. The gethes really hadn't
understood them at all. "No discussion," said Nevyan. "Who's
responsible?"
Okurt paused again. "As commanding officer, I am."
"Responsibility is personal."
"The individuals who carried out the attack will be
disciplined when they return to this ship, but the buck stops with me.
You understand that phrase, I take it."
"I do."
"I'm really very sorry about Superintendent Frankland."
"And so are we. But only actions matter, and I regret
what I must do just as you regret what you have done, and the end will
not be altered by either."
Mestin was getting agitated too. Why was Nevyan
spending so long talking with this creature? Cidemnet didn't need time
to maneuver. His missiles were aimed and locked: this was entirely
superfluous. It was a game. Wess'har didn't play games.
Okurt's face stopped moving and his voice sounded a
little higher in pitch although it was steady. It was a sign of
nervousness.
"I know you have a small vessel on station observing
us, ma'am."
"Yes, a single fighter. It's more than five thousand
years old. It still works."
Clearly he didn't think one ancient, distant fighter
was more than a gesture, but he was confused, that was clear. "Ma'am,
are you threatening us?"
"No. I'm targeting you. This is the act of balance for
your crimes. Launch."
Cidemnet let loose three warheads. Okurt's transmission
cut off halfway through words that sounded like stand
to and Mestin saw the three trails of light spread in the sudden
image of Cidemnet's viewplate. Actaeon now
had less than the time it took to boil two cups of water to make that
strange, bitter tea.
Nevyan had not only launched an attack on the gethes,
but had also sent them a message that
she could do so with the least of her arsenal. Mestin now understood
the game her daughter had learned to play, taught by Shan Frankland and
Eddie Michallat.
A tiny pinpoint of white light flared briefly against
the disk of Umeh, then another, and another.
"You can come home now, Cidemnet," said Nevyan.
STAND TO--VESSEL
CONTACT. OPS ROOM, BRIDGE: VESSEL
ON SCREEN VISUAL, RED 300, MOVING LEFT TO RIGHT: PWO, OFFICER OF THE
WATCH, THREE CONTACTS INCOMING, UP THE CHUFF, RANGE 450 KAY, SPEED
THIRD LIGHT. BRACE BRACE BRACE. SECOND CONTACT INCOMING. BRACE BRACE BRACE STAND TO. Voice traffic
downlinked to FEU Fleet Command
from CSV Actaeon. No further transmission
received.
There were so many fragments from the
shattered hull of Actaeon that isenj
actually froze their constant river of movement to watch the fireballs
streaking across the sky above Jejeno even during daylight.
A couple had crashed into the suburbs of Tivsk on the
next landmass. There were a lot of casualties, the sort of numbers you
couldn't avoid in crowded places. If Actaeon
hadn't been easing out of orbit, running up her engines after the last
emergency evacuation to Umeh, it would have been far worse.
It was quite a display. Eddie watched it too. It
continued into the dusk. If you dissociated it from the circumstances,
it was spectacularly beautiful. But he couldn't do that sort of
mind-trick, not any more.
He kept wondering if what he had told Malcolm Okurt
about c'naatat had been the root cause of
this. He had been so sure he was doing the right thing. But he had told
him--and Lindsay Neville--where it was, and where Shan might be found.
It
was an agonizing thought. He didn't want it in his head.
Umeh Station boiled with angry ussissi. Shan had summed
it up succinctly, as she always did: take on one ussissi, and you took
on all of them.
Eddie hadn't realized he had made such an impact on
them. Apparently they admired his pluck for facing them after the
destruction of Ouzhari.
So they had sought him out first to tell him that Shan
Frank- land and Vijissi were dead.
They had become a pack. They roamed among the workers
and military personnel in the biodome, sniffing and darting away. Eddie
had never seen that before. It made them look like hunting animals,
like mongooses on to a cobra. It seemed only a matter of time before
they attacked.
Even Serrimissani joined then for a while, weaving
around and becoming one part of a single, increasingly angry creature.
Eddie sat on a trestle made up of a sheet of greenhouse
composite and two stacks of pallets that would eventually become
composting bins if Umeh Station was ever completed. He should have been
very glad that he had decided against returning to Actaeon:
but all he could think about was Shan.
"Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ."
Eddie said it so many times that the words didn't sound like English
any more, just a mantra, a sound, a song in a foreign language. "Shan. Shan."
Serrimissani had gathered her belongings in a sack. She
lowered her head as if something was raining down on it. "This is the
last place I would want to be at this moment."
"You're leaving?"
"The gethes have killed Shan Chail and Vijissi.
There may be more
retribution, and they may target every human here." She took Eddie's
arm. "If you have sense, you will come with me. I am returning to
Wess'ej. Come with me and beg forgiveness of the matriarchs, and
perhaps they will spare you. You have done a favor for them." She
looked up anxiously. "And you have been honest. Come on."
"The humans didn't kill them. Not actual murder."
"And would they still be alive had they not been
captured?"
"Yes."
"Then spare me your sophistry."
Eddie reached for the urine vial in his pocket and
pressed it against his chest to make sure it was still there with its
single ruby-beaded quill. He'd hand it over. He wouldn't have the
slightest trouble doing that now.
Eddie had run for his life a few times. It was always
several hours after everyone else had come up with the idea first.
There was something about seeing a world through a camera lens that
made you feel less vulnerable: added to the detachment of being a
reporter, it made for a poor sense of mortality. Journalists in danger
zones got killed with depressing frequency. Eddie didn't plan on
joining them, not because he was scared--and he was, oh God yes he was--but
because he hadn't told his story yet.
He owed Shan that much. He wanted to know everything.
He hoped they wouldn't execute Ade Bennett before he could talk to him.
"Okay," he said. "When we get the evacuation warning,
I'll come."
"Warning? They will not warn you. You didn't warn them.
The vengeance will come, and soon."
Eddie pulled out the bee-cam. "Tight on me until
further notice, divert for explosive and sudden movement," he told it.
"And upload every five minutes." He didn't want to die with an unfiled
story in the system. He hoped the isenj link would relay his material
now that Actaeon was no more than a
spectacular shower of false meteors.
He quickened his pace behind Serrimissani. At least she
had come back for him; he'd had native guides abandon him in the middle
of riots. As they walked, they saw ground cars trundling materials
towards the Jejeno sphere. One slowed down and an orange-suited foreman
leaned out of the cab.
"Want a lift?" he asked.
"I'm leaving," Eddie said. "But thanks. Have you had a
security alert yet?"
"No. Why?"
"I don't think Jejeno is going to be the safest place
to be after what happened earlier."
"What?"
"Doesn't matter. There's a war starting. Don't be here
when it does."
The foreman shrugged and heaved himself back into the
seat. Eddie and Serrimissani walked on, quickening their pace. Isenj
were obviously starting to work out who would be next after Actaeon:
there was a definite thinning out of
the crowds in the neighborhoods closest to the sphere, and some isenj
were carrying bundles on their flat heads, children trailing behind
them in orderly lines. They knew the wess'har well enough to have come
to the same conclusion as Serrimissani.
"And where will your humans go now that Actaeon
is destroyed?" Serrimissani asked. They
flagged down an isenj vehicle and she chattered at the driver. "They
are stranded here."
"Is Lin back yet? Where's the shuttle?"
"I would not waste concern on her."
"I was thinking of Mart Barencoin, actually." Shan
liked the marines. She would have wanted them kept out of the
aftermath. "How can I check what's happened--"
"Think of your own safety." Serrimissani reached down
and pulled Eddie up into the seat, and they sat in silence until they
came to the outskirts of the airport. The driver was anxious to get as
far away from Jejeno as he could, and taking them to the terminal
seemed to be asking for more time than he was willing to spare. They
began a brisk walk up the main approach road, dodging isenj workers who
seemed simply to be going about their tasks.
