Sarah Zettel - The Quiet Invasion
CONTENTS
The Quiet Invasion
Sarah Zettel
ASPECT® WARNER BOOKS
A Time Warner Company
This book is
dedicated, with deepest thanks, to my spiritual big sister, Dawn Marie
Sampson Beresford.
Acknowledgments
The Author would like to thank Timothy B. Smith for his expert
technical advice, Laura Woody, who knew about the yeast, and Dr. David
Grinspoon, whose
Venus Revealed she consulted frequently
during the writing of this book. She would also like to thank Betsy
Mitchell and Jaime Levine, whose patient work made this a better book,
and Karen Everson, who was there for the crisis.
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Chapter One
"This is Venera Control, Shuttle AX-2416. You're clear for landing.
Welcome back."
Hello, Tori. How are you doing? thought Helen from her seat
in the passenger compartment. She liked the fact that the shuttle
pilots left the intercom open so she could listen to the familiar
voices running through the landing protocols. Overhearing this final
flight ritual made her feel that she was really home.
I just wish I was really home with better news.
She bit her lip and settled a little further back in her
crash-couch. Helen was the only Venera-bound passenger this run. She'd
flown from Earth in the long-distance ship
Queen Isabella,
which now waited in orbit while the shuttles from Venera ferried down
supplies and equipment that had to be imported from Earth.
Helen stared straight ahead over the rows of empty couches. The
ceiling and front wall of the shuttle's passenger cabin were one
gigantic view screen. Venus's opaque, yellowish-gray clouds churned all
around the shuttle. Wind stirred the mists constantly but never cleared
them away.
She strained her eyes, struggling to see the solid shadow of Venera
Base through the shifting fog. Despite everything, Helen still felt as
if she carried the bad news with her, that nothing could have changed
aboard Venera until she got there and handed the news over.
I'm not there so it's not real yet. Helen smoothed down the
indigo scarf she wore over her stark white hair.
Arrogance,
arrogance,
old woman. This last trip should have finally put you
in your place.
She really did feel old. It was strange. Even in the modern era of
med trips and gene-level body modification, eighty-three was not young.
She had never felt so old
inside, though. She'd never felt
calcified like this, as if something in her understanding had failed,
leaving her standing on the edge of events she was unable to comprehend
clearly, let alone affect.
The shuttle's descent steepened. At last, the cloud veil thinned
enough that Helen really could make out the spherical shadow of Venera
Base—her dream, her life's work, her home.
And now, my poor failure.
Even with self-pity and defeat swimming around inside her head,
Helen's heart lifted at the sight of Venera. The base was a gigantic
sphere buoyed by Venus's thick CO2 atmosphere. Distance and
cloud cover made the massive girders and cables that attached the tail
and stabilizers to the main body of the station look as thin as
threads.
Venera rode the perpetual easterly winds that circled the planet's
equator. The shuttle matched Venera's speed easily, and the navigation
chips in the shuttle and the runway handled the rest. The shuttle
glided onto the great deck that encircled the very top of Venera's
hull. It taxied straight across the runway and to the open hangar.
The shuttle jerked slightly as it rolled to a stop. A moment of
silence enveloped Helen. This was no tourist shuttle. There were no
attendants, human or automated, to tell her it was okay to get up now,
or to make sure she claimed all her luggage, or to hope she'd enjoyed
her flight and would come again soon.
Instead, the hissing, bumping noises of pressurization, corridor
docking, and engine power-down surrounded her. Helen stayed where she
was. As soon as she stepped out of the shuttle, it all became real.
The transition would be over. Her illusions would no longer shield
her. Helen found she did not want to abandon that shelter.
"Dr. Failia?"
Helen started and looked up into the broad, dark face of
the
shuttle's senior pilot. What was his name?
"Yes?" She pushed herself upright and began fumbling with the
multiple buckles that strapped her to the couch.
Name, name, name…
"I just wanted to say, I know you're going to get us through this.
Everybody's with you."
Pearson! "Thank you, Mr. Pearson," said Helen. "We'll find
a way."
"I know we will." He stepped aside to give her room to stand. Helen
did not miss the hand that briefly darted out to help her to her feet
and then darted back again, afraid of being offensive. She pretended to
ignore the awkward gesture and retrieved her satchel from the bin under
her couch.
"Thank you again, Mr. Pearson." Helen shook the pilot's hand and met
his eyes with a friendly smile.
P.R. reflexes all in working
order, thank you.
Then, because there was nothing else to do, she walked down the
flex-walled docking corridor.
Bennet Godwin and Michael Lum, the other two members of Venera's
governing board, were, of course, waiting for her in the passenger
clearing area. One look at their faces told her that the bad news had
indeed flown far ahead of her.
Her hand tightened around her satchel strap as she walked up to her
colleagues.
"I take it you've heard," she said flatly. "We lost Andalucent
Technologies and IBM."
There, it's official. I said it. The
last shards of her comforting illusions fell away.
Ben Godwin was a square-built, florid man. Every emotion registered
on his face as a change of color, from snow white to cherry red. Right
now though, he just looked gray. He opened his mouth, but nothing came
out.
Michael, standing beside him, glanced briefly at the floor and then
up at Helen's eyes. He was a much younger, much leaner, much calmer man
with clear gold skin. He wore his black hair long and pulled back into
a ponytail. The gold ID badge on his white tunic proclaimed him the
chief of Venera's security. "They took the University of Washington
with them."
He spoke softly, but the words crashed hard against Helen. "What?
When?"
"About an hour ago." Ben ran his hand over his bristly scalp. We
tried to get them to wait to talk to you, but they weren't—"
Anger hardened Helen's face. "Well, they'll have to talk to me
anyway." She brushed past the two men. "We can't afford to lose their
funding too."
Helen did not look back to see if they were following her. she just
strode straight ahead into the broad, curving corridor that connected
the docking area to the rest of Venera. She ignored the nearest
elevator bundle and started down the stairs instead. She was not
waiting around anymore. She'd been waiting on people for months on
Earth. Waiting for them to tell her they had no more money, no more
time to wait for results, no more interest in a planet that would never
be amenable to human colonization or exploitation.
Helen kept her office on the farm levels near the center of Venera's
sphere. Full spectrum lights shone down on vast soil beds growing
high-yield cereals and brightly colored vegetables. Ducks and geese
waded freely through troughed rice paddies that also nurtured several
species of fish. The chickens, however, were penned in separate yards
around the perimeter. The chickens did not get along with the more
peaceable fowls. Quartz windows ringed the entire level, showing the
great gray clouds. Every now and then, a pure gold flash of sheet
lightning lit the world.
The farms had been meant to give Venera some measure of
independence. Acquiring good, fresh food was vital to the maintenance
of a permanent colony, and from the beginning, Helen had meant Venera
to be a permanent colony.
Old dreams died hard. Venera might have actually had real
self-sufficiency, except for the restrictions the U.N. placed on
manufacturing and shipping licenses.
Old fears died hard too.
Helen's office was an administrative cubicle on an island in the
middle of one of the rice paddies. She knew people called it "the
Throne Room" and didn't really care. She loved Venus, but she missed
Earth's blues and greens. Setting up her workspace in the farms had
been the perfect compromise.
Helen kept a spartan office. It was furnished with a work desk,
three visitor's chairs, and an all-purpose view screen that currently
showed a star field. Her one luxury, besides her view, was a couple of
shelves of potted plants—basil, oregano, lavender, and so on. Their
sweet, spicy scents were the air's only perfume.
Helen dropped herself into the chair behind the desk and tossed her
satchel onto the floor. It was only then that she became aware that
Michael and Ben had in fact followed her.
"Who'd you talk to?" Her touch woke the desk and lit its command
board. She shuffled through the icons to bring up her list of contact
codes.
"Patricia Iannone," said Ben, sitting in one of the visitor's
chairs. "She sounded like she was just following orders."
"We'll see." Helen activated Pat's contact and checked the time
delay. Four minutes today. Not great for purposes of persuasive
conversation, but doable. Helen opened the com system and lifted her
face to the view screen. "Hello, Pat. I've just gotten back to Venera,
and they're telling me that U Washington is pulling our funding.
What's the matter? You can't tell me the volcanology department has not
been getting its money's worth out of us. If it's a matter of being
more vocal about your sponsorship or about allowing your people some
more directed research time, I know we can work out the details. You
just have to let me know what you and your people need." She touched
the Send key, and the com system took over, shooting the message down
after the contact code, waiting for a connection, and a reply.
Helen swiveled her chair to face Ben and Michael. "All right, tell
me what's been happening since we talked last."
So Ben told her about some of the new personnel assignments and
promotions and how the volcano, Hathor Montes, was showing signs of
entering an active cycle. Michael talked about a rash of petty thefts,
an increase in demands on the data lines caused apparently by the
volcanology group gearing up for Hathor's active cycle, and a couple of
instream clipout personas
trying to get themselves inserted onto Venera's payroll.
"Now that would be all we'd need," muttered Helen. "Handing out
extra money for a couple of computer ghosts."
As she spoke, the desk chimed. All of them turned their attention
back to the view screen. Helen's stomach tightened. The star field
cleared away to show a fashionably slim, young-looking woman with beige
skin and a cloud of dark-blond hair, worn unbound under a pink scarf.
"Hello, Helen," she said soberly. "I was expecting this. Listen,
there are no complaints about the publicity, the facilities access,
about anything. The problems are application, opportunity, and
resource distribution. The comptrollers have decided our people are
going to have to be content with St. Helens and Pelee for a while. The
industrial research spillover is contracting, and there is just not
enough to go around right now." Her expression flickered from annoyed
to apologetic. "There's no more after this. Anything you send is going
to my machine. I'm sorry, but there is nothing I can do."
The stars faded back into view. For a moment, Helen met Ben's gaze,
but she looked quickly away. She didn't want to see what he was
thinking.
We could have done this, he was thinking,
if
you'd been willing to do it small. If you hadn't insisted from the
beginning on a full-scale base where people could live and raise their
children and make a lifetime commitment to the study of this world.
She pressed her fingertips against her forehead. That was what he
was thinking. That Venus was, at most, four weeks away from Earth. It
wouldn't have mattered if people had to come and go. Venera could have
been made small and simple and then expanded if things worked out. But,
oh, no. Helen Failia had her vision, and Helen Failia had to push it
through. Helen had to make sure there were children like Michael who
could lose their homes if the funding ever collapsed.
"There is a way out of this," said Michael. "There has to be."
"What?" Helen's hand jerked away from her face. "Michael, I'm open
to suggestions. I've just spent four months scavenging the whole of
Mother Earth for additional funding. It's not there."
"Well." Michael rolled his eyes toward the ceiling and then brought
them back down to meet Helen's gaze. "Have you tried a com burst out to
Yan Su on the Colonial Affairs Committee? There might be some U.N.
money we can dredge up."
Ben snorted. "Oh, come on, Michael. The U.N. pay to keep a colony
running? Their business is keeping colonies scraping and begging." As a
younger man, Helen knew, Ben had been strongly sympathetic with the
Bradbury Separatist movement on Mars—the same movement that had
blossomed into the Bradbury Rebellion and, for five short, violent
years, Bradbury Free Territory. Because of that, he still took a very
dim view of the United Nations and their off-Earth colonial policies.
She had to admit he was partly right. Since the Bradbury Rebellion,
the C.A.C.'s sole function had been to make sure nothing like that
ever happened again. Hence, the licensing restrictions. No colony could
manufacture space shuttles or long-distance ships. No colony could
manufacture communications satellites, although they were graciously
allowed to repair the ones they had. There was a whole host of other
hardware and spare parts that either never got licensed or were taxed
to the Sun and back again.
Most of the time that didn't bother Helen. She dealt with the C.A.C.
through her friend Yan Su, and so far Su had been willing to help
whenever she could. Now, though, they were coming head-to-head with
the old, frightened public policies.
"You think they want to deal with ten thousand refugees?" countered
Michael calmly. "It's got to be cheaper to let us stay where we're at
than to pay for processing ten thousand new resident-citizen files."
Helen nodded absently. She found, to her shame, she was not ready to
admit that that avenue had been shut off almost a year ago. Maybe she
could try again.
Now is not the time for pride, she reminded
herself firmly.
You've begged everybody else. Why not the
government?
"Yan Su helped put us up here," said Michael, more to Ben than to
Helen. "Maybe she can help keep us up here." Ben's only response was to
turn a little pinker and look sour.
As little as she liked to admit it, Michael was right. It was time
for last resorts. Without their three major funding sources, they were
not going to be able to meet their payroll. They could buy some time by
laying off the nonpermanent residents and sending them back to Mother
Earth, but then they wouldn't be able to complete their research
projects and they'd lose yet more money.
Helen looked at the time delay again. Venus and Earth were moving
out of conjunction. If she put this off, the time delay was only going
to get worse, and she didn't want to have to conduct this conversation
through the mail. "Why don't you—"
Movement outside the office cleared the door's view panel. Grace
Meyer stood in front of the door with her arms folded and her
impatience plain on her heavily lined face. Helen suppressed a groan.
What she wanted to do was open the intercom and say, "We're having a
meeting, Grace. Not now." But she held back. Grace had proven herself
willing to make trouble lately, and Venera did not need more trouble.
"We'll finish in a minute, gentlemen," she said instead. "Door.
Open. Hello, Grace," she said, not bothering to put on a smile, as
Grace would know it was false. "What can I do for you?"
Dr. Grace Meyer was a short woman with a milk-and-roses complexion.
Her lab coat was no longer crisp, and her tunic and trousers were as
rumpled as if she'd slept in them. She wore a green kerchief tied over
her short hair, which was the same strawberry blond as when she'd moved
to Venera fifteen years ago. Grace was a long-lifer. She was actually
twice Helen's age, even though she looked only half that old.
Grace nodded to Ben and Michael and then turned all her attention
to Helen. "I heard about U Washington."
Helen sighed. "The only thing that travels faster than bad news is
bad news about you personally." Ben and Michael did not smile. Ben
looked grim. Michael looked like he was trying to calculate the
probable outcome of this scenario so he could ready his responses.
"What about U Washington?" asked Helen.
Grace glanced at Ben and Michael. In that glance, Helen read that
Grace would like to ask them to leave but couldn't quite work out how.
And
I'll be damned if I'll help you, Helen thought.
"Helen," Grace started again, "there are still sources of money out
there. If we shift emphasis just a little—"
Here it comes. "To the possibility of life on Venus?"
Grace leaned across the desk. "You saw my new grant from Biotech 24.
That's good money, Helen. The absorbers—"
"Are a complex set of benzene rings with some strange sulfuric
hangers-on under heat and pressure."
Grace was a chemist who had come to Venera to help look for the
ultraviolet absorber in the Venusian clouds. The clouds were mostly
transparent to ultraviolet, but there were bands and patches that
absorbed all but the very lowest end of the UV wavelengths. For years,
no one had been able to work out what was happening. Grace and her team
had isolated a large, complex carbon, oxygen, sulfur molecule that
interacted with the sulfuric acid in the clouds and the UV from the
Sun, so it was constantly breaking apart, reforming and recreating
more of itself. Which was fine; it had won her awards and acclaim, and
brought Venera a lot of good publicity.
The problem was, Grace was trying to get the compound, which she
called "the absorber" for simplicity's sake, classified as life.
Helen got slowly to her feet. She was not tall, but she had a few
centimeters on Grace and didn't mind using them. Especially now. She
did not need this. "Your absorbers are not life. No funding university
or independent research lab we've had on board for the last ten years
has said it could be qualified as life, or even proto-life."
Grace held her ground. "But there's—"
"There's one little company that's got more of an existence
instream than out in reality. It's willing to gamble on your idea this
is some kind of alien autocatalytic RNA." Grace subsided just a little,
but Helen wasn't ready to. The past months had been
too much on top of the past year, all the past years. All he fighting,
all the frustration, all the time wasted,
wasted on stupid,
petty money-grubbing and useless personal projects. I've read your
papers, Grace. I've read them all, and you know what? I wish I'd tried
harder to get you to leave it alone, you've directly contributed to the
image of this base as a useless piece of dream ware. You have cost us,
Grace. You personally have cost all of us!"
The intercom chimed again. "What is it?" demanded Helen icily. She
needed to take the call. She needed to stop yelling at Grace. She was
falling out of control, and she could not afford that. Grace could
still make trouble—publicize internal dissension, that kind of thing.
There was plenty she could do. Plenty she would do. Helen needed to
stop.
"Ummm… Dr. Failia?" The screen flickered to life to show a slender
young man with clear, sandy-brown skin and thick black hair. Behind
him, a floor-to-ceiling view screen displayed the ragged gray cliff,
possibly the edge of one of the continent-sized plateaus that broke the
Venusian crust.
"Yes, Derek?" Helen tried to smooth the impatience out of her voice.
Derek Cusmanos headed the survey department. Actually, Derek and his
fleet of drones
were the survey department. He always did
his job well. He had done nothing to deserve her anger.
"I… I'm getting some pictures in from one of the drones near Beta
Regio that you need to see, Dr. Failia."
Helen's fingers twitched as she tried not to clench her hands into
fists. "This is not a good time, Derek. Shoot me up a file and I'll go
over it—"
"No, Dr. Failia." Strain tightened Derek's voice. "You really need
to see this right now."
Curiosity and concern surfaced together in Helen's mind. She glanced
back at Ben and Michael, who both returned blank stares. A glance at
Grace produced a shrug and a pair of spread hands.
"All right, Derek," said Helen. "Show me."
Without another word, Derek pushed his chair back so they had a
clear view of his wall screen. Helen heard him give soft
orders to his desk to display the current uplink.
The screen's view changed. The gigantic plateau wall receded into
the distance. In its place stood a smaller, rounded canyon wall, the
kind that typically bordered the ancient lava channels. On the canyon's
cracked floor, Helen saw something sticking up out of the ground. Derek
gave another order. The view zoomed in.
The new, tighter view showed a perfectly circular shaft protruding
from the Venusian ground.
"Oh my God," whispered Michael. Helen just got out of her chair and
walked slowly forward until her nose almost touched the intercom screen.
It was not anything that should have been there, but there it was.
It was circular. It had a cap on it. Its gray sides glinted dully in
Venus's ashen light, and it sank straight into the bedrock.
"This is live," said Derek from his post off-screen. "I'm getting
this in right now from SD-25."
"You've done a diagnostic?" cut in Ben. He supervised Derek's
"department." "The drone is functioning on spec?"
"On spec and in the green," said Derek. "I… I didn't believe what I
was seeing, so I sent SD-24 down after it. This is what I'm getting
from SD-24." He gave another order and the view shifted again. Now they
looked down from above, as if the camera drone perched on the canyon
wall, which it probably did.
The capped shaft sat there, smooth and circular and utterly
impossible. Even Venus, which had produced stone formations seen
nowhere else in the solar system, had not created those smooth lines,
that flattened lid.
"Well," said Ben. "I don't remember putting that there."
"Derek," said Helen quietly, "I want you to keep both drones
on-site. I want that thing recorded from every possible angle. I want
it measured and I want its dimensions and position to the millimeter.
We'll get a scarab down there to look at it."
"Yes, Dr. Failia." Derek sounded relieved that someone else was
making the decisions.
"Well done, young man," she added.
"Thank you, Dr. Failia."
The intercom cut out and Helen turned slowly around. "Do I have to
say
it?" she asked dryly.
"You mean that if that's what it looks like—" began Ben.
"We have evidence of life on Venus?" Grace folded her arms. her
green eyes gleamed brightly. "Oh, please, Helen. I'd love to
hear you say it, just once."
A muscle in Helen's temple spasmed. "Now is not the time to be
petty,
Grace."
Grace smiled. "Oh no, not petty, Helen. But you'll have to allow me
a
little smugness. I've been shouting in the wilderness for years now.
If this bears out—"
"
If this bears out." Ben emphasized the first word heavily.
"Venus has thrown up some landscapes that make the old face on Mars
look passe." He pushed himself to his feet. "Kevin is on shift. I'll
have him outfit us a scarab ay-sap." Kevin Cusmanos was Derek's older
brother. He was also chief engineer and pilot for the surface-to-air
explorer units known as scarabs, which transported people to and from
the Venusian surface. "I assume you're coming down to see what's what?"
Ben looked pointedly at Helen.
"Of course," she answered. "And Michael's coming with us." She
looked to him for approval and he nodded. His face held a kind of
stunned wonder as the implications filtered through him. Helen knew
exactly how he felt. If this was played out, it meant so many things.
It meant human beings were not alone in the universe. It meant there
was
not only intelligent life out there somewhere but it had also left its
traces on Venus.
It meant money for Venera.
Grace opened her mouth, but Helen held up her hand. "Not this run,
Grace. Next one, if it turns out to be more than rocks and heat
distortion."
Keep up the patter, Helen. You do not know what's
really down there. You only know what it looks like.
Somewhat to Helen's surprise, Grace just nodded and stepped aside
for Ben as he hurried out the door. Helen did not, however, miss the
purely triumphant smile that spread across her face.
Can't blame her, I suppose. "If that's what it looks like,"
she repeated out loud.
"If that's what it looks like, all our old problems are over with,
and we'll have a set of brand-new ones," said Michael. "But oh my god…"
Helen touched his arm. "I quite agree. Go grab your gear, Michael,
and tell Jolynn and the boys you won't be home for supper."
"Yes, ma'am." He snapped a mock salute and hurried out the door.
Grace and Helen faced each other for a long moment. "Well," said
Grace brightly, "I think I'll go reorganize my files. I think there's
going to be some new work coming in." She left, and the door slid shut
behind her.
Finally alone, Helen reached up and untied her scarf. Her long white
hair fell down around her shoulders. She combed her fingers through it,
feeling how each strand separated and fell, brushing her cheeks and
shoulders. It felt coarser than she remembered it feeling when she was
a young woman. Coarser and yet more fragile, like its owner.
Let this work out, she prayed silently.
I don't care
if I have to spend the next fifty years apologizing to Grace Meyer.
This could save us all. Please, let it work out right.
* * *
Less than five hours later, Helen, too on edge to remember she ought
to be tired and hungry, unstrapped herself from a second crash-couch.
This one was in the little dormitory aboard Scarab Fourteen. The scarab
itself crawled across the Venusian surface, following the signal output
of Derek Cusmanos's two drones.
Because it was Kevin Cusmanos's policy to always have two of
Venera's twenty scarabs ready to go in case of emergency, heading to
the surface had been a matter of grabbing overnight bags and calling on
Adrian Makepeace, the duty pilot for the afternoon shift. Kevin said
he'd take the board down himself, but he wanted Adrian's experience in
the copilot's seat.
Scarab Fourteen was a clone of all the other scarabs owned and
operated by Venera Base—a wedge-shaped, mobile laboratory that could
both fly and roll. They were designed to take a
team of up to seven researchers plus two crew members to almost any
spot on the Venusian surface that wasn't covered in lava. Built wide
and
low to the ground, they were practical but not comfortable. Adrian,
Helen noticed, seemed to be developing a permanent stoop and a
tendency to walk sideways from all the time he spent in them.
Designing for the heat and pressure of the Venusian surface had
proved incredibly difficult. That was one of the reasons Venera floated
through the clouds. The surface was an oven. Up in the clouds, the
temperature was close to the freezing point of water. Down here, they
had to carry layers of insulation and heavy-duty coolant tanks that
had to be recharged and refrozen after each trip.
Helen picked her way between the crash-couches, rocking slightly
with the motion of the treads until she emerged into the main corridor.
Ben and Michael had gone ahead of her and already crowded behind
Kevin's and Adrian's chairs in the command area. They all stared
through the main window that wrapped around the scarab's nose.
The scarab ground its careful way across the nightside of Venus.
Outside, the cracked surface of Ruskalia Planitia glowed with the heat
it radiated, creating a quilt of deep reds, bright oranges, and clear,
clean yellow. Overhead, the light reflected off the clouds, lending
them the color and texture of molten gold being stirred by some
invisible hand.
Kevin, a cautious, quiet man, who was almost twice as broad in the
shoulders as his younger brother, kept his gaze flickering between the
map displays and the window which showed them Beta Regio, a ragged wall
of living fire wavering in the distance.
Coming down several kilometers from the whatever-it-was had seemed
prudent. They did not want to land accidentally on something important.
As Beta Regio grew larger, the plain under the scarab's treads
became rougher. Small, knife-backed ridges, blood red with escaping
heat and blurred by the thick atmosphere, rose out of the plain. The
closer they came to Beta Regio, the higher the ridges rose, until they
became ragged walls. At last, Scarab Fourteen drove down a glowing
corridor, following the path carved by a river of ancient lava.
A million similar paths spread out around the various Venusian
highlands. Kevin drove the scarab gently over the rocks and swells,
guided by the global positioning readout and the signals from his
brother's drones.
The lava trail dead-ended at a sharp, smooth cliff that shone a
livid orange. Some coal-bright sand rolled lazily along the brilliant
ground, brushing against the hatchway set into the living rock.
"Venera Base," said Kevin in the general direction of the radio
grill. "This is Scarab fourteen." It was somehow comforting to see he
was staring, as was Adrian.
As are we all. "We have the…
target in sight. Are you getting our picture?"
"We're getting it, Boss." Helen almost didn't recognize Charlotte
Murray's voice, with its undertone of uncertainty, as if she were torn
between fear and awe.
Helen understood the feeling. Her own eyes ached from staring at the
brightly shining artifact. It was a perfectly circular shaft, about two
meters across, that protruded half a meter out of the rugged surface.
It glowed red hot, like its surroundings. Its lid had a series of,
what?—handles? locks?—spaced evenly on all the sides she could see.
She glanced at Ben and saw his thoughts shining plainly on his face.
It had to be a hatchway. It couldn't be anything else. Someone had
built it there. That was the only explanation.
She knew he was not about to say any of that out loud, however. It
wouldn't do. It was bad science and poor leadership, neither of which
Ben would tolerate.
"Well"—she straightened up—"who's coming out to take a look?"
"Dr. Failia, you're not—" began Kevin. Helen silenced him with a
glance. He was probably right. It probably was not a good idea for an
eighty-something who was behind on her med trips to don a heavy
hardsuit and go outside on Venus for a bit of a ramble.
But I'll be damned if I'm staying behind to watch this through
the window.
"Right behind you, Helen," said Ben. Michael didn't say anything. He
just headed down the narrow central corridor toward the changing area
at
the back of the scarab.
Helen rolled her eyes and followed, with Ben and Adrian filing after
her. As copilot, Adrian's primary job was monitoring, or
baby-sitting, any extravehicular activities. The EVA staging area took
up most of the scarab's wide back end. Still, there somehow never
seemed to be quite enough room for even three people to get into the
bulky hardsuits.
The hardsuits themselves consisted of two layers. The soft,
cloth-lined inner suit went directly over a person's clothes. This
layer
carried the coolants circulating in microtubules drawn from tanks which
were pulled from the freezer and strapped, along with the O2 packs,
over the shoulders.
Then the pressure shell was assembled. Based on the hardsuits used
in very deep industrial sea diving, it kept the user's personal
pressure at a comfortable one atmosphere. It was also heavy as all
get-out. Despite the internally powered skeletons, every time she put
one on, Helen felt like a clunky monster from outer space.
But it was all necessary. The best simulations they had suggested
that a person exposed to Venus's surface temperature and pressure would
flash-burn a split second before any remaining chemical residue was
squashed flat.
Finally, Helen locked down her helmet. The edges of the faceplate
lit up with the various monitor readouts and the control icons. Helen
had never liked the icons. They were line-of-sight controlled and she
found them clumsy to use. Adrian looped the standard tool belt around
her waist and stood back. "Check one, check one, Dr. Failia." Adrian's
voice came through her helmet's intercom. Following routine, Helen
waved her hand in front of her suit's chest camera. "Reading you,
Scarab Fourteen," she said. The monitors in each hardsuit were slaved
to the scarab for earliest possible detection of mechanical trouble.
"And we have you, Dr. Failia," replied Adrian, glancing at the wall
monitors. "Check two, check two, Dr. Godwin." The routine was repeated
with Ben and Michael. Helen leaned against the wall and tried not to
think too much about what waited outside. The picture had burned itself
into her mind. It was an artificial structure, no question there. She
couldn't wait until the rest of the solar system saw it. Good God,
they'd say, there was somebody else out here or there had been. Her
Venus, her beautiful, misunderstood twin to Earth, housed or had housed
intelligent life…
Steady Helen. Remember, you still don't know
anything.
The checks on Ben and Michael's suits came up green, and Adrian let
them all move into the airlock. He swung the hatch shut behind them.
The suits maintained pressure for their inhabitants, but the airlock
had to equalize the pressure inside and outside before the hatch would
open. That meant pumping the room up to a full ninety atmospheres
worth of pressure.
As the pump started chugging, Ben turned toward Helen. "Well, it's
either aliens or the biggest practical joke in human history."
"If we open it up and a bunch of those springy worms fly out, we'll
know, right?" said Michael, carefully bending his knees to sit on a
bench he couldn't quite see.
"Would they fly out, under pressure?" asked Helen. "Or would they
just sort of pop and bounce?"
"That's one for Ned and the atmospherics people." Michael's hands
moved restlessly, tapping against his thighs to some internal rhythm.
There seemed to be nothing else to say. Each of them lapsed into
silence, thinking their own thoughts, making their own calculations or
dreaming of their own futures. It took about fifteen minutes to
pressurize the airlock. Right now, it felt like hours.
But finally the gauges all blinked green. Ben worked the levers on
the outer hatch and swung it open.
"Good luck, Team Fourteen," came Adrian's voice.
One by one the governing board stepped out onto the glowing
Venusian surface. Helen had never been so aware of being
watched—monitored by her suit, overseen by Adrian and all Scarab
Fourteen's cameras, followed by her colleagues, tracked by Derek's
drones, which sat dormant on their own little treads, a short distance
from the target object.
She took refuge in chatter. She activated the general intercom icon.
"Failia to Scarab Fourteen," she said. "Are you receiving?"
"Receiving loud and clear, Dr. Failia," answered Adrian. "Our
readings say all suits green and go."
"All green and go out here," she returned. "Except Dr. Godwin
forgot the marshmallows."
"That was on
your to-do list, Helen," shot back Ben. Helen
smiled. That had been an early experiment. The marshmallow exposed to
the Venusian atmosphere had not roasted, however. It had scrunched up
and vaporized. The egg they'd attempted to fry on the rock had
exploded.
The memory spread a smile across Helen's face and made it easier to
concentrate on the way in front of her. The cracks in the crust could
be wide enough to catch a toe in, sending a person tumbling down in a
most undignified fashion and wasting time while they were helped back
to their feet—if their suit held up to the fall. If it didn't, there'd
be nothing left to help up.
Helen dismissed that thought but held her pace in check with
difficulty. She did not want to waste any more time. She wanted to
sprint on ahead, but she had to settle for a slow march.
Still, they got steadily closer to the target. The closer they got,
the more obvious it became that the object had to be artificial. It
was indeed perfectly circular. The smooth sides rose about a half meter
out of the rock. A series of smaller spheres protruded from it. For a
moment, the three of them all lined up in front of the thing, examining
it in reverent silence.
"Okay." The word came out of Michael like a sigh. "What's the
procedure? Measure it first?"
"Measure it first," said Helen.
Slowly, Helen, Michael, and Ben circled the target in a strange,
clumsy dance, recording everything yet again and measuring all of it.
Yes, the drones had technically done all of this, but that was the
machine record. This was the human record, and they needed it to help
prove that this object was not just the result of some computer
graphics and hocus-pocus.
The shaft was exactly forty-four centimeters in height and one and a
half meters in diameter. A second, apparently separate section rested
on or was attached to the top. That section was also one and a half
meters in diameter but was only ten centimeters thick. Small, spherical
protrusions, each appearing to be ten centimeters across, were attached
to the sides of the upper section (like somebody'd stuck a half-dozen
oranges there, Ben noted), equally spaced at sixty-degree intervals and
attached by some undetermined means. A small circle, eight point three
centimeters in diameter, had been inscribed three point six-four
centimeters from the outer edge of the top section.
"Well, you're the expert, Ben," said Helen. "Is it or is it not
naturally occurring?"
Ben's helmet turned toward her. "You're kidding, right, Helen?"
"No, I'm not." Helen remained immobile. "I want this all for the
record."
"Okay, then." There came a brief shuffling noise that might have
been Ben shrugging inside his suit. "In my opinion, based on the
observations of the previous robotic investigation and my own two eyes,
this is not a naturally occurring formation."
"To my knowledge, no one on Venera Base has ever authorized
construction of such an object," added Helen.
"Are you going to open it, Helen, or can I go ahead?" Michael asked
mildly.
Helen bit her lip. Part of her wanted to call down a whole team to
swarm over the thing, analyzing every molecule before they did anything
else. She told herself that was the good scientist part of herself.
The truth was somewhat less flattering.
I'm afraid of what we're doing, of what might, or might not,
happen next.
"If you want to try, Michael, be my guest." Helen stepped back,
hoping no one realized she was giving in to the private ear
that bubbled, unwelcome, out of the back of her mind.
Michael walked around the hatch. He ran his fingers over the small
circle set flush against the lid. He walked around the shaft again.
Finally, he grasped two of the protrusions and leaned to the right.
The hatch slid slowly, unsteadily, sideways. A huge white cloud
rushed out. Michael lurched backward.
"Steam?" said Ben incredulously. "There was water in there?" There
was no water on the surface of Venus. Some particles in the clouds, but
other than that, nothing.
"No analysis on that," came back Adrian. "Sorry."
"Not your fault," murmured Helen.
The cloud evaporated, and they all bent over the dark shaft. The
tunnel sank straight into the bedrock. Their helmet lights shone on the
bottom about four, maybe five, meters down. The first ten centimeters
or so of rock around the mouth glowed brightly, but after that, it
darkened to a shiny black, shot through with charcoal-gray veins. Thick
staples had been shoved into the rock just below the glow-line, making
what appeared to be the widely spaced rungs of a ladder.
Five sets of eyes stared. Three cameras recorded the ladder. One
recorded the doctors as they waited. Nothing happened. Well, nothing
new happened.
Helen straightened up and looked at her colleagues. Ben and Michael
returned her gaze. She saw the awe tinged with ashamed fear in their
eyes and felt a little better.
"All right, gentlemen," she said. "Let's go meet the neighbors."
One careful step at a time, she climbed down into the shaft.
What none of them saw, not with their cameras, not with their own
eyes, was how one of the outcroppings on the side of Beta Regio crawled
a little closer to the hatchway, as if to get a better look.
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Chapter Two
The clouds of Home hung low overhead, pushing thick, yellow fingers
deep into the clear. Harvest flies swarmed around them, feasting on
spoiling algae or floater larvae. Here and there, a solitary shade
darted into the swarm, skimmed off a few flies, and soared away.
There should be a thousand of them, thought T'sha as she
watched the tiny bird.
Where have they all gone? Why are the flies
winning?
It was not just the absence of birds that disturbed the day. It was
the smell, or the lack of it. The wind supporting her body blew light
and sterile. It should have been heavy with salt, sweat, and rich,
growing life. The dayside currents never blew empty from the living
highlands. Except, today they did.
T'sha tilted her wings to slow her flight. This was not good.
According to the reports, the winds had been reseeded with nutritive
monocellulars not twelve miles from here. Had the seed been bad, or had
the planting failed to take? Had they underestimated the imbalance on
the microscopic layers here? If they had, what else had they
underestimated?
It might be something else, whispered a treacherous voice
in the back of her mind.
No, she chided herself.
I will not believe blasphemous
rumors.
People were not straining the winds right off the highlands to take
fresh monocellulars for their homes. There had been patrols. They had
found nothing. No one would be guilty of so much greed, so much sin. At
least, not yet. Things had not gone so
far yet.
At least, they shouldn't have. But winds that were empty of algaes
and krills and other nutritional elements were becoming more common.
Worse, there was word from the Polars that some of their winds were
becoming currents of poison. A permanent migration down to the Rough
Northerns was being debated even now if the Northerners could be
persuaded to accept such a move.
Below T'sha spread the canopy, bright with its mottled golds, blues,
and reds. From this distance, it looked healthy, ready for a casual
single harvester or a concentrated reaping. But before too many more
hours had passed, T'sha knew she was going to have to go down in there
while the team confirmed what she suspected: that there would be too
many flies down there too and not enough birds or puffs to clear them
out. They would travel deep into the underside between the canopy and
the crust and see the canopy's roots withering.
It was just as well the area itself was lightly traveled. She
scanned the horizon in all directions and, apart from her own team, saw
only one distant sail cluster. Her headset told her that it was the
Village Gaith. T'sha reflexively gave orders to send greetings to the
city and its speakers.
The rest of her team worked less than a half mile away. Their
bright-white kites and stabilizers billowed in the sterile wind. T'sha
could almost feel the engineers glancing nervously toward her. She was
not behaving as she should. She was not a private person anymore. She
was an ambassador to the High Law Meet. Her duties, in addition to
making promises on behalf of her city and representing her city to the
legislature and courts, included making people nervous. She was
supposed to be hovering around the edges of the team, waiting for them
to give her the words to carry back to the Meet.
Come now; time to play your part. You want the truth; you need
to go collect it. T'sha banked, curving her path back toward her
team.
You're doing no good drifting out here sniffing and brooding.
A waver in the air currents over her shoulder made her glance back.
A new orange kite sailed on the wind. T'sha turned in a
tight circle to read the signal lights flashing on its frame. Her bones
bunched briefly.
What does D'seun want here?
Like T'sha, D'seun served as an ambassador to the High Law Meet. She
respected him as a close reasoner and an even-minded legislator. His
birth village had died when he was still a child, but, against great
odds, he had risen to become ambassador of his adopted city. She had
wished many times they did not hover on opposite sides of every debate
concerning the search for New Home. D'seun could only be here to check
up on her team. The samples they were analyzing would help measure how
critical the ecological breakdown here on Home was and so help
determine how much time they had to make decisions regarding the new
world.
She considered heading straight back to the survey team. But then
she decided that keeping D'seun at a distance from her people might be
advisable.
Let them get as much done as possible without him fluttering
behind and making suggestions. The circumstances here might not be as
bad as they seem.
T'sha fanned her wings, letting the wind proceed without her and
waiting for D'seun's kite to approach.
His kite was a pleasant hybrid with sails of orange skin and gold
ligaments. Startling green scales dotted the shell-strip struts. Its
engine was shut down, and it coasted on nothing more than the power of
the wind. D'seun balanced half-inflated on the kite's perches. He
raised both forehands in greeting to her.
T'sha spread her forehands in return. As D'seun and his kite drew
near her, T'sha stilled her wings and let the wind pull her along so
she could keep level with him.
"Good luck, Ambassador T'sha," he said pleasantly, shifting sideways
to make room for her on the perches. "Will you join me?"
"Good luck, Ambassador D'seun. Certainly, I will." There was no
disagreement between them so great that courtesy could be disregarded.
T'sha cupped her wings to lift herself up slightly and wrapped all
twenty-four fingers around the kite's
perches. Then she deflated herself until her back and crest were level
with D'seun's. They touched forehands formally.
D'seun was even younger than T'sha was. The bright gold of his skin
sparkled strong and clear in the daylight, leaving his heavy maze of
tattoos, both official and personal, in dark relief. His white and blue
crest, which marked him as an Equatorial, streamed all the way down to
his shoulderblades. T'sha suspected both the crest and the skin were
enhanced. Fully inflated, he was only slightly smaller than she was,
something T'sha was ashamed to admit she found disconcerting. Even her
birth father was only three-quarters of her size.
D'seun spoke to the kite in its command language, softly ordering
it to change its drift so they angled away from the survey team's
distant sails. Disquiet gathered in the pockets between T'sha's bones.
"What brings you out here?" T'sha asked, deliberately keeping the
question conversational.
"I had to call into the High Law Meet to finish some reportings."
D'seun settled his weight back on his posthands, leaving his forehands
free to stroke the kite's ligaments. "So I was there when the Seventh
Team returned."
The Seventh? Oh, no. T'sha's mother had still been a child
when ten worlds had been selected as candidates for New Home. T'sha had
heard the memories of the raging debate as to whether Number Seven,
which had… complications… should be included in the roster of test
worlds. Ambassador Tr'ena, one of T'sha's predecessors in the
ambassadorship of Ca'aed, had lobbied hard against its inclusion. He
had lost. T'sha had had to deal with the consequences of that loss.
D'seun, on the other hand, had risen to the rank of ambassador on
the strength of what he and the Seventh Team had accomplished on that
same world.
D'seun turned his gaze from the kite's ligaments. "The seedings
have taken on their candidate. The life base is spreading. We have
found New Home."
"They have taken on this candidate." T'sha pushed her muzzle
forward. "What about the others?"
D'seun swelled, as if he carried the best of news. "None of the
other seedings were successful. It is Number Seven, or it is nothing."
"There are other worlds out there. Millions of them."
"We do not have the time to test those millions."
T'sha strained the wind through her teeth. It held nothing, no
taste, no texture, no scent. Empty air. Good for nothing but carrying
flies and bad news.
"You came all this way to tell me this? You could have sent a
message. I do wear a radio." She tapped the fine neural mesh of her
headset for emphasis.
T'sha searched D'seun's stance and bearing, trying to get some feel
for what he wanted. Despite his confident size, he was not at ease. He
gripped and released the perches with each hand in turn so that he
rocked unsteadily. His eyes darted about behind their lenses, looking
for something other than her.
"There are things I wished to say to you directly," said D'seun
blandly.
T'sha's posthands clenched the perch a little more tightly. "What
are they? Do not speak against this candidate world? Do not say that if
we must take this candidate, we must approach the New People and tell
them plainly what we have come to New Home to do?"
D'seun inflated himself a little bit more. "The Seventh is the only
planet where the life base has taken." Light sparkled against his skin
and his tattoos. He had several new patterns running down his
shoulder—a kite with billowing sails, a pattern of interlinking
diamonds, and an ancient pictorial symbol for movement.
T'sha turned her gaze from D'seun's personal vanity. "Did the
Seventh Team also report that the activities of the New People are
increasing?" Her friend Pe'sen had monitor duty at the Conoi portal
cluster. Now and then, he slipped her advance notice of team reports.
"That's all to the good," said D'seun calmly.
"Is it?" T'sha watched the cloud fingers in front of them with their
haze of flies. Perhaps some hunter birds could be imported from the
higher latitudes. They adapted well and needed
little breeding supervision.
"What else could it be? Life must expand. Life helps life." The
intensity of his words rippled the air. She could feel them against the
skin of her muzzle.
Is that what you believe? Or are you only saying that because
you know it's what I believe? With D'seun, this could be a
question. She had seen him use partial truths to manipulate speakers
and ambassadors before.
"Not all life views the world, perhaps I should say worlds, in the
same way." T'sha pointed her muzzle toward the thick, sulfurous
columns of haze and rot. "We see this abundance of flies as a danger
signal. How do the flies see it?"
D'seun held up one forehand. "Intelligent life understands the void
must be filled." That was an old truism, one that had never been put to
the test. D'seun knew that as well as T'sha did.
"But filled with what?" muttered T'sha.
D'seun deflated until he was level with her again. "It is a
question, certainly."
"No, it is
the question," said T'sha. "And it is the one
we are not asking."
She watched the bones under his skin expand and contract as he
resisted the urge to swell up and tower over her. "
You
certainly are."
"Because someone must." She had carefully gone over all the
available memories of the New People. They themselves were as hard to
see as shellfish in their shells, but their creations were easily
found. Their creations existed on three planets and one satellite of
the Seventh World system, and one of those planets was Seventh World
itself.
What did not seem to exist was any sign of life outside the shells,
which was what breathed life into the debates. No good information had
yet been acquired about their home world. They were obviously
intelligent, but if they were not actively spreading life to New Home,
were they making legitimate use of its resources? And if they were not
making legitimate use of its resources, what stopped the People from
doing so? There were those who argued that a system that already
supported life was the best place to move themselves to. It would
provide community, knowledge, and resources. D'seun was one of those,
although he generally argued much more about knowledge and resources
than he did about community.
Until now, of course.
D'seun deflated, becoming small, tight, and hard. "We need a new
haven and new resources to ride out this imbalance." He sounded like a
recording, running over and over until the feel of his words
overwhelmed his audience and they could draw in nothing else.
Remain calm. Remain calm. You are an ambassador now and do not
have the luxury of unchallenged opinion. T'sha leaned closer,
seeking to draw him out. "Have you considered that contact with the New
People will put an end to many questions?"
D'seun inflated slightly. "I agree, but this is not the right time.
We must establish life beyond a few building blocks. We must be able to
prove to the New People that we are serious about assisting with life's
common goals."
Are you just trying this out on me? Why aren't you presenting
this to the debate clusters? "But do we know they are common
goals? Do we know the New People see things as we do?"
D'seun rippled his wings. "You and yours are too afraid of this
thing we do. This is not greed. We need a new home, one where we can
organize and arrange the life which supports us, where we can wait out
what is happening on this old home of ours."
"I do not accuse you of greed," said T'sha.
Not yet. "But
you are right. Those I support act from fear. I am as afraid of taking
this action as you and yours are afraid of not taking it." She leaned a
little closer, her muzzle almost touching his. She wanted every word to
sink into him. "Fear fills the air around you until you cannot feel
what is truly happening to you." She pulled back and let herself swell
until she felt her bones press hard against her skin. "We are all
afraid. That is why we must question everything we do. We must act on
our fear, but we must not act out of fear."
D'seun ruffled his bright crest, raising and spreading its
tendrils. "I feel your words. Do not think I am numb. But raising yet
more uncertainty at this time could be disastrous. We must be sure, all
of us."
T'sha looked down at him. He did not flinch or subside. He just
returned her gaze.
At last, she asked, "What do you want?"
"I want to poll your city and its families. I have made a formal
request to the High Law Meet. It will be sent to you within the hour."
T'sha's bones trembled.
I should have known this was coming. I
should have read it in the way that flies are clustering. "You
question my fitness as ambassador?"
"No." D'seun's reply was easy, simple, and T'sha didn't believe it
for a moment. "I seek to eliminate uncertainty in this great project we
are undertaking. If your doubts truly reflect the doubts of your
families, then it must be widely known."
Anger swelled T'sha until she thought she would float away on the
wind. "Then let us set the polling time. But I tell you, D'seun"—she
leaned close, making sure every word touched him—"I will not be
stilled."
"Neither will the project, T'sha."
Whatever else he had been about to say was cut off by the voice of
T'sha's headset vibrating through her ear. "Ambassador T'sha, this is
Village Gaith. Help. You must help. I am in rot. You must help my
people."
T'sha's wings spread in instant response. "We will be there."
"What's happening?" demanded D'seun.
"Village Gaith. It says it's in rot." She barked a quick transfer
command to her headset. "Engineer K'taan!" she shouted for her team
leader. "We have an emergency in Village Gaith. They are in rot. Take a
sighting and get everyone there as quickly as you can."
Under the sound of her own voice, she heard D'seun give orders to
the kite. It unfurled its wings to their fullest extent and reined in
its tail. The winds swept it up. Its engines added speed. T'sha made
herself compact so as not to add any drag that might slow them down.
The wind grew hard and full as it raced
across her shoulders, pressing the kite into swift motion.
Another rot. How many did that make since the First Mountain last
saw the dayside? How many cities in how many latitudes were dead or
dying, and what was the total refugee count? Two and a half million?
Had it gotten up to three million yet?
She spoke to her headset, telling it to seek details about Village
Gaith. After a few moments, the set murmured back to her.
"Gaith is a Calm Northerns village, with about a thousand
individuals from four different families calling it home. Sixty
percent of the individuals are children. Individuals are good
engineers, have contributed several widely adapted adjustments to
canopy balance in recent years, and have raised several excellent
surveyors and samplers. Its ambassador is T'nain V'gan Kan Gaith. He
has been notified of the emergency at the High Law Meet and is
returning now. Its local speaker is T'gai Doth Kan Gaith."
T'gai. Oh, memory. I haven't seen you since I was declared an
adult. She remembered T'gai's visits to her parents' complex, his
dark-gold skin, and his speaker's tattoos branching out all around his
muzzle. He always had some new point of discussion to raise, some new
poll to try to start. He was all a speaker ought to be—busy, serious,
forward thinking.
How did a rot start in his own village?
She shook herself out of her own thoughts as she realized D'seun was
watching her.
"I'm sorry. You spoke?"
D'seun dipped his muzzle. "I was saying this is your latitude. You
should warn the cities."
Good, good. Pay attention, T'sha. There's work to do. "Yes.
Of course." She commanded her headset to call Ca'aed.
"I hear you, Ambassador," returned her city's deep voice.
"Ca'aed, there's an emergency in Village Gaith. Warn the downwind
cities to take quarantine precautions. I'm on my way to assess the
damage. I'll have more news soon."
Even as she spoke the words, a fresh finger of wind touched her.
This one was not empty. It was thick with something far too
cloying to be a healthy scent. She could see Gaith in the distance—a
sphere bristling with sails and sensor fronds. It looked peaceful, but
that smell, that too sweet taste…
"I have their location, Ambassador…" Ca'aed paused, and worry
stiffened T'sha's bones. "I can't raise the village. I hear no voice."
T'sha glanced at D'seun, but he was looking straight ahead at Gaith.
It took T'sha's eyes a moment to focus, but then she too saw what was
wrong.
Around even the smallest village, there would be a few citizens
flying freely about their business, but Gaith was surrounded by a
swarm of its own people. They fluttered about the shell and bones like
flies without purpose.
It was the sight of panic.
D'seun spoke to the kite. It brought them around to Gaith's windward
side. They closed on the village, and T'sha saw that its sails and wind
guides were no longer white, as they should have been. Huge patches of
grayish-brown funguslike growths disfigured their surfaces.
The smell of rotting flesh engulfed her. T'sha instantly tightened
in on herself.
Breath of life, bones of mine, what is happening
here? I've never seen one this bad!
The village cried as if hurt just by the wind of her approach. All
around those diseased sails flew its citizens. Now they were close
enough that T'sha could hear their voices—shouting, crying, demanding,
trying to give orders. Above it all, she heard the wordless keening of
the village's pain. It was dying and it did not know how to save
itself. In its fear, it called desperately for its people.
D'seun snatched the bulky caretaker unit from out of the kite's
holder and launched himself into the air. T'sha dipped her muzzle. The
caretaker might be able to speak to the village where a person could
not.
"Engineer K'taan," T'sha bawled into her headset as she launched
herself into the air. "Where are you?"
"Approaching from leeward. We have you in sight."
"Get a catchskin under the village. We can't let the rot fall into
the canopy!"
"Yes, Ambassador!"
Flies clustered everywhere, the eternal flies that should have been
clustered around the clouds. The insects scattered in angry swarms
around her wings. The smell was unbearable. T'sha closed her muzzle
tightly and tried not to think of what was filtering in through her
skin.
Bubbling gray fungus turned the nearest sails slick. Even as she
watched, great patches melted and sagged. Speckled liquid ran down what
was left of the clean white skin. Something unseen whimpered.
"Gaith! Gaith!" T'sha called through her headset. "Answer me! Are
you there?"
No answer. None at all.
D'seun flew straight into the thickest crowd and started forming
them up into an orderly flight chain. As soon as the formation was
spotted, people started flocking toward it, leaving fewer to flap in
panic around the dying village.
T'sha ordered her headset onto a general-call frequency. "This is
T'sha So Br'ei Taith Kan Ca'aed, ambassador for Ca'aed, to anyone who
can hear me. I need Speaker T'gai Doth Kan Gaith at the center of
leeward."
She got no answer. It was possible there was nothing healthy enough
left to hear the call.
Ten yards below the city, K'taan directed a group of four
researchers to stretch out the translucent, life-tight catchsheet. It
wasn't big enough. Two other researchers rushed in, carrying an
additional sheet. They sealed the sheets together and spread them
again. That was just enough if the wind did not take too much. They
needed to get a quarantine blanket around the village as soon as
possible. Why were those not grown generally?
Why is this happening at all?
"Ambassador T'sha."
T'sha wheeled on her wingtip. Behind her floated T'gai. His tattoos
branched all the way to the roots of his crest now, but the crest was
dimmed by age.
"Speaker T'gai." T'sha touched his forehands. "Good luck to you."
"Good luck to you, T'sha. Ambassador T'sha." His crest ruffled
softly.
She tried not to feel the weakness in his words. "Why didn't you
report this?" she asked as gently as she could.
"We thought… we thought…"
We thought we could take care of it. T'sha dipped her
muzzle to let him know she understood. No people wanted to believe
they could fail their city, or even their village. No one wanted the
shame of having to make promises because they were not skilled enough
or rich enough to care for their own, so they struggled in their
silence until it was too late.
There were always dangers, particularly in the smaller villages
such as Gaith, that drifted on their own rather than following in the
wake of a larger, older city. Cortices got too closely bred and became
unable to cognate as required. Builders and assessors went insane and
undid the work they were supposed to enhance. Corals used too many
times without enough interior variety bleached in thin winds. Cancers
took hold of the village's bones.
But now, infections were spreading around the world. A fungus or a
yeast that should have been easy for an engineer to excise would
instead burn through a city, breaking down everything it touched,
sometimes turning from the city and attacking the people.
Even so, that usually took weeks. This… T'sha didn't dare let that
thought go any further.
"We'll talk about that later." T'sha turned her mind to the problem.
"I'm here with Ambassador D'seun and my survey team. We'll send some of
them for kites and other transports. There are several healthy cities
traveling this stream. But first you need to assemble your people.
We'll need to have you checked out to make sure you are carrying
nothing infectious."
We cannot let this spread. We dare not.
T'gai withered. "We must tend our village…"
T'sha swelled gently, trying to calm him with her authority. It felt
strange. He was so much her senior in years. But now, she outranked
him, and she must not shrink from that. "It has gone too far for that,
Speaker. We need to quarantine Gaith. You must call in all the promises
you have owing and divert them to diagnosis and prevention. Your
ambassador will need all your help with that when he returns."
Speaker T'gai dipped his muzzle. "Yes, of course, Ambassador. You
are right."
"Good." She glanced around. The catchsheet was stabilized and
anchored to the village's sail struts. Someone had released a slurry of
inch-long cleaners onto the sails. They slithered across the sails'
skin, ingesting the bubbling growths until the toxicity became too much
and they dropped onto the catchsheet. The skin left behind was almost
transparent. Even as T'sha watched, the wind tore through the skin,
leaving the sail in tatters. The sail mewled and tried to draw in on
itself.
She pulled her gaze away. D'seun had a great line of people gathered
in the orderly chain now. That would be where T'gai could help.
"Find your teachers to keep gathering your people together. Bring
your engineers and doctors. We must determine what's gotten out and how
far it's gone."
"Yes. Yes." The speaker swelled again to the lines and proportions
she knew. "Thank you, Ambassador."
T'sha deflated until she was just a little smaller than T'gai. "With
you, I am still just T'sha, Speaker T'gai." She returned to her normal
size. "Go. We will do what we can."
As she watched T'gai fly away, she tried to enumerate what needed to
be done.
We need a quarantine blanket. We need a team to find what
cortices are still working. A way to repel these flies…
Life gone insane. Life taking more than it needed, swinging from
balance into chaos. T'sha circled until she was upwind of the stench
and the sounds of pain. The canopy was lush underneath them. The wind
had good weight and texture. This rot seemed to be interested in animal
materials; maybe at least the plants below would be safe.
T'sha tensed her bones. They could assume nothing. She'd have to go
down and look. If the rot had gotten down there, they would probably be
forced to cut it out. That made for a
wasteful, inelegant cure, especially with so much of the canopy dying
on its own, but they couldn't risk this getting carried any further.
Who knew what spores were already in the wind? Was this even really
a fungus, or was she being fooled by appearances? T'sha shivered. On
top of it all, here were a thousand more refugees. Some healthy cities
would probably still take them in, but they would also demand hefty
promissory obligations against the time Gaith, or a replacement, could
be regrown. The children huddling under their parents' bellies would be
declared adults before the village was free of its debts.
In an earlier time, some of the adults certainly would have offered
to bind themselves into lifetime slavery to individuals who could help
their children, but that was a practice that had been out of favor for
at least two hundred years. Most teachers said accepting such a promise
came very close to actual greed. Looking on this sight, T'sha was
grateful.
But what sort of promises would T'gai be able to obtain for his
people? They were good engineers, but if too many of them had to be
indentured away to serve other cities, they would never be able to
resurrect their village. They would become permanently homeless,
scrabbling for their right to stay wherever they could find space,
maybe permanently deprived of their votes.
"I've sent word of our situation to the High Law Meet." D'seun
dropped into T'sha's line of sight.
T'sha shook her wings. "There isn't much to report yet."
"Not much to report!" D'seun bobbed up and down as if the sheer
force of his exclamation rocked him. "Gaith is dead and decaying in
front of our eyes! We have to spread the word!"
"Until we have a cause, that will do nothing but raise a panic."
T'sha stopped. "Which is the idea, isn't it?" she murmured. "If the
Law Meet panics, they will approve your candidate world without
debate, won't they?"
"How can you even be thinking of debate?" demanded D'seun. "Surely
this shows us there is no more time. We must make New Home ours or we
will all die!"
A dozen different thoughts, realizations, and responses rippled
through T'sha. But all she said was, "You and my engineers have the
situation under care. I must return to Ca'aed to make sure the latitude
quarantines are coordinated. May I borrow your kite?"
It was not a request he could easily refuse. "I will ask for a
promise against this."
"A proportionate one, I'm certain."
T'sha found the required wind and flew back to the place where
D'seun's kite waited. She gave it orders with the most urgent
modifiers. The kite unfurled its wings without hesitation. Its engines
sang as the air forced through them. T'sha flattened herself against
the perches, wishing the team had brought a dirigible instead. But no
need had been seen, no emergency anticipated. Certainly nothing like
this.
The memories of the gray, bubbling growths coating Gaith's sails and
the black ashlike substance clinging to its walls flew round and round
inside T'sha's mind and she could not banish them.
D'seun had been a little right. This was new and this was deadly.
The High Law Meet did have to be told. But told what? Told how? That
was the next question.
The kite chattered in command language, sending the message on
ahead that they were on an emergency run and traffic should clear the
gates. Everything had some task to keep them busy, but not T'sha. All
she could do was hang on until they reached the walls of Ca'aed.
The kite kept to the clearest routes. T'sha saw dirigibles and other
kites in the distance, but did not ask any to be hailed. Even further
away she saw the sails and walls of the Ca'aed's wake-villages. The
villages saw her as well, and their voices began to pour through her
headset.
"I've heard the message of Gaith. My speakers are on the alert. All
precautions are being taken." This was T'aide, a young and confident
village, strong in its faith of its people. "Good luck, Ambassador."
"Message received from Gaith. The diagnostics are roused." P'teri,
an ancient village that had spread its boundaries so far there was talk
of it growing into its own city. P'teri was cautious
and content, though, and had so far been unwilling to agree to the
expansion. "Good luck, Ambassador."
Terse, protective T'zem came through next. "My people are well. I
will keep them so. Look to Ca'aed, Ambassador."
I do. You may be sure
that I do.
Ca'aed itself shimmered in the distance now, its breadth dominating
the horizon. Kites, dirigibles, and people swarmed around it like
flies. No, no, not like flies. Like hunter birds, like shades, or even
puffs. Ca'aed would not fall to the flies.
Ca'aed was an ancient city. It's pass-throughs, arches, sails, and
gardens had grown huge and richly colored with age. Its highest sails
nearly raked the clouds, and its sensor roots dragged in the canopy.
Where villages skimmed and bobbed on the winds, Ca'aed sailed ponderous
and stately, as if it graciously allowed the winds to carry it along.
T'sha's family had helped the city grow its shells and sails. They
had protected it and been protected by it for thirty generations. They
had been pollers, speakers, teachers, engineers, and ambassadors.
Always, always, they had worked directly with Ca'aed, heard its voice,
helped it live.
No, Ca'aed would not fall.
Ca'aed spread like a person fully inflated with their wings flung
wide. Its walls were deeply creviced, making a thousand harbors into
which to guide its people or their vehicles. It drew people in and
exuded them again, as if people were what it breathed. Its lens eyes
sparkled silver in the daylight. It watched the people come and go so
it could advise them as to their routes and their loads or simply to
wish them good luck. Lacy fronds of sensors stretched between the
sails, constantly testing the winds, looking for riches to steer into
and disease to steer away from. Ca'aed was careful. Ca'aed was well
advised. Ca'aed might act quickly but never rashly.
"No wonder you have no husbands yet," her younger sister T'kel had
teased her once. "Your love is all for the city."
"That is no bad thing," her birth father had replied. "If someone
in the position to make promises does not love the city as well as she
loves the people in it, she may grow careless with her promises and
perhaps overtax its capacities. This can force growth where growth is
not ready or even advisable." He'd been answering T'kel, but his
attention had been on T'sha. That had been while she was being debated
in the general polls as a speaker, but already her father was trying to
convince her to start building a base to become ambassador.
"Welcome home, Ambassador," came Ca'aed's familiar voice from her
headset. "Have you answers from Gaith? Is there a name for its illness?"
"We don't know yet." All T'sha's hands clutched the perches uneasily.
"But you are confident it will be found?"
"Not as confident as I was." T'sha deflated just a little. "I have
to send the kite back to Gaith. Open your gates for me?"
"Always, T'sha. Give me your kite."
T'sha spoke the words to transfer command and Ca'aed took over,
pulling the little kite unerringly into one of its harbors. As the rich
brown walls surrounded them, Ca'aed's welcomers fluttered out of their
cubbyhole and surrounded T'sha in a swarm of reds and greens. They
lighted here and there on her back and wings, tasting the emissions of
her pores and flitting away again for Ca'aed to be sure there were no
dangerous tastes, that she carried nothing hidden with her from Gaith.
But nothing was found, and the pebbled gates at the end of the
harbor, which constantly strained and tested the winds for the
beneficial elements as well as for the harmful ones, opened a portal
for her to dart through. One of Ca'aed's fronds brushed her as she
passed, a touch of reassurance and welcome.
"An old city," her birth father had often said, "becomes as full,
rich, and complex as the canopy underneath, and its life becomes as
tightly intertwined."
T'sha sometimes thought "tangled" would be a better word. The inside
of Ca'aed was decidedly a tangle. Bones braced it, corals defined its
spaces, and ligaments bound its elements together. Plants and animals
gave its walls color, and its air weight and life.
Between them, Ca'aed was a shell full of shells. Small dwellings and
family compounds were tethered to each other and to
the city, but were not part of its essential substance.
Ca'aed's free citizens flew through its chambers, intent on their
various businesses, or merely enjoying the tastes and textures of their
world. Its indentured worked down in the veins and chasms of its
corals, growing, researching, comparing, because the city could not be
wholly aware of the workings of every symbiont and parasite, any more
than a person could be aware of the workings of every pore.
Music, perfumes, voices, flavors filled the air, vying for
attention, pressing against T'sha's skin, filling her up with the
vigor of life. The memory of Gaith made the miasma all the more
precious. The people of Gaith had lost all of this when they lost their
village. But, with care, T'sha might still be able to help them get it
back.
T'sha flew into the tangle of life, angling herself vaguely toward
her family's district. "Ca'aed, I need my brother T'deu. Where is he?"
"Your brother is in the promise trees."
Of course. T'sha beat her wings, turning her flight up
toward the city's sculpted and vented ceiling. The promise trees were
in this finger of the city. She would not have to snag a passing kite.
A solid turquoise and cream carapace encapsulated the promise trees
and kept out not only the winds but all that the winds might carry. The
ligaments that twined around its oval walls and anchored it to Ca'aed's
living bones did not themselves live. They carried neither information
nor nutrition and so could not be used to tamper with anything within
the carapace.
The only entrance to the trees was a long tunnel that was so narrow
that only one person at a time could fly its length. Pink and gold
papillae tasted the air around each entrant, making sure that he or she
was a free citizen of Ca'aed. If the entrant was a stranger to the city
or an indenture, it made sure he or she had received permission from
the city or a speaker to come. If not, the ends of the tunnel would
seal and Ca'aed would call for the district's speaker.
Entering the trees was like flying straight into the canopy. It was
a jungle of leaves, stems, branches, and trunks, all grown into one
another. They spread from the center of the room to the carapace. They
climbed the walls, until patterns of intertwining stems and roots
covered the carapace's grainy hide. All the colors of growing life
shone there in a delicate riot. It all appeared extremely fragile, but
the slightest root was many times stronger than the thickest metal wire
T'sha had ever touched. It was as beautiful to T'sha as any temple.
Inside the trees' veins flowed the DNA records of every registered
promise of the world of Home. Not all promises were registered.
Promises passed every day between friends and family that had no need
to be here, but promises between businesses, between cities and
villages, between ambassadors and any person or any city needed to be
recorded. Their fine tendrils of implication needed to be tracked. In
here were promises of marriage, merger, birth, inheritance, indenture,
trade, service, and sale.
None of this luxuriant growth was necessary, of course. All of the
promise registries could have been contained in a set of cortex boxes,
and in a younger city it might have been, but the beauty and
elaboration of Ca'aed was one of the aspects of it that T'sha had
always loved about her city.
T'deu, T'sha's older brother, hovered near the top of the chamber,
away from the other trackers and registrants who dotted the chamber.
T'deu was an archiver, trained in the reading and tracking of promises.
T'sha wove her way through the maze of stems and branches until the air
of her passage brushed against him. Her brother turned on his wingtip
and leaned forward, rubbing his muzzle joyfully against hers.
"Ambassador Sister!" he said, softly but happily. She and T'deu
shared the same birth mother. His father had entered the marriage
because of a political promise, and hers had been promised in to help
his family when their city fell into trouble. She and T'deu had been
raised together and never lost their friendship, even after they were
both declared adults and sent out to make their own lives. "It is good
to have you here, no matter what the circumstances."
"Thank you, Archiver Brother." T'sha pulled away just a little.
"You heard about Gaith."
He dipped his muzzle. "Ca'aed spread the word to the speakers, and
the speakers have not been silent."
T'sha's bones bunched as she winced, but she smoothed them out.
"Brother, we need to redirect this wind. It is going to
be
used to rush us into an untenable situation."
T'deu peered up at her, as if he could see into her mind and touch
her thoughts. "If you tell me so," he said, but he did not sound
certain.
T'sha accepted his words and dismissed his tone. "I want us to bring
Gaith's body here."
Her brother deflated in a long, slow motion. "That's dangerous,
T'sha—"
"No, listen, there are advantages here. If we give Gaith's engineers
the resources to regenerate and resurrect the city and they give us the
knowledge and experience they gain from the task, we will be able to
turn around and make our own promises with that information, should
this strain of disease spread."
"It will mean bringing in a potential contagion, though," T'deu
reminded her. "You'll have to take a vote on that."
"I'll get the votes. Can you design me a promise that will do the
job?"
"I can design anything you like." T'deu waved one wing at the maze
of stems and branches around them. "I could grow you a tree that would
outline ownership of the clouds above us. Implementing it—"
"Is my job," said T'sha, cutting him off. "Make sure you graft
P'kan's engineers into its branches. They hold several promises against
the city. This will help close those down."
"Of course, Ambassador," T'deu said, deflating with mock servility.
"Anything else?"
"Should fresh thoughts sprout, I'll share them with you."
T'deu moved even closer, making sure his words reached only her.
"Why are you really doing this, Ambassador Sister? It is not only for
the profit of the city, or even for the good of Gaith."
"No," she admitted. For a moment she thought of telling him he did
not need to know, but that was not true. To design a truly effective
promise, he needed to know the ultimate goal,
especially if the promise were complex, as promises dealing with cities
ultimately were. Trying to integrate the wrong person could jeopardize
the entire balance. "I want to be sure Gaith is studied, and studied
immediately. If I leave it free for D'seun to take over, he'll fly the
village's bones all around the world and show everyone what horrors we
are exposing ourselves to if we don't all flock to New Home
immediately."
"He'll still try to use Gaith's illness to overfly you," said T'deu.
T'sha shook her wings. "I won't let him. All D'seun's attention is
fixed on a single point. If he will not voluntarily see the whole
horizon, he must be made to see."
T'deu dipped his muzzle again. "As my Ambassador Sister says. I'll
start growing your promise."
"Thank you, Brother. Good luck." She brushed her muzzle against his
briefly and launched herself back toward the entrance.
And now there are only a thousand meetings to arrange. The
district speakers must hear all of this of course and be brought
around. That could be expensive. I'll have to organize the pollers for
a
citywide referendum, but their schedule should be light right now,
except for the poll D'seun has so thoughtfully called for. T'sha
emerged from the tunnel into the filtered light of the city. She turned
her flight toward the city center and her family's district where she
kept her workspace. "Ca'aed?"
"Yes, Ambassador?" answered the city.
"Ca'aed, I have a case to put to you. It concerns your well-being,
so I cannot move without you."
"What is it?"
As T'sha flew, she told Ca'aed her plan to bring Gaith to the city
to allow Gaith's own citizens to effect its resurrection in return for
sharing their knowledge with Ca'aed's engineers, thus saving the Kan
Gaith years of potential indenture for their food and shelter in some
other city.
Ca'aed was silent for a moment. "We have the room to bring the Kan
Gaith here," it said finally. "Our binding of promises with them is not
strong or detailed, but there is some exchange that could be worked
out." Again, the city paused. T'sha suspected it was mulling over the
conversation T'sha had held with
T'deu. "We do need to know what infects Gaith," Ca'aed went on. "Yes,
bring it here. I agree. I will start working on precautionary plans so
we can implement this action as soon as you have secured the people's
votes."
"Thank you, Ca'aed," said T'sha earnestly. "This is not just to
further my cause with the High Law Meet. There is good for all
concerned here."
"Yes," answered Ca'aed. "I do comprehend the good in this."
Something in the city's voice kept T'sha from asking what else it
comprehended.
T'sha's workspace was a small coral bubble in her family's compound.
The veins holding her records twined all around its insides, spreading
out crooked tendrils of blue and purple. It was not as grand or complex
a space as many ambassadors had, but T'sha preferred to work on the
wing and conduct her meetings and requests in person.
This time though, that would be impossible. She needed all of her
specially trained cortex boxes to organize a meeting of the city's
thirty district speakers and coordinate their schedules. Each speaker,
in turn, would have to reserve time with their chiefs and the pollers
because this was a voting matter. The entire process would take
dodec-hours.
T'sha was not even halfway finished when the room told her D'seun
waited outside.
"Let him in," she said, reluctantly. She was not quite ready for him
yet, but she had no polite way to delay.
D'seun drifted into her workspace. He looked shriveled and settled
at once on a perch.
"Good luck, D'seun. Can I offer you some time in the refresher?
Surely whatever you have to say can wait an hour or two until you are
restored."
"No, it cannot wait." He lifted his muzzle. "I must hear you say
that you now understand that we cannot wait to find another world to
be New Home. I must hear you say we will work together in this."
Shock swelled T'sha. That really was all he thought about. There was
no swaying him, no changing the focus of his mind.
"I understand that we are not always as wise as we think we are,"
she told him fiercely, leaning forward from her own perch. "I
understand that we might not know all the rules of life, and that if we
act like we do, we are breeding disaster, for ourselves and for these
New People."
"I respect your caution, Ambassador T'sha, but I cannot let it
endanger us any further." Righteousness swelled D'seun to his fullest
extent. "I will proceed with the poll of your families."
"I know that," replied T'sha calmly. "I'm already arranging time
with the speakers and the pollers. You will have your vote."
D'seun cocked his head. His eyes examined her from crest to
fingertip, trying to guess what made her so complacent. If he
succeeded, he gave no sign. "Thank you for your cooperation then,
Ambassador. I will wish you good luck and go prepare for the vote."
"Good luck, Ambassador D'seun." T'sha lifted her hands. D'seun
lifted his briefly in return and flew away.
T'sha watched him go.
There are advantages to dealing with
someone whose attention has narrowed to a hairsbreadth, she
thought.
He has not yet thought to make a try for Gaith's body.
"Ambassador?" came Ca'aed's voice suddenly.
"Yes, Ca'aed?"
"I want you to know, I'm going to vote in favor of using D'seun's
candidate for New Home."
"What?" T'sha stiffened. "Ca'aed, why?"
"Because I'm afraid, T'sha. I'm afraid that what happened to Gaith
will happen to me and to you."
T'sha shriveled in on herself as the city's words washed through
her. Ca'aed was afraid. She had never heard the city voice such a
thought before. What could she do against that?
"We will protect you, Ca'aed," she murmured. "But who will protect
the New People?"
"You will find a way."
T'sha dipped her muzzle. "I will have to."
Contents -
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Chapter Three
"This is your seven a.m. wake-up," said the room's too sweet voice.
"This is your seven a.m. wake-up."
Around Veronica, the hotel suite woke up. The lights lifted to full
morning brightness. In the sitting room, the coffeemaker began to
gurgle and hiss, while a fresh lemon scent wafted out of the air ducts.
Vee, who had been awake for an hour already, looked up, sniffed the
combination of coffee and lemon, and wrinkled her nose.
"Should've shut off one of those," she muttered.
She looked back down at the desk screen in front of her with its
list of names, degrees, and recent publications. She frowned for a
moment and then moved Martha Pruess to the top of the list. She was a
research fellow in photonic engineering from the Massachusetts
Federated Institute of Technology, and her list of publications took up
half the screen.
"Checking out the competition?"
Vee jumped, twisting in her seat. Rosa Cristobal, her friend and
business manager, stood right behind her chair. "Jesus, Rosa. Don't
sneak up on me. It's too early."
"Sorry." Rosa tucked her hands into the pockets of her thick,
terry-cloth robe. "But that is what you're doing?"
"Yeah." Vee sighed and tugged on a lock of her hair. "Rosa, I am not
going to get this."
"They invited you," Rosa pointed out, as patiently and as firmly as
if this were the first time she'd said it.
"Why?" Vee spread her hands. "They need scientists, engineers. I'm
an artist, for God's sake. It's been years since I've set
foot in a real lab."
"You've got a Ph.D. in planetary atmospherics and your name is
sitting pretty on five different patents."
"Which you will remind them of." Vee dropped her gaze back down to
the list.
Actually, maybe Avram Elchohen should be at the top.
He's got a few more papers on optoelectric engineering—
"Which I will remind them of." Rosa reached over Vee's shoulder and
touched the Off key. The desk screen blanked. "Get dressed, Vee. The
interview's at nine and you do not want to be late."
"Yes, Rosa," said Vee in the tones of a child saying "Yes, Mommy."
She got up meekly and headed for her bathroom. "And shut off the
lemons, will you?"
"Yes, Vee."
After her shower, Vee dressed in an outfit she'd bought especially
for the interview—wide navy-blue slacks and a matching vest with matte
buttons over a sky-blue silk blouse. She stepped into the makeup
station and selected a minimalist setting. The mirror glowed gently as
it scanned her face and sent color instructions to the waldos, which
responded by laying on just a hint of bronze to highlight her
cheekbones and jawline, and a touch of deep wine to her lips.
"Close your eyes please," said the same too sweet voice that had
given the wake-up call. Vee did and felt a quick puff of powder. She
opened her eyes. Now her lids had a hint of burgundy coloring and a
discreet sheen of gold dust glimmered on her cheeks, the very latest in
conservo-chic.
"Routine complete," said the station.
Vee studied herself in the mirror for a minute. It was a good face,
with high cheekbones, strong nose, soft chin. Her brows were so pale as
to be almost nonexistent. The rest of her was what she called "Nordic
swizzle-stick fashion," very long, very white, and very thin. "Handy
for hiding behind flagpoles," she liked to joke.
Vee wound her mane of silver-blond hair into a tidy coil and pinned
it in place. She selected a scarf that matched her blouse and fastened
it so it covered her head but fluttered freely down over her
shoulders. She nodded at her reflection, pleased. The
effect was businesslike but not stuffy. It said that here was a person
to be taken seriously.
Vee had been stunned when she saw the v-mail message from the
Colonial Affairs Committee. She had sat in front of her living room
view
screen for ten full minutes, playing and replaying the recording.
"Hello, Dr. Hatch. I'm Edmund Waicek of the United Nations Colonial
Affairs Committee Special Work Group on Venus."
Good breath-control exercise there, Vee remembered
thinking, facetiously. Edmund Waicek was a tall man with red-brown skin
and black eyes. A round, beaded cap covered his thick copper hair. His
age was indeterminate and his clothing immaculate.
"As I am sure you are aware, there has been a remarkable discovery
made on the world of Venus. We have found what appears to be the
remains of an alien base or facility of some kind. Because of the
vastly important nature of this development, the C.A.C. has decided to
assemble a team of specialists to examine and evaluate the discovery."
He leaned forward and flashed a smile full of carefully calculated
sincerity. "We have reviewed your academic record and subsequent
accomplishments, and we would like to invite you to participate in the
interview process to see if you can take your place on this historic
mission." His expression grew solemn. "We will need your answer by
Tuesday the eighteenth at nine a.m., your local
time. Thank you for your attention to this matter. I look forward to
meeting you."
The Discovery on Venus. Of course Vee had heard of it. It was a
solid indication that there had once been alien life inside the solar
system, an idea that had been given up on years before Vee had even
been born. When she was feeling cynical, she would tell herself it was
nothing more than three holes in the ground. Except it was. It was
three holes in the ground dug by nothing human, and they had left
behind what everyone was certain was a laser, or maybe it was a laser
component of a larger machine.
It was that laser they wanted her to go up and take a look at. Well,
they wanted someone to go up and take a look at it, and her name,
somehow, had made the short list.
Veronica Hatch, science popularizer, temperamental artiste, and
noted personality. The U.N. was setting all that aside and going back
to the part of her that was Dr. Hatch, the part that had patents and
papers and could do actual work.
"Vee?" came Rosa's voice.
Vee realized she hadn't moved. She was just standing there, staring
at the reflection of a serious, competent stranger, and clenching her
fists.
"Coming." Vee smoothed out her veil and turned away from the mirror.
Rosa was in the sitting room, drinking what was probably her second
cup of coffee. How she could suck that stuff down on an empty stomach
Vee had never known. Rosa had selected a tunic and skirt suit in shades
of forest green with emerald trim and a pale, silver scarf to cover her
black hair. She looked Vee up and down and gave a small nod of approval
as Vee twirled on her toes to show herself off.
"Very nice." Rosa drained her mug. "Do you want to order in, or go
out for breakfast?"
"Would you mind if we dropped by the Coral Sea? I promised Nikki."
Rosa made a face. "That place is overdone."
"Hey." Vee drew herself up indignantly. "I helped design the effects
on that place, thank you very much."
"And you overdid it." Rosa stood up. "In your usual stylish,
trend-setting way." She grabbed her briefcase off the couch. "Let's hit
the deck, shall we?"
Vee and Rosa took a glide-walk up through the layers of the
Ashecroft Hotel to the main pedestrian deck and the clean, clear,
Pacific day. U.N. City had been built during the first decade of what
some people still called the Takeover. The Takeover happened halfway
through the 2100s, when the United Nations went from being a pack of
squabbling diplomats to a genuine world-governing body. Because
national feeling still ran very high back then, it was decided that the
seat of world government would not be given to any one country. It
would float around the world on the oceans. The mobility created
some trouble with time zones, but that was deemed a minor problem
compared to the endless bickering caused by the debate over where to
put
the capital of the world.
The city itself was huge. Toward its center, you couldn't even tell
you were on the ocean. Ashecroft was in the fashionable edge district
however, and the first thing Vee saw when they emerged was sunlight
sparkling cheerfully on the broad, blue Pacific. In the distance she
could just make out three of the cordon ships that sailed in a ring
around the city, serving as escort and border guard.
On the main deck, U.N. City was wide awake and in full swing. Crowds
of people swarmed between the buildings and the parks.
Their skins were every color, from snow white to midnight black. They
wore all styles and colors of clothing and every possible level of body
enhancement, both organic and mechanical. Some drifted between the
boutiques, studying the holo-displays that took the place of windows.
Some strolled along the city's sculpted rail looking out at the calm,
sapphire ocean, maybe hoping to see dolphins or, better yet, whales,
some just hurried from glide-walk mouth to glide-walk mouth,
catching a
few precious moments of sunlight between meetings and appointments down
in the heart of the city.
How many of them are hustling to something related to the Venus
Discovery? Vee felt a twinge of guilt at being happy for U.N.
City's restrictive public assembly policies. You could barely move in
Chicago without tripping over another "citizens meeting" or "public
discussion" about Venus's underground chambers and their contents and
what, if anything, should be done about them.
The Coral Sea Cafe was a few blocks from the railing, nestled in the
corner between one of the observation towers and the Council of Tourism
Welcome Center. The mirrored door scanned them both, found them
admissible, and slid itself open. Vee stepped into the underseascaped
interior with its wavery, water-scattered light, which she had
fine-tuned for them. Schools of tropical fish swam lazily across the
walls. The chairs and tables mimicked rounded stones or coral
outcroppings.
"Just too-too," murmured Rosa. Vee slapped her shoulder.
A woman almost as tall and thin as Vee emerged from the office
door, probably alerted to their arrival by the door. She looked like
she was in her mid-twenties, but Vee knew she was using body-mod to
keep middle age firmly at bay. Not even forty, Nikki had already waved
her rights to children and signed up for long-life.
Nothing like knowing what you want.
A circle of blue glass shone in the middle of Nikki's forehead,
probably concealing a personal scanner and database to let her know
just who she was dealing with.
"Vee!" Nikki cried happily.
"Nikki!" Vee exclaimed, embracing the woman with the expected level
of fervor. "Love the third eye. You look great."
"And you look"—Nikki pulled back just a little—"subdued."
"Ah." Vee held up one, long finger. "Someone's actually vetting me
for a science job today."
Nikki's smile grew conspiratorial. "This is about the Venus thing,
isn't it? I heard your name on the lists."
"Well surely, nothing important can happen without my name on it,"
announced Vee regally.
"Surely, dear, surely," said Nikki, grasping Vee's hand.
Rosa coughed.
"Oh, right. Nikki, breakfast? Clock's ticking."
"Of course, dear." Nikki ushered them to a corner booth shaped like
a supposedly cosy undersea grotto. "I'll have your waiter over three
seconds ago."
"There's a relativity problem there, Nikki," said Vee as she slid
into her seat.
"What?" Nikki's face went politely blank.
"Science joke. Never mind." Vee smiled sunnily. "Have to get back
into practice."
"Of course. Good luck, Vee." Nikki squeezed her shoulder and breezed
away.
Rosa was looking at her. "What?" asked Vee.
Rosa picked up her napkin and made a great show of smoothing it
across her lap. "It just never ceases to amaze me how fast you drop
into the artiste persona."
"Hey." Vee stabbed the table with one finger. "That persona as kept
us both living very comfortably. I wouldn't complain."
"Never," said Rosa flatly. "Just commenting." She called up the menu
from the tabletop display and began examining it.
The cafe was tony enough to have real humans as servers, but,
fortunately, not so over-the-top as to put them in any form of
swimwear. Rosa and Vee ordered coffee, white tea, rolls, and fruit cups
from a young man in the ultratraditional server's black-and-white
uniform.
When he left, Rosa jacked her briefcase into the table and unfolded
the view screen.
"How're we doing today?" Vee asked. If Rosa heard her, she gave no
sign. She just skimmed the display and shuffled the cons.
"Your money's good," Rosa said at last. "The family trusts are
percolating along nicely, and I think we're going to be able to out
Kitty through college without a problem."
"Same as yesterday."
"Same as yesterday," agreed Rosa. "Want to see the latest on the
Discovery?"
Vee shrugged, trying to be casual about it. "Might as well see what
I'm getting into." Inside, her stomach began to flutter and she
wondered where breakfast was. Food might help settle her down, except
all of a sudden she wasn't hungry.
Rosa lit the back of the screen so Vee could follow along and called
up her favorite news service.
The lead stories all came under the heading of
The Discovery on
Venus, as they had for the past month. Today was a pretty light
news day. Only three new stories had been added since Vee checked it
last night. Rosa touched the title
Venus Colonists Say No Help
Needed and the
Silent option. The main menu vanished,
and the text and video story unfolded in front of them.
Sources at Venera Base, home to the
incredible discovery of what may
be signs of alien life on Venus [long-range, color-enhanced picture of
the spherical settlement with its airfoil tail floating through
billowing clouds], are saying that the governing board strongly resents
the formation of the new United Nations subcommittee on Venus. The
governing board
insists that the Venerans already in residence have sufficient
expertise to deal with this most unexpected find.
While Dr. Helen Failia, founder of the
base and head of Venera's
Board of Directors [video clip of a short, gray-haired woman with a
severe face giving a lecture to a group of what looked like college
students], still refuses comment, sources close to the board say that
petitions have been filed to render the Discovery [dissolve to the now
familiar glowing hatchway] proprietary to the funding universities and
therefore outside the realm of government probes or restrictions.
Dr. Bennet Godwin [jump cut to a split
picture with a still shot of
an iron-gray-haired man with permanent windburn in one half, and a
hardsuited figure standing on a yellowish-red cliff in the other half],
also on Venera's board, had this comment [the man's picture flickered
to life].
"We welcome all serious research into
any aspect of the world of
Venus. That's what Venera Base is here for. What we cannot welcome, or
tolerate, is interference by nonscientists in what is a scientific
inquiry [the face froze]."
Dr. Godwin later issued the following
clarification of his statement
[the face flickered to life again, but now much more rigid and
controlled]. "When I said nonscientists, obviously I meant
unauthorized or inexpert personnel. This discovery is of massive
importance to all humanity, and its investigation must be conducted in
the open with all available assistance and resources."
"Who got you to add that disclaimer?" murmured Rosa, picking up her
newly arrived cup of coffee and sipping it appreciatively. Vee
swallowed some of the peach-flavored tea and poked at a strawberry in
her fruit cup. The scent of fresh fruit and baked goods was failing to
bring back her appetite in a rather spectacular fashion.
She read on.
When asked what he thought about Dr.
Godwin's comment, Edmund
Waicek [dissolve to the same man who had sent Vee her interview
invitation], spokesman for the newly formed
U.N. Work Group on Venus, said only, "We are glad that Dr. Godwin and
the rest of the members of Venera Base realize how important openness
and cooperation are at this historic time. This discovery affects the
whole of humanity. Humanity's elected representatives need to assist in
its uncovering and understanding."
"Mmmph." Rosa buttered a croissant and bit into it. Vee drank a
little more tea, trying to get her stomach to open up enough that she'd
actually be able to get some food down. The only thing that little
piece made clear was that there was animosity between Venera Base and
the U.N. That did not bode well, and Venera was probably going to live
to regret it. It also meant she was walking into a hornets' nest, which
made it even less likely that a controversial candidate would get the
job.
"Eat, Vee," ordered Rosa. "You're not doing either of us any favors
if you go in there on edge."
Vee obediently munched on strawberries, kiwis, mango, and pineapple.
But she couldn't make herself face the rolls. Instead, she watched
Rosa's screen. The other two stories were public-reaction sensation
videos. One showed a public meeting in good old free-speech Chicago.
The other was an interview with a pair of bald, neutered, Universal Age
synthesists explaining how this was the first step toward the human
worlds being accepted into the Greater Galactic Consciousness. There
were, of course, links to the thousands of papers, discussions, and
wonder-sites that had mushroomed since the Discovery was announced.
There had been aliens on Venus, and Earth was alive with all the
wonder that the idea brought. At first, a lot of people had been
worried that there would be riots and panics, but, so far, no one had
seen fit to go twentieth over the news.
Something on Rosa chimed. "Time to go," she said, shutting down her
briefcase. She picked up a danish and put it into Vee's hand. "Eat."
Vee gnawed the pastry without tasting it while Rosa authorized an
account deduction on the table's screen. As they left, the fishes on
the wall called, "Good luck, Vee," causing the other patrons to whisper
and stare.
Vee made a mental note to tell Nikki never to do that again without
permission and followed Rosa out the door.
Their appointment was in the J. K. McManus administration complex,
which lay deep in the heart of U.N. City. It took Vee and Rosa twenty
minutes, four glide-walks, and three ID scans before they reached the
central atrium of the gleaming crystal-and-steel administration mall.
Philodendrons, morning glories, and passion flowers twined around
glass-encased fiber-optic bundles that stretched from floor to ceiling.
Diplomats, administrators, lobbyists, and small herds of courier
drones flowed in and out of transparent doors. They jammed the
elevators and escalators running between the complex's eight floors.
The muted roar of their voices substituted for the rush of wind and
waves on the deck.
Vee and Rosa presented themselves to a live human security team and
were asked to write down their names and leave a thumbprint on an
impression film registry. In return, they were presented with audio
badges and directed to Room 3425. The badges would tell them if they
took a wrong turn.
Rosa clipped the badge to her briefcase strap and stepped onto the
nearest escalator. Vee followed obediently, brushing restlessly at her
tunic and smoothing down her veil.
They want me here. They want me here. I've done good, solid work
and it's on record. I can do this. They believe I can do this, or they
wouldn't have invited me in.
Room 3425 was a conference room. Rosa presented her badge to the
room door, which scanned it, and her, before sliding open. On the
other side waited an oval table big enough for a dozen people. An
e-window showed a view of a tropical park on the sun-drenched deck with
parti-colored parrots preening themselves in lush green trees.
The room had three occupants. Edmund Waicek sat at the conference
table looking like he'd just stepped out of the story clip Vee viewed
at breakfast. Next to him sat a tiny Asian woman in a pale-gold
suit-dress. Her face was heavily lined, and her opaque red veil lay
over pure-white hair. Behind them stood a slender, dark man who could
have been from any of a hundred
cities in the Middle East or North Africa. He wore a loose, white robe
and a long orange-and-red-striped vest. A plain black cap covered his
neatly trimmed hair. He turned from his contemplation of the parrots as
the door opened and gave Vee a look that managed to be both amused and
critical.
Mr. Waicek was on his feet and crossing the room toward Vee before
Vee had a chance to step over the threshold.
"Dr. Hatch, thank you for coming." He shook Vee's hand with a nicely
judged amount of firmness. "I'm Edmund Waicek."
"Pleased to meet you, Mr. Waicek," said Vee, extricating her hand.
"Call me Edmund," he said, as Vee guessed he would.
"Edmund," she repeated. "This is Rosa Cristobal."
"Delighted to meet you Ms. Cristobal. Allow me to introduce you both
to Ms. Yan Su. She is the Venus work group's resource coordinator."
"Pleased to meet you both." Ms. Yan's voice was light and slightly
hesitant, giving the impression that English was not her first
language. Underneath that, though, lay a feeling of strength and the
awareness of it. "You will forgive me if I ask your field of specialty,
Ms. Cristobal. The nature of your relationship with Dr. Hatch is not
exactly clear."
Rosa gave a brief laugh. "No, it is not, even to me, some days.
Primarily, I am Dr. Hatch's manager. I coordinate her projects and her
contracts. Demand for her skills is very high, as I'm sure you know,
but you would be amazed at the number of people who try to pay less
than those skills are worth."
"And this is Mr. Sadiq Hourani, whose province is security,"
interjected Edmund smoothly.
Weird way of putting it. Mr. Hourani gave them a small bow.
Vee noticed that his eyebrows were still raised and his expression was
still amused.
Rosa laid her briefcase on the conference table and sat next to Ms.
Yan. "First of all, let me say that we are extremely excited to be
considered for this project." She jacked her case into the table, which
lit up the clear-blue data displays in front of each of the
participants.
"As we are to have you here," beamed Edmund. "We have reviewed Dr.
Hatch's credentials in both the engineering and information fields and
found them very impressive. Very impressive indeed."
"Thank you." Vee inclined her head modestly.
Edmund's smile grew fatherly. Vee kept her face still. "Our
questions here will be of a more personal nature," he went on.
"What? Rosa didn't get you my gene screens?" Vee's flippancy was
reflexive, and she regretted it even before Rosa's toe prodded her shin.
Ms. Yan laughed dryly. "No. Health issues, if there are any, will be
addressed later. These are more questions of political outlook,
approach, and general attitude toward—"
"Political outlook?" interrupted Vee.
"Yes," said Ms. Yan. "I wish this mission were purely a question of
research and exploration, but it is not."
A spark of suspicion lit up inside Vee. She tried to squash it but
was only partially successful. She'd grown up in the remnants of the
old United States. Her grandfather had talked almost daily about the
Disarmament, when U.N. troops went house to house confiscating guns and
arresting the owners who would not peacefully hand them over, and
worse. Personally, Vee thought her grandfather was nuts for
romanticizing the freedom to shoot your neighbors, but his distrust and
distaste for the "yewners" had taken root in some deep places, and she
hadn't managed to shake it yet.
"Of course,"' Rosa was saying smoothly. "An effective team is more
than just a collection of skills. Personalities have to mesh smoothly,
and there must be a unified outlook."
"Exactly." Edmund's chest swelled, and Vee knew they were in for a
speech.
Apparently, Ms. Yan knew it too because she quickly asked, "Have you
ever been to Venera before, Dr. Hatch?"
"Once, about eight years ago." Vee did not miss the dirty look
Edmund shot Ms. Yan, but she suppressed her smile of amusement. "As
part of my Planets project." Vee's initial fame and the basis of her
fortune was made by her creation of the first experiential holoscenic.
It was a tour of the solar system, set to the music of Hoist's The
Planets. She had taken people inside the clouds of Venus, the
oceans of liquid ice on Europa, the storms of Jupiter, and the revolt
in Bradbury, Mars, for the movement "Mars, Bringer of War."
It suddenly hit Vee what they must be leading up to.
"I have always particularly liked the Veneran segment of The
Planets," said Ms. Yan. "Most people see Venus as hellish. You
made it beautiful."
"Thank you." Tension tightened Vee's back. When are they going
to say it? When are they going to say it?
"Your section on the Bradbury Rebellion was rather less beautiful,"
said Edmund.
Vee caught Rosa's "be careful" glance and ignored it. "I strove for
accuracy," she said, aware her voice had gone tart. "And
comprehension." The "Bringer of War" segment showed the people being
marched into the patched-up ships which were launched without regard to
their safety, but it also showed the crowds rallying around Theodore
Fuller and his cause, the shining faces, the great hopes of the dream
of freedom before that dream had tarnished and twisted.
Edmund's expression fell into a kind of hard neutrality. "Yes, some
of your images were quite… sympathetic." He glanced at a secondary
display on the table in front of him. Vee wished she were close enough
to read the items listed there. "What are your feelings about the
separatist movements here on Earth?"
This is it? Vee looked incredulously from one face to the
other. Both Edmund and Ms. Yan were perfectly serious. Even Mr.
Hourani, who had not uttered one word since the beginning of the
meeting, had lost his little amused smile. They want to judge my
fitness based on how I feel about separatists?
Rosa's warning prod against her ankle grew urgent. Vee dismissed it
and heaved herself to her feet.
"You want to know how I feel about Bradbury? I was seven years old
when that mess happened. I didn't have an opinion, just a few vague
feelings. The Planets show was for money and to show off what
you could do with my new holography tricks." She planted both hands on
the table and leaned toward the yewners. "You want a political yes-sir,
pick one of your own. You want an Earth liber Alles, find a Bradbury
survivor. You want somebody who can take a look at your Discovery and
just maybe come up with something useful to say about it, then you want
me. But I will not"—she slammed her hand against the table—"sit here
and be interrogated because I may have had a thought or two."
She turned on her heel and stalked out of the room.
The corridors passed by in a blur. She slapped her audio badge down
on the counter at the security station without breaking stride. She saw
nothing clearly until she found herself up on the deck in the blazing
sunlight, staring out across the blue-gray waters and clenching her
hands around the warm metal railing.
Well, Vee, you crashed that one pretty good, didn't you?
She bowed her head until it rested on the backs of her hands. What
the hell were you doing? Did you really think they were looking for the
dilettante?
Vee was not going to whine about her fate. She had made her choices
for money, yes, but also for love. She was good at her art. She
understood light and the machines that manipulated it. She could shape
light like a potter shaping clay. She knew how to blend it and soften
it to create any color and nuance the human eye could detect. She knew
how it controlled shadows and reflections. She knew how it scattered
and bounced and played mischievous tricks on the senses. She knew
nine-and-ninety ways it could be used to transmit messages. The lab
had become mind-bogglingly boring right about the time the money from
her patents and the resulting holo-scenics had really started to come
in. She'd taken off for the artistic life, along with the ability to
buy her college debts away from her parents' bank and keep her brothers
and sisters from ever having to go into debt for themselves.
But sometimes she felt she'd missed the chance to do something
real, the chance to explore as well as create, to question the nature
of the universe in ways art couldn't reach by itself, to say something
that would last, even if it was so obscure only ten other people
understood it.
An accomplishment her family back in its naturalist, statist town
wouldn't have to feel ambivalent about.
"You know," said Rosa's voice beside her, "there's this old saying
that goes 'Be careful what you pretend to be; you may become it.'"
Vee lifted her head, blinking back tears of pain as the light
assaulted her eyes. "How fast did they throw you out of there?"
"They didn't, actually." Rosa leaned her elbows against the railing.
The salt breeze caught her silver scarf and sent it fluttering across
her face. She pushed it away. "I spread some fertilizer about
sensitive geniuses, which they seemed willing to sit still for. They,
or at least Ms. Yan and Mr. Hourani, seemed impressed by your strong
political neutrality." The wind plastered her scarf against her cheek
again, and she brushed it back impatiently. "I'm less sure about Mr.
Waicek, but I do believe he's leaning in our direction."
Hope, slow and warm, filled Vee's mind. "You're kidding."
"I have one question." Rosa rubbed her hands together and studied
them. "Do you really want to do this?" She lifted her gaze to Vee's
face. "They were giving you purity in there. This is going to be a
political situation. You've seen the news. Everybody's got a position.
Everybody wants referendums. You're going to be quizzed and dissected
and watched, and you're going to have to put up with it. Quietly. No
more scenes like that one." She jerked her chin back toward the
glide-walk mouth. "So, I'm asking you, Vee, as your friend and your
manager, do you really, honestly, want to be a part of this mission?"
Vee stared out across the blue water under the brilliant sky.
Nothing on Venus was blue. It was all orange and gold and blazing red.
Yet someone had been there, had set up their base there, and then left.
Where had they gone? Who were they? Why had they come in the first
place? They might have left the answer behind them. It might be in that
laserlike device.
Do I really want to be a part of finding that answer?
"Yes," she said, to sea and sky, and Rosa. "Oh yes. I want this."
Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Rosa nod. "Okay, then. I think
you'll get it."
Vee's smile spread across her face. "If I do nothing else real in my
life, at least I'll get to do this," she said softly.
For a moment, she thought she heard Rosa mutter, "Whatever this
is," but then she decided that she didn't.
The image of a spring meadow high in the Colorado Rockies surrounded
Yan Su as she sat behind her desk. She paid no attention to it.
Instead, she focused on the wall screen, which she had set to record
her message to Helen Failia on Venera Base. "Hello, Helen. I just saw
the latest commentary from out your way. Now, you know I don't
interfere." Pause for Helen to insert whatever comment she had on that
score. "But you've got to sit on Ben Godwin for the duration. I've done
my best with the investigative team makeup. They are as close to what
you asked for as I could manage. But this will not, I repeat, will not,
hold up to certain types of scrutiny. Assure Dr. Godwin that if he lets
the spinners do their job and is patient, this will all blow over and
your people can get back to work."
"I'm doing my part down here, and we're making progress. You will
all get what you want, but you've got to keep quiet." She paused again,
tapping her fingernails against the glass of iced tea sitting on her
desk. "I know this isn't easy, Helen, but believe me, it's the only
way. You also need to keep your security chief on the alert. Every
single cracker on three planets is going to be trying to get into
Venera's systems, trying to get 'the real story.' " She made quotation
marks with her fingertips. "The rumors in-stream are bad enough without
that." She sighed softly. "Take care of yourself Helen. You've
inherited quite a situation."
A quick keystroke faded the recording out and shunted
the message into the queue for the next com burst out to
Venus. Helen would receive the message in an hour or two.
Su finished her iced tea and rattled the ice cubes a couple of times
as she stared at the sunlight on the distant snowy peaks. God, how long
until she'd see the real thing again? She felt certain there would be
nothing in her life but Venera and its Discovery at least until the
"investigative team" came home, and maybe not even then. A lot would
depend on how well Helen was able to handle her
people and her sudden fame.
Su remembered the first time Helen Failia sailed into her office.
Forty years ago, no, forty-five years ago, and she still remembered.
It had been a long day of in-stream meetings and screen-work. A
headache was just beginning to press against her temples. None of this
had left Su in the best of moods.
"Thank you for agreeing to see me, Ms. Yan." Helen Failia was not
yet forty then. She wore her chestnut hair bundled up under a scarf of
dusky-rose silk. Her handshake was firm, her smile genuine, and her
movements calm and confident. Despite that, Su got the strong
impression of restless energy brimming just below the surface of this
woman.
"Now, what can I do for you, Dr. Failia?" Su asked as she handed
Helen the cup of black coffee she'd requested. The woman was a very
traditional American on that score.
"I'm building a research colony on Venus," said Helen, taking the
seat Su waved her toward. "I want to know what governmental
permissions I need."
Just like that. Not "I'm exploring the possibilities of…" or "I'm
part of a consortium considering building…"
"You're building on Venus?" Su raised both eyebrows. "With what?"
She hadn't been able to get another word out for thirty minutes.
Helen had brought scroll after scroll of blueprints, encyclopedic
budget projections, and lists of potential donors. Everything was
planned out, down to which construction facilities could supply which
frame sections for the huge, floating city she had designed.
When Dr. Failia finally subsided, Su was ready to admit, privately,
she was impressed. In an ideal world, Dr. Failia's proposal would be
quite feasible. Unfortunately, Su had already been on the C.A.C. long
enough to know this was not an ideal world.
Perhaps a gentle hint in that direction. "Wouldn't it be more
practical, Dr. Failia, to start with a temporary facility funded by
perhaps one or two universities?"
"No," said Helen at once. Su raised her eyebrows again, and Helen
actually looked abashed. "I'm sorry, but no. Venus is a vast,
complex world. It's active in many of the basic ways that Earth is
active. It has an atmosphere, weather, and volcanic activity." Dr.
Failia's eyes shone. At that, Su remembered where she'd heard Dr.
Failia's name before. Helen Failia had been a member of the Icarus
Expedition that had gone out, what was it? Two? No, three years ago.
She was now one of the four people who had actually walked on the
Venusian surface.
It also looked as though she had fallen in love down there.
"In a temporary facility," Dr. Failia was saying, "a few
researchers could study a few aspects of the planet for a few months
at a time. But in a real facility, such as Venera"—she tapped the
screen roll—"people could specialize. Careers could be dedicated to the
study of Earth's sister without requiring people to remove themselves
from their families. The work could be made practical and comfortable
for years at a time. We would not be limited to snapshots; we could
take in the entire panorama."
Earth's sister. It is love. Su shook her head. "And the
industrial applications? Are there any commercial possibilities?"
Helen didn't even blink. "In all probability, industrial and
commercial applications would be limited. Mining or other exploitive
surface operations would remain prohibitively expensive due to the
harsh conditions."
All right, at least you're willing to admit that much, Dr. Failia.
Su folded her hands on the desk and mustered her "serious diplomat"
tones. "You do realize that the colonies which have paid off their
debts and become going concerns all have some kind of export or
manufacturing base?"
"Until now, yes."
Su found herself having to suppress a laugh. The question hadn't
even ruffled the surface of Dr. Failia's confidence. "So you are hoping
the research value will offset the economic liabilities?"
"Research and publicity." Helen thumbed through the screen rolls on
the desk, pulled out the one labeled "University Funding" and
presented it for Su's inspection. "Research departments in both
universities and private industry are fueled by their papers as well as
their patents. From a publications standpoint, Venus is more than
ready to be exploited."
Su nodded as she skimmed the numbers again. It was all true and
reasonable, as far as it went. But the fact was that the
pure-research colonies had never worked. The small republics, and even
the big universities, were unable to keep them funded. The United
Nations was unwilling. Nobody said it out loud, of course, but the
established wisdom was that the planets should be saved for industry,
and now for the long-life retreats that the lobbyists were proposing
as a way for those who had children but wanted extended life spans to
have it all. They could live in specialized colonies with continued
gene-level medical treatment without straining the balance and
resources of Mother Earth.
Su found herself extremely ambivalent about that idea. But this one…
Su liked the vision of this gigantic bubble of a town, sort of a U.N.
City in the Venusian sky. She liked Helen's enthusiastic and detailed
descriptions of not an outpost but a real community, as self-supporting
as any off-world colony could be, given over to exploration and
research. True, this vision ignored most of the political realities
and historical examples, but that did not lessen its attractiveness.
Su did not get much chance to dream anymore, and she found herself
enjoying the opportunity.
Still, no politician could afford to dream for too long. It'll
be shot down by the rest of the C.A.C. if it gets in their line of sight,
she reminded herself with a sigh. They did not like approving doomed
projects. It made for snide comments in-stream and low scores on the
opinion polls.
But maybe, maybe there was a way around that.
"I will be honest with you, Dr. Failia," said Su. "Without the money
in account, this is not going through."
To her credit, Helen Failia did not say "But…"
Su leaned forward, making sure the other woman met her gaze.
"However, if you can get at least some of the start-up money, I think
its chances are very good. Very good."
As Su watched, light sparked behind Dr. Failia's dark eyes.
"Well, thank you for your time, Ms. Yan." She stood up and held her
hand out. "I'll see you when I have my money."
Su also rose. "I look forward to it."
They shook hands. Helen gathered up her screen rolls and left
without a backward glance. Su sat back down behind her desk and watched
the door swish shut. Her headache, she noticed, had vanished.
"Desk. Sort recording of completed meeting and extract proposal
details for the construction of Venera Base," she said thoughtfully.
"Assume acquisition of adequate funding. List applicable regulatory
and legislative requirements that must be met for construction of the
proposed base." She paused. "Also extract voting records of C.A.C.
members and project probable votes should proposal come to committee as
offered in this meeting."
Helen, after all, was not the only one who had work to do if Venera
was to… well… fly.
It had taken five years, but the money had been found; the base had
been built, and for forty years after that, Helen kept it running. She
scraped, scrounged, begged, borrowed, and worked the stream with a
skill Su had seen only in the very best politicians. She had help of
course. Sometimes, Su felt that while Helen had raised Venera, Su
herself had raised Helen. She'd taught the older woman the finer points
of publicity and spin doctoring. She'd steered her toward the more
sympathetic funds and trusts. After the Bradbury Rebellion, Su had
helped Helen make sure that all their money came from Earth so there
could be no tangible connection between Venera and any suspect
persons, who, at that point, included everyone who did not live on
Mother Earth.
Helen had never married, never had children. Venera and its
prosperity had been her entire life.
And she had almost lost it. Su tried to imagine what that felt like
and failed. Her own life had been tied to so many different things—her
husband, her son, political ambitions, and the colonies. Not just
Venera, but Small Step and Giant Leap, Bradbury, Burroughs, Dawn, the
L5 archipelagoes, all of them. They deserved their chance to flourish.
Mother Earth needed her children, but like any flesh-and-blood parent,
she needed to treat
them as people, not possessions.
However, since Bradbury, with its deaths and exiles and threats, and
since the long-life colonies had become a credit-filled reality, it had
not been easy to convince anybody else in power of this.
For the moment, Venera at least was going to be all right. Su
studied the donations list displayed on her desktop. If even half these
promises were fulfilled, Venera was not going to even have to think
about money for another five years.
Which is all to the good, Su rubbed her temples. There
is nothing bad about this. If we want any colony in the public eye,
it's Venera.
She shook herself. This was not anything she had time for. The
Secretaries-General had called a meeting for the afternoon, and Su had
to get her candidate files in order. Despite what she'd told Helen,
there was still the very real possibility that Edmund might withdraw
his backing from one or two of her people, and she might have to make
her case to the Sec-Gens without any help at all. Secretary Haight was
very much committed to the status quo, but Kent and Sun had a little
more leeway in their thinking and saw the political opportunities
inherent in loosening the grip on the planets a little. She would have
to play to them if she wanted to keep the U.N. from just walking in and
taking over the Discovery, and she wanted that very much.
The door chimed and Su looked at the view port. It cleared to reveal
Sadiq Hourani and Su ordered it open. He walked in and Su waved him to
a chair. Sadiq was on the very short list of people whom she would
always see.
Su sat back and regarded him for a moment. "Tell me you have good
news."
"I have good news," said Sadiq promptly.
"Really? Or are you just saying that?" Sadiq had been assigned to
the C.A.C. security and intelligence work group ten years ago. In that
time, Su had learned to trust him, despite the fact that he kept more
hidden than she would ever learn about. It had not been easy, but it
had been worth it.
Sadiq returned a small smile. "Really. We've negotiated an end to
that potential media standoff in Bombay. They're to have some
unmonitored access time to the investigative team and some of the
Veneran scientists so they can ask questions without, and I quote,
governmental interference, end quote."
Su raised both her eyebrows. "And you capitulated with all
humbleness?"
"That I did."
"And you went in there knowing what they really wanted?"
"That I did," repeated Sadiq. "It's my job, you know."
The news of the Discovery had been received with calm just about
everywhere. There were a few hardcase places—Bombay, Dublin, Old
L.A.—where tempests threatened to start up in the stream. The stream
was the systemwide communications network that had evolved out of all
the old nets and webs that had spanned the globe since the twentieth
century. It was possible for discontent in-stream to spill out into
the real world. Part of Sadiq's job was to make sure it never did.
"So." Su leaned back and folded her hands in her lap. "Do you know
what the Secretaries-General really want to see us about?"
Sadiq shrugged. "To hear about Bombay, for a start, and the other
hot spots. They should have reviewed our Comprehensive Coping Strategy
by now. They also, of course, need to give their blessing to the
investigative team roster so the full committee won't be able to
bicker too much."
"Have you ascertained whether Edmund's going to behave?" Su had
known from the beginning that Edmund was going to be difficult. Since
he had been appointed to the C.A.C., he had been one of the loudest
anticolonial voices they had, and that was saying a great deal. His
initial idea had been to send out a team that would investigate Venera
at least as thoroughly as it would investigate the Discovery.
"I believe he will." Sadiq studied his neat hands for a moment.
"You know, Su, you are going to have to speak to him again, sooner or
later."
"Yes, I know." After Dr. Hatch and Ms. Cristobal had left, Edmund
had started in on one of his canned speeches about the "absolute
necessity of choosing members who will not be blinded by propaganda or
sentimentality and will be willing to examine every aspect of
the Discovery." Su, suddenly unable to stand it another minute, had
stood up and said, "You don't want an investigation; you want an
inquisition," and stalked out.
The memory made her sigh again. "That is no way for a grown
bureaucrat to behave. Especially now," she added.
"Especially now," echoed Sadiq. "Especially on one of your pet
projects."
Su eyed him carefully to see if there was anything hidden under that
statement, but Sadiq's face remained placid. "Yes," she admitted. "This
one's mine and I can't hide from it." She was about to add a question
about Edmund Waicek, positive that Sadiq had spoken with him before he
walked into her office, but Sadiq had stiffened and his eyes darted
back and forth. Su closed her mouth. Sadiq wore a phone spot, so he
could be reached at any time. This could be anything from a request for
authorization on an expense report to notification of an outbreak of
public violence.
When Sadiq had focused on her again, Su asked, "Anything wrong?"
"We seem to have a demonstration on the deck." Sadiq stood.
"Peaceful but illegal. Care to come?"
"Not really." Su waved him away. "I'll see you at the Sec-Gens this
afternoon."
"Until then." Sadiq left her there. The door swished shut behind
him. Su sat still for a moment, then swiveled her chair toward her
working wall. "Window function," she ordered, "show me political
activity identified on main deck."
A patch of Colorado sky cleared away, replaced by the image of one
of the observation towers. Normally, the side of the three story
building was a blank, forbidding gun-metal gray. Today, however,
someone had managed to hang a gigantic sheet screen from the side and
light up a scene of Venus and Earth orbiting around each other in a
display that was as pretty as it was inaccurate. A crowd had gathered
at the foot of the tower to watch the show. In front of the casual
observers, a set of feeders with briefcases and camera bands had
already jacked into the deck and were rapidly dropping the entire
experience into the stream.
Venus and Earth faded, replaced by a man of moderate coloring and
moderate age, wearing a suit so conservative he might have bought it in
the previous century.
"And what are we doing with this wonder, this Discovery?" He swept
one hand out. Venus appeared, neatly balanced in his palm. "We are
using it as a focus of fear. We are using it to tighten the chains
already on the wrists of our brothers and sisters in the colonies.
Millions of people whose only crime is not living on Mother Earth." He
closed his fist around the Venus globe. The low moan it gave was
gratuitous, Su thought, but it did make its point. "We must, every one
of us, ask what is our government so afraid of? Aging men and women who
failed in their dream?" The starry background blurred and shifted until
the speaker stood in a bare red-ceramic cell filled with people whose
eyes were dark and haunted. "The guilty have been punished and
punished again. Must we punish their children now?"
Before the speaker could answer his own question, the screen went
black. A groan rose from the assembled crowd. Three people in coveralls
of U.N. blue appeared on the observation tower's roof and started
rolling up the screen. Still grumbling, the crowd began to disperse.
Show's over.
"Window function off."
The screen melted back into the meadow scene around her.
Su considered. That wasn't much as demonstrations went, but it would
give her an opening to talk with Edmund. Su rubbed her forehead. Her
mind had been shying away from the memory of how she'd left the
morning's interview. What had happened? What had snapped? There was no
excuse, none, especially now, as she'd said to Sadiq. If she didn't
find a way to clean up after herself, it would be… bad.
"Desk. Contact Edmund Waicek." Compose yourself, Su. Don't let
the boy get to you. There is too much going on for that. "Put
display on main screen."
The whole wall cleared until Su saw Edmund's clean, blank-walled
office. Edmund himself was hunched over his desk screen. He did not
look up.
"I'm rather busy, Su. We do have a meeting this afternoon."
"Yes, I am aware of that." Calm, calm, calm. "Were you
aware that we've just had a separatist demonstration on the main
deck?"
Edmund's head jerked up. "What?"
Su waved her hands in a gesture both dismissing and soothing. "It
was small. Sadiq's people have already handled it." She lowered her
hands. "But it did draw a crowd. Here. People were listening. The
speaker was making sense to them."
Edmund's face went cold. Su held up her hand again before he could
even open his mouth. "It does matter. This is U.N. City, and our people
were listening to the idea that perhaps the restrictions on the
colonies have gone too far." She spread her hands. "There is more than
one kind of bias we need to avoid here, Edmund. If it appears that we
are sending up a team that has an anticolonial agenda, we run the risk
that their conclusions will be discounted by popular opinion. We have
both been around the world far too many times to pretend that doesn't
matter."
She watched Edmund's expression waver as that thought sank in. "We
cannot be seen to encourage irresponsible rhetoric," he said, resorting
to some rhetoric of his own.
Good. He's running short on arguments. "Of course not. We
must be seen to be aiming for a strict neutrality. That is where people
like Veronica Hatch can benefit us. People appreciate that she put a
human face on a terrible tragedy. On both sides of the tragedy."
Edmund did not like that idea. She could tell that much by the stony
set of his jaw, but he was at least thinking about it. "If we're taking
her and the other one"—he glanced at his desk—"Peachman, I want
security on the team."
"My thinking exactly," lied Su. "Sadiq can pick the best available,
and we can submit their names to the Sec-Gen along with the others."
"All right," said Edmund. "You've got your team, Su. But it had
better not overstep its bounds."
"It won't, Edmund. I'll see you this afternoon."
Edmund nodded and broke the connection. Su collapsed back into her
chair. That was a near thing. If Edmund had been just a
little more angry, it would not have worked. But it did, and that was
all she needed to care about at this moment.
Still, there was one more call she should make.
"Desk. Contact Yan Quai."
This time, the sky was replaced by a static scene of a white railed
veranda overlooking a misty cityscape.
"I'm sorry," said a gender-neutral voice. "Yan Quai is unavailable—"
"Quai, it's your mother."
The voice hesitated. Then, the veranda cleared away and revealed
Quai's apartment, which hadn't been cleaned up in a while. Clothes and
towels were draped over the arms of chairs. Screen rolls lay heaped on
every flat surface, held in place by empty cups and glasses full of
something that might have once been either beer or apple juice.
In the middle of it all sat Quai at his battered desk. Su
automatically looked him over. He hadn't shaved. His hair was now
black and blond, and the holo-tat on the right side of his throat was a
winking blue eye this week.
In short, her son looked just fine.
"Hello, Mother," he said cheerfully. "Slow day in the corridors of
power?"
"Not particularly." Her lips twitched, trying not to smile. "As
you've said, saving the worlds is a full-time job."
Quai's own smile was tight and knowing and made him look
frighteningly like his father. "Especially when you have to kiss up to
the C.A.C. to do it."
Su let that pass. "We've just had a little demo on the decks here,
Quai."
"Really?" His face and voice brightened considerably. "Who managed
it?"
"I don't know. I thought you might."
Quai shook his head, and Su believed him. If he had known, he would
have just evaded the question. They did not agree, she and her son. He
felt she did not go far enough in her politics, and she felt that by
attempting to undermine the system, he was worsening the condition of
those he was supposed to be fighting for. Despite that, they had a
tacit agreement that each
would avoid lying to the other, if at all possible.
"Well, just in case anyone in your acquaintance gets ideas—"
"Us?" Quai laid a hand on his breast. "We operate strictly within
the law wherever we are, Mom; you know that."
"I don't for sure know any different," responded Su blandly. "But
just in case, you might pass along the word that the C.A.C. is very
edgy right now and that that edginess is getting communicated up the
legislature. The more unrest there is right at this moment, the bigger
the potential backlash."
They looked at each other, each of them replaying conversations
from both the distant and the not-so-distant past in their heads.
"All right, Mom." Quai nodded. "Not that anybody I deal with would
arrange illegal public demos in U.N. City or anywhere else, but I'll
see if I can leak the generalities of this conversation where they'll
do some good."
"That's all I ask." Su bowed her head briefly in a gesture of thanks.
A flicker of worry crossed Quai's face. "Take care of yourself out
there, Mom. Okay? I'd hate to see you lose your footing."
Su smiled. "I will take care. I love you, my son."
"Love you, Mom. Good-bye."
Su said good-bye and shut down the screen. She shook her head and
sighed. Quai was good people. How had that happened? Abandoned by a
nervous father, left with an obsessive mother, he still managed to make
his own way. He went overboard, it was true, but not as badly as some,
and at least he really believed in what he did.
So do you, she reminded herself. At least, you'd
better, or all your work's going to fall apart and Helen's going to be
left out there on her own.
That thought stiffened Su's shoulders. No, she would not permit
that. She bent over her desk screen and laid her hands on the command
board. Time to get back to work.
Contents - Prev / Next
Chapter Four
T'sha's kite furled its bright-blue wings as it approached the High
Law Meet. Unlike other cities, the High Law Meet's ligaments ran all
the way down to the crust, tethering the complex in place. The
symbolism was plain. All the winds, all the world, met here.
"Good luck, Ambassador T'sha," the Law Meet hailed her through her
headset. "You are much anticipated."
"Is it a pleased anticipation or otherwise?" asked T'sha wryly as
the Law Meet took over her kite guidance, bringing it smoothly toward
the empty mooring clamps.
"That is not for me to know or tell," said the Meet primly.
Amusement swelled through T'sha.
T'sha had always found the Meet beautiful. Its shell walls were
delicately curved, and their colors blended from a pure white to rich
purple. Portraits and stories had been painted all across their
surfaces in both hot and cold paints. When the Law Meet was in dayside,
the hot paints glowed red. On nightside, the cold paints made dark
etchings against the shining walls. The coral struts were whorled and
carved so that the winds sang as they blew past. More shell and dyed
stiff skins funneled and gentled the winds through the corridors
between the chambers. The interior chambers themselves were bubbles of
still air where anyone could move freely without being guided or
prodded by the world outside.
T'sha sometimes wondered if this was a good idea.
As ever, the High Law Meet was alive with swarms of people. The air
around it tasted heavy with life and constant movement. T'sha counted
nine separate villages floating past the Meet
with their sails furled so the citizens who flew beside their homes
could keep up easily. All the noise, all the activity of daily life
blew past with them.
Below, the canopy was being tended by the Meet's own conservators.
It was symbolically important, said many senior ambassadors, that the
canopy around the High Law Meet remain vital, solid, and productive.
But as T'sha watched, a quartet of reapers from one of the villages,
identifiable by the straining nets they carried between them, as well
as by the zigzagging tattoos on their wings, descended to the canopy. A
conservator flew at them, sending them all winging away, back to their
village with empty nets, no food, seeds, or clippings to enhance their
diet, their gardens, or their engineers' inventories.
T'sha felt her bones loosen with weariness.
It must be kept
productive. Certainly. But if not for our families, then for what?
T'sha inflated, trying to let her mood roll off her skin. There was
important work to be done, and she had to be tightly focused. Her kite
dropped its tethers toward the Law Meet's mooring clamps. T'sha leaned
back on her posthands so she could collect her belongings: an offering
for the temple, the congratulatory banner for Ambassador Pr'sefs
latest wedding, and the bulging satchel of promissory agreements which
she had negotiated in return for the votes she needed. She had
promised away a great deal of work from her city and her families for
this vote. She had to keep telling herself that they all gave freely
and that she was doing this for the entirety of the people, not just
for herself. This was necessary. It was not greed.
The clamps took hold of the tethers and reeled the kite in to a
resting height. T'sha launched herself into the wind, her parcels
dangling from three of her hands.
A temple surmounted the High Law Meet. It was a maze of ligaments
and colored skins, covered in a complex blanket of life. In the corners
and catches, puffs, birds, flies, algae bubbles, smoke growers, and a
hundred other plants and animals collected. Funguses and danglers grew
from the walls and fed the creatures who lived there, until the winds
that blew them in blew them away again.
As she let those winds carry her toward the temple's center, T'sha
tried to relax and immerse herself in the messages of life present in
every plant, every insect and bird. She had only marginal success.
There was too much waiting on the vote in the Meet below to allow her
to give in to her meditations.
The temple's center was ablaze with tapestries, each illustrating a
history, parable, or lesson. Congregants were supposed to let the
random winds blow them toward a tapestry and consider its moral. This
time, however, T'sha steered herself toward a small tapestry that
fluttered alone in a deep curve of the wall. It was ancient, woven
entirely from colored fibers taken from the canopy. It depicted a lone
male, his hands bony, his skin sagging, and his muzzle open in muttered
speech. His rose and violet crest draped flat against his back as if he
lacked the strength to raise it. All around him stretched the crust,
naked to the sky.
As T'sha drank in the tapestry's details, a teacher drifted to her
side. "Tell me this story," he said.
The words spread the warmth of familiarity through T'sha. Her youth
had seemed dominated by those words. Her birth mother, Pa'and, had
brought T'sha teacher after teacher, each more taxing than the last.
Whether the lesson was maths, sciences, history, or even the
geographies of the wind currents, they all seemed to start their
quizzing by saying "Tell me this story."
"Ca'doth was the first of the Teacher-Kings," began T'sha, keeping
her attention fixed on the tapestry, as was proper. "Contemplate the
object and its lesson. This is the way to learn." Which of the parade
of teachers had first told her that? "He led twenty cities in the
Equatorial Calms. But he wanted to harvest eight canopy islands that
were also claimed by D'anai, who was Teacher-King for the Southern
Roughs. A feud began. Each king made great promises to their neighbors
to join their cause. Arguments and debates lasted years. Ca'doth, who
was the greatest speaker ever known, persuaded the winds and the clouds
and even the birds to help him." T'sha's imagination showed her
Ca'doth, strong and healthy, spreading his wings to the listening
clouds.
"What he wanted most was that the living highlands should stop
feeding his enemies," she went on, falling into the rhythm of
her recitation. The teacher hovered close beside her, encouraging her
with his silence. "But no matter how long he flew around the highlands,
they made no response to his great speeches." The smallest of the
monocellulars originated in the living highlands, which expelled them
into the air to be the seeds for all other life in the world.
At last, he realized he would have to fly inside the highland to
make it hear him. He dived straight down the throat of the living
highland, beating his wings against winds of solid lava. He passed
through a chamber where the walls were pale skin, a chamber of white
bone, a chamber of silver plasma, and a chamber tangled with muscle and
nerve. In each he heard a riddle to which he did not know the answer."
For a moment, she thought the teacher would ask her the riddles, but he
did not, and she kept going. "Finally, Ca'doth came to a chamber where
the air around him shimmered golden with the pure essence of life, and
he knew he floated within the soul of the living highland.
" 'Why do you feed my enemies?' he cried. 'They steal what I need to
live. I have promised away all my present that I may gain a future for
my children, and yet you feed those who would destroy them. Why?' "
The soul of the highland answered him, 'Life cannot choose who it
helps. If your enemy came to me first, should I starve you instead?'
But Ca'doth did not listen. He argued and pleaded and threatened,
until the highland said 'Very well, I will not feed your enemy.'
"Pleased, Ca'doth passed through the chambers, and there he heard
the answers to all the riddles but could not tell which answer fitted
which riddle. He emerged into the clear and returned to tell his
family the highland would no longer feed their rivals.
"But when he reached his birth city, the city and all within were
dead, starved.
"The highland would not feed the rivals, but the highland would no
longer feed Ca'doth's people either. Ca'doth turned from his rule and
his other cities and drifted on the winds for the rest of his life,
trying to fit the answers to the riddles."
The teacher dipped his muzzle approvingly. "And what is the meaning
of this story?"
"All life is linked," answered T'sha promptly. "If that is
forgotten, all life will die."
Even the flies, she sighed
inwardly.
Even the fungus. Even I and D'seun.
T'sha deflated before the teacher and flew respectfully underneath
him. She slipped around the side of the temple to the gifting nets and
deposited her offering—a pouch of seeds and epiphytes that her own
family had recently spread in the canopy. They were having great
success in healing a breech in the growth. Hopefully, the temple's
conservators could make use of them as well.
As she sealed the gifting net up and turned, she found herself
muzzle-to-muzzle with Z'eth, one of the most senior ambassadors to the
Meet. T'sha pulled back reflexively, fanning her wings to get some
distance.
"Good luck, Ambassador T'sha," said Z'eth, laughing a little at how
startled her junior colleague was. Z'eth was big and round. Even when
she had contracted herself, she was a presence that filled rooms and
demanded attention. She had only three tattoos on her pale skin—her
family's formal name, the rolling winds, indicating she was a student
of life, and the ambassador's flock of birds on her muzzle. Despite
her sparse personal decoration, there was something extravagant about
Z'eth. Perhaps that was only because there was no promise so rare or
exotic she would not make it if it benefited her city. T'sha could not
blame her for that. The city K'est had sickened when T'sha was still a
child, and Z'eth's whole existence had become dedicated to keeping her
city alive.
"Good luck, Ambassador Z'eth," said T'sha. "I was on my way to your
offices from here."
"No doubt to speak of things it is not appropriate to discuss in
temple." Z'eth dipped her muzzle. "Shall we leave so we may converse
freely?"
"Thank you, Ambassador."
Z'eth and T'sha let themselves be
blown through
the
temple corridors and out into the open air.
As soon as they were a decent distance from the temple's walls,
T'sha said, "I have the promissory for you regarding the imprinting
service for the cortices grown in your facilities."
"Excellent." Z'eth tilted her wings and deflated so she descended
smoothly alongside the High Law Meet. It was a delicate path, as the
winds between the walls were strong and unpredictable. T'sha followed
but had to flap clumsily to keep herself from being brushed against the
painted-shell wall.
"I have not envied you these past hours, Ambassador." Z'eth whistled
sympathetically. "It is hard during your first term, especially if
your first term is a historic one." One of the arched corridor mouths
opened behind them, but Z'eth wheeled around, dipping under the
corridor instead of entering it. T'sha followed her into the shallow,
irregular tunnel underneath the real corridor, a little surprised.
Z'eth drifted close, her wings spread wide. Her words brushed across
T'sha's muzzle. "You needn't worry about the vote. Your quiet promises
and the work Ca'aed has done with Gaith have been
most
impressive. I have spoken where I can. Between us all we have turned
the flow. You'll have your appointment."
T'sha nearly deflated with relief. At the same time she was
conscious of Z'eth's steady gaze on her. Despite the promises she had
already made, she still owed the senior ambassador, and it was a debt
that would need to be paid before long.
T'sha resolved not to worry about that now. "Thank you again,
Ambassador Z'eth."
"You are welcome. I will see you in the voting chamber." Z'eth
lifted herself to the corridor mouth and disappeared inside.
T'sha floated where she was for a moment, remaining in place more
because she was in a calm than from actual effort.
They had towed Gaith's corpse encased in its quarantine blanket into
Ca'aed's wake. The rotting had so deformed it that it looked less like
a city than an engineer's experiment gone hideously wrong. Its people
worked on it diligently, sampling and analyzing and salvaging, but it
would have taken a thicker skin than T'sha's not to feel the despair
in them. It had taken Gaith a handful of hours to die. Who knew which
village, which city, might be next?
And here was T'sha, doing her best to keep them all from what looked
like the nearest safe course. She had quizzed the team supervisors from
the other candidate worlds extensively. The seeds had not taken hold on
any other of the ten worlds. Only Number Seven could readily support
life.
But life might already have a claim on Number Seven. In spite of
all, T'sha could not let that fact blow past. She had to see for
herself that D'seun's team was not ignoring a legitimate claim on the
part of the New People. Now, according to Z'eth, she was going to get
her chance.
Is this right, what I do? Life of my mother and life of my
father, it has to be, because it is too late for me to do otherwise.
She shut her doubts off behind calculations about how many promises
she could deliver before she was called to hear the vote. She lifted
herself to the corridor mouth and joined the swarm of ambassadors and
assistants propelling themselves deep into the Meet.
In the end, she was able to deliver four of the eight notes, staying
long enough to give and accept polite thanks with each ambassador and
discuss general pleasantries and the work being done on Gaith. She had
to use her headset to leave message for the rest. The Law Meet was
calling them all to hear the results of the latest poll.
When T'sha arrived, the spherical voting chamber already brimmed
with her colleagues. There were no perches left. She would have to
float in the stillness and try to keep from bumping rudely into anyone
else.
"Good luck, T'sha," murmured tiny, tight Ambassador Br've as she
drifted above him.
"Good luck," added Ambassador T'fron, whose bird tattoos were still
fresh on his skin.
Their wishes warmed her, but not as much as the security of Z'eth's
promise.
T'sha found a clear spot in which to hover near the ceiling. Because
the High Law Meet was currently on the dayside, the family trees, which
were written in hot paints, glowed
brightly against the white and purple walls. Each showed the
connections and the promises of connection between the First
Thousand. T'sha scanned the trees for her family's names and found
them, unchanging and immutable. She was their daughter. Her
ancestors
had birthed cities. She would save them, but not at the cost of their
people's souls.
She looked down between the crests and tattooed wings and spotted
D'seun's distinctive and overmarked back. He was practically touching
the polling box. T'sha wondered whom he had made promises to and if he
had anyone as powerful as Z'eth sponsoring his cause. If he'd managed
to bring in H'tair or Sh'vaid on his side, the vote might not be as set
as Z'eth believed. The mood of the meeting tightened rapidly around
her. The announcement would come soon. Her bones shifted. Soon. Soon.
The polling box had been grown in the image of a person
without wings or eyes. Its neural net ran straight into the floor of
the voting chamber and was watched over by the High Law Meet itself. It
would not be moved, and it looked with favor on no one. It was solid
and impartial.
The box lifted its muzzle and spoke in a voice that rippled strongly
through the chamber.
"The poll has been taken, recognized, and counted. Does any
ambassador wish to register doubt as to the validity of the count
contained in this box?"
No one spoke. T'sha tried to breathe evenly and hold her bones still.
"No doubt has been registered," said the box. "A poll has been taken
of the ambassadors to the High Law Meet on the following questions.
First, should candidate world Seven be designated New Home? If this is
decided positively, the second question is, should the current
investigative team whose names are listed in the record continue under
the leadership of Ambassador D'seun Te'eff Kan K'edch D'ai Gathad to
establish the life base necessary for the growth of a canopy and the
establishment of life ways for the People, with such expansion and
promises as this project shall require?"
T'sha's wings rippled. Her skin felt alert, open to every sensation
from the brush of her own crest to the gentle waft of a whisper on the
other side of the chamber.
"Is there any ambassador within the touch of these words who has not
been polled on these questions?" asked the box. Silence, waiting, and
tension strained her bones as if they were mooring ligaments in a high
wind.
"No ambassador indicates not having been polled," said the box.
"Then, the consensus of the High Law Meet is as follows. On the first
question, the consensus is yes, candidate world Seven is New Home."
The rumble and ripple of hundreds of voices filled the chamber.
T'sha remained still and silent. That was never the real question. The
vote had to be yes. D'seun was right about that much. His peremptory
poll of Ca'aed had confirmed that all the families agreed with the
choice.
"On the second question," the box went on, "the consensus is that
Ambassador D'seun Te'eff Kan K'edch D'ai Gathad shall continue as the
leader of the investigative team, that the current team will continue
in the task of creating a life base with such expansions as are
required for that task, provided that one of those expansions shall be
the addition of Ambassador T'sha So Br'ei Taith Kan Ca'aed for the
purpose of observing and studying the life currently named the New
People. She shall ensure that these New People have no legitimate claim
to New Home world that might counteract the validity of the consensus
on the first question."
There it was. She could now go to New Home herself and make sure the
New People had no legitimate claim on the world. T'sha's relief was so
complete, she almost didn't feel the congratulations erupting around
her. When she was able to focus outward, she found herself in a storm
of good-luck wishes and a hundred questions. She answered all she
could, as fast as she could, while mentally cataloging the messages and
calls she'd have to make as soon as the chamber opened again.
It might have been a moment or a lifetime later when D'seun rose to
meet her.
"An interesting addendum, Ambassador T'sha," he said flatly and
coolly. "You have been working toward
this for
some
time, I take it."
T'sha met D'seun's gaze and spoke her words straight to him.
"Surely, you could not have been unaware of what I was doing. I was
hardly secretive."
D'seun's bones contracted under his tattoos, and T'sha felt a swirl
of exasperation. She shrank herself a little to match him. "D'seun,
there is no reason for us to be enemies on this. We both want the same
thing. We both want to make New Home a reality. If that is to happen,
we cannot discount the New People."
"We cannot let their presence override everything we must do,
either." He thrust his muzzle forward. "You question and delay, you
counter and debate everything! Every time we try to warn people what
happened to Gaith, there you are, assuring us all that it isn't so very
bad, that we must just wait until its disease is understood, that we
have the resources to understand." His words tumbled harshly over her.
"There is no more time. There is no way to understand. We must leave."
T'sha deliberately deflated and sank, resisting the urge to fly
right under him to make her point. "I am only one voice, D'seun. All
the rest of the Senior Committee for New Home are your supporters.
There will be very little I can do."
D'seun dropped himself so he could look into her eyes. "Do not
flutter helplessness at me, T'sha. What 'little' you can do, you will
do."
"Is there some promise you would give my families to have me do
otherwise, D'seun?" asked T'sha bluntly. "How much will you give for me
to disregard our new neighbors? Is there enough to make that right?"
D'seun did not answer.
"No, there is not," said T'sha. "We are together in this, D'seun,
until the task is over."
"Until the task is over," D'seun said softly. "Until then."
* * *
D'seun rose from the world portal into the candidate world, now New
Home. Its clean winds brushed the transfer's disorientation off him. A
quick turn about showed him P'tesk and T'oth waiting on the downwind
side of the portal's ring. D'seun flew
quickly toward them.
"Good luck, Ambassador D'seun." P'tesk raised his hands. "Is there
news?"
D'seun touched his engineers' hands. "Engineer P'tesk, Engineer
T'oth. There is news, but not all of it is good. Let us return to the
test base, and then I can tell our people all at once."
As often as he had done it, it was strange to D'seun to fly over the
naked crust without even a scrap of canopy to cover it. He could barely
taste the life base they had seeded the winds with. He imagined
sometimes that this was not a newly emerging world, but a prophecy as
to what Home might become—lifeless stone and ash sculpted by sterile
winds.
So it will be if T'sha has her way.
Their base was little more than a few shells tethered together with
half a dozen infant cortex boxes to nurture the necessary functions.
Not comfortable or companionable, but it served its function, as they
all did.
"Team Seven," D'seun called through his headset, "this is Ambassador
D'seun. We are gathering in the analysis chamber. I have word of the
latest vote from the High Law Meet."
Like the rest of the base, the analysis chamber was strictly
functional. The undecorated walls showed the shell's natural pearl and
purple colors. Separate caretaker units, all holding their specialized
cortex boxes, had been grown into the shell. That and a few perches
were all there was to the room.
D'seun, T'oth, and P'tesk arrived to find T'stad and Kr'ath already
waiting for them. They all wished each other luck as the others
filtered in. D'seun's gaze swept the assembly—his assembly, his team
who had worked so hard to prove the worth of their world. He laid claim
to them all, and if that was greedy of him, so be it. After so much
work and so many promises, he had earned the right to be a little
greedy.
"Where is Engineer Br'sei?" D'seun asked.
The others glanced around the chamber, as if just now noticing
Br'sei was gone.
"Engineer Br'sei?" he asked his headset.
After a brief pause, Engineer Br'sei's voice came back. "I'm at
Living Highland 45, Ambassador. I'll listen in over the headset.
I have to check the stability of the base seeding here. I think we may
be running into some trouble from the high salt content of these lavas."
"Then listen closely." D'seun raised his voice to speak to the
entire assembly. "The ambassadors to the High Law Meet have voted. This
world, our world, is declared New Home!"
All around him, voices trilled high, fluting notes of jubilation.
D'seun let them enjoy. They had all worked so hard. Thousands of
dodec-hours of observation and analysis. Millions of adjustments in
proportion and organization on the most basic levels. Sometimes it felt
as though each molecule had been hand reared. But they had made their
promise to the whole of the People, and they had kept it. Life could be
made to thrive here in these alien winds.
"That is not all the news, however," D'seun said, cutting through
their celebration. He waited until the last echoes of their chaotic
song died away. "Something new has happened on Home."
All their attention was on him, and he told them about Gaith. For
the first time there was no danger of interference from T'sha, and he
could tell what had really happened. An entire village had died an
indescribable death in such pain as life should never know. It had
happened in a few hours. A life the villagers thought they knew, a life
they had grown and cherished for thousands of years, had gone insane.
Insane as it was, it would turn on other life until nothing was left
but a mantle of death surrounding the entire world.
When he was finished, not one of them remained their normal size.
They all huddled close to their perches and close to each other, small
and tight, as if they could draw their skin in far enough to shut his
words out.
"I know the dangers of haste," he said at last. "I was taught, as
you all were, that haste is equal to greed as a bringer of death. But
this time, to be cautious is to die. This new rot will not wait for us
to make our careful plans."
Soft whistles of agreement filled the room. D'seun let himself
swell, just a tiny bit. "There are those who do not understand this,
however. There are those among the ambassadors who insist that we
wait. For what? I ask. Until our cities all fall? No, they reply. Until
we are sure of the New People."
Silence. The New People. No one liked the mention of them. The New
People might be poison, and everyone here felt that in every pore.
Time to remove that poison. "We are all concerned about the
New People. We have watched them as closely as we are able. You have
labored with great care to understand their transmissions to each
other and their commands to their tools. You have spoken to me in a
straightforward fashion, as dedicated engineers should, about the
fragility of life and the resources of community and the claim of life
upon its own home. But I must ask you other questions now."
D'seun focused his attention completely on P'tesk. "P'tesk, have we
found any new life here? Any life we did not ourselves spread?"
"No, Ambassador," said P'tesk. "Except for our life base, the winds
are clean. The living highlands do not really measure up to that
name—none of the ones we've observed anyway."
"T'vosh." D'seun switched his focus to the youngest engineer. "Have
we seen signs of mining or sifting for the hard elements?"
"No, Ambassador," T'vosh answered quickly. "And among the
transmissions, we have heard no plans for such."
"No plans that we understand."
The last was spoken by Tr'es. D'seun did not let himself swell in
frustration. It was a good point. Besides, Tr'es's birth city was
Ca'aed, as was T'sha's. She would have to be handled carefully in the
time to come.
"None that we understand, yes." D'seun dipped his muzzle. "Our
understanding is far from perfect. Our ability to separate , image
and message and tool command is not complete, although we have made
great strides. The New People may be making plans for legitimate use of
this world." His gaze swept the assembly. "But they have not done it
yet. When has a mere plan, an unfulfilled intent, ever been grounds to
withhold a resource?" He let them think about that for a minute. "Most
importantly"— he spread his wings wide—"nothing has prevented them from
detecting the life base. Nothing has prevented them from finding us.
They have made no move to challenge our claims or to contact us as one
family contacts another when there is a dispute over resources."
Let
those words sink through their pores; let their minds turn that over.
"There is nothing, nothing, in the laws of life and balance which
prevents us from moving forward and laying legitimate claim to this
empty, pure world."
Whistles of agreement, notes of encouragement bathed D'seun. This
would work. He had them convinced. "Despite this, for reasons of her
own, the ambassador of Ca'aed"—he glanced at Tr'es—"is doing all she
can to delay the transformation of this world, and she is citing the
presence of the New People as her reason."
Tr'es was not intimidated, not yet. "How could she do otherwise?"
Tr'es asked. "They are here. Ambassador T'sha is both cautious and
pious."
"Ambassador T'sha has acquired the body of Gaith Village for the
people of Ca'aed," replied D'seun. "She has indentured all Gaith's
engineers to the resurrection of the village. She hopes to exact many
promises for herself and her city, even while the new rot spreads on
the winds."
Silence, deep and shocked, filled the chamber, broken only by the
slight rustling as the engineers inflated and deflated uneasily.
"Surely there is a misunderstanding," stammered Tr'es. "This cannot
be the stated goal."
"It is not the stated goal," said D'seun softly. "But I fear it is
the true goal. I grieve with you and your city, Engineer Tr'es, but
power has turned many a soul sour. This is why the teachers warn us so
stringently against greed. Through greed we turn the very needs of life
against each other."
Tr'es covered her eyes with her wing in confusion and denial.
D'seun said nothing, just let the silence settle in ever more deeply.
At last, Tr'es lifted her muzzle. "What are we to do?"
D'seun felt satisfaction form deep in his bones. "Ambassador T'sha
is coming here herself to inspect the claims of the New People. We must
make sure she is given no reason to doubt that this world is free for
us to use." He focused his attention on each of his engineers in turn.
"She must have no opportunity to question what we do here." He pulled
his muzzle back and drew in his wings. "I will make no move without
your agreement. You are not indentured, and I do not lead without
consensus. We will take a poll now. Vote as your soul's understanding
moves you. Let me hear from those in agreement."
One by one, his engineers whistled their assent. Even Tr'es whistled
agreement, low but strong.
"I thank you," said D'seun softly. "Soon, all your families will
have cause to thank you as well. We can move forward with our work now,
without doubt or hindrance. Enjoy, my friends. Soon promises will be
made in your names and on the backs of your skills."
More wordless songs of delight and triumph rang out. D'seun swelled
to his fullest extent to take in every note and nuance. It was then he
realized that his headset had remained silent. Br'sei had not added his
vote.
Sudden suspicion flowed into him. "To work, to work, my colleagues,
my friends. We do not have time to waste!"
His happy words sent them all scattering to their tasks. Not one of
them commented as he flew out into the clear air to claim a kite. He
too had work to do, and they were all aware of it.
Right now, his work was to find Engineer Br'sei.
* * *
Br'sei glided around the side of the living highland. His bones
tightened nervously, barely allowing him the lift he needed to fly,
even down here in the thick air near the crust.
You are being ridiculous. He forced himself to relax and
gained a little height.
You have grown things that are a thousand
times more terrifying than these New People.
But nothing stranger.
In truth, he was here only because Ambassador D'seun demurred every
single time Br'sei suggested they place close surveillance on the New
People. D'seun worried about being seen, about the New People raising a
peremptory challenge to their presence if they were seen. The
ambassador seemed completely disinterested in the New People's
explorations of the crust. Even now, when their activities had
increased so markedly.
If the New People had a legitimate claim on this world, it would be
disastrous, but it must be known. Br'sei listened to D'seun's stirring
words through his headset and heard the enthusiastic agreement of his
colleagues. Grim silence settled within him. D'seun spoke, D'seun
inspired, but D'seun did not know. Br'sei, on the other hand, had to
know.
So Br'sei flitted around the highland, weaving in and out of its
stony ripples to spy on the New People and see what could be seen.
Below him, Br'sei saw the flat, wing-shaped carriers that the New
People used to take themselves from place to place. They had smooth
hides and glistening windows and were unbelievably clumsy. However,
they seemed to serve their purpose well enough. Grace may have been
sacrificed for durability.
No New People walked the surface between the transports. Perhaps
they were dormant now. Br'sei dipped a little closer, equal parts of
fear and excitement swelling his body.
Then, he saw movement on the ground. Two lumps of what he had first
taken for crust moved toward the transports. From their shadow rose
what
looked like one of the People's own constructors.
Br'sei backwinged, holding his position and watching. The
constructor and its accompanying tools glided between the transports as
if sniffing at their sides, seeking what? He spoke to his headset, but
it could pick up nothing from them, no exchange, no projection,
nothing but silence.
At last, the tools retreated to a deep crevice in the highland wall.
Br'sei dived after them, bunching himself up tightly to fit between the
stone walls where they hid.
The tools made no move as he came within their perceptual range. Now
he could see that the one was indeed a constructor. It had the
umbrella, the deeply grooved cortex and the manipulator arms. The
other two had only eyes and locomotors. Overseers? Recorders maybe?
"What is your purpose?" asked Br'sei in the most common command
language.
No reply. Br'sei repeated the question in four of the other command
languages he knew, also with no result.
Frustration tightened Br'sei's bones. "Who made your purpose?
Engineer D'han? Engineer T'oth?" Neither name elicited any reaction.
The tools stayed as they were, unmoving, unresponsive. Br'sei's crest
ruffled. A tool should at least respond to its user's name. "Engineer
P'tesk? Engineer—"
"Ambassador D'seun."
Startled, Br'sei's wings flapped on their own, lifting him and
turning him. Ambassador D'seun flew over a ridge in the highland's
wall and deflated until he was level with Br'sei and the tools.
"Good luck, Br'sei," said D'seun amiably. He spoke to the tools in a
command language that Br'sei couldn't even recognize the roots of. The
constructor touched the ambassador's headset. Br'sei realized with a
start that he must be using a chemical link, something Br'sei hadn't
seen in years.
"I would ask you what you're doing here, Br'sei," said the
ambassador, "especially as this is Highland 76, not 45. But I imagine
you feel you have the right to ask me that question first."
"I don't wish to presume, Ambassador." Br'sei sank diffidently.
"But yes, I do wish to ask that question."
The constructor drifted away from Ambassador D'seun, who spoke
another few words of his convoluted command language. The constructor
headed back to the crevices of the highland with the two overseers
crawling after it.
D'seun watched them go until the tools could no longer be told apart
from the crust. "At the moment, the tools are monitoring the patterned
radio wave transmissions between the New People and their transports,
as well as their transports and their base." He swelled, just a little.
"We need to refine our translation techniques. It still takes even our
most adept engineers four or five dodec-hours to achieve what we think
is an approximate translation of any given message."
Br'sei stared at the ambassador, framed there by the living
highland. "It is difficult to accomplish such a work from a distance."
He fought to keep his voice mild. "But you have said repeatedly that
you do not want any tools within a mile of the New People, wherever
they are."
Ambassador D'seun deflated slowly, as if he were too tired to keep
his size and shape anymore. "I have wrestled with a great dilemma since
we originally dropped the wind seeds onto this world, Br'sei. Now, you
have the dubious honor of sharing it with me." He turned to face
Br'sei. "But perhaps we should speak somewhere more comfortable?"
"If you wish, Ambassador."
Patience, he told himself as
his bones twitched.
The only way you're going to get your answers
is by waiting him out.
Br'sei had been helping to design the seeds for the candidate worlds
when he first met D'seun. Br'sei was young for an adult, having been
fully declared in his eightieth year.
Back then, there were still debates raging over what the nature of
the seeding should be. Should it be a wide variety of organisms, both
useful and strictly supportive, to make sure the candidate world would
accept a range of life? Or should it be a single organism so that when
it did begin to spread, there would be fewer interactions to calculate
when the overlaying began?
Br'sei had been of the opinion that broad-seeding was the correct
method, and his experiment house was working with two dozen different
microcosms to show the differences in effect between broad-seeding and
mono-seeding.
Then D'seun had flown up to the door without sending advance notice
and asked for a tour and an appointment with Br'sei. Because D'seun
was a speaker then, he got both.
The experiment house was an old, wise workplace with heavy screens
and thick filters to keep its interior air absolutely sterile. Its
cortices were complex and well grown, each able to monitor its
crystalline microcosms for hours without supervision or correction,
leaving the engineers free to work on projection and innovation.
Br'sei led D'seun from cosmos to cosmos, showing him the hardiness
of the broad-seeding in the miniature ecosystems as opposed to the
flimsy strains of mono-seeded cultures.
"The broad-seeding provides its own support system, you see,
Speaker," said Br'sei as they paused to study yet another microcosm.
The sphere's lensing sides allowed them to see through to the
microscopic organisms thriving in the simulated cloud.
"Yes." D'seun pointed his muzzle at Br'sei.
"But
that is not truly the point, is it?"
Br'sei remembered how his crest had spread at those words. "Forgive
me, Speaker, but that is the entire point."
"Forgive me, Engineer, but it is not," D'seun replied. "The point of
the initial seeding is not to establish life, but merely to establish
that life is a possibility. First we establish that life can exist on a
world; then we survey that world carefully, understanding it
thoroughly in its pure, prelife state. Then, and only then, can we
start laying out the basis for a new canopy, one we design and
supervise in its entirety." He turned his gaze back to the microcosm,
deflating a little as he did. "We have acted too often without
understanding. We must not do that with our new world. I fear we will
have only one chance to make this plan of ours work."
Br'sei had felt himself swelling at that point, ready to argue, but
the speaker's words flew ahead of his. "What I see here convinces me
that you and yours have a tremendous understanding of how life can be
built and layered. Your life-base designs are strong and rich." D'seun
whistled, pleased. "I would like to talk to you about providing members
for the initial teams, as well as engineers and designers for when New
Home is found."
The implication that brushed against Br'sei was that this
discussion would take place only if Br'sei agreed to the idea of a
mono-seeding. The speaker did make several excellent points, and the
idea of Br'sei and his own team working on the foundations of New Home
was a powerful lure.
"I think I could be convinced, Speaker," Br'sei admitted, fanning
his wings gently to keep himself close to D'seun. "Let me bring some of
my engineers, and let us discuss this. Some new microcosms may need to
be designed."
"Thank you, Engineer Br'sei," said D'seun, and the words sank deeply
into Br'sei's skin. "Bring your people. Let us think about what we may
do together."
In the end, with Br'sei's help, D'seun had triumphed. As a result,
Br'sei and his team, which he picked out with D'seun's help, were given
the most promising
world to seed
with a mono-culture
of their own design.
It had worked and here they were, with D'seun as ambassador and
Br'sei as collaborator.
Br'sei's wings faltered slightly as that thought filtered through
him.
"I have been thinking, Engineer Br'sei." D'seun banked into an
updraft. The warm air from the highland with its delicate taste of life
lifted him high. "We say 'Life spreads life' all the time, but we do
not ever hold still long enough to think what that should really mean."
"Should mean?" Br'sei's crest ruffled and spread flat, helping him
keep an even path in the turbulent wind from the highlands. Pockets of
heat and cold bumped against him, making him have to work to keep his
position steady relative to the ambassador. If he was not careful, he
would be trapped by the same eloquent arguments D'seun had used on the
youngsters. "Not 'does mean'?"
"On Home, I would have said 'does mean.' " The updraft spilled
D'seun
into the cooler air and he drifted down again until he was level with
Br'sei. "But here we are dealing with new possibilities. Here we can
say 'should mean.' "
Br'sei deflated just a little. The ambassador's words were like a
storm wind. They could sweep you along to an unknown destination before
you even realized you were in a current too strong for you to fight.
"And have you decided what 'Life spreads life' should mean,
Ambassador?"
"Not yet." D'seun cupped his wings and hovered in place in a
relative calm. "But I am wondering if it involves surrounding yourself
with things that do not live."
"What?" The single word burst out of Br'sei before he could even
think about what he said.
D'seun dipped his muzzle. "Their transports, their base, they do not
live. They are metal and ceramic without any living component I can
find, and I have looked carefully."
"But that's…" Br'sei searched for a strong enough word and found
nothing. He gathered his thoughts again. "They are other. Their life is
different from ours," he said, trying to give his
words weight, but all the time he was thinking,
Their home does
not live? How can it care for them? How can they care for it?
D'seun glided close to him. "The question is, are they life we can
live with?"
Br'sei deflated reflexively as the last sentence touched his
muzzle. "Do you think they are insane, Ambassador?" Insanity was the
gravest accusation that could be made against another being, worse than
greed, worse than jealousy. Insanity meant they would ravage the life
around them and that they would have to be stopped before they could
damage the larger balance.
D'seun's bones bunched tightly and he sank. "I don't know, Engineer.
I do know they frighten me."
"Then why—"
D'seun's teeth clacked but his amusement was grim. "Then why did I
fight so hard for this world? Because this is the world where our life
can exist, Br'sei. The only one we have ever found where it can."
Their home does not live. Br'sei rolled his eyes upward, as
if he thought to see the New People's base floating overhead, drawn by
the thought. The New People had not been his study or concern. His time
had been spent with the highlands, the clouds, and the wind seeds. Even
so, someone in the team should have told him about this.
Unless an ambassador told them not to… But that was too
much even for Br'sei, and he did not struggle when his thoughts swerved
back to the New People.
Do they isolate themselves from life, or
do they just need to isolate their kind of life? How can we know?
"I have worked hard to keep this knowledge quiet, Engineer Br'sei,"
said D'seun, as if he read Br'sei's thoughts. "There are those who
would take the facts of how the New People live and create a panic to
spread across all the winds of Home. Ambassador T'sha, to begin with."
Br'sei shook himself. "Do you have so little faith in your
colleagues, Ambassador?" he asked, being deliberately blunt.
"No." D'seun swelled. "I have so much experience with them. T'sha is
rich. She hands out promises as if they were guesting gifts. She does
not want this world for New Home because
of the New People. I have managed to block her so far, but what if she
were able to cry insanity?" A single beat of his wings brought him
towering over Br'sei. "Would any of the People be willing to run from
insanity toward insanity?" Now their muzzles touched and the
ambassador's words sank deep into Br'sei's skin. "How long does Home
have left for us, Br'sei? Twenty years? Forty? How long will it take
before a new world can support us in all our billions?"
"At least fifty years," admitted Br'sei.
"So, we have no time to waste in panic and argument."
"But—"
"But if the New People are insane, they must be treated as such."
D'seun let himself drift away. "If they are not, they must be treated
as such. Right now, we know only three things— that they have no
legitimate claim on this world, that we cannot decide on their sanity
until we understand them better, and that we cannot waste time looking
for yet another candidate world."
Br'sei's bones bunched together. He would have plummeted had not the
warm plumes from the highland cradled him. "I am not so sure,
Ambassador."
D'seun dipped his muzzle. "Of course not. These are not small
thoughts. This must all be digested and studied from all angles. But
tell me this: you do truly agree that action without knowledge will
lead to disaster?"
"It can," admitted Br'sei.
"And you do agree that we have no time to waste in the creation of
New Home?"
Br'sei dipped his muzzle. "I have seen the cities rotting too,
Ambassador. I heard your tale of Gaith. I am aware our time is short."
"Good." D'seun flew over him, letting his hands graze against
Br'sei's crest. "Then give me this much. Do not panic Ambassador T'sha
when she comes. Do not tell her how much we know." He turned on a
wingtip. "And help me understand the New People. With knowledge, your
doubts and mine will all be resolved. We will not be fumbling and
flapping in our helplessness, as we must on Home, where the diseases
and their progeny have flown too far ahead for us to ever understand,
let alone overtake. Here, we must always know how to proceed."
We must always know how to proceed. Br'sei let D'seun's
words echo inside him. He wanted to believe that was possible, but
sometimes he doubted it. What he did know, however, was that D'seun had
convinced himself of the Tightness of his words, and a mere engineer
would not change Ambassador D'seun's mind.
Ambassador T'sha, however, might be able to, and if she couldn't
change D'seun's mind, she might be able to sway the Law Meet, which
even D'seun could not ignore.
But Br'sei would have to steer a careful path. If D'seun did not
think Br'sei was convinced, the ambassador would find a way to have him
removed from the team. That was very much D'seun's way.
"I shall work with you, Ambassador." Br'sei inflated himself until
his size was equal with D'seun's. "Together we will see what we can
find."
I do not, however,
promise you will like what I will do with
what we find.
It was not until they had returned to the base and dispersed to
their separate tasks that Br'sei realized D'seun had never answered
one question about the tools near the New People.
Contents -
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Chapter Five
A fresh United Nations flag dominated the rear wall of the
passenger clearing area. Its sky blue background made a stark contrast
to the soft, shifting reds and golds that the walls had been set
for. Ben was glad to see, however, that Helen had drawn the line at
welcoming banners.
Ben stood beside Helen and Michael. The assorted Veneran department
heads ranged past them in a ragged line. Beyond the hatch, they could
hear the soft whirs and bumps of the docking corridor extending and
clamping itself to the newly arrived shuttle.
"Here they come," announced Tori from the control booth.
"The intercom better be off in the corridor," muttered Helen.
"Tori knows what she's doing," Michael assured her, somewhat
absently.
Ben said nothing. He was too busy dealing with his own emotions.
Anger, irrational and completely out of proportion, seethed inside him.
He feared that if he had to open his mouth, it would all come spilling
out in an unstoppable red flood.
God, I knew it was going to be bad, but I didn't expect it to be
this bad.
The last time he'd seen the U.N. come into a colony, he'd been in a
holding cell, watching lines of neatly dressed judges and bureaucrats
arrive with their armed escorts. There seemed to be hundreds of them,
all there to deal with the "criminals" who had "broken the rule of law
in Bradbury." He remembered the fear he'd felt, wondering what would
happen to them all now, and the deep shame at that fear.
None of the people standing next to him now knew about that cell or
that he had ever lived on Bradbury at all. He'd managed to disconnect
his records from that past and that person. But he could not disconnect
his memories, even if there were times he wanted to.
Like now.
The hatch cranked itself open. Ben's stomach clenched itself
involuntarily.
Get over it! They're just tourists. They're going
to be rumpled and gravity dizzy and slightly stupid, like any other
crowd of Earthlings.
Edmund Waicek, the man Ben considered to be the most dangerous
member of the C.A.C., had cheerfully sent Venera's governing board a
list of their invaders. Ben had to admit, Helen had worked her end
quite well. It could have been a lot worse.
The first two down the ramp Ben recognized as Robert Stykos and
Terry Wray, the media faces. Their job was to create the in-stream
"news" presentations on the U.N. investigation of the Discovery. Both
had been restructured to look exactly average, only more beautiful.
They might have been brother and sister, with their coffee-and-cream
skin, big brown eyes, and shoulder-length black hair (hers pinned under
a bronze scarf, his pulled back into a ponytail under a red beaded
cap). But where Stykos was tall and broad, Wray was petite, almost
elfin. Both wore glittering camera bands on their foreheads and command
bracelets on their wrists.
"Mr. Stykos, Ms. Wray." Helen, in full public relations mode,
stepped forward and shook their hands. "Welcome to Venera Base. I'm Dr.
Helen Failia. Allow me to introduce my associate, Dr. Bennet Godwin,
who is our head of personnel and chief volcanologist…"
So it began. Stykos and Wray both looked long and hard at him,
making sure their cameras got a good image of him smiling and shaking
their soft hands. Lindi Manzur, the architect, beamed up at him as if
she'd never met anyone more fascinating, except maybe Troy Peachman
(was that a real name?), the comparative culturalist (whatever that
was), at whom she kept glancing fondly as he followed her down the
line, shaking everybody's hands with a kind of firm enthusiasm that
came with
practice.
What have you two been doing for the past week and a half?
he wondered snidely.
After them came Julia Lott, the archeologist, a sturdy fireplug of a
woman with a square face and tired eyes. She was followed by Isaac
Walters who looked so uncomfortable that Ben had to wonder if he'd ever
left Mother Earth before.
Out of the corner of his eye, Ben saw Grace Meyer smile broadly and
step forward from the line.
Oh, right, this is the biologist, he thought as he passed
Walters down to Michael.
Next, a tall, pale woman in artistic black and white swept up the
line. Veronica Hatch, here to look at the laser and pronounce
judgment. In contrast to Walters, she seemed ready to parachute down to
the ground and start digging in.
There was a pause then, just long enough for Ben's anger to start
simmering again. There were only two people left to come.
Angela Cleary and Philip Bowerman emerged together from the docking
corridor. She had sandy skin and sandy hair, which she wore short under
her white scarf. He was darker, with wavy hair and tropical skin and
eyes that took in the entire room at a glance. Both of them were tall,
broad in the shoulders and narrow at the waist, people whose bulk came
not from body-mod, but from work. They both wore the blue tunics with
white collars that were the uniform of U.N. security assessors on
official duty.
Ben's blood ran hot, then cold. It must have showed in his face. He
knew Michael was looking at him, but he couldn't help it. He'd sat for
hours in little windowless rooms with uniforms like these, being
recorded and interrogated until he couldn't think straight, couldn't
remember if he'd implicated his friends or not, couldn't decide whether
his own lies still made sense. All he could do was feel his burning
eyes, raw throat, and aching bladder.
What if they know me? What if they were there? The thought
rose unbidden from the back of his brain.
"Pleased to meet you, Dr. Godwin," Cleary was saying. Ben focused on
her, a little startled, but she just smiled politely.
Ben stuck his hand out and shook hers. It was strong and slightly
calloused. He made himself look into her amber-colored eyes. He saw no
hint of recognition there, and relief, as irrational and unlooked for
as his anger and his fear, almost robbed him of his balance.
"Pleased to meet you, Ms. Cleary," he answered in as steady a voice
as he could manage.
Too young, he thought to himself.
Security
has limits on how rejuvenated you can be, and they're both way too
young to have been at Bradbury.
That realization allowed him to greet Bowerman with something
approaching equanimity.
Then, it was over. The yewners mingled with the department heads,
making polite small talk about their voyage and the base. Helen flitted
between the conversational groups, reminding everyone of the reception
scheduled for that evening. Grace Meyer walked Isaac Walters a little
way off from the general crowd and talked to him in low, urgent tones.
Michael took charge of Cleary and Bowerman and was telling them about
the provisions he'd made to get them access to base records regarding
the Discovery. Stykos and Wray stood back and photographed it all.
Then, in groups of twos and threes, the yewners and their chaperones
began to make their way to the elevator bundles. The crowd thinned, and
Ben found he could breathe again.
The sound of footsteps echoing through the docking corridor turned
Ben around again. Another person emerged. This one wore a tan tunic and
trousers with blue ID patches, the standard uniform for crews on
distance ships. It took Ben a moment to recognize him.
"Hello, Dr. Godwin."
Joshua Kenyon, one of Venera's atmospheric researchers, held out his
hand. Well, no, he wasn't exactly Venera's. He'd never made the
commitment to live on the base. He just came up every now and again to
do his work on Rayleigh scattering in the upper atmosphere and then
went back down to Mother Earth to analyze and publish what he'd found.
Because of that, Ben
found himself unable to really like the man.
Kenyon was also not scheduled to be back for at least another six
months.
"Hello, Dr. Kenyon." Ben shook his hand. "This is unexpected,
especially in uniform."
Kenyon blushed a little. "I know. They weren't even going to let me
back up. Special flight for U.N. VTPs only. But I knew a couple of guys
on the crew, and they kind of smuggled me in." He gestured at his
uniform. "Not to spec, I know, but when I heard about the Discovery, I
couldn't help myself. I'm really hoping Dr. Failia will let me get a
look at that laser."
Of course. Kenyon used lasers constantly in his work. Ben's dislike
for the man did not change the fact that Kenyon was probably one of the
best optical engineers Venera had access to. Of course he wanted a look
at the laser. He'd be just the person to pull the machine apart and see
what it was made of and what it was for.
Ben shook his head regretfully. "I'm sorry. Helen's put a ban on any
Venerans, or anyone else, going down there until the yewners… the U.N.
team has finished up. Doesn't want anybody to get in their way or to
challenge whatever theories they come up with by presenting a whole
bunch of facts. She says there'll be plenty of time for that later."
Kenyon's face fell one muscle at a time. "I may just ask her
anyway," he said at last. "Do you think getting on my knees and begging
would help any?"
Ben did not laugh. "She's got her hands full, Dr. Kenyon. I think
it'd be better if you just waited until the investigative team's
finished."
Kenyon's eyes searched Ben's face, and Ben saw in them the knowledge
of his, Ben's, personal dislike. That was all right; he'd never
supposed it to be a secret.
At last, Kenyon blew out a sigh. "Okay, if that's the way it is,
that's the way it is. I'll wait." He paused. "Or did you rent out my
room while I was gone?"
"No, your quarters are still right where you left them." Venera
kept a set of apartments for people like Kenyon who came and went on
regular schedules. Ben stepped aside. "Sorry you went through all this
for nothing."
The thought
no you're not, flickered across Kenyon's face,
but he quickly smoothed it out. "Thanks," he said as he strode past
Ben, heading for the elevators.
Alone, Ben let his shoulders sag. The U.N. flag fluttered in the
breeze from the ventilator shafts, and Ben found his hands itching to
go over and rip it down.
Pull it together. You have more important things to worry about.
Ben focused his eyes on the corridor and marched past the flag,
almost as if it wasn't there.
* * *
The door to the Surveyors' lab opened as soon as it identified
Bennet Godwin, just as all the doors on Venera did. That fact could
still amaze him. There had been a point when he assumed he'd never be
trusted again.
And I may be about to blow all of it. He shoved the thought
aside. This was not some petty academic political battle. This one was
for the real world.
Except for Derek Cusmanos and several dozen neatly arrayed survey
drones, the cavernous room was empty. All the personnel who'd been
assigned to Derek were off either in the scarabs or in their own
offices, poring over years of satellite data, looking for more alien
bases. The mammoth wall screens showed a series of seemingly random
still shots—the mush-roomlike dome of a pancake volcano, the ripples of
one of the lava deltas, the ragged, concentric rings of a collapsed
crater.
Derek himself crouched in front of one of his drones. This was one
of the surface surveyors, which looked like miniature scarabs with eyes
and arms. Derek had it turned over on its side so he could get at the
hatch in its belly. Whatever he saw there was so absorbing that he did
not look up as Ben started across the floor.
"Derek?"
Derek grunted and held up one finger. Ben stopped where he was,
folding his hands behind his back and getting ready to wait. Derek,
like most of the mechanical engineers Ben knew, had the tendency to get
completely absorbed in his work. Ben studied the rows of drones with
their spindly arms, picks and containers for taking samples, lasers for
measuring, cameras for every kind of photography. Derek knew them all.
Had built half of them. Had come very close to losing his job because
no one felt the need to fund a human mapmaker when drones and computers
could do that
just fine. The drones themselves could, of course, be cared for by the
same staff that took care of the scarabs.
Derek finished his repairs or adjustments, closed the hatch, and
heaved the drone upright onto its treads. Only then did he stand
up and really acknowledge Ben's presence.
"Afternoon, Dr. Godwin." Derek plucked a sterile towel out of the
box and started wiping his hands with it. "What can I do for you?"
"Afternoon." Derek had been one of Ben's students when he was still
teaching. Ben had long ago given up trying to get the younger man to
use his first name. "Have you got the new pictures of
Ozza Mons?"
"Fresh in." Derek tossed the towel down the recycling shaft and
plunked himself
behind the sprawling, semicircular desk that was in his main
workstation. The desk woke up, and he typed in a quick command
sequence. The wall image of the lava delta disappeared, replaced by the
ragged, ashen gray throat of an old, massive volcano. "Looks pretty
dead."
"May just be dormant." Ben studied the picture, but the familiar
sense of excitement failed to rise in him. "We'll have to go down and
look at it."
"If you can get a scarab for anything but ogling the Discovery."
Derek shook his head at his keyboard. "It's amazing, you know? I mean,
I knew, once we found it, that the Terrans wouldn't
think there was anything else worthwhile up here, but I thought the
Board…" He stopped.
Ben held up his hand. "Now that the tourists are here, everybody's
supposed to go back to their normal duties. Dr. Failia wants to give
your visitors plenty of room to play."
Derek made a sour face. Ben returned a smile and changed the
subject. "Have you found anything that looks like another outpost?"
Derek shook his head. "They've given me the entire geology
department, and we've got every surveyor, from the satellites to the
minirovers, set on fine-tooth comb, but there's nothing."
"Think we will find anything?"
Derek started but recovered quickly. "How would I know?"
Ben shrugged. "You found the first one. I thought you might
recognize… traces."
Derek didn't look at him. His gaze wandered over the silent ranks of
surveyors with their waldos, cameras, and caterpillar treads. They were
heavy, blocky, reinforced things, completely unlike the delicate
machines Ben had worked with on Mars. "The drones found the first one,
Dr. Godwin, not me. But there are no traces of anything around it. It's
just sitting there, a random occurrence." He paused and finally
returned his gaze to Ben. "Or have your people found something new?"
Ben barked out a laugh. "You have all my people. You're going to
hear anything long before I do." Then, he paused, as if considering a
new thought. "Although… well, you've got a trained eye. Can I get you
to take a look at one of the new batches of images your team passed me?"
"Sure." Derek poised his hands over the command board.
"It's file number AT-3642."
Derek entered the number and brought up the picture on the wall
screen. It was a black-and-white still shot, taken from one of their
ancient satellites. It showed a gray raised ring with a dark center and
long pale ridges radiating from the sides. Derek studied it for a
moment.
Ben leaned one hand against the back of Derek's chair and peered at
the image, as if trying to see it in greater detail.
"Looks like a tick," Derek said. A tick was a type of volcano found
only on Venus. It got its name because from above it looked like a
gigantic, round-bodied insect with its crooked legs sticking out at
irregular angles.
"Yeah, it does," said Ben, watching Derek carefully. "Except it's
never been mapped."
"Oh? Well, that describes a lot of the planet." Venus had three
times the land area of Earth. Detailed mapping was the work of multiple
lifetimes. "Do you want me to put it on the list for close study?"
"No, no." Ben shook his head.
Especially since it does seem
you've never seen it before. "You've got your hands full. Just see
about routing me a couple of close-ups during the next flyover, okay?"
"Okay." Derek made a note on one of his flat screens. "Was there
anything else?"
"Not really." Ben straightened up. "Will I see you at the
reception?"
"Maybe." Derek turned his attention back to his command board. The
lava delta reappeared on the wall, this time with the white lines of a
measuring grid laid over it. "When I'm done here."
"You should consider putting in an appearance," Ben suggested with
a small smile. "I think Grandma Helen is counting noses. If she isn't,
she'll be reviewing the tapes later."
Derek glanced up. "Thanks, Dr. Godwin. I'll show myself."
"Good choice." He patted the boy on the shoulder and
showed himself out.
Ben walked down the broad corridor to the elevator bays and, as was
his habit, took the sweeping staircase instead. Space was Venera's one
true luxury, and Ben had to admit he reveled in it. The stairs were
wide, and the ceilings were high. There was room for people coming up,
going down, and just standing around talking or leaning against the
outer railing. The elevator shafts made mini-atriums, so he could look
the whole, long, dizzy way down and up again and hear the sounds of
purposeful life drifting to him from each of the twenty-four decks. Ten
thousand people living and working peacefully together. It could be
paradise if it were allowed to be.
Ben turned off at the landing for the administration level, getting
ready to head for his office. But he stopped in mid-stride and glanced
at the clock on the wall. Quarter of five, with the reception at six.
No one would think anything of it if he didn't stay at his desk until
the required hour.
And what Ben really wanted to do could not be done in the office.
So he returned to the stairs and walked down three levels to the
residential section. The apartments took up most of the two levels
above the farm and one level below. Everyone had a full suite of rooms:
bed, bath, study, living, and kitchen. Even the visitors. With the
soaring ceilings, full-spectrum lights, and generous use of e-windows
and greenery, you could almost forget you were in a colony.
In his own rooms, Ben always kept one of his screens set to show the
clouds outside. He did not want to forget.
Other than that, Ben's apartment was pretty much as he had moved
into it. Someone looking for evidence of the owner's personality would
have had to work hard. After a while, they might have picked out the
shiny chunk of obsidian on the end table by the couch, the brightly
polished garnet on the half-wall that divided the kitchen from the
living room, and the piles of open screen rolls on the desk, coffee
table, and couch. From this they could have concluded that the owner
liked rocks and was dedicated to his work.
As his door shut behind him, Ben crossed to the sofa. He picked up a
pile of screen rolls to clear space for himself and sat down. His
briefcase rested on the coffee table. He didn't jack it in; he just
woke it and called up a privately encrypted file that waited for both
the password and the scan of his fingertips from the command board.
The file opened for him and displayed a picture identical to Derek's
AT-3642.
It did look like a tick. It had the circular center and the ridges
radiating out like crooked legs. In black and white and two
dimensions, those ridges appeared to be level with the ground— until
you had spent a day looking at everything you had as if they were alien
artifacts because you couldn't help yourself, until you enlarged it and
refined it and squinted at it for hours.
Then you saw it was not level with the ground, that the ring was, in
fact, sitting well above ground level, and that the "ridges" might be
supports of some kind.
He couldn't be sure, of course. The only way to be sure would be to
fly one of Derek's prize camera drones in there, shine a laser over the
thing, and make a holograph of it. But close study of anything on
Venera involved other people—assistants and their supervisors, Derek
as the drone keeper; Helen, who had to know what was going on at all
times. Ben did not
want anyone,
anyone, else involved in this yet. Anyone on
Venera anyway.
What Ben knew currently was that this object was approximately 1.3
kilometers across and that it had been there somewhere between 40 and
170 years. The
Magellan probe sent up in the 1990s hadn't
seen it, but the
Francis Drake had, and the
Francis Drake
went up just as the first plates of Venera were being bolted together.
So never mind where the Discovery with its three little holes in the
ground came from. Where did this…
thing come from?
But no one was looking at it, except him. Derek's complete
nonrecognition had told him that. If someone else had been checking out
this spot or this object, Derek would have confirmed it. Everyone else
was looking in the ground for more holes. No one had looked up.
Ben's first thought had been to rush to Helen with this, but he'd
hesitated. He told himself that it was just because he wanted to be
sure. He didn't want to speak before he had the facts.
But that wasn't it, and even as he was rationalizing his actions at
three in the morning, he knew that.
Ben slumped backward and ran his hand over his scalp, scrubbing the
gray bristles that were all that was left of his hair. Male pattern
baldness he'd never bothered to get corrected. He hated med-trips when
they were necessary, never mind the idea of getting stuck in one of the
capsules for cosmetic touch-ups.
He'd had a full head of chestnut hair at Bradbury. He'd been so
young. Ben chuckled to himself.
God, when did twenty-seven get to
be young?
He'd taken his own sweet time getting through college. Some of his
friends joked he was in on the "eternity program." Ben replied he was
just looking for something to get excited about. Comparative
planetology, with its possibilities for exploration and discovery, had
come close to filling the bill.
Then he went to Bradbury for his post-doc work and he found the real
thing.
Theodore Fuller was just picking up steam when Ben arrived. No one
on Earth took him seriously, but in the colony itself, that was
another story. The stream was full of his words and of people talking
about them.
Ben had arrived at Arestech, Inc., to set up shop in their lab and
run their surveyors with every intention of ignoring Fuller's message.
But he couldn't help hearing. To his surprise, Fuller didn't talk about
the good old days of the nation states, like most people who had grief
with the U.N. did. He didn't talk about the past at all. Instead he
talked with enthusiasm and delight about the present—how modern
technology had finally made possible a truly free flow of information,
information available to each and every human being no matter who they
were, no matter where they were. Information made it possible for
everyone to control their own lives completely in a way that had never
been possible before. It could bring them into contact with whomever
and whatever they needed. They could pick and choose what their lives
held. There was no more need for middlemen or for central government.
After all, what did governments do? Provide security? There were no
more nations to wage war on each other. Personal security could be
provided by electronics or a private company, depending on the needs
and desires of the individual. The government regulated commerce? Why?
The market, like nature, could take care of itself and had for a long
time now. When was the last real economic collapse? Late twenty-first
century, wasn't it? Before the stream was truly established.
How about rule of law? Employment for lawyers and bureaucrats
mostly. A person who felt unjustly treated could seek satisfaction in
courts run on the same principles as any other business. The ones in
which the arbitration and settlement procedures were seen as just and
fair would have the most subscribers and work with the greatest number
of private security companies. Those who didn't like the justice of one
system could subscribe to another which they read about and evaluated
in-stream.
The central government did not need to exist. It was an idea from
previous centuries. It was like the great North American weed called
kudzu. It had invaded so long ago no one remembered where it came
from. They just knew it was there, and they spent a lot of time,
effort,
and money dealing with it because no one knew how to get rid of it. No,
because no one was ready to do what was necessary to get rid of it.
Well, the good news was that dealing with the U.N. was a lot easier
than dealing with kudzu. All you had to do to get rid of government was
say no. Simple. Direct. Say no, show the bureaucrats the nearest ship
out, and get on with your life. Your life, your money, your future.
Yours. No one to say who could and could not build on the planets, no
endless rounds of licensing for ships and shipping, no one to hedge or
ban scientific research that frightened them, no one to ever again
supervise bloodbaths like the U.S. Disarmament.
Ben had had no blaze-of-light revelation. He'd started reading
because he almost couldn't help himself. Fuller and Fuller's ideas were
all anybody talked about. He had to find out for himself whether they
would work or not.
The answer shocked and scared him. It could work. The free flow of
information was the key, just as Fuller said. The U.N. had been, in
some ways, a necessary stage to eliminate the barriers imposed by
nation states and national currency. But now that it had nothing
external to fight against, it had turned around, like all powerful
governments had throughout history, and started to feed on its own, and
people put up with it because they couldn't see any way past it.
Bradbury and its people could show them. Bradbury could push the
U.N. out the door and thrive. When they did, the rest of the worlds
would see that it could be done, and done safely and quickly. It would
start with Mars, out on the frontier, but it would spread all the way
back down to Mother Earth herself.
It should have worked, but they moved too fast. Fuller got bad
advice, or maybe he just got overconfident, but they overestimated the
number of their followers in Bradbury. Too many people just stood
around and did nothing. Too many other people actively tried to
undermine the revolution and were judged dangerous to the
implementation of the new system. Transporting all the dissenters back
to Earth turned out to be a bigger problem than had been anticipated.
During the process of transportation, someone got sloppy and didn't run
safety checks on all the ships that carried the dissenters away.
Then there were the ones who misunderstood what was happening and
decided to take charge in their own way before the security systems
could be established. Revenge had overwhelmed the fragile court
corporations.
None of that changed the basic principles. Fuller's ideas still
held. But twenty years had passed and no one else had found the time or
the place to put them into practice.
Until now.
Ben stared at the clouds displayed on his view screen. They billowed
and boiled, filling the world outside. Even after so long, they could
still be awe inspiring.
When he'd first stood inside the Discovery, his thoughts had tumbled
over each other, almost too fast for him to follow. Awe, fear, wonder,
humility, and then, slowly, almost shamefully, came the idea that he
might be able to use this great thing that had happened. This might be
the catalyst for the shift in thinking that would be needed to finish
what Ted Fuller had started.
The more he thought, the more he saw and uncovered on his own, the
more certain he became. This was it. It just had to be managed, that
was all. Not suppressed, not lied about, just managed. Everything
could be made to work out for the best for all the worlds, including
Venus, if they just moved carefully.
Well? He tapped his fingers restlessly against his thigh.
If
you're going to do it, do it. If not, put your file away and go get
dressed up for the yewners.
Ben leaned forward and jacked the case into the table. He set up a
quick search code, attached his best encryption to it, and dropped it
into the queue for the next com burst to Earth. Then he got up to shave
and change for the reception.
One of the features of the stream that few people bothered to take
notice of was that if you constructed your packet correctly, you did
not actually have to store your information anywhere. So many
different, completely untended machines were constantly receiving and
rerouting data that it was possible to keep a packet bouncing between
them. Ben had several packets that had been flying from relay to relay
for twenty years now. He'd lost three to badly timed hardware upgrades
that he'd failed to get wind of, but other than that, his most secret
information bounced happily around the solar system, untraceable, not
only because of its encryptions, but because it seldom landed anywhere
long enough for any one machine to make a complete record of its
contents.
The disadvantage of this was that it took awhile to find the packet,
once you did go looking for it.
Ben returned to his case, clean shaven and dressed in tunic and
trousers of a suitably conservative blue-gray. A matching cap with
black beading covered his head. He checked the screen display.
Success.
His searcher had recovered the packet in one of the repeater relays
between Earth and the Moon and had rerouted it back to Venus. Ben
accessed his four-tier decryption key and added the password.
The packet opened to display the face of an aging man with dark
hair, pale skin, a suggestion of a beard, and mud-brown eyes under
heavy brows. His name was Paul Mabrey. He had assorted degrees from
assorted universities. He worked as a risk assessor for various small
companies, spending his time traveling from colony to colony, mostly on
Mars, looking at new market niches and good suppliers. He took
med-trips and vacations back on Mother Earth regularly but not
excessively. He had been in Bradbury during the rebellion, and while it
was felt that he had some sympathies toward Fuller's faction,
surveillance on him had been turned off over fifteen years ago
because he never did anything remotely suspicious.
He was, in fact, the man Ben used to be.
Once upon a time, Ben, then called Paul Mabrey, had been dismissed
by the yewners who had taken over Bradbury as being of little
consequence. They did, however, post automatic surveillance over him,
as they did every rebel, just in case. For three years, Paul behaved
himself meekly, like a good defeated puppy. He watched his friends
jailed, watched Fuller hauled back to Earth for trial and
incarceration. He watched the yewners take up posts on every street
corner and randomly search the passersby. He watched the taxes go up
and the licenses go down and travel get restricted. He sat in his
apartment at night and hated himself because there was nothing he could
do, not now, not ever again, because the yewners would never really
take their eyes off him. The free flow of information that Fuller had
touted as the route to the future would make it impossible for him to
hide.
He had one thing left to him. The yewners had not quite uncovered
the extent of what Paul had done for Fuller. He'd specialized in
helping make clip-outs—in-stream ghosts of people who wound up on
various payrolls and mailing lists and who, eventually, wound up with
various levels of access and permission to various segments of the
communications networks. When the uprising came, those clip-outs gave
the software corruption teams that Paul was a part of a handle on the
U.N. networks, which he used to shut them down.
Minor stuff, really, a low-level hacker trick.
But what he labored over at night, almost every night, was not. It
was researched and tested, a little bit here, a little bit there. It
was years of learning under Fuller's best, a few minor bribes, a couple
of slow, painful system break-ins, and a whole lot of patience.
Then, Paul received notice that his surveillance period was up and
he was declared rehabilitated. Good luck to you, Mr. Mabrey.
Paul, grimly satisfied, had closed the letter and gone in-stream to
request permission politely to travel to Giant Leap on business. The
yewner bureaucrat on the other end was in a benevolent mood that day
and let him go.
Two weeks later, Paul Mabrey left for Luna. He arrived at Giant Leap
and stayed for three months, working on various consulting jobs and
contracts. Then—according to all available records, anyway—Paul Mabrey
went home.
That same day, a man named Bennet Godwin, who had— according to all
available records—arrived in Giant Leap on Luna from the Republic of
Manhattan space port, got a job as a geologist for Dorson Mines, Inc.
No one knew how many clip-outs floated around the stream.
Usually they were used by people wishing to perpetrate some kind of
fraud. They were vague constructs, tied to a few vital records and
easily torn apart or scared away by semidetermined scrutiny.
A very few were like Paul, who sat in-stream and stared at Ben out
of eyes that could have been his own. Paul had been nurtured and cared
for. He had aged as Ben had aged. He had subscriptions to the major
news services and joined in-stream discussions on various items of
interest. He had credit accounts, and he used them. He drew pay from
companies he consulted for. He vacationed, theatered, and kept
apartments in Giant Leap and Burroughs. He even had personal contact
codes, which a simulation would answer and alert Ben when they were
used.
Now, it was time for Paul to come back to life. Paul was going to
get hold of some very interesting information and pass it along to a
few old associates. Paul still had a few tricks up his sleeve to keep
the yewners from noticing he'd revived some acquaintances that were
still, after all those years, under surveillance and travel
restrictions.
Paul still had a chance to prove he was not useless.
Ben, heedless of the time, hunched over his briefcase and started
typing.
* * *
"… with mutual cooperation and free exchange of ideas we will
together unravel this, the greatest of human mysteries."
Vee applauded politely, along with the rest of the gathering. Dr.
Failia smiled and stepped out from behind the podium, shifting
immediately from solemn speech-giver to smiling
greeter-of-friends-and-strangers. Vee found herself grinning. The
speeches had been well delivered and short, the food was good, and the
view… the view was stunning.
Vee hadn't stood in Venera's observation hall for eight years. She
had forgotten the impact of being surrounded by the huge, constantly
shifting landscapes of gray, white, and gold created by the clouds.
Observation Hall was ringed, from the white floor to domed ceiling,
with a seamless window of industrial quartz,
so it was
possible to stand and stare until you felt as if you were alone and
exposed in the midst of that boiling alien mist.
Not that that's going to happen tonight. Vee felt her mouth
quirk up.
The place is way too full.
A couple of hundred Venerans plus the investigative team
circumnavigated around tables loaded with appropriate predinner
snacks
and beverages. Stykos and Wray, camera bands firmly in place, flanked
the tall dark woman who Vee vaguely remembered was head of
meteorology. Lindi Manzur stood in front of the window, a little too
close to Troy Peachman, who was gesturing grandly as he expounded about
something. Vee smiled softly and turned away from their private moment.
Everyone in the gathering had made an effort to show some gold or
silk. Vee herself had been torn between wanting to put on a good show
for the cameras and not wanting to break the
conservative veneer she'd been carefully cultivating during the entire
week-and-a-half flight up here.
In the end, she'd selected a green-and-gold paneled skirt, with a
green jacket trimmed with gold piping and an abbreviated gold turban
with a green veil falling down behind to cover her
unbound hair. It looked good enough to make the story cut, but not so
outrageous as to offend academic sensibility.
Apparently, however, she was not circulating enough. Out of the
corner of her eye, Vee saw Dr. Failia making a beeline for her. "Good
evening, Dr. Hatch. Thank you for coming." Vee shook her hand. "I'm
sorry I'm late, Dr. Failia. I'd forgotten just how big Venera is."
"After a week on a ship, it can take some getting used to, yes." Dr.
Failia nodded sympathetically. "Tell me, did you have a
chance to review the visuals we've taken of the Discovery?"
"Yes, in
between learning how not to get squashed and burned when we go down."
Vee smiled to let Dr. Failia know she
was kidding.
Dr. Failia laughed once, politely. "And did you form any initial
plans as to how to proceed?"
"Yes. The first thing we need is a spectrographic analysis, to find
out what kind of laser we're dealing with." Vee warmed as she talked,
excited about the possibilities her research might open. "Then, I
think…" Vee's gaze strayed over Dr. Failia's shoulder. Michael Lum, the
security chief, waited
two
steps behind her.
Dr. Failia followed her gaze. "Excuse me, Dr. Hatch," she said
hastily. "Please, help yourself to the buffet."
Dr. Failia crossed quickly to Lum, who murmured something in her
ear. They both looked up at the entranceway, just as Bennet Godwin
walked through. Failia frowned and strode over to the latecomer.
Uh-oh, Vee turned away and skirted the conversational knots
as she made her way to the food tables.
Somebody's getting
demerits for tardiness.
The buffet was a good spread, with the Western traditional cheese
and crackers, but also with couscous, falafel, and various flat
breads, triangles of toast with what looked like mushroom pate,
miniature empenadas, and some blue pastry things that Vee, with all her
experience of artsy receptions, couldn't put a name to. Glasses of wine
flanked bowls of ginger and fruit punches, as well as silver samovars
of tea and coffee.
Vee was debating over what to sample next, when she felt someone
walking up to her side.
"Excuse me. Are you Dr. Veronica Hatch?"
Vee turned to face a sparsely built man with ruddy skin and tawny
eyes. He was only a few centimeters taller than she was. He wore a blue
baseball cap over his thick brown hair instead of a more fashionable
brimless cap or half-turban. It made a pleasantly rebellious contrast
to his formal gold-and-black tunic and trousers. Vee decided she liked
him.
"That's what they tell me," Vee answered cheerfully and extended
her hand. "Hi."
"Hi." He shook her hand with a good grip, which was also pleasant.
Most people got a look at her long, thin hand and adjusted their
greeting touch to something overly delicate. "I'm Joshua Kenyon. Josh."
Ah. His name rang memory chimes inside Vee and brought up
the titles of several recently surveyed publications. "Vee. I've read
you."
He did not, to his credit, look at all surprised. Dr. Kenyon had
about a gigabyte of published work on tracking particle flow and
interaction in the Venusian atmosphere using realtime laser holography
techniques. Vee's job, before she got her first patent and turned to
experiential holograms, was "time-resolved sequential holographic
particle imaging velocimetry," which was the official way of saying she
took four-dimensional images of particles in dense plasmas. Most people
didn't know she'd done serious lab work. Some refused to believe it.
"Are you going to be leading the research on the laser?" Vee asked,
as she picked up one of the blue pastries. "And do you know what these
are?"
"That's crab rangoon, dyed blue to preserve some of the mystery of
life," said Josh promptly. "And the research on the laser is actually
what I wanted to talk to you about."
"Oh?" Vee arched her eyebrows. "Shall we get out of traffic?"
"Good idea."
Vee paused to collect a small plate of blue things and followed
Josh over to one of the little round tables covered with a white cloth
that always seemed to spring up like mushrooms at these gatherings.
Vee sat and pushed the pastries toward Josh, who shook his head. Vee
took one and nibbled the edge. Yep, crab.
A flash of orange in the clouds caught her eyes. A delicate flurry
of sparks spiraled up through the mist, tiny petals of brightness
scattered through the impenetrable fog.
"Star trails." Vee smiled at the beauty of the small event. "We must
be going over one of the volcanoes."
Josh checked the position readout set in the floor. "Yeah,
Xochiquetzal Mons. It went active, I guess twenty years ago now."
"They're beautiful." As Vee watched, the clouds swallowed the sparks
whole, but a fresh trail swept along the wind as if these new sparks
wanted to follow their friends.
Josh nodded in thoughtful agreement. "Make me nervous, though."
"Why?" Vee cocked her head at him.
A look of frank surprise crossed his face, followed by a sudden
realization. "You didn't get down to the surface last time you were
here, did you?"
"No need." Vee shook her head and nibbled another pastry. I was just
here for the clouds."
Josh took off his cap and smoothed his hair down before relacing
it. His face said he was considering some internal question. Then,
apparently, he got his answer.
"Well," he said, "you met Michael Lum, right?"
Vee nodded. In fact, she could see him through the crowd, pacing
alongside Philip Bowerman talking about whatever spooks and spies
talked about. Vee found herself wondering where Angela Cleary had
gotten to. She did not seem to be in evidence anywhere.
"Michael's a good guy," Josh went on. "He's a v-baby. Born here. His
parents were almost the first people on the station when Helen opened
it up. His father, Kyle Lum, was a climatologist, and he was out doing
some surveys of the lower cloud layer when the scarab ran into a star
trail." He stared out at the sparks as they danced away into the
clouds. "Sheered off one if the wing struts, dropped the entire scarab.
They got their parachute out, fortunately, but they slammed into the
side of one of the mountains. The rescue team dropped after them,
within minutes, but when they got there"—Josh shook his lead—"the hull
had ruptured. There was nothing left."
Vee glanced back at the fading sparks. A shiver ran up her spine. "I
think I'm glad I didn't know that when I was photographing them."
Josh laughed a little. "Sorry. Not the best subject of
conversation, especially with a newcomer."
Vee waved his words away. "Don't worry about me. So"—she brushed a
few crumbs from her skirt—"what about the laser?"
Josh took off his cap again and smoothed his hair down once
more. "It's not actually about the laser," he said. "It's about getting
a look at it."
"How so?"
He blew out a sigh that puffed his cheeks, put his cap back on,
and looked down at his fingertips as if to see his words written there.
Vee waited.
"I work on Venera on a regular basis. I do my stints here for about
nine months at a time and then go home and do the lecture and paper
routine. I was on Earth when the news about the Discovery dropped into
the stream. When I heard about the laser, I didn't even think about it.
I just got myself onto the next ship back. I assumed…" He shook his
head and started again. "I assumed, since I was known and had a
longtime affiliation with Venera, that I'd be able to get on the short
list for a look at the thing, maybe even a chance to help in the
analysis." He lifted his gaze. "But, no, that's not the way this is
going to play. The laser is your territory for now, they're telling me.
After that, maybe we'll see, but in the meantime, it's just you."
"I see," said Vee, and she really thought she did. "And you think I
can get you a piece of this?"
"I don't know," he admitted. "But it seemed worth a shot."
"Why the rush?" she asked breezily. "It'll be there after I'm done
with it."
The look he gave her indicated his estimation of her mental acuity
had just taken a header. Vee grinned. "Got it. You want to see what the
aliens left too."
"Don't get me wrong, I love my work." He tugged on his cap's brim.
"I always wanted to be out in space, but there are days when I'm very
aware that I'm really just a glorified weatherman." His eyes grew
distant. "This is the stuff we've forgotten to dream about."
Vee felt her grin widen.
Joshua Kenyon, you're a romantic! I
thought they'd put the last of your kind into zoos. "I don't see
how there could be any problem with it. It's not as if…" She cut
herself off but glanced around the room. There was Troy, glad-handing
yet another patient Veneran with Lindi trailing behind him. There was
Julia at the buffet, being photographed by Terry, and there was Robert,
staring straight at her while Isaac seemed to be occupied in keeping as
many bodies between him and that window as possible.
"As if?" asked Josh.
One corner of Vee's mouth turned up. "As if they've overloaded us
with skilled workers. And I include myself in that." She slumped
backwards and stared at her plate with its blue bits of pastry. "I
swear, I don't know what they were thinking when they picked this
bunch."
Josh looked at her carefully. "You really want to know?"
Vee thought about it for a minute. "Yes," she said.
Josh sighed, lifted his cap, smoothed his hair down, and replaced
it. "Because you're harmless."
"What?" Vee straightened up slowly, uncertain that she'd really
heard those words.
"I talked to some of the other atmosphere people about the U.N.
team. I was wondering the same thing. Turns out that Grandma Helen
pulled a whole set of strings to make sure whoever the U.N. sent up
wouldn't be able to do much in the way of actual investigation. She
wanted all the glory, and all the publications and the money, to go to
Venerans."
Vee's face flushed. Anger gathered in the back of her mind. The real
work to the Venerans. That she understood. But there was plenty to go
around. There had to be. Wanted to get a team that couldn't do much…
brought her up here not because they respected her skills, but because
they suspected she lacked them. Just another pretty popularizer. Just
another stupid face.
Vee's jaw clamped down so hard her teeth started to ache. She stood.
"Vee…" began Josh. "I'm sorry. I shouldn't have—"
"Don't worry about it," she said without looking at him. Her gaze
swept the room until it fastened on Helen Failia, who didn't think she
knew enough. Who didn't think she could do this job and had her
handpicked because of that.
Vee strode across the room, barely seeing where she was going.
Slow down, Vee. Slow down! This is not going to do anyone any
good, especially you. She stopped in her tracks. Her chest had
tightened, and she was breathing way too hard.
Stop and think what
you're doing. You throw a fit now, and you'll just be proving their
point.
In the back of her mind she heard Rosa's voice: "Be careful what you
pretend to be."
Vee turned away from Failia, hoping the woman hadn't noticed her
angry approach and abrupt change of plan. Evidently not. No one came up
to her as she found an empty table and sat. The cameras were occupied;
so were the other U.N. investigators, with each other and the cameras
and with the whole wide cloudscape, and not one of them knew why they
were here.
I'm gonna kill her. Vee bowed her head into one hand.
I'm
gonna kill myself. What was I thinking? I actually believed—
"Dr. Hatch?"
Vee looked up. Terry Wray stood over her.
"If this little tableau turns up in-stream—"
"It's off, it's off," Terry reassured her, lifting her hair out of
the way so Vee could see the band was well and truly dark. "But are you
okay?"
Vee pushed her veil back over her shoulders. "Not right now, but I
will be."
"Okay, good." Terry smiled. "You're one of my star attractions. I'd
hate it if you stomped off or anything."
"Oh no," replied Vee sweetly. "They're not getting rid of me that
easily." A thought struck her. "Terry, can I use you shamelessly for a
minute?"
A whole variety of expressions crossed Terry's face from amused
curiosity to interested calculation. "As long as we stay in public,
sure."
Vee squeezed her hand. "Turn that thing back on, and when I start
talking to Helen Failia, come up and start paying attention, okay?"
Terry looked down her snub nose at Vee. "Okay, but I get an extra
interview for this."
"Done."
Vee rose, pasted her best sunny, vapid smile on her face, and
slipped over to where Helen Failia stood talking with Philip. Vee
waited for a pause in the conversation and then strode forward, timing
her attack.
One, two, three, she pauses for breath and…
"Dr. Failia, good, you're still here."
Helen turned toward Vee, all solicitous. "What can I do for you, Dr.
Hatch?"
"Well"—Vee folded her hands in front of her—"I hadn't realized Dr.
Kenyon was going to be on base. I thought he was still on his Earthside
swing."
Helen's expression went slightly rigid as she held back some
impolite emotion. "Ah, you know Dr. Kenyon?"
"By reputation. I've read his work." She glanced across at Josh and
let her smile grow even happier. "I'm so glad he'll be with us. I don't
mind telling you." Vee leaned forward confidentially. As she did, she
saw Terry coming into range on the very edge of Helen's field of view.
"I'm excited about this opportunity, but my lab work was all done a
long time ago. Without someone who's in better practice, I'm afraid I
might make a mess of things." She laughed lightly. Dr. Failia looked
gratifyingly disconcerted.
"I'm sorry." Vee pulled back and blinked rapidly a few times. "He
is
coming down with us, isn't he? His help would be utterly invaluable to
me."
Come on, there's the camera, you see it. You aren't going to
admit you're sending down a half-assed team, are you?
Helen Failia didn't even hesitate. "If you feel Dr. Kenyon can be of
assistance, of course he will be included in the investigative
roster." Only a slight darkness in Helen's clear eyes told Vee that she
did not think this was an excellent idea.
"Marvelous." Vee beamed. "Thank you so much." For good measure, she
shook Dr. Failia's hand before she turned away and strode out the door.
"That was pretty shameless," murmured Terry behind her.
"You should see me when I'm trying." Vee turned, and her smile was
feral. "Thanks. Contact me when you're ready for that interview."
"Never fear." Terry's face grew thoughtful. "You should be careful
about getting to like this too much, Dr. Hatch."
"You know, I've got a friend back home who says the same thing." Vee
felt her face soften. "You're probably both right too."
Terry gave her one more thoughtful look.
Sizing me up,
thought Vee.
For what? "I've got to get back," was all Terry
said. "See you tomorrow."
"Bye."
Vee let her go and started walking down the corridor, suddenly both
tired and frustrated.
Hope this doesn't get you in any kind of
trouble, Josh, but I was not, I was not,
going to let her get
way with this. You and I. She paused before the elevator.
We're
going to make something of this, and Dr. Failia can just sit back and
watch us.
* * *
Kevin Cusmanos hated accounting. Especially late at night after an
evening spent smiling and chatting with a glass of wine in his hand
when what he really wanted was a beer. He hated staring at the rows of
figures in their little boxes and checking them on a split screen
against the individual logs where everyone was supposed to enter all
their individual orders and purchases but never did.
However, it came with the job. So he sat in his office with coffee
steaming in a plastic mug, ancient Afro-Country playing over the
speakers, and a burgeoning dislike of Shelby Kray, one of the new guys
who could not seem to get the hang of keeping track of his money.
The door, which Kevin never locked, swished open. Kevin glanced up
briefly and saw Derek framed in the threshold.
"Hey," said Derek, a little tentatively. He still had his party
clothes on—black slacks, red tunic, and cap.
Now's not a great time, little brother, thought Kevin, but
all he said was, "Hey."
Derek wandered in and dropped down on the stiff sofa Kevin kept for
visitors. Most offices had chairs, but Kevin insisted that it was
traditional for a mechanic to have a rundown sofa, so a sofa he would
have.
"So, when they dropping you down?" asked Derek.
Kevin eyed him, trying to see what he had really come in for.
"Couple of days. Gotta get at least some training into the tourists
first."
Derek tapped the back of the sofa, sort of in time with the music.
"They're going to be sending Josh Kenyon down with you. Did you know
that?"
"Yes." Derek still wouldn't look at him. "Ben let me know at the end
of the reception. Said it was Dr. Hatch's idea."
Come on, Derek,
say it, whatever it is. It's just you and me here.
But Derek just changed the subject again. "And you're taking Adrian
with you?"
Kevin sighed and looked back down at his screen. "Yeah, Adrian will
be with me in Scarab Five. Charlotte and Bailey are taking down
Fourteen." The problem, he decided was that Shelby wasn't used to the
idea of human backup for computer records. He'd come from a fully
automated and fully profit-making environment.
Just have to take him aside and teach him the importance of
counting those beans…
"I don't envy you, Kevin."
"I don't envy me either," muttered Kevin before he realized Derek
was not talking about correcting Shelby's accounting behaviors.
"You expecting problems?" Derek was working hard to make the
question sound like idle curiosity, and he was failing miserably.
At least now I know what you wanted to talk about. Kevin
leaned back with a sigh. "Actually, Derek, I am, and you should be too."
Derek shook his head and dropped his gaze, smiling a little, it was
an old gesture, a little-boy gesture Derek had picked up when trying to
put one over on teachers, and principals, and pretty girls. "Well,
we'll just all have to do our best, won't we?" he said brightly. When
he looked up again, all he saw was Kevin's blank expression.
"I guess so," Kevin ran one finger along the edge of the desk. "Dr.
Meyer talk to you lately?"
Derek nodded, relaxed. "Yeah. She doesn't mind the pause, he's got
lots of new data to correlate, she says, especially with the biologist
they sent up."
Kevin met his brother's eyes. He saw all the uneasy trust in them,
all the shaky confidence that everything was still going to be okay
because not only was one of the big shots in on this, his big brother
was too. A thousand things jumped into Kevin's mind all at once, all of
them needing to be said. Hell, begging to be said.
Derek slapped his hands down on his thighs and got to his feet.
"Derek…" started Kevin.
"What?"
And if I say anything, then what? He won't stop. I'll just scare
him, and if he's scared, he'll give it all away. It's not just Michael
we're dealing with now. We've got the U.N. here. "Never mind."
Derek shrugged. "Okay, then. I won't."
"Okay."
Derek walked back out into the main hangar. The door swished shut
behind him. Kevin rested his elbows on his desk and stared at the
screen. The rows of dollar figures and time signatures made no sense.
They were just numbers, tidy sets of numbers that didn't mean anything
at all.
What had ever convinced him that they did?
* * *
"We are ready to make the recording, Ms. Cleary," called Phil
through the open door.
"Thank you, Mr. Bowerman," Angela shouted back. "I'll be right
there."
Philip and Angela had requested adjoining suites on the grounds that
they'd have to be doing a lot of screen work together and they didn't
want to have to monopolize a conference room. Angela wasn't entirely
sure Dr. Failia believed them, but she wasn't sure she cared either.
Angela pulled out a chair from under Phil's dining table and
swiveled it to face the wall screen. She sat down and flattened her
screen roll on her lap. As she did, Phil pressed the Record key and
started talking to the wall screen.
"Good evening, Mr. Hourani. This is preliminary report you asked
for. We've had several conversations with Michael Lum, the chief of
security here. He's cooperative, if not terribly enthusiastic. We've
established a monitoring approach on com traffic to and from Mars that
everybody can live with…"
"We're monitoring transmission levels, just for the past six months
as opposed to the previous couple of years, seeing if we get any
jumps," put in Angela.
"We've also checked dips into known stream hot spots," Philip went
on, ticking off a point on the screen roll he had spread out on his
lap. "There's a few Venerans who like to talk separatist politics, but
they're all in the shallows, nothing going on down in the depths." He
glanced at Angela.
Your turn,
he mouthed.
Angela found her next point on her own roll. "Bennet Godwin was
late to the U.N. reception tonight, but we got in a face-to-face. My
impression is that he seems more sour than serious. If he's doing
anything other than being sympathetic to the Bradburyans and being
annoyed at U.N. interference with his schedule pad, he's doing a
tremendous job of hiding it."
"In short, sir," said Philip, "so far so good. There seems to be
nothing going on here but science and general good clean living." He
reached for the Send key, but Angela frowned, and he hesitated.
"The only thing is…" She started and then stopped. "Could be
nothing,
probably was nothing, but if it wasn't…"
Say it Angela. "The
tension around here is thicker than the cloud cover. During the
reception, I felt as if I was in a shark pool, and the sharks were all
waiting for the first hint of blood."
The corner of Philip's mouth quirked up. "You ever dealt with a
research facility that's short on funding before?"
Angela shook her head. "But this one isn't anymore."
"True, but if you've been living in fear for a while, it can take
time to bleed away."
Angela shrugged. "I offer it for what it's worth." She paused. "Mr.
Hourani, you should also know that I will be the one going down to take
a look at the Discovery with the rest of the investigative team. Phil
required me to engage in an obscure North American combat ritual known
as scissors-paper-stone to determine which of us would take the plunge,
and I lost."
Phil's smile was all benevolence. "And on that note…" Philip touched
the Send button, and the record light faded out in time with the glow
of the screen.
Angela dropped the screen roll on the couch and yawned hugely. "Want
something caffeinated?" asked Philip.
She shook her head. "I was on coffee all through dinner; any more
and you'll be peeling me off the ceiling."
"Scotch then? The base distillery's surprisingly good."
She waved him away. "Want the boss to catch me with a glass in my
hand? We're on the clock until he takes us off it."
"Relax, Angie, he can't see you from Earth."
"He'd smell it on the ether." Philip opened his mouth, and she held
up her hand. Philip shrugged and let it go, picking up his notes
instead. They each settled down to their own work and their own
thoughts until the screen chimed again and lit up with an incoming
message.
Mr. Hourani's head and shoulders appeared on the screen. The wall
behind him was completely blank, so he was probably in his own office
rather than one of the conference rooms.
"Good evening, Mr. Bowerman, Ms. Cleary," said Mr. Hourani. They'd
both given him permission to use their first names, but Angela had
never heard him do it. "Thank you for your initial report. Your
compromise on the Venus-Mars communication monitoring is excellent. I
doubt we'll see anything there, but if we do, it would be best if the
Venerans see it too. We are conducting this one in the full blaze of
media jurisprudence. You in particular are being watched. If we make
an accusation we must be very, very certain of our facts or we will be
vilified from one end of the stream to the other." He gave them a
small, ironic smile. "I know. Someone is going to do that anyway, but
I'd prefer it if they were wrong and we were right." Mr. Hourani turned
over a sheet in front of him. "Now, as to Ms. Cleary being the one to
actually visit the Discovery, all I have to say is, given Mr.
Bowerman's fondness for ancient combat rituals, I would have expected
you to be ready for this eventuality." He flashed a look full of his
best mock severity. "I can only hope you will do better next time." His
face softened instantly back into his normal, neutral expression.
"Continue with your good work. I will be very interested in what you
uncover." The connection faded to black.
"Excellent job, Ms. Cleary," said Phil.
"Excellent job, Mr. Bowerman," replied Angela. They shook hands
vigorously. Angela rolled her screen back up and stood. "I've got
training tomorrow morning. You want to get together afterwards and do
an initial rundown on the Mars monitoring?"
"Sounds good." Phil stretched his arms up over his head and let them
swing back down. "Tough going on the EVA stuff?"
Now it was Angela's turn to shrug. "Getting in and out of the suits
is a pain, but other than that…" She shrugged again.
"Actually, I'm kind of looking forward to this. It's not a chance that
comes around every day."
"You're right there. I just"—Phil waved his hands as if looking to
catch hold of the right words—"cannot get excited about going down into
that hellhole."
Angela chuckled and slapped him gently on the shoulder. "Wimp. You
go through space just fine."
"Ah"—Phil held up one finger—"but if the ship springs a leak in
space, chances are you'll have time to do something. One of those
scarabs springs a leak, and you're going to pop like a balloon."
"Actually, I'll flatten and vaporize." She smiled at him. "They
showed us a video. See you at breakfast?"
"You bet."
In her own room, Angela laid her screen roll on the desk. She stared
at it for a moment, trying to understand what was bothering her. So
far, the assignment had been a walk in the park. Everybody, everything,
was as they were supposed to be, with just enough little variations and
surprises to assure her that she was seeing them all accurately. The
underlying tension could easily exist because Venera Base was a colony,
a unique colony in a unique situation to be sure, but a colony all the
same; and colonists did not generally like yewners, with good reason.
From the outside, Venera looked simple, but when you got inside, you
saw it was anything but. It was called a research base, so everyone saw
the scientists and the engineers and seldom got beyond that. But the
majority of the ten thousand people on the base were not scientists.
They were maintenance staff, shopkeepers, teachers, administrators,
farmers, skilled and unskilled workers, children, and what Angie called
"support spouses," people who kept the house and raised the children
and did the business of living so the other spouse could take care of
the other kinds of business. As on any isolated base, people were
largely defined by what work they did. Your work determined who you
socialized with, where you lived, how you were treated in the social
hierarchy—and there was definitely a hierarchy, with the scientists at
the top. She hadn't quite defined the bottom yet. It was somewhere
between the butchers and the farmers.
Not that there were bad neighborhoods here or anything like that.
Grandma Helen would never have permitted it. Everything was clean,
everyone was looked after one way or another. Everyone had some kind
of community to keep them going—villages within the village.
All of which helped explain one of the other things Angie had found.
Some people had spent their life savings and a whole lot of time trying
to get here. It was far more peaceful than Mars and, unlike the Moon,
was uncontrolled by corporate interests. It was also far friendlier
than Earth. There were people who saw this as paradise, and Grandma
Helen as Mother Creation.
All day Angela had talked to people: on the mall, on the education
level, in the food-processing plants, and all day she had heard the
same thing. "Grandma Helen, she's a great woman."
"Grandma Helen, she keeps this place going."
"Grandma Helen knows what she's doing." It was amazing. It was a
little frightening.
But still, there was something. Snippets. Near misses. Hesitations.
She shook her head. She'd tell Phil about it at breakfast tomorrow. One
of the things she liked about her partner and her boss was that they
paid attention to unformed concerns. Maybe together Phil and she could
dig out whatever her subconscious was trying to tell her.
Angela smiled. One thing was for sure. If Venera Base had secrets,
it would not be keeping them for very much longer.
Contents -
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Chapter Six
"My fellow Ca'aed continues to enjoy its health?"
The sad envy in the city's question shivered through T'sha and made
her shift her weight on the kite's perches. Disease and too many
sterile winds had crippled the city of K'est. Pity surged through T'sha
as her kite carried her through the city's body. The supporting bones
shone white around her, as bleached as the corals. The only colors
seemed to be the painted shells, with their sayings and teachings
written in beautiful calligraphy overlaying graduated shades of rose
and lavender.
"Ca'aed has been fortunate," T'sha replied to the city through her
headset. "I have brought Ambassador Z'eth a new cloning of skin cells
that have worked well for us."
"Ah," sighed K'est, "I look forward to receiving them." Although
long illness had given K'est a slight tendency toward self-pity, the
city was not yet dying. Far from it. Everywhere, T'sha passed people
alive with purpose. They tended and studied. They sampled and directed.
In several places, she saw clusters of constructors and their
attendants grafting living tendons onto dead bones and transplanting
coral buds that glowed pink and orange with vibrant life. Although the
winds swirling outside the city were thin, inside its sphere they were
thick with life and nutrition. It was almost as if the engineers had
turned the entire city into a refresher chamber. T'sha felt her skin
expand to take in the richness flowing all around her. All of this life
was the result of Ambassador Z'eth's tireless efforts. Another
ambassador would have given up long ago and indentured her people to
other cities for the best terms she could get. Perhaps she would have
gone so far as to try to grow a village from what little still lived of
her city.
Z'eth, however, soared over her tragedies. It was known that K'est
had suggested that her people disband and allow her to die, but Z'eth
would not hear of it. Instead, she had bargained and bartered for her
city's needs with a zeal that left the most senior of the High Law Meet
in awe. Her city, her people, were not rich and might not ever be
again, but they were alive, and if they were not strong, they were
still proud.
T'sha had to admit Z'eth's call for a private meeting made her
nervous. Z'eth could wring promises from the clouds and the canopy, and
T'sha was beholden to her on several levels. What did Z'eth want from
T'sha? Or, even more important, what did she want from Ca'aed?
Z'eth's embassy lay beneath the city's central temple. The embassy
was a chamber of shell and bone twined with ligaments and synaptic
lace to connect it directly to the major sensory nodes of the city.
What the city felt was transmitted to the embassy without the city even
having to speak. Z'eth could tell by the tone and texture of her
embassy walls how her city fared.
T'sha gave her kite to one of the embassy's few healthy mooring
clamps and presented herself to the portal. It recognized her image
and essence and opened for her.
"I have told the ambassador you are here," said K'est. "She is in
the debating chamber."
"Thank you." T'sha slipped cautiously forward.
The embassy was crowded. So many people rested on the perches and
floated in the air that T'sha could barely find room to glide through
the corridors. T'sha glimpsed tattoos as she wove her way between them.
Some were engineers and teachers, which she had expected, but most
were archivists and trackers.
Of course, not even the city could keep track of all Z'eth's
promises. If there is enough of the city to work complex issues…
T'sha winced at her own thoughts. K'est lived. It would grow strong
again. Z'eth was dedicated and would see it happen.
T'sha laughed softly at herself. Old superstitions. Send a bad
thought out on the wind, and it would land where it began. A
Dessimistic
thought about K'est's health could affect Ca'aed's.
At last, T'sha made her awkward way to the embassy's debating
chamber. The room filled with the scent and taste of people. Words
crowded the air and bumped against T'sha's wings. In the center of it
all hung Z'eth, her posthands clutching a synaptic bundle as she
listened to an engineer, a teacher, and an archivist. For a moment,
T'sha thought she might be taking the pulse of her city as it listened
to the same discussion and weighed the words.
T'sha waited politely in the threshold. Eventually, Z'eth
disengaged herself from her advisers and glided a winding but still
dignified path to the door.
"Good luck, Ambassador T'sha." Z'eth raised her forehands. "I'm
sorry you find such a crush here. We've had a heavy day. K'est is
suffering from a vascular cancer in the upper eastern districts. As you
can imagine, we must work quickly."
The news shook T'sha's bones. "Good luck, Ambassador," she said
hurriedly, even as she touched Z'eth's hands. "Please, allow me to
return some other time. You have too much to do here without—"
Z'eth fanned her words away. "You leave for New Home in two
dodec-hours, do you not?"
"Yes," admitted T'sha, "but—"
"Then my words must touch you now." Z'eth lifted her muzzle, as if
tasting the air to find a quiet space. "Let us go to the refresher. It
is not the place for polite conversation, but—"
"Gladly, Ambassador," T'sha dipped her muzzle.
"Then follow me, if there is room," Z'eth added ruefully.
They made their way through the corridor, sometimes flying,
sometimes picking their way from perch to perch, but at last the
refresher opened for them. T'sha allowed the thick air to surround her.
The circulation pushed her gently from point to point, allowing her own
toxins to disperse while her skin took in what nutrients the room had
to offer. The walls sprouted fresh fruits and other dainties, but T'sha
did not sample any, even though nervousness had emptied her stomachs.
Z'eth let the room float her for a while. It seemed to T'sha her
skin was drinking deeply of quiet as well as nutrition. As T'sha
watched, Z'eth swelled, opening her pores and relaxing her bones.
The moment, however, did not last. Z'eth returned to her normal
size, angling her wings and spreading her crest to hold herself still
against the room's circulating breezes.
"I have been following up the records of your votes, Ambassador,"
she said as T'sha brought herself to a proper distance for
conversation. "You have been lavish with Ca'aed's promises."
T'sha resolved not to drop her gaze or twiddle her postfingers.
"Now is not a good time to narrow our chances of success on the
candidate world." She could not yet bring herself to call it New Home.
D'seun's words still echoed through the High Law Meet. His friends were
many, and they had promises they could call in at a moment's notice.
"Without constant countering, there was still the danger that a vote
might be taken to ignore the New People altogether and simply start
full-scale conversion of the candidate world into New Home."
"Ambassador T'sha," sighed Z'eth, "as one who has represented her
city for a long time, let me warn you—if Ca'aed got sick now, you would
have nothing to save it with."
T'sha lost her balance for a moment and drifted away. Z'eth's words
touched her secret fear. She had not even voiced the worry to Ca'aed
itself, although she suspected Ca'aed knew. "Ca'aed is strong and has
the wisdom of years."
"The past did not help Gaith. We are flying into the nightside,
Ambassador T'sha, and we may not come out." Z'eth dipped her muzzle.
"Especially if we do not have New Home."
"Ambassador." T'sha hesitated. "Did I have your vote only because of
my promises?"
Z'eth swelled. "No." The word was strong against T'sha's skin. "I
believe you are correct. We must understand the New People. We must
know they have no claim on the candidate world. If a feud began, we
could be divided if there were… questions about our right to do as we
do. We cannot be divided."
T'sha felt as if all the air had rushed away from her wings and that
she must fall. "A feud with the New People? How can it even be
contemplated?"
"If we both want the same thing, and we both have justifiable
claims, how can it not be contemplated?" returned Z'eth. "Ambassador, I
know that your mother favored teachers from the temples for your
education, but you are not that naive. We have a severe problem. We
need New Home. We have New Home underneath us. We must be ready to
secure it. We cannot question that."
Even if the New People truly have a legitimate claim?
Ambassador, what are you asking of me? In the next moment T'sha
knew, and the realization tightened her skin and bones. Z'eth wanted
T'sha to go in and study the situation, as mandated by the vote in the
High Law Meet. Then, no matter what she found, Z'eth wanted T'sha to
say that the New People had no legitimate claim to the candidate world.
"Ambassador Z'eth… I cannot promise to give you the answers you
want."
"I know that." Z'eth drifted even closer. The taste and touch of her
words flooded T'sha's senses. "I am not asking you to say anything you
do not see. I am asking you to understand how serious this matter is.
How deeply we need this done. I am asking you to imagine scars on
Ca'aed's hearts and the ancient walls crumbling to dust on the wind
because the life has been bleached out of them. I am asking you to
imagine your city in pain." She paused. "I am asking you to imagine
what I have been through with K'est."
Shame and confusion shriveled T'sha. Already Ca'aed was afraid, a
fact that never left her, even though her city had never spoken to her
of it but that once. What if… ?
"I have never underestimated the dangers," said T'sha, uncertain
whether she was trying to reassure Z'eth or herself.
"I think you have, Ambassador," said Z'eth, cutting her off. "I am
sorry, but I believe what I say to be the truth. You are young, you are
rich, and you have all the Teachings behind you. I have only my
crippled city and my people promised down to their grandchildren."
T'sha clamped her muzzle shut. If she tried to speak now, she would
only spurt and sputter like a nervous child. Even so, she could not
believe what filled the air between them. Ambassador Z'eth wanted her
to discover that the New People had no legitimate claim to the
candidate world so that if those New People wished to begin a feud over
the world, the People themselves would not even consider that the New
People's cause might be legitimate.
Z'eth asked for this without facts, without sight or taste or any
other concrete knowledge.
She asked T'sha to tell this heinous lie because she, Z'eth, feared
for her city.
No, no, that's not all, T'sha tried to banish the thought.
There
is more to it than that. She fears for her city's people, for all of us.
But even if Z'eth only feared for her city, surely that was fear
enough. T'sha tried to imagine Ca'aed as ill as K'est. What would she
do? What would she not do?
And she owed Z'eth heavily for her support. Without her, T'sha would
not be going to the candidate world at all.
But what was the point of T'sha going to question D'seun's work if
she took the answers with her?
T'sha tensed her bones. "I will remember the touch of your words,"
she said. "I feel them keenly. They will not fall away from me in the
winds of the candidate world."
"Thank you, Ambassador," said Z'eth gravely. "That is all the
promise I ask."
Thank you, Ambassador, for that is all the promise I can give.
"Is there anything else we must discuss? As you said, I must leave
soon, and I still have so much to settle with Ca'aed and its
caretakers."
Z'eth dipped her muzzle. "Care for your city, Ambassador. May it
stay strong for your return."
They wished each other luck and parted, Z'eth to find her advisers,
and T'sha to find her kite.
What T'sha could not find again was her calm. As her kite flew her
home, T'sha turned Z'eth's words over and over again, searching for
comfort, or at least a kinder interpretation in them.
A feud with the New People. It was not something she had even
considered. If the New People had any kind of claim on the candidate
world, surely, the People themselves would simply leave. Life served
life. Life spread life. Sane and balanced life did not spend itself in
useless contest. It found its own niche and filled it to the fullest.
The People were sane and balanced and would not feud with the New
People.
But what if the New People feud with us?
All of T'sha's bones contracted abruptly at the thought.
No.
She shook herself.
It could not happen. There are things which
must be true for all sane life. If they have no claim, they cannot
contest our claim. There would be no reason for them to. Z'eth is a
great ambassador, but perhaps she has been fighting too long for the
life of her city.
Not that she is growing insane, T'sha added to herself
hastily.
But perhaps her focus has narrowed.
That was a good enough thought that T'sha could pretend to be
content with it. But even so, Z'eth's words about a sudden illness
touching Ca'aed left a nagging fear. Almost instinctively, T'sha
ordered her headset to call Ca'aed.
"Good luck, Ambassador," came the city's voice. "How went your
meeting with Ambassador Z'eth?"
T'sha deflated. "I will tell you, Ca'aed. I don't know which upset
me more, Z'eth or her city."
Ca'aed murmured sympathetically. "Visiting the sick can be
distressing."
A silence stretched out between them, while T'sha worked up the
courage to ask the question that would not leave her alone. "Ca'aed?"
"Yes, T'sha?"
T'sha deflated even further, as if the weight of her thoughts
pressed down on her. "You said… you said you were afraid that you would
suffer, as Gaith suffered—"
"I am afraid, T'sha. I cannot help it."
"But I may find that the New People have a legitimate claim on the
candidate world. What then?"
Ca'aed was silent for a long moment. When it did speak, the words
came slowly, as if the city had to drag them out one at a time. "If
they live in the world, if they spread life and help life, and still
their life and ours cannot live together sanely, I believe we must then
find another world."
Love welled up out of T'sha's soul. She did not question her city's
words. If the words were not completely true, she did not want to know.
She wanted only to believe. While she had Ca'aed with her, she could do
anything and needed no other ally.
As Ca'aed's sphere came into view, their talk turned to the
provisions made for T'sha's absence. Together they reviewed the
promises of authority and caretaking and agreed to their wording.
Ca'aed reported it was getting on well with Ta'teth, the newly selected
deputy ambassador, but that Ta'teth's sudden elevation still made him
nervous.
T'sha couldn't blame him. She knew what it was to sit cloistered in
a waiting room while all the Kan Ca'aed considered your skills, your
family, the promises you had made and accepted, and told the pollers
who went from compound to compound whether they believed you were
worthy of their trust. And this was before the question was even
officially put to Ca'aed itself.
"He will calm down soon, I believe," said Ca'aed. "Wait. Ah. Your
parents speak to me and ask me to remind you that you agreed to stop by
your home and talk about marriage promises."
"Do they?" T'sha clacked her teeth hard, once.
"You should have your own household."
Indignation swelled T'sha back up to her normal size. "Are those
your words or theirs?"
"Both."
I am surrounded. "You are my city, not my marriage broker."
"You are my citizen as well as my ambassador. I speak for your
welfare. Does your own body not speak to you of children?"
"Frequently."
This is a lovely conversation to be having right
now. It is not a distraction I need.
"Well then?"
"All right, all right." T'sha rattled her wings. "Take me there.
Public affairs must wait for affairs of the home and egg, it would
seem."
"Sometimes, T'sha." A rare flash of humor brightened Ca'aed's voice.
"Sometimes."
Ca'aed spoke to T'sha's kite and took control, guiding it between
the swarm of traffic—kite, wing, and dirigible that always buzzed
about Ca'aed and its wake villages. T'sha's birth family lived near the
top of the city. When she was young, she and her siblings had played
chase, darting in and out of the light portals that made up their
personal ceiling.
The family Br'ei had encouraged a garden around the tendons that
tied their private chambers to the main body of the city. Anemones in
all the colors of life puffed out eggs and pollen that sparkled
brightly in the approaching twilight. T'sha paused in front of the main
door, intending to take time to organize her thoughts, but she
misjudged her distance. The door caught a taste of her and opened.
Her birth parents waited for her in the center of the greeting
room—pale Mother Pa'and who seemed to fill any room with her presence
even when she was contracted down to the size of a child, and brightly
shining Father Ta'ved, who had an aura of calm around him that could
work on T'sha better than ten hours in a refresher. The interlocking
rings of their marriage tattoos still appeared as dark and strong
against their skin as they had when T'sha was a child.
Father Ta'ved's city had fallen to a slow rot, one of the first.
Mother Pa'and's family could not bear the idea of their friends all
falling into an ordinary term of indenture, so they arranged for Ta'ved
to enter into a childbearing marriage with their oldest daughter.
After two children, Ta'ved and Pa'and decided they both liked the
arrangement. Ta'ved liked not having the pressures of his own house to
worry over, and Pa'and found him an excellent father and friend. So,
they renewed the promise. Pa'and even gave Ta'ved the option of
bringing other spouses into the household, but he had never used it.
"Good luck, Mother Pa'and, Father Ta'ved." T'sha rubbed her parents'
muzzles. She noticed, gratefully, that they had decided to leave her
little sisters T'kel and Pa'daid out of this family conversation. T'deu
had probably absented himself.
"Now." T'sha backed just far enough away so she could see their
eyes. "Let me see if I can guess how this will go. Mother Pa'and, you
will wish me the best of luck on my new mission." Mother dipped her
muzzle in acknowledgment. Father clacked his teeth, just a little. "And
you, Father Ta'ved, will mention that this is likely to be the work of
a lifetime. Mother, you will agree with him and say how hard it is to
do the work of a lifetime with no family to support you, to have to
promise constantly and barter for everything that you need instead of
being surrounded by those who are dedicated to helping you because
their future and contentment are tied to yours." T'sha swelled,
spreading her wings to encompass the whole room. "Father will agree
profoundly, and I, so moved by your arguments, will fly instantly to
the marriage broker, pick myself out three husbands and a wife, and
not leave for the candidate world until my entire load of eggs is
thoroughly fertilized." She subsided.
"Am I right?"
Mother clacked her teeth loud and hard, shaking with her amusement.
"You could have gone straight to the marriage broker, Daughter T'sha,
and saved your breath to choose your spouses."
T'sha deflated to her normal size. "Mother, Father." She thrust her
muzzle toward them, pleading. "I promise, when my business on the
candidate world is done, I will graft myself onto the marriage broker
until I have found someone to be madly in love with, someone to sire my
children, and someone to keep my home. Will that satisfy you?"
"Deeply," said Mother Pa'and. "You will never be in a better
position to make those promises than you are now."
T'sha's crest ruffled. "And if we're done predicting my imminent
political death?"
"Daughter T'sha." Father Ta'ved sank just a little. "You know that
is not what we're doing here."
"I know, Father Ta'ved, I know." T'sha brushed her muzzle against
his. "But I have been given so much, both in responsibility and
authority, that to spend time seeking after a household of my own
before I've done my duty by the People and my city… It feels greedy."
Father Ta'ved swelled proudly. "Such a feeling does you great
credit, Daughter T'sha. But children for your family and your city is
not a greedy wish."
T'sha clacked her teeth, both in mirth and utter exasperation.
"Enough! Mother, Father, you have my promises and I have an important
appointment. Can we wish each other luck with full souls and leave all
this for when I return?"
Mother Pa'and rubbed T'sha's muzzle with her own. "Of course,
Daughter. Good luck in all you do."
"Stand by your feelings, Daughter," Father Ta'ved murmured as he
caressed her. "They are sound and alive."
"Thank you, and good luck to you both." T'sha drifted away toward
the portal. "And if, when I return, you have word of someone from a
good family who is interested in perhaps two years of mutual promise to
help us both learn how to set up a house and work within a marriage, I
will not be sorry to hear of them."
Her parents' approval all but radiated off her back as T'sha flew
out the door.
The remainder of her time passed quietly. She met with her newly
selected deputy and found him much as Ca'aed described. The district
speakers were content with his credentials and competence. He would do
well as soon as he had something to do. She checked in with the
indentures working on Gaith and found all there going smoothly, if
slowly, and the quarantines being rigorously maintained.
Back at home, she played with her sisters and chatted about
innocuous things with her brother and his father, pretending nothing
much was happening in any of their lives.
Finally, she soaked herself long and thoroughly in the refresher,
eating until her stomach groaned and her headset reminded her it was
time to leave for the World Portals.
T'sha loaded herself and her tiny caretaker bundle aboard her kite.
It felt her weight and let Ca'aed guide it out into the open air.
"Good luck, Ambassador," said Ca'aed as its portal closed. "I will
miss you."
Sorrow deflated T'sha, although she struggled against it. In the
past few hours, she had been able to forget about Z'eth's words and
about D'seun's formidable support. Now, it all flooded back. "I'll be
back soon, Ca'aed, with only good news."
"I believe you, T'sha," said her city. "I believe in you."
T'sha let those last words warm her all the way to the World Portals.
The portals themselves were not alive. Too much metal was required
in their construction to allow them life and awareness such as the
cities possessed. Instead, the great cagelike complex was maintained
by a veneer of life—scuttling, twiglike constructors, flat stately
securitors, and busy recorders that were all eye and wing.
T'sha reached the gate and was touched briefly by the welcomers,
which identified her and opened the portals. T'sha sent her kite back
to Ca'aed and hesitated, looking through at the tools swarming over the
lifeless struts and conduits. She shivered. At the best of times, T'sha
did not like the World Portals. They made her uneasy, gliding through
a huge cage that was insensible to her presence, unable to care who she
was or what she needed.
"Ambassador T'sha?" A recorder swooped into her line of sight.
"Technician Pe'sen has asked this one to direct you to your portal."
"Proceed."
T'sha followed the recorder along the approved path, staying well
away from the engineers, technicians, and their tools. All around her,
she heard the low, strange hum of mindless machinery. The air tasted of
metal and electricity. Two of T'sha's stomachs turned over, and she
wished she had eaten more lightly.
The cage opened before her, and T'sha saw the seventh portal
stretching out parallel with the canopy. It was a ragged star-burst,
like a huge silver neuron. T'sha picked Pe'sen out from among his
colleagues circling the big, blocky monitor station.
"Technician Pe'sen." T'sha flew past the recorder and touched her
friend's hands. "Good luck. I promise my passage will not damage any of
your children." Pe'sen would go on at length about the difficulty of
growing and training cortices that could adequately translate the
condition of a nonliving entity.
"That's what you say now." He shook his head mournfully. "But I know
you ambassadors. If it can't vote, you don't care for it."
T'sha whistled with mock despair. "I repent, I repent. I have
learned better." Pe'sen clacked his teeth at her. "Are you ready for
me, my friend?"
"Always, Ambassador." Pe'sen glided back diffidently, leaving her
path clear. "If you'll enter the ring, we will send you to New Home."
T'sha tried to keep her posthands from clutching her bundle, even as
she tried to keep her bones relaxed. She was partially successful. She
flew across the vast, open expanse of the ring until she reached the
center. She hovered there, waiting, while Pe'sen and his colleagues
worked their magic.
T'sha didn't understand how the World Portals worked. Pe'sen's
patient explanations of the function of waves and particles, actions
at a distance, and the flux-fold model of nonliving spaces brushed
past her skin and left no impression. In the end, all she really knew
was that Pe'sen understood it and had made it work flawlessly hundreds
of times.
Then why am I ready to bolt from fear?
Through her headset, she heard Pe'sen give the activation command.
The ring sang, a high, keening note. The metalic-electric taste of the
air grew overwhelming. The air below her rippled with pure white light.
T'sha clutched her bundle and drew tightly in on herself. The air
around her bent, brightened, and pulled her down… And then she was not
falling down into brightness but rising up from darkness. Clear air
supported her wings, and T'sha could breathe again and look around
herself.
All she saw was desert. The candidate world was gold and gray in its
twilight. The wind felt firm and familiar under her wings. It was
strong with the scent of acid, gritty with dust, and dense with the
swirling clouds and smoke from the living mountains. For all that, the
wind was sterile. She could smell no life anywhere.
The sterility, though, was not distressing, as it was on Home. Here,
the wind felt clean. They could do anything here, plant anything, breed
anything, spread all the life they needed. New Home, new life, new
hope. Her bones quivered with an excitement that was the last thing
she expected to feel.
"Amazing, isn't it?" D'seun flew from his perch on the edge of the
ring and hovered next to her.
"Yes," she answered, all animosity lost in wonder. T'sha tilted her
wings to rise higher. Below all the winds spread a naked crust laced
with cracks and ravines and double-walled ring valleys. Twilight dulled
its colors underneath her. But ahead, she could see the deepening
darkness of the nightside, and there, the crust glowed more brightly
than she had ever seen on Home. "It truly is amazing."
She banked back to D'seun. He was speaking to the mooring cortex
next to the clamp that held the portal's kite. He turned his muzzle
toward her. "I am getting a signal from the base. They are not far and
are moving slower than windspeed. Shall we go on our own wings?"
"I'd like that." T'sha felt herself swell at the prospect of
traveling through the fresh winds.
"Let us, then." D'seun launched himself onto the wind, sailing
toward the nightside with its blackened air and brightly shining crust.
The twilight they flew through turned the wind a smoky gray.
"When I first came here, I never thought to find anything without
life beautiful," said D'seun. T'sha started at the brush of his words.
"I keep dreaming that because this world in itself is so beautiful, so
balanced, the life we spread will be the same."
A fine sentiment, one T'sha could easily agree with. The wonder of
the place seeped through her skin and settled into her bones, carried
by the willing wind. But she could not afford to let the feelings sink
so deep that she stopped thinking. That was something D'seun might be
counting on.
"The balance will depend on us," she said.
D'seun said nothing in reply. They coasted together in silence.
T'sha tried not to believe that D'seun was plotting strategies in his
own mind, but she did not have much success.
"There is our home." D'seun pointed his muzzle over his right wing.
T'sha followed the angle of his flight.
The base drifted steadily through the thickening twilight, heading
toward the darkness. They were almost fully into night now. The
swirling clouds glowed orange and gold with reflected light, their
wrinkles and grooves turning into black patches of shadow.
"Base One," D'seun spoke into his headset, "this is Ambassador
D'seun, approaching with Ambassador T'sha."
"We are open for you both, Ambassadors." came a vaguely familiar
voice. "Approach as you are ready."
They were now close enough that T'sha could see between the sails.
The outside of the base's shells bristled with antennae and sensors.
Their roots and ligaments created a net around ten or twelve bubble
chambers that reflected the crust's light even more intensely than the
clouds. T'sha had stayed in similar outposts on many of her
engineering journeys when she was part of the teams trying to repair
the canopy.
A windward door stood open for them. T'sha and D'seun let themselves
be swept inside. The door snapped promptly shut, cutting off the wind
and allowing them plenty of time to slow and bank into the main work
chamber.
The company inside that room also felt familiar. Researchers and
engineer clung to their perches or draped across boxes of supplies and
tools, watching their instruments, inscribing their reports, or talking
earnestly. She had worked with such people for most of her life, before
she had decided to make her opinions public.
One engineer, a dark-gold male with a deep-purple crest, climbed
from perch to perch until he stood beside them.
"Welcome back, Ambassador D'seun," he said, and T'sha realized his
was the familiar voice she'd heard on her headset. She scanned his
tattoos quickly. "Welcome, Ambassador T'sha," he said. "I don't
suppose—"
"Actually, I do, Engineer Br'sei." T'sha touched his forehands. "We
worked together on the D'siash survey."
Br'sei whistled agreement. "And I'm glad to be working with you
again. Let me introduce you to the rest of our team…" He hesitated, his
gaze sliding sideways to D'seun. "If that is acceptable, Ambassador."
"As you see fit, Engineer." D'seun settled onto a pair of perches,
letting his wings furl and his body deflate.
But from Br'sei's hesitation, T'sha knew that this was not always
D'seun's sentiment.
She said nothing about it. She followed in Br'sei's wake as he
introduced her to the ten other members of the Seventh Team. She
greeted those she knew by name and skimmed their reports. Wind acidity,
speed, current direction, how the world was layered, the location of
the living mountains and how frequently they erupted. Maps of seeding
plans. Diagrams for new bases, equipment lists, and promises. All the
concerns of a preliminary research base, but the scale was staggering.
To spread life to a whole world. To turn this desert into a vibrant
garden and watch the People take possession, raise that life, and use
it to spread their own life, all their lives, even further. A myriad
of ideas sang inside her, swelling her up as surely as an indrawn
breath.
In that moment, floating there in the still air of the analysis
chamber with all the possibilities of this empty world swirling inside
her, T'sha had to fight to remember there were other issues here.
"What kind of attention are we currently paying to the New People?"
D'seun looked disappointed, as if he expected the marvel of this new
world to overwhelm her strange obsession with the other people. "We
have mapped and timed their satellite flyovers. We arrange not to be
where they are looking." A standard tactic. Stealth was important
during a race to claim a resource. "If they've seen the portal, they
have not made any change in routine to investigate it."
"At the moment, they are spending most of their time on one area of
the crust," Br'sei volunteered. "They seem to have found
something of great interest down there."
T'sha cocked her muzzle toward Br'sei. "Something they can use to
spread their life?"
"We don't know…" said D'seun irritably, "yet."
"They are beginning to spread their machines further out across the
crust," Br'sei went on, sending a disapproving ripple across D'seun's
wings. "Our speculation is they are looking for more of whatever it is
they've found."
T'sha gripped a perch with one of her posthands so she could keep
facing Br'sei. "But have you determined whether or not they've started
to make legitimate use of any resource?"
Br'sei's gaze slid uneasily over her shoulder toward D'seun. She
felt the tension in the air around her and heard the small rustle of
skin and bone as the other engineers shrank or swelled nervously. "They
aren't mining, if that's what you mean. Unless you've determined
there's another legitimate use of the crust."
T'sha's wings rippled. What had passed between Br'sei and D'seun?
She felt a kind of urgency flowing from the engineer, but without words
she could make no sense of it. "They might be planting. They might be
building homes."
"Homes?" repeated D'seun sharply. "Don't be ridiculous. They live in
the clouds."
Slowly, T'sha turned to face him where he swelled on his perches.
"My point is this," she said deliberately as she pulled herself tight.
"We don't know what they're doing. If it is legitimate use, we might
have to change our working plan for seeding New Home."
"You could go and ask them, I suppose," said D'seun, his voice full
of bland sarcasm.
"I wish that I could," said T'sha smoothly. "But the High Law Meet
authorized me only to observe, and I have no doubt you will be all too
happy to report me should I overfly my commission."
They eyed each other, swelling and deflating minutely in their
uneasiness, very aware that they were arguing in front of subordinates
in defiance of good manners and good sense.
T'sha mourned for that one fleeting moment when they were joined in
admiration of this new place. It had been a false promise of easier
times.
Finally, D'seun settled on one size. Some of the belligerence vented
from his body. "I'll be most interested to see your plan for a more
thorough observation and study."
Perhaps he just hopes to keep me out of the way, thought
T'sha and then she realized that was unworthy. D'seun wanted what she
wanted, the birth of New Home. At the moment she was obstructing that.
She swallowed her bitter thought. "I would be willing," she said.
"May I make a call for two or three volunteers?" She looked at Br'sei.
He dipped his muzzle minutely in answer. He'd be willing to help.
"Certainly," said D'seun. "We will grow a chamber for you."
And perhaps this will give me a way to calm my own fears.
Perhaps the New People are doing nothing legitimate. Perhaps we may
take this world without taint of greed. I would like that. I would very
much like that.
But the memory of the tension surrounding the engineers touched her
again. No, the question was not whether something was wrong here, but
what that wrong was and how far it had gone.
T'sha deflated and looked longingly at the silent walls. Already,
she missed Ca'aed
.
Contents -
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Chapter Seven
I am actually doing this. I am going to touch evidence of other
life, of another world.
Raw excitement had stretched Josh Kenyon's mouth into a smile that
felt like it was going to become permanent. He lay in the swaddling
cradle that would serve as his crash-couch for Scarab Five's drop to
the Discovery. It would also be his bed for the next two weeks. All
around him, he heard soft rustles and mutters as his fellow passengers
wriggled in their straps trying to get comfortable. All of them were
from the U.N. team—Julia Lott, the archeologist, Terry Wray, the media
rep, Troy Peachman, who called himself a "comparative culturalist" and
was apparently there to look for any sociological insights and
implications, and, of course, Veronica Hatch.
They were all nervous and fussy, very much a bunch of impatient
tourists. But that was all right. Seeing the Discovery was worth
anything—working his way up as a junior grade maintenance man, begging
Vee for a slot on the team, even getting into Grandma Helen's bad
books, which he had, quite thoroughly.
The morning after the reception, Dr. Failia had called him into the
Throne Room, a place he'd been to only a couple of times before. While
he'd stood awkwardly in front of her desk, she'd reviewed something on
its screen that seemed to absorb her whole attention. At last, he
realized she wasn't going to invite him to sit down. So he sat without
invitation and got ready to wait.
She kept him there in silence for another good five minutes before
she finally looked up to acknowledge his presence.
"Thank you for coming, Josh," she said, with only the barest hint of
politeness in her voice. "I wanted to inform you personally that Dr.
Veronica Hatch of the U.N. investigative team has requested your
presence to help her examine the Discovery's laser." Dr. Failia's
voice was calm but tinged with something unpleasant—suspicion, maybe,
or disapproval. Josh sat there with a stiff smile on his face, torn
between elation and feeling like a guilty child.
"Since you'll have far more experience with EVA's than any other
member of that team, I'm counting on you to take the position of team
leader, to show the others around the Discovery and make sure they do
minimum damage to the site."
"But, Dr. Failia…" Josh spread his hands. Despite the cold look she
gave him, Josh forced himself to continue. "Kevin Cusmanos has a
thousand times more experience than I do. Shouldn't he be going out
with the team?"
"That was the initial plan." Dr. Failia's eyes grew hard. "But we
want as few people down there as possible. Every new bootprint runs the
risk of damaging something priceless. Since you're going, you get to
baby-sit and Kevin gets to do what he is specifically trained
for—supervising the scarab and the essential mechanical support system
for the team."
Josh swallowed. "Yes, of course."
"Thank you, Josh," she said without warmth. "I appreciate your help."
Did she know I talked Vee into this? Or was she just peeved that
one of the yewners monkeyed with her plan? Josh shook his head at
the ceiling. He had no way of knowing. The whole interview had left him
confused. The times he had talked with Dr. Failia before, she had been
businesslike but friendly, quick with a small joke or useful
observation. He'd never seen her so forbidding.
It doesn't matter. You're here. You can worry about the rest of
your life later.
The low ceiling over him held a view screen that was controlled
from down in the pilot's seat. Right now, it showed an image of the
hangar seen through the scarab's main window and
surmounted by the back of Adrian Makepeace's head and shoulders.
"Please make sure the status lights over your couches are all on the
green," Adrian was saying. "We have no flight insurance. Anybody who
doesn't have a green, just holler, and we'll make sure there's nothing
else to holler about. Any non-greens?"
"Going once, going twice…" added Kevin Cusmanos.
Josh reflexively checked the four indicator lights at the bottom of
his screen. All of them shone bright green, indicating he was properly
strapped in.
"They're enjoying themselves, aren't they?" murmured Julia from the
couch next to Vee's.
"I don't think they get many tourists out here," said Vee. Josh
heard her squirm and couldn't blame her. The couches took getting used
to. He also decided not to correct their impressions of what the
pilots thought of them. He'd spoken out loud that once to Vee at the
reception, and she still got an angry gleam in her eye when she had to
talk to Grandma Helen.
"Not many tourists?" muttered Julia. "Not too many people interested
in a dive into Hell? Imagine."
Josh rolled his eyes up to try to get a glimpse of the women. He
could see Veronica's feet, and Julia's. He could also see part of
Julia's hand, which clutched the side of her couch so hard the fabric
bunched up in her grip.
"Are you going to be all right?" asked Vee.
"Eventually, yes," Julia sighed. Josh watched her deliberately relax
her hand. "This is just like being at the top of the thrill vid, you
know? I hate this part."
"It gets easier," volunteered Josh. "Wait until you've done a dozen
or so."
Josh spoke with more confidence than he felt. Most of his work had
to do with atmospheric particle scattering, which could be done from
the comforts of Venera Base and its optics lab. He could count his
trips down to the surface on the fingers of one hand.
"A dozen or so," murmured Julia. "There's something to look forward
to."
"It's the adventure of a lifetime," intoned Troy Peachman from his
couch on Josh's right. "You should be alive to every facet of the
experience."
"Alive is what I'm hoping for."
"We could record you," suggested Terry Wray helpfully. She had the
couch to Julia's left. "That way you could work on your reactions each
drop until you've got the keeper. Something suitably calm, yet
awestruck."
"Next time," answered Julia. "I want a run-through first."
"Always a good idea," said Terry. "I can't tell you how many
disasters I've had to shoot that missed all the dramatic impact just
because the victims wouldn't take a minute to get their responses
right."
"Well then," came Adrian's voice through the intercom, reminding
them all that the speakers were open on both ends. "Let's see if we can
get it right."
"Wing deployed and green at twenty percent inflation. Drop
conditions green. Scarab status is go," said Kevin.
"Ready when you are, Control."
"Ready, Scarab Five," said yet another voice, this one from the
hangar control. "Opening doors."
"See you on the up-trip," said Kevin.
Josh thought he heard Troy breathe something about "falling into
history" but hoped he was wrong.
The view screen's feed switched down to a camera in the scarab's
belly. The desk rolled past underneath them, fast and faster, until it
shot away, leaving a swirl of impenetrable gray cloud.
The scarab fell. As always, Josh's stomach lurched and his body
strained against the straps. His heart flipped over, a purely reflexive
reaction. There was nothing he could do about it but lie there, keep
his eyes on the screen, and concentrate on controlling his breathing.
On our way. They won't call us back now. We're really going to
do this! The smile on his face stretched even wider.
Layers of cloud pressed against the camera. Adrian's voice, again
for the sake of the tourists, droned through the intercom.
"Wing position optimized," said Adrian calmly. "Everybody okay up
there? Just relax and let the couch take care of you. We're at
forty-eight kilometers and looking good."
All at once, the clouds parted. Below them spread the surface of
Venus, as red and wrinkled as anything Mars had to offer. It was
getting closer at a rate that made Josh's heart flip over again.
"Inflating wing," rumbled Kevin. "Wing inflation at fifty percent."
Outside, the ground's approach slowed to a more leisurely pace.
Features began to resolve themselves. Some wrinkles became riverbeds
cut by ancient lava. Others became delicate ripples in the ground,
like furrows plowed by a drunken farmer. The colors on the ground
divided into rust red, burnt orange, and sulfur yellow with streamers
of coal black drifting through them.
"Beautiful," breathed Troy, and this time Josh had to agree with him.
"Fifteen kilometers from touchdown and everything green and go,"
said Adrian. "You're not getting the most interesting landscape, but
it's tough to make a good landing anywhere interesting."
"Julia, have you opened your eyes yet?" asked Veronica.
"No," Julia said, her voice pitched only slightly higher than
normal. "I'll wait until we get to the ground."
"Suit yourself." Vee shrugged in her straps. "The colors are
amazing."
"I'll bet."
"Three kilometers," said Adrian. "If you squint to the upper right
of your screens, you'll see beacon A-34, which means we're right on
target."
Beneath them, the largest furrows spread apart. Smaller furrows
following the same drunken path appeared between them. The whole plain
became a huge, wrinkled, color-splashed bedsheet, bent at the edges, as
if viewed through a fish-eye lens. The high-pressure atmosphere played
all kinds of interesting tricks with the light.
The patch of ground Josh could see became smaller and darker, until
only a few rocks were visible. Then nothing but blackness, followed
fast by a crunching noise from below. The scarab came to rest on a
small slope, tilted up and to the left.
"And that, ladies and gentlemen, is a perfect landing," said Kevin.
"You are now free to come out and see the world through the big window."
Julia was already fumbling with her buckles. Vee obviously took a
second to read the directions beside her screen, because she was on her
feet and heading out into the main cabin before Julia was even sitting
up. Josh waited behind to make sure Julia, Troy, and Terry had
successfully extricated themselves and then followed Veronica out.
Outside the front window, the rumpled landscape stretched as far as
he could see. The horizon, such as it was, was lost in a dim blur that
might have been dust or mountains or simply the thick atmosphere
distorting the light. They were a fair way into the long Venusian day.
The dim sunlight that filtered through the clouds showed a ground that
reminded Josh of the Painted Desert; red, brown, orange all mixed
together along with great stretches of black, rippled stone left over
from old lava flows. Here and there, an outcropping of halite or
obsidian glinted dully in the ashen light.
Josh watched the investigative team crowd around the pilot seats,
craning their necks to see out the window. Then he saw the muscles in
Kevin's jaw tighten.
"We've got a drive ahead of us," Josh said, trying to sound polite,
if not cheerful. "We can use the time to get into suits. That way
there'll be less of a delay when we reach the Discovery."
And less time Kevin has to deal with you guys crammed into the
cockpit.
As if to confirm Josh's thought, Kevin glanced up at him and Josh
read a silent thank-you in his eyes.
The statement brought universal agreement, and the team of tourists
started filing back toward the changing area. Vee gave Josh a knowing
look as she passed. Yeah, she would be the one to figure out what he
was really trying to do. That was all
right as long as she didn't try to counteract it. Kevin gave Adrian the
nod, and Adrian unbuckled himself to follow the tourists.
"And here's where the fun really starts," he muttered to Josh as he
passed.
You'll forgive me if I agree with the words and not the tone,
thought Josh as he followed Adrian down the corridor to the suit
lockers.
I can't believe we're almost there.
The scarab crawled forward along the uneven ground. Its bumping,
rocking motion added to the confusion of the suit-up procedure, but
eventually Josh and the rest of the team all got safely into their
hardsuits. Adrian, with Josh's help, double-checked everyone's
equipment and connections and made them run down the displays to make
sure those were all functional.
Everything looked green and go. Mechanical failure in the suit—joint
failure, pump failure, loss of seal integrity—any of these could mean
instant death. If that knowledge added extra tension to the team, Josh
couldn't see it. Even Julia, now that she was on the ground, seemed to
have calmed down and become wrapped up in the business of checking her
equipment, as if this were something she did every day.
Admit it. You can't see beyond your own nose right now, unless
it's to look at that hole in the ground, Josh admonished himself.
But he couldn't really make himself care. The Discovery waited for
them. He had made it. He was going to be inside, soon, very soon.
Finally, the scarab came to a lurching halt.
"We're here!" called back Kevin.
Here. We're here. I'm here.
The U.N. investigators climbed into the airlock. Josh closed the
interior hatch and found a place on one of the benches. The
pressurization pump's steady chugging filled the air. Next to him,
Terry Wray fussed with the camera on her chest. Her normal band rig
wouldn't be able to tolerate the conditions out there, so she'd have to
make do with the equipment that came with the suit, and from the look
on her face, it did not meet her standards. He watched Julia Lott's
lips move as she removed something on her private log channel. Next to
her, Troy Peachman did the same. It looked like the two of them were
holding a whispered conversation. Vee, sitting on the bench between
them, flashed Josh one of her mischievous grins.
"Some fun, eh?" Her voice sounded harsher than normal through the
intercom. Josh wondered if she might actually be nervous.
"Not yet," he answered. "But trust me, it will be."
Now, Josh could feel the tension winding the whole team tight. The
small talk and idle speculation picked up pace, as did the meaningless
shifting of weight and all the other little movements restless people
make when waiting. There were the usual complaints about trying to use
helmet display icons that relied on eye movement and how the
water-straw kept bumping up against your chin. Finally, Troy Peachman
heaved himself to his feet and started pacing between the inner hatch
and the outer.
Veronica watched him for about two minutes before she apparently had
enough. "Oh, sit down, Troy, it's not going anywhere."
"How do you know?" he asked with the bluff humor he apparently
cultivated. "Aliens put it here. Maybe they're out there taking it away
again."
Terry tried folding her arms and found that didn't work. "If they
were going to do that, they would have notified me."
"You?" asked Troy, surprised.
"Yeah. I'm a media drone. We're all aliens. Didn't you know that?"
"I had wondered," replied Troy blandly.
A brief collective laugh filtered through the intercoms. Before it
died, the light above the outer hatch flashed green, indicating
pressurization was complete.
Instantly, everyone was on their feet. Josh worked the locking
lever on the outer hatch. With a clank and a thump, the hatch swung
inward to reveal the rough, intensely colored world beyond.
"Have a good trip," said Adrian as Josh stepped out. Dust and stone
crunched beneath his boot. To the right loomed the cliffs of
Beta Regio, with its volcano thrusting up toward the boiling sky and
ribbons of lava trailing down its sides. On the edge of his vision,
Josh saw Scarab Fourteen creeping down beside a fresh, flowing lava
stream, and he wondered how Charlotte Murray and her crew were holding
up with their load of tourists.
Then he saw the Discovery's entrance squatting in front of them, and
the rest of the world went away. He took three heavy steps forward
before he remembered he was supposed to be leading a team out here.
His eyes found the intercom icon and opened the general channel.
"Okay, everybody, try to step where I step. The ground is pretty lumpy
out there."
They only needed to cross about ten meters to the hatchway. The
hardsuits and the uncertain footing made it slow going, but with every
step, the hatchway got a little bigger, a little clearer. He could see
the handles on the side of the lid, make out the dim reflections on the
curve of its gray ceramic sides, see the little scores and pits that
had been made by the burning sand brushing past on the lazy wind.
Then he was standing next to it. It was there, under his glove. He
couldn't feel anything, but he could see his hand on the lid.
It was a long moment before he realized the others had ringed the
hatch and stood waiting for him.
"I'll open the hatchway now." Josh grasped two of the handles, bent
his knees, and shoved. The cover swung aside, just as he'd been told it
would. Julia clapped her hands in silent applause. Veronica stooped
and ran one gloved finger over the handle he'd just used, and grunted.
Peachman tromped forward eagerly.
"Hold on," said Terry. "Can we get a shot of the empty shaft?"
"Sure." Josh stepped back and let Terry come forward and point her
camera and light down the steep well with its ladder.
Just don't
take too long. He laughed silently.
Get a hold of yourself.
Vee was right, it's not going
anywhere.
"Got it," Terry said, sounding satisfied. She stepped back from the
hatch and turned toward him.
"Okay," said Josh, trying to keep his voice calm, as if he had
already climbed down into the Discovery a hundred times. "I'll go first
and show you how it's done."
Josh planted his boots onto the first rung and, moving carefully,
started climbing down the well. Darkness engulfed him and his suit's
lights clicked on, illuminating the black rock with its charcoal veins.
He had to keep himself pressed close to the rungs to prevent his
backpack from scraping against the shaft wall. His throat tightened.
He'd never been inside Venus before, and he could not escape the
feeling that he was being swallowed.
Josh's boot touched level stone and his lights showed him the
bubble-shaped room dubbed "Chamber One." He moved back from the ladder.
A shiver ran up his spine.
This place is not ours. This is
other. There is someone else out there, and we know nothing about them.
That was too huge and too strange a thought not to merit a moment of
sheer wonder.
There wasn't even that much to see here—the base of the ladder, the
six holes gaping beside the smooth curving wall. The real prize lay
through the narrow tunnel that opened by his right hand. Down there lay
Chambers Two and Three and the laser.
"Okay, next," he said into the intercom. "Keep close to the rungs;
don't bump your pack if you can help it." They'd all been briefed and
run through the simulators, but it wouldn't hurt to remind them.
"Yes, Papa," said Vee. He watched her green form descending
carefully, foot searching momentarily for each rung. But she reached
the bottom without incident and came to stand beside him.
"Next," Josh said.
"Here we go," answered Julia. While the archeologist worked her way
down, Veronica walked over to look at the inner doorway, if a small,
rounded entry to a low tunnel could be called a doorway. Josh was torn
between watching Vee and keeping an eye on Julia, who, if anything, was
moving less steadily
than Vee had, and wishing they would all
hurry up.
"Vee, what are you doing?" asked Josh, to distract himself. She was
crouched down and running her fingers over the threshold.
"Exploring the secrets of the universe," she answered. Her voice
sounded flat, tight.
Troy descended right after Julia, followed closely by Terry. As soon
as Terry was down, she whistled softly and began examining the smooth,
rounded walls. Julia bent over the six holes laid out in a straight
line at the base of the ladder. Josh was willing to bet she was talking
animatedly into her log. Veronica stayed where she was, turning from
the inner threshold to the mouth of the entry shaft and back again.
Troy just stood in the middle of it all, a look of sheer delight on his
face.
"Incredible. It just feels incredible."
Although part of Josh suspected Troy was, yet again, playing for the
cameras, part of him nodded in agreement. He'd run through the videos
and holographs a hundred times, but that was nothing compared to
standing in the middle of the Discovery, feeling the stone surrounding
them and wondering, just wondering.
Freed from his initial bout of amazement, Troy started hopping
around the chamber like a kid in a candy store. He bent over the six
holes with Julia; he ran his hands over the inner threshold with
Veronica. He peered eagerly over Wray's shoulders to see whatever it
was they were looking at, all the time murmuring, "Incredible,
incredible."
"Can we see the rest?" asked Veronica abruptly.
Josh blinked. "Sure."
And I thought it was just me who couldn't
wait.
"One second," said Terry. "I need a shot of all of you with the
light from the shaft coming down." She shuffled closer to the ladder.
"Say cheese, but keep on doing what you're doing." People bent or
walked, stiffly and reluctantly, but Josh supposed that would later be
put down to the suits and the pressure. "Okay. All done."
Great. "Okay. The main chamber is through here." Josh
gestured down the horizontal tunnel. "Again, I'll go first. It's hands
and knees. Go slow and try not to bump your packs."
The inner tunnel was even more constricting than the entry shaft.
The smooth, narrow way was completely dark except for the small
black-and-gray area illuminated by his suit lights. He crawled forward
without feeling anything but the insides of his gloves against his
hands and the padding of his suit under his knees. There was no sound
except his own breathing.
"It makes a slight rise here in the middle," he told the people
behind him, whether they were following or waiting in Chamber One. He
couldn't tell. There was no room for him to turn his head to look. His
general plate displays told him only that their intercoms were up and
running, not where those intercoms were.
The tunnel undulated sharply, forcing Josh flat onto his stomach. He
shinnied up to the rounded crest and slid back down again. He hoped
none of his tourists would find this too much for their dignity.
Probably not. Troy seemed the most likely to make a fuss, and he
wouldn't do it while there was a risk of being recorded. If they were
nervous about the world around them, they seemed to be burying that
feeling under the excitement of exploration.
Another two meters and the tunnel opened up into Chamber Two, the
main chamber of the Discovery.
Josh got to his feet and turned around in time to see Veronica
emerge from the tunnel. She stood up and moved back from the tunnel's
mouth, turning as she did so she could take absolutely everything in.
Chamber Two was a bubble, like Chamber One, but three times as big
and twice as high. Michael Lum had joked that this was obviously an
alien church, because it was so hole-y. Circular niches a meter around
and ten centimeters deep had been carved into the walls. Small shafts
perforated the floor, ranging between one and six centimeters in
diameter. Robot surveyors sent down those shafts found they
interconnected at different levels underground. Maybe they once held a
pipe network.
Tiny holes that sank into the walls at regular intervals might have
been for staples or brackets of some kind, holding up shelves
or wiring or clothes pegs for all they knew. An entire section of floor
had been dug away for about a half meter, making a shallow,
smooth-walled depression at the eastern curve of the chamber. At the
bottom of the depression were still more holes—two ovals of eight holes
each were surrounded by numerous minute holes drilled at seemingly
random intervals.
Not even the stark evidence of human intervention could dampen
Josh's delight at finally standing in the middle of the Discovery.
Every last one of the holes now had a cermet tag next to it with a
number designation. It had taken almost a week just to get all the
holes tagged. The measurements still weren't finished. Hopefully Julia
would be able to make a contribution to that effort with the miniature
survey drones she carried in her pack.
From the ceiling hung three quartz globes. Inside them, you could
see a tangle of filament wires. Big, pressure-tolerant, alien light
bulbs. No one had managed to find the power source though, and God, how
they'd looked.
A low, round doorway opened across from the tunnel. This one led to
another smaller bubble room, almost a closet. Chamber Three. The laser
was in there. Josh's curiosity was almost a physical force pushing him
toward that other doorway. He kept still with difficulty while, one at
a time, the remainder of the team emerged from the tunnel.
Every last one of them looked up and around, just as Veronica had.
Josh had a feeling a number of jaws had dropped open. It even took
Terry a moment before she started systematically aiming her camera
again.
After that, it was a replay of the scene in the antechamber, except
nine times more intense. Snatches of competing conversations jammed
the radio until everyone remembered about the private channels. Troy
and Julia crowded the edge of the pit, pointing and gesturing. Terry
tried to record everything at once. Only Veronica didn't move. She
stood in the middle of Chamber Two and frowned up at the lights.
In return, Josh frowned at her. He opened a private channel between
them. "Vee? We're here to see the laser?"
She focused on him slowly, as if his words reached her from a long
way away. "Yes. Right."
"This way." He pointed to the low doorway. His hand almost shook
with eagerness.
Let the other tourists fend for themselves for a
while. Let's see what the neighbors left for us.
Josh ducked through the low doorway, for the moment not really
caring if Vee followed him. He turned to the right, and there it was.
The laser rig stood next to the far wall of Chamber Three. Whoever
hollowed out the chamber had left behind a single wedge of polished
rock. It had been planed off at a forty-five-degree angle and tapered
up from the floor until it was about level with Josh's waist. A
mechanism fastened to its surface and pointed toward a pair of short,
narrow holes let in the ashen light from the surface.
Clumsily, Josh sat down. Now the laser rig was about level with his
nose. "We're dealing with little green men all right," he said to Vee.
"If this was working height for them, they couldn't be much more than a
meter tall."
Vee said nothing. She just sat down beside him.
The laser itself was nothing much to look at right off. Its body was
a dull-gray half-pipe about a meter long. Two tubes with roughly
triangular cross sections projected out of it and pointed toward the
holes to the surface, their flared ends almost touching the living
rock.
"There's a set of staples down here," said Josh, leaning into the
base of the half-pipe and pointing to the thick metal fasteners. "They
pull out." He gripped one carefully in his thick glove fingers and
pulled as gently as he could. The staple eased out a little ways, then
stopped.
"Anybody analyzed the cover?" asked Vee.
"It's a ceramic. They think it's refined from local earths. Maybe
shaped by some kind of laser tomography."
Vee just grunted. Josh pulled out the remaining staples. Then he
lifted the cover away to reveal an interior that glittered with black
glass, crystal, and gold.
And there it all was—the power points tucked into the two long,
black glass (maybe) tubes, with what were unmistakably Brewster windows
set into either end. The tubes themselves contained… what? They didn't
know yet. Mirrors of incorruptible gold (probably gold. Looked like
gold) stood at either end of the tubes. Golden strips had been laid
down in neat patterns along the tube supports. Pairs of thick lenses
had been positioned at the end of each tube that was closest to the
wall, with the smaller of the pair on the inside (almost definitely a
beam expander), and in front of them was a pinplate to focus the light
and send it… where? He looked at the holes to the surface. To do what?
Much of the answer to that question would depend on what was in
those black tubes, which would tell them what kind of laser they were
dealing with. The presence of the tube told them it was a gas laser,
but what kind of gas laser?
When they knew what kind of laser it was, they could work out what
it had been used for. And when they knew what it was for, they would
know what these people were doing here, and when they knew what these
people were doing here… the universe would open up wide.
He wanted to say this to Vee, but he didn't. Something was wrong
with her. She seemed closed off, and he couldn't tell why.
Well, you can sort that out later. "Can you get the
monochrometer out of my pack?"
"Right." Vee stumped around behind him and he felt the small
jostlings as she undid the catches on his pack and pulled out the
equipment.
While Vee squatted next to the laser to position the boxy analyzer
and pump down the suction cup at its base, Josh pulled their portable
floodlight out of her pack and lined it up with the monochrometer on
the other side of the tubes. When both devices were switched on, pure
white light would shine through the tubes into the monochrometer, which
would analyze the absorption patterns and report. Then they'd know
what lay inside the opaque glass.
Vee jacked the monochrometer into her suit. "Okay. Go."
Josh pressed the power-on switch and the light flashed on, so
suddenly and intensely bright his faceplate dimmed. He imagined a faint
humming as its beams passed through the tubes. Another shiver of fear
and excitement went through him, brought by the awareness that he was
doing something no one else had ever done before. Even Vee's closed
expression softened as she read off the monochrometer's conclusions.
"Okay, we've got hydrogen in there, a little neon, and"—she
paused—"carbon dioxide." She stared at the device. "It's a CO2 laser,
Josh."
"Makes sense, doesn't it?" Josh was aware he was grinning like an
idiot. "Not only does CO2 make for a versatile, powerful
laser, but our aliens have been making heavy use of local materials. If
there's one thing Venus has and to spare, it's CO2."
"Right." Vee pulled the monochrometer jack out of her glove's wrist,
turned her back, and left.
Josh did not let his jaw drop. Veronica marched through Chamber Two
and climbed back into the tunnel toward Chamber One.
"What was that?" came Troy's voice.
I have no effing idea,
thought Josh.
"Is there a problem?" Julia stood up from her crouch over the
carved-out section of floor.
"No, no." Josh waved them back. Both curious and confused, he
crawled back through the tunnel to Chamber One. He got there just in
time to see Vee climb the last rungs of the ladder and disappear over
the side of the hatchway.
Josh opened their channel. "Vee? Vee? What are you doing?"
No answer. Josh flicked over to the channel for the scarab. "Adrian?
This is Josh."
"I hear you, Josh, what's up?"
"How's Dr. Hatch's suit doing?"
"She's green and go here. Something wrong?"
I have no effing idea.
Josh stared at the ladder. He did
not want to chase after her. If she wanted to be a temperamental
artiste, that was her business. The laser was waiting for them both. If
she didn't care, fine.
Except that there were so many ways she could get herself killed out
there.
Josh carefully closed down all his com channels except the one to
the scarab. When he was sure no one could hear him but Adrian, he
started swearing softly, and he climbed the ladder back to the surface.
As he emerged from the hatch, he saw Vee crouched about ten meters
away, apparently staring at one patch of ground.
"Vee? What the hell are you doing?" Josh demanded as he started
stumping toward her.
"More holes." She pointed.
"Yes, I know. We found those. They should be tagged." Two squares of
four small holes drilled neatly into the earth on the right side of the
hole the laser pointed through.
"Yes." She stood up and started walking back toward him. Josh
stopped in his tracks.
"You want to tell me what's going on?"
Apparently, she didn't. She said nothing as she passed him and
climbed back down the ladder. Josh choked off another set of curses and
returned to the hatch. While he watched, she lumbered down the rungs,
walked to the center of the chamber, and laid down on her back, her
faceplate pointing up at the ceiling.
Bewilderment warred with exasperation as Josh climbed down the
ladder and stood over her. "Are you okay?"
"Fine, thank you." Her voice was bland, almost bored, and her
expression matched.
"Are you going to be able to get up all right?"
"I'll call if I can't."
He paused. "You having an artistic snit of some kind?"
"Probably. You're in my way."
"Excuse me." Josh stepped back and wished he could run his hand
through his hair. He just watched the still form lying on its back and
staring at the ceiling, looking for all the world like an empty suit
that had fallen over.
Well, so much for the idea that you'd turn
out to be the reasonable one.
Seeing nothing else to do, Josh crawled back through the tunnel to
Chamber Two.
"Is Veronica all right?" asked Troy.
"She's fine," Josh assured them all as he straightened up. "She's
decided to pursue an independent investigation."
Those few words satisfied everyone.
Everybody knows how
artistes are, thought Josh as he returned to Chamber Three.
I
wonder
how much she trades on that?
He pushed the thought aside. Whatever Veronica wanted to do—as long
as it didn't actively involve killing herself, damaging equipment, or
wrecking the site—didn't really matter. He could still work. Every part
of the laser had to be measured, labeled, gently sampled, and
precisely cataloged and videoed. The work and the wonder of it all soon
swallowed up thoughts of anything else.
Every so often, movement in Chamber Two caught his eye. Vee went
back and forth between the main chamber and the antechamber three
separate times. Once, she came into the laser chamber and just sat by
the wall for a while. He ignored her. Eventually, she left.
At 14:00, his suit clock chimed. So, he knew, did everyone else's,
but he spoke into the intercom anyway. "That's time, folks. We need to
head back."
"Another few minutes—" began Troy.
"We've got two weeks," replied Josh. "You don't want to run low on
coolant out here, do you?"
That got them. All at once, everyone was ready to go. No doubt Derek
had showed them the record of Deborah Pakkala, whose coolant
circulation had failed on her, and how she had cooked to death in her
suit before she reached the scarab, twenty meters away. Josh eyed the
radio icons to flip over to the channel for Scarab Five. "Adrian,
Kevin, we're coming in."
"Roger that, Josh," came back Adrian's voice. "We'll be ready for
you."
Josh took a quick head count. All present, except for Vee.
"Vee?" called Josh over the public channel. "Time."
"I heard." came her voice, clear, tight, and slightly bored, as it
had been for the entire afternoon.
Shaking his head yet again, Josh led the way back through the
tunnel. He shinnied over the rise and stopped. Vee's suit, on its back
again, blocked the tunnel.
"Vee," he said, refusing to be surprised or angry. She would not
take the wonder of this day from him. He would not let her.
"Right." Using the tunnel walls as traction, she turned herself over
onto her stomach and crawled out ahead of him.
Josh led the team up the ladder and across the rough, barren ground
to the scarab. The airlock hatch stood open, waiting for them. They
took their spots on the benches. Josh shut them inside and signaled
Adrian. The outer hatch's light blinked red as the depressurization
started.
"So, Dr. Hatch," began Troy conversationally. "Did you find what you
were looking for?"
"Not yet." She gave him a sunny, meaningless smile. "But as Josh
said, we've got two whole weeks."
"Two weeks," said Julia less enthusiastically. "If it doesn't kill
us. I feel like I've been lifting weights for four solid hours."
"It's the pressure," said Troy. "We'll get used to it, I'm sure.
Isn't that right, Josh?"
Josh shrugged but then remembered his suit wouldn't show the
movement. "Not really, no, but you learn your limits and how to pace
yourself."
"Do you think you'll ever get used to the idea you're crawling
around inside an alien artifact?" asked Terry.
Josh felt his mouth quirk up. "Is this on or off the record?"
Terry sighed exasperatedly. "Civilians. If the answer's really good,
I'll ask to use it."
"My God, an ethical feeder," murmured Josh, and the remark earned
him a round of laughter. "The answer is, no, I don't think I'll get
used to it, and I don't really want to get used to it. We are in the
middle of the most incredible thing that's ever happened and I never
want to forget that." He smiled. "Good enough to use?"
"Are you kidding?" said Terry. "The boss willing, I'm going to open
with that."
"And what about you, Veronica?" Troy angled himself to face her.
"How did you feel inside the Discovery?"
Veronica didn't move. "Oh, I was impressed," she said distantly.
"Very impressed. The sheer scale of the undertaking. It's amazing."
The team nodded solemnly.
The depressurization finished, and the green light shone over the
inner hatch. Josh worked the hatch and everyone spilled gratefully over
into the changing room. Adrian stood ready to help them out of the
bulky suits and supplied cold water from the scarab's fridge. Josh
glanced down the corridor and saw movement through the main window.
Team Fourteen was on the ball and heading down for their turn at the
Discovery.
By the time Josh looked up from his water bottle again, Vee had
vanished. The rest of the team crowded around the kitchen table, eating
sandwiches and drinking water and fruit juice in quantity. They all
speculated freely and at top volume about what they'd seen, what it
meant, and how they were going to frame their findings for Mother
Earth. Vee did not reappear.
Conscience caught up with Josh. He drained the last of his juice and
climbed through the side hatch to the sleeping cabin.
Veronica sat cross-legged on her coach with her briefcase open in
front of her, typing frantically. Her lips moved as the keys clacked,
but he couldn't make out what she was saying to herself.
"Are you all right, Vee?"
She looked up, startled, and for a moment he saw naked anger on her
face. She wiped it away. "Fine."
What is it? What is the matter with you? He sat on the edge
of the floor. "You really should at least have something to drink."
She reached down next to the couch and pulled out a bottle of water.
"I'm fine, really."
"Anything you want to talk about?"
Anger flickered back across her features. "No."
One more try. "You know, this is supposed to be a team
effort."
"I'd heard," she replied dryly.
Leave it alone, he told himself.
Let her play her
game. This is not your business. But there was a challenge in her
eyes that grated at him. No, not a challenge, an accusation.
Josh picked his way to her couch. "What have you found?" He crouched
down next to her.
With three keystrokes, Veronica blanked her screen. "Nothing I'm
ready to talk about."
"Listen to me," he whispered fiercely. "You've got an act going,
fine. You can play with Peachman's head, and Wray's. But you play with
the Discovery, and so help me, I will make such a stink you will be
booted all the way back to Mother Earth without benefit of shuttle.
This is not a gallery show. This is so far beyond important we can
barely understand its implications. I will
not let you screw
around with this."
Vee's angry eyes searched his face. Josh did not let his expression
waver or soften. At last, Veronica dropped her gaze. Her fingers moved
across the command board and typed out one line of text. She turned the
screen toward him. Josh read it and his heart thudded hard in his chest.
It's a fake.
Josh sat back on his heels and met Vee's gaze. "You're out of your
mind."
She frowned hard and typed.
Keep it down! We have no idea who's in on this. Go back to
dinner. Tell them I overdid it and am taking a nap. Whatever. Get your
briefcase out and mail me. I'll spell it out.
She added her contact code at the bottom.
Josh looked at her again. Vee's face and eyes had hardened. Whatever
she'd found, or thought she'd found, she was serious about it, and if
she was right…
No. She can't be.
Without another word, Josh returned to the kitchen nook.
"Everything all right?" asked Troy.
"Oh yeah," lied Josh, picking up his empty juice cup and carrying
it to the sonic cleaner so he wouldn't have to stay at the table and
look at anybody. "It's easy to overdo it out there if you're not
careful. Vee just needs to lie down and get some extra fluids."
And get her head examined. He shut the cup in the cleaner.
God,
if she's doing this for self-aggrandizement, I'll kill her.
The meal finished, the dishes got cleared, and people spread out as
much as the scarab allowed, giving each other the mental space
necessary for sane and civil interaction in a confined space. Adrian
shuffled back to the changing area, probably to run the post-EVA suit
checks and recharge batteries and tanks. Kevin was up front in the
pilot's seat, running over something on the main displays. Terry
commandeered one corner of the kitchen table and downloaded the day's
records into her smart cam. She watched the display, apparently
oblivious to anything else. Julia retreated to the couch compartment.
Josh went into the analysis nook, opened one of the overhead
compartments, and retrieved his own briefcase. Perched on the nook's
one stool, he jacked it into the counter's power supply and accessed
his mail.
He typed,
I'm up and open. Connect to this contact, and
sent the message across to the code Veronica had shown him.
He waited, trying not to fidget. He wished he'd thought to make a
cup of coffee before he started, but now that he had started, he didn't
want to leave the case. Anybody could come down the corridor and read
the screen. He wanted all this cleared up, now.
Another line of text spelled itself out across the screen.
Up and open. Now, first question. What's anybody going to do
with a CO2 laser on Venus?
Josh felt his brows knit together.
What?
What's the atmosphere out there made of? CO2. What's
going to happen if you fire a CO2 laser into a CO2
atmosphere? The beam is going to be absorbed almost immediately. What
good is that going to be? The setup makes no sense!
Josh took a deep breath, steadying himself. A grand outburst was not
going to accomplish anything.
We are obviously not seeing the
whole mechanism. That's clear from the pattern of holes on the outside.
There was something else here.
Pause. He lifted his cap up, smoothed down his hair, and replaced
it. New text appeared.
Dead convenient, isn't it? Anything that couldn't be cobbled
together from local materials is conveniently missing from the
scene, like a power source for the laser, like any kind of repeater or
reflector that you couldn't make out of salt and stone. And what about
the lights?
The lights? typed Josh, genuinely mystified.
The lights! There are three lights in the whole place and
they're all in one room. Did somebody just climb down into the dark?
Crawl through dark tunnels? Send messages in the dark?
Josh remembered her lying on her back in the antechamber, staring at
the ceiling. Now genuine irritation flared. What did she want, a
guidebook? They were supposed to be looking for possible answers for
these questions. That was why they were all here.
This
installation was built by aliens; we can't except to understand their
motives.
No. That's the tautology whoever set this up wants us to start
using. Anything that doesn't make sense can be put down to this all
being done by aliens. OF COURSE it doesn't make sense to us.
Use Occam's Razor, fosh. What's the simpler explanation? That
aliens came, undetected, to Venus and created an outpost, which they
left half of in permanent darkness. Then they abandoned it, leaving
just enough clues behind to let us know they were there. Or is the
simpler truth that somebody set up a mysterious looking fake to gain
some fame and fortune?
Or funding. Josh thought involuntarily.
Oh, Christ.
Funding.
His head felt light. The soft, background sounds of movement,
random clanking, and soft conversation seemed unbearably loud. He
tugged hard on the brim of his cap and looked over to the kitchen,
wishing for coffee.
No. This was not happening. She was reading the data wrong.
More text spilled across the screen.
There is nothing in there
we don't understand or that we couldn't make, given the proper
facilities. Anything we might not understand is missing. It's a SETUP.
Josh took a deep breath and forced his fingers to type in a reply.
His hands had gone cold, he realized.
How come after weeks of
camera work, measuring, tagging, and analysis, no one
else has reached this conclusion?
No one else wanted to, she replied.
Josh suppressed a snort.
And you did? Or maybe you just want to
get back at Grandma Helen for thinking you're harmless?
A long pause this time. A blank screen and a strained mental
silence.
Is that what you think I'm doing?
I think it's possible, returned Josh.
Fine, The connection shut down.
Josh sat there, staring at his screen, reading and rereading the
words shining on its gray surface.
A fake? Impossible. Ridiculous. The amount of time, money, and
material it would take to rig up a fake like this would be incredible.
Nobody on Venera would have access to those kinds of resources.
Except maybe Grandma Helen.
Josh's spine stiffened. No. Now that really was crazy. She'd never
do anything like this. No one would.
But, damn, hasn't it brought the money rolling in. Right when
Venera needed it.
Josh shook his head. Crazy, crazy. The Venerans were scientists. If
there was a cardinal sin among scientists, it was the falsification of
data. If you got caught, it meant scandal, possible lawsuits, and the
complete ruination of a career.
But if you didn't… Josh found he did not want to think about it.
Anger darkened his mind. Vee'd done it. She'd stolen the day. Now,
instead of wonder and excitement, he was filled up with suspicion and
fear.
Josh slapped the case lid down. He stowed it away automatically,
out of the habit of living and working in confined spaces. Then he
shuffled sideways into the kitchen. No one else was there. He heard the
sonic shower going. He heard voices from both sides and up front. He
thought about coffee, but instead he opened the fridge and rummaged
through the scarab's small stock of beer, pulled himself out a bottle,
and twisted the top off.
"Everything all right, Josh?"
Josh turned. Adrian stood there, a suit glove in his hand.
"Yes and no." He sat at the table. Adrian put the glove on the table
and reached into one of the overhead bins. "What's the matter with
that?"
"Microfracture in one of the seals. Nothing big." He pulled down a
tool kit and a plastic pack containing the silicon rings that helped
seal the gloves to the joints in the suit cuffs.
Josh watched him work for a while; then he looked around carefully
and said in a whisper. "Adrian, what do you think of our tourists?"
Adrian shrugged. "They're tourists," he murmured. Adrian had lots of
practice at not being overheard. "They're looking for something
profound or amazing to send back to Mother Earth. Saw it on Mars all
the time. Idiots racing down Olympus Mons in go-carts and writing
articles about what a deeply expanding experience it was." He frowned
at the flawed seal for a moment. "Terry Wray's pretty cute though."
Josh chuckled. "If you like media bland."
"But it's such a cute kind of bland." Adrian inspected his work.
"That'll do. I'm going to check the fit."
Adrian left him there and Josh sat alone listening to the comings
and goings of the others. The air smelled of soap, sweat, minerals, and
vaguely of sulfur. Josh glanced at the hatch to the couch compartment.
What was she doing in there? Who was she telling her theory to? Her
manager back on Earth? Julia or Troy, or one of the other team members?
Terry Wray and her camera?
Josh felt the blood rush from his face. If Vee told her ideas to
anybody,
anybody, there would be an outcry like nothing that
had been heard yet. The Venerans, all of them, would stand accused of
fraud. The U.N. would move in for real, work on the Discovery would be
wrenched away, money would dry up, and Venera would fold, and work
would stop because there would be no place to do the work from.
Stop it, Josh. What's a little more controversy?
Or are you starting to believe her? Are you starting to agree
there's not one thing in the entire Discovery that could definitely
not have been made by a
human with the time and
resources?
Josh swallowed hard. Feeling detached from himself, he got up and
walked to the couch compartment and opened the hatch. The lights were
down. Julia snored gently in her couch, one arm flung out into the
aisle. Josh stepped around her.
Vee still sat up on her couch with her briefcase open on her knees.
She glanced up briefly at him and then seemingly dismissed what she
saw. Her hands never stopped moving across the command board.
"Don't," whispered Josh. "Don't go public with this."
"Why not?" she asked mildly.
"Because you'll ruin them. The Venerans."
"They deserve to be ruined." Bitterness swallowed all pretense of
disinterest.
"All of them?" Josh leaned as close as he could. She had to hear
him. He had to make her hear. "Everybody who lives in Venera deserves
to be ruined? That's what'll happen."
Vee's hands stilled. "It's a fake, Josh. What do you want me to do?
Perpetuate a fraud because the Venerans have been living beyond their
means?"
Julia snorted and rolled over. Josh bit his tongue and waited until
she subsided. "You don't give a shit about anybody but yourself, do
you? You just want to show them all up. Noted artiste uncovers fraud
where scientists fail. Click here to read."
Her face had gone perfectly smooth and expressionless. "Of course.
What else would it be? It couldn't possibly be I believe what I'm
saying or that I might be right."
Josh clamped his jaw shut around what he'd been about to say. Julia
rolled again with a rustle of cloth and a sighing of breath. Josh
glared at Vee as if he could make her see reason by sheer force of
will. She just sat placidly, her face immobile, her eyes unimpressed.
Josh felt his teeth grind together. She'd do it. She'd ruin
everything. Everything.
But what if she's right?
"What if I promised to go out now and mail Michael Lum? Tell
him your suspicions, have him double-check to make sure all the
funding's on the up and up. Would that satisfy you?"
Vee's gaze searched his face, considering. "It would be a start,"
she said at last.
Score one. "Would it at least keep you from telling Stykos
and Wray about all this?" he pressed.
There was a long pause, and then Vee nodded.
"Okay, then." Josh unbent himself as far as the room allowed.
"Josh?" Vee's whisper stopped him.
"What?"
Her face was lost in shadow, so he could not make out her
expression, but he heard the weight of her words. The anger, the
flippancy had left, and all that remained was honest feeling—tired and
a little worried. "I am not doing this to show anyone up. I am not
doing this because I'm angry at Helen Failia. The Discovery has been
falsified and whoever did it deserves whatever they get."
"We'll see."
He left her there and returned to the analysis nook, shaken and
confused. She couldn't be right. But what if she was? Surely somebody
had already investigated everything to make sure all was in order. But
what if they hadn't?
His stomach tightened.
It's happening already. The idea's
taking hold. Nothing to do but clear it out, one way or the other.
Josh got his case down from its bin and brought it back to the
analysis table, setting it down next to his half-finished beer. He
jacked the case in, turned it on, took another swallow of beer, swore
to himself, or maybe at himself, and started typing.
Contents -
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Chapter Eight
Michael rubbed the heels of both palms into his eyes. When he
lowered them, he blinked hard and read Josh Kenyon's note again.
Dear Michael,
Sorry I can't do a v-mail, but this has got to be kept quiet. I
spent the day working with Dr. Hatch, and she spent the day getting
convinced that the Discovery is a fake.
I want to laugh at the idea, but I can't. She's making some good
points, especially about the fact that there is nothing down here a
human couldn't have made, given resources and time. There's also the
fact that some facets of this laser we're studying don't make sense.
I know I'm not a Veneran, and I'd never tell you your job, but can
you let me know you've checked everything out? The money's good, the
logs are good, and so on? If I don't get something to tell Dr. Hatch,
she might just go straight to the media drones.
Thanks,
Josh
Michael
could picture Josh in the scarab, hunched over his case,
swearing as he typed, not wanting to believe, but not being able to
dismiss a reasonable premise without checking it out.
A hazard of the scientific mind.
And the security mind.
Had they checked for the possibility of fraud? Of course they had
checked. That was the first thing they did after the governing board
had come back up from the Discovery while the implications still made
them all dizzy. Helen had run the money down. Ben had done the
personnel logs. Michael had checked their checking, and everything
looked fine. In the meantime, Helen had sent their best people down to
the Discovery to start cataloging and looking for any sign of human
intervention.
They'd turned up nothing, nothing, and more nothing.
Only then had Helen called the U.N.
So what was Veronica Hatch seeing? What possibility had they left
open? Or was she just playing for the cameras? She might be the type.
She certainly acted like the type.
It didn't make any difference, though. If this went into the stream,
the accusations were going to fly, and everything Venera did regarding
the Discovery would be called into question.
Michael stared out at the world beyond his desk. Administration was
Venera's brain, even if the Throne Room was its heart. Unlike most of
the workspace on the base, administration was not divided up into
individual offices and laboratories. Each department had an open work
section with desks scattered around it.
The arrangement made this one of the noisiest levels on Venera,
second only to the education level. The idea was to keep everybody out
in the open, so the left hand always knew what the right hand was
doing. It met with limited success, but by now everyone was so used to
it, no one really worked to change it.
As always, the place was a hive. A noisy hive of a thousand
competing conversations, some with coworkers, some with residents or
visitors who had complaints. His people wore no uniform, but they all
had a white-and-gold badge pinned to their shirts to identify
themselves.
He had forty people working for him right now, counting the U.N.'s
contribution of Bowerman and Cleary. Since it was the day shift, about
half of the security personnel were at their desks, dealing with
complaints or paperwork or helping Venerans fill out forms for
passports, marriage licenses, or taxes.
Only a handful of those people knew exactly how close they'd come to
losing their home.
Or how close they still are, Michael chewed thoughtfully on
his lower lip.
If the validity of the Discovery is called into
question, the money flood is going to dry up, and we'll be right back
where we started.
Enough. The accusation had been made. The only question left was
what to do about it.
First thing, revisit the evidence. Make sure the investigation was
as complete as he thought it was four months ago. Second, check out Dr.
Hatch. If she was doing this to call attention to herself, maybe she'd
done similar things in the past. It might help to have that to hold up
to her, or to anyone else who came calling.
Of course there was somebody on the base who knew all about Dr.
Hatch. Michael pictured Philip Bowerman—a big man, serious, but with a
sense of humor that ran just below the professional surface. From the
beginning Bowerman and Cleary had been polite, circumspect, and very
aware that they were unwelcome. Michael, in return, had made sure his
people were polite, circumspect, and very aware that Bowerman and
Cleary were just doing their job.
Still, the idea of going to the yewners with this made his stomach
curdle.
And not because you're worried you might have let something
slide past that they'll catch. Oh, no.
Michael straightened up. "Desk. Contact Philip Bowerman." Bowerman
was wired for sound, as were most U.N. security people. He and Cleary
had given Michael their contact codes within minutes of his meeting
them.
"Bowerman," the man's voice came back. "How can I help you, Dr. Lum?"
"I've got one or two questions about the U.N. team to ask you."
"Okay," said Bowerman without hesitation. "I'm in the Mall, but I'll
be right up."
"No, that's okay. I'll come down."
Eleven years as head of security had given Michael a refined
appreciation of how Venera's rumor mill worked. There would actually be
less talk if Michael "ran into" Bowerman at the Mall than if he sat
closeted with the man at his desk behind sound dampeners. Lack of talk
was something much to be desired right now, especially with Stykos and
his camera band roaming the halls.
"Desk," said Michael as he stood. "Display Absence Message 1. Record
and store all incoming messages, or if the situation is an emergency,
route to my personal phone."
"Will comply," said the desk. Its screen displayed the words AT
LUNCH, LEAVE A MESSAGE.
Michael tucked his phone spot into his ear and threaded his way
between the desks, heading for the stairs.
Michael walked down past the farms, past the gallery level with its
harvester and processing plants, its winery, brewery, bakery, and
butchery, past the research level, and past two of the residential
levels with their concentric rings of brightly painted doors, and past
the educational level where the irrepressible sound of children's
voices rang off the walls. Below the educational level waited the Mall.
From the beginning, Venera had been designed to support whole
families. Helen had wanted people to be able to make a long-term
commitment to their work. The open Mall with its shops, trough gardens,
food stalls, and cafelike seating clusters was one of the features that
made the base livable for years at a time.
The Mall was about half full. An undercurrent of voices thrummed
through the air, along with scents of cooking food, coffee, and fresh
greenery. Meteorologists clustered around a table screen, probably
getting readings of a storm from the sampling equipment Venera carried
in its underbelly. Off-shift techs and engineers played cards, typed
letters, ate sandwiches, or sipped coffee. Graduate students took
advice and instructions from senior researchers, and senior researchers
tossed ideas back and forth between each other. A pod of science
feeders held a whispered argument among themselves. If the gestures
were anything to go by, it was getting pretty heated. Families, knots
of friends, and loners drifted in and out of the shops or stood in line
at the food booths. Around the edges of the hall, a couple of
maintenancers spritzed the miniature trees and dusted off the
grow-lights. A cluster of children played with puzzle bricks at their
parents' feet. If anyone's gaze landed on him, they waved or nodded and
he returned their greetings reflexively. Michael no longer knew the
names of everyone on Venera, but he knew most of the faces, and he
couldn't bring himself to think of anyone aboard the base as a stranger.
This was his world. It was not the only one he had ever known, but
it was the only one that had ever truly known him.
Spotting Bowerman took only a quick scan of the room. The man stood
out in his subdued blue-and-white tunic. Venerans went in for bright
colors.
Bowerman had picked a table near the far edge of the Mall under a
pair of potted orange trees. He spotted Michael before Michael was
halfway across the floor and lifted a hand.
"Please, sit down." Bowerman gestured toward the empty chair as
Michael reached him. "Mind if I go ahead?" he nodded at his lunch—soup,
fresh bread, a cup of rich
chai, spiced Indian tea that
Margot at Salon Blu imported.
"Please. I'm actually going to meet my wife for lunch right after
this."
"You two have kids?" asked Bowerman, breaking apart his small loaf
of sourdough bread and spreading it thickly with butter.
"Two boys," said Michael, going with the conversation and not
bothering to mention that Bowerman surely knew this from reading
Michael's files. "You?"
Bowerman shook his head. "Not yet." He bit into the bread, chewed,
and swallowed. "This is good. I didn't expect such good food, or so
much space." He gestured with the bread. "I've only been to Small Step
on Luna, and on Mars once. I got used to the idea that colonies are
cramped."
Michael noticed Bowerman did not say where he'd been on Mars. "Our
one real luxury," he said, repeating
the Stock
phrase.
"So." Bowerman put the bread down and picked up his soup spoon. "How
can I help you?"
Good question. Michael hesitated. He'd made up his mind to
do this while he was behind his desk, but now that he faced Bowerman,
he had trouble putting the words together. He was about to tell the
U.N. there might be a problem aboard Venera. Venera was a colony, and
the U.N. looked for excuses to make life difficult for colonies. That
was a fact. What if Michael was about to give them such an excuse?
Bowerman wasn't looking at him. He concentrated on his soup, making
little appreciative slurping noises as he ate.
I could get up and
leave. I could invent something small and leave, go tell Helen what's
going on, and let her handle it. I could do that.
"One of the investigative team has raised a question about the
validity of the Discovery."
Bowerman paused and set his spoon down. "Oh?" The syllable could
have meant anything from "Oh, really?" to "Only one?"
Going to make me say it, aren't you? Okay, I'd do the same if I
were you. "We investigated this exact question extensively when
the Discovery first came to our attention. I assume you saw the
reports?"
Bowerman's gaze turned sharp. Michael had his full attention now.
"They looked thorough. Do you think you missed something?"
Michael sighed. He appreciated the lack of judgment in Bowerman's
voice. Just one pro talking to another. Anybody could miss something.
It happened. "I don't know," he admitted. "But if a fraud accusation
is going to be made, that isn't good enough. I have to know."
Bowerman nodded soberly. "How can we help?"
Michael studied his fingertips. The scent of beef and tomatoes
reached him from Bowerman's soup and his stomach rumbled. "If this is
a fraud, it cost money," he said slowly. "And Venera was running on a
wing, a prayer, and short credit. If
somebody did this, they got money from somewhere."
"Or shuffled it from somewhere," said Bowerman quietly.
Michael just nodded.
"Who could do that?"
"Most easily?" Michael didn't look up. He didn't want to see
Bowerman's eyes, weighing, calculating, running ahead with different
scenarios to see how each of them might fit. "I could. Ben Godwin or
Helen Failia. After us, the department heads."
"But Dr. Failia is in charge of base finance, isn't she?"
Michael nodded again. Helen had kept that position for herself. She
raised the money, she counted the money, she divvied the money up. It
was no small task, but she would not delegate it. Occasionally, Michael
suspected Helen did not want to admit she was not entirely in control
of this city of ten thousand.
Bowerman was silent for a long time. "All right. I'll call down to
Earth and start a trace on the incoming funds for, say, the year before
the Discovery's announcement. Will that do?"
Now Michael looked up. Bowerman's face was understanding but not
pitying, which he also appreciated. "How quiet can you keep this?"
"I'll do my best," he shrugged. "But I have to tell my boss."
"Who will have to tell the Venus work group?"
Bowerman nodded one more time. "But trust me, they will not want to
let this out until they're sure. There've been a lot of speeches made
about your Discovery, and nobody's going to want to look like they
bought vaporware. We'll sell it as double-checking your facts. Just
doing our job." He smiled thinly. "Everybody knows we don't trust your
kind."
Michael gave a short laugh. "So they do."
"I'd recommend two other things." Bowerman tapped the table gently
with his spoon. "First you let me ask my boss, Sadiq Hourani, to order
an audit of Venera's books. If we go over it all, when we find nothing,
no one will be able to accuse you of hiding anything. Also, if Angela
and I do it, well…" He smiled again. "We can be obnoxious. We don't
live here and nobody likes us anyway."
"Good idea," admitted Michael. "What's the other thing?"
"Let me get Angela checking around the team down there. See if
anything suspicious is going on, let her talk to Hatch, and so on. See
what the position is on the ground."
"Also good," Michael paused. "I don't suppose you can let me have
what you've got on Dr. Hatch, can you?"
Bowerman's stirred his soup, considering. "I might be able to leave
a file unsecured here and there."
"Thanks." Michael's phone spot rang the two-tone reminder chime.
Michael tapped it in acknowledgment, gratefully. "I've got to go. I'm
meeting my wife."
"Go." Bowerman waved the spoon. "I'll stop by tomorrow. Let you know
what the preliminary view is."
"Thanks," said Michael again. "I appreciate it."
Bowerman smiled his acknowledgment and returned his attention to
his cooling soup.
Michael didn't hang around. He headed for the nearest stairwell and
climbed back up toward the educational level. Jolynn was headmaster for
grades one through six and they were going to have lunch in her office.
She was having it brought in.
He tried not to think. He tried to blank the conversation he'd just
had out of his mind and concentrate on the outside world—the voices,
the faces, the sights that he knew as well as any man from Mother Earth
knew the rooms of his house or the streets of his city. He'd grown up
here with tilt drills, suit drills, and evacuation drills. He'd always
known that inside was safe, and outside was poison.
But he'd never believed that the outside could touch him, not really.
He'd been on Earth when his father died. For the first time, he was
walking under a sky that rained water, not acid. He was breathing air
that didn't come from a processing plant and seeing the stars at
night. He was infatuated with Mother Earth.
His mother's v-mail came. Dad had had one of those accidents they
warned you about. Venus had used one of her thousand tricks to kill
him or take down his scarab. Same thing. There was nothing to bury,
nothing to burn. Just a lifetime of memories ringing around his head
and Mom asking him to come home.
He went. But he swore not to stay. He went so he could attend the
memorial service and help sort out the will and all the other red tape
death generates. All his remaining energies he bent toward trying to
convince Mom to come back to Earth. She'd been born there, after all,
and she was getting old, despite the med trips. Since long-life was
not something she wanted for herself, what was keeping her there, in a
world that would kill her?
Come down, come back, come home. This home. Our real home, where
Michael was going back to and fully intended to stay.
"You do what you have to, Michael," she said. "And grant me the
right to do the same."
"This is no place for a human being to live, Mom. Trapped in a
bubble like this."
She'd sighed, with that annoying infinite patience she was capable
of. "Some trap. The door's open Michael. Go or stay, it's all up to
you." She'd taken his hands then. "I love you, Son. If you want to live
on Earth, then that's what you should do." She'd meant it too, every
word.
So Michael had gone. He'd finished his degree, he'd found work, and
within a year, he'd come back to Venus, found work again, met Jolynn,
and gotten married.
He'd never questioned what he'd done, but he'd never really
understood it either. He'd never been able to point to any one thing
and say, "That was it; that was why I left Earth." He'd been lonely, it
was true, and the vast global village of Earth with its snarl of
republics could be confusing to someone who'd grown up with one set of
people his entire life. But neither of those things was entirely the
answer.
On days like today, he still wondered. He did not regret, no, never
that. His life was too sweet, too rich, for regret, but all the same,
he did wonder.
Jolynn's office was at the end of a hall that the older kids called
"grass row," presumably because your ass was grass if you got sent
there. The door was open just a little, and Michael stepped into the
ordered chaos—shelves and racks of screen rolls,
text pads, an insulated lunch box, two deactivated animatron cats, and
a worse-for-wear rubber ducky left over from a disciplinary action
involving some overimaginative first graders. In the middle of it all
sat Jolynn with her rich brown-black hair and beautiful amber eyes,
smiling her smile that always held her own special brand of terse
amusement, and just waiting for him to bend down and kiss her.
"Hello to you too," she said when he pulled back. "Sit and eat. Some
of us are on a schedule." She lifted the lid off the lunch box.
About half an hour later, they had lunch reduced to salad
containers, sandwich warm-wraps, and a couple of empty ice cream cups
scattered on her desk. It wasn't until then that he realized Jolynn was
just looking at him.
"What?"
Her eyes sparkled, and he heard her unspoken accusation.
"I am listening," he said indignantly.
Jolynn snorted. "Maybe." She set her spoon down next to one of the
toy cats. "Shall I tell you what's wrong?"
Michael leaned back and folded his hands. "Please do." He'd known
this was coming. He hadn't wanted to talk during lunch. He'd just
wanted to be here with Jolynn in her quiet, cluttered office, away from
everything else. He knew she'd notice his silence, but he still hadn't
been able to get himself to make more than brief answers to her remarks
about her day, their children's upcoming tests, and the intramural
soccer tournament.
Jolynn bunched one of the warm-wraps into a ball and stuffed it into
her empty ice cream cup. "What's wrong is that Grandma Helen has left
you out of the loop and you are not doing anything about it."
How does she know? How does she always know? "I don't know
that there's any loop to be left out of."
"Of course you don't. You're not asking."
Michael sighed and tapped his spoon against the edge of the desk.
The plastic ticked sharply against the metal. "Jolynn, why did you come
back?"
"From where?" She stuck one of the ice cream cups inside the other.
"College. On Earth." He tossed the spoon into one of the empty salad
containers. "You went, just like the rest of us. Why'd you come back
here?"
"Because I couldn't resist the lure of all this glamour?" She waved
both hands at her cluttered, windowless office and smiled. "I don't
know. I couldn't get the hang of Earth, I suppose." She paused, and her
gaze focused on the wall, but Michael knew she was seeing her own
thoughts. "I could have been a school administrator on Earth, anywhere
I wanted, but I didn't feel like it would mean anything. My roots were
all up here, everybody I really knew, everybody who really knew me,
and… I guess I was just more comfortable with edges to my world."