Eddie motioned the bee-cam to get shots of them. "How
many of them will still be alive next week?" he asked.
"If the wess'har attack, they will only target the
sphere. If the isenj stay clear of it, very few will die. There will be
substantial disruption, though." It sounded like a few traffic jams:
but Eddie imagined water pipes spurting and power lines cut and fires
raging and food shortages. And very high casualties. There was no room
in this tight-packed infrastructure to have any sort of emergency
without the isenj suffering too. Ual would be busy in his serene
aquamarine offices.
He thought again of Shan and wondered if anyone had
broken the news to Aras. His grief would be terrible.
"Jesus, I still can't believe she's gone," he said, not
caring if the bee-cam picked it up. It shot back to concentrate on his
face, intruding into his own grief, a fitting punishment for his
calling. "Oh God. Oh God."
"She was a good wess'har," Serrimissani said. "She
accepted Targassat. To die to preserve the balance of life is a
commendable act."
It seemed that every ussissi on Umeh had the same
premonition of war as they did. Anxious little faces and chattering
teeth greeted them as they pushed through the lobby and out onto the
apron nearest the ussissi shuttle. One had already left, packed to just
above safe lading weight. They were loyal creatures if they had a
personal charge to care for, but they weren't stupid.
"I have to make some calls," said Eddie.
"We must go."
"I need to ask Ual for a few favors. The ministry is at
least fifteen kay from here. Even if they start bombing now--"
"You have until this evening. I will stay with you, in
case you become foolish and try to get more stories that end up killing
you."
"You're a doll," Eddie said, and meant it. Yes, they
were loyal, dog-loyal. But Serrimissani didn't understand, and nor did
it appear that she was interested in doing so. She stared at the vessel
filling up with ussissi. So did Eddie.
"Sinking ship," he said.
"It will fly," said Serrimissani.
"I meant--never mind. Rats leaving sinking ships--they're
supposed to be the first to know when a ship is in trouble." He was
gibbering. He always did that when fighting down emotions that
threatened to overwhelm him. "Doesn't matter."
"What are rats?" she asked.
Eddie thought hard. "Another kind of people."
His mind was a mess of fragments, personal fears,
professional worries, loss, confusion. But he centered on what he was
at his core--a reporter. It anchored him again and he felt calmer. If
Ual's link was denied to him, he could ask the matriarchs of F'nar to
hack into the ITX link. He had to get that story filed: it was the
least he owed Shan Frankland.
He had once made a mistake and thought she was like
everyone else, available at the right price, but he'd been wrong. And
he was glad he had the chance to tell her so.
Everyone needed heroes. He still had his, intact and
immutable, and now he always would.
Aras suddenly realized he was kneeling on the
floor, and he had no idea how long he had been there. His forehead was
on his knees, his hands tucked in under his chest.
It hurt too much to move. It certainly hurt to think.
"Actaeon has been
destroyed," said Nevyan gently. "I made certain of it."
He knew he was back on Wess'ej. He heard her but the
pressure in his throat had taken over. He had forgotten about Josh and
he had forgotten about the bezeri and he had forgotten about his
failure to protect Bezer'ej after so many, many years of standing
sentinel.
They had taken his isan.
Shan was gone. He couldn't move for grief.
He tried to focus on the pain. It was a trick he had
learned when he was a prisoner of the isenj, when he couldn't die but
wanted to very badly, when every second was infinite. He found that if
he concentrated on the pain, on the moment, the enormity of the
unspecified void ahead of him was pushed to one side.
"Can he hear us?" It was Mestin's voice.
"I think so. Leave us. I'll stay with him for the
while."
Aras tried not to think of Shan and failed. She
consumed him. And he thought of Askiniyas, and he hadn't seen her or
held her for centuries. There had been a time when he couldn't summon
up her face or scent despite his perfect wess'har recall, but now she
was vivid--and astonishingly alien. But he wanted Shan. He wanted to
hold her.
They had even denied him the comfort of cradling her
body one last time.
Wess'har males who lost their isan
remated or else they died. He could do neither. And he didn't want to.
He never wanted to move beyond this grief even though it was burning
him alive.
"You can come and stay with us," said Nevyan.
He couldn't form any words. Even breathing was an
effort.
"Or we can bring you whatever you need. You need not
see anyone until you want to." Nevyan moved, sending a cloud of very
dominant scent into the air, and knelt down beside him. The smell
triggered a primeval urge to placate her, but he felt as if he would
fall apart, limb from limb, if he tried to move. "We have had messages
from their leaders. They want to talk and apologize. But I have sent
word to the World Before. I await their reply."
Nevyan waited an uncharacteristically long time for a
senior matriarch. She waited, kneeling, but Aras was frozen. She's gone. She's dead.
"Eddie has asked to live in F'nar. He'll be alone here.
I doubt he will ever get home."
Aras struggled to think. His mind was trapped in a loop
of reliving the first realization that Shan was gone. He could not
imagine the pain ever stopping. It kept rolling over him again and
again.
"I think you and Eddie could be a great comfort to each
other," Nevyan persisted. "Shall I tell him he's welcome?"
Aras wanted oblivion. If he could have moved, he would
have gone and taken the grenades Shan kept as bizarre souvenirs and
laid upon them and died.
He forced his head up.
"She's c'naatat," said
Nevyan. "You must not lose hope. We have no idea what the parasite's
limits are."
Aras hated Nevyan suddenly for that suggestion. C'naatat
was remarkable: but it could not bring
back the dead. That was a conjuring trick for the humans'god. He
managed to pound his fists on the stone floor. He felt the skin tear
and the blood flow, albeit briefly. The pain helped.
They always seemed to think a c'naatat
couldn't feel pain. They were wrong.
"We'll bring her body home," Nevyan said. "We'll find
her. Every wess'har has the right to return home to the cycle. She'll
be taken back into the world, however long we have to search."
Aras thought how much it would have meant to Shan to be
spoken of as a wess'har. He wanted to see her body. He wanted to hold
her one last time. He didn't give a damn about the cycle. He wanted his
isan.
Nevyan was still staring at Shan's few personal items
on a shelf that was rapidly taking on the appearance of a human shrine.
She put her hand out towards an imperfect emerald glass bowl but
stopped short of touching it.
"I would like something of her," she said. "She made
this, yes?"
Aras couldn't form the words, but he didn't feel the
urge to stop her. He still had more of Shan than anyone would ever
touch. He had her memories, the very fabric of her, genetic material he
had not even begun to see expressed yet.
Nevyan placed the bowl in the folds of her dhren
and clutched it to her like a child. "She
shaped me, Aras. She was my friend. She taught me that you can't
withdraw from the world and you can't run from threats. You must engage
them and not spend your life in dread of their coming. And this view
will guide me now that I have succeeded Mestin." What will I do without her? How
will I carry on?
"Aras, I know you can hear me," said Nevyan. "I shall
send Eddie to you. And then there are the other humans. There's the
soldier, Bennett. He asks to talk to you."
Bennett would never have harmed Shan. Whatever he
claimed, he would never have killed her. Aras knew it. He needed to
talk to him. But it would have to wait.
He sat back on his heels. It was the most effort he had
managed to muster in days. It was a primeval survival reflex gone
haywire, from the tunnel-dwelling past when keeping still when faced
with an unseen threat might be the difference between living and dying
for the proto-wess'har. Aras was always surprised when it caught him
out like this. The last time had been when Askiniyas took her own life.
He now had two isan've who
had been suicides in extreme circumstances. It was too much to ask of a
wess'har male.
"Bring them here," he said.
Bennett was a soldier. Eddie was a soldier too, except
he could fight with words, and gethes were
very vulnerable to those.