"Edges?" Her words nibbled at him, reaching toward meanings inside
himself that he had been trying to tease out all morning.
Jolynn nodded. "We're all stuck together up here. Everybody's got a
place and something to work toward, and Grandma Helen's at the top of
it all. As long as she's there, there's somebody else to make sure the
world's all right. It's not all on you." She dropped the ice cream cups
into the lunch box. "That's kind of a scary thought. I came back
because I want to be looked after."
Michael nodded in agreement. "But it's there, isn't it? I think
every v-baby's got it. As long as Grandma Helen's around, everything's
going to be okay." He met Jolynn's eyes, her beautiful warm eyes. "So,
what do we do if something goes wrong with Grandma Helen?"
"Tell me," she said.
So, he told her about Josh's letter and his talk with Philip and
how, on the face of it anyway, Helen herself was the logical first
place to look, and how he didn't want to believe that.
Jolynn smiled in sympathy and took his hand. "You said it yourself.
Us v-babies, we want Grandma Helen to take care of us. We don't want to
think about her not being there or being flawed. It's as bad as the day
you find out your own parents are just human beings."
Michael gently squeezed her fingertips. "Yeah, it feels like that.
But—"
"But nothing." Jolynn dropped his hand down onto the desk and pushed
her chair back. "You go looking where you need to look and you don't
come home until you've got the truth."
"I'll tell you what's wrong," Michael pointed at her. "My wife is
always telling me what to do, that's what's wrong."
"Divorce lawyer's a com burst away," she returned calmly. "I'm ready
whenever you are."
Michael stood up, took her face in both hands, and kissed her
gently. "I'll be home for dinner." He started gathering up the lunch
litter.
"Good." Jolynn grabbed up the cups and dumped them both down the
solids chute. "Chase has sociology homework. That's your bailiwick."
"And while I am educating our youngest"—Michael used one of the
spoons to send a few lettuce leaves down the organics chute and then
dropped the spoon and the dishes into the solids chute—"what will you
be doing?"
"Going to a teacher conference with our oldest. Dean wants Chord in
the fast track. I want to hear what Chord thinks." Jolynn looked
skeptical.
Chord was eleven, just gearing up for adolescence and all its
attendant delights. "He could do it, if he were willing to try."
"And with Chord that's always the question, isn't it?" Jolynn sighed
and shook her head. "Well, what will be will be, and all that. I'll see
you tonight." She gave him a parting kiss and sat back down. "Now, get
out of here. Some of us have work to do."
Michael grinned at her as the door slid shut between them. Now he
had it, all the reason he needed to do his job, as hard and unpleasant
as it might get. He'd arrested friends before. He'd told hard truths,
in public. He did it because he loved his home, his wife, his sons.
This was his place and it was a good place, and he would not let anyone
change that.
Not even Grandma Helen.
* * *
Yan Quai had planned on being early to the performance mosaic at
Shake & Jake's, but a customer had called with a last-minute order,
and by the time he got out of the stream, got changed, caught the
monorail, and paid his admission fee, he was an hour late and the place
was jammed.
Shake & Jake's had been a warehouse or factory at some point.
Now, it was a series of performance spaces. The cocktail and chat crowd
circulated on catwalks, balconies, and platforms, looking down on the
dancers and actors below. Each act had its own stage with a seating
area bounded by sound-dampening screens so the music and dialogue
couldn't get out and the rumble of casual conversation couldn't get in.
The air smelled of clashing perfumes and spicy snacks.
Quai leaned over the railing on one of the catwalks, watching a
trio of French cirque-tradition performers in sparkling costumes giving
an exhibition of slack-wire walking. To their left, a slender couple
danced a sensuous and elaborate tango. To the right was the obligatory
Shakespearean scene. He couldn't hear, of course, but it looked like
Macbeth and the witches. The audience seemed enchanted.
Mari, you always do throw a good party.
"Quai!"
Quai turned toward the sound of his name. Marietta shouldered her
way through the crowd.
"Mari!" Quai hugged his friend and hostess. Marietta wore a scarlet
sheath dress without any kind of head scarf at all. Her shoes were
high-heeled pumps in a matching red, with ribbons that wrapped around
her ankles. "What's this? Going historical?"
"Like it?" She twirled. Quai shook his head. Mari grimaced and
smoothed the front of the dress down. "Yeah, well, actually, it's
uncomfortable as all creation. I can't breathe and my feet are
killing
me. I'm not doing this again." She returned her focus to Quai, and a
cheerful expression covered her face again. "So, how's your end of the
revolution going?"
Quai laughed. Mari's direct approach to politics, and life in
general, was legendary among her friends. "Slowly, slowly. There's a
lot of thought drifting around the stream that now is the time to be a
still water and run deep and not give the yewners an excuse to come
busting in." No need to mention where that
thought was coming from, of course.
Mari leaned against the wall to take the weight off at least one of
the killer shoes. "Yeah, I've been hearing that, but I don't know. I'd
feel a lot better if I knew what we were waiting for."
"Ah." Quai held up one finger. "But we do know. We're waiting for
the yewners to be relieved that we didn't kick up a fuss at the height
of the Discovery brouhaha and for them to relax. Then it's our turn."
"Mmmm." Mari shifted her weight to the other foot. "I'm not entirely
convinced, but I'll take it under advisement. I like to know what the
money I raise"—she swept her hand out to encompass the entire
performance space—"is going toward."
"Same thing it's always been going toward, Mari," Quai assured her.
"Finally returning full citizenship rights for the colonists."
All the colonies had suffered at the result of the Bradbury
Rebellion. All colonists had a harder time getting seats on the
U.N. controlled shuttles that flew between Earth and the planets. They
found it impossible to obtain licenses for starting manufacturing or
shipping businesses. Their privacy was invaded more frequently, their
taxes were higher, and not one of them had been allowed to hold an
independent election in twenty years. Yes, they all suffered, except
maybe the long-lifers in their resorts.
Mari's skeptical look did not entirely fade. She pushed herself away
from the wall. "Speaking of colonists," she said, looking away from
Quai to scan the room, "there's a feeder here who wants to talk to you."
"You let a feeder in here?" Quai was stunned. One of the other
things Mari was famous for was her careful guest list.
"Yes," she answered calmly. "Frezia Cheney. Do you know her?"
Quai thought. He subscribed to eight or nine shallow news services
and hung around three or four of the deepwater ones. That made for a
lot of names to forget. "I've heard of her," he said finally. "A Lunar,
isn't she?"
Mari nodded. "And she's got a reputation for fair and ruthless
reporting all across the stream. We could use a few more like her." She
touched his arm. "Just give her ten minutes, and I'll pull you out."
"If she wants to talk about my relationship with my mother—" said
Quai sternly.
"She won't, Quai, I promise."
Quai set his mouth in a straight line and favored Mari with one of
his Grade A sour glares. Mari responded with a pitiful look that made
the most of her big, brown eyes. Quai laughed and relented.
"Okay."
Mari opened her mouth, but Quai pointed a finger at her. "Ten
minutes, that's it. After that, you come get me. I want to go see the
cirque troupe, and I promised Eli we'd do some coordinating."
"I swear." Mari held up her right hand to promise and grabbed Quai's
wrist with her left. "Come on."
Quai sighed inwardly and let himself be pulled along.
He had over the years become extremely wary of stream feeders. Only
a few had ever actually wanted to talk to him. Mostly they wanted to
talk about his mother. If they were pro-U.N., they wanted to know why
he chose to damage her life with his outspoken causes. If they were
separatists, they wanted to know why he didn't denounce her timid
politics more frequently.
This particular feeder sat in a wingback chair in a little
parlorlike cluster of seats and tables. As Mari and Quai crossed the
dampening field, the muted roar of the party fell away. Frezia Cheney
was a fine-boned woman with pale copper skin and coffee-dark eyes. She
was conservatively dressed for this party—loose gold trousers and a
knee-length white tunic with gold embroidery around the collar and
cuffs. A gold beaded cap covered her black hair, which had been pulled
into a knot at the nape of her long neck.
"Frezia Cheney," said Mari as the woman stood up. "This is Yan Quai.
Quai, this is Frezia Cheney."
"How do you do." Quai shook Ms. Cheney's hand. As he did, he noticed
the clear plastic exoskeleton extending out of the
woman's tunic sleeve to cover her hand. Not only was Ms. Cheney a
Lunar, she did not spend much time at all on Earth. If she did, her
muscles would have been able to manage the gravity without help.
"Thank you for agreeing to see me, Mr. Yan." Ms. Cheney withdrew her
hand and sat back down a little hesitantly. The exoskeleton allowed her
to move freely, but it could not disguise a Lunar's mental discomfort
with full gravity. "I am sorry about having to bring this to a social
gathering. Would you prefer I made an appointment to meet you at your
office?"
Two points for the appearance of consideration, anyway.
"No, this is fine," Quai said, casting a significant look toward Mari.
"I understand having a crowded schedule."
Mari patted Quai's shoulder as she left. Quai sat in the second
wingback chair, which was turned so he was almost knee-to-knee with Ms.
Cheney.
"Something to drink?" asked Ms. Cheney.
"Scotch, thanks," replied Quai, and Ms. Cheney sent the table
scooting away with orders for two.
"Now." Quai crossed his legs and pulled out his best businesslike
voice. "What can I do for you, Ms. Cheney?"
Ms. Cheney smiled. "Don't worry, Mr. Yan. I have no intention of
asking you about your mother."
Not yet, anyway, thought Quai, but he kept his expression
bland. "Well, that's refreshing."
Ms. Cheney gave him a knowing look. When he didn't react, she just
shook her head. "I'm much more interested in a little company called
Biotech 24."
"Biotech 24? And they are?"
"A little stream company that's been giving money to various
research projects out in the planets, including to a Dr. Meyer up on
Venera Base so she can study what she thinks is microscopic life in
the Venusian cloud banks." The table returned, and Ms. Cheney handed
Quai a short, stout glass.
"And why would you be interested in them?" Quai sipped his drink.
One of the other things Mari did really well was catering. This was the
pure stuff. No rapid distilleries for Mari's patrons, no sir.
Ms. Cheney wrapped her fingers around her glass. Quai heard the
minute hum as the servos tightened her grip for her. "Because a friend
of a friend of ours wants to know if there's separatist money behind
it."
"A friend of a friend of ours?" Quai felt his eyebrows rise. "Is
there a name involved here?"
Ms. Cheney lifted the glass and cradled it in her augmented hands
but did not drink. "Paul Mabrey."
Quai whistled long and low. "Now there's a memory. I thought he'd
ceased to exist." Quai had researched the Bradbury inquisitions
thoroughly. He looked on it as a necessity. So many people popped their
heads back up once every five years or so that you needed to know
whether they were the real thing or whether they were on the yewner's
fishing teams. His mother's colleague Mr. Hourani was particularly good
at getting old revolutionaries to turn on the new separatist movements.
"There was a rumor he was gone." Ms. Cheney's face was guarded. "But
he's back, and he wants to help, or at least not do any harm."
"I see." No one had ever accused Paul Mabrey of actually
cooperating with the yewners, that Quai had heard. There was, however,
a kind of automatic suspicion attached to anyone who got out of
Bradbury without having to go to trial. He'd have to check the stream,
see if there was any gravitational attraction between Mabrey's name
and Hourani's. "Is Mabrey the friend, or the friend of the friend?"
"He's the friend." Ms. Cheney still did not drink. Quai started to
wonder why she'd bothered to send for a drink she didn't want. Probably
so she'd look companionable.
"And the friend of the friend?"
Ms. Cheney did not miss a beat. "I'm not at liberty to say."
Quai took another swallow of his own drink. She didn't know what she
was missing here. "Then I'm not at liberty to speak."
They regarded each other for a long moment, weighing their private
considerations and deciding how much they could give or how much they
had to hold back.
"If Biotech 24 is working with you, then there's a potential
disaster brewing," said Ms. Cheney. "The yewners are ordering an audit
of Venera's books. They won't miss this."
That caught Quai off guard. He let the silence stretch out too long
before he was able to answer. "And were that to be any kind of a
problem, Paul's friend might be in a position to do something about
this?"
"Yes."
Which pretty much told Quai who the friend of a friend was. There
was only one place where the organized separatists had been able to
make any inroads on Venera. The Venerans were so ruthlessly apolitical
that it wasn't funny. Sometimes Quai wondered if it was part of the
boarding oath. "We the undersigned agree not to have any opinions
whatsoever."
Well, well, Ben Godwin has decided to move from sympathizer to
player. Dicey time to try it. I wonder what changed his mind?
I wonder what Paul Mabrey has been up to all these years? Maybe
it's time to dither.
"Listen, Ms. Cheney," he began. "I'm only loosely jacked in to that
end of—"
Ms. Cheney snorted and waved one hand. "If you don't want to tell
me, Mr. Yan, just say so. The only person who knows more than you about
where the Terran separatist money comes from is our hostess."
Quai smiled, just a little. "I've heard that one too. If it's true,
then Heaven help the separatists, because nobody knows what's going on."
Ms. Cheney studied him in silence for a minute. Then she said, "The
game's starting up again, Mr. Yan. This may be our last, best chance to
break from Earth. The longer the yewners can be put off, the better for
us." She set her drink back down on the table, still untasted. "Now is
not the time to be invisible. Now is the time to let them know we're
here."
"There I do not agree with you." Quai shook his head.
Ms. Cheney shrugged, a move that made her servos buzz angrily. "And
there's a lot of us on Luna who disagree with your disagreement. But
that's all right. Unless"—she turned her head so she regarded him out
of one shining eye—"that's what's keeping you from answering my
questions?"
Quai took another sip of scotch and rolled it around in his mouth
for a moment, considering the possibilities. He had to agree that
having the yewners track down the origins of Biotech 24 would not be a
good idea. However, at least as far as he was concerned, and he was the
one being asked here, neither Paul Mabrey nor Ben Godwin were good
risks. On the other hand, Mari trusted this woman, and Mari's judgment
was sound.
Also, it was worth a little payback to know that the Lunars were not
willing to sit back and wait.
Of course, Ms. Cheney could not be speaking for all the Lunars, any
more than he and Mari worked with all the Terran groups. There were
knots and bunches of people who called themselves separatists, or
procolonials, or planetary-rights representatives scattered all across
four worlds, and in the L5 archipelagoes to boot. Some of them held
summits together. Some of them actively hated each other. They had all
been born out of the Bradbury Rebellion, but their principles divided
them more than they united them.
Sometimes Quai wondered why the yewners considered them any kind of
threat.
Still, if he gave Ms. Cheney what she was looking for, she might be
able to give him an inroad to the Lunar separatists if he needed it
later.
"Yes, there's separatist money in Biotech 24," he said at last. "No,
it would not be a good thing if the yewners knew that."
Ms. Cheney nodded. "Thank you."
"You're welcome, Ms. Cheney." Quai set his drink down on the table
and stood. "Anything else I can help you with?"
"Not at the moment." She stood also and held out her hand. "But I
may want to talk to you in the future."
"And I may want to talk to you." He shook her skeleton-encased hand,
barely able to feel the flesh under the plastic cage.
"I look forward to it."
They said good-bye and Quai walked away to find Mari. It wasn't
hard. She stood out like a scarlet exclamation point in a crowd of men
and women in earth tones and gold. She spotted Quai and extricated
herself from the group.
"I see you got yourself out."
"Years of experience." Quai leaned against the railing and looked
down on the stages. A cirque performer was juggling now, a brilliant
cascade of green glowing spheres. "Mari, did you know what that was
going to be about?"
"Of course," she answered simply.
Quai cocked an eye toward her. Her face was free of any suspicion or
apology. "And you trust her all right?"
Now Mari frowned. "I wouldn't have sent you in there if I didn't,
Quai; you know that."
"I do." Quai rubbed his hands together. "I just… I don't know."
Mari touched his shoulder. "What's the matter?"
He looked up at her. Her hand was warm and felt very pleasant where
it was. A pretty woman, Mari, a good friend, and a savvy
businessperson. They needed more people like her. "You ever wonder if
we know what we're doing? If we're the right ones for the job?"
She laughed and patted his back. "Constantly. But we're all there
is."
"I guess."
"Come on." She took his arm. "You're not having fun, and that'll be
no good when I start pressing for account deductions. Let's go watch
the cirque troupe."
"In a second, Mari." Quai straightened up and gently extricated his
arm from hers. "Can you get me a secure line? I've got to send out some
mail."
"Sure. Hang for a minute." Mari threaded her way expertly through
the crowd, heading for the offices in the back.
Quai hung. He watched the performers and the audiences, and the
talkers and the drinkers. He wondered how many people here really
believed that the colonists deserved better than they were getting and
how many of them were just here because Mari knew they had deep
pockets and wanted to pretend they were involved in daring underground
politics.
How many of them had waived their right to kids in favor of
long-life? How many of them wanted to have both the kids and as much
immortality as money could buy and had already reserved a slot in some
resort on the Moon or Mars where they could retreat once they reached
age 120? That was the deal. You got long life, or kids, or you left
Mother Earth behind.
And for the hundred-millionth time Quai told himself his activism
was not about his father's decision to take the waiver and leave him.
Mari came back with a minipad. She slotted it into the bar, hit a
couple of command keys, and handed him the stylus. "It's all encrypted
under some of my best stuff, so don't send anything they'll want to
trace. The yewners will think it's me."
"Never." Quai took the stylus and considered the blank screen for a
moment.
Finally, he wrote:
Old friends operating under alias in
targeted area. Working toward mutual goal. With their efforts, we
might get there sooner rather than later if we just sit back and let it
happen. But maybe keep one eye on the Moon.
He addressed the message to an alias and sent it out. The contact
code he sent the scrambled package to was a group box. Buyers and
sellers of all kinds went in there to keep up on gossip, to give leads
to friends, that kind of thing. All of it was scrupulously legal, of
course, or, at least, all of it was so far unaudited.
Quai sat back and fingered the holotattoo on his neck. He could
barely believe things were really happening. Ever since he'd thrown in
with the separatists, he'd gotten used to the idea that it was going to
be a long, hard slog. Ted Fuller rotted in an isolation cell. Mars was
discovering easy economic benefits in lining up to serve the mines,
the heavy industries, and the long-life resorts.
But now, now, he could see the end. He could almost touch it. Okay,
not the end, but the beginning. The new beginning.
He'd never really believed he'd have this kind of help, or that the
people they needed so badly would come around.
But he did and they had, and now it was a whole new game.
* * *
"Well, well," murmured Alinda, pushing her heavy braid of hair back
over her shoulder. "Don't push the Send key yet, ladies and gentlemen."
Grace looked up from her desk. "What are you mumbling about, Al?"
Alinda's dark eyes sparkled and Grace groaned inwardly. There was
nothing Alinda Noon loved more than a good rumor.
That is the biggest problem with v-babies, thought Grace.
They
all believe gossip is a social grace.
The three of them sat along the curving wall of Chemistry Lab Nine,
their desks a small island on a sea of cluttered workbenches and
metal-sided analyzers.
"Looks like reports of aliens on Venus were a bit premature," Alinda
went on.
Grace froze. "What?" she demanded.
"I win the pool." Al called over her shoulder to Marty, who'd frozen
his own simulation to listen. "I said the yewners would be crying fraud
within a week of getting here."
"What are you talking about?" Grace heaved herself to her feet.
Alinda blinked, startled. "Nothing catastrophic, Grace, really. The
yewners are calling for an audit of base books and time logs. Only one
reason for it. They think we've been playing games with time and money."
Each word thudded hard against Grace's mind. "But they don't know?"
"Know we've been playing games?" Alinda's brow creased.
"That the Discovery's is a fake!"
"Of course not. Why? Should they?"
Alinda's blank look, Marty's stupid, stunned stare were suddenly
more than Grace could stand. "Pay attention, little girl!" she roared.
"That Discovery is saving your job and your precious base! If it gets
taken away, this whole place is going into cold storage! There is
nothing funny here!"
Grace wanted to shake her. She wanted to smack him. Instead, she
strode into her private office and slammed the door. She knew outside a
whole cloud of whispers was now rising, most of them containing her
name. She had just given the entire lab something to chew over for
weeks. She gripped the back of her chair and squeezed.
Get it together, get it together. Nothing's happened yet. It's
just an audit. Of course there had to be an audit.
But it wasn't just an audit; it was another round of questions and
inspections and sideways glances and gossip and more questions and
nobody believing what she'd found.
For just a minute there, it had been going so well. The outside
world was actually listening to her. For once, the great Helen Failia
hadn't been able to divert her funding or try to monopolize her
research assistant's time.
On the wall of her office, Grace kept a still shot of an absorber
chain. It had been taken by a stasis microscope and looked like someone
had taken forty gray-and-white tennis balls and stuck them together in
a ring that twisted in on itself. Not in the neat double helix, but
more like a bedspring wound far too tightly and then folded over in the
middle and fed back into itself.
This small tangle had been her life for ten years. She and her team
had isolated this as Venus's mysterious ultraviolet absorber. Snarls
of this little molecule created the dark bands that showed up in the
cloud banks. There had been praise and papers and money, and even
Helen had been happy.
Which had all been fine, but then Grace had discovered that the
compound was alive.
"Now, I'm not saying it's a yeast or an alga," she tried to tell
them. "But it must be considered on a level with a virus or at the very
least an autocatalytic RNA molecule. It absorbs energy; it exudes waste
chemicals." Ozone and water molecules were more concentrated in the
absorption bands than outside them. This had been independently
measured. "It has an identifiable internal barrier to increase
electrochemical potential. And"— she'd stab at the table, or the chart,
or the nearest person with her index finger as she got to this part—"it
reproduces itself."
There was the snag. The molecules were highly active, always
combining and recombining. But Grace couldn't get anyone else to say
that this process was definitely reproduction, and she hadn't yet been
able to duplicate its peculiar gyrations in
the lab. The consensus of the rest of the worlds was that the intense
ultraviolet light hitting the top of the cloud layer broke apart the
molecules, which reformed once they'd dropped far enough down in the
clouds to be out of reach of the worst of the UV.
But she hadn't stopped. She had years' worth of observations. She
scrabbled for independent confirmation of her results. She fought to
bring biologists and chemists to Venera to look at the absorbers, just
on the chance that someone else would finally see what she saw.
For the first time in her long life, Grace was certain about what
she was doing, and that certainty had almost ruined her.
Grace brushed her bangs from her forehead and stared at the absorber
on her wall. She hadn't planned on becoming a long-lifer. She'd planned
on taking her 120 allotted years, getting a decent life, getting
married, having a kid and passing on, leaving the kid, or the work, or
both, behind to say Here Lived Grace Meyer.
But it hadn't worked out that way. She'd gone into chemistry because
it could be applied in so many different fields, not because it
interested her for its own sake. She'd wandered from job to job. In
each one, she found she was a solid middle-of-the-road performer. She
was good enough but not brilliant, never brilliant. Always the third or
fourth name on the few papers that her work groups published, never
quite making the patent disclosures.
Her first marriage had bombed, the second had petered out, the
third… the third had barely existed. After the third, she realized
she'd been wandering from husband to husband the way she'd been
wandering from job to job, so she swore off marriage.
It was after that that she'd headed for "the planets," hoping in her
vague, wandering way that her life waited for her outside Mother
Earth's sheltering arms.
And then you found it, and nobody listened to you. Grace
laughed and shook her head.
Too perfect.
But I made them listen. She smiled at the picture of her
little, personal discovery.
Even if just for a little while, I
made them listen.
And if the yewners discovered how she'd managed that particular
feat, then it really was over. Everything. Here Lived Grace Meyer,
Fraud.
No, she dug her fingers into the chair's fabric until her nails bent
against the frame. She'd wiped the trail clean. She'd reviewed all the
records and put them back the way they were supposed to be. There was
no linkage. Nothing.
Nothing you can think of anyway.
Grace closed her eyes. Now it wasn't just routine logs sitting in
the endless streams of screenwork that Venera generated. Now it was
individual files being scrutinized by Michael Lum, who'd apprenticed
under Gregory Schoma, the man who designed Venera's security. Now it
was two yewner cops helping him.
All that skill and brilliance trained against the work of Grace
Meyer, who'd never been able to get anyone to believe she might
actually be more than just competent.
So what do you do about it? Grace opened her eyes and
focused on the image of the absorber, the real discovery, the true
evidence of life on Venus.
You go back over everything. You make
sure there's nothing you've missed. Come on, Grace, it's basic
research. You've been doing this for seventy years. Go in there and see
if you can find yourself.
Grace pulled the chair away from her private desk and sat down,
waking the command board with her touch. As she started shuffling her
icons, she realized she'd have to do something about Alinda. She and
Marty would spread news of Grace's outburst across half the base, with
embellishments, if Grace didn't give them something else to think
about. She did not need for her name coming to the yewners' attention.
Not like this, anyway.
Grace fixed a smile onto her face and walked back out into the main
lab and up to Alinda's desk.
"I'm sorry, Al," she said, meaning it. "That was completely uncalled
for. I've been sitting on the edge just a little too long."
Alinda, as quick to forgive as she was quick to talk, waved Grace's
words away. "It's okay, Grace. We all want this to be real,
and our department's got more reason than most."
Grace nodded. "Just one more attack on the data. Only to be
expected." She shrugged. "What would you say to a show of unity? The
microbrewery's got a new batch coming out today. We could close up shop
early and go try a sample. My treat?"
Al's face lit up. "Sounds great. You in, Marty?" She turned to her
fellow researcher.
"The boss's buying beer?" Marty's thin grin split his face. "You bet
I'm in."
Grace smiled down on them. Kids. Easily distracted. Michael and the
yewners would not be so easy. With them, she'd have to be careful;
she'd have to be thorough.
For the first time in her life, she really would have to be
brilliant.
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Chapter Nine
T'sha found Tr'es in the life research chamber. She hovered silently
in the doorway and watched the child work.
No, not child. Stop
thinking like that. Tr'es was small, it was true, almost as small
as a male, and her crest shone blue as sapphires, undimmed by age. But
she was an adult, picked out by Br'sei shortly after her Declaration.
She followed his promises and left Ca'aed's care for Ke'taiat's, to
become one of Br'sei's best engineers, or so T'sha understood.
Even so, there was something furtive about Tr'es, or at least there
was when she was around other people. Here, though, alone with her maze
of microcosms, caretakers, and simulators, she was intent and
confident. Reverse engineering, that was Tr'es's specialty. Find
something that existed and track it back through all its previous
stages. Take it apart until you understood it and put it back together
again.
Rather like what I'm trying to do here. T'sha poked her
muzzle into the room. The gesture did not catch Tr'es's attention. The
engineer just hovered in front of her simulator, talking nonstop in a
specialized command language and watching patterns that might have
been wind currents on the nightside, or neurochemical diffusion, flow
across its surface.
T'sha flew all the way into the room, careful not to touch any of
the microcosms or their connecting tubules.
The shadow of her movement crossed the simulator's surface, and
Tr'es whirled around, startled.
"Oh, ah, good luck, Ambassador T'sha." She raised her forehands. "I
didn't… I—"
"You were absorbed in your work." T'sha glided carefully between the
tools, both living and nonliving. "I know how it feels."
Reassured, Tr'es inflated slightly. "Is there something I can share
with you, Ambassador?"
"I hope so." T'sha finally spotted a pair of rods that she was
fairly sure were perches and settled onto them. "I understand it was
you who did the initial work on the raw materials D'seun took from the
New People." She had listened to the caretaker of the reports for an
entire dodec-hour and had practically had to be carried into the
refresher, she was so exhausted. Fear had kept her listening. Fear and
suspicion, because of what she could not find.
Tr'es dipped her muzzle. "He wanted me to map neural branching and
chemical diffusion patterns to see if we could link that and the gross
physiology to the transmissions we were receiving and make a start on
the language translation."
She seemed about to go on, but T'sha interrupted. "And you have made
great progress, I see."
Tr'es shriveled a little, embarrassed. "We have done our best. The
New People are complex. They have at least as many command languages
as we do, and those patterns are all bound up with their
person-to-person speech. Teasing them apart has not been easy."
T'sha whistled her appreciation. "No, it would be extremely
difficult. Your good work will make your birth city proud."
At that, Tr'es puffed up fully. "How does Ca'aed?"
"Very well." T'sha whistled more approval at the warmth with which
Tr'es spoke of her blood home. "You have been here a long time, haven't
you? Perhaps a trip back to Ca'aed is indicated."
Tr'es cocked her head first to one side, then the other. "I'd like
that, Ambassador T'sha, if Ambassador D'seun would agree…"
T'sha decided to spare her from having to go on. "We can leave the
discussion for later if you think that would be better." This was a
rough wind. T'sha had some authority over Tr'es, as ambassador from her
birth home, but if Tr'es's loyalties weren't all promised to D'seun,
she was the only one on the team, except possibly for Br'sei. Br'sei,
however, was older, much more complicated, and much better at hiding
what he really knew, so T'sha had decided to tackle Tr'es first.
Tr'es had swelled even further. She was almost her normal size now.
"Yes, that might be best."
"Then that's what we'll do." T'sha stretched her wings. The child…
Tr'es was as relaxed as she was going to get. Now was the time to ask
the real question. "Tr'es, how did the New People's raw material come
into our possession?"
"I was not there," said Tr'es, just a little too quickly.
"Ambassador D'seun said there was an accident and all that remained of
the New People who suffered was raw material, which he collected for
study." She shifted her size uneasily. "For me to study," she added
like an admission.
T'sha dipped her muzzle. "That study sounds as though it was
arduous," she said, carefully keeping the touch of judgment from her
words. "How did you deal with the extreme cold?"
"Carefully," said Tr'es, with a flash of engineer's humor. T'sha
clacked her teeth. "At first we used only nonliving tools. Then,
working from the New People's material, we were able to grow some
specialized microcosms that were able to keep their liquid transfer
media intact and yet perform useful work."
Again, T'sha whistled, this time genuinely impressed. Tr'es was no
child when it came to skill. To not only propagate an alien life but to
make a useful tool of it with only a few years of study, that was a
feat indeed.
Unfortunately, it did not change the reason T'sha had come. "They
are delicate things, the New People," she said. "Ambassador D'seun
must have moved very quickly."
Tr'es hesitated, but then dipped her muzzle. "That is my
understanding," she said softly.
T'sha thrust her muzzle closer. "Did no new people arrive to claim
the raw materials of their own?"
"They may have, later, but"—Tr'es rattled her wings uneasily—"raw
materials are raw materials. They belong to whoever claims them first."
"True." T'sha dipped her muzzle. "We are fortunate Ambassador
D'seun was so alert. The translations would be going much more slowly
if you had not had anything to work with."
Tr'es's relaxation vanished. She pulled herself inward, minutely,
just a couple of bones at a time, as if she were hoping T'sha wouldn't
notice. "I believe he was waiting for such an occurrence."
"Waiting?" T'sha pushed closer.
Tr'es's skin trembled as she deflated. "I have work to do,
Ambassador. Is there anything else I can share with you?"
T'sha let go of her perches and glided forward until the tip of her
muzzle just brushed Tr'es's bright-blue crest. "How quickly did D'seun
move to obtain the raw materials, Tr'es?"
Tr'es jerked away and turned to face her simulator again. She spoke
a few words in a command language T'sha didn't know, and the diaphanous
patterns were replaced by a more familiar wind grid.
"Tr'es," said T'sha, although the engineer was no longer looking at
her. "What has D'seun made you do?"
"He made me do nothing," said Tr'es without taking her gaze off the
simulator. "I have made promises."
T'sha moved up next to her until they hovered wingtip to wingtip.
T'sha did not overfly her, not yet. Tr'es still might talk without
overt intimidation. "This is not about promises. I was sent here by the
High Law Meet, just like you were. We're here to do what's right for
the People."
"That's what I'm trying to do," Tr'es said miserably, huddling in on
herself.
"Tr'es."
T'sha turned her head, her muzzle still open to speak. Br'sei glided
through the doorway.
"D'tak needs some help in the surveying chamber," he said, brushing
a forehand against Tr'es's wing. "There's an unpredicted mutation in
the preparers we seeded in Highland 98. We need to find out where it
came from."
"Yes, Engineer Br'sei." Tr'es swelled instantly with relief. She
flew away without giving T'sha a second glance.
Br'sei faced T'sha, saying nothing, waiting for her. It was a
remarkably discomforting tactic.
"Excellent timing, Engineer," remarked T'sha at last.
"Forgive me, Ambassador T'sha." Br'sei sank a little with a humility
T'sha was certain he did not feel. "But if you're going to make trouble
for someone, it really should be for someone who can handle that
trouble."
"I am making trouble?" T'sha pulled her muzzle back. "I thought I
was doing my job."
"That is what everyone here thinks." Br'sei's wings fluttered,
bobbing him dangerously close to some of the carefully aligned
microcosms. "Unfortunately, everyone has conflicting ideas as to what
that job is."
"I see." T'sha dropped until she was level with him. "And what do
you think
your job is?"
"I was brought here to establish a life base on this world, one that
could form the foundation for a canopy, for our lives," said Br'sei
without flinching or hesitation. "I've done that."
T'sha moved in closer. She wanted to breathe him, taste him
thoroughly. She wanted there to be no chance of misunderstanding even
one word. "There is more in you," she said.
"Yes."
Closer. Make him aware of you. Let him be unable to escape the
touch and taste of you. "Is it some promise to D'seun that keeps
you from telling me?"
"In truth, no, it's…" He inflated suddenly. "Ambassador, T'sha, have
you seen the New People yet?"
The question caught T'sha off guard and she backed away. "In truth,
I haven't. I have been busy going over reports and trying to
understand—"
"What Ambassador D'seun has been doing with his team." Br'sei
finished her words and pointed his muzzle toward the doorway. "The New
People's home is near. Will you come with me to see it?"
Eagerness and caution both tugged at T'sha. "Can we do so in safety?"
"If we keep our distance, we can, but we will need a dirigible."
Br'sei spoke a few command words into his headset. "It will meet us at
the mooring point." He glided out the door. T'sha
rattled her wings to the empty air and followed.
They reached the fat, white dirigible without encountering D'seun.
T'sha felt a bit like a child breaking curfew. It occurred to her to
wonder if Br'sei had made sure D'seun was away before he came to her.
Br'sei was cautious enough to think of such a thing.
The dirigible opened its doors and waited for them to fly aboard.
T'sha settled herself on one pair of perches while Br'sei spoke in
the dirigible's command language. The dirigible gave its confirmation,
closed its doors, and began to rise.
They flew straight up into the shifting clouds, far up past the
temperate zones to where the air was cold and thin and the gases
themselves began to freeze into liquids. T'sha stroked one of the
dirigible's tendons in sympathy. It had been bred for harsh conditions,
but this could not be comfortable.
Br'sei said nothing during the flight. T'sha let the silence float
between them. He was making decisions, that much was obvious. She
needed to give him room. He was not some overawed child who needed to
be alternately coaxed along and reminded of his responsibilities.
Br'sei had been declared adult before T'sha had even been born. Whole
cities owed their lives to his work, and if he was successful here, the
whole world would too. D'seun would take the credit for it, as
ambassador. But T'sha at least would know who had grown the life, who
had really spread it.
And I will make sure that others do too, she vowed
silently.
You have my promise.
"There," said Br'sei suddenly.
T'sha let go of her perches and floated up beside him. Through the
dirigible's eyes she saw a sphere of silver with its wings and tail
spread wide to catch the winds. Thick tendons connected an elaborate
exoskeleton to dull-gray skin.
"It's a city!" T'sha clacked her teeth delightedly. "Clearly, that
is a city. Why did no one say!"
"It's not alive."
T'sha turned one eye toward him. "What?"
"It's not alive," he repeated slowly and forcefully, allowing each
word to sink into her skin. "None of their cities are. They're metal."
T'sha pulled in on herself, almost unwilling to understand. "Ca'aed
has metallic extensions, Engineer. That doesn't mean—"
"I don't mean metallic extensions, Ambassador." Br'sei swelled and
spread his wings. His hands all grabbed a perch to keep him from
bumping into the ceiling. "I mean metal. The shell, the tendons, the
bones. That was built, not grown. It is not alive. None of their cities
are."
"That's…" T'sha stopped, searching for words.
"Morbid? Disgusting? Frightening?" suggested Br'sei, clenching and
unclenching his posthands in his agitation. "I have thought all of
these things."
T'sha struggled. To live encased in metal, to not even try to
emerge. How must that be? "I would not be able to tolerate it," she
said slowly. "I would go insane. But I have a friend, Technician
Pe'sen, who would be fascinated by this."
Br'sei clacked his teeth once, sharply. "Technicians always are a
bit morbid, aren't they? To give yourself over to the science of the
never-living, I suppose you must be." He whistled. "I have thought we
might need one or two technicians on this team before we are done." He
gazed at the distant silver sphere again, clenching his hands around
his perches. "But, I ask myself, as a good engineer must, because
their environment would make me insane, does it follow that they must
be insane? There are many creatures in the canopy who eat what would
poison a person."
T'sha remained silent, feeling the pattern of his words with care.
Where did these questions come from? Were they wholly his own, or had
someone said something to him to lift the questions up? Someone who
might be Ambassador D'seun?
"Have you found an answer to this question yet?" asked T'sha
carefully.
"No." He faced the graceful, lifeless sphere that held all there was
of the New People on this world. "I have seen what there is to see of
them, and of us, and my thoughts have swung back and forth until I'm no
longer sure what wind blows them." He deflated. "I was hoping that your
thoughts would be steadier than
mine."
"Engineer Br'sei." T'sha glided to his perch and settled there, her
wings touching his, her crest brushing his back. "What has D'seun told
your team?"
Br'sei did not look fully at her, but neither did he deflate. He
just spread his crest, as if seeking his balance in a difficult wind.
"That you are greedy and dangerous. That you are rich and young and do
not see beyond your own ambitions. That we must not say what we know of
the New People because too many in the High Law Meet would be
frightened and advocate finding another world so as not to be too near
this potential insanity. That the People are dying and if we do not
succeed with this world, we are all of us dead." Br'sei cocked his
head. "He was most convincing too."
"Yes," murmured T'sha even as anger swelled her body. "I imagine he
was. Even Tr'es believed him."
Stop, stop. Now is not the time.
Swallow it, save it, breathe it out later. Lose control and you'll kill
what you're growing with Br'sei.
Her patience though was raw and withered. Her worries, her
suspicions swam around inside her body, threatening her internal
vision. She could not trust her subtlety now. She was too rocked by
what Br'sei had said. She needed to ask her questions right now. There
was no alternative.
"Engineer Br'sei." She let go of the perch and swelled herself out
as far as her skin allowed. "Was there life in the New Person when
Tr'es took it apart?"
"No," he said, simply and immediately.
"Was there life in the New Person when you took it apart?" She
spread wings and crest to their fullest extent, towering, dominating
with her size as she could not with her years. "Or was it D'seun's
doing?"
"You have promised me nothing that could make me answer that
question," said Br'sei coldly. She opened her mouth, but he thrust his
muzzle forward. "And before you try, you should review how deeply I
and mine are promised to D'seun. He brought us here. He ensured futures
for us and our children and all our families—not just free futures,
either, but glorious ones. The least of us will head our own households
with our pick of spouses. I cannot set all that aside for nothing." The
touch of his words was as weak as the words themselves were strong. He
was pleading with her, she realized, almost sick with what he could not
say, could not do.
One bone at a time, T'sha made herself subside. "I see you are torn.
I understand it. I will find what I can do to make this as easy as
possible for you."
"He is not insane, Ambassador," murmured Br'sei, as if he were
trying out an uncertain idea.
T'sha stiffened against the engineer's words. "If he killed a New
Person for their raw materials, he is."
"I don't know that's what he did," said Br'sei, more to the city
beyond them than to T'sha herself. "It could be nothing but my fear
talking."
"Maybe, Engineer." T'sha was not eager to allow that possibility,
but she had to. She had nothing tangible to wrap her hands around. She
had nothing but holes— holes in the records, holes in Br'sei's
knowledge. Holes were not proof. Holes were suspicion only. "But you
must allow that Ambassador D'seun is flying high and that the air
around him is very, very thin."
Br'sei clacked his teeth bitterly. "Is that not how we all fly right
now?"
T'sha dipped her muzzle. "You are right, Engineer. I wish you
weren't."
"So do I, Ambassador," said Br'sei, deflating until he was only the
size of a child. "Life of my mother, so do I."
* * *
Helen stood as Grace Meyer entered her office. "Thanks for coming,
Grace." She pulled a cup of steaming black coffee from the wall
dispenser and handed it across to the chemist.
"Thanks." Grace inhaled the aroma appreciatively. Helen had called
for fresh coffee specifically for this interview. Grace looked tired,
but alert as ever. Grace Meyer pushed herself harder than anyone on
Venera, with the possible exception of Helen herself.
But then again, Grace felt she had more to prove, and more to gain,
than anyone.
So, how far would that take her?
"Has Isaac Walters pronounced an opinion on your absorbers yet?"
asked Helen, drawing a cup for herself.
"We're designing some new experiments," said Grace non-committally
as she sat in one of the guest chairs and crossed her legs. "I'm in
contact with him." Walters was down at the Discovery with the rest of
the U.N. team.
"Now," Grace said as Helen sat back down behind her desk, "any
particular reason why I'm the one being summoned to court?"
Helen sighed. "It's not just you, Grace. The yewners have us all on
the carpet. They've called for an audit, so the books have to be
opened." She did not say why, but it was hard. She wanted to yell, was
it you? Did you put us in this position? Did you tell the yewners that
our salvation is a fraud?
Grace's face softened a little. "I suppose that's only to be
expected. After all, the eyes of the world are upon us," she intoned.
"How's that going, by the way?" she asked in a more normal voice.
Helen shrugged and sat behind her desk, setting her coffee cup down
in front of her. "As U.N. publicity, it seems to be a big success. I've
been getting congratulatory bursts from our Mr. Waicek telling me what
a marvelous job we're doing keeping his people fed and watered." She
curled her hands loosely around her cup, feeling the warmth seep into
her palms. "I think the C.A.C. folks do not want us to get above
ourselves. Because we're a chartered colony, they have a right to look
at our books. If they wanted to make real trouble, an easy route would
be to say we're not using all our new resources efficiently and that
we need to be regulated." Helen sipped her coffee and returned it to
the circle of her hands. "So this means we get an audit, and this means
that the people with the biggest budget increases are going to get
special attention." Helen smiled wanly. "This means you."
"This means me." Grace studied Helen for a minute. Searching her
face for what? Helen could not guess. Helen returned the woman's gaze,
although it did not take much looking to see Grace's native
stubbornness settling in. Helen braced herself for a fight.
In the next moment, however, Grace's expression eased, almost as if
she'd learned what she wanted to know. "Okay, Helen. I'll play. What do
you need?"
"I need to go over your expenses with you." Helen lit up her desk
screen. "If you can jack into your records and follow along, help me
fill in the blank spots. I'd appreciate it."
Grace took another swallow of coffee and set her cup down on the
edge of Helen's desk. "Well, I won't enjoy it, but let's do it." She
worked the secondary command board to open her private logs. "Where do
you want to start?"
The next hour felt almost like a ritual. Helen laid out the expense
reports for the time immediately up to the Discovery on her desk screen
and went down the line, questioning each point of income and each
corresponding point of outflow. Grace answered solemnly, pausing to
check her private records when her memory faltered. Helen made notes.
They both drank their coffee, refilling the cups whenever they emptied.
"Last thing," said Helen finally. The look on Grace's face was one
of disbelief. "Really." Grace grunted and made a "come on" gesture.
Helen gave her a sour half-smile. "Just the new supporter. Biotech 24."
"Oh, them." Grace ruffled her strawberry-blond bangs. "They're
venture capitalists of the old school. Very twentieth. Bet on the
underdog kind of thing. I made a pitch that alien RNA might prove to be
highly useful, and they dug into their pockets. Not as far as I would
have liked, though." She smiled thoughtfully at her coffee. "Although,
I haven't been back since the Discovery. We've been too busy."
"Haven't exactly needed to, have you?" Helen looked at her
spreadsheets. "People have been waving money in your face."
"It's a nice change," admitted Grace. "For all of us."
"And you've been keeping your people busy spending it." Helen
touched a key and a new set of records appeared on her desk screen.
"They've been logging in a lot of scarab time as well."
"Oh, yes. I've got Kevin Cusmanos yammering at me for being too hard
on his babies and his pilots." She saw Helen's look and raised her free
hand. "Okay, I admit it. I've been pushing. But I've got no idea how
long the largesse is going to last. I finally have the chance to make
my case and be taken seriously. I wanted to move on it."
Helen nodded. She understood that feeling all too well. "I've just
got to keep on top of what's good for Venera, Grace. Our whole colony's
on the line here."
Grace shook her head. "You've been listening to Bennet too long,
Helen. C.A.C.'s not going to take it away from us for a set of
proto-proteins and a hole in the ground. The yewners have got better
things to do."
"Let's hope so," said Helen fervently. She blanked her desk. "It all
looks good, Grace. Thanks for your patience."
"Not a problem." Grace stood up and pitched the remains of her
coffee and the cup into the appropriate chutes. "I take it I'm
dismissed."
"Until the next press call." Helen gave her a small smile, and Grace
returned it. Helen touched a key to open the door for her.
Grace walked out but paused in the threshold and turned around. "By
the way, Helen, it wasn't me."
Helen frowned. "It wasn't you, what?"
"Who's been talking to the yewners." Grace's smile was sly, like
someone who knew they'd made a stellar move in a difficult game. "If I
were you, I'd bring the subject up with Michael Lum."
Then she did leave. The door shut, and Helen sat there, paralyzed.
Michael? Michael talked to the U.N. without talking to her?
Ridiculous. Michael wouldn't even think…
No, Michael would think. It was the one thing Michael could be
absolutely counted on to do. It was one of the reasons she and Ben had
picked him for the board when the slot opened up.
But without talking to her?
Listen to me, will you. Sitting in my throne room wondering
who's just stabbed me in the back. A little wind-up Ceaser.
Helen's head sank slowly to her hands.
Has it really come to that?
She'd seen it coming, the money crisis that lay at the root of every
question she'd had to ask during the whole long, aching day. More than
a year ago, she'd seen the trends and had known a storm was brewing.
She'd told no one on Venera.
That was probably a mistake. But she hadn't wanted anyone to worry.
She hadn't wanted to disturb anyone's work.
To be honest, she hadn't wanted anyone to leave.
Instead, during her yearly stump trip to Mother Earth, she'd made a
side visit to U.N. City and went to see Yan Su.
They'd been in a windchime park. The salty ocean breeze blew through
the miniature trees and rang bells representing every republic, from
mellow brass Tibetan bells to weirdly tuned Monterey pipes. They sat on
one of the autoform benches, ignoring the security cameras that trained
themselves automatically on Su as a member of The Government.
The sun was pleasantly hot on the back of Helen's neck as she told
Su what was happening—the shrinking pure-research budgets, never huge
to begin with, the waning enthusiasm for corporate charity, the
inability of the hundreds of tiny republics to support major research
grants for their people.
"I hate to say this." She'd smiled tiredly at her friend. "But if
nothing changes, we're going to be asking for a government handout next
year."
The wind caught a lock of Su's white hair and whipped it across her
forehead. Su brushed it back under her scarf. Most people who went in
for body-mod had themselves made artificially younger. Su, on the
other hand, had herself aged. She looked about seventy-five, but Helen
knew she was only a little over sixty. It had to do with respect and
camouflage, Su said. A number of her influential colleagues came from
backgrounds that respected age. The ones who didn't, underestimated
her. Both attitudes could be extremely useful.
"What kind of handout were you thinking of, Helen?"
Just a couple of old women sitting on a bench and discussing the
future of ten thousand people. Helen shrugged. "I can show you our
budgets. We're going to need between a third and a half of our
operating expenses for, say, five years. By then the slump should be
over and we should be able to tap into
our
normal sources."
"You want a loan?"
"I want a grant, but I probably can't have one. So, yes, I'll take a
loan."
Su sat there for a long moment. Helen watched her face carefully.
She looked tired, and, despite the fact that Helen knew most of the
lines and pouches were artificial, she really did look old. Something
inside Helen stirred uneasily. The last time she'd seen Su look like
this was right after her husband had left. Correction, after her
husband had cleaned out their bank account to have himself made back
into a thirty-something and run away with a professional wife and
blamed Su for it.
He'd married someone who was supposed to have a future, he said, not
someone who was going to be stuck in the same dead-end bureaucratic
appointment for the rest of their lives, nursemaiding miners and
importers when there was important work to be done. Oh, and
incidentally, I've decided I want to get genetic rejuvenation past the
120 years everyone's guaranteed, so I've signed over my reproduction
rights. The boy's all yours.
Helen couldn't even imagine what that had been like. Su, born and
raised in U.N. City, had gone the expected route. She had a career of
government service, a family of her own, and a host of people and
causes to fill her life to the brim. How did she focus? How did she
choose what was important? Helen knew it was how most people lived, but
sometimes she wondered how anyone managed when they'd given their
heart to more than one thing.
"Helen," Su broke in on her thoughts. "I don't think the money's
going to be there."
Helen smiled. "I think we've had this conversation before."
"We have, several times." Su leaned her shoulder against the bench's
back. The wind blew her bronze scarf over her shoulder. "But this time
its different."
"How?"
Su turned her gaze to the chimes swinging in the breeze. Their
random music filled the park but did nothing to lift the chill settling
over Helen's heart. "Call it a narrowing of horizons, Helen. Call it a
selfishness born of the fact that we can now live three hundred years
all on our own and we worry less about leaving something behind that
will truly last."
"Can I call it a bunch of cheapskate bureaucrats?" asked Helen
lightly.
"You can, if it makes you feel better." Su's smile quickly faded.
"But you know as well as I do that since Bradbury—"
"No." Helen pushed herself upright. "No, you do not get to blame
this on Bradbury. Bradbury was twenty years ago. Bradbury has nothing
to do with the way things are now."
"I wish that were true. For your sake, I truly do. But it's not only
generals who are always refighting the last war. Bureaucrats do it,
too."
No. No. You are not saying this. I refuse to accept this.
"And do those bureaucrats really want ten thousand refugees on their
doorstep?"
Su spread her hands helplessly. "The C.A.C. doesn't see you as
refugees, Helen. They see you as misfits. You all have citizenship in
your parents' republics. They have to take you, and then you're their
problem, not the U.N.'s."
All around them wind rang the bells, sending their music out into a
world that didn't care about the work of her life or the futures of her
people. "You can't expect me to be content with this. I can't just let
Venera die."
"I expect them to find you stone-cold dead with your fingers wrapped
around a support girder," said Su, perfectly seriously. "They'll have
to cut you out of there."
Helen's mouth twitched as if she didn't quite have the energy to
smile. "The money's there someplace," she said, because it was so much
easier than even contemplating the alternative. "We just have to find
it. You're not going to just hang me out to dry, are you?"
"Never, Helen."
Helen had been right about something, anyway. The money had been out
there. All it had taken was the Discovery to prime the pump. For a
moment, everything looked like it was going to be all right. But now,
now… everything might be about to change again if the U.N. decided the
new rumors were true, if they
decided she wasn't handling this right, if Michael said the wrong thing.
Helen stepped up to her window and stared out across the farms.
Drones, humans, and ducks made their way between the lush plant life,
each with their own mission of the moment. Each with something
immediate to do. She was the only one standing still on the whole
farming level.
She felt alone. Deeply and profoundly alone, as if she'd lost the
feeling for the world around her, the world she'd built from the first
dollar and the first strut. She stood in the middle of it, and yet it
was somewhere else. Somewhere she wasn't sure she knew how to get to.
Don't be an idiot. She shook herself and returned to her
desk.
You have too much work to do to get depressive. First, you
have to decide what you're going to do about Michael.
She knew what she wanted to do. She wanted to call him in right now
and demand to know what he thought he was doing, find out how he could
betray Venera, betray her, like this. How could he not know what this
could lead to? How could he not realize what the U.N. would do with
whatever he told them?
The sudden memory of Grace's eyes stopped her. That little smile,
that knowledge of possessing a winning move.
Grace had known what this news would do to her. Grace had wanted
this. She had wanted to turn Helen against Michael, to send her running
off after a traitor, off after someone who was just doing his job but
wounding her ego…
Grace had been sure it would work, and it almost had.
Helen realized her hands were shaking.
Oh God, am I that far
gone?
She got up, went into her little private lavatory, pulled a cup of
water from the sink, and drank it in three swallows. Then she met her
own gaze in the mirror for a long moment.
Am I that far gone?
Almost, Helen. Almost, but not quite.
It was a good face, a strong face, a well-meaning face that had
worked so hard and had almost lost its way. God, had come so close…
Helen removed her scarf and pulled all the pins out of her hair. The
mane tumbled down over her shoulders, a waterfall of white and gray.
With long, competent fingers she twisted it into a fresh knot and one
by one, slid the pins back to their places. She laid the scarf back and
pinned that firmly down, too.
"Desk," she said as she returned to her work area. "Locate Michael
Lum."
After a pause, Michael's voice came back through the intercom. "I'm
here Helen."
"Where's here?"
"Admin. Security. My desk, specifically. Do you want me to come up
there?"
"No. I'll come down. Do me a favor though. Find Ben and your friend
Bowerman. We need to talk."
"I'm on it, Helen."
"Desk. Close connection."
I will deal with this.
We will all get through this, and if
this isn't the permanent solution I dreamed it would be, then I'd
better find that out now, hadn't I?
Helen strode out the door.
* * *
"Hi," said Angela Cleary as the hatch swung back. "Can I borrow a
cup of sugar?"
Vee chuckled from her seat in the kitchen nook. It was strange
seeing someone emerge from the airlock without a suit on. But the two
scarabs had backed up against each other in a clunky but effective
docking procedure that preceded what Terry called the "gab and grill."
It happened at dinner every other day and allowed the passengers to
circulate and talk about their work face-to-face. It also allowed the
crews to sit with their friends and talk about the passengers, Vee was
certain.
Angela was the first one over, but she was followed quickly by Lindi
Manzur, who hugged her Troy happily and fell into talking with him
about a theory of universal curiosity as a mainstay of sentient life
that they'd been cooking up together. It might even be a good theory.
Pity it wasn't going to come to anything. Isaac and Julia made a
beeline for the fridge and the
mango juice, which they both seemed to live off. Josh grabbed Bailey
Heathe, the copilot for Scarab Fourteen, briefly by the hand as Bailey
brushed past to the pilot's compartment to catch up with Kevin and
Adrian.
Angela moved out of the way of the new arrivals and came to stand
over the kitchen table. Vee saluted her with a plastic cup of tea.
"Dr. Hatch," said Angela, her voice low and formal. "I was hoping we
could talk. There's some incidents in your background check that I
wanted to go over…"
Vee pulled on an expression of surprise. "Yeah, sure." She downed
the last of her tea in one lukewarm gulp and stood up. "I think the
couch compartment's empty."
It was. Vee touched the lock on the door. Now anyone who wanted to
come in would at least have to knock.
"You don't think anybody believed that, do you?" For the past week
they had been doing most of their talking via e-mail or the occasional
comments on gab-and-grill nights. But now that the investigation was in
full swing upstairs as well as down here, Angela was becoming visibly
less patient with sporadic communication.
"People have a tendency to believe the Blues are after them
personally." Angela shrugged. "So they're not all that surprised to
hear we're after somebody else." She picked her way unerringly to
Vee's couch and perched on the edge. "Show me what you've got?"
"Just simulations so far." Vee snatched up a pair of used socks off
her couch and stuffed them into the storage bin overhead. Then she sat
down cross-legged with her case open on her lap and switched on the
back screen so Angela could see what was displayed. "But they're based
on reality. I found all the drones you're going to see in Venera's
current inventory."
Vee had been expanding her image library every day since she'd
gotten to Venera, so the simulations actually hadn't taken all that
long to put together, once she'd tracked down what she thought of as
the component parts.
The screen showed a three-dimensional rendering of the little cup of
a valley outside. A fat, multitreaded drone rolled down
the lava corridor. It's main features—a tank and a hose.
"Experimental emergency drone," Vee told Angela. "Number ED-445. The
idea was it'd be able to carry coolant down to a scarab in trouble. But
it could do this too."
The drone extended its hose and planted it against the ground, as if
it was nuzzling the stone. In the next second, a huge white cloud rose
up around the nozzle and the hose started sinking into the rock, like a
drill into cement.
"What's it spraying?" asked Angela.
"Water," Vee told her, and just nodded at the look of skepticism
that appeared on Angela's face a moment later. "I checked with Josh on
this. He ran a lab-level simulation. The rock outside has no water in
it, which makes it stronger than normal terran rock, which is how you
can get these massive continents thrusting out of the crust. But,
power-spray that rock with water, and it weakens. Add in the fact that
the water reacts with the sulfuric acid in the atmosphere, turning the
air around the stone into a corrosive, then the rock crumbles." The
hose on the screen had already buried itself eight or nine centimeters
into the ground. "They could have hollowed out the whole thing with one
or two of these. And they do have one or two." She entered another
command, and the image skipped forward. "The metal in the ladder rungs
and the laser is your basic iron. You could either bring it down from
the base, or you could sort it out of the waste rock from the digging."
This section of the simulation showed a "scoop-and-chute" drone next
to a pile of dust and rubble. Its shovel-tipped waldo shoved into the
pile and came up with a sample of dirt. The sample ran through the
chemically sensitive filters in the drone's body, and everything except
what was needed got shaken out of its belly.
"What about the delicate work?" asked Angela, without taking her
gaze off the screen. "Shaping the ceramics? Making the lenses in the
lasers?"
"A lot of that could be done with lasers," said Vee. She skipped the
simulation ahead to a neat row of three separate measurement drones,
each of which had its array of small lasers and waldos, so delicate
they looked more like insect pincers
than human hands. "Take your pick. These are just the three most
likely."
Angela folded her arms and hung her head down. "You know, there are
days I hate my job."
Vee shut the simulation off. "It's a fraud."
Why are you, of
all people, missing the point here? "I don't care what was about
to happen to their precious base; they don't get to perpetrate a fraud."
Angela just shook her head. "So you're enjoying this?"
Vee threw up her hands. "Why does everybody think I'm doing this to
get my ya-yas?"
"Because I saw the playback of you at the Dublin gallery opening
when you called the arts minister a bribe-taking nationalist pig, in
front of every major news service in the stream," replied Angela evenly.
"Oh." Vee cocked her head from side to side. "That was probably not
my best day for P.R." She'd frequently wished she really had been
drunk, which was the cover story Rosa worked so hard to put out for
months afterward. "My only excuse is I was right then too."
"Yes," Angela admitted. "But you have this tendency to be right in
public, loudly. It's not reassuring."
A powerful image of Rosa leaning against the rail in U.N. City
flashed in front of Vee's mind. "Be careful what you pretend to be,"
Vee muttered.
Angela nodded. "You hear that one a lot in my business." She slapped
her hands down on her thighs. "I'm going to need a copy of your drone
file so Philip can confirm the inventory." She straightened up. "And I
need you to be ready to testify to the truth of your findings and that
you created this without help or interference."
"Of course." A few more commands and Vee shot a copy of the
simulations out to Angela's contact code. "It's got to be Derek
Cusmanos then, doesn't it? He's the one who has access to all the
drones."
"That would be the logical conclusion based on what you've seen so
far," said Angela.
Vee glanced at her and knew she was not going to get any more of an
answer than that. They were investigating her accusations inside
Venera, but Angela had wanted Vee to remain independent of any kind of
suggestion. "If we can show we arrived at this from separate angles,"
Angela had said, "it'll be even more convincing when we have to go
public with it."
"Well, glad I could help," said Vee.
"I'm sure." Angela headed out the door, leaving Vee sitting alone
with her simulated evidence.
Vee had tried to understand. She tried to imagine what it was to
have your life shut down, to have to move to a strange new world with
such things in it as Earth at its craziest could surround you with.
She felt sad, she felt sorry, she wished there was something she could
do, but they did not get to lie about this. They did
not get
to lie about life on another world. The hope of finding that human
beings weren't alone was such an old, precarious hope. To one day
discover that there was somebody else out there who asked the same
questions and dreamed the same dreams. Every time she thought about
somebody playing on that venerable dream… again,
again, rage
shot through her veins.
This was supposed to be real. This was supposed to be her one real
thing, to make up for the tantrums and the farces and the pretty veneer
she had made out of her life.
And what did they do this for? For money, again, like the worst of
the Universal Age frauds. Was it really all that different? Was she
the only one here who didn't see that it wasn't different at all?
Except, maybe it was. This one was built for love and worry, not
just greed. This was done to fill, not to drain. Maybe it was
different. But that just made it sad, in addition to making it wrong.
Vee sighed, closed her case, and stowed it. She looked at the
hatchway and decided she didn't want to face the rest of the team.
She'd munch on some leftovers later. Her stomach was all in knots.
Instead she curled up in the couch, hugging her knees. In the silence,
she mourned the loss of a dream, again.
Contents -
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Chapter Ten
"Pressure good, opening airlock."
Adrian brought his hand down on the key that opened the inner hatch.
The clank of the portal opening was followed fast by the thumping of
multiple pairs of stiff, heavy boots and the clunking of armored limbs
as they accidentally bumped into walls and other people in a confined
space.
"Another day, another dollar," said Kevin, rubbing the back of his
neck.
"So they tell me." Adrian got to his feet and arched his back in a
prolonged stretch. The team had gotten good enough at managing their
suits that he no longer had to hover around them each time they
returned. The snapping of catches and various, wordless, relieved
noises drifted up the central corridor. He knew how they felt. He was
really looking forward to the end of this run. Terry Wray in particular
was becoming a bigger pain in the ass all the time, despite her good
looks. For the past week she'd been running back and forth, asking them
both for the story of how the base was found over and over, until
finally Kevin said to her, "Ms. Wray, you're sounding less like a media
face and more like a lawyer all the time."
"What an interesting choice of words, Mr. Cusmanos," she had replied
mildly.
After that, Kevin's normal good humor had started to fade, and
Adrian had found himself engaging in the unhealthy and unproductive
hobby of marking time until the run was over.
The radio beeped. "This is Venera Base calling Scarab Five and
Scarab Fourteen," said a woman's voice. Adrian blinked at the speaker
grill. That wasn't Tori at flight control. That was Grandma Helen.
Kevin touched the Reply key. "This is Scarab Five. Receiving you,
Venera Base."
"This is a recall notice. Five and Fourteen, you are to return to
base immediately."
"What? Why?" The questions were out before Adrian remembered whom
he was talking to.
"You'll hear all about it when you get back up here." Dr. Failia
sounded grim. "Get your people back and get in the air." A soft popping
underscored her voice.
Adrian looked at his boss. Kevin sat there, a coffee cup held in
both hands. His fingers tightened convulsively, denting and redenting
the plastic, making the popping noise. Kevin stared at the radio, but
Adrian felt positive he didn't see it.
"We're on our way up, Dr. Failia," said Adrian, not taking his
attention off Kevin.
"Good. Venera Base out."
Kevin still just stood there, crushing the cup and letting it go
again. Adrian's confusion quickly bled away into cold concern.
"What's going on?" asked Adrian softly.
Kevin shook himself and tossed the cup into the garbage. "We'll find
out when we get back up, won't we?" He looked at the floor, the chair,
the window, but not at Adrian. "You'd better tell the passengers."
Kevin settled himself back in the pilot's chair.
That was no answer, but what could Adrian do? "Right, okay."
As he sidled and shuffled his way down the scarab's narrow central
corridor, he realized that the sounds of a team getting out of their
suits had silenced. He was not surprised to see them, all in their
various stages of unsuiting, standing still and staring at him.
Adrian sighed. "I take it you all heard that? We need you in your
couches, please, so we can get in the air."
"Can we get any kind of information here?" asked Peachman.
"There's nothing I can tell you." Adrian spread his hands.
"I'm sure there'll be a full briefing when we're back on base. If
you'll just fasten yourselves in, please."
"Surely, there must be something—" began Peachman, half to Adrian,
half to his teammates, looking for their support.
"I'm sorry," said Adrian. He was. He didn't know what was going on
either, and he wanted to. Probably more than any of them did. Recalls
did not happen unless something bad did.
Hatch's expression caught his eye. She was looking at him,
speculatively, as if she were trying to guess what was going on inside
his head. Kenyon, on the other hand, was watching Hatch as if he were
worried about what she'd do next.
But she didn't do anything except bend over and start snapping the
catches on her boots. Wray bent over next to her and murmured something
Adrian couldn't hear. He heard the reply, though.
"I'm sure you'll get to interview everybody soon enough. Now,
shouldn't we do what we're told?" Dr. Hatch gave one of her brainless
smiles and started stripping out of the stiff, white, undersuit that
covered her everyday clothes.
Tourists. Adrian left them to it and headed back to the
pilot's compartment. For a moment, he didn't see Kevin, because Kevin
was almost doubled over in his chair, with his elbows on his knees, his
head in his hands, and his fingers twined through his thick hair.
"Kevin?"
Kevin straightened up instantly at the sound of his name, but he
couldn't wipe the pallor from his face.
"What is it?" Adrian sank into his own chair. "What's happened?"
Kevin shook his head. "I don't know any more than you do." He
swiveled his chair around to face the primary controls. "Let's get the
preflights done, okay?"
Adrian didn't move. "Look, if we're headed back into trouble, I
want to know."
Kevin poked at a few keys, getting readiness displays up on the
screens. "You're not headed into anything."
"But you are?"
"Did I say I was?" Kevin scowled at the control panel. "Quit
pushing, Adrian. Just do your job."
"You helped, didn't you?"
They both jumped. Hatch stood in the entranceway, her face serious,
her eyes probing.
"Dr. Hatch, please, get into your couch," said Kevin. "We're under a
recall and we've got to leave now."
"But you did help?" she said.
Kevin reared out of his chair. "What the hell do you care? You and
your tourist friends were right, and you showed us all up. Fine. Take
the headline and be happy. But if you want to gloat, do it on Mother
Earth with your art buddies. This is my ship. For the next five hours
I'm still in charge and I'm telling you to get in that cabin and out of
my way!"
She didn't move. She stayed right where she was, as if she meant to
stare Kevin down.
"I am sorry," she said finally. Then, she turned away and climbed
through the door into the starboard couch bay.
Kevin sat back down, shaking.
"What was she talking about?" demanded Adrian.
"Don't start," said Kevin.
"Come on, Kevin—"
"No!" he roared. Adrian reeled back. He'd heard Kevin yell before,
at incompetence, at carelessness, but not like this, not this empty,
lost rage.
"I'm sorry," Kevin whispered. He cleared his throat. "I'm sorry.
Let's get out of here, okay?"
"Yeah, sure." agreed Adrian.
They ran through the preflights mechanically, with no comments or
bantering. Adrian kept his eyes on his instruments. He didn't want to
look at his boss. He didn't want to see what was eating the other man.
Something sure was. Something huge.
Finally, Kevin turned the radio on Venera Base. "Venera Base, this
is Scarab Five."
"We have you, Scarab Five," came back Tori's voice. "Conditions are
go for your launch."
"Good to hear, Venera." Kevin's response was flat, automatic. "That
lightning cleared up?"
"Clear as crystal," answered Tori. "For Venus anyway."
"Thank you, Venera." He switched the radio over to the next channel.
"Scarab Fourteen, this is Scarab Five. Are you go for launch?"
"Ready whenever you are, Scarab Five," Charlotte Murray, Scarab
Fourteen's pilot, told them. "You got any idea what this is about?"
For a moment, Adrian thought Kevin was going to be sick. "None,
Charlotte. Listen, we're good to go here too. How about you follow us
up?"
"Okay by me," said Charlotte. "Let's do the drill. Scarab Five, are
you go?"
"We are go, Scarab Fourteen." Kevin gave Adrian the nod.
"Engaging wing." Adrian thumbed the button on the wheel stem that
raised the wing. The roof camera showed the rack lift and spread,
stretching the skin wide. The indicator light shone green and Adrian
slid the inflation control up to Full. The wing inflated slowly. Scarab
Five shifted uneasily until it finally lost contact with the ground and
began its gentle rise toward the clouds.
Kevin pulled the wheel forward with one hand and pressed in the two
keys that engaged the flight engines with the other. The flight engines
were tiny things, mostly for guidance and stabilization. The wing
provided the lift in the dense atmosphere, and once they reached them,
the 360-kilometer-an-hour winds in the cloud layers provided the speed.
Kevin eased the wheel forward to angle the wing for a little extra
lift. He probably wanted to get as far away from the volcano wall as
possible, as soon as possible. Beta Regio never failed to make Adrian
nervous. Too many outcroppings, too many weird corners.
Today, though, it didn't bother him half as much as the dead, gray
look on Kevin's face. He was not here. His hands were flying the scarab
without his head. This was not good.
"Flying a little sluggish, do you think?" asked Adrian to try to
draw him out.
Kevin nodded. "A little. Might be some grit in the works. How do the
diagnostics look?"
Adrian's gaze swept the instrument panels and screens. "Everything's
green and go."
"All right, let me get a little more clearance from the wall. We've
got that big shelf coming up." He pushed the wheel down and away,
dropping them, swinging them wide, without waiting, without looking.
Without seeing Scarab Fourteen on the monitor.
"Pull back!" shouted Adrian.
The radio crackled to life. "Scarab Five, get—"
WHANG!
The whole scarab shuddered and swung wildly to the right. Stunned,
Kevin gripped the wheel and pulled back, trying for height.
"What happened?" cried Adrian. A sick creaking sounded through the
roof. "We got a critical failure in the wing joints!" Adrian glanced
down at the roof camera. The cage around the right wingtip was crumpled
in. The scarab lurched and leaned right.
"It was an accident!" Kevin hauled the wheel left. That worked, sort
of. The scarab stabilized for a moment but then slowly slewed right and
down.
"Okay," said Adrian under his breath. "We're going back down." He
hit the radio key. "Scarab Fourteen, Scarab Fourteen, are you there?
Come in, Charlotte…"
Nothing. No answer. Adrian punched the keys for the sweep cameras in
the scarab's belly to scan the ground. All he saw was the broken
landscape, crisscrossed by the tracks of old lava flows and the glowing
rivulets of fresh ones.
"They're not answering," he said sharply. Kevin didn't seem to
notice. Kevin pulled the wheel back and left. The scarab started a
shallow dive, dipping a little to the left as it curved gently around.
He heard screams, shouted questions, more creaks and strains. Too
much noise, too many possibilities. Oh, Holy God, too many ways to die.
"Deploy chutes," ordered Kevin.
Adrian slapped the key and saw the red message glowing next to it.
"We don't have the chute! The hatch is nonresponsive."
Too many ways to die. If one of those creaks was the hull. If they
landed too hard on their belly and a rock bit through, if the joints
and seals that were moaning all around them gave way…
Something overhead groaned. Then, something snapped.
The right half of the scarab dropped, dragging everything with it.
The world rattled and clattered and clanked. Voices swore. Somebody
screamed again. The straps bit into Adrian's shoulders.
Oh, Holy God and Mother Creation, I don't want to die!
With a hiss, the outside airbags deployed. The scarab banged against
the side of the mountain, bounced back, rattling them all like dice in
a tin can, and headed down.
"No response!" shouted Kevin, wrestling with the wheel.
Adrian grabbed the copilot wheel and threw all his weight behind it.
It didn't budge. "Nothing!" No steering, no way to get away from the
rocks, the sharp rocks that could cut right through them, let in the
poison and the pressure…
A bang, and Adrian's body bounced hard against the straps. He bit
his own lip to keep from screaming. The scarab's rear quarter hit the
volcano wall with a sickening crunch and settled slowly on a drunken
angle, head down, right rear corner sticking up.
Adrian didn't try to move. He just sat still, listened to his heart
hammer, and watched the thousand red lights shine on the panels.
But it was quiet again, and he was alive.
"Everyone okay?" called Adrian, half to the intercom, half to the
air.
Answers tumbled over themselves, but it sounded like the team in the
couches had weathered it all right. Better than Scarab Five itself had,
that was for sure.
Better than Kevin, who sat blinking at his controls.
"Kevin? Boss?"
"It was an accident. It was an accident," he whispered hoarsely. "I
didn't. Oh, God." He stared out the window.
Adrian followed his gaze. In the distance, maybe a couple of hundred
meters, it was hard to tell, Scarab Fourteen snuggled against the side
of a rough foothill, as if it were attempting to crawl inside the rock.
Its treads were crushed. Its hull wasn't the right shape anymore.
"It was an accident," murmured Kevin.
"Shut up!" shouted Adrian. "Just… shut up! I don't care what it
was!" He didn't. He was scared; he wanted to run, but there was nowhere
to go.
Okay. Okay. You know what to do. Do it.
The radio still showed up green. He hit the key for Scarab Fourteen
again. "Scarab Fourteen! Scarab Fourteen! Come in, Charlotte. Talk to
me!"
Still nothing but silence.
"Send the mayday to Venera," Adrian ordered his boss. "Tell them
Scarab Fourteen isn't answering. I'll put together a comprehensive on
the damage."
If we've still got hull integrity, we'll be all
right. Hull integrity, all the pumps, most of the air tanks. … He
cast a quick glance out the window, trying not to see the battered hulk
of Scarab Fourteen. The black and gray land outside was a mass of sharp
ridges and steep descents, as if someone had slashed through the ground
with a razor. Scarab Five had come to rest against one of the
sharp-backed ridges. Orange glow oozed in the distance, filling the
crevices below them. Lava.
But that's over there. Not here. Adrian dropped his gaze to
his hands.
Keep it together. You know what to do. This is why
you're here.
Kevin had pulled himself far enough back into the present to work
the radio. "Venera Base, this is Scarab Five. Mayday, mayday. I
repeat, Venera Base, this is Scarab Five. Mayday. Mayday. We are down.
Scarab Fourteen is down and not responding."
Adrian tuned him out and concentrated on the instruments. Most of
the electronics seemed to be functioning. The computer gave him no
errors as he requested a comprehensive list of the damages.
Adrian scanned the report. Bad, bad, bad. The rear axle had
collapsed. Two panels on the exterior wall had buckled in to the point
they were pressing on the interior insulation and had cut
through a whole set of coolant pipes on the way. Ice tank one had been
completely crushed. So had air processor three.
Okay. First thing, get back and see what's to do about those
buckled panels. They break through and we're very, very screwed.
"We have you, Scarab Five." Tori's familiar, infinitely welcome
voice sounded from the radio. "Your position is fixed. Rescue team
being readied for drop now. What is your status?"
Kevin turned to Adrian. The helplessness on his face made Adrian
want to hit him.
"Not good, but not dead," said Adrian toward the speaker. "Crew
unhurt. Lost mobility, lost one ice tank, lost one air processor, and
have sustained partial loss of one cooling pump. All remaining pumps,
scrubbers, and tanks look green. Possible danger of hull compromise.
I'm going to check it out now."
Adrian unsnapped his catches and got to his feet. As he did, a new
trembling grind vibrated through the scarab's floor. The world shifted
backward. Adrian pin wheeled his arms for balance. He stared
involuntarily out the window. As he toppled backwards, his eyes told
his brain that the scarab hadn't moved, the ground outside had.
The floor hit his back, knocking all the wind out of him. Something
hard caught his head, and stars burst in front of his eyes in sync with
the pain.
"Holy God!" gasped Kevin. "Oh Christ!"
Adrian tried to lift his head, but the world spun. The floor
vibrated again. The scarab slid backward. The front end came down with
a crash that rattled his teeth and sent fresh flashes of pain through
his head.
"Scarab Five, what's going on? Talk to me, Adrian!"
"There's something alive," rasped Kevin. "Venera Base, cancel drop.
I repeat, cancel drop. There's something alive out there, and it's
coming toward us."
What? Adrian pulled himself to his knees.
I did not
hear that.
"We've found the goddamned aliens," grated Kevin.
Adrian planted one hand on the counter and pushed. He reached his
feet and looked out the front window. At first he saw nothing but black
rock hunched up between the streams of lava. Then, two of the islands
moved. They slid out of the lava stream and over the steady ground.
From behind them rose a translucent jellyfish half the size of the
scarab, its tentacles tipped with pincers.
The world spun and Adrian toppled back to the floor. Consciousness
started to slip away. To his shame, he let it go.
* * *
Br'sei flew into the main chamber with the speed born of agitation.
T'sha shifted on her own perch, turning away from the recorder and its
reports that she was still reviewing to get herself up to speed on New
Home and its New People.
D'han and P'tesk lurched sideways as Br'sei blew past. He managed to
snag a perch in time to keep from crashing into the wall.
"What's happened?" asked T'sha.
"I… there's…" Br'sei's muzzle bobbed as he looked around the
chamber. "Where is Ambassador D'seun?"
"He's surveying the wind currents." T'sha raised her forehand and
beckoned to Br'sei. "What's happened? Talk to me."
"I…" Br'sei's teeth clacked. Was he nervous? T'sha's bones bunched
in annoyance at his hesitation. D'seun had them all too well trained.
Even Br'sei, for all the doubts he expressed to her. She was an
interloper. Only approved information was to be shared with her.
I am also an
ambassador to the High Law Meet. "Tell me
what's happened, Engineer," she ordered.
Br'sei shrank a little in resignation, but maybe also in relief.
"There's been an accident."
T'sha's arms stiffened, lifting her off her perch. "Who? How many
are hurt?"
"No, none of ours," said Br'sei. "It's the New People."
The words jolted straight through T'sha. "What?"
Br'sei dipped his muzzle. "The overseers watching the New People
report that two of their transports have crashed near Living Highland
76. They believe them to be damaged."
There are overseers assigned to the New People? This isn't in
the reports. T'sha went very still. "Are their own kind
responding?"
"Not yet," said Br'sei.
"P'tesk, D'han, come with me." T'sha spread her wings. "Br'sei, you
will sweep the base. Bring everyone we have. Get the dirigibles flying
and bring the emergency spares. We need whatever we've got to work in
cold and low pressure."
"What? Why?" D'han fluttered. "Ambassador—"
T'sha was already flying toward the door. "We have to help."
"But their own kind will surely respond." P'tesk held out both
forehands, pleading.
T'sha hooked a forehand onto the threshold and turned to face him.
"We cannot leave them there. The research D'seun has so kindly gathered
indicates they cannot be exposed to air."
The research, based on
raw materials he collected, which may not have been raw at the time.
"But if we—" began P'tesk.
"If we what?" demanded T'sha, swelling. "If we go they will find out
we're here. Surely. What if we let them die? We are that desperate for
our secrecy? We are that uncertain about our claim to this world that
we should fail to help life?"
"No," said Br'sei softly, more to P'tesk and D'han than to her. "We
are not." He inflated himself. "We have several constructors designed
to deal with the New People if necessary. I'll bring them."
Br'sei vanished into the corridor. T'sha winged after him, all but
exploding into the open air. She pushed all thought, all suspicion of
what had happened here before out of her mind. That was for later. For
now, the New People needed her.
* * *
"Scarab Five, Scarab Five." The radio called from the main cabin.
"Respond. Adrian? Kevin? Come on, answer me!"
"Shit," exclaimed Josh, and Vee heard him start popping the buckles
on his safety straps. She started doing the same.
"Maybe you should—" began Julia.
"No." Vee shoved the straps aside and made her way up the steeply
tilted floor after Josh.
Adrian lay on the floor in the main aisle, dazed. Kevin crouched
beside him, little better.
"What happened?" asked Vee, dropping to her knees next to them.
Kevin swallowed hard. "It was an—"
Josh just shoved his way past them to the radio.
"Scarab Five, Scarab Five!" came a frantic voice out of the speaker.
Josh slapped the Reply key. "We're here, Venera. This is Josh
Kenyon."
"What happened? Kevin said he saw the aliens?"
What? Vee froze.
"I'm not seeing anything except Scarab Fourteen," said Josh. "They
look hurt. Have you been able to raise them?"
"No. We've got the rescue on standby. If they leave now, they'll
make it in three hours."
Josh's lips moved in silent calculation, or maybe prayer. "Drop them
down. Now."
"Have you got anybody who can get across to Fourteen and check out
their situation?" asked the voice from Venera.
Josh looked at the red lights glowing on the control panels, then
back at Adrian and Kevin on the floor.
"We're damaged and have to do control," he said reluctantly.
"There's no trained personnel to respond."
Vee stood. Now she could see out the window, and she saw Scarab
Fourteen's crippled body alone on the ragged plain, far too near a lava
stream. "How much training does it take to shove someone in a suit and
get them over here? How much does it take to look around?"
"You'll need to get in." Adrian struggled to sit up. "I can get you
in."
"You saw—" began Kevin.
"I saw null." Adrian grabbed a cabinet handle and hauled himself to
his feet. "I saw null," he repeated. "We need to get over to Fourteen.
We need to stabilize Five." He glowered down at Kevin.
Pride resurfaced in Kevin's eyes. "Don't tell me my job."
"Somebody has to!" Adrian steadied himself against the wall. Fury
shook him. "You're not doing it!"
Kevin shut his mouth and pulled back. He took a long, shaky breath,
leaning a hand against the counter. "You're right.
Take Josh and Dr. Hatch and two of the others over to Fourteen. Give
them any help you can. I'll stabilize us so we can hold out until the
rescue drops." He glanced out the window at the still landscape. "If
you saw null, I saw null."
"I'll go get your volunteers." Vee hurried back into the cabin.
Her colleagues were as she left them, strapped in and arguing.
"What is going on out there?" demanded Troy.
"We're in trouble, but we're talking," Vee told him. "Fourteen is in
trouble and not talking. Terry, Troy, they need us to go over and help.
We need to get into suits. Julia," softer, lower, "Kevin's kind of
shaky. He's going to need a pair of hands. Wait until we're on our way
to Fourteen; then come out and see what you can do."
"When were you elected?" snorted Troy.
"When I was the one who got myself out of this cabin," shot back
Vee. "There's lives on the line, Peachman. You want to leave Lindi
Manzur to fry?" It was emotional blackmail and she knew it, but it
worked. He shut up. "Come on."
Troy and Terry reached the changing compartment shortly after she
did. Josh and Adrian were already there. They suited each other up in
silence. Vee went through the motions, trying not to think about the
broken hulk of a scarab she'd seen. She didn't want to think about how
thin its walls were, how they were all deep down inside a poisonous,
pressurized crucible that was just waiting for them to screw up so it
could burn them all to ashes.
The airlock's inner door closed and the pump started up, but instead
of the normal, steady chug-chug-chug, it wheezed, snarled and
sputtered, skipped beats and raced ahead as if to catch up.
God, we might not even be able to get out of here, thought
Vee. She felt her self-control slipping a little. Which was unusual.
She tried to be objective and examine her feelings, but that didn't
work. She eyed her helmet icons until she got Josh's channel.
"Do you think they might still be all right?" she asked.
"Same as us," said Josh. "If their hull holds and they have at least
one of the pumps and a cooler tank, they can hang on."
She licked her lips and asked the next question. "If there is a hull
breach, how long do they have?"
"They don't."
"I didn't think so."
Vee rested her helmet against the wall and listened to the
asthmatic pump. She let herself wish long and hard that she hadn't
volunteered for this, just to get that feeling out of the way. Then she
prayed long and hard that the hull on Scarab Five would hold tight,
because if it didn't, she'd just killed Julia by letting her be the one
to stay behind. That feeling went away more slowly, even after she
assured herself that Kevin would make Julia get into a hardsuit as soon
as he thought of it, or that Julia, who was not stupid, just easily
stressed, would think of it on her own.
Finally, the outer hatch rolled open, giving Vee a chance to move
away from her thoughts. She climbed out, right behind Adrian.
The world outside was like a petrified ocean, with its waves and
currents frozen into black stone. Through the ridges, glowing ribbons
of lava crept down well-worn paths. She imagined it smelled hot, almost
spicy, the kind of smell you could taste.
"They'd get into suits, wouldn't they?" asked Terry on the general
channel, echoing Vee's thoughts from the airlock.
"If they could get to them, yeah," said Adrian. "The scarabs have
bulkheads that seal if there's a hull breach, just like a ship."
Vee tried to clamp down on her imagination. Now was not the time to
paint pictures of the future. Now was the time to slog forward, watch
her footing and play it straight. Don't look up. Be like a kid. If you
don't look at the scarab, it won't change. It won't get any worse
because while you're not looking at it, it isn't there. Slog up the
ridges, pick your way down the side, watch the ash piles that have
collected in the hollows, notice how the charcoal veins look like the
veins in the Discovery walls. Don't look up.
"No!"
Adrian stumbled forward, trying for a loping run but only sliding
and wobbling as he fought the ragged ground and the
pressure. Ahead of him, the scarab's side buckled sharply inward, as
if it had been punched by an invisible fist. A thread-thin, black crack
appeared.
Vee's throat closed up tight.
"Veronica," said Josh, tentatively.
"What?" Vee tore her gaze off Adrian's stumbling form. Josh pointed
ahead and to the right. Vee followed the line of his arm, until she saw
the edge of the ragged wall the volcano made.
Something white floated next to it. Something shaped like an
inverted teardrop or a hot-air balloon.
Vee froze in her tracks, tilted on the side of a stone wave. The
balloon flew in an absolutely straight line. Vee saw a glint of silver
on its swelling sides, like lenses, maybe.
"That's not from Venera, is it?" asked Vee quietly.
"No," answered Josh.
It was getting closer. Terry had seen it now. She also came to an
abrupt halt with Troy right beside her.
"Adrian!" called Josh. Adrian stopped, teetered, and almost fell,
but he righted himself, and he saw it too.
The thing flew like the wind. Silver scales covered its white skin.
Bundles of red-brown cables held an enclosed gondola to the balloon. At
first, Vee thought it was heading for them, but it wasn't.
It was heading for Scarab Fourteen.
The balloon stopped, suddenly, as if it had hit a wall. From the
bottom a flurry of… things emerged. They sparkled gold in the ashen
light. Wings spread out from their oval torsos. Legs (arms?) hung under
their bellies.
One carried a fold of cloth, one an egg, one a box, another a blob
of gray jelly. They were followed by three others with empty hands.
They all flew over Scarab Fourteen. The first of them dropped the
cloth. The three with empty hands grasped the cloth and pulled it over
the scarab, as if they were fitting a sheet to a bed. The cloth was
transparent, but the dim light reflected off an oily sheen on the
edges where they held it.
The creatures holding the cloth dropped to the ground. The cloth
made a tent over the scarab. The one with the egg cracked it open. A
gout of milky liquid poured over the cloth. It sluiced down the sides,
becoming transparent as it did so. The creatures let go; the tent
stayed where it was.
The creature with the box shriveled and drew in its wings. It sank
until it hovered just above ground level. Now Vee saw a complex series
of markings, or maybe wires, running across its body. It pressed the
box against the tent and its muzzle moved. Vee tried to set her suit
controls to pick up outside sound, but she couldn't get her gaze to
stay steady enough to activate the commands.
The one with the jelly blob joined the one by the box. It set its
blob down. The blob had an eye and silver lines running through its
body.
The blob moved.
It crawled into the box and emerged inside the tent. It lifted up
into the air and became a jellyfish with tentacles hanging down, tipped
with, what? Claws? Tools? It drifted unerringly toward Scarab Fourteen
and slipped into the jagged, black crack in the hull.
Vee wanted to speak but had no words adequate to the task. This was
unreal. Surreal. She was frightened, bemused, unbelieving. She wanted
to laugh her head off. Her heart fluttered high in her throat and she
could hear her blood singing in her ears.
One of the creatures (aliens? There are no aliens. The base is a
fake. How can they be aliens?) was looking at her. It had two huge
silver eyes, encased, she realized, behind something hard and clear,
like a natural lens. But those were unmistakably eyes. She could
distinguish the iris, pupil, and white. Huge eyes. Underneath its eyes,
it had a wedge-shaped beak, like a bird's beak, or maybe a dolphin's.
It was beautiful. It was incomprehensible. It was looking right at
her and she could tell nothing, nothing about what it saw.
Then, she realized it didn't see her at all. It saw a suit, with a
smooth plate where its face should be. Maybe it was just wondering what
was in there.
Voices were babbling. Voices she knew, but there were too many of
them and she couldn't make out what they were saying. She
didn't even really want to try.
The creatures ferried more blobs out of their balloon. They put them
up to the box to become jellyfish and enter the space under the tent
and eventually the scarab. The creatures themselves flew all around
the tent, angels, butterflies, prehistoric monsters glittering gold on
a cloudy day. Except for the one that looked straight at her.
Was it trying to divine something? Send a telepathic message? Judge
her for salt content? What? What did aliens do?
"Veronica, we've got to go, now!" It was Josh. He had his hand on
her arm and he was trying to pull her away. But she wasn't responding.
She should respond. He was right. They needed to go, now, didn't they?
Did they?
The side of the scarab tore like paper.
"No!" screamed Adrian like it was the only word he had left.
Two jellyfish floated out of the hole in the scarab's side. Their
tentacles wrapped around something roughly oblong that shimmered.
It was Angela Cleary. Angela, who'd been helping Vee prove the
Discovery was nothing but a fraud. Whom Vee had spent a whole week
aboard the shuttle trying to get to know and failing without really
realizing it. She'd respected that in a weird kind of way. Angela, who
gave nothing away by accident. Angela, who had a sardonic grin and
sharp eyes.
"Can't be. She'd be pulp. Less than pulp." murmured Josh. He wasn't
pulling on Vee anymore.
Angela wasn't pulp. Something crystalline covered her, like the
stuff that made the tent over the scarab or enclosed the alien's silver
eyes. The creatures flying over the tent cracked another egg. More
milky liquid sluiced over the tent sides. The tent tore and fell away
like cobwebs.
The jellyfish turned away from the creatures and began flying
toward the team from Scarab Five.
"Get away, get away, get away," chanted Terry, like a mantra. Out of
the side of her faceplate, Vee saw someone stumble backward and turn to
slog away.
The jellyfish kept coming with Angela, encased in glass, supported
between them. They drifted forward until they were about two meters
away. Then, very gently, they sank down and laid Angela on the ground.
Their tentacles released her and they rose, drifting back toward the
scarab.
"Holy God and Mother Creation, what've they done?" Josh moved
forward. Vee looked up at the alien, her alien, who hadn't moved. Then,
slowly, as if she had to remember how, Vee walked up beside Josh and
looked down at the glass coffin.
Angela lay inside, whole, and perfect. Her eyes were closed and her
arms lay straight along her sides.
"I think she's breathing," said Josh softly.
Vee bent closer. Yes. You could see it. Barely. Angela's chest
didn't so much rise and fall as flutter like Vee's heart. But she was
alive under there.
Alive and without a suit on Venus, and there sure as hell weren't
air tanks on that glass case. Vee's mind fastened on these details and
jolted her body into action.
"Help me!" She grabbed Angela's feet.
Josh grabbed Angela's shoulders. They heaved Angela up as if they
were lifting a log and staggered back toward Scarab Five. Fighting
pressure and the awkwardness of the suit, Vee could glance up only
once. The jellyfish reemerged from Scarab Fourteen, carrying another
glass-encased figure in their tentacles.
"Peachman, get back here! I need help!" shouted Terry.
"I'm there. I'm there." Troy waddled more than walked over the
ridges. His suit was scored. Had he fallen in his hurry to get away
from the aliens? "I'm sorry. Christ in the green, I'm sorry."
Maybe we should have brought Julia after all.
"Kevin, are you watching this?" came Josh's voice over the intercom.
"Get that door open!"
"Done!" shouted Kevin. "God, god, is she really alive?"
"I think so." Josh's voice was breathy with hope and uncertainty.
I hope so,
thought Vee,
because it means they saved
her. It means they're… what? Friendly? Doesn't cover it. Human?
Obviously her brain could take only so much of this.
The airlock door was open. They laid Angela on the floor.
"Take her up!" ordered Josh.
"Can't," came back Kevin's reply. "The pump is almost dead. We can't
risk running it more than once. You're going to have to get them all in
here. Get moving!"
Vee stared at Josh. "This is going to sound dumb," she said, her
voice too high and tight. "Will she be all right alone?"
"I hope so," said Josh. Obviously, that was the phrase of the day.
Vee slogged back toward Scarab Fourteen, wishing desperately that
she could run. All she could manage was a fast walk. Sweat poured down
her face. Her face plate blinked yellow warnings at her to drink and
take a salt tablet. She ignored them.
Terry and Troy were hoisting Lindi Manzur off the ground when Vee
and Josh reached them. The jellyfish were arriving with another woman
in a pilot's coverall. Must be Charlotte. Charlotte… what was her last
name?
Why is this bugging me now?
Adrian, all on his own, hoisted Charlotte into his arms and
staggered across the broken landscape.
It was ridiculous. It was macabre. But they did it three more times,
hefting colleagues and strangers like bricks and laying them neatly
down on the airlock floor, trying to make efficient use of space but
trying not to think too much because it would slow them down.
They headed back one more time. The jellyfish had another form in
their tentacles. But this one was shaped wrong. It was all curves. It
didn't have enough straight lines for a human body. The jellies stopped
about three meters away this time. When Vee registered what she saw,
she had to choke back her bile while part of her mind said, "Ah, that's
why they call it 'pulped.' "
The jellies did not put this one down. They carried it back past the
gold creatures and vanished into the bottom of the balloon.
"Who was that? Why'd they do that?" asked Terry. "Sorry, sorry, I
know you don't know… I—"
"It's okay," said Vee. "Really."
There were no more, what? Deliveries? The aliens flew back into
their balloon, except the one still one. Vee wondered what it was
waiting for. It stared at her with its huge eyes, as if memorizing
every detail of Vee's form, as Vee was memorizing its, with the sharply
angled wings and the thick, but amazingly flexible neck, the broad
body, the crimson and ivory mane that streamed down its neck and the
dark lines on golden skin.
Vee took a step forward, holding her hand out. The other's wings
twitched minutely, its body swelled, and it drifted forward.
Vee's breath caught in her throat.
A second creature, this one more heavily lined, or wired, came up
next to the first one. They hovered close together, their beaks, maybe
they were really more like muzzles, almost touching. Then, together
they turned and flew back into the gondola under the silver and white
balloon.
The moment was gone so abruptly that Vee was a little surprised to
find she herself was still there.
And Angela still has no air tank. Vee cursed herself for
standing and staring. She turned and lumbered back across the ragged
plain.
Last time, last time. You can do this. She held tightly to
the thought. Her plate warnings were now more orange than yellow. Her
muscles felt stretched out and limp. Sweat trickled down her face,
pooling for a moment in her collar before the cloth wicked it away. Her
back itched. Her hands had swollen until her gloves felt too tight.
"You all right?" asked Josh.
"Barely," she admitted. "But I'll made it."
From here she could see Scarab Five's open airlock and the
glass-encased bodies lying on the floor.
If they can make it, I sure as hell can. She glanced back
to make sure the others were keeping up. They limped and stumbled
their way back, just as she did. The aliens had vanished.
We'll all make it because we have to back each other's stories
up.
They bundled back into the airlock, trying to cram onto the benches.
Except Adrian. He squatted down next to Charlotte and laid a hand on
her wrist, as if his gloved fingers could feel her pulse through that
alien crystal.
"Shut it down, Kevin, depressurize," said Josh as he dogged the
hatch. He was panting hard, and Vee saw the rivers of sweat running
down his face.
"Doing it now." Kevin's voice had relaxed, weirdly enough, and he
sounded more like the pilot who had shepherded them all down than the
terrified man she'd last seen on the corridor floor.
The pump began struggling to take them back to human conditions.
Relief surged through Vee. She slumped against the inside of her
hardsuit. Angela Cleary lay right at her feet, like a corpse that had
been dipped in plastic. Vee closed her eyes. Angela was breathing under
there. They all were. No one was dead yet. Except that person the
aliens took away.
Why did they take the dead one away?
"It's a fake, huh?" Josh's voice interrupted her thoughts and she
was grateful, even when she interpreted his tone. "If the Discovery is
a fake, what the hell were those? Holographs?"
"You thought the Discovery was a fake?" said Troy. "When we've just
seen the builders—"
"The Discovery is a fake," snapped Vee. She started shaking. A
thousand different emotions churned inside her and she couldn't put a
name to any of them. "Those creatures did not build the Discovery. Did
those things look like they could fit through the tunnel? Those were
birds, not moles."
"So there are two sets of aliens?" said Troy, sounding dazed.
"Yes," said Vee. "Us and them."
Adrian hadn't moved from his crouch next to Charlotte. He ran his
gloves over the solid, crystal casing. Vee had no doubt he was
thinking,
How are we going to get them out of there? Vee sure
was.
A sound like a shot split the air. Vee jerked backward. A crack
swept down Charlotte's case. It branched out, sending a network of
fractures all along the crystal. Another shot, and another and
another. The cases shattered.
Well, that answers that.
"Charlotte!" Adrian brushed away flakes of crystal that turned to
dust as soon as he touched them. Vee, then Josh, fell clumsily to
their knees, following his example. Vee brushed off Angela's face,
trying to get the stuff clear before she inhaled it.
Angela gasped, then choked. Her body convulsed under Vee's hand and
her face contorted horribly.
"Shit! Kevin! Kill the pump!" cried Adrian. "They're getting the
bends! Kill the pump!"
"No! They can't live under this pressure!" Vee yelled. The gauge
wasn't even up to three atmospheres. That much pressure was not
something an unsheltered body could tolerate. They were going to be
crushed. Right in here. Right in front of them.
"The bends will kill them!" shot back Adrian. He was right. If they
were brought up too fast, the gases in their blood would turn into
bubbles in their veins, and those bubbles would float into their hearts.
But if they remained under this intense pressure, they'd simply be
squeezed to death by the air.
No-win situation, thought Vee, almost hysterically.
"Keep us down, Kevin!" shouted Adrian. "Where's the rescue drop?"
"An hour away, tops," came the answer.
"Make sure they know we're under pressure."
They were all on their knees now, trying to hold the contorting
bodies down, trying to speak soothing words that could not possibly be
heard. The rescued team might as well have been naked to the heat and
the pressure. Vee could see Angela's neck muscles swell. A thin ribbon
of blood ran from her ear. Vee tried to hold Angela as she curled in on
herself, but Vee couldn't tell whether the gesture was helping or
hurting. Vee couldn't hear her, couldn't feel her. Angela was outside
her. Vee couldn't check Angela's breathing or her pulse. Vee's thick,
gloved fingers couldn't even hold Angela's hand.
"Charlotte, Charlotte," murmured Adrian. "I'm so sorry. Just hang
on, please hang on."
Please hang on. I'm sorry. The first-aid kit was on the
other side of the airlock. Who'd put a first-aid kit in here? No one
would be in here when the door was closed without a suit on. That was
nuts.
Nuts as it was, these people had no suits. There was no way to reach
them. Angela was beginning to shake. Tears ran from her closed eyes.
Let her be unconscious. Let her not know this is happening to
her.
Seconds crawled by. Vee's gaze kept darting from her faceplate
clock to Angela. Seconds, minutes, passing. Angela going from tremors,
to jerks, to convulsions that kicked and battered Isaac Walters, who
lay beside her, as well as Vee's hardsuit. She faded back to jerks and
then to tremors, leaving Vee drowning in fear that the next thing to
happen would be that Angela's muscles would go completely limp and her
dead eyes would roll open.
But it didn't happen. It should have. It should have happened
moments after their casings cracked. It should have happened when their
scarab crashed, but it didn't. Angela, Isaac, Lindi, Charlotte, Dave
the mission specialist, Chen the geologist, Arva the meteorologist, all
held on for one more second, and one more, and one more after that.
After an eternity of one more second, Kevin's voice echoed inside
Vee's helmet.
"Scarabs Eight and Ten are on the ground! They're on their way.
What's your pressure and temp back there? Exactly."
"We're at the three point three atmospheres and fifty-two degrees
Celsius," answered Adrian. "Tell them to step on it!"
More waiting.
Hang on Angela, oh, please, hang on.
Angela was barely even twitching now. Her fingers curled and opened
slightly, almost as if they were being blown by a wind. Not much to
indicate life. Not nearly enough. Vee laid her hand on Angela's chest
and tried to feel its rise and fall. Nothing. Nothing at all.
No. Please. You can't die. You can't die! Help's on the way!
The scarab shuddered. Vee's gaze jerked automatically to the door.
"We've got a docking seal with Scarab Eight," said Kevin. "Just
another second, they'll have the door open."
Vee's heart hammered hard. Angela's hand went still.
"No, no, no." She grasped the woman's forearm. "Come on! One more
second! One more!"
The outer door hissed open and they faced an identical airlock and
a pair of strangers in hardsuits surrounded by stretcher capsules.
"Mother Creation," whispered one, even as he swung a capsule
forward and lifted its lid.
They got Charlotte in, strapped her down, closed the lid, swung the
capsule into the airlock, where another person waited to read her vital
signs and give the capsule orders for treatment and maintenance. They
swung down another capsule, this one for Lindi. Another for Dave.
Angela still wasn't moving.
"They're here, help's here," breathed Vee. She felt tears running
down her cheeks. She barely knew this woman who was dying under her
hand and Vee couldn't even feel it and help was inches away and she
couldn't beg them to hurry because everyone else was as bad or worse
and they were already moving as fast as they possible could.
A capsule shut. Another swung into place.
"Okay, Dr. Hatch. We got her."
The med techs lifted Angela away and slotted her into the stretcher
capsule, strapped her down, slapped the monitor patches on her, and
closed the lid. The capsule's screens lit up instantly.
"Is she alive?" she croaked.
"Oh yeah," said the med tech. "Mother Creation alone knows how, but
they're all still with us."
Vee fell backwards and sideways and found herself leaning against
Josh. He laid an arm around her shoulder. She couldn't feel it, but she
knew it was there.
Thank God, she thought, for the lives in the stretchers and
the life next to her now.
Thank God.
Contents -
Prev /
Next
Chapter Eleven
The mooring hook took the ligaments the dirigible let down for it.
As soon as the gondola opened its door, T'sha gathered up the cortex
boxes they'd used to cope with the New People's shelter and flew
straight for the base's main portal. She wanted to get into D'seun's
way before he could take his anger out on any of the engineers.
As she had guessed, D'seun was there in the main analysis chamber,
quivering with rage. T'sha glided past him into the chamber, making him
turn away from the door and its view of the corridor beyond.
"I've heard what you did," he said.
"I am not surprised." She set each of the cortex boxes into their
caretaker unit, which would determine whether they needed soothing,
debriefing, or reprogramming.
"Why would you do such a thing?" demanded D'seun. "Why would you
come into contact with them? It is not in your commission!"
T'sha wrapped her posthands around a perch and settled down to face
him. She had to remain calm now. His anger was justified. She had
completely ignored the presence of another ambassador while taking an
action that could affect all the People. She had deliberately
overflown her commission, and there was no going back.
"They were dying, D'seun," she said softly. "What should I have
done?"
D'seun swelled. T'sha held her own bones in tight control.
She could not rise to this. Not now. "We had our mandate. We were
not yet ready to greet them properly."
"This was not a greeting. This was an emergency." It had been too.
Even knowing as much about them as she did, T'sha had been stunned when
the cortices reported on the frigid temperatures the New People
maintained for themselves and how deeply sheltered they were from the
press of the air around them. Their own kind only limped to their aid.
They showed all the soul of family members, surely, but they would have
been far too late. There would not even have been raw materials to
recover, so much would have boiled away.
"You may have jeopardized everything," D'seun shouted. "How can we
show we have proper claim to New Home at this stage? They could
legitimately call question to what we are doing."
T'sha clacked her teeth. "
I
could legitimately question what we're
doing." Her body tried to swell, but she held herself rigid. "D'seun,
you are making assumptions for which you have no evidence. We have no
idea how they see us. We haven't asked them. We may not even have a way
to ask them." There had been the one who'd stood so still under her
stare. What was going on in that one's mind? What was passing between
it and the others? Had they known the People were there to help? Had it
feared they would take the raw materials of their companions' bodies
before they were ready to be used?
D'seun leaned as far forward as he could without releasing his
perch. He swelled up so huge he looked as if he was about to burst.
"You did this deliberately. You did not get your way in the High Law
Meet and so you are forcing the issue."
Despite all her self-control, T'sha's wings beat the air in simple
frustration. "Did I cause the New People's equipment to fail? Did I
make sure you were away from the base when it did?"
D'seun towered over her, rude and showy with his tattoos and his
dyed crest, and did not answer. Not one of the other team members had
come into the chamber, T'sha noted. Intelligent.
"I will take this back to the Law Meet," said D'seun, deflating only
slightly.
T'sha dipped her muzzle. "I've already done so, D'seun. I sent D'han
back through the portal with my complete report of the events."
"Your interpretation of events," said D'seun. "I'm sure, once I've
spoken to them the engineers will have their own stories to tell."
That was enough, more than enough. T'sha inflated, swift and sudden.
She spread her wings out until she was all D'seun could see.
"If I find you've intimidated even the lowest engineer on this team,
I will take you before the Law Meet and I will bring up the question of
your sanity!"
D'seun shriveled. "You wouldn't."
She cupped her wings to surround him. "Feel my words, Ambassador;
feel my life. You know I have cause."
D'seun was so small and tight he would have sunk like a stone had he
not been sitting on a perch. It was then T'sha knew. She had not been
certain until that moment, but now she was. D'seun had not taken raw
materials from the New People. He had taken a life.
Realization rocked T'sha back on her perch.
"I will not forget this," D'seun said.
"You should not." T'sha let go of her perch and flew into the
corridor. She was aware of the Seventh Team strung out along the
corridor like lanterns around a nightside room. She did not speak to
them. Instead, she took herself straight into the refresher and
ordered the door to close tightly behind her.
The air in the refresher was rich, thick, and heavy. T'sha took it
in gratefully, relaxing her skin, drawing the life-giving air in
through her loosened muzzle and feeling her internal poisons release
from her pores. It was so hard to feel full here, in this beautiful,
empty world. Back home she needed to refresh perhaps once every
dodec-hour. Here, every four or five hours that passed left her
drained. She relaxed skin, muscle, and bone in the room's gentle breeze
and let herself drift.
She'd done it. Oh, she had done it. She'd spent so much effort
controlling her body, she'd obviously forgotten to control her mind.
Did she really mean she'd call D'seun's sanity into question?
She did. Her skin rippled with small fear. She'd do it. This was too
huge. It meant too much. If D'seun would have her sacrifice the New
People needlessly, if he had taken one of their lives, he might really
be insane. The sane spread life, served it, nurtured it, and in return
were served and spread and nurtured by life. The insane were greedy.
They killed. They stunted and confined and hoarded life. The sane and
the insane could not live together.
T'sha remembered when her family had met on a question of insanity.
She'd only just been declared adult, able to fly with the others and
add her voice to the consensus. T'thran, a second cousin to her birth
family, had deliberately destroyed an entire square mile of canopy. He
offered no reason, however closely questioned. He had only wanted to do
this thing. It was bad, he said. It was rotted, and the rot would
spread.
But there was no evidence. No one else in the entire latitude had
witnessed this corruption. Not even Ca'aed could say it had existed.
The family asked; they asked everyone they could reach. The wind blew
them from day through night and back into day again while they turned
the question over. But in the end, every voice polled had called him
insane.
Insane. Nothing left to contribute to life but his own raw
material. So that raw material had been taken and used to help
recreate what had been destroyed.
As would D'seun's be, if she did this and the Law Meet found she was
right.
The problem was, of course, that D'seun could make his own case
against her. He had already convinced the Seventh Team she was greedy
and careless. What if he or some ally took that to a court or the
Fitness Review Committee in the High Law Meet? There existed the very
real possibility that she would be removed from her special position
here, and then who would speak for the New People? D'seun would not,
his bullied team would not, and back in the High Law Meet, Ambassador
Z'eth most certainly would not.
T'sha floated between disasters and did not know which way to dodge.
She only knew that as long as the New People were alive and sane they
could not be dismissed, could not be flown over without regard to their
needs and their claims. That was right. That was the first Right and
the final Right and it would not change, no matter how closely D'seun
argued his case and no matter what Z'eth had asked her to do.
"I cannot choose which life to serve," she murmured, calling back
the words the living highland spoke to Ca'doth.
T'sha floated, blown by the room's gentle, random breeze, taking in
its nutrition and its calm. She had made her move. All that she could
do now was wait and see how D'seun would respond.
* * *
The Veneran doctors agreed Vee could sleep in her own room if she
wore the monitor belt and patches under her shirt and swore to drink
two liters of water before she went to bed.
So there she stood in her spacious, comfortable living room, with
its autoform furniture and its walls set to a static pattern of
mountains and clouds based on Japanese watercolors, and the purple rag
rug on the soft-tile floor, completely at a loss about what to do.
Angela, Lindi, Isaac, and the Venerans were all going to live, thanks
to the intervention of the aliens. She drew a large glass of water from
the tap at the sink in the kitchenette and drank some absently. What
were they doing down there now? What were they doing there at all? Who
were they? Why had they decided to help?
For the first time since coming to Venera, Vee felt trapped. There
was a whole new world out there now, and she couldn't reach it.
Nothing you can do about it now, unless you want to put the act
back on and try to bully Failia and company to let you back down there.
Vee sat in the desk chair. No. That was not going to get her
anywhere. But she couldn't just sit here. She had to
do
something.
Almost idly, she flipped open her briefcase and accessed her drawing
programs. She undipped the stylus from her holder and opened the
gallery. Maybe she could draw the scene from the accident, just to pass
the time. She could begin with clips from the gallery. She had the
backdrops she'd used for her simulations to show Angela, but they were
strictly second rate. Might do for a base to build on. Needed color
though, and a different scale.
Her mind's eye brought the rescue scene back to the fore, and her
hands started to move.
This wasn't a real holograph; this was a computer-generated
simulation. She'd have to unpack her holotank and film to make the real
thing, but she could make a sketch for eventual transfer to real 3-D.
She could show the dim shadows and black rock with the startling
threads of lava creeping down the mountainsides. She could show the
scarab, bent and crippled in a wilderness of stone.
And she could show the aliens. The gold wings that shimmered and
sparkled in the dim light and thick air. The silver eyes. Those eyes,
how could she render those eyes? How could she show the intelligence
she had felt under the surface as this creature, no, this
person
from another world looked into her own eyes?
Vee zoomed in on the winged form and concentrated solely on it, the
eyes, the lines along its skin, the curve of its torso and wings. She
worked fast, trying to freeze the memory before it faded. The cameras
from the suits and the scarab had surely captured the images, but how
long would it be before she had access to them? This was her memory.
This was her moment made real in light and code. This is what she'd
show the world, all the worlds, so they would understand what had
happened.
Water, promises, and time forgotten, Vee drew the first portrait of
Earth's neighbors.
Her door chimed, jerking Vee back into the present, where she became
aware of a stiff back and ankles, a cramped hand, and a raging thirst.
"Door. Open," called Vee, half-annoyed, half-grateful. She gulped
half the water remaining in her glass.
Josh stood in the threshold.
"Hi," he said. "You okay?"
"Oh yeah, fine." She blanked her case screen. It wasn't done yet.
Not ready for anyone else to see. "Got caught up in a project. What's
going on?"
"Dr. Failia wants us all in the conference room to debrief about…
what happened. I said I'd come get you."
"Thanks." Vee unbent her protesting back and legs. She got to her
feet and drained her water glass. "You didn't have to do this."
Josh's face shifted into an expression she hadn't seen before. It
was gentle, yet awkward. "I wanted to make sure you were okay. Things
got rough down there, and you were looking at Angela like…" He searched
for words. "Like she was the only thing holding you together."
"Thanks," said Vee again, and she meant it. "It was bad for a bit.
No question. We owe the aliens. Whatever they are, we owe them."
"Yes, we do." Josh shook his head. "Ever since you told me the base
was a fake, I'd been gearing up for a huge disappointment. But then…"
His words trailed off. "I don't know what to think now."
"Me either," she admitted. "Yet. Let's go get debriefed." She
crossed to the door and stopped. Something else needed to be said.
Something she hadn't needed to say for a long time. She turned back
toward Josh. "Thank you for taking me seriously down there. For letting
me help."
"That was the real you," Josh said. "I was glad you were there."
"Yeah, well," said Vee, unable to form a better response and kicking
herself for it. "Let's see how glad the board is."
Vee and Josh walked to Conference Room One through a Venera Base
that seemed abnormally tense. Vee was sure the rumor mill had been
incredibly active all day, but from the sidelong glances people were
giving them, she was also sure that Dr. Failia and the governing board
hadn't yet deigned to release any official information. If it had been
Vee, she'd have been going crazy.
They were the last to arrive. The board clustered together at one
end of the oval table. The passengers and crew of Scarab Five ranged
around the rest of it. All the U.N. team who were not in
the hospital were there. Terry sat next to her partner. Robert Stykos.
Julia sat between Troy and Adrian, who was next to a shell-shocked
Philip Bowerman. Vee picked the free chair beside Philip. Josh sat next
to her. Vee felt absurdly pleased.
Helen Failia got to her feet. She looked determined, as if she was
not going to let even this situation get the best of her.
But Philip did not give her the chance to speak. "Before we say
anything else here"—Philip looked haggard. No surprise. His partner was
lying in the infirmary with tubes in her arms and synaptic stimulators
in her ears while all five medical doctors tried to work out how many
nerve grafts she was going to need—"I want to know why our outgoing
communications are being blocked."
Our what? Vee straightened up. Now she could see why both
Terry and Robert appeared particularly grim.
Helen gave a short sigh, as if this were a minor inconvenience.
"Venera's governing board has decided that, for the time being, all
outgoing communication which contains references to this latest
development will be held for transmission at a later time."
"You cannot do this," said Robert through clenched teeth. "You have
no right to restrict free communication."
"Venera Base reserves the right to refuse transmission of data which
might include proprietary or unpublished information based on work that
does not belong to the person requesting the transmission." Dr. Failia
said it like she'd memorized it. She probably had. It was probably part
of the colony's charter or some similar document.
Philip shook his head. "That is not an acceptable decision, Dr.
Failia."
"It is most definitely not acceptable," said Terry. "This is the
real thing. We need to get this out as soon as possible."
"No," said Helen flatly. "That was what was done with the Discovery.
Now we know that was a fraud. Who knows what this latest phenomenon is?"
"I do," said Troy, his voice husky with awe. Vee had heard that tone
plenty of times down in the Discovery, but this was different somehow.
Down there, she'd been quite sure it was all for show, a way to impress
Lindi with his depth and give Terry good sound bits. Now though, she
got the sudden impression they were hearing what he really felt. "They
were saviors. Merciful saviors. They took gentle care of the crew of
Scarab Fourteen—"
"They kept Heathe's body," cut in Dr. Godwin. "What'd they do that
for? Merciful saviors? Maybe just morbidly curious?"
"We can't know," said Michael Lum. "Not yet. From what we saw we
can't even know if we can communicate with them."
"Yes, we can." Vee blurted out the words before she even realized
she had spoken.
"What?" said Dr. Failia sharply. Everyone turned to face Vee.
"We can communicate with them," said Vee, slowly this time, letting
the ideas bubbling up inside her mind coalesce, giving herself a chance
to see them clearly. "They can see." Yes, there it was. The foundation.
They could build from there. "One of them was watching me the whole
time. Their eyes were made up like a human eye, or near as, which means
it's probable they can see in wavelengths we use and resolve images
very close to the way we do."
"And assuming you're right?" said Dr. Godwin.
Vee felt herself smile. Ideas flowed through her. This could work.
They could do this. "If they can see, we can communicate with them. I
don't know if they could hear a radio broadcast, but they might be
able to read a letter."
"You want to teach them their ABC's? How?" Dr. Failia's voice was
suspicious but not dismissive. Good. Excellent.
"Holographs," Vee told them.
"Don't be ridiculous," said Dr. Godwin. "It'd take years to get a
holograph setup that would work."
Vee's smile spread. She loved surprises. She loved the impossible,
and this was the most impossible set of circumstances she'd ever been
in. "It'll take a week. The hard part's already done."
"What is the hard part?" asked Dr. Failia.
Vee leaned forward. "The hard part would have been getting a working
laser in place, but we've already got one. Whoever built the Discovery
took care of that for us. There is a laser down there that Josh says
will work under Venusian conditions as soon as we jack it into a power
source."
"And you think you can talk to them?" Dr. Lum sounded half-afraid,
half-hopeful.
"Maybe." Her gaze turned inward while her mind lined up the things
they'd need. "We build a holotank outside the Discovery where they can
see it. Line it up with the laser. Wire the laser so it can be
controlled from inside one of the scarabs. It's got a double beam, so
it can record and project once we get the tank in place. I've brought
some of my rapid-replay film with me, so if we can set up some kind of
cold-box for the tank to work in, we won't have a problem there—"
"Wait a minute." Philip got to his feet. "Figuring out the
mechanics, this is good; we'll need that, but this is not something we
can do alone up here. This is not your decision. We need to contact the
C.A.C. immediately and let them inform the Secretaries-General what has
happened."
"What do you want us to do, Mr. Bowerman?" asked Dr. Godwin. "Let
the aliens sit and twiddle their thumbs for weeks until the S.G.s
decide which end's up?"
"That's not my decision." Philip planted one hand on the tabletop.
"And it's not yours."
"Yes, it is ours," said Dr. Godwin. "This is our home, not yours."
Philip's face tightened. "This involves all of humanity, not just
Venus."
"We owe it to all of humanity to give them an accurate picture,"
said Dr. Lum quietly. "If it is proven the Discovery is a fraud, then
we already screwed up once, and look what we started. We can't risk
doing that again."
"I appreciate your scientific rigor—"
"It's not science, it's survival," said Dr. Lum. "We are not
talking about a few holes in the ground anymore. We are talking about
living beings with who knows what capabilities and who knows what
reasons for being here. Before we panic the entire range of humanity,
we have to know what they can and cannot do and why they're doing it."
Dr. Lum let his gaze sweep the
entire gathering. "If we don't have some answers when people ask 'what
do they want,' we're going to have an upheaval like nothing we've seen
since the twentieth century."
"One week," said Dr. Failia. "Dr. Hatch said she can make contact
within a week. We will then at least see how they react to our attempts
to talk. We can take that to the U.N. It will be better than nothing."
Philip shook his head. "It's unacceptable. This is not your
decision."
"Unfortunately, it is," said Dr. Failia. "We're here and so are
they. We have to decide what to do about that. Here it is."
Philip said nothing. Vee didn't miss the struggle on his face,
though. He was going to try to contact his superiors again as soon as
he left the meeting. The board certainly knew it. Despite his
determination, however, he was also obviously aware he was a long, long
way from any kind of backup.
"Dr. Hatch." Dr. Failia turned to Vee. "I need an honest
assessment. Do you believe you can initiate some kind of contact with…
our neighbors in one week?"
"Yes," said Vee without hesitation. "I'll need Dr. Kenyon's help,
but we can do it."
"Please proceed after the meeting then," said Dr. Failia. Vee nodded.
"And for those of us who don't agree with the one week holding
period?" asked Robert coolly.
"All outgoing communications are being monitored," said Dr. Lum.
"Nothing will be released without authorization."
"I see," said Philip. He looked at Godwin. "It's nice to see
separatist principles being applied evenly as always. The U.N. tries to
regulate your communication, you howl at the unfairness of it all. But
you regulating the U.N.'s, that's just fine."
"You are not the U.N.," said Dr. Godwin softly, but his
satisfaction with the statement was unmistakable.
"I am a U.N. employee, just like every other Terran member at this
table. What you are doing is not legal and not acceptable." Philip
stood and walked out the door.
"You'll excuse us as well," Terry also got up and left, followed by
Robert.
As the door swished shut, Dr. Lum woke up the tabletop screen in
front of him and touched a few command keys. Vee itched to know what
they were, but there was no way to ask.
Dr. Failia sighed as if resigning herself to something unpleasant
and focused on her remaining audience.
"Josh, if you could tell us what you know about the accident and
what happened afterwards, please."
Josh glanced around the table and then at the door. "For the record,
I don't agree at all with censoring communication. That said"—he sighed
and folded his arms—"this is what I saw."
They each talked in turn. Four versions of the same experience made
a collage that mostly resolved into a single story. By the end of it,
Vee had heard the experience repeated so many times it began to feel a
little dreamlike. But all she had to do was think about the bodies on
the airlock floor and it hit her all over again—the waiting, the fear,
the cries of pain. Oh yeah, it was real.
And nothing would ever be the same again. Vee pictured the person
hovering in front of her on golden wings and felt herself start to
smile again.
She would find a way to talk to the ones with golden wings.
Then the universe would open up wide.
* * *
The door closed behind the U.N. investigative team as they left the
meeting, cutting off both Veronica Hatch's rapid-fire suggestions to
Josh Kenyon and Troy Peachman's continued awed murmurings to whoever
would listen.
"Well that's done," said Helen, smoothing her scarf down. "I do hope
our new neighbors appreciate what we're going through for them."
Ben smiled faintly at her attempted joke, but Michael's face
remained serious.
"There's one more thing," he said quietly.
There was no question as to what he meant. Helen wished there could
be. She sighed. "Your people have them?"
"Yes."
"Are you going to ask the yewners to be there for the questioning?"
asked Ben in as mild a voice as he owned.
That would be your first priority, Ben, wouldn't it? "No."
Helen shook her head. "I would prefer we handle this ourselves for as
long as we can." She'd gone down with Michael to arrest Derek. She
remembered the hurt on his face, the bewildered betrayal, as if he
didn't understand what all the
fuss was about.
"But you're still going to send them back to Mother Earth for
trial?" Ben's face was flushed, but his eyes were cold.
"What else are we supposed to do? No"—Helen held up her hand—"I
don't want to hear it. We are sending them back to Earth, eventually."
She rested her fingertips briefly on the table.
I do not want to
do this. Please understand, Ben, even with all they are about to bring
down on us, I do not want to do this.
She straightened up. "I don't want them paraded through the halls.
We'll go down."
"You don't have to do this, Helen," Michael told her as he stood at
her side. "I can bring you a report."
He'd said the same thing during the arrest. He was a good boy,
Michael. His attempts to shelter her were well meaning. This was even a
fairly decent out. No one would question it or think that there was
another way to do this.
No one but Helen herself. "No. We all let this happen and we're all
going to be made to pay for it, one way or another. Look at this as the
first installment."
Remember the others, Helen told herself as she led the
board out into the corridor and toward the elevator bundle.
Remember
what is real. Our neighbors have saved more than a scarab crew, simply
by being there. They have saved us from the worst this fraud accusation
could bring.
It was a strange thought to be having at this moment, but it kept
her going as they descended to the administration level and walked in
single file into the back of Michael's security area. Murmured
conversations started up as they passed, and Helen imagined the waves
of whispering spreading out like ripples in a pool. Whispering about
how the entire governing board marched in to see the Cusmanos brothers
and endless speculations about what they talked about, spreading and
merging to join with the speculation about what really happened to the
scarab crews.
She'd have to make an announcement soon. But first they had to try
to find out who else needed to be held. Michael was certain the
Cusmanoses had not acted alone, and Helen trusted him.
Venera's brig was the only cramped place on the base. Little cells,
little questioning rooms, all decked with big cameras, it was exactly
the opposite of the free spaces. Not torturous, no, but disquieting,
especially for long-term residents.
The brig had actually been an afterthought. Helen, for all her
careful planning, had not envisioned the need for such a place in her
original design. But scientists and academics were human, with their
share of the human fallibilities, and house arrest did not suffice for
everyone.
Two of Michael's security team brought the brothers into the
interrogation room, where the governing board waited for them. Derek,
troubled but defiant, and Kevin, hollow-eyed and tired, sat at the end
of the table as far from the board as they could get. Derek slumped his
shoulders and looked anywhere in the room except at the faces of his
accusers. Kevin sat up straight but bowed his head, studying the
smooth, wired plastic surface of the table.
Anger grabbed hold of Helen, but she'd been ready for it. What she
was less prepared for was the sorrow. Kevin and Derek's parents had
been old-fashioned Christians, and she'd been to both their sons'
baptisms. She'd written Kevin the recommendation that got him into
M.F.I.T., and she'd been there when Ben told Derek he'd won the
competitive exams that turned him into the one-man survey department.
Beth and Rick Cusmanos had both retired and moved back to Mother
Earth. Helen remembered her own mixed feelings at the bon voyage party.
But the sons had both stayed. Stayed to do this to Venera.
Belatedly, she realized Beth and Rick did not yet know what their
sons had done, and sorrow struck her again.
"I have your statements in your files." Michael lit up one of the
table screens, all business. Whatever he felt watching the men
who were his friends, he kept hidden. He just shuffled the icons until
he had access to their fact files. "Is there anything you want to add
at this time?"
Derek's eyes slid sideways to look at Kevin. Kevin did not look up.
"Can you cut us a deal?" asked Derek, a little belligerently, a little
hopefully.
Michael's gaze flickered from Derek to Kevin. "I can make sure the
court knows you cooperated fully."
"But you can't deal?" pressed Derek.
Helen felt her jaw clench.
How can you talk like this? Don't
you realize what you almost did? If there hadn't been something real
out there, you would have killed Venera!
Michael shook his head. "I'm not an officer of the courts, no, but I
am recognized as a police officer. It gives me some weight."
Derek snorted, and Kevin glowered at him. "No," Derek said. "It's
not enough. The shit's too deep to be shoveled out with a good report
card."
"Derek." Ben leaned forward. "Don't do this to yourselves. Don't do
this to your friends. You've been caught. It's all over. There's no one
to protect anymore."
Derek said nothing.
Helen swallowed her anger. She stood and walked around the edge of
the table. "Kevin?" she said, standing next to him.
Kevin sat silently. Helen let the silence stretch. Then, she said.
"You're a good man, Kevin Cusmanos. You have done so much good work for
us." She meant it, every word. A thousand memories flashed through her
head of Kevin, in and out of the scarabs, his attention to detail, his
care and diligence in training his people and caring for his
equipment. "You're just trying to help your brother, I'm sure of that."
More memories—the two of them in the playground, Derek always tearing
along behind his older, bulkier brother. Kevin at Derek's promotion
ceremony, his chest puffed all the way out. Derek looked so… lost
really when Kevin boarded the ship for Earth and his degrees, and
Kevin shaking him by the shoulder and telling him to cheer up.
Helen laid her hand on Kevin's shoulder. "I'm telling you, it
doesn't have to be this bad. We might not even have to send you down
there if we can show we know all of what happened."
Slowly, sadly, Kevin shook his head. "There is no way the yewners
are going to let you hang on to us. Too many people are going to look
stupid as soon as word gets out. There's nothing you can do, Helen."
Regret deep and profound poured through her. That was it then. She
touched his shoulder. "There's nothing you'll let me do."
"You're probably right," he said to the tabletop.
"Kevin."
Kevin finally looked up, right into her eyes. Over his shoulder,
she saw Derek's face go white.
He's going to tell us. Hope
leaped up inside her.
He's not going to let us down.
But the moment passed, and Kevin's gaze dropped back to the
tabletop. "I can't," he whispered. "I'm sorry."
"So am I, Kevin." She squeezed his shoulder and turned away. "For
both of you."
* * *
Phil stepped into Angela's cubicle in the infirmary. She was still
unconscious. Her face was mottled red and white. The muffling
headphones the doctors had strapped over her damaged ears plastered
her short hair against her burned scalp. Tubes and patches covered her
pale arms lying on top of the rough monitor blanket.
"You're looking good, Ms. Cleary." He sat in the stiff chair beside
her bed. Why was there no hospital in existence that had comfortable
visitor's chairs? She really did look better. When they'd first let him
in to see her, every limb was swollen with bruises and blisters. Her
face was a single massive, doughy contusion. He'd seen worse but not on
his partner.
They told him she'd been awake briefly, but now what she needed was
sleep. She needed to sleep away the pain and the fear and the utter
strangeness of what had happened to her. The Veneran doctors were
minimalists who did not approve of speed-healing techniques. They
repaired the blood vessels and nerves, alleviated the adenoma, and
treated the worst of the burns. Other than that, they were leaving her
body to take care of itself.
"Well, you've been saying you needed a vacation anyway," said Phil,
looking more at the floor than at Angela. She'd been nearly dead when
they brought her back. He'd thought it was all over. He'd thought she
was gone. He'd been terrified. They'd worked together since he'd joined
the U.N. security team. In some ways he was closer to her than to his
own wife.
But she wasn't dead. She'd been saved. By strangers. Aliens. It was
almost too much. Phil found he didn't really want to think about it. It
was a lot easier to concentrate on what was going on inside Venera's
walls.
"I haven't written the report for the boss yet," he went on. "The
Venerans are screening outgoing transmissions. Somehow I don't think
our encrypted stuff is going to get through. I'm going to start looking
for holes." He rested his elbows on his knees. "But I don't think I'm
going to find any. The guy is very good." He glanced at her. The
blanket rose and fell with her rhythmic breathing.
She's getting better. She's going to stay alive. "I wonder
how long it's going to take Stykos and Wray to file free-speech
lawsuits." He sucked on his cheek thoughtfully. "Actually, the
Venerans will probably offer them exclusive coverage of the aliens if
they keep their mouths shut until the Venerans are ready."
He rubbed his palms together, feeling skin against skin, feeling
how they were slightly damp. Then his thoughts froze the motion.
"How'd he filter out the communications so fast?" Phil straightened
up.
You just said he was good. His imagination supplied
Angela's words.
"Nobody's that good. He couldn't just shut down everything; it'd
look funny. Someone on Mother Earth would notice." He touched Angie's
hand. It was warm and dry under the tubes. "A good broad-spectrum
communication filter is not something you pluck out of the stream. He
must have had them in place." He turned toward her, eyes shining,
despite the fact that nothing had changed with her. "I think Michael
Lum's been less than
straight with us about how wired this base is. That means there might
be info we could strain out."
Might be. Maybe. If he was right. But that also meant the not so
still waters of Venera ran deeper than he'd believed.
If Michael Lum hadn't told them how much info he had access to, who
else hadn't he told?
On the other hand, Michael was the one who'd come to him about the
possible fraud involving the Discovery, which made him less likely to
be involved in perpetrating that fraud.
"What a mess," Phil muttered through his teeth. He turned his eyes
to Angela's blanket and its steady rise and fall. "We're going to have
to do some scenario planning here. It's pretty clear the original
Discovery was a fake. They've got the guys who actually built it. But I
think Michael's right. There were other people involved in planning the
scam. We need to find them." He leaned back again, a restless,
meaningless movement. "And hope for the moment he's not one of them,
although I don't know… Fake base and real aliens." Phil shook his
head. "I am not buying the coincidence here. Someone is building up to
something, and I can't see what yet." He frowned, both at his thoughts
and at the realization that it was so much easier to think of aliens if
they were part of a conspiracy or a cover-up of some kind. That felt
strange and a little sad.
Angela stirred, a meaningless, restless movement of her own. "Wake
up soon, Angie," he said softly. "I need you on the beach with me when
the wave hits."
* * *
The idiots, thought Su as she surveyed the broken chunks of
metal and ceramic tumbling gently through the void.
They couldn't
wait. They couldn't hold back.
She floated upright in the shuttle's observation compartment, one
hand hanging on to a wall handle to keep herself still and oriented.
The port window currently showed the small debris field. Here and there
she could see the bright-yellow suits of the Trans-Lunar Patrol
workers, gathering the debris, strapping it into bundles to be hauled
into the shuttles and out of the shipping lanes. Small drones spread
out in sweep patterns, vacuuming
up the dust and marble-sized debris that could pinhole anything that
flew through it.
Twelve hours ago, all that debris had been a shipyard engaged in
labor negotiations with a union that had outspoken separatist
sentiments. The yard was a space station, and the property of a wholly
owned Terran corporation, which got it around the "no ship building"
rules that applied to the colonies.
It also meant that the colonists cared a lot less about keeping the
place in good shape.
The bombs had scattered the yards and the ships across kilometers of
heavily traveled space. The Trans-Lunars and the insurance people were
still calculating the damage. At least five ships had been hit by
debris. The majority of traffic between Earth and Luna was grounded
until they could get the wreckage cleared up. It would take days and
cost millions.
They just couldn't wait.
"The Union has made a strong statement condemning the bombing," said
Glenn Kucera, the U.N.'s Lunar representative, and the person Su kept
thinking of as her "host" for this little trip. "They're saying it's
radical elements within the organization and that the union is
committed to peaceful reform."
"Yes, I heard that," said Su. She couldn't look away. The world
outside was all sharp edges against the blackness. Everything was too
clean, too clear. It all fell, fell endlessly, silver, white, and
black. "How many people died in there?"
"Fourteen," said Kucera. "It went off between shifts."
"And is anyone is custody?" Her mouth moved and questions came out,
but Su felt as though someone else were asking them. She was just
watching the tumbling debris and cursing the ones who couldn't wait
just a few days, maybe a few weeks longer.
"Not yet. We're still following some leads, and of course Mr.
Hourani is here to help." Kucera licked his lips. "Su, we've got to
diffuse this. Waicek—"
Su nodded. "Edmund was down in U.N. City now, having himself a
little field day, pointing out what unrest, what
independent thought in the colonies led to."
"And he's got backup." Su ground her teeth against the curses that
wanted to spill out of her. They'd worked so hard to keep things calm,
to keep everything going through the transition period. She'd done
absolutely everything she could do. Why did it feel like she had never
worked hard enough?
Why couldn't you just wait?
Well, while she was up here, she would take some of the wind out of
Edmund Waicek's sails. That was all ready to set in motion. She just
needed to get through this first.
It took all of Su's strength to turn away from the window and face
her host. Even then, out of the corner of her eye, she could still see
bits of black and silver tumbling in the darkness.
"I'll meet with the Union reps," she said. "Find somebody to arrest,
Glenn. Get this under wraps quickly." Actually, with Sadiq Hourani
himself looking into the situation, Su did not give the perpetrators of
this violent idiocy long odds.
"I want it under wraps too, believe me." Although Glenn had been
born on Earth, he looked like the classic Lunar—tall, spindly, hair
cropped short under his cap. He'd gone pretty native up here, but he
hid it so he could keep his post. It was a balancing act that Su
understood well and did not envy.
Su touched his arm. "We'll pull it out, Glenn. We always have."
He smiled crookedly. "One damn crisis after another, isn't it?" He
gazed out the window. "I just wish they weren't coming closer together."
"So do I, Glenn."
They shared a tired, tight smile with each other. Glenn let go of
his strap and pushed easily off the wall with just enough force to take
him to the threshold of the passenger bay. "So, can I drop you
somewhere?"
"Back to Selene, thank you," said Su, primly. "I've got an
appointment."
"Will do." Glenn paused. "Thanks for coming up for this one, Su. I
know you've got enough going on with Venera."
"I'm not abandoning anybody, Glenn. We're all in this together."
Almost involuntarily her gaze shifted back to the spinning debris.
At
least, we should be.
The landing back in the Selene port was perfectly routine. Su
emerged with her retinue and Glenn and then sent them all about their
business. She really did have an appointment, but this was not a
meeting that needed an audience.
Assisted by the weighted undersuit she wore, Su walked to Selene's
public caverns. Su visited Luna frequently, but she'd never gotten the
hang of light gravity, so she dressed like a tourist to keep from
hurting herself or from damaging property by inadvertently flinging
things across the room.
She found the cafe where the meeting was to take place in the
vine-hung public cavern that served as a small park. She took a seat at
one of its gilt-wire tables but did not order anything. Outwardly she
was calm, but inside, her stomach churned from the memory of the
devastation. Her mind kept running through all the areas where damage
control would be needed, and the list was expanding alarmingly.
It was ten minutes later when Frezia Cheney finally emerged from the
northeast tunnel. Living on the Moon gave one grace, Su decided, as she
watched the feeder walk toward her. Especially in those who were born
here, there was an unhurried elegance in their small movements. Maybe
it was because things around them fell so slowly that there was no
imperative to rush when you reached for something. You could grab hold
of whatever you wanted and not even gravity would snatch it away from
you.
Su stood up politely as the feeder reached her table. "Thank you for
agreeing to meet me, Ms. Cheney."
"I should be thanking you, Ms. Yan." She beamed the smile of those
comfortable with cameras and publicity. "Normally there's a three-month
waiting list to get to speak to anyone in the U.N."
"Yes," agreed Su as they both sat down. "We are kept on short
leashes."
"They've let yours out far enough to reach Luna."
Su smiled deprecatingly. "Ah, that took a little doing. I was
officially here doing some labor negotiations…" She broke off. "But
then, you would know that already."
"I would." Ms. Cheney nodded once. "In fact, I've written about it."
"Of course." Su frequently scanned the stream for her own name. It
was partly vanity, but mostly it was to keep an eye on how she was
perceived. The bad opinion of her colleagues was one thing, but public
opinion turned against her could be the end of her.
Su set that thought aside. "And how was my son when you spoke to
him?"
Ms. Cheney's smile was both curious and sly. "He told you about me?"
"Was it supposed to be confidential?" returned Su.
"Oh, no." She waved her hand, dismissing any such suggestion. "But
I wasn't aware that you two spoke much."
Now it was Su's turn to smile slyly. "We keep that quiet. It's not
good for either of our reputations."
"I suppose not. To answer your question, I'm happy to tell you he
was quite well." She paused and her eyes slid up and sideways. Su had
the distinct feeling some implant had just been activated. Probably a
recorder. "Now, may I ask what you wanted to see me about?" asked Ms.
Cheney.
Su folded her hands on the table and smoothed her thoughts out. Time
to get to work. "Actually, I also came to Luna about a stream piece."
The feeder tipped her head in polite curiosity. "One I've written,
or one you'd like me to write?"
I see, Ms. Cheney, that you've had experience with politicians.
"One I'd like you to write. If you're willing to accommodate me, I am
in a position to offer you access to the blast site and some of the
U.N. personnel involved in the investigation."
And aren't I going
to have the time convincing Sadiq to go along with it.
Ms. Cheney's eyes gleamed for a moment, but experience and suspicion
doused the light. "A great deal would depend on what you want me to
write."
"Naturally." Su inclined her head. "You know Edmund Waicek?"
Ms. Cheney's eyes slid sideways again. Su was certain the feeder was
looking Edmund up, fetching the pertinent details from some internally
stored database to be displayed on a contact lens or spoken softly
into her ear. "Not personally, but I know his political opinions better
than I'd care to."
"You know that his parents died in the Bradbury Rebellion?" Su
asked, positive Ms. Cheney had the information available.
One more slide of Ms. Cheney's eyes.
Look that up. Don't make
any statement of fact unless you're sure. "That's been gone over
several times. He's made speeches about it."
I have lost more than
can ever be recovered, and I am only one
of many. Su remembered the speech very well. He'd done it with
tears in his eyes. They might even have been real.
"But did you know that they were Fullerists?" asked Su.
"What?" Ms. Cheney jerked out of her internal communion with her
data implants. It was just as well. She would not find this little fact
in the shallows of the stream. Edmund had made sure of that.
Su nodded slowly. "The senior Waiceks were friends and supporters of
Ted Fuller. They sent their son into politics to be a friendly voice
for the colonies. Then the rebellion happened, and one of Fuller's…
less reliable associates feared they'd expose his embezzlements and
bundled them off on an unreliable ship with one of the last loads of
U.N. sympathizers."
Neither of them spoke for a long time. They sat there with their own
thoughts, letting the world flow around them. Su couldn't guess at Ms.
Cheney's imaginings. Her own were lost in the thought of the little
tin-can ships that were Fuller's real crime. All those ships, pulled
from the repair yards when there weren't enough sound vessels in port
to exile the dissenters, or suspected dissenters. Ships with poor
reactor shielding, ships with spent fuel tanks, ships with hulls
already
weak or pinholed, just waiting to be cut to ribbons by the random
stones that flew between Earth and Mars.
No matter what his apologists said about evil counselors, it was
those ships—those dead human beings—not his wish for freedom, that
doomed Ted Fuller's cause and all that might have come of it.
"I'm not sure that's exactly the sort of story I'd be willing to
publish," said Ms. Cheney after a while.
"I see." Of course. The woman was a separatist. She would not be
willing to cast any additional aspersions on the great Theodore Fuller.
"Can I ask you to consider the implications that Edmund Waicek covered
up his parents' political leanings? It is one of the great media truths
that it's not the crime, it's the cover-up, that makes news."
Ms. Cheney pursed her mouth and nodded. "True. True. There may be
something there." Su could practically read her thoughts. For the
mainstream, political cover-up. For the separatists, the loudest voice
against colonial rights is the son of Fullerists. Yes, there was
certainly something there.
"Why are you telling me this, Mrs. Yan?"
Su was ready for that one. "I deplore hypocrisy."
"Surely that's not the whole reason."
"Surely it is."
Ms. Cheney leaned back and nodded, an indication that she was
prepared to be content with that for the moment. "I believe I can put
together something that will return Edmund Waicek's background to
public conversation."
"Very good." Su stood, signaling the end of the conversation.
"You'll be contacted tomorrow about covering the blast site. Word will
be left that you are—" Her phone spot's chime cut off the rest of her
words.
"Transmission from Ben Godwin to Yan Quai," said the voice in her
ear. "Private recording and decryption process go."
Mother Creation, so soon? "I'm sorry," Su forced her
attention back to the reporter. "I've just received a message I must
attend to."
"About the Discovery?" asked Ms. Cheney, getting smoothly to her
feet. "Or about more separatist activity?"
"I have no comment about it at this time," said Su reflexively. "I'm
sorry."
"So am I, Ms. Yan." She smiled. "Thank you for your time."
"Thank you for yours," returned Su.
Su left the feeder there. She had to get away from the cameras and
their attendant ears. Her room at the embassy was as private as Sadiq
could make it, so she headed there.
* * *
The room felt uncomfortably tiny to Su, but for Lunar quarters, it
was quite luxurious. There was room for all the essentials—bed, desk,
table, three chairs, without any of them having to be foldaways. The
bathroom had a separate door and was hers alone.
Luna made some of its money off the tourist industry, but most of it
off mining and industry, and the mining and industrial concerns were
not interested in taking up room with living quarters.
When Su first had Sadiq Hourani tap Quai's private mailboxes for
her, she'd told herself it was a precaution. Quai dealt with some
fringe characters and might find himself up to his neck before he knew
it. He was just a boy.
But that was a comfortable fiction and she knew it. She'd asked for
the tap because she wanted to know what was happening with the
separatists. She wanted to keep an eye on them all so she could try to
temper their activities, steer them away from the most damaging courses.
She wanted to control them.
The tap was a betrayal of her son's trust. One day he'd find out,
and she would pay. Even now, when they were on the same side, he would
not forgive this intrusion into his privacy.
Even that stark realization, though, did not make her turn off the
tap.
Su had already unplugged the desk and jacked her own case into the
wall socket. She sat down in the desk chair and opened the screen.
After a few typed commands and three passwords of increasing length,
the decrypted stolen transmission printed out for her.
Su felt her eyes widen as she read. Her hands slipped from the
command board and toppled into her lap.
Aliens. Aliens on Venus. Not some hole in the ground this time. Not
overblown speculation and chancy photographs. Not even microscopic RNA
particles. No. These were living beings with minds and wills of their
own, and they had saved a scarab's crew.
Su's throat tightened. Implications, wondrous and terrible, poured
through her mind too fast for her to take note of them all.
And here was Ben Godwin telling it all to her son, laying out how it
could be used by the separatists for their cause. As predicted. But it
was one thing to predict and another to see it happening. Some part of
her had believed, had hoped, this day would not come even as she had
laid down all her strategies for when it did.
One command at a time, Su wiped out the file. It would not do for
anyone else to see this.
No, it would not do at all.
Contents -
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Next
Chapter Twelve
T'sha floated in the research chamber of the New Home base,
murmuring her worries to her personal cortex box and wishing painfully
it was Ca'aed she spoke to. She and D'seun were now in the order of
debate for the High Law Meet. A few of T'sha's friends had quietly
passed the word that they found it hard to support what she had done,
considering that the consensus had been quite clear about the fact that
she was to observe and report on the New People, not contact them, and
that the New People's own kind were already responding by the time
T'sha had reached the accident site. One of those friends was
Ambassador Z'eth.
T'sha cupped the soft box in her forehands, stroking its skin,
inhaling the calm scents it gave off and murmuring in its recording
language.
"I have no pictures to show them. I could subpoena the raw materials
Tr'es is examining, I suppose, but how else am I going to show how
fragile the New People are? How brave they are being here? Their needs
must be very great for them to come to a place that is so hazardous to
them." The box mistook her tone of bewildered wonder for distress and
plumped itself up soothingly under her restless fingers, letting its
gentle cooings drift across her fingertips. "Of my worst assertions, I
still have no proof. I—"
"Ambassador T'sha?" Br'sei hovered in the threshold. "You wanted to
speak with me, Ambassador?"
"Yes, I did." She spoke the Off command to her box and tucked it
back into the caretaker's folds.
Br'sei drifted into the room. He looked alert but calm, with his
purple crest only partly raised and his bones relaxed under his skin.
T'sha found herself surveying his tattoos afresh. Br'sei was not just a
senior engineer, he was a master engineer. He was also a freed
indenture and a survivor of D'dant village, where a yeast had turned
their home's bones to a froth that had broken in the wind.
"How are the researches on the New People's raw materials going?"
T'sha asked.
Br'sei shook his wings noncommittally. "Tr'es is practically flying
in circles in her excitement. She swears she's making new discoveries
by the minute."
"Which you will confirm, I trust?" T'sha's own crest lifted, just a
little.
"The review will be rigorous," Br'sei said blandly. "Was there
anything else?"
T'sha glanced toward the door. She could hear no one in the
corridor, but that could change momentarily.
"Will you come with me, Br'sei?" she asked. "I need your help
deciphering a few new sightings."
Br'sei hovered where he was, watching her steadily for a long
moment. Then he whistled his assent.
T'sha took her camera eye out of the caretaker. Its tentacles
wrapped comfortably around her right posthand. She led Br'sei out of
the chamber and into the open air beyond the base's sails. Several of
the team saw them, but that didn't matter. They would also see the
camera and assume T'sha needed some help for a survey, just as she'd
said.
"You know that Ambassador D'seun and I will be leaving soon to
address the High Law Meet," remarked T'sha as the winds carried them
away from the base. She spoke a little command language to the camera.
It focused its eyes to record the passage of the crust under her. Every
bit of data helped.
"I know," said Br'sei. "There is a great deal of speculation around
the base as to which of you will be coming back."
"Which would you prefer, Engineer Br'sei?" It was an unfair
question, but she needed to know which way his priorities flew.
Br'sei inflated
himself,
rising just a
little
higher. "Truthfully, Ambassador?"
T'sha dipped her muzzle.
Br'sei did not look at her. He watched the wind in front of them.
They were fully on the dayside now. The wind was clear and smelled only
faintly of ash and acid. "Truthfully, I wish you both would go back to
your cities and leave us alone to do our work. If the New People don't
like what we're doing, they can protest, and we can sort it all out
with them." Only then did he cock his head toward her. "But I'm not
likely to find this wish returning to me, am I?"
"No," said T'sha, deflating. "I'm sorry."
"I believe that you are." An air pocket dropped them both down.
Br'sei recovered smoothly and sailed on. "I believe that you would
leave this all alone if you could. I believe that you are like me. You
want to do your work and go your way knowing your family is safe, now
and forever." He wheeled in front of her so that T'sha had to pull
herself up short. They faced each other, hovering, eye to eye, wing to
wing, exactly matching in size and height. "Am I right, Ambassador?"
T'sha dipped her muzzle.
Br'sei deflated, breath and energy flowing out of him together.
T'sha wondered how long it had been since he refreshed, since he had
been home, since he had flown with his own family. Who were they? She
didn't know, and her ignorance shamed her.
"Tell me what I can do to help you, Ambassador," he said.
So many responses filled T'sha at that moment that she did not know
which to choose. She was almost grateful when her camera tapped her
postarm, interrupting her. She looked down and she saw only crust,
wrinkled, rust red and yellow here for the most part.
But what was that dark spot that crept forward so slowly?
All but forgetting Br'sei, T'sha dropped down for a better look.
From the taste of the air, she knew Br'sei followed her flight.
As she descended, the speck resolved into one of the New People's
transports crouched on the crust directly below her.
She was about to rise again, automatically, to avoid detection when
the transport flashed a bright light.
Startled, T'sha fanned her wings. The transport crawled a little
northward, then stopped.
"What are they doing in there?" Without waiting for an answer, T'sha
dropped down a little closer, even though the pressure became
uncomfortable this near to the crust.
The transport crawled away a little further and stopped.
T'sha stretched her wings and flew until she was almost directly
over the transport again.
It crawled out from under her, and T'sha flew after it. It kept
going.
"They want us to follow." Br'sei's words startled her with their
light touch.
He was right. They were trying to reach out. They wanted her to come
with them, somewhere. A thrill of fear and eagerness ran through her.
The New People were trying to talk to her. Was her particular person in
there? The one who had stood so still, watching her during the rescue?
Was this her doing?
"Br'sei." She turned to him, now knowing what he could do to help,
although it was a long way from what she'd initially believed she would
say. "I need you to go back to base. Don't tell anyone what you've seen
here."
"Why not?" he asked mildly.
T'sha looked back over her wing at him. "Because it is possible
there will be some objection to what I am going to do next, and I don't
want to be stopped."
Br'sei held himself still. "What are you going to do?"
"Find out what the New People want." T'sha did not wait to see if he
moved or not. She gave her will up to the wind and let it propel her.
The transport saw her movement and began creeping forward again.
T'sha flew directly over the transport, working hard to keep herself
from getting ahead of it. They moved so slowly, these New People,
creeping across the folds and ripples of the crust. What was that like
to feel the crust constantly under your hands? To know its composition
and texture as intimately as any of the People knew the winds?
Curiosity spurred her forward, accompanied by a childlike fear that
someone would see her and stop her game.
One of the living highlands approached, thickening the air with its
scents, making T'sha's skin quiver reflexively with the anticipation of
rich life, although there was none to absorb. The transport underneath
her skirted the highland carefully as if afraid to get too close. Maybe
they were. Frozen as cold as they were, who knew what the heat of a
highland meant to them?
Beyond the highland, the crust was a tapestry of trenches and ragged
valleys. In a small, irregular cup cut by some ancient lava pool
waited another transport. The transport she'd been following pulled up
beside its twin and stopped.
T'sha stayed where she was, and so did they. Immobile. Waiting. For
what?
"Camera, descend and report," she said in the command language.
The camera extricated itself from her posthand and closed its
umbrella. It dropped down until T'sha lost sight of it against the
blacks and grays of the old lava flows. She banked in a slow circle,
forcing herself to be patient.
At long last, the camera, its umbrella open, began to rise again.
Abandoning caution, T'sha dropped to meet it. She grasped it in both
forehands, turning it over until its replay eye faced her.
"Show me," she ordered.
In the bowed reflection of the eye, she saw the transports, standing
still and patient. She saw a clear box, very like an isolation box,
sitting on the crust. It was connected by tubes and wires to one of the
transports. A low, perfectly straight, silver tunnel also connected it
to a slight rise in the crust.
As she looked closer, she saw that inside the box was a sphere, and
inside the sphere… was a New Person, rendered in shades of red.
It wasn't the bulky, shelled creature she'd seen walking around, but
those had been protective coverings of some kind. No, this was a New
Person, stripped to their essence, or nearly so.
It was a biped. Its torso was not so angular as the protective
covering made it look. Its skin was soft, and it looked to be wearing
some gentle skins or cloths. It had hands, a head, and, unmistakably,
eyes. They were small, almost alarmingly so in that flat face, but
those were indisputably eyes, looking out at her. It had one forehand
raised up. In greeting? Perhaps. Why not?
Underneath the New Person's feet were more images, also all in red.
Why red? Could they see no other color? T'sha ordered the camera to
concentrate on the lower images. The surroundings vanished as the
camera recalled what she needed.
The first image was discreet clusters of shining balls. One, two,
three, five, seven. Interesting. Communication through numbers? Maybe.
A good idea. How could the New People know how much she knew about
them? Numbers were concrete, hard to mistake, and easy to understand.
She chuckled to herself. Oh, clever, New People!
The second image was another sphere. Inside it glowed a star, with
its surrounding planets. Despite the strangeness of it being
represented in red and white, she recognized it instantly. Of course.
The New People had eyes. They would see as the People did and create
images they could recognize. This was the New People's star system,
with their world picked out in a red-and-white swirl, orbiting just
beyond New Home.
It was as clear as the air around her, as alive as a wind from the
highlands. The New People did want to communicate. They really were
reaching out. She could not refuse them.
"Mustn't be rude, after all." She told her headset to send her voice
on to the base and find Ambassador D'seun.
Silence descended while D'seun was located. T'sha looked at the
camera's image again and at the New Person raising their hand. Did they
name themselves? What was this one called? Was it male or female? Some
other gender T'sha had no name for? Was it the one she had spent so
much time staring at? What did it think when it looked at her? She
wanted to know everything immediately. The necessity of waiting made
her itch.
"Ambassador T'sha, where are you?" came D'seun's voice. If his voice
was anything to go by, he was puffed up with anger again.
She gave him her coordinates, and from the resounding silence, she
knew he recognized them. She said nothing. She waited for him to ask.
"What are you doing there?"
"I was led here. The New People are trying to communicate."
Silence again. T'sha chose to interpret it as stunned disbelief.
"This is significant," said D'seun dryly.
"Yes it is. I need you and yours to gather together everything
you've got on how the New People communicate so we can find a way to
answer them."
"What… we…" he stammered.
T'sha swelled, although there was no one there to see. "We can delay
this no longer, D'seun. I know you have been observing the New People
closely for a long time now. I've seen your specialized constructors."
She looked down at the waiting transports and their viewing station.
"The New People have tried to speak with us and are waiting for us to
make some kind of reply. I will not disappoint them. You can help, or
you can force me to tell the Law Meet about exactly who here has
overstepped their commission."
Stillness and silence. The wind buffeted T'sha, urging her to motion.
"How did they try to communicate?" he asked, finally. His voice was
small and tight, as his body was right now, T'sha was sure.
"Visually. They have created a display with images." The detail was
very fine for all its lack of color. She could see the New People had
five fingers on each hand, that they had crests of fine, long tendrils
on their heads, that the elbows of their forearms bent in two, maybe
three places, depending on how you counted.
"Effective. We're not certain they hear as we do, but they can see
the same wavelengths we do." She heard the rustle of movement. "They
have a written language. We have been working on deciphering it and
have made great progress, we think."
"Good," she said firmly. "Then you can come and interpret."
"T'sha, we must report this to the Law Meet."
"As soon as we have something to report we will. We must address
them now. They are waiting for us."
Yet another silence. "You are pleased with this, aren't you?"
T'sha hesitated, clutching the camera a little too tightly. It
squeaked, and she eased her grip at once. "It is what I wanted, yes. I
am not pleased with how I've gotten it. You must come here now, D'seun."
She heard him whistle, low and disapproving, but in the end he said,
"Very well. We will be there soon. Good luck, Ambassador T'sha."
"Good luck, Ambassador D'seun." The connection died, and she was
left alone with the New People waiting below her.
Vee sat in the copilot's chair on board Scarab Three, which looked
exactly the same as Scarab Five. Helen Failia sat in the pilot's chair
as if it were the most natural place in the world for her to be. Adrian
Makepeace and a woman named Sheila Whist had brought them down, but
they were both in the back now, running diagnostics and suit checks and
generally keeping themselves out of the way.
Through the main window, Vee watched the sheltered holotank with its
trio of images—her own picture, taken from her image gallery, a set of
prime numbers, and a miniature of the solar system with Earth
highlighted. She'd been frustrated by the lack of color, but lasers
were, by definition, monochromatic, and if they were going to make the
one-week deadline, they had to work with what was available.
The tank connection was one of the biggest jury-riggings she'd ever
built. The lasers' beams had been directed out of the Discovery through
two ceramic-metallic tunnels. One for writing, one for display. The
display screen consisted of some of her best films on a refrigerated
platform between slabs of doped quartz.
It looked like somebody had set up a view screen in the middle of a
desert.
The pressure wasn't the real problem. Years of oceanographic mining
had resulted in the creation of pressure-resistant materials and
provided collateral research on the effect of pressure on a whole world
of substances. The real problem was the heat.
The entire communications station had to be constructed so it wouldn't
vaporize out there.
"How are we doing?" came Josh's voice through the intercom. He and
his assistants, Ray and Heather, were down in the Discovery with the
laser, making sure the Cusmanoses' machine worked and stayed working.
"No change." Vee craned her neck so she could see the circling
black dot the scarab's cameras showed as a sparkling, golden, winged
alien. Vee had wanted to fly the scarab straight to their base and get
them to follow along, but Helen had nulled out that idea. She worried
the aliens might take it as a threat or a challenge of some kind. So
Scarab Ten had gone out on the ground and flashed lights.
It had worked, though. One of the aliens followed Scarab Ten back
from wherever they had found it. Then it had dropped a little jellyfish
down. The jellyfish had hovered over the holotank and shot back up to
its owner. Since then, the alien had stayed where it was, tracing
circles in the shifting, leaden sky.
Waiting.
"How are things down there?" Vee asked Josh, to keep the
conversation going. Waiting and watching were starting to get to her.
She oscillated between wonder and an involuntary fear that she couldn't
make go away.
This kind of thing is tough on the sensitive
artist's stomach.
"No change here either," answered Josh. "But I'll tell you what. If
we're going to keep this up, we need to terraform this room. I've got
sand in my eyes."
"Ouch." Vee grimaced in sympathy. Not being able to touch your own
skin was definitely a design limitation in the hardsuits, and when
Josh had locked himself into his, there had been bags under his eyes.
Neither one of them had gotten a full night's sleep for a week.
They'd spent the entire time in his lab trying to find ways to make
this work. They had cannibalized half-a-dozen survey drones and
simulated eight different kinds of protective covers and cooling
systems before they found one that looked like it would work.
Their setup was that it not only had to function under conditions
that were literally hellish, but it also had to be flexible. They had
to be able to write and rewrite the images and do it quickly with
minimal help from a computer. They had put so much work into the
hardware that there had been little left for the controlling software.
Vee would be typing in most of the commands by hand and most of those
commands were recorded nowhere but in her own head.
There were going to be so many bugs to work out of this system that
it wasn't funny. The biggest was that the whole lash-up was computer
controlled from inside the scarab. How would the aliens be able to
answer?
"Let me know when you're going to start making demands on this
thing," said Josh. "I am not happy about some of these connections."
"Will do," Vee told him. Josh had a camera of his own down there. He
could see what was going on. He just wanted some contact. Vee couldn't
blame him. In fact, she was kind of glad.
"Coffee?" Dr. Failia asked Vee, reaching for the thermos stowed in
the holder on the pilot's chair.
"No thanks," said Vee. "I'm wound up so tight right now I think
caffeine would tear me in two."
And you didn't think to stock any
tea for the trip, did you? Where are your priorities, Vee?
"Ah, youth." Helen unscrewed the thermos and poured herself a cup.
"You need to learn to relax."
Josh chuckled on the other side of the intercom. "Forgive me for
saying so, Dr. Failia, but the only reason you're offering around the
coffee is because you can't stand to sit in silence anymore."
"Tact," said Helen, sipping a cup of the thick, black liquid, "is
another thing that comes with age."
Vee smiled. Josh had a good sense of humor, and he could dish it out
and take it with equanimity. She liked that. She liked him. It felt
good. He'd gotten out of her way like an old pro when her ideas had run
ahead of her explanations and she'd just typed furiously, bringing the
simulation up to speed, or had raged, unfairly, she knew, against his
lab preparation because
they didn't have the specialty parts she needed.
Good guy. Steady. A friend. Just what they'd need when…
A dark blur flew over the volcano's rim.
"Heads up." Vee leaned forward, squinting at the sky and ignoring
the camera. "They're coming in."
The kite rode ahead of the winds, guided by a competent mind. T'sha
resisted the urge to turn loops in the sky to say "Over here, over
here." They knew where she was, and they were heading there at full
speed.
"We will meet down beside the transports, T'sha," D'seun said
through her headset.
T'sha whistled her assent.
The dirigible slowed its forward progress and descended toward the
crust. T'sha pulled in her wings and deflated, settling further and
further into the thickening air. There was no real wind this far down,
just faint strugglings in air that was so solid you could perch on it.
It was grossly uncomfortable, but T'sha had done plenty of deep work in
her time. She could accommodate herself to it.
The New People's transports still waited side by side. They made an
amazing amount of noise, all high squeals and long snores. But if they
were speaking to each other, T'sha could make no sense out of it. A
piercing metallic smell surrounded them, reminding T'sha sharply of the
scents in the World Portal complex.
D'seun launched himself from the dirigible's gondola, leaving
Br'sei, D'han, and P'tesk to drop the moorings and wrestle out the
toolboxes.
D'seun didn't even acknowledge T'sha. He flew straight to the New
People's display. He hovered around it for a long time, looking at the
images from every possible angle.
T'sha glanced at the transports. What were they doing in there right
now? Were they pleased? Bored? Worried?
"Grow the viewer," said D'seun to the engineers. "Make sure it faces
the transports, not this screen. I don't know if this thing can see."
The engineers flew to obey. While Br'sei tore open a dish of growth
medium, P'tesk opened the stasis cover on a box of seed crystals.
Br'sei laid the seeds into the jellylike medium. The seeds responded
instantly, fusing and replicating until the jelly swelled up out of its
dish, forming a glistening bubble. The bubble grew until it was nearly
the size of the New People's screen. P'tesk poured the neutralizer
into the dish. Br'sei rooted a works box onto the side, running through
the standard checks. The crystal was good. The medium was adequately
conductive. No flaws in structure.
D'seun, meanwhile, pulled two cortex boxes out of the portable
caretaker. He weighed them in his forehands and put one back. He laid
the one he selected onto the works box, letting its sensors reach into
the works and twine around the neural net. D'seun fanned his wings and
backed away.
He spoke rapidly in the cortex's command language. T'sha was not
surprised to find that she did not understand a word of it. The crystal
lit up and a set of symbols printed themselves across its surface.
D'seun looked toward the transports and the New People's screen.
"What are you saying?" asked T'sha.
"I am stating our purpose," D'seun said. His voice was slurred,
suspicious. "Now we will see what they will do."
* * *
Inside the scarab, they watched the aliens arrive, watched their
transmitter grow as if by magic, and saw bright-red letters coalesce
inside it.
WE SERVE LIFE.
Vee had to swallow before she could force any words out. "It
appears," she said slowly, "that they've been watching us a lot longer
than we've been watching them."
"So it would seem," agreed Josh. "Now what?"
Vee looked to Dr. Failia. The older woman had set her coffee down.
She watched the aliens, her hands on her knees, immobile and yet at
the same time incredibly alive. Every line of her body sang with
eagerness. She was looking out onto something magnificent.
Vee knew exactly how she felt. She thought of the portrait file
waiting in her briefcase. She'd have to start all over. She didn't do
their beauty, their grace, their sheer
otherness justice, not
by light-years.
Dr. Failia cleared her throat, coming back to the everyday
acknowledgment of her fellow human beings reluctantly.
"Well, since they're chatty, let's try the basics. Ask who they are."
"Cross your fingers over your connections, Josh." Vee's hands
hovered over the keys while she remembered how they had this all coded
in. Mentally crossing her own fingers for the solidity of their
improvisation, she typed in a set of commands. The introductory images
vanished and the holotank showed the words,
Who are you?
The aliens stayed as they were. Helen reached across the command
board and punched up the zoom on the camera. Now they could see the
muzzle moving on the smallest of the group.
The words shifted inside the glass bubble to read
The People.
"Well, that's helpful." Vee almost giggled. She swallowed. Too much
wonder obviously had similar effects on the human psyche as too much
fear. "First contact. Complicated stuff. How about I try a more
detailed question?" Without waiting for an answer, she typed in a new
set of commands. Their screen read:
I am Doctor Veronica Hatch. What is your name?
More conferring between the aliens. One of them, whose feathered
crest was mottled crimson and ivory, flapped its wings restlessly. The
smallest turned toward their screen and spoke again. More new words.
I am Ambassador D'seun
Te'eff Kan K'edch D'ai Gathad. With me
is Ambassador T'sha So Br'ei Taith Kan Ca'aed. We are ambassadors of
the High Law Meet of the People. We have with us our engineers and
assistants. Are there others with you? What is your purpose?
"Loaded question," said Josh.
Vee paused with her hands over the keyboard. "Can I ignore it?"
Helen raised her eyebrows. "I don't think so."
Vee nodded, chewed her lip thoughtfully, and typed.
With me are Doctor Helen Failia, Mister Adrian Makepeace, and
Miss Sheila Whist. In the underground chamber are Doctor Joshua Kenyon,
Mister Ray Sandoval, and Miss Heather Wilde. We are from Venera Base,
which is a research colony for the people of Earth. She added a
few extra commands. The pictorial diagram of the solar system
reappeared with arrows and labels.
"Now may not be the time to get fancy," remarked Helen.
"Now is exactly the time to get fancy," shot back Vee. "One picture,
one thousand words, you know? How are we doing down there, Josh?"
"It's green and go in here." His voice was both hushed and strained.
Vee could practically feel his excitement vibrating through the
connection.
The aliens flapped and hovered around the new scene shining in the
holotank. They came within centimeters of its quartz surface but never
actually touched it. Their control was incredible. Part of Vee's mind
was already designing the movement codes, trying to work out how to
show them to the rest of humanity.
The words in the alien's bubble changed.
Are you ambassadors? Do you speak for the New People?
Vee looked quizzically at Helen.
She puffed out her cheeks. Vee could almost hear her rehearsing
different answers. "I don't think we do." She sounded slightly
disappointed. "But we know who does."
We call ourselves human beings. No, we ourselves do not lead,
but we would like a message to take to our leaders. "Since I don't
think we can take them—" added Vee.
"You can be tactful after all," murmured Helen. "I'm impressed,
Vee. Would you do me a favor, please, and get the big question out of
the way?"
"Right." Vee knew exactly what she was talking about. She typed and
the screen responded.
What are you doing here?
We serve life, answered the aliens, no, the People.
Life
helps life.
This time Vee didn't bother to check with Helen. She just typed.
We don't understand.
Three of the People had retreated from the screen. They perched in
the contraption of sails, struts, and cables that had brought them
here. It looked like a cross between a box kite and the old Wright
brothers' airplane. Smallest, Ambassador D'seun, etc., and
Crimson-and-Ivory remained by the bubble, which probably meant
Crimson-and-Ivory was Ambassador T'sha, etc.
The ambassadors seemed to be having a discussion. They leaned close
together, muzzles almost brushing each other. As they spoke, their
bodies swelled and shrank. Was that their breathing? Or a way of
showing emotion? Dominance maybe? Even this far down, where the light
was gray instead of clear, they sparkled. The black lines on their
bodies and muzzles stood out sharply. Maybe they were tattoos. Wouldn't
that be a good one? If what humans had in common with aliens was body
art?
A decision seemed to have been reached. D'seun spoke to T'sha and
then the screen. Their spherical screen relayed the words.
We wish only community and cohabitation with the life of this
world.
"Oh, my," murmured Vee. She typed.
You are colonizing?
D'seun pulled his muzzle back momentarily before he spoke again.
We do not know that word.
Vee considered a moment. Definitions had never been her strong suit.
She was aware of someone standing close behind her, of warm breath on
her ear. She typed.
You are moving People here? You are going to live here?
Yes.
"Oh, my." Vee's hands went suddenly cold.
Helen touched her shoulder. "I think it's time to bring in the U.N."
"Yeah," said Vee slowly. "I think you might be right."
"I'll go back up with Scarab Ten." Dr. Failia straightened up.
"I'll contact Mother Earth myself. Ms. Yan should be able to call
together an emergency meeting with the C.A.C."
Vee turned to look at her. "Shouldn't this go straight to the
Secretaries-General?"
"Bureaucracy will have its way." Helen's smile was humorless. Vee
watched her eyes. She was calculating something, planning, working the
variables. "It will get to them soon enough."
"Whatever you say," Vee said with a shrug. That was not her field,
and she didn't particularly want it to be. "What should we do here?"
Helen was silent for a moment. She watched the People, hovering like
living kites out in what Vee knew Helen thought of as her world. "Keep
them talking."
* * *
"Dr. Lum gave me permission to visit the Cusmanoses," said Grace to
the security guard outside Kevin Cusmanos's door. She held out the
screen slip with Michael's authorization and seal on it.
"Right, Dr. Meyer," said the very thin, very brown man. "You can
head on in." He touched the override pad.
The suite door swished open. Kevin looked up, startled, from his
seat at the dining table. Derek was sitting in a strangely
forlorn-looking chair in front of where the desk used to be. They'd
hauled all the communications equipment out
in preparation to turn Kevin's home into a cell. It had
been Ben, of all people, who had talked Michael out of keeping them
locked
in Venera's minuscule brig.
"They're going to be manhandled by the yewners soon enough," he'd
argued. "Let's at least let them wait
for it in comfort."
"Hello, Kevin. Hello, Derek." Grace held up the pair of brown
bottles she carried. "Brought you some beer."
"Thanks." Kevin got up to the take the bottles from her. He'd
changed over the past week. It was as if the fire had gone out inside
him, leaving behind nothing but cold resignation. Grace thought she
knew the cause. Whatever he thought about the Discovery and how it came
to be, Kevin believed heart and soul that he deserved to be punished
for what had happened to Scarab
Fourteen.
Grace turned her attention to Derek, who hadn't moved since she came
in.
"Hello, Derek," said Grace again, gently.
Derek did not respond.
Kevin eyed her uneasily, but she waved him away. "It's all right,
Kevin. I don't blame him. He's angry." Grace sighed. "I'm sorry you got
caught up in this, Kevin."
Kevin just slumped into his chair at the dining table. "It was my
fault."
She nodded. "Among others. We were all in danger. There was so much
to lose… at the time it seemed like a good idea."
If either of you
knew how long, how hard I tried to find another way, you'd understand
how desperate the situation really was. I tried everything else first.
It was the only way. "I got so damn tired of being ignored."
"Ignored?" Derek looked up. Sudden, raw hatred filled his eyes.
"That's why you talked me into this? Because you didn't want to be
ignored?"
And you just didn't want to lose your job, you spoiled child.
She didn't say it. "Seems pretty stupid now that we've got real live
aliens to talk to. No one's going to give a damn that I spotted their
traces first."
"Well that's just too bad," growled Derek.
"Okay, Derek," said Kevin wearily. "You can't blame her for what you
did."
"The hell I can't!" Derek snapped. He stabbed a finger at Grace. "It
was her idea! If she hadn't—"
Kevin stood up slowly. His brother matched him for height, but
Kevin's shoulders were far broader. He loomed over the smaller man.
"You didn't have to do one damn thing," Kevin told him slowly. "She
didn't have a gun to your head. You did this, and I did this. We got
caught, and Bailey Heathe got killed because of us!"
"Because of you," grated Derek. "Don't try to bring that one down on
me!"
Grace stepped between them, putting her back to Kevin before he
could react. "My lawyers will get you out of this," she told Derek
firmly. "You and your brother."
"They'd better." Derek didn't take his gaze off his brother, but he
backed up a few paces. "Because we are not going to rot in a jail on
Mother Earth alone, understand me?"
"You will not go to jail." Grace turned a little so she could see
them both. "I'd better go. Kevin, try not to worry. It'll all be okay."
Kevin looked from Derek to her. "I hope you're right, Dr. Meyer."
Neither of them said goodbye. Grace walked out. Her stomach
knotted up on her as she passed the guard stationed on the door and
started down the busy residential corridor.
They would not go to prison. Grace watched her own feet as she
headed for the stairs. They would drink the beer she'd brought,
tonight, or perhaps tomorrow. They'd drain all the bottles contained.
Then, sometime within the next week, they'd die. By then they'd have
eaten over a dozen meals and their buddies from the scarab crews would
have brought them at least as many beers. The traces in their guts
would make it appear that they had died of severe food poisoning. Her
bottles would have long since been recycled and it would be next to
impossible to say where the contagion had come from. The kitchens and
food processors would have a bad week while they were turned upside
down, but that couldn't be helped.
Organic chemistry was useful for so many things.
No, Derek and Kevin would not go to jail. There was so much work to
be done. No one would ignore her anymore; no one would tell her that
her work might reflect badly on Venera as a whole. There was one person
left who might connect Grace's name to the fraud, but that one had so
much to lose that she would not risk it. Grace was certain of that.
Grace lifted her head as she started up the stairs and found she
could meet the gazes of the people she passed quite easily.
There was important work to do. She had to be free to do it.
Contents -
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Chapter Thirteen
Ben paced his office, trying to be patient. He had one of the few
private spaces on the administrative level. The dampeners in the walls
meant he couldn't hear the continual buzz and bustle going on outside.
Sometimes he dropped them. He liked being around people. He did not
like being shut up and alone, but there were things for which he needed
privacy.
Like the transmission he was waiting for.
The office did have a real window, allowing him to see the
cloudscape with its continual whorls and ripples and flashes of
lightning. So different from Mars or the Moon. Those were static
worlds. What motion there was, humans brought. Venus though… Venus was
alive in its own right. It still had a beating heart under its
volcanoes, and it still shifted and shrugged its crust, even without
plate tectonics.
He could have spent his life studying this place. He could have
given himself up to the world the way Helen had if there hadn't been
other considerations.
He glanced back at his gently humming desk. Anyone running a
systems sweep would think he was busy processing satellite data with
the new criteria of observing the aliens (Holy God, those aliens!) and
their artifacts. What he was actually doing was looking for a
transmission signature. When his scanner found it, the transmission
would be routed straight to the desk without having to go through
Venera's usual exchanges and checks.
It wasn't something he liked to do very often. Michael and Michael's
people were very good at what they did. Trying to get
around their security measures
was a chancy
business at best.
Venera was alive with activity, speculation, and wonder. Everybody
wanted their chance to go meet the neighbors. Michael was going to have
to forcibly restrain Grace before long. They tried to tell her the
board's consensus was that there should be only a limited contact team.
Just for now, of course, until a good understanding had been
established with the People.
Ben shook his head. They couldn't tell her the real reason only one
scarab was being kept down there. He'd guessed at that reason and had
told Helen his guess in private. Her silence had been enough to tell
him he'd guessed correctly.
The Venerans needed to talk to the aliens. They needed as much
information as they could get. Every bit of information they controlled
was an edge on the C.A.C. But if anybody made a damning mistake, they
needed to be able to say to the U.N., "It was your people who did that,
not ours."
For the first time in a long time, he'd agreed absolutely with
Helen's strategy.
His desk chimed. Ben was beside it in two long strides. The screen
cleared and Frezia Cheney looked out at him.
"Paul." It had been so long since he'd used that name on a regular
basis that it felt as if she were talking to some stranger. "Your
word's been spread. Much to the chagrin of the yewners, may I add."
Mischief sparkled in her eyes for a moment and then faded away.
"I hate to have to say this, but no one else is even close to ready
for a succession attempt, distractions or paradigm shifts
notwithstanding. They're going to have to let the chance pass. We're
feeling the loss of Fuller here. There's no unifying voice anymore.
There's no one person to talk to." She paused and shook her head. "The
demo at the shipyard hasn't even managed to unite the Lunars."
Ben grimaced. That "demo" had been a stupid idea. When he'd caught a
whiff of what was being planned, he—or Paul, rather—had protested to
everyone he could and had been ignored.
But apparently he was not being ignored anymore. "I think uniting us
is up to you, Paul. The only way the wave is going to
rise is if Venera takes the place of Bradbury and makes the break. With
an example to follow, the squabblers will be able to shut up and drive,
if you see what I mean." Her mouth twisted into an ironic smile, but
her eyes still gleamed. "It's not that men make history; history makes
men. If you can show us the way, we can still free the worlds."
The message faded out. Ben, moving more on reflex than any conscious
thought, wiped the file and the record of receipt. Then he released a
search agent into the system to see if there were any ghosts or records
he'd forgotten and wipe them too.
The only way this is going to work is if Venera takes the place
of Bradbury and makes the break. Ben sat back and ran one hand
across his scalp.
If you can show us the way it can still happen.
If you can show us the way.
Alone? Venera alone? Without help, without friends; at least,
without friends who had declared themselves. Once they broke, they
could maybe count on Bradbury and probably Giant Leap.
But then came the problem, the old, old problem. Mother Earth still
controlled the shipping between planets. The tacit threat had always
been that if any colony tried to become self-governing, Earth would
simply stop transports to and from the colony, isolating the world. No
food, no spare parts, no replacement personnel, nothing. Even Bradbury
with its mixed industry had felt the pinch after a while. How much
worse would it be for Venera? Venera manufactured nothing but research
reports. They could not survive alone.
But Venera wouldn't be alone. Ben straightened up, one muscle at a
time. Venera had neighbors. Neighbors who could fly from world to world
as easily as a yewner bureaucrat could fly from republic to republic.
More easily.
What if the Venerans set up one of their portals between Venus and
Mars? Between Luna and Venus? The colonists could move between the
worlds without any interference from Mother Earth. Earth's transport
and communications monopolies would be shattered. The one sure control
they held over the colonies would be gone.
If Venera could make a deal with the aliens. If it were Venera that
spoke, not the U.N.
If it were Venera that spoke.
Venera, meaning Helen. Ben stared out at the clouds. Helen would
never abandon the U.N. To do so would mean abandoning Yan Su, who had
stood by her for so long.
No. He corrected his thoughts.
Helen would never
betray the U.N. unless the U.N. betrayed her, betrayed Venera, first.
If that happened, all bets were off. Helen would do anything she had
to so that Venera would survive and be free to do its work with its
people free to live their lives. She'd even make a deal with aliens.
An idea formed in his mind, one slow thought trickling into his
consciousness at a time.
There was a way. He held it in his hands. He stood a very good
chance of pushing Helen over the edge. All he had to do was lie to the
U.N. about what she knew and when she knew it.
Ben leaned back in the chair as far as it would let him and scrubbed
his face with both hands.
All he had to do was be the one who really betrayed Helen.
He'd been on Luna when he met Helen. He'd successfully left the name
Paul Mabrey behind and found work as a geologist for Dorson Mines,
Inc. As such, he supervised more databases than humans, analyzing rock
and soil samples and looking for useful deposits. It was a job. It
bought food and shelter and paid the taxes so he could breathe and
drink, but it meant nothing.
He'd been in one of the public caverns. He'd just bought coffee and
fry cakes for breakfast. He'd been sitting on a hard little chair,
staring at the walls and thinking how much he missed the Bradbury
gardens. The Lunars had covered their gray rock with vines. Morning
glories and wild grapes made a living wallpaper and warred with the
rambler roses and raspberries in providing color and scent. Pretty,
but not the gardens. Empty, second-rate. Cheap. Like his job. Like him.
"Dr. Godwin?"
He looked up. A woman stood by his table, plainly dressed in a blue
blouse and matching trousers. Her graying hair was bundled into a knot
and pinned in place with wooden pins. Her eyes sparkled and
her entire attitude said she knew why she was alive.
"Yes?" said Ben, wracking his brain to see if he should know her.
"I'm Helen Failia. I've been looking for you. I need a geologist
who knows comparative planetology and volcanology." She dropped into a
spare chair without asking. "For Venera Base on Venus."
"Oh?" was all Ben could think to say. Venera was half-built,
half-occupied, and some said half-baked. It was a pure-research colony,
the first in decades. No one believed it could last. The science
currents predicted its death year after year. But somehow, Venera never
quite laid down.
"Our staff is thinning out. We need to get some fresh blood in.
Someone who can dig hard into the work." Which told him why her staff
was thinning out. She didn't have the money to pay them what the mining
companies could. Which also explained why she was willing to recruit
someone who only had a few, very obscure papers to his credit. Papers
he'd spent the past three or so Terran years carefully salting through
the stream. Helen, he would learn, always had an eye open for a good
bargain. "I've read your credentials. Your postdoctoral work is
brilliant. You've got an eye for the unusual, and you don't mind hard
work. Which is perfect for Venus." She didn't just smile; she beamed.
Ben couldn't help thinking of Ted Fuller. On a good day, when things
were going well, Ted radiated the same light.
Ben drank his bitter, cooling coffee, trying to sort out his
thoughts. This was definitely not what he'd been expecting to hear this
morning. He'd been expecting another day of trying to convince himself
he'd made the right decision, that this life really was better than the
one he'd abandoned, or would be very soon.
"Venus is open territory," said Helen, leaning on her elbows. "You
can't throw a stone without hitting something new. You'll have complete
freedom to direct the research. Anything you want to look at, it's
yours."
Risky. It had the chance to bring him to public attention, and
public attention could be the end of the line for someone hiding
behind an alias.
He looked at the coffee in his cup. He looked at the vines covering
the gray walls. He looked at the people around the table—miners,
students, engineers, all buzzing about in their separate lives like
bees and meaning about as much to him. He looked back at Helen, and in
her dark eyes, he suddenly saw some hope. Hope of a real life, a better
life, one with meaning and purpose to replace the purpose that had been
ripped from him by the yewners and their troops.
"I'd have to hear about the base," he said slowly. "The facilities,
the package you're offering, and so on."
"Of course." Helen picked up his coffee cup, sniffed its contents,
and made a face. "But first you have to get some real coffee. On me.
Come on."
He'd followed her without question. Into the Lunar coffee bar, down
to Earth, out to Venus. He'd followed her for twenty years through
funding fights, mission fights, personnel fights, and charter fights.
Ben swiveled his chair and watched the clouds outside the window.
They swirled and flowed together like his thoughts. They had
predictable currents, he knew, and if you worked long enough, you could
map their movements and understand how each little particle fit into
the greater flow.
He'd never even tried to tell Helen about what had really happened
to him all those years ago. Helen would not have understood that what
they were doing on Mars was real, even more real than the research, or
building Venera into a sustainable colony that would outlive both of
them. What really mattered was shaking off Earth's grip. What mattered
was freedom. Right now, Mother Earth could tell them to do anything,
anything, and they'd have to do it. They had no choice. Mother Earth
owned them, their lives, and their homes. Helen never saw it that way.
Helen thought she called the shots. Helen thought she was in control.
She wasn't. Mother Earth was bigger, more forceful, and more
determined than even Helen Failia.
Ben turned back around to face his
desk again and started typing.
Helen had to be shown the truth.
* * *
"Good luck, Ambassador D'seun," said K'est as D'seun glided through
its windward gate. "Ambassador Z'eth is in the public park. She asks
that you meet her there."
"Thank you, K'est." D'seun flew swiftly toward the park. He
struggled to keep his senses open to the dying city—the bare bones, the
air rich with forced nutrients, yes, but also filled with desperation.
A thin veneer of life that was all that lay between K'est and true
death, and all the citizens knew it.
This is what I fight for, he told himself.
We must
prevent any more living deaths like these.
D'seun's first impression of the public park was that it was bigger
than his whole birth village had ever been. Bone, shell, ligament,
vine, and tapestry outlined a roughly spherical labyrinth of arches,
corridors, and pass-throughs. Flight became a dance, here. Wind became
song, and the voice of the city guided him through it all.
"What am I interrupting here?" asked D'seun as he gave himself up
to the drafts of the wind-guides and let them carry him through a
corridor of story tapestries.
"Ambassador Z'eth has called a hiring fair," replied K'est.
D'seun dipped his muzzle. Such things had been rare once, but with
the massive numbers of refugees and indentures that circled the world,
the ones who held the promises were gathering more and more frequently
to review the skills they held promise to, and to exchange those skills
and the persons to better serve the cities and the free citizens.
Conversations touched D'seun at every turn, about medicines, about
refugee projections, and the health of the canopy. Adults and children,
both free and with the hatchmark of indenture between their eyes,
passed him on every side. Tentacled constructors and spindly,
broad-eyed clerkers trailed in their wakes.
Finally, the wind-guides opened out into a pearlescent chamber that
could have easily held two or three hundred adult females. The voices
of a quartet rang pleasantly off its walls. Here and there, clusters of
ambassadors and speakers hovered, deep in conversation with each other.
The archivers hovered in their own clusters, off to the side, waiting
until they were needed.
Z'eth herself was easy to spot. She drifted from cluster to cluster.
She'd listen to a conversation for a moment and then move on to the
next. D'seun could not feel any words from her. She just listened.
Good. Perhaps she'll just listen to me.
Perhaps the city spoke to Z'eth, or perhaps she was just waiting for
him, because as he flew through the portal, Z'eth lifted her muzzle and
rose above the conversation where she hovered. D'seun flew quickly to
her, deflating just enough to make sure his eyes were below hers.
"Good luck, Ambassador Z'eth," he said as they touched hands. "Thank
you for agreeing to see me. Please accept a guesting gift, which I
found on my journeys." As he spoke the formal words, he held out a
palm-sized eyepiece. It lifted from his palm and hovered between
himself and Z'eth. Inside, a delicate, biped drawn in shades of red
raised her hand in greeting.
"Lovely!" exclaimed Z'eth. "One of your New People, is it not?"
"It is, Ambassador." He did not even attempt to pronounce the name
they called themselves by. "They are what I have come to speak with you
about."
Z'eth lifted herself and closed her right forehand around the
eyepiece. "The members of the High Law Meet speak of nothing else.
Their cogent method of contact with Ambassador T'sha has convinced many
that they are a whole, sane people and should be treated as such."
"I wish to urge you, Ambassador Z'eth, to believe no reports from
Ambassador T'sha and her followers." D'seun spoke earnestly, but
softly. The touch of his words was for Z'eth only. "I see the
tapestries they weave to show the New People as whole beings, complete
in intellect and soul who live intricate lives and wish to exist with
us in community." He swelled as far as he dared. "This is not true.
They do not know even the first
principles of life. Community with them is impossible."
Z'eth's crest ruffled and spread. She touched her muzzle to his, and
D'seun felt all her gentle mockery. "You are so certain, Ambassador,
you must have been paying close attention to them."
"Very close, Ambassador." What did it matter what she knew? Either
he would succeed, in which case she would be with him, or he would
fail. If he failed, nothing else mattered. New Home and Home would both
be lost.
"Your attention has been closer, I think, than your commission
allowed, and for much longer," Z'eth went on.
"Yes," agreed D'seun. He had been supposed to supervise the seeding
of the world and leave. He had left, but when he had returned for a
monitoring stint, he had left behind some special tools. Each
monitoring stint after that had brought him new data. He had all but
mortgaged his future for the analysis of it.
"And you have shared none of this illicit information with the Law
Meet?" Z'eth inquired. "How discreet of you. Why have you kept this to
yourself?"
"At first, I feared T'sha and those like her would fear the New
People." He aimed his words right at Z'eth, not wanting her to miss a
single one. "So I kept what I knew a secret until I knew how the New
People could be controlled or eliminated." Preferably eliminated. New
Home had to be kept pure for life the People created and understood.
"But, instead, she has fallen in love with them and their dead things."
"Are you so sure they need to be controlled?" For the first time,
the mockery left Z'eth's voice. "Why not let them flourish beside us?"
Revulsion crawled across D'seun's skin. "You do not know,
Ambassador. They surround themselves with death. They bring nothing
living with them. Their homes are dead, their shells are dead, even
their tools are dead. They are ghouls, Ambassador, billions of ghouls
who live in ignorance of even the basic ideas of spreading life. Can we
permit ghouls to wander the winds of New Home with our children?"
Z'eth pulled her muzzle back in thoughtful silence. D'seun held
himself still, trying to muster the patience to wait out her thoughts.
He could not rush her. She had influence that went beyond wealth. If he
could turn her from her patronage of T'sha, T'sha would be toppled.
Everything depended on this.
"Ambassador, I seek a promise from you."
"I assumed." Her crest spread out even further, as if it reached
toward every conversation and promise being exchanged in her dying
city. "And what would you pay for this promise?"
"My children, when they are born, will belong to your city on New
Home," said D'seun. "They will serve your city until they are adults."
It hurt to say it. It hurt to know that it had to be this way. He
had been indentured in his tenth year of life, when K'taith succumbed
to one of the first of the new rots. He had always sworn to the souls
of his unborn children that they would grow to adulthood free.
But he had to break that oath. He had nothing left to promise but
those children, whoever they were and whenever they would come to be.
He could not permit the New People to spread their death further across
New Home.
"A rich promise, and a risky one," Z'eth mused. "You may not find a
wife willing to go along with it."
"I will find a wife who will," said D'seun, firmly. He had to.
"You sound most determined." Z'eth dipped her muzzle. "What promise
do you want?"
"You will be elected to the Law Meet of New Home." D'seun drifted as
close to her as he could without touching her. "There is no question of
this. I have heard the proposed rosters in the Meet. Your name is on
every one. You will be the most senior of the ambassadors, the leader
there as you are the leader here. I ask that you promise to follow my
lead when we must determine the final disposition of the New People."
Z'eth swelled, just a little.
What are you thinking,
Ambassador? What future do you taste?
Her gaze drifted from him and passed over the shifting crowds that
filled this beautiful chamber in the center of her slowly dying city.
"Thank you for your promise, Ambassador," she said. "It is rich and
would bring my city benefit."
Hope swelled D'seun's skin; then he read the tilt of her head and
the spread of her wings and knew what was coming next.
"But even if I accepted," she pushed herself closer to him, "I could
make no guarantees of your success. T'sha is not the only one in love
with the New People. There are many in the High Law Meet who are
enchanted by their words. My influence is great, but I am not certain
it is that great."
"But, Ambassador." He thrust his muzzle forward, touching her skin,
breathing out his urgency with his words. She must understand, she
must. "We cannot predict them; we cannot understand or control them.
There must be nothing on New Home that we cannot control; otherwise
life will rebel against us and bring death and imbalance, as it has to
Home."
Z'eth backwinged sharply. "Ambassador, I think you have been too
long away from the temples to speak so. We serve life, and in return
life serves us. That is the way of it. Life does not attack us, nor do
we attack it."
Abandoning all caution, D'seun swelled to his fullest extent. "We
serve the life we know. We do not know the New People, or their life."
"You will calm yourself, Ambassador," murmured Z'eth. D'seun shrank
down instantly. Z'eth remained silent for awhile, and D'seun had to
concentrate on each small motion of his wings to keep himself in place.
"If I took your offer," she said softly, her words brushing so
lightly against his skin he had to strain every pore to feel them, "I
could promise only that I will vote with you regarding the disposal of
the New People on New Home. It could be no more than that."
Cautious, controlled, very Z'eth. It would be an expensive promise.
But Z'eth would not go into any such vote alone. Even if she exacted no
promises from the other members of the New Home Law Meet, her vote
would sway others yet unpromised.
And he might be able to swing a few votes himself, especially if he
could find a way to silence T'sha.
Was it enough to break his vow to his unborn children?
The New People will corrupt us. They will take our world from
us, as the rots have taken this world from us.
New Home must be for the People alone, or they would all die. He
hovered alone, surrounded by death and life, and he was the only one
who understood what it really meant.
His understanding had come to him the day his village, K'taith, had
died. He'd huddled under his mother's belly upwind of the village and
listened to the speaker and the ambassador telling them that the
village could no longer care for them. Its bones were too brittle; its
skin and ligaments could no longer heal themselves. Their presence was
hurting the village. It had asked for death, to be disassembled and
its few healthy parts put to use elsewhere. The vote would be taken to
see if the citizens would honor that wish, of course, but, said the
speaker and the ambassador, they could not believe that anyone who
loved the village would insist it continue in pain and helplessness it
could not bear.
The vote was taken, and all free adults voted to let their
village's suffering end. D'seun had just watched the discolored walls
and the limp, tattered sails. He felt the wind against his own skin.
The wind that fed him had killed the city and taken his freedom. He
knew that instinctively. Everyone knew what happened when their
village died.
He had seen it then. There was no balance. The life that killed his
home, his future, did not in any way serve him. The People were not
strong, they were weak. Life did not serve them; it hated them. It
planned against them in its wildness. It left no niche for the People
to fill. Life on Home was closed utterly to them.
Oh, he'd mimicked the proper words and ways of thought. He had no
wish to be declared insane, but he had known it all to be a lie.
Then he had spread his wings in the pristine winds of New Home and
he saw how it could be. Life built by the People, life that truly did
serve them because they laid down every cell and commanded how it
should be.
If they permitted death to flourish there, they would never create
this new balance. Life would once again cease to obey them and the
death the New People lived in would take them all.
He saw the truth. He tasted it. He touched it every day, but T'sha
remained numb and had convinced the others, even his hand-picked team
who had promised to him so freely.
And there was nothing he could do.
Was there?
If Ca'aed were ill, if a quick rot took hold there, T'sha would have
to see the truth. T'sha was not so far gone that she did not love her
city. She spoke of it with fondness and concern, despite her tricks
with Village Gaith.
Or if she would not see, at least she would no longer be able to
interfere. She was not Z'eth. Without the wealth of her city, her
ability to make promises would be gone, and with it her influence in
the High Law Meet.
No. D'seun huddled in on himself, glancing furtively around
the hiring fair as if his very thoughts could have touched those flying
past him.
This is insane. To take life, to give nothing back, to
treat life as raw materials (that did not happen, it did not. The New
Person was dead. Dead).
But if what I do ultimately serves life, our life? If T'sha's
resistance and lies are broken, the truth can be heard. The danger the
New People represent can be fully understood then. Yes. Yes. That is
the way it is, the way it will be.
There were so many ways a city might sicken, even a wise and ancient
city like Ca'aed. Especially when passing by a living highland when
the winds were so thick with life. Even the most careful of welcomers
and sail skins could miss something, say a few spores transferred from
a quarantine that was no longer life-tight? Such things happened every
day and could be made to happen again.
It serves life, for it allows the People themselves to live:
Yes. Yes.
Z'eth was waiting for his answer. Waiting for him to decide whether
her promise was worth the expense. It was. Oh, yes, it was. Life would
grow from death, and in that way life would serve life.
"Call us an archiver," he said to Z'eth, his words steady and
weighty. "I will accept this promise. My children will serve your city
if you follow my vote on the disposition of the New People on New Home."
* * *
The smell hit Michael first—the sour acidic reek that he could taste
in the back of his mouth. Then came the sight of Kevin and Derek, side
by side on the white beds with soiled sheets, surrounded by a battery
of monitors and tubes trailing limply into various injectors and
samplers, all of which sat in an eerie silence.
"Sorry to haul you out tonight, Michael." Antonio Dedues, Venera's
chief physician, stuffed his hands into the pockets of his traditional
white coat and didn't look at Michael. Antonio's gaze was on the
corpses in their beds with the useless, attendant machinery. "But
you've got to witness the death certificates."
Michael swallowed hard against the smell and found his voice. "What
happened?"
"It looks like food poisoning." Antonio came back to the present,
jerked his chin toward the doctor's station, and walked Michael away
from the sight. "Hey, can we get those two taken care of please?" he
called to Jimmy Coombs, one of the nurse practitioners, who was passing
by with a pile of screen rolls in his hands. Jimmy nodded and Antonio
continued gently herding Michael away from the unpleasantness,
something doctors got a lot of practice at, Michael was sure.
"Looks like?" said Michael, keeping his voice pitched low. He had no
idea who was in the infirmary right now.
"They both came in about three o'clock complaining of fever and
stomach cramps."
"I was notified."
Antonio nodded. "Symptoms got treated, and they got worse. Workup
got done and by then we had a massive systemic infection." Antonio
motioned him into the monitoring station. The place had so many
different monitors and command boards, it looked like mission control
for a major spaceport, and all the numbers and plots made about as much
sense to Michael.
"The infection all but ate the broad-spectrum stabilizer we gave
them while we were trying to isolate the bacteria and tailor an
antibiotic to hit it," said Antonio. "There's only so much we can keep
on ice around here." He frowned at the cabinets across the hall as if
he wanted to blame them for what happened. "We did find the bug and
get the antibiotics into them, but it was too late."
"But it wasn't food poisoning?" pressed Michael. He was still
reeling. They were dead. Dead of a simple bug, something that should
have been treatable in five minutes but wasn't. They had been good men,
they had been idiots, they had been friends, they had been criminals.
They were dead.
"If it was food poisoning, where are the other patients?" Antonio
swept his hand out. "We've shut down the galley level, of course, and
we're going through and doing a sanitary inspection. You got the call
on that too?"
Michael nodded.
"But nothing's turning up. We haven't got the autopsy yet, so I
can't say for sure what they've been eating, but from what your people
say, it wouldn't be anything that another couple hundred people hadn't
swallowed." Antonio looked up at him. "Do you want me to say it?"
No, and I don't want to say it either. "You think they were
poisoned."
Now Antonio nodded. His pockets bunched and wrinkled as he clenched
his fists. "By someone who was very smart and very stupid."
Michael waited. Poisoned? Murdered? Who… but he knew who. It was the
other person who had helped create the Discovery. They didn't want to
be implicated, so they'd killed the men. God! This was not something
that could happen. Not on Venera, not now. This was something out of
the twentieth century.
"Smart because they were able to successfully cultivate a strain of
bacteria we couldn't neutralize immediately. Stupid because in
conditions like Venera's, where the food comes from limited production
sources, there's never just two victims of a poisoning outbreak."
"How hard would it be to cook up this… bug?"
Antonio shrugged. "With access to a lab and a decent chemistry and
medical database and a strong stomach, not very."
"Strong stomach?"
Antonio's smile was watery. "Even the unprepared food the galley
sells has been sterilized eight ways to Sunday. The easiest place to
get bacteria from around here would be your own waste products."
Michael hung his head, torn between disgust and black humor. "I
should have thought."
"No you shouldn't," Antonio assured him. "Holy God knows I didn't
want to."
"Yeah." Michael lifted his gaze again. "Look, I'll need the autopsy
as soon as you can get it to me, okay?"
"Okay." Antonio glanced around at his monitors. "All this and we
still haven't got the immortality programs up and running. Grandma
Helen know yet?"
"Not yet." She knew about the galley quarantine, of course, but not
about the deaths. Mother Creation, she was already walking on the edge
with the C.A.C. meeting coming up. What was this going to do to her?
"I'll tell her."
I don't want to, but I will.
"Okay," said Antonio gratefully. "Thanks."
Michael left to the soft sound of Antonio's voice readying his
autopsy team to find out what exactly killed Derek and Kevin. He walked
down the corridors without really seeing them. The main lights were
dimming toward twilight. The base was on a twenty-four-hour Greenwich
time cycle, and now it was late in the summer evening.
Someone had deliberately committed a murder. This was not a fight,
not a horrified and angry somebody who didn't mean to do it, "I swear I
didn't…" No. This somebody meant to do it. They had decided and planned
and executed.
Now he had to tell Philip and Angela, and he had to tell Helen. He
had to tell the whole world, all the worlds, that Venera was spinning
out of control, that the arrival of aliens had made the place crazy,
but not in any of the ways people had feared since the possibility had
been raised all those hundreds of years ago. There were no riots, no
religious revivals, no barbaric, tribal displays of aggression.
No. Just murder. This really had nothing to do with the aliens
themselves. This had to do with petty, frightened humanity.
Michael stopped and rubbed his eyes. This was also nuts. Nuts. He
had his work to do. He looked up, got his bearings, and headed for the
staircase, the administrative level, and his desk.
It was midnight before he walked back through his own door. The
light was still on. Jolynn sat on the sofa in front of the living room
view screen, going over her endless series of teacher reports.
When she heard the door, she looked up and smiled, tired but
beautiful.
"How twentieth is this?" she said as she swung her legs down so he
could sit beside her. "The dutiful wife waiting for her husband to come
home?"
Michael didn't answer. He took her in his arms and held her close.
She returned the embrace, not speaking, just enveloping him with her
warmth, her fragrance of soap and lilacs, and the strength of her
presence.
"How bad is it?" she asked when he finally released her.
"Beyond bad." He pulled his cap off and tossed it on the end table.
He told her about Derek and Kevin, dead in the infirmary, how the
sanitary checks in the galley had turned up nothing, how he'd had to
seal their room, quiz the people on guard, write it all up, decide whom
to assign to the investigation, work out the announcement for general
release into the base stream, and then go tell Helen.
"What did she say?" Jolynn asked.
Michael felt his jaw begin to shake. "That's the worst part. I'm not
sure she heard me all that well. She was so… preoccupied with the
C.A.C. report." He ran both hands through his hair, pulling strands of
it free from the ponytail and not caring. "She basically told me to
handle it, and I'm not sure I can."
Jolynn said nothing.
"It's not that they're dead," he told her. "It's that they were
murdered by one of us. A Veneran, maybe even a v-baby. We've never had
anything worse than a bad bar fight, and that was ten years ago. People
come here to be safe. People come
back here to be safe, and
now…" His throat closed around the sentence. "Now, when the greatest
thing that has ever happened to humanity is happening to
us,
we're killing each other. How the hell did that happen, Jolynn?"
She took his hand in hers. "Because we're being human, and some of
us aren't very good at that." She stroked the back of his hand with her
palm, a gentle rhythm, distracting him from the swirl of his own
thoughts with the touch of her warm skin. "If we give into the belief
that we are somehow better than the general run of people, it's going
to chew us up and spit us out. That belief kills something vital,
because as soon as you start believing you're better, you have to start
proving everybody else is inferior. It makes you crazy."
"How would you know?" he joked tiredly.
"When I was on Earth, I went to the Baghdad ruins. Did you?"
Michael shook his head. "But you told me about them." Through her
memories he saw the rubble, the dust, the rats, and the starving dogs
nosing around the dust-gray skulls. He smelled the empty smell of
desert encroachment and heard her whisper, "Look on my works, ye
mighty, and despair."
"So I came back, to the world with the edges and the boundaries and
its own history and Grandma Helen to make sure we never went crazy like
human beings are wont to do from time to time." She shook her head.
"Wrong again."
Michael let his head fall back until he was staring at the ceiling.
"What do I do, Jolynn?"
"Your very best, my love," she said, enfolding him again in her
arms. "Your very best."
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Chapter Fourteen
Ca'aed first became aware of the wrongness as an itch. A small nerve
bundle at the base of one of its lower northwest sails (half-furled now
to keep the course smooth and steady) itched, not painfully but
persistently. Ca'aed concentrated on the patch. The air around it
tasted fine. A silent command sent a runner to the spot to ingest a few
cells and compare them with the healthy patterns it held inside.
Normally, Ca'aed would have just had the itch soothed by a caretaker,
but times were dangerous now and caution was indicated.
Another itch, this one deep and nagging in Ca'aed's digestive veins.
A small cramp formed around the itch.
Worry stroked Ca'aed's mind. What caretakers were in that area?
Ca'aed felt and Ca'aed looked.
"Indenture T'elen," said Ca'aed. "A review of the digestive veins
near you. There is a break in flow."
T'elen was responsive and competent. She bore her indenture well.
Ca'aed tried to take care of its indentures, make their servitude easy,
but some could not flow with their service. It understood, but it
needed indentured and free people to live, as the people needed their
city. All had to work together. Life served life.
Ca'aed watched T'elen as she located the swelling in the vein.
T'elen smelled it carefully, touched it gently, checked with the
interior antibodies, injected an anti-inflammatory, which eased the
cramp but not the itch, and removed some cells and antibodies from the
needle into a microcosm of her own design. Ca'aed knew T'elen hoped to
make some promises based on the new microcosms to shorten her
indenture and felt strangely pleased that its discomfort might help
prove their worth.
A sharp spark of pain cut through Ca'aed's primary thoughts. The
city isolated the spot. One of the sensor roots that tasted and tested
the canopy to find the best harvest points. A blister swelled painfully
on the outer skin, squeezing the pores closed and pinching the delicate
papillae.
Worry pressed harder against Ca'aed's consciousness. It pulled out
from several conversations with citizens and speakers and put as much
of the traffic on its own behavior as it could. Ca'aed withdrew its
thoughts into its own body that stretched across miles of wind and
tried to understand what was happening.
Muscles contracted smoothly, hearts circulated the gases and
chemicals, timed the electrical pulses, intestines filtered wastes, its
own and its peoples, veins guided potentiated and unpotentiated
neurochemical flows, and pores regulated diffusion. All good, all
smooth, all as it should be, except there, and there and there…
Ca'aed looked out onto the body of Gaith behind its quarantine
blankets, and worry blossomed into fear.
Ca'aed found its chief engineer in the refresher of his private home
with D'cle, who was one of Ca'aed's adopted citizens and the chiefs
companion-wife.
Another cramp, this one along a muscle for one of the upper
southwest stabilizers. The muscle contracted involuntarily and the
stabilizer wavered.
"Engineer T'gen," said Ca'aed through his headset. "Alert. I am ill.
I repeat, I am…"
Pain! It lanced up the sensor roots, straight into Ca'aed's primary
cortex. Blisters, dozens of them, popping out of the skin like a
burning fungus. Pain, wrongness, illness, pain…
The pain ebbed for a moment, and Ca'aed was aware that T'gen was
calling all the engineers and indentures via their headsets. Ca'aed
mustered its resources and tracked them down, circulating the call with
its own voices. It routed images of the affected areas to the research
houses and tracked the response. T'gen flew fast into the deep
crevices and chambers near the center of Ca'aed's body, where the main
antibody generators lay. The required varieties were not getting
released; new growth might have to be facilitated.
Below, indentureds and engineers numbed the pained roots and began
treating the blisters with steroid compounds. Relief blew through
Ca'aed and opened its mind up again. It was able to alert the
surrounding traffic that there would be interruptions, that all should
return to the home ports. It found the district speakers, let them
know what was happening and that it was all being attended to, but
alerted them to keep in contact with the city and each other. Ca'aed
set some of its voices in reserve, just for the speakers.
Now, inventory the position and health of the sails and
stabilizers. Along with waste disposal, those were key to comfort
of the Kan Ca'aed. They were near a living highland cluster, and
pockets of warm air would cause unpredictable currents necessitating
thousands of small adjustments, and everything had to be in health.
Ca'aed felt the first patch of gray rot blossom on its skin, and it
took all the strength of centuries for the city not to scream.
* * *
Vee yawned hugely as she stepped, dried and dressed, out of the
shower cubicle. A mug of opaque black tea appeared in front of her. The
mug was attached to a hand, which had an arm, on the end of which was
Josh.
"My hero," she said fervently. Grasping the mug in both hands she
took a huge gulp, almost scalding her tongue. "Ahhh," she sighed
blissfully. "Is she out there?"
"As always." Josh waved toward the front window. There was the
holotank and the People's display device, which Vee had come to think
of as "the holobubble." Next to them, waiting patiently on her
perches, sat T'sha.
At first, D'seun had spoken to them, along with T'sha. The
ambassadors were always accompanied by at least three others who were
all called "engineers" and seemed to be responsible for looking after
the kite and the translators, as well as making sure their imagers were
holding up.
After the third day, however, it had just been T'sha.
Where are the others? Vee had asked the first time she'd
woken up and T'sha had been out there alone.
A compromise has been reached, T'sha said.
D'seun has
left me with the translators while he returns to speak to our… wait…
colleagues. T'sha still had to pause frequently to argue with her
translator on interpretation. At first, Vee thought T'sha had meant
that figuratively, but now she knew better. The things controlling the
holobubble were, in some way, alive.
Why did you need to compromise on that? Vee had asked.
T'sha had inflated, just a little, a gesture Vee had come to learn
meant a mild emotion, such as annoyance. A full inflation was full
emotion, such as anger or happiness. Vee wondered if they played poker
on Home.
It is politics, T'sha had told her,
and I think I
should not discuss that yet.
You have politics too, do you? asked Vee.
Yes, we decidedly have politics too.
I'm sorry.
T'sha deflated, sinking, and causing her crest to flutter around her
wings.
So am I.
T'sha's engineers had rigged her what Vee understood was their
version of a tent—a couple of balloons floating up near the cloud line,
where T'sha was most comfortable. They were held in place by long brown
tethers that appeared to have rooted themselves to the ground.
It turned out that the People didn't sleep. Every few hours, T'sha
would vanish to "refresh," a physical activity that Vee couldn't quite
make out but seemed to combine meditation and afternoon tea. Each trip
took about an hour. Except for that, T'sha was always there and ready
to talk.
Mostly it was Vee who talked back. They talked about T'sha's older
brother, who seemed to be either a contracts lawyer or a court
recorder, and about her little sisters, who were still in school. They
talked about Vee's five siblings, and her parents and grandparents back
home, and about the costs and problems of caring for a family,
especially when you were the one with the most resources. They talked
about marriage as a basis for the family structure, and it turned out
T'sha was expecting to have several marriages arranged for her all at
once, which Vee found delightfully practical. She had a hard time
explaining courtship, romance, love, and individual, serial monogamy.
T'sha thought it sounded like a lot of work.
They talked about seeing the stars, which T'sha had done only once
in her life. She was fascinated to hear about living in a world where
you could see them every night. They talked about cities, and Vee was
stunned to hear T'sha speak about hers with the same words she used to
talk about her family or her future lovers, until Vee remembered and
quoted some old Sandburg poems about Chicago and New York. T'sha was
fascinated by the poetry, and soon Vee was reading her Keats,
Angelou, Shakespeare, Dickenson, and all the haiku she could dredge
up. In return, T'sha told Vee stories of the ancient Teacher-Kings and
riddles that had no answers, to which Vee replied with some Lewis
Carroll and then had to explain what ravens and writing desks actually
were…
And on and on and on. They showed each other pictures of their
worlds like proud grandparents showing off images of the latest
addition to the family. Thanks to Josh putting himself through serious
sleep deprivation, the humans had added two new lasers to their
projector and they now had full color capabilities. T'sha asked Vee to
show her things that were beautiful, and Vee did her best—great
buildings, fine statues, forests, the Grand Canyon, and then she found
that many times she had to explain what was beautiful about them.
T'sha showed her Ca'aed, the canopy, the clouds thick with things
that might have been fish and might have been birds, and Vee did not
have to be taught that these were beautiful.
For everything she learned, Vee was left with a thousand more
questions. It felt like the only thing she knew for sure was that she
liked this winged person who flew through a world that would kill Vee
dead, and still had brothers and sisters and a home she loved, and a
wicked sense of humor.
It was dizzying. It was magnificent. It was exhausting. Vee slept
like the dead at the end of her shifts and was only vaguely aware of
what else was going on in the scarab.
Vee snagged a piece of toast off the breakfast table, earning a
dirty look from Sheila, whom she smiled at as she breezed by. She
plunked herself into the copilot's chair, toast in her mouth and tea in
her hand.
Good morning, T'sba, she typed, one-handed.
Good luck, Vee. Vee had quickly given T'sha her nickname
after they had established that the long form gave the People's
translator trouble.
T'sha seemed agitated this morning. Her body shrank and expanded as
if she were breathing heavily. She shifted her weight on the perch that
had been set up for her, and her wings twitched even though they were
folded neatly along her back.
Is there something wrong? typed Vee.
Politics, replied T'sha.
We are on the verge of an
important poll in the High law Meet. Vee, I have worked on a scene I
wish to show you. Something of Home. When you have seen it, I will ask
you some questions and I will then take your answers back to the Law
Meet. Will you watch?
Of course. She wanted to add, "I'm all eyes," but she
wasn't sure what T'sha would make of the metaphor.
T'sha's words faded, leaving the bubble clear and empty for a
moment. Then a blur of color filled the bubble like smoke. The blur
resolved itself and Vee saw another Venus.
But this one had life.
The bubble showed her an island made up of swollen roots and leaves
covered with translucent gold and silver blisters. Green tendrils that
might have been vines or blades of grass waved in the wind. Light,
white feathers protruded from clusters of seeds, or maybe they were
little mushrooms. They all hooked together as if hanging on for dear
life. A nearly spherical slug crawled along one of the ash-colored
branches only to get sucked up by something that looked like a cross
between a jellyfish and a kingfisher.
This is the canopy, right? asked Vee.
Yes, came T'sha's answer.
The canopy is below the
clear. It is a complex tangle of life which, with the living highlands,
supplies all the nutrients that we need to live and thrive. The
plants intermingle and grow out from each other creating, what…
wait,
islands of vegetation that support both fliers and runners, which live
on the canopy as you do on the crust and never lift themselves from it.
Vee glanced up at T'sha, trying to find words for the sheer wonder
of what she saw, but T'sha was deflated on her perch, smaller than Vee
had ever seen her, so small that her sparkling gold skin hung in
wrinkles and folds around her frame. She was gazing at the image in the
holobubble.
This is a construction from old records, read the text.
This
was what we think it might have looked like several thousand years ago
when the canopy was little more than loose islands floating on the
wind. This is what it looks like now.
A solid, verdant carpet, green and gold, red and blue, and brown.
Broad, bubblelike leaves reached up into the wind from a solid mat of
intertwined roots. A series of six-legged, what? Reptiles? Or birds?
The local equivalent of chickens, maybe? Whatever they were, they
picked their way between the leaves, sticking their beaks into bubbles
here and there and draining them dry. But large patches of this field,
with its one kind of "bird," were twisted black or limp brown.
I guess death and disease look the same no matter where you go,
was Vee's first thought. Her second was,
Wait until Isaac gets a
look at all this.
Vee saw T'sha sagging next to the image, and details from the past
few days' worth of conversations clicked into place.
You don't
build things—
I have
that right? You grow them or breed them?
Mostly, yes. T'sha shook herself, inflating a little, like
a person trying to shake off a malaise.
And if they're alive, they have to eat, so they drain off the
same stuff from the air that you do?
Yes. T'sha dipped her muzzle, an affirmative gesture.
And so you cultivated the most useful stuff in the canopy and in
the clouds to thicken the soup in the clear which nourishes your living
infrastructure, and you've overtaxed whatever the canopy eats?
Again, T'sha dipped her muzzle.
That is one of the things that
is happening. Another is blights. Huge portions of the canopy
are dying, and we cannot stop them.
Vee nodded to herself as she typed.
Monoculture. We've had that
problem on Earth too.
T'sha inflated a little further, hesitating before she spoke.
It
is more than that. Some of the symbiotes and the living infrastructure
made more efficient use of the… soup than the food crops. The tenders
are actively killing the crops. We have lost the balance and have not
yet recovered it.
Vee felt a twinge of sympathy. Imagine if the ladybugs stopped
eating the aphids and turned around and ate the grain? What could
anyone do?
So your world is dying?
Dying? T'sha flapped her wings as if to drive the word
away.
No. It is changing. The change will be violent, and the
outcome is uncertain. We cannot predict what the new balance will be
like or how well it will support us. The most viable solution heard was
to use the World Portals our technicians were experimenting with to
find another world where we could spread a controllable life base and
transfer ourselves. We could wait until the pace of change on Home
slowed down, and then we could return, possibly reserving the New Home
and… wait… allow one world to lie fallow and stabilize while we lived
on the other. T'sha turned her gaze directly toward the scarab.
This
is our case, you understand. This is what we wish to do here. We wish
to spread life. We will take no more than we need. Do you understand?
Maybe the urgency was imagined, but Vee felt it nonetheless. Part
of her was aware that someone had come to stand behind her and read
over her shoulder. She thought it was Josh, but she didn't turn to make
sure.
Wait, she typed.
You can't transfer an entire
population from one world to another every ten years or so. On the
other hand, who knew? T'sha had shown her an image of the portal they
used to transfer from Home to Venus, but she couldn't explain how it
worked. Vee could give her no words to help out. This was so far up the
line from the world Vee knew that there was no way to talk about it.
They needed a
quantum physicist or something down here.
We would not perform the transfer every ten years,
T'sha's, new words said.
It would be every three thousand.
Vee whistled.
You think in the long term don't you?
T'sha froze. Startled?
Is there another way to think of life?
You'd be surprised. Vee licked her lips.
Look, T'sha,
I think you should know there are those in the government on Earth who
are not going to be very happy with the fact that you've
started colonizing one of our worlds without asking them first.
One of your worlds? T'sha grew and shrank uncertainly for a
moment and then settled down, small but not sagging.
Then
this IS your world?
Yes, replied Vee, wondering at the emphasis.
T'sha's muzzle opened and closed a few times as she watched the
holobubble. Finally, new words appeared.
How is it yours?
Vee pulled back a minute. As she did, Josh leaned forward.
She felt him before she saw him. She glanced back, looking for
suggestions.
"Be careful, Vee," he said. "I think we're probing close to a ,
nerve here."
"You too, huh?" Vee shook her head. "Okay, let's go for honesty."
She typed,
I don't
understand.
T'sha swelled and rattled her wings. Impatience?
How is it
yours?
What do you build here? Where do you live? How do you use this place? I
must be able to speak of legitimate use.
Josh looked down at her and shrugged. Vee felt a chill sinking into
her. Josh was right. There was a nerve under these words, and she had
to find a way around it.
We have our base, Venera, here.
Again, T'sha rattled her wings. Her crest ruffled and smoothed as if
it were breathing.
But your base does nothing. It does not expand,
it does not build or grow, it does not spread life.
Vee hesitated and suddenly wished Rosa were with her. Rosa was the
one who could manage a room full of hostile board members. Rosa would
surely be able to give the right answers to one alien. Actually, Vee
wished there was anyone in this chair right now except her.
We have always considered the planets orbiting the sun ours.
They didn't belong to anyone else.
Even the ones you do not use? They are yours? Now Vee
couldn't see T'sha move at all. The ambassador just hung there, like a
holograph of herself.
The idea has always been we'd find a use for them eventually.
No answer came back. Vee licked her lips and tried again.
I'm not saying this is right, T'sha, but it's an old habit of
thought, and it's going to be hard to break.
No answer. T'sha's muzzle pointed toward the sky and her wings
spread wide. Vee sat frozen with her hands hovering over the keys.
What
do I do? What do I do? What made me think I could pull this off?
All at once, T'sha froze. Vee saw her mouth move, but nothing new
appeared on the translator. This had happened a couple of times
before. T'sha was getting a message from her colleagues over the
spidery headset she wore. Vee sat back and glanced up at Josh. His face
was tight with worry. She knew exactly how he felt.
Outside, T'sha swelled as if she sought to drink in the whole world.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I must go. I… there is word my city is
sick. Someone will come speak to you. I must go.
T'sha launched herself into the air, rocketing into the distance.
The dirigible overhead detached itself from the tent and began to
follow.
Vee lowered her hands onto the command board. "Good luck," she
murmured.
"Her city's sick?" said Josh.
Vee nodded, watching after T'sha until she vanished over the edge of
Beta Regio. "Her city's alive. It's… it's like a friend." She turned
her gaze toward the sky again. The horror of the idea seeped slowly
into her mind. The city was a friend and the city was sick, maybe
dying. It was too enormous to be really understood all at once, and it
overlaid all the previous conversation, where they scrabbled for ideas
and understanding and came up
empty.
Friends were dying, families were dying, and they needed someplace
safe to go. That place, they had decided, was here. Their only question
was whether the humans were here first.
And T'sha wasn't so sure they were.
"Josh," she said, watching the empty perches outside. "I think the
easy part is over with."
* * *
T'sha rose from the World Portal into the miasma of metallic odors
and coughed hard, contracting spasmodically around herself.
When she was able to spread her wings again, Pe'sen was beside her.
"There's a dirigible waiting for you. Let me guide you out of here."
T'sha brushed her wing against his in thanks. "Quickly, Pe'sen."
Pe'sen led the way, calling ahead the securitors and the portals to
clear the way. The metallic walls and struts passed by in a blur. All
T'sha saw was the dirigible's open gondola. She shot inside, barely
hearing Pe'sen's call of "Good luck!"
The dirigible already had its orders. It closed up and lit its
engines before T'sha even had time to grasp its perches. She rocked
badly as the dirigible shot forward, but she didn't care. She was on
her way.
"Ca'aed?" she ordered her headset to carry her voice to her city.
Her stricken city. How bad? Maybe not so bad, maybe just a panic, an
exaggeration. Ca'aed was strong, Ca'aed had survived so much.
"T'sha?" came Ca'aed's voice, strong, but strained. "Good luck,
Ambassador."
T'sha's teeth clacked involuntarily. "Good luck, my city. I'm coming
to see what all the fuss is about."
"I'm not sure I can let you near me, T'sha."
Fear twitched T'sha's bones. "I'm your ambassador, Ca'aed. You
cannot deny me."
"I can't endanger you ei—" The word cut off.
"Ca'aed!" shouted T'sha.
Life of my mother, life of my father,
what is happening to you?
"Evacuation," said Ca'aed. "We must call for evacuation. I am
alerting the safety engineers. Do not come here, T'sha."
T'sha did not answer. She ordered her headset to find her birth
mother.
"T'sha, you are returning?" came her anxious voice. "There is
trouble—"
"I know Mother Pa'and. Listen to me. You must organize the family.
The safety engineers are being called. Ca'aed says you need to
evacuate."
"Life of my mother…" breathed Mother Pa'and.
"I know, I know, but we can't let this get away from us. We are a
million and we may all be ill. A quarantine shell is a priority, but
even before that we must keep everyone from scattering. Spread the
word. Everyone must stay together. We cannot let anyone flee. Do you
understand?"
"I understand Ambassador." Mother Pa'and's voice was firm now. "We
will do as you say."
"Thank you. Good luck."
Hurry, hurry, hurry, she thought
to the dirigible.
I need to be there! But she could hear the
whine of its engines and taste the ozone and electrochemicals. It was
already straining to reach greater speeds, sacrificing smooth flight to
plow straight ahead. She could ask nothing more of it.
She did not even ask it to open its inner eyes. She did not want to
see Ca'aed growing in the distance. She did not want to see its people,
her people, swarming around it like flies. She would see that soon
enough. She had to concentrate, call the speakers, call the archivers.
The city's records had to be stored and saved.
A million people. A million to be quarantined and examined and
provided for, even as Ca'aed itself had to be quarantined, examined,
and provided for. She alone could make promises for her city. She
needed to know what her city had left to give.
If Ca'aed should become sick now, you will have nothing left.
Z'eth's words dropped into her thoughts. T'sha shoved them away. It was
not that bad. She had not been that profligate. Surely not. They had
caught this in time. There would be damage, yes. There would be
expense, but they were a million strong and
they loved their city. They were united and they had acted promptly.
Their city had not let them try to keep quiet and hide this illness
from the world. They would call in help from their neighbors. It would
be all right.
The dirigible banked sharply and slowed. Its portal opened and T'sha
shot out into the open air. She saw her city spreading before her, and
her body collapsed.
Directly in front of her, heavy, fungal blotches filled the deep
crevices of Ca'aed's coral walls. She could taste them with her whole
mouth. Her throat and skin tightened against the sickness. The wake
villages were already being brought around to the leeward walls. The
safety engineers hovered with their tools, draping the villages in the
gauzelike strainers to keep out contagion, if that was possible. Shells
were being lifted from Ca'aed's body and orderly flight chains of
people filed into them. As they filled, the shells were wrapped in
strainers and tethered together with bloodless ligaments. The people
were closed inside to wait for the doctors, to wonder if the sickness
had spread from their city to themselves.
It was so orderly, it was very nearly a dance. The enormity of it
dived straight to the center of T'sha's being and left her stupefied.
Her family was in there somewhere. Mother, Father, her little sisters,
her brother… Oh life and bone, brother!
"Ca—" she began, but she cut herself off. She could not rob Ca'aed
of any of its concentration. She instead ordered the headset to find
her brother on its own. A cluster of dirigibles flew the speaker's
flags. She turned her flight toward them, beating her wings against the
wind until she felt her bones would break.
"Ambassador!"
The voice came to her own ears, not her headset. T'sha saw a solid
red crest spread on the wind and recognized Deputy Ambassador Ta'teth
rising above the dirigibles. She put on a burst of speed and flew to
meet him.
"Ambassador," he gasped as if he'd been the one flying so fast. "I
am glad you are returned. We've been doing our best—"
"How bad is it?" T'sha cut him off, fanning her wings against the
buffeting wind. She could smell the disease from here, cloying and
sweet, just like the scents that had surrounded Village Gaith. The
flies would be descending soon.
"Bad. The engineers are trying to keep up, but it is spreading too
fast, in too many places."
"How did this happen?" T'sha demanded. Ta'teth dipped and shriveled
before her outburst. T'sha cursed herself and dropped until she was
level with her deputy. "I'm sorry, Ta'teth. I'm sorry. I do not blame
you. But does anyone know what happened?"
Ta'teth recovered his size. "The best theories are from the
indentures from Gaith, and they are very serious." T'sha grit herself
against her impatience. Ta'teth was also scared. Ta'teth loved Ca'aed
as she did. He was doing his best. "They think it is a new kind of
virus."
"But that's a fungus!" retorted T'sha.
"No," said Ta'teth. "It's cancer."
"What?" The word was out before T'sha could stop herself. Cancer?
How could that be cancer? A virus might cause a cancer, yes, but not
like this.
"They think…" Anticipation of his own words made Ta'teth shudder.
"They think it is a new strain of virus that has managed to take
advantage of the People's close relationship with the cities. They
think it replicates in sections, part of it in the people, part of it
in the segments of the city's anatomy that are chiefly animal. The
virus sections lie dormant in the hosts, mimicking, they think,
familiar nutritive elements. They possibly even infect the
monocellular nutritives and through them infect the hosts. The
dangerous phase does not start until two or more sections of the virus
are combined, possibly in the presence of an additional chemical
stimulus—"
"In such a place as in the city's bowels."
Ta'teth dipped his muzzle. "Then it replicates furiously, devouring
its host and releasing the undetected spawning segments, working too
fast to be completely stopped or destroyed."
T'sha did not deflate. She felt paralyzed by Ta'teth's words, frozen
as cold as a New Person. "It is a good theory. Is it being
tested now?"
Again, Ta'teth dipped his muzzle. "They are hunting for viral DNA
segments now and trying to map its life cycle."
"And we might all be carriers?"
"Yes," murmured Ta'teth. "Of portions of the disease, at least." He
swelled and shrank. "There might be more than one strain."
The words sank into T'sha and she shivered, releasing old memories.
What is the nature of life? went the first riddle in the story of
Ca'doth. Three possible answers—a stone, a shell, the wind. A stone
because life is strong and underlies the whole world. A shell because
life contains and shelters what is precious. The wind because it is
everywhere and cannot be stopped.
It is everywhere and cannot be stopped. "Have you told
Ca'aed?"
Ta'teth collapsed in on himself. "No. I didn't think… I…"
T'sha flew over him, brushing her fingers against his crest. "No
shame, Deputy. I'll do it now."
T'sha flew past the chains of her people being evacuated to the
isolation shells, past the engineers with their flocks of tools
surrounding them, between the walls patched with this strange, sweet
cancer that mimicked a fungus so well. She knew where she wanted to be.
There were eyes beside the main portal. Pretty silver eyes, which
watched the winds and the world. She wanted to be there when she told
Ca'aed.
"My city?" T'sha hovered before the city's eyes, each one as big as
a whole person.
"Ambassador?" murmured Ca'aed.
"You are very ill, Ca'aed. They think it is a new virus." Slowly,
carefully, she repeated what Ta'teth had told her.
The eyes remained focused on her, drinking her in as if she were the
only thing in the world. Sorrow swelled T'sha's body. She wanted to
wrap the city in her arms and hug it to her belly as if it were a
child. She wanted to carry it away from here to somewhere safe, where
the winds were wholesome and it could be fed and healed. But there was
no safe place, not in any latitude. The whole world might be infected
by now; they had no way of knowing.
"You must cut it out," said Ca'aed.
"What?" blurted out T'sha.
"This theory is sound. I run it through my minds. It holds, life of
us all, it holds. They apply anticancer treatments now, and they have
some effect, but they will take dodec-hours, and we do not have the
time." Ca'aed paused as if gathering its strength. "You must cut out
the affected sections of my body. You must isolate them, burn them if
necessary. If my body is spreading infection, it must be stopped."
There was no room in T'sha for further horror. She would not permit
Ca'aed's words to enter her. "No, a quarantine—"
"Will allow me to stew in my own disease," interrupted the city.
"This way we may be able to save at least my consciousness and keep
the worst of the infection out of the wind." Its voice was calm,
collected. But T'sha still heard the fear.
Cut? Cut my city…
In front of her, a ligament snapped, the ends flapping into the wind.
"I am the shelter. I am the shell," said the city, giving the old
words of the unity chant, the one T'sha had recited every year when the
city passed over the First Mountain.
"We are the bone. We are the embryo," responded T'sha instantly.
"I preserve you."
"We preserve you. Life serves life."
"Life serves life," replied the city. "Cut out this disease from me."
Every bone in T'sha's body clenched. Cut out the disease. It was
barbaric but effective if the anticancer treatments weren't working
fast enough. Cut down the sails, cut out the homes, cut through the
parks, the windguides, the promise trees…
Life and bone, the promise trees, and I've heard nothing from
T'deu. Suddenly, there was no question inside T'sha about where
her brother was. He was deep inside the infected city, trying to save
the beauty and intricacy he had dedicated his life to nurturing. Who
knew what he carried inside him by now?
The safety engineers would have to keep him quarantined even from
the other citizens.
Oh, my brother! And I cannot even go to find you now.
"Are you speaking to Chief Engineer T'gen of your remedy?" T'sha
asked Ca'aed, her voice barely a whisper.
"I am. He resists. Do not let him."
Memories. A thousand, a million memories of a world that grew and
changed, of life, and family and ambition, worry and debate, flight and
stillness. Through all that there was only one constant—Ca'aed. Her
ancient city, her soul's home. "No, I will not let him resist."
"I am ready."
"Stay ready." T'sha turned from the city walls and flew toward the
isolation shells. It was not engineers she needed now but harvesters
with their saws and hooks and pruning sheers. She needed to lead them
deep into their city to places the engineers would numb. She needed
their nets, their patience, and their precision. Ca'aed might be
gutted, but Ca'aed might be saved.
But only if they were fast enough, only if they were right.
Otherwise, they would be doing nothing but killing the city a piece at
a time.
T'sha closed her mind against the thought and flew.
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Chapter Fifteen
Ian Su sat in front of the full membership of the Colonial Affairs
Committee of the United Nations. Their hearing room was something out
of another age, with a crystal dome and green marble floor, polished
wooden trim, benches and tables. All around the walls, gold leaf picked
out the words of great sages from throughout history, messages of
tolerance, patience, long thought, and calm.
Calm especially, she needed that today. She surveyed the committee,
all twenty-two of them. She was number twenty-three. She had kept her
appointment by hook, crook, and means that did not always bear the
light of day, but she had kept it. Now, though, her colleagues all
watched her with hard eyes and skeptical faces.
Nothing was eased by the fact that the holotank in the center of
the crescent bench was activated to show the three
Secretaries-General—Kim Sun, Avram Haight, and Ursula Kent. They sat
in their conservative clothes and comfortable chairs with desks in
front of them that had tidy rows of screen rolls laid out for
convenient reference. The Secretaries looked cool, detached. The souls
of worldly reason, they waited to see what the committee brought to
light.
From the beginning, Su had known the events on Venus would end up
here, and she had thought she'd be ready to speak about them. But now
that she was here, she was no longer sure. She had faced down the
committee before, but never had her prepared speech seemed so… absurd.
She was used to arguing civil rights, articles of incorporation, land
ownership, and mineral exploitation rights. She was not used to making
announcements of discoveries. Especially not like this.
Su glanced at the representation of Helen Failia, who sat next to
her in another holotank. The real Helen was in her private office on
Venera, wearing an assembler rig and watching the proceedings through
her wall screen. The image beside Su sat as still as a stone, except
for her eyes. Grim exhaustion still hung about Helen from dealing with
the sudden deaths of the Gusmanos brothers aboard Venera, and those
tired, determined eyes scanned the members of the C.A.C. They looked
for the members' reactions and tried to judge what Helen should do or
say next.
The initial announcement about the contact with aliens had already
been made. Now that the committee had sufficiently calmed down, it was
time to move on and give them something else to chew over.
Su didn't give Helen the chance to do or say anything.
Speed-of-light delays could be so useful at times. Su just cleared her
throat and spoke with a confidence that had more to do with
political experience than honest belief. "I would like to take this
moment to say that Dr. Failia and the governing Board for Venera Base
were quite right in bringing this situation to our attention
immediately. This is a diplomatic event unparalleled in human history,
and as such, it deserves to be addressed with immediate and undivided
attention."
"We must not," Su went on, "no matter how much our imaginations
want to revert to old stories of invasion and attack, forget for a
moment that our first indication that these… people existed was when
they performed a rescue of seven human beings. Let me say that again.
They rescued seven human beings. Seven human beings whose lives would
have been lost if not for the selfless intervention of the
aliens."
Screen rolls rustled and Patrick James, a fat, florid committee
member with a thatch of yellow hair looked up. "What about the eighth
human being? The report says the scarab had a crew of eight."
"Yes," said Helen's projection when the question reached her. "The
eighth crew member, Bailey Heathe, was killed in the initial accident.
His remains were not recoverable." She did not glance at Su. Helen had
told Su why the remains were not recoverable. They had agreed that that
particular revelation should be left for later, if it ever needed to
be brought out at all.
Secretary Avram Haight, a needle-thin man with pallid brown skin and
his hair cut short under his black cap spoke. "Have these… People… said
what they are doing here?"
This was going to be tricky. Su and Helen had worked on the wording
for an hour and agreed that Helen, as the one from the scene, should
deliver it.
"They are interested in surveying the planet," said Helen.
"Just surveying?" Even through the holotank, Su could feel the
weight of Secretary Height's gaze. "This is an exploratory team?"
The question traveled to Venus. Screen rolls were shuffled. Eyes
glanced around the room, measuring reaction, guessing intentions. Su's
gaze met Edmund Waicek's and saw nothing there but cold hostility.
Frezia Cheney had been as good as her word, and Edmund's spinners were
now all in a scramble, re-explaining his every statement against the
colonies, trying to salvage the impression that his judgment was sound
and unbiased. There was even some careful talk of a
conflict-of-interest hearing. Very careful, but there it was.
Every little bit helped. Some people were finally beginning to get
the hint that a completely anticolonial viewpoint was no longer flying
with the entire population of Mother Earth.
Finally, Helen's answer reached the hearing chamber. "No, Sir, it is
not just an exploratory team," she said. Her voice was calm, but Su
could see how tightly she held herself. "They wish to assess the
possibility of establishing a permanent colony on Venus."
Here it comes. Su held her breath. But the explosion did
not happen. Instead the committee just murmured and whispered. Even
Jasmine Latimer, who went in for shouting and pounding the table,
blanched only slightly.
Maybe we can pull this off. Maybe it won't have to be a circus.
"Dr. Failia." Secretary Kent unrolled a screen and swept the gaze of
her overlarge blue eyes across it. "What are the Venerans doing now?"
Again the speed-of-light delay stretched out. Helen's image sat at
Su's side, making motions Helen had made six minutes ago.
Does
Edmund know I raked his background back up? Su found herself
wondering. Probably not, or she would have felt the backlash by now.
No, her campaign to keep him busy appeared to be working.
At least something is. Keep your focus, Su. This is not about
Edmund; this is about Venera.
Helen's image spoke. "We have asked members of the U.N.
investigative team to establish communication with the People."
Helen had her hands folded together in front of her. Su tried not to
notice her white knuckles. The statement was only a minor stretch. Dr.
Hatch was a team member, and Dr. Kenyon was not really a Veneran. "The
People seem quite willing to talk."
Secretary Kent looked down her long nose at Helen. "Has it been
made
quite clear that no one on Venera has any power to negotiate any kind
of treaty?"
When that question reached her, Helen answered with forced
patience.
"Yes, Secretary Kent. Everyone is aware of this."
Su minutely adjusted the table microphone. "Dr. Failia decided
to
address the C.A.C. immediately because Venera lacks trained mediators,
linguists, or diplomats at this time. A new team needs to be assembled
as soon as possible." Several of the committee members nodded in
approval, but everyone else seemed to be waiting for the word from on
high. The faces of the Secretaries were not revealing.
"It is very clear we need a new team," said Secretary Sun. He
looked
like a young, vigorous man with a full head of black hair, a round,
open face, and eyes that rivaled Secretary Kent's for their size. Su
had once heard an estimate of his yearly bill for med-trips and
body-mod. There were counties in North America that didn't make that
much in a year. "What we want to establish here is that Venera Base has
not overstepped its bounds." Secretary Sun looked directly at Helen.
"Why are you still
allowing your people contact with the aliens?"
More waiting. Su's fists tightened until her nails pressed
painfully
into her palms. Too much waiting. It was stretching her thin. She had
waited for Helen to contact her, even after she had found out there
were aliens. She had waited for Mr. Hourani's answers to all the
questions raised by the shipyard bombing. She had waited for each and
every one of her questions to reach Helen sitting up there alone in
her Throne Room as they tried to work out a strategy for coping with a
miracle so huge that Su's mind shied away from contemplating it.
"The people establishing contact with the aliens are not my
people,"
said Helen. The gaze from her image met the gaze of Secretary Sun's
image without hesitation. "They're yours. The optical specialist you
sent us, Dr. Veronica Hatch, has taken charge of the communication
project."
Su wondered what Dr. Hatch was going to say when she heard how
Helen
worded that particular fact.
"She did this without your permission?" Like Secretary Kent,
Secretary Sun had perfected the art of looking down his nose. Su
supposed it was something that came with high office.
Images stared at each other while their physical bodies shifted
in
offices continents apart
. And here we sit with these
illusions,
waiting to pass judgment on each other. Stop it, Su. You're being
ridiculous.
Helen's image spread its hands. "I was directed by the C.A.C. to
cooperate fully with their team in all matters pertaining to the
Discovery. Communicating with the People to determine if they built the
Discovery and for what purpose it was built, seemed pertinent to the
Discovery."
Silence, except for a few coughs and the rustling of fabric and
screen rolls. Su suppressed a smile. They'd scored a touch with that
one, but it was a long way from a telling blow.
"Forgive my ignorance, Dr. Failia," Jasmine Latimer glanced at
her
colleagues and the Secretaries, as if seeking permission to speak. "But
how is an optical specialist helping to communicate with the aliens?
"
Helen cocked her head, looking intelligently interested, an
expression Su had seen her use at a hundred cocktail parties.
The question reached Helen, and her answer returned. "We have so
far
been unable to establish whether the People can hear on frequencies we
use or whether they hear at all. They do, however, have eyes that are
similar in construction to human eyes. Because of this, Dr. Hatch
speculated that we might be able to communicate visually."
"So," said Jasmine. "Dr. Hatch is teaching them English?"
Helen held her interested pose. The question went out, the
answer
came back. "We've had to teach them very little."
The words were out of Helen's mouth before Su could do anything.
They had already been spoken six minutes ago. There was no way to
censor them or talk over them. They were spoken.
"We are perfecting the communication hardware," Helen's image
went
on. "Dr. Hatch is working on a holography display that will give us
both mobility and a full range of communications options."
Su did not crumple in her chair, but she wanted to.
Too
late,
too late.
"Just a moment, please, Dr. Failia," Secretary Kent interrupted
by
raising her hand slightly. "Would you please elaborate on that earlier
point. You had to teach them very little? About what? About English?"
Helen kept her expression admirably placid. Su felt certain that
she
spent the whole long time delay inwardly kicking herself.
"The People seem to have a facility with language," said Helen.
"They are picking up English rapidly."
"Dr. Failia," said Secretary Haight sternly. "How long do the
aliens
say they've been on Venus?"
For the first time, worry lines creased Helen's forehead. "They
haven't said."
"Have you asked?" Secretary Haight reached for one of the rolls
on
his desk and opened it. "Wait." He held up a hand, but his attention
stayed focused on the roll. "Let me change that question. How long have
you been aware of their existence?"
"For ten days," said Helen. Her voice was still calm, but Su
could
hear the strain creeping in around the edges. "As soon as we learned
they were there, I contacted Ms. Yan and asked her to arrange this
session."
"I wonder." Secretary Kent laid her hands, one on top of the
other,
on her desk.
"About what, Secretary Kent?" asked Su.
Secretary Kent blinked her huge blue eyes. "Your people were so
resistant to having a team of U.N. observers come to Venera Base. It
was almost as if you were afraid the team would see something you did
not want them to see."
At last, Su saw a chance to step in. "The only reason Venera
Base
did not want the U.N. team on Venus was that they were concerned about
possible interference with an ongoing scientific investigation of the
first importance. The team members were unknown quantities and the
Venerans had no say in their selection." Well, little say, Su
added silently. Now was not the time to bring up Helen's lobbying
efforts or Su's own covert maneuvers.
"And yet," said Secretary Sun, "there are these reports that the
Discovery was in fact fraudulent." He gestured to the rolls on his desk.
Helen hesitated, visibly gathering her inner resources. Su
answered
for her again.
Save your voice, get your bearings, Helen.
"The investigation of the Discovery is ongoing."
"And I understand from this report that the Venerans are making
use
of the laser that is part of the Discovery in order to communicate with
the aliens?" Secretary Sun sounded overly innocent, as if there was
nothing behind his question but honest curiosity.
All at once, Su saw where the questioning was going. For the
first
time in her whole political career, her mouth went completely dry. She
felt the eyes of her colleagues on her, Edmund Waicek's most of all.
I
missed it. I had all the facts in front of me, and I completely
missed this interpretation. Oh, Mother Creation…
"It is part of the holography system, yes," came Helen's
answer.
She hadn't seen it yet. Or maybe she had. These words were six minutes
old. Maybe it had dawned on her by now.
"Convenient that it was in working order, isn't it?" said
Secretary
Kent. "And just what you needed?"
Cut it off, Su. Su leaned forward. "Secretary, fellow
committee members, we are all aware that when a complex occurrence is
scrutinized, the separate events rarely add up directly. Loose facts
can be stuffed into any number of boxes."
Heaven knows I've done
it often enough, and there's enough going on here that you could find
an interpretation to fit every need. "What is before us now, and
what must remain before us, is that for the first time, we are speaking
to another intelligent species. We must send a diplomatic team to
properly welcome them and begin formal contact."
"A diplomatic team will most certainly be sent," said Secretary
Haight. He sounded far too righteous for Su's liking. "But there are
one or two other background matters that need to be cleared up first.
The first is this photograph we were sent."
Photograph? The photo
appeared on Su's desk screen. A
copy
sped toward Venus. Su, suddenly afraid, looked down at the
black-and-white satellite shot that caught the alien's portal.
Su's heart thudded once, hard.
Where
did they get that
from?
They shouldn't have that. The room was tense, silent. Su
realized
they were waiting for Helen to receive the image. Su looked to the
holotank and saw the representation of her old friend trapped inside,
almost as if it were Helen herself who sat in that clear cage. The
image looked down, and focused, understood what was before it, and Su
saw no possibility of explanation appear on Helen's tight, distraught
face.
"According to the satellite record," said Secretary Haight,
"this
picture was taken over a year ago. That's well before the original
Discovery was announced and certainly well before you saw fit to report
to us that you had met aliens in your personal backyard."
They had plenty of time to study the confusion on Helen's face,
how
her jaw began to work back and forth, how she had to struggle to still
it, the way her hand trembled as it lifted to brush one white lock of
hair back behind her ear.
But, in the end, Helen lifted her gaze and spoke firmly. "I am
sure
you are aware that our satellites record thousands of hours of images
in a single year. We do not have the personnel or the computing power
to analyze all of them carefully." She glanced down at the photo's
caption and her voice took on an added measure of calm assurance. "This
was not of an area under active study. It bears a close resemblance to
a land feature known as a 'tick.' Like the vast majority of all our
satellite imagery, it was filed for later study."
"But you must see it from our point of view, Dr. Failia."
Secretary Kent had a smile on her face. She was once again, all
innocence, all righteousness. All for the cameras and public record.
"This looks a little strange."
"A scientific inquiry is not a political or legal inquiry,
Secretary," Su said smoothly. "Particularly from a privately funded
project. The researchers must concentrate on areas most likely to yield
interesting or useful results. As Dr. Failia said, this"— she gestured
at the photo—"appeared to be a common Venusian land feature. Nothing
to excite additional inquiry. A review of Venera's work practices can
certainly be arranged for another time. What is most important now—"
"Is that we understand exactly what our position with regard to
these aliens is," said Secretary Haight, cutting Su off. "And to do so,
we need to know the truth about how long the Venerans have been in
contact with them and exactly what they've been negotiating."
When the question reached her, the color drained from Helen's
face.
"And when we have established this, then what?"
Secretary Haight looked at her as if Helen had just missed
something
glaringly obvious. "Then Venera Base will be placed under the direct
control of the Colonial Affairs Committee, which will oversee personnel
assignments and all other requirements
pertaining to the alien dialogue."
The words crept the long, slow way to Venus. Helen's face
remained frozen and paper white. "I see," was all the reply that
returned.
"You are not being accused of anything yet, Dr. Failia."
Secretary
Kent's voice was soothing, almost sweet with reassurance. "We are
merely asking for clarifications."
"I see." Without another word, Helen's representation vanished.
Su stared at the empty box, along with everyone else. She looked
mutely up at the Secretaries and the committee and then back at the box.
"A recess, please, Secretaries, committee members." Su got to
her
feet. "Surely there's been an outside interruption in communications
from Venus."
The Secretaries gave their assent. It was still being seconded
as Su
turned and hurried out of the chamber, the sounds of her footsteps
echoing off the marble walls.
What does she think she's doing? Su ground her
teeth as
she
marched across the lobby.
This is
not productive. She could be
cited for contempt. She could be arrested…
What if she doesn't care?
Su staggered and caught her balance against a marble bench. She
sat
down heavily, as if pushed bodily by her thoughts.
This might have done it. They had attacked Helen's integrity,
her
management of her people and her world. It might have been enough.
After all the work and the caution and the planning, this
confrontation might have pushed Helen over the edge into rebellion.
Su took a deep, slow breath. "Oh, Helen," she whispered. "Oh,
Helen,
my friend, be careful."
* * *
Michael watched as Helen slowly, deliberately, removed the
assembler
rig goggles and set them on her desk. She blinked at them a moment
before she could make herself look up again and focus on Michael and
Ben.
"That," said Michael mildly, "was probably not extremely
productive. They're going to haul you down there for contempt."
"Then they are going to have to come and get me." She pulled the
gloves off, one finger at a time.
"Helen…" began Michael. A cold sensation crept through him as he
watched her eyes. This was not Helen angry. This was not even Helen
furious. She had gone past those emotions into some new world, and he
wasn't sure how to pull her back.
"No." She swiveled the chair and stabbed a finger at him. "No.
We're
finished with them." She stood up a little bit at a time, as if all her
joints protested the move. "They are not taking our world away from
us."
"Amen," whispered Ben. Michael whipped around to stare at him.
"That's not the word I'd use." Helen smoothed her scarf down.
"Michael, someone here sent the committee that photograph. I want you
to find out who."
"Does it really matter?" Michael spread his hands.
"It matters!" Helen began to shake. "The U.N. is about to take
Venera away from us and one of our own people is trying to help them!"
Her fists clenched involuntarily.
Michael licked his lips. "Okay, Helen. I agree, we need to know
who
sent that picture, but just so we can head off a complete takeover. We
can tell the C.A.C. somebody's been spreading lies and then they'll—"
"And then they'll still conclude we are even more out of control
than they thought we were and come up with a few extra security
people," said Helen bitterly. "It's done, Michael. Whatever spin can be
put on that photo, it's not going to change anything. They are coming
and they are taking over." She smoothed down her scarf. "I just want to
know who it was so we can keep them out of the info loop. Start with
Grace Meyer. She might just have done it to see me out of here."
"Helen, we don't know—"
"Then find out!" Helen's fist slammed against the wall. "That's
your
job!"
"All right, Helen, all right," said Ben. "We'll find out for
you.
Don't worry about it."
"Good. Good." The tide of her more-than-anger subsided in her a
little. "While you're doing that, I'm going down to the surface to talk
to our neighbors. We're going to need them. Ben, have a couple of
pilots meet me in the hangar, and warn Josh and Vee I'm coming down."
She left the office without looking back. Michael stared after
her as she walked down the stairs and began crossing the farm, with
her shoulders hunched and her hands knotted.
He turned to Ben. "What are we going to do?"
Ben shrugged. "I'm going to send a message to Dr. Hatch and Dr.
Kenyon. I assumed you were going to start checking out whether Grace
Meyer gave the C.A.C. that photo."
Disbelief flooded Michael. "Ben, she's over the edge. She
doesn't
know what she's doing."
"Yes, she does." Michael could practically hear the
finally
Ben added in his thoughts. "She's saving her home, and she's asking us
to do the same."
Michael's hands fell to his sides.
You're
on your own now,
Michael, whispered a voice in the back of his mind.
He's gone
with Helen or taken her with him.
"All right," he heard his own voice say. "But you'd better hope
I
don't find out you sent that picture."
Ben's jaw tightened, just a little, but he said nothing. He just
turned and left, following Helen's path across the farms.
Michael rested one hand on the windowpane and tried to think,
but
before he could sort out what had just happened, his phone spot chimed.
Michael touched it to take the message, a little relieved.
"Code 360-A," said a recorded voice.
Michael swore under his breath and rounded Helen's desk, it woke
up
when he touched the command board and he shuffled her icons until he
got the security overview and entered his own passwords. The desk took
a reading of his fingerprints and let him in.
A was unauthorized access to com archives. Yes, there it was,
the
serial number. It didn't use Venera's ID system. Probably a briefcase
jacked into the system for somebody's fishing expedition. Probably
Stykos and Wray trying to get their story out. Maybe Peachman, but he
didn't seem like he had the expertise, although he certainly had the
love of publicity. They'd tripped one of Michael's bugs, and it had
pinged their case and dumped the report for him.
He couldn't really blame them. Somebody had to try. In their
place
he'd have done the same. Maybe he could have Helen talk to them again.
He glanced toward the door. Or maybe not. Helen was not at top form
right now.
So, where are you? He typed in the appropriate
commands.
The answer appeared a split second later.
The infirmary? Michael
frowned.
Who'd…
Michael swore again, loudly this time. He tossed down the
command to
shut the intruding case terminal out of the com files and ran out the
door.
By the time he reached the infirmary cubicle, Angela and Philip
had
their briefcase packed away, and they both had the nerve to look
affronted.
"What the hell were you trying to do?" Michael demanded in a
hoarse
whisper as he touched the control for the cubicle's sound dampener.
"You've been holding out on us, Michael," said Phil. "You've got
this base bugged into the middle of next week, and you didn't think you
should tell us about it."
"I showed you all security measures pertaining to the
Discovery,"
said Michael slowly, enunciating each word. "I gave you every
authorization—"
"You've got a private copy of every single conversation that
goes on this base," croaked Angela. "E-time or face-time. Wouldn't the
good
citizens of Venera like to know about that? Does Grandma Helen even
know?"
Of course she does; she approved
the design. Michael
didn't
say that. There was nothing he could say. The files existed. Gregory
Schoma had created the programs and done the wiring. Michael had never
needed to resort to them for any case he'd supervised, but they were
there all the same. Everyone more or less expected message logs to be
kept, but message texts? Usually written permission had to be obtained
before private e-mail could be stored. Venera was very proud of its
privacy regulations.
But what was he going to say to these two? That he didn't
approve of
those copies? That he'd never used them? He'd never erased them either.
"If you'd told me what you were looking for," said Michael, "I'd
have given it to you without the hackwork."
"Would you?" Philip lifted his eyebrows. "I want to believe you,
Michael, but—"
Michael waved his hand to cut the other man off. "I'm not going
to
play Prove-It-To-Me with you. What do you want? If I've got it, I'll
give it to you."
"Who faked the Discovery?" asked Angela.
Michael blinked. "Derek and Kevin Cusmanos. They confessed.
"
Angela shook her head gently. For the first time since entering
the
cubicle, Michael found a moment to wonder if she was still in pain. She
still had plenty of tubes and monitors taped to her bare arms.
"They didn't do it alone. You know that, Michael," she said.
"You're
not stupid and you know the people around here much better than we do."
Her voice took on a rasp. Philip drew a glass of water from the
dispenser and handed it to her. She sipped. "So who else faked the
Discovery?"
Michael weighed his options. He could stall, he could lie, or he
could be straight with them. He didn't really like any of the choices.
At last, he said, "I don't know."
"Was it Dr. Failia?"
"What?" The word jerked Michael out of his slump. Angela didn't
bat
an eye; neither did Philip.
"She has complete control of Venera's financial records," said
Phil.
"The base is her whole life, and it was about to die. People around
here worship her. They'd start a war if she asked them to. It would not
be hard for her to funnel the necessary money down to the Cusmanos
brothers so they could do the deed."
"No," said Michael.
"No, you know she didn't do it, or no, you don't want to
believe
she would?" Philip looked down his nose at Michael. "You're a v-baby,
aren't you?"
Anger rushed through Michael's veins. He clamped his jaw shut
around
the words that wanted to tumble out.
When he was certain he had control of his voice, he said, "There
are
some things Helen wouldn't do, even for Venera."
"Are there?" whispered Angela. "There are two dead men next door
to
us, Mr. Lum. Who else on this base would people kill or die for?"
They were trying to anger him, trying to get him to doubt what
he
knew. It was a good tactic, and they played it out like the pros they
were. But a tactic was all it was, a game, a way to try to turn him
against Helen and Venera. That was all.
"The Cusmanoses died of food poisoning," lied Michael, slowly,
reasonably. "We found a whole batch with the same contamination and
have closed the brewery. It was bad luck."
"It was dead convenient," said Philip. "And you're being
deliberately obtuse."
Michael just smiled a little. "And you two are completely
objective
and did not get sent up here with any agenda at all. The C.A.C. just
wants what's best for the planets. Am I right?"
"Come on, Michael." Angela rolled her eyes. "You're too smart
for
this."
Michael nodded again. "You're right. I am."
He left them there and made his way back to the main corridor
and
joined the flow of life that swirled through Venera, all day, every
day. This was his home, his place, his life. He knew its upside, and
its underside. He knew what the people sheltered here would and would
not do.
The yewners were used to chaos. They were used to looking for
rebellion and conspiracy and greed. They weren't used to people being
happy. They didn't understand. This was another world. His world. He
would not let them turn him against it.
He would not.
* * *
After Michael stormed out, Philip got up out of his chair and
closed
the cubicle door.
"Well," Angela said mildly. "I don't think he's going to be able
to
kid himself for more than three days, maybe four, tops."
Philip shook his head and returned to his seat. "Less than that.
He's good people, at bottom. He knows where his own lines are, and
they've been crossed."
"They've been erased." Angie fell back on her pillows. "If we're
right."
"You've got to be kidding? How could we be wrong?"
"We could always be wrong." She let her head flop toward him.
God,
it felt good to have those earphones off. "We've got more simulations
than direct evidence. One good lawyer, and we're suspended for
negligent harassment and God knows what else."
"Won't stay that way." Phil picked a spot at the tip of her
fingers
that didn't have any tubes sticking out and patted it. "I just wish we
could have got to him before the Cusmanoses had to die."
"Yeah," Angela coughed. Phil practically jumped to hand her the
water. She smiled as she took it. "Thanks."
She drank. It tasted good. It felt good going down. The pain was
almost gone. She couldn't believe how good it felt, just to move an arm
under the sheets and not have it feel like hot sandpaper. To be able to
turn her neck freely, to not have every sound screaming straight
through to her brain. "I wish we could have told him we know about the
C.A.C. accusations. That might have pushed him over."
"Now, now, we don't want him to know how many of his landmines
we
did get around." Phil looked at the door thoughtfully and fingered his
beard. "We might be wrong about how long it takes him to come around. I
want a back-up plan, just in case."
"Let's get to it." Angela pushed herself up a little higher on
her
pillows. Work felt good. Working was easier than thinking about what
was waiting outside the walls. Aliens. Living creatures, intelligent
creatures right here, right next door to Mother Earth, and they'd saved
her life. Saved all their lives.
And Helen Failia might have known about them for years. She
might
have defrauded to keep her secret. She might have killed. She was
definitely in contempt of committee.
And right now this woman, this maybe-murderer, was controlling
all
human contact with these new people. That could not be allowed to
continue.
Contents -
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Chapter Sixteen
"This is ridiculous." Vee shoved her briefcase back on the
scarab's
kitchen nook table. "Why don't we just fly over there? We know where
they are."
"Maybe because we've been told to stay here?" suggested Josh.
"We haven't been told anything lately." Vee glanced toward the
main
window. The perches and the holobubble sat there in the gray twilight,
unattended. Naturally, they'd been out to take a look at it all, and
they had good measurements and great pictures, but they had completely
failed to elicit any response out of the nobby "cortex box" at its
base that functioned as translator.
"Not to mention that if we left," Josh went on, "we wouldn't be
able
to talk to any of the People we met." He waved his hand at the plans
for the modified survey drone they had been hashing out on the
briefcase screen. "This is a long way from finished."
Vee and Josh were working up simulations for a mobile
communications
drone which used parts scavenged from survey drones and his lab. The
problem was, of course, that while the drones had all kinds of
recording equipment attached to them, they had zilch in the way of
projection equipment.
Vee found herself wishing she could talk to Derek Cusmanos.
He'd
done such a job on the laser in the Discovery, they could use him now.
She shook her head, a little sad, a little angry, a little confused.
First he'd blown his talents on a fraud, then he got caught, then he
went and died from a bad batch of
yeast.
How did you even start to deal with something like that?
Especially
when you were the one who helped catch him in the first place? Guilt,
cold and unfamiliar, took hold, and she set it aside with difficulty.
"We don't need to talk to them; we just need to let them know
we're
still here." Vee chewed her lip thoughtfully. "T'sha said they have
politics. Maybe the local bureaucracy is having a hard time deciding on
a replacement for her. If we showed ourselves, it might be a motivator."
"It might be seen as a sign of aggression. We really don't know
that
much about them, Vee." Josh was trying to be reasonable. He was even
succeeding, but Vee wasn't in the mood for reason right now.
"We know a little. We know they're ready to talk." She pressed
her
fingertips against the tabletop. "We know they have a hierarchical
social infrastructure, and we know they really want to settle this
planet because their own is in trouble." She met his gaze. "Personally,
I think it'd be a bad idea for all concerned to let them talk too much
about that in private."
Josh watched her thoughtfully for a long moment. "Plus, you're
bored, right?"
She smiled her patented number-fourteen vapid smile. "You know
me so
well."
"Mmmph," snorted Josh, exaggeratedly unimpressed.
"Unfortunately,
I'm not the one you have to convince. Adrian!" he called up the
corridor to the pilot's compartment. "You hearing any of this?"
"I'm trying not to," Adrian called back.
"All I'm suggesting"—Vee stepped into the aisle where she could
see
Josh at the table and Adrian crouched in front of the pilot's chair,
checking the inventory in one of the storage cupboards—"is that we fly
in, showing that we are in fact still here, and come back. It's just to
start things up again." God knew they weren't having any luck appealing
to Venera. Supposedly Helen was talking to the C.A.C. today, but no one
upstairs seemed to be willing to tell them how that was going, if it
had happened yet. That, even more than the empty perches outside, was
making Vee nervous.
"Look," Adrian straightened up. "I'm not sure I want things to
start
up again, all right? I'm even less sure I want to have to explain to
the governing board that I helped start them."
"Dr. Failia's last orders to us were keep them talking," Vee
pointed
out. "We're currently failing in that assignment."
From his face, Vee could tell she'd scored a hit. "I don't think
going into their camp was part of what she had in mind," said Adrian.
"Keep them talking," repeated Vee. "Which we currently are not
doing." She folded her arms. "If the U.N. wants to know what our
current status is, what are we going to tell them?"
Adrian's shoulders sagged. He looked past Vee to Josh. Josh
shrugged. "I almost hate to say this, but she's right. If we have to
give an update, it's going to be lean."
Adrian turned away and carefully slotted his inventory roll into
its
rack. When he faced them again, his expression was grim. He was
remembering the crash, Vee was sure. He was remembering the aliens
carrying away the body of copilot Bailey Heathe. They still didn't know
why. Vee had been reluctant to ask the question. Okay, Vee had been
afraid to ask the question. She wanted the aliens to be… good people,
understandable people. She'd been unwilling to compromise the image
she was building in her mind.
Going to have to get over that and
fast, Vee, she told
herself.
Or you are going to be no
good to anybody.
"If we do this," Adrian said, laying the emphasis heavily on the
first word, "we do this quickly. We go in, we fly a couple of circles
to let them know we're still around, and we come back. That's it. Okay?"
Vee nodded soberly, covering her private triumph. Finally!
Something
to do besides sitting around and watching the world blow by.
"I'll go inform Sheila of our new assignment." Adrian slid past
Vee,
heading for the rear of the scarab. Sheila had probably heard every
word and decided to keep out of it, something she was very good at. Vee
hadn't been able to get more than two words out of the woman since
they'd dropped down. Vee suspected
she was withdrawing from the utter strangeness of what was happening
around her, which Vee could understand intellectually but not
emotionally. How could you not want to know everything there was about
the People? How could you not want to find a way to make friends?
Especially since it sounded like they were determined to be
neighbors.
Had anybody else thought about that? Everyone had seen the
transcripts of all the conversations, but had they really thought about
it? The People were coming. No, they were here, and they were here to
stay. They planned to transform Venus. Had anybody really thought about
what that meant?
Adrian came back up the aisle followed by Sheila, her mouth
pressed
into a thin, straight line. Another thing she wasn't happy about. Vee
turned to Josh, who just shrugged again, as if to say, "It was your
idea."
I'll buy her a coffee when we get
back. It seemed to be
the
official beverage of Venera.
"If you two could strap down please," said Adrian as he settled
into the pilot's chair.
"Right." Vee patted Josh's hand. "Come on, back to the cocoons."
Josh didn't say a word until they were both strapped in and
their
couches' indicator lights all shone green. Then he turned his head
toward her.
"What if they say no?"
"What?" She lifted her head just a little so she could see his
whole
face over the edge of the couch.
"When we show up, indicating we want to talk some more. What if
the
People say no?"
"Then we'll know." Vee let her head drop and focused on the view
screen. "Anything's better than not knowing."
Through the intercom, she could hear Adrian and Sheila running
through the preflight checks. The tourist-guide banter had completely
vanished, and Vee found herself missing it. It had made her feel they
really were a united team, that they all agreed this was something
worth doing. Maybe she'd been kidding herself, but that was how it felt.
"I hope you're right," said Josh as the scarab lifted off the
ground. The soft hum of the flight engines crept through the walls. On
the screen, the twilight landscape of Venus sped by under the scarab.
"Are you afraid?" she asked.
Josh was silent for a moment. Then he said, "Yes. I wish I
weren't,
but I am. I mean, I was there. I saw them rescue Scarab Fourteen too.
I've sat here and talked with T'sha, and she's civilized and curious,
and incredible, and I'm scared to death of her and everything she
represents." He licked his lips. "They might be stronger than we are .
If they decide they don't want us here, there might not be anything we
can do. But at the same time, I don't want anybody else thinking that
way, because I'm afraid somebody down at the U.N. is going to do
something really stupid, like decide we don't want them here under any
circumstances."
"Oh, good." Vee gave him a watery smile. "I thought it was just
me."
They lapsed into the silence of their individual thoughts. Venus
continued to slip by underneath them, twilight deepening into
darkness. The wind rocked the scarab gently, just to make sure they
didn't forget it was out there. Vee knew where they were going. They
had detailed satellite images of the portal now. But what would they
find when they got there? Was T'sha there, or was she still with her
sick city? Vee thought that was likely. If T'sha had come back, she'd
surely have returned to talk with them. Unless something or someone had
prevented her…
No, there was no reason to believe that. Except that the People
had
politics too. Politics made human people do strange things. Who knew
what it made aliens do?
"God and Mother Creation," came Sheila's stunned voice through
the
intercom. "They're everywhere."
Vee's gaze jerked to her view screen. It showed nothing but the
Venusian surface, glowing brightly in the darkness. She unsnapped her
straps and struggled to her feet.
"You're not…" Josh stopped himself and undid his owns straps.
Swaying with the rocking motion of the scarab, they both made
their
way out into the main corridor. When Vee could see what lay outside the
main window, she stopped dead in her tracks.
The people soared and wheeled in the night like birds, but they
had
none of the random motion or simple, obvious purpose of birds, and
they glowed. Each one of them was a shimmering, living flame. Those
flames rode the winds surrounded by clouds of their shining jellyfish.
They tied new, big, shimmering white bubbles to their established
base. They launched silver-scaled dirigibles into the air. They
hovered, staying still relative to their base in knots of twos and
threes, probably talking earnestly. They lit the night with their very
presence, and Vee knew deep inside she'd never forget the pure beauty
and wonder of this one moment, no matter what happened next.
What happened next was that they were spotted.
A trio of People broke away from the others and dived toward
the
scarab. Sheila's hands convulsed on the wheel.
"Wait for it," said Adrian, gesturing to her to relax.
The People pulled up sharply in front of the main window, close
enough that Vee had to squint against the light they radiated until
her eyes adjusted. She could see their muzzles opening and closing and
their flexible lips covering teeth that looked like a forest of tightly
packed toothpicks. Their shining wings rippled minutely in the wind,
each centimeter of skin adjusting itself to keep them from being blown
away. Their jewel-colored crests spread wide. What were they for?
Stabilizers? Sensory organs? She hadn't asked. It seemed like she
hadn't remembered to ask anything important.
But, God and Mother Creation, they were beautiful.
One of the People drifted forward from the others, until its
(his?
her?) muzzle floated a bare centimeter from the thick layer of quartz
that separated the humans from the outside.
"Isn't he one of T'sha's engineers?" Josh traced the air with
his
finger, indicating the interlocking circle pattern on the underside of
its wings. The tattoos stayed black, despite the surrounding light.
The effect was startling.
Vee nodded
. They never told us the
engineers' names. Why?
But he did look familiar. She stepped forward, leaning between Adrian
and Sheila, and looked straight into his eyes.
Do you see me? Do you know me?
Outside, Semi-Familiar swayed from side to side, as if he were
taking the measure of the window. Adrian seemed torn between working
the controls to keep them steady and staring at the People to try to
guess what Semi-Familiar might do. Semi-Familiar circled the scarab. He
flew above and underneath. He peered into the rear hatch window. He
hovered a long time beside the treads.
"What's he doing?" demanded Sheila all of a sudden.
"He's an engineer," Josh smiled. "He's saying, look, here's a
cool
new machine. How's it fit together?"
Vee managed to stifle her laugh. But Josh was right. That would
be
the first thing an engineer would do.
At last, Semi-Familiar returned to the main window, and he
stayed
there for a long moment, doing nothing but looking in at them, not
quite touching the window while his fellows talked—maybe argued—behind
him.
Finally, he backed away, drawing almost level with his
companions.
He said something, and they responded by lifting their muzzles, and
deflating and reinflating. Agitatedly? Approvingly? She could tell
nothing from their eyes.
Semi-Familiar flew off to the northeast a little and then darted
back. He repeated the move several times.
"I think he wants us to follow him," said Vee.
Adrian's hands clenched the wheel and then released it. "Okay,"
he
dragged the word out like a sigh.
"I am officially protesting this," said Sheila. "I end up like
Heathe, I'm coming back and haunting the hell out of you, Makepeace."
"You end up like Heathe and I'll deserve it." Adrian adjusted
his
controls and eased the stick forward. The scarab flew gently after the
Person they thought they recognized.
Their passage did not go unnoticed. The People swarmed around
them, thrusting their glowing muzzles toward their windows,
and peering inside the scarab with their silver eyes.
"Keep out of the damn way," breathed Sheila, but it was more
like a
prayer than a curse.
They did, barely sometimes, but they did. They were born knowing
what was needed for flight, and they did not interfere with the
scarab's wing or block the forward path. They did swoop in wide circles
all the way around the transport and hover alongside, keeping pace with
the machine easily.
"I swam with the dolphins once, in Hawaii," said Josh. "That was
like this, only, this is more…"
Vee nodded, understanding perfectly. She remembered the time her
mother took her and her brothers and sisters to a butterfly atrium in
St. Louis. She'd stood still in the middle of the garden, sweat and
humidity soaking her clothes, while butterflies fluttered all around.
The little blurs of color appeared here and there, holding still for a
moment before taking off or landing, according to their needs of the
moment. She'd felt herself to be in the center of a whole new world,
one that belonged to butterflies instead of people.
That feeling came back to her now, impossibly magnified.
Now the portal spread underneath them. Vee hadn't been prepared
for
how big it would be. It must have been at least a kilometer across.
More. It stretched out until the darkness hid the far edge in her
sight. The support struts hunched up like mountain ridges.
The air at the portal's center trembled, and the scarab
vibrated in
response. Adrian gritted his teeth and eased the scarab backwards and
up. He glanced at Vee as if he wanted to tell her they were leaving
now, but he didn't say anything, and Vee silently thanked him.
Outside, Semi-Familiar stopped, fanning his wings to keep his
place.
Another Person rocketed up from the portal's edge. This one had a
blue-and-white striped crest that Vee definitely recognized.
"Ambassador D'seun," she said. Josh nodded once.
D'seun swelled up in front of Semi-Familiar, and whatever he was
saying, he was saying it fast and there was a lot of it.
Up until then, Vee would have bet nothing could make her take
her
eyes off the People, but, beneath them, the center of the portal began
to glow.
A net woven of strands of pure, white light formed in the
massive
portal. The strands thickened and strengthened until they became a
sheet of light that twisted and folded, and Sheila and Adrian were
shouting at each other, and the scarab was backing away and the world
clenched itself up for a minute and a whole flock of shining golden
bodies shot out of the center of the portal like a living fountain.
D'seun turned his back on Semi-Familiar. We have to find
out
what this one's real name is. The ambassador swooped down into
the
center of the arrivals. They lost sight of him among the others
wheeling and diving in the twilight air.
Semi-Familiar looked over his shoulder at them, trying to send
them
some message they had no way to understand, and followed Ambassador
D'seun down into the flock of newcomers. His arrival stilled them, and
they fanned out in an uneven sphere around him.
"Scarab Three, Scarab Three," called the intercom. Everybody
jumped. "Scarab Three, where are you?"
"Not where we're supposed to be," muttered Sheila.
Adrian shot her an aggravated glance and opened the radio.
"We're
doing a reconnaissance on the aliens, Venera. Everything's okay.
What's up?"
Or maybe they're doing
reconnaissance on us. The
newcomers
were heading their way, fanning out like geese, if geese fanned in
three dimensions.
"Dr. Failia's on her way down to the Discovery site. She wants
to
talk to the People for herself. Is your ambassador back?"
The latest crowd of People surrounded them, hovering, peering
and
talking, unheard and uncomprehended, to each other. One large, bright
Person with an amethyst crest hovered alone in front of the main
window. The wavering tattoos around its muzzle matched both D'seun's
and T'sha's.
"I think we've got a new one, Venera," said Vee.
"Then bring them back with you, but get back there. Everything's
blown up, and we need to sort out what they're doing here."
"Roger that, Venera," said Adrian, fervently. "We're on our way
back."
"Okay, kids," said Sheila as she and Adrian worked the
controls,
banking the scarab in a wide arch. "Time to play follow the leader."
* * *
"That was the New People?" asked Z'eth, both wonder and
amusement
filling the air between her and D'seun.
D'seun dipped his muzzle. "Their engineers, rather than their
ambassadors. No ambassador would have been so rude." He could not
believe Br'sei had brought them here to disrupt the welcome he had
planned for Z'eth and the other ambassadors, to display the New People
before D'seun had a chance to say
anything.
"I would have thought they'd be bigger," mused Ambassador
P'eath.
"From your description, Ambassador D'seun, I was expecting monsters."
"Should we follow them?" piped up Ambassador K'ptai. "They only
have
a single working station for communication. Is that not correct?" She
turned an eye toward D'seun.
"That is correct, Ambassador K'ptai," he said, deflating a
little
in deference. "I was hoping we could take counsel first so that you
could be fully conversant with the current status of New Home…"
Z'eth overflew him, gracefully, with plenty of distance.
"Perhaps
we can hear what the New People say and then what you say. It is rude
to keep even mere engineers waiting, surely."
The whistles of assent buffeted D'seun from every side.
"I hardly think we need a formal vote here," remarked Z'eth.
"Will
you lead the way?"
D'seun forced himself to swell. "Of course, Ambassadors." Well,
let
the New People show them. Let the ambassadors see what he had seen. It
would happen. It could not help but happen. The ambassadors were not
fools, not like Br'sei. They would see the truth.
Besides, he had Z'eth's promise. With that secured, all would be
well.
All the dirigibles that were not out with the engineers and
surveyors were quickly summoned, including the one D'seun had been
using since the beginning. It knew its way perfectly by now. It needed
no prompting to take them across the plain and over the Living Highland
76 to where the two transports waited, low and gleaming in the dim
twilight.
The dirigibles slowed, reaching out their anchors to each other
so
they made a waiting chain while the ambassadors spilled from the
gondolas. The ambassadors swam against the thickening air to hover just
above the crust, circling around the transports and the communication
screens, peering closely at all they saw. The air rippled with their
excited commentary.
Only D'seun came immediately to hover beside the perches T'sha
had
left behind.
The translator, activated by his presence, read the words that
appeared on the New People's screen along with the familiar image of
Engineer Vee. Now though, instead of shades of red, she was many
colors—cream and pink and gold in coverings of pale blue and green. The
New People's engineers had been busy.
"Ambassador D'seun?" The translator's clear voice cut through
the
swirl of exclamation. "Good luck to you and to everyone who has
accompanied you."
The words touched the circulating crowd of ambassadors and
reminded
them that the formations in front of them were not just some growth on
this strange crust. The ambassadors arrayed themselves in a politely
interested tier, all facing the transports. Ambassador Z'eth came to
hover directly beside D'seun.
Lest I forget who is senior here,
thought D'seun.
I
forget nothing, Ambassador. You will understand what I am doing, soon.
"With me is the Law Meet of New Home," said D'seun to the
translator. "They wished to hear you speak on matters pertaining to
this world on which we find ourselves. Is this you to whom I wish good
luck, Vee?"
Let it be seen that I am
civilized and polite. That
I am a whole person.
There was a pause while the translator displayed the words for
the
New People and they formulated their response.
"Vee is here, but does not speak. I am Helen Failia. I am the
ambassador for Venera Base." The image of the New Person on the screen
shifted slightly and became smaller, rounder, more wrinkled, and a
little darker, with a more abbreviated gray crest. This image too
raised both its hands in greeting.
Finally they see fit to send
someone we can truly speak to.
"Good luck to you, Ambassador Helen."
"Ambassador Helen," spoke up Ambassador Z'eth. "Forgive me if I
do
not observe necessary ceremony, but the Law Meet is assembled here to
seek an understanding of your claim to this world." D'seun reformulated
her words into the translator's command language.
Words appeared under the New Person's, Ambassador Helen's, feet.
The
translator read the words out.
"Our claim to this world is that we live here. Before we came
there
was no life at all on Venus. Now, there are ten thousand of us in
Venera Base. Four thousand of those were born in that base and have no
other home. Our work is the study of this world. That study gives us
both individual reward and our means of exchange with others of our
kind. Without it, we have no home and no purpose to our lives."
Behind and above, D'seun heard the rustle of wings and skin.
"Now,
there," said K'ptai, "is an answer that is neither greedy nor insane."
"Such a difference to deal with an ambassador," said D'seun, his
voice carefully neutral. He spoke to the translator. "Then why is there
no life beyond your habitat? Why have your people not expanded in the
last eighty years?"
A pause. "You have been watching us for that long?"
"We have been working with New Home that long. We needed to see
what
your claim to this world is."
"And because you do not recognize our claim, you will throw us
off
this world?"
K'pta froze. "Is that what they think? That we're
insane?"
Ambassador Z'eth swooped a little closer to the translator. "We
make
no claim on anything used to support and maintain your life or the
lives of the other New People on this world. These things are yours and
are acknowledged as such without question."
New words appeared on the screen. "I understand you wish to make
this world your home?" read the translator. "How will you do that?"
D'seun looked to Z'eth for permission to speak, but it was
P'eath,
Ambassador for Ba'detad in the Far Southerns, who came forward to
answer, swelling her aging body as she did. "We have already
established that this world is capable of supporting the life that
supports us. If, and only if, no one else has a valid claim to this
world, then we will attempt to establish a biosystem." She waited while
D'seun translated between her and the tools. "If the biosystem takes
hold, then we will birth settlements for our people and we will live
here while the changes on our home rebalance themselves and we can
again live there. When we are gone, this world will be left as fallow
to rebalance itself." P'eath had proposed the original idea of New
Home. She carried her pride of that accomplishment like an extra tattoo
on her wings. But her vision extended no further than finding a new
world. She did not see the wider implications of allowing the New
People to remain here.
"What about the rest of the planets that orbit this sun?" asked
the
translator for Ambassador Helen.
"We do not need them," said Z'eth without hesitation. "They will
not
help us spread life."
"What about us?" The image gestured toward the clouds. "The
humans
here on Venera? While you are… spreading life, what will you do with
us?"
"Ambassador," murmured D'seun to Z'eth, keeping his words light
as
pollen. "Do not answer. Make no promises. There are consequences here…"
But if Z'eth heard him, she gave no sign. She kept her gaze
fixed on
the communicator.
"Community is a resource," said Z'eth. "One which we hope you
will
provide for us. You have studied this world for a long time and we hope
you will share your knowledge with us."
No, no. There can be no community here.
This world must be ours
alone. They cannot be controlled, cannot be predicted.
I
hold your promise!
"In return," said Z'eth, spreading her wings to show their scope
and
the canopy of her tattoos to the New People waiting in their shelters,
"we hope we can help you." No one questioned her right to speak or her
words. D'seun's gaze swept the assembled ambassadors, and he wondered
how many of them owed promises to Z'eth.
The image of Ambassador Helen bobbed its face several times.
"This
all sounds very good, but what assurance can you give us that you will
not change your position later, when there are more of you here?"
That was a tricky question. It raised implications of sanity. If
the
People were insane, they'd lie. But there was no way to prove sanity in
advance. After a moment, Ambassador P'tkei descended to within the
translator's range and spoke. "What assurance would you accept?"
There was a long pause, even after the words had been fed to the
translator. "Good question."
D'seun fluttered, inflating and deflating rapidly, angry at this
show of understanding and aware his anger was absurd. They would betray
themselves soon enough. This was a thin shell. It would crack. "This
world was declared New Home by the High Law Meet. Since then, miles had
passed under us both and we have done nothing but debate your status
and save your lives. If we were insane, as you fear, and meant to
destroy you, would we not have done so already?"
Another pause. Were they debating over there? Or were they just
trying to understand?
At last, the answer came. "I can accept this."
"Then we have our understanding?" said Z'eth. "You agree this
world
is ours to make our new Home?"
"Yes," said the translator. "To you, this is New Home, and
together
we have community. You will help us if we need it, as you helped the
others in the scarab that crashed?"
"Life helps life," said Z'eth. "We will do what we can."
"Our situation here is not easy." The image of the ambassador
seemed to shrink a bit. "There are those with whom we disagree about
our rights to this world, and consequently yours. They might attempt to
cut off our supply routes from the other worlds. We may be forced to
ask for a great deal of assistance in maintaining ourselves here."
Hope and fear burned together inside D'seun. There was clear
acknowledgment that this was New Home. That would relax many of the
ambassadors at his back. But there were words in this delectation that
would raise the questions he needed openly debated. Here was the first
crack in the New People's shell.
D'seun opened his muzzle to speak, but Z'eth spoke first. "This
is
our world, together. We will of course help you."
Ambassador Helen's image raised its hands again. "Thank you,
Ambassadors all. We will talk more in the future. Hopefully our
engineers can find a way to make this easier."
"I am certain they can." Pride swelled Z'eth. She hadn't heard
it,
then. That was all right. He would make her hear.
"Good-bye, then," said the words beneath Ambassador Helen.
"Good luck in your life."
Z'eth a apparently resisted the urge to trumpet her triumph, but
she
did spread her wings to the assembled ambassadors. "We have them. We
have this world. Clean and clear, it is ours."
"But we still have a problem," said D'seun, deflating humbly.
"Ambassador?" Z'eth shrank to something close to her normal
size.
"The other New People. Their distant family on their other
world."
He swelled and lifted his muzzle, making sure his words touched all the
Law Meet of New Home. "Did you not hear the ambassador? They are
willing to dispute the clear and legitimate claims to this world, when
they have no counterclaims in place. They are insane."
* * *
Vee watched D'seun and the other ambassadors spread their wings
and
rise gracefully into the sky like a dream of golden birds.
"I cannot believe you did that," she whispered harshly to the
command board. "Holy God and Mother Creation, I cannot
believe
you did that!"
I can't believe I let you do that.
Vee looked down at
her
own hands on the command board. Helen Failia once again sat in the
pilot's seat.
"I didn't do anything," said Helen, firmly. "I just made sure we
had
backup in case the C.A.C. tries to force us to do things their way."
"Didn't do anything?" Vee stared at her in complete disbelief.
"You
just got an alien race involved in a pissant bid for revolution that
they can't possibly understand. You called yourself an
ambassador,
for God's sake. Do you know what that means to them? It means you speak
for a whole city, that you have the right to make decisions for an
entire population!"
"I do speak for a whole city," replied Helen.
"Did Michael and Ben know what you were going to say?" asked
Josh
from his position in the back of the cabin. They'd rigged up a
monitoring station in the Discovery so that he wouldn't have to leave
the scarab to keep an eye on the equipment.
"They knew." Helen nodded once. But she did not, Vee noticed,
look
at either of them.
"Did they approve?" inquired Josh.
Helen turned and gave him an icy glare. "That is none of your
business."
"The U.N. could be doing anything," said Vee hoarsely. "They
could
be planning an embargo. They could be sending in soldiers!"
"Maybe." Helen's voice was flat and practical, just like the
expression on her face. "That's their problem."
Vee got slowly to her feet, her hands shaking with rage. Josh
scraped his chair back a little, and she saw his expression urging her
to caution. She didn't care. He didn't get it. None of them got it.
"You idiot!" she rasped at Failia. "You stupid, bloody-minded,
idiot! If we get them involved with this, they may decide the Terrans
are greedy or crazy. Do you know what that means to them?"
"No." Helen regarded her calmly. "And neither do you. Sit down,
Dr.
Hatch."
"And remember who I'm talking to?" shot back Vee. She swept out
her
hand. "How could I forget? I'm talking to a woman who is willing to get
an entire alien race involved in her stupid little pissing games!"
Helen's face flushed a dark purple, even though her voice
remained
soft and calm. Her gnarled hands clenched the seat's arms.
"Dr. Hatch, thank you for your help in facilitating
communication
with the People. I think, however, you had better be aboard the shuttle
which will be returning your colleagues to Earth."
Josh laid a hand on Vee's shoulder. He opened his mouth to start
to
say something.
"No, Josh," said Vee, coldly. "I think you'd better distance
yourself from me." She met Dr. Failia's gaze without blinking. "I think
I'm a very bad person to be near right now."
But if you think I'm going to let this
happen, Dr. Failia,
think
again. Think hard.
They held their ground, staring each other down. There was no
way
for her to win here, Vee knew, and her only exit options lacked
dignity. But a display of petulant
vulnerability now might be
beneficial later on.
God Almighty, Vee you have been doing
this for too long.
"They shipped all the dissenters out of Bradbury too." She
whirled
around and stormed down the central corridor and into her cabin. The
door swished shut behind her. She wished it would slam.
Vee dropped onto the edge of her couch and pressed her fingers
against her temples. Think, think.
This has to handled. You can't
let them do this to T'sha. To the world. To everything. A sad
realization came over her. Nobody
even asked about T'sha. We don't
know what's happening to her.
She stayed like that until she heard the door swish open again.
She
unfolded herself. Josh stepped over the threshold and let the door
close behind him.
"How's life outside?" she asked lightly.
He sat on the edge of the couch facing her. "Helen's calling up
to
the base to say mission accomplished. Adrian is going a little nuts
checking and rechecking the soundness of the scarab." He glanced at the
door. "I think he really does not want to be here."
Vee laughed, once. "That makes two of us." She looked down at
her
fingertips. "What are you going to do?"
Josh sighed and looked around the cabin, a little bleak, a
little
annoyed. Vee sympathized. This was a lousy place to be having this
discussion. Neither one of them could stand up straight. The
crash-couches weren't comfortable to sit up in. Her shoulders ached and
she bet his did too, and who knew when Helen was going to come walking
through the door to see what they were conspiring about. The whole
situation stank.
"You know what's the worst?" Josh asked suddenly, as if reading
her
thoughts. Vee shook her head. "That I can't win. If I go home, I'm
turning my back on what might be the most important thing that's ever
happened to humanity. On the other hand, if the Venerans start
anything, you know the propaganda machine on Mother Earth's going to
paint Venera as a bunch of mindless Fullerite rebels. So, if I stay,
it'll look like I'd rather be with traitors and aliens than my friends
and family." He glanced at Vee and shook his head again. "It'll look
like I'm a traitor."
"I know," she said. "It's pretty much a disaster." She reached
up
and pulled her veil off, picking out the pins and dropping them into
her lap. "Maybe the smart thing is to leave it to the disaster makers."
Josh's mouth quirked up. "You don't mean that."
She shrugged. "Not really." She wound the scarf through her
fingers.
It was real silk, a blazing paisley pattern. Amber, her
next-to-youngest sister had bought it for her, for some birthday or the
other. "What's going on here, it's stupid. If I can stop it, I have to."
"Because it's stupid?" he said quizzically. "Not because it's
right,
or wrong, but because it's stupid?"
He looked incredulous, and she supposed she couldn't blame him.
It
sounded hard, even to her. She searched herself for an explanation.
"You know why I do my act? My Vee-the-Temperamental-Artiste act?"
"I have a few ideas." Josh leaned back on both hands. "Most of
them
have to do with getting attention."
Vee waved his words away with the end of her scarf. "When I hit
college, the beauty fads had cycled back around to tall, skinny, and
pale." She spread her arms wide. "Ta-daa. Suddenly, and for the first
time in my life, I was it. I was the ideal. As a result, I had people
sidling up to me and saying"— Vee leaned forward and gave an imaginary
person a confidential nudge—" 'My dear, wherever did you get yourself
done?' I'd say I'd never been 'done.' This"—she gestured at her
torso—"was just me. They'd look smug or sour, and not one of them would
believe me. So"—she shrugged—"I started telling this long story about
this bod shaper in the Republic of Manhattan and how much physical
therapy I had to go through after he added ten centimeters to my
height, and how he'd died last year in a boating accident, and I was
just devastated because what if I needed to get short again…" She
dropped her voice back to normal. "Nobody with a brain believed me for
a second, but the ones without a brain…" She tightened her hands around
the scarf. "Right and wrong can be difficult, but stupidity is easy to
spot, and this situation is brimming with stupidity."
The corner of Josh's mouth twitched. "Must be a nice view from
up
there."
"Maybe." Vee looked at the door. It remained closed. "Will you
help
anyway?"
Josh dropped his gaze. A dozen different kinds of indecision
played
across his face, one after another. Did he have family on Earth? Vee
wondered. She didn't know. She'd never asked. She'd accepted the
appearance of a bachelor researcher, without ties to bind or to
anchor. The realization hit Vee hard. She'd become so used to being
judged by her surface appearance, she'd somewhere started doing the
same with other people.
And here was the one person of unquestioned substance in this
whole gigantic mess, and he might be about to slide through her
fingers.
Josh sighed, interrupting her thoughts. "I will help. I think we'd
better start by talking to Michael Lum. He's the steadiest member of
the governing board, and has the fewest political interests."
Gratitude rushed through Vee. "Thank you," she breathed.
Josh studied her, looking for what she had not said. Maybe he
found
it. She hoped he did. She hoped there'd be a chance to say it later.
"You're welcome." His smile was small, but it reached his eyes. "What
do we do now?"
Vee considered. Much to her relief, ideas sparked quickly to
life.
"You need to go out there and make obeisance. Make sure she knows
you're still on her side so you can keep working on the mobile com
drone. We may need to be able to talk to the people without
interference." She gave him a wry grin. "Nobody's got you down as a
troublemaker yet. You'll be able to work the system more easily than I
can."
"All right." Josh uncrossed his legs. "While I'm working behind
the
scenes, what are you going to do?"
Vee grinned at him. "Make trouble."
* * *
"Ambassador Helen has with her own words condemned the New
People's
distant family as insane." D'seun flew with the Law Meet over the New
People's transports and his words were heavy with assurance. "They
would hold back the spread of life if they could. Do we permit New Home
to grow in the presence of this threat? Do we refuse to do our best to
help this life with which we now share our new world?"
This life
which cannot survive without its distant family, unless they turn to
us, and then we will have the control we need. Yes, all could still be
made right.
"Do we know that this is the best?" countered bloated K'ptai,
overflying him without regard to rank. D'seun might be younger, but he
had been an ambassador longer than she. "Our understanding is still
incomplete."
"Helen is an ambassador." Z'eth steered her path between D'seun
and K'ptai. "We must agree that her words are more accurate
than any engineer's could be."
"Ambassadors, Ambassadors." P'eath lifted herself up until it
seemed
as if she would touch the clouds. "We are not children playing about
the edges of our village. These are not appropriate questions for the
open air. We must return to our debate chamber, crude as it is, and
make proper consideration of all matters there. Our haste is unseemly.
We have not examined all the evidence." But D'seun did not miss the way
she glanced up at Z'eth as she spoke, almost as if she were seeking
permission to be reasonable.
"There is one question we might think on as we return, however,"
said D'seun softly, lifting himself up so they would all feel his
words. "The New People require raw material from the world they call
Earth
to maintain themselves. We have many records of this fact. The distant
family is threatening to withhold this. Do we deny our neighbors access
to the raw materials they need to survive and spread their own life
because an insane family stands in their way?"
Silence spread across the wind. D'seun flapped his wings, taking
himself outside the quieting circle of ambassadors and saw what he
expected. They all looked to Z'eth. Could they all owe Z'eth? Had she
brought every vote with her? And she had promised her vote to him.
If that was true, it was done. Even if T'sha returned this
minute,
she could not ruin what he grew here. The New People would be
contained or destroyed. The health of New Home was assured.
D'seun swelled. All was finally well.
* * *
Helen watched the People filter into their dirigibles and
depart.
She felt empty, as if somehow drained of purpose.
Not surprising, I suppose.
I just gave the world away.
She
brushed her hair back behind her ears and tried not to hear Vee's
accusations ringing in her ears.
The radio crackled to life. "Scarab Ten, this is Venera Base,"
came
Tori's voice.
Helen leaned forward and touched the Reply key. "This is Scarab
Ten.
Go ahead, Venera."
"I'm glad we got you, Dr. Failia. There's a message here
incoming
from Earth, and they won't talk to anyone else on the governing board."
Won't talk to anyone else? Is it
Su? "Can you send it
down?"
"It'll be audio only, but yes, I can."
Helen pushed herself up a little straighter in the chair on pure
reflex. "Okay, Tori, put it through."
"Everything okay up here, Dr. Failia?" Adrian's head poked
around
the corner from the analysis nook.
"Fine." She picked a coffee cup up out of its holder and stared
at
the dregs in the bottom. "It's just the C.A.C. calling to tell me I'm
in contempt, I'm sure."
Or to find
out what I think I'm doing, at
the very least. She tried to remember whether the cup was hers
or
not, and couldn't. She put it back.
"Helen?" said the voice from the intercom. "This is Su. I have
Secretary Kent with me. You've raised a great deal of concern with
your… abrupt disconnection from the committee meeting."
I'm sorry to have to drag you into
this Su. "Good
afternoon, Madame Secretary Su."
Venus spread out in front of her. Beta Regio lifted itself out
of
the ragged plain. The plateau was the color of ashy coals in the
twilight, but with bright ribbons of lava lacing its side from the
volcano that forced itself up from the tableland's edge. It steamed and
smoked in the wavering air and would continue to for centuries to come.
Unless, of course, the People wanted to do something else to it.
Could they stop a volcano? They could travel instantly across
light-years, and they were talking about transforming an entire world.
What was one volcano compared to all that?
"Dr. Failia," came Secretary Kent's voice. "I'm not going to turn
this conversation into a total farce by informing you that you've been
charged with contempt of a governmental committee."
I'm so glad.
"What I am going to tell you is that in accordance with the
articles
of incorporation for Venera Base, you
are being
removed as head of the governing board."
"By whom, Madame Secretary?" asked Helen.
The time delay dragged out. Helen watched the smoke of the
burning
mountain. She remembered her first glimpse of the volcano. She'd been
dropped down with Gregory Schoma in a very crude version of what would
become a scarab. Theirs was more like a cross between a turtle and the
original lunar rover. It was cramped as hell, they were strapped in to
the point of suffocation, and despite the shielding, despite the
scrubbers, despite everything, the cabin still smelled strongly of
rotten eggs.
Helen hadn't cared. No one had ever been below the cloud layer
before. Oh, they'd sent some probes down, but never a person. They were
first, and they'd see… they'd see…
Then had come that moment when the blanket of clouds had parted
and
she looked down and saw what they'd been guessing at and arguing over
for literally centuries. She saw the mountain lifting above the rugged
tableland with lava running freely down its charcoal slope.
"It's alive!" she had shouted to Greg, delight making her
foolish.
"It's alive!"
"You can help keep this process as smooth and open as
possible,"
Su
was saying
. Did they give you a
script to read from, Su? This
doesn't sound like you. "We will need to consult closely with
your
people about their experiences and the data they've gathered thus far
on the aliens."
"No," said Helen.
Alive. Almost no one seemed to understand what that meant. This
world still had a living heart. It wasn't broken, like the Moon, or
burned out, like Mars. It had fire, it had air, it had earth. There was
even water, if only just a little in the heart of the clouds. It had
all the ancient elements, the only world that did, aside from the home
world herself. It was Earth's neglected twin, but because they
couldn't mine it or build on it, no one cared.
"I beg your pardon?" came Secretary Kent's astonished reply.
"Your people will not be consulting with my people. Your people
will
not be allowed to land."
No one cared how beautiful this world was, how rich and
vibrant,
how much they could learn about the origins of their own home from this
mysterious and fiery place. No one at all cared what she might have to
offer.
Except the people in Venera, and now, the People.
"Helen. Be very sure you understand what's going on here." Su
again, sounding much more like herself. "You are not being given a
choice. The
Golden Willow
will be leaving in two days. It has
a complement of C.A.C. diplomats and support staff, as well as a full
company of peacekeepers to make sure that this transition goes smoothly
and to advise in case the aliens become overtly threatening." Su
paused to let that sink in. "If you try to break your charter, all
flights to Venus will be halted. There will be no transport of goods or
people between Venera and Earth. All satellite support will be shut
down. You will not be able to speak to any of the other worlds. You
will be completely cut off." She spoke the last words slowly, making
sure Helen heard each and every one.
Su was trying hard. She was a good friend, and she genuinely
cared.
A sort of colonial mother hen was Yan Su.
"It doesn't matter, Su," sighed Helen. "This little call is just
for
show and we both know it. The Secretaries and the committee are going
to
do what they are going to do, and so am I." She shut the connection.
Take good care of my world,
she thought toward the
vanished
aliens.
You're all we have now.
She got to her feet. She didn't want to have to shout at Adrian, but
they needed to get back in
the air. There was still Venera to consider, after all, and looked like
Venera was going to be put under siege.
Contents -
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Chapter Seventeen
Michael glanced at the clock on the livingroom view screen.
4:05
a.m. Not a time anybody should have to know about. There should be a
rule that everybody was allowed to sleep through four in the morning.
Because when you were awake at four in the morning, you felt like the
last person alive in the world. In any of the worlds.
He'd kissed the kids good night hours ago, running through the
rituals of tooth care and storytelling on autopilot and hating himself
for it. Even Jolynn had gone to bed at last, not saying anything when
he didn't join her. He'd just lie there, staring at the ceiling, all
his thoughts running circles. They both knew it. They'd been there
before, although not quite under these circumstances.
In four hours, Helen would be taking off from the surface to
come
back home. In less than that, every single person aboard Venera would
have heard what happened between her and Secretary-General Kent. Half
of them already knew before they'd gone to bed. It was the only subject
being talked about in the Mall, in the labs, up and down the
staircases, and along the halls.
She'd come back tomorrow, and then what?
The lights would come up to full morning, and he'd still have
Bowerman and Cleary trying to get into the base system and calling him
a hypocrite. He still wouldn't know who killed Derek and Kevin. He
didn't even know who sent that picture that Helen had decided was a
direct attack against her and Venera.
Or rather, he might know. He just didn't want to look.
What if it were Ben? Without Ben's urging, she might give up his
whole revolutionary idea. Maybe she was just grasping at the straws he
held out. Without him, Michael could talk her out of this.
But he'd have to do it quickly. He'd have to have the evidence
in
hand when Helen got off the shuttle. He couldn't give anybody time to
think.
Which meant he'd have to open Schoma's com files.
Well, maybe he'd nursed this particular secret long enough, he
was
expecting everybody else to take responsibility for their actions in
this farce; he had to be ready to take on his.
Once he'd shown Helen what a mess they were really in, they could
call Yan Su in on their side and hash out a compromise with the U.N.
Then he could find out who had taken Derek and Kevin's lives, and
everything could get back to the way it was supposed to be. Well,
mostly. They'd still have the aliens to deal with, but at least the
human order would be restored.
Right then, alone, in the silence and the darkness, the human
order
was all Michael cared about.
* * *
D'seun had never seen an experiment house as crowded is Tr'es
had
managed to make hers. Yards of encapsulated folding racks made a stiff
net strung wall to wall and floor to ceiling.
The net left no room even for one person to stretch his or her
wings. Tr'es climbed clumsily from rack to rack with her recorder
bobbing through the air behind her. The racks were full of specimen
spheres and microcosms that held the raw materials from both the New
People they had acquired. Most of them, D'seun saw, were solutions of
various colors—red, blue, yellow, gray, even a deep greenish purple.
There was a skull, recognizable mainly by its eye sockets. Tr'es's
tools
had separated it neatly into plates, exposing the wrinkled gray matter
underneath. It was remarkably compact. Tr'es had told him it was the
major nervous center. The New People, it seemed, thought with only part
of their bodies.
"Good luck, Ambassador," said Tr'es, climbing over the nearest
rack, carefully not touching the spheres encasing the raw materials,
D'seun noticed. "How can I help you?"
D'seun held onto the threshold with one hand to keep himself in
place. "Good luck, Tr'es. Your work is going well?"
Pride swelled the engineer up until D'seun thought she would
burst.
"There is such a wealth of material here, Ambassador. We lost next to
nothing this time, because we had appropriate stasis containers and
microcosms ready to hold the materials." She spread her crest out. The
individual tendrils brushed the racks surrounding her. "It is a vision
of an entirely different way of arranging and spreading life. But"—she
went on excitedly before he could speak—"there are some shocking
familiarities on the molecular level. This may be confirmation that
life is patterned, not random. That the life we see is as it is because
this is
the working template…"
D'seun clacked his teeth at her enthusiasm. "Engineer, while I
sympathize with your eagerness to reshape our notions of the nature of
the universe"—she shrank in on herself, abashed— "are you aware of the
nature of the debate happening in the Law Meet?"
Her crest ruffled. "I had heard, Ambassador."
D'seun dropped himself directly into her line of sight. "It is
becoming increasingly likely that the distant family of the New People
will be declared insane. We need to know if you have found anything in
terms of a molecular solution, should we need to separate out their raw
materials."
Tr'es stilled and shrank. "Insane?"
D'seun dipped his muzzle. "One family of them may be."
"A deep shame that they let this happen to themselves." Her
words
barely reached him. "They are so elegant, so complex."
"Perhaps because of their complexity, they were unable to
prevent
this tragedy," suggested D'seun. The words felt good as he said them.
After all, how much damage had the People themselves done because they
didn't understand the true complexity of Home? But New Home was a
simple world. They would be able to control what they did here. No more
cities would die under their hands.
Tr'es's gaze drifted from specimen to specimen. "There are
several
possibilities," she said slowly. "Like us, they actually live in
symbiosis with all manner of monocellulars. There is a particular one…"
She clambered through the racks, climbing over and under them without
regard to orientation.
We have to get this child more room,
thought D'seun
idly.
Surely
we are not that pressed for resources.
She stopped by a specimen microcosm full of a hazy gray solution. "I
found it in some of the orifice membranes. It seemed to be doing no
harm, but when I cultured it in some issue and bone samples, it seemed
willing to feed on whatever it found, very like a wild yeast. I think
it maintains a balance in the New Person's body. But that balance can
be tipped, by, say, increasing its concentration in the body or
possibly
a chemical trigger that would turn the benign strain virulent." She
paused again, studying her brew. "It uses the chemicals trigger method
naturally, so that might be the course to follow."
"Could you pursue that line of research?" asked D'seun, swelling
slightly. "If we need it, we will need it soon." He gazed
around her ordered chaos. "I will see you are granted help and more
space."
"Thank you, Ambassador." There was gratitude in her words, but
still
she deflated where she clung. "Are they really insane, Ambassador?"
"Some of them are," he said, kindly. He could tell her more
later, if
that became necessary. "Only some. As are some of us."
"Then it will be a kindness to the rest if we do this." One of her
forehands hovered over the specimen sphere.
D'seun was tempted to clack his teeth at her piety, but he did
not.
Even after all she had seen, Tr'es still believed that life truly did
help life, on all levels and in all ways. It was one of the qualities
that made a good research engineer. If she needed to justify what she
was about to help do to the New People in order to work well and
quickly, he would willingly help her.
"A true kindness, because the insane family is threatening to cut
the sane off from the resources they need to live." That startled her.