He would need them both if he was going to exact his
own balance for the death of Shan Frankland.
A spokesman for
the FEU Foreign Office said they regretted the incident and would
revise the guidelines for future missions. But the spokesman declined
to comment on whether any formal protest would be lodged over the fate
of CSV Actaeon. Meanwhile protests
continued against the planned landing of isenj delegates from the EFS
Thetis. The veteran ship is still more than
seventy years away from the solar system but the Sino-European Space
Commission admits it has carried out a feasibility study into whether a
mission can be launched to retrieve the vessel and speed its journey
home with modern propulsion systems. "We have so much to learn
from the isenj, and bridges to build," said technology minister
Francois Teilhard. "We would rather that happened as quickly as
possible."
BBCHan bulletin.
"Come on," said Eddie "You can patch me
through to my News Desk, can't you?"
He had drilled down as far as the Defense Ministry
comms control desk, and he suspected he'd only made it that far because
he was on Minister Ual's private link. Ual was proving to be a reliable
and valuable friend. Eddie was laboring under no illusions that it was
his witty repartee ensuring the minister's cooperation.
"Mr. Michallat, this is a military communications
channel," said the woman on the other end of his precious and fragile
life-line. She was very chic and dark, a little too exotic for the drab
uniform of an army major. She reminded him of Marine Ismat Qureshi. "We
don't feed into the entertainment networks from here."
"You did all the time it suited you, though."
"I appreciate your frustration."
"I need to let my people know I'm alive. They think I
was on--in--Actaeon when she was hit."
"And it's clear you're still on Umeh."
"It's clear to you, but not to them. Maybe you could make it
clear."
"Wait one."
The screen flicked to the holding menu of warnings
about confidentiality, federal security and dire penalties if any one
of a thousand rules and regulations was breached.
Eddie didn't want to be polite at all. He wanted to
scream that the news they were currently broadcasting was bollocks,
less than half a story because it didn't mention why the wess'har had
fired on Actaeon with three massive
missiles that shattered her backbone and broke her into fragments in
minutes.
He knew that because the wess'har had provided the
information via Serrimissani. He also knew the Defense Ministry didn't
have all the data because there were no survivors from Actaeon
to file a sitrep or take part in a
wash-up. All they had were the last transmissions from the ship and
reports from the surface of Umeh about the magnificent fireworks
display that meant all hands were lost.
That meant 106 out of nearly 500 men and women,
civilians and service personnel. Everyone else had been evacuated to
Umeh Station during what the military delicately called the period
of tension, as if the threat of war was
some sort of minor back pain.
Someone back at BBChan had to be asking why the
wess'har attacked. He knew they wouldn't swallow whatever pat answer
they had been fed. But one thing reassured him. The news about Actaeon
had leaked fast, in hours rather than
days or months. It was the price of ITX. Once the routine of instant
messages and telemetry between remote stations and Earth had become
established, a lot of people in dull support jobs noticed when they
suddenly stopped. And those people talked, both to their contacts at
Umeh Station and to their chums back on Earth.
Eddie had been afraid that ITX's exclusivity would mean
all news would be suppressed. He should never have underestimated the
power of the human mouth.
The warning menu dissolved and the glamorous but
inflexible major was back in frame again.
"Mr. Michallat, I can certainly pass on a message to
your employers. You'll appreciate that we have quite a bit on our hands
at the moment."
Eddie's brain started scrambling for a message that
would let News Desk know that the information the Defense Ministry
spokesweasels were pumping out was incomplete. Okay, they knew that
anyway. It was part of the game. But they didn't know exactly what they
were omitting and--unlike on Earth--the opposing forces' view from the
Cavanagh system would be channeled through the Cerberuslike DM liaison
desk. They couldn't just call the wess'har for a comment.
He hadn't been this cut off even during the Greek war.
He had been able to buy the protection of a militia minder, complete
with armored car, and drive the damn story over the nearest safe border.
Now that was a thought. He'd have to work on that as a
backup plan.
"Thank you," said Eddie. Inspiration suddenly struck
him so hard that he had to squeeze his nails into his palm to stay
dead-pan. "Can you tell them I have a Belgrano to file?"
"Spell that."
"Bravo Echo Lima Golf Romeo Alpha November Oscar."
Eddie hoped his gambling wasn't visible. He was banking on nobody being
familiar with three-hundred-year-old incidents during a war even the
military had forgotten. But News Desk would look it up. Think. Think.
"Bloody Expensive Living, Gratuities,
Research And Nobbling Officials. I'm out of barter items, love. I want
to file my expenses to replace them for when I get home."
There was a pause. Major Gorgeous was making notes,
lips moving slightly as she keyed in the acronym. Then she smiled
coldly. "You journalists," she said. "You really are callous bastards,
aren't you?"
Eddie managed a convincingly guilty shrug. "Not the
first war I've been in," he said. "How about you?"
"I'll see this is relayed immediately and get back to
you. Good day, Mr. Michallat."
Eddie held his aw-don't-be-hard-on-me expression until
he was sure the connection was cut. Then he punched the air in brief
triumph. That was one fucking amazing
God-given stroke of genius. He had no idea that he could bluff that
well or lie that fast. Belgrano? Jesus. It was as if
everything he had ever done,
however minor, had been designed to lead up to that point in time.
Serrimissani was at his shoulder immediately. "We have
to go."
"One more hour."
"We can return when the wess'har have finished with
Umeh Station."
"What if they don't attack?"
"Then we come back and find it intact."
"I need to know if News Desk got the message."
"What is Belgrano?"
"It was a ship, but I made up the acronym on the spot.
Nothing to do with my expenses." Oh, he was pleased
with himself. "Provided the teenage morons running News Desk spot that
I've sent a spoof message, they'll know something's wrong."
"More wrong than one of their warships being destroyed?"
"Spare me the sarcasm. This is journalist maths. If
they spot the problem, they'll look up Belgrano.
I'm just hoping the Defense Ministry is sufficiently ignorant, badly
educated, and European enough not to have any knowledge of an event in
an obscure British war."
"Which is?"
"An Argentine warship that was sunk by a British
submarine, HMS Conqueror, and there was a
big row over whether or not it represented a threat to the British
forces. That's irrelevant. What matters is that it started a major
bust-up between the military, the government and the media of the day
about what really happened. If my colleagues make the connection, that
ought to be enough to let them know there's an even bigger fucking
story behind this one."
He was going to wait until the walls came crashing
down, even if that meant making Serrimissani leave without him. For
foul-tempered ferrets, they had an unshakable sense of devotion. He
liked them. Right then, he liked every species except Homo sapiens. Just like Shan.
The thought caught him unawares and his spirit sank
briefly before he dragged it back up by its collar again, assuring it
he was going to do right by her. He owed it to her to fight.
The Defense Ministry was cutting it fine.
Serrimissani had already started circling him like an
impatient sheepdog when the FEU menu screen appeared and paged him. He
waited three seconds and hit the control.
It was Major Gorgeous.
"Mr. Michallat," she said, "I have a message from a Mr.
Chetwynd at BBChan Foreign Desk. He says your expenses claim gives them
some cause for concern and he wants to know if you're trying to claim
for…" She looked down, apparently at a screen. "…more Conqueror
brand whisky, given the argument you
had over it last time. He'll be back in touch when he can, but in the
meantime not to hand out too many more bribes."
Eddie felt relief wash over him like a warm shower.
"What a tight-fisted bastard," he said grimly, and
convincingly.
"As are you all," said the major, and the menu screen
replaced her lovely but unlovable face.
Serrimissani was at eye-level with him. "We go now,"
she said. "Do you have your answer?"