She had not heard this part. She stared at him, horrified. D'seun
dipped his muzzle. "It's true. You'd best get to work, Engineer."
"Yes, Ambassador." She started speaking in a command language
so
specialized, D'seun understood only one word in three. A number of
tools detached themselves from the caretakers inside the crystalline
racks and began creeping toward the gray-filled microcosm.
D'seun left her to her work.
* * *
New Home's world portal had no securitors, no recorders, no
gates.
But it had no privacy either. The entire base knew when it was in use
and exactly who was going through. Br'sei had spent the past dodec-hour
engineering a need for fresh monocellular templates, because there
were still some mutations around Living Highland 98 that he didn't like
the look of and he did not want them to work their way up the chain
when there was a chain for them to work their way up, of course.
He had not asked Ambassador D'seun for permission to return to
Home. He had asked Ambassador K'ptai instead while she was on the way
to the grand debate D'seun had called. She had quickly granted his
request and vanished into the new debating chamber that his people had
grown for them.
For now we have ambassadors again,
and we must do nothing
without their official notice, thought Br'sei as he waited in
the
center of the portal for its light to reach for him.
Oh yes, we
all have a voice, and we all have a vote, but what does it mean, unless
those who overfly us all approve?
They were bleak, cynical thoughts, but he did not even try to
disperse them as the portal's light enfolded him and carried him back
to Home.
T'sha had been an engineer. T'sha saw the patterns of life.
T'sha
would not let this happen without a hearing.
T'sha did not owe D'seun her future.
Br'sei rose from the light into the vast metal cage of struts
and
supports that held the World Portals of Home. The technicians
fluttered and fussed about drain of generators and danger to delicate
connections. Br'sei apologized to them all and flew out of there at the
lowest possible height to show his shame at having put them through any
trouble. It was quicker than trying to assert his rank, and the whole
sky knew he'd had enough practice at humility lately.
Out in the open air, he returned to his proper size and flight
path.
Several public-use kites were moored to the portal cluster's chitinous
outer frame. Br'sei picked the closest and settled himself onto its
perches.
"Take me to Ca'aed," he said in the kite's command language.
"The
flight is urgent."
But the kite hesitated. "Ca'aed is under strict quarantine. I
cannot
take you there."
Br'sei pulled his muzzle back. Of course. Ca'aed was ill. In all
his
turbulent worry and need, he'd almost forgotten why T'sha was no longer
on New Home.
I have flown in a dead world too long.
I've forgotten what
it is
to be part of the greater balance of life.
But nothing had changed. The debate on New Home was forging
ahead,
whether Ca'aed was sick or well.
"Take me as close as you can," Br'sei ordered the kite.
The kite's ligaments trembled, but it was a lawful order and the
kite could not refuse. It unfurled its sails and tails and lifted
itself free of the mooring clamp.
The canopy sped away under them, filling the wind and Br'sei
with
rich life. He felt pleasantly dizzy drinking in the living air, but he
could not make himself relax. He kept watching the colors rushing away
underneath him, looking for gaps in the canopy's growth, or worse, the
telltale grays, browns, and blacks that indicated an untended patch of
disease.
How sick was the world? He was not sure anyone really knew
anymore.
Oh, they made reports and projections, and filled microcosms with
guesses. But no one really knew. D'seun thought he did. But then,
D'seun thought he knew the New People were insane and needed to be
killed. Br'sei might even have believed him if he hadn't seen them for
himself and if he hadn't known how early D'seun had reached that
conclusion.
Br'sei no longer had any doubt that it was D'seun who was
insane.
Could it be proved, though? That was the question. Br'sei owed D'seun
so much…
If D'seun were found insane, then Br'sei owed him nothing. But
if
insanity could not be proved and it was Br'sei who made the accusation,
then D'seun could take him into court, denounce him for malice, and
seek his indenture.
Br'sei had been indentured before. He wore the marks of it. He'd
sworn it would not happen again. Not even for something as important as
this.
I am a coward. Br'sei
shrank in on himself, but he did
not
tell the kite to change direction.
At last, the kite slowed its flight. "This is as far as I may
go,"
it said, furling its wings and banking away.
Br'sei looked to the southwest. Warning beacons floated in a
tidy
net in front of the kite, each barely a thousand yards from the other.
They seemed to be guarding nothing but the busy, healthy canopy,
though. He heard no sounds except for the wind. He tasted the currents,
and they seemed clear. On the horizon sat a single gray smudge, which
he supposed must be Ca'aed.
A warning net this far out?
No one was taking any
chances.
The situation must be very bad.
Br'sei lifted himself off the perches. The kite quivered and
breezed
away before he had even cleared its tendons. Br'sei rattled his wings,
uncertain whether to be amused or worried. Regardless, he flew toward
the warning net and felt his skin begin to prickle from the currents it
sent out.
"Attention," said his headset automatically. "You are
approaching a
quarantined area. Please select an alternate path."
"Quiet," ordered Br'sei. "Find me Ambassador T'sha. Tell her I
am
waiting at the quarantine boundary."
Silence stretched out around him, except for the distant noise
of
the wind through the canopy. No one came, no one went. He was used to
solitude and emptiness but not in a world where he could taste life. It
was eerie.
He strained the wind through his teeth. His engineer's palate
had
lost some of its sensitivity but not too much. He cataloged the flavors
and sensations in his mind.
His headset remained silent. Br'sei searched tastes and scents
for
the rank sweetness of disease and found none. Good, perhaps this was
an overreaction. There had been so much illness that it was better to
be safe, especially if some vectors remained unidentified.
Eventually, the headset spoke. "Good luck, Engineer Br'sei. This
is
speaker Pa'and. Ambassador T'sha cannot answer you now. I offer my
help."
Br'sei beat his wings impatiently, but kept the emotion from his
voice. "I have come from New Home. There is an emergency. I must see
Ambassador T'sha."
Silence for a moment and then, "There is an emergency here too,
Engineer."
"I know." Br'sei dipped his muzzle, although there was no one to
see
except the warning beacons. "I am an engineer. Perhaps I can help."
Silence again. "I thank you for your offer, Engineer Br'sei, but
if
you enter the quarantine, I cannot promise you will be allowed to leave
it."
Br'sei hesitated, fanning his wings uneasily. Well, he would
find
his way back when the time came. Without T'sha, D'seun would have no
opposing voice on New Home. It would become his world.
"I will come in. I may be able to help."
"I would thank you for your help," answered Speaker Pa'and. "I
have
sent the entry command to the quarantine net."
While Br'sei watched, four of the beacons faded from green to
brown.
He darted through the gap. On the other side, he took his bearings on
the gray smudge on the horizon and beat his wings until he found a
soaring wind to carry him forward on its back.
Br'sei had been to Ca'aed many times. As an apprentice, he had
been
required to study in each of the twenty-four ancients, where life had
grown layer upon layer for more centuries than anyone could accurately
count. While he explored the depth and breadth of its body, he had
talked to the city. He'd found a kind of openness in Ca'aed that was
sometimes lacking in the other truly old cities. There had been
contentment there, beyond duty and pride, and kindness. He'd briefly
considered asking for adoption, but his own birth city needed free
citizens so badly that he never had.
The horizon distortion began to clear, and Ca'aed came into
focus.
Something was wrong, though, and Br'sei couldn't quite make it out. He
strained his eyes. He saw the gold shadows of the citizens flying about
their business. He saw the wake villages, but why did they look like
they were being towed by their people?
What am I seeing? Br'sei
angled his wings to find more
speed in the wind.
Voices touched him. The faint voices of people called to each
other
through the air. Between them came the strong voices of the city,
directing, arguing, reassuring. Under it all, Br'sei heard pain. Pain
restrained with great strength, but it was there.
At last, his eyes resolved portions of the panorama in front of
him,
but for a long, agonizing moment, his soul refused to believe his eyes.
He saw a gleaming white bone, as broad as his own torso, laid
bare
to the wind and a cluster of people layering it over with something
pink and translucent.
He saw six people rise from the city with a quarantine net held
between them. Inside the net hung something misshapen and patched with
gray.
He saw that what surrounded Ca'aed were not its wake villages.
Those hung in the distance, like children afraid to come too close.
These were great segments of coral wall, tangles of muscle, tendon and
ligament, sections of skin and flesh gone colorless with fungal tumors,
air sacs, intestines, veins, even a heart. One of the city's huge,
precious hearts hung, blackened and distorted, in a quarantine blanket
with a flock of tools inside the blanket, and a flock of engineers
outside.
They're cutting the city. Life and
breath, they're
cutting the
city. Horror drew his bones together.
The delicate perfume of disease touched him, and it was all
Br'sei
could do to keep going.
As he drew near the very edges of the furious activity, a
female
flew toward him. For a moment, Br'sei thought it was Ambassador
T'sha. But as she reached him, he saw she was older than the
ambassador, although they shared a coloring of crest and skin. She and
T'sha were birth family though, that much was clear.
"Good luck, Engineer Br'sei." She raised her hands in greeting.
"Good luck, Speaker Pa'and," replied Br'sei, reading her tattoos.
They touched hands, but Br'sei could not keep his gaze focused
on
her. It kept skittering over her back to the surgery, the desperate
butchery, of Ca'aed.
"I didn't know," he murmured, shrinking in around his apology.
The speaker just dipped her muzzle. "How could you, Engineer?
But
perhaps you see now why the ambassador cannot speak with you."
Br'sei lifted his muzzle. Sounds and scents filled him— strained
voices, blood, rot, pain, the sounds of knives in flesh and saws in
bone. He could not escape it or turn away.
I should leave, or I should help.
Ca'aed was one of
the
first cities, an ancient life, a good soul with irreplaceable memories
and knowledge locked inside it. He should not be scheming to take away
its ambassador at the time she was most needed.
Even knowing that, he spoke. "Let me see the ambassador, Speaker
Pa'and. I swear to you, this is not a small thing. It affects the
entire future of New Home and it needs her voice. Our future, our hope,
Ca'aed's hope, needs her voice."
Speaker Pa'and pulled back. She fanned her wings to rise a
little
above him. Br'sei worked to hold his bones still.
She will refuse. She will not
believe me. Tension sang
through Br'sei's soul. I will have
to go back alone.
"She is consulting with some of the other speakers and the
archivers," said Pa'and. "I will take you to her."
"Thank you," replied Br'sei fervently.
Pa'and gave him no answer. She just turned on her wingtip and
led
him a long a curving path around and over the edge of the ruined city.
People dived in and out of its body, calling to one another. Br'sei saw
engineers, harvesters, and conservators, and dozens of others whose
tattoos he could not make out, all borne up by hard purpose and fear as
much as by the wind underneath them.
They do feel the death. They will
not say the word to
themselves, but they feel it. Br'sei kept his muzzle closed and
followed the speaker.
Around a bulbous outcropping in Ca'aed's wall, Br'sei finally
saw
T'sha. She hung swollen between the city and three males, as if she
sought to protect Ca'aed from their approach.
"We cannot promise them any of our people until all the vectors
for
this cancer have been analyzed," T'sha was saying. "We can promise them
full and free use of any knowledge their people discover, and surely
there are some futures they'd be interested in."
One of the males deflated. Br'sei thought he might be a brother,
for
he shared his colors with both T'sha and Pa'and. "We've spread the
offer of knowledge too thin, Ambassador. It's losing its value. We are
going to have to offer people or, at the very least, skills."
Frustration ruffled T'sha's crest. She turned toward the male
speaker. "What volunteers have we…" The sentence died away as she saw
Pa'and and she saw Br'sei.
"Your pardon," said T'sha to her advisers. She rose above them
and
flew to meet the new arrivals. "Engineer Br'sei, what are you doing
here?"
No words came. What was he doing here? What had driven him to
the
heart of this disaster? For a moment he honestly couldn't remember.
"A moment please, Speaker?" said T'sha to Pa'and. Pa'and dipped
her
muzzle and soared away to the cluster of waiting males.
She was exhausted, Br'sei could see that at a glance. The color
had
run from her skin, leaving her pale and gaunt as if she could not
inflate herself fully anymore. Her words felt brittle against his
muzzle as she spoke.
"Tell me what has happened, Engineer."
Br'sei deflated. "Ambassador D'seun is trying to convince the
New Home Law Meet that the New People should be turned to raw
materials."
He expected an explosion, but it did not come. She just settled
lower in the air as if she had lost all strength and only the wind kept
her from falling. "Openly now? What changed?" She looked up at him,
sorry and tired, and too full of these things to be afraid.
He let himself drop until his eyes were level with hers, and he
told
her how the New People came to the base as the ambassadors arrived and
how they spoke with each other and all seemed well, until D'seun… until
D'seun…
"Until D'seun and his words overrode whatever the New People
actually said." T'sha brushed her wing past her eyes. "Life of my
mother, Br'sei. He'd have them kill a whole world full of people?"
Br'sei dipped his muzzle.
"And they're listening?" A spark rose in her, burned, and
swelled
her skin with its heat. "No one has called this what it is?"
But Br'sei noticed even she did not say the word insanity.
"There are promises involved," he told her. "I haven't tracked them all
yet."
"Ambassador Z'eth." T'sha turned her face to her ruined city.
Its
miasma of scents and voices washed over her.
She stretched her wings to their limits. "Why?" she whispered
to
the wind and the pain and the ruin. "Is it my greed? Did I destroy the
balance of our lives?"
"No." Br'sei pressed closer, making his words strong and heavy
so
she could not mistake them. "Not yours, D'seun's. You have to go back.
You have to tell them what's happening. They'll listen to you. You're—"
"I'm what?" she whirled to face him, and he felt a dare in her
words. "I'm nothing, Br'sei."
"You're an ambassador," he said evenly. "One of their own."
She dipped her muzzle. "An ambassador who tried to do everything
at
once, who tried to compass worlds, and now her own city is dying
because of it."
Br'sei shrank under her words. He couldn't help it. "This
disease
is not your fault."
"Perhaps not." She fanned backwards. She was shrinking again as
the
spark within her faded away. "But it is my responsibility."
Br'sei felt his bones go absolutely still. "You will not come
back?
You will let the New People die?"
"Are they children?" she asked bitterly, dismissively. "Have
they no
ambassadors to speak for them?"
"Yes, they are children." He swooped closer. She could not do
this.
She could not turn away and leave him, leave them, he
corrected himself, alone to face the insane and the greedy. "They do
not understand what their words mean to us. I am sure of it."
T'sha drew closer, until her muzzle touched his. "What changed
your
mind, Br'sei? You were not so sure of them when you and I went to view
their city?"
Br'sei held size and place. "I had not met them then. I had not
seen
them for myself." He pressed his muzzle even more tightly against hers.
"You were an engineer once, Ambassador. You understand how deep the
roots of our instincts sink. You know what it is to feel the balance,
the wonder of new life that is sane and whole. You've brought such life
into the world with your own work. There have been moments when you
just knew that this was good and it would work." Now he
pulled away and spread his wings. "I looked at them when they came
fearlessly to meet us, and I just knew."
For a moment, he had her. He could tell by the shine in her eyes
and
the angle of her wings and the taste of the air near her skin. But in
the next moment she had swollen, and risen, and turned away.
"I will not leave my city."
All the air left Br'sei at a rush. He had lost. They had lost.
He
had tried to bring protection for himself and the New People, and that
had failed.
Now what? he asked himself,
but he already knew the
answer, and it frightened him.
"There is nothing I can say then." He spoke his words to her
wings
and crest. "But, you must forgive me, I am going back. I am going to
warn them. Maybe they can defend themselves, maybe not.
But life helps life, and I must do what I can."
He banked around and flew away. There were still the quarantine
checks with their bother and worry to get through, but he would deal
with that. He had to. He was all the New People had now, all New Home
had. Himself, alone and afraid.
In some small part of his soul, he hoped to feel the touch of
T'sha's voice against his back, but it did not come.
Contents - Prev / Next
Chapter Eighteen
"Scarab Ten approaching the runway. Welcome home, Scarab Ten."
Tori's words reverberated through the P.A. From the internal
speakers, Michael heard a tinny reproduction of the cheers filling the
corridors.
At the sound, his fists clenched until his knuckles turned white.
Michael remembered being selected for the governing board. He
remembered reading the notice on his briefcase screen, leaping up,
yelling like a fool, and dancing Jolynn, who was then six months
pregnant, around the apartment.
Gregory Schoma had retired and moved back to Mother Earth. Helen
and
Ben between them had decided that his replacement should be someone
born on the station. They had noticed the prestige schism growing
between research and nonresearch personnel. That was a problem all
outposts had dealt with since the first permanent settlement in
Antarctica. They had also noticed, however, that a growing number of
the nonresearch personnel were native Venerans.
That did not suit either of their visions for the base. So they
looked for a Veneran who would be acceptable to the various funding
groups and found Michael Lum. Veneran-born, Earth-educated, a talented
administrator, trained by Schoma himself, and married, with a baby on
the way.
"I know," he'd told Jolynn, when they'd collapsed breathless on
the
sofa. "It's partly a face appointment, but that's okay. Just think what
I can do from up there. Think about it! I'll be doing the security and
infrastructure maintenance, but I'll be constantly meeting with Bennet
Godwin. Access to Dr. Personnel himself."
From the beginning, Ben had shown concern for the issues Michael
raised. Ben had listened. Ben had worked with him to improve the base's
on-site education facilities, had worked to get Terran equivalencies
and Terran accreditations for Venera's schools. He'd worked quietly to
see that the details of tech and maintenancer jobs were publicized to
those children so that they could be someone important to the
well-being of their world, rather than just a janitor.
And Grandma Helen had smiled on them all, and it had been good.
And now? Michael's knuckles
ached. Now he had opened
the
files he swore he was never, ever going to use. He had his people
looking at Grace Meyer as a murderer and Ben Godwin as a traitor, and
he didn't know what to do.
He heard the faint rumble of the hangar airlock cycling for the
scarab.
"Airlock open, you're clear for the hangar, Scarab Ten,"
announced
Tori.
Michael had seen Tori take her post at flight control this
morning.
He'd done high school equivalencies with her. She was a cynic. She took
nothing at face value. But at that moment, she had looked like she had
seen a miracle, or at least a really fine illusion.
She wasn't the only one. The whole base had turned out to
welcome
Helen home. Somehow, her trip down to talk to the aliens had traveled
through the rumor mill and become a Historic Meeting of Peoples to
Reach a Great Accord. Everyone had heard about Secretary Kent's
conversation with Helen, along with one version or another of its
unveiled threats.
A copy of the transmission had even shown up in the base's
public
stream. Michael suspected Ben was responsible for that. Ben was
responsible for so many things.
You wait, he thought toward
the man standing tall, and
strangely serene, at his side.
What
will you do when she finds out
you are the traitor?
Michael and Ben stood in the passenger clearing area, watching
on
the wall screen as the hangar doors parted and the scarab, its cermet
hide scarred and pitted from use, rolled in between the silent rows of
machinery—shuttles on the left side, the other scarabs on the right. It
slotted itself neatly into the empty bay.
"Extending ramp," said Tori as a walkway stretched itself
toward
the scarab's airlock. It wasn't all that hot out there, and the
pressure was almost exactly one atmosphere, but the combination of CO2
and hydrogen sulfides was not healthy to breathe for very long.
There followed a series of rumbles and whooshes familiar to
anyone
who had traveled in space, as more airlocks opened. Then, Helen Failia,
looking as straight-backed and determined as ever, marched down the
narrow connector.
"Welcome home, Dr. Failia," announced Tori over the intercom.
Helen looked only a little startled. "Thank you, Tori," she said
in
the general direction of the open intercom. Then Helen faced Michael
and Ben. "A full welcoming committee, gentlemen?"
Ben practically beamed. "It's not just us." He swept a hand
toward
the intercom. Helen's eyebrows rose as she identified the rushing noise
as voices and exclamations.
"Well," she said, sounding slightly pleased. "We'd better not
keep
them waiting."
"Helen." Michael quickly sidestepped into her path. "There's
been a
couple of developments you need to know about, right now."
Helen frowned, but Ben scowled. A dark-red flush crept up his
neck.
"Okay." Helen glanced around. There was a small lounge off the
corner of the clearing area for the occasional passenger who came down
sick and dizzy from the transitions between weightlessness and full
gravity. "Gentlemen…" She gestured for them to follow her.
But movement caught his eye, and Michael glanced back toward
the
connector. Josh Kenyon and Veronica Hatch walked out into flight
control. Veronica caught Michael's eye and
lengthened her stride.
"I'd like to talk with you," she said as she brushed past him.
Then
she set her jaw and headed for the hallway, shouldering her way through
Helen's crowd. Michael looked back again at Josh. Josh simply nodded
and turned away, vanishing back into the scarab for reasons which he
obviously did not feel like sharing.
Deal with that later.
Michael hurried to catch up with
Helen and Ben.
The three of them crowded into the lounge, with its small table,
a
couple of chairs, and an old-fashioned fainting couch. Helen walked to
the back wall, turned around, and folded her arms.
"Well?"
Which first? Michael
thought of the cheering crowds and
the
recording of Helen's conversation with Mother Earth.
"We know who sent the photo to the C.A.C."
Helen took a deep breath and expelled it slowly. Michael
couldn't
help glancing at Ben. He'd gone ghost white, and Michael smiled
inwardly with a kind of grim triumph.
Helen looked from Michael to Ben. He saw the realization come to
her. Her face shifted, the expression turning from impatience, to
shock, to disbelief, and finally to sorrow.
"No, Ben. You didn't."
"I'm sorry," Ben spread his hands. "I… I wanted you to see what
Mother Earth really planned for us. It was the only way."
"Trying to push us into a revolution was an answer?" demanded
Michael. Ben looked regretful, but not at what he'd done. He was only
sorry he'd gotten caught. "I'd hate to hear the question."
Ben just shook his head. His color was returning, and now he was
a
little too pink. "You did hear it. You just weren't listening."
Which didn't even deserve an answer.
Helen collapsed into one of the chairs. She pressed her
forehead
against her palm and huddled in on herself as if she were cold or
frightened. Michael didn't blame her. He'd felt the same way when he
saw the files. Ben wasn't who he'd pretended to be all these years. He
had lied and manipulated them all from the start. This was just the
latest in a long series of deceptions. Michael wasn't even sure it was
the worst.
Michael opened his mouth to tell Helen, but she lifted her head.
"Well, it doesn't really matter," she said.
Michael choked. "What?"
"We need Ben." Helen got to her feet. "It would have come down
to
this sooner or later anyway. I need you both to keep Venera working."
"I'm with you Helen," breathed Ben, all sincere loyalty.
"Holy God!" Michael swung around to face him. "You! She doesn't
even
know who you are!"
Helen stayed still, swaying a little on her feet.
She must
be
exhausted, thought Michael.
Or
just stunned. Maybe that's
good. Let me show her how bad this is. Shock her back to her senses.
"His name is Paul Mabrey," said Michael, looking straight at
Ben.
The pink tinge to his skin faded, then darkened, until he turned red
with what? Shame? Anger? "He followed Fuller through the Bradbury
Rebellion and then disappeared under cover of an alias, leaving the
Paul Mabrey identity as one of the sharpest clip-outs our two U.N.
security drones say they've ever seen." Ben's eyes narrowed, just a
little, and Michael wondered what he was thinking. It didn't matter.
"He used you, Helen. He used you and Venera."
"No." Ben scrubbed his scalp. "Never. Not until the yewners
threatened to take us over. Helen, I just wanted Venera to be free."
For the first time in his entire life, Michael saw Helen look
her
age. She stepped slowly and carefully around the table and stopped when
she reached Michael's side. She laid her hand on his forearm, and he
felt the dryness of her skin, and the deep grooves in her palm.
Grandma Helen looked up at him with her dark eyes. "It doesn't
matter Michael," she told him. "We've already taken the first steps and
we can't turn around." She squeezed his arm, and continued past him
toward the door. Ben flushed even darker
with
triumph.
No, no. I will not let it go like
this. Michael had
control
of his voice again. "First steps?" he demanded of her back. "And we're
standing on, what? Fraud? Murder? Grace Meyer murdered Derek and Kevin
to keep them from tagging her as one of their bosses. Are you going to
say that doesn't matter?" He strode forward until he was beside her, at
least partly in her line of sight. "They were Venerans, Helen. They
were born here. They expected you to look out for them." His hands
flailed helplessly in the air. "Are you going to let them down?"
That stopped her. She stood there, just on the edge of the
door's
sensor range. Michael's heart hammered hard in his chest. She had to
listen to that. She had to.
"Give Grace to the yewners," she said. "They can take her down
to
Mother Earth for prosecution."
"Helen!" Michael cried. No other word would come.
"No, Michael," she said softly. "It's too late. The U.N. wants
to
take the world away from us. We are not going to let them."
She stepped forward. The door swished open. She walked through
the
empty staging area and out into the crowded hallway beyond, with Ben
right at her heels.
There was nothing Michael could do but follow along.
By the time he got to the corridor, the noise was deafening.
People
lined the sides of the staircase three deep. Applause, cheers, and
cries of "Welcome home!" showered down on Helen from all sides.
As Michael and Ben trailed behind, Helen descended the stairs.
She
shook hands, clasped arms, waved, looking for all the world like a
politician or like royalty. She had been both in her time, without the
titles, but with the jobs, and she was milking that experience now for
all it was worth.
Helen turned off the staircase when they reached the Mall. The
entire place was jammed. Parents held their children on their
shoulders. People whistled through their teeth and waved as Helen
worked her way through, laughing and trying to shush the crowd,
shouting she had something to say.
A space cleared in front of them. Someone shoved a table
forward.
Ben saw what was coming and held Helen's hand while she stepped up on a
chair and then up onto the table, turning it into an impromptu dais
with himself and Michael flanking her like an honor guard.
Now, Helen's arm-waving could be seen, and silence spread out
from
around her like a wave. She looked small up there, but pride gave her
stature. Pride and confidence. Helen knew exactly what she was doing,
or at least she thought she did. Michael glanced at the public screens
and there was Helen. Someone had been on the ball and gotten the
cameras going.
"You have already heard that I cut the line on the C.A.C.," said
Helen, loud enough to be heard over the ambient noise of the gathering.
"Now I want you to hear why."
Yes, tell us why, Grandma Helen,
thought Michael as he
felt
his neck muscles tense.
"I did it because they were about to remove from us the one
right we
have always had. The right to conduct our lives, our work, as we see
fit. They intend to tell us what to think about the new race of people
who have come to our world. Our world, not their world. They have not
spoken with these new people. They have not listened to them. But we
have. We know that they are scientists and explorers, just as we are.
They are looking to make new homes for their people, to carry out their
work and live their lives, just like we were when we created Venera
forty years ago. Their world is in crisis, and they want only to
alleviate that crisis."
"This is what we heard. This is what we told the C.A.C. How did
they
respond?" Helen spread her hands as if amazed at the wonder of it all.
"They told us we knew nothing. We didn't count. Our research, our
expertise, our collective experience meant nothing, nothing at all,
because we were not politicians." She stressed the word
politicians
like most people stressed the word
bastard.
"The politicians from Mother Earth, on the other hand, have
determined that our new neighbors are dangerous, despite the fact that
those neighbors have done nothing but watch us until lives were in
danger. Then they intervened and saved all those who could be saved."
"But that doesn't matter. The politicians of Earth have decided
our
neighbors are dangerous, so dangerous they are. Because we do not
agree, because we know that judgments must be based on facts, on the
evidence, not on rumor and fear, the yewners are going to invade our
home, push us aside, and tell our neighbors that they must leave or
die."
She paused for breath. No one moved. No one murmured or stirred.
She
had them. They heard her and they understood. Only some of this had
actually been said out loud by Secretary Kent, but the people around
her accepted Helen's expansions without question.
Cold fear reached inside Michael's mind.
"To make good on this threat, they need Venera. They need our
home,
our equipment, the products of our sweat and our vision. They need our
minds, our experience, and our inspiration. If we deny them Venera, if
we deny them ourselves, they cannot threaten the murder of the only
other intelligent species humanity has ever met."
"I cannot, I will not, order anyone to cooperate with this aim.
I
can only say I will not permit this invasion. I will not permit this
usurpation of everything I have worked for. I will stand alone if I
need to, but I still stand, here." She stabbed her finger toward the
floor. "On this deck which I helped build, in this place that I helped,
that you helped, bring to life. No one is going to take it away from me
and use it for murder, or threat of murder. No one. Ever."
The cheer was deafening. It rang off the walls and the ceiling
and
reverberated through the deck. It surrounded the people who thrust
fists into the air, hugged each other, stomped their feet, clapped
hands, babbled out their agreement. A few, a very few, Michael noticed,
stood stock still, their eyes cast down and their faces pale. A very
few had the good sense to stand in the presence of that speech and be
afraid.
And you? he asked himself
as he watched the storm of
energy and anger pouring out around him.
She's doing it. She's
starting her own little dictatorship right here. Look at it. The first
steps have already been taken. What are you going to do about it?
Michael searched the crowd for familiar faces, looking to see
what
friends and colleagues were doing. A shock of fear ran through him. He
couldn't recognize anybody. They'd been transformed out of all
recognition by their excitement, by Helen.
I can't even see Jolynn.
Where's Jolynn?
Helen held up her hands for silence. It took a moment, but the
crowd
quieted down and turned its attention fully on her again.
"This is not going to be easy. This is not going to be without
risk.
The C.A.C. is sending up the military to take Venera from us. They've
threatened a trade embargo and a complete communications shutdown. If
we're going to resist, we're going to be placing ourselves and our
children in danger."
"I do not want anyone at risk who does not believe in what we
are
doing. I do not want any children at risk at all. The Queen
Isabella enters high orbit tomorrow, and they will take with
them
anyone who wants to leave."
"We only have a few days to perform an evacuation and set our
defense plans into motion. Fortunately, we only need a few days. I want
everyone to consider their lives, their needs, and their beliefs and
then make up their minds. No judgment will be cast on anyone who wants
to leave. If you cannot support us honestly, then you are better off
elsewhere, and we are better off with you elsewhere."
Silence. Some shuffling feet and rustling cloth and a few
coughs,
but mostly profound, attentive silence.
"Finally, let me say this. Our new neighbors have promised to
help
us. We are not alone in what we do. We will never be alone and at
anyone's mercy again."
Another cheer, just as deafening, just as prolonged, and just as
transforming. Michael looked from Helen, who looked grimly satisfied
with her work, to Ben standing beside her. Ben's face was flushed, but
not with anger. This time it was with an unfamiliar excitement, as if
he were looking forward to what was coming next.
Suddenly Michael couldn't stand it anymore. He turned on his
heel
and walked away. He didn't know if Helen or Ben looked after him. He
didn't care. He was barely aware of the touch
of bodies against him as he pushed his way toward the stairs. He had to
get out of the hall, away from the crowd of strangers around Helen.
Where is Jolynn?
The residential corridors were empty. Everyone who hadn't
crammed
into the Mall was in their rooms, he supposed, watching the spectacle.
Stop. Wait. Michael made himself halt. He stood there,
hand
on the wall, feeling the slight padding of the soundproofing under his
fingers, as if it would keep him grounded and remind him where he
really was and what was really going on.
Jolynn is at home. She's with the
kids. Everything is okay.
He took a deep breath. You need to
work out what you're doing. Are
you just following along, or are you going to make your own plans?
Like talking to Veronica Hatch about the
possibility of
useful
action?
He barely knew Dr. Hatch. There were a thousand other people he
would have rather had on the tip of his mind right now. But she was
outside it. She didn't have the visceral connection to Venera that
almost everyone else here did. Even more important, she'd actually
talked to the aliens. She was on the front lines of the whole mess, at
least when it came to information, and information was what he needed
if he were going to explode Helen's inspirational speech.
He redirected his steps, up one level and around one of the
inner
corridor rings until he stood in front of Dr. Hatch's guest quarters.
The door scanned him and opened automatically.
You were expected, he
thought as he went inside.
Dr. Hatch sat cross-legged on her bed, doing something with her
briefcase. She looked up as he came in but did not look surprised.
"That was quick," she said, shutting the briefcase down. "Thank
you
for coming."
Michael nodded and took a seat on the desk chair. "What did you
want to talk about, Dr. Hatch?"
She met his gaze, and he knew what she saw. She saw fear and she
saw
anger. She probably even saw disbelief at the display he had just
witnessed. How had it happened? How had it gotten so bad so fast?
"We need help with a little espionage," said Dr. Hatch.
"We?"
She nodded. "Me and Dr. Kenyon." Dr. Hatch leaned forward,
resting
her elbows on her knees. "We've got to talk to the People, without your
friends on the governing board knowing about it."
"We do?" Michael's eyebrows lifted.
Dr. Hatch frowned, hard. "Look, the People don't know what
they're
getting dragged into. They haven't been told. It sounds like we're
asking them for more rescue help or maybe a technology exchange, not
help dealing with an invasion. We're playing games with them. It is not
fair and it is not right."
"What the aliens think is the least of our problems," said
Michael,
remembering the crowd cheering Helen on. Helen didn't know what was
really going on. She hadn't heard him the first time. That was the only
answer. He could walk in there and show her again what Ben had done,
what Grace had done, and then, and then…
And then what? She'd be alone in the Throne Room, with him, and
what
would he say to her then? How would he stop this, stop her? What if he
said the wrong thing and she decided he was a traitor and should be put
on the ship as well? Would she think to send Jolynn and the boys with
him? Would he have to ask to be allowed to remain with his family?
Michael didn't know if he could stand that.
I can't believe I'm even
thinking like this. Holy God,
what's
happening to us?
"What the aliens think is the least of our problems, is it?" Dr.
Hatch was asking as she raised her own eyebrows, in mockery of his own
expression, Michael suspected. "This is all happening because of the
People. Because the People came here. Because Helen and Ben think they
have the People's support for what they're doing. Without the aliens—"
she waved her hand—"poof! Nothing happens, except the exposure of a
little well-perpetrated fraud."
"So what do you want to tell them?" asked Michael. "Sit back
while
we sort this out?"
"Essentially." Dr. Hatch dropped her hand back onto her knee.
"They
understand politics. If we tell them this is a political debate that
needs to be resolved, I think they'll give us the time."
"This is a little more than a political debate." A little
more?
Who am I trying to kid?
"Let me talk to them," said Dr. Hatch, low and earnest. "Let me
get
them to talk to you. Together we can at least try to pull them out of
the equation. Without them, Failia and Godwin will have to deal with
the U.N., because without the People, Venera cannot make a real stand."
Michael chewed the inside of his lip and turned the idea over in
his
mind. Hatch and Kenyon. Josh he had known for years. He was steady,
quiet, uncomplicated. He did his work and he went home. Dr. Hatch acted
like a fool some days, but she was the one who spotted that the
Discovery was fraudulent.
"It's a good idea," he said. "It's worth a shot. But I've got to
tell you"—he tugged on the end of his pony tail—"I'm not sure how much
I can help you right now. I'm not sure about a whole lot of things."
Veronica nodded, all the bluster and kidding gone from her face.
"Just help me not get thrown out of here. I'll take care of the rest."
Michael searched her eyes for a moment. She meant it. She wanted
to
stay, and he wanted…
What do I want?
He wanted to talk to Helen. He wanted her to see what she was
doing,
to herself, to Venera, to everybody and everything. But he didn't know
if she would hear him anymore or if she ever had. He saw the flush in
her face as she addressed the crowd, as she finally made Venera truly
her own. How could he reach past that? How could he make her hear?
God, God, God, what am I going to do?
Jolynn, Chord, Chase—I
can't risk them. If I can't make her hear, what do I do?
The image of Jolynn's golden-brown eyes flashed in front of his
mind's eye, and he knew. There was one thing that might still reach
Helen, and if it didn't work, well, the Queen Isabella would
be right there.
* * *
The engineers had grown a debating chamber for the Law Meet, but
there had not been time to grow a very big one. The pink-and-cream
shell was barely big enough to hold all the ambassadors who hovered in
the air, finding still pockets between the currents of the distracted
wind.
Eighteen ambassadors had been assigned to New Home. Each of the
twelve specialties was represented, along with six seniors to act as
administrators. D'seun knew only a handful of them, but that did not
matter. He held Z'eth's vote. The rest would follow along with them as
soon as the formal debate was over with.
D'seun hovered near a speaker box improvised from some of
Br'sei's
lacelike cortices and a frame of stiffened ligaments shielded by
nothing more than sail skin. Through the light gaps in the shell's
side, he could see the joyous activity of the newly arrived engineers.
Surveying expeditions were being set to ride the major latitudes. All
the living highlands needed to be located and tested. The winds had to
be gauged and mapped, along with as many of the cross-currents as
possible. The wind seed that had sprouted needed to be analyzed in
terms of growth and evolution so it could be determined what could be
best layered on top of it.
So much work, so many minds and souls needed. So many
complications,
but soon those would be lessened. While all his colleagues listened,
the speaker box pulled the record of Z'eth's last conversation with the
New Person, Ambassador Helen, and repeated it smoothly. Hearing it
again, it sounded no better.
"There are those with whom we disagree about our rights to this
world, and consequently yours." The box used its own soft, unimpressive
voice to repeat Ambassador Helen's words, as it had no reference for
how she really sounded. "They might attempt to cut off our supply
routes from the other worlds. We may be forced to ask for a great deal
of assistance in maintaining ourselves here."
The final words died away and D'seun expanded himself, body and
wings. No matter what promises he was certain of, he
was an
ambassador with a case to present.
But before he could begin, Ambassador T'taik rattled her wings.
She
was from the Calm Northerns, like T'sha, and had the red-and-white
crest and burnished bronze skin to prove it.
"Ambassadors, I ask you to keep in mind two things," T'taik
said.
"The first is that this engineer, Vee, has made no promises or
exchanges for representational power among her people. She is just an
engineer, trained in the use of tools, not of words. This Ambassador
Helen is basing all she knows of us on potentially inaccurate
information. This may have led to a poor choice of words. Second"—she
raised her hands—"T'sha was in a similar position. Despite her title
and power to promise, she is only very new at our work and it may be
she misrepresented herself. Ambiguity can be seen for example—"
D'seun ruffled his crest and broke across her words. "You are
too
hard on our colleague, Ambassador. Her words made the situation
abundantly clear. The New People are obviously composed of several
different families. The ones who are our neighbors and offer us
community are one group, and they are, probably, sane. But these
others, this distant family, are not sane. They are greedy and seek to
stop the spread not only of life, but of their own offshoots."
T'taik swelled at his words. "Ambassador D'seun, you have been
so
ready to condemn someone as greedy or insane during this undertaking,
I wonder at it."
D'seun shifted his weight on the perches. "I have. I have been
overzealous in my desire to claim this world as New Home. I admit this.
If the Meet wishes to poll the members about my fitness to give opinion
on this issue, I will not argue the question."
It was a good strategy, and one that D'seun could be confident
of
winning. The ambassadors debated it briefly and the question was soon
called. The consensus was that D'seun recognized his overzealousness
and would not be denied a voice and vote in future.
"It must be acknowledged, however," said Ambassador D'tran,
"that an
engineer, someone responsible for building and creating, must know what
uses the resources of the world she lives on are being put to. If the
New People have a legitimate claim here, why did she not say so? T'sha
did make that point clear in her previous conversations." T'sha's last
conversation with Engineer Vee had also been played for the Law Meet.
"We do not know for certain that Ambassador T'sha's words were
completely clear," replied T'taik. "The New People are not cortices. We
cannot read their imprinting to be certain the information has been
properly received."
They are listening to her,
D'seun felt his bones
tighten
with worry.
How could they be
listening to this?
"It may be that you are both right."
D'seun turned gratefully to Ambassador Z'eth. A stray breeze
blew
past, carrying the touch of Z'eth's words on it as she spoke.
"It may be that this New Person, Engineer Vee, did not properly
understand what she was being asked and so improperly transmitted and
translated that information for her ambassador. It may also be that she
is in fear of a family of her people that are insane. Which of us could
clearly speak of such a thing to strangers, whose motivations we do not
know?"
Z'eth beat her wings twice, lifting herself up over the center
of
the Meet. "So my first belief is that we need much more time to speak
with Ambassador Helen, Engineer Vee, and any other New People who
present themselves."
No, no, there is no more time!
"However," Z'eth went on, "if the distant family of the New
People
is found to be insane, we need to ask what should be done about them."
"Clearly, they need to be prevented from interfering with the
New
People and New Home," said T'taik. "Their means of transport should be
fairly easy to identify and disable."
T'sha must have sent T'taik to speak in her place. That was the
only
answer. What promise lay there? He had not had time to research this
all as thoroughly as he should have. If they listened to this now…
"I say that's not enough, Ambassador T'taik." Ambassador P'eath,
who, like D'seun, was a refugee from the Southern Roughs, inflated her
body fully. "When has any insane being been
allowed to exist as more than raw materials to build a sane future
from?"
T'taik dipped her muzzle. "That is the way it has been, yes. But
we
have it from Engineer Vee that the New People do not have the same
views of how to deal with insanity."
"They would allow insanity to live? To grow in its own way and
risk
smothering sanity?" P'eath extended her wings. Relief lifted D'seun's
body. "With respect, T'taik, it sounds as if our neighbors may be
slightly insane themselves."
"Is difference insanity?" inquired T'taik mildly, letting her
crest
rise as if in surprise. "If it is, we are in great trouble, because
the Equatorials and the Northerns will be at each other's throats in
the civil courts again."
A general whistle of assent, and some clacking muzzles in
chagrin
and amusement. Disquiet filled the pockets between D'seun's bones. He
looked to Z'eth, who made no move to silence the words. What was she
waiting for? Why was she permitting this to continue? She had
promised! He had agreed to give her everything he had. He should put an
end to this right now, call for a vote and end this display…
The chamber portal opened. All the ambassadors fanned their
wings,
turning themselves to see what this interruption was.
It was Engineer D'han, shrunk so small he was almost cringing
as he
floated through the threshold.
"Ambassador, forgive me, but… Ambassadors," he stammered,
beating
his wings and bobbing his head, looking for a friendly face. "We have a
translation of one of the last transport-to-base transmissions from the
New People…"
Several crests ruffled quizzically. "The New People exchange
patterned radiation, as I have told you," D'seun reminded them. "Most
of it heads off into the vacuum, but some of it passes between their
base and their transports on the surface. We have been monitoring and
translating it since they first began, although it is still slow going
because it is so tangled with their command languages. The practice
greatly improved our speed of communication when we were finally able
to speak to them."
"Thank you, Ambassador." Z'eth dipped her muzzle to him and then
she
dropped herself to D'han's level. "What do they say in this translation
you have made?"
D'han seemed to have pulled himself together. His size
normalized
and his sentences smoothed out. "They say the distant family is insane."
The chamber erupted. Questions and exclamations buffeted D'seun,
but
even so he swelled in triumph. Now the debate was over. Now they could
move.
Z'eth rose up high, spreading her wings and swelling her torso
to
its fullest extent. "Ambassadors! Ambassadors, please!"
Did you know? D'seun gazed
up at Z'eth in awe and
admiration. Did you time this
entrance? She might have. It
was well within her skills to delay a message just a little so it might
be used to bind the Law Meet together whether they were promised to her
or not.
Stillness settled slowly. Z'eth fell back beside D'han, who
looked a
little dazed now. "How is the distant family insane, Engineer? Tell us
exactly."
D'han's gaze darted around the room, amazed to find all the
ambassadors pinning him down with their attention. "The distant family
says they are sending a force to New Home. They will cut the New People
off from the resources of their world and force them to comply with the
wishes of the distant family."
"Well then." Z'eth whistled and lifted her muzzle to the entire
Meet. "It appears the New People have ended our debate for us. We
cannot permit the insane to overrun the sane."
As the whistles of agreement filled the chamber, D'seun's soul
swelled.
At last, he thought. At last. This world will be
ours
and the New People will be ours or they will be raw materials to serve
us and our life.
At last.
Contents - Prev / Next
Chapter Nineteen
Crowds thronged in the corridors outside flight control.
Children
clung to their mother's tunics or their father's arms. Teenagers
slumped against the walls, torn between looking tough and being
uncertain. Whole families stood around and sorted through bags, trying
to make sure everything precious had gotten packed.
Five thousand people—half the base—had decided to stay and sit
out
whatever the U.N. was going to put them through. A whole five thousand,
and Helen was grateful for each person.
But according to the note in her desk that morning, Michael Lum
was
not one of them.
The crowds parted around her, saying hello or just looking
guilty as
they did. Helen still had to crane her neck, searching for a truly
familiar face amid the crowd that suddenly all looked alike to her.
At last she spotted him. He stood patiently with his wife and
their
two children. He had one arm around Jolynn and one hand on his older
son's shoulder. Jolynn rested both of her hands on the shoulders of the
younger boy and looked straight ahead with a kind of grim
determination, as if she could make the line move by sheer willpower.
Helen's name rippled through the crowd as she marched up to
Michael
and his family.
"Good morning, Michael," she said. "Good morning, Jolynn. May I
speak with your husband?"
"Certainly, Dr. Failia." Jolynn shuffled backward a fraction of
an
inch. She and Michael exchanged a look Helen couldn't read, and she
felt an irrational stab of annoyance run through her.
Michael said nothing, just crossed to the other side of the
corridor
a half-step behind Helen. She had to pivot to face him. When she did,
she saw his face was full of the gentle humor that had characterized
him for so many years.
"I take it you got my resignation," he said.
"I did." She nodded once. "I do not accept it."
"Helen." He dropped his gaze to the floor. "You're going to have
to."
A hundred emotions flooded through Helen—sorrow, betrayal,
loneliness, desperation. She had no words, no words at all. He was a
child of Venera. He was everything they had worked for.
"This is your home, Michael." was all she could think to say.
"And that is my family, Helen." He stabbed a finger at Jolynn,
who
had her arms around Chord and Chase. "Whom I love. Now, you've got this
great idea about saving the world from the madness of Earth and that's
fine, but you're doing it by creating more madness."
"I am trying to put an end to—"
"To what?" Michael threw up his hands. "Our stability? Our
safety?
How many lives is this glorious ending worth? We've got two dead
already, Helen. I will not stand around and watch the body count rise."
Helen felt her chest constrict until the pain ran down her arms.
She
could not lift a hand against his words, which struck her like blows.
She could barely think. Michael, Michael who had gone away and returned
to become one of the people she trusted the most in all the worlds. How
could he say this to her? How could he abandon Venera?
"Do you have any idea what's about to happen?" she asked him
coldly.
"They are not just coming to end any independent research, any good
science we might ever do; they are coming to decide what all of us are
going to do with the rest of our lives." She stepped up close to him,
trying to fill his world with her words. He had to understand. He had
to. "And what about the aliens? Do you really think the U.N. is going
to let them build
a new home here? The yewners are coming to rob us and them of the
future, of our future."
"Our future?" Michael's voice cracked sharply on the second
syllable. "Our future based on
what
Murder? Deception?
Wounded pride? Don't you see what you're doing?" He swept out his hand.
"You are demanding that the people of Venera give up their lives, their
freedom, their futures, their families so you can keep your pretty toy.
At the very least, you are going to prison. You might manage to get
killed if the U.N. troops decide to come in shooting, and if you don't
stop this disaster right now, you are taking five thousand people with
you."
"What's happened to you Michael?" Helen searched his face,
looking
for something she could understand. "The only way we're going to lose
is if they divide us. By leaving, you are going to let them walk in
here and take whatever they want to, without understanding what's
really at stake, without caring—"
"You just don't see it anymore, do you Helen?" His hand swept
out,
encompassing the corridor, the crowds, the whole of Venera. "You don't
care what anyone does or who they really are." People were starting to
murmur, starting to stare. Michael didn't seem to notice. He stabbed a
finger at her. "All you care about is your vision and your pride, and
your pride is Venera!"
Helen's fists clenched. This was not happening. Michael could
not be
leaving her. Not when she needed him.
"If you've got a problem with me, you take it up with me. But
right
now—"
"If I have a problem." Michael barked out a short, sharp laugh.
"That's almost funny."
Helen's whole body trembled. "Why are you doing this?"
He met her gaze without hesitation. "Because I will not leave my
family to help you start a war." He shook his head. "You need fanatics
to help you now, Helen. I'm sorry to say you've got them."
Fear sent another spasm of pain through Helen's chest. "I don't
need
fanatics, Michael. I need you."
"No, you don't." He shook his head sadly. "You want me because
I'm
a v-baby and I fit your picture of what Venera ought to be. You've lost
your ability to see what it is."
"No," said Helen softly, firmly. "This is not about me. This is
about Venera's survival." She gripped his arm, as if she could transmit
understanding from her flesh to his. "This is about the U.N. This is
about the People flying through the Venusian clouds, looking for New
Home."
This is about you abandoning your
position and your
responsibilities.
Helen met his gaze and held it. "If you won't fight for your
home,
for your people, maybe you should go." She released him and stepped
back.
Even through her anger, she saw how the years of life and
service
weighed him down, pressing him into the deck and demanding he remain
there. "I was going to stay, Helen, I really was, but I can't." He
stretched both hands out to her, pleading. He was still so young,
really. Younger than she'd been when she first flew through the clouds
of Venus. He'd given his heart to so many things. He wanted to do
right, but with so much to love, how could he see clearly what was most
important?
"I can't stand what's going on here," Michael was saying. "Grace
was
the last straw."
"Grace…" Helen felt the blood drain from her face. "She'll be
punished on Earth."
The look he gave her was pure, stunned disbelief. His hands came
up
as if he meant to strangle the air between them. But his fists closed
on emptiness. "Earth," he breathed. "Mother Earth can't be trusted.
Mother Earth is the villain. But Mother Earth gets to decide how to
punish the woman who killed two of our own." He looked back at Jolynn
and his children and shook all the years of his service off. "Good-bye,
Helen."
Helen just stood there and stared. Michael reached his family
just
as the line began to move again. Michael picked up his bulging satchel.
Jolynn wrapped an arm around his waist, almost as if she meant to pull
him along if he faltered. He put his arm back around her shoulders and
together they and their children walked onto the shuttle.
Helen's balance rocked. Her knees buckled and she had to put one
hand on the wall to steady herself.
"Dr. Failia?" said someone timidly. "Are you all right?"
"Yes, yes." She pulled herself upright. "I'm fine." She turned
away
from the crowds that were working so hard to get away from what was
coming and started down the stairs to the Throne Room.
She did not have the luxury of time to mourn Michael's leaving
right now. No matter what else happened, Venera still needed taking
care of. Venera needed her. Venera could not betray her. She would not
give it away as she'd been forced to give away Venus.
Venera, at least, at last, was hers.
Contents - Prev / Next
Chapter Twenty
T'sha nestled against the central heart of her city. She felt
the
ticking and timing of its valves and sacs underneath her body. Above
her swarmed clouds of flies so thick they blotted out the sight of the
clouds, and she could barely hear the rustle of her own skin under
their triumphant buzzing.
All around her Ca'aed was dying and the flies had come to
celebrate.
She could smell nothing anymore but the scents of the rot. There was
nothing to hear except the flies, and the wordless mewlings and
keenings as the pain became too great for its smaller voices.
"Stop," Ca'aed had said, how many hours ago? T'sha didn't
remember.
Maybe it was only a few minutes since. She didn't know. "There is
nothing to be done. Stop."
They had fought the disease with knives and shears. They had
fought
with monocellulars and antibodies and killer viruses. Its people had
fought hand, wing and heart, and it had not been enough.
Now their city, exhausted and in agony, asked to be left alone.
T'sha had sent all the engineers to the quarantine shells, but
she
herself had descended into the exact center of the city, where she
could touch the deepest part of its ancient, ravaged body.
Let the cancers take me too.
She sent the thought
freely
onto the wind.
Don't leave me here
alone with nothing but my
failure.
"I remember when we grew the first park," said Ca'aed. Its voice
shook. It sounded old.
"Tell me." T'sha nestled closer.
"I was so excited. I had spread out far enough that it was quite
a
flight sometimes for the people to get out to open air. So we were
going to make a place just for gathering, just for dance and beauty in
my heart. I think I drove the engineers to distraction. I insisted on
testing every graft myself for its strength and vivacity." Ca'aed
stopped. "I don't remember their names. The engineers. They were so
patient, and I don't remember them."
"That part of you was probably removed," said T'sha. "It's not
your
fault."
"Ah. Yes."
The city fell quiet for a moment. Under her torso, T'sha felt
one of
the heart sacs collapse, and it did not swell again.
"Tell me about the New People," said Ca'aed. "I want something
different to think about."
T'sha stirred her wings. "They are very different from us," she
began hesitantly. "They do not fly naturally. They spend long stretches
of time doing this thing they call
sleep,
where they lie down
in darkness and are still. At this time, their whole consciousness is
changed from one state to another. It is part of their refreshment
cycle." She paused. "I admit I do not quite understand it."
"It sounds frightening," said Ca'aed.
"It is natural to them," T'sha reminded the city. "They speak of
sleep as if it were another place. They say 'We go to sleep.' I found
it a little easier to think about that way. It made it a journey they
must undergo."
Ca'aed thought about that. "Yes, that is a little easier." The
muscles under T'sha cramped and smoothed, and one of Ca'aed's other
voices gasped. "Tell me how they live on their world," its main voice
asked.
Vee's pictures soared through T'sha's memory. So strange, so
different, but spoken of with such pride and delight. "They live on the
crust of their world where the air is the thickest. It is so cold
there, they have great pools of liquids filling the valleys that they
call lakes and oceans. Vee lives in a city on the
edge of one of these lakes. Their cities stay in one place," she
explained, "and the New People travel to them, as ambassadors do to
the High Law Meet."
A whole world of High Law Meets,
T'sha remembered
thinking.
How grand that must be.
"She says her city is an
ancient place, encompassing revered centers of science and learning.
Its people are great engineers and merchants and have been so for
centuries. She spoke of the lake it sits on and how it sparkles blue
and silver in the sunlight, and how it has a wealth of legends that
belong just to it."
"Then they do love their cities?" asked Ca'aed.
"Yes, very much." T'sha rubbed her muzzle back and forth against
Ca'aed's skin, as she could not dip her muzzle pressed so close to the
city. "They write poems about them and tell each other stories of their
greatness." She paused again, remembering. " 'Come and show me another
city with lifted head singing so proud to be alive, and coarse and
strong and cunning.' Vee told me that was written about her city."
"I like that," said Ca'aed. "And their cities love them?"
"No," said T'sha as gently as possible. "Their cities are not
such
as they can return the love."
"What a great thing it is," murmured Ca'aed. "To be able to love
even that which cannot return your love."
T'sha had not thought of that before, but the idea felt
comfortable
inside her. "Yes, it is a great thing."
"I heard Br'sei when he came."
A cloud, thick with the smell of illness drifted across them.
T'sha
coughed. "I'm sorry, Ca'aed. I did not mean you to."
I thought you
too distracted. I should know better than to underestimate you, even
now.
"Will you abandon the New People?" asked Ca'aed.
T'sha stiffened. "I cannot be with them and with you. You are my
city."
"You cannot choose which life you serve," whispered Ca'aed. Its
heart labored unevenly as it spoke. T'sha lifted herself until her
skin just brushed Ca'aed's skin. She could no longer control her size.
Her body shuddered and wavered to the uneven
rhythms of Ca'aed's last heart.
"I must choose," she said.
Something stank, thick, rank, and choking. She could sense it in
every pore. The flies landed on her wings to taste her flesh, and she
lacked the strength to shake them off.
"Perhaps I am not dying," whispered Ca'aed. "Perhaps I am going
to
sleep."
"Perhaps you are."
Ca'aed's heart spasmed. It jerked twice. Another foul cloud rose
around T'sha, and the heart lay still.
T'sha settled slowly onto the still skin that covered the heart. She
could not move her wings or even her bones. Around her she heard sounds
of collapsing air sacs and loosening muscles.
She heard herself moaning.
But she did not hear Ca'aed. She would never hear Ca'aed again.
Her
mind clutched at the last few words, drawing them deep into her soul.
All the words she would ever have. There would be no more. No more,
ever.
You cannot choose which life you serve.
What a great thing it is, to be able to
love even that which cannot return your love.
T'sha rose from her city's silent heart. She swelled herself, aware
she was exhausted, but no longer caring. She beat her wings until her
body caught the soaring wind and she shot out of the city's body.
She saw no one. She heard nothing. She was aware only of where
she
must go and what she must do. There were vague voices somewhere,
calling and arguing, but they meant nothing. All the meaning was in
Ca'aed's words. Those and her body were all T'sha could call her own
now, and she could not forsake them.
* * *
Vee had thought that seeing the People through a wall screen, in
the
familiar surroundings of Josh's lab, would lessen some of the impact.
She was wrong. They were just as grand, just as golden, and just as
awe-inspiring in their aerial dances.
Well, the camera's working,
she thought.
This was the test flight of the new drone they had dubbed "His
Ambassador's Voice." Vee and Josh stood beside a desk in Josh's lab,
surrounded by dismantled lasers and survey drones. Josh had the
specialized keypad for flying the drone in his hands, and Vee had her
briefcase with its image catalog and updated software open and jacked
into the drone controls. A tangle of cables held them together. It was
probably symbolic of something.
The fly-by drones were already remote controlled. They used the
communication satellite network that ringed Venus to send their signals
back to Venera, so they were natural candidates when Vee and Josh
began to think about a mobile communications device.
The problem had been, as ever, mounting a projection device
that
wouldn't melt or be crushed.
Their reworked drone was a big, blocky confabulation that only
stayed up because it was supported by Venus's atmosphere. Most of the
size was a consequence of the insulation and housing for the projection
laser and the last sheet of Vee's film. The drone didn't fly so much as
lurch, but that was all right. It moved. Now they had to see if it
could speak.
Through the drone's camera they watched a flock of the People's
attendant jellyfish scatter in all directions. A trio of people floated
up to look into the main window, close enough that Vee could see their
tattoos clearly. She spotted the interlocking circles on their wings.
These were all engineers, but she couldn't see Br'sei among them.
"Your turn," said Josh softly.
"Right." Vee licked her lips and pressed the Send key to
execute
the commands she had waiting.
A strip at the bottom of the screen lit up with the message that
was, hopefully, at this moment being displayed on the film right next
to the camera.
Good luck. We would like to see
Ambassador T'sha or
Ambassador
D'seun, please.
One of the People broke away from the others and dived toward
the
base. The other two stared at the drone, each other, and their
vanishing companion.
"Think they got the message?" asked Josh dryly.
"Looks it. Can we hover here?"
"After a fashion. Nothing like them." Josh worked the stick and
the
keyboard for a moment, and the drone slowed its flight. The propulser
readouts that appeared on the desk crept up from green toward yellow.
Josh hit a few more keys and they faded again. The view on the camera
bobbed unsteadily up and down, but it stayed where it was.
"You'll be up for Adrian's job next," remarked Vee.
"You couldn't pay me enough to do Adrian's job." The sourness
in
his voice told Vee that Josh was thinking about Kevin, and the exodus
that was going on over their heads, and whatever might be coming next.
She touched his arm, but he didn't look at her.
Two People rose from the base. As they got closer, Vee was
surprised
to see the Engineer Who Looked Familiar beside the stranger. He carried
a lumpy, mottled gray-green package clutched in his hands.
He did not stop level with the others. He kept going until he was
almost on top of the drone. His muzzle and tattooed wings blocked out
the rest of the view.
Vee sucked on her cheek and typed.
Hello,
Engineer. What is
your name?
The engineer stared at the message and then looked straight at
the
camera lens. He raised both of his forehands, a greeting gesture, Vee
remembered T'sha saying.
The lumpy package the engineer carried turned out to be a knotted
ropelike thing with several objects clinging to it. Without looking
down, he ran his hands over several of the objects, and Vee realized
that most of the time the People couldn't see what their hands were
doing.
What must their hands be like? Are they
more sensitive? Less? Do they have more senses than the five humans
have?
"I think he's about to make a few improvements," remarked Josh.
"Oh good," said Vee. "Always room for improvement." The engineer
plucked something off the rope and spread it on the drone's hull. It
was silver skinned and glistened. It spread out tendrils that gripped
the hull as tree roots would grip a stone.
Josh typed quickly, bringing up status readings that flashed
past on
the deck. Vee couldn't understand half of them, but they all shone
green. Whatever their engineer was doing out there, it wasn't hurting
their experiment.
The engineer pulled a clear disk off his rope and nestled it in
the
center of the tendrils. Then he took what looked like a balloon filled
with pinkish jelly and settled it on the disk. The bag swelled, puffing
up as if being inflated by an invisible pump, until it became a perfect
sphere about the size of Josh's head. When it stopped growing, the
engineer pulled a small white box with a grainy surface that reminded
Vee of unpolished coral and slid it next to the sphere. He backed away
with one stroke of his wings. Words appeared inside the sphere.
Good luck. I am Engineer Br'sei, Is this
hybrid harming your
transport? Is your visual field blocked? This hybrid should function
down to the freezing point of, wait… water. Will that be cold enough?
"Good luck? Good lord," laughed Vee. The thing clinging to the
drone
looked ridiculous. It looked like a child's clay masterpiece
surmounted by a pale-pink crystal ball.
It's probably an incredible
jury-rigging, she thought.
"Everything's still green," reported Josh. He looked at the
conglomeration again. "Doesn't block too much of the camera."
The hybrid is not harming our
transport. The temperature
tolerance is more than adequate. What is its range? Vee typed
out
the new message.
At the moment, the hybrid is
limited to vocal range,
came
the reply. He shifted his weight. Embarrassed? I must ask you to
feel these words, Br'sei went on. Ambassador T'sha is not
here. She is trying to save the life of her city. If she were here, she
would surely tell you that you need to warn your families. D'seun is
trying to get you all declared insane.
"What?" said Vee before she remembered that Br'sei couldn't hear
her. She typed her question.
What?
"The Law Meet has determined that your
distant family is
insane. We are finishing the means to separate their souls from
their raw materials.
"Distant family?" said Josh.
Vee's heart thudded once, hard. "They mean the Terrans."
The words almost choked her. She typed, "You are going to
kill the Terrans? The people on Earth?"
Br'sei dipped his muzzle. An affirmation. They say the
Terrans are insane. The sane and the insane cannot live together.
"Josh," croaked Vee. "I think you'd better go get the governing
board."
But Josh was already gone. Vee typed. Her hands had gone
completely cold.
What are they going to do?
The words spelled themselves out in front of Vee's eyes. A monocellular to be launched through the
portal… A chemical trigger that
would turn a benign monocellular life form in the human body into a
lethal strain… Deaths within hours…
"Holy God and Mother Creation." Vee could barely control her
hands
anymore. She couldn't encompass this. Earth. They were going
to wipe out the human race. They were going to kill everyone.
Everyone.
No, Br'sei, the Terrans are not insane.
They're different.
We disagree, that's all.
Br'sei swelled a little as he studied the words. They did
not
threaten to cut you off from the resources you need to live? We
misunderstood? She thought he might be hopeful.
What is misunderstood is the
reason for it, Br'sei.
"Come
on, come on, you have to understand this!" It is an internal
conflict, nothing more.
Br'sei did not respond. He pulled back, and D'seun swept into the
camera's view followed by a Person Vee did not recognize. D'seun spoke
to Br'sei, swelling his body and flapping his wings as if to shove
Br'sei aside.
Br'sei spoke.
I am asked if I think I am
now an ambassador, read the
screen. I am asked—
D'seun dived at him, beating him away with his wings. Vee saw
his
skin tear open, freeing wisps of vapor. Br'sei fell back under the
attack, shrinking and dropping as he did.
Stop! Stop! Vee typed
frantically. But he did not stop.
He
drove Br'sei backward. His wings smashed against the display bubble,
tearing it open. It flopped sideways, spilling out a pink fog that
dispersed into the clear air.
Vee looked down at the torn bubble and up at the strange members
of
the People. The one who had arrived with D'seun spoke to Br'sei's
companions. One of them vanished.
Vee didn't stand still to watch what happened. She had to tell
somebody. Warn Earth. Who? How? The communications were blocked by
Michael. But Michael had left. Had he thought to turn the blocks off
before he went?
Vee shoved the drone controls aside and began typing so fast and
hard her fingers screamed in protest.
Rosa, Rosa, Rosa, be there, be
there, be there. Vee
grasped
the edges of the desk and leaned over the screen, gasping for breath
around the panic that filled her throat. Would it work? Could she open
a line? What if she couldn't?
She glanced up at the wall screen. Br'sei's friend had returned
with a string of lumps. A tear ran down Vee's cheek.
The desk screen cleared, and Rosa's concerned face looked up at
her.
"What's the matter Vee?"
Vee almost laughed. There was no time. "Rosy, listen to me. I
haven't got any time to explain. There are live aliens on Venus and
they have decided the Terrans are too dangerous to live. They're
launching a virus or something like it through their portal. They're
going to try to kill the Terrans, Rosa. All of them. If we can't stop
them, it's going to be soon." On the other screen, the Person had new
tendrils spread out on the drone's hull and had produced another pink
bag. "Rosa, you have to tell the U.N. They have to figure out a plan.
I'll try to get more information through as soon as I've got it."
The delay ticked by, and the pink bag grew. Her manager's face
went
white, then gray.
"Vee, you don't mean this—"
The new pink bag was a full bubble outside the wall screen low.
The
stranger beside D'seun spoke.
I am sorry you had to
witness that, Engineer Vee. Br'sei
does
not speak for the People. I do. I am Ambassador Z'eth.
Vee bit down hard on her lip. "I mean it Rosy," she whispered,
wiping at the tears on her cheeks. "Call Yan Su. She'll confirm what
I'm telling you about the aliens. Tell her about he virus. I'm doing my
best, but… Please, call my family. Tell them they've got to get off
Earth, go to Luna. Give them my account access, but you and they have
to get out of there. I've got to go." She cut the connection and it
felt like her heart was torn in two.
Ambassador, she typed with
her cold, trembling fingers.
This
is Vee. The people of this world do not want the Terrans dead.
Rosa would not stay on Earth. Rosa would get away. They wouldn't kill
her family. Mother, Father, Gramma, Grampa, Kitty, Lois, Tom, Amber,
Auden. Rosa. Nikki. Everybody.
No, no, no, they would not die. She couldn't let them. She had
to
think of something to say. She had to think of something. They—
You are not an ambassador,
replied Z'eth. You
cannot
say what your people want.
"No, but tell her I can."
Vee jerked around. Helen and Ben hurried
into the room with Josh on their heels.
"Thank God." Vee wiped at her cheeks and stepped away from the
board,
letting Helen take her place. She bumped against Josh, who just laid
his hands on her shoulders. She leaned against his chest, drinking in
his warmth.
Helen's hands shook as she lifted them to the command board.
I am Ambassador Helen, Ambassador Z'eth.
Good Luck. I am asking
you to stop whatever plans you have for the people of Earth. Let us
talk. Let us explain.
Ambassador Z'eth swelled. Ambassador
Helen, there is
nothing
to explain. We have your own words condemning the Terrans as insane.
They seek to cut you off from the source of your life for no reason.
Helen took a deep breath. The trembling in her hands stilled for
a
moment. Ambassador Z'eth, please,
try to understand. We don't
think they're crazy. We think they're wrong, but there's a difference
with us.
I understand that, but it is not
only a question of what you
think, replied Z'eth. This is
now our home too. You promised
this world to us, and we must protect ourselves.
Josh's hands tightened on Vee's shoulders. Vee clenched her
fists.
She had to do something. She couldn't just stand there shaking like a
frightened child. She had to do something.
There was nothing she could do. Nothing at all.
Yes, read Helen's new
message. But not like this.
There are six billion people on Earth, Ambassador. Most of them have
nothing to do with this. Most of them don't want a war. They just want
to go about their business.
Z'eth's crest lifted. Then why
are they permitting this?
Why
has there been no poll?
"How fast can you explain representative democracy," whispered
Vee.
She couldn't help it. Josh just held her close. He understood. Oh,
God, he understood.
Ambassador, surely you do not believe
there is only one
right
way to do things.
Z'eth swelled even further. She was enormous. It looked
as
if she meant to fill the whole world. No
right way can involve
submitting to greed.
"Damn you!" Helen's fist thumped against the desk. She typed.
We are not submitting. Listen,
please, listen. Helen's
whole body was shaking now. Ben shoved a chair behind her, but she did
not sit. Words spilled out of her fingers onto the screen.
Once, our only world was Earth, but
there were too many of
us
living there and we needed too much to support our lives. Earth was
choking on us; it was dying. We moved out to fresh worlds to seek the
space, the minerals, the power that we needed to live and keep our
world of Earth alive.
We spread to our Moon, and to a world we
call Mars, as well
as
this world of Venus. Before we came to these places, there was no life
at all here. We spread our life beyond the confines of our own planet
for survival yes, but also because we found those other worlds
beautiful and we wanted to know all of their
wonders and secrets.
It is true that even after all this time
the colonies like
ours
still need Earth to live. But Earth also needs us. The people of Earth
are trying to stay alive. Without the colonies the world will choke on
itself again.
They fear that because of you they will
lose us. They are
trying
to prevent that. But we need them and they need us. If we took the
colonies from them, they might die. If you take Earth from us, we will
die. You will kill us all. Is that spreading life?
Vee's breath caught in her throat. They'd have to listen to that.
That was their own language. They'd have to understand what.
Ambassador Z'eth glided closer to the screen, filling the world
and
blocking out options.
It is you who do not yet understand. You
will no longer be
forced
to depend on your insane family to survive. This is our world now, and
we will help you and make sure you live.
The implications of Z'eth's words reached inside Vee and squeezed
her heart.
"Jesus God," whispered Josh. His arms trembled even as he pulled
her
closer. "We're going to be another experiment for them. They're going
to
use us…"
Movement in the corner of the screen caught Vee's eye. A
familiar
shape, beating its wings so fast she could barely see its markings, but
she knew its color and its crest.
"T'sha!" Vee broke away from Josh and thrust her hands onto the
keyboard.
T'sha! They're trying to kill
Earth! Her family's names
ran through her mind, blocking out everything else. There's six billion
people down there! They—
The message line went dead.
The screen went blank.
Vee lifted her trembling hands off the keys. "What happened?" she
whispered as she backed slowly away. "What happened!"
Ben came up to Helen's right side and touched a few keys. When he
turned, his face was paper white. "It's the satellites, they're down.
The U.N.'s started their attack."
"NO!" screamed Vee.
Beside her, Helen's mouth opened soundlessly and she clutched
Ben's
arm. In the next moment, Helen Failia slid to the floor.
* * *
While T'sha watched, the message faded from the New People's
display. The tool foundered in the air and began to sink, gathering
momentum as it fell.
D'seun did not move to stop it. Neither did Z'eth. T'sha darted
down
and grasped the cold, clumsy thing without thinking. It burned all her
palms, and she shrieked, but she kept hold of it. Br'sei swooped after
her and grasped one of the thing's extensions, pulling it toward a
construction shelf where it could rest.
"A malfunction, apparently?" said Z'eth overhead.
Her hands stung, but T'sha ignored them. She rose to meet
Z'eth's
gaze.
"Ambassador, did you not see their plea? We cannot do this
thing."
"Why not?" asked Z'eth, her crest lifting as if she were
genuinely
surprised. "We have declared them insane. This world is ours, and we
have every right to protect it from insanity. There is nothing wrong
here, Ambassador."
T'sha stretched out hands and wings to Z'eth, "Please,
Ambassador,
this cannot be done. It is wrong,
wrong."
Z'eth rose over her, her voice sad, but stolid. "I have given my
promise, T'sha. What can you give me to change that? This is too much;
there are too many ties. I cannot just break my words because you wish
things were other than they are."
T'sha shrank. She had nothing, nothing except Ca'aed's last
words,
and Z'eth would not accept those. "You must stop this. You know it is
wrong. D'seun is insane!"
Z'eth's muzzle lifted. "That doesn't matter!"
No, you did not say that. You
could not possibly have said
that.
But D'seun hovered behind Z'eth, swelled to his fullest extent, pride
and triumph filling the world. "How can what is right not matter?"
Z'eth flew so close to T'sha that she could not even see D'seun.
"Because D'seun is also right! We need this world, and we
need it now. Not fifty years from now, not twenty. We are dying T'sha.
Your own city, T'sha, how does it do?"
A moan burst free from her. "Ca'aed is dead."
For a moment they were all silent and still. T'sha's wings folded
over her eyes, and she wished she were dead with her city. She had
failed. She was nothing. The New People would die as Ca'aed had died.
Her wings fell away from her eyes and she looked up at Z'eth
hovering
in front of her.
"I am sorry." Z'eth brushed her muzzle against T'sha's. T'sha could
barely feel it, her skin was so contracted. "But if we do not create
our life here, in just a few years, all the cities will be dead. What
good will sanity and right be then?"
"What can I promise you to change your words? What can you
be seen to accept that is worth the lives of the New People?"
D'seun rose from behind Z'eth, a great cloud lifting up from the
horizon. "Ca'aed is dead, T'sha," he announced, as if he savored the
words. "Your people must be indentured so their children will be
adopted by what cities still live. You have nothing left."
T'sha looked at him and hated what she saw. Greed and insanity
and
the terrible power of both. But he was right. He was right and she
could
not dismiss his words. What did she have to promise Z'eth? Nothing.
Z'eth had given a promise to D'seun, and T'sha had nothing with which
to counter that promise. She had Ca'aed's last words and her own wings
and that was all…
Her own wings. T'sha jerked her muzzle up to stare at Z'eth.
Her own wings. No one had made such a promise in centuries, but
it
was still legal. It could still be made and accepted and it was the
richest offer, the final promise of all.
T'sha swelled to her full size. "My life, Ambassador Z'eth."
"What?" Z'eth pulled her muzzle back.
"My life," T'sha repeated. "I give it to you as promissory. If
you
do not kill the distant family, my life is yours. Not your city's.
Yours."
Z'eth's whole body tensed. "That's a very old-fashioned idea,
Ambassador."
"It's still legal."
Life of my
mother and my father… Oh my
sisters, my brother, forgive me, forgive me. "And it's all I
have
left."
"T'sha." D'seun thrust his muzzle at her. "Why are you doing
this?"
T'sha rounded on him. "Because there is nothing else I can do,
D'seun! No matter what the New People said for themselves, no matter
what you heard, or saw, you wanted them gone. You have blocked me at
every turn, and raw materials and soul are all I have left!" She shrank
in on herself and sank down until her belly touched the thickening air
and she could fall no further. Memories of Ca'aed and all its beauties
filled her. If Z'eth agreed she'd never have a home again, never fly
anywhere without orders. Gone, everything would be gone.
But she had to make this work. The New People were not insane.
Vee
was not insane. "My life, Ambassador Z'eth. You will have a promise
such as no ambassador has had in two hundred years."
Z'eth hesitated. "The teachers do not favor such promises."
T'sha swelled yet again. Every tendon, every pore strained to
the
fullest. "My city is dead. Yours is dying. I can promise nothing to
it. We have only each other."
"No!" cried D'seun, flapping his wings as if he meant to strike
T'sha. "Ambassador Z'eth, I hold your promise. You will follow my vote
about the disposition of the New People."
"The New People on this world," Z'eth told him. "On this world
only,
and you have already argued they are sane." She turned her back on him
and swelled her body until her size matched T'sha's. "If we do this, we
must truly do this. I cannot turn around in a year, or two, or ten and
set you free again. This will be a legal, binding promise. You will be
enslaved to me, and I will use you as such."
T'sha glanced over Z'eth's wing and she saw Br'sei there,
hunched in
and shrunken. His skin was torn. Something had happened, and she could
not ask him what. She had meant to repay him for all he had done to
help her, but if this worked, she would never be able even to make a
promise of her own again. All that she had, all that she was would be
Z'eth's until her soul flew away free, to go to
sleep with
Ca'aed's perhaps.
T'sha dipped her muzzle.
"Done," said Z'eth.
"Ambassador!" shouted D'seun.
"It is done," said Z'eth calmly. "And it is not done." She faced
D'seun. "Do you wish to protest, Ambassador? How many promises do I
hold for you, D'seun? What shall I call in first?"
T'sha swelled, even as she felt her future slide off her skin
like
wisps of cloud. No husbands, no wives, no children of her own.
Nothing left at all, except six billion of the New People who were
free to prove what they truly were.
"It will be worth it," she said to Br'sei, knowing they would be
her
last free words. "It will."
* * *
A voice nibbled at the edge of Helen's hearing and tugged at he
comfortable blanket of darkness. She did not want to hear and she did
not want to wake up. There was nothing to wake up to.
"Helen, come on, Helen, you can't leave it like this, Helen…"
Can't leave it like this? Can't
leave what like this?
She'd
have to wake up to find out. Helen strained for a moment, but,
gradually, her eyelids fluttered open.
At the sight of Ben's frantic face, memory flooded back, the New
People, the threat to Earth, to them all…
"What's—" she croaked.
"It's okay, Helen." Ben smoothed her hand. "You're in the
infirmary.
It's going to be okay."
Another voice. "The New People have given in. They're not going
to
kill Earth." Veronica Hatch, that's who that was. "They sent up a
balloon to tell us so."
Helen coughed. "Get to the shuttles. Tell Michael, tell the
yewners."
She squeezed Ben's hand as if to drain his strength into her.
"Tell them we give in too. Get them back here."
"No, Helen, it's all right," whispered Ben anxiously. "The New
People relented. There's no need—"
"Do it." Her head fell back against something soft that had been
placed there.
Don't you see? she wanted
to tell him.
We were
wrong.
We were seeing only in terms of ourselves, our futures, our pasts. We
didn't see in terms of worlds, in terms of time and all the lives that
are connected to ours. We thought, I thought, Venera was all there was,
all I was. I was wrong, I was so wrong, and Michael was right. We have
to make peace now. We have to remember how much more there is to us
than just what we've done here.
"He'll do it," said Veronica firmly. "Trust me."
I do, Helen closed her
eyes. It would be all right.
She'd
get better. There was work to do, for Venera, for herself, and for all
the human beings for whom this would now be a point of new beginning as
they reached out to the People, came to understand them, taught the
People about the breadth of humanity so both sides could truly
understand their neighbors.
It all began now.
Contents -
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Epilogue
Yan Su's apartment was two stories above the main deck of U.N.
city.
Her small balcony faced west and let in the magnificent colors of the
sunset over the waters. Standing by its rail, she could even see Venus
shining peacefully in the darkening sky. No matter how hard she looked,
she couldn't see any sign of the chaos going on up there.
When she had received Rosa Cristobal's call telling her about
what
the aliens had decided, she had stood frozen in place for several long
seconds. Then she called the Secretaries-General. They in turn had put
every single satellite on high alert to try to detect whatever missile
the aliens would hurl at Earth to launch the virus, carefully ignoring
the fact that the aliens could probably just make it appear anywhere
they pleased. They spread the word to every major disease-control
center on the planet. Every doctor who could be reached by the long
arms of government bureaucracy was awake and on alert.
They waited, Su waited, in the darkness of her own apartment,
frightened both by the magnitude of what was happening, and her own
inability to do anything at all about it.
Then nothing happened.
Su looked down from the stars. Below her balcony, she could see
a
familiar figure crossing the deck.
She gripped the wrought-iron railing and watched Sadiq Hourani
present himself to the door of her building for identification and
admittance. The swish of the door was lost under the roar of the ocean
waves, but she did see him enter.
Be here any moment.
She felt strangely calm. She had a fair idea what had brought
him to
her door this late at night without calling ahead, but somehow she
could not get herself to fear it.
Perhaps I believe I deserve
whatever comes.
She walked back into her living room. The room was comfortable,
even a little luxurious with its thick, Persian carpet, the carved
tables, and vases of fresh flowers. The balcony's etched glass doors
glided shut behind her. As they did, the front door chimed, and its
panel showed her Sadiq waiting in the hallway with his endless patience.
Su took a deep breath. "Door. Open."
The door did as it was told, and Sadiq walked into the foyer. He
looked tired, she thought, and a little sad.
Well, they had been friends for a long time, and this had to be
something of a disappointment for him.
"Good evening, Su," he said, walking forward. "I'm sorry for
calling
so late—"
"There's no need for you to apologize to me." She waved his
words
away. "Won't you sit down?" Su gestured toward one of her low, faux
leather sofas. "I don't see why we should stand on ceremony after all
this time. Can I send for some coffee?" It was astonishing how easily
she fell into the hostess role. Then again, she'd had a great deal of
practice at play acting.
"No, thank you." Sadiq remained standing. Su smoothed the hem of
her
long, rose tunic under her as she sat. She looked up at him, not
weighing, calculating, or judging, just waiting to see what he had to
say. She always tried to avoid planning her next move until she had all
the required facts in her hands. That was one of the things that had
made her so good at what she did and helped keep her at her post for so
long.
Sadiq sighed, and she saw actual indecision on his face. She
imagined he wanted to be angry, to let righteous rage fill him up and
carry him through this, but it wouldn't come.
"Why did you do it, Su?"
She raised her eyebrows and curled up the corner of her mouth.
"I
have a busy schedule, Sadiq. Which 'it' are you talking about?" She
thought she knew, but she wanted to be certain.
Sadiq bowed his head and folded his hands behind his back. He
looked
at the pattern of the carpet, burgundy and gold, so many knots all tied
together to make their own pattern. A nice metaphor. "I've been having
an extremely interesting chat with a feeder named Frezia Cheney, who
let slip some facts about a conversation she had with your son, Quai.
Quai, in turn, told me you asked him to set up a stream corporation
called Biotech 24 so it could donate money to Grace Meyer, who, we now
know, was the brains and funding behind the falsified Discovery on
Venus." He looked at her. She sat very still, trying to keep her face
impassive. She mostly succeeded, but she felt her eyes widen slightly.
"How did you get Quai to talk to you?" she asked softly.
"I told him about your surveillance on his private mail."
"Oh." Su dropped her gaze. So here was the payment for that. Her
heart swelled with love and sorrow until her entire chest tightened,
but she couldn't blame her son. No, she could not blame him at all.
"There is even an implication"—Sadiq moved just a little
closer—"that you and some of the Venerans have known about the aliens
for years." He spread his hands, appealing to her. "Why, Su? What were
you doing?"
Su smoothed the fabric of her tunic across her knees. She
reached
out and minutely adjusted the small jade-dragon carving on her coffee
table.
"I thought," she said, drawing her hand back but not lifting her
gaze from the sinuous reptile, "that I was creating an unprecedented
opportunity for the colonies to gain political capital."
Sadiq sank onto the sofa, facing her. "Tell me," he said.
She touched the spines on the dragon's back, gingerly, feeling
their needle sharp tips dent the skin of her fingertips.
"Grace Meyer sent me an agitated message three years ago. It
seems
that while searching for her UV absorber, she found a satellite photo
of what looked like an alien artifact. She was telling me rather than
Helen Failia, because she did not like Dr. Failia and wanted to go over
her head."
"Do you know the source of this feud?"
Su smiled thinly. "It seems Dr. Failia was unwilling to
actively
seek funding for Dr. Meyer's projects. Dr. Failia was afraid that
searching for life, which had failed so many times before in so many
more likely places, would make Venera look silly and spoil its ability
to get serious funding and serious attention. Dr. Meyer never forgave
her." Su shook her head. "And we think the in-fighting in the
legislature is bad."
"So, she gave you this photo and told you her theories—" Sadiq
prompted.
"And I asked her to keep them both quiet for a while." Su pushed
at
the dragon so that its focus shifted from looking directly at her to
looking at the wall past her right shoulder. "At first, I didn't
believe it could possibly be what it looked like, and I also did not
want public ridicule to fall on Venera."
"Grace said she would do no such thing, however. She was tired
of
having her work suppressed, she said. She was ready to sign off in a
huff, when the idea struck me." She rubbed her palms together.
"Suppose there were aliens on Venus. Suppose they made contact,
not
with the government of Earth, but with Venera base. Venera would have
the chance to do what no one had ever done. It would have a first that
could not be taken away from it. A colony with a contact that not even
the C.A.C. could take away, no matter how hard they tried. It might
even lead to a successful independence bid. One without bloodshed this
time." She looked up at him. The sadness had deepened on his face. "The
C.A.C. is never going to let the colonists go. Their status as
second-class citizens has become too ingrained and in some ways too
convenient. I came to believe that to get full civil and human rights
restored would take a revolution, but not a bloody one, not like
Fuller's." She smiled softly. "If anyone could make it work, it would
be Helen Failia, I was sure. Her people were so loyal to her."
"I added in the fact that Grace wasn't going to keep quiet. She
wanted her recognition, and she wanted it now, and I started getting
ideas."
"I suggested we create what became the Discovery." She turned
her
hands this way and that, examining the backs, the nails, the deeply
lined palms. "It was brilliant, actually. I was
very proud. It served to focus public attention on the colonies. It
raised all sorts of questions about Terran rule from places other than
Bradbury, and it got the scientific world to take Grace Meyer
seriously. Grace found help from some of Venera's many underfunded
departments, and I found there were plenty of places between Earth and
Venus to hide the money they used for the construction." She smiled at
her hands. "Actually, except for gold for the laser, it was quite an
economical operation."
"I see," said Sadiq.
"It also got the Venerans actually looking for aliens. I felt if
the
news came from anybody on the base other than Grace Meyer, Helen would
have an easier time of things."
Sadiq turned away. He paced slowly over to her balcony doors and
looked out onto the night.
"Tell me what you're thinking," asked Su.
He shook his head slowly. "So many years of fighting. So many
years
of a single goal in mind—equal rights for the colonies. It blotted out
everything else, even the stunning wonder of meeting another form of
life, other minds from other worlds. Everything was just there to be
used. Nothing could be left alone to just happen." He turned around and
his eyes were shining a little too brightly. "I'd hoped you were above
that."
"I'm sorry." Su clasped her hands together. "What do we do about
this?"
"I don't think there's anything else to do." Sadiq turned back
toward her. "The story will be breaking soon, and your attempt at a
bloodless coup killed two men. I'm sure that will keep you busy enough."
Su bowed her head. "I am sorry, Sadiq. It looked like the only
way
to break the C.A.C.'s hold on the colonies."
"I'm sure it did." He paused. "Do you know, Veronica Hatch tells
me
that one of the People's ambassadors sold herself into slavery to save
us all."
"Did she?" murmured Yan Su. "What a fine thing to do for
strangers."
"Yes." He looked down at her. "I wonder if we'll ever be able to
show such a fine thing to them."
He left her there and walked out the door. Su sat where she was
for
a while. Then she rose and walked back onto the balcony to breathe the
salty night air and look up at the sky. She did not know, after all,
how much longer these privileges would be hers.
Daylight had dwindled to a patch of gray on the horizon. The
gentle
yellow streetlights had come out, lighting the deck and dimming the
stars overhead.
Su turned her face to the evening star.
"Thank you," she whispered, hoping somehow her words would touch
the
stranger who had saved them all. "Thank you."
Sarah Zettel - The Quiet Invasion
CONTENTS
The Quiet Invasion
Sarah Zettel
ASPECT® WARNER BOOKS
A Time Warner Company
This book is
dedicated, with deepest thanks, to my spiritual big sister, Dawn Marie
Sampson Beresford.
Acknowledgments
The Author would like to thank Timothy B. Smith for his expert
technical advice, Laura Woody, who knew about the yeast, and Dr. David
Grinspoon, whose
Venus Revealed she consulted frequently
during the writing of this book. She would also like to thank Betsy
Mitchell and Jaime Levine, whose patient work made this a better book,
and Karen Everson, who was there for the crisis.
Contents -
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Chapter One
"This is Venera Control, Shuttle AX-2416. You're clear for landing.
Welcome back."
Hello, Tori. How are you doing? thought Helen from her seat
in the passenger compartment. She liked the fact that the shuttle
pilots left the intercom open so she could listen to the familiar
voices running through the landing protocols. Overhearing this final
flight ritual made her feel that she was really home.
I just wish I was really home with better news.
She bit her lip and settled a little further back in her
crash-couch. Helen was the only Venera-bound passenger this run. She'd
flown from Earth in the long-distance ship
Queen Isabella,
which now waited in orbit while the shuttles from Venera ferried down
supplies and equipment that had to be imported from Earth.
Helen stared straight ahead over the rows of empty couches. The
ceiling and front wall of the shuttle's passenger cabin were one
gigantic view screen. Venus's opaque, yellowish-gray clouds churned all
around the shuttle. Wind stirred the mists constantly but never cleared
them away.
She strained her eyes, struggling to see the solid shadow of Venera
Base through the shifting fog. Despite everything, Helen still felt as
if she carried the bad news with her, that nothing could have changed
aboard Venera until she got there and handed the news over.
I'm not there so it's not real yet. Helen smoothed down the
indigo scarf she wore over her stark white hair.
Arrogance,
arrogance,
old woman. This last trip should have finally put you
in your place.
She really did feel old. It was strange. Even in the modern era of
med trips and gene-level body modification, eighty-three was not young.
She had never felt so old
inside, though. She'd never felt
calcified like this, as if something in her understanding had failed,
leaving her standing on the edge of events she was unable to comprehend
clearly, let alone affect.
The shuttle's descent steepened. At last, the cloud veil thinned
enough that Helen really could make out the spherical shadow of Venera
Base—her dream, her life's work, her home.
And now, my poor failure.
Even with self-pity and defeat swimming around inside her head,
Helen's heart lifted at the sight of Venera. The base was a gigantic
sphere buoyed by Venus's thick CO2 atmosphere. Distance and
cloud cover made the massive girders and cables that attached the tail
and stabilizers to the main body of the station look as thin as
threads.
Venera rode the perpetual easterly winds that circled the planet's
equator. The shuttle matched Venera's speed easily, and the navigation
chips in the shuttle and the runway handled the rest. The shuttle
glided onto the great deck that encircled the very top of Venera's
hull. It taxied straight across the runway and to the open hangar.
The shuttle jerked slightly as it rolled to a stop. A moment of
silence enveloped Helen. This was no tourist shuttle. There were no
attendants, human or automated, to tell her it was okay to get up now,
or to make sure she claimed all her luggage, or to hope she'd enjoyed
her flight and would come again soon.
Instead, the hissing, bumping noises of pressurization, corridor
docking, and engine power-down surrounded her. Helen stayed where she
was. As soon as she stepped out of the shuttle, it all became real.
The transition would be over. Her illusions would no longer shield
her. Helen found she did not want to abandon that shelter.
"Dr. Failia?"
Helen started and looked up into the broad, dark face of
the
shuttle's senior pilot. What was his name?
"Yes?" She pushed herself upright and began fumbling with the
multiple buckles that strapped her to the couch.
Name, name, name…
"I just wanted to say, I know you're going to get us through this.
Everybody's with you."
Pearson! "Thank you, Mr. Pearson," said Helen. "We'll find
a way."
"I know we will." He stepped aside to give her room to stand. Helen
did not miss the hand that briefly darted out to help her to her feet
and then darted back again, afraid of being offensive. She pretended to
ignore the awkward gesture and retrieved her satchel from the bin under
her couch.
"Thank you again, Mr. Pearson." Helen shook the pilot's hand and met
his eyes with a friendly smile.
P.R. reflexes all in working
order, thank you.
Then, because there was nothing else to do, she walked down the
flex-walled docking corridor.
Bennet Godwin and Michael Lum, the other two members of Venera's
governing board, were, of course, waiting for her in the passenger
clearing area. One look at their faces told her that the bad news had
indeed flown far ahead of her.
Her hand tightened around her satchel strap as she walked up to her
colleagues.
"I take it you've heard," she said flatly. "We lost Andalucent
Technologies and IBM."
There, it's official. I said it. The
last shards of her comforting illusions fell away.
Ben Godwin was a square-built, florid man. Every emotion registered
on his face as a change of color, from snow white to cherry red. Right
now though, he just looked gray. He opened his mouth, but nothing came
out.
Michael, standing beside him, glanced briefly at the floor and then
up at Helen's eyes. He was a much younger, much leaner, much calmer man
with clear gold skin. He wore his black hair long and pulled back into
a ponytail. The gold ID badge on his white tunic proclaimed him the
chief of Venera's security. "They took the University of Washington
with them."
He spoke softly, but the words crashed hard against Helen. "What?
When?"
"About an hour ago." Ben ran his hand over his bristly scalp. We
tried to get them to wait to talk to you, but they weren't—"
Anger hardened Helen's face. "Well, they'll have to talk to me
anyway." She brushed past the two men. "We can't afford to lose their
funding too."
Helen did not look back to see if they were following her. she just
strode straight ahead into the broad, curving corridor that connected
the docking area to the rest of Venera. She ignored the nearest
elevator bundle and started down the stairs instead. She was not
waiting around anymore. She'd been waiting on people for months on
Earth. Waiting for them to tell her they had no more money, no more
time to wait for results, no more interest in a planet that would never
be amenable to human colonization or exploitation.
Helen kept her office on the farm levels near the center of Venera's
sphere. Full spectrum lights shone down on vast soil beds growing
high-yield cereals and brightly colored vegetables. Ducks and geese
waded freely through troughed rice paddies that also nurtured several
species of fish. The chickens, however, were penned in separate yards
around the perimeter. The chickens did not get along with the more
peaceable fowls. Quartz windows ringed the entire level, showing the
great gray clouds. Every now and then, a pure gold flash of sheet
lightning lit the world.
The farms had been meant to give Venera some measure of
independence. Acquiring good, fresh food was vital to the maintenance
of a permanent colony, and from the beginning, Helen had meant Venera
to be a permanent colony.
Old dreams died hard. Venera might have actually had real
self-sufficiency, except for the restrictions the U.N. placed on
manufacturing and shipping licenses.
Old fears died hard too.
Helen's office was an administrative cubicle on an island in the
middle of one of the rice paddies. She knew people called it "the
Throne Room" and didn't really care. She loved Venus, but she missed
Earth's blues and greens. Setting up her workspace in the farms had
been the perfect compromise.
Helen kept a spartan office. It was furnished with a work desk,
three visitor's chairs, and an all-purpose view screen that currently
showed a star field. Her one luxury, besides her view, was a couple of
shelves of potted plants—basil, oregano, lavender, and so on. Their
sweet, spicy scents were the air's only perfume.
Helen dropped herself into the chair behind the desk and tossed her
satchel onto the floor. It was only then that she became aware that
Michael and Ben had in fact followed her.
"Who'd you talk to?" Her touch woke the desk and lit its command
board. She shuffled through the icons to bring up her list of contact
codes.
"Patricia Iannone," said Ben, sitting in one of the visitor's
chairs. "She sounded like she was just following orders."
"We'll see." Helen activated Pat's contact and checked the time
delay. Four minutes today. Not great for purposes of persuasive
conversation, but doable. Helen opened the com system and lifted her
face to the view screen. "Hello, Pat. I've just gotten back to Venera,
and they're telling me that U Washington is pulling our funding.
What's the matter? You can't tell me the volcanology department has not
been getting its money's worth out of us. If it's a matter of being
more vocal about your sponsorship or about allowing your people some
more directed research time, I know we can work out the details. You
just have to let me know what you and your people need." She touched
the Send key, and the com system took over, shooting the message down
after the contact code, waiting for a connection, and a reply.
Helen swiveled her chair to face Ben and Michael. "All right, tell
me what's been happening since we talked last."
So Ben told her about some of the new personnel assignments and
promotions and how the volcano, Hathor Montes, was showing signs of
entering an active cycle. Michael talked about a rash of petty thefts,
an increase in demands on the data lines caused apparently by the
volcanology group gearing up for Hathor's active cycle, and a couple of
instream clipout personas
trying to get themselves inserted onto Venera's payroll.
"Now that would be all we'd need," muttered Helen. "Handing out
extra money for a couple of computer ghosts."
As she spoke, the desk chimed. All of them turned their attention
back to the view screen. Helen's stomach tightened. The star field
cleared away to show a fashionably slim, young-looking woman with beige
skin and a cloud of dark-blond hair, worn unbound under a pink scarf.
"Hello, Helen," she said soberly. "I was expecting this. Listen,
there are no complaints about the publicity, the facilities access,
about anything. The problems are application, opportunity, and
resource distribution. The comptrollers have decided our people are
going to have to be content with St. Helens and Pelee for a while. The
industrial research spillover is contracting, and there is just not
enough to go around right now." Her expression flickered from annoyed
to apologetic. "There's no more after this. Anything you send is going
to my machine. I'm sorry, but there is nothing I can do."
The stars faded back into view. For a moment, Helen met Ben's gaze,
but she looked quickly away. She didn't want to see what he was
thinking.
We could have done this, he was thinking,
if
you'd been willing to do it small. If you hadn't insisted from the
beginning on a full-scale base where people could live and raise their
children and make a lifetime commitment to the study of this world.
She pressed her fingertips against her forehead. That was what he
was thinking. That Venus was, at most, four weeks away from Earth. It
wouldn't have mattered if people had to come and go. Venera could have
been made small and simple and then expanded if things worked out. But,
oh, no. Helen Failia had her vision, and Helen Failia had to push it
through. Helen had to make sure there were children like Michael who
could lose their homes if the funding ever collapsed.
"There is a way out of this," said Michael. "There has to be."
"What?" Helen's hand jerked away from her face. "Michael, I'm open
to suggestions. I've just spent four months scavenging the whole of
Mother Earth for additional funding. It's not there."
"Well." Michael rolled his eyes toward the ceiling and then brought
them back down to meet Helen's gaze. "Have you tried a com burst out to
Yan Su on the Colonial Affairs Committee? There might be some U.N.
money we can dredge up."
Ben snorted. "Oh, come on, Michael. The U.N. pay to keep a colony
running? Their business is keeping colonies scraping and begging." As a
younger man, Helen knew, Ben had been strongly sympathetic with the
Bradbury Separatist movement on Mars—the same movement that had
blossomed into the Bradbury Rebellion and, for five short, violent
years, Bradbury Free Territory. Because of that, he still took a very
dim view of the United Nations and their off-Earth colonial policies.
She had to admit he was partly right. Since the Bradbury Rebellion,
the C.A.C.'s sole function had been to make sure nothing like that
ever happened again. Hence, the licensing restrictions. No colony could
manufacture space shuttles or long-distance ships. No colony could
manufacture communications satellites, although they were graciously
allowed to repair the ones they had. There was a whole host of other
hardware and spare parts that either never got licensed or were taxed
to the Sun and back again.
Most of the time that didn't bother Helen. She dealt with the C.A.C.
through her friend Yan Su, and so far Su had been willing to help
whenever she could. Now, though, they were coming head-to-head with
the old, frightened public policies.
"You think they want to deal with ten thousand refugees?" countered
Michael calmly. "It's got to be cheaper to let us stay where we're at
than to pay for processing ten thousand new resident-citizen files."
Helen nodded absently. She found, to her shame, she was not ready to
admit that that avenue had been shut off almost a year ago. Maybe she
could try again.
Now is not the time for pride, she reminded
herself firmly.
You've begged everybody else. Why not the
government?
"Yan Su helped put us up here," said Michael, more to Ben than to
Helen. "Maybe she can help keep us up here." Ben's only response was to
turn a little pinker and look sour.
As little as she liked to admit it, Michael was right. It was time
for last resorts. Without their three major funding sources, they were
not going to be able to meet their payroll. They could buy some time by
laying off the nonpermanent residents and sending them back to Mother
Earth, but then they wouldn't be able to complete their research
projects and they'd lose yet more money.
Helen looked at the time delay again. Venus and Earth were moving
out of conjunction. If she put this off, the time delay was only going
to get worse, and she didn't want to have to conduct this conversation
through the mail. "Why don't you—"
Movement outside the office cleared the door's view panel. Grace
Meyer stood in front of the door with her arms folded and her
impatience plain on her heavily lined face. Helen suppressed a groan.
What she wanted to do was open the intercom and say, "We're having a
meeting, Grace. Not now." But she held back. Grace had proven herself
willing to make trouble lately, and Venera did not need more trouble.
"We'll finish in a minute, gentlemen," she said instead. "Door.
Open. Hello, Grace," she said, not bothering to put on a smile, as
Grace would know it was false. "What can I do for you?"
Dr. Grace Meyer was a short woman with a milk-and-roses complexion.
Her lab coat was no longer crisp, and her tunic and trousers were as
rumpled as if she'd slept in them. She wore a green kerchief tied over
her short hair, which was the same strawberry blond as when she'd moved
to Venera fifteen years ago. Grace was a long-lifer. She was actually
twice Helen's age, even though she looked only half that old.
Grace nodded to Ben and Michael and then turned all her attention
to Helen. "I heard about U Washington."
Helen sighed. "The only thing that travels faster than bad news is
bad news about you personally." Ben and Michael did not smile. Ben
looked grim. Michael looked like he was trying to calculate the
probable outcome of this scenario so he could ready his responses.
"What about U Washington?" asked Helen.
Grace glanced at Ben and Michael. In that glance, Helen read that
Grace would like to ask them to leave but couldn't quite work out how.
And
I'll be damned if I'll help you, Helen thought.
"Helen," Grace started again, "there are still sources of money out
there. If we shift emphasis just a little—"
Here it comes. "To the possibility of life on Venus?"
Grace leaned across the desk. "You saw my new grant from Biotech 24.
That's good money, Helen. The absorbers—"
"Are a complex set of benzene rings with some strange sulfuric
hangers-on under heat and pressure."
Grace was a chemist who had come to Venera to help look for the
ultraviolet absorber in the Venusian clouds. The clouds were mostly
transparent to ultraviolet, but there were bands and patches that
absorbed all but the very lowest end of the UV wavelengths. For years,
no one had been able to work out what was happening. Grace and her team
had isolated a large, complex carbon, oxygen, sulfur molecule that
interacted with the sulfuric acid in the clouds and the UV from the
Sun, so it was constantly breaking apart, reforming and recreating
more of itself. Which was fine; it had won her awards and acclaim, and
brought Venera a lot of good publicity.
The problem was, Grace was trying to get the compound, which she
called "the absorber" for simplicity's sake, classified as life.
Helen got slowly to her feet. She was not tall, but she had a few
centimeters on Grace and didn't mind using them. Especially now. She
did not need this. "Your absorbers are not life. No funding university
or independent research lab we've had on board for the last ten years
has said it could be qualified as life, or even proto-life."
Grace held her ground. "But there's—"
"There's one little company that's got more of an existence
instream than out in reality. It's willing to gamble on your idea this
is some kind of alien autocatalytic RNA." Grace subsided just a little,
but Helen wasn't ready to. The past months had been
too much on top of the past year, all the past years. All he fighting,
all the frustration, all the time wasted,
wasted on stupid,
petty money-grubbing and useless personal projects. I've read your
papers, Grace. I've read them all, and you know what? I wish I'd tried
harder to get you to leave it alone, you've directly contributed to the
image of this base as a useless piece of dream ware. You have cost us,
Grace. You personally have cost all of us!"
The intercom chimed again. "What is it?" demanded Helen icily. She
needed to take the call. She needed to stop yelling at Grace. She was
falling out of control, and she could not afford that. Grace could
still make trouble—publicize internal dissension, that kind of thing.
There was plenty she could do. Plenty she would do. Helen needed to
stop.
"Ummm… Dr. Failia?" The screen flickered to life to show a slender
young man with clear, sandy-brown skin and thick black hair. Behind
him, a floor-to-ceiling view screen displayed the ragged gray cliff,
possibly the edge of one of the continent-sized plateaus that broke the
Venusian crust.
"Yes, Derek?" Helen tried to smooth the impatience out of her voice.
Derek Cusmanos headed the survey department. Actually, Derek and his
fleet of drones
were the survey department. He always did
his job well. He had done nothing to deserve her anger.
"I… I'm getting some pictures in from one of the drones near Beta
Regio that you need to see, Dr. Failia."
Helen's fingers twitched as she tried not to clench her hands into
fists. "This is not a good time, Derek. Shoot me up a file and I'll go
over it—"
"No, Dr. Failia." Strain tightened Derek's voice. "You really need
to see this right now."
Curiosity and concern surfaced together in Helen's mind. She glanced
back at Ben and Michael, who both returned blank stares. A glance at
Grace produced a shrug and a pair of spread hands.
"All right, Derek," said Helen. "Show me."
Without another word, Derek pushed his chair back so they had a
clear view of his wall screen. Helen heard him give soft
orders to his desk to display the current uplink.
The screen's view changed. The gigantic plateau wall receded into
the distance. In its place stood a smaller, rounded canyon wall, the
kind that typically bordered the ancient lava channels. On the canyon's
cracked floor, Helen saw something sticking up out of the ground. Derek
gave another order. The view zoomed in.
The new, tighter view showed a perfectly circular shaft protruding
from the Venusian ground.
"Oh my God," whispered Michael. Helen just got out of her chair and
walked slowly forward until her nose almost touched the intercom screen.
It was not anything that should have been there, but there it was.
It was circular. It had a cap on it. Its gray sides glinted dully in
Venus's ashen light, and it sank straight into the bedrock.
"This is live," said Derek from his post off-screen. "I'm getting
this in right now from SD-25."
"You've done a diagnostic?" cut in Ben. He supervised Derek's
"department." "The drone is functioning on spec?"
"On spec and in the green," said Derek. "I… I didn't believe what I
was seeing, so I sent SD-24 down after it. This is what I'm getting
from SD-24." He gave another order and the view shifted again. Now they
looked down from above, as if the camera drone perched on the canyon
wall, which it probably did.
The capped shaft sat there, smooth and circular and utterly
impossible. Even Venus, which had produced stone formations seen
nowhere else in the solar system, had not created those smooth lines,
that flattened lid.
"Well," said Ben. "I don't remember putting that there."
"Derek," said Helen quietly, "I want you to keep both drones
on-site. I want that thing recorded from every possible angle. I want
it measured and I want its dimensions and position to the millimeter.
We'll get a scarab down there to look at it."
"Yes, Dr. Failia." Derek sounded relieved that someone else was
making the decisions.
"Well done, young man," she added.
"Thank you, Dr. Failia."
The intercom cut out and Helen turned slowly around. "Do I have to
say
it?" she asked dryly.
"You mean that if that's what it looks like—" began Ben.
"We have evidence of life on Venus?" Grace folded her arms. her
green eyes gleamed brightly. "Oh, please, Helen. I'd love to
hear you say it, just once."
A muscle in Helen's temple spasmed. "Now is not the time to be
petty,
Grace."
Grace smiled. "Oh no, not petty, Helen. But you'll have to allow me
a
little smugness. I've been shouting in the wilderness for years now.
If this bears out—"
"
If this bears out." Ben emphasized the first word heavily.
"Venus has thrown up some landscapes that make the old face on Mars
look passe." He pushed himself to his feet. "Kevin is on shift. I'll
have him outfit us a scarab ay-sap." Kevin Cusmanos was Derek's older
brother. He was also chief engineer and pilot for the surface-to-air
explorer units known as scarabs, which transported people to and from
the Venusian surface. "I assume you're coming down to see what's what?"
Ben looked pointedly at Helen.
"Of course," she answered. "And Michael's coming with us." She
looked to him for approval and he nodded. His face held a kind of
stunned wonder as the implications filtered through him. Helen knew
exactly how he felt. If this was played out, it meant so many things.
It meant human beings were not alone in the universe. It meant there
was
not only intelligent life out there somewhere but it had also left its
traces on Venus.
It meant money for Venera.
Grace opened her mouth, but Helen held up her hand. "Not this run,
Grace. Next one, if it turns out to be more than rocks and heat
distortion."
Keep up the patter, Helen. You do not know what's
really down there. You only know what it looks like.
Somewhat to Helen's surprise, Grace just nodded and stepped aside
for Ben as he hurried out the door. Helen did not, however, miss the
purely triumphant smile that spread across her face.
Can't blame her, I suppose. "If that's what it looks like,"
she repeated out loud.
"If that's what it looks like, all our old problems are over with,
and we'll have a set of brand-new ones," said Michael. "But oh my god…"
Helen touched his arm. "I quite agree. Go grab your gear, Michael,
and tell Jolynn and the boys you won't be home for supper."
"Yes, ma'am." He snapped a mock salute and hurried out the door.
Grace and Helen faced each other for a long moment. "Well," said
Grace brightly, "I think I'll go reorganize my files. I think there's
going to be some new work coming in." She left, and the door slid shut
behind her.
Finally alone, Helen reached up and untied her scarf. Her long white
hair fell down around her shoulders. She combed her fingers through it,
feeling how each strand separated and fell, brushing her cheeks and
shoulders. It felt coarser than she remembered it feeling when she was
a young woman. Coarser and yet more fragile, like its owner.
Let this work out, she prayed silently.
I don't care
if I have to spend the next fifty years apologizing to Grace Meyer.
This could save us all. Please, let it work out right.
* * *
Less than five hours later, Helen, too on edge to remember she ought
to be tired and hungry, unstrapped herself from a second crash-couch.
This one was in the little dormitory aboard Scarab Fourteen. The scarab
itself crawled across the Venusian surface, following the signal output
of Derek Cusmanos's two drones.
Because it was Kevin Cusmanos's policy to always have two of
Venera's twenty scarabs ready to go in case of emergency, heading to
the surface had been a matter of grabbing overnight bags and calling on
Adrian Makepeace, the duty pilot for the afternoon shift. Kevin said
he'd take the board down himself, but he wanted Adrian's experience in
the copilot's seat.
Scarab Fourteen was a clone of all the other scarabs owned and
operated by Venera Base—a wedge-shaped, mobile laboratory that could
both fly and roll. They were designed to take a
team of up to seven researchers plus two crew members to almost any
spot on the Venusian surface that wasn't covered in lava. Built wide
and
low to the ground, they were practical but not comfortable. Adrian,
Helen noticed, seemed to be developing a permanent stoop and a
tendency to walk sideways from all the time he spent in them.
Designing for the heat and pressure of the Venusian surface had
proved incredibly difficult. That was one of the reasons Venera floated
through the clouds. The surface was an oven. Up in the clouds, the
temperature was close to the freezing point of water. Down here, they
had to carry layers of insulation and heavy-duty coolant tanks that
had to be recharged and refrozen after each trip.
Helen picked her way between the crash-couches, rocking slightly
with the motion of the treads until she emerged into the main corridor.
Ben and Michael had gone ahead of her and already crowded behind
Kevin's and Adrian's chairs in the command area. They all stared
through the main window that wrapped around the scarab's nose.
The scarab ground its careful way across the nightside of Venus.
Outside, the cracked surface of Ruskalia Planitia glowed with the heat
it radiated, creating a quilt of deep reds, bright oranges, and clear,
clean yellow. Overhead, the light reflected off the clouds, lending
them the color and texture of molten gold being stirred by some
invisible hand.
Kevin, a cautious, quiet man, who was almost twice as broad in the
shoulders as his younger brother, kept his gaze flickering between the
map displays and the window which showed them Beta Regio, a ragged wall
of living fire wavering in the distance.
Coming down several kilometers from the whatever-it-was had seemed
prudent. They did not want to land accidentally on something important.
As Beta Regio grew larger, the plain under the scarab's treads
became rougher. Small, knife-backed ridges, blood red with escaping
heat and blurred by the thick atmosphere, rose out of the plain. The
closer they came to Beta Regio, the higher the ridges rose, until they
became ragged walls. At last, Scarab Fourteen drove down a glowing
corridor, following the path carved by a river of ancient lava.
A million similar paths spread out around the various Venusian
highlands. Kevin drove the scarab gently over the rocks and swells,
guided by the global positioning readout and the signals from his
brother's drones.
The lava trail dead-ended at a sharp, smooth cliff that shone a
livid orange. Some coal-bright sand rolled lazily along the brilliant
ground, brushing against the hatchway set into the living rock.
"Venera Base," said Kevin in the general direction of the radio
grill. "This is Scarab fourteen." It was somehow comforting to see he
was staring, as was Adrian.
As are we all. "We have the…
target in sight. Are you getting our picture?"
"We're getting it, Boss." Helen almost didn't recognize Charlotte
Murray's voice, with its undertone of uncertainty, as if she were torn
between fear and awe.
Helen understood the feeling. Her own eyes ached from staring at the
brightly shining artifact. It was a perfectly circular shaft, about two
meters across, that protruded half a meter out of the rugged surface.
It glowed red hot, like its surroundings. Its lid had a series of,
what?—handles? locks?—spaced evenly on all the sides she could see.
She glanced at Ben and saw his thoughts shining plainly on his face.
It had to be a hatchway. It couldn't be anything else. Someone had
built it there. That was the only explanation.
She knew he was not about to say any of that out loud, however. It
wouldn't do. It was bad science and poor leadership, neither of which
Ben would tolerate.
"Well"—she straightened up—"who's coming out to take a look?"
"Dr. Failia, you're not—" began Kevin. Helen silenced him with a
glance. He was probably right. It probably was not a good idea for an
eighty-something who was behind on her med trips to don a heavy
hardsuit and go outside on Venus for a bit of a ramble.
But I'll be damned if I'm staying behind to watch this through
the window.
"Right behind you, Helen," said Ben. Michael didn't say anything. He
just headed down the narrow central corridor toward the changing area
at
the back of the scarab.
Helen rolled her eyes and followed, with Ben and Adrian filing after
her. As copilot, Adrian's primary job was monitoring, or
baby-sitting, any extravehicular activities. The EVA staging area took
up most of the scarab's wide back end. Still, there somehow never
seemed to be quite enough room for even three people to get into the
bulky hardsuits.
The hardsuits themselves consisted of two layers. The soft,
cloth-lined inner suit went directly over a person's clothes. This
layer
carried the coolants circulating in microtubules drawn from tanks which
were pulled from the freezer and strapped, along with the O2 packs,
over the shoulders.
Then the pressure shell was assembled. Based on the hardsuits used
in very deep industrial sea diving, it kept the user's personal
pressure at a comfortable one atmosphere. It was also heavy as all
get-out. Despite the internally powered skeletons, every time she put
one on, Helen felt like a clunky monster from outer space.
But it was all necessary. The best simulations they had suggested
that a person exposed to Venus's surface temperature and pressure would
flash-burn a split second before any remaining chemical residue was
squashed flat.
Finally, Helen locked down her helmet. The edges of the faceplate
lit up with the various monitor readouts and the control icons. Helen
had never liked the icons. They were line-of-sight controlled and she
found them clumsy to use. Adrian looped the standard tool belt around
her waist and stood back. "Check one, check one, Dr. Failia." Adrian's
voice came through her helmet's intercom. Following routine, Helen
waved her hand in front of her suit's chest camera. "Reading you,
Scarab Fourteen," she said. The monitors in each hardsuit were slaved
to the scarab for earliest possible detection of mechanical trouble.
"And we have you, Dr. Failia," replied Adrian, glancing at the wall
monitors. "Check two, check two, Dr. Godwin." The routine was repeated
with Ben and Michael. Helen leaned against the wall and tried not to
think too much about what waited outside. The picture had burned itself
into her mind. It was an artificial structure, no question there. She
couldn't wait until the rest of the solar system saw it. Good God,
they'd say, there was somebody else out here or there had been. Her
Venus, her beautiful, misunderstood twin to Earth, housed or had housed
intelligent life…
Steady Helen. Remember, you still don't know
anything.
The checks on Ben and Michael's suits came up green, and Adrian let
them all move into the airlock. He swung the hatch shut behind them.
The suits maintained pressure for their inhabitants, but the airlock
had to equalize the pressure inside and outside before the hatch would
open. That meant pumping the room up to a full ninety atmospheres
worth of pressure.
As the pump started chugging, Ben turned toward Helen. "Well, it's
either aliens or the biggest practical joke in human history."
"If we open it up and a bunch of those springy worms fly out, we'll
know, right?" said Michael, carefully bending his knees to sit on a
bench he couldn't quite see.
"Would they fly out, under pressure?" asked Helen. "Or would they
just sort of pop and bounce?"
"That's one for Ned and the atmospherics people." Michael's hands
moved restlessly, tapping against his thighs to some internal rhythm.
There seemed to be nothing else to say. Each of them lapsed into
silence, thinking their own thoughts, making their own calculations or
dreaming of their own futures. It took about fifteen minutes to
pressurize the airlock. Right now, it felt like hours.
But finally the gauges all blinked green. Ben worked the levers on
the outer hatch and swung it open.
"Good luck, Team Fourteen," came Adrian's voice.
One by one the governing board stepped out onto the glowing
Venusian surface. Helen had never been so aware of being
watched—monitored by her suit, overseen by Adrian and all Scarab
Fourteen's cameras, followed by her colleagues, tracked by Derek's
drones, which sat dormant on their own little treads, a short distance
from the target object.
She took refuge in chatter. She activated the general intercom icon.
"Failia to Scarab Fourteen," she said. "Are you receiving?"
"Receiving loud and clear, Dr. Failia," answered Adrian. "Our
readings say all suits green and go."
"All green and go out here," she returned. "Except Dr. Godwin
forgot the marshmallows."
"That was on
your to-do list, Helen," shot back Ben. Helen
smiled. That had been an early experiment. The marshmallow exposed to
the Venusian atmosphere had not roasted, however. It had scrunched up
and vaporized. The egg they'd attempted to fry on the rock had
exploded.
The memory spread a smile across Helen's face and made it easier to
concentrate on the way in front of her. The cracks in the crust could
be wide enough to catch a toe in, sending a person tumbling down in a
most undignified fashion and wasting time while they were helped back
to their feet—if their suit held up to the fall. If it didn't, there'd
be nothing left to help up.
Helen dismissed that thought but held her pace in check with
difficulty. She did not want to waste any more time. She wanted to
sprint on ahead, but she had to settle for a slow march.
Still, they got steadily closer to the target. The closer they got,
the more obvious it became that the object had to be artificial. It
was indeed perfectly circular. The smooth sides rose about a half meter
out of the rock. A series of smaller spheres protruded from it. For a
moment, the three of them all lined up in front of the thing, examining
it in reverent silence.
"Okay." The word came out of Michael like a sigh. "What's the
procedure? Measure it first?"
"Measure it first," said Helen.
Slowly, Helen, Michael, and Ben circled the target in a strange,
clumsy dance, recording everything yet again and measuring all of it.
Yes, the drones had technically done all of this, but that was the
machine record. This was the human record, and they needed it to help
prove that this object was not just the result of some computer
graphics and hocus-pocus.
The shaft was exactly forty-four centimeters in height and one and a
half meters in diameter. A second, apparently separate section rested
on or was attached to the top. That section was also one and a half
meters in diameter but was only ten centimeters thick. Small, spherical
protrusions, each appearing to be ten centimeters across, were attached
to the sides of the upper section (like somebody'd stuck a half-dozen
oranges there, Ben noted), equally spaced at sixty-degree intervals and
attached by some undetermined means. A small circle, eight point three
centimeters in diameter, had been inscribed three point six-four
centimeters from the outer edge of the top section.
"Well, you're the expert, Ben," said Helen. "Is it or is it not
naturally occurring?"
Ben's helmet turned toward her. "You're kidding, right, Helen?"
"No, I'm not." Helen remained immobile. "I want this all for the
record."
"Okay, then." There came a brief shuffling noise that might have
been Ben shrugging inside his suit. "In my opinion, based on the
observations of the previous robotic investigation and my own two eyes,
this is not a naturally occurring formation."
"To my knowledge, no one on Venera Base has ever authorized
construction of such an object," added Helen.
"Are you going to open it, Helen, or can I go ahead?" Michael asked
mildly.
Helen bit her lip. Part of her wanted to call down a whole team to
swarm over the thing, analyzing every molecule before they did anything
else. She told herself that was the good scientist part of herself.
The truth was somewhat less flattering.
I'm afraid of what we're doing, of what might, or might not,
happen next.
"If you want to try, Michael, be my guest." Helen stepped back,
hoping no one realized she was giving in to the private ear
that bubbled, unwelcome, out of the back of her mind.
Michael walked around the hatch. He ran his fingers over the small
circle set flush against the lid. He walked around the shaft again.
Finally, he grasped two of the protrusions and leaned to the right.
The hatch slid slowly, unsteadily, sideways. A huge white cloud
rushed out. Michael lurched backward.
"Steam?" said Ben incredulously. "There was water in there?" There
was no water on the surface of Venus. Some particles in the clouds, but
other than that, nothing.
"No analysis on that," came back Adrian. "Sorry."
"Not your fault," murmured Helen.
The cloud evaporated, and they all bent over the dark shaft. The
tunnel sank straight into the bedrock. Their helmet lights shone on the
bottom about four, maybe five, meters down. The first ten centimeters
or so of rock around the mouth glowed brightly, but after that, it
darkened to a shiny black, shot through with charcoal-gray veins. Thick
staples had been shoved into the rock just below the glow-line, making
what appeared to be the widely spaced rungs of a ladder.
Five sets of eyes stared. Three cameras recorded the ladder. One
recorded the doctors as they waited. Nothing happened. Well, nothing
new happened.
Helen straightened up and looked at her colleagues. Ben and Michael
returned her gaze. She saw the awe tinged with ashamed fear in their
eyes and felt a little better.
"All right, gentlemen," she said. "Let's go meet the neighbors."
One careful step at a time, she climbed down into the shaft.
What none of them saw, not with their cameras, not with their own
eyes, was how one of the outcroppings on the side of Beta Regio crawled
a little closer to the hatchway, as if to get a better look.
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Chapter Two
The clouds of Home hung low overhead, pushing thick, yellow fingers
deep into the clear. Harvest flies swarmed around them, feasting on
spoiling algae or floater larvae. Here and there, a solitary shade
darted into the swarm, skimmed off a few flies, and soared away.
There should be a thousand of them, thought T'sha as she
watched the tiny bird.
Where have they all gone? Why are the flies
winning?
It was not just the absence of birds that disturbed the day. It was
the smell, or the lack of it. The wind supporting her body blew light
and sterile. It should have been heavy with salt, sweat, and rich,
growing life. The dayside currents never blew empty from the living
highlands. Except, today they did.
T'sha tilted her wings to slow her flight. This was not good.
According to the reports, the winds had been reseeded with nutritive
monocellulars not twelve miles from here. Had the seed been bad, or had
the planting failed to take? Had they underestimated the imbalance on
the microscopic layers here? If they had, what else had they
underestimated?
It might be something else, whispered a treacherous voice
in the back of her mind.
No, she chided herself.
I will not believe blasphemous
rumors.
People were not straining the winds right off the highlands to take
fresh monocellulars for their homes. There had been patrols. They had
found nothing. No one would be guilty of so much greed, so much sin. At
least, not yet. Things had not gone so
far yet.
At least, they shouldn't have. But winds that were empty of algaes
and krills and other nutritional elements were becoming more common.
Worse, there was word from the Polars that some of their winds were
becoming currents of poison. A permanent migration down to the Rough
Northerns was being debated even now if the Northerners could be
persuaded to accept such a move.
Below T'sha spread the canopy, bright with its mottled golds, blues,
and reds. From this distance, it looked healthy, ready for a casual
single harvester or a concentrated reaping. But before too many more
hours had passed, T'sha knew she was going to have to go down in there
while the team confirmed what she suspected: that there would be too
many flies down there too and not enough birds or puffs to clear them
out. They would travel deep into the underside between the canopy and
the crust and see the canopy's roots withering.
It was just as well the area itself was lightly traveled. She
scanned the horizon in all directions and, apart from her own team, saw
only one distant sail cluster. Her headset told her that it was the
Village Gaith. T'sha reflexively gave orders to send greetings to the
city and its speakers.
The rest of her team worked less than a half mile away. Their
bright-white kites and stabilizers billowed in the sterile wind. T'sha
could almost feel the engineers glancing nervously toward her. She was
not behaving as she should. She was not a private person anymore. She
was an ambassador to the High Law Meet. Her duties, in addition to
making promises on behalf of her city and representing her city to the
legislature and courts, included making people nervous. She was
supposed to be hovering around the edges of the team, waiting for them
to give her the words to carry back to the Meet.
Come now; time to play your part. You want the truth; you need
to go collect it. T'sha banked, curving her path back toward her
team.
You're doing no good drifting out here sniffing and brooding.
A waver in the air currents over her shoulder made her glance back.
A new orange kite sailed on the wind. T'sha turned in a
tight circle to read the signal lights flashing on its frame. Her bones
bunched briefly.
What does D'seun want here?
Like T'sha, D'seun served as an ambassador to the High Law Meet. She
respected him as a close reasoner and an even-minded legislator. His
birth village had died when he was still a child, but, against great
odds, he had risen to become ambassador of his adopted city. She had
wished many times they did not hover on opposite sides of every debate
concerning the search for New Home. D'seun could only be here to check
up on her team. The samples they were analyzing would help measure how
critical the ecological breakdown here on Home was and so help
determine how much time they had to make decisions regarding the new
world.
She considered heading straight back to the survey team. But then
she decided that keeping D'seun at a distance from her people might be
advisable.
Let them get as much done as possible without him fluttering
behind and making suggestions. The circumstances here might not be as
bad as they seem.
T'sha fanned her wings, letting the wind proceed without her and
waiting for D'seun's kite to approach.
His kite was a pleasant hybrid with sails of orange skin and gold
ligaments. Startling green scales dotted the shell-strip struts. Its
engine was shut down, and it coasted on nothing more than the power of
the wind. D'seun balanced half-inflated on the kite's perches. He
raised both forehands in greeting to her.
T'sha spread her forehands in return. As D'seun and his kite drew
near her, T'sha stilled her wings and let the wind pull her along so
she could keep level with him.
"Good luck, Ambassador T'sha," he said pleasantly, shifting sideways
to make room for her on the perches. "Will you join me?"
"Good luck, Ambassador D'seun. Certainly, I will." There was no
disagreement between them so great that courtesy could be disregarded.
T'sha cupped her wings to lift herself up slightly and wrapped all
twenty-four fingers around the kite's
perches. Then she deflated herself until her back and crest were level
with D'seun's. They touched forehands formally.
D'seun was even younger than T'sha was. The bright gold of his skin
sparkled strong and clear in the daylight, leaving his heavy maze of
tattoos, both official and personal, in dark relief. His white and blue
crest, which marked him as an Equatorial, streamed all the way down to
his shoulderblades. T'sha suspected both the crest and the skin were
enhanced. Fully inflated, he was only slightly smaller than she was,
something T'sha was ashamed to admit she found disconcerting. Even her
birth father was only three-quarters of her size.
D'seun spoke to the kite in its command language, softly ordering
it to change its drift so they angled away from the survey team's
distant sails. Disquiet gathered in the pockets between T'sha's bones.
"What brings you out here?" T'sha asked, deliberately keeping the
question conversational.
"I had to call into the High Law Meet to finish some reportings."
D'seun settled his weight back on his posthands, leaving his forehands
free to stroke the kite's ligaments. "So I was there when the Seventh
Team returned."
The Seventh? Oh, no. T'sha's mother had still been a child
when ten worlds had been selected as candidates for New Home. T'sha had
heard the memories of the raging debate as to whether Number Seven,
which had… complications… should be included in the roster of test
worlds. Ambassador Tr'ena, one of T'sha's predecessors in the
ambassadorship of Ca'aed, had lobbied hard against its inclusion. He
had lost. T'sha had had to deal with the consequences of that loss.
D'seun, on the other hand, had risen to the rank of ambassador on
the strength of what he and the Seventh Team had accomplished on that
same world.
D'seun turned his gaze from the kite's ligaments. "The seedings
have taken on their candidate. The life base is spreading. We have
found New Home."
"They have taken on this candidate." T'sha pushed her muzzle
forward. "What about the others?"
D'seun swelled, as if he carried the best of news. "None of the
other seedings were successful. It is Number Seven, or it is nothing."
"There are other worlds out there. Millions of them."
"We do not have the time to test those millions."
T'sha strained the wind through her teeth. It held nothing, no
taste, no texture, no scent. Empty air. Good for nothing but carrying
flies and bad news.
"You came all this way to tell me this? You could have sent a
message. I do wear a radio." She tapped the fine neural mesh of her
headset for emphasis.
T'sha searched D'seun's stance and bearing, trying to get some feel
for what he wanted. Despite his confident size, he was not at ease. He
gripped and released the perches with each hand in turn so that he
rocked unsteadily. His eyes darted about behind their lenses, looking
for something other than her.
"There are things I wished to say to you directly," said D'seun
blandly.
T'sha's posthands clenched the perch a little more tightly. "What
are they? Do not speak against this candidate world? Do not say that if
we must take this candidate, we must approach the New People and tell
them plainly what we have come to New Home to do?"
D'seun inflated himself a little bit more. "The Seventh is the only
planet where the life base has taken." Light sparkled against his skin
and his tattoos. He had several new patterns running down his
shoulder—a kite with billowing sails, a pattern of interlinking
diamonds, and an ancient pictorial symbol for movement.
T'sha turned her gaze from D'seun's personal vanity. "Did the
Seventh Team also report that the activities of the New People are
increasing?" Her friend Pe'sen had monitor duty at the Conoi portal
cluster. Now and then, he slipped her advance notice of team reports.
"That's all to the good," said D'seun calmly.
"Is it?" T'sha watched the cloud fingers in front of them with their
haze of flies. Perhaps some hunter birds could be imported from the
higher latitudes. They adapted well and needed
little breeding supervision.
"What else could it be? Life must expand. Life helps life." The
intensity of his words rippled the air. She could feel them against the
skin of her muzzle.
Is that what you believe? Or are you only saying that because
you know it's what I believe? With D'seun, this could be a
question. She had seen him use partial truths to manipulate speakers
and ambassadors before.
"Not all life views the world, perhaps I should say worlds, in the
same way." T'sha pointed her muzzle toward the thick, sulfurous
columns of haze and rot. "We see this abundance of flies as a danger
signal. How do the flies see it?"
D'seun held up one forehand. "Intelligent life understands the void
must be filled." That was an old truism, one that had never been put to
the test. D'seun knew that as well as T'sha did.
"But filled with what?" muttered T'sha.
D'seun deflated until he was level with her again. "It is a
question, certainly."
"No, it is
the question," said T'sha. "And it is the one
we are not asking."
She watched the bones under his skin expand and contract as he
resisted the urge to swell up and tower over her. "
You
certainly are."
"Because someone must." She had carefully gone over all the
available memories of the New People. They themselves were as hard to
see as shellfish in their shells, but their creations were easily
found. Their creations existed on three planets and one satellite of
the Seventh World system, and one of those planets was Seventh World
itself.
What did not seem to exist was any sign of life outside the shells,
which was what breathed life into the debates. No good information had
yet been acquired about their home world. They were obviously
intelligent, but if they were not actively spreading life to New Home,
were they making legitimate use of its resources? And if they were not
making legitimate use of its resources, what stopped the People from
doing so? There were those who argued that a system that already
supported life was the best place to move themselves to. It would
provide community, knowledge, and resources. D'seun was one of those,
although he generally argued much more about knowledge and resources
than he did about community.
Until now, of course.
D'seun deflated, becoming small, tight, and hard. "We need a new
haven and new resources to ride out this imbalance." He sounded like a
recording, running over and over until the feel of his words
overwhelmed his audience and they could draw in nothing else.
Remain calm. Remain calm. You are an ambassador now and do not
have the luxury of unchallenged opinion. T'sha leaned closer,
seeking to draw him out. "Have you considered that contact with the New
People will put an end to many questions?"
D'seun inflated slightly. "I agree, but this is not the right time.
We must establish life beyond a few building blocks. We must be able to
prove to the New People that we are serious about assisting with life's
common goals."
Are you just trying this out on me? Why aren't you presenting
this to the debate clusters? "But do we know they are common
goals? Do we know the New People see things as we do?"
D'seun rippled his wings. "You and yours are too afraid of this
thing we do. This is not greed. We need a new home, one where we can
organize and arrange the life which supports us, where we can wait out
what is happening on this old home of ours."
"I do not accuse you of greed," said T'sha.
Not yet. "But
you are right. Those I support act from fear. I am as afraid of taking
this action as you and yours are afraid of not taking it." She leaned a
little closer, her muzzle almost touching his. She wanted every word to
sink into him. "Fear fills the air around you until you cannot feel
what is truly happening to you." She pulled back and let herself swell
until she felt her bones press hard against her skin. "We are all
afraid. That is why we must question everything we do. We must act on
our fear, but we must not act out of fear."
D'seun ruffled his bright crest, raising and spreading its
tendrils. "I feel your words. Do not think I am numb. But raising yet
more uncertainty at this time could be disastrous. We must be sure, all
of us."
T'sha looked down at him. He did not flinch or subside. He just
returned her gaze.
At last, she asked, "What do you want?"
"I want to poll your city and its families. I have made a formal
request to the High Law Meet. It will be sent to you within the hour."
T'sha's bones trembled.
I should have known this was coming. I
should have read it in the way that flies are clustering. "You
question my fitness as ambassador?"
"No." D'seun's reply was easy, simple, and T'sha didn't believe it
for a moment. "I seek to eliminate uncertainty in this great project we
are undertaking. If your doubts truly reflect the doubts of your
families, then it must be widely known."
Anger swelled T'sha until she thought she would float away on the
wind. "Then let us set the polling time. But I tell you, D'seun"—she
leaned close, making sure every word touched him—"I will not be
stilled."
"Neither will the project, T'sha."
Whatever else he had been about to say was cut off by the voice of
T'sha's headset vibrating through her ear. "Ambassador T'sha, this is
Village Gaith. Help. You must help. I am in rot. You must help my
people."
T'sha's wings spread in instant response. "We will be there."
"What's happening?" demanded D'seun.
"Village Gaith. It says it's in rot." She barked a quick transfer
command to her headset. "Engineer K'taan!" she shouted for her team
leader. "We have an emergency in Village Gaith. They are in rot. Take a
sighting and get everyone there as quickly as you can."
Under the sound of her own voice, she heard D'seun give orders to
the kite. It unfurled its wings to their fullest extent and reined in
its tail. The winds swept it up. Its engines added speed. T'sha made
herself compact so as not to add any drag that might slow them down.
The wind grew hard and full as it raced
across her shoulders, pressing the kite into swift motion.
Another rot. How many did that make since the First Mountain last
saw the dayside? How many cities in how many latitudes were dead or
dying, and what was the total refugee count? Two and a half million?
Had it gotten up to three million yet?
She spoke to her headset, telling it to seek details about Village
Gaith. After a few moments, the set murmured back to her.
"Gaith is a Calm Northerns village, with about a thousand
individuals from four different families calling it home. Sixty
percent of the individuals are children. Individuals are good
engineers, have contributed several widely adapted adjustments to
canopy balance in recent years, and have raised several excellent
surveyors and samplers. Its ambassador is T'nain V'gan Kan Gaith. He
has been notified of the emergency at the High Law Meet and is
returning now. Its local speaker is T'gai Doth Kan Gaith."
T'gai. Oh, memory. I haven't seen you since I was declared an
adult. She remembered T'gai's visits to her parents' complex, his
dark-gold skin, and his speaker's tattoos branching out all around his
muzzle. He always had some new point of discussion to raise, some new
poll to try to start. He was all a speaker ought to be—busy, serious,
forward thinking.
How did a rot start in his own village?
She shook herself out of her own thoughts as she realized D'seun was
watching her.
"I'm sorry. You spoke?"
D'seun dipped his muzzle. "I was saying this is your latitude. You
should warn the cities."
Good, good. Pay attention, T'sha. There's work to do. "Yes.
Of course." She commanded her headset to call Ca'aed.
"I hear you, Ambassador," returned her city's deep voice.
"Ca'aed, there's an emergency in Village Gaith. Warn the downwind
cities to take quarantine precautions. I'm on my way to assess the
damage. I'll have more news soon."
Even as she spoke the words, a fresh finger of wind touched her.
This one was not empty. It was thick with something far too
cloying to be a healthy scent. She could see Gaith in the distance—a
sphere bristling with sails and sensor fronds. It looked peaceful, but
that smell, that too sweet taste…
"I have their location, Ambassador…" Ca'aed paused, and worry
stiffened T'sha's bones. "I can't raise the village. I hear no voice."
T'sha glanced at D'seun, but he was looking straight ahead at Gaith.
It took T'sha's eyes a moment to focus, but then she too saw what was
wrong.
Around even the smallest village, there would be a few citizens
flying freely about their business, but Gaith was surrounded by a
swarm of its own people. They fluttered about the shell and bones like
flies without purpose.
It was the sight of panic.
D'seun spoke to the kite. It brought them around to Gaith's windward
side. They closed on the village, and T'sha saw that its sails and wind
guides were no longer white, as they should have been. Huge patches of
grayish-brown funguslike growths disfigured their surfaces.
The smell of rotting flesh engulfed her. T'sha instantly tightened
in on herself.
Breath of life, bones of mine, what is happening
here? I've never seen one this bad!
The village cried as if hurt just by the wind of her approach. All
around those diseased sails flew its citizens. Now they were close
enough that T'sha could hear their voices—shouting, crying, demanding,
trying to give orders. Above it all, she heard the wordless keening of
the village's pain. It was dying and it did not know how to save
itself. In its fear, it called desperately for its people.
D'seun snatched the bulky caretaker unit from out of the kite's
holder and launched himself into the air. T'sha dipped her muzzle. The
caretaker might be able to speak to the village where a person could
not.
"Engineer K'taan," T'sha bawled into her headset as she launched
herself into the air. "Where are you?"
"Approaching from leeward. We have you in sight."
"Get a catchskin under the village. We can't let the rot fall into
the canopy!"
"Yes, Ambassador!"
Flies clustered everywhere, the eternal flies that should have been
clustered around the clouds. The insects scattered in angry swarms
around her wings. The smell was unbearable. T'sha closed her muzzle
tightly and tried not to think of what was filtering in through her
skin.
Bubbling gray fungus turned the nearest sails slick. Even as she
watched, great patches melted and sagged. Speckled liquid ran down what
was left of the clean white skin. Something unseen whimpered.
"Gaith! Gaith!" T'sha called through her headset. "Answer me! Are
you there?"
No answer. None at all.
D'seun flew straight into the thickest crowd and started forming
them up into an orderly flight chain. As soon as the formation was
spotted, people started flocking toward it, leaving fewer to flap in
panic around the dying village.
T'sha ordered her headset onto a general-call frequency. "This is
T'sha So Br'ei Taith Kan Ca'aed, ambassador for Ca'aed, to anyone who
can hear me. I need Speaker T'gai Doth Kan Gaith at the center of
leeward."
She got no answer. It was possible there was nothing healthy enough
left to hear the call.
Ten yards below the city, K'taan directed a group of four
researchers to stretch out the translucent, life-tight catchsheet. It
wasn't big enough. Two other researchers rushed in, carrying an
additional sheet. They sealed the sheets together and spread them
again. That was just enough if the wind did not take too much. They
needed to get a quarantine blanket around the village as soon as
possible. Why were those not grown generally?
Why is this happening at all?
"Ambassador T'sha."
T'sha wheeled on her wingtip. Behind her floated T'gai. His tattoos
branched all the way to the roots of his crest now, but the crest was
dimmed by age.
"Speaker T'gai." T'sha touched his forehands. "Good luck to you."
"Good luck to you, T'sha. Ambassador T'sha." His crest ruffled
softly.
She tried not to feel the weakness in his words. "Why didn't you
report this?" she asked as gently as she could.
"We thought… we thought…"
We thought we could take care of it. T'sha dipped her
muzzle to let him know she understood. No people wanted to believe
they could fail their city, or even their village. No one wanted the
shame of having to make promises because they were not skilled enough
or rich enough to care for their own, so they struggled in their
silence until it was too late.
There were always dangers, particularly in the smaller villages
such as Gaith, that drifted on their own rather than following in the
wake of a larger, older city. Cortices got too closely bred and became
unable to cognate as required. Builders and assessors went insane and
undid the work they were supposed to enhance. Corals used too many
times without enough interior variety bleached in thin winds. Cancers
took hold of the village's bones.
But now, infections were spreading around the world. A fungus or a
yeast that should have been easy for an engineer to excise would
instead burn through a city, breaking down everything it touched,
sometimes turning from the city and attacking the people.
Even so, that usually took weeks. This… T'sha didn't dare let that
thought go any further.
"We'll talk about that later." T'sha turned her mind to the problem.
"I'm here with Ambassador D'seun and my survey team. We'll send some of
them for kites and other transports. There are several healthy cities
traveling this stream. But first you need to assemble your people.
We'll need to have you checked out to make sure you are carrying
nothing infectious."
We cannot let this spread. We dare not.
T'gai withered. "We must tend our village…"
T'sha swelled gently, trying to calm him with her authority. It felt
strange. He was so much her senior in years. But now, she outranked
him, and she must not shrink from that. "It has gone too far for that,
Speaker. We need to quarantine Gaith. You must call in all the promises
you have owing and divert them to diagnosis and prevention. Your
ambassador will need all your help with that when he returns."
Speaker T'gai dipped his muzzle. "Yes, of course, Ambassador. You
are right."
"Good." She glanced around. The catchsheet was stabilized and
anchored to the village's sail struts. Someone had released a slurry of
inch-long cleaners onto the sails. They slithered across the sails'
skin, ingesting the bubbling growths until the toxicity became too much
and they dropped onto the catchsheet. The skin left behind was almost
transparent. Even as T'sha watched, the wind tore through the skin,
leaving the sail in tatters. The sail mewled and tried to draw in on
itself.
She pulled her gaze away. D'seun had a great line of people gathered
in the orderly chain now. That would be where T'gai could help.
"Find your teachers to keep gathering your people together. Bring
your engineers and doctors. We must determine what's gotten out and how
far it's gone."
"Yes. Yes." The speaker swelled again to the lines and proportions
she knew. "Thank you, Ambassador."
T'sha deflated until she was just a little smaller than T'gai. "With
you, I am still just T'sha, Speaker T'gai." She returned to her normal
size. "Go. We will do what we can."
As she watched T'gai fly away, she tried to enumerate what needed to
be done.
We need a quarantine blanket. We need a team to find what
cortices are still working. A way to repel these flies…
Life gone insane. Life taking more than it needed, swinging from
balance into chaos. T'sha circled until she was upwind of the stench
and the sounds of pain. The canopy was lush underneath them. The wind
had good weight and texture. This rot seemed to be interested in animal
materials; maybe at least the plants below would be safe.
T'sha tensed her bones. They could assume nothing. She'd have to go
down and look. If the rot had gotten down there, they would probably be
forced to cut it out. That made for a
wasteful, inelegant cure, especially with so much of the canopy dying
on its own, but they couldn't risk this getting carried any further.
Who knew what spores were already in the wind? Was this even really
a fungus, or was she being fooled by appearances? T'sha shivered. On
top of it all, here were a thousand more refugees. Some healthy cities
would probably still take them in, but they would also demand hefty
promissory obligations against the time Gaith, or a replacement, could
be regrown. The children huddling under their parents' bellies would be
declared adults before the village was free of its debts.
In an earlier time, some of the adults certainly would have offered
to bind themselves into lifetime slavery to individuals who could help
their children, but that was a practice that had been out of favor for
at least two hundred years. Most teachers said accepting such a promise
came very close to actual greed. Looking on this sight, T'sha was
grateful.
But what sort of promises would T'gai be able to obtain for his
people? They were good engineers, but if too many of them had to be
indentured away to serve other cities, they would never be able to
resurrect their village. They would become permanently homeless,
scrabbling for their right to stay wherever they could find space,
maybe permanently deprived of their votes.
"I've sent word of our situation to the High Law Meet." D'seun
dropped into T'sha's line of sight.
T'sha shook her wings. "There isn't much to report yet."
"Not much to report!" D'seun bobbed up and down as if the sheer
force of his exclamation rocked him. "Gaith is dead and decaying in
front of our eyes! We have to spread the word!"
"Until we have a cause, that will do nothing but raise a panic."
T'sha stopped. "Which is the idea, isn't it?" she murmured. "If the
Law Meet panics, they will approve your candidate world without
debate, won't they?"
"How can you even be thinking of debate?" demanded D'seun. "Surely
this shows us there is no more time. We must make New Home ours or we
will all die!"
A dozen different thoughts, realizations, and responses rippled
through T'sha. But all she said was, "You and my engineers have the
situation under care. I must return to Ca'aed to make sure the latitude
quarantines are coordinated. May I borrow your kite?"
It was not a request he could easily refuse. "I will ask for a
promise against this."
"A proportionate one, I'm certain."
T'sha found the required wind and flew back to the place where
D'seun's kite waited. She gave it orders with the most urgent
modifiers. The kite unfurled its wings without hesitation. Its engines
sang as the air forced through them. T'sha flattened herself against
the perches, wishing the team had brought a dirigible instead. But no
need had been seen, no emergency anticipated. Certainly nothing like
this.
The memories of the gray, bubbling growths coating Gaith's sails and
the black ashlike substance clinging to its walls flew round and round
inside T'sha's mind and she could not banish them.
D'seun had been a little right. This was new and this was deadly.
The High Law Meet did have to be told. But told what? Told how? That
was the next question.
The kite chattered in command language, sending the message on
ahead that they were on an emergency run and traffic should clear the
gates. Everything had some task to keep them busy, but not T'sha. All
she could do was hang on until they reached the walls of Ca'aed.
The kite kept to the clearest routes. T'sha saw dirigibles and other
kites in the distance, but did not ask any to be hailed. Even further
away she saw the sails and walls of the Ca'aed's wake-villages. The
villages saw her as well, and their voices began to pour through her
headset.
"I've heard the message of Gaith. My speakers are on the alert. All
precautions are being taken." This was T'aide, a young and confident
village, strong in its faith of its people. "Good luck, Ambassador."
"Message received from Gaith. The diagnostics are roused." P'teri,
an ancient village that had spread its boundaries so far there was talk
of it growing into its own city. P'teri was cautious
and content, though, and had so far been unwilling to agree to the
expansion. "Good luck, Ambassador."
Terse, protective T'zem came through next. "My people are well. I
will keep them so. Look to Ca'aed, Ambassador."
I do. You may be sure
that I do.
Ca'aed itself shimmered in the distance now, its breadth dominating
the horizon. Kites, dirigibles, and people swarmed around it like
flies. No, no, not like flies. Like hunter birds, like shades, or even
puffs. Ca'aed would not fall to the flies.
Ca'aed was an ancient city. It's pass-throughs, arches, sails, and
gardens had grown huge and richly colored with age. Its highest sails
nearly raked the clouds, and its sensor roots dragged in the canopy.
Where villages skimmed and bobbed on the winds, Ca'aed sailed ponderous
and stately, as if it graciously allowed the winds to carry it along.
T'sha's family had helped the city grow its shells and sails. They
had protected it and been protected by it for thirty generations. They
had been pollers, speakers, teachers, engineers, and ambassadors.
Always, always, they had worked directly with Ca'aed, heard its voice,
helped it live.
No, Ca'aed would not fall.
Ca'aed spread like a person fully inflated with their wings flung
wide. Its walls were deeply creviced, making a thousand harbors into
which to guide its people or their vehicles. It drew people in and
exuded them again, as if people were what it breathed. Its lens eyes
sparkled silver in the daylight. It watched the people come and go so
it could advise them as to their routes and their loads or simply to
wish them good luck. Lacy fronds of sensors stretched between the
sails, constantly testing the winds, looking for riches to steer into
and disease to steer away from. Ca'aed was careful. Ca'aed was well
advised. Ca'aed might act quickly but never rashly.
"No wonder you have no husbands yet," her younger sister T'kel had
teased her once. "Your love is all for the city."
"That is no bad thing," her birth father had replied. "If someone
in the position to make promises does not love the city as well as she
loves the people in it, she may grow careless with her promises and
perhaps overtax its capacities. This can force growth where growth is
not ready or even advisable." He'd been answering T'kel, but his
attention had been on T'sha. That had been while she was being debated
in the general polls as a speaker, but already her father was trying to
convince her to start building a base to become ambassador.
"Welcome home, Ambassador," came Ca'aed's familiar voice from her
headset. "Have you answers from Gaith? Is there a name for its illness?"
"We don't know yet." All T'sha's hands clutched the perches uneasily.
"But you are confident it will be found?"
"Not as confident as I was." T'sha deflated just a little. "I have
to send the kite back to Gaith. Open your gates for me?"
"Always, T'sha. Give me your kite."
T'sha spoke the words to transfer command and Ca'aed took over,
pulling the little kite unerringly into one of its harbors. As the rich
brown walls surrounded them, Ca'aed's welcomers fluttered out of their
cubbyhole and surrounded T'sha in a swarm of reds and greens. They
lighted here and there on her back and wings, tasting the emissions of
her pores and flitting away again for Ca'aed to be sure there were no
dangerous tastes, that she carried nothing hidden with her from Gaith.
But nothing was found, and the pebbled gates at the end of the
harbor, which constantly strained and tested the winds for the
beneficial elements as well as for the harmful ones, opened a portal
for her to dart through. One of Ca'aed's fronds brushed her as she
passed, a touch of reassurance and welcome.
"An old city," her birth father had often said, "becomes as full,
rich, and complex as the canopy underneath, and its life becomes as
tightly intertwined."
T'sha sometimes thought "tangled" would be a better word. The inside
of Ca'aed was decidedly a tangle. Bones braced it, corals defined its
spaces, and ligaments bound its elements together. Plants and animals
gave its walls color, and its air weight and life.
Between them, Ca'aed was a shell full of shells. Small dwellings and
family compounds were tethered to each other and to
the city, but were not part of its essential substance.
Ca'aed's free citizens flew through its chambers, intent on their
various businesses, or merely enjoying the tastes and textures of their
world. Its indentured worked down in the veins and chasms of its
corals, growing, researching, comparing, because the city could not be
wholly aware of the workings of every symbiont and parasite, any more
than a person could be aware of the workings of every pore.
Music, perfumes, voices, flavors filled the air, vying for
attention, pressing against T'sha's skin, filling her up with the
vigor of life. The memory of Gaith made the miasma all the more
precious. The people of Gaith had lost all of this when they lost their
village. But, with care, T'sha might still be able to help them get it
back.
T'sha flew into the tangle of life, angling herself vaguely toward
her family's district. "Ca'aed, I need my brother T'deu. Where is he?"
"Your brother is in the promise trees."
Of course. T'sha beat her wings, turning her flight up
toward the city's sculpted and vented ceiling. The promise trees were
in this finger of the city. She would not have to snag a passing kite.
A solid turquoise and cream carapace encapsulated the promise trees
and kept out not only the winds but all that the winds might carry. The
ligaments that twined around its oval walls and anchored it to Ca'aed's
living bones did not themselves live. They carried neither information
nor nutrition and so could not be used to tamper with anything within
the carapace.
The only entrance to the trees was a long tunnel that was so narrow
that only one person at a time could fly its length. Pink and gold
papillae tasted the air around each entrant, making sure that he or she
was a free citizen of Ca'aed. If the entrant was a stranger to the city
or an indenture, it made sure he or she had received permission from
the city or a speaker to come. If not, the ends of the tunnel would
seal and Ca'aed would call for the district's speaker.
Entering the trees was like flying straight into the canopy. It was
a jungle of leaves, stems, branches, and trunks, all grown into one
another. They spread from the center of the room to the carapace. They
climbed the walls, until patterns of intertwining stems and roots
covered the carapace's grainy hide. All the colors of growing life
shone there in a delicate riot. It all appeared extremely fragile, but
the slightest root was many times stronger than the thickest metal wire
T'sha had ever touched. It was as beautiful to T'sha as any temple.
Inside the trees' veins flowed the DNA records of every registered
promise of the world of Home. Not all promises were registered.
Promises passed every day between friends and family that had no need
to be here, but promises between businesses, between cities and
villages, between ambassadors and any person or any city needed to be
recorded. Their fine tendrils of implication needed to be tracked. In
here were promises of marriage, merger, birth, inheritance, indenture,
trade, service, and sale.
None of this luxuriant growth was necessary, of course. All of the
promise registries could have been contained in a set of cortex boxes,
and in a younger city it might have been, but the beauty and
elaboration of Ca'aed was one of the aspects of it that T'sha had
always loved about her city.
T'deu, T'sha's older brother, hovered near the top of the chamber,
away from the other trackers and registrants who dotted the chamber.
T'deu was an archiver, trained in the reading and tracking of promises.
T'sha wove her way through the maze of stems and branches until the air
of her passage brushed against him. Her brother turned on his wingtip
and leaned forward, rubbing his muzzle joyfully against hers.
"Ambassador Sister!" he said, softly but happily. She and T'deu
shared the same birth mother. His father had entered the marriage
because of a political promise, and hers had been promised in to help
his family when their city fell into trouble. She and T'deu had been
raised together and never lost their friendship, even after they were
both declared adults and sent out to make their own lives. "It is good
to have you here, no matter what the circumstances."
"Thank you, Archiver Brother." T'sha pulled away just a little.
"You heard about Gaith."
He dipped his muzzle. "Ca'aed spread the word to the speakers, and
the speakers have not been silent."
T'sha's bones bunched as she winced, but she smoothed them out.
"Brother, we need to redirect this wind. It is going to
be
used to rush us into an untenable situation."
T'deu peered up at her, as if he could see into her mind and touch
her thoughts. "If you tell me so," he said, but he did not sound
certain.
T'sha accepted his words and dismissed his tone. "I want us to bring
Gaith's body here."
Her brother deflated in a long, slow motion. "That's dangerous,
T'sha—"
"No, listen, there are advantages here. If we give Gaith's engineers
the resources to regenerate and resurrect the city and they give us the
knowledge and experience they gain from the task, we will be able to
turn around and make our own promises with that information, should
this strain of disease spread."
"It will mean bringing in a potential contagion, though," T'deu
reminded her. "You'll have to take a vote on that."
"I'll get the votes. Can you design me a promise that will do the
job?"
"I can design anything you like." T'deu waved one wing at the maze
of stems and branches around them. "I could grow you a tree that would
outline ownership of the clouds above us. Implementing it—"
"Is my job," said T'sha, cutting him off. "Make sure you graft
P'kan's engineers into its branches. They hold several promises against
the city. This will help close those down."
"Of course, Ambassador," T'deu said, deflating with mock servility.
"Anything else?"
"Should fresh thoughts sprout, I'll share them with you."
T'deu moved even closer, making sure his words reached only her.
"Why are you really doing this, Ambassador Sister? It is not only for
the profit of the city, or even for the good of Gaith."
"No," she admitted. For a moment she thought of telling him he did
not need to know, but that was not true. To design a truly effective
promise, he needed to know the ultimate goal,
especially if the promise were complex, as promises dealing with cities
ultimately were. Trying to integrate the wrong person could jeopardize
the entire balance. "I want to be sure Gaith is studied, and studied
immediately. If I leave it free for D'seun to take over, he'll fly the
village's bones all around the world and show everyone what horrors we
are exposing ourselves to if we don't all flock to New Home
immediately."
"He'll still try to use Gaith's illness to overfly you," said T'deu.
T'sha shook her wings. "I won't let him. All D'seun's attention is
fixed on a single point. If he will not voluntarily see the whole
horizon, he must be made to see."
T'deu dipped his muzzle again. "As my Ambassador Sister says. I'll
start growing your promise."
"Thank you, Brother. Good luck." She brushed her muzzle against his
briefly and launched herself back toward the entrance.
And now there are only a thousand meetings to arrange. The
district speakers must hear all of this of course and be brought
around. That could be expensive. I'll have to organize the pollers for
a
citywide referendum, but their schedule should be light right now,
except for the poll D'seun has so thoughtfully called for. T'sha
emerged from the tunnel into the filtered light of the city. She turned
her flight toward the city center and her family's district where she
kept her workspace. "Ca'aed?"
"Yes, Ambassador?" answered the city.
"Ca'aed, I have a case to put to you. It concerns your well-being,
so I cannot move without you."
"What is it?"
As T'sha flew, she told Ca'aed her plan to bring Gaith to the city
to allow Gaith's own citizens to effect its resurrection in return for
sharing their knowledge with Ca'aed's engineers, thus saving the Kan
Gaith years of potential indenture for their food and shelter in some
other city.
Ca'aed was silent for a moment. "We have the room to bring the Kan
Gaith here," it said finally. "Our binding of promises with them is not
strong or detailed, but there is some exchange that could be worked
out." Again, the city paused. T'sha suspected it was mulling over the
conversation T'sha had held with
T'deu. "We do need to know what infects Gaith," Ca'aed went on. "Yes,
bring it here. I agree. I will start working on precautionary plans so
we can implement this action as soon as you have secured the people's
votes."
"Thank you, Ca'aed," said T'sha earnestly. "This is not just to
further my cause with the High Law Meet. There is good for all
concerned here."
"Yes," answered Ca'aed. "I do comprehend the good in this."
Something in the city's voice kept T'sha from asking what else it
comprehended.
T'sha's workspace was a small coral bubble in her family's compound.
The veins holding her records twined all around its insides, spreading
out crooked tendrils of blue and purple. It was not as grand or complex
a space as many ambassadors had, but T'sha preferred to work on the
wing and conduct her meetings and requests in person.
This time though, that would be impossible. She needed all of her
specially trained cortex boxes to organize a meeting of the city's
thirty district speakers and coordinate their schedules. Each speaker,
in turn, would have to reserve time with their chiefs and the pollers
because this was a voting matter. The entire process would take
dodec-hours.
T'sha was not even halfway finished when the room told her D'seun
waited outside.
"Let him in," she said, reluctantly. She was not quite ready for him
yet, but she had no polite way to delay.
D'seun drifted into her workspace. He looked shriveled and settled
at once on a perch.
"Good luck, D'seun. Can I offer you some time in the refresher?
Surely whatever you have to say can wait an hour or two until you are
restored."
"No, it cannot wait." He lifted his muzzle. "I must hear you say
that you now understand that we cannot wait to find another world to
be New Home. I must hear you say we will work together in this."
Shock swelled T'sha. That really was all he thought about. There was
no swaying him, no changing the focus of his mind.
"I understand that we are not always as wise as we think we are,"
she told him fiercely, leaning forward from her own perch. "I
understand that we might not know all the rules of life, and that if we
act like we do, we are breeding disaster, for ourselves and for these
New People."
"I respect your caution, Ambassador T'sha, but I cannot let it
endanger us any further." Righteousness swelled D'seun to his fullest
extent. "I will proceed with the poll of your families."
"I know that," replied T'sha calmly. "I'm already arranging time
with the speakers and the pollers. You will have your vote."
D'seun cocked his head. His eyes examined her from crest to
fingertip, trying to guess what made her so complacent. If he
succeeded, he gave no sign. "Thank you for your cooperation then,
Ambassador. I will wish you good luck and go prepare for the vote."
"Good luck, Ambassador D'seun." T'sha lifted her hands. D'seun
lifted his briefly in return and flew away.
T'sha watched him go.
There are advantages to dealing with
someone whose attention has narrowed to a hairsbreadth, she
thought.
He has not yet thought to make a try for Gaith's body.
"Ambassador?" came Ca'aed's voice suddenly.
"Yes, Ca'aed?"
"I want you to know, I'm going to vote in favor of using D'seun's
candidate for New Home."
"What?" T'sha stiffened. "Ca'aed, why?"
"Because I'm afraid, T'sha. I'm afraid that what happened to Gaith
will happen to me and to you."
T'sha shriveled in on herself as the city's words washed through
her. Ca'aed was afraid. She had never heard the city voice such a
thought before. What could she do against that?
"We will protect you, Ca'aed," she murmured. "But who will protect
the New People?"
"You will find a way."
T'sha dipped her muzzle. "I will have to."
Contents -
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Chapter Three
"This is your seven a.m. wake-up," said the room's too sweet voice.
"This is your seven a.m. wake-up."
Around Veronica, the hotel suite woke up. The lights lifted to full
morning brightness. In the sitting room, the coffeemaker began to
gurgle and hiss, while a fresh lemon scent wafted out of the air ducts.
Vee, who had been awake for an hour already, looked up, sniffed the
combination of coffee and lemon, and wrinkled her nose.
"Should've shut off one of those," she muttered.
She looked back down at the desk screen in front of her with its
list of names, degrees, and recent publications. She frowned for a
moment and then moved Martha Pruess to the top of the list. She was a
research fellow in photonic engineering from the Massachusetts
Federated Institute of Technology, and her list of publications took up
half the screen.
"Checking out the competition?"
Vee jumped, twisting in her seat. Rosa Cristobal, her friend and
business manager, stood right behind her chair. "Jesus, Rosa. Don't
sneak up on me. It's too early."
"Sorry." Rosa tucked her hands into the pockets of her thick,
terry-cloth robe. "But that is what you're doing?"
"Yeah." Vee sighed and tugged on a lock of her hair. "Rosa, I am not
going to get this."
"They invited you," Rosa pointed out, as patiently and as firmly as
if this were the first time she'd said it.
"Why?" Vee spread her hands. "They need scientists, engineers. I'm
an artist, for God's sake. It's been years since I've set
foot in a real lab."
"You've got a Ph.D. in planetary atmospherics and your name is
sitting pretty on five different patents."
"Which you will remind them of." Vee dropped her gaze back down to
the list.
Actually, maybe Avram Elchohen should be at the top.
He's got a few more papers on optoelectric engineering—
"Which I will remind them of." Rosa reached over Vee's shoulder and
touched the Off key. The desk screen blanked. "Get dressed, Vee. The
interview's at nine and you do not want to be late."
"Yes, Rosa," said Vee in the tones of a child saying "Yes, Mommy."
She got up meekly and headed for her bathroom. "And shut off the
lemons, will you?"
"Yes, Vee."
After her shower, Vee dressed in an outfit she'd bought especially
for the interview—wide navy-blue slacks and a matching vest with matte
buttons over a sky-blue silk blouse. She stepped into the makeup
station and selected a minimalist setting. The mirror glowed gently as
it scanned her face and sent color instructions to the waldos, which
responded by laying on just a hint of bronze to highlight her
cheekbones and jawline, and a touch of deep wine to her lips.
"Close your eyes please," said the same too sweet voice that had
given the wake-up call. Vee did and felt a quick puff of powder. She
opened her eyes. Now her lids had a hint of burgundy coloring and a
discreet sheen of gold dust glimmered on her cheeks, the very latest in
conservo-chic.
"Routine complete," said the station.
Vee studied herself in the mirror for a minute. It was a good face,
with high cheekbones, strong nose, soft chin. Her brows were so pale as
to be almost nonexistent. The rest of her was what she called "Nordic
swizzle-stick fashion," very long, very white, and very thin. "Handy
for hiding behind flagpoles," she liked to joke.
Vee wound her mane of silver-blond hair into a tidy coil and pinned
it in place. She selected a scarf that matched her blouse and fastened
it so it covered her head but fluttered freely down over her
shoulders. She nodded at her reflection, pleased. The
effect was businesslike but not stuffy. It said that here was a person
to be taken seriously.
Vee had been stunned when she saw the v-mail message from the
Colonial Affairs Committee. She had sat in front of her living room
view
screen for ten full minutes, playing and replaying the recording.
"Hello, Dr. Hatch. I'm Edmund Waicek of the United Nations Colonial
Affairs Committee Special Work Group on Venus."
Good breath-control exercise there, Vee remembered
thinking, facetiously. Edmund Waicek was a tall man with red-brown skin
and black eyes. A round, beaded cap covered his thick copper hair. His
age was indeterminate and his clothing immaculate.
"As I am sure you are aware, there has been a remarkable discovery
made on the world of Venus. We have found what appears to be the
remains of an alien base or facility of some kind. Because of the
vastly important nature of this development, the C.A.C. has decided to
assemble a team of specialists to examine and evaluate the discovery."
He leaned forward and flashed a smile full of carefully calculated
sincerity. "We have reviewed your academic record and subsequent
accomplishments, and we would like to invite you to participate in the
interview process to see if you can take your place on this historic
mission." His expression grew solemn. "We will need your answer by
Tuesday the eighteenth at nine a.m., your local
time. Thank you for your attention to this matter. I look forward to
meeting you."
The Discovery on Venus. Of course Vee had heard of it. It was a
solid indication that there had once been alien life inside the solar
system, an idea that had been given up on years before Vee had even
been born. When she was feeling cynical, she would tell herself it was
nothing more than three holes in the ground. Except it was. It was
three holes in the ground dug by nothing human, and they had left
behind what everyone was certain was a laser, or maybe it was a laser
component of a larger machine.
It was that laser they wanted her to go up and take a look at. Well,
they wanted someone to go up and take a look at it, and her name,
somehow, had made the short list.
Veronica Hatch, science popularizer, temperamental artiste, and
noted personality. The U.N. was setting all that aside and going back
to the part of her that was Dr. Hatch, the part that had patents and
papers and could do actual work.
"Vee?" came Rosa's voice.
Vee realized she hadn't moved. She was just standing there, staring
at the reflection of a serious, competent stranger, and clenching her
fists.
"Coming." Vee smoothed out her veil and turned away from the mirror.
Rosa was in the sitting room, drinking what was probably her second
cup of coffee. How she could suck that stuff down on an empty stomach
Vee had never known. Rosa had selected a tunic and skirt suit in shades
of forest green with emerald trim and a pale, silver scarf to cover her
black hair. She looked Vee up and down and gave a small nod of approval
as Vee twirled on her toes to show herself off.
"Very nice." Rosa drained her mug. "Do you want to order in, or go
out for breakfast?"
"Would you mind if we dropped by the Coral Sea? I promised Nikki."
Rosa made a face. "That place is overdone."
"Hey." Vee drew herself up indignantly. "I helped design the effects
on that place, thank you very much."
"And you overdid it." Rosa stood up. "In your usual stylish,
trend-setting way." She grabbed her briefcase off the couch. "Let's hit
the deck, shall we?"
Vee and Rosa took a glide-walk up through the layers of the
Ashecroft Hotel to the main pedestrian deck and the clean, clear,
Pacific day. U.N. City had been built during the first decade of what
some people still called the Takeover. The Takeover happened halfway
through the 2100s, when the United Nations went from being a pack of
squabbling diplomats to a genuine world-governing body. Because
national feeling still ran very high back then, it was decided that the
seat of world government would not be given to any one country. It
would float around the world on the oceans. The mobility created
some trouble with time zones, but that was deemed a minor problem
compared to the endless bickering caused by the debate over where to
put
the capital of the world.
The city itself was huge. Toward its center, you couldn't even tell
you were on the ocean. Ashecroft was in the fashionable edge district
however, and the first thing Vee saw when they emerged was sunlight
sparkling cheerfully on the broad, blue Pacific. In the distance she
could just make out three of the cordon ships that sailed in a ring
around the city, serving as escort and border guard.
On the main deck, U.N. City was wide awake and in full swing. Crowds
of people swarmed between the buildings and the parks.
Their skins were every color, from snow white to midnight black. They
wore all styles and colors of clothing and every possible level of body
enhancement, both organic and mechanical. Some drifted between the
boutiques, studying the holo-displays that took the place of windows.
Some strolled along the city's sculpted rail looking out at the calm,
sapphire ocean, maybe hoping to see dolphins or, better yet, whales,
some just hurried from glide-walk mouth to glide-walk mouth,
catching a
few precious moments of sunlight between meetings and appointments down
in the heart of the city.
How many of them are hustling to something related to the Venus
Discovery? Vee felt a twinge of guilt at being happy for U.N.
City's restrictive public assembly policies. You could barely move in
Chicago without tripping over another "citizens meeting" or "public
discussion" about Venus's underground chambers and their contents and
what, if anything, should be done about them.
The Coral Sea Cafe was a few blocks from the railing, nestled in the
corner between one of the observation towers and the Council of Tourism
Welcome Center. The mirrored door scanned them both, found them
admissible, and slid itself open. Vee stepped into the underseascaped
interior with its wavery, water-scattered light, which she had
fine-tuned for them. Schools of tropical fish swam lazily across the
walls. The chairs and tables mimicked rounded stones or coral
outcroppings.
"Just too-too," murmured Rosa. Vee slapped her shoulder.
A woman almost as tall and thin as Vee emerged from the office
door, probably alerted to their arrival by the door. She looked like
she was in her mid-twenties, but Vee knew she was using body-mod to
keep middle age firmly at bay. Not even forty, Nikki had already waved
her rights to children and signed up for long-life.
Nothing like knowing what you want.
A circle of blue glass shone in the middle of Nikki's forehead,
probably concealing a personal scanner and database to let her know
just who she was dealing with.
"Vee!" Nikki cried happily.
"Nikki!" Vee exclaimed, embracing the woman with the expected level
of fervor. "Love the third eye. You look great."
"And you look"—Nikki pulled back just a little—"subdued."
"Ah." Vee held up one, long finger. "Someone's actually vetting me
for a science job today."
Nikki's smile grew conspiratorial. "This is about the Venus thing,
isn't it? I heard your name on the lists."
"Well surely, nothing important can happen without my name on it,"
announced Vee regally.
"Surely, dear, surely," said Nikki, grasping Vee's hand.
Rosa coughed.
"Oh, right. Nikki, breakfast? Clock's ticking."
"Of course, dear." Nikki ushered them to a corner booth shaped like
a supposedly cosy undersea grotto. "I'll have your waiter over three
seconds ago."
"There's a relativity problem there, Nikki," said Vee as she slid
into her seat.
"What?" Nikki's face went politely blank.
"Science joke. Never mind." Vee smiled sunnily. "Have to get back
into practice."
"Of course. Good luck, Vee." Nikki squeezed her shoulder and breezed
away.
Rosa was looking at her. "What?" asked Vee.
Rosa picked up her napkin and made a great show of smoothing it
across her lap. "It just never ceases to amaze me how fast you drop
into the artiste persona."
"Hey." Vee stabbed the table with one finger. "That persona as kept
us both living very comfortably. I wouldn't complain."
"Never," said Rosa flatly. "Just commenting." She called up the menu
from the tabletop display and began examining it.
The cafe was tony enough to have real humans as servers, but,
fortunately, not so over-the-top as to put them in any form of
swimwear. Rosa and Vee ordered coffee, white tea, rolls, and fruit cups
from a young man in the ultratraditional server's black-and-white
uniform.
When he left, Rosa jacked her briefcase into the table and unfolded
the view screen.
"How're we doing today?" Vee asked. If Rosa heard her, she gave no
sign. She just skimmed the display and shuffled the cons.
"Your money's good," Rosa said at last. "The family trusts are
percolating along nicely, and I think we're going to be able to out
Kitty through college without a problem."
"Same as yesterday."
"Same as yesterday," agreed Rosa. "Want to see the latest on the
Discovery?"
Vee shrugged, trying to be casual about it. "Might as well see what
I'm getting into." Inside, her stomach began to flutter and she
wondered where breakfast was. Food might help settle her down, except
all of a sudden she wasn't hungry.
Rosa lit the back of the screen so Vee could follow along and called
up her favorite news service.
The lead stories all came under the heading of
The Discovery on
Venus, as they had for the past month. Today was a pretty light
news day. Only three new stories had been added since Vee checked it
last night. Rosa touched the title
Venus Colonists Say No Help
Needed and the
Silent option. The main menu vanished,
and the text and video story unfolded in front of them.
Sources at Venera Base, home to the
incredible discovery of what may
be signs of alien life on Venus [long-range, color-enhanced picture of
the spherical settlement with its airfoil tail floating through
billowing clouds], are saying that the governing board strongly resents
the formation of the new United Nations subcommittee on Venus. The
governing board
insists that the Venerans already in residence have sufficient
expertise to deal with this most unexpected find.
While Dr. Helen Failia, founder of the
base and head of Venera's
Board of Directors [video clip of a short, gray-haired woman with a
severe face giving a lecture to a group of what looked like college
students], still refuses comment, sources close to the board say that
petitions have been filed to render the Discovery [dissolve to the now
familiar glowing hatchway] proprietary to the funding universities and
therefore outside the realm of government probes or restrictions.
Dr. Bennet Godwin [jump cut to a split
picture with a still shot of
an iron-gray-haired man with permanent windburn in one half, and a
hardsuited figure standing on a yellowish-red cliff in the other half],
also on Venera's board, had this comment [the man's picture flickered
to life].
"We welcome all serious research into
any aspect of the world of
Venus. That's what Venera Base is here for. What we cannot welcome, or
tolerate, is interference by nonscientists in what is a scientific
inquiry [the face froze]."
Dr. Godwin later issued the following
clarification of his statement
[the face flickered to life again, but now much more rigid and
controlled]. "When I said nonscientists, obviously I meant
unauthorized or inexpert personnel. This discovery is of massive
importance to all humanity, and its investigation must be conducted in
the open with all available assistance and resources."
"Who got you to add that disclaimer?" murmured Rosa, picking up her
newly arrived cup of coffee and sipping it appreciatively. Vee
swallowed some of the peach-flavored tea and poked at a strawberry in
her fruit cup. The scent of fresh fruit and baked goods was failing to
bring back her appetite in a rather spectacular fashion.
She read on.
When asked what he thought about Dr.
Godwin's comment, Edmund
Waicek [dissolve to the same man who had sent Vee her interview
invitation], spokesman for the newly formed
U.N. Work Group on Venus, said only, "We are glad that Dr. Godwin and
the rest of the members of Venera Base realize how important openness
and cooperation are at this historic time. This discovery affects the
whole of humanity. Humanity's elected representatives need to assist in
its uncovering and understanding."
"Mmmph." Rosa buttered a croissant and bit into it. Vee drank a
little more tea, trying to get her stomach to open up enough that she'd
actually be able to get some food down. The only thing that little
piece made clear was that there was animosity between Venera Base and
the U.N. That did not bode well, and Venera was probably going to live
to regret it. It also meant she was walking into a hornets' nest, which
made it even less likely that a controversial candidate would get the
job.
"Eat, Vee," ordered Rosa. "You're not doing either of us any favors
if you go in there on edge."
Vee obediently munched on strawberries, kiwis, mango, and pineapple.
But she couldn't make herself face the rolls. Instead, she watched
Rosa's screen. The other two stories were public-reaction sensation
videos. One showed a public meeting in good old free-speech Chicago.
The other was an interview with a pair of bald, neutered, Universal Age
synthesists explaining how this was the first step toward the human
worlds being accepted into the Greater Galactic Consciousness. There
were, of course, links to the thousands of papers, discussions, and
wonder-sites that had mushroomed since the Discovery was announced.
There had been aliens on Venus, and Earth was alive with all the
wonder that the idea brought. At first, a lot of people had been
worried that there would be riots and panics, but, so far, no one had
seen fit to go twentieth over the news.
Something on Rosa chimed. "Time to go," she said, shutting down her
briefcase. She picked up a danish and put it into Vee's hand. "Eat."
Vee gnawed the pastry without tasting it while Rosa authorized an
account deduction on the table's screen. As they left, the fishes on
the wall called, "Good luck, Vee," causing the other patrons to whisper
and stare.
Vee made a mental note to tell Nikki never to do that again without
permission and followed Rosa out the door.
Their appointment was in the J. K. McManus administration complex,
which lay deep in the heart of U.N. City. It took Vee and Rosa twenty
minutes, four glide-walks, and three ID scans before they reached the
central atrium of the gleaming crystal-and-steel administration mall.
Philodendrons, morning glories, and passion flowers twined around
glass-encased fiber-optic bundles that stretched from floor to ceiling.
Diplomats, administrators, lobbyists, and small herds of courier
drones flowed in and out of transparent doors. They jammed the
elevators and escalators running between the complex's eight floors.
The muted roar of their voices substituted for the rush of wind and
waves on the deck.
Vee and Rosa presented themselves to a live human security team and
were asked to write down their names and leave a thumbprint on an
impression film registry. In return, they were presented with audio
badges and directed to Room 3425. The badges would tell them if they
took a wrong turn.
Rosa clipped the badge to her briefcase strap and stepped onto the
nearest escalator. Vee followed obediently, brushing restlessly at her
tunic and smoothing down her veil.
They want me here. They want me here. I've done good, solid work
and it's on record. I can do this. They believe I can do this, or they
wouldn't have invited me in.
Room 3425 was a conference room. Rosa presented her badge to the
room door, which scanned it, and her, before sliding open. On the
other side waited an oval table big enough for a dozen people. An
e-window showed a view of a tropical park on the sun-drenched deck with
parti-colored parrots preening themselves in lush green trees.
The room had three occupants. Edmund Waicek sat at the conference
table looking like he'd just stepped out of the story clip Vee viewed
at breakfast. Next to him sat a tiny Asian woman in a pale-gold
suit-dress. Her face was heavily lined, and her opaque red veil lay
over pure-white hair. Behind them stood a slender, dark man who could
have been from any of a hundred
cities in the Middle East or North Africa. He wore a loose, white robe
and a long orange-and-red-striped vest. A plain black cap covered his
neatly trimmed hair. He turned from his contemplation of the parrots as
the door opened and gave Vee a look that managed to be both amused and
critical.
Mr. Waicek was on his feet and crossing the room toward Vee before
Vee had a chance to step over the threshold.
"Dr. Hatch, thank you for coming." He shook Vee's hand with a nicely
judged amount of firmness. "I'm Edmund Waicek."
"Pleased to meet you, Mr. Waicek," said Vee, extricating her hand.
"Call me Edmund," he said, as Vee guessed he would.
"Edmund," she repeated. "This is Rosa Cristobal."
"Delighted to meet you Ms. Cristobal. Allow me to introduce you both
to Ms. Yan Su. She is the Venus work group's resource coordinator."
"Pleased to meet you both." Ms. Yan's voice was light and slightly
hesitant, giving the impression that English was not her first
language. Underneath that, though, lay a feeling of strength and the
awareness of it. "You will forgive me if I ask your field of specialty,
Ms. Cristobal. The nature of your relationship with Dr. Hatch is not
exactly clear."
Rosa gave a brief laugh. "No, it is not, even to me, some days.
Primarily, I am Dr. Hatch's manager. I coordinate her projects and her
contracts. Demand for her skills is very high, as I'm sure you know,
but you would be amazed at the number of people who try to pay less
than those skills are worth."
"And this is Mr. Sadiq Hourani, whose province is security,"
interjected Edmund smoothly.
Weird way of putting it. Mr. Hourani gave them a small bow.
Vee noticed that his eyebrows were still raised and his expression was
still amused.
Rosa laid her briefcase on the conference table and sat next to Ms.
Yan. "First of all, let me say that we are extremely excited to be
considered for this project." She jacked her case into the table, which
lit up the clear-blue data displays in front of each of the
participants.
"As we are to have you here," beamed Edmund. "We have reviewed Dr.
Hatch's credentials in both the engineering and information fields and
found them very impressive. Very impressive indeed."
"Thank you." Vee inclined her head modestly.
Edmund's smile grew fatherly. Vee kept her face still. "Our
questions here will be of a more personal nature," he went on.
"What? Rosa didn't get you my gene screens?" Vee's flippancy was
reflexive, and she regretted it even before Rosa's toe prodded her shin.
Ms. Yan laughed dryly. "No. Health issues, if there are any, will be
addressed later. These are more questions of political outlook,
approach, and general attitude toward—"
"Political outlook?" interrupted Vee.
"Yes," said Ms. Yan. "I wish this mission were purely a question of
research and exploration, but it is not."
A spark of suspicion lit up inside Vee. She tried to squash it but
was only partially successful. She'd grown up in the remnants of the
old United States. Her grandfather had talked almost daily about the
Disarmament, when U.N. troops went house to house confiscating guns and
arresting the owners who would not peacefully hand them over, and
worse. Personally, Vee thought her grandfather was nuts for
romanticizing the freedom to shoot your neighbors, but his distrust and
distaste for the "yewners" had taken root in some deep places, and she
hadn't managed to shake it yet.
"Of course,"' Rosa was saying smoothly. "An effective team is more
than just a collection of skills. Personalities have to mesh smoothly,
and there must be a unified outlook."
"Exactly." Edmund's chest swelled, and Vee knew they were in for a
speech.
Apparently, Ms. Yan knew it too because she quickly asked, "Have you
ever been to Venera before, Dr. Hatch?"
"Once, about eight years ago." Vee did not miss the dirty look
Edmund shot Ms. Yan, but she suppressed her smile of amusement. "As
part of my Planets project." Vee's initial fame and the basis of her
fortune was made by her creation of the first experiential holoscenic.
It was a tour of the solar system, set to the music of Hoist's The
Planets. She had taken people inside the clouds of Venus, the
oceans of liquid ice on Europa, the storms of Jupiter, and the revolt
in Bradbury, Mars, for the movement "Mars, Bringer of War."
It suddenly hit Vee what they must be leading up to.
"I have always particularly liked the Veneran segment of The
Planets," said Ms. Yan. "Most people see Venus as hellish. You
made it beautiful."
"Thank you." Tension tightened Vee's back. When are they going
to say it? When are they going to say it?
"Your section on the Bradbury Rebellion was rather less beautiful,"
said Edmund.
Vee caught Rosa's "be careful" glance and ignored it. "I strove for
accuracy," she said, aware her voice had gone tart. "And
comprehension." The "Bringer of War" segment showed the people being
marched into the patched-up ships which were launched without regard to
their safety, but it also showed the crowds rallying around Theodore
Fuller and his cause, the shining faces, the great hopes of the dream
of freedom before that dream had tarnished and twisted.
Edmund's expression fell into a kind of hard neutrality. "Yes, some
of your images were quite… sympathetic." He glanced at a secondary
display on the table in front of him. Vee wished she were close enough
to read the items listed there. "What are your feelings about the
separatist movements here on Earth?"
This is it? Vee looked incredulously from one face to the
other. Both Edmund and Ms. Yan were perfectly serious. Even Mr.
Hourani, who had not uttered one word since the beginning of the
meeting, had lost his little amused smile. They want to judge my
fitness based on how I feel about separatists?
Rosa's warning prod against her ankle grew urgent. Vee dismissed it
and heaved herself to her feet.
"You want to know how I feel about Bradbury? I was seven years old
when that mess happened. I didn't have an opinion, just a few vague
feelings. The Planets show was for money and to show off what
you could do with my new holography tricks." She planted both hands on
the table and leaned toward the yewners. "You want a political yes-sir,
pick one of your own. You want an Earth liber Alles, find a Bradbury
survivor. You want somebody who can take a look at your Discovery and
just maybe come up with something useful to say about it, then you want
me. But I will not"—she slammed her hand against the table—"sit here
and be interrogated because I may have had a thought or two."
She turned on her heel and stalked out of the room.
The corridors passed by in a blur. She slapped her audio badge down
on the counter at the security station without breaking stride. She saw
nothing clearly until she found herself up on the deck in the blazing
sunlight, staring out across the blue-gray waters and clenching her
hands around the warm metal railing.
Well, Vee, you crashed that one pretty good, didn't you?
She bowed her head until it rested on the backs of her hands. What
the hell were you doing? Did you really think they were looking for the
dilettante?
Vee was not going to whine about her fate. She had made her choices
for money, yes, but also for love. She was good at her art. She
understood light and the machines that manipulated it. She could shape
light like a potter shaping clay. She knew how to blend it and soften
it to create any color and nuance the human eye could detect. She knew
how it controlled shadows and reflections. She knew how it scattered
and bounced and played mischievous tricks on the senses. She knew
nine-and-ninety ways it could be used to transmit messages. The lab
had become mind-bogglingly boring right about the time the money from
her patents and the resulting holo-scenics had really started to come
in. She'd taken off for the artistic life, along with the ability to
buy her college debts away from her parents' bank and keep her brothers
and sisters from ever having to go into debt for themselves.
But sometimes she felt she'd missed the chance to do something
real, the chance to explore as well as create, to question the nature
of the universe in ways art couldn't reach by itself, to say something
that would last, even if it was so obscure only ten other people
understood it.
An accomplishment her family back in its naturalist, statist town
wouldn't have to feel ambivalent about.
"You know," said Rosa's voice beside her, "there's this old saying
that goes 'Be careful what you pretend to be; you may become it.'"
Vee lifted her head, blinking back tears of pain as the light
assaulted her eyes. "How fast did they throw you out of there?"
"They didn't, actually." Rosa leaned her elbows against the railing.
The salt breeze caught her silver scarf and sent it fluttering across
her face. She pushed it away. "I spread some fertilizer about
sensitive geniuses, which they seemed willing to sit still for. They,
or at least Ms. Yan and Mr. Hourani, seemed impressed by your strong
political neutrality." The wind plastered her scarf against her cheek
again, and she brushed it back impatiently. "I'm less sure about Mr.
Waicek, but I do believe he's leaning in our direction."
Hope, slow and warm, filled Vee's mind. "You're kidding."
"I have one question." Rosa rubbed her hands together and studied
them. "Do you really want to do this?" She lifted her gaze to Vee's
face. "They were giving you purity in there. This is going to be a
political situation. You've seen the news. Everybody's got a position.
Everybody wants referendums. You're going to be quizzed and dissected
and watched, and you're going to have to put up with it. Quietly. No
more scenes like that one." She jerked her chin back toward the
glide-walk mouth. "So, I'm asking you, Vee, as your friend and your
manager, do you really, honestly, want to be a part of this mission?"
Vee stared out across the blue water under the brilliant sky.
Nothing on Venus was blue. It was all orange and gold and blazing red.
Yet someone had been there, had set up their base there, and then left.
Where had they gone? Who were they? Why had they come in the first
place? They might have left the answer behind them. It might be in that
laserlike device.
Do I really want to be a part of finding that answer?
"Yes," she said, to sea and sky, and Rosa. "Oh yes. I want this."
Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Rosa nod. "Okay, then. I think
you'll get it."
Vee's smile spread across her face. "If I do nothing else real in my
life, at least I'll get to do this," she said softly.
For a moment, she thought she heard Rosa mutter, "Whatever this
is," but then she decided that she didn't.
The image of a spring meadow high in the Colorado Rockies surrounded
Yan Su as she sat behind her desk. She paid no attention to it.
Instead, she focused on the wall screen, which she had set to record
her message to Helen Failia on Venera Base. "Hello, Helen. I just saw
the latest commentary from out your way. Now, you know I don't
interfere." Pause for Helen to insert whatever comment she had on that
score. "But you've got to sit on Ben Godwin for the duration. I've done
my best with the investigative team makeup. They are as close to what
you asked for as I could manage. But this will not, I repeat, will not,
hold up to certain types of scrutiny. Assure Dr. Godwin that if he lets
the spinners do their job and is patient, this will all blow over and
your people can get back to work."
"I'm doing my part down here, and we're making progress. You will
all get what you want, but you've got to keep quiet." She paused again,
tapping her fingernails against the glass of iced tea sitting on her
desk. "I know this isn't easy, Helen, but believe me, it's the only
way. You also need to keep your security chief on the alert. Every
single cracker on three planets is going to be trying to get into
Venera's systems, trying to get 'the real story.' " She made quotation
marks with her fingertips. "The rumors in-stream are bad enough without
that." She sighed softly. "Take care of yourself Helen. You've
inherited quite a situation."
A quick keystroke faded the recording out and shunted
the message into the queue for the next com burst out to
Venus. Helen would receive the message in an hour or two.
Su finished her iced tea and rattled the ice cubes a couple of times
as she stared at the sunlight on the distant snowy peaks. God, how long
until she'd see the real thing again? She felt certain there would be
nothing in her life but Venera and its Discovery at least until the
"investigative team" came home, and maybe not even then. A lot would
depend on how well Helen was able to handle her
people and her sudden fame.
Su remembered the first time Helen Failia sailed into her office.
Forty years ago, no, forty-five years ago, and she still remembered.
It had been a long day of in-stream meetings and screen-work. A
headache was just beginning to press against her temples. None of this
had left Su in the best of moods.
"Thank you for agreeing to see me, Ms. Yan." Helen Failia was not
yet forty then. She wore her chestnut hair bundled up under a scarf of
dusky-rose silk. Her handshake was firm, her smile genuine, and her
movements calm and confident. Despite that, Su got the strong
impression of restless energy brimming just below the surface of this
woman.
"Now, what can I do for you, Dr. Failia?" Su asked as she handed
Helen the cup of black coffee she'd requested. The woman was a very
traditional American on that score.
"I'm building a research colony on Venus," said Helen, taking the
seat Su waved her toward. "I want to know what governmental
permissions I need."
Just like that. Not "I'm exploring the possibilities of…" or "I'm
part of a consortium considering building…"
"You're building on Venus?" Su raised both eyebrows. "With what?"
She hadn't been able to get another word out for thirty minutes.
Helen had brought scroll after scroll of blueprints, encyclopedic
budget projections, and lists of potential donors. Everything was
planned out, down to which construction facilities could supply which
frame sections for the huge, floating city she had designed.
When Dr. Failia finally subsided, Su was ready to admit, privately,
she was impressed. In an ideal world, Dr. Failia's proposal would be
quite feasible. Unfortunately, Su had already been on the C.A.C. long
enough to know this was not an ideal world.
Perhaps a gentle hint in that direction. "Wouldn't it be more
practical, Dr. Failia, to start with a temporary facility funded by
perhaps one or two universities?"
"No," said Helen at once. Su raised her eyebrows again, and Helen
actually looked abashed. "I'm sorry, but no. Venus is a vast,
complex world. It's active in many of the basic ways that Earth is
active. It has an atmosphere, weather, and volcanic activity." Dr.
Failia's eyes shone. At that, Su remembered where she'd heard Dr.
Failia's name before. Helen Failia had been a member of the Icarus
Expedition that had gone out, what was it? Two? No, three years ago.
She was now one of the four people who had actually walked on the
Venusian surface.
It also looked as though she had fallen in love down there.
"In a temporary facility," Dr. Failia was saying, "a few
researchers could study a few aspects of the planet for a few months
at a time. But in a real facility, such as Venera"—she tapped the
screen roll—"people could specialize. Careers could be dedicated to the
study of Earth's sister without requiring people to remove themselves
from their families. The work could be made practical and comfortable
for years at a time. We would not be limited to snapshots; we could
take in the entire panorama."
Earth's sister. It is love. Su shook her head. "And the
industrial applications? Are there any commercial possibilities?"
Helen didn't even blink. "In all probability, industrial and
commercial applications would be limited. Mining or other exploitive
surface operations would remain prohibitively expensive due to the
harsh conditions."
All right, at least you're willing to admit that much, Dr. Failia.
Su folded her hands on the desk and mustered her "serious diplomat"
tones. "You do realize that the colonies which have paid off their
debts and become going concerns all have some kind of export or
manufacturing base?"
"Until now, yes."
Su found herself having to suppress a laugh. The question hadn't
even ruffled the surface of Dr. Failia's confidence. "So you are hoping
the research value will offset the economic liabilities?"
"Research and publicity." Helen thumbed through the screen rolls on
the desk, pulled out the one labeled "University Funding" and
presented it for Su's inspection. "Research departments in both
universities and private industry are fueled by their papers as well as
their patents. From a publications standpoint, Venus is more than
ready to be exploited."
Su nodded as she skimmed the numbers again. It was all true and
reasonable, as far as it went. But the fact was that the
pure-research colonies had never worked. The small republics, and even
the big universities, were unable to keep them funded. The United
Nations was unwilling. Nobody said it out loud, of course, but the
established wisdom was that the planets should be saved for industry,
and now for the long-life retreats that the lobbyists were proposing
as a way for those who had children but wanted extended life spans to
have it all. They could live in specialized colonies with continued
gene-level medical treatment without straining the balance and
resources of Mother Earth.
Su found herself extremely ambivalent about that idea. But this one…
Su liked the vision of this gigantic bubble of a town, sort of a U.N.
City in the Venusian sky. She liked Helen's enthusiastic and detailed
descriptions of not an outpost but a real community, as self-supporting
as any off-world colony could be, given over to exploration and
research. True, this vision ignored most of the political realities
and historical examples, but that did not lessen its attractiveness.
Su did not get much chance to dream anymore, and she found herself
enjoying the opportunity.
Still, no politician could afford to dream for too long. It'll
be shot down by the rest of the C.A.C. if it gets in their line of sight,
she reminded herself with a sigh. They did not like approving doomed
projects. It made for snide comments in-stream and low scores on the
opinion polls.
But maybe, maybe there was a way around that.
"I will be honest with you, Dr. Failia," said Su. "Without the money
in account, this is not going through."
To her credit, Helen Failia did not say "But…"
Su leaned forward, making sure the other woman met her gaze.
"However, if you can get at least some of the start-up money, I think
its chances are very good. Very good."
As Su watched, light sparked behind Dr. Failia's dark eyes.
"Well, thank you for your time, Ms. Yan." She stood up and held her
hand out. "I'll see you when I have my money."
Su also rose. "I look forward to it."
They shook hands. Helen gathered up her screen rolls and left
without a backward glance. Su sat back down behind her desk and watched
the door swish shut. Her headache, she noticed, had vanished.
"Desk. Sort recording of completed meeting and extract proposal
details for the construction of Venera Base," she said thoughtfully.
"Assume acquisition of adequate funding. List applicable regulatory
and legislative requirements that must be met for construction of the
proposed base." She paused. "Also extract voting records of C.A.C.
members and project probable votes should proposal come to committee as
offered in this meeting."
Helen, after all, was not the only one who had work to do if Venera
was to… well… fly.
It had taken five years, but the money had been found; the base had
been built, and for forty years after that, Helen kept it running. She
scraped, scrounged, begged, borrowed, and worked the stream with a
skill Su had seen only in the very best politicians. She had help of
course. Sometimes, Su felt that while Helen had raised Venera, Su
herself had raised Helen. She'd taught the older woman the finer points
of publicity and spin doctoring. She'd steered her toward the more
sympathetic funds and trusts. After the Bradbury Rebellion, Su had
helped Helen make sure that all their money came from Earth so there
could be no tangible connection between Venera and any suspect
persons, who, at that point, included everyone who did not live on
Mother Earth.
Helen had never married, never had children. Venera and its
prosperity had been her entire life.
And she had almost lost it. Su tried to imagine what that felt like
and failed. Her own life had been tied to so many different things—her
husband, her son, political ambitions, and the colonies. Not just
Venera, but Small Step and Giant Leap, Bradbury, Burroughs, Dawn, the
L5 archipelagoes, all of them. They deserved their chance to flourish.
Mother Earth needed her children, but like any flesh-and-blood parent,
she needed to treat
them as people, not possessions.
However, since Bradbury, with its deaths and exiles and threats, and
since the long-life colonies had become a credit-filled reality, it had
not been easy to convince anybody else in power of this.
For the moment, Venera at least was going to be all right. Su
studied the donations list displayed on her desktop. If even half these
promises were fulfilled, Venera was not going to even have to think
about money for another five years.
Which is all to the good, Su rubbed her temples. There
is nothing bad about this. If we want any colony in the public eye,
it's Venera.
She shook herself. This was not anything she had time for. The
Secretaries-General had called a meeting for the afternoon, and Su had
to get her candidate files in order. Despite what she'd told Helen,
there was still the very real possibility that Edmund might withdraw
his backing from one or two of her people, and she might have to make
her case to the Sec-Gens without any help at all. Secretary Haight was
very much committed to the status quo, but Kent and Sun had a little
more leeway in their thinking and saw the political opportunities
inherent in loosening the grip on the planets a little. She would have
to play to them if she wanted to keep the U.N. from just walking in and
taking over the Discovery, and she wanted that very much.
The door chimed and Su looked at the view port. It cleared to reveal
Sadiq Hourani and Su ordered it open. He walked in and Su waved him to
a chair. Sadiq was on the very short list of people whom she would
always see.
Su sat back and regarded him for a moment. "Tell me you have good
news."
"I have good news," said Sadiq promptly.
"Really? Or are you just saying that?" Sadiq had been assigned to
the C.A.C. security and intelligence work group ten years ago. In that
time, Su had learned to trust him, despite the fact that he kept more
hidden than she would ever learn about. It had not been easy, but it
had been worth it.
Sadiq returned a small smile. "Really. We've negotiated an end to
that potential media standoff in Bombay. They're to have some
unmonitored access time to the investigative team and some of the
Veneran scientists so they can ask questions without, and I quote,
governmental interference, end quote."
Su raised both her eyebrows. "And you capitulated with all
humbleness?"
"That I did."
"And you went in there knowing what they really wanted?"
"That I did," repeated Sadiq. "It's my job, you know."
The news of the Discovery had been received with calm just about
everywhere. There were a few hardcase places—Bombay, Dublin, Old
L.A.—where tempests threatened to start up in the stream. The stream
was the systemwide communications network that had evolved out of all
the old nets and webs that had spanned the globe since the twentieth
century. It was possible for discontent in-stream to spill out into
the real world. Part of Sadiq's job was to make sure it never did.
"So." Su leaned back and folded her hands in her lap. "Do you know
what the Secretaries-General really want to see us about?"
Sadiq shrugged. "To hear about Bombay, for a start, and the other
hot spots. They should have reviewed our Comprehensive Coping Strategy
by now. They also, of course, need to give their blessing to the
investigative team roster so the full committee won't be able to
bicker too much."
"Have you ascertained whether Edmund's going to behave?" Su had
known from the beginning that Edmund was going to be difficult. Since
he had been appointed to the C.A.C., he had been one of the loudest
anticolonial voices they had, and that was saying a great deal. His
initial idea had been to send out a team that would investigate Venera
at least as thoroughly as it would investigate the Discovery.
"I believe he will." Sadiq studied his neat hands for a moment.
"You know, Su, you are going to have to speak to him again, sooner or
later."
"Yes, I know." After Dr. Hatch and Ms. Cristobal had left, Edmund
had started in on one of his canned speeches about the "absolute
necessity of choosing members who will not be blinded by propaganda or
sentimentality and will be willing to examine every aspect of
the Discovery." Su, suddenly unable to stand it another minute, had
stood up and said, "You don't want an investigation; you want an
inquisition," and stalked out.
The memory made her sigh again. "That is no way for a grown
bureaucrat to behave. Especially now," she added.
"Especially now," echoed Sadiq. "Especially on one of your pet
projects."
Su eyed him carefully to see if there was anything hidden under that
statement, but Sadiq's face remained placid. "Yes," she admitted. "This
one's mine and I can't hide from it." She was about to add a question
about Edmund Waicek, positive that Sadiq had spoken with him before he
walked into her office, but Sadiq had stiffened and his eyes darted
back and forth. Su closed her mouth. Sadiq wore a phone spot, so he
could be reached at any time. This could be anything from a request for
authorization on an expense report to notification of an outbreak of
public violence.
When Sadiq had focused on her again, Su asked, "Anything wrong?"
"We seem to have a demonstration on the deck." Sadiq stood.
"Peaceful but illegal. Care to come?"
"Not really." Su waved him away. "I'll see you at the Sec-Gens this
afternoon."
"Until then." Sadiq left her there. The door swished shut behind
him. Su sat still for a moment, then swiveled her chair toward her
working wall. "Window function," she ordered, "show me political
activity identified on main deck."
A patch of Colorado sky cleared away, replaced by the image of one
of the observation towers. Normally, the side of the three story
building was a blank, forbidding gun-metal gray. Today, however,
someone had managed to hang a gigantic sheet screen from the side and
light up a scene of Venus and Earth orbiting around each other in a
display that was as pretty as it was inaccurate. A crowd had gathered
at the foot of the tower to watch the show. In front of the casual
observers, a set of feeders with briefcases and camera bands had
already jacked into the deck and were rapidly dropping the entire
experience into the stream.
Venus and Earth faded, replaced by a man of moderate coloring and
moderate age, wearing a suit so conservative he might have bought it in
the previous century.
"And what are we doing with this wonder, this Discovery?" He swept
one hand out. Venus appeared, neatly balanced in his palm. "We are
using it as a focus of fear. We are using it to tighten the chains
already on the wrists of our brothers and sisters in the colonies.
Millions of people whose only crime is not living on Mother Earth." He
closed his fist around the Venus globe. The low moan it gave was
gratuitous, Su thought, but it did make its point. "We must, every one
of us, ask what is our government so afraid of? Aging men and women who
failed in their dream?" The starry background blurred and shifted until
the speaker stood in a bare red-ceramic cell filled with people whose
eyes were dark and haunted. "The guilty have been punished and
punished again. Must we punish their children now?"
Before the speaker could answer his own question, the screen went
black. A groan rose from the assembled crowd. Three people in coveralls
of U.N. blue appeared on the observation tower's roof and started
rolling up the screen. Still grumbling, the crowd began to disperse.
Show's over.
"Window function off."
The screen melted back into the meadow scene around her.
Su considered. That wasn't much as demonstrations went, but it would
give her an opening to talk with Edmund. Su rubbed her forehead. Her
mind had been shying away from the memory of how she'd left the
morning's interview. What had happened? What had snapped? There was no
excuse, none, especially now, as she'd said to Sadiq. If she didn't
find a way to clean up after herself, it would be… bad.
"Desk. Contact Edmund Waicek." Compose yourself, Su. Don't let
the boy get to you. There is too much going on for that. "Put
display on main screen."
The whole wall cleared until Su saw Edmund's clean, blank-walled
office. Edmund himself was hunched over his desk screen. He did not
look up.
"I'm rather busy, Su. We do have a meeting this afternoon."
"Yes, I am aware of that." Calm, calm, calm. "Were you
aware that we've just had a separatist demonstration on the main
deck?"
Edmund's head jerked up. "What?"
Su waved her hands in a gesture both dismissing and soothing. "It
was small. Sadiq's people have already handled it." She lowered her
hands. "But it did draw a crowd. Here. People were listening. The
speaker was making sense to them."
Edmund's face went cold. Su held up her hand again before he could
even open his mouth. "It does matter. This is U.N. City, and our people
were listening to the idea that perhaps the restrictions on the
colonies have gone too far." She spread her hands. "There is more than
one kind of bias we need to avoid here, Edmund. If it appears that we
are sending up a team that has an anticolonial agenda, we run the risk
that their conclusions will be discounted by popular opinion. We have
both been around the world far too many times to pretend that doesn't
matter."
She watched Edmund's expression waver as that thought sank in. "We
cannot be seen to encourage irresponsible rhetoric," he said, resorting
to some rhetoric of his own.
Good. He's running short on arguments. "Of course not. We
must be seen to be aiming for a strict neutrality. That is where people
like Veronica Hatch can benefit us. People appreciate that she put a
human face on a terrible tragedy. On both sides of the tragedy."
Edmund did not like that idea. She could tell that much by the stony
set of his jaw, but he was at least thinking about it. "If we're taking
her and the other one"—he glanced at his desk—"Peachman, I want
security on the team."
"My thinking exactly," lied Su. "Sadiq can pick the best available,
and we can submit their names to the Sec-Gen along with the others."
"All right," said Edmund. "You've got your team, Su. But it had
better not overstep its bounds."
"It won't, Edmund. I'll see you this afternoon."
Edmund nodded and broke the connection. Su collapsed back into her
chair. That was a near thing. If Edmund had been just a
little more angry, it would not have worked. But it did, and that was
all she needed to care about at this moment.
Still, there was one more call she should make.
"Desk. Contact Yan Quai."
This time, the sky was replaced by a static scene of a white railed
veranda overlooking a misty cityscape.
"I'm sorry," said a gender-neutral voice. "Yan Quai is unavailable—"
"Quai, it's your mother."
The voice hesitated. Then, the veranda cleared away and revealed
Quai's apartment, which hadn't been cleaned up in a while. Clothes and
towels were draped over the arms of chairs. Screen rolls lay heaped on
every flat surface, held in place by empty cups and glasses full of
something that might have once been either beer or apple juice.
In the middle of it all sat Quai at his battered desk. Su
automatically looked him over. He hadn't shaved. His hair was now
black and blond, and the holo-tat on the right side of his throat was a
winking blue eye this week.
In short, her son looked just fine.
"Hello, Mother," he said cheerfully. "Slow day in the corridors of
power?"
"Not particularly." Her lips twitched, trying not to smile. "As
you've said, saving the worlds is a full-time job."
Quai's own smile was tight and knowing and made him look
frighteningly like his father. "Especially when you have to kiss up to
the C.A.C. to do it."
Su let that pass. "We've just had a little demo on the decks here,
Quai."
"Really?" His face and voice brightened considerably. "Who managed
it?"
"I don't know. I thought you might."
Quai shook his head, and Su believed him. If he had known, he would
have just evaded the question. They did not agree, she and her son. He
felt she did not go far enough in her politics, and she felt that by
attempting to undermine the system, he was worsening the condition of
those he was supposed to be fighting for. Despite that, they had a
tacit agreement that each
would avoid lying to the other, if at all possible.
"Well, just in case anyone in your acquaintance gets ideas—"
"Us?" Quai laid a hand on his breast. "We operate strictly within
the law wherever we are, Mom; you know that."
"I don't for sure know any different," responded Su blandly. "But
just in case, you might pass along the word that the C.A.C. is very
edgy right now and that that edginess is getting communicated up the
legislature. The more unrest there is right at this moment, the bigger
the potential backlash."
They looked at each other, each of them replaying conversations
from both the distant and the not-so-distant past in their heads.
"All right, Mom." Quai nodded. "Not that anybody I deal with would
arrange illegal public demos in U.N. City or anywhere else, but I'll
see if I can leak the generalities of this conversation where they'll
do some good."
"That's all I ask." Su bowed her head briefly in a gesture of thanks.
A flicker of worry crossed Quai's face. "Take care of yourself out
there, Mom. Okay? I'd hate to see you lose your footing."
Su smiled. "I will take care. I love you, my son."
"Love you, Mom. Good-bye."
Su said good-bye and shut down the screen. She shook her head and
sighed. Quai was good people. How had that happened? Abandoned by a
nervous father, left with an obsessive mother, he still managed to make
his own way. He went overboard, it was true, but not as badly as some,
and at least he really believed in what he did.
So do you, she reminded herself. At least, you'd
better, or all your work's going to fall apart and Helen's going to be
left out there on her own.
That thought stiffened Su's shoulders. No, she would not permit
that. She bent over her desk screen and laid her hands on the command
board. Time to get back to work.
Contents - Prev / Next
Chapter Four
T'sha's kite furled its bright-blue wings as it approached the High
Law Meet. Unlike other cities, the High Law Meet's ligaments ran all
the way down to the crust, tethering the complex in place. The
symbolism was plain. All the winds, all the world, met here.
"Good luck, Ambassador T'sha," the Law Meet hailed her through her
headset. "You are much anticipated."
"Is it a pleased anticipation or otherwise?" asked T'sha wryly as
the Law Meet took over her kite guidance, bringing it smoothly toward
the empty mooring clamps.
"That is not for me to know or tell," said the Meet primly.
Amusement swelled through T'sha.
T'sha had always found the Meet beautiful. Its shell walls were
delicately curved, and their colors blended from a pure white to rich
purple. Portraits and stories had been painted all across their
surfaces in both hot and cold paints. When the Law Meet was in dayside,
the hot paints glowed red. On nightside, the cold paints made dark
etchings against the shining walls. The coral struts were whorled and
carved so that the winds sang as they blew past. More shell and dyed
stiff skins funneled and gentled the winds through the corridors
between the chambers. The interior chambers themselves were bubbles of
still air where anyone could move freely without being guided or
prodded by the world outside.
T'sha sometimes wondered if this was a good idea.
As ever, the High Law Meet was alive with swarms of people. The air
around it tasted heavy with life and constant movement. T'sha counted
nine separate villages floating past the Meet
with their sails furled so the citizens who flew beside their homes
could keep up easily. All the noise, all the activity of daily life
blew past with them.
Below, the canopy was being tended by the Meet's own conservators.
It was symbolically important, said many senior ambassadors, that the
canopy around the High Law Meet remain vital, solid, and productive.
But as T'sha watched, a quartet of reapers from one of the villages,
identifiable by the straining nets they carried between them, as well
as by the zigzagging tattoos on their wings, descended to the canopy. A
conservator flew at them, sending them all winging away, back to their
village with empty nets, no food, seeds, or clippings to enhance their
diet, their gardens, or their engineers' inventories.
T'sha felt her bones loosen with weariness.
It must be kept
productive. Certainly. But if not for our families, then for what?
T'sha inflated, trying to let her mood roll off her skin. There was
important work to be done, and she had to be tightly focused. Her kite
dropped its tethers toward the Law Meet's mooring clamps. T'sha leaned
back on her posthands so she could collect her belongings: an offering
for the temple, the congratulatory banner for Ambassador Pr'sefs
latest wedding, and the bulging satchel of promissory agreements which
she had negotiated in return for the votes she needed. She had
promised away a great deal of work from her city and her families for
this vote. She had to keep telling herself that they all gave freely
and that she was doing this for the entirety of the people, not just
for herself. This was necessary. It was not greed.
The clamps took hold of the tethers and reeled the kite in to a
resting height. T'sha launched herself into the wind, her parcels
dangling from three of her hands.
A temple surmounted the High Law Meet. It was a maze of ligaments
and colored skins, covered in a complex blanket of life. In the corners
and catches, puffs, birds, flies, algae bubbles, smoke growers, and a
hundred other plants and animals collected. Funguses and danglers grew
from the walls and fed the creatures who lived there, until the winds
that blew them in blew them away again.
As she let those winds carry her toward the temple's center, T'sha
tried to relax and immerse herself in the messages of life present in
every plant, every insect and bird. She had only marginal success.
There was too much waiting on the vote in the Meet below to allow her
to give in to her meditations.
The temple's center was ablaze with tapestries, each illustrating a
history, parable, or lesson. Congregants were supposed to let the
random winds blow them toward a tapestry and consider its moral. This
time, however, T'sha steered herself toward a small tapestry that
fluttered alone in a deep curve of the wall. It was ancient, woven
entirely from colored fibers taken from the canopy. It depicted a lone
male, his hands bony, his skin sagging, and his muzzle open in muttered
speech. His rose and violet crest draped flat against his back as if he
lacked the strength to raise it. All around him stretched the crust,
naked to the sky.
As T'sha drank in the tapestry's details, a teacher drifted to her
side. "Tell me this story," he said.
The words spread the warmth of familiarity through T'sha. Her youth
had seemed dominated by those words. Her birth mother, Pa'and, had
brought T'sha teacher after teacher, each more taxing than the last.
Whether the lesson was maths, sciences, history, or even the
geographies of the wind currents, they all seemed to start their
quizzing by saying "Tell me this story."
"Ca'doth was the first of the Teacher-Kings," began T'sha, keeping
her attention fixed on the tapestry, as was proper. "Contemplate the
object and its lesson. This is the way to learn." Which of the parade
of teachers had first told her that? "He led twenty cities in the
Equatorial Calms. But he wanted to harvest eight canopy islands that
were also claimed by D'anai, who was Teacher-King for the Southern
Roughs. A feud began. Each king made great promises to their neighbors
to join their cause. Arguments and debates lasted years. Ca'doth, who
was the greatest speaker ever known, persuaded the winds and the clouds
and even the birds to help him." T'sha's imagination showed her
Ca'doth, strong and healthy, spreading his wings to the listening
clouds.
"What he wanted most was that the living highlands should stop
feeding his enemies," she went on, falling into the rhythm of
her recitation. The teacher hovered close beside her, encouraging her
with his silence. "But no matter how long he flew around the highlands,
they made no response to his great speeches." The smallest of the
monocellulars originated in the living highlands, which expelled them
into the air to be the seeds for all other life in the world.
At last, he realized he would have to fly inside the highland to
make it hear him. He dived straight down the throat of the living
highland, beating his wings against winds of solid lava. He passed
through a chamber where the walls were pale skin, a chamber of white
bone, a chamber of silver plasma, and a chamber tangled with muscle and
nerve. In each he heard a riddle to which he did not know the answer."
For a moment, she thought the teacher would ask her the riddles, but he
did not, and she kept going. "Finally, Ca'doth came to a chamber where
the air around him shimmered golden with the pure essence of life, and
he knew he floated within the soul of the living highland.
" 'Why do you feed my enemies?' he cried. 'They steal what I need to
live. I have promised away all my present that I may gain a future for
my children, and yet you feed those who would destroy them. Why?' "
The soul of the highland answered him, 'Life cannot choose who it
helps. If your enemy came to me first, should I starve you instead?'
But Ca'doth did not listen. He argued and pleaded and threatened,
until the highland said 'Very well, I will not feed your enemy.'
"Pleased, Ca'doth passed through the chambers, and there he heard
the answers to all the riddles but could not tell which answer fitted
which riddle. He emerged into the clear and returned to tell his
family the highland would no longer feed their rivals.
"But when he reached his birth city, the city and all within were
dead, starved.
"The highland would not feed the rivals, but the highland would no
longer feed Ca'doth's people either. Ca'doth turned from his rule and
his other cities and drifted on the winds for the rest of his life,
trying to fit the answers to the riddles."
The teacher dipped his muzzle approvingly. "And what is the meaning
of this story?"
"All life is linked," answered T'sha promptly. "If that is
forgotten, all life will die."
Even the flies, she sighed
inwardly.
Even the fungus. Even I and D'seun.
T'sha deflated before the teacher and flew respectfully underneath
him. She slipped around the side of the temple to the gifting nets and
deposited her offering—a pouch of seeds and epiphytes that her own
family had recently spread in the canopy. They were having great
success in healing a breech in the growth. Hopefully, the temple's
conservators could make use of them as well.
As she sealed the gifting net up and turned, she found herself
muzzle-to-muzzle with Z'eth, one of the most senior ambassadors to the
Meet. T'sha pulled back reflexively, fanning her wings to get some
distance.
"Good luck, Ambassador T'sha," said Z'eth, laughing a little at how
startled her junior colleague was. Z'eth was big and round. Even when
she had contracted herself, she was a presence that filled rooms and
demanded attention. She had only three tattoos on her pale skin—her
family's formal name, the rolling winds, indicating she was a student
of life, and the ambassador's flock of birds on her muzzle. Despite
her sparse personal decoration, there was something extravagant about
Z'eth. Perhaps that was only because there was no promise so rare or
exotic she would not make it if it benefited her city. T'sha could not
blame her for that. The city K'est had sickened when T'sha was still a
child, and Z'eth's whole existence had become dedicated to keeping her
city alive.
"Good luck, Ambassador Z'eth," said T'sha. "I was on my way to your
offices from here."
"No doubt to speak of things it is not appropriate to discuss in
temple." Z'eth dipped her muzzle. "Shall we leave so we may converse
freely?"
"Thank you, Ambassador."
Z'eth and T'sha let themselves be
blown through
the
temple corridors and out into the open air.
As soon as they were a decent distance from the temple's walls,
T'sha said, "I have the promissory for you regarding the imprinting
service for the cortices grown in your facilities."
"Excellent." Z'eth tilted her wings and deflated so she descended
smoothly alongside the High Law Meet. It was a delicate path, as the
winds between the walls were strong and unpredictable. T'sha followed
but had to flap clumsily to keep herself from being brushed against the
painted-shell wall.
"I have not envied you these past hours, Ambassador." Z'eth whistled
sympathetically. "It is hard during your first term, especially if
your first term is a historic one." One of the arched corridor mouths
opened behind them, but Z'eth wheeled around, dipping under the
corridor instead of entering it. T'sha followed her into the shallow,
irregular tunnel underneath the real corridor, a little surprised.
Z'eth drifted close, her wings spread wide. Her words brushed across
T'sha's muzzle. "You needn't worry about the vote. Your quiet promises
and the work Ca'aed has done with Gaith have been
most
impressive. I have spoken where I can. Between us all we have turned
the flow. You'll have your appointment."
T'sha nearly deflated with relief. At the same time she was
conscious of Z'eth's steady gaze on her. Despite the promises she had
already made, she still owed the senior ambassador, and it was a debt
that would need to be paid before long.
T'sha resolved not to worry about that now. "Thank you again,
Ambassador Z'eth."
"You are welcome. I will see you in the voting chamber." Z'eth
lifted herself to the corridor mouth and disappeared inside.
T'sha floated where she was for a moment, remaining in place more
because she was in a calm than from actual effort.
They had towed Gaith's corpse encased in its quarantine blanket into
Ca'aed's wake. The rotting had so deformed it that it looked less like
a city than an engineer's experiment gone hideously wrong. Its people
worked on it diligently, sampling and analyzing and salvaging, but it
would have taken a thicker skin than T'sha's not to feel the despair
in them. It had taken Gaith a handful of hours to die. Who knew which
village, which city, might be next?
And here was T'sha, doing her best to keep them all from what looked
like the nearest safe course. She had quizzed the team supervisors from
the other candidate worlds extensively. The seeds had not taken hold on
any other of the ten worlds. Only Number Seven could readily support
life.
But life might already have a claim on Number Seven. In spite of
all, T'sha could not let that fact blow past. She had to see for
herself that D'seun's team was not ignoring a legitimate claim on the
part of the New People. Now, according to Z'eth, she was going to get
her chance.
Is this right, what I do? Life of my mother and life of my
father, it has to be, because it is too late for me to do otherwise.
She shut her doubts off behind calculations about how many promises
she could deliver before she was called to hear the vote. She lifted
herself to the corridor mouth and joined the swarm of ambassadors and
assistants propelling themselves deep into the Meet.
In the end, she was able to deliver four of the eight notes, staying
long enough to give and accept polite thanks with each ambassador and
discuss general pleasantries and the work being done on Gaith. She had
to use her headset to leave message for the rest. The Law Meet was
calling them all to hear the results of the latest poll.
When T'sha arrived, the spherical voting chamber already brimmed
with her colleagues. There were no perches left. She would have to
float in the stillness and try to keep from bumping rudely into anyone
else.
"Good luck, T'sha," murmured tiny, tight Ambassador Br've as she
drifted above him.
"Good luck," added Ambassador T'fron, whose bird tattoos were still
fresh on his skin.
Their wishes warmed her, but not as much as the security of Z'eth's
promise.
T'sha found a clear spot in which to hover near the ceiling. Because
the High Law Meet was currently on the dayside, the family trees, which
were written in hot paints, glowed
brightly against the white and purple walls. Each showed the
connections and the promises of connection between the First
Thousand. T'sha scanned the trees for her family's names and found
them, unchanging and immutable. She was their daughter. Her
ancestors
had birthed cities. She would save them, but not at the cost of their
people's souls.
She looked down between the crests and tattooed wings and spotted
D'seun's distinctive and overmarked back. He was practically touching
the polling box. T'sha wondered whom he had made promises to and if he
had anyone as powerful as Z'eth sponsoring his cause. If he'd managed
to bring in H'tair or Sh'vaid on his side, the vote might not be as set
as Z'eth believed. The mood of the meeting tightened rapidly around
her. The announcement would come soon. Her bones shifted. Soon. Soon.
The polling box had been grown in the image of a person
without wings or eyes. Its neural net ran straight into the floor of
the voting chamber and was watched over by the High Law Meet itself. It
would not be moved, and it looked with favor on no one. It was solid
and impartial.
The box lifted its muzzle and spoke in a voice that rippled strongly
through the chamber.
"The poll has been taken, recognized, and counted. Does any
ambassador wish to register doubt as to the validity of the count
contained in this box?"
No one spoke. T'sha tried to breathe evenly and hold her bones still.
"No doubt has been registered," said the box. "A poll has been taken
of the ambassadors to the High Law Meet on the following questions.
First, should candidate world Seven be designated New Home? If this is
decided positively, the second question is, should the current
investigative team whose names are listed in the record continue under
the leadership of Ambassador D'seun Te'eff Kan K'edch D'ai Gathad to
establish the life base necessary for the growth of a canopy and the
establishment of life ways for the People, with such expansion and
promises as this project shall require?"
T'sha's wings rippled. Her skin felt alert, open to every sensation
from the brush of her own crest to the gentle waft of a whisper on the
other side of the chamber.
"Is there any ambassador within the touch of these words who has not
been polled on these questions?" asked the box. Silence, waiting, and
tension strained her bones as if they were mooring ligaments in a high
wind.
"No ambassador indicates not having been polled," said the box.
"Then, the consensus of the High Law Meet is as follows. On the first
question, the consensus is yes, candidate world Seven is New Home."
The rumble and ripple of hundreds of voices filled the chamber.
T'sha remained still and silent. That was never the real question. The
vote had to be yes. D'seun was right about that much. His peremptory
poll of Ca'aed had confirmed that all the families agreed with the
choice.
"On the second question," the box went on, "the consensus is that
Ambassador D'seun Te'eff Kan K'edch D'ai Gathad shall continue as the
leader of the investigative team, that the current team will continue
in the task of creating a life base with such expansions as are
required for that task, provided that one of those expansions shall be
the addition of Ambassador T'sha So Br'ei Taith Kan Ca'aed for the
purpose of observing and studying the life currently named the New
People. She shall ensure that these New People have no legitimate claim
to New Home world that might counteract the validity of the consensus
on the first question."
There it was. She could now go to New Home herself and make sure the
New People had no legitimate claim on the world. T'sha's relief was so
complete, she almost didn't feel the congratulations erupting around
her. When she was able to focus outward, she found herself in a storm
of good-luck wishes and a hundred questions. She answered all she
could, as fast as she could, while mentally cataloging the messages and
calls she'd have to make as soon as the chamber opened again.
It might have been a moment or a lifetime later when D'seun rose to
meet her.
"An interesting addendum, Ambassador T'sha," he said flatly and
coolly. "You have been working toward
this for
some
time, I take it."
T'sha met D'seun's gaze and spoke her words straight to him.
"Surely, you could not have been unaware of what I was doing. I was
hardly secretive."
D'seun's bones contracted under his tattoos, and T'sha felt a swirl
of exasperation. She shrank herself a little to match him. "D'seun,
there is no reason for us to be enemies on this. We both want the same
thing. We both want to make New Home a reality. If that is to happen,
we cannot discount the New People."
"We cannot let their presence override everything we must do,
either." He thrust his muzzle forward. "You question and delay, you
counter and debate everything! Every time we try to warn people what
happened to Gaith, there you are, assuring us all that it isn't so very
bad, that we must just wait until its disease is understood, that we
have the resources to understand." His words tumbled harshly over her.
"There is no more time. There is no way to understand. We must leave."
T'sha deliberately deflated and sank, resisting the urge to fly
right under him to make her point. "I am only one voice, D'seun. All
the rest of the Senior Committee for New Home are your supporters.
There will be very little I can do."
D'seun dropped himself so he could look into her eyes. "Do not
flutter helplessness at me, T'sha. What 'little' you can do, you will
do."
"Is there some promise you would give my families to have me do
otherwise, D'seun?" asked T'sha bluntly. "How much will you give for me
to disregard our new neighbors? Is there enough to make that right?"
D'seun did not answer.
"No, there is not," said T'sha. "We are together in this, D'seun,
until the task is over."
"Until the task is over," D'seun said softly. "Until then."
* * *
D'seun rose from the world portal into the candidate world, now New
Home. Its clean winds brushed the transfer's disorientation off him. A
quick turn about showed him P'tesk and T'oth waiting on the downwind
side of the portal's ring. D'seun flew
quickly toward them.
"Good luck, Ambassador D'seun." P'tesk raised his hands. "Is there
news?"
D'seun touched his engineers' hands. "Engineer P'tesk, Engineer
T'oth. There is news, but not all of it is good. Let us return to the
test base, and then I can tell our people all at once."
As often as he had done it, it was strange to D'seun to fly over the
naked crust without even a scrap of canopy to cover it. He could barely
taste the life base they had seeded the winds with. He imagined
sometimes that this was not a newly emerging world, but a prophecy as
to what Home might become—lifeless stone and ash sculpted by sterile
winds.
So it will be if T'sha has her way.
Their base was little more than a few shells tethered together with
half a dozen infant cortex boxes to nurture the necessary functions.
Not comfortable or companionable, but it served its function, as they
all did.
"Team Seven," D'seun called through his headset, "this is Ambassador
D'seun. We are gathering in the analysis chamber. I have word of the
latest vote from the High Law Meet."
Like the rest of the base, the analysis chamber was strictly
functional. The undecorated walls showed the shell's natural pearl and
purple colors. Separate caretaker units, all holding their specialized
cortex boxes, had been grown into the shell. That and a few perches
were all there was to the room.
D'seun, T'oth, and P'tesk arrived to find T'stad and Kr'ath already
waiting for them. They all wished each other luck as the others
filtered in. D'seun's gaze swept the assembly—his assembly, his team
who had worked so hard to prove the worth of their world. He laid claim
to them all, and if that was greedy of him, so be it. After so much
work and so many promises, he had earned the right to be a little
greedy.
"Where is Engineer Br'sei?" D'seun asked.
The others glanced around the chamber, as if just now noticing
Br'sei was gone.
"Engineer Br'sei?" he asked his headset.
After a brief pause, Engineer Br'sei's voice came back. "I'm at
Living Highland 45, Ambassador. I'll listen in over the headset.
I have to check the stability of the base seeding here. I think we may
be running into some trouble from the high salt content of these lavas."
"Then listen closely." D'seun raised his voice to speak to the
entire assembly. "The ambassadors to the High Law Meet have voted. This
world, our world, is declared New Home!"
All around him, voices trilled high, fluting notes of jubilation.
D'seun let them enjoy. They had all worked so hard. Thousands of
dodec-hours of observation and analysis. Millions of adjustments in
proportion and organization on the most basic levels. Sometimes it felt
as though each molecule had been hand reared. But they had made their
promise to the whole of the People, and they had kept it. Life could be
made to thrive here in these alien winds.
"That is not all the news, however," D'seun said, cutting through
their celebration. He waited until the last echoes of their chaotic
song died away. "Something new has happened on Home."
All their attention was on him, and he told them about Gaith. For
the first time there was no danger of interference from T'sha, and he
could tell what had really happened. An entire village had died an
indescribable death in such pain as life should never know. It had
happened in a few hours. A life the villagers thought they knew, a life
they had grown and cherished for thousands of years, had gone insane.
Insane as it was, it would turn on other life until nothing was left
but a mantle of death surrounding the entire world.
When he was finished, not one of them remained their normal size.
They all huddled close to their perches and close to each other, small
and tight, as if they could draw their skin in far enough to shut his
words out.
"I know the dangers of haste," he said at last. "I was taught, as
you all were, that haste is equal to greed as a bringer of death. But
this time, to be cautious is to die. This new rot will not wait for us
to make our careful plans."
Soft whistles of agreement filled the room. D'seun let himself
swell, just a tiny bit. "There are those who do not understand this,
however. There are those among the ambassadors who insist that we
wait. For what? I ask. Until our cities all fall? No, they reply. Until
we are sure of the New People."
Silence. The New People. No one liked the mention of them. The New
People might be poison, and everyone here felt that in every pore.
Time to remove that poison. "We are all concerned about the
New People. We have watched them as closely as we are able. You have
labored with great care to understand their transmissions to each
other and their commands to their tools. You have spoken to me in a
straightforward fashion, as dedicated engineers should, about the
fragility of life and the resources of community and the claim of life
upon its own home. But I must ask you other questions now."
D'seun focused his attention completely on P'tesk. "P'tesk, have we
found any new life here? Any life we did not ourselves spread?"
"No, Ambassador," said P'tesk. "Except for our life base, the winds
are clean. The living highlands do not really measure up to that
name—none of the ones we've observed anyway."
"T'vosh." D'seun switched his focus to the youngest engineer. "Have
we seen signs of mining or sifting for the hard elements?"
"No, Ambassador," T'vosh answered quickly. "And among the
transmissions, we have heard no plans for such."
"No plans that we understand."
The last was spoken by Tr'es. D'seun did not let himself swell in
frustration. It was a good point. Besides, Tr'es's birth city was
Ca'aed, as was T'sha's. She would have to be handled carefully in the
time to come.
"None that we understand, yes." D'seun dipped his muzzle. "Our
understanding is far from perfect. Our ability to separate , image
and message and tool command is not complete, although we have made
great strides. The New People may be making plans for legitimate use of
this world." His gaze swept the assembly. "But they have not done it
yet. When has a mere plan, an unfulfilled intent, ever been grounds to
withhold a resource?" He let them think about that for a minute. "Most
importantly"— he spread his wings wide—"nothing has prevented them from
detecting the life base. Nothing has prevented them from finding us.
They have made no move to challenge our claims or to contact us as one
family contacts another when there is a dispute over resources."
Let
those words sink through their pores; let their minds turn that over.
"There is nothing, nothing, in the laws of life and balance which
prevents us from moving forward and laying legitimate claim to this
empty, pure world."
Whistles of agreement, notes of encouragement bathed D'seun. This
would work. He had them convinced. "Despite this, for reasons of her
own, the ambassador of Ca'aed"—he glanced at Tr'es—"is doing all she
can to delay the transformation of this world, and she is citing the
presence of the New People as her reason."
Tr'es was not intimidated, not yet. "How could she do otherwise?"
Tr'es asked. "They are here. Ambassador T'sha is both cautious and
pious."
"Ambassador T'sha has acquired the body of Gaith Village for the
people of Ca'aed," replied D'seun. "She has indentured all Gaith's
engineers to the resurrection of the village. She hopes to exact many
promises for herself and her city, even while the new rot spreads on
the winds."
Silence, deep and shocked, filled the chamber, broken only by the
slight rustling as the engineers inflated and deflated uneasily.
"Surely there is a misunderstanding," stammered Tr'es. "This cannot
be the stated goal."
"It is not the stated goal," said D'seun softly. "But I fear it is
the true goal. I grieve with you and your city, Engineer Tr'es, but
power has turned many a soul sour. This is why the teachers warn us so
stringently against greed. Through greed we turn the very needs of life
against each other."
Tr'es covered her eyes with her wing in confusion and denial.
D'seun said nothing, just let the silence settle in ever more deeply.
At last, Tr'es lifted her muzzle. "What are we to do?"
D'seun felt satisfaction form deep in his bones. "Ambassador T'sha
is coming here herself to inspect the claims of the New People. We must
make sure she is given no reason to doubt that this world is free for
us to use." He focused his attention on each of his engineers in turn.
"She must have no opportunity to question what we do here." He pulled
his muzzle back and drew in his wings. "I will make no move without
your agreement. You are not indentured, and I do not lead without
consensus. We will take a poll now. Vote as your soul's understanding
moves you. Let me hear from those in agreement."
One by one, his engineers whistled their assent. Even Tr'es whistled
agreement, low but strong.
"I thank you," said D'seun softly. "Soon, all your families will
have cause to thank you as well. We can move forward with our work now,
without doubt or hindrance. Enjoy, my friends. Soon promises will be
made in your names and on the backs of your skills."
More wordless songs of delight and triumph rang out. D'seun swelled
to his fullest extent to take in every note and nuance. It was then he
realized that his headset had remained silent. Br'sei had not added his
vote.
Sudden suspicion flowed into him. "To work, to work, my colleagues,
my friends. We do not have time to waste!"
His happy words sent them all scattering to their tasks. Not one of
them commented as he flew out into the clear air to claim a kite. He
too had work to do, and they were all aware of it.
Right now, his work was to find Engineer Br'sei.
* * *
Br'sei glided around the side of the living highland. His bones
tightened nervously, barely allowing him the lift he needed to fly,
even down here in the thick air near the crust.
You are being ridiculous. He forced himself to relax and
gained a little height.
You have grown things that are a thousand
times more terrifying than these New People.
But nothing stranger.
In truth, he was here only because Ambassador D'seun demurred every
single time Br'sei suggested they place close surveillance on the New
People. D'seun worried about being seen, about the New People raising a
peremptory challenge to their presence if they were seen. The
ambassador seemed completely disinterested in the New People's
explorations of the crust. Even now, when their activities had
increased so markedly.
If the New People had a legitimate claim on this world, it would be
disastrous, but it must be known. Br'sei listened to D'seun's stirring
words through his headset and heard the enthusiastic agreement of his
colleagues. Grim silence settled within him. D'seun spoke, D'seun
inspired, but D'seun did not know. Br'sei, on the other hand, had to
know.
So Br'sei flitted around the highland, weaving in and out of its
stony ripples to spy on the New People and see what could be seen.
Below him, Br'sei saw the flat, wing-shaped carriers that the New
People used to take themselves from place to place. They had smooth
hides and glistening windows and were unbelievably clumsy. However,
they seemed to serve their purpose well enough. Grace may have been
sacrificed for durability.
No New People walked the surface between the transports. Perhaps
they were dormant now. Br'sei dipped a little closer, equal parts of
fear and excitement swelling his body.
Then, he saw movement on the ground. Two lumps of what he had first
taken for crust moved toward the transports. From their shadow rose
what
looked like one of the People's own constructors.
Br'sei backwinged, holding his position and watching. The
constructor and its accompanying tools glided between the transports as
if sniffing at their sides, seeking what? He spoke to his headset, but
it could pick up nothing from them, no exchange, no projection,
nothing but silence.
At last, the tools retreated to a deep crevice in the highland wall.
Br'sei dived after them, bunching himself up tightly to fit between the
stone walls where they hid.
The tools made no move as he came within their perceptual range. Now
he could see that the one was indeed a constructor. It had the
umbrella, the deeply grooved cortex and the manipulator arms. The
other two had only eyes and locomotors. Overseers? Recorders maybe?
"What is your purpose?" asked Br'sei in the most common command
language.
No reply. Br'sei repeated the question in four of the other command
languages he knew, also with no result.
Frustration tightened Br'sei's bones. "Who made your purpose?
Engineer D'han? Engineer T'oth?" Neither name elicited any reaction.
The tools stayed as they were, unmoving, unresponsive. Br'sei's crest
ruffled. A tool should at least respond to its user's name. "Engineer
P'tesk? Engineer—"
"Ambassador D'seun."
Startled, Br'sei's wings flapped on their own, lifting him and
turning him. Ambassador D'seun flew over a ridge in the highland's
wall and deflated until he was level with Br'sei and the tools.
"Good luck, Br'sei," said D'seun amiably. He spoke to the tools in a
command language that Br'sei couldn't even recognize the roots of. The
constructor touched the ambassador's headset. Br'sei realized with a
start that he must be using a chemical link, something Br'sei hadn't
seen in years.
"I would ask you what you're doing here, Br'sei," said the
ambassador, "especially as this is Highland 76, not 45. But I imagine
you feel you have the right to ask me that question first."
"I don't wish to presume, Ambassador." Br'sei sank diffidently.
"But yes, I do wish to ask that question."
The constructor drifted away from Ambassador D'seun, who spoke
another few words of his convoluted command language. The constructor
headed back to the crevices of the highland with the two overseers
crawling after it.
D'seun watched them go until the tools could no longer be told apart
from the crust. "At the moment, the tools are monitoring the patterned
radio wave transmissions between the New People and their transports,
as well as their transports and their base." He swelled, just a little.
"We need to refine our translation techniques. It still takes even our
most adept engineers four or five dodec-hours to achieve what we think
is an approximate translation of any given message."
Br'sei stared at the ambassador, framed there by the living
highland. "It is difficult to accomplish such a work from a distance."
He fought to keep his voice mild. "But you have said repeatedly that
you do not want any tools within a mile of the New People, wherever
they are."
Ambassador D'seun deflated slowly, as if he were too tired to keep
his size and shape anymore. "I have wrestled with a great dilemma since
we originally dropped the wind seeds onto this world, Br'sei. Now, you
have the dubious honor of sharing it with me." He turned to face
Br'sei. "But perhaps we should speak somewhere more comfortable?"
"If you wish, Ambassador."
Patience, he told himself as
his bones twitched.
The only way you're going to get your answers
is by waiting him out.
Br'sei had been helping to design the seeds for the candidate worlds
when he first met D'seun. Br'sei was young for an adult, having been
fully declared in his eightieth year.
Back then, there were still debates raging over what the nature of
the seeding should be. Should it be a wide variety of organisms, both
useful and strictly supportive, to make sure the candidate world would
accept a range of life? Or should it be a single organism so that when
it did begin to spread, there would be fewer interactions to calculate
when the overlaying began?
Br'sei had been of the opinion that broad-seeding was the correct
method, and his experiment house was working with two dozen different
microcosms to show the differences in effect between broad-seeding and
mono-seeding.
Then D'seun had flown up to the door without sending advance notice
and asked for a tour and an appointment with Br'sei. Because D'seun
was a speaker then, he got both.
The experiment house was an old, wise workplace with heavy screens
and thick filters to keep its interior air absolutely sterile. Its
cortices were complex and well grown, each able to monitor its
crystalline microcosms for hours without supervision or correction,
leaving the engineers free to work on projection and innovation.
Br'sei led D'seun from cosmos to cosmos, showing him the hardiness
of the broad-seeding in the miniature ecosystems as opposed to the
flimsy strains of mono-seeded cultures.
"The broad-seeding provides its own support system, you see,
Speaker," said Br'sei as they paused to study yet another microcosm.
The sphere's lensing sides allowed them to see through to the
microscopic organisms thriving in the simulated cloud.
"Yes." D'seun pointed his muzzle at Br'sei.
"But
that is not truly the point, is it?"
Br'sei remembered how his crest had spread at those words. "Forgive
me, Speaker, but that is the entire point."
"Forgive me, Engineer, but it is not," D'seun replied. "The point of
the initial seeding is not to establish life, but merely to establish
that life is a possibility. First we establish that life can exist on a
world; then we survey that world carefully, understanding it
thoroughly in its pure, prelife state. Then, and only then, can we
start laying out the basis for a new canopy, one we design and
supervise in its entirety." He turned his gaze back to the microcosm,
deflating a little as he did. "We have acted too often without
understanding. We must not do that with our new world. I fear we will
have only one chance to make this plan of ours work."
Br'sei had felt himself swelling at that point, ready to argue, but
the speaker's words flew ahead of his. "What I see here convinces me
that you and yours have a tremendous understanding of how life can be
built and layered. Your life-base designs are strong and rich." D'seun
whistled, pleased. "I would like to talk to you about providing members
for the initial teams, as well as engineers and designers for when New
Home is found."
The implication that brushed against Br'sei was that this
discussion would take place only if Br'sei agreed to the idea of a
mono-seeding. The speaker did make several excellent points, and the
idea of Br'sei and his own team working on the foundations of New Home
was a powerful lure.
"I think I could be convinced, Speaker," Br'sei admitted, fanning
his wings gently to keep himself close to D'seun. "Let me bring some of
my engineers, and let us discuss this. Some new microcosms may need to
be designed."
"Thank you, Engineer Br'sei," said D'seun, and the words sank deeply
into Br'sei's skin. "Bring your people. Let us think about what we may
do together."
In the end, with Br'sei's help, D'seun had triumphed. As a result,
Br'sei and his team, which he picked out with D'seun's help, were given
the most promising
world to seed
with a mono-culture
of their own design.
It had worked and here they were, with D'seun as ambassador and
Br'sei as collaborator.
Br'sei's wings faltered slightly as that thought filtered through
him.
"I have been thinking, Engineer Br'sei." D'seun banked into an
updraft. The warm air from the highland with its delicate taste of life
lifted him high. "We say 'Life spreads life' all the time, but we do
not ever hold still long enough to think what that should really mean."
"Should mean?" Br'sei's crest ruffled and spread flat, helping him
keep an even path in the turbulent wind from the highlands. Pockets of
heat and cold bumped against him, making him have to work to keep his
position steady relative to the ambassador. If he was not careful, he
would be trapped by the same eloquent arguments D'seun had used on the
youngsters. "Not 'does mean'?"
"On Home, I would have said 'does mean.' " The updraft spilled
D'seun
into the cooler air and he drifted down again until he was level with
Br'sei. "But here we are dealing with new possibilities. Here we can
say 'should mean.' "
Br'sei deflated just a little. The ambassador's words were like a
storm wind. They could sweep you along to an unknown destination before
you even realized you were in a current too strong for you to fight.
"And have you decided what 'Life spreads life' should mean,
Ambassador?"
"Not yet." D'seun cupped his wings and hovered in place in a
relative calm. "But I am wondering if it involves surrounding yourself
with things that do not live."
"What?" The single word burst out of Br'sei before he could even
think about what he said.
D'seun dipped his muzzle. "Their transports, their base, they do not
live. They are metal and ceramic without any living component I can
find, and I have looked carefully."
"But that's…" Br'sei searched for a strong enough word and found
nothing. He gathered his thoughts again. "They are other. Their life is
different from ours," he said, trying to give his
words weight, but all the time he was thinking,
Their home does
not live? How can it care for them? How can they care for it?
D'seun glided close to him. "The question is, are they life we can
live with?"
Br'sei deflated reflexively as the last sentence touched his
muzzle. "Do you think they are insane, Ambassador?" Insanity was the
gravest accusation that could be made against another being, worse than
greed, worse than jealousy. Insanity meant they would ravage the life
around them and that they would have to be stopped before they could
damage the larger balance.
D'seun's bones bunched tightly and he sank. "I don't know, Engineer.
I do know they frighten me."
"Then why—"
D'seun's teeth clacked but his amusement was grim. "Then why did I
fight so hard for this world? Because this is the world where our life
can exist, Br'sei. The only one we have ever found where it can."
Their home does not live. Br'sei rolled his eyes upward, as
if he thought to see the New People's base floating overhead, drawn by
the thought. The New People had not been his study or concern. His time
had been spent with the highlands, the clouds, and the wind seeds. Even
so, someone in the team should have told him about this.
Unless an ambassador told them not to… But that was too
much even for Br'sei, and he did not struggle when his thoughts swerved
back to the New People.
Do they isolate themselves from life, or
do they just need to isolate their kind of life? How can we know?
"I have worked hard to keep this knowledge quiet, Engineer Br'sei,"
said D'seun, as if he read Br'sei's thoughts. "There are those who
would take the facts of how the New People live and create a panic to
spread across all the winds of Home. Ambassador T'sha, to begin with."
Br'sei shook himself. "Do you have so little faith in your
colleagues, Ambassador?" he asked, being deliberately blunt.
"No." D'seun swelled. "I have so much experience with them. T'sha is
rich. She hands out promises as if they were guesting gifts. She does
not want this world for New Home because
of the New People. I have managed to block her so far, but what if she
were able to cry insanity?" A single beat of his wings brought him
towering over Br'sei. "Would any of the People be willing to run from
insanity toward insanity?" Now their muzzles touched and the
ambassador's words sank deep into Br'sei's skin. "How long does Home
have left for us, Br'sei? Twenty years? Forty? How long will it take
before a new world can support us in all our billions?"
"At least fifty years," admitted Br'sei.
"So, we have no time to waste in panic and argument."
"But—"
"But if the New People are insane, they must be treated as such."
D'seun let himself drift away. "If they are not, they must be treated
as such. Right now, we know only three things— that they have no
legitimate claim on this world, that we cannot decide on their sanity
until we understand them better, and that we cannot waste time looking
for yet another candidate world."
Br'sei's bones bunched together. He would have plummeted had not the
warm plumes from the highland cradled him. "I am not so sure,
Ambassador."
D'seun dipped his muzzle. "Of course not. These are not small
thoughts. This must all be digested and studied from all angles. But
tell me this: you do truly agree that action without knowledge will
lead to disaster?"
"It can," admitted Br'sei.
"And you do agree that we have no time to waste in the creation of
New Home?"
Br'sei dipped his muzzle. "I have seen the cities rotting too,
Ambassador. I heard your tale of Gaith. I am aware our time is short."
"Good." D'seun flew over him, letting his hands graze against
Br'sei's crest. "Then give me this much. Do not panic Ambassador T'sha
when she comes. Do not tell her how much we know." He turned on a
wingtip. "And help me understand the New People. With knowledge, your
doubts and mine will all be resolved. We will not be fumbling and
flapping in our helplessness, as we must on Home, where the diseases
and their progeny have flown too far ahead for us to ever understand,
let alone overtake. Here, we must always know how to proceed."
We must always know how to proceed. Br'sei let D'seun's
words echo inside him. He wanted to believe that was possible, but
sometimes he doubted it. What he did know, however, was that D'seun had
convinced himself of the Tightness of his words, and a mere engineer
would not change Ambassador D'seun's mind.
Ambassador T'sha, however, might be able to, and if she couldn't
change D'seun's mind, she might be able to sway the Law Meet, which
even D'seun could not ignore.
But Br'sei would have to steer a careful path. If D'seun did not
think Br'sei was convinced, the ambassador would find a way to have him
removed from the team. That was very much D'seun's way.
"I shall work with you, Ambassador." Br'sei inflated himself until
his size was equal with D'seun's. "Together we will see what we can
find."
I do not, however,
promise you will like what I will do with
what we find.
It was not until they had returned to the base and dispersed to
their separate tasks that Br'sei realized D'seun had never answered
one question about the tools near the New People.
Contents -
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Chapter Five
A fresh United Nations flag dominated the rear wall of the
passenger clearing area. Its sky blue background made a stark contrast
to the soft, shifting reds and golds that the walls had been set
for. Ben was glad to see, however, that Helen had drawn the line at
welcoming banners.
Ben stood beside Helen and Michael. The assorted Veneran department
heads ranged past them in a ragged line. Beyond the hatch, they could
hear the soft whirs and bumps of the docking corridor extending and
clamping itself to the newly arrived shuttle.
"Here they come," announced Tori from the control booth.
"The intercom better be off in the corridor," muttered Helen.
"Tori knows what she's doing," Michael assured her, somewhat
absently.
Ben said nothing. He was too busy dealing with his own emotions.
Anger, irrational and completely out of proportion, seethed inside him.
He feared that if he had to open his mouth, it would all come spilling
out in an unstoppable red flood.
God, I knew it was going to be bad, but I didn't expect it to be
this bad.
The last time he'd seen the U.N. come into a colony, he'd been in a
holding cell, watching lines of neatly dressed judges and bureaucrats
arrive with their armed escorts. There seemed to be hundreds of them,
all there to deal with the "criminals" who had "broken the rule of law
in Bradbury." He remembered the fear he'd felt, wondering what would
happen to them all now, and the deep shame at that fear.
None of the people standing next to him now knew about that cell or
that he had ever lived on Bradbury at all. He'd managed to disconnect
his records from that past and that person. But he could not disconnect
his memories, even if there were times he wanted to.
Like now.
The hatch cranked itself open. Ben's stomach clenched itself
involuntarily.
Get over it! They're just tourists. They're going
to be rumpled and gravity dizzy and slightly stupid, like any other
crowd of Earthlings.
Edmund Waicek, the man Ben considered to be the most dangerous
member of the C.A.C., had cheerfully sent Venera's governing board a
list of their invaders. Ben had to admit, Helen had worked her end
quite well. It could have been a lot worse.
The first two down the ramp Ben recognized as Robert Stykos and
Terry Wray, the media faces. Their job was to create the in-stream
"news" presentations on the U.N. investigation of the Discovery. Both
had been restructured to look exactly average, only more beautiful.
They might have been brother and sister, with their coffee-and-cream
skin, big brown eyes, and shoulder-length black hair (hers pinned under
a bronze scarf, his pulled back into a ponytail under a red beaded
cap). But where Stykos was tall and broad, Wray was petite, almost
elfin. Both wore glittering camera bands on their foreheads and command
bracelets on their wrists.
"Mr. Stykos, Ms. Wray." Helen, in full public relations mode,
stepped forward and shook their hands. "Welcome to Venera Base. I'm Dr.
Helen Failia. Allow me to introduce my associate, Dr. Bennet Godwin,
who is our head of personnel and chief volcanologist…"
So it began. Stykos and Wray both looked long and hard at him,
making sure their cameras got a good image of him smiling and shaking
their soft hands. Lindi Manzur, the architect, beamed up at him as if
she'd never met anyone more fascinating, except maybe Troy Peachman
(was that a real name?), the comparative culturalist (whatever that
was), at whom she kept glancing fondly as he followed her down the
line, shaking everybody's hands with a kind of firm enthusiasm that
came with
practice.
What have you two been doing for the past week and a half?
he wondered snidely.
After them came Julia Lott, the archeologist, a sturdy fireplug of a
woman with a square face and tired eyes. She was followed by Isaac
Walters who looked so uncomfortable that Ben had to wonder if he'd ever
left Mother Earth before.
Out of the corner of his eye, Ben saw Grace Meyer smile broadly and
step forward from the line.
Oh, right, this is the biologist, he thought as he passed
Walters down to Michael.
Next, a tall, pale woman in artistic black and white swept up the
line. Veronica Hatch, here to look at the laser and pronounce
judgment. In contrast to Walters, she seemed ready to parachute down to
the ground and start digging in.
There was a pause then, just long enough for Ben's anger to start
simmering again. There were only two people left to come.
Angela Cleary and Philip Bowerman emerged together from the docking
corridor. She had sandy skin and sandy hair, which she wore short under
her white scarf. He was darker, with wavy hair and tropical skin and
eyes that took in the entire room at a glance. Both of them were tall,
broad in the shoulders and narrow at the waist, people whose bulk came
not from body-mod, but from work. They both wore the blue tunics with
white collars that were the uniform of U.N. security assessors on
official duty.
Ben's blood ran hot, then cold. It must have showed in his face. He
knew Michael was looking at him, but he couldn't help it. He'd sat for
hours in little windowless rooms with uniforms like these, being
recorded and interrogated until he couldn't think straight, couldn't
remember if he'd implicated his friends or not, couldn't decide whether
his own lies still made sense. All he could do was feel his burning
eyes, raw throat, and aching bladder.
What if they know me? What if they were there? The thought
rose unbidden from the back of his brain.
"Pleased to meet you, Dr. Godwin," Cleary was saying. Ben focused on
her, a little startled, but she just smiled politely.
Ben stuck his hand out and shook hers. It was strong and slightly
calloused. He made himself look into her amber-colored eyes. He saw no
hint of recognition there, and relief, as irrational and unlooked for
as his anger and his fear, almost robbed him of his balance.
"Pleased to meet you, Ms. Cleary," he answered in as steady a voice
as he could manage.
Too young, he thought to himself.
Security
has limits on how rejuvenated you can be, and they're both way too
young to have been at Bradbury.
That realization allowed him to greet Bowerman with something
approaching equanimity.
Then, it was over. The yewners mingled with the department heads,
making polite small talk about their voyage and the base. Helen flitted
between the conversational groups, reminding everyone of the reception
scheduled for that evening. Grace Meyer walked Isaac Walters a little
way off from the general crowd and talked to him in low, urgent tones.
Michael took charge of Cleary and Bowerman and was telling them about
the provisions he'd made to get them access to base records regarding
the Discovery. Stykos and Wray stood back and photographed it all.
Then, in groups of twos and threes, the yewners and their chaperones
began to make their way to the elevator bundles. The crowd thinned, and
Ben found he could breathe again.
The sound of footsteps echoing through the docking corridor turned
Ben around again. Another person emerged. This one wore a tan tunic and
trousers with blue ID patches, the standard uniform for crews on
distance ships. It took Ben a moment to recognize him.
"Hello, Dr. Godwin."
Joshua Kenyon, one of Venera's atmospheric researchers, held out his
hand. Well, no, he wasn't exactly Venera's. He'd never made the
commitment to live on the base. He just came up every now and again to
do his work on Rayleigh scattering in the upper atmosphere and then
went back down to Mother Earth to analyze and publish what he'd found.
Because of that, Ben
found himself unable to really like the man.
Kenyon was also not scheduled to be back for at least another six
months.
"Hello, Dr. Kenyon." Ben shook his hand. "This is unexpected,
especially in uniform."
Kenyon blushed a little. "I know. They weren't even going to let me
back up. Special flight for U.N. VTPs only. But I knew a couple of guys
on the crew, and they kind of smuggled me in." He gestured at his
uniform. "Not to spec, I know, but when I heard about the Discovery, I
couldn't help myself. I'm really hoping Dr. Failia will let me get a
look at that laser."
Of course. Kenyon used lasers constantly in his work. Ben's dislike
for the man did not change the fact that Kenyon was probably one of the
best optical engineers Venera had access to. Of course he wanted a look
at the laser. He'd be just the person to pull the machine apart and see
what it was made of and what it was for.
Ben shook his head regretfully. "I'm sorry. Helen's put a ban on any
Venerans, or anyone else, going down there until the yewners… the U.N.
team has finished up. Doesn't want anybody to get in their way or to
challenge whatever theories they come up with by presenting a whole
bunch of facts. She says there'll be plenty of time for that later."
Kenyon's face fell one muscle at a time. "I may just ask her
anyway," he said at last. "Do you think getting on my knees and begging
would help any?"
Ben did not laugh. "She's got her hands full, Dr. Kenyon. I think
it'd be better if you just waited until the investigative team's
finished."
Kenyon's eyes searched Ben's face, and Ben saw in them the knowledge
of his, Ben's, personal dislike. That was all right; he'd never
supposed it to be a secret.
At last, Kenyon blew out a sigh. "Okay, if that's the way it is,
that's the way it is. I'll wait." He paused. "Or did you rent out my
room while I was gone?"
"No, your quarters are still right where you left them." Venera
kept a set of apartments for people like Kenyon who came and went on
regular schedules. Ben stepped aside. "Sorry you went through all this
for nothing."
The thought
no you're not, flickered across Kenyon's face,
but he quickly smoothed it out. "Thanks," he said as he strode past
Ben, heading for the elevators.
Alone, Ben let his shoulders sag. The U.N. flag fluttered in the
breeze from the ventilator shafts, and Ben found his hands itching to
go over and rip it down.
Pull it together. You have more important things to worry about.
Ben focused his eyes on the corridor and marched past the flag,
almost as if it wasn't there.
* * *
The door to the Surveyors' lab opened as soon as it identified
Bennet Godwin, just as all the doors on Venera did. That fact could
still amaze him. There had been a point when he assumed he'd never be
trusted again.
And I may be about to blow all of it. He shoved the thought
aside. This was not some petty academic political battle. This one was
for the real world.
Except for Derek Cusmanos and several dozen neatly arrayed survey
drones, the cavernous room was empty. All the personnel who'd been
assigned to Derek were off either in the scarabs or in their own
offices, poring over years of satellite data, looking for more alien
bases. The mammoth wall screens showed a series of seemingly random
still shots—the mush-roomlike dome of a pancake volcano, the ripples of
one of the lava deltas, the ragged, concentric rings of a collapsed
crater.
Derek himself crouched in front of one of his drones. This was one
of the surface surveyors, which looked like miniature scarabs with eyes
and arms. Derek had it turned over on its side so he could get at the
hatch in its belly. Whatever he saw there was so absorbing that he did
not look up as Ben started across the floor.
"Derek?"
Derek grunted and held up one finger. Ben stopped where he was,
folding his hands behind his back and getting ready to wait. Derek,
like most of the mechanical engineers Ben knew, had the tendency to get
completely absorbed in his work. Ben studied the rows of drones with
their spindly arms, picks and containers for taking samples, lasers for
measuring, cameras for every kind of photography. Derek knew them all.
Had built half of them. Had come very close to losing his job because
no one felt the need to fund a human mapmaker when drones and computers
could do that
just fine. The drones themselves could, of course, be cared for by the
same staff that took care of the scarabs.
Derek finished his repairs or adjustments, closed the hatch, and
heaved the drone upright onto its treads. Only then did he stand
up and really acknowledge Ben's presence.
"Afternoon, Dr. Godwin." Derek plucked a sterile towel out of the
box and started wiping his hands with it. "What can I do for you?"
"Afternoon." Derek had been one of Ben's students when he was still
teaching. Ben had long ago given up trying to get the younger man to
use his first name. "Have you got the new pictures of
Ozza Mons?"
"Fresh in." Derek tossed the towel down the recycling shaft and
plunked himself
behind the sprawling, semicircular desk that was in his main
workstation. The desk woke up, and he typed in a quick command
sequence. The wall image of the lava delta disappeared, replaced by the
ragged, ashen gray throat of an old, massive volcano. "Looks pretty
dead."
"May just be dormant." Ben studied the picture, but the familiar
sense of excitement failed to rise in him. "We'll have to go down and
look at it."
"If you can get a scarab for anything but ogling the Discovery."
Derek shook his head at his keyboard. "It's amazing, you know? I mean,
I knew, once we found it, that the Terrans wouldn't
think there was anything else worthwhile up here, but I thought the
Board…" He stopped.
Ben held up his hand. "Now that the tourists are here, everybody's
supposed to go back to their normal duties. Dr. Failia wants to give
your visitors plenty of room to play."
Derek made a sour face. Ben returned a smile and changed the
subject. "Have you found anything that looks like another outpost?"
Derek shook his head. "They've given me the entire geology
department, and we've got every surveyor, from the satellites to the
minirovers, set on fine-tooth comb, but there's nothing."
"Think we will find anything?"
Derek started but recovered quickly. "How would I know?"
Ben shrugged. "You found the first one. I thought you might
recognize… traces."
Derek didn't look at him. His gaze wandered over the silent ranks of
surveyors with their waldos, cameras, and caterpillar treads. They were
heavy, blocky, reinforced things, completely unlike the delicate
machines Ben had worked with on Mars. "The drones found the first one,
Dr. Godwin, not me. But there are no traces of anything around it. It's
just sitting there, a random occurrence." He paused and finally
returned his gaze to Ben. "Or have your people found something new?"
Ben barked out a laugh. "You have all my people. You're going to
hear anything long before I do." Then, he paused, as if considering a
new thought. "Although… well, you've got a trained eye. Can I get you
to take a look at one of the new batches of images your team passed me?"
"Sure." Derek poised his hands over the command board.
"It's file number AT-3642."
Derek entered the number and brought up the picture on the wall
screen. It was a black-and-white still shot, taken from one of their
ancient satellites. It showed a gray raised ring with a dark center and
long pale ridges radiating from the sides. Derek studied it for a
moment.
Ben leaned one hand against the back of Derek's chair and peered at
the image, as if trying to see it in greater detail.
"Looks like a tick," Derek said. A tick was a type of volcano found
only on Venus. It got its name because from above it looked like a
gigantic, round-bodied insect with its crooked legs sticking out at
irregular angles.
"Yeah, it does," said Ben, watching Derek carefully. "Except it's
never been mapped."
"Oh? Well, that describes a lot of the planet." Venus had three
times the land area of Earth. Detailed mapping was the work of multiple
lifetimes. "Do you want me to put it on the list for close study?"
"No, no." Ben shook his head.
Especially since it does seem
you've never seen it before. "You've got your hands full. Just see
about routing me a couple of close-ups during the next flyover, okay?"
"Okay." Derek made a note on one of his flat screens. "Was there
anything else?"
"Not really." Ben straightened up. "Will I see you at the
reception?"
"Maybe." Derek turned his attention back to his command board. The
lava delta reappeared on the wall, this time with the white lines of a
measuring grid laid over it. "When I'm done here."
"You should consider putting in an appearance," Ben suggested with
a small smile. "I think Grandma Helen is counting noses. If she isn't,
she'll be reviewing the tapes later."
Derek glanced up. "Thanks, Dr. Godwin. I'll show myself."
"Good choice." He patted the boy on the shoulder and
showed himself out.
Ben walked down the broad corridor to the elevator bays and, as was
his habit, took the sweeping staircase instead. Space was Venera's one
true luxury, and Ben had to admit he reveled in it. The stairs were
wide, and the ceilings were high. There was room for people coming up,
going down, and just standing around talking or leaning against the
outer railing. The elevator shafts made mini-atriums, so he could look
the whole, long, dizzy way down and up again and hear the sounds of
purposeful life drifting to him from each of the twenty-four decks. Ten
thousand people living and working peacefully together. It could be
paradise if it were allowed to be.
Ben turned off at the landing for the administration level, getting
ready to head for his office. But he stopped in mid-stride and glanced
at the clock on the wall. Quarter of five, with the reception at six.
No one would think anything of it if he didn't stay at his desk until
the required hour.
And what Ben really wanted to do could not be done in the office.
So he returned to the stairs and walked down three levels to the
residential section. The apartments took up most of the two levels
above the farm and one level below. Everyone had a full suite of rooms:
bed, bath, study, living, and kitchen. Even the visitors. With the
soaring ceilings, full-spectrum lights, and generous use of e-windows
and greenery, you could almost forget you were in a colony.
In his own rooms, Ben always kept one of his screens set to show the
clouds outside. He did not want to forget.
Other than that, Ben's apartment was pretty much as he had moved
into it. Someone looking for evidence of the owner's personality would
have had to work hard. After a while, they might have picked out the
shiny chunk of obsidian on the end table by the couch, the brightly
polished garnet on the half-wall that divided the kitchen from the
living room, and the piles of open screen rolls on the desk, coffee
table, and couch. From this they could have concluded that the owner
liked rocks and was dedicated to his work.
As his door shut behind him, Ben crossed to the sofa. He picked up a
pile of screen rolls to clear space for himself and sat down. His
briefcase rested on the coffee table. He didn't jack it in; he just
woke it and called up a privately encrypted file that waited for both
the password and the scan of his fingertips from the command board.
The file opened for him and displayed a picture identical to Derek's
AT-3642.
It did look like a tick. It had the circular center and the ridges
radiating out like crooked legs. In black and white and two
dimensions, those ridges appeared to be level with the ground— until
you had spent a day looking at everything you had as if they were alien
artifacts because you couldn't help yourself, until you enlarged it and
refined it and squinted at it for hours.
Then you saw it was not level with the ground, that the ring was, in
fact, sitting well above ground level, and that the "ridges" might be
supports of some kind.
He couldn't be sure, of course. The only way to be sure would be to
fly one of Derek's prize camera drones in there, shine a laser over the
thing, and make a holograph of it. But close study of anything on
Venera involved other people—assistants and their supervisors, Derek
as the drone keeper; Helen, who had to know what was going on at all
times. Ben did not
want anyone,
anyone, else involved in this yet. Anyone on
Venera anyway.
What Ben knew currently was that this object was approximately 1.3
kilometers across and that it had been there somewhere between 40 and
170 years. The
Magellan probe sent up in the 1990s hadn't
seen it, but the
Francis Drake had, and the
Francis Drake
went up just as the first plates of Venera were being bolted together.
So never mind where the Discovery with its three little holes in the
ground came from. Where did this…
thing come from?
But no one was looking at it, except him. Derek's complete
nonrecognition had told him that. If someone else had been checking out
this spot or this object, Derek would have confirmed it. Everyone else
was looking in the ground for more holes. No one had looked up.
Ben's first thought had been to rush to Helen with this, but he'd
hesitated. He told himself that it was just because he wanted to be
sure. He didn't want to speak before he had the facts.
But that wasn't it, and even as he was rationalizing his actions at
three in the morning, he knew that.
Ben slumped backward and ran his hand over his scalp, scrubbing the
gray bristles that were all that was left of his hair. Male pattern
baldness he'd never bothered to get corrected. He hated med-trips when
they were necessary, never mind the idea of getting stuck in one of the
capsules for cosmetic touch-ups.
He'd had a full head of chestnut hair at Bradbury. He'd been so
young. Ben chuckled to himself.
God, when did twenty-seven get to
be young?
He'd taken his own sweet time getting through college. Some of his
friends joked he was in on the "eternity program." Ben replied he was
just looking for something to get excited about. Comparative
planetology, with its possibilities for exploration and discovery, had
come close to filling the bill.
Then he went to Bradbury for his post-doc work and he found the real
thing.
Theodore Fuller was just picking up steam when Ben arrived. No one
on Earth took him seriously, but in the colony itself, that was
another story. The stream was full of his words and of people talking
about them.
Ben had arrived at Arestech, Inc., to set up shop in their lab and
run their surveyors with every intention of ignoring Fuller's message.
But he couldn't help hearing. To his surprise, Fuller didn't talk about
the good old days of the nation states, like most people who had grief
with the U.N. did. He didn't talk about the past at all. Instead he
talked with enthusiasm and delight about the present—how modern
technology had finally made possible a truly free flow of information,
information available to each and every human being no matter who they
were, no matter where they were. Information made it possible for
everyone to control their own lives completely in a way that had never
been possible before. It could bring them into contact with whomever
and whatever they needed. They could pick and choose what their lives
held. There was no more need for middlemen or for central government.
After all, what did governments do? Provide security? There were no
more nations to wage war on each other. Personal security could be
provided by electronics or a private company, depending on the needs
and desires of the individual. The government regulated commerce? Why?
The market, like nature, could take care of itself and had for a long
time now. When was the last real economic collapse? Late twenty-first
century, wasn't it? Before the stream was truly established.
How about rule of law? Employment for lawyers and bureaucrats
mostly. A person who felt unjustly treated could seek satisfaction in
courts run on the same principles as any other business. The ones in
which the arbitration and settlement procedures were seen as just and
fair would have the most subscribers and work with the greatest number
of private security companies. Those who didn't like the justice of one
system could subscribe to another which they read about and evaluated
in-stream.
The central government did not need to exist. It was an idea from
previous centuries. It was like the great North American weed called
kudzu. It had invaded so long ago no one remembered where it came
from. They just knew it was there, and they spent a lot of time,
effort,
and money dealing with it because no one knew how to get rid of it. No,
because no one was ready to do what was necessary to get rid of it.
Well, the good news was that dealing with the U.N. was a lot easier
than dealing with kudzu. All you had to do to get rid of government was
say no. Simple. Direct. Say no, show the bureaucrats the nearest ship
out, and get on with your life. Your life, your money, your future.
Yours. No one to say who could and could not build on the planets, no
endless rounds of licensing for ships and shipping, no one to hedge or
ban scientific research that frightened them, no one to ever again
supervise bloodbaths like the U.S. Disarmament.
Ben had had no blaze-of-light revelation. He'd started reading
because he almost couldn't help himself. Fuller and Fuller's ideas were
all anybody talked about. He had to find out for himself whether they
would work or not.
The answer shocked and scared him. It could work. The free flow of
information was the key, just as Fuller said. The U.N. had been, in
some ways, a necessary stage to eliminate the barriers imposed by
nation states and national currency. But now that it had nothing
external to fight against, it had turned around, like all powerful
governments had throughout history, and started to feed on its own, and
people put up with it because they couldn't see any way past it.
Bradbury and its people could show them. Bradbury could push the
U.N. out the door and thrive. When they did, the rest of the worlds
would see that it could be done, and done safely and quickly. It would
start with Mars, out on the frontier, but it would spread all the way
back down to Mother Earth herself.
It should have worked, but they moved too fast. Fuller got bad
advice, or maybe he just got overconfident, but they overestimated the
number of their followers in Bradbury. Too many people just stood
around and did nothing. Too many other people actively tried to
undermine the revolution and were judged dangerous to the
implementation of the new system. Transporting all the dissenters back
to Earth turned out to be a bigger problem than had been anticipated.
During the process of transportation, someone got sloppy and didn't run
safety checks on all the ships that carried the dissenters away.
Then there were the ones who misunderstood what was happening and
decided to take charge in their own way before the security systems
could be established. Revenge had overwhelmed the fragile court
corporations.
None of that changed the basic principles. Fuller's ideas still
held. But twenty years had passed and no one else had found the time or
the place to put them into practice.
Until now.
Ben stared at the clouds displayed on his view screen. They billowed
and boiled, filling the world outside. Even after so long, they could
still be awe inspiring.
When he'd first stood inside the Discovery, his thoughts had tumbled
over each other, almost too fast for him to follow. Awe, fear, wonder,
humility, and then, slowly, almost shamefully, came the idea that he
might be able to use this great thing that had happened. This might be
the catalyst for the shift in thinking that would be needed to finish
what Ted Fuller had started.
The more he thought, the more he saw and uncovered on his own, the
more certain he became. This was it. It just had to be managed, that
was all. Not suppressed, not lied about, just managed. Everything
could be made to work out for the best for all the worlds, including
Venus, if they just moved carefully.
Well? He tapped his fingers restlessly against his thigh.
If
you're going to do it, do it. If not, put your file away and go get
dressed up for the yewners.
Ben leaned forward and jacked the case into the table. He set up a
quick search code, attached his best encryption to it, and dropped it
into the queue for the next com burst to Earth. Then he got up to shave
and change for the reception.
One of the features of the stream that few people bothered to take
notice of was that if you constructed your packet correctly, you did
not actually have to store your information anywhere. So many
different, completely untended machines were constantly receiving and
rerouting data that it was possible to keep a packet bouncing between
them. Ben had several packets that had been flying from relay to relay
for twenty years now. He'd lost three to badly timed hardware upgrades
that he'd failed to get wind of, but other than that, his most secret
information bounced happily around the solar system, untraceable, not
only because of its encryptions, but because it seldom landed anywhere
long enough for any one machine to make a complete record of its
contents.
The disadvantage of this was that it took awhile to find the packet,
once you did go looking for it.
Ben returned to his case, clean shaven and dressed in tunic and
trousers of a suitably conservative blue-gray. A matching cap with
black beading covered his head. He checked the screen display.
Success.
His searcher had recovered the packet in one of the repeater relays
between Earth and the Moon and had rerouted it back to Venus. Ben
accessed his four-tier decryption key and added the password.
The packet opened to display the face of an aging man with dark
hair, pale skin, a suggestion of a beard, and mud-brown eyes under
heavy brows. His name was Paul Mabrey. He had assorted degrees from
assorted universities. He worked as a risk assessor for various small
companies, spending his time traveling from colony to colony, mostly on
Mars, looking at new market niches and good suppliers. He took
med-trips and vacations back on Mother Earth regularly but not
excessively. He had been in Bradbury during the rebellion, and while it
was felt that he had some sympathies toward Fuller's faction,
surveillance on him had been turned off over fifteen years ago
because he never did anything remotely suspicious.
He was, in fact, the man Ben used to be.
Once upon a time, Ben, then called Paul Mabrey, had been dismissed
by the yewners who had taken over Bradbury as being of little
consequence. They did, however, post automatic surveillance over him,
as they did every rebel, just in case. For three years, Paul behaved
himself meekly, like a good defeated puppy. He watched his friends
jailed, watched Fuller hauled back to Earth for trial and
incarceration. He watched the yewners take up posts on every street
corner and randomly search the passersby. He watched the taxes go up
and the licenses go down and travel get restricted. He sat in his
apartment at night and hated himself because there was nothing he could
do, not now, not ever again, because the yewners would never really
take their eyes off him. The free flow of information that Fuller had
touted as the route to the future would make it impossible for him to
hide.
He had one thing left to him. The yewners had not quite uncovered
the extent of what Paul had done for Fuller. He'd specialized in
helping make clip-outs—in-stream ghosts of people who wound up on
various payrolls and mailing lists and who, eventually, wound up with
various levels of access and permission to various segments of the
communications networks. When the uprising came, those clip-outs gave
the software corruption teams that Paul was a part of a handle on the
U.N. networks, which he used to shut them down.
Minor stuff, really, a low-level hacker trick.
But what he labored over at night, almost every night, was not. It
was researched and tested, a little bit here, a little bit there. It
was years of learning under Fuller's best, a few minor bribes, a couple
of slow, painful system break-ins, and a whole lot of patience.
Then, Paul received notice that his surveillance period was up and
he was declared rehabilitated. Good luck to you, Mr. Mabrey.
Paul, grimly satisfied, had closed the letter and gone in-stream to
request permission politely to travel to Giant Leap on business. The
yewner bureaucrat on the other end was in a benevolent mood that day
and let him go.
Two weeks later, Paul Mabrey left for Luna. He arrived at Giant Leap
and stayed for three months, working on various consulting jobs and
contracts. Then—according to all available records, anyway—Paul Mabrey
went home.
That same day, a man named Bennet Godwin, who had— according to all
available records—arrived in Giant Leap on Luna from the Republic of
Manhattan space port, got a job as a geologist for Dorson Mines, Inc.
No one knew how many clip-outs floated around the stream.
Usually they were used by people wishing to perpetrate some kind of
fraud. They were vague constructs, tied to a few vital records and
easily torn apart or scared away by semidetermined scrutiny.
A very few were like Paul, who sat in-stream and stared at Ben out
of eyes that could have been his own. Paul had been nurtured and cared
for. He had aged as Ben had aged. He had subscriptions to the major
news services and joined in-stream discussions on various items of
interest. He had credit accounts, and he used them. He drew pay from
companies he consulted for. He vacationed, theatered, and kept
apartments in Giant Leap and Burroughs. He even had personal contact
codes, which a simulation would answer and alert Ben when they were
used.
Now, it was time for Paul to come back to life. Paul was going to
get hold of some very interesting information and pass it along to a
few old associates. Paul still had a few tricks up his sleeve to keep
the yewners from noticing he'd revived some acquaintances that were
still, after all those years, under surveillance and travel
restrictions.
Paul still had a chance to prove he was not useless.
Ben, heedless of the time, hunched over his briefcase and started
typing.
* * *
"… with mutual cooperation and free exchange of ideas we will
together unravel this, the greatest of human mysteries."
Vee applauded politely, along with the rest of the gathering. Dr.
Failia smiled and stepped out from behind the podium, shifting
immediately from solemn speech-giver to smiling
greeter-of-friends-and-strangers. Vee found herself grinning. The
speeches had been well delivered and short, the food was good, and the
view… the view was stunning.
Vee hadn't stood in Venera's observation hall for eight years. She
had forgotten the impact of being surrounded by the huge, constantly
shifting landscapes of gray, white, and gold created by the clouds.
Observation Hall was ringed, from the white floor to domed ceiling,
with a seamless window of industrial quartz,
so it was
possible to stand and stare until you felt as if you were alone and
exposed in the midst of that boiling alien mist.
Not that that's going to happen tonight. Vee felt her mouth
quirk up.
The place is way too full.
A couple of hundred Venerans plus the investigative team
circumnavigated around tables loaded with appropriate predinner
snacks
and beverages. Stykos and Wray, camera bands firmly in place, flanked
the tall dark woman who Vee vaguely remembered was head of
meteorology. Lindi Manzur stood in front of the window, a little too
close to Troy Peachman, who was gesturing grandly as he expounded about
something. Vee smiled softly and turned away from their private moment.
Everyone in the gathering had made an effort to show some gold or
silk. Vee herself had been torn between wanting to put on a good show
for the cameras and not wanting to break the
conservative veneer she'd been carefully cultivating during the entire
week-and-a-half flight up here.
In the end, she'd selected a green-and-gold paneled skirt, with a
green jacket trimmed with gold piping and an abbreviated gold turban
with a green veil falling down behind to cover her
unbound hair. It looked good enough to make the story cut, but not so
outrageous as to offend academic sensibility.
Apparently, however, she was not circulating enough. Out of the
corner of her eye, Vee saw Dr. Failia making a beeline for her. "Good
evening, Dr. Hatch. Thank you for coming." Vee shook her hand. "I'm
sorry I'm late, Dr. Failia. I'd forgotten just how big Venera is."
"After a week on a ship, it can take some getting used to, yes." Dr.
Failia nodded sympathetically. "Tell me, did you have a
chance to review the visuals we've taken of the Discovery?"
"Yes, in
between learning how not to get squashed and burned when we go down."
Vee smiled to let Dr. Failia know she
was kidding.
Dr. Failia laughed once, politely. "And did you form any initial
plans as to how to proceed?"
"Yes. The first thing we need is a spectrographic analysis, to find
out what kind of laser we're dealing with." Vee warmed as she talked,
excited about the possibilities her research might open. "Then, I
think…" Vee's gaze strayed over Dr. Failia's shoulder. Michael Lum, the
security chief, waited
two
steps behind her.
Dr. Failia followed her gaze. "Excuse me, Dr. Hatch," she said
hastily. "Please, help yourself to the buffet."
Dr. Failia crossed quickly to Lum, who murmured something in her
ear. They both looked up at the entranceway, just as Bennet Godwin
walked through. Failia frowned and strode over to the latecomer.
Uh-oh, Vee turned away and skirted the conversational knots
as she made her way to the food tables.
Somebody's getting
demerits for tardiness.
The buffet was a good spread, with the Western traditional cheese
and crackers, but also with couscous, falafel, and various flat
breads, triangles of toast with what looked like mushroom pate,
miniature empenadas, and some blue pastry things that Vee, with all her
experience of artsy receptions, couldn't put a name to. Glasses of wine
flanked bowls of ginger and fruit punches, as well as silver samovars
of tea and coffee.
Vee was debating over what to sample next, when she felt someone
walking up to her side.
"Excuse me. Are you Dr. Veronica Hatch?"
Vee turned to face a sparsely built man with ruddy skin and tawny
eyes. He was only a few centimeters taller than she was. He wore a blue
baseball cap over his thick brown hair instead of a more fashionable
brimless cap or half-turban. It made a pleasantly rebellious contrast
to his formal gold-and-black tunic and trousers. Vee decided she liked
him.
"That's what they tell me," Vee answered cheerfully and extended
her hand. "Hi."
"Hi." He shook her hand with a good grip, which was also pleasant.
Most people got a look at her long, thin hand and adjusted their
greeting touch to something overly delicate. "I'm Joshua Kenyon. Josh."
Ah. His name rang memory chimes inside Vee and brought up
the titles of several recently surveyed publications. "Vee. I've read
you."
He did not, to his credit, look at all surprised. Dr. Kenyon had
about a gigabyte of published work on tracking particle flow and
interaction in the Venusian atmosphere using realtime laser holography
techniques. Vee's job, before she got her first patent and turned to
experiential holograms, was "time-resolved sequential holographic
particle imaging velocimetry," which was the official way of saying she
took four-dimensional images of particles in dense plasmas. Most people
didn't know she'd done serious lab work. Some refused to believe it.
"Are you going to be leading the research on the laser?" Vee asked,
as she picked up one of the blue pastries. "And do you know what these
are?"
"That's crab rangoon, dyed blue to preserve some of the mystery of
life," said Josh promptly. "And the research on the laser is actually
what I wanted to talk to you about."
"Oh?" Vee arched her eyebrows. "Shall we get out of traffic?"
"Good idea."
Vee paused to collect a small plate of blue things and followed
Josh over to one of the little round tables covered with a white cloth
that always seemed to spring up like mushrooms at these gatherings.
Vee sat and pushed the pastries toward Josh, who shook his head. Vee
took one and nibbled the edge. Yep, crab.
A flash of orange in the clouds caught her eyes. A delicate flurry
of sparks spiraled up through the mist, tiny petals of brightness
scattered through the impenetrable fog.
"Star trails." Vee smiled at the beauty of the small event. "We must
be going over one of the volcanoes."
Josh checked the position readout set in the floor. "Yeah,
Xochiquetzal Mons. It went active, I guess twenty years ago now."
"They're beautiful." As Vee watched, the clouds swallowed the sparks
whole, but a fresh trail swept along the wind as if these new sparks
wanted to follow their friends.
Josh nodded in thoughtful agreement. "Make me nervous, though."
"Why?" Vee cocked her head at him.
A look of frank surprise crossed his face, followed by a sudden
realization. "You didn't get down to the surface last time you were
here, did you?"
"No need." Vee shook her head and nibbled another pastry. I was just
here for the clouds."
Josh took off his cap and smoothed his hair down before relacing
it. His face said he was considering some internal question. Then,
apparently, he got his answer.
"Well," he said, "you met Michael Lum, right?"
Vee nodded. In fact, she could see him through the crowd, pacing
alongside Philip Bowerman talking about whatever spooks and spies
talked about. Vee found herself wondering where Angela Cleary had
gotten to. She did not seem to be in evidence anywhere.
"Michael's a good guy," Josh went on. "He's a v-baby. Born here. His
parents were almost the first people on the station when Helen opened
it up. His father, Kyle Lum, was a climatologist, and he was out doing
some surveys of the lower cloud layer when the scarab ran into a star
trail." He stared out at the sparks as they danced away into the
clouds. "Sheered off one if the wing struts, dropped the entire scarab.
They got their parachute out, fortunately, but they slammed into the
side of one of the mountains. The rescue team dropped after them,
within minutes, but when they got there"—Josh shook his lead—"the hull
had ruptured. There was nothing left."
Vee glanced back at the fading sparks. A shiver ran up her spine. "I
think I'm glad I didn't know that when I was photographing them."
Josh laughed a little. "Sorry. Not the best subject of
conversation, especially with a newcomer."
Vee waved his words away. "Don't worry about me. So"—she brushed a
few crumbs from her skirt—"what about the laser?"
Josh took off his cap again and smoothed his hair down once
more. "It's not actually about the laser," he said. "It's about getting
a look at it."
"How so?"
He blew out a sigh that puffed his cheeks, put his cap back on,
and looked down at his fingertips as if to see his words written there.
Vee waited.
"I work on Venera on a regular basis. I do my stints here for about
nine months at a time and then go home and do the lecture and paper
routine. I was on Earth when the news about the Discovery dropped into
the stream. When I heard about the laser, I didn't even think about it.
I just got myself onto the next ship back. I assumed…" He shook his
head and started again. "I assumed, since I was known and had a
longtime affiliation with Venera, that I'd be able to get on the short
list for a look at the thing, maybe even a chance to help in the
analysis." He lifted his gaze. "But, no, that's not the way this is
going to play. The laser is your territory for now, they're telling me.
After that, maybe we'll see, but in the meantime, it's just you."
"I see," said Vee, and she really thought she did. "And you think I
can get you a piece of this?"
"I don't know," he admitted. "But it seemed worth a shot."
"Why the rush?" she asked breezily. "It'll be there after I'm done
with it."
The look he gave her indicated his estimation of her mental acuity
had just taken a header. Vee grinned. "Got it. You want to see what the
aliens left too."
"Don't get me wrong, I love my work." He tugged on his cap's brim.
"I always wanted to be out in space, but there are days when I'm very
aware that I'm really just a glorified weatherman." His eyes grew
distant. "This is the stuff we've forgotten to dream about."
Vee felt her grin widen.
Joshua Kenyon, you're a romantic! I
thought they'd put the last of your kind into zoos. "I don't see
how there could be any problem with it. It's not as if…" She cut
herself off but glanced around the room. There was Troy, glad-handing
yet another patient Veneran with Lindi trailing behind him. There was
Julia at the buffet, being photographed by Terry, and there was Robert,
staring straight at her while Isaac seemed to be occupied in keeping as
many bodies between him and that window as possible.
"As if?" asked Josh.
One corner of Vee's mouth turned up. "As if they've overloaded us
with skilled workers. And I include myself in that." She slumped
backwards and stared at her plate with its blue bits of pastry. "I
swear, I don't know what they were thinking when they picked this
bunch."
Josh looked at her carefully. "You really want to know?"
Vee thought about it for a minute. "Yes," she said.
Josh sighed, lifted his cap, smoothed his hair down, and replaced
it. "Because you're harmless."
"What?" Vee straightened up slowly, uncertain that she'd really
heard those words.
"I talked to some of the other atmosphere people about the U.N.
team. I was wondering the same thing. Turns out that Grandma Helen
pulled a whole set of strings to make sure whoever the U.N. sent up
wouldn't be able to do much in the way of actual investigation. She
wanted all the glory, and all the publications and the money, to go to
Venerans."
Vee's face flushed. Anger gathered in the back of her mind. The real
work to the Venerans. That she understood. But there was plenty to go
around. There had to be. Wanted to get a team that couldn't do much…
brought her up here not because they respected her skills, but because
they suspected she lacked them. Just another pretty popularizer. Just
another stupid face.
Vee's jaw clamped down so hard her teeth started to ache. She stood.
"Vee…" began Josh. "I'm sorry. I shouldn't have—"
"Don't worry about it," she said without looking at him. Her gaze
swept the room until it fastened on Helen Failia, who didn't think she
knew enough. Who didn't think she could do this job and had her
handpicked because of that.
Vee strode across the room, barely seeing where she was going.
Slow down, Vee. Slow down! This is not going to do anyone any
good, especially you. She stopped in her tracks. Her chest had
tightened, and she was breathing way too hard.
Stop and think what
you're doing. You throw a fit now, and you'll just be proving their
point.
In the back of her mind she heard Rosa's voice: "Be careful what you
pretend to be."
Vee turned away from Failia, hoping the woman hadn't noticed her
angry approach and abrupt change of plan. Evidently not. No one came up
to her as she found an empty table and sat. The cameras were occupied;
so were the other U.N. investigators, with each other and the cameras
and with the whole wide cloudscape, and not one of them knew why they
were here.
I'm gonna kill her. Vee bowed her head into one hand.
I'm
gonna kill myself. What was I thinking? I actually believed—
"Dr. Hatch?"
Vee looked up. Terry Wray stood over her.
"If this little tableau turns up in-stream—"
"It's off, it's off," Terry reassured her, lifting her hair out of
the way so Vee could see the band was well and truly dark. "But are you
okay?"
Vee pushed her veil back over her shoulders. "Not right now, but I
will be."
"Okay, good." Terry smiled. "You're one of my star attractions. I'd
hate it if you stomped off or anything."
"Oh no," replied Vee sweetly. "They're not getting rid of me that
easily." A thought struck her. "Terry, can I use you shamelessly for a
minute?"
A whole variety of expressions crossed Terry's face from amused
curiosity to interested calculation. "As long as we stay in public,
sure."
Vee squeezed her hand. "Turn that thing back on, and when I start
talking to Helen Failia, come up and start paying attention, okay?"
Terry looked down her snub nose at Vee. "Okay, but I get an extra
interview for this."
"Done."
Vee rose, pasted her best sunny, vapid smile on her face, and
slipped over to where Helen Failia stood talking with Philip. Vee
waited for a pause in the conversation and then strode forward, timing
her attack.
One, two, three, she pauses for breath and…
"Dr. Failia, good, you're still here."
Helen turned toward Vee, all solicitous. "What can I do for you, Dr.
Hatch?"
"Well"—Vee folded her hands in front of her—"I hadn't realized Dr.
Kenyon was going to be on base. I thought he was still on his Earthside
swing."
Helen's expression went slightly rigid as she held back some
impolite emotion. "Ah, you know Dr. Kenyon?"
"By reputation. I've read his work." She glanced across at Josh and
let her smile grow even happier. "I'm so glad he'll be with us. I don't
mind telling you." Vee leaned forward confidentially. As she did, she
saw Terry coming into range on the very edge of Helen's field of view.
"I'm excited about this opportunity, but my lab work was all done a
long time ago. Without someone who's in better practice, I'm afraid I
might make a mess of things." She laughed lightly. Dr. Failia looked
gratifyingly disconcerted.
"I'm sorry." Vee pulled back and blinked rapidly a few times. "He
is
coming down with us, isn't he? His help would be utterly invaluable to
me."
Come on, there's the camera, you see it. You aren't going to
admit you're sending down a half-assed team, are you?
Helen Failia didn't even hesitate. "If you feel Dr. Kenyon can be of
assistance, of course he will be included in the investigative
roster." Only a slight darkness in Helen's clear eyes told Vee that she
did not think this was an excellent idea.
"Marvelous." Vee beamed. "Thank you so much." For good measure, she
shook Dr. Failia's hand before she turned away and strode out the door.
"That was pretty shameless," murmured Terry behind her.
"You should see me when I'm trying." Vee turned, and her smile was
feral. "Thanks. Contact me when you're ready for that interview."
"Never fear." Terry's face grew thoughtful. "You should be careful
about getting to like this too much, Dr. Hatch."
"You know, I've got a friend back home who says the same thing." Vee
felt her face soften. "You're probably both right too."
Terry gave her one more thoughtful look.
Sizing me up,
thought Vee.
For what? "I've got to get back," was all Terry
said. "See you tomorrow."
"Bye."
Vee let her go and started walking down the corridor, suddenly both
tired and frustrated.
Hope this doesn't get you in any kind of
trouble, Josh, but I was not, I was not,
going to let her get
way with this. You and I. She paused before the elevator.
We're
going to make something of this, and Dr. Failia can just sit back and
watch us.
* * *
Kevin Cusmanos hated accounting. Especially late at night after an
evening spent smiling and chatting with a glass of wine in his hand
when what he really wanted was a beer. He hated staring at the rows of
figures in their little boxes and checking them on a split screen
against the individual logs where everyone was supposed to enter all
their individual orders and purchases but never did.
However, it came with the job. So he sat in his office with coffee
steaming in a plastic mug, ancient Afro-Country playing over the
speakers, and a burgeoning dislike of Shelby Kray, one of the new guys
who could not seem to get the hang of keeping track of his money.
The door, which Kevin never locked, swished open. Kevin glanced up
briefly and saw Derek framed in the threshold.
"Hey," said Derek, a little tentatively. He still had his party
clothes on—black slacks, red tunic, and cap.
Now's not a great time, little brother, thought Kevin, but
all he said was, "Hey."
Derek wandered in and dropped down on the stiff sofa Kevin kept for
visitors. Most offices had chairs, but Kevin insisted that it was
traditional for a mechanic to have a rundown sofa, so a sofa he would
have.
"So, when they dropping you down?" asked Derek.
Kevin eyed him, trying to see what he had really come in for.
"Couple of days. Gotta get at least some training into the tourists
first."
Derek tapped the back of the sofa, sort of in time with the music.
"They're going to be sending Josh Kenyon down with you. Did you know
that?"
"Yes." Derek still wouldn't look at him. "Ben let me know at the end
of the reception. Said it was Dr. Hatch's idea."
Come on, Derek,
say it, whatever it is. It's just you and me here.
But Derek just changed the subject again. "And you're taking Adrian
with you?"
Kevin sighed and looked back down at his screen. "Yeah, Adrian will
be with me in Scarab Five. Charlotte and Bailey are taking down
Fourteen." The problem, he decided was that Shelby wasn't used to the
idea of human backup for computer records. He'd come from a fully
automated and fully profit-making environment.
Just have to take him aside and teach him the importance of
counting those beans…
"I don't envy you, Kevin."
"I don't envy me either," muttered Kevin before he realized Derek
was not talking about correcting Shelby's accounting behaviors.
"You expecting problems?" Derek was working hard to make the
question sound like idle curiosity, and he was failing miserably.
At least now I know what you wanted to talk about. Kevin
leaned back with a sigh. "Actually, Derek, I am, and you should be too."
Derek shook his head and dropped his gaze, smiling a little, it was
an old gesture, a little-boy gesture Derek had picked up when trying to
put one over on teachers, and principals, and pretty girls. "Well,
we'll just all have to do our best, won't we?" he said brightly. When
he looked up again, all he saw was Kevin's blank expression.
"I guess so," Kevin ran one finger along the edge of the desk. "Dr.
Meyer talk to you lately?"
Derek nodded, relaxed. "Yeah. She doesn't mind the pause, he's got
lots of new data to correlate, she says, especially with the biologist
they sent up."
Kevin met his brother's eyes. He saw all the uneasy trust in them,
all the shaky confidence that everything was still going to be okay
because not only was one of the big shots in on this, his big brother
was too. A thousand things jumped into Kevin's mind all at once, all of
them needing to be said. Hell, begging to be said.
Derek slapped his hands down on his thighs and got to his feet.
"Derek…" started Kevin.
"What?"
And if I say anything, then what? He won't stop. I'll just scare
him, and if he's scared, he'll give it all away. It's not just Michael
we're dealing with now. We've got the U.N. here. "Never mind."
Derek shrugged. "Okay, then. I won't."
"Okay."
Derek walked back out into the main hangar. The door swished shut
behind him. Kevin rested his elbows on his desk and stared at the
screen. The rows of dollar figures and time signatures made no sense.
They were just numbers, tidy sets of numbers that didn't mean anything
at all.
What had ever convinced him that they did?
* * *
"We are ready to make the recording, Ms. Cleary," called Phil
through the open door.
"Thank you, Mr. Bowerman," Angela shouted back. "I'll be right
there."
Philip and Angela had requested adjoining suites on the grounds that
they'd have to be doing a lot of screen work together and they didn't
want to have to monopolize a conference room. Angela wasn't entirely
sure Dr. Failia believed them, but she wasn't sure she cared either.
Angela pulled out a chair from under Phil's dining table and
swiveled it to face the wall screen. She sat down and flattened her
screen roll on her lap. As she did, Phil pressed the Record key and
started talking to the wall screen.
"Good evening, Mr. Hourani. This is preliminary report you asked
for. We've had several conversations with Michael Lum, the chief of
security here. He's cooperative, if not terribly enthusiastic. We've
established a monitoring approach on com traffic to and from Mars that
everybody can live with…"
"We're monitoring transmission levels, just for the past six months
as opposed to the previous couple of years, seeing if we get any
jumps," put in Angela.
"We've also checked dips into known stream hot spots," Philip went
on, ticking off a point on the screen roll he had spread out on his
lap. "There's a few Venerans who like to talk separatist politics, but
they're all in the shallows, nothing going on down in the depths." He
glanced at Angela.
Your turn,
he mouthed.
Angela found her next point on her own roll. "Bennet Godwin was
late to the U.N. reception tonight, but we got in a face-to-face. My
impression is that he seems more sour than serious. If he's doing
anything other than being sympathetic to the Bradburyans and being
annoyed at U.N. interference with his schedule pad, he's doing a
tremendous job of hiding it."
"In short, sir," said Philip, "so far so good. There seems to be
nothing going on here but science and general good clean living." He
reached for the Send key, but Angela frowned, and he hesitated.
"The only thing is…" She started and then stopped. "Could be
nothing,
probably was nothing, but if it wasn't…"
Say it Angela. "The
tension around here is thicker than the cloud cover. During the
reception, I felt as if I was in a shark pool, and the sharks were all
waiting for the first hint of blood."
The corner of Philip's mouth quirked up. "You ever dealt with a
research facility that's short on funding before?"
Angela shook her head. "But this one isn't anymore."
"True, but if you've been living in fear for a while, it can take
time to bleed away."
Angela shrugged. "I offer it for what it's worth." She paused. "Mr.
Hourani, you should also know that I will be the one going down to take
a look at the Discovery with the rest of the investigative team. Phil
required me to engage in an obscure North American combat ritual known
as scissors-paper-stone to determine which of us would take the plunge,
and I lost."
Phil's smile was all benevolence. "And on that note…" Philip touched
the Send button, and the record light faded out in time with the glow
of the screen.
Angela dropped the screen roll on the couch and yawned hugely. "Want
something caffeinated?" asked Philip.
She shook her head. "I was on coffee all through dinner; any more
and you'll be peeling me off the ceiling."
"Scotch then? The base distillery's surprisingly good."
She waved him away. "Want the boss to catch me with a glass in my
hand? We're on the clock until he takes us off it."
"Relax, Angie, he can't see you from Earth."
"He'd smell it on the ether." Philip opened his mouth, and she held
up her hand. Philip shrugged and let it go, picking up his notes
instead. They each settled down to their own work and their own
thoughts until the screen chimed again and lit up with an incoming
message.
Mr. Hourani's head and shoulders appeared on the screen. The wall
behind him was completely blank, so he was probably in his own office
rather than one of the conference rooms.
"Good evening, Mr. Bowerman, Ms. Cleary," said Mr. Hourani. They'd
both given him permission to use their first names, but Angela had
never heard him do it. "Thank you for your initial report. Your
compromise on the Venus-Mars communication monitoring is excellent. I
doubt we'll see anything there, but if we do, it would be best if the
Venerans see it too. We are conducting this one in the full blaze of
media jurisprudence. You in particular are being watched. If we make
an accusation we must be very, very certain of our facts or we will be
vilified from one end of the stream to the other." He gave them a
small, ironic smile. "I know. Someone is going to do that anyway, but
I'd prefer it if they were wrong and we were right." Mr. Hourani turned
over a sheet in front of him. "Now, as to Ms. Cleary being the one to
actually visit the Discovery, all I have to say is, given Mr.
Bowerman's fondness for ancient combat rituals, I would have expected
you to be ready for this eventuality." He flashed a look full of his
best mock severity. "I can only hope you will do better next time." His
face softened instantly back into his normal, neutral expression.
"Continue with your good work. I will be very interested in what you
uncover." The connection faded to black.
"Excellent job, Ms. Cleary," said Phil.
"Excellent job, Mr. Bowerman," replied Angela. They shook hands
vigorously. Angela rolled her screen back up and stood. "I've got
training tomorrow morning. You want to get together afterwards and do
an initial rundown on the Mars monitoring?"
"Sounds good." Phil stretched his arms up over his head and let them
swing back down. "Tough going on the EVA stuff?"
Now it was Angela's turn to shrug. "Getting in and out of the suits
is a pain, but other than that…" She shrugged again.
"Actually, I'm kind of looking forward to this. It's not a chance that
comes around every day."
"You're right there. I just"—Phil waved his hands as if looking to
catch hold of the right words—"cannot get excited about going down into
that hellhole."
Angela chuckled and slapped him gently on the shoulder. "Wimp. You
go through space just fine."
"Ah"—Phil held up one finger—"but if the ship springs a leak in
space, chances are you'll have time to do something. One of those
scarabs springs a leak, and you're going to pop like a balloon."
"Actually, I'll flatten and vaporize." She smiled at him. "They
showed us a video. See you at breakfast?"
"You bet."
In her own room, Angela laid her screen roll on the desk. She stared
at it for a moment, trying to understand what was bothering her. So
far, the assignment had been a walk in the park. Everybody, everything,
was as they were supposed to be, with just enough little variations and
surprises to assure her that she was seeing them all accurately. The
underlying tension could easily exist because Venera Base was a colony,
a unique colony in a unique situation to be sure, but a colony all the
same; and colonists did not generally like yewners, with good reason.
From the outside, Venera looked simple, but when you got inside, you
saw it was anything but. It was called a research base, so everyone saw
the scientists and the engineers and seldom got beyond that. But the
majority of the ten thousand people on the base were not scientists.
They were maintenance staff, shopkeepers, teachers, administrators,
farmers, skilled and unskilled workers, children, and what Angie called
"support spouses," people who kept the house and raised the children
and did the business of living so the other spouse could take care of
the other kinds of business. As on any isolated base, people were
largely defined by what work they did. Your work determined who you
socialized with, where you lived, how you were treated in the social
hierarchy—and there was definitely a hierarchy, with the scientists at
the top. She hadn't quite defined the bottom yet. It was somewhere
between the butchers and the farmers.
Not that there were bad neighborhoods here or anything like that.
Grandma Helen would never have permitted it. Everything was clean,
everyone was looked after one way or another. Everyone had some kind
of community to keep them going—villages within the village.
All of which helped explain one of the other things Angie had found.
Some people had spent their life savings and a whole lot of time trying
to get here. It was far more peaceful than Mars and, unlike the Moon,
was uncontrolled by corporate interests. It was also far friendlier
than Earth. There were people who saw this as paradise, and Grandma
Helen as Mother Creation.
All day Angela had talked to people: on the mall, on the education
level, in the food-processing plants, and all day she had heard the
same thing. "Grandma Helen, she's a great woman."
"Grandma Helen, she keeps this place going."
"Grandma Helen knows what she's doing." It was amazing. It was a
little frightening.
But still, there was something. Snippets. Near misses. Hesitations.
She shook her head. She'd tell Phil about it at breakfast tomorrow. One
of the things she liked about her partner and her boss was that they
paid attention to unformed concerns. Maybe together Phil and she could
dig out whatever her subconscious was trying to tell her.
Angela smiled. One thing was for sure. If Venera Base had secrets,
it would not be keeping them for very much longer.
Contents -
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Chapter Six
"My fellow Ca'aed continues to enjoy its health?"
The sad envy in the city's question shivered through T'sha and made
her shift her weight on the kite's perches. Disease and too many
sterile winds had crippled the city of K'est. Pity surged through T'sha
as her kite carried her through the city's body. The supporting bones
shone white around her, as bleached as the corals. The only colors
seemed to be the painted shells, with their sayings and teachings
written in beautiful calligraphy overlaying graduated shades of rose
and lavender.
"Ca'aed has been fortunate," T'sha replied to the city through her
headset. "I have brought Ambassador Z'eth a new cloning of skin cells
that have worked well for us."
"Ah," sighed K'est, "I look forward to receiving them." Although
long illness had given K'est a slight tendency toward self-pity, the
city was not yet dying. Far from it. Everywhere, T'sha passed people
alive with purpose. They tended and studied. They sampled and directed.
In several places, she saw clusters of constructors and their
attendants grafting living tendons onto dead bones and transplanting
coral buds that glowed pink and orange with vibrant life. Although the
winds swirling outside the city were thin, inside its sphere they were
thick with life and nutrition. It was almost as if the engineers had
turned the entire city into a refresher chamber. T'sha felt her skin
expand to take in the richness flowing all around her. All of this life
was the result of Ambassador Z'eth's tireless efforts. Another
ambassador would have given up long ago and indentured her people to
other cities for the best terms she could get. Perhaps she would have
gone so far as to try to grow a village from what little still lived of
her city.
Z'eth, however, soared over her tragedies. It was known that K'est
had suggested that her people disband and allow her to die, but Z'eth
would not hear of it. Instead, she had bargained and bartered for her
city's needs with a zeal that left the most senior of the High Law Meet
in awe. Her city, her people, were not rich and might not ever be
again, but they were alive, and if they were not strong, they were
still proud.
T'sha had to admit Z'eth's call for a private meeting made her
nervous. Z'eth could wring promises from the clouds and the canopy, and
T'sha was beholden to her on several levels. What did Z'eth want from
T'sha? Or, even more important, what did she want from Ca'aed?
Z'eth's embassy lay beneath the city's central temple. The embassy
was a chamber of shell and bone twined with ligaments and synaptic
lace to connect it directly to the major sensory nodes of the city.
What the city felt was transmitted to the embassy without the city even
having to speak. Z'eth could tell by the tone and texture of her
embassy walls how her city fared.
T'sha gave her kite to one of the embassy's few healthy mooring
clamps and presented herself to the portal. It recognized her image
and essence and opened for her.
"I have told the ambassador you are here," said K'est. "She is in
the debating chamber."
"Thank you." T'sha slipped cautiously forward.
The embassy was crowded. So many people rested on the perches and
floated in the air that T'sha could barely find room to glide through
the corridors. T'sha glimpsed tattoos as she wove her way between them.
Some were engineers and teachers, which she had expected, but most
were archivists and trackers.
Of course, not even the city could keep track of all Z'eth's
promises. If there is enough of the city to work complex issues…
T'sha winced at her own thoughts. K'est lived. It would grow strong
again. Z'eth was dedicated and would see it happen.
T'sha laughed softly at herself. Old superstitions. Send a bad
thought out on the wind, and it would land where it began. A
Dessimistic
thought about K'est's health could affect Ca'aed's.
At last, T'sha made her awkward way to the embassy's debating
chamber. The room filled with the scent and taste of people. Words
crowded the air and bumped against T'sha's wings. In the center of it
all hung Z'eth, her posthands clutching a synaptic bundle as she
listened to an engineer, a teacher, and an archivist. For a moment,
T'sha thought she might be taking the pulse of her city as it listened
to the same discussion and weighed the words.