"Oh, I do," he said, and began cramming his text pad
and editing screen in his bag. "Thank God for BBChan researchers."
Yes, they now knew damn well what he had meant. Conqueror.
Round about now, fellow journalists he had neither
known nor worked with would be calling contacts and harassing media
spokespersons and challenging ministers.
They would be asking what the hell they hadn't
been told about how CSV Actaeon came to be
blown to kingdom come while
in apparently friendly space. And they wouldn't rest until they had
heard from the BBChan man on the scene. Him.
"Ready when you are, doll," said Eddie.
Nevyan was settling comfortably into the role
of senior matriarch. Mestin watched the expression on Eddie Michallat's
face as he came into the large kitchen and looked expectantly at her,
only to be waved towards Nevyan.
"Don't be embarrassed, Mr. Michallat," said Mestin. "Political power
here is not the same commodity as it is for gethes.
My daughter has precedence now, and
we're all content with that."
"You really ought to invade Earth sometime," said
Eddie. She knew enough of humans now to realize he was being flip-
pant. "It would make our life a hell of a lot simpler."
Nevyan had Giyadas with her. Isanket've
needed to learn how to conduct themselves, and there was no reason not
to start early. The child sat patiently on the floor at Nevyan's side
with her head against her legs, watching Eddie with unblinking eyes. He
was trying not to watch the child, and not succeeding.
"You have asked for asylum
here," said Nevyan. "Is that the correct word?"
"Yes. I don't want to live among the human community,
either here or on Umeh."
"Are you going to find it difficult living among us and
remaining on good terms with the isenj?"
"I'm a journalist. I'm professionally neutral. But if
you're asking if I'm going to be a spy in your camp, try this for
size." He put his hand inside his garment and took out a small
transparent container. He held it at the level of his ear and rattled
it. "A quill. Ironically, from the seat of government."
He held it out and Nevyan took it.
"It's too late for the bezeri," she said.
"I know, and I'm sorry. But it's not too late for the
rest of Bezer'ej. The vast majority of life will survive. This is for
them." Right answer, thought
Mestin. Giyadas craned her neck to peer at the container as Nevyan
turned it over in her hands.
"What is the bead?" she asked.
"Ruby," he said. "Corundum. Valuable, where I come
from. Keep it. It's not my color."
Nevyan trilled to summon Lisik and handed the vial to
him. "Take this to Sevaor," she said. Then she concentrated on Eddie
again. "If you stay here, I would appreciate it if you would provide
company for Aras."
"How is he?"
"Grieving."
"Sorry. Stupid question. Is he going to want me around?"
"It will be easier for him to be with a human than with
a family here that reminds him of his loss."
"Suppose he wants to be alone?"
"He has spent too long alone. He needs friendship now,
even if he doesn't see that." She paused. "He has executed Joshua
Garrod. I believe that is troubling him too."
Mestin, keeping a silent watch on the exchange,
couldn't interpret Eddie's mood until that point. He was too much of a
jumble of emotions and agitation to detect any scent clearly. Then
overwhelming panic roiled off him, pungent as human sweat. He swallowed
hard and the knobbly lump at the front of his neck moved visibly.
He seemed to be chewing on unspoken words. His jaw
moved. It was a few seconds before sound emerged.
"Oh," he said.
"The soldier called Bennett is here too. He
surrendered. He'll be useful."
"I can't imagine him surrendering."
"He claims to have caused Shan's death. He saw her die."
"Ade? Never. He had a big crush on her. He might have
screwed up, but--look, can I talk to him?"
"Ask Aras. You should go to him now. You know where his
home is."
"Thank you." Eddie still seemed shaken. "I appreciate
your kindness."
"And we appreciate your willingness to help."
"There's one more thing I want to ask of you. I need to
send back reports. I can't let that garbage about Actaeon
go unchallenged, and I reckon people back home are asking questions now
about what really started the conflict. When they let me tell the
story, I want to have the stuff ready to file. I owe it to Shan,
especially if Ade will talk to me about it."
"Professionally neutral," said Nevyan. "Wasn't that
your claim?"
"I was lying," said Eddie. "Sometimes neutrality is
just an excuse for being spineless."
Eddie had clearly scored highly with Nevyan. She patted
his arm. Mestin sent Serrimissani with Eddie, just to make sure he
reached Aras's home in one piece. Humans had poor memories, and she
couldn't rely on him to remember the way. She was also worried he might
not cope with the steps and terraces with their sheer drops into
nothing. Humans didn't have good balance, either.
Giyadas was trilling spineless,
spineless, spineless under her breath, trying out the word with
overtones and then trying to limit herself to one note. The weight of
the last few days settled on the adults while the child delighted in
the novelty of new alien words.
"What a strange language English can be," said Nevyan. "He'll never
learn wess'u. He'll never be able to pronounce it, anyway."
"It's English you most need him to speak," said Mestin. "Because
it's the humans who need to listen."
Eddie hesitated before knocking on the lovely
pearl door. He knew it was shit, but it didn't make it any less
magical. And knowing Aras well didn't make it any easier to work out
what to say to him.
The door opened. Aras, grim and huge, filled the
opening. He didn't look any different, but then Eddie wasn't sure he
would show signs of not eating or sleeping.
And he knew wess'har couldn't weep.
"I don't know what to say to you," Eddie said. "I'm
truly sorry, and I miss her too, and I won't presume to tell you I know
how you must feel, because I don't."
Aras said nothing, but held out his arm in a gesture to
invite Eddie inside.
Eddie stood in the center of the Spartan room, afraid
to sit down in case he was taking a seat that had been Shan's. He
waited for Aras to indicate a place on the incongruously human sofa.
"Thanks for taking me in," he said.
"Shan was very fond of you."
It was painfully touching. Eddie knew she enjoyed their
verbal sparring but he had no idea that the relationship generated any
degree of warmth at her end. She was good at holding people at arm's
length. "It's all my fault," he said. "If you want to kill me, I
wouldn't blame you."
"As always, you confuse knowledge with action," said
Aras.
"If I had kept my mouth shut, they wouldn't have known
she had the damn thing. I even told them where to find her. And it."
"No. If you had kept those things to yourself, they
would still have found out in time, and pursued us, but you would have
been long dead, and so oblivious of the events."
Aras had an accidental talent for making Eddie feel
better. Eddie hoped he could return the favor. But he had a feeling
that the questions he needed to ask Aras would simply scrape at wounds
so fresh and raw that the pain would overwhelm him.
They didn't talk much for the rest of the day. Aras
busied himself cooking, which Eddie took as displacement activity, but
he was glad of it because it was good food. Aras didn't eat anything.
He just gave Eddie a pile of sek blankets,
showed him the sofa and went out.
Eddie thought he might be going into the center of the
city on some errand or other, but as he watched from the terrace,
taking in a vista that had still not yet palled for him, he saw a
figure walking out into the dry plain.
He hoped Aras wasn't going to do anything stupid.
But Aras was c'naatat, and
that made killing yourself a very tall order. Eddie still decided he
would keep an eye on him.
The room was stark despite the odd touches of human
upholstery--a bed against one wall, the sofa, a padded stool. Eddie
looked around. There was almost no storage. It was like being back in
the cabins at Thetis camp. He rummaged in
the one cupboard and found some glass bowls, Shan's carefully folded
formal uniform jacket, thin-woven hand towels, and two hand grenades.
It didn't really surprise him. She liked to be ready for emergencies.
It was painful to realize that she wouldn't come
striding through the door and give him a stream of inventive and
good-natured abuse. He thought of how she'd taken a laser cutter to
Rayat's desk when he'd argued about some trivia, and he smiled, and it
hurt. He'd miss her.
Aras was going to have a very hard time of it.