T'sha waited politely in the threshold. Eventually, Z'eth
disengaged herself from her advisers and glided a winding but still
dignified path to the door.
"Good luck, Ambassador T'sha." Z'eth raised her forehands. "I'm
sorry you find such a crush here. We've had a heavy day. K'est is
suffering from a vascular cancer in the upper eastern districts. As you
can imagine, we must work quickly."
The news shook T'sha's bones. "Good luck, Ambassador," she said
hurriedly, even as she touched Z'eth's hands. "Please, allow me to
return some other time. You have too much to do here without—"
Z'eth fanned her words away. "You leave for New Home in two
dodec-hours, do you not?"
"Yes," admitted T'sha, "but—"
"Then my words must touch you now." Z'eth lifted her muzzle, as if
tasting the air to find a quiet space. "Let us go to the refresher. It
is not the place for polite conversation, but—"
"Gladly, Ambassador," T'sha dipped her muzzle.
"Then follow me, if there is room," Z'eth added ruefully.
They made their way through the corridor, sometimes flying,
sometimes picking their way from perch to perch, but at last the
refresher opened for them. T'sha allowed the thick air to surround her.
The circulation pushed her gently from point to point, allowing her own
toxins to disperse while her skin took in what nutrients the room had
to offer. The walls sprouted fresh fruits and other dainties, but T'sha
did not sample any, even though nervousness had emptied her stomachs.
Z'eth let the room float her for a while. It seemed to T'sha her
skin was drinking deeply of quiet as well as nutrition. As T'sha
watched, Z'eth swelled, opening her pores and relaxing her bones.
The moment, however, did not last. Z'eth returned to her normal
size, angling her wings and spreading her crest to hold herself still
against the room's circulating breezes.
"I have been following up the records of your votes, Ambassador,"
she said as T'sha brought herself to a proper distance for
conversation. "You have been lavish with Ca'aed's promises."
T'sha resolved not to drop her gaze or twiddle her postfingers.
"Now is not a good time to narrow our chances of success on the
candidate world." She could not yet bring herself to call it New Home.
D'seun's words still echoed through the High Law Meet. His friends were
many, and they had promises they could call in at a moment's notice.
"Without constant countering, there was still the danger that a vote
might be taken to ignore the New People altogether and simply start
full-scale conversion of the candidate world into New Home."
"Ambassador T'sha," sighed Z'eth, "as one who has represented her
city for a long time, let me warn you—if Ca'aed got sick now, you would
have nothing to save it with."
T'sha lost her balance for a moment and drifted away. Z'eth's words
touched her secret fear. She had not even voiced the worry to Ca'aed
itself, although she suspected Ca'aed knew. "Ca'aed is strong and has
the wisdom of years."
"The past did not help Gaith. We are flying into the nightside,
Ambassador T'sha, and we may not come out." Z'eth dipped her muzzle.
"Especially if we do not have New Home."
"Ambassador." T'sha hesitated. "Did I have your vote only because of
my promises?"
Z'eth swelled. "No." The word was strong against T'sha's skin. "I
believe you are correct. We must understand the New People. We must
know they have no claim on the candidate world. If a feud began, we
could be divided if there were… questions about our right to do as we
do. We cannot be divided."
T'sha felt as if all the air had rushed away from her wings and that
she must fall. "A feud with the New People? How can it even be
contemplated?"
"If we both want the same thing, and we both have justifiable
claims, how can it not be contemplated?" returned Z'eth. "Ambassador, I
know that your mother favored teachers from the temples for your
education, but you are not that naive. We have a severe problem. We
need New Home. We have New Home underneath us. We must be ready to
secure it. We cannot question that."
Even if the New People truly have a legitimate claim?
Ambassador, what are you asking of me? In the next moment T'sha
knew, and the realization tightened her skin and bones. Z'eth wanted
T'sha to go in and study the situation, as mandated by the vote in the
High Law Meet. Then, no matter what she found, Z'eth wanted T'sha to
say that the New People had no legitimate claim to the candidate world.
"Ambassador Z'eth… I cannot promise to give you the answers you
want."
"I know that." Z'eth drifted even closer. The taste and touch of her
words flooded T'sha's senses. "I am not asking you to say anything you
do not see. I am asking you to understand how serious this matter is.
How deeply we need this done. I am asking you to imagine scars on
Ca'aed's hearts and the ancient walls crumbling to dust on the wind
because the life has been bleached out of them. I am asking you to
imagine your city in pain." She paused. "I am asking you to imagine
what I have been through with K'est."
Shame and confusion shriveled T'sha. Already Ca'aed was afraid, a
fact that never left her, even though her city had never spoken to her
of it but that once. What if… ?
"I have never underestimated the dangers," said T'sha, uncertain
whether she was trying to reassure Z'eth or herself.
"I think you have, Ambassador," said Z'eth, cutting her off. "I am
sorry, but I believe what I say to be the truth. You are young, you are
rich, and you have all the Teachings behind you. I have only my
crippled city and my people promised down to their grandchildren."
T'sha clamped her muzzle shut. If she tried to speak now, she would
only spurt and sputter like a nervous child. Even so, she could not
believe what filled the air between them. Ambassador Z'eth wanted her
to discover that the New People had no legitimate claim to the
candidate world so that if those New People wished to begin a feud over
the world, the People themselves would not even consider that the New
People's cause might be legitimate.
Z'eth asked for this without facts, without sight or taste or any
other concrete knowledge.
She asked T'sha to tell this heinous lie because she, Z'eth, feared
for her city.
No, no, that's not all, T'sha tried to banish the thought.
There
is more to it than that. She fears for her city's people, for all of us.
But even if Z'eth only feared for her city, surely that was fear
enough. T'sha tried to imagine Ca'aed as ill as K'est. What would she
do? What would she not do?
And she owed Z'eth heavily for her support. Without her, T'sha would
not be going to the candidate world at all.
But what was the point of T'sha going to question D'seun's work if
she took the answers with her?
T'sha tensed her bones. "I will remember the touch of your words,"
she said. "I feel them keenly. They will not fall away from me in the
winds of the candidate world."
"Thank you, Ambassador," said Z'eth gravely. "That is all the
promise I ask."
Thank you, Ambassador, for that is all the promise I can give.
"Is there anything else we must discuss? As you said, I must leave
soon, and I still have so much to settle with Ca'aed and its
caretakers."
Z'eth dipped her muzzle. "Care for your city, Ambassador. May it
stay strong for your return."
They wished each other luck and parted, Z'eth to find her advisers,
and T'sha to find her kite.
What T'sha could not find again was her calm. As her kite flew her
home, T'sha turned Z'eth's words over and over again, searching for
comfort, or at least a kinder interpretation in them.
A feud with the New People. It was not something she had even
considered. If the New People had any kind of claim on the candidate
world, surely, the People themselves would simply leave. Life served
life. Life spread life. Sane and balanced life did not spend itself in
useless contest. It found its own niche and filled it to the fullest.
The People were sane and balanced and would not feud with the New
People.
But what if the New People feud with us?
All of T'sha's bones contracted abruptly at the thought.
No.
She shook herself.
It could not happen. There are things which
must be true for all sane life. If they have no claim, they cannot
contest our claim. There would be no reason for them to. Z'eth is a
great ambassador, but perhaps she has been fighting too long for the
life of her city.
Not that she is growing insane, T'sha added to herself
hastily.
But perhaps her focus has narrowed.
That was a good enough thought that T'sha could pretend to be
content with it. But even so, Z'eth's words about a sudden illness
touching Ca'aed left a nagging fear. Almost instinctively, T'sha
ordered her headset to call Ca'aed.
"Good luck, Ambassador," came the city's voice. "How went your
meeting with Ambassador Z'eth?"
T'sha deflated. "I will tell you, Ca'aed. I don't know which upset
me more, Z'eth or her city."
Ca'aed murmured sympathetically. "Visiting the sick can be
distressing."
A silence stretched out between them, while T'sha worked up the
courage to ask the question that would not leave her alone. "Ca'aed?"
"Yes, T'sha?"
T'sha deflated even further, as if the weight of her thoughts
pressed down on her. "You said… you said you were afraid that you would
suffer, as Gaith suffered—"
"I am afraid, T'sha. I cannot help it."
"But I may find that the New People have a legitimate claim on the
candidate world. What then?"
Ca'aed was silent for a long moment. When it did speak, the words
came slowly, as if the city had to drag them out one at a time. "If
they live in the world, if they spread life and help life, and still
their life and ours cannot live together sanely, I believe we must then
find another world."
Love welled up out of T'sha's soul. She did not question her city's
words. If the words were not completely true, she did not want to know.
She wanted only to believe. While she had Ca'aed with her, she could do
anything and needed no other ally.
As Ca'aed's sphere came into view, their talk turned to the
provisions made for T'sha's absence. Together they reviewed the
promises of authority and caretaking and agreed to their wording.
Ca'aed reported it was getting on well with Ta'teth, the newly selected
deputy ambassador, but that Ta'teth's sudden elevation still made him
nervous.
T'sha couldn't blame him. She knew what it was to sit cloistered in
a waiting room while all the Kan Ca'aed considered your skills, your
family, the promises you had made and accepted, and told the pollers
who went from compound to compound whether they believed you were
worthy of their trust. And this was before the question was even
officially put to Ca'aed itself.
"He will calm down soon, I believe," said Ca'aed. "Wait. Ah. Your
parents speak to me and ask me to remind you that you agreed to stop by
your home and talk about marriage promises."
"Do they?" T'sha clacked her teeth hard, once.
"You should have your own household."
Indignation swelled T'sha back up to her normal size. "Are those
your words or theirs?"
"Both."
I am surrounded. "You are my city, not my marriage broker."
"You are my citizen as well as my ambassador. I speak for your
welfare. Does your own body not speak to you of children?"
"Frequently."
This is a lovely conversation to be having right
now. It is not a distraction I need.
"Well then?"
"All right, all right." T'sha rattled her wings. "Take me there.
Public affairs must wait for affairs of the home and egg, it would
seem."
"Sometimes, T'sha." A rare flash of humor brightened Ca'aed's voice.
"Sometimes."
Ca'aed spoke to T'sha's kite and took control, guiding it between
the swarm of traffic—kite, wing, and dirigible that always buzzed
about Ca'aed and its wake villages. T'sha's birth family lived near the
top of the city. When she was young, she and her siblings had played
chase, darting in and out of the light portals that made up their
personal ceiling.
The family Br'ei had encouraged a garden around the tendons that
tied their private chambers to the main body of the city. Anemones in
all the colors of life puffed out eggs and pollen that sparkled
brightly in the approaching twilight. T'sha paused in front of the main
door, intending to take time to organize her thoughts, but she
misjudged her distance. The door caught a taste of her and opened.
Her birth parents waited for her in the center of the greeting
room—pale Mother Pa'and who seemed to fill any room with her presence
even when she was contracted down to the size of a child, and brightly
shining Father Ta'ved, who had an aura of calm around him that could
work on T'sha better than ten hours in a refresher. The interlocking
rings of their marriage tattoos still appeared as dark and strong
against their skin as they had when T'sha was a child.
Father Ta'ved's city had fallen to a slow rot, one of the first.
Mother Pa'and's family could not bear the idea of their friends all
falling into an ordinary term of indenture, so they arranged for Ta'ved
to enter into a childbearing marriage with their oldest daughter.
After two children, Ta'ved and Pa'and decided they both liked the
arrangement. Ta'ved liked not having the pressures of his own house to
worry over, and Pa'and found him an excellent father and friend. So,
they renewed the promise. Pa'and even gave Ta'ved the option of
bringing other spouses into the household, but he had never used it.
"Good luck, Mother Pa'and, Father Ta'ved." T'sha rubbed her parents'
muzzles. She noticed, gratefully, that they had decided to leave her
little sisters T'kel and Pa'daid out of this family conversation. T'deu
had probably absented himself.
"Now." T'sha backed just far enough away so she could see their
eyes. "Let me see if I can guess how this will go. Mother Pa'and, you
will wish me the best of luck on my new mission." Mother dipped her
muzzle in acknowledgment. Father clacked his teeth, just a little. "And
you, Father Ta'ved, will mention that this is likely to be the work of
a lifetime. Mother, you will agree with him and say how hard it is to
do the work of a lifetime with no family to support you, to have to
promise constantly and barter for everything that you need instead of
being surrounded by those who are dedicated to helping you because
their future and contentment are tied to yours." T'sha swelled,
spreading her wings to encompass the whole room. "Father will agree
profoundly, and I, so moved by your arguments, will fly instantly to
the marriage broker, pick myself out three husbands and a wife, and
not leave for the candidate world until my entire load of eggs is
thoroughly fertilized." She subsided.
"Am I right?"
Mother clacked her teeth loud and hard, shaking with her amusement.
"You could have gone straight to the marriage broker, Daughter T'sha,
and saved your breath to choose your spouses."
T'sha deflated to her normal size. "Mother, Father." She thrust her
muzzle toward them, pleading. "I promise, when my business on the
candidate world is done, I will graft myself onto the marriage broker
until I have found someone to be madly in love with, someone to sire my
children, and someone to keep my home. Will that satisfy you?"
"Deeply," said Mother Pa'and. "You will never be in a better
position to make those promises than you are now."
T'sha's crest ruffled. "And if we're done predicting my imminent
political death?"
"Daughter T'sha." Father Ta'ved sank just a little. "You know that
is not what we're doing here."
"I know, Father Ta'ved, I know." T'sha brushed her muzzle against
his. "But I have been given so much, both in responsibility and
authority, that to spend time seeking after a household of my own
before I've done my duty by the People and my city… It feels greedy."
Father Ta'ved swelled proudly. "Such a feeling does you great
credit, Daughter T'sha. But children for your family and your city is
not a greedy wish."
T'sha clacked her teeth, both in mirth and utter exasperation.
"Enough! Mother, Father, you have my promises and I have an important
appointment. Can we wish each other luck with full souls and leave all
this for when I return?"
Mother Pa'and rubbed T'sha's muzzle with her own. "Of course,
Daughter. Good luck in all you do."
"Stand by your feelings, Daughter," Father Ta'ved murmured as he
caressed her. "They are sound and alive."
"Thank you, and good luck to you both." T'sha drifted away toward
the portal. "And if, when I return, you have word of someone from a
good family who is interested in perhaps two years of mutual promise to
help us both learn how to set up a house and work within a marriage, I
will not be sorry to hear of them."
Her parents' approval all but radiated off her back as T'sha flew
out the door.
The remainder of her time passed quietly. She met with her newly
selected deputy and found him much as Ca'aed described. The district
speakers were content with his credentials and competence. He would do
well as soon as he had something to do. She checked in with the
indentures working on Gaith and found all there going smoothly, if
slowly, and the quarantines being rigorously maintained.
Back at home, she played with her sisters and chatted about
innocuous things with her brother and his father, pretending nothing
much was happening in any of their lives.
Finally, she soaked herself long and thoroughly in the refresher,
eating until her stomach groaned and her headset reminded her it was
time to leave for the World Portals.
T'sha loaded herself and her tiny caretaker bundle aboard her kite.
It felt her weight and let Ca'aed guide it out into the open air.
"Good luck, Ambassador," said Ca'aed as its portal closed. "I will
miss you."
Sorrow deflated T'sha, although she struggled against it. In the
past few hours, she had been able to forget about Z'eth's words and
about D'seun's formidable support. Now, it all flooded back. "I'll be
back soon, Ca'aed, with only good news."
"I believe you, T'sha," said her city. "I believe in you."
T'sha let those last words warm her all the way to the World Portals.
The portals themselves were not alive. Too much metal was required
in their construction to allow them life and awareness such as the
cities possessed. Instead, the great cagelike complex was maintained
by a veneer of life—scuttling, twiglike constructors, flat stately
securitors, and busy recorders that were all eye and wing.
T'sha reached the gate and was touched briefly by the welcomers,
which identified her and opened the portals. T'sha sent her kite back
to Ca'aed and hesitated, looking through at the tools swarming over the
lifeless struts and conduits. She shivered. At the best of times, T'sha
did not like the World Portals. They made her uneasy, gliding through
a huge cage that was insensible to her presence, unable to care who she
was or what she needed.
"Ambassador T'sha?" A recorder swooped into her line of sight.
"Technician Pe'sen has asked this one to direct you to your portal."
"Proceed."
T'sha followed the recorder along the approved path, staying well
away from the engineers, technicians, and their tools. All around her,
she heard the low, strange hum of mindless machinery. The air tasted of
metal and electricity. Two of T'sha's stomachs turned over, and she
wished she had eaten more lightly.
The cage opened before her, and T'sha saw the seventh portal
stretching out parallel with the canopy. It was a ragged star-burst,
like a huge silver neuron. T'sha picked Pe'sen out from among his
colleagues circling the big, blocky monitor station.
"Technician Pe'sen." T'sha flew past the recorder and touched her
friend's hands. "Good luck. I promise my passage will not damage any of
your children." Pe'sen would go on at length about the difficulty of
growing and training cortices that could adequately translate the
condition of a nonliving entity.
"That's what you say now." He shook his head mournfully. "But I know
you ambassadors. If it can't vote, you don't care for it."
T'sha whistled with mock despair. "I repent, I repent. I have
learned better." Pe'sen clacked his teeth at her. "Are you ready for
me, my friend?"
"Always, Ambassador." Pe'sen glided back diffidently, leaving her
path clear. "If you'll enter the ring, we will send you to New Home."
T'sha tried to keep her posthands from clutching her bundle, even as
she tried to keep her bones relaxed. She was partially successful. She
flew across the vast, open expanse of the ring until she reached the
center. She hovered there, waiting, while Pe'sen and his colleagues
worked their magic.
T'sha didn't understand how the World Portals worked. Pe'sen's
patient explanations of the function of waves and particles, actions
at a distance, and the flux-fold model of nonliving spaces brushed
past her skin and left no impression. In the end, all she really knew
was that Pe'sen understood it and had made it work flawlessly hundreds
of times.
Then why am I ready to bolt from fear?
Through her headset, she heard Pe'sen give the activation command.
The ring sang, a high, keening note. The metalic-electric taste of the
air grew overwhelming. The air below her rippled with pure white light.
T'sha clutched her bundle and drew tightly in on herself. The air
around her bent, brightened, and pulled her down… And then she was not
falling down into brightness but rising up from darkness. Clear air
supported her wings, and T'sha could breathe again and look around
herself.
All she saw was desert. The candidate world was gold and gray in its
twilight. The wind felt firm and familiar under her wings. It was
strong with the scent of acid, gritty with dust, and dense with the
swirling clouds and smoke from the living mountains. For all that, the
wind was sterile. She could smell no life anywhere.
The sterility, though, was not distressing, as it was on Home. Here,
the wind felt clean. They could do anything here, plant anything, breed
anything, spread all the life they needed. New Home, new life, new
hope. Her bones quivered with an excitement that was the last thing
she expected to feel.
"Amazing, isn't it?" D'seun flew from his perch on the edge of the
ring and hovered next to her.
"Yes," she answered, all animosity lost in wonder. T'sha tilted her
wings to rise higher. Below all the winds spread a naked crust laced
with cracks and ravines and double-walled ring valleys. Twilight dulled
its colors underneath her. But ahead, she could see the deepening
darkness of the nightside, and there, the crust glowed more brightly
than she had ever seen on Home. "It truly is amazing."
She banked back to D'seun. He was speaking to the mooring cortex
next to the clamp that held the portal's kite. He turned his muzzle
toward her. "I am getting a signal from the base. They are not far and
are moving slower than windspeed. Shall we go on our own wings?"
"I'd like that." T'sha felt herself swell at the prospect of
traveling through the fresh winds.
"Let us, then." D'seun launched himself onto the wind, sailing
toward the nightside with its blackened air and brightly shining crust.
The twilight they flew through turned the wind a smoky gray.
"When I first came here, I never thought to find anything without
life beautiful," said D'seun. T'sha started at the brush of his words.
"I keep dreaming that because this world in itself is so beautiful, so
balanced, the life we spread will be the same."
A fine sentiment, one T'sha could easily agree with. The wonder of
the place seeped through her skin and settled into her bones, carried
by the willing wind. But she could not afford to let the feelings sink
so deep that she stopped thinking. That was something D'seun might be
counting on.
"The balance will depend on us," she said.
D'seun said nothing in reply. They coasted together in silence.
T'sha tried not to believe that D'seun was plotting strategies in his
own mind, but she did not have much success.
"There is our home." D'seun pointed his muzzle over his right wing.
T'sha followed the angle of his flight.
The base drifted steadily through the thickening twilight, heading
toward the darkness. They were almost fully into night now. The
swirling clouds glowed orange and gold with reflected light, their
wrinkles and grooves turning into black patches of shadow.
"Base One," D'seun spoke into his headset, "this is Ambassador
D'seun, approaching with Ambassador T'sha."
"We are open for you both, Ambassadors." came a vaguely familiar
voice. "Approach as you are ready."
They were now close enough that T'sha could see between the sails.
The outside of the base's shells bristled with antennae and sensors.
Their roots and ligaments created a net around ten or twelve bubble
chambers that reflected the crust's light even more intensely than the
clouds. T'sha had stayed in similar outposts on many of her
engineering journeys when she was part of the teams trying to repair
the canopy.
A windward door stood open for them. T'sha and D'seun let themselves
be swept inside. The door snapped promptly shut, cutting off the wind
and allowing them plenty of time to slow and bank into the main work
chamber.
The company inside that room also felt familiar. Researchers and
engineer clung to their perches or draped across boxes of supplies and
tools, watching their instruments, inscribing their reports, or talking
earnestly. She had worked with such people for most of her life, before
she had decided to make her opinions public.
One engineer, a dark-gold male with a deep-purple crest, climbed
from perch to perch until he stood beside them.
"Welcome back, Ambassador D'seun," he said, and T'sha realized his
was the familiar voice she'd heard on her headset. She scanned his
tattoos quickly. "Welcome, Ambassador T'sha," he said. "I don't
suppose—"
"Actually, I do, Engineer Br'sei." T'sha touched his forehands. "We
worked together on the D'siash survey."
Br'sei whistled agreement. "And I'm glad to be working with you
again. Let me introduce you to the rest of our team…" He hesitated, his
gaze sliding sideways to D'seun. "If that is acceptable, Ambassador."
"As you see fit, Engineer." D'seun settled onto a pair of perches,
letting his wings furl and his body deflate.
But from Br'sei's hesitation, T'sha knew that this was not always
D'seun's sentiment.
She said nothing about it. She followed in Br'sei's wake as he
introduced her to the ten other members of the Seventh Team. She
greeted those she knew by name and skimmed their reports. Wind acidity,
speed, current direction, how the world was layered, the location of
the living mountains and how frequently they erupted. Maps of seeding
plans. Diagrams for new bases, equipment lists, and promises. All the
concerns of a preliminary research base, but the scale was staggering.
To spread life to a whole world. To turn this desert into a vibrant
garden and watch the People take possession, raise that life, and use
it to spread their own life, all their lives, even further. A myriad
of ideas sang inside her, swelling her up as surely as an indrawn
breath.
In that moment, floating there in the still air of the analysis
chamber with all the possibilities of this empty world swirling inside
her, T'sha had to fight to remember there were other issues here.
"What kind of attention are we currently paying to the New People?"
D'seun looked disappointed, as if he expected the marvel of this new
world to overwhelm her strange obsession with the other people. "We
have mapped and timed their satellite flyovers. We arrange not to be
where they are looking." A standard tactic. Stealth was important
during a race to claim a resource. "If they've seen the portal, they
have not made any change in routine to investigate it."
"At the moment, they are spending most of their time on one area of
the crust," Br'sei volunteered. "They seem to have found
something of great interest down there."
T'sha cocked her muzzle toward Br'sei. "Something they can use to
spread their life?"
"We don't know…" said D'seun irritably, "yet."
"They are beginning to spread their machines further out across the
crust," Br'sei went on, sending a disapproving ripple across D'seun's
wings. "Our speculation is they are looking for more of whatever it is
they've found."
T'sha gripped a perch with one of her posthands so she could keep
facing Br'sei. "But have you determined whether or not they've started
to make legitimate use of any resource?"
Br'sei's gaze slid uneasily over her shoulder toward D'seun. She
felt the tension in the air around her and heard the small rustle of
skin and bone as the other engineers shrank or swelled nervously. "They
aren't mining, if that's what you mean. Unless you've determined
there's another legitimate use of the crust."
T'sha's wings rippled. What had passed between Br'sei and D'seun?
She felt a kind of urgency flowing from the engineer, but without words
she could make no sense of it. "They might be planting. They might be
building homes."
"Homes?" repeated D'seun sharply. "Don't be ridiculous. They live in
the clouds."
Slowly, T'sha turned to face him where he swelled on his perches.
"My point is this," she said deliberately as she pulled herself tight.
"We don't know what they're doing. If it is legitimate use, we might
have to change our working plan for seeding New Home."
"You could go and ask them, I suppose," said D'seun, his voice full
of bland sarcasm.
"I wish that I could," said T'sha smoothly. "But the High Law Meet
authorized me only to observe, and I have no doubt you will be all too
happy to report me should I overfly my commission."
They eyed each other, swelling and deflating minutely in their
uneasiness, very aware that they were arguing in front of subordinates
in defiance of good manners and good sense.
T'sha mourned for that one fleeting moment when they were joined in
admiration of this new place. It had been a false promise of easier
times.
Finally, D'seun settled on one size. Some of the belligerence vented
from his body. "I'll be most interested to see your plan for a more
thorough observation and study."
Perhaps he just hopes to keep me out of the way, thought
T'sha and then she realized that was unworthy. D'seun wanted what she
wanted, the birth of New Home. At the moment she was obstructing that.
She swallowed her bitter thought. "I would be willing," she said.
"May I make a call for two or three volunteers?" She looked at Br'sei.
He dipped his muzzle minutely in answer. He'd be willing to help.
"Certainly," said D'seun. "We will grow a chamber for you."
And perhaps this will give me a way to calm my own fears.
Perhaps the New People are doing nothing legitimate. Perhaps we may
take this world without taint of greed. I would like that. I would very
much like that.
But the memory of the tension surrounding the engineers touched her
again. No, the question was not whether something was wrong here, but
what that wrong was and how far it had gone.
T'sha deflated and looked longingly at the silent walls. Already,
she missed Ca'aed
.
Contents -
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Chapter Seven
I am actually doing this. I am going to touch evidence of other
life, of another world.
Raw excitement had stretched Josh Kenyon's mouth into a smile that
felt like it was going to become permanent. He lay in the swaddling
cradle that would serve as his crash-couch for Scarab Five's drop to
the Discovery. It would also be his bed for the next two weeks. All
around him, he heard soft rustles and mutters as his fellow passengers
wriggled in their straps trying to get comfortable. All of them were
from the U.N. team—Julia Lott, the archeologist, Terry Wray, the media
rep, Troy Peachman, who called himself a "comparative culturalist" and
was apparently there to look for any sociological insights and
implications, and, of course, Veronica Hatch.
They were all nervous and fussy, very much a bunch of impatient
tourists. But that was all right. Seeing the Discovery was worth
anything—working his way up as a junior grade maintenance man, begging
Vee for a slot on the team, even getting into Grandma Helen's bad
books, which he had, quite thoroughly.
The morning after the reception, Dr. Failia had called him into the
Throne Room, a place he'd been to only a couple of times before. While
he'd stood awkwardly in front of her desk, she'd reviewed something on
its screen that seemed to absorb her whole attention. At last, he
realized she wasn't going to invite him to sit down. So he sat without
invitation and got ready to wait.
She kept him there in silence for another good five minutes before
she finally looked up to acknowledge his presence.
"Thank you for coming, Josh," she said, with only the barest hint of
politeness in her voice. "I wanted to inform you personally that Dr.
Veronica Hatch of the U.N. investigative team has requested your
presence to help her examine the Discovery's laser." Dr. Failia's
voice was calm but tinged with something unpleasant—suspicion, maybe,
or disapproval. Josh sat there with a stiff smile on his face, torn
between elation and feeling like a guilty child.
"Since you'll have far more experience with EVA's than any other
member of that team, I'm counting on you to take the position of team
leader, to show the others around the Discovery and make sure they do
minimum damage to the site."
"But, Dr. Failia…" Josh spread his hands. Despite the cold look she
gave him, Josh forced himself to continue. "Kevin Cusmanos has a
thousand times more experience than I do. Shouldn't he be going out
with the team?"
"That was the initial plan." Dr. Failia's eyes grew hard. "But we
want as few people down there as possible. Every new bootprint runs the
risk of damaging something priceless. Since you're going, you get to
baby-sit and Kevin gets to do what he is specifically trained
for—supervising the scarab and the essential mechanical support system
for the team."
Josh swallowed. "Yes, of course."
"Thank you, Josh," she said without warmth. "I appreciate your help."
Did she know I talked Vee into this? Or was she just peeved that
one of the yewners monkeyed with her plan? Josh shook his head at
the ceiling. He had no way of knowing. The whole interview had left him
confused. The times he had talked with Dr. Failia before, she had been
businesslike but friendly, quick with a small joke or useful
observation. He'd never seen her so forbidding.
It doesn't matter. You're here. You can worry about the rest of
your life later.
The low ceiling over him held a view screen that was controlled
from down in the pilot's seat. Right now, it showed an image of the
hangar seen through the scarab's main window and
surmounted by the back of Adrian Makepeace's head and shoulders.
"Please make sure the status lights over your couches are all on the
green," Adrian was saying. "We have no flight insurance. Anybody who
doesn't have a green, just holler, and we'll make sure there's nothing
else to holler about. Any non-greens?"
"Going once, going twice…" added Kevin Cusmanos.
Josh reflexively checked the four indicator lights at the bottom of
his screen. All of them shone bright green, indicating he was properly
strapped in.
"They're enjoying themselves, aren't they?" murmured Julia from the
couch next to Vee's.
"I don't think they get many tourists out here," said Vee. Josh
heard her squirm and couldn't blame her. The couches took getting used
to. He also decided not to correct their impressions of what the
pilots thought of them. He'd spoken out loud that once to Vee at the
reception, and she still got an angry gleam in her eye when she had to
talk to Grandma Helen.
"Not many tourists?" muttered Julia. "Not too many people interested
in a dive into Hell? Imagine."
Josh rolled his eyes up to try to get a glimpse of the women. He
could see Veronica's feet, and Julia's. He could also see part of
Julia's hand, which clutched the side of her couch so hard the fabric
bunched up in her grip.
"Are you going to be all right?" asked Vee.
"Eventually, yes," Julia sighed. Josh watched her deliberately relax
her hand. "This is just like being at the top of the thrill vid, you
know? I hate this part."
"It gets easier," volunteered Josh. "Wait until you've done a dozen
or so."
Josh spoke with more confidence than he felt. Most of his work had
to do with atmospheric particle scattering, which could be done from
the comforts of Venera Base and its optics lab. He could count his
trips down to the surface on the fingers of one hand.
"A dozen or so," murmured Julia. "There's something to look forward
to."
"It's the adventure of a lifetime," intoned Troy Peachman from his
couch on Josh's right. "You should be alive to every facet of the
experience."
"Alive is what I'm hoping for."
"We could record you," suggested Terry Wray helpfully. She had the
couch to Julia's left. "That way you could work on your reactions each
drop until you've got the keeper. Something suitably calm, yet
awestruck."
"Next time," answered Julia. "I want a run-through first."
"Always a good idea," said Terry. "I can't tell you how many
disasters I've had to shoot that missed all the dramatic impact just
because the victims wouldn't take a minute to get their responses
right."
"Well then," came Adrian's voice through the intercom, reminding
them all that the speakers were open on both ends. "Let's see if we can
get it right."
"Wing deployed and green at twenty percent inflation. Drop
conditions green. Scarab status is go," said Kevin.
"Ready when you are, Control."
"Ready, Scarab Five," said yet another voice, this one from the
hangar control. "Opening doors."
"See you on the up-trip," said Kevin.
Josh thought he heard Troy breathe something about "falling into
history" but hoped he was wrong.
The view screen's feed switched down to a camera in the scarab's
belly. The desk rolled past underneath them, fast and faster, until it
shot away, leaving a swirl of impenetrable gray cloud.
The scarab fell. As always, Josh's stomach lurched and his body
strained against the straps. His heart flipped over, a purely reflexive
reaction. There was nothing he could do about it but lie there, keep
his eyes on the screen, and concentrate on controlling his breathing.
On our way. They won't call us back now. We're really going to
do this! The smile on his face stretched even wider.
Layers of cloud pressed against the camera. Adrian's voice, again
for the sake of the tourists, droned through the intercom.
"Wing position optimized," said Adrian calmly. "Everybody okay up
there? Just relax and let the couch take care of you. We're at
forty-eight kilometers and looking good."
All at once, the clouds parted. Below them spread the surface of
Venus, as red and wrinkled as anything Mars had to offer. It was
getting closer at a rate that made Josh's heart flip over again.
"Inflating wing," rumbled Kevin. "Wing inflation at fifty percent."
Outside, the ground's approach slowed to a more leisurely pace.
Features began to resolve themselves. Some wrinkles became riverbeds
cut by ancient lava. Others became delicate ripples in the ground,
like furrows plowed by a drunken farmer. The colors on the ground
divided into rust red, burnt orange, and sulfur yellow with streamers
of coal black drifting through them.
"Beautiful," breathed Troy, and this time Josh had to agree with him.
"Fifteen kilometers from touchdown and everything green and go,"
said Adrian. "You're not getting the most interesting landscape, but
it's tough to make a good landing anywhere interesting."
"Julia, have you opened your eyes yet?" asked Veronica.
"No," Julia said, her voice pitched only slightly higher than
normal. "I'll wait until we get to the ground."
"Suit yourself." Vee shrugged in her straps. "The colors are
amazing."
"I'll bet."
"Three kilometers," said Adrian. "If you squint to the upper right
of your screens, you'll see beacon A-34, which means we're right on
target."
Beneath them, the largest furrows spread apart. Smaller furrows
following the same drunken path appeared between them. The whole plain
became a huge, wrinkled, color-splashed bedsheet, bent at the edges, as
if viewed through a fish-eye lens. The high-pressure atmosphere played
all kinds of interesting tricks with the light.
The patch of ground Josh could see became smaller and darker, until
only a few rocks were visible. Then nothing but blackness, followed
fast by a crunching noise from below. The scarab came to rest on a
small slope, tilted up and to the left.
"And that, ladies and gentlemen, is a perfect landing," said Kevin.
"You are now free to come out and see the world through the big window."
Julia was already fumbling with her buckles. Vee obviously took a
second to read the directions beside her screen, because she was on her
feet and heading out into the main cabin before Julia was even sitting
up. Josh waited behind to make sure Julia, Troy, and Terry had
successfully extricated themselves and then followed Veronica out.
Outside the front window, the rumpled landscape stretched as far as
he could see. The horizon, such as it was, was lost in a dim blur that
might have been dust or mountains or simply the thick atmosphere
distorting the light. They were a fair way into the long Venusian day.
The dim sunlight that filtered through the clouds showed a ground that
reminded Josh of the Painted Desert; red, brown, orange all mixed
together along with great stretches of black, rippled stone left over
from old lava flows. Here and there, an outcropping of halite or
obsidian glinted dully in the ashen light.
Josh watched the investigative team crowd around the pilot seats,
craning their necks to see out the window. Then he saw the muscles in
Kevin's jaw tighten.
"We've got a drive ahead of us," Josh said, trying to sound polite,
if not cheerful. "We can use the time to get into suits. That way
there'll be less of a delay when we reach the Discovery."
And less time Kevin has to deal with you guys crammed into the
cockpit.
As if to confirm Josh's thought, Kevin glanced up at him and Josh
read a silent thank-you in his eyes.
The statement brought universal agreement, and the team of tourists
started filing back toward the changing area. Vee gave Josh a knowing
look as she passed. Yeah, she would be the one to figure out what he
was really trying to do. That was all
right as long as she didn't try to counteract it. Kevin gave Adrian the
nod, and Adrian unbuckled himself to follow the tourists.
"And here's where the fun really starts," he muttered to Josh as he
passed.
You'll forgive me if I agree with the words and not the tone,
thought Josh as he followed Adrian down the corridor to the suit
lockers.
I can't believe we're almost there.
The scarab crawled forward along the uneven ground. Its bumping,
rocking motion added to the confusion of the suit-up procedure, but
eventually Josh and the rest of the team all got safely into their
hardsuits. Adrian, with Josh's help, double-checked everyone's
equipment and connections and made them run down the displays to make
sure those were all functional.
Everything looked green and go. Mechanical failure in the suit—joint
failure, pump failure, loss of seal integrity—any of these could mean
instant death. If that knowledge added extra tension to the team, Josh
couldn't see it. Even Julia, now that she was on the ground, seemed to
have calmed down and become wrapped up in the business of checking her
equipment, as if this were something she did every day.
Admit it. You can't see beyond your own nose right now, unless
it's to look at that hole in the ground, Josh admonished himself.
But he couldn't really make himself care. The Discovery waited for
them. He had made it. He was going to be inside, soon, very soon.
Finally, the scarab came to a lurching halt.
"We're here!" called back Kevin.
Here. We're here. I'm here.
The U.N. investigators climbed into the airlock. Josh closed the
interior hatch and found a place on one of the benches. The
pressurization pump's steady chugging filled the air. Next to him,
Terry Wray fussed with the camera on her chest. Her normal band rig
wouldn't be able to tolerate the conditions out there, so she'd have to
make do with the equipment that came with the suit, and from the look
on her face, it did not meet her standards. He watched Julia Lott's
lips move as she removed something on her private log channel. Next to
her, Troy Peachman did the same. It looked like the two of them were
holding a whispered conversation. Vee, sitting on the bench between
them, flashed Josh one of her mischievous grins.
"Some fun, eh?" Her voice sounded harsher than normal through the
intercom. Josh wondered if she might actually be nervous.
"Not yet," he answered. "But trust me, it will be."
Now, Josh could feel the tension winding the whole team tight. The
small talk and idle speculation picked up pace, as did the meaningless
shifting of weight and all the other little movements restless people
make when waiting. There were the usual complaints about trying to use
helmet display icons that relied on eye movement and how the
water-straw kept bumping up against your chin. Finally, Troy Peachman
heaved himself to his feet and started pacing between the inner hatch
and the outer.
Veronica watched him for about two minutes before she apparently had
enough. "Oh, sit down, Troy, it's not going anywhere."
"How do you know?" he asked with the bluff humor he apparently
cultivated. "Aliens put it here. Maybe they're out there taking it away
again."
Terry tried folding her arms and found that didn't work. "If they
were going to do that, they would have notified me."
"You?" asked Troy, surprised.
"Yeah. I'm a media drone. We're all aliens. Didn't you know that?"
"I had wondered," replied Troy blandly.
A brief collective laugh filtered through the intercoms. Before it
died, the light above the outer hatch flashed green, indicating
pressurization was complete.
Instantly, everyone was on their feet. Josh worked the locking
lever on the outer hatch. With a clank and a thump, the hatch swung
inward to reveal the rough, intensely colored world beyond.
"Have a good trip," said Adrian as Josh stepped out. Dust and stone
crunched beneath his boot. To the right loomed the cliffs of
Beta Regio, with its volcano thrusting up toward the boiling sky and
ribbons of lava trailing down its sides. On the edge of his vision,
Josh saw Scarab Fourteen creeping down beside a fresh, flowing lava
stream, and he wondered how Charlotte Murray and her crew were holding
up with their load of tourists.
Then he saw the Discovery's entrance squatting in front of them, and
the rest of the world went away. He took three heavy steps forward
before he remembered he was supposed to be leading a team out here.
His eyes found the intercom icon and opened the general channel.
"Okay, everybody, try to step where I step. The ground is pretty lumpy
out there."
They only needed to cross about ten meters to the hatchway. The
hardsuits and the uncertain footing made it slow going, but with every
step, the hatchway got a little bigger, a little clearer. He could see
the handles on the side of the lid, make out the dim reflections on the
curve of its gray ceramic sides, see the little scores and pits that
had been made by the burning sand brushing past on the lazy wind.
Then he was standing next to it. It was there, under his glove. He
couldn't feel anything, but he could see his hand on the lid.
It was a long moment before he realized the others had ringed the
hatch and stood waiting for him.
"I'll open the hatchway now." Josh grasped two of the handles, bent
his knees, and shoved. The cover swung aside, just as he'd been told it
would. Julia clapped her hands in silent applause. Veronica stooped
and ran one gloved finger over the handle he'd just used, and grunted.
Peachman tromped forward eagerly.
"Hold on," said Terry. "Can we get a shot of the empty shaft?"
"Sure." Josh stepped back and let Terry come forward and point her
camera and light down the steep well with its ladder.
Just don't
take too long. He laughed silently.
Get a hold of yourself.
Vee was right, it's not going
anywhere.
"Got it," Terry said, sounding satisfied. She stepped back from the
hatch and turned toward him.
"Okay," said Josh, trying to keep his voice calm, as if he had
already climbed down into the Discovery a hundred times. "I'll go first
and show you how it's done."
Josh planted his boots onto the first rung and, moving carefully,
started climbing down the well. Darkness engulfed him and his suit's
lights clicked on, illuminating the black rock with its charcoal veins.
He had to keep himself pressed close to the rungs to prevent his
backpack from scraping against the shaft wall. His throat tightened.
He'd never been inside Venus before, and he could not escape the
feeling that he was being swallowed.
Josh's boot touched level stone and his lights showed him the
bubble-shaped room dubbed "Chamber One." He moved back from the ladder.
A shiver ran up his spine.
This place is not ours. This is
other. There is someone else out there, and we know nothing about them.
That was too huge and too strange a thought not to merit a moment of
sheer wonder.
There wasn't even that much to see here—the base of the ladder, the
six holes gaping beside the smooth curving wall. The real prize lay
through the narrow tunnel that opened by his right hand. Down there lay
Chambers Two and Three and the laser.
"Okay, next," he said into the intercom. "Keep close to the rungs;
don't bump your pack if you can help it." They'd all been briefed and
run through the simulators, but it wouldn't hurt to remind them.
"Yes, Papa," said Vee. He watched her green form descending
carefully, foot searching momentarily for each rung. But she reached
the bottom without incident and came to stand beside him.
"Next," Josh said.
"Here we go," answered Julia. While the archeologist worked her way
down, Veronica walked over to look at the inner doorway, if a small,
rounded entry to a low tunnel could be called a doorway. Josh was torn
between watching Vee and keeping an eye on Julia, who, if anything, was
moving less steadily
than Vee had, and wishing they would all
hurry up.
"Vee, what are you doing?" asked Josh, to distract himself. She was
crouched down and running her fingers over the threshold.
"Exploring the secrets of the universe," she answered. Her voice
sounded flat, tight.
Troy descended right after Julia, followed closely by Terry. As soon
as Terry was down, she whistled softly and began examining the smooth,
rounded walls. Julia bent over the six holes laid out in a straight
line at the base of the ladder. Josh was willing to bet she was talking
animatedly into her log. Veronica stayed where she was, turning from
the inner threshold to the mouth of the entry shaft and back again.
Troy just stood in the middle of it all, a look of sheer delight on his
face.
"Incredible. It just feels incredible."
Although part of Josh suspected Troy was, yet again, playing for the
cameras, part of him nodded in agreement. He'd run through the videos
and holographs a hundred times, but that was nothing compared to
standing in the middle of the Discovery, feeling the stone surrounding
them and wondering, just wondering.
Freed from his initial bout of amazement, Troy started hopping
around the chamber like a kid in a candy store. He bent over the six
holes with Julia; he ran his hands over the inner threshold with
Veronica. He peered eagerly over Wray's shoulders to see whatever it
was they were looking at, all the time murmuring, "Incredible,
incredible."
"Can we see the rest?" asked Veronica abruptly.
Josh blinked. "Sure."
And I thought it was just me who couldn't
wait.
"One second," said Terry. "I need a shot of all of you with the
light from the shaft coming down." She shuffled closer to the ladder.
"Say cheese, but keep on doing what you're doing." People bent or
walked, stiffly and reluctantly, but Josh supposed that would later be
put down to the suits and the pressure. "Okay. All done."
Great. "Okay. The main chamber is through here." Josh
gestured down the horizontal tunnel. "Again, I'll go first. It's hands
and knees. Go slow and try not to bump your packs."
The inner tunnel was even more constricting than the entry shaft.
The smooth, narrow way was completely dark except for the small
black-and-gray area illuminated by his suit lights. He crawled forward
without feeling anything but the insides of his gloves against his
hands and the padding of his suit under his knees. There was no sound
except his own breathing.
"It makes a slight rise here in the middle," he told the people
behind him, whether they were following or waiting in Chamber One. He
couldn't tell. There was no room for him to turn his head to look. His
general plate displays told him only that their intercoms were up and
running, not where those intercoms were.
The tunnel undulated sharply, forcing Josh flat onto his stomach. He
shinnied up to the rounded crest and slid back down again. He hoped
none of his tourists would find this too much for their dignity.
Probably not. Troy seemed the most likely to make a fuss, and he
wouldn't do it while there was a risk of being recorded. If they were
nervous about the world around them, they seemed to be burying that
feeling under the excitement of exploration.
Another two meters and the tunnel opened up into Chamber Two, the
main chamber of the Discovery.
Josh got to his feet and turned around in time to see Veronica
emerge from the tunnel. She stood up and moved back from the tunnel's
mouth, turning as she did so she could take absolutely everything in.
Chamber Two was a bubble, like Chamber One, but three times as big
and twice as high. Michael Lum had joked that this was obviously an
alien church, because it was so hole-y. Circular niches a meter around
and ten centimeters deep had been carved into the walls. Small shafts
perforated the floor, ranging between one and six centimeters in
diameter. Robot surveyors sent down those shafts found they
interconnected at different levels underground. Maybe they once held a
pipe network.
Tiny holes that sank into the walls at regular intervals might have
been for staples or brackets of some kind, holding up shelves
or wiring or clothes pegs for all they knew. An entire section of floor
had been dug away for about a half meter, making a shallow,
smooth-walled depression at the eastern curve of the chamber. At the
bottom of the depression were still more holes—two ovals of eight holes
each were surrounded by numerous minute holes drilled at seemingly
random intervals.
Not even the stark evidence of human intervention could dampen
Josh's delight at finally standing in the middle of the Discovery.
Every last one of the holes now had a cermet tag next to it with a
number designation. It had taken almost a week just to get all the
holes tagged. The measurements still weren't finished. Hopefully Julia
would be able to make a contribution to that effort with the miniature
survey drones she carried in her pack.
From the ceiling hung three quartz globes. Inside them, you could
see a tangle of filament wires. Big, pressure-tolerant, alien light
bulbs. No one had managed to find the power source though, and God, how
they'd looked.
A low, round doorway opened across from the tunnel. This one led to
another smaller bubble room, almost a closet. Chamber Three. The laser
was in there. Josh's curiosity was almost a physical force pushing him
toward that other doorway. He kept still with difficulty while, one at
a time, the remainder of the team emerged from the tunnel.
Every last one of them looked up and around, just as Veronica had.
Josh had a feeling a number of jaws had dropped open. It even took
Terry a moment before she started systematically aiming her camera
again.
After that, it was a replay of the scene in the antechamber, except
nine times more intense. Snatches of competing conversations jammed
the radio until everyone remembered about the private channels. Troy
and Julia crowded the edge of the pit, pointing and gesturing. Terry
tried to record everything at once. Only Veronica didn't move. She
stood in the middle of Chamber Two and frowned up at the lights.
In return, Josh frowned at her. He opened a private channel between
them. "Vee? We're here to see the laser?"
She focused on him slowly, as if his words reached her from a long
way away. "Yes. Right."
"This way." He pointed to the low doorway. His hand almost shook
with eagerness.
Let the other tourists fend for themselves for a
while. Let's see what the neighbors left for us.
Josh ducked through the low doorway, for the moment not really
caring if Vee followed him. He turned to the right, and there it was.
The laser rig stood next to the far wall of Chamber Three. Whoever
hollowed out the chamber had left behind a single wedge of polished
rock. It had been planed off at a forty-five-degree angle and tapered
up from the floor until it was about level with Josh's waist. A
mechanism fastened to its surface and pointed toward a pair of short,
narrow holes let in the ashen light from the surface.
Clumsily, Josh sat down. Now the laser rig was about level with his
nose. "We're dealing with little green men all right," he said to Vee.
"If this was working height for them, they couldn't be much more than a
meter tall."
Vee said nothing. She just sat down beside him.
The laser itself was nothing much to look at right off. Its body was
a dull-gray half-pipe about a meter long. Two tubes with roughly
triangular cross sections projected out of it and pointed toward the
holes to the surface, their flared ends almost touching the living
rock.
"There's a set of staples down here," said Josh, leaning into the
base of the half-pipe and pointing to the thick metal fasteners. "They
pull out." He gripped one carefully in his thick glove fingers and
pulled as gently as he could. The staple eased out a little ways, then
stopped.
"Anybody analyzed the cover?" asked Vee.
"It's a ceramic. They think it's refined from local earths. Maybe
shaped by some kind of laser tomography."
Vee just grunted. Josh pulled out the remaining staples. Then he
lifted the cover away to reveal an interior that glittered with black
glass, crystal, and gold.
And there it all was—the power points tucked into the two long,
black glass (maybe) tubes, with what were unmistakably Brewster windows
set into either end. The tubes themselves contained… what? They didn't
know yet. Mirrors of incorruptible gold (probably gold. Looked like
gold) stood at either end of the tubes. Golden strips had been laid
down in neat patterns along the tube supports. Pairs of thick lenses
had been positioned at the end of each tube that was closest to the
wall, with the smaller of the pair on the inside (almost definitely a
beam expander), and in front of them was a pinplate to focus the light
and send it… where? He looked at the holes to the surface. To do what?
Much of the answer to that question would depend on what was in
those black tubes, which would tell them what kind of laser they were
dealing with. The presence of the tube told them it was a gas laser,
but what kind of gas laser?
When they knew what kind of laser it was, they could work out what
it had been used for. And when they knew what it was for, they would
know what these people were doing here, and when they knew what these
people were doing here… the universe would open up wide.
He wanted to say this to Vee, but he didn't. Something was wrong
with her. She seemed closed off, and he couldn't tell why.
Well, you can sort that out later. "Can you get the
monochrometer out of my pack?"
"Right." Vee stumped around behind him and he felt the small
jostlings as she undid the catches on his pack and pulled out the
equipment.
While Vee squatted next to the laser to position the boxy analyzer
and pump down the suction cup at its base, Josh pulled their portable
floodlight out of her pack and lined it up with the monochrometer on
the other side of the tubes. When both devices were switched on, pure
white light would shine through the tubes into the monochrometer, which
would analyze the absorption patterns and report. Then they'd know
what lay inside the opaque glass.
Vee jacked the monochrometer into her suit. "Okay. Go."
Josh pressed the power-on switch and the light flashed on, so
suddenly and intensely bright his faceplate dimmed. He imagined a faint
humming as its beams passed through the tubes. Another shiver of fear
and excitement went through him, brought by the awareness that he was
doing something no one else had ever done before. Even Vee's closed
expression softened as she read off the monochrometer's conclusions.
"Okay, we've got hydrogen in there, a little neon, and"—she
paused—"carbon dioxide." She stared at the device. "It's a CO2 laser,
Josh."
"Makes sense, doesn't it?" Josh was aware he was grinning like an
idiot. "Not only does CO2 make for a versatile, powerful
laser, but our aliens have been making heavy use of local materials. If
there's one thing Venus has and to spare, it's CO2."
"Right." Vee pulled the monochrometer jack out of her glove's wrist,
turned her back, and left.
Josh did not let his jaw drop. Veronica marched through Chamber Two
and climbed back into the tunnel toward Chamber One.
"What was that?" came Troy's voice.
I have no effing idea,
thought Josh.
"Is there a problem?" Julia stood up from her crouch over the
carved-out section of floor.
"No, no." Josh waved them back. Both curious and confused, he
crawled back through the tunnel to Chamber One. He got there just in
time to see Vee climb the last rungs of the ladder and disappear over
the side of the hatchway.
Josh opened their channel. "Vee? Vee? What are you doing?"
No answer. Josh flicked over to the channel for the scarab. "Adrian?
This is Josh."
"I hear you, Josh, what's up?"
"How's Dr. Hatch's suit doing?"
"She's green and go here. Something wrong?"
I have no effing idea.
Josh stared at the ladder. He did
not want to chase after her. If she wanted to be a temperamental
artiste, that was her business. The laser was waiting for them both. If
she didn't care, fine.
Except that there were so many ways she could get herself killed out
there.
Josh carefully closed down all his com channels except the one to
the scarab. When he was sure no one could hear him but Adrian, he
started swearing softly, and he climbed the ladder back to the surface.
As he emerged from the hatch, he saw Vee crouched about ten meters
away, apparently staring at one patch of ground.
"Vee? What the hell are you doing?" Josh demanded as he started
stumping toward her.
"More holes." She pointed.
"Yes, I know. We found those. They should be tagged." Two squares of
four small holes drilled neatly into the earth on the right side of the
hole the laser pointed through.
"Yes." She stood up and started walking back toward him. Josh
stopped in his tracks.
"You want to tell me what's going on?"
Apparently, she didn't. She said nothing as she passed him and
climbed back down the ladder. Josh choked off another set of curses and
returned to the hatch. While he watched, she lumbered down the rungs,
walked to the center of the chamber, and laid down on her back, her
faceplate pointing up at the ceiling.
Bewilderment warred with exasperation as Josh climbed down the
ladder and stood over her. "Are you okay?"
"Fine, thank you." Her voice was bland, almost bored, and her
expression matched.
"Are you going to be able to get up all right?"
"I'll call if I can't."
He paused. "You having an artistic snit of some kind?"
"Probably. You're in my way."
"Excuse me." Josh stepped back and wished he could run his hand
through his hair. He just watched the still form lying on its back and
staring at the ceiling, looking for all the world like an empty suit
that had fallen over.
Well, so much for the idea that you'd turn
out to be the reasonable one.
Seeing nothing else to do, Josh crawled back through the tunnel to
Chamber Two.
"Is Veronica all right?" asked Troy.
"She's fine," Josh assured them all as he straightened up. "She's
decided to pursue an independent investigation."
Those few words satisfied everyone.
Everybody knows how
artistes are, thought Josh as he returned to Chamber Three.
I
wonder
how much she trades on that?
He pushed the thought aside. Whatever Veronica wanted to do—as long
as it didn't actively involve killing herself, damaging equipment, or
wrecking the site—didn't really matter. He could still work. Every part
of the laser had to be measured, labeled, gently sampled, and
precisely cataloged and videoed. The work and the wonder of it all soon
swallowed up thoughts of anything else.
Every so often, movement in Chamber Two caught his eye. Vee went
back and forth between the main chamber and the antechamber three
separate times. Once, she came into the laser chamber and just sat by
the wall for a while. He ignored her. Eventually, she left.
At 14:00, his suit clock chimed. So, he knew, did everyone else's,
but he spoke into the intercom anyway. "That's time, folks. We need to
head back."
"Another few minutes—" began Troy.
"We've got two weeks," replied Josh. "You don't want to run low on
coolant out here, do you?"
That got them. All at once, everyone was ready to go. No doubt Derek
had showed them the record of Deborah Pakkala, whose coolant
circulation had failed on her, and how she had cooked to death in her
suit before she reached the scarab, twenty meters away. Josh eyed the
radio icons to flip over to the channel for Scarab Five. "Adrian,
Kevin, we're coming in."
"Roger that, Josh," came back Adrian's voice. "We'll be ready for
you."
Josh took a quick head count. All present, except for Vee.
"Vee?" called Josh over the public channel. "Time."
"I heard." came her voice, clear, tight, and slightly bored, as it
had been for the entire afternoon.
Shaking his head yet again, Josh led the way back through the
tunnel. He shinnied over the rise and stopped. Vee's suit, on its back
again, blocked the tunnel.
"Vee," he said, refusing to be surprised or angry. She would not
take the wonder of this day from him. He would not let her.
"Right." Using the tunnel walls as traction, she turned herself over
onto her stomach and crawled out ahead of him.
Josh led the team up the ladder and across the rough, barren ground
to the scarab. The airlock hatch stood open, waiting for them. They
took their spots on the benches. Josh shut them inside and signaled
Adrian. The outer hatch's light blinked red as the depressurization
started.
"So, Dr. Hatch," began Troy conversationally. "Did you find what you
were looking for?"
"Not yet." She gave him a sunny, meaningless smile. "But as Josh
said, we've got two whole weeks."
"Two weeks," said Julia less enthusiastically. "If it doesn't kill
us. I feel like I've been lifting weights for four solid hours."
"It's the pressure," said Troy. "We'll get used to it, I'm sure.
Isn't that right, Josh?"
Josh shrugged but then remembered his suit wouldn't show the
movement. "Not really, no, but you learn your limits and how to pace
yourself."
"Do you think you'll ever get used to the idea you're crawling
around inside an alien artifact?" asked Terry.
Josh felt his mouth quirk up. "Is this on or off the record?"
Terry sighed exasperatedly. "Civilians. If the answer's really good,
I'll ask to use it."
"My God, an ethical feeder," murmured Josh, and the remark earned
him a round of laughter. "The answer is, no, I don't think I'll get
used to it, and I don't really want to get used to it. We are in the
middle of the most incredible thing that's ever happened and I never
want to forget that." He smiled. "Good enough to use?"
"Are you kidding?" said Terry. "The boss willing, I'm going to open
with that."
"And what about you, Veronica?" Troy angled himself to face her.
"How did you feel inside the Discovery?"
Veronica didn't move. "Oh, I was impressed," she said distantly.
"Very impressed. The sheer scale of the undertaking. It's amazing."
The team nodded solemnly.
The depressurization finished, and the green light shone over the
inner hatch. Josh worked the hatch and everyone spilled gratefully over
into the changing room. Adrian stood ready to help them out of the
bulky suits and supplied cold water from the scarab's fridge. Josh
glanced down the corridor and saw movement through the main window.
Team Fourteen was on the ball and heading down for their turn at the
Discovery.
By the time Josh looked up from his water bottle again, Vee had
vanished. The rest of the team crowded around the kitchen table, eating
sandwiches and drinking water and fruit juice in quantity. They all
speculated freely and at top volume about what they'd seen, what it
meant, and how they were going to frame their findings for Mother
Earth. Vee did not reappear.
Conscience caught up with Josh. He drained the last of his juice and
climbed through the side hatch to the sleeping cabin.
Veronica sat cross-legged on her coach with her briefcase open in
front of her, typing frantically. Her lips moved as the keys clacked,
but he couldn't make out what she was saying to herself.
"Are you all right, Vee?"
She looked up, startled, and for a moment he saw naked anger on her
face. She wiped it away. "Fine."
What is it? What is the matter with you? He sat on the edge
of the floor. "You really should at least have something to drink."
She reached down next to the couch and pulled out a bottle of water.
"I'm fine, really."
"Anything you want to talk about?"
Anger flickered back across her features. "No."
One more try. "You know, this is supposed to be a team
effort."
"I'd heard," she replied dryly.
Leave it alone, he told himself.
Let her play her
game. This is not your business. But there was a challenge in her
eyes that grated at him. No, not a challenge, an accusation.
Josh picked his way to her couch. "What have you found?" He crouched
down next to her.
With three keystrokes, Veronica blanked her screen. "Nothing I'm
ready to talk about."
"Listen to me," he whispered fiercely. "You've got an act going,
fine. You can play with Peachman's head, and Wray's. But you play with
the Discovery, and so help me, I will make such a stink you will be
booted all the way back to Mother Earth without benefit of shuttle.
This is not a gallery show. This is so far beyond important we can
barely understand its implications. I will
not let you screw
around with this."
Vee's angry eyes searched his face. Josh did not let his expression
waver or soften. At last, Veronica dropped her gaze. Her fingers moved
across the command board and typed out one line of text. She turned the
screen toward him. Josh read it and his heart thudded hard in his chest.
It's a fake.
Josh sat back on his heels and met Vee's gaze. "You're out of your
mind."
She frowned hard and typed.
Keep it down! We have no idea who's in on this. Go back to
dinner. Tell them I overdid it and am taking a nap. Whatever. Get your
briefcase out and mail me. I'll spell it out.
She added her contact code at the bottom.
Josh looked at her again. Vee's face and eyes had hardened. Whatever
she'd found, or thought she'd found, she was serious about it, and if
she was right…
No. She can't be.
Without another word, Josh returned to the kitchen nook.
"Everything all right?" asked Troy.
"Oh yeah," lied Josh, picking up his empty juice cup and carrying
it to the sonic cleaner so he wouldn't have to stay at the table and
look at anybody. "It's easy to overdo it out there if you're not
careful. Vee just needs to lie down and get some extra fluids."
And get her head examined. He shut the cup in the cleaner.
God,
if she's doing this for self-aggrandizement, I'll kill her.
The meal finished, the dishes got cleared, and people spread out as
much as the scarab allowed, giving each other the mental space
necessary for sane and civil interaction in a confined space. Adrian
shuffled back to the changing area, probably to run the post-EVA suit
checks and recharge batteries and tanks. Kevin was up front in the
pilot's seat, running over something on the main displays. Terry
commandeered one corner of the kitchen table and downloaded the day's
records into her smart cam. She watched the display, apparently
oblivious to anything else. Julia retreated to the couch compartment.
Josh went into the analysis nook, opened one of the overhead
compartments, and retrieved his own briefcase. Perched on the nook's
one stool, he jacked it into the counter's power supply and accessed
his mail.
He typed,
I'm up and open. Connect to this contact, and
sent the message across to the code Veronica had shown him.
He waited, trying not to fidget. He wished he'd thought to make a
cup of coffee before he started, but now that he had started, he didn't
want to leave the case. Anybody could come down the corridor and read
the screen. He wanted all this cleared up, now.
Another line of text spelled itself out across the screen.
Up and open. Now, first question. What's anybody going to do
with a CO2 laser on Venus?
Josh felt his brows knit together.
What?
What's the atmosphere out there made of? CO2. What's
going to happen if you fire a CO2 laser into a CO2
atmosphere? The beam is going to be absorbed almost immediately. What
good is that going to be? The setup makes no sense!
Josh took a deep breath, steadying himself. A grand outburst was not
going to accomplish anything.
We are obviously not seeing the
whole mechanism. That's clear from the pattern of holes on the outside.
There was something else here.
Pause. He lifted his cap up, smoothed down his hair, and replaced
it. New text appeared.
Dead convenient, isn't it? Anything that couldn't be cobbled
together from local materials is conveniently missing from the
scene, like a power source for the laser, like any kind of repeater or
reflector that you couldn't make out of salt and stone. And what about
the lights?
The lights? typed Josh, genuinely mystified.
The lights! There are three lights in the whole place and
they're all in one room. Did somebody just climb down into the dark?
Crawl through dark tunnels? Send messages in the dark?
Josh remembered her lying on her back in the antechamber, staring at
the ceiling. Now genuine irritation flared. What did she want, a
guidebook? They were supposed to be looking for possible answers for
these questions. That was why they were all here.
This
installation was built by aliens; we can't except to understand their
motives.
No. That's the tautology whoever set this up wants us to start
using. Anything that doesn't make sense can be put down to this all
being done by aliens. OF COURSE it doesn't make sense to us.
Use Occam's Razor, fosh. What's the simpler explanation? That
aliens came, undetected, to Venus and created an outpost, which they
left half of in permanent darkness. Then they abandoned it, leaving
just enough clues behind to let us know they were there. Or is the
simpler truth that somebody set up a mysterious looking fake to gain
some fame and fortune?
Or funding. Josh thought involuntarily.
Oh, Christ.
Funding.
His head felt light. The soft, background sounds of movement,
random clanking, and soft conversation seemed unbearably loud. He
tugged hard on the brim of his cap and looked over to the kitchen,
wishing for coffee.
No. This was not happening. She was reading the data wrong.
More text spilled across the screen.
There is nothing in there
we don't understand or that we couldn't make, given the proper
facilities. Anything we might not understand is missing. It's a SETUP.
Josh took a deep breath and forced his fingers to type in a reply.
His hands had gone cold, he realized.
How come after weeks of
camera work, measuring, tagging, and analysis, no one
else has reached this conclusion?
No one else wanted to, she replied.
Josh suppressed a snort.
And you did? Or maybe you just want to
get back at Grandma Helen for thinking you're harmless?
A long pause this time. A blank screen and a strained mental
silence.
Is that what you think I'm doing?
I think it's possible, returned Josh.
Fine, The connection shut down.
Josh sat there, staring at his screen, reading and rereading the
words shining on its gray surface.
A fake? Impossible. Ridiculous. The amount of time, money, and
material it would take to rig up a fake like this would be incredible.
Nobody on Venera would have access to those kinds of resources.
Except maybe Grandma Helen.
Josh's spine stiffened. No. Now that really was crazy. She'd never
do anything like this. No one would.
But, damn, hasn't it brought the money rolling in. Right when
Venera needed it.
Josh shook his head. Crazy, crazy. The Venerans were scientists. If
there was a cardinal sin among scientists, it was the falsification of
data. If you got caught, it meant scandal, possible lawsuits, and the
complete ruination of a career.
But if you didn't… Josh found he did not want to think about it.
Anger darkened his mind. Vee'd done it. She'd stolen the day. Now,
instead of wonder and excitement, he was filled up with suspicion and
fear.
Josh slapped the case lid down. He stowed it away automatically,
out of the habit of living and working in confined spaces. Then he
shuffled sideways into the kitchen. No one else was there. He heard the
sonic shower going. He heard voices from both sides and up front. He
thought about coffee, but instead he opened the fridge and rummaged
through the scarab's small stock of beer, pulled himself out a bottle,
and twisted the top off.
"Everything all right, Josh?"
Josh turned. Adrian stood there, a suit glove in his hand.
"Yes and no." He sat at the table. Adrian put the glove on the table
and reached into one of the overhead bins. "What's the matter with
that?"
"Microfracture in one of the seals. Nothing big." He pulled down a
tool kit and a plastic pack containing the silicon rings that helped
seal the gloves to the joints in the suit cuffs.
Josh watched him work for a while; then he looked around carefully
and said in a whisper. "Adrian, what do you think of our tourists?"
Adrian shrugged. "They're tourists," he murmured. Adrian had lots of
practice at not being overheard. "They're looking for something
profound or amazing to send back to Mother Earth. Saw it on Mars all
the time. Idiots racing down Olympus Mons in go-carts and writing
articles about what a deeply expanding experience it was." He frowned
at the flawed seal for a moment. "Terry Wray's pretty cute though."
Josh chuckled. "If you like media bland."
"But it's such a cute kind of bland." Adrian inspected his work.
"That'll do. I'm going to check the fit."
Adrian left him there and Josh sat alone listening to the comings
and goings of the others. The air smelled of soap, sweat, minerals, and
vaguely of sulfur. Josh glanced at the hatch to the couch compartment.
What was she doing in there? Who was she telling her theory to? Her
manager back on Earth? Julia or Troy, or one of the other team members?
Terry Wray and her camera?
Josh felt the blood rush from his face. If Vee told her ideas to
anybody,
anybody, there would be an outcry like nothing that
had been heard yet. The Venerans, all of them, would stand accused of
fraud. The U.N. would move in for real, work on the Discovery would be
wrenched away, money would dry up, and Venera would fold, and work
would stop because there would be no place to do the work from.
Stop it, Josh. What's a little more controversy?
Or are you starting to believe her? Are you starting to agree
there's not one thing in the entire Discovery that could definitely
not have been made by a
human with the time and
resources?
Josh swallowed hard. Feeling detached from himself, he got up and
walked to the couch compartment and opened the hatch. The lights were
down. Julia snored gently in her couch, one arm flung out into the
aisle. Josh stepped around her.
Vee still sat up on her couch with her briefcase open on her knees.
She glanced up briefly at him and then seemingly dismissed what she
saw. Her hands never stopped moving across the command board.
"Don't," whispered Josh. "Don't go public with this."
"Why not?" she asked mildly.
"Because you'll ruin them. The Venerans."
"They deserve to be ruined." Bitterness swallowed all pretense of
disinterest.
"All of them?" Josh leaned as close as he could. She had to hear
him. He had to make her hear. "Everybody who lives in Venera deserves
to be ruined? That's what'll happen."
Vee's hands stilled. "It's a fake, Josh. What do you want me to do?
Perpetuate a fraud because the Venerans have been living beyond their
means?"
Julia snorted and rolled over. Josh bit his tongue and waited until
she subsided. "You don't give a shit about anybody but yourself, do
you? You just want to show them all up. Noted artiste uncovers fraud
where scientists fail. Click here to read."
Her face had gone perfectly smooth and expressionless. "Of course.
What else would it be? It couldn't possibly be I believe what I'm
saying or that I might be right."
Josh clamped his jaw shut around what he'd been about to say. Julia
rolled again with a rustle of cloth and a sighing of breath. Josh
glared at Vee as if he could make her see reason by sheer force of
will. She just sat placidly, her face immobile, her eyes unimpressed.
Josh felt his teeth grind together. She'd do it. She'd ruin
everything. Everything.
But what if she's right?
"What if I promised to go out now and mail Michael Lum? Tell
him your suspicions, have him double-check to make sure all the
funding's on the up and up. Would that satisfy you?"
Vee's gaze searched his face, considering. "It would be a start,"
she said at last.
Score one. "Would it at least keep you from telling Stykos
and Wray about all this?" he pressed.
There was a long pause, and then Vee nodded.
"Okay, then." Josh unbent himself as far as the room allowed.
"Josh?" Vee's whisper stopped him.
"What?"
Her face was lost in shadow, so he could not make out her
expression, but he heard the weight of her words. The anger, the
flippancy had left, and all that remained was honest feeling—tired and
a little worried. "I am not doing this to show anyone up. I am not
doing this because I'm angry at Helen Failia. The Discovery has been
falsified and whoever did it deserves whatever they get."
"We'll see."
He left her there and returned to the analysis nook, shaken and
confused. She couldn't be right. But what if she was? Surely somebody
had already investigated everything to make sure all was in order. But
what if they hadn't?
His stomach tightened.
It's happening already. The idea's
taking hold. Nothing to do but clear it out, one way or the other.
Josh got his case down from its bin and brought it back to the
analysis table, setting it down next to his half-finished beer. He
jacked the case in, turned it on, took another swallow of beer, swore
to himself, or maybe at himself, and started typing.
Contents -
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Chapter Eight
Michael rubbed the heels of both palms into his eyes. When he
lowered them, he blinked hard and read Josh Kenyon's note again.
Dear Michael,
Sorry I can't do a v-mail, but this has got to be kept quiet. I
spent the day working with Dr. Hatch, and she spent the day getting
convinced that the Discovery is a fake.
I want to laugh at the idea, but I can't. She's making some good
points, especially about the fact that there is nothing down here a
human couldn't have made, given resources and time. There's also the
fact that some facets of this laser we're studying don't make sense.
I know I'm not a Veneran, and I'd never tell you your job, but can
you let me know you've checked everything out? The money's good, the
logs are good, and so on? If I don't get something to tell Dr. Hatch,
she might just go straight to the media drones.
Thanks,
Josh
Michael
could picture Josh in the scarab, hunched over his case,
swearing as he typed, not wanting to believe, but not being able to
dismiss a reasonable premise without checking it out.
A hazard of the scientific mind.
And the security mind.
Had they checked for the possibility of fraud? Of course they had
checked. That was the first thing they did after the governing board
had come back up from the Discovery while the implications still made
them all dizzy. Helen had run the money down. Ben had done the
personnel logs. Michael had checked their checking, and everything
looked fine. In the meantime, Helen had sent their best people down to
the Discovery to start cataloging and looking for any sign of human
intervention.
They'd turned up nothing, nothing, and more nothing.
Only then had Helen called the U.N.
So what was Veronica Hatch seeing? What possibility had they left
open? Or was she just playing for the cameras? She might be the type.
She certainly acted like the type.
It didn't make any difference, though. If this went into the stream,
the accusations were going to fly, and everything Venera did regarding
the Discovery would be called into question.
Michael stared out at the world beyond his desk. Administration was
Venera's brain, even if the Throne Room was its heart. Unlike most of
the workspace on the base, administration was not divided up into
individual offices and laboratories. Each department had an open work
section with desks scattered around it.
The arrangement made this one of the noisiest levels on Venera,
second only to the education level. The idea was to keep everybody out
in the open, so the left hand always knew what the right hand was
doing. It met with limited success, but by now everyone was so used to
it, no one really worked to change it.
As always, the place was a hive. A noisy hive of a thousand
competing conversations, some with coworkers, some with residents or
visitors who had complaints. His people wore no uniform, but they all
had a white-and-gold badge pinned to their shirts to identify
themselves.
He had forty people working for him right now, counting the U.N.'s
contribution of Bowerman and Cleary. Since it was the day shift, about
half of the security personnel were at their desks, dealing with
complaints or paperwork or helping Venerans fill out forms for
passports, marriage licenses, or taxes.
Only a handful of those people knew exactly how close they'd come to
losing their home.
Or how close they still are, Michael chewed thoughtfully on
his lower lip.
If the validity of the Discovery is called into
question, the money flood is going to dry up, and we'll be right back
where we started.
Enough. The accusation had been made. The only question left was
what to do about it.
First thing, revisit the evidence. Make sure the investigation was
as complete as he thought it was four months ago. Second, check out Dr.
Hatch. If she was doing this to call attention to herself, maybe she'd
done similar things in the past. It might help to have that to hold up
to her, or to anyone else who came calling.
Of course there was somebody on the base who knew all about Dr.
Hatch. Michael pictured Philip Bowerman—a big man, serious, but with a
sense of humor that ran just below the professional surface. From the
beginning Bowerman and Cleary had been polite, circumspect, and very
aware that they were unwelcome. Michael, in return, had made sure his
people were polite, circumspect, and very aware that Bowerman and
Cleary were just doing their job.
Still, the idea of going to the yewners with this made his stomach
curdle.
And not because you're worried you might have let something
slide past that they'll catch. Oh, no.
Michael straightened up. "Desk. Contact Philip Bowerman." Bowerman
was wired for sound, as were most U.N. security people. He and Cleary
had given Michael their contact codes within minutes of his meeting
them.
"Bowerman," the man's voice came back. "How can I help you, Dr. Lum?"
"I've got one or two questions about the U.N. team to ask you."
"Okay," said Bowerman without hesitation. "I'm in the Mall, but I'll
be right up."
"No, that's okay. I'll come down."
Eleven years as head of security had given Michael a refined
appreciation of how Venera's rumor mill worked. There would actually be
less talk if Michael "ran into" Bowerman at the Mall than if he sat
closeted with the man at his desk behind sound dampeners. Lack of talk
was something much to be desired right now, especially with Stykos and
his camera band roaming the halls.
"Desk," said Michael as he stood. "Display Absence Message 1. Record
and store all incoming messages, or if the situation is an emergency,
route to my personal phone."
"Will comply," said the desk. Its screen displayed the words AT
LUNCH, LEAVE A MESSAGE.
Michael tucked his phone spot into his ear and threaded his way
between the desks, heading for the stairs.
Michael walked down past the farms, past the gallery level with its
harvester and processing plants, its winery, brewery, bakery, and
butchery, past the research level, and past two of the residential
levels with their concentric rings of brightly painted doors, and past
the educational level where the irrepressible sound of children's
voices rang off the walls. Below the educational level waited the Mall.
From the beginning, Venera had been designed to support whole
families. Helen had wanted people to be able to make a long-term
commitment to their work. The open Mall with its shops, trough gardens,
food stalls, and cafelike seating clusters was one of the features that
made the base livable for years at a time.
The Mall was about half full. An undercurrent of voices thrummed
through the air, along with scents of cooking food, coffee, and fresh
greenery. Meteorologists clustered around a table screen, probably
getting readings of a storm from the sampling equipment Venera carried
in its underbelly. Off-shift techs and engineers played cards, typed
letters, ate sandwiches, or sipped coffee. Graduate students took
advice and instructions from senior researchers, and senior researchers
tossed ideas back and forth between each other. A pod of science
feeders held a whispered argument among themselves. If the gestures
were anything to go by, it was getting pretty heated. Families, knots
of friends, and loners drifted in and out of the shops or stood in line
at the food booths. Around the edges of the hall, a couple of
maintenancers spritzed the miniature trees and dusted off the
grow-lights. A cluster of children played with puzzle bricks at their
parents' feet. If anyone's gaze landed on him, they waved or nodded and
he returned their greetings reflexively. Michael no longer knew the
names of everyone on Venera, but he knew most of the faces, and he
couldn't bring himself to think of anyone aboard the base as a stranger.
This was his world. It was not the only one he had ever known, but
it was the only one that had ever truly known him.
Spotting Bowerman took only a quick scan of the room. The man stood
out in his subdued blue-and-white tunic. Venerans went in for bright
colors.
Bowerman had picked a table near the far edge of the Mall under a
pair of potted orange trees. He spotted Michael before Michael was
halfway across the floor and lifted a hand.
"Please, sit down." Bowerman gestured toward the empty chair as
Michael reached him. "Mind if I go ahead?" he nodded at his lunch—soup,
fresh bread, a cup of rich
chai, spiced Indian tea that
Margot at Salon Blu imported.
"Please. I'm actually going to meet my wife for lunch right after
this."
"You two have kids?" asked Bowerman, breaking apart his small loaf
of sourdough bread and spreading it thickly with butter.
"Two boys," said Michael, going with the conversation and not
bothering to mention that Bowerman surely knew this from reading
Michael's files. "You?"
Bowerman shook his head. "Not yet." He bit into the bread, chewed,
and swallowed. "This is good. I didn't expect such good food, or so
much space." He gestured with the bread. "I've only been to Small Step
on Luna, and on Mars once. I got used to the idea that colonies are
cramped."
Michael noticed Bowerman did not say where he'd been on Mars. "Our
one real luxury," he said, repeating
the Stock
phrase.
"So." Bowerman put the bread down and picked up his soup spoon. "How
can I help you?"
Good question. Michael hesitated. He'd made up his mind to
do this while he was behind his desk, but now that he faced Bowerman,
he had trouble putting the words together. He was about to tell the
U.N. there might be a problem aboard Venera. Venera was a colony, and
the U.N. looked for excuses to make life difficult for colonies. That
was a fact. What if Michael was about to give them such an excuse?
Bowerman wasn't looking at him. He concentrated on his soup, making
little appreciative slurping noises as he ate.
I could get up and
leave. I could invent something small and leave, go tell Helen what's
going on, and let her handle it. I could do that.
"One of the investigative team has raised a question about the
validity of the Discovery."
Bowerman paused and set his spoon down. "Oh?" The syllable could
have meant anything from "Oh, really?" to "Only one?"
Going to make me say it, aren't you? Okay, I'd do the same if I
were you. "We investigated this exact question extensively when
the Discovery first came to our attention. I assume you saw the
reports?"
Bowerman's gaze turned sharp. Michael had his full attention now.
"They looked thorough. Do you think you missed something?"
Michael sighed. He appreciated the lack of judgment in Bowerman's
voice. Just one pro talking to another. Anybody could miss something.
It happened. "I don't know," he admitted. "But if a fraud accusation
is going to be made, that isn't good enough. I have to know."
Bowerman nodded soberly. "How can we help?"
Michael studied his fingertips. The scent of beef and tomatoes
reached him from Bowerman's soup and his stomach rumbled. "If this is
a fraud, it cost money," he said slowly. "And Venera was running on a
wing, a prayer, and short credit. If
somebody did this, they got money from somewhere."
"Or shuffled it from somewhere," said Bowerman quietly.
Michael just nodded.
"Who could do that?"
"Most easily?" Michael didn't look up. He didn't want to see
Bowerman's eyes, weighing, calculating, running ahead with different
scenarios to see how each of them might fit. "I could. Ben Godwin or
Helen Failia. After us, the department heads."
"But Dr. Failia is in charge of base finance, isn't she?"
Michael nodded again. Helen had kept that position for herself. She
raised the money, she counted the money, she divvied the money up. It
was no small task, but she would not delegate it. Occasionally, Michael
suspected Helen did not want to admit she was not entirely in control
of this city of ten thousand.
Bowerman was silent for a long time. "All right. I'll call down to
Earth and start a trace on the incoming funds for, say, the year before
the Discovery's announcement. Will that do?"
Now Michael looked up. Bowerman's face was understanding but not
pitying, which he also appreciated. "How quiet can you keep this?"
"I'll do my best," he shrugged. "But I have to tell my boss."
"Who will have to tell the Venus work group?"
Bowerman nodded one more time. "But trust me, they will not want to
let this out until they're sure. There've been a lot of speeches made
about your Discovery, and nobody's going to want to look like they
bought vaporware. We'll sell it as double-checking your facts. Just
doing our job." He smiled thinly. "Everybody knows we don't trust your
kind."
Michael gave a short laugh. "So they do."
"I'd recommend two other things." Bowerman tapped the table gently
with his spoon. "First you let me ask my boss, Sadiq Hourani, to order
an audit of Venera's books. If we go over it all, when we find nothing,
no one will be able to accuse you of hiding anything. Also, if Angela
and I do it, well…" He smiled again. "We can be obnoxious. We don't
live here and nobody likes us anyway."
"Good idea," admitted Michael. "What's the other thing?"
"Let me get Angela checking around the team down there. See if
anything suspicious is going on, let her talk to Hatch, and so on. See
what the position is on the ground."
"Also good," Michael paused. "I don't suppose you can let me have
what you've got on Dr. Hatch, can you?"
Bowerman's stirred his soup, considering. "I might be able to leave
a file unsecured here and there."
"Thanks." Michael's phone spot rang the two-tone reminder chime.
Michael tapped it in acknowledgment, gratefully. "I've got to go. I'm
meeting my wife."
"Go." Bowerman waved the spoon. "I'll stop by tomorrow. Let you know
what the preliminary view is."
"Thanks," said Michael again. "I appreciate it."
Bowerman smiled his acknowledgment and returned his attention to
his cooling soup.
Michael didn't hang around. He headed for the nearest stairwell and
climbed back up toward the educational level. Jolynn was headmaster for
grades one through six and they were going to have lunch in her office.
She was having it brought in.
He tried not to think. He tried to blank the conversation he'd just
had out of his mind and concentrate on the outside world—the voices,
the faces, the sights that he knew as well as any man from Mother Earth
knew the rooms of his house or the streets of his city. He'd grown up
here with tilt drills, suit drills, and evacuation drills. He'd always
known that inside was safe, and outside was poison.
But he'd never believed that the outside could touch him, not really.
He'd been on Earth when his father died. For the first time, he was
walking under a sky that rained water, not acid. He was breathing air
that didn't come from a processing plant and seeing the stars at
night. He was infatuated with Mother Earth.
His mother's v-mail came. Dad had had one of those accidents they
warned you about. Venus had used one of her thousand tricks to kill
him or take down his scarab. Same thing. There was nothing to bury,
nothing to burn. Just a lifetime of memories ringing around his head
and Mom asking him to come home.
He went. But he swore not to stay. He went so he could attend the
memorial service and help sort out the will and all the other red tape
death generates. All his remaining energies he bent toward trying to
convince Mom to come back to Earth. She'd been born there, after all,
and she was getting old, despite the med trips. Since long-life was
not something she wanted for herself, what was keeping her there, in a
world that would kill her?
Come down, come back, come home. This home. Our real home, where
Michael was going back to and fully intended to stay.
"You do what you have to, Michael," she said. "And grant me the
right to do the same."
"This is no place for a human being to live, Mom. Trapped in a
bubble like this."
She'd sighed, with that annoying infinite patience she was capable
of. "Some trap. The door's open Michael. Go or stay, it's all up to
you." She'd taken his hands then. "I love you, Son. If you want to live
on Earth, then that's what you should do." She'd meant it too, every
word.
So Michael had gone. He'd finished his degree, he'd found work, and
within a year, he'd come back to Venus, found work again, met Jolynn,
and gotten married.
He'd never questioned what he'd done, but he'd never really
understood it either. He'd never been able to point to any one thing
and say, "That was it; that was why I left Earth." He'd been lonely, it
was true, and the vast global village of Earth with its snarl of
republics could be confusing to someone who'd grown up with one set of
people his entire life. But neither of those things was entirely the
answer.
On days like today, he still wondered. He did not regret, no, never
that. His life was too sweet, too rich, for regret, but all the same,
he did wonder.
Jolynn's office was at the end of a hall that the older kids called
"grass row," presumably because your ass was grass if you got sent
there. The door was open just a little, and Michael stepped into the
ordered chaos—shelves and racks of screen rolls,
text pads, an insulated lunch box, two deactivated animatron cats, and
a worse-for-wear rubber ducky left over from a disciplinary action
involving some overimaginative first graders. In the middle of it all
sat Jolynn with her rich brown-black hair and beautiful amber eyes,
smiling her smile that always held her own special brand of terse
amusement, and just waiting for him to bend down and kiss her.
"Hello to you too," she said when he pulled back. "Sit and eat. Some
of us are on a schedule." She lifted the lid off the lunch box.
About half an hour later, they had lunch reduced to salad
containers, sandwich warm-wraps, and a couple of empty ice cream cups
scattered on her desk. It wasn't until then that he realized Jolynn was
just looking at him.
"What?"
Her eyes sparkled, and he heard her unspoken accusation.
"I am listening," he said indignantly.
Jolynn snorted. "Maybe." She set her spoon down next to one of the
toy cats. "Shall I tell you what's wrong?"
Michael leaned back and folded his hands. "Please do." He'd known
this was coming. He hadn't wanted to talk during lunch. He'd just
wanted to be here with Jolynn in her quiet, cluttered office, away from
everything else. He knew she'd notice his silence, but he still hadn't
been able to get himself to make more than brief answers to her remarks
about her day, their children's upcoming tests, and the intramural
soccer tournament.
Jolynn bunched one of the warm-wraps into a ball and stuffed it into
her empty ice cream cup. "What's wrong is that Grandma Helen has left
you out of the loop and you are not doing anything about it."
How does she know? How does she always know? "I don't know
that there's any loop to be left out of."
"Of course you don't. You're not asking."
Michael sighed and tapped his spoon against the edge of the desk.
The plastic ticked sharply against the metal. "Jolynn, why did you come
back?"
"From where?" She stuck one of the ice cream cups inside the other.
"College. On Earth." He tossed the spoon into one of the empty salad
containers. "You went, just like the rest of us. Why'd you come back
here?"
"Because I couldn't resist the lure of all this glamour?" She waved
both hands at her cluttered, windowless office and smiled. "I don't
know. I couldn't get the hang of Earth, I suppose." She paused, and her
gaze focused on the wall, but Michael knew she was seeing her own
thoughts. "I could have been a school administrator on Earth, anywhere
I wanted, but I didn't feel like it would mean anything. My roots were
all up here, everybody I really knew, everybody who really knew me,
and… I guess I was just more comfortable with edges to my world."
"Edges?" Her words nibbled at him, reaching toward meanings inside
himself that he had been trying to tease out all morning.
Jolynn nodded. "We're all stuck together up here. Everybody's got a
place and something to work toward, and Grandma Helen's at the top of
it all. As long as she's there, there's somebody else to make sure the
world's all right. It's not all on you." She dropped the ice cream cups
into the lunch box. "That's kind of a scary thought. I came back
because I want to be looked after."
Michael nodded in agreement. "But it's there, isn't it? I think
every v-baby's got it. As long as Grandma Helen's around, everything's
going to be okay." He met Jolynn's eyes, her beautiful warm eyes. "So,
what do we do if something goes wrong with Grandma Helen?"
"Tell me," she said.
So, he told her about Josh's letter and his talk with Philip and
how, on the face of it anyway, Helen herself was the logical first
place to look, and how he didn't want to believe that.
Jolynn smiled in sympathy and took his hand. "You said it yourself.
Us v-babies, we want Grandma Helen to take care of us. We don't want to
think about her not being there or being flawed. It's as bad as the day
you find out your own parents are just human beings."
Michael gently squeezed her fingertips. "Yeah, it feels like that.
But—"
"But nothing." Jolynn dropped his hand down onto the desk and pushed
her chair back. "You go looking where you need to look and you don't
come home until you've got the truth."
"I'll tell you what's wrong," Michael pointed at her. "My wife is
always telling me what to do, that's what's wrong."
"Divorce lawyer's a com burst away," she returned calmly. "I'm ready
whenever you are."
Michael stood up, took her face in both hands, and kissed her
gently. "I'll be home for dinner." He started gathering up the lunch
litter.
"Good." Jolynn grabbed up the cups and dumped them both down the
solids chute. "Chase has sociology homework. That's your bailiwick."
"And while I am educating our youngest"—Michael used one of the
spoons to send a few lettuce leaves down the organics chute and then
dropped the spoon and the dishes into the solids chute—"what will you
be doing?"
"Going to a teacher conference with our oldest. Dean wants Chord in
the fast track. I want to hear what Chord thinks." Jolynn looked
skeptical.
Chord was eleven, just gearing up for adolescence and all its
attendant delights. "He could do it, if he were willing to try."
"And with Chord that's always the question, isn't it?" Jolynn sighed
and shook her head. "Well, what will be will be, and all that. I'll see
you tonight." She gave him a parting kiss and sat back down. "Now, get
out of here. Some of us have work to do."
Michael grinned at her as the door slid shut between them. Now he
had it, all the reason he needed to do his job, as hard and unpleasant
as it might get. He'd arrested friends before. He'd told hard truths,
in public. He did it because he loved his home, his wife, his sons.
This was his place and it was a good place, and he would not let anyone
change that.
Not even Grandma Helen.
* * *
Yan Quai had planned on being early to the performance mosaic at
Shake & Jake's, but a customer had called with a last-minute order,
and by the time he got out of the stream, got changed, caught the
monorail, and paid his admission fee, he was an hour late and the place
was jammed.
Shake & Jake's had been a warehouse or factory at some point.
Now, it was a series of performance spaces. The cocktail and chat crowd
circulated on catwalks, balconies, and platforms, looking down on the
dancers and actors below. Each act had its own stage with a seating
area bounded by sound-dampening screens so the music and dialogue
couldn't get out and the rumble of casual conversation couldn't get in.
The air smelled of clashing perfumes and spicy snacks.
Quai leaned over the railing on one of the catwalks, watching a
trio of French cirque-tradition performers in sparkling costumes giving
an exhibition of slack-wire walking. To their left, a slender couple
danced a sensuous and elaborate tango. To the right was the obligatory
Shakespearean scene. He couldn't hear, of course, but it looked like
Macbeth and the witches. The audience seemed enchanted.
Mari, you always do throw a good party.
"Quai!"
Quai turned toward the sound of his name. Marietta shouldered her
way through the crowd.
"Mari!" Quai hugged his friend and hostess. Marietta wore a scarlet
sheath dress without any kind of head scarf at all. Her shoes were
high-heeled pumps in a matching red, with ribbons that wrapped around
her ankles. "What's this? Going historical?"
"Like it?" She twirled. Quai shook his head. Mari grimaced and
smoothed the front of the dress down. "Yeah, well, actually, it's
uncomfortable as all creation. I can't breathe and my feet are
killing
me. I'm not doing this again." She returned her focus to Quai, and a
cheerful expression covered her face again. "So, how's your end of the
revolution going?"
Quai laughed. Mari's direct approach to politics, and life in
general, was legendary among her friends. "Slowly, slowly. There's a
lot of thought drifting around the stream that now is the time to be a
still water and run deep and not give the yewners an excuse to come
busting in." No need to mention where that
thought was coming from, of course.
Mari leaned against the wall to take the weight off at least one of
the killer shoes. "Yeah, I've been hearing that, but I don't know. I'd
feel a lot better if I knew what we were waiting for."
"Ah." Quai held up one finger. "But we do know. We're waiting for
the yewners to be relieved that we didn't kick up a fuss at the height
of the Discovery brouhaha and for them to relax. Then it's our turn."
"Mmmm." Mari shifted her weight to the other foot. "I'm not entirely
convinced, but I'll take it under advisement. I like to know what the
money I raise"—she swept her hand out to encompass the entire
performance space—"is going toward."
"Same thing it's always been going toward, Mari," Quai assured her.
"Finally returning full citizenship rights for the colonists."
All the colonies had suffered at the result of the Bradbury
Rebellion. All colonists had a harder time getting seats on the
U.N. controlled shuttles that flew between Earth and the planets. They
found it impossible to obtain licenses for starting manufacturing or
shipping businesses. Their privacy was invaded more frequently, their
taxes were higher, and not one of them had been allowed to hold an
independent election in twenty years. Yes, they all suffered, except
maybe the long-lifers in their resorts.
Mari's skeptical look did not entirely fade. She pushed herself away
from the wall. "Speaking of colonists," she said, looking away from
Quai to scan the room, "there's a feeder here who wants to talk to you."
"You let a feeder in here?" Quai was stunned. One of the other
things Mari was famous for was her careful guest list.
"Yes," she answered calmly. "Frezia Cheney. Do you know her?"
Quai thought. He subscribed to eight or nine shallow news services
and hung around three or four of the deepwater ones. That made for a
lot of names to forget. "I've heard of her," he said finally. "A Lunar,
isn't she?"
Mari nodded. "And she's got a reputation for fair and ruthless
reporting all across the stream. We could use a few more like her." She
touched his arm. "Just give her ten minutes, and I'll pull you out."
"If she wants to talk about my relationship with my mother—" said
Quai sternly.
"She won't, Quai, I promise."
Quai set his mouth in a straight line and favored Mari with one of
his Grade A sour glares. Mari responded with a pitiful look that made
the most of her big, brown eyes. Quai laughed and relented.
"Okay."
Mari opened her mouth, but Quai pointed a finger at her. "Ten
minutes, that's it. After that, you come get me. I want to go see the
cirque troupe, and I promised Eli we'd do some coordinating."
"I swear." Mari held up her right hand to promise and grabbed Quai's
wrist with her left. "Come on."
Quai sighed inwardly and let himself be pulled along.
He had over the years become extremely wary of stream feeders. Only
a few had ever actually wanted to talk to him. Mostly they wanted to
talk about his mother. If they were pro-U.N., they wanted to know why
he chose to damage her life with his outspoken causes. If they were
separatists, they wanted to know why he didn't denounce her timid
politics more frequently.
This particular feeder sat in a wingback chair in a little
parlorlike cluster of seats and tables. As Mari and Quai crossed the
dampening field, the muted roar of the party fell away. Frezia Cheney
was a fine-boned woman with pale copper skin and coffee-dark eyes. She
was conservatively dressed for this party—loose gold trousers and a
knee-length white tunic with gold embroidery around the collar and
cuffs. A gold beaded cap covered her black hair, which had been pulled
into a knot at the nape of her long neck.
"Frezia Cheney," said Mari as the woman stood up. "This is Yan Quai.
Quai, this is Frezia Cheney."
"How do you do." Quai shook Ms. Cheney's hand. As he did, he noticed
the clear plastic exoskeleton extending out of the
woman's tunic sleeve to cover her hand. Not only was Ms. Cheney a
Lunar, she did not spend much time at all on Earth. If she did, her
muscles would have been able to manage the gravity without help.
"Thank you for agreeing to see me, Mr. Yan." Ms. Cheney withdrew her
hand and sat back down a little hesitantly. The exoskeleton allowed her
to move freely, but it could not disguise a Lunar's mental discomfort
with full gravity. "I am sorry about having to bring this to a social
gathering. Would you prefer I made an appointment to meet you at your
office?"
Two points for the appearance of consideration, anyway.
"No, this is fine," Quai said, casting a significant look toward Mari.
"I understand having a crowded schedule."
Mari patted Quai's shoulder as she left. Quai sat in the second
wingback chair, which was turned so he was almost knee-to-knee with Ms.
Cheney.
"Something to drink?" asked Ms. Cheney.
"Scotch, thanks," replied Quai, and Ms. Cheney sent the table
scooting away with orders for two.
"Now." Quai crossed his legs and pulled out his best businesslike
voice. "What can I do for you, Ms. Cheney?"
Ms. Cheney smiled. "Don't worry, Mr. Yan. I have no intention of
asking you about your mother."
Not yet, anyway, thought Quai, but he kept his expression
bland. "Well, that's refreshing."
Ms. Cheney gave him a knowing look. When he didn't react, she just
shook her head. "I'm much more interested in a little company called
Biotech 24."
"Biotech 24? And they are?"
"A little stream company that's been giving money to various
research projects out in the planets, including to a Dr. Meyer up on
Venera Base so she can study what she thinks is microscopic life in
the Venusian cloud banks." The table returned, and Ms. Cheney handed
Quai a short, stout glass.
"And why would you be interested in them?" Quai sipped his drink.
One of the other things Mari did really well was catering. This was the
pure stuff. No rapid distilleries for Mari's patrons, no sir.
Ms. Cheney wrapped her fingers around her glass. Quai heard the
minute hum as the servos tightened her grip for her. "Because a friend
of a friend of ours wants to know if there's separatist money behind
it."
"A friend of a friend of ours?" Quai felt his eyebrows rise. "Is
there a name involved here?"
Ms. Cheney lifted the glass and cradled it in her augmented hands
but did not drink. "Paul Mabrey."
Quai whistled long and low. "Now there's a memory. I thought he'd
ceased to exist." Quai had researched the Bradbury inquisitions
thoroughly. He looked on it as a necessity. So many people popped their
heads back up once every five years or so that you needed to know
whether they were the real thing or whether they were on the yewner's
fishing teams. His mother's colleague Mr. Hourani was particularly good
at getting old revolutionaries to turn on the new separatist movements.
"There was a rumor he was gone." Ms. Cheney's face was guarded. "But
he's back, and he wants to help, or at least not do any harm."
"I see." No one had ever accused Paul Mabrey of actually
cooperating with the yewners, that Quai had heard. There was, however,
a kind of automatic suspicion attached to anyone who got out of
Bradbury without having to go to trial. He'd have to check the stream,
see if there was any gravitational attraction between Mabrey's name
and Hourani's. "Is Mabrey the friend, or the friend of the friend?"
"He's the friend." Ms. Cheney still did not drink. Quai started to
wonder why she'd bothered to send for a drink she didn't want. Probably
so she'd look companionable.
"And the friend of the friend?"
Ms. Cheney did not miss a beat. "I'm not at liberty to say."
Quai took another swallow of his own drink. She didn't know what she
was missing here. "Then I'm not at liberty to speak."
They regarded each other for a long moment, weighing their private
considerations and deciding how much they could give or how much they
had to hold back.
"If Biotech 24 is working with you, then there's a potential
disaster brewing," said Ms. Cheney. "The yewners are ordering an audit
of Venera's books. They won't miss this."
That caught Quai off guard. He let the silence stretch out too long
before he was able to answer. "And were that to be any kind of a
problem, Paul's friend might be in a position to do something about
this?"
"Yes."
Which pretty much told Quai who the friend of a friend was. There
was only one place where the organized separatists had been able to
make any inroads on Venera. The Venerans were so ruthlessly apolitical
that it wasn't funny. Sometimes Quai wondered if it was part of the
boarding oath. "We the undersigned agree not to have any opinions
whatsoever."
Well, well, Ben Godwin has decided to move from sympathizer to
player. Dicey time to try it. I wonder what changed his mind?
I wonder what Paul Mabrey has been up to all these years? Maybe
it's time to dither.
"Listen, Ms. Cheney," he began. "I'm only loosely jacked in to that
end of—"
Ms. Cheney snorted and waved one hand. "If you don't want to tell
me, Mr. Yan, just say so. The only person who knows more than you about
where the Terran separatist money comes from is our hostess."
Quai smiled, just a little. "I've heard that one too. If it's true,
then Heaven help the separatists, because nobody knows what's going on."
Ms. Cheney studied him in silence for a minute. Then she said, "The
game's starting up again, Mr. Yan. This may be our last, best chance to
break from Earth. The longer the yewners can be put off, the better for
us." She set her drink back down on the table, still untasted. "Now is
not the time to be invisible. Now is the time to let them know we're
here."
"There I do not agree with you." Quai shook his head.
Ms. Cheney shrugged, a move that made her servos buzz angrily. "And
there's a lot of us on Luna who disagree with your disagreement. But
that's all right. Unless"—she turned her head so she regarded him out
of one shining eye—"that's what's keeping you from answering my
questions?"
Quai took another sip of scotch and rolled it around in his mouth
for a moment, considering the possibilities. He had to agree that
having the yewners track down the origins of Biotech 24 would not be a
good idea. However, at least as far as he was concerned, and he was the
one being asked here, neither Paul Mabrey nor Ben Godwin were good
risks. On the other hand, Mari trusted this woman, and Mari's judgment
was sound.
Also, it was worth a little payback to know that the Lunars were not
willing to sit back and wait.
Of course, Ms. Cheney could not be speaking for all the Lunars, any
more than he and Mari worked with all the Terran groups. There were
knots and bunches of people who called themselves separatists, or
procolonials, or planetary-rights representatives scattered all across
four worlds, and in the L5 archipelagoes to boot. Some of them held
summits together. Some of them actively hated each other. They had all
been born out of the Bradbury Rebellion, but their principles divided
them more than they united them.
Sometimes Quai wondered why the yewners considered them any kind of
threat.
Still, if he gave Ms. Cheney what she was looking for, she might be
able to give him an inroad to the Lunar separatists if he needed it
later.
"Yes, there's separatist money in Biotech 24," he said at last. "No,
it would not be a good thing if the yewners knew that."
Ms. Cheney nodded. "Thank you."
"You're welcome, Ms. Cheney." Quai set his drink down on the table
and stood. "Anything else I can help you with?"
"Not at the moment." She stood also and held out her hand. "But I
may want to talk to you in the future."
"And I may want to talk to you." He shook her skeleton-encased hand,
barely able to feel the flesh under the plastic cage.
"I look forward to it."
They said good-bye and Quai walked away to find Mari. It wasn't
hard. She stood out like a scarlet exclamation point in a crowd of men
and women in earth tones and gold. She spotted Quai and extricated
herself from the group.
"I see you got yourself out."
"Years of experience." Quai leaned against the railing and looked
down on the stages. A cirque performer was juggling now, a brilliant
cascade of green glowing spheres. "Mari, did you know what that was
going to be about?"
"Of course," she answered simply.
Quai cocked an eye toward her. Her face was free of any suspicion or
apology. "And you trust her all right?"
Now Mari frowned. "I wouldn't have sent you in there if I didn't,
Quai; you know that."
"I do." Quai rubbed his hands together. "I just… I don't know."
Mari touched his shoulder. "What's the matter?"
He looked up at her. Her hand was warm and felt very pleasant where
it was. A pretty woman, Mari, a good friend, and a savvy
businessperson. They needed more people like her. "You ever wonder if
we know what we're doing? If we're the right ones for the job?"
She laughed and patted his back. "Constantly. But we're all there
is."
"I guess."
"Come on." She took his arm. "You're not having fun, and that'll be
no good when I start pressing for account deductions. Let's go watch
the cirque troupe."
"In a second, Mari." Quai straightened up and gently extricated his
arm from hers. "Can you get me a secure line? I've got to send out some
mail."
"Sure. Hang for a minute." Mari threaded her way expertly through
the crowd, heading for the offices in the back.
Quai hung. He watched the performers and the audiences, and the
talkers and the drinkers. He wondered how many people here really
believed that the colonists deserved better than they were getting and
how many of them were just here because Mari knew they had deep
pockets and wanted to pretend they were involved in daring underground
politics.
How many of them had waived their right to kids in favor of
long-life? How many of them wanted to have both the kids and as much
immortality as money could buy and had already reserved a slot in some
resort on the Moon or Mars where they could retreat once they reached
age 120? That was the deal. You got long life, or kids, or you left
Mother Earth behind.
And for the hundred-millionth time Quai told himself his activism
was not about his father's decision to take the waiver and leave him.
Mari came back with a minipad. She slotted it into the bar, hit a
couple of command keys, and handed him the stylus. "It's all encrypted
under some of my best stuff, so don't send anything they'll want to
trace. The yewners will think it's me."
"Never." Quai took the stylus and considered the blank screen for a
moment.
Finally, he wrote:
Old friends operating under alias in
targeted area. Working toward mutual goal. With their efforts, we
might get there sooner rather than later if we just sit back and let it
happen. But maybe keep one eye on the Moon.
He addressed the message to an alias and sent it out. The contact
code he sent the scrambled package to was a group box. Buyers and
sellers of all kinds went in there to keep up on gossip, to give leads
to friends, that kind of thing. All of it was scrupulously legal, of
course, or, at least, all of it was so far unaudited.
Quai sat back and fingered the holotattoo on his neck. He could
barely believe things were really happening. Ever since he'd thrown in
with the separatists, he'd gotten used to the idea that it was going to
be a long, hard slog. Ted Fuller rotted in an isolation cell. Mars was
discovering easy economic benefits in lining up to serve the mines,
the heavy industries, and the long-life resorts.
But now, now, he could see the end. He could almost touch it. Okay,
not the end, but the beginning. The new beginning.
He'd never really believed he'd have this kind of help, or that the
people they needed so badly would come around.
But he did and they had, and now it was a whole new game.
* * *
"Well, well," murmured Alinda, pushing her heavy braid of hair back
over her shoulder. "Don't push the Send key yet, ladies and gentlemen."
Grace looked up from her desk. "What are you mumbling about, Al?"
Alinda's dark eyes sparkled and Grace groaned inwardly. There was
nothing Alinda Noon loved more than a good rumor.
That is the biggest problem with v-babies, thought Grace.
They
all believe gossip is a social grace.
The three of them sat along the curving wall of Chemistry Lab Nine,
their desks a small island on a sea of cluttered workbenches and
metal-sided analyzers.
"Looks like reports of aliens on Venus were a bit premature," Alinda
went on.
Grace froze. "What?" she demanded.
"I win the pool." Al called over her shoulder to Marty, who'd frozen
his own simulation to listen. "I said the yewners would be crying fraud
within a week of getting here."
"What are you talking about?" Grace heaved herself to her feet.
Alinda blinked, startled. "Nothing catastrophic, Grace, really. The
yewners are calling for an audit of base books and time logs. Only one
reason for it. They think we've been playing games with time and money."
Each word thudded hard against Grace's mind. "But they don't know?"
"Know we've been playing games?" Alinda's brow creased.
"That the Discovery's is a fake!"
"Of course not. Why? Should they?"
Alinda's blank look, Marty's stupid, stunned stare were suddenly
more than Grace could stand. "Pay attention, little girl!" she roared.
"That Discovery is saving your job and your precious base! If it gets
taken away, this whole place is going into cold storage! There is
nothing funny here!"
Grace wanted to shake her. She wanted to smack him. Instead, she
strode into her private office and slammed the door. She knew outside a
whole cloud of whispers was now rising, most of them containing her
name. She had just given the entire lab something to chew over for
weeks. She gripped the back of her chair and squeezed.
Get it together, get it together. Nothing's happened yet. It's
just an audit. Of course there had to be an audit.
But it wasn't just an audit; it was another round of questions and
inspections and sideways glances and gossip and more questions and
nobody believing what she'd found.
For just a minute there, it had been going so well. The outside
world was actually listening to her. For once, the great Helen Failia
hadn't been able to divert her funding or try to monopolize her
research assistant's time.
On the wall of her office, Grace kept a still shot of an absorber
chain. It had been taken by a stasis microscope and looked like someone
had taken forty gray-and-white tennis balls and stuck them together in
a ring that twisted in on itself. Not in the neat double helix, but
more like a bedspring wound far too tightly and then folded over in the
middle and fed back into itself.
This small tangle had been her life for ten years. She and her team
had isolated this as Venus's mysterious ultraviolet absorber. Snarls
of this little molecule created the dark bands that showed up in the
cloud banks. There had been praise and papers and money, and even
Helen had been happy.
Which had all been fine, but then Grace had discovered that the
compound was alive.
"Now, I'm not saying it's a yeast or an alga," she tried to tell
them. "But it must be considered on a level with a virus or at the very
least an autocatalytic RNA molecule. It absorbs energy; it exudes waste
chemicals." Ozone and water molecules were more concentrated in the
absorption bands than outside them. This had been independently
measured. "It has an identifiable internal barrier to increase
electrochemical potential. And"— she'd stab at the table, or the chart,
or the nearest person with her index finger as she got to this part—"it
reproduces itself."
There was the snag. The molecules were highly active, always
combining and recombining. But Grace couldn't get anyone else to say
that this process was definitely reproduction, and she hadn't yet been
able to duplicate its peculiar gyrations in
the lab. The consensus of the rest of the worlds was that the intense
ultraviolet light hitting the top of the cloud layer broke apart the
molecules, which reformed once they'd dropped far enough down in the
clouds to be out of reach of the worst of the UV.
But she hadn't stopped. She had years' worth of observations. She
scrabbled for independent confirmation of her results. She fought to
bring biologists and chemists to Venera to look at the absorbers, just
on the chance that someone else would finally see what she saw.
For the first time in her long life, Grace was certain about what
she was doing, and that certainty had almost ruined her.
Grace brushed her bangs from her forehead and stared at the absorber
on her wall. She hadn't planned on becoming a long-lifer. She'd planned
on taking her 120 allotted years, getting a decent life, getting
married, having a kid and passing on, leaving the kid, or the work, or
both, behind to say Here Lived Grace Meyer.
But it hadn't worked out that way. She'd gone into chemistry because
it could be applied in so many different fields, not because it
interested her for its own sake. She'd wandered from job to job. In
each one, she found she was a solid middle-of-the-road performer. She
was good enough but not brilliant, never brilliant. Always the third or
fourth name on the few papers that her work groups published, never
quite making the patent disclosures.
Her first marriage had bombed, the second had petered out, the
third… the third had barely existed. After the third, she realized
she'd been wandering from husband to husband the way she'd been
wandering from job to job, so she swore off marriage.
It was after that that she'd headed for "the planets," hoping in her
vague, wandering way that her life waited for her outside Mother
Earth's sheltering arms.
And then you found it, and nobody listened to you. Grace
laughed and shook her head.
Too perfect.
But I made them listen. She smiled at the picture of her
little, personal discovery.
Even if just for a little while, I
made them listen.
And if the yewners discovered how she'd managed that particular
feat, then it really was over. Everything. Here Lived Grace Meyer,
Fraud.
No, she dug her fingers into the chair's fabric until her nails bent
against the frame. She'd wiped the trail clean. She'd reviewed all the
records and put them back the way they were supposed to be. There was
no linkage. Nothing.
Nothing you can think of anyway.
Grace closed her eyes. Now it wasn't just routine logs sitting in
the endless streams of screenwork that Venera generated. Now it was
individual files being scrutinized by Michael Lum, who'd apprenticed
under Gregory Schoma, the man who designed Venera's security. Now it
was two yewner cops helping him.
All that skill and brilliance trained against the work of Grace
Meyer, who'd never been able to get anyone to believe she might
actually be more than just competent.
So what do you do about it? Grace opened her eyes and
focused on the image of the absorber, the real discovery, the true
evidence of life on Venus.
You go back over everything. You make
sure there's nothing you've missed. Come on, Grace, it's basic
research. You've been doing this for seventy years. Go in there and see
if you can find yourself.
Grace pulled the chair away from her private desk and sat down,
waking the command board with her touch. As she started shuffling her
icons, she realized she'd have to do something about Alinda. She and
Marty would spread news of Grace's outburst across half the base, with
embellishments, if Grace didn't give them something else to think
about. She did not need for her name coming to the yewners' attention.
Not like this, anyway.
Grace fixed a smile onto her face and walked back out into the main
lab and up to Alinda's desk.
"I'm sorry, Al," she said, meaning it. "That was completely uncalled
for. I've been sitting on the edge just a little too long."
Alinda, as quick to forgive as she was quick to talk, waved Grace's
words away. "It's okay, Grace. We all want this to be real,
and our department's got more reason than most."
Grace nodded. "Just one more attack on the data. Only to be
expected." She shrugged. "What would you say to a show of unity? The
microbrewery's got a new batch coming out today. We could close up shop
early and go try a sample. My treat?"
Al's face lit up. "Sounds great. You in, Marty?" She turned to her
fellow researcher.
"The boss's buying beer?" Marty's thin grin split his face. "You bet
I'm in."
Grace smiled down on them. Kids. Easily distracted. Michael and the
yewners would not be so easy. With them, she'd have to be careful;
she'd have to be thorough.
For the first time in her life, she really would have to be
brilliant.
Contents -
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Chapter Nine
T'sha found Tr'es in the life research chamber. She hovered silently
in the doorway and watched the child work.
No, not child. Stop
thinking like that. Tr'es was small, it was true, almost as small
as a male, and her crest shone blue as sapphires, undimmed by age. But
she was an adult, picked out by Br'sei shortly after her Declaration.
She followed his promises and left Ca'aed's care for Ke'taiat's, to
become one of Br'sei's best engineers, or so T'sha understood.
Even so, there was something furtive about Tr'es, or at least there
was when she was around other people. Here, though, alone with her maze
of microcosms, caretakers, and simulators, she was intent and
confident. Reverse engineering, that was Tr'es's specialty. Find
something that existed and track it back through all its previous
stages. Take it apart until you understood it and put it back together
again.
Rather like what I'm trying to do here. T'sha poked her
muzzle into the room. The gesture did not catch Tr'es's attention. The
engineer just hovered in front of her simulator, talking nonstop in a
specialized command language and watching patterns that might have
been wind currents on the nightside, or neurochemical diffusion, flow
across its surface.
T'sha flew all the way into the room, careful not to touch any of
the microcosms or their connecting tubules.
The shadow of her movement crossed the simulator's surface, and
Tr'es whirled around, startled.
"Oh, ah, good luck, Ambassador T'sha." She raised her forehands. "I
didn't… I—"
"You were absorbed in your work." T'sha glided carefully between the
tools, both living and nonliving. "I know how it feels."
Reassured, Tr'es inflated slightly. "Is there something I can share
with you, Ambassador?"
"I hope so." T'sha finally spotted a pair of rods that she was
fairly sure were perches and settled onto them. "I understand it was
you who did the initial work on the raw materials D'seun took from the
New People." She had listened to the caretaker of the reports for an
entire dodec-hour and had practically had to be carried into the
refresher, she was so exhausted. Fear had kept her listening. Fear and
suspicion, because of what she could not find.
Tr'es dipped her muzzle. "He wanted me to map neural branching and
chemical diffusion patterns to see if we could link that and the gross
physiology to the transmissions we were receiving and make a start on
the language translation."
She seemed about to go on, but T'sha interrupted. "And you have made
great progress, I see."
Tr'es shriveled a little, embarrassed. "We have done our best. The
New People are complex. They have at least as many command languages
as we do, and those patterns are all bound up with their
person-to-person speech. Teasing them apart has not been easy."
T'sha whistled her appreciation. "No, it would be extremely
difficult. Your good work will make your birth city proud."
At that, Tr'es puffed up fully. "How does Ca'aed?"
"Very well." T'sha whistled more approval at the warmth with which
Tr'es spoke of her blood home. "You have been here a long time, haven't
you? Perhaps a trip back to Ca'aed is indicated."
Tr'es cocked her head first to one side, then the other. "I'd like
that, Ambassador T'sha, if Ambassador D'seun would agree…"
T'sha decided to spare her from having to go on. "We can leave the
discussion for later if you think that would be better." This was a
rough wind. T'sha had some authority over Tr'es, as ambassador from her
birth home, but if Tr'es's loyalties weren't all promised to D'seun,
she was the only one on the team, except possibly for Br'sei. Br'sei,
however, was older, much more complicated, and much better at hiding
what he really knew, so T'sha had decided to tackle Tr'es first.
Tr'es had swelled even further. She was almost her normal size now.
"Yes, that might be best."
"Then that's what we'll do." T'sha stretched her wings. The child…
Tr'es was as relaxed as she was going to get. Now was the time to ask
the real question. "Tr'es, how did the New People's raw material come
into our possession?"
"I was not there," said Tr'es, just a little too quickly.
"Ambassador D'seun said there was an accident and all that remained of
the New People who suffered was raw material, which he collected for
study." She shifted her size uneasily. "For me to study," she added
like an admission.
T'sha dipped her muzzle. "That study sounds as though it was
arduous," she said, carefully keeping the touch of judgment from her
words. "How did you deal with the extreme cold?"
"Carefully," said Tr'es, with a flash of engineer's humor. T'sha
clacked her teeth. "At first we used only nonliving tools. Then,
working from the New People's material, we were able to grow some
specialized microcosms that were able to keep their liquid transfer
media intact and yet perform useful work."
Again, T'sha whistled, this time genuinely impressed. Tr'es was no
child when it came to skill. To not only propagate an alien life but to
make a useful tool of it with only a few years of study, that was a
feat indeed.
Unfortunately, it did not change the reason T'sha had come. "They
are delicate things, the New People," she said. "Ambassador D'seun
must have moved very quickly."
Tr'es hesitated, but then dipped her muzzle. "That is my
understanding," she said softly.
T'sha thrust her muzzle closer. "Did no new people arrive to claim
the raw materials of their own?"
"They may have, later, but"—Tr'es rattled her wings uneasily—"raw
materials are raw materials. They belong to whoever claims them first."
"True." T'sha dipped her muzzle. "We are fortunate Ambassador
D'seun was so alert. The translations would be going much more slowly
if you had not had anything to work with."
Tr'es's relaxation vanished. She pulled herself inward, minutely,
just a couple of bones at a time, as if she were hoping T'sha wouldn't
notice. "I believe he was waiting for such an occurrence."
"Waiting?" T'sha pushed closer.
Tr'es's skin trembled as she deflated. "I have work to do,
Ambassador. Is there anything else I can share with you?"
T'sha let go of her perches and glided forward until the tip of her
muzzle just brushed Tr'es's bright-blue crest. "How quickly did D'seun
move to obtain the raw materials, Tr'es?"
Tr'es jerked away and turned to face her simulator again. She spoke
a few words in a command language T'sha didn't know, and the diaphanous
patterns were replaced by a more familiar wind grid.
"Tr'es," said T'sha, although the engineer was no longer looking at
her. "What has D'seun made you do?"
"He made me do nothing," said Tr'es without taking her gaze off the
simulator. "I have made promises."
T'sha moved up next to her until they hovered wingtip to wingtip.
T'sha did not overfly her, not yet. Tr'es still might talk without
overt intimidation. "This is not about promises. I was sent here by the
High Law Meet, just like you were. We're here to do what's right for
the People."
"That's what I'm trying to do," Tr'es said miserably, huddling in on
herself.
"Tr'es."
T'sha turned her head, her muzzle still open to speak. Br'sei glided
through the doorway.
"D'tak needs some help in the surveying chamber," he said, brushing
a forehand against Tr'es's wing. "There's an unpredicted mutation in
the preparers we seeded in Highland 98. We need to find out where it
came from."
"Yes, Engineer Br'sei." Tr'es swelled instantly with relief. She
flew away without giving T'sha a second glance.
Br'sei faced T'sha, saying nothing, waiting for her. It was a
remarkably discomforting tactic.
"Excellent timing, Engineer," remarked T'sha at last.
"Forgive me, Ambassador T'sha." Br'sei sank a little with a humility
T'sha was certain he did not feel. "But if you're going to make trouble
for someone, it really should be for someone who can handle that
trouble."
"I am making trouble?" T'sha pulled her muzzle back. "I thought I
was doing my job."
"That is what everyone here thinks." Br'sei's wings fluttered,
bobbing him dangerously close to some of the carefully aligned
microcosms. "Unfortunately, everyone has conflicting ideas as to what
that job is."
"I see." T'sha dropped until she was level with him. "And what do
you think
your job is?"
"I was brought here to establish a life base on this world, one that
could form the foundation for a canopy, for our lives," said Br'sei
without flinching or hesitation. "I've done that."
T'sha moved in closer. She wanted to breathe him, taste him
thoroughly. She wanted there to be no chance of misunderstanding even
one word. "There is more in you," she said.
"Yes."
Closer. Make him aware of you. Let him be unable to escape the
touch and taste of you. "Is it some promise to D'seun that keeps
you from telling me?"
"In truth, no, it's…" He inflated suddenly. "Ambassador, T'sha, have
you seen the New People yet?"
The question caught T'sha off guard and she backed away. "In truth,
I haven't. I have been busy going over reports and trying to
understand—"
"What Ambassador D'seun has been doing with his team." Br'sei
finished her words and pointed his muzzle toward the doorway. "The New
People's home is near. Will you come with me to see it?"
Eagerness and caution both tugged at T'sha. "Can we do so in safety?"
"If we keep our distance, we can, but we will need a dirigible."
Br'sei spoke a few command words into his headset. "It will meet us at
the mooring point." He glided out the door. T'sha
rattled her wings to the empty air and followed.
They reached the fat, white dirigible without encountering D'seun.
T'sha felt a bit like a child breaking curfew. It occurred to her to
wonder if Br'sei had made sure D'seun was away before he came to her.
Br'sei was cautious enough to think of such a thing.
The dirigible opened its doors and waited for them to fly aboard.
T'sha settled herself on one pair of perches while Br'sei spoke in
the dirigible's command language. The dirigible gave its confirmation,
closed its doors, and began to rise.
They flew straight up into the shifting clouds, far up past the
temperate zones to where the air was cold and thin and the gases
themselves began to freeze into liquids. T'sha stroked one of the
dirigible's tendons in sympathy. It had been bred for harsh conditions,
but this could not be comfortable.
Br'sei said nothing during the flight. T'sha let the silence float
between them. He was making decisions, that much was obvious. She
needed to give him room. He was not some overawed child who needed to
be alternately coaxed along and reminded of his responsibilities.
Br'sei had been declared adult before T'sha had even been born. Whole
cities owed their lives to his work, and if he was successful here, the
whole world would too. D'seun would take the credit for it, as
ambassador. But T'sha at least would know who had grown the life, who
had really spread it.
And I will make sure that others do too, she vowed
silently.
You have my promise.
"There," said Br'sei suddenly.
T'sha let go of her perches and floated up beside him. Through the
dirigible's eyes she saw a sphere of silver with its wings and tail
spread wide to catch the winds. Thick tendons connected an elaborate
exoskeleton to dull-gray skin.
"It's a city!" T'sha clacked her teeth delightedly. "Clearly, that
is a city. Why did no one say!"
"It's not alive."
T'sha turned one eye toward him. "What?"
"It's not alive," he repeated slowly and forcefully, allowing each
word to sink into her skin. "None of their cities are. They're metal."
T'sha pulled in on herself, almost unwilling to understand. "Ca'aed
has metallic extensions, Engineer. That doesn't mean—"
"I don't mean metallic extensions, Ambassador." Br'sei swelled and
spread his wings. His hands all grabbed a perch to keep him from
bumping into the ceiling. "I mean metal. The shell, the tendons, the
bones. That was built, not grown. It is not alive. None of their cities
are."
"That's…" T'sha stopped, searching for words.
"Morbid? Disgusting? Frightening?" suggested Br'sei, clenching and
unclenching his posthands in his agitation. "I have thought all of
these things."
T'sha struggled. To live encased in metal, to not even try to
emerge. How must that be? "I would not be able to tolerate it," she
said slowly. "I would go insane. But I have a friend, Technician
Pe'sen, who would be fascinated by this."
Br'sei clacked his teeth once, sharply. "Technicians always are a
bit morbid, aren't they? To give yourself over to the science of the
never-living, I suppose you must be." He whistled. "I have thought we
might need one or two technicians on this team before we are done." He
gazed at the distant silver sphere again, clenching his hands around
his perches. "But, I ask myself, as a good engineer must, because
their environment would make me insane, does it follow that they must
be insane? There are many creatures in the canopy who eat what would
poison a person."
T'sha remained silent, feeling the pattern of his words with care.
Where did these questions come from? Were they wholly his own, or had
someone said something to him to lift the questions up? Someone who
might be Ambassador D'seun?
"Have you found an answer to this question yet?" asked T'sha
carefully.
"No." He faced the graceful, lifeless sphere that held all there was
of the New People on this world. "I have seen what there is to see of
them, and of us, and my thoughts have swung back and forth until I'm no
longer sure what wind blows them." He deflated. "I was hoping that your
thoughts would be steadier than
mine."
"Engineer Br'sei." T'sha glided to his perch and settled there, her
wings touching his, her crest brushing his back. "What has D'seun told
your team?"
Br'sei did not look fully at her, but neither did he deflate. He
just spread his crest, as if seeking his balance in a difficult wind.
"That you are greedy and dangerous. That you are rich and young and do
not see beyond your own ambitions. That we must not say what we know of
the New People because too many in the High Law Meet would be
frightened and advocate finding another world so as not to be too near
this potential insanity. That the People are dying and if we do not
succeed with this world, we are all of us dead." Br'sei cocked his
head. "He was most convincing too."
"Yes," murmured T'sha even as anger swelled her body. "I imagine he
was. Even Tr'es believed him."
Stop, stop. Now is not the time.
Swallow it, save it, breathe it out later. Lose control and you'll kill
what you're growing with Br'sei.
Her patience though was raw and withered. Her worries, her
suspicions swam around inside her body, threatening her internal
vision. She could not trust her subtlety now. She was too rocked by
what Br'sei had said. She needed to ask her questions right now. There
was no alternative.
"Engineer Br'sei." She let go of the perch and swelled herself out
as far as her skin allowed. "Was there life in the New Person when
Tr'es took it apart?"
"No," he said, simply and immediately.
"Was there life in the New Person when you took it apart?" She
spread wings and crest to their fullest extent, towering, dominating
with her size as she could not with her years. "Or was it D'seun's
doing?"
"You have promised me nothing that could make me answer that
question," said Br'sei coldly. She opened her mouth, but he thrust his
muzzle forward. "And before you try, you should review how deeply I
and mine are promised to D'seun. He brought us here. He ensured futures
for us and our children and all our families—not just free futures,
either, but glorious ones. The least of us will head our own households
with our pick of spouses. I cannot set all that aside for nothing." The
touch of his words was as weak as the words themselves were strong. He
was pleading with her, she realized, almost sick with what he could not
say, could not do.
One bone at a time, T'sha made herself subside. "I see you are torn.
I understand it. I will find what I can do to make this as easy as
possible for you."
"He is not insane, Ambassador," murmured Br'sei, as if he were
trying out an uncertain idea.
T'sha stiffened against the engineer's words. "If he killed a New
Person for their raw materials, he is."
"I don't know that's what he did," said Br'sei, more to the city
beyond them than to T'sha herself. "It could be nothing but my fear
talking."
"Maybe, Engineer." T'sha was not eager to allow that possibility,
but she had to. She had nothing tangible to wrap her hands around. She
had nothing but holes— holes in the records, holes in Br'sei's
knowledge. Holes were not proof. Holes were suspicion only. "But you
must allow that Ambassador D'seun is flying high and that the air
around him is very, very thin."
Br'sei clacked his teeth bitterly. "Is that not how we all fly right
now?"
T'sha dipped her muzzle. "You are right, Engineer. I wish you
weren't."
"So do I, Ambassador," said Br'sei, deflating until he was only the
size of a child. "Life of my mother, so do I."
* * *
Helen stood as Grace Meyer entered her office. "Thanks for coming,
Grace." She pulled a cup of steaming black coffee from the wall
dispenser and handed it across to the chemist.
"Thanks." Grace inhaled the aroma appreciatively. Helen had called
for fresh coffee specifically for this interview. Grace looked tired,
but alert as ever. Grace Meyer pushed herself harder than anyone on
Venera, with the possible exception of Helen herself.
But then again, Grace felt she had more to prove, and more to gain,
than anyone.
So, how far would that take her?
"Has Isaac Walters pronounced an opinion on your absorbers yet?"
asked Helen, drawing a cup for herself.
"We're designing some new experiments," said Grace non-committally
as she sat in one of the guest chairs and crossed her legs. "I'm in
contact with him." Walters was down at the Discovery with the rest of
the U.N. team.
"Now," Grace said as Helen sat back down behind her desk, "any
particular reason why I'm the one being summoned to court?"
Helen sighed. "It's not just you, Grace. The yewners have us all on
the carpet. They've called for an audit, so the books have to be
opened." She did not say why, but it was hard. She wanted to yell, was
it you? Did you put us in this position? Did you tell the yewners that
our salvation is a fraud?
Grace's face softened a little. "I suppose that's only to be
expected. After all, the eyes of the world are upon us," she intoned.
"How's that going, by the way?" she asked in a more normal voice.
Helen shrugged and sat behind her desk, setting her coffee cup down
in front of her. "As U.N. publicity, it seems to be a big success. I've
been getting congratulatory bursts from our Mr. Waicek telling me what
a marvelous job we're doing keeping his people fed and watered." She
curled her hands loosely around her cup, feeling the warmth seep into
her palms. "I think the C.A.C. folks do not want us to get above
ourselves. Because we're a chartered colony, they have a right to look
at our books. If they wanted to make real trouble, an easy route would
be to say we're not using all our new resources efficiently and that
we need to be regulated." Helen sipped her coffee and returned it to
the circle of her hands. "So this means we get an audit, and this means
that the people with the biggest budget increases are going to get
special attention." Helen smiled wanly. "This means you."
"This means me." Grace studied Helen for a minute. Searching her
face for what? Helen could not guess. Helen returned the woman's gaze,
although it did not take much looking to see Grace's native
stubbornness settling in. Helen braced herself for a fight.
In the next moment, however, Grace's expression eased, almost as if
she'd learned what she wanted to know. "Okay, Helen. I'll play. What do
you need?"
"I need to go over your expenses with you." Helen lit up her desk
screen. "If you can jack into your records and follow along, help me
fill in the blank spots. I'd appreciate it."
Grace took another swallow of coffee and set her cup down on the
edge of Helen's desk. "Well, I won't enjoy it, but let's do it." She
worked the secondary command board to open her private logs. "Where do
you want to start?"
The next hour felt almost like a ritual. Helen laid out the expense
reports for the time immediately up to the Discovery on her desk screen
and went down the line, questioning each point of income and each
corresponding point of outflow. Grace answered solemnly, pausing to
check her private records when her memory faltered. Helen made notes.
They both drank their coffee, refilling the cups whenever they emptied.
"Last thing," said Helen finally. The look on Grace's face was one
of disbelief. "Really." Grace grunted and made a "come on" gesture.
Helen gave her a sour half-smile. "Just the new supporter. Biotech 24."
"Oh, them." Grace ruffled her strawberry-blond bangs. "They're
venture capitalists of the old school. Very twentieth. Bet on the
underdog kind of thing. I made a pitch that alien RNA might prove to be
highly useful, and they dug into their pockets. Not as far as I would
have liked, though." She smiled thoughtfully at her coffee. "Although,
I haven't been back since the Discovery. We've been too busy."
"Haven't exactly needed to, have you?" Helen looked at her
spreadsheets. "People have been waving money in your face."
"It's a nice change," admitted Grace. "For all of us."
"And you've been keeping your people busy spending it." Helen
touched a key and a new set of records appeared on her desk screen.
"They've been logging in a lot of scarab time as well."
"Oh, yes. I've got Kevin Cusmanos yammering at me for being too hard
on his babies and his pilots." She saw Helen's look and raised her free
hand. "Okay, I admit it. I've been pushing. But I've got no idea how
long the largesse is going to last. I finally have the chance to make
my case and be taken seriously. I wanted to move on it."
Helen nodded. She understood that feeling all too well. "I've just
got to keep on top of what's good for Venera, Grace. Our whole colony's
on the line here."
Grace shook her head. "You've been listening to Bennet too long,
Helen. C.A.C.'s not going to take it away from us for a set of
proto-proteins and a hole in the ground. The yewners have got better
things to do."
"Let's hope so," said Helen fervently. She blanked her desk. "It all
looks good, Grace. Thanks for your patience."
"Not a problem." Grace stood up and pitched the remains of her
coffee and the cup into the appropriate chutes. "I take it I'm
dismissed."
"Until the next press call." Helen gave her a small smile, and Grace
returned it. Helen touched a key to open the door for her.
Grace walked out but paused in the threshold and turned around. "By
the way, Helen, it wasn't me."
Helen frowned. "It wasn't you, what?"
"Who's been talking to the yewners." Grace's smile was sly, like
someone who knew they'd made a stellar move in a difficult game. "If I
were you, I'd bring the subject up with Michael Lum."
Then she did leave. The door shut, and Helen sat there, paralyzed.
Michael? Michael talked to the U.N. without talking to her?
Ridiculous. Michael wouldn't even think…
No, Michael would think. It was the one thing Michael could be
absolutely counted on to do. It was one of the reasons she and Ben had
picked him for the board when the slot opened up.
But without talking to her?
Listen to me, will you. Sitting in my throne room wondering
who's just stabbed me in the back. A little wind-up Ceaser.
Helen's head sank slowly to her hands.
Has it really come to that?
She'd seen it coming, the money crisis that lay at the root of every
question she'd had to ask during the whole long, aching day. More than
a year ago, she'd seen the trends and had known a storm was brewing.
She'd told no one on Venera.
That was probably a mistake. But she hadn't wanted anyone to worry.
She hadn't wanted to disturb anyone's work.
To be honest, she hadn't wanted anyone to leave.
Instead, during her yearly stump trip to Mother Earth, she'd made a
side visit to U.N. City and went to see Yan Su.
They'd been in a windchime park. The salty ocean breeze blew through
the miniature trees and rang bells representing every republic, from
mellow brass Tibetan bells to weirdly tuned Monterey pipes. They sat on
one of the autoform benches, ignoring the security cameras that trained
themselves automatically on Su as a member of The Government.
The sun was pleasantly hot on the back of Helen's neck as she told
Su what was happening—the shrinking pure-research budgets, never huge
to begin with, the waning enthusiasm for corporate charity, the
inability of the hundreds of tiny republics to support major research
grants for their people.
"I hate to say this." She'd smiled tiredly at her friend. "But if
nothing changes, we're going to be asking for a government handout next
year."
The wind caught a lock of Su's white hair and whipped it across her
forehead. Su brushed it back under her scarf. Most people who went in
for body-mod had themselves made artificially younger. Su, on the
other hand, had herself aged. She looked about seventy-five, but Helen
knew she was only a little over sixty. It had to do with respect and
camouflage, Su said. A number of her influential colleagues came from
backgrounds that respected age. The ones who didn't, underestimated
her. Both attitudes could be extremely useful.
"What kind of handout were you thinking of, Helen?"
Just a couple of old women sitting on a bench and discussing the
future of ten thousand people. Helen shrugged. "I can show you our
budgets. We're going to need between a third and a half of our
operating expenses for, say, five years. By then the slump should be
over and we should be able to tap into
our
normal sources."
"You want a loan?"
"I want a grant, but I probably can't have one. So, yes, I'll take a
loan."
Su sat there for a long moment. Helen watched her face carefully.
She looked tired, and, despite the fact that Helen knew most of the
lines and pouches were artificial, she really did look old. Something
inside Helen stirred uneasily. The last time she'd seen Su look like
this was right after her husband had left. Correction, after her
husband had cleaned out their bank account to have himself made back
into a thirty-something and run away with a professional wife and
blamed Su for it.
He'd married someone who was supposed to have a future, he said, not
someone who was going to be stuck in the same dead-end bureaucratic
appointment for the rest of their lives, nursemaiding miners and
importers when there was important work to be done. Oh, and
incidentally, I've decided I want to get genetic rejuvenation past the
120 years everyone's guaranteed, so I've signed over my reproduction
rights. The boy's all yours.
Helen couldn't even imagine what that had been like. Su, born and
raised in U.N. City, had gone the expected route. She had a career of
government service, a family of her own, and a host of people and
causes to fill her life to the brim. How did she focus? How did she
choose what was important? Helen knew it was how most people lived, but
sometimes she wondered how anyone managed when they'd given their
heart to more than one thing.
"Helen," Su broke in on her thoughts. "I don't think the money's
going to be there."
Helen smiled. "I think we've had this conversation before."
"We have, several times." Su leaned her shoulder against the bench's
back. The wind blew her bronze scarf over her shoulder. "But this time
its different."
"How?"
Su turned her gaze to the chimes swinging in the breeze. Their
random music filled the park but did nothing to lift the chill settling
over Helen's heart. "Call it a narrowing of horizons, Helen. Call it a
selfishness born of the fact that we can now live three hundred years
all on our own and we worry less about leaving something behind that
will truly last."
"Can I call it a bunch of cheapskate bureaucrats?" asked Helen
lightly.
"You can, if it makes you feel better." Su's smile quickly faded.
"But you know as well as I do that since Bradbury—"
"No." Helen pushed herself upright. "No, you do not get to blame
this on Bradbury. Bradbury was twenty years ago. Bradbury has nothing
to do with the way things are now."
"I wish that were true. For your sake, I truly do. But it's not only
generals who are always refighting the last war. Bureaucrats do it,
too."
No. No. You are not saying this. I refuse to accept this.
"And do those bureaucrats really want ten thousand refugees on their
doorstep?"
Su spread her hands helplessly. "The C.A.C. doesn't see you as
refugees, Helen. They see you as misfits. You all have citizenship in
your parents' republics. They have to take you, and then you're their
problem, not the U.N.'s."
All around them wind rang the bells, sending their music out into a
world that didn't care about the work of her life or the futures of her
people. "You can't expect me to be content with this. I can't just let
Venera die."
"I expect them to find you stone-cold dead with your fingers wrapped
around a support girder," said Su, perfectly seriously. "They'll have
to cut you out of there."
Helen's mouth twitched as if she didn't quite have the energy to
smile. "The money's there someplace," she said, because it was so much
easier than even contemplating the alternative. "We just have to find
it. You're not going to just hang me out to dry, are you?"
"Never, Helen."
Helen had been right about something, anyway. The money had been out
there. All it had taken was the Discovery to prime the pump. For a
moment, everything looked like it was going to be all right. But now,
now… everything might be about to change again if the U.N. decided the
new rumors were true, if they
decided she wasn't handling this right, if Michael said the wrong thing.
Helen stepped up to her window and stared out across the farms.
Drones, humans, and ducks made their way between the lush plant life,
each with their own mission of the moment. Each with something
immediate to do. She was the only one standing still on the whole
farming level.
She felt alone. Deeply and profoundly alone, as if she'd lost the
feeling for the world around her, the world she'd built from the first
dollar and the first strut. She stood in the middle of it, and yet it
was somewhere else. Somewhere she wasn't sure she knew how to get to.
Don't be an idiot. She shook herself and returned to her
desk.
You have too much work to do to get depressive. First, you
have to decide what you're going to do about Michael.
She knew what she wanted to do. She wanted to call him in right now
and demand to know what he thought he was doing, find out how he could
betray Venera, betray her, like this. How could he not know what this
could lead to? How could he not realize what the U.N. would do with
whatever he told them?
The sudden memory of Grace's eyes stopped her. That little smile,
that knowledge of possessing a winning move.
Grace had known what this news would do to her. Grace had wanted
this. She had wanted to turn Helen against Michael, to send her running
off after a traitor, off after someone who was just doing his job but
wounding her ego…
Grace had been sure it would work, and it almost had.
Helen realized her hands were shaking.
Oh God, am I that far
gone?
She got up, went into her little private lavatory, pulled a cup of
water from the sink, and drank it in three swallows. Then she met her
own gaze in the mirror for a long moment.
Am I that far gone?
Almost, Helen. Almost, but not quite.
It was a good face, a strong face, a well-meaning face that had
worked so hard and had almost lost its way. God, had come so close…
Helen removed her scarf and pulled all the pins out of her hair. The
mane tumbled down over her shoulders, a waterfall of white and gray.
With long, competent fingers she twisted it into a fresh knot and one
by one, slid the pins back to their places. She laid the scarf back and
pinned that firmly down, too.
"Desk," she said as she returned to her work area. "Locate Michael
Lum."
After a pause, Michael's voice came back through the intercom. "I'm
here Helen."
"Where's here?"
"Admin. Security. My desk, specifically. Do you want me to come up
there?"
"No. I'll come down. Do me a favor though. Find Ben and your friend
Bowerman. We need to talk."
"I'm on it, Helen."
"Desk. Close connection."
I will deal with this.
We will all get through this, and if
this isn't the permanent solution I dreamed it would be, then I'd
better find that out now, hadn't I?
Helen strode out the door.
* * *
"Hi," said Angela Cleary as the hatch swung back. "Can I borrow a
cup of sugar?"
Vee chuckled from her seat in the kitchen nook. It was strange
seeing someone emerge from the airlock without a suit on. But the two
scarabs had backed up against each other in a clunky but effective
docking procedure that preceded what Terry called the "gab and grill."
It happened at dinner every other day and allowed the passengers to
circulate and talk about their work face-to-face. It also allowed the
crews to sit with their friends and talk about the passengers, Vee was
certain.
Angela was the first one over, but she was followed quickly by Lindi
Manzur, who hugged her Troy happily and fell into talking with him
about a theory of universal curiosity as a mainstay of sentient life
that they'd been cooking up together. It might even be a good theory.
Pity it wasn't going to come to anything. Isaac and Julia made a
beeline for the fridge and the
mango juice, which they both seemed to live off. Josh grabbed Bailey
Heathe, the copilot for Scarab Fourteen, briefly by the hand as Bailey
brushed past to the pilot's compartment to catch up with Kevin and
Adrian.
Angela moved out of the way of the new arrivals and came to stand
over the kitchen table. Vee saluted her with a plastic cup of tea.
"Dr. Hatch," said Angela, her voice low and formal. "I was hoping we
could talk. There's some incidents in your background check that I
wanted to go over…"
Vee pulled on an expression of surprise. "Yeah, sure." She downed
the last of her tea in one lukewarm gulp and stood up. "I think the
couch compartment's empty."
It was. Vee touched the lock on the door. Now anyone who wanted to
come in would at least have to knock.
"You don't think anybody believed that, do you?" For the past week
they had been doing most of their talking via e-mail or the occasional
comments on gab-and-grill nights. But now that the investigation was in
full swing upstairs as well as down here, Angela was becoming visibly
less patient with sporadic communication.
"People have a tendency to believe the Blues are after them
personally." Angela shrugged. "So they're not all that surprised to
hear we're after somebody else." She picked her way unerringly to
Vee's couch and perched on the edge. "Show me what you've got?"
"Just simulations so far." Vee snatched up a pair of used socks off
her couch and stuffed them into the storage bin overhead. Then she sat
down cross-legged with her case open on her lap and switched on the
back screen so Angela could see what was displayed. "But they're based
on reality. I found all the drones you're going to see in Venera's
current inventory."
Vee had been expanding her image library every day since she'd
gotten to Venera, so the simulations actually hadn't taken all that
long to put together, once she'd tracked down what she thought of as
the component parts.
The screen showed a three-dimensional rendering of the little cup of
a valley outside. A fat, multitreaded drone rolled down
the lava corridor. It's main features—a tank and a hose.
"Experimental emergency drone," Vee told Angela. "Number ED-445. The
idea was it'd be able to carry coolant down to a scarab in trouble. But
it could do this too."
The drone extended its hose and planted it against the ground, as if
it was nuzzling the stone. In the next second, a huge white cloud rose
up around the nozzle and the hose started sinking into the rock, like a
drill into cement.
"What's it spraying?" asked Angela.
"Water," Vee told her, and just nodded at the look of skepticism
that appeared on Angela's face a moment later. "I checked with Josh on
this. He ran a lab-level simulation. The rock outside has no water in
it, which makes it stronger than normal terran rock, which is how you
can get these massive continents thrusting out of the crust. But,
power-spray that rock with water, and it weakens. Add in the fact that
the water reacts with the sulfuric acid in the atmosphere, turning the
air around the stone into a corrosive, then the rock crumbles." The
hose on the screen had already buried itself eight or nine centimeters
into the ground. "They could have hollowed out the whole thing with one
or two of these. And they do have one or two." She entered another
command, and the image skipped forward. "The metal in the ladder rungs
and the laser is your basic iron. You could either bring it down from
the base, or you could sort it out of the waste rock from the digging."
This section of the simulation showed a "scoop-and-chute" drone next
to a pile of dust and rubble. Its shovel-tipped waldo shoved into the
pile and came up with a sample of dirt. The sample ran through the
chemically sensitive filters in the drone's body, and everything except
what was needed got shaken out of its belly.
"What about the delicate work?" asked Angela, without taking her
gaze off the screen. "Shaping the ceramics? Making the lenses in the
lasers?"
"A lot of that could be done with lasers," said Vee. She skipped the
simulation ahead to a neat row of three separate measurement drones,
each of which had its array of small lasers and waldos, so delicate
they looked more like insect pincers
than human hands. "Take your pick. These are just the three most
likely."
Angela folded her arms and hung her head down. "You know, there are
days I hate my job."
Vee shut the simulation off. "It's a fraud."
Why are you, of
all people, missing the point here? "I don't care what was about
to happen to their precious base; they don't get to perpetrate a fraud."
Angela just shook her head. "So you're enjoying this?"
Vee threw up her hands. "Why does everybody think I'm doing this to
get my ya-yas?"
"Because I saw the playback of you at the Dublin gallery opening
when you called the arts minister a bribe-taking nationalist pig, in
front of every major news service in the stream," replied Angela evenly.
"Oh." Vee cocked her head from side to side. "That was probably not
my best day for P.R." She'd frequently wished she really had been
drunk, which was the cover story Rosa worked so hard to put out for
months afterward. "My only excuse is I was right then too."
"Yes," Angela admitted. "But you have this tendency to be right in
public, loudly. It's not reassuring."
A powerful image of Rosa leaning against the rail in U.N. City
flashed in front of Vee's mind. "Be careful what you pretend to be,"
Vee muttered.
Angela nodded. "You hear that one a lot in my business." She slapped
her hands down on her thighs. "I'm going to need a copy of your drone
file so Philip can confirm the inventory." She straightened up. "And I
need you to be ready to testify to the truth of your findings and that
you created this without help or interference."
"Of course." A few more commands and Vee shot a copy of the
simulations out to Angela's contact code. "It's got to be Derek
Cusmanos then, doesn't it? He's the one who has access to all the
drones."
"That would be the logical conclusion based on what you've seen so
far," said Angela.
Vee glanced at her and knew she was not going to get any more of an
answer than that. They were investigating her accusations inside
Venera, but Angela had wanted Vee to remain independent of any kind of
suggestion. "If we can show we arrived at this from separate angles,"
Angela had said, "it'll be even more convincing when we have to go
public with it."
"Well, glad I could help," said Vee.
"I'm sure." Angela headed out the door, leaving Vee sitting alone
with her simulated evidence.
Vee had tried to understand. She tried to imagine what it was to
have your life shut down, to have to move to a strange new world with
such things in it as Earth at its craziest could surround you with.
She felt sad, she felt sorry, she wished there was something she could
do, but they did not get to lie about this. They did
not get
to lie about life on another world. The hope of finding that human
beings weren't alone was such an old, precarious hope. To one day
discover that there was somebody else out there who asked the same
questions and dreamed the same dreams. Every time she thought about
somebody playing on that venerable dream… again,
again, rage
shot through her veins.
This was supposed to be real. This was supposed to be her one real
thing, to make up for the tantrums and the farces and the pretty veneer
she had made out of her life.
And what did they do this for? For money, again, like the worst of
the Universal Age frauds. Was it really all that different? Was she
the only one here who didn't see that it wasn't different at all?
Except, maybe it was. This one was built for love and worry, not
just greed. This was done to fill, not to drain. Maybe it was
different. But that just made it sad, in addition to making it wrong.
Vee sighed, closed her case, and stowed it. She looked at the
hatchway and decided she didn't want to face the rest of the team.
She'd munch on some leftovers later. Her stomach was all in knots.
Instead she curled up in the couch, hugging her knees. In the silence,
she mourned the loss of a dream, again.
Contents -
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Chapter Ten
"Pressure good, opening airlock."
Adrian brought his hand down on the key that opened the inner hatch.
The clank of the portal opening was followed fast by the thumping of
multiple pairs of stiff, heavy boots and the clunking of armored limbs
as they accidentally bumped into walls and other people in a confined
space.
"Another day, another dollar," said Kevin, rubbing the back of his
neck.
"So they tell me." Adrian got to his feet and arched his back in a
prolonged stretch. The team had gotten good enough at managing their
suits that he no longer had to hover around them each time they
returned. The snapping of catches and various, wordless, relieved
noises drifted up the central corridor. He knew how they felt. He was
really looking forward to the end of this run. Terry Wray in particular
was becoming a bigger pain in the ass all the time, despite her good
looks. For the past week she'd been running back and forth, asking them
both for the story of how the base was found over and over, until
finally Kevin said to her, "Ms. Wray, you're sounding less like a media
face and more like a lawyer all the time."
"What an interesting choice of words, Mr. Cusmanos," she had replied
mildly.
After that, Kevin's normal good humor had started to fade, and
Adrian had found himself engaging in the unhealthy and unproductive
hobby of marking time until the run was over.
The radio beeped. "This is Venera Base calling Scarab Five and
Scarab Fourteen," said a woman's voice. Adrian blinked at the speaker
grill. That wasn't Tori at flight control. That was Grandma Helen.
Kevin touched the Reply key. "This is Scarab Five. Receiving you,
Venera Base."
"This is a recall notice. Five and Fourteen, you are to return to
base immediately."
"What? Why?" The questions were out before Adrian remembered whom
he was talking to.
"You'll hear all about it when you get back up here." Dr. Failia
sounded grim. "Get your people back and get in the air." A soft popping
underscored her voice.
Adrian looked at his boss. Kevin sat there, a coffee cup held in
both hands. His fingers tightened convulsively, denting and redenting
the plastic, making the popping noise. Kevin stared at the radio, but
Adrian felt positive he didn't see it.
"We're on our way up, Dr. Failia," said Adrian, not taking his
attention off Kevin.
"Good. Venera Base out."
Kevin still just stood there, crushing the cup and letting it go
again. Adrian's confusion quickly bled away into cold concern.
"What's going on?" asked Adrian softly.
Kevin shook himself and tossed the cup into the garbage. "We'll find
out when we get back up, won't we?" He looked at the floor, the chair,
the window, but not at Adrian. "You'd better tell the passengers."
Kevin settled himself back in the pilot's chair.
That was no answer, but what could Adrian do? "Right, okay."
As he sidled and shuffled his way down the scarab's narrow central
corridor, he realized that the sounds of a team getting out of their
suits had silenced. He was not surprised to see them, all in their
various stages of unsuiting, standing still and staring at him.
Adrian sighed. "I take it you all heard that? We need you in your
couches, please, so we can get in the air."
"Can we get any kind of information here?" asked Peachman.
"There's nothing I can tell you." Adrian spread his hands.
"I'm sure there'll be a full briefing when we're back on base. If
you'll just fasten yourselves in, please."
"Surely, there must be something—" began Peachman, half to Adrian,
half to his teammates, looking for their support.
"I'm sorry," said Adrian. He was. He didn't know what was going on
either, and he wanted to. Probably more than any of them did. Recalls
did not happen unless something bad did.