Eddie picked up the grenades, prayed that they were
disarmed, and put them in his bag. Fragmentation was the one thing he
knew that could kill c'naatat troops.
There was no point taking chances.
He spent the rest of the afternoon playing with the
insubstantial-looking translucent console at the far end of the room.
He worked out how to get images, sound, and data from the wess'har
archives, but the tuning defeated him.
He was still fiddling around when Aras, silent and
unexpected, walked up behind him and showed him where the data streams
from Earth could be found.
"Thanks," said Eddie. "Are you okay? Want to talk?"
"No."
At least Eddie could watch the news. He wasn't sure he
wanted to. There was nothing worse than being spitting mad and 150
trillion miles away from being able to do anything about it.
He watched the news anyway, curled up on the eccentric
white sofa while Aras disappeared onto the terrace.
"I can listen," Eddie called. "And I don't mean an
interview."
Aras grunted noncommittally from a distance. Eddie
turned back to the screen to wander through his favorite news channels.
He was glad he did. The European Federal Union's junior
defense secretary was having a hard time. His boss had gone to ground,
leaving him to deal with reporters covering a space war for the very
first time. Eddie could sense their excitement.
People always tut-tutted about journalists being pushy
and rude and disrespectful. But Eddie thought there was nothing finer
than the sight of a minister being doorstepped and harried all the way
from his shiny office door to his overpriced privilege of a
chauffeur-driven limo by a pack of reporters.
It was democracy. He loved it. He could take all the
abuse and slammed doors in the world because, when it came down to it, this
was what the job was really about.
It was about being one of the last ordinary people left
with enough clout to put those in power on the spot and make them
account for themselves.
Shan would have loved it too.
Serrimissani had slotted into the gap left by
Vijissi without asking or being asked. She wanted to be useful. She sat
on the steps of the terrace beside Mestin and Nevyan without comment as
they waited for a response from the World Before.
The wess'har populations no longer spoke the same
language, but the ussissi moved between the worlds and could make
contact and translate. Shan had found it hard to work out how the
ussissi could work with such differing cultures without being a conduit
for any of them. Mestin would have sent her out with them to learn and
understand, but it was too late now.
"They're wess'har, like us," said Nevyan. "However
differently they live, they will share our basic drive for cooperation.
And they will not be gethes."
"What do you want them to do if they accept our
approach?" asked Mestin.
"To tell us what's possible in confining the gethes
to their own system, and what support
they will give us to achieve that."
"So we're back to the policing
that Targassat so despised?"
"She felt we sought out cultures for interference
because we believed we were morally superior, and that it would
over-stretch us and cost us our own civilization. This
is a response to outright aggression."
"Outcomes, isanket, not
motives. And perhaps she was just wrong."
"And perhaps she was right for the times, but not for
now."
"You don't need to comfort yourself about betraying a
dead woman's ideals." It seemed they were being driven by respect for
opinionated and exceptional matriarchs who were no longer around to
enforce their own philosophies. "You make your own judgments. The will
of Wess'ej supports you. It's time to act."
And if it wasn't, it was too late to step back.
Nijassi, a member of Vijissi's pack, came scrambling up
the steps. "There is a message," he said. "It has taken time to find
the right people to ask the questions, but we have an answer."
"And?" Nevyan stood up and shook down her dhren
as if she were heading somewhere to
receive a visit.
"They will arrange a conference by screen as soon as
they have spoken to the various cities."
"This isn't an answer. What did they actually say? What
were the words?"
Nijassi sat back on his haunches as if he had forgotten
to note the most important part of the message. He seemed to have taken
it as understood.
"They said that what threatens us threatens them. And
threat is now. They will come."
When our defense
personnel die in action, we want to hear the truth. We can handle it.
We might even think their lives were worth sacrificing. But what we
can't handle is lies. CSV Actaeon was the first vessel to
be sunk--if that word can
apply--in a war in space. Before we rush to condemn the alien forces
that destroyed her, we need to ask what made them attack after living
peacefully with humans for nearly two hundred years. Why won't the
government let us hear from the one independent observer who can talk
openly to all the parties in this tragic conflict? We challenge the FEU
president to let us talk to Eddie Michallat, unedited and unrestricted.
If we're going to live with aliens, we need to understand them before
it's too late.
Editorial comment, "Europe Now"
Aras wondered how long it would be before
even a c'naatat succumbed to lack of
nourishment.
He really didn't feel like eating. It was more than
simply being off his food. Food was communal: he had cooked for Shan,
and Shan was no longer there to enjoy it. She had not been there for
nearly seven days now and she would never be there again.
There were no stages of grieving for wess'har, no
denial or bargaining. First they were paralyzed by grief and shock, and
then they accepted it. Males remated and the pain was soothed, but not
wholly forgotten. So did females. Aras had to find his own solution,
and for a second time.
But he was mired in human anger.
He spent the morning wondering how many scores he would
feel obliged to settle before his life was too miserable to be faced.
"Aras," said Eddie. He stood at the door to the terrace
and called him. He seemed scared to come within Aras's reach, as if he
would receive a blow. It was a shame. The human was doing his best to
support him, misguided though it was. "Aras, Nevyan's at the door.
She's brought someone to talk to you."
It was Sergeant Bennett in his camouflage battle dress,
even though there was no longer any point in concealment, and he was
wearing that odd flat green fabric headdress that he called a beret.
Nevyan gestured the soldier forward
silently. He saluted Aras.
"Sir," he said. It sounded like sah. "I
need to talk to you urgently."
Aras stood back and let them walk in. Bennett simply
stood in the center of the room with his hands clasped behind his back,
legs a little apart. They called it standing easy.
It certainly didn't look like there was any ease about it.
This man had shot his isan.
He had also stopped Lindsay Neville from killing her.
Aras didn't know what to make of him, but he had once liked him a lot
more than he had liked Josh, and he needed his skills and knowledge.
"Go on," said Aras. He didn't sit down either.
Bennett put his hand in the expandable pocket on his
trouser leg and took out Shan's gun. He handed it to Aras on the flat
of his palm. "She would have wanted you to have it, sir."
Aras took it and turned it over in his hands. He'd used
the weapon before. He had executed Surendra Parekh with it. It hadn't
done Shan much good. Pain, the real physical pain of grief, gripped at
his chest.
"She asked me to tell you that she was sorry and that
she hadn't abandoned you," said Bennett. "You would have been very
proud of her, sir."
Aras wanted to hear it and yet he didn't. "Tell me what
happened," he said. "Everything." He turned to Eddie. "And you need to
hear it too. Because you will tell the gethes,
and I know you will tell the truth."
It was a hard story to hear. Bennett kept stopping. He
related it like a report, but he was struggling to keep his voice
steady.
"And you shot her," said Aras.
"It took nearly the whole magazine to bring her down,"
he said. "She wouldn't give up. It took two of us to restrain her and
even then she head-butted me. Hard."
"Do you expect sympathy? She admired you. She trusted
you."
"I mention it simply because she was so bloody brave,
sir."
"And she--" Aras stopped. He couldn't say it. He needed
to sit. Eddie stepped in smartly.
"I think we want to know if she really…jettisoned
herself of her own free will, Ade."
Bennett's jaw worked silently for a few seconds. "She
did, but not that she had much of a choice. She told Commander Neville
what she thought of her, and just stepped out into space, and the
ussissi wouldn't leave her." He swallowed and his whole throat seemed
to move. "It was horrible but I'm glad I was there. Some people
disappoint you. They're all mouth. Shan wasn't. She got on and did it.
I just wanted you to know that."
There was a silence. It went on for a while, and Nevyan
seemed to be having the most difficulty with it. She was almost
billowing acid agitation. She stood up and peered into Bennett's face.
"Can you give me any location?" she said. "We want to
retrieve her body. And Vijissi. They deserve to come home."
Bennett held out his hand. The palm was illuminated
green, showing flat lines and numbers. "It records a lot. There'll be a
month's worth of location data in there. You'll have a job on your
hands, though, even with the coordinates."
"Then it's a job I should be getting on with," said
Nevyan.
"I still don't understand why you surrendered," said
Eddie. "You didn't kill Shan. You didn't help her much, but you know it
wasn't your doing. Had enough of the FEU shunting you around to
nursemaid corporations or something?"
Bennett hadn't taken his eyes off Aras. He held his
hand out to him, palm up, fist clenched. He nodded towards the tilgir
on Aras's belt.
"Want to take a slice out of me, sir?"
"That won't bring her back."
"That's not quite what I meant. Please. Just cut me."
Eddie looked completely stunned. No,
thought Aras. No, not that. But he took
his knife and he caught Bennett's arm and drew the blade down from the
inside of his elbow to the faint blue vessels on his wrist. It was a
shallow cut. It was all it needed.
Blood welled for a moment and stopped. Then the cut
settled into a red line, and then a pink one, and then it was as if he
had never been cut.
"Oh shit," said Eddie. "Here we go again."
"See, I told you she nutted me," said Bennett. "I mean hard,
too. Blood everywhere, right across my
face and hers, and I thought it was all mine because there wasn't a
mark on her when we looked. It was an accident. She didn't know she'd
infected me."
Aras stared. It was one more difficulty he didn't need.
It was the sort of problem Shan would have made him feel better about
had she been here to advise him.
He needed her. And he didn't need a human c'naatat
soldier to worry about.
"Sir, I thought it might be best for everyone if I went
deep for a bit," Bennett said, looking rather modest for a man who had
kept his nerve under unthinkable circumstances. "And I did tell
Commander Neville I took a piss-poor view of what happened to Shan, but
it was probably bloody daft of me to let her know I was infected.
Anyway, here I am, sir. Can you tell me if the rest of the detachment
are okay?"
Eddie interrupted. "I'll find out," he said. "In the
meantime, take a seat. I'm sure you'll come in very handy."
The pearl icing of F'nar looked perfectly
wonderful in heavy rain.
Eddie stood at the door to the terrace, watching the
downpour wash in great waves down the walls of the caldera. The glass
conduits were almost singing. At some points the city looked like a
designer water feature, the torrent rolling across the iridescence in
swirls and channels and creating an abstract animation. Eddie had sent
the bee-cam in, fully weather-jacketed, to capture footage while he
waited.
It was now five days since he had become the most
sought-after interviewee on four planets. It wasn't a position a
journalist ever expected to find himself in. He watched angry debates
and call-ins with people demanding that he be allowed to speak, and
still the call didn't come.
He had interviewed Bennett. It was one of the best he'd
ever done, and he reckoned so himself. Bennett had an endearingly frank
quality and a matter-of-fact manner that made the telling of Shan
Frankland's last grand gesture something of a show-stopper. She would
have liked that.
But Eddie couldn't use it. The whole story hinged on c'naatat.
If he ran the line on Shan's death
before he conveyed the enormity of the attack on Christopher--on
Ouzhari--then nobody would hear the detail. They would be working out
how feasible immortality might be for them. Once again one of Shan
Frankland's moral stands would have to remain a secret.
She hadn't been able to admit even to him that she had
once sacrificed her career and reputation to protect a bunch of
ecoterrorists with whom she sympathized. He knew anyway. Whether anyone
agreed with her or not, there was something heart-stoppingly admirable
about a woman who would put everything on the line--her life
included--for a principle.
Eddie was going to make sure she had prime-time if it
was the last thing he ever did. He'd just wait a while.
There was no interview with Lindsay Neville or Mohan
Rayat, of course. He wanted that most of all. But he could wait for
that too.
Eddie walked back into the house and stood in front of
the screen, now sliced into five different news channels. Then he hit
the message key: still nothing. No incoming calls from Earth. Call
me, you tossers. Eddie wondered what Ual
made of the FEU's poor handling of the row. He needed the diplomatic
channels to stay open, at least until he had filed.
Maybe it didn't matter. By not being able to speak,
Eddie had become a silent nod to growing speculation that humans had
started the war. Yes, they were using the word war
on every channel. The legal niceties of declaration had gone by the
board, even on BBChan bulletins. If your loved ones had died, you
needed to hear that it was a war. Nobody wanted to hear that they'd
been killed in a diplomatic misunderstanding.
Eddie went back to the door and watched the rain
punching through ever-changing rainbows for a long time.
"Does it piss down like this all the time?" asked
Bennett. Eddie hadn't even heard him come up behind him. "Been walking
round F'nar, getting accustomed to the layout. Pretty. Very pretty."
"Heard from the others yet?"
"Izzy and Chaz are on Mar'an'cas, but Izzy's bioscreen
packed up so I'm messaging Chaz. I think they quite like setting up the
colonists' camp there. Something good they can do. And Sue, Jon and
Barkers are on Umeh."
"And Lindsay's okay?"
"Not interested in her," said Bennett. "Maybe you could
ask Nevyan if we could get them all over here. They wouldn't do
anything stupid, I'd see to that. When things calm down a bit, of
course."
"As POWs?"
"Why?"
"You want to be deserters? Even this far from a
court-martial? Otherwise we have to explain why you've cut loose."
"Come on, they'd never try to take me here."
"It's not about that, really. If the c'naatat
story goes fully public, then who's
going to give a shit about a few dead squid?"
"Or Shan," said Bennett.
They stood and shared a homebrew beer. It hadn't
fermented long enough but it was more a symbol than an expression of
the brewer's art. Bennett was politely tactful.
"Interesting," he said.
"You can't get drunk any more anyway," said Eddie. "So
Shan said."
The front door opened and let in a blast of damp air.
Aras had come back from the fields with a basket of muddy vegetables.
He dumped them in the bowl under the spigot, rinsed them, and then went
to the lavatory and locked the door.
"That's not good," said Eddie. He wanted Aras to talk,
at least to Bennett if not to him. He walked up to the door and tapped
very gently with his knuckles.
"How are you feeling, mate?" he asked.
There was no answer.
"Aras, come and have something to eat."
"Later," said Aras.
Eddie went out onto the terrace again and began working
out how he might get a story off Wess'ej. He couldn't think of any
route that didn't involve ITX and bribery. Bennett busied himself
cleaning his rifle.
Eddie was still coming up with nothing and feeling
increasingly frustrated when he heard Aras moving around inside the
house. There was the sound of a container easing open and then a sharp
slam as something else was opened and closed.
The sounds of rummaging became more rapid and frantic.
Eventually they stopped and Aras came slowly out onto the terrace.
"You have taken something of mine, Eddie."
It hadn't been a bad premonition. There wasn't much of
anything to take from Aras, being wess'har: just the grenades.
"It's no good looking for them," Eddie said. He was
suddenly scared. Aras could have torn him apart with little effort, and
in his current state of mind there was every chance he would. Bennett
stood back, watching them carefully. "You won't find them."
"Eddie, how can you do this to me?"
"Because I care what happens to you."
"I can't stand another day like this. I have lived long
enough and I have nothing left now. If you had any respect for me you'd
stop this stupid game, so give me the grenades."
Eddie had nowhere to run. He stood with his arms held
away from his sides, thinking where he'd left his bag. It was stowed
under the sofa. He edged between Aras and the door. His stomach was
churning. Aras twitched and Eddie almost leaped back, but he stood his
ground. "I'm not going to let you kill yourself."
Aras was still for a moment. Then he seized Eddie by
his collar and thrust him so hard against the wall that it hammered the
breath out of him and he thought Aras was finally going to kill him.
"Let me go, Eddie. Let me
die."
Eddie gasped for breath. "Fuck you, no. No.
You want to do it--you do it alone."
"Give them to me. Sergeant Bennett, will you
give them to me?"
Bennett walked slowly forward, one careful pace at a
time. "I'm not helping you, mate."
"Why? What's it to either of you?"
Eddie choked. "She wouldn't have wanted you to do it.
And you're the last bit of her left."
Bennett finally came close enough to lay both hands on
Aras's arm, very slowly, very gently. "Come on," he said. "Eddie's
right. I know what you're going through, remember. I know better than
Eddie, anyway. You help me through it and I'll help you. Okay?" My fault, Eddie thought. My fault. Aras didn't let
go. He didn't even
look at Bennett.
"I failed the bezeri," said Aras. "I killed Josh
Garrod. And now I've lost her. How can I carry on?"
"Because it's not finished. It's just starting. She's
not here to sort it. But you are."
Bennett's hands tightened on Aras's arm. "Aras, just
let it go. Come on. I know it's hard. Come on."
Aras was pressing so hard on his chest that Eddie
thought he would black out. Then he let him go, and Eddie slid down the
damp pearl wall. Aras sat down slowly beside him.
"I need to lay her to rest," he said.
"You leave that to Nevyan. She's got the ussissi
searching."
"Is there more than this life, Eddie?"
"No, mate. Only what we do. That's why it's important
that you hang on."
"You have your focus, Eddie. You want to tell the story
and shame your government, and you'll always find one to shame. I'm not
sure of my purpose beyond vengeance."
"Then do it for Shan. Even if it's only revenge, the
end result is the same."
"I shouldn't have hurt you," Aras said. "I apologize."
"It's okay," said Eddie. He gave Bennett a go
away look. I'm fine. We
need to talk. Bennett shrugged and went back in the house.
They sat in the puddles on the terrace for a long time.
Eddie didn't want to leave him sitting there alone. After a while he
looked at his exotic, man-beast face and saw something he knew couldn't
be, but was.
There were definite tears in Aras's eyes. C'naatat had relented and
handed him one new adaptation that he had wanted so badly for so long.
He wept for his isan.
Eddie joined him.
I see no case
against coming to the aid of Wess'ej. They have been provoked. Their
allies have been invaded and slaughtered. The ussissi are calling on us
to intervene to save their kin as well. It will be a long-term
commitment but now we all know what is at stake, the end is inevitable.
Now or later is meaningless: the gethes will
invade again. And if they do not, then they still commit acts on their
own world that we cannot tolerate. The word gethes is from our distant
past. If we forget what it means,
then we forget what we are at our core. It's the antithesis of all
things that are wess'har.
SARMATAKIAN
VE,
adviser to the council of matriarchs of Eqbas Vorhi,
commonly known as the World Before
Minister Ual called Eddie in the early
hours with the best news he had heard in recent weeks.
Aras shook his shoulder to wake him. He stumbled to the
console and tried not to think what would happen to this odd friendship
if Ual found out about the quill. Eddie suspected the wily statesman
would think it was fair game, nothing personal at all.
"Pressure from one direction can be deflected," Ual
said, wheezing and sucking. "But pressure from two sides can crush. I
have your link."
"Thank you," said Eddie. He motioned to Aras to find
BBChan 56930, the current primary news feed. He had to nudge him: Aras
was fixed on Ual's image, unblinking. "How did you manage that?"
"I told your Foreign Office that I was most
disappointed that humans were taking a dim view of a race who would
help them establish instant communications across galaxies. I also said
it would ease my own electorate's fear of aliens if humans were seen to
admit their failings."
"A stylish threat, sir."
"No threat," said Ual. "You have a full hour, and I
think the phrase is live to air." He made
that rattling bubble that Eddie liked to think was a giggle but could
as easily have been a curse. "And I do not
care for your news editor."
"I'll buy you a beer one day, Minister. Thank you."
Eddie had a half-hour package ready to run. It opened
with the patrol craft recce footage of Ouzhari burning. It ended with
Ade Bennett's eyewitness account.
"Shall I leave you to it?" asked Aras.
"No, you stay right here." Eddie pulled on a fresh
shirt and hoped his stubble would make him look authentically warry
rather than a man who'd been dragged out of bed and caught on the hop.
He set the bee-cam on the console and pulled two stools into place.
"Because when this lot finishes running, you're on. I'm interviewing
you."
"What do you want me to do?"
"I'll ask you questions and you answer them as you see
fit. They might not sound like kind questions, but don't get angry on
air. You can punch me later."
"This sounds very negative."
"You know when you tore into me at dinner that time?"
"I was very rude. I meant to be."
"And it would have been great TV. Just say what you
think."
"What game is this, then?"
"Showing them what they're taking on. Conveniently
running back-to-back with scenes of destruction caused by gungho
humans."
"Is this a substitute for drama, Eddie, or have you
become a propagandist for us?"
"I'm treading a fine line. But all I'm doing is showing
people things that they're not here to see for themselves. How they
process it is down to them."
Eddie keyed in his code and found that it still worked.
He could begin his transmission at any time with a sixty second
stand-by so the current anchor could get the bulletin out of the
segment and manage a reasonable throw to a live OB from 150 trillion
miles away. He could see the output from the split feed from Umeh
Station.
He didn't even have to talk to News Desk.
"Thirty seconds," he said to nobody in particular, and
smoothed down his shirt.
Lindsay Neville walked through the crowded
biodome of Umeh Station and found a path had cleared for her.
It wasn't the sort of leeway granted to Shan Frankland
by dint of her commanding presence. The evacuees just didn't look like
they wanted close contact with the woman who had carried out an act of
war against a militarily superior neighbor.
And Okurt and his senior officers had died in Actaeon.
She was now the ranking officer in a
ship of chaos.
She had the feeling she wasn't going to be popular. It
was hard to be loved and respected when you had stranded nearly four
hundred people a long way from home without the prospect of rescue.
"There's Jon," said Barencoin. He put his thumb and
forefinger between his lips and whistled so loudly that Lindsay jumped.
"Oi, Jon! Over here!" He grinned, but not at her. "And there's Sue. The
old firm again, eh?"
"I want you lot to keep Rayat on a leash for the time
being," said Lindsay.
Barencoin inhaled slowly. "He's your problem now,
ma'am," he said. "He's not going anywhere. None of us are ever again, I
reckon. If you'll excuse me, I'm going to find a doctor to get this
bloody round out of my leg before the meds wear off."
He limped off into the milling crowd to be reunited
with his two comrades. If Lindsay thought she'd have marine backup, she
was mistaken. She wandered into one of the construction huts and asked
for the duty foreman. It was time to make a start on creating some
order and purpose. She was going to be here a long time.
"Well, that was fucking clever." The young engineer
sitting behind the makeshift desk just glanced up at her once. He was
checking inventories. "You're the military genius who nearly got us all
fried, eh?"
"I'm not even going to discuss that," said Lindsay
wearily. "We need some organization here."
"We've got nearly four hundred people in a
half-finished habitat. It's enough water, lavatories, and food
facilities that we need. You offering?"
There was no point pulling rank. Civilians didn't jump
for her. "Okay," she said. "You get on with the logistics and I'll
round up my personnel. Then we can sit down and talk sensibly later."
"And bring a shovel," said the engineer. He jabbed his
thumb over his shoulder without looking up. "Have a look at the news.
You're on. Or at least your handiwork is."
Lindsay cast around and found the small screen obscured
by piles of insulation sheeting. She was going to leave: she didn't
have time for this. But she didn't. She watched. She watched because
she heard Eddie's familiar voice over images that she should have
recognized but didn't.
Lindsay watched Eddie's news special with detached
horror. She had lived these events. They looked much worse on screen.
Stripped of the emotion of experiencing them, she saw only what history
would see: destruction, anger, panic and a huge gamble taken on what
humans might have done had they got hold of an organism called c'naatat.
Viewed cold, it seemed a very slim risk. What have I done?
It gave her an unpleasant feeling in her mouth, the
sensation that the sides of her palate just above her teeth were
closing together like Scylla and Charybdis. She wasn't sure if it was
adrenaline or nausea.
Eddie was now interviewing Aras. "Who do you see as the greater
threat now--isenj or human?"
"The isenj managed to destroy
almost the entire bezeri population. Humans--gethes--finished
the job, as you would say. I have no great
love for either species." "Do you feel the alliance
between the two has increased tension here on Wess'ej?" "Of course it has. The isenj are
native to this system, but you're not, and you have no right to be
here. As long as you have a base within striking distance of us, we
will not rest easy. We have seen what a handful of you can do." "And your people have a
reputation for all-encompassing military solutions." "If you're referring to the
cleansing of Bezer'ej, yes, we act decisively."
It was extraordinary. There was no mention of Shan.
There was no mention of c'naatat. Eddie
had skirted neatly, round it but the question hung there: why bomb the
bloody place? Lindsay wondered what game he was playing. Maybe his
bosses had warned him off. She was angry. It named her and it named
Rayat and made them both look like war criminals.
"It wasn't like that at all," she said angrily at the
screen. "Eddie, you bastard. Tell them why I did it."
"Yeah, I'd love to know,"
muttered the engineer.
Lindsay turned and walked out. She'd done the right
thing, but the wrong way. She'd wiped out--no, she had almost
wiped out--a dangerous organism that
humans simply couldn't be trusted to handle. And she couldn't tell
anyone right then, or maybe ever. All they saw was her crime and her
stupidity.
It was just like Eddie had said about Shan and that
business with Green Rage. It was Rochefoucauld's classic example of
perfect courage, a massive private sacrifice that won you no worshipers.
For the first time, Lindsay knew exactly how it felt to
be Shan Frankland.
Ceret was rising. The tem
flies, swarming before moving south to hotter climates for the winter
season, battled for position on the first sun-warmed stones.
"It's still the prettiest damn thing I've ever seen,"
said Eddie. "It's not a bad place to be marooned."
Eddie had more of a choice than he had realized. F'nar
was not the only city of pearl, just one of a chain of settlements and
cliffs and other convenient surfaces that stood on the tems'
migration path. Aras said he regretted not
showing all of them to Shan.
The tem flies were on the
move now, great black clouds of smoke across the face of Ceret. If you
looked at them long enough, you could pick out images that resembled
animals or plants or landscapes.
Children enjoyed the game of recognition. Nevyan waited
with Giyadas for an especially large cloud of flies to sweep across the
setting red disk of the sun.
"Great shot," said Eddie, like a fond uncle. The
bee-cam was diligently recording it all. He'd use that the next time he
got an uplink.
Giyadas, absorbing English at an alarming rate, watched
him intently.
"Great shot," she said, accentless.
Mestin had promised to send Serrimissani to fetch them
when the message came through from the World Before. She was waiting by
the screen, an unusual act of patience for her. There was a vague
promise of help in the recognition of a common threat, but Eddie had
heard that before on Earth. Had it been the matriarchs of F'nar who had
said it, he would have believed it.
But not even the ussissi knew how the World Before
would really react to a plea for help from a band of outcasts who had
cut themselves off thousands of years ago because they didn't want to
get involved.
There was always the chance they would come back and
tell them to piss off.
"Have you seen pictures of them?" asked Eddie.
Nevyan jiggled her head like an Indian dancer. "No."
"You're pretty short on curiosity for a clever species."
"Curiosity leads to exploration, and we never planned
to go back. But I am curious, Eddie."
"You'll find out soon enough."
They all would.
Bennett had persuaded Aras to come out and see the
swarming. Aras was sitting with his head bowed, absorbed in the
contents of a small red cylinder whose fragile screen was strung
between filaments. It was Shan's swiss. He never put it down now.
Bennett simply sat and watched him. They had a lot in common. If Aras
was going to survive his grief, it would be Bennett who would be most
help to him. A bloody shame, thought
Eddie. Poor sods.
Serrimissani was suddenly among them, agitated, urgent. "They are
responding," she said. "Right now. Come."
Eddie wasn't the last inside. Aras was reluctant to
watch and shook his head. Bennett waited with him.
"Call me when I can do something useful," he said, and
held the swiss in both hands as if it would break. When it did, there
would be nobody left who knew how to repair it or where to find the
parts.
The rest of them--Nevyan and Mestin's families and
Eddie--stood and watched the image from a city that was
well-proportioned and softened by planting, but very, very urban.
For once Eddie was not alone in his bewilderment and
wonder.
The whole of F'nar had ground to a halt. The signal had
been made available to everybody: there were no secrets among wess'har.
The usual backdrop of domestic noise, of scraping glass utensils and
caterwauling matriarchs, had ceased. For the first time Eddie could
hear the trickling water from thousands of glass conduits around the
caldera. It was as heart-stopping as a total eclipse.
They were all looking at their screens, wherever they
were, because that was what he was doing too. They were looking for the
first time at kin they hadn't seen in ten thousand years.
And the face in the image was almost wholly alien.
The wess'har genome was as flexible as thread, always
adapting, reshaping. It was what made them such a perfect host for c'naatat.
And in ten thousand years, both
branches of the family had gone their own distinctive ways.
"That's a wess'har?" Eddie asked.
"Yes," said Serrimissani. "A matriarch."
The scarcely recognizable creature had a ussissi
interpreter, and that much they could all identify. It was the ussissi
who spoke after a stream of double-voiced but unintelligible sound
emerged from the female who looked little like the isan've
Eddie had now started to see as normal.
"Tell the gethes we are
coming," said the ussissi, repeating the words of his matriarch. "Tell
them that we too believe in balancing, and that the bezeri will have
justice, even if none are left to witness it. What threatens you
threatens us."
Nevyan had her long arms crossed over her chest in that
odd nervous gesture the females seemed to have. "So it's done," she
said. And she simply turned and walked out on to the terraces again.
Eddie went after her.
"Is that it?" he said. "What next?"
"We will arrange liaison now. It will take a little
time. And you have much to do."
"Yeah, I've got some stories to broadcast, when the
time's right. You've seen the news. Earth's boiling. So I'm busy. What
will you do?"
Nevyan pulled her dhren up
around her neck. "I have important work to occupy me."
"What exactly?"
Nevyan cocked her head, taking in Aras and Bennett, who
were just sitting on a low wall and not talking.
"I'm going to find my friend," said Nevyan. "And I'm
going to bring her home."
Look for the third volume in The
Wess'har Wars, coming soon.
Thanks go to Charlie Allery, Debbie Button,
Bryan Boult and Chris "TK" Evans, for thorough and critical reading; to
Dr. Ian Tregillis and Mark Allery for technical advice; to Dr. Farah
Mendlesohn for cheerleading; to my editor, Diana Gill, never fazed by
wild plot changes; and to my father, George, who taught me the value of
thorough preparation.
KAREN
TRAVISS is a former defense
correspondent and TV and newspaper journalist. She's now a political
public relations manager and has also been a press officer for the
police, an advertising copywriter, and a journalism lecturer. She has
served in both the Royal Navy Auxiliary Service and the Territorial
Army. A graduate of the Clarion science fiction and fantasy workshop,
her work has appeared in Asimov's, Realms of
Fantasy, and On Spec. She lives in
Wiltshire, England.
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