Hatch's expression caught his eye. She was looking at him,
speculatively, as if she were trying to guess what was going on inside
his head. Kenyon, on the other hand, was watching Hatch as if he were
worried about what she'd do next.
But she didn't do anything except bend over and start snapping the
catches on her boots. Wray bent over next to her and murmured something
Adrian couldn't hear. He heard the reply, though.
"I'm sure you'll get to interview everybody soon enough. Now,
shouldn't we do what we're told?" Dr. Hatch gave one of her brainless
smiles and started stripping out of the stiff, white, undersuit that
covered her everyday clothes.
Tourists. Adrian left them to it and headed back to the
pilot's compartment. For a moment, he didn't see Kevin, because Kevin
was almost doubled over in his chair, with his elbows on his knees, his
head in his hands, and his fingers twined through his thick hair.
"Kevin?"
Kevin straightened up instantly at the sound of his name, but he
couldn't wipe the pallor from his face.
"What is it?" Adrian sank into his own chair. "What's happened?"
Kevin shook his head. "I don't know any more than you do." He
swiveled his chair around to face the primary controls. "Let's get the
preflights done, okay?"
Adrian didn't move. "Look, if we're headed back into trouble, I
want to know."
Kevin poked at a few keys, getting readiness displays up on the
screens. "You're not headed into anything."
"But you are?"
"Did I say I was?" Kevin scowled at the control panel. "Quit
pushing, Adrian. Just do your job."
"You helped, didn't you?"
They both jumped. Hatch stood in the entranceway, her face serious,
her eyes probing.
"Dr. Hatch, please, get into your couch," said Kevin. "We're under a
recall and we've got to leave now."
"But you did help?" she said.
Kevin reared out of his chair. "What the hell do you care? You and
your tourist friends were right, and you showed us all up. Fine. Take
the headline and be happy. But if you want to gloat, do it on Mother
Earth with your art buddies. This is my ship. For the next five hours
I'm still in charge and I'm telling you to get in that cabin and out of
my way!"
She didn't move. She stayed right where she was, as if she meant to
stare Kevin down.
"I am sorry," she said finally. Then, she turned away and climbed
through the door into the starboard couch bay.
Kevin sat back down, shaking.
"What was she talking about?" demanded Adrian.
"Don't start," said Kevin.
"Come on, Kevin—"
"No!" he roared. Adrian reeled back. He'd heard Kevin yell before,
at incompetence, at carelessness, but not like this, not this empty,
lost rage.
"I'm sorry," Kevin whispered. He cleared his throat. "I'm sorry.
Let's get out of here, okay?"
"Yeah, sure." agreed Adrian.
They ran through the preflights mechanically, with no comments or
bantering. Adrian kept his eyes on his instruments. He didn't want to
look at his boss. He didn't want to see what was eating the other man.
Something sure was. Something huge.
Finally, Kevin turned the radio on Venera Base. "Venera Base, this
is Scarab Five."
"We have you, Scarab Five," came back Tori's voice. "Conditions are
go for your launch."
"Good to hear, Venera." Kevin's response was flat, automatic. "That
lightning cleared up?"
"Clear as crystal," answered Tori. "For Venus anyway."
"Thank you, Venera." He switched the radio over to the next channel.
"Scarab Fourteen, this is Scarab Five. Are you go for launch?"
"Ready whenever you are, Scarab Five," Charlotte Murray, Scarab
Fourteen's pilot, told them. "You got any idea what this is about?"
For a moment, Adrian thought Kevin was going to be sick. "None,
Charlotte. Listen, we're good to go here too. How about you follow us
up?"
"Okay by me," said Charlotte. "Let's do the drill. Scarab Five, are
you go?"
"We are go, Scarab Fourteen." Kevin gave Adrian the nod.
"Engaging wing." Adrian thumbed the button on the wheel stem that
raised the wing. The roof camera showed the rack lift and spread,
stretching the skin wide. The indicator light shone green and Adrian
slid the inflation control up to Full. The wing inflated slowly. Scarab
Five shifted uneasily until it finally lost contact with the ground and
began its gentle rise toward the clouds.
Kevin pulled the wheel forward with one hand and pressed in the two
keys that engaged the flight engines with the other. The flight engines
were tiny things, mostly for guidance and stabilization. The wing
provided the lift in the dense atmosphere, and once they reached them,
the 360-kilometer-an-hour winds in the cloud layers provided the speed.
Kevin eased the wheel forward to angle the wing for a little extra
lift. He probably wanted to get as far away from the volcano wall as
possible, as soon as possible. Beta Regio never failed to make Adrian
nervous. Too many outcroppings, too many weird corners.
Today, though, it didn't bother him half as much as the dead, gray
look on Kevin's face. He was not here. His hands were flying the scarab
without his head. This was not good.
"Flying a little sluggish, do you think?" asked Adrian to try to
draw him out.
Kevin nodded. "A little. Might be some grit in the works. How do the
diagnostics look?"
Adrian's gaze swept the instrument panels and screens. "Everything's
green and go."
"All right, let me get a little more clearance from the wall. We've
got that big shelf coming up." He pushed the wheel down and away,
dropping them, swinging them wide, without waiting, without looking.
Without seeing Scarab Fourteen on the monitor.
"Pull back!" shouted Adrian.
The radio crackled to life. "Scarab Five, get—"
WHANG!
The whole scarab shuddered and swung wildly to the right. Stunned,
Kevin gripped the wheel and pulled back, trying for height.
"What happened?" cried Adrian. A sick creaking sounded through the
roof. "We got a critical failure in the wing joints!" Adrian glanced
down at the roof camera. The cage around the right wingtip was crumpled
in. The scarab lurched and leaned right.
"It was an accident!" Kevin hauled the wheel left. That worked, sort
of. The scarab stabilized for a moment but then slowly slewed right and
down.
"Okay," said Adrian under his breath. "We're going back down." He
hit the radio key. "Scarab Fourteen, Scarab Fourteen, are you there?
Come in, Charlotte…"
Nothing. No answer. Adrian punched the keys for the sweep cameras in
the scarab's belly to scan the ground. All he saw was the broken
landscape, crisscrossed by the tracks of old lava flows and the glowing
rivulets of fresh ones.
"They're not answering," he said sharply. Kevin didn't seem to
notice. Kevin pulled the wheel back and left. The scarab started a
shallow dive, dipping a little to the left as it curved gently around.
He heard screams, shouted questions, more creaks and strains. Too
much noise, too many possibilities. Oh, Holy God, too many ways to die.
"Deploy chutes," ordered Kevin.
Adrian slapped the key and saw the red message glowing next to it.
"We don't have the chute! The hatch is nonresponsive."
Too many ways to die. If one of those creaks was the hull. If they
landed too hard on their belly and a rock bit through, if the joints
and seals that were moaning all around them gave way…
Something overhead groaned. Then, something snapped.
The right half of the scarab dropped, dragging everything with it.
The world rattled and clattered and clanked. Voices swore. Somebody
screamed again. The straps bit into Adrian's shoulders.
Oh, Holy God and Mother Creation, I don't want to die!
With a hiss, the outside airbags deployed. The scarab banged against
the side of the mountain, bounced back, rattling them all like dice in
a tin can, and headed down.
"No response!" shouted Kevin, wrestling with the wheel.
Adrian grabbed the copilot wheel and threw all his weight behind it.
It didn't budge. "Nothing!" No steering, no way to get away from the
rocks, the sharp rocks that could cut right through them, let in the
poison and the pressure…
A bang, and Adrian's body bounced hard against the straps. He bit
his own lip to keep from screaming. The scarab's rear quarter hit the
volcano wall with a sickening crunch and settled slowly on a drunken
angle, head down, right rear corner sticking up.
Adrian didn't try to move. He just sat still, listened to his heart
hammer, and watched the thousand red lights shine on the panels.
But it was quiet again, and he was alive.
"Everyone okay?" called Adrian, half to the intercom, half to the
air.
Answers tumbled over themselves, but it sounded like the team in the
couches had weathered it all right. Better than Scarab Five itself had,
that was for sure.
Better than Kevin, who sat blinking at his controls.
"Kevin? Boss?"
"It was an accident. It was an accident," he whispered hoarsely. "I
didn't. Oh, God." He stared out the window.
Adrian followed his gaze. In the distance, maybe a couple of hundred
meters, it was hard to tell, Scarab Fourteen snuggled against the side
of a rough foothill, as if it were attempting to crawl inside the rock.
Its treads were crushed. Its hull wasn't the right shape anymore.
"It was an accident," murmured Kevin.
"Shut up!" shouted Adrian. "Just… shut up! I don't care what it
was!" He didn't. He was scared; he wanted to run, but there was nowhere
to go.
Okay. Okay. You know what to do. Do it.
The radio still showed up green. He hit the key for Scarab Fourteen
again. "Scarab Fourteen! Scarab Fourteen! Come in, Charlotte. Talk to
me!"
Still nothing but silence.
"Send the mayday to Venera," Adrian ordered his boss. "Tell them
Scarab Fourteen isn't answering. I'll put together a comprehensive on
the damage."
If we've still got hull integrity, we'll be all
right. Hull integrity, all the pumps, most of the air tanks. … He
cast a quick glance out the window, trying not to see the battered hulk
of Scarab Fourteen. The black and gray land outside was a mass of sharp
ridges and steep descents, as if someone had slashed through the ground
with a razor. Scarab Five had come to rest against one of the
sharp-backed ridges. Orange glow oozed in the distance, filling the
crevices below them. Lava.
But that's over there. Not here. Adrian dropped his gaze to
his hands.
Keep it together. You know what to do. This is why
you're here.
Kevin had pulled himself far enough back into the present to work
the radio. "Venera Base, this is Scarab Five. Mayday, mayday. I
repeat, Venera Base, this is Scarab Five. Mayday. Mayday. We are down.
Scarab Fourteen is down and not responding."
Adrian tuned him out and concentrated on the instruments. Most of
the electronics seemed to be functioning. The computer gave him no
errors as he requested a comprehensive list of the damages.
Adrian scanned the report. Bad, bad, bad. The rear axle had
collapsed. Two panels on the exterior wall had buckled in to the point
they were pressing on the interior insulation and had cut
through a whole set of coolant pipes on the way. Ice tank one had been
completely crushed. So had air processor three.
Okay. First thing, get back and see what's to do about those
buckled panels. They break through and we're very, very screwed.
"We have you, Scarab Five." Tori's familiar, infinitely welcome
voice sounded from the radio. "Your position is fixed. Rescue team
being readied for drop now. What is your status?"
Kevin turned to Adrian. The helplessness on his face made Adrian
want to hit him.
"Not good, but not dead," said Adrian toward the speaker. "Crew
unhurt. Lost mobility, lost one ice tank, lost one air processor, and
have sustained partial loss of one cooling pump. All remaining pumps,
scrubbers, and tanks look green. Possible danger of hull compromise.
I'm going to check it out now."
Adrian unsnapped his catches and got to his feet. As he did, a new
trembling grind vibrated through the scarab's floor. The world shifted
backward. Adrian pin wheeled his arms for balance. He stared
involuntarily out the window. As he toppled backwards, his eyes told
his brain that the scarab hadn't moved, the ground outside had.
The floor hit his back, knocking all the wind out of him. Something
hard caught his head, and stars burst in front of his eyes in sync with
the pain.
"Holy God!" gasped Kevin. "Oh Christ!"
Adrian tried to lift his head, but the world spun. The floor
vibrated again. The scarab slid backward. The front end came down with
a crash that rattled his teeth and sent fresh flashes of pain through
his head.
"Scarab Five, what's going on? Talk to me, Adrian!"
"There's something alive," rasped Kevin. "Venera Base, cancel drop.
I repeat, cancel drop. There's something alive out there, and it's
coming toward us."
What? Adrian pulled himself to his knees.
I did not
hear that.
"We've found the goddamned aliens," grated Kevin.
Adrian planted one hand on the counter and pushed. He reached his
feet and looked out the front window. At first he saw nothing but black
rock hunched up between the streams of lava. Then, two of the islands
moved. They slid out of the lava stream and over the steady ground.
From behind them rose a translucent jellyfish half the size of the
scarab, its tentacles tipped with pincers.
The world spun and Adrian toppled back to the floor. Consciousness
started to slip away. To his shame, he let it go.
* * *
Br'sei flew into the main chamber with the speed born of agitation.
T'sha shifted on her own perch, turning away from the recorder and its
reports that she was still reviewing to get herself up to speed on New
Home and its New People.
D'han and P'tesk lurched sideways as Br'sei blew past. He managed to
snag a perch in time to keep from crashing into the wall.
"What's happened?" asked T'sha.
"I… there's…" Br'sei's muzzle bobbed as he looked around the
chamber. "Where is Ambassador D'seun?"
"He's surveying the wind currents." T'sha raised her forehand and
beckoned to Br'sei. "What's happened? Talk to me."
"I…" Br'sei's teeth clacked. Was he nervous? T'sha's bones bunched
in annoyance at his hesitation. D'seun had them all too well trained.
Even Br'sei, for all the doubts he expressed to her. She was an
interloper. Only approved information was to be shared with her.
I am also an
ambassador to the High Law Meet. "Tell me
what's happened, Engineer," she ordered.
Br'sei shrank a little in resignation, but maybe also in relief.
"There's been an accident."
T'sha's arms stiffened, lifting her off her perch. "Who? How many
are hurt?"
"No, none of ours," said Br'sei. "It's the New People."
The words jolted straight through T'sha. "What?"
Br'sei dipped his muzzle. "The overseers watching the New People
report that two of their transports have crashed near Living Highland
76. They believe them to be damaged."
There are overseers assigned to the New People? This isn't in
the reports. T'sha went very still. "Are their own kind
responding?"
"Not yet," said Br'sei.
"P'tesk, D'han, come with me." T'sha spread her wings. "Br'sei, you
will sweep the base. Bring everyone we have. Get the dirigibles flying
and bring the emergency spares. We need whatever we've got to work in
cold and low pressure."
"What? Why?" D'han fluttered. "Ambassador—"
T'sha was already flying toward the door. "We have to help."
"But their own kind will surely respond." P'tesk held out both
forehands, pleading.
T'sha hooked a forehand onto the threshold and turned to face him.
"We cannot leave them there. The research D'seun has so kindly gathered
indicates they cannot be exposed to air."
The research, based on
raw materials he collected, which may not have been raw at the time.
"But if we—" began P'tesk.
"If we what?" demanded T'sha, swelling. "If we go they will find out
we're here. Surely. What if we let them die? We are that desperate for
our secrecy? We are that uncertain about our claim to this world that
we should fail to help life?"
"No," said Br'sei softly, more to P'tesk and D'han than to her. "We
are not." He inflated himself. "We have several constructors designed
to deal with the New People if necessary. I'll bring them."
Br'sei vanished into the corridor. T'sha winged after him, all but
exploding into the open air. She pushed all thought, all suspicion of
what had happened here before out of her mind. That was for later. For
now, the New People needed her.
* * *
"Scarab Five, Scarab Five." The radio called from the main cabin.
"Respond. Adrian? Kevin? Come on, answer me!"
"Shit," exclaimed Josh, and Vee heard him start popping the buckles
on his safety straps. She started doing the same.
"Maybe you should—" began Julia.
"No." Vee shoved the straps aside and made her way up the steeply
tilted floor after Josh.
Adrian lay on the floor in the main aisle, dazed. Kevin crouched
beside him, little better.
"What happened?" asked Vee, dropping to her knees next to them.
Kevin swallowed hard. "It was an—"
Josh just shoved his way past them to the radio.
"Scarab Five, Scarab Five!" came a frantic voice out of the speaker.
Josh slapped the Reply key. "We're here, Venera. This is Josh
Kenyon."
"What happened? Kevin said he saw the aliens?"
What? Vee froze.
"I'm not seeing anything except Scarab Fourteen," said Josh. "They
look hurt. Have you been able to raise them?"
"No. We've got the rescue on standby. If they leave now, they'll
make it in three hours."
Josh's lips moved in silent calculation, or maybe prayer. "Drop them
down. Now."
"Have you got anybody who can get across to Fourteen and check out
their situation?" asked the voice from Venera.
Josh looked at the red lights glowing on the control panels, then
back at Adrian and Kevin on the floor.
"We're damaged and have to do control," he said reluctantly.
"There's no trained personnel to respond."
Vee stood. Now she could see out the window, and she saw Scarab
Fourteen's crippled body alone on the ragged plain, far too near a lava
stream. "How much training does it take to shove someone in a suit and
get them over here? How much does it take to look around?"
"You'll need to get in." Adrian struggled to sit up. "I can get you
in."
"You saw—" began Kevin.
"I saw null." Adrian grabbed a cabinet handle and hauled himself to
his feet. "I saw null," he repeated. "We need to get over to Fourteen.
We need to stabilize Five." He glowered down at Kevin.
Pride resurfaced in Kevin's eyes. "Don't tell me my job."
"Somebody has to!" Adrian steadied himself against the wall. Fury
shook him. "You're not doing it!"
Kevin shut his mouth and pulled back. He took a long, shaky breath,
leaning a hand against the counter. "You're right.
Take Josh and Dr. Hatch and two of the others over to Fourteen. Give
them any help you can. I'll stabilize us so we can hold out until the
rescue drops." He glanced out the window at the still landscape. "If
you saw null, I saw null."
"I'll go get your volunteers." Vee hurried back into the cabin.
Her colleagues were as she left them, strapped in and arguing.
"What is going on out there?" demanded Troy.
"We're in trouble, but we're talking," Vee told him. "Fourteen is in
trouble and not talking. Terry, Troy, they need us to go over and help.
We need to get into suits. Julia," softer, lower, "Kevin's kind of
shaky. He's going to need a pair of hands. Wait until we're on our way
to Fourteen; then come out and see what you can do."
"When were you elected?" snorted Troy.
"When I was the one who got myself out of this cabin," shot back
Vee. "There's lives on the line, Peachman. You want to leave Lindi
Manzur to fry?" It was emotional blackmail and she knew it, but it
worked. He shut up. "Come on."
Troy and Terry reached the changing compartment shortly after she
did. Josh and Adrian were already there. They suited each other up in
silence. Vee went through the motions, trying not to think about the
broken hulk of a scarab she'd seen. She didn't want to think about how
thin its walls were, how they were all deep down inside a poisonous,
pressurized crucible that was just waiting for them to screw up so it
could burn them all to ashes.
The airlock's inner door closed and the pump started up, but instead
of the normal, steady chug-chug-chug, it wheezed, snarled and
sputtered, skipped beats and raced ahead as if to catch up.
God, we might not even be able to get out of here, thought
Vee. She felt her self-control slipping a little. Which was unusual.
She tried to be objective and examine her feelings, but that didn't
work. She eyed her helmet icons until she got Josh's channel.
"Do you think they might still be all right?" she asked.
"Same as us," said Josh. "If their hull holds and they have at least
one of the pumps and a cooler tank, they can hang on."
She licked her lips and asked the next question. "If there is a hull
breach, how long do they have?"
"They don't."
"I didn't think so."
Vee rested her helmet against the wall and listened to the
asthmatic pump. She let herself wish long and hard that she hadn't
volunteered for this, just to get that feeling out of the way. Then she
prayed long and hard that the hull on Scarab Five would hold tight,
because if it didn't, she'd just killed Julia by letting her be the one
to stay behind. That feeling went away more slowly, even after she
assured herself that Kevin would make Julia get into a hardsuit as soon
as he thought of it, or that Julia, who was not stupid, just easily
stressed, would think of it on her own.
Finally, the outer hatch rolled open, giving Vee a chance to move
away from her thoughts. She climbed out, right behind Adrian.
The world outside was like a petrified ocean, with its waves and
currents frozen into black stone. Through the ridges, glowing ribbons
of lava crept down well-worn paths. She imagined it smelled hot, almost
spicy, the kind of smell you could taste.
"They'd get into suits, wouldn't they?" asked Terry on the general
channel, echoing Vee's thoughts from the airlock.
"If they could get to them, yeah," said Adrian. "The scarabs have
bulkheads that seal if there's a hull breach, just like a ship."
Vee tried to clamp down on her imagination. Now was not the time to
paint pictures of the future. Now was the time to slog forward, watch
her footing and play it straight. Don't look up. Be like a kid. If you
don't look at the scarab, it won't change. It won't get any worse
because while you're not looking at it, it isn't there. Slog up the
ridges, pick your way down the side, watch the ash piles that have
collected in the hollows, notice how the charcoal veins look like the
veins in the Discovery walls. Don't look up.
"No!"
Adrian stumbled forward, trying for a loping run but only sliding
and wobbling as he fought the ragged ground and the
pressure. Ahead of him, the scarab's side buckled sharply inward, as
if it had been punched by an invisible fist. A thread-thin, black crack
appeared.
Vee's throat closed up tight.
"Veronica," said Josh, tentatively.
"What?" Vee tore her gaze off Adrian's stumbling form. Josh pointed
ahead and to the right. Vee followed the line of his arm, until she saw
the edge of the ragged wall the volcano made.
Something white floated next to it. Something shaped like an
inverted teardrop or a hot-air balloon.
Vee froze in her tracks, tilted on the side of a stone wave. The
balloon flew in an absolutely straight line. Vee saw a glint of silver
on its swelling sides, like lenses, maybe.
"That's not from Venera, is it?" asked Vee quietly.
"No," answered Josh.
It was getting closer. Terry had seen it now. She also came to an
abrupt halt with Troy right beside her.
"Adrian!" called Josh. Adrian stopped, teetered, and almost fell,
but he righted himself, and he saw it too.
The thing flew like the wind. Silver scales covered its white skin.
Bundles of red-brown cables held an enclosed gondola to the balloon. At
first, Vee thought it was heading for them, but it wasn't.
It was heading for Scarab Fourteen.
The balloon stopped, suddenly, as if it had hit a wall. From the
bottom a flurry of… things emerged. They sparkled gold in the ashen
light. Wings spread out from their oval torsos. Legs (arms?) hung under
their bellies.
One carried a fold of cloth, one an egg, one a box, another a blob
of gray jelly. They were followed by three others with empty hands.
They all flew over Scarab Fourteen. The first of them dropped the
cloth. The three with empty hands grasped the cloth and pulled it over
the scarab, as if they were fitting a sheet to a bed. The cloth was
transparent, but the dim light reflected off an oily sheen on the
edges where they held it.
The creatures holding the cloth dropped to the ground. The cloth
made a tent over the scarab. The one with the egg cracked it open. A
gout of milky liquid poured over the cloth. It sluiced down the sides,
becoming transparent as it did so. The creatures let go; the tent
stayed where it was.
The creature with the box shriveled and drew in its wings. It sank
until it hovered just above ground level. Now Vee saw a complex series
of markings, or maybe wires, running across its body. It pressed the
box against the tent and its muzzle moved. Vee tried to set her suit
controls to pick up outside sound, but she couldn't get her gaze to
stay steady enough to activate the commands.
The one with the jelly blob joined the one by the box. It set its
blob down. The blob had an eye and silver lines running through its
body.
The blob moved.
It crawled into the box and emerged inside the tent. It lifted up
into the air and became a jellyfish with tentacles hanging down, tipped
with, what? Claws? Tools? It drifted unerringly toward Scarab Fourteen
and slipped into the jagged, black crack in the hull.
Vee wanted to speak but had no words adequate to the task. This was
unreal. Surreal. She was frightened, bemused, unbelieving. She wanted
to laugh her head off. Her heart fluttered high in her throat and she
could hear her blood singing in her ears.
One of the creatures (aliens? There are no aliens. The base is a
fake. How can they be aliens?) was looking at her. It had two huge
silver eyes, encased, she realized, behind something hard and clear,
like a natural lens. But those were unmistakably eyes. She could
distinguish the iris, pupil, and white. Huge eyes. Underneath its eyes,
it had a wedge-shaped beak, like a bird's beak, or maybe a dolphin's.
It was beautiful. It was incomprehensible. It was looking right at
her and she could tell nothing, nothing about what it saw.
Then, she realized it didn't see her at all. It saw a suit, with a
smooth plate where its face should be. Maybe it was just wondering what
was in there.
Voices were babbling. Voices she knew, but there were too many of
them and she couldn't make out what they were saying. She
didn't even really want to try.
The creatures ferried more blobs out of their balloon. They put them
up to the box to become jellyfish and enter the space under the tent
and eventually the scarab. The creatures themselves flew all around
the tent, angels, butterflies, prehistoric monsters glittering gold on
a cloudy day. Except for the one that looked straight at her.
Was it trying to divine something? Send a telepathic message? Judge
her for salt content? What? What did aliens do?
"Veronica, we've got to go, now!" It was Josh. He had his hand on
her arm and he was trying to pull her away. But she wasn't responding.
She should respond. He was right. They needed to go, now, didn't they?
Did they?
The side of the scarab tore like paper.
"No!" screamed Adrian like it was the only word he had left.
Two jellyfish floated out of the hole in the scarab's side. Their
tentacles wrapped around something roughly oblong that shimmered.
It was Angela Cleary. Angela, who'd been helping Vee prove the
Discovery was nothing but a fraud. Whom Vee had spent a whole week
aboard the shuttle trying to get to know and failing without really
realizing it. She'd respected that in a weird kind of way. Angela, who
gave nothing away by accident. Angela, who had a sardonic grin and
sharp eyes.
"Can't be. She'd be pulp. Less than pulp." murmured Josh. He wasn't
pulling on Vee anymore.
Angela wasn't pulp. Something crystalline covered her, like the
stuff that made the tent over the scarab or enclosed the alien's silver
eyes. The creatures flying over the tent cracked another egg. More
milky liquid sluiced over the tent sides. The tent tore and fell away
like cobwebs.
The jellyfish turned away from the creatures and began flying
toward the team from Scarab Five.
"Get away, get away, get away," chanted Terry, like a mantra. Out of
the side of her faceplate, Vee saw someone stumble backward and turn to
slog away.
The jellyfish kept coming with Angela, encased in glass, supported
between them. They drifted forward until they were about two meters
away. Then, very gently, they sank down and laid Angela on the ground.
Their tentacles released her and they rose, drifting back toward the
scarab.
"Holy God and Mother Creation, what've they done?" Josh moved
forward. Vee looked up at the alien, her alien, who hadn't moved. Then,
slowly, as if she had to remember how, Vee walked up beside Josh and
looked down at the glass coffin.
Angela lay inside, whole, and perfect. Her eyes were closed and her
arms lay straight along her sides.
"I think she's breathing," said Josh softly.
Vee bent closer. Yes. You could see it. Barely. Angela's chest
didn't so much rise and fall as flutter like Vee's heart. But she was
alive under there.
Alive and without a suit on Venus, and there sure as hell weren't
air tanks on that glass case. Vee's mind fastened on these details and
jolted her body into action.
"Help me!" She grabbed Angela's feet.
Josh grabbed Angela's shoulders. They heaved Angela up as if they
were lifting a log and staggered back toward Scarab Five. Fighting
pressure and the awkwardness of the suit, Vee could glance up only
once. The jellyfish reemerged from Scarab Fourteen, carrying another
glass-encased figure in their tentacles.
"Peachman, get back here! I need help!" shouted Terry.
"I'm there. I'm there." Troy waddled more than walked over the
ridges. His suit was scored. Had he fallen in his hurry to get away
from the aliens? "I'm sorry. Christ in the green, I'm sorry."
Maybe we should have brought Julia after all.
"Kevin, are you watching this?" came Josh's voice over the intercom.
"Get that door open!"
"Done!" shouted Kevin. "God, god, is she really alive?"
"I think so." Josh's voice was breathy with hope and uncertainty.
I hope so,
thought Vee,
because it means they saved
her. It means they're… what? Friendly? Doesn't cover it. Human?
Obviously her brain could take only so much of this.
The airlock door was open. They laid Angela on the floor.
"Take her up!" ordered Josh.
"Can't," came back Kevin's reply. "The pump is almost dead. We can't
risk running it more than once. You're going to have to get them all in
here. Get moving!"
Vee stared at Josh. "This is going to sound dumb," she said, her
voice too high and tight. "Will she be all right alone?"
"I hope so," said Josh. Obviously, that was the phrase of the day.
Vee slogged back toward Scarab Fourteen, wishing desperately that
she could run. All she could manage was a fast walk. Sweat poured down
her face. Her face plate blinked yellow warnings at her to drink and
take a salt tablet. She ignored them.
Terry and Troy were hoisting Lindi Manzur off the ground when Vee
and Josh reached them. The jellyfish were arriving with another woman
in a pilot's coverall. Must be Charlotte. Charlotte… what was her last
name?
Why is this bugging me now?
Adrian, all on his own, hoisted Charlotte into his arms and
staggered across the broken landscape.
It was ridiculous. It was macabre. But they did it three more times,
hefting colleagues and strangers like bricks and laying them neatly
down on the airlock floor, trying to make efficient use of space but
trying not to think too much because it would slow them down.
They headed back one more time. The jellyfish had another form in
their tentacles. But this one was shaped wrong. It was all curves. It
didn't have enough straight lines for a human body. The jellies stopped
about three meters away this time. When Vee registered what she saw,
she had to choke back her bile while part of her mind said, "Ah, that's
why they call it 'pulped.' "
The jellies did not put this one down. They carried it back past the
gold creatures and vanished into the bottom of the balloon.
"Who was that? Why'd they do that?" asked Terry. "Sorry, sorry, I
know you don't know… I—"
"It's okay," said Vee. "Really."
There were no more, what? Deliveries? The aliens flew back into
their balloon, except the one still one. Vee wondered what it was
waiting for. It stared at her with its huge eyes, as if memorizing
every detail of Vee's form, as Vee was memorizing its, with the sharply
angled wings and the thick, but amazingly flexible neck, the broad
body, the crimson and ivory mane that streamed down its neck and the
dark lines on golden skin.
Vee took a step forward, holding her hand out. The other's wings
twitched minutely, its body swelled, and it drifted forward.
Vee's breath caught in her throat.
A second creature, this one more heavily lined, or wired, came up
next to the first one. They hovered close together, their beaks, maybe
they were really more like muzzles, almost touching. Then, together
they turned and flew back into the gondola under the silver and white
balloon.
The moment was gone so abruptly that Vee was a little surprised to
find she herself was still there.
And Angela still has no air tank. Vee cursed herself for
standing and staring. She turned and lumbered back across the ragged
plain.
Last time, last time. You can do this. She held tightly to
the thought. Her plate warnings were now more orange than yellow. Her
muscles felt stretched out and limp. Sweat trickled down her face,
pooling for a moment in her collar before the cloth wicked it away. Her
back itched. Her hands had swollen until her gloves felt too tight.
"You all right?" asked Josh.
"Barely," she admitted. "But I'll made it."
From here she could see Scarab Five's open airlock and the
glass-encased bodies lying on the floor.
If they can make it, I sure as hell can. She glanced back
to make sure the others were keeping up. They limped and stumbled
their way back, just as she did. The aliens had vanished.
We'll all make it because we have to back each other's stories
up.
They bundled back into the airlock, trying to cram onto the benches.
Except Adrian. He squatted down next to Charlotte and laid a hand on
her wrist, as if his gloved fingers could feel her pulse through that
alien crystal.
"Shut it down, Kevin, depressurize," said Josh as he dogged the
hatch. He was panting hard, and Vee saw the rivers of sweat running
down his face.
"Doing it now." Kevin's voice had relaxed, weirdly enough, and he
sounded more like the pilot who had shepherded them all down than the
terrified man she'd last seen on the corridor floor.
The pump began struggling to take them back to human conditions.
Relief surged through Vee. She slumped against the inside of her
hardsuit. Angela Cleary lay right at her feet, like a corpse that had
been dipped in plastic. Vee closed her eyes. Angela was breathing under
there. They all were. No one was dead yet. Except that person the
aliens took away.
Why did they take the dead one away?
"It's a fake, huh?" Josh's voice interrupted her thoughts and she
was grateful, even when she interpreted his tone. "If the Discovery is
a fake, what the hell were those? Holographs?"
"You thought the Discovery was a fake?" said Troy. "When we've just
seen the builders—"
"The Discovery is a fake," snapped Vee. She started shaking. A
thousand different emotions churned inside her and she couldn't put a
name to any of them. "Those creatures did not build the Discovery. Did
those things look like they could fit through the tunnel? Those were
birds, not moles."
"So there are two sets of aliens?" said Troy, sounding dazed.
"Yes," said Vee. "Us and them."
Adrian hadn't moved from his crouch next to Charlotte. He ran his
gloves over the solid, crystal casing. Vee had no doubt he was
thinking,
How are we going to get them out of there? Vee sure
was.
A sound like a shot split the air. Vee jerked backward. A crack
swept down Charlotte's case. It branched out, sending a network of
fractures all along the crystal. Another shot, and another and
another. The cases shattered.
Well, that answers that.
"Charlotte!" Adrian brushed away flakes of crystal that turned to
dust as soon as he touched them. Vee, then Josh, fell clumsily to
their knees, following his example. Vee brushed off Angela's face,
trying to get the stuff clear before she inhaled it.
Angela gasped, then choked. Her body convulsed under Vee's hand and
her face contorted horribly.
"Shit! Kevin! Kill the pump!" cried Adrian. "They're getting the
bends! Kill the pump!"
"No! They can't live under this pressure!" Vee yelled. The gauge
wasn't even up to three atmospheres. That much pressure was not
something an unsheltered body could tolerate. They were going to be
crushed. Right in here. Right in front of them.
"The bends will kill them!" shot back Adrian. He was right. If they
were brought up too fast, the gases in their blood would turn into
bubbles in their veins, and those bubbles would float into their hearts.
But if they remained under this intense pressure, they'd simply be
squeezed to death by the air.
No-win situation, thought Vee, almost hysterically.
"Keep us down, Kevin!" shouted Adrian. "Where's the rescue drop?"
"An hour away, tops," came the answer.
"Make sure they know we're under pressure."
They were all on their knees now, trying to hold the contorting
bodies down, trying to speak soothing words that could not possibly be
heard. The rescued team might as well have been naked to the heat and
the pressure. Vee could see Angela's neck muscles swell. A thin ribbon
of blood ran from her ear. Vee tried to hold Angela as she curled in on
herself, but Vee couldn't tell whether the gesture was helping or
hurting. Vee couldn't hear her, couldn't feel her. Angela was outside
her. Vee couldn't check Angela's breathing or her pulse. Vee's thick,
gloved fingers couldn't even hold Angela's hand.
"Charlotte, Charlotte," murmured Adrian. "I'm so sorry. Just hang
on, please hang on."
Please hang on. I'm sorry. The first-aid kit was on the
other side of the airlock. Who'd put a first-aid kit in here? No one
would be in here when the door was closed without a suit on. That was
nuts.
Nuts as it was, these people had no suits. There was no way to reach
them. Angela was beginning to shake. Tears ran from her closed eyes.
Let her be unconscious. Let her not know this is happening to
her.
Seconds crawled by. Vee's gaze kept darting from her faceplate
clock to Angela. Seconds, minutes, passing. Angela going from tremors,
to jerks, to convulsions that kicked and battered Isaac Walters, who
lay beside her, as well as Vee's hardsuit. She faded back to jerks and
then to tremors, leaving Vee drowning in fear that the next thing to
happen would be that Angela's muscles would go completely limp and her
dead eyes would roll open.
But it didn't happen. It should have. It should have happened
moments after their casings cracked. It should have happened when their
scarab crashed, but it didn't. Angela, Isaac, Lindi, Charlotte, Dave
the mission specialist, Chen the geologist, Arva the meteorologist, all
held on for one more second, and one more, and one more after that.
After an eternity of one more second, Kevin's voice echoed inside
Vee's helmet.
"Scarabs Eight and Ten are on the ground! They're on their way.
What's your pressure and temp back there? Exactly."
"We're at the three point three atmospheres and fifty-two degrees
Celsius," answered Adrian. "Tell them to step on it!"
More waiting.
Hang on Angela, oh, please, hang on.
Angela was barely even twitching now. Her fingers curled and opened
slightly, almost as if they were being blown by a wind. Not much to
indicate life. Not nearly enough. Vee laid her hand on Angela's chest
and tried to feel its rise and fall. Nothing. Nothing at all.
No. Please. You can't die. You can't die! Help's on the way!
The scarab shuddered. Vee's gaze jerked automatically to the door.
"We've got a docking seal with Scarab Eight," said Kevin. "Just
another second, they'll have the door open."
Vee's heart hammered hard. Angela's hand went still.
"No, no, no." She grasped the woman's forearm. "Come on! One more
second! One more!"
The outer door hissed open and they faced an identical airlock and
a pair of strangers in hardsuits surrounded by stretcher capsules.
"Mother Creation," whispered one, even as he swung a capsule
forward and lifted its lid.
They got Charlotte in, strapped her down, closed the lid, swung the
capsule into the airlock, where another person waited to read her vital
signs and give the capsule orders for treatment and maintenance. They
swung down another capsule, this one for Lindi. Another for Dave.
Angela still wasn't moving.
"They're here, help's here," breathed Vee. She felt tears running
down her cheeks. She barely knew this woman who was dying under her
hand and Vee couldn't even feel it and help was inches away and she
couldn't beg them to hurry because everyone else was as bad or worse
and they were already moving as fast as they possible could.
A capsule shut. Another swung into place.
"Okay, Dr. Hatch. We got her."
The med techs lifted Angela away and slotted her into the stretcher
capsule, strapped her down, slapped the monitor patches on her, and
closed the lid. The capsule's screens lit up instantly.
"Is she alive?" she croaked.
"Oh yeah," said the med tech. "Mother Creation alone knows how, but
they're all still with us."
Vee fell backwards and sideways and found herself leaning against
Josh. He laid an arm around her shoulder. She couldn't feel it, but she
knew it was there.
Thank God, she thought, for the lives in the stretchers and
the life next to her now.
Thank God.
Contents -
Prev /
Next
Chapter Eleven
The mooring hook took the ligaments the dirigible let down for it.
As soon as the gondola opened its door, T'sha gathered up the cortex
boxes they'd used to cope with the New People's shelter and flew
straight for the base's main portal. She wanted to get into D'seun's
way before he could take his anger out on any of the engineers.
As she had guessed, D'seun was there in the main analysis chamber,
quivering with rage. T'sha glided past him into the chamber, making him
turn away from the door and its view of the corridor beyond.
"I've heard what you did," he said.
"I am not surprised." She set each of the cortex boxes into their
caretaker unit, which would determine whether they needed soothing,
debriefing, or reprogramming.
"Why would you do such a thing?" demanded D'seun. "Why would you
come into contact with them? It is not in your commission!"
T'sha wrapped her posthands around a perch and settled down to face
him. She had to remain calm now. His anger was justified. She had
completely ignored the presence of another ambassador while taking an
action that could affect all the People. She had deliberately
overflown her commission, and there was no going back.
"They were dying, D'seun," she said softly. "What should I have
done?"
D'seun swelled. T'sha held her own bones in tight control.
She could not rise to this. Not now. "We had our mandate. We were
not yet ready to greet them properly."
"This was not a greeting. This was an emergency." It had been too.
Even knowing as much about them as she did, T'sha had been stunned when
the cortices reported on the frigid temperatures the New People
maintained for themselves and how deeply sheltered they were from the
press of the air around them. Their own kind only limped to their aid.
They showed all the soul of family members, surely, but they would have
been far too late. There would not even have been raw materials to
recover, so much would have boiled away.
"You may have jeopardized everything," D'seun shouted. "How can we
show we have proper claim to New Home at this stage? They could
legitimately call question to what we are doing."
T'sha clacked her teeth. "
I
could legitimately question what we're
doing." Her body tried to swell, but she held herself rigid. "D'seun,
you are making assumptions for which you have no evidence. We have no
idea how they see us. We haven't asked them. We may not even have a way
to ask them." There had been the one who'd stood so still under her
stare. What was going on in that one's mind? What was passing between
it and the others? Had they known the People were there to help? Had it
feared they would take the raw materials of their companions' bodies
before they were ready to be used?
D'seun leaned as far forward as he could without releasing his
perch. He swelled up so huge he looked as if he was about to burst.
"You did this deliberately. You did not get your way in the High Law
Meet and so you are forcing the issue."
Despite all her self-control, T'sha's wings beat the air in simple
frustration. "Did I cause the New People's equipment to fail? Did I
make sure you were away from the base when it did?"
D'seun towered over her, rude and showy with his tattoos and his
dyed crest, and did not answer. Not one of the other team members had
come into the chamber, T'sha noted. Intelligent.
"I will take this back to the Law Meet," said D'seun, deflating only
slightly.
T'sha dipped her muzzle. "I've already done so, D'seun. I sent D'han
back through the portal with my complete report of the events."
"Your interpretation of events," said D'seun. "I'm sure, once I've
spoken to them the engineers will have their own stories to tell."
That was enough, more than enough. T'sha inflated, swift and sudden.
She spread her wings out until she was all D'seun could see.
"If I find you've intimidated even the lowest engineer on this team,
I will take you before the Law Meet and I will bring up the question of
your sanity!"
D'seun shriveled. "You wouldn't."
She cupped her wings to surround him. "Feel my words, Ambassador;
feel my life. You know I have cause."
D'seun was so small and tight he would have sunk like a stone had he
not been sitting on a perch. It was then T'sha knew. She had not been
certain until that moment, but now she was. D'seun had not taken raw
materials from the New People. He had taken a life.
Realization rocked T'sha back on her perch.
"I will not forget this," D'seun said.
"You should not." T'sha let go of her perch and flew into the
corridor. She was aware of the Seventh Team strung out along the
corridor like lanterns around a nightside room. She did not speak to
them. Instead, she took herself straight into the refresher and
ordered the door to close tightly behind her.
The air in the refresher was rich, thick, and heavy. T'sha took it
in gratefully, relaxing her skin, drawing the life-giving air in
through her loosened muzzle and feeling her internal poisons release
from her pores. It was so hard to feel full here, in this beautiful,
empty world. Back home she needed to refresh perhaps once every
dodec-hour. Here, every four or five hours that passed left her
drained. She relaxed skin, muscle, and bone in the room's gentle breeze
and let herself drift.
She'd done it. Oh, she had done it. She'd spent so much effort
controlling her body, she'd obviously forgotten to control her mind.
Did she really mean she'd call D'seun's sanity into question?
She did. Her skin rippled with small fear. She'd do it. This was too
huge. It meant too much. If D'seun would have her sacrifice the New
People needlessly, if he had taken one of their lives, he might really
be insane. The sane spread life, served it, nurtured it, and in return
were served and spread and nurtured by life. The insane were greedy.
They killed. They stunted and confined and hoarded life. The sane and
the insane could not live together.
T'sha remembered when her family had met on a question of insanity.
She'd only just been declared adult, able to fly with the others and
add her voice to the consensus. T'thran, a second cousin to her birth
family, had deliberately destroyed an entire square mile of canopy. He
offered no reason, however closely questioned. He had only wanted to do
this thing. It was bad, he said. It was rotted, and the rot would
spread.
But there was no evidence. No one else in the entire latitude had
witnessed this corruption. Not even Ca'aed could say it had existed.
The family asked; they asked everyone they could reach. The wind blew
them from day through night and back into day again while they turned
the question over. But in the end, every voice polled had called him
insane.
Insane. Nothing left to contribute to life but his own raw
material. So that raw material had been taken and used to help
recreate what had been destroyed.
As would D'seun's be, if she did this and the Law Meet found she was
right.
The problem was, of course, that D'seun could make his own case
against her. He had already convinced the Seventh Team she was greedy
and careless. What if he or some ally took that to a court or the
Fitness Review Committee in the High Law Meet? There existed the very
real possibility that she would be removed from her special position
here, and then who would speak for the New People? D'seun would not,
his bullied team would not, and back in the High Law Meet, Ambassador
Z'eth most certainly would not.
T'sha floated between disasters and did not know which way to dodge.
She only knew that as long as the New People were alive and sane they
could not be dismissed, could not be flown over without regard to their
needs and their claims. That was right. That was the first Right and
the final Right and it would not change, no matter how closely D'seun
argued his case and no matter what Z'eth had asked her to do.
"I cannot choose which life to serve," she murmured, calling back
the words the living highland spoke to Ca'doth.
T'sha floated, blown by the room's gentle, random breeze, taking in
its nutrition and its calm. She had made her move. All that she could
do now was wait and see how D'seun would respond.
* * *
The Veneran doctors agreed Vee could sleep in her own room if she
wore the monitor belt and patches under her shirt and swore to drink
two liters of water before she went to bed.
So there she stood in her spacious, comfortable living room, with
its autoform furniture and its walls set to a static pattern of
mountains and clouds based on Japanese watercolors, and the purple rag
rug on the soft-tile floor, completely at a loss about what to do.
Angela, Lindi, Isaac, and the Venerans were all going to live, thanks
to the intervention of the aliens. She drew a large glass of water from
the tap at the sink in the kitchenette and drank some absently. What
were they doing down there now? What were they doing there at all? Who
were they? Why had they decided to help?
For the first time since coming to Venera, Vee felt trapped. There
was a whole new world out there now, and she couldn't reach it.
Nothing you can do about it now, unless you want to put the act
back on and try to bully Failia and company to let you back down there.
Vee sat in the desk chair. No. That was not going to get her
anywhere. But she couldn't just sit here. She had to
do
something.
Almost idly, she flipped open her briefcase and accessed her drawing
programs. She undipped the stylus from her holder and opened the
gallery. Maybe she could draw the scene from the accident, just to pass
the time. She could begin with clips from the gallery. She had the
backdrops she'd used for her simulations to show Angela, but they were
strictly second rate. Might do for a base to build on. Needed color
though, and a different scale.
Her mind's eye brought the rescue scene back to the fore, and her
hands started to move.
This wasn't a real holograph; this was a computer-generated
simulation. She'd have to unpack her holotank and film to make the real
thing, but she could make a sketch for eventual transfer to real 3-D.
She could show the dim shadows and black rock with the startling
threads of lava creeping down the mountainsides. She could show the
scarab, bent and crippled in a wilderness of stone.
And she could show the aliens. The gold wings that shimmered and
sparkled in the dim light and thick air. The silver eyes. Those eyes,
how could she render those eyes? How could she show the intelligence
she had felt under the surface as this creature, no, this
person
from another world looked into her own eyes?
Vee zoomed in on the winged form and concentrated solely on it, the
eyes, the lines along its skin, the curve of its torso and wings. She
worked fast, trying to freeze the memory before it faded. The cameras
from the suits and the scarab had surely captured the images, but how
long would it be before she had access to them? This was her memory.
This was her moment made real in light and code. This is what she'd
show the world, all the worlds, so they would understand what had
happened.
Water, promises, and time forgotten, Vee drew the first portrait of
Earth's neighbors.
Her door chimed, jerking Vee back into the present, where she became
aware of a stiff back and ankles, a cramped hand, and a raging thirst.
"Door. Open," called Vee, half-annoyed, half-grateful. She gulped
half the water remaining in her glass.
Josh stood in the threshold.
"Hi," he said. "You okay?"
"Oh yeah, fine." She blanked her case screen. It wasn't done yet.
Not ready for anyone else to see. "Got caught up in a project. What's
going on?"
"Dr. Failia wants us all in the conference room to debrief about…
what happened. I said I'd come get you."
"Thanks." Vee unbent her protesting back and legs. She got to her
feet and drained her water glass. "You didn't have to do this."
Josh's face shifted into an expression she hadn't seen before. It
was gentle, yet awkward. "I wanted to make sure you were okay. Things
got rough down there, and you were looking at Angela like…" He searched
for words. "Like she was the only thing holding you together."
"Thanks," said Vee again, and she meant it. "It was bad for a bit.
No question. We owe the aliens. Whatever they are, we owe them."
"Yes, we do." Josh shook his head. "Ever since you told me the base
was a fake, I'd been gearing up for a huge disappointment. But then…"
His words trailed off. "I don't know what to think now."
"Me either," she admitted. "Yet. Let's go get debriefed." She
crossed to the door and stopped. Something else needed to be said.
Something she hadn't needed to say for a long time. She turned back
toward Josh. "Thank you for taking me seriously down there. For letting
me help."
"That was the real you," Josh said. "I was glad you were there."
"Yeah, well," said Vee, unable to form a better response and kicking
herself for it. "Let's see how glad the board is."
Vee and Josh walked to Conference Room One through a Venera Base
that seemed abnormally tense. Vee was sure the rumor mill had been
incredibly active all day, but from the sidelong glances people were
giving them, she was also sure that Dr. Failia and the governing board
hadn't yet deigned to release any official information. If it had been
Vee, she'd have been going crazy.
They were the last to arrive. The board clustered together at one
end of the oval table. The passengers and crew of Scarab Five ranged
around the rest of it. All the U.N. team who were not in
the hospital were there. Terry sat next to her partner. Robert Stykos.
Julia sat between Troy and Adrian, who was next to a shell-shocked
Philip Bowerman. Vee picked the free chair beside Philip. Josh sat next
to her. Vee felt absurdly pleased.
Helen Failia got to her feet. She looked determined, as if she was
not going to let even this situation get the best of her.
But Philip did not give her the chance to speak. "Before we say
anything else here"—Philip looked haggard. No surprise. His partner was
lying in the infirmary with tubes in her arms and synaptic stimulators
in her ears while all five medical doctors tried to work out how many
nerve grafts she was going to need—"I want to know why our outgoing
communications are being blocked."
Our what? Vee straightened up. Now she could see why both
Terry and Robert appeared particularly grim.
Helen gave a short sigh, as if this were a minor inconvenience.
"Venera's governing board has decided that, for the time being, all
outgoing communication which contains references to this latest
development will be held for transmission at a later time."
"You cannot do this," said Robert through clenched teeth. "You have
no right to restrict free communication."
"Venera Base reserves the right to refuse transmission of data which
might include proprietary or unpublished information based on work that
does not belong to the person requesting the transmission." Dr. Failia
said it like she'd memorized it. She probably had. It was probably part
of the colony's charter or some similar document.
Philip shook his head. "That is not an acceptable decision, Dr.
Failia."
"It is most definitely not acceptable," said Terry. "This is the
real thing. We need to get this out as soon as possible."
"No," said Helen flatly. "That was what was done with the Discovery.
Now we know that was a fraud. Who knows what this latest phenomenon is?"
"I do," said Troy, his voice husky with awe. Vee had heard that tone
plenty of times down in the Discovery, but this was different somehow.
Down there, she'd been quite sure it was all for show, a way to impress
Lindi with his depth and give Terry good sound bits. Now though, she
got the sudden impression they were hearing what he really felt. "They
were saviors. Merciful saviors. They took gentle care of the crew of
Scarab Fourteen—"
"They kept Heathe's body," cut in Dr. Godwin. "What'd they do that
for? Merciful saviors? Maybe just morbidly curious?"
"We can't know," said Michael Lum. "Not yet. From what we saw we
can't even know if we can communicate with them."
"Yes, we can." Vee blurted out the words before she even realized
she had spoken.
"What?" said Dr. Failia sharply. Everyone turned to face Vee.
"We can communicate with them," said Vee, slowly this time, letting
the ideas bubbling up inside her mind coalesce, giving herself a chance
to see them clearly. "They can see." Yes, there it was. The foundation.
They could build from there. "One of them was watching me the whole
time. Their eyes were made up like a human eye, or near as, which means
it's probable they can see in wavelengths we use and resolve images
very close to the way we do."
"And assuming you're right?" said Dr. Godwin.
Vee felt herself smile. Ideas flowed through her. This could work.
They could do this. "If they can see, we can communicate with them. I
don't know if they could hear a radio broadcast, but they might be
able to read a letter."
"You want to teach them their ABC's? How?" Dr. Failia's voice was
suspicious but not dismissive. Good. Excellent.
"Holographs," Vee told them.
"Don't be ridiculous," said Dr. Godwin. "It'd take years to get a
holograph setup that would work."
Vee's smile spread. She loved surprises. She loved the impossible,
and this was the most impossible set of circumstances she'd ever been
in. "It'll take a week. The hard part's already done."
"What is the hard part?" asked Dr. Failia.
Vee leaned forward. "The hard part would have been getting a working
laser in place, but we've already got one. Whoever built the Discovery
took care of that for us. There is a laser down there that Josh says
will work under Venusian conditions as soon as we jack it into a power
source."
"And you think you can talk to them?" Dr. Lum sounded half-afraid,
half-hopeful.
"Maybe." Her gaze turned inward while her mind lined up the things
they'd need. "We build a holotank outside the Discovery where they can
see it. Line it up with the laser. Wire the laser so it can be
controlled from inside one of the scarabs. It's got a double beam, so
it can record and project once we get the tank in place. I've brought
some of my rapid-replay film with me, so if we can set up some kind of
cold-box for the tank to work in, we won't have a problem there—"
"Wait a minute." Philip got to his feet. "Figuring out the
mechanics, this is good; we'll need that, but this is not something we
can do alone up here. This is not your decision. We need to contact the
C.A.C. immediately and let them inform the Secretaries-General what has
happened."
"What do you want us to do, Mr. Bowerman?" asked Dr. Godwin. "Let
the aliens sit and twiddle their thumbs for weeks until the S.G.s
decide which end's up?"
"That's not my decision." Philip planted one hand on the tabletop.
"And it's not yours."
"Yes, it is ours," said Dr. Godwin. "This is our home, not yours."
Philip's face tightened. "This involves all of humanity, not just
Venus."
"We owe it to all of humanity to give them an accurate picture,"
said Dr. Lum quietly. "If it is proven the Discovery is a fraud, then
we already screwed up once, and look what we started. We can't risk
doing that again."
"I appreciate your scientific rigor—"
"It's not science, it's survival," said Dr. Lum. "We are not
talking about a few holes in the ground anymore. We are talking about
living beings with who knows what capabilities and who knows what
reasons for being here. Before we panic the entire range of humanity,
we have to know what they can and cannot do and why they're doing it."
Dr. Lum let his gaze sweep the
entire gathering. "If we don't have some answers when people ask 'what
do they want,' we're going to have an upheaval like nothing we've seen
since the twentieth century."
"One week," said Dr. Failia. "Dr. Hatch said she can make contact
within a week. We will then at least see how they react to our attempts
to talk. We can take that to the U.N. It will be better than nothing."
Philip shook his head. "It's unacceptable. This is not your
decision."
"Unfortunately, it is," said Dr. Failia. "We're here and so are
they. We have to decide what to do about that. Here it is."
Philip said nothing. Vee didn't miss the struggle on his face,
though. He was going to try to contact his superiors again as soon as
he left the meeting. The board certainly knew it. Despite his
determination, however, he was also obviously aware he was a long, long
way from any kind of backup.
"Dr. Hatch." Dr. Failia turned to Vee. "I need an honest
assessment. Do you believe you can initiate some kind of contact with…
our neighbors in one week?"
"Yes," said Vee without hesitation. "I'll need Dr. Kenyon's help,
but we can do it."
"Please proceed after the meeting then," said Dr. Failia. Vee nodded.
"And for those of us who don't agree with the one week holding
period?" asked Robert coolly.
"All outgoing communications are being monitored," said Dr. Lum.
"Nothing will be released without authorization."
"I see," said Philip. He looked at Godwin. "It's nice to see
separatist principles being applied evenly as always. The U.N. tries to
regulate your communication, you howl at the unfairness of it all. But
you regulating the U.N.'s, that's just fine."
"You are not the U.N.," said Dr. Godwin softly, but his
satisfaction with the statement was unmistakable.
"I am a U.N. employee, just like every other Terran member at this
table. What you are doing is not legal and not acceptable." Philip
stood and walked out the door.
"You'll excuse us as well," Terry also got up and left, followed by
Robert.
As the door swished shut, Dr. Lum woke up the tabletop screen in
front of him and touched a few command keys. Vee itched to know what
they were, but there was no way to ask.
Dr. Failia sighed as if resigning herself to something unpleasant
and focused on her remaining audience.
"Josh, if you could tell us what you know about the accident and
what happened afterwards, please."
Josh glanced around the table and then at the door. "For the record,
I don't agree at all with censoring communication. That said"—he sighed
and folded his arms—"this is what I saw."
They each talked in turn. Four versions of the same experience made
a collage that mostly resolved into a single story. By the end of it,
Vee had heard the experience repeated so many times it began to feel a
little dreamlike. But all she had to do was think about the bodies on
the airlock floor and it hit her all over again—the waiting, the fear,
the cries of pain. Oh yeah, it was real.
And nothing would ever be the same again. Vee pictured the person
hovering in front of her on golden wings and felt herself start to
smile again.
She would find a way to talk to the ones with golden wings.
Then the universe would open up wide.
* * *
The door closed behind the U.N. investigative team as they left the
meeting, cutting off both Veronica Hatch's rapid-fire suggestions to
Josh Kenyon and Troy Peachman's continued awed murmurings to whoever
would listen.
"Well that's done," said Helen, smoothing her scarf down. "I do hope
our new neighbors appreciate what we're going through for them."
Ben smiled faintly at her attempted joke, but Michael's face
remained serious.
"There's one more thing," he said quietly.
There was no question as to what he meant. Helen wished there could
be. She sighed. "Your people have them?"
"Yes."
"Are you going to ask the yewners to be there for the questioning?"
asked Ben in as mild a voice as he owned.
That would be your first priority, Ben, wouldn't it? "No."
Helen shook her head. "I would prefer we handle this ourselves for as
long as we can." She'd gone down with Michael to arrest Derek. She
remembered the hurt on his face, the bewildered betrayal, as if he
didn't understand what all the
fuss was about.
"But you're still going to send them back to Mother Earth for
trial?" Ben's face was flushed, but his eyes were cold.
"What else are we supposed to do? No"—Helen held up her hand—"I
don't want to hear it. We are sending them back to Earth, eventually."
She rested her fingertips briefly on the table.
I do not want to
do this. Please understand, Ben, even with all they are about to bring
down on us, I do not want to do this.
She straightened up. "I don't want them paraded through the halls.
We'll go down."
"You don't have to do this, Helen," Michael told her as he stood at
her side. "I can bring you a report."
He'd said the same thing during the arrest. He was a good boy,
Michael. His attempts to shelter her were well meaning. This was even a
fairly decent out. No one would question it or think that there was
another way to do this.
No one but Helen herself. "No. We all let this happen and we're all
going to be made to pay for it, one way or another. Look at this as the
first installment."
Remember the others, Helen told herself as she led the
board out into the corridor and toward the elevator bundle.
Remember
what is real. Our neighbors have saved more than a scarab crew, simply
by being there. They have saved us from the worst this fraud accusation
could bring.
It was a strange thought to be having at this moment, but it kept
her going as they descended to the administration level and walked in
single file into the back of Michael's security area. Murmured
conversations started up as they passed, and Helen imagined the waves
of whispering spreading out like ripples in a pool. Whispering about
how the entire governing board marched in to see the Cusmanos brothers
and endless speculations about what they talked about, spreading and
merging to join with the speculation about what really happened to the
scarab crews.
She'd have to make an announcement soon. But first they had to try
to find out who else needed to be held. Michael was certain the
Cusmanoses had not acted alone, and Helen trusted him.
Venera's brig was the only cramped place on the base. Little cells,
little questioning rooms, all decked with big cameras, it was exactly
the opposite of the free spaces. Not torturous, no, but disquieting,
especially for long-term residents.
The brig had actually been an afterthought. Helen, for all her
careful planning, had not envisioned the need for such a place in her
original design. But scientists and academics were human, with their
share of the human fallibilities, and house arrest did not suffice for
everyone.
Two of Michael's security team brought the brothers into the
interrogation room, where the governing board waited for them. Derek,
troubled but defiant, and Kevin, hollow-eyed and tired, sat at the end
of the table as far from the board as they could get. Derek slumped his
shoulders and looked anywhere in the room except at the faces of his
accusers. Kevin sat up straight but bowed his head, studying the
smooth, wired plastic surface of the table.
Anger grabbed hold of Helen, but she'd been ready for it. What she
was less prepared for was the sorrow. Kevin and Derek's parents had
been old-fashioned Christians, and she'd been to both their sons'
baptisms. She'd written Kevin the recommendation that got him into
M.F.I.T., and she'd been there when Ben told Derek he'd won the
competitive exams that turned him into the one-man survey department.
Beth and Rick Cusmanos had both retired and moved back to Mother
Earth. Helen remembered her own mixed feelings at the bon voyage party.
But the sons had both stayed. Stayed to do this to Venera.
Belatedly, she realized Beth and Rick did not yet know what their
sons had done, and sorrow struck her again.
"I have your statements in your files." Michael lit up one of the
table screens, all business. Whatever he felt watching the men
who were his friends, he kept hidden. He just shuffled the icons until
he had access to their fact files. "Is there anything you want to add
at this time?"
Derek's eyes slid sideways to look at Kevin. Kevin did not look up.
"Can you cut us a deal?" asked Derek, a little belligerently, a little
hopefully.
Michael's gaze flickered from Derek to Kevin. "I can make sure the
court knows you cooperated fully."
"But you can't deal?" pressed Derek.
Helen felt her jaw clench.
How can you talk like this? Don't
you realize what you almost did? If there hadn't been something real
out there, you would have killed Venera!
Michael shook his head. "I'm not an officer of the courts, no, but I
am recognized as a police officer. It gives me some weight."
Derek snorted, and Kevin glowered at him. "No," Derek said. "It's
not enough. The shit's too deep to be shoveled out with a good report
card."
"Derek." Ben leaned forward. "Don't do this to yourselves. Don't do
this to your friends. You've been caught. It's all over. There's no one
to protect anymore."
Derek said nothing.
Helen swallowed her anger. She stood and walked around the edge of
the table. "Kevin?" she said, standing next to him.
Kevin sat silently. Helen let the silence stretch. Then, she said.
"You're a good man, Kevin Cusmanos. You have done so much good work for
us." She meant it, every word. A thousand memories flashed through her
head of Kevin, in and out of the scarabs, his attention to detail, his
care and diligence in training his people and caring for his
equipment. "You're just trying to help your brother, I'm sure of that."
More memories—the two of them in the playground, Derek always tearing
along behind his older, bulkier brother. Kevin at Derek's promotion
ceremony, his chest puffed all the way out. Derek looked so… lost
really when Kevin boarded the ship for Earth and his degrees, and
Kevin shaking him by the shoulder and telling him to cheer up.
Helen laid her hand on Kevin's shoulder. "I'm telling you, it
doesn't have to be this bad. We might not even have to send you down
there if we can show we know all of what happened."
Slowly, sadly, Kevin shook his head. "There is no way the yewners
are going to let you hang on to us. Too many people are going to look
stupid as soon as word gets out. There's nothing you can do, Helen."
Regret deep and profound poured through her. That was it then. She
touched his shoulder. "There's nothing you'll let me do."
"You're probably right," he said to the tabletop.
"Kevin."
Kevin finally looked up, right into her eyes. Over his shoulder,
she saw Derek's face go white.
He's going to tell us. Hope
leaped up inside her.
He's not going to let us down.
But the moment passed, and Kevin's gaze dropped back to the
tabletop. "I can't," he whispered. "I'm sorry."
"So am I, Kevin." She squeezed his shoulder and turned away. "For
both of you."
* * *
Phil stepped into Angela's cubicle in the infirmary. She was still
unconscious. Her face was mottled red and white. The muffling
headphones the doctors had strapped over her damaged ears plastered
her short hair against her burned scalp. Tubes and patches covered her
pale arms lying on top of the rough monitor blanket.
"You're looking good, Ms. Cleary." He sat in the stiff chair beside
her bed. Why was there no hospital in existence that had comfortable
visitor's chairs? She really did look better. When they'd first let him
in to see her, every limb was swollen with bruises and blisters. Her
face was a single massive, doughy contusion. He'd seen worse but not on
his partner.
They told him she'd been awake briefly, but now what she needed was
sleep. She needed to sleep away the pain and the fear and the utter
strangeness of what had happened to her. The Veneran doctors were
minimalists who did not approve of speed-healing techniques. They
repaired the blood vessels and nerves, alleviated the adenoma, and
treated the worst of the burns. Other than that, they were leaving her
body to take care of itself.
"Well, you've been saying you needed a vacation anyway," said Phil,
looking more at the floor than at Angela. She'd been nearly dead when
they brought her back. He'd thought it was all over. He'd thought she
was gone. He'd been terrified. They'd worked together since he'd joined
the U.N. security team. In some ways he was closer to her than to his
own wife.
But she wasn't dead. She'd been saved. By strangers. Aliens. It was
almost too much. Phil found he didn't really want to think about it. It
was a lot easier to concentrate on what was going on inside Venera's
walls.
"I haven't written the report for the boss yet," he went on. "The
Venerans are screening outgoing transmissions. Somehow I don't think
our encrypted stuff is going to get through. I'm going to start looking
for holes." He rested his elbows on his knees. "But I don't think I'm
going to find any. The guy is very good." He glanced at her. The
blanket rose and fell with her rhythmic breathing.
She's getting better. She's going to stay alive. "I wonder
how long it's going to take Stykos and Wray to file free-speech
lawsuits." He sucked on his cheek thoughtfully. "Actually, the
Venerans will probably offer them exclusive coverage of the aliens if
they keep their mouths shut until the Venerans are ready."
He rubbed his palms together, feeling skin against skin, feeling
how they were slightly damp. Then his thoughts froze the motion.
"How'd he filter out the communications so fast?" Phil straightened
up.
You just said he was good. His imagination supplied
Angela's words.
"Nobody's that good. He couldn't just shut down everything; it'd
look funny. Someone on Mother Earth would notice." He touched Angie's
hand. It was warm and dry under the tubes. "A good broad-spectrum
communication filter is not something you pluck out of the stream. He
must have had them in place." He turned toward her, eyes shining,
despite the fact that nothing had changed with her. "I think Michael
Lum's been less than
straight with us about how wired this base is. That means there might
be info we could strain out."
Might be. Maybe. If he was right. But that also meant the not so
still waters of Venera ran deeper than he'd believed.
If Michael Lum hadn't told them how much info he had access to, who
else hadn't he told?
On the other hand, Michael was the one who'd come to him about the
possible fraud involving the Discovery, which made him less likely to
be involved in perpetrating that fraud.
"What a mess," Phil muttered through his teeth. He turned his eyes
to Angela's blanket and its steady rise and fall. "We're going to have
to do some scenario planning here. It's pretty clear the original
Discovery was a fake. They've got the guys who actually built it. But I
think Michael's right. There were other people involved in planning the
scam. We need to find them." He leaned back again, a restless,
meaningless movement. "And hope for the moment he's not one of them,
although I don't know… Fake base and real aliens." Phil shook his
head. "I am not buying the coincidence here. Someone is building up to
something, and I can't see what yet." He frowned, both at his thoughts
and at the realization that it was so much easier to think of aliens if
they were part of a conspiracy or a cover-up of some kind. That felt
strange and a little sad.
Angela stirred, a meaningless, restless movement of her own. "Wake
up soon, Angie," he said softly. "I need you on the beach with me when
the wave hits."
* * *
The idiots, thought Su as she surveyed the broken chunks of
metal and ceramic tumbling gently through the void.
They couldn't
wait. They couldn't hold back.
She floated upright in the shuttle's observation compartment, one
hand hanging on to a wall handle to keep herself still and oriented.
The port window currently showed the small debris field. Here and there
she could see the bright-yellow suits of the Trans-Lunar Patrol
workers, gathering the debris, strapping it into bundles to be hauled
into the shuttles and out of the shipping lanes. Small drones spread
out in sweep patterns, vacuuming
up the dust and marble-sized debris that could pinhole anything that
flew through it.
Twelve hours ago, all that debris had been a shipyard engaged in
labor negotiations with a union that had outspoken separatist
sentiments. The yard was a space station, and the property of a wholly
owned Terran corporation, which got it around the "no ship building"
rules that applied to the colonies.
It also meant that the colonists cared a lot less about keeping the
place in good shape.
The bombs had scattered the yards and the ships across kilometers of
heavily traveled space. The Trans-Lunars and the insurance people were
still calculating the damage. At least five ships had been hit by
debris. The majority of traffic between Earth and Luna was grounded
until they could get the wreckage cleared up. It would take days and
cost millions.
They just couldn't wait.
"The Union has made a strong statement condemning the bombing," said
Glenn Kucera, the U.N.'s Lunar representative, and the person Su kept
thinking of as her "host" for this little trip. "They're saying it's
radical elements within the organization and that the union is
committed to peaceful reform."
"Yes, I heard that," said Su. She couldn't look away. The world
outside was all sharp edges against the blackness. Everything was too
clean, too clear. It all fell, fell endlessly, silver, white, and
black. "How many people died in there?"
"Fourteen," said Kucera. "It went off between shifts."
"And is anyone is custody?" Her mouth moved and questions came out,
but Su felt as though someone else were asking them. She was just
watching the tumbling debris and cursing the ones who couldn't wait
just a few days, maybe a few weeks longer.
"Not yet. We're still following some leads, and of course Mr.
Hourani is here to help." Kucera licked his lips. "Su, we've got to
diffuse this. Waicek—"
Su nodded. "Edmund was down in U.N. City now, having himself a
little field day, pointing out what unrest, what
independent thought in the colonies led to."
"And he's got backup." Su ground her teeth against the curses that
wanted to spill out of her. They'd worked so hard to keep things calm,
to keep everything going through the transition period. She'd done
absolutely everything she could do. Why did it feel like she had never
worked hard enough?
Why couldn't you just wait?
Well, while she was up here, she would take some of the wind out of
Edmund Waicek's sails. That was all ready to set in motion. She just
needed to get through this first.
It took all of Su's strength to turn away from the window and face
her host. Even then, out of the corner of her eye, she could still see
bits of black and silver tumbling in the darkness.
"I'll meet with the Union reps," she said. "Find somebody to arrest,
Glenn. Get this under wraps quickly." Actually, with Sadiq Hourani
himself looking into the situation, Su did not give the perpetrators of
this violent idiocy long odds.
"I want it under wraps too, believe me." Although Glenn had been
born on Earth, he looked like the classic Lunar—tall, spindly, hair
cropped short under his cap. He'd gone pretty native up here, but he
hid it so he could keep his post. It was a balancing act that Su
understood well and did not envy.
Su touched his arm. "We'll pull it out, Glenn. We always have."
He smiled crookedly. "One damn crisis after another, isn't it?" He
gazed out the window. "I just wish they weren't coming closer together."
"So do I, Glenn."
They shared a tired, tight smile with each other. Glenn let go of
his strap and pushed easily off the wall with just enough force to take
him to the threshold of the passenger bay. "So, can I drop you
somewhere?"
"Back to Selene, thank you," said Su, primly. "I've got an
appointment."
"Will do." Glenn paused. "Thanks for coming up for this one, Su. I
know you've got enough going on with Venera."
"I'm not abandoning anybody, Glenn. We're all in this together."
Almost involuntarily her gaze shifted back to the spinning debris.
At
least, we should be.
The landing back in the Selene port was perfectly routine. Su
emerged with her retinue and Glenn and then sent them all about their
business. She really did have an appointment, but this was not a
meeting that needed an audience.
Assisted by the weighted undersuit she wore, Su walked to Selene's
public caverns. Su visited Luna frequently, but she'd never gotten the
hang of light gravity, so she dressed like a tourist to keep from
hurting herself or from damaging property by inadvertently flinging
things across the room.
She found the cafe where the meeting was to take place in the
vine-hung public cavern that served as a small park. She took a seat at
one of its gilt-wire tables but did not order anything. Outwardly she
was calm, but inside, her stomach churned from the memory of the
devastation. Her mind kept running through all the areas where damage
control would be needed, and the list was expanding alarmingly.
It was ten minutes later when Frezia Cheney finally emerged from the
northeast tunnel. Living on the Moon gave one grace, Su decided, as she
watched the feeder walk toward her. Especially in those who were born
here, there was an unhurried elegance in their small movements. Maybe
it was because things around them fell so slowly that there was no
imperative to rush when you reached for something. You could grab hold
of whatever you wanted and not even gravity would snatch it away from
you.
Su stood up politely as the feeder reached her table. "Thank you for
agreeing to meet me, Ms. Cheney."
"I should be thanking you, Ms. Yan." She beamed the smile of those
comfortable with cameras and publicity. "Normally there's a three-month
waiting list to get to speak to anyone in the U.N."
"Yes," agreed Su as they both sat down. "We are kept on short
leashes."
"They've let yours out far enough to reach Luna."
Su smiled deprecatingly. "Ah, that took a little doing. I was
officially here doing some labor negotiations…" She broke off. "But
then, you would know that already."
"I would." Ms. Cheney nodded once. "In fact, I've written about it."
"Of course." Su frequently scanned the stream for her own name. It
was partly vanity, but mostly it was to keep an eye on how she was
perceived. The bad opinion of her colleagues was one thing, but public
opinion turned against her could be the end of her.
Su set that thought aside. "And how was my son when you spoke to
him?"
Ms. Cheney's smile was both curious and sly. "He told you about me?"
"Was it supposed to be confidential?" returned Su.
"Oh, no." She waved her hand, dismissing any such suggestion. "But
I wasn't aware that you two spoke much."
Now it was Su's turn to smile slyly. "We keep that quiet. It's not
good for either of our reputations."
"I suppose not. To answer your question, I'm happy to tell you he
was quite well." She paused and her eyes slid up and sideways. Su had
the distinct feeling some implant had just been activated. Probably a
recorder. "Now, may I ask what you wanted to see me about?" asked Ms.
Cheney.
Su folded her hands on the table and smoothed her thoughts out. Time
to get to work. "Actually, I also came to Luna about a stream piece."
The feeder tipped her head in polite curiosity. "One I've written,
or one you'd like me to write?"
I see, Ms. Cheney, that you've had experience with politicians.
"One I'd like you to write. If you're willing to accommodate me, I am
in a position to offer you access to the blast site and some of the
U.N. personnel involved in the investigation."
And aren't I going
to have the time convincing Sadiq to go along with it.
Ms. Cheney's eyes gleamed for a moment, but experience and suspicion
doused the light. "A great deal would depend on what you want me to
write."
"Naturally." Su inclined her head. "You know Edmund Waicek?"
Ms. Cheney's eyes slid sideways again. Su was certain the feeder was
looking Edmund up, fetching the pertinent details from some internally
stored database to be displayed on a contact lens or spoken softly
into her ear. "Not personally, but I know his political opinions better
than I'd care to."
"You know that his parents died in the Bradbury Rebellion?" Su
asked, positive Ms. Cheney had the information available.
One more slide of Ms. Cheney's eyes.
Look that up. Don't make
any statement of fact unless you're sure. "That's been gone over
several times. He's made speeches about it."
I have lost more than
can ever be recovered, and I am only one
of many. Su remembered the speech very well. He'd done it with
tears in his eyes. They might even have been real.
"But did you know that they were Fullerists?" asked Su.
"What?" Ms. Cheney jerked out of her internal communion with her
data implants. It was just as well. She would not find this little fact
in the shallows of the stream. Edmund had made sure of that.
Su nodded slowly. "The senior Waiceks were friends and supporters of
Ted Fuller. They sent their son into politics to be a friendly voice
for the colonies. Then the rebellion happened, and one of Fuller's…
less reliable associates feared they'd expose his embezzlements and
bundled them off on an unreliable ship with one of the last loads of
U.N. sympathizers."
Neither of them spoke for a long time. They sat there with their own
thoughts, letting the world flow around them. Su couldn't guess at Ms.
Cheney's imaginings. Her own were lost in the thought of the little
tin-can ships that were Fuller's real crime. All those ships, pulled
from the repair yards when there weren't enough sound vessels in port
to exile the dissenters, or suspected dissenters. Ships with poor
reactor shielding, ships with spent fuel tanks, ships with hulls
already
weak or pinholed, just waiting to be cut to ribbons by the random
stones that flew between Earth and Mars.
No matter what his apologists said about evil counselors, it was
those ships—those dead human beings—not his wish for freedom, that
doomed Ted Fuller's cause and all that might have come of it.
"I'm not sure that's exactly the sort of story I'd be willing to
publish," said Ms. Cheney after a while.
"I see." Of course. The woman was a separatist. She would not be
willing to cast any additional aspersions on the great Theodore Fuller.
"Can I ask you to consider the implications that Edmund Waicek covered
up his parents' political leanings? It is one of the great media truths
that it's not the crime, it's the cover-up, that makes news."
Ms. Cheney pursed her mouth and nodded. "True. True. There may be
something there." Su could practically read her thoughts. For the
mainstream, political cover-up. For the separatists, the loudest voice
against colonial rights is the son of Fullerists. Yes, there was
certainly something there.
"Why are you telling me this, Mrs. Yan?"
Su was ready for that one. "I deplore hypocrisy."
"Surely that's not the whole reason."
"Surely it is."
Ms. Cheney leaned back and nodded, an indication that she was
prepared to be content with that for the moment. "I believe I can put
together something that will return Edmund Waicek's background to
public conversation."
"Very good." Su stood, signaling the end of the conversation.
"You'll be contacted tomorrow about covering the blast site. Word will
be left that you are—" Her phone spot's chime cut off the rest of her
words.
"Transmission from Ben Godwin to Yan Quai," said the voice in her
ear. "Private recording and decryption process go."
Mother Creation, so soon? "I'm sorry," Su forced her
attention back to the reporter. "I've just received a message I must
attend to."
"About the Discovery?" asked Ms. Cheney, getting smoothly to her
feet. "Or about more separatist activity?"
"I have no comment about it at this time," said Su reflexively. "I'm
sorry."
"So am I, Ms. Yan." She smiled. "Thank you for your time."
"Thank you for yours," returned Su.
Su left the feeder there. She had to get away from the cameras and
their attendant ears. Her room at the embassy was as private as Sadiq
could make it, so she headed there.
* * *
The room felt uncomfortably tiny to Su, but for Lunar quarters, it
was quite luxurious. There was room for all the essentials—bed, desk,
table, three chairs, without any of them having to be foldaways. The
bathroom had a separate door and was hers alone.
Luna made some of its money off the tourist industry, but most of it
off mining and industry, and the mining and industrial concerns were
not interested in taking up room with living quarters.
When Su first had Sadiq Hourani tap Quai's private mailboxes for
her, she'd told herself it was a precaution. Quai dealt with some
fringe characters and might find himself up to his neck before he knew
it. He was just a boy.
But that was a comfortable fiction and she knew it. She'd asked for
the tap because she wanted to know what was happening with the
separatists. She wanted to keep an eye on them all so she could try to
temper their activities, steer them away from the most damaging courses.
She wanted to control them.
The tap was a betrayal of her son's trust. One day he'd find out,
and she would pay. Even now, when they were on the same side, he would
not forgive this intrusion into his privacy.
Even that stark realization, though, did not make her turn off the
tap.
Su had already unplugged the desk and jacked her own case into the
wall socket. She sat down in the desk chair and opened the screen.
After a few typed commands and three passwords of increasing length,
the decrypted stolen transmission printed out for her.
Su felt her eyes widen as she read. Her hands slipped from the
command board and toppled into her lap.
Aliens. Aliens on Venus. Not some hole in the ground this time. Not
overblown speculation and chancy photographs. Not even microscopic RNA
particles. No. These were living beings with minds and wills of their
own, and they had saved a scarab's crew.
Su's throat tightened. Implications, wondrous and terrible, poured
through her mind too fast for her to take note of them all.
And here was Ben Godwin telling it all to her son, laying out how it
could be used by the separatists for their cause. As predicted. But it
was one thing to predict and another to see it happening. Some part of
her had believed, had hoped, this day would not come even as she had
laid down all her strategies for when it did.
One command at a time, Su wiped out the file. It would not do for
anyone else to see this.
No, it would not do at all.
Contents -
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Chapter Twelve
T'sha floated in the research chamber of the New Home base,
murmuring her worries to her personal cortex box and wishing painfully
it was Ca'aed she spoke to. She and D'seun were now in the order of
debate for the High Law Meet. A few of T'sha's friends had quietly
passed the word that they found it hard to support what she had done,
considering that the consensus had been quite clear about the fact that
she was to observe and report on the New People, not contact them, and
that the New People's own kind were already responding by the time
T'sha had reached the accident site. One of those friends was
Ambassador Z'eth.
T'sha cupped the soft box in her forehands, stroking its skin,
inhaling the calm scents it gave off and murmuring in its recording
language.
"I have no pictures to show them. I could subpoena the raw materials
Tr'es is examining, I suppose, but how else am I going to show how
fragile the New People are? How brave they are being here? Their needs
must be very great for them to come to a place that is so hazardous to
them." The box mistook her tone of bewildered wonder for distress and
plumped itself up soothingly under her restless fingers, letting its
gentle cooings drift across her fingertips. "Of my worst assertions, I
still have no proof. I—"
"Ambassador T'sha?" Br'sei hovered in the threshold. "You wanted to
speak with me, Ambassador?"
"Yes, I did." She spoke the Off command to her box and tucked it
back into the caretaker's folds.
Br'sei drifted into the room. He looked alert but calm, with his
purple crest only partly raised and his bones relaxed under his skin.
T'sha found herself surveying his tattoos afresh. Br'sei was not just a
senior engineer, he was a master engineer. He was also a freed
indenture and a survivor of D'dant village, where a yeast had turned
their home's bones to a froth that had broken in the wind.
"How are the researches on the New People's raw materials going?"
T'sha asked.
Br'sei shook his wings noncommittally. "Tr'es is practically flying
in circles in her excitement. She swears she's making new discoveries
by the minute."
"Which you will confirm, I trust?" T'sha's own crest lifted, just a
little.
"The review will be rigorous," Br'sei said blandly. "Was there
anything else?"
T'sha glanced toward the door. She could hear no one in the
corridor, but that could change momentarily.
"Will you come with me, Br'sei?" she asked. "I need your help
deciphering a few new sightings."
Br'sei hovered where he was, watching her steadily for a long
moment. Then he whistled his assent.
T'sha took her camera eye out of the caretaker. Its tentacles
wrapped comfortably around her right posthand. She led Br'sei out of
the chamber and into the open air beyond the base's sails. Several of
the team saw them, but that didn't matter. They would also see the
camera and assume T'sha needed some help for a survey, just as she'd
said.
"You know that Ambassador D'seun and I will be leaving soon to
address the High Law Meet," remarked T'sha as the winds carried them
away from the base. She spoke a little command language to the camera.
It focused its eyes to record the passage of the crust under her. Every
bit of data helped.
"I know," said Br'sei. "There is a great deal of speculation around
the base as to which of you will be coming back."
"Which would you prefer, Engineer Br'sei?" It was an unfair
question, but she needed to know which way his priorities flew.
Br'sei inflated
himself,
rising just a
little
higher. "Truthfully, Ambassador?"
T'sha dipped her muzzle.
Br'sei did not look at her. He watched the wind in front of them.
They were fully on the dayside now. The wind was clear and smelled only
faintly of ash and acid. "Truthfully, I wish you both would go back to
your cities and leave us alone to do our work. If the New People don't
like what we're doing, they can protest, and we can sort it all out
with them." Only then did he cock his head toward her. "But I'm not
likely to find this wish returning to me, am I?"
"No," said T'sha, deflating. "I'm sorry."
"I believe that you are." An air pocket dropped them both down.
Br'sei recovered smoothly and sailed on. "I believe that you would
leave this all alone if you could. I believe that you are like me. You
want to do your work and go your way knowing your family is safe, now
and forever." He wheeled in front of her so that T'sha had to pull
herself up short. They faced each other, hovering, eye to eye, wing to
wing, exactly matching in size and height. "Am I right, Ambassador?"
T'sha dipped her muzzle.
Br'sei deflated, breath and energy flowing out of him together.
T'sha wondered how long it had been since he refreshed, since he had
been home, since he had flown with his own family. Who were they? She
didn't know, and her ignorance shamed her.
"Tell me what I can do to help you, Ambassador," he said.
So many responses filled T'sha at that moment that she did not know
which to choose. She was almost grateful when her camera tapped her
postarm, interrupting her. She looked down and she saw only crust,
wrinkled, rust red and yellow here for the most part.
But what was that dark spot that crept forward so slowly?
All but forgetting Br'sei, T'sha dropped down for a better look.
From the taste of the air, she knew Br'sei followed her flight.
As she descended, the speck resolved into one of the New People's
transports crouched on the crust directly below her.
She was about to rise again, automatically, to avoid detection when
the transport flashed a bright light.
Startled, T'sha fanned her wings. The transport crawled a little
northward, then stopped.
"What are they doing in there?" Without waiting for an answer, T'sha
dropped down a little closer, even though the pressure became
uncomfortable this near to the crust.
The transport crawled away a little further and stopped.
T'sha stretched her wings and flew until she was almost directly
over the transport again.
It crawled out from under her, and T'sha flew after it. It kept
going.
"They want us to follow." Br'sei's words startled her with their
light touch.
He was right. They were trying to reach out. They wanted her to come
with them, somewhere. A thrill of fear and eagerness ran through her.
The New People were trying to talk to her. Was her particular person in
there? The one who had stood so still, watching her during the rescue?
Was this her doing?
"Br'sei." She turned to him, now knowing what he could do to help,
although it was a long way from what she'd initially believed she would
say. "I need you to go back to base. Don't tell anyone what you've seen
here."
"Why not?" he asked mildly.
T'sha looked back over her wing at him. "Because it is possible
there will be some objection to what I am going to do next, and I don't
want to be stopped."
Br'sei held himself still. "What are you going to do?"
"Find out what the New People want." T'sha did not wait to see if he
moved or not. She gave her will up to the wind and let it propel her.
The transport saw her movement and began creeping forward again.
T'sha flew directly over the transport, working hard to keep herself
from getting ahead of it. They moved so slowly, these New People,
creeping across the folds and ripples of the crust. What was that like
to feel the crust constantly under your hands? To know its composition
and texture as intimately as any of the People knew the winds?
Curiosity spurred her forward, accompanied by a childlike fear that
someone would see her and stop her game.
One of the living highlands approached, thickening the air with its
scents, making T'sha's skin quiver reflexively with the anticipation of
rich life, although there was none to absorb. The transport underneath
her skirted the highland carefully as if afraid to get too close. Maybe
they were. Frozen as cold as they were, who knew what the heat of a
highland meant to them?
Beyond the highland, the crust was a tapestry of trenches and ragged
valleys. In a small, irregular cup cut by some ancient lava pool
waited another transport. The transport she'd been following pulled up
beside its twin and stopped.
T'sha stayed where she was, and so did they. Immobile. Waiting. For
what?
"Camera, descend and report," she said in the command language.
The camera extricated itself from her posthand and closed its
umbrella. It dropped down until T'sha lost sight of it against the
blacks and grays of the old lava flows. She banked in a slow circle,
forcing herself to be patient.
At long last, the camera, its umbrella open, began to rise again.
Abandoning caution, T'sha dropped to meet it. She grasped it in both
forehands, turning it over until its replay eye faced her.
"Show me," she ordered.
In the bowed reflection of the eye, she saw the transports, standing
still and patient. She saw a clear box, very like an isolation box,
sitting on the crust. It was connected by tubes and wires to one of the
transports. A low, perfectly straight, silver tunnel also connected it
to a slight rise in the crust.
As she looked closer, she saw that inside the box was a sphere, and
inside the sphere… was a New Person, rendered in shades of red.
It wasn't the bulky, shelled creature she'd seen walking around, but
those had been protective coverings of some kind. No, this was a New
Person, stripped to their essence, or nearly so.
It was a biped. Its torso was not so angular as the protective
covering made it look. Its skin was soft, and it looked to be wearing
some gentle skins or cloths. It had hands, a head, and, unmistakably,
eyes. They were small, almost alarmingly so in that flat face, but
those were indisputably eyes, looking out at her. It had one forehand
raised up. In greeting? Perhaps. Why not?
Underneath the New Person's feet were more images, also all in red.
Why red? Could they see no other color? T'sha ordered the camera to
concentrate on the lower images. The surroundings vanished as the
camera recalled what she needed.
The first image was discreet clusters of shining balls. One, two,
three, five, seven. Interesting. Communication through numbers? Maybe.
A good idea. How could the New People know how much she knew about
them? Numbers were concrete, hard to mistake, and easy to understand.
She chuckled to herself. Oh, clever, New People!
The second image was another sphere. Inside it glowed a star, with
its surrounding planets. Despite the strangeness of it being
represented in red and white, she recognized it instantly. Of course.
The New People had eyes. They would see as the People did and create
images they could recognize. This was the New People's star system,
with their world picked out in a red-and-white swirl, orbiting just
beyond New Home.
It was as clear as the air around her, as alive as a wind from the
highlands. The New People did want to communicate. They really were
reaching out. She could not refuse them.
"Mustn't be rude, after all." She told her headset to send her voice
on to the base and find Ambassador D'seun.
Silence descended while D'seun was located. T'sha looked at the
camera's image again and at the New Person raising their hand. Did they
name themselves? What was this one called? Was it male or female? Some
other gender T'sha had no name for? Was it the one she had spent so
much time staring at? What did it think when it looked at her? She
wanted to know everything immediately. The necessity of waiting made
her itch.
"Ambassador T'sha, where are you?" came D'seun's voice. If his voice
was anything to go by, he was puffed up with anger again.
She gave him her coordinates, and from the resounding silence, she
knew he recognized them. She said nothing. She waited for him to ask.
"What are you doing there?"
"I was led here. The New People are trying to communicate."
Silence again. T'sha chose to interpret it as stunned disbelief.
"This is significant," said D'seun dryly.
"Yes it is. I need you and yours to gather together everything
you've got on how the New People communicate so we can find a way to
answer them."
"What… we…" he stammered.
T'sha swelled, although there was no one there to see. "We can delay
this no longer, D'seun. I know you have been observing the New People
closely for a long time now. I've seen your specialized constructors."
She looked down at the waiting transports and their viewing station.
"The New People have tried to speak with us and are waiting for us to
make some kind of reply. I will not disappoint them. You can help, or
you can force me to tell the Law Meet about exactly who here has
overstepped their commission."
Stillness and silence. The wind buffeted T'sha, urging her to motion.
"How did they try to communicate?" he asked, finally. His voice was
small and tight, as his body was right now, T'sha was sure.
"Visually. They have created a display with images." The detail was
very fine for all its lack of color. She could see the New People had
five fingers on each hand, that they had crests of fine, long tendrils
on their heads, that the elbows of their forearms bent in two, maybe
three places, depending on how you counted.
"Effective. We're not certain they hear as we do, but they can see
the same wavelengths we do." She heard the rustle of movement. "They
have a written language. We have been working on deciphering it and
have made great progress, we think."
"Good," she said firmly. "Then you can come and interpret."
"T'sha, we must report this to the Law Meet."
"As soon as we have something to report we will. We must address
them now. They are waiting for us."
Yet another silence. "You are pleased with this, aren't you?"
T'sha hesitated, clutching the camera a little too tightly. It
squeaked, and she eased her grip at once. "It is what I wanted, yes. I
am not pleased with how I've gotten it. You must come here now, D'seun."
She heard him whistle, low and disapproving, but in the end he said,
"Very well. We will be there soon. Good luck, Ambassador T'sha."
"Good luck, Ambassador D'seun." The connection died, and she was
left alone with the New People waiting below her.
Vee sat in the copilot's chair on board Scarab Three, which looked
exactly the same as Scarab Five. Helen Failia sat in the pilot's chair
as if it were the most natural place in the world for her to be. Adrian
Makepeace and a woman named Sheila Whist had brought them down, but
they were both in the back now, running diagnostics and suit checks and
generally keeping themselves out of the way.
Through the main window, Vee watched the sheltered holotank with its
trio of images—her own picture, taken from her image gallery, a set of
prime numbers, and a miniature of the solar system with Earth
highlighted. She'd been frustrated by the lack of color, but lasers
were, by definition, monochromatic, and if they were going to make the
one-week deadline, they had to work with what was available.
The tank connection was one of the biggest jury-riggings she'd ever
built. The lasers' beams had been directed out of the Discovery through
two ceramic-metallic tunnels. One for writing, one for display. The
display screen consisted of some of her best films on a refrigerated
platform between slabs of doped quartz.
It looked like somebody had set up a view screen in the middle of a
desert.
The pressure wasn't the real problem. Years of oceanographic mining
had resulted in the creation of pressure-resistant materials and
provided collateral research on the effect of pressure on a whole world
of substances. The real problem was the heat.
The entire communications station had to be constructed so it wouldn't
vaporize out there.
"How are we doing?" came Josh's voice through the intercom. He and
his assistants, Ray and Heather, were down in the Discovery with the
laser, making sure the Cusmanoses' machine worked and stayed working.
"No change." Vee craned her neck so she could see the circling
black dot the scarab's cameras showed as a sparkling, golden, winged
alien. Vee had wanted to fly the scarab straight to their base and get
them to follow along, but Helen had nulled out that idea. She worried
the aliens might take it as a threat or a challenge of some kind. So
Scarab Ten had gone out on the ground and flashed lights.
It had worked, though. One of the aliens followed Scarab Ten back
from wherever they had found it. Then it had dropped a little jellyfish
down. The jellyfish had hovered over the holotank and shot back up to
its owner. Since then, the alien had stayed where it was, tracing
circles in the shifting, leaden sky.
Waiting.
"How are things down there?" Vee asked Josh, to keep the
conversation going. Waiting and watching were starting to get to her.
She oscillated between wonder and an involuntary fear that she couldn't
make go away.
This kind of thing is tough on the sensitive
artist's stomach.
"No change here either," answered Josh. "But I'll tell you what. If
we're going to keep this up, we need to terraform this room. I've got
sand in my eyes."
"Ouch." Vee grimaced in sympathy. Not being able to touch your own
skin was definitely a design limitation in the hardsuits, and when
Josh had locked himself into his, there had been bags under his eyes.
Neither one of them had gotten a full night's sleep for a week.
They'd spent the entire time in his lab trying to find ways to make
this work. They had cannibalized half-a-dozen survey drones and
simulated eight different kinds of protective covers and cooling
systems before they found one that looked like it would work.
Their setup was that it not only had to function under conditions
that were literally hellish, but it also had to be flexible. They had
to be able to write and rewrite the images and do it quickly with
minimal help from a computer. They had put so much work into the
hardware that there had been little left for the controlling software.
Vee would be typing in most of the commands by hand and most of those
commands were recorded nowhere but in her own head.
There were going to be so many bugs to work out of this system that
it wasn't funny. The biggest was that the whole lash-up was computer
controlled from inside the scarab. How would the aliens be able to
answer?
"Let me know when you're going to start making demands on this
thing," said Josh. "I am not happy about some of these connections."
"Will do," Vee told him. Josh had a camera of his own down there. He
could see what was going on. He just wanted some contact. Vee couldn't
blame him. In fact, she was kind of glad.
"Coffee?" Dr. Failia asked Vee, reaching for the thermos stowed in
the holder on the pilot's chair.
"No thanks," said Vee. "I'm wound up so tight right now I think
caffeine would tear me in two."
And you didn't think to stock any
tea for the trip, did you? Where are your priorities, Vee?
"Ah, youth." Helen unscrewed the thermos and poured herself a cup.
"You need to learn to relax."
Josh chuckled on the other side of the intercom. "Forgive me for
saying so, Dr. Failia, but the only reason you're offering around the
coffee is because you can't stand to sit in silence anymore."
"Tact," said Helen, sipping a cup of the thick, black liquid, "is
another thing that comes with age."
Vee smiled. Josh had a good sense of humor, and he could dish it out
and take it with equanimity. She liked that. She liked him. It felt
good. He'd gotten out of her way like an old pro when her ideas had run
ahead of her explanations and she'd just typed furiously, bringing the
simulation up to speed, or had raged, unfairly, she knew, against his
lab preparation because
they didn't have the specialty parts she needed.
Good guy. Steady. A friend. Just what they'd need when…
A dark blur flew over the volcano's rim.
"Heads up." Vee leaned forward, squinting at the sky and ignoring
the camera. "They're coming in."
The kite rode ahead of the winds, guided by a competent mind. T'sha
resisted the urge to turn loops in the sky to say "Over here, over
here." They knew where she was, and they were heading there at full
speed.
"We will meet down beside the transports, T'sha," D'seun said
through her headset.
T'sha whistled her assent.
The dirigible slowed its forward progress and descended toward the
crust. T'sha pulled in her wings and deflated, settling further and
further into the thickening air. There was no real wind this far down,
just faint strugglings in air that was so solid you could perch on it.
It was grossly uncomfortable, but T'sha had done plenty of deep work in
her time. She could accommodate herself to it.
The New People's transports still waited side by side. They made an
amazing amount of noise, all high squeals and long snores. But if they
were speaking to each other, T'sha could make no sense out of it. A
piercing metallic smell surrounded them, reminding T'sha sharply of the
scents in the World Portal complex.
D'seun launched himself from the dirigible's gondola, leaving
Br'sei, D'han, and P'tesk to drop the moorings and wrestle out the
toolboxes.
D'seun didn't even acknowledge T'sha. He flew straight to the New
People's display. He hovered around it for a long time, looking at the
images from every possible angle.
T'sha glanced at the transports. What were they doing in there right
now? Were they pleased? Bored? Worried?
"Grow the viewer," said D'seun to the engineers. "Make sure it faces
the transports, not this screen. I don't know if this thing can see."
The engineers flew to obey. While Br'sei tore open a dish of growth
medium, P'tesk opened the stasis cover on a box of seed crystals.
Br'sei laid the seeds into the jellylike medium. The seeds responded
instantly, fusing and replicating until the jelly swelled up out of its
dish, forming a glistening bubble. The bubble grew until it was nearly
the size of the New People's screen. P'tesk poured the neutralizer
into the dish. Br'sei rooted a works box onto the side, running through
the standard checks. The crystal was good. The medium was adequately
conductive. No flaws in structure.
D'seun, meanwhile, pulled two cortex boxes out of the portable
caretaker. He weighed them in his forehands and put one back. He laid
the one he selected onto the works box, letting its sensors reach into
the works and twine around the neural net. D'seun fanned his wings and
backed away.
He spoke rapidly in the cortex's command language. T'sha was not
surprised to find that she did not understand a word of it. The crystal
lit up and a set of symbols printed themselves across its surface.
D'seun looked toward the transports and the New People's screen.
"What are you saying?" asked T'sha.
"I am stating our purpose," D'seun said. His voice was slurred,
suspicious. "Now we will see what they will do."
* * *
Inside the scarab, they watched the aliens arrive, watched their
transmitter grow as if by magic, and saw bright-red letters coalesce
inside it.
WE SERVE LIFE.
Vee had to swallow before she could force any words out. "It
appears," she said slowly, "that they've been watching us a lot longer
than we've been watching them."
"So it would seem," agreed Josh. "Now what?"
Vee looked to Dr. Failia. The older woman had set her coffee down.
She watched the aliens, her hands on her knees, immobile and yet at
the same time incredibly alive. Every line of her body sang with
eagerness. She was looking out onto something magnificent.
Vee knew exactly how she felt. She thought of the portrait file
waiting in her briefcase. She'd have to start all over. She didn't do
their beauty, their grace, their sheer
otherness justice, not
by light-years.
Dr. Failia cleared her throat, coming back to the everyday
acknowledgment of her fellow human beings reluctantly.
"Well, since they're chatty, let's try the basics. Ask who they are."
"Cross your fingers over your connections, Josh." Vee's hands
hovered over the keys while she remembered how they had this all coded
in. Mentally crossing her own fingers for the solidity of their
improvisation, she typed in a set of commands. The introductory images
vanished and the holotank showed the words,
Who are you?
The aliens stayed as they were. Helen reached across the command
board and punched up the zoom on the camera. Now they could see the
muzzle moving on the smallest of the group.
The words shifted inside the glass bubble to read
The People.
"Well, that's helpful." Vee almost giggled. She swallowed. Too much
wonder obviously had similar effects on the human psyche as too much
fear. "First contact. Complicated stuff. How about I try a more
detailed question?" Without waiting for an answer, she typed in a new
set of commands. Their screen read:
I am Doctor Veronica Hatch. What is your name?
More conferring between the aliens. One of them, whose feathered
crest was mottled crimson and ivory, flapped its wings restlessly. The
smallest turned toward their screen and spoke again. More new words.
I am Ambassador D'seun
Te'eff Kan K'edch D'ai Gathad. With me
is Ambassador T'sha So Br'ei Taith Kan Ca'aed. We are ambassadors of
the High Law Meet of the People. We have with us our engineers and
assistants. Are there others with you? What is your purpose?
"Loaded question," said Josh.
Vee paused with her hands over the keyboard. "Can I ignore it?"
Helen raised her eyebrows. "I don't think so."
Vee nodded, chewed her lip thoughtfully, and typed.
With me are Doctor Helen Failia, Mister Adrian Makepeace, and
Miss Sheila Whist. In the underground chamber are Doctor Joshua Kenyon,
Mister Ray Sandoval, and Miss Heather Wilde. We are from Venera Base,
which is a research colony for the people of Earth. She added a
few extra commands. The pictorial diagram of the solar system
reappeared with arrows and labels.
"Now may not be the time to get fancy," remarked Helen.
"Now is exactly the time to get fancy," shot back Vee. "One picture,
one thousand words, you know? How are we doing down there, Josh?"
"It's green and go in here." His voice was both hushed and strained.
Vee could practically feel his excitement vibrating through the
connection.
The aliens flapped and hovered around the new scene shining in the
holotank. They came within centimeters of its quartz surface but never
actually touched it. Their control was incredible. Part of Vee's mind
was already designing the movement codes, trying to work out how to
show them to the rest of humanity.
The words in the alien's bubble changed.
Are you ambassadors? Do you speak for the New People?
Vee looked quizzically at Helen.
She puffed out her cheeks. Vee could almost hear her rehearsing
different answers. "I don't think we do." She sounded slightly
disappointed. "But we know who does."
We call ourselves human beings. No, we ourselves do not lead,
but we would like a message to take to our leaders. "Since I don't
think we can take them—" added Vee.
"You can be tactful after all," murmured Helen. "I'm impressed,
Vee. Would you do me a favor, please, and get the big question out of
the way?"
"Right." Vee knew exactly what she was talking about. She typed and
the screen responded.
What are you doing here?
We serve life, answered the aliens, no, the People.
Life
helps life.
This time Vee didn't bother to check with Helen. She just typed.
We don't understand.
Three of the People had retreated from the screen. They perched in
the contraption of sails, struts, and cables that had brought them
here. It looked like a cross between a box kite and the old Wright
brothers' airplane. Smallest, Ambassador D'seun, etc., and
Crimson-and-Ivory remained by the bubble, which probably meant
Crimson-and-Ivory was Ambassador T'sha, etc.
The ambassadors seemed to be having a discussion. They leaned close
together, muzzles almost brushing each other. As they spoke, their
bodies swelled and shrank. Was that their breathing? Or a way of
showing emotion? Dominance maybe? Even this far down, where the light
was gray instead of clear, they sparkled. The black lines on their
bodies and muzzles stood out sharply. Maybe they were tattoos. Wouldn't
that be a good one? If what humans had in common with aliens was body
art?
A decision seemed to have been reached. D'seun spoke to T'sha and
then the screen. Their spherical screen relayed the words.
We wish only community and cohabitation with the life of this
world.
"Oh, my," murmured Vee. She typed.
You are colonizing?
D'seun pulled his muzzle back momentarily before he spoke again.
We do not know that word.
Vee considered a moment. Definitions had never been her strong suit.
She was aware of someone standing close behind her, of warm breath on
her ear. She typed.
You are moving People here? You are going to live here?
Yes.
"Oh, my." Vee's hands went suddenly cold.
Helen touched her shoulder. "I think it's time to bring in the U.N."
"Yeah," said Vee slowly. "I think you might be right."
"I'll go back up with Scarab Ten." Dr. Failia straightened up.
"I'll contact Mother Earth myself. Ms. Yan should be able to call
together an emergency meeting with the C.A.C."
Vee turned to look at her. "Shouldn't this go straight to the
Secretaries-General?"
"Bureaucracy will have its way." Helen's smile was humorless. Vee
watched her eyes. She was calculating something, planning, working the
variables. "It will get to them soon enough."
"Whatever you say," Vee said with a shrug. That was not her field,
and she didn't particularly want it to be. "What should we do here?"
Helen was silent for a moment. She watched the People, hovering like
living kites out in what Vee knew Helen thought of as her world. "Keep
them talking."
* * *
"Dr. Lum gave me permission to visit the Cusmanoses," said Grace to
the security guard outside Kevin Cusmanos's door. She held out the
screen slip with Michael's authorization and seal on it.
"Right, Dr. Meyer," said the very thin, very brown man. "You can
head on in." He touched the override pad.
The suite door swished open. Kevin looked up, startled, from his
seat at the dining table. Derek was sitting in a strangely
forlorn-looking chair in front of where the desk used to be. They'd
hauled all the communications equipment out
in preparation to turn Kevin's home into a cell. It had
been Ben, of all people, who had talked Michael out of keeping them
locked
in Venera's minuscule brig.
"They're going to be manhandled by the yewners soon enough," he'd
argued. "Let's at least let them wait
for it in comfort."
"Hello, Kevin. Hello, Derek." Grace held up the pair of brown
bottles she carried. "Brought you some beer."
"Thanks." Kevin got up to the take the bottles from her. He'd
changed over the past week. It was as if the fire had gone out inside
him, leaving behind nothing but cold resignation. Grace thought she
knew the cause. Whatever he thought about the Discovery and how it came
to be, Kevin believed heart and soul that he deserved to be punished
for what had happened to Scarab
Fourteen.
Grace turned her attention to Derek, who hadn't moved since she came
in.
"Hello, Derek," said Grace again, gently.
Derek did not respond.
Kevin eyed her uneasily, but she waved him away. "It's all right,
Kevin. I don't blame him. He's angry." Grace sighed. "I'm sorry you got
caught up in this, Kevin."
Kevin just slumped into his chair at the dining table. "It was my
fault."
She nodded. "Among others. We were all in danger. There was so much
to lose… at the time it seemed like a good idea."
If either of you
knew how long, how hard I tried to find another way, you'd understand
how desperate the situation really was. I tried everything else first.
It was the only way. "I got so damn tired of being ignored."
"Ignored?" Derek looked up. Sudden, raw hatred filled his eyes.
"That's why you talked me into this? Because you didn't want to be
ignored?"
And you just didn't want to lose your job, you spoiled child.
She didn't say it. "Seems pretty stupid now that we've got real live
aliens to talk to. No one's going to give a damn that I spotted their
traces first."
"Well that's just too bad," growled Derek.
"Okay, Derek," said Kevin wearily. "You can't blame her for what you
did."
"The hell I can't!" Derek snapped. He stabbed a finger at Grace. "It
was her idea! If she hadn't—"
Kevin stood up slowly. His brother matched him for height, but
Kevin's shoulders were far broader. He loomed over the smaller man.
"You didn't have to do one damn thing," Kevin told him slowly. "She
didn't have a gun to your head. You did this, and I did this. We got
caught, and Bailey Heathe got killed because of us!"
"Because of you," grated Derek. "Don't try to bring that one down on
me!"
Grace stepped between them, putting her back to Kevin before he
could react. "My lawyers will get you out of this," she told Derek
firmly. "You and your brother."
"They'd better." Derek didn't take his gaze off his brother, but he
backed up a few paces. "Because we are not going to rot in a jail on
Mother Earth alone, understand me?"
"You will not go to jail." Grace turned a little so she could see
them both. "I'd better go. Kevin, try not to worry. It'll all be okay."
Kevin looked from Derek to her. "I hope you're right, Dr. Meyer."
Neither of them said goodbye. Grace walked out. Her stomach
knotted up on her as she passed the guard stationed on the door and
started down the busy residential corridor.
They would not go to prison. Grace watched her own feet as she
headed for the stairs. They would drink the beer she'd brought,
tonight, or perhaps tomorrow. They'd drain all the bottles contained.
Then, sometime within the next week, they'd die. By then they'd have
eaten over a dozen meals and their buddies from the scarab crews would
have brought them at least as many beers. The traces in their guts
would make it appear that they had died of severe food poisoning. Her
bottles would have long since been recycled and it would be next to
impossible to say where the contagion had come from. The kitchens and
food processors would have a bad week while they were turned upside
down, but that couldn't be helped.
Organic chemistry was useful for so many things.
No, Derek and Kevin would not go to jail. There was so much work to
be done. No one would ignore her anymore; no one would tell her that
her work might reflect badly on Venera as a whole. There was one person
left who might connect Grace's name to the fraud, but that one had so
much to lose that she would not risk it. Grace was certain of that.
Grace lifted her head as she started up the stairs and found she
could meet the gazes of the people she passed quite easily.
There was important work to do. She had to be free to do it.
Contents -
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Chapter Thirteen
Ben paced his office, trying to be patient. He had one of the few
private spaces on the administrative level. The dampeners in the walls
meant he couldn't hear the continual buzz and bustle going on outside.
Sometimes he dropped them. He liked being around people. He did not
like being shut up and alone, but there were things for which he needed
privacy.
Like the transmission he was waiting for.
The office did have a real window, allowing him to see the
cloudscape with its continual whorls and ripples and flashes of
lightning. So different from Mars or the Moon. Those were static
worlds. What motion there was, humans brought. Venus though… Venus was
alive in its own right. It still had a beating heart under its
volcanoes, and it still shifted and shrugged its crust, even without
plate tectonics.
He could have spent his life studying this place. He could have
given himself up to the world the way Helen had if there hadn't been
other considerations.
He glanced back at his gently humming desk. Anyone running a
systems sweep would think he was busy processing satellite data with
the new criteria of observing the aliens (Holy God, those aliens!) and
their artifacts. What he was actually doing was looking for a
transmission signature. When his scanner found it, the transmission
would be routed straight to the desk without having to go through
Venera's usual exchanges and checks.
It wasn't something he liked to do very often. Michael and Michael's
people were very good at what they did. Trying to get
around their security measures
was a chancy
business at best.
Venera was alive with activity, speculation, and wonder. Everybody
wanted their chance to go meet the neighbors. Michael was going to have
to forcibly restrain Grace before long. They tried to tell her the
board's consensus was that there should be only a limited contact team.
Just for now, of course, until a good understanding had been
established with the People.
Ben shook his head. They couldn't tell her the real reason only one
scarab was being kept down there. He'd guessed at that reason and had
told Helen his guess in private. Her silence had been enough to tell
him he'd guessed correctly.
The Venerans needed to talk to the aliens. They needed as much
information as they could get. Every bit of information they controlled
was an edge on the C.A.C. But if anybody made a damning mistake, they
needed to be able to say to the U.N., "It was your people who did that,
not ours."
For the first time in a long time, he'd agreed absolutely with
Helen's strategy.
His desk chimed. Ben was beside it in two long strides. The screen
cleared and Frezia Cheney looked out at him.
"Paul." It had been so long since he'd used that name on a regular
basis that it felt as if she were talking to some stranger. "Your
word's been spread. Much to the chagrin of the yewners, may I add."
Mischief sparkled in her eyes for a moment and then faded away.
"I hate to have to say this, but no one else is even close to ready
for a succession attempt, distractions or paradigm shifts
notwithstanding. They're going to have to let the chance pass. We're
feeling the loss of Fuller here. There's no unifying voice anymore.
There's no one person to talk to." She paused and shook her head. "The
demo at the shipyard hasn't even managed to unite the Lunars."
Ben grimaced. That "demo" had been a stupid idea. When he'd caught a
whiff of what was being planned, he—or Paul, rather—had protested to
everyone he could and had been ignored.
But apparently he was not being ignored anymore. "I think uniting us
is up to you, Paul. The only way the wave is going to
rise is if Venera takes the place of Bradbury and makes the break. With
an example to follow, the squabblers will be able to shut up and drive,
if you see what I mean." Her mouth twisted into an ironic smile, but
her eyes still gleamed. "It's not that men make history; history makes
men. If you can show us the way, we can still free the worlds."
The message faded out. Ben, moving more on reflex than any conscious
thought, wiped the file and the record of receipt. Then he released a
search agent into the system to see if there were any ghosts or records
he'd forgotten and wipe them too.
The only way this is going to work is if Venera takes the place
of Bradbury and makes the break. Ben sat back and ran one hand
across his scalp.
If you can show us the way it can still happen.
If you can show us the way.
Alone? Venera alone? Without help, without friends; at least,
without friends who had declared themselves. Once they broke, they
could maybe count on Bradbury and probably Giant Leap.
But then came the problem, the old, old problem. Mother Earth still
controlled the shipping between planets. The tacit threat had always
been that if any colony tried to become self-governing, Earth would
simply stop transports to and from the colony, isolating the world. No
food, no spare parts, no replacement personnel, nothing. Even Bradbury
with its mixed industry had felt the pinch after a while. How much
worse would it be for Venera? Venera manufactured nothing but research
reports. They could not survive alone.
But Venera wouldn't be alone. Ben straightened up, one muscle at a
time. Venera had neighbors. Neighbors who could fly from world to world
as easily as a yewner bureaucrat could fly from republic to republic.
More easily.
What if the Venerans set up one of their portals between Venus and
Mars? Between Luna and Venus? The colonists could move between the
worlds without any interference from Mother Earth. Earth's transport
and communications monopolies would be shattered. The one sure control
they held over the colonies would be gone.
If Venera could make a deal with the aliens. If it were Venera that
spoke, not the U.N.
If it were Venera that spoke.
Venera, meaning Helen. Ben stared out at the clouds. Helen would
never abandon the U.N. To do so would mean abandoning Yan Su, who had
stood by her for so long.
No. He corrected his thoughts.
Helen would never
betray the U.N. unless the U.N. betrayed her, betrayed Venera, first.
If that happened, all bets were off. Helen would do anything she had
to so that Venera would survive and be free to do its work with its
people free to live their lives. She'd even make a deal with aliens.
An idea formed in his mind, one slow thought trickling into his
consciousness at a time.
There was a way. He held it in his hands. He stood a very good
chance of pushing Helen over the edge. All he had to do was lie to the
U.N. about what she knew and when she knew it.
Ben leaned back in the chair as far as it would let him and scrubbed
his face with both hands.
All he had to do was be the one who really betrayed Helen.
He'd been on Luna when he met Helen. He'd successfully left the name
Paul Mabrey behind and found work as a geologist for Dorson Mines,
Inc. As such, he supervised more databases than humans, analyzing rock
and soil samples and looking for useful deposits. It was a job. It
bought food and shelter and paid the taxes so he could breathe and
drink, but it meant nothing.
He'd been in one of the public caverns. He'd just bought coffee and
fry cakes for breakfast. He'd been sitting on a hard little chair,
staring at the walls and thinking how much he missed the Bradbury
gardens. The Lunars had covered their gray rock with vines. Morning
glories and wild grapes made a living wallpaper and warred with the
rambler roses and raspberries in providing color and scent. Pretty,
but not the gardens. Empty, second-rate. Cheap. Like his job. Like him.
"Dr. Godwin?"
He looked up. A woman stood by his table, plainly dressed in a blue
blouse and matching trousers. Her graying hair was bundled into a knot
and pinned in place with wooden pins. Her eyes sparkled and
her entire attitude said she knew why she was alive.
"Yes?" said Ben, wracking his brain to see if he should know her.
"I'm Helen Failia. I've been looking for you. I need a geologist
who knows comparative planetology and volcanology." She dropped into a
spare chair without asking. "For Venera Base on Venus."
"Oh?" was all Ben could think to say. Venera was half-built,
half-occupied, and some said half-baked. It was a pure-research colony,
the first in decades. No one believed it could last. The science
currents predicted its death year after year. But somehow, Venera never
quite laid down.
"Our staff is thinning out. We need to get some fresh blood in.
Someone who can dig hard into the work." Which told him why her staff
was thinning out. She didn't have the money to pay them what the mining
companies could. Which also explained why she was willing to recruit
someone who only had a few, very obscure papers to his credit. Papers
he'd spent the past three or so Terran years carefully salting through
the stream. Helen, he would learn, always had an eye open for a good
bargain. "I've read your credentials. Your postdoctoral work is
brilliant. You've got an eye for the unusual, and you don't mind hard
work. Which is perfect for Venus." She didn't just smile; she beamed.
Ben couldn't help thinking of Ted Fuller. On a good day, when things
were going well, Ted radiated the same light.
Ben drank his bitter, cooling coffee, trying to sort out his
thoughts. This was definitely not what he'd been expecting to hear this
morning. He'd been expecting another day of trying to convince himself
he'd made the right decision, that this life really was better than the
one he'd abandoned, or would be very soon.
"Venus is open territory," said Helen, leaning on her elbows. "You
can't throw a stone without hitting something new. You'll have complete
freedom to direct the research. Anything you want to look at, it's
yours."
Risky. It had the chance to bring him to public attention, and
public attention could be the end of the line for someone hiding
behind an alias.
He looked at the coffee in his cup. He looked at the vines covering
the gray walls. He looked at the people around the table—miners,
students, engineers, all buzzing about in their separate lives like
bees and meaning about as much to him. He looked back at Helen, and in
her dark eyes, he suddenly saw some hope. Hope of a real life, a better
life, one with meaning and purpose to replace the purpose that had been
ripped from him by the yewners and their troops.
"I'd have to hear about the base," he said slowly. "The facilities,
the package you're offering, and so on."
"Of course." Helen picked up his coffee cup, sniffed its contents,
and made a face. "But first you have to get some real coffee. On me.
Come on."
He'd followed her without question. Into the Lunar coffee bar, down
to Earth, out to Venus. He'd followed her for twenty years through
funding fights, mission fights, personnel fights, and charter fights.
Ben swiveled his chair and watched the clouds outside the window.
They swirled and flowed together like his thoughts. They had
predictable currents, he knew, and if you worked long enough, you could
map their movements and understand how each little particle fit into
the greater flow.
He'd never even tried to tell Helen about what had really happened
to him all those years ago. Helen would not have understood that what
they were doing on Mars was real, even more real than the research, or
building Venera into a sustainable colony that would outlive both of
them. What really mattered was shaking off Earth's grip. What mattered
was freedom. Right now, Mother Earth could tell them to do anything,
anything, and they'd have to do it. They had no choice. Mother Earth
owned them, their lives, and their homes. Helen never saw it that way.
Helen thought she called the shots. Helen thought she was in control.
She wasn't. Mother Earth was bigger, more forceful, and more
determined than even Helen Failia.
Ben turned back around to face his
desk again and started typing.
Helen had to be shown the truth.
* * *
"Good luck, Ambassador D'seun," said K'est as D'seun glided through
its windward gate. "Ambassador Z'eth is in the public park. She asks
that you meet her there."
"Thank you, K'est." D'seun flew swiftly toward the park. He
struggled to keep his senses open to the dying city—the bare bones, the
air rich with forced nutrients, yes, but also filled with desperation.
A thin veneer of life that was all that lay between K'est and true
death, and all the citizens knew it.
This is what I fight for, he told himself.
We must
prevent any more living deaths like these.
D'seun's first impression of the public park was that it was bigger
than his whole birth village had ever been. Bone, shell, ligament,
vine, and tapestry outlined a roughly spherical labyrinth of arches,
corridors, and pass-throughs. Flight became a dance, here. Wind became
song, and the voice of the city guided him through it all.
"What am I interrupting here?" asked D'seun as he gave himself up
to the drafts of the wind-guides and let them carry him through a
corridor of story tapestries.
"Ambassador Z'eth has called a hiring fair," replied K'est.
D'seun dipped his muzzle. Such things had been rare once, but with
the massive numbers of refugees and indentures that circled the world,
the ones who held the promises were gathering more and more frequently
to review the skills they held promise to, and to exchange those skills
and the persons to better serve the cities and the free citizens.
Conversations touched D'seun at every turn, about medicines, about
refugee projections, and the health of the canopy. Adults and children,
both free and with the hatchmark of indenture between their eyes,
passed him on every side. Tentacled constructors and spindly,
broad-eyed clerkers trailed in their wakes.
Finally, the wind-guides opened out into a pearlescent chamber that
could have easily held two or three hundred adult females. The voices
of a quartet rang pleasantly off its walls. Here and there, clusters of
ambassadors and speakers hovered, deep in conversation with each other.
The archivers hovered in their own clusters, off to the side, waiting
until they were needed.
Z'eth herself was easy to spot. She drifted from cluster to cluster.
She'd listen to a conversation for a moment and then move on to the
next. D'seun could not feel any words from her. She just listened.
Good. Perhaps she'll just listen to me.
Perhaps the city spoke to Z'eth, or perhaps she was just waiting for
him, because as he flew through the portal, Z'eth lifted her muzzle and
rose above the conversation where she hovered. D'seun flew quickly to
her, deflating just enough to make sure his eyes were below hers.
"Good luck, Ambassador Z'eth," he said as they touched hands. "Thank
you for agreeing to see me. Please accept a guesting gift, which I
found on my journeys." As he spoke the formal words, he held out a
palm-sized eyepiece. It lifted from his palm and hovered between
himself and Z'eth. Inside, a delicate, biped drawn in shades of red
raised her hand in greeting.
"Lovely!" exclaimed Z'eth. "One of your New People, is it not?"
"It is, Ambassador." He did not even attempt to pronounce the name
they called themselves by. "They are what I have come to speak with you
about."
Z'eth lifted herself and closed her right forehand around the
eyepiece. "The members of the High Law Meet speak of nothing else.
Their cogent method of contact with Ambassador T'sha has convinced many
that they are a whole, sane people and should be treated as such."
"I wish to urge you, Ambassador Z'eth, to believe no reports from
Ambassador T'sha and her followers." D'seun spoke earnestly, but
softly. The touch of his words was for Z'eth only. "I see the
tapestries they weave to show the New People as whole beings, complete
in intellect and soul who live intricate lives and wish to exist with
us in community." He swelled as far as he dared. "This is not true.
They do not know even the first
principles of life. Community with them is impossible."
Z'eth's crest ruffled and spread. She touched her muzzle to his, and
D'seun felt all her gentle mockery. "You are so certain, Ambassador,
you must have been paying close attention to them."
"Very close, Ambassador." What did it matter what she knew? Either
he would succeed, in which case she would be with him, or he would
fail. If he failed, nothing else mattered. New Home and Home would both
be lost.
"Your attention has been closer, I think, than your commission
allowed, and for much longer," Z'eth went on.
"Yes," agreed D'seun. He had been supposed to supervise the seeding
of the world and leave. He had left, but when he had returned for a
monitoring stint, he had left behind some special tools. Each
monitoring stint after that had brought him new data. He had all but
mortgaged his future for the analysis of it.
"And you have shared none of this illicit information with the Law
Meet?" Z'eth inquired. "How discreet of you. Why have you kept this to
yourself?"
"At first, I feared T'sha and those like her would fear the New
People." He aimed his words right at Z'eth, not wanting her to miss a
single one. "So I kept what I knew a secret until I knew how the New
People could be controlled or eliminated." Preferably eliminated. New
Home had to be kept pure for life the People created and understood.
"But, instead, she has fallen in love with them and their dead things."
"Are you so sure they need to be controlled?" For the first time,
the mockery left Z'eth's voice. "Why not let them flourish beside us?"
Revulsion crawled across D'seun's skin. "You do not know,
Ambassador. They surround themselves with death. They bring nothing
living with them. Their homes are dead, their shells are dead, even
their tools are dead. They are ghouls, Ambassador, billions of ghouls
who live in ignorance of even the basic ideas of spreading life. Can we
permit ghouls to wander the winds of New Home with our children?"
Z'eth pulled her muzzle back in thoughtful silence. D'seun held
himself still, trying to muster the patience to wait out her thoughts.
He could not rush her. She had influence that went beyond wealth. If he
could turn her from her patronage of T'sha, T'sha would be toppled.
Everything depended on this.
"Ambassador, I seek a promise from you."
"I assumed." Her crest spread out even further, as if it reached
toward every conversation and promise being exchanged in her dying
city. "And what would you pay for this promise?"
"My children, when they are born, will belong to your city on New
Home," said D'seun. "They will serve your city until they are adults."
It hurt to say it. It hurt to know that it had to be this way. He
had been indentured in his tenth year of life, when K'taith succumbed
to one of the first of the new rots. He had always sworn to the souls
of his unborn children that they would grow to adulthood free.
But he had to break that oath. He had nothing left to promise but
those children, whoever they were and whenever they would come to be.
He could not permit the New People to spread their death further across
New Home.
"A rich promise, and a risky one," Z'eth mused. "You may not find a
wife willing to go along with it."
"I will find a wife who will," said D'seun, firmly. He had to.
"You sound most determined." Z'eth dipped her muzzle. "What promise
do you want?"
"You will be elected to the Law Meet of New Home." D'seun drifted as
close to her as he could without touching her. "There is no question of
this. I have heard the proposed rosters in the Meet. Your name is on
every one. You will be the most senior of the ambassadors, the leader
there as you are the leader here. I ask that you promise to follow my
lead when we must determine the final disposition of the New People."
Z'eth swelled, just a little.
What are you thinking,
Ambassador? What future do you taste?
Her gaze drifted from him and passed over the shifting crowds that
filled this beautiful chamber in the center of her slowly dying city.
"Thank you for your promise, Ambassador," she said. "It is rich and
would bring my city benefit."
Hope swelled D'seun's skin; then he read the tilt of her head and
the spread of her wings and knew what was coming next.
"But even if I accepted," she pushed herself closer to him, "I could
make no guarantees of your success. T'sha is not the only one in love
with the New People. There are many in the High Law Meet who are
enchanted by their words. My influence is great, but I am not certain
it is that great."
"But, Ambassador." He thrust his muzzle forward, touching her skin,
breathing out his urgency with his words. She must understand, she
must. "We cannot predict them; we cannot understand or control them.
There must be nothing on New Home that we cannot control; otherwise
life will rebel against us and bring death and imbalance, as it has to
Home."
Z'eth backwinged sharply. "Ambassador, I think you have been too
long away from the temples to speak so. We serve life, and in return
life serves us. That is the way of it. Life does not attack us, nor do
we attack it."
Abandoning all caution, D'seun swelled to his fullest extent. "We
serve the life we know. We do not know the New People, or their life."
"You will calm yourself, Ambassador," murmured Z'eth. D'seun shrank
down instantly. Z'eth remained silent for awhile, and D'seun had to
concentrate on each small motion of his wings to keep himself in place.
"If I took your offer," she said softly, her words brushing so
lightly against his skin he had to strain every pore to feel them, "I
could promise only that I will vote with you regarding the disposal of
the New People on New Home. It could be no more than that."
Cautious, controlled, very Z'eth. It would be an expensive promise.
But Z'eth would not go into any such vote alone. Even if she exacted no
promises from the other members of the New Home Law Meet, her vote
would sway others yet unpromised.
And he might be able to swing a few votes himself, especially if he
could find a way to silence T'sha.
Was it enough to break his vow to his unborn children?
The New People will corrupt us. They will take our world from
us, as the rots have taken this world from us.
New Home must be for the People alone, or they would all die. He
hovered alone, surrounded by death and life, and he was the only one
who understood what it really meant.
His understanding had come to him the day his village, K'taith, had
died. He'd huddled under his mother's belly upwind of the village and
listened to the speaker and the ambassador telling them that the
village could no longer care for them. Its bones were too brittle; its
skin and ligaments could no longer heal themselves. Their presence was
hurting the village. It had asked for death, to be disassembled and
its few healthy parts put to use elsewhere. The vote would be taken to
see if the citizens would honor that wish, of course, but, said the
speaker and the ambassador, they could not believe that anyone who
loved the village would insist it continue in pain and helplessness it
could not bear.
The vote was taken, and all free adults voted to let their
village's suffering end. D'seun had just watched the discolored walls
and the limp, tattered sails. He felt the wind against his own skin.
The wind that fed him had killed the city and taken his freedom. He
knew that instinctively. Everyone knew what happened when their
village died.
He had seen it then. There was no balance. The life that killed his
home, his future, did not in any way serve him. The People were not
strong, they were weak. Life did not serve them; it hated them. It
planned against them in its wildness. It left no niche for the People
to fill. Life on Home was closed utterly to them.
Oh, he'd mimicked the proper words and ways of thought. He had no
wish to be declared insane, but he had known it all to be a lie.
Then he had spread his wings in the pristine winds of New Home and
he saw how it could be. Life built by the People, life that truly did
serve them because they laid down every cell and commanded how it
should be.
If they permitted death to flourish there, they would never create
this new balance. Life would once again cease to obey them and the
death the New People lived in would take them all.
He saw the truth. He tasted it. He touched it every day, but T'sha
remained numb and had convinced the others, even his hand-picked team
who had promised to him so freely.
And there was nothing he could do.
Was there?
If Ca'aed were ill, if a quick rot took hold there, T'sha would have
to see the truth. T'sha was not so far gone that she did not love her
city. She spoke of it with fondness and concern, despite her tricks
with Village Gaith.
Or if she would not see, at least she would no longer be able to
interfere. She was not Z'eth. Without the wealth of her city, her
ability to make promises would be gone, and with it her influence in
the High Law Meet.
No. D'seun huddled in on himself, glancing furtively around
the hiring fair as if his very thoughts could have touched those flying
past him.
This is insane. To take life, to give nothing back, to
treat life as raw materials (that did not happen, it did not. The New
Person was dead. Dead).
But if what I do ultimately serves life, our life? If T'sha's
resistance and lies are broken, the truth can be heard. The danger the
New People represent can be fully understood then. Yes. Yes. That is
the way it is, the way it will be.
There were so many ways a city might sicken, even a wise and ancient
city like Ca'aed. Especially when passing by a living highland when
the winds were so thick with life. Even the most careful of welcomers
and sail skins could miss something, say a few spores transferred from
a quarantine that was no longer life-tight? Such things happened every
day and could be made to happen again.
It serves life, for it allows the People themselves to live:
Yes. Yes.
Z'eth was waiting for his answer. Waiting for him to decide whether
her promise was worth the expense. It was. Oh, yes, it was. Life would
grow from death, and in that way life would serve life.
"Call us an archiver," he said to Z'eth, his words steady and
weighty. "I will accept this promise. My children will serve your city
if you follow my vote on the disposition of the New People on New Home."
* * *
The smell hit Michael first—the sour acidic reek that he could taste
in the back of his mouth. Then came the sight of Kevin and Derek, side
by side on the white beds with soiled sheets, surrounded by a battery
of monitors and tubes trailing limply into various injectors and
samplers, all of which sat in an eerie silence.
"Sorry to haul you out tonight, Michael." Antonio Dedues, Venera's
chief physician, stuffed his hands into the pockets of his traditional
white coat and didn't look at Michael. Antonio's gaze was on the
corpses in their beds with the useless, attendant machinery. "But
you've got to witness the death certificates."
Michael swallowed hard against the smell and found his voice. "What
happened?"
"It looks like food poisoning." Antonio came back to the present,
jerked his chin toward the doctor's station, and walked Michael away
from the sight. "Hey, can we get those two taken care of please?" he
called to Jimmy Coombs, one of the nurse practitioners, who was passing
by with a pile of screen rolls in his hands. Jimmy nodded and Antonio
continued gently herding Michael away from the unpleasantness,
something doctors got a lot of practice at, Michael was sure.
"Looks like?" said Michael, keeping his voice pitched low. He had no
idea who was in the infirmary right now.
"They both came in about three o'clock complaining of fever and
stomach cramps."
"I was notified."
Antonio nodded. "Symptoms got treated, and they got worse. Workup
got done and by then we had a massive systemic infection." Antonio
motioned him into the monitoring station. The place had so many
different monitors and command boards, it looked like mission control
for a major spaceport, and all the numbers and plots made about as much
sense to Michael.
"The infection all but ate the broad-spectrum stabilizer we gave
them while we were trying to isolate the bacteria and tailor an
antibiotic to hit it," said Antonio. "There's only so much we can keep
on ice around here." He frowned at the cabinets across the hall as if
he wanted to blame them for what happened. "We did find the bug and
get the antibiotics into them, but it was too late."
"But it wasn't food poisoning?" pressed Michael. He was still
reeling. They were dead. Dead of a simple bug, something that should
have been treatable in five minutes but wasn't. They had been good men,
they had been idiots, they had been friends, they had been criminals.
They were dead.
"If it was food poisoning, where are the other patients?" Antonio
swept his hand out. "We've shut down the galley level, of course, and
we're going through and doing a sanitary inspection. You got the call
on that too?"
Michael nodded.
"But nothing's turning up. We haven't got the autopsy yet, so I
can't say for sure what they've been eating, but from what your people
say, it wouldn't be anything that another couple hundred people hadn't
swallowed." Antonio looked up at him. "Do you want me to say it?"
No, and I don't want to say it either. "You think they were
poisoned."
Now Antonio nodded. His pockets bunched and wrinkled as he clenched
his fists. "By someone who was very smart and very stupid."
Michael waited. Poisoned? Murdered? Who… but he knew who. It was the
other person who had helped create the Discovery. They didn't want to
be implicated, so they'd killed the men. God! This was not something
that could happen. Not on Venera, not now. This was something out of
the twentieth century.
"Smart because they were able to successfully cultivate a strain of
bacteria we couldn't neutralize immediately. Stupid because in
conditions like Venera's, where the food comes from limited production
sources, there's never just two victims of a poisoning outbreak."
"How hard would it be to cook up this… bug?"
Antonio shrugged. "With access to a lab and a decent chemistry and
medical database and a strong stomach, not very."
"Strong stomach?"
Antonio's smile was watery. "Even the unprepared food the galley
sells has been sterilized eight ways to Sunday. The easiest place to
get bacteria from around here would be your own waste products."
Michael hung his head, torn between disgust and black humor. "I
should have thought."
"No you shouldn't," Antonio assured him. "Holy God knows I didn't
want to."
"Yeah." Michael lifted his gaze again. "Look, I'll need the autopsy
as soon as you can get it to me, okay?"
"Okay." Antonio glanced around at his monitors. "All this and we
still haven't got the immortality programs up and running. Grandma
Helen know yet?"
"Not yet." She knew about the galley quarantine, of course, but not
about the deaths. Mother Creation, she was already walking on the edge
with the C.A.C. meeting coming up. What was this going to do to her?
"I'll tell her."
I don't want to, but I will.
"Okay," said Antonio gratefully. "Thanks."
Michael left to the soft sound of Antonio's voice readying his
autopsy team to find out what exactly killed Derek and Kevin. He walked
down the corridors without really seeing them. The main lights were
dimming toward twilight. The base was on a twenty-four-hour Greenwich
time cycle, and now it was late in the summer evening.
Someone had deliberately committed a murder. This was not a fight,
not a horrified and angry somebody who didn't mean to do it, "I swear I
didn't…" No. This somebody meant to do it. They had decided and planned
and executed.
Now he had to tell Philip and Angela, and he had to tell Helen. He
had to tell the whole world, all the worlds, that Venera was spinning
out of control, that the arrival of aliens had made the place crazy,
but not in any of the ways people had feared since the possibility had
been raised all those hundreds of years ago. There were no riots, no
religious revivals, no barbaric, tribal displays of aggression.
No. Just murder. This really had nothing to do with the aliens
themselves. This had to do with petty, frightened humanity.
Michael stopped and rubbed his eyes. This was also nuts. Nuts. He
had his work to do. He looked up, got his bearings, and headed for the
staircase, the administrative level, and his desk.
It was midnight before he walked back through his own door. The
light was still on. Jolynn sat on the sofa in front of the living room
view screen, going over her endless series of teacher reports.
When she heard the door, she looked up and smiled, tired but
beautiful.
"How twentieth is this?" she said as she swung her legs down so he
could sit beside her. "The dutiful wife waiting for her husband to come
home?"
Michael didn't answer. He took her in his arms and held her close.
She returned the embrace, not speaking, just enveloping him with her
warmth, her fragrance of soap and lilacs, and the strength of her
presence.
"How bad is it?" she asked when he finally released her.
"Beyond bad." He pulled his cap off and tossed it on the end table.
He told her about Derek and Kevin, dead in the infirmary, how the
sanitary checks in the galley had turned up nothing, how he'd had to
seal their room, quiz the people on guard, write it all up, decide whom
to assign to the investigation, work out the announcement for general
release into the base stream, and then go tell Helen.
"What did she say?" Jolynn asked.
Michael felt his jaw begin to shake. "That's the worst part. I'm not
sure she heard me all that well. She was so… preoccupied with the
C.A.C. report." He ran both hands through his hair, pulling strands of
it free from the ponytail and not caring. "She basically told me to
handle it, and I'm not sure I can."
Jolynn said nothing.
"It's not that they're dead," he told her. "It's that they were
murdered by one of us. A Veneran, maybe even a v-baby. We've never had
anything worse than a bad bar fight, and that was ten years ago. People
come here to be safe. People come
back here to be safe, and
now…" His throat closed around the sentence. "Now, when the greatest
thing that has ever happened to humanity is happening to
us,
we're killing each other. How the hell did that happen, Jolynn?"
She took his hand in hers. "Because we're being human, and some of
us aren't very good at that." She stroked the back of his hand with her
palm, a gentle rhythm, distracting him from the swirl of his own
thoughts with the touch of her warm skin. "If we give into the belief
that we are somehow better than the general run of people, it's going
to chew us up and spit us out. That belief kills something vital,
because as soon as you start believing you're better, you have to start
proving everybody else is inferior. It makes you crazy."
"How would you know?" he joked tiredly.
"When I was on Earth, I went to the Baghdad ruins. Did you?"
Michael shook his head. "But you told me about them." Through her
memories he saw the rubble, the dust, the rats, and the starving dogs
nosing around the dust-gray skulls. He smelled the empty smell of
desert encroachment and heard her whisper, "Look on my works, ye
mighty, and despair."
"So I came back, to the world with the edges and the boundaries and
its own history and Grandma Helen to make sure we never went crazy like
human beings are wont to do from time to time." She shook her head.
"Wrong again."
Michael let his head fall back until he was staring at the ceiling.
"What do I do, Jolynn?"
"Your very best, my love," she said, enfolding him again in her
arms. "Your very best."
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Chapter Fourteen
Ca'aed first became aware of the wrongness as an itch. A small nerve
bundle at the base of one of its lower northwest sails (half-furled now
to keep the course smooth and steady) itched, not painfully but
persistently. Ca'aed concentrated on the patch. The air around it
tasted fine. A silent command sent a runner to the spot to ingest a few
cells and compare them with the healthy patterns it held inside.
Normally, Ca'aed would have just had the itch soothed by a caretaker,
but times were dangerous now and caution was indicated.
Another itch, this one deep and nagging in Ca'aed's digestive veins.
A small cramp formed around the itch.
Worry stroked Ca'aed's mind. What caretakers were in that area?
Ca'aed felt and Ca'aed looked.
"Indenture T'elen," said Ca'aed. "A review of the digestive veins
near you. There is a break in flow."
T'elen was responsive and competent. She bore her indenture well.
Ca'aed tried to take care of its indentures, make their servitude easy,
but some could not flow with their service. It understood, but it
needed indentured and free people to live, as the people needed their
city. All had to work together. Life served life.
Ca'aed watched T'elen as she located the swelling in the vein.
T'elen smelled it carefully, touched it gently, checked with the
interior antibodies, injected an anti-inflammatory, which eased the
cramp but not the itch, and removed some cells and antibodies from the
needle into a microcosm of her own design. Ca'aed knew T'elen hoped to
make some promises based on the new microcosms to shorten her
indenture and felt strangely pleased that its discomfort might help
prove their worth.
A sharp spark of pain cut through Ca'aed's primary thoughts. The
city isolated the spot. One of the sensor roots that tasted and tested
the canopy to find the best harvest points. A blister swelled painfully
on the outer skin, squeezing the pores closed and pinching the delicate
papillae.
Worry pressed harder against Ca'aed's consciousness. It pulled out
from several conversations with citizens and speakers and put as much
of the traffic on its own behavior as it could. Ca'aed withdrew its
thoughts into its own body that stretched across miles of wind and
tried to understand what was happening.
Muscles contracted smoothly, hearts circulated the gases and
chemicals, timed the electrical pulses, intestines filtered wastes, its
own and its peoples, veins guided potentiated and unpotentiated
neurochemical flows, and pores regulated diffusion. All good, all
smooth, all as it should be, except there, and there and there…
Ca'aed looked out onto the body of Gaith behind its quarantine
blankets, and worry blossomed into fear.
Ca'aed found its chief engineer in the refresher of his private home
with D'cle, who was one of Ca'aed's adopted citizens and the chiefs
companion-wife.
Another cramp, this one along a muscle for one of the upper
southwest stabilizers. The muscle contracted involuntarily and the
stabilizer wavered.
"Engineer T'gen," said Ca'aed through his headset. "Alert. I am ill.
I repeat, I am…"
Pain! It lanced up the sensor roots, straight into Ca'aed's primary
cortex. Blisters, dozens of them, popping out of the skin like a
burning fungus. Pain, wrongness, illness, pain…
The pain ebbed for a moment, and Ca'aed was aware that T'gen was
calling all the engineers and indentures via their headsets. Ca'aed
mustered its resources and tracked them down, circulating the call with
its own voices. It routed images of the affected areas to the research
houses and tracked the response. T'gen flew fast into the deep
crevices and chambers near the center of Ca'aed's body, where the main
antibody generators lay. The required varieties were not getting
released; new growth might have to be facilitated.
Below, indentureds and engineers numbed the pained roots and began
treating the blisters with steroid compounds. Relief blew through
Ca'aed and opened its mind up again. It was able to alert the
surrounding traffic that there would be interruptions, that all should
return to the home ports. It found the district speakers, let them
know what was happening and that it was all being attended to, but
alerted them to keep in contact with the city and each other. Ca'aed
set some of its voices in reserve, just for the speakers.
Now, inventory the position and health of the sails and
stabilizers. Along with waste disposal, those were key to comfort
of the Kan Ca'aed. They were near a living highland cluster, and
pockets of warm air would cause unpredictable currents necessitating
thousands of small adjustments, and everything had to be in health.
Ca'aed felt the first patch of gray rot blossom on its skin, and it
took all the strength of centuries for the city not to scream.
* * *
Vee yawned hugely as she stepped, dried and dressed, out of the
shower cubicle. A mug of opaque black tea appeared in front of her. The
mug was attached to a hand, which had an arm, on the end of which was
Josh.
"My hero," she said fervently. Grasping the mug in both hands she
took a huge gulp, almost scalding her tongue. "Ahhh," she sighed
blissfully. "Is she out there?"
"As always." Josh waved toward the front window. There was the
holotank and the People's display device, which Vee had come to think
of as "the holobubble." Next to them, waiting patiently on her
perches, sat T'sha.
At first, D'seun had spoken to them, along with T'sha. The
ambassadors were always accompanied by at least three others who were
all called "engineers" and seemed to be responsible for looking after
the kite and the translators, as well as making sure their imagers were
holding up.
After the third day, however, it had just been T'sha.
Where are the others? Vee had asked the first time she'd
woken up and T'sha had been out there alone.
A compromise has been reached, T'sha said.
D'seun has
left me with the translators while he returns to speak to our… wait…
colleagues. T'sha still had to pause frequently to argue with her
translator on interpretation. At first, Vee thought T'sha had meant
that figuratively, but now she knew better. The things controlling the
holobubble were, in some way, alive.
Why did you need to compromise on that? Vee had asked.
T'sha had inflated, just a little, a gesture Vee had come to learn
meant a mild emotion, such as annoyance. A full inflation was full
emotion, such as anger or happiness. Vee wondered if they played poker
on Home.
It is politics, T'sha had told her,
and I think I
should not discuss that yet.
You have politics too, do you? asked Vee.
Yes, we decidedly have politics too.
I'm sorry.
T'sha deflated, sinking, and causing her crest to flutter around her
wings.
So am I.
T'sha's engineers had rigged her what Vee understood was their
version of a tent—a couple of balloons floating up near the cloud line,
where T'sha was most comfortable. They were held in place by long brown
tethers that appeared to have rooted themselves to the ground.
It turned out that the People didn't sleep. Every few hours, T'sha
would vanish to "refresh," a physical activity that Vee couldn't quite
make out but seemed to combine meditation and afternoon tea. Each trip
took about an hour. Except for that, T'sha was always there and ready
to talk.
Mostly it was Vee who talked back. They talked about T'sha's older
brother, who seemed to be either a contracts lawyer or a court
recorder, and about her little sisters, who were still in school. They
talked about Vee's five siblings, and her parents and grandparents back
home, and about the costs and problems of caring for a family,
especially when you were the one with the most resources. They talked
about marriage as a basis for the family structure, and it turned out
T'sha was expecting to have several marriages arranged for her all at
once, which Vee found delightfully practical. She had a hard time
explaining courtship, romance, love, and individual, serial monogamy.
T'sha thought it sounded like a lot of work.
They talked about seeing the stars, which T'sha had done only once
in her life. She was fascinated to hear about living in a world where
you could see them every night. They talked about cities, and Vee was
stunned to hear T'sha speak about hers with the same words she used to
talk about her family or her future lovers, until Vee remembered and
quoted some old Sandburg poems about Chicago and New York. T'sha was
fascinated by the poetry, and soon Vee was reading her Keats,
Angelou, Shakespeare, Dickenson, and all the haiku she could dredge
up. In return, T'sha told Vee stories of the ancient Teacher-Kings and
riddles that had no answers, to which Vee replied with some Lewis
Carroll and then had to explain what ravens and writing desks actually
were…
And on and on and on. They showed each other pictures of their
worlds like proud grandparents showing off images of the latest
addition to the family. Thanks to Josh putting himself through serious
sleep deprivation, the humans had added two new lasers to their
projector and they now had full color capabilities. T'sha asked Vee to
show her things that were beautiful, and Vee did her best—great
buildings, fine statues, forests, the Grand Canyon, and then she found
that many times she had to explain what was beautiful about them.
T'sha showed her Ca'aed, the canopy, the clouds thick with things
that might have been fish and might have been birds, and Vee did not
have to be taught that these were beautiful.
For everything she learned, Vee was left with a thousand more
questions. It felt like the only thing she knew for sure was that she
liked this winged person who flew through a world that would kill Vee
dead, and still had brothers and sisters and a home she loved, and a
wicked sense of humor.
It was dizzying. It was magnificent. It was exhausting. Vee slept
like the dead at the end of her shifts and was only vaguely aware of
what else was going on in the scarab.
Vee snagged a piece of toast off the breakfast table, earning a
dirty look from Sheila, whom she smiled at as she breezed by. She
plunked herself into the copilot's chair, toast in her mouth and tea in
her hand.
Good morning, T'sba, she typed, one-handed.
Good luck, Vee. Vee had quickly given T'sha her nickname
after they had established that the long form gave the People's
translator trouble.
T'sha seemed agitated this morning. Her body shrank and expanded as
if she were breathing heavily. She shifted her weight on the perch that
had been set up for her, and her wings twitched even though they were
folded neatly along her back.
Is there something wrong? typed Vee.
Politics, replied T'sha.
We are on the verge of an
important poll in the High law Meet. Vee, I have worked on a scene I
wish to show you. Something of Home. When you have seen it, I will ask
you some questions and I will then take your answers back to the Law
Meet. Will you watch?
Of course. She wanted to add, "I'm all eyes," but she
wasn't sure what T'sha would make of the metaphor.
T'sha's words faded, leaving the bubble clear and empty for a
moment. Then a blur of color filled the bubble like smoke. The blur
resolved itself and Vee saw another Venus.
But this one had life.
The bubble showed her an island made up of swollen roots and leaves
covered with translucent gold and silver blisters. Green tendrils that
might have been vines or blades of grass waved in the wind. Light,
white feathers protruded from clusters of seeds, or maybe they were
little mushrooms. They all hooked together as if hanging on for dear
life. A nearly spherical slug crawled along one of the ash-colored
branches only to get sucked up by something that looked like a cross
between a jellyfish and a kingfisher.
This is the canopy, right? asked Vee.
Yes, came T'sha's answer.
The canopy is below the
clear. It is a complex tangle of life which, with the living highlands,
supplies all the nutrients that we need to live and thrive. The
plants intermingle and grow out from each other creating, what…
wait,
islands of vegetation that support both fliers and runners, which live
on the canopy as you do on the crust and never lift themselves from it.
Vee glanced up at T'sha, trying to find words for the sheer wonder
of what she saw, but T'sha was deflated on her perch, smaller than Vee
had ever seen her, so small that her sparkling gold skin hung in
wrinkles and folds around her frame. She was gazing at the image in the
holobubble.
This is a construction from old records, read the text.
This
was what we think it might have looked like several thousand years ago
when the canopy was little more than loose islands floating on the
wind. This is what it looks like now.
A solid, verdant carpet, green and gold, red and blue, and brown.
Broad, bubblelike leaves reached up into the wind from a solid mat of
intertwined roots. A series of six-legged, what? Reptiles? Or birds?
The local equivalent of chickens, maybe? Whatever they were, they
picked their way between the leaves, sticking their beaks into bubbles
here and there and draining them dry. But large patches of this field,
with its one kind of "bird," were twisted black or limp brown.
I guess death and disease look the same no matter where you go,
was Vee's first thought. Her second was,
Wait until Isaac gets a
look at all this.
Vee saw T'sha sagging next to the image, and details from the past
few days' worth of conversations clicked into place.
You don't
build things—
I have
that right? You grow them or breed them?
Mostly, yes. T'sha shook herself, inflating a little, like
a person trying to shake off a malaise.
And if they're alive, they have to eat, so they drain off the
same stuff from the air that you do?
Yes. T'sha dipped her muzzle, an affirmative gesture.
And so you cultivated the most useful stuff in the canopy and in
the clouds to thicken the soup in the clear which nourishes your living
infrastructure, and you've overtaxed whatever the canopy eats?
Again, T'sha dipped her muzzle.
That is one of the things that
is happening. Another is blights. Huge portions of the canopy
are dying, and we cannot stop them.
Vee nodded to herself as she typed.
Monoculture. We've had that
problem on Earth too.
T'sha inflated a little further, hesitating before she spoke.
It
is more than that. Some of the symbiotes and the living infrastructure
made more efficient use of the… soup than the food crops. The tenders
are actively killing the crops. We have lost the balance and have not
yet recovered it.
Vee felt a twinge of sympathy. Imagine if the ladybugs stopped
eating the aphids and turned around and ate the grain? What could
anyone do?
So your world is dying?
Dying? T'sha flapped her wings as if to drive the word
away.
No. It is changing. The change will be violent, and the
outcome is uncertain. We cannot predict what the new balance will be
like or how well it will support us. The most viable solution heard was
to use the World Portals our technicians were experimenting with to
find another world where we could spread a controllable life base and
transfer ourselves. We could wait until the pace of change on Home
slowed down, and then we could return, possibly reserving the New Home
and… wait… allow one world to lie fallow and stabilize while we lived
on the other. T'sha turned her gaze directly toward the scarab.
This
is our case, you understand. This is what we wish to do here. We wish
to spread life. We will take no more than we need. Do you understand?
Maybe the urgency was imagined, but Vee felt it nonetheless. Part
of her was aware that someone had come to stand behind her and read
over her shoulder. She thought it was Josh, but she didn't turn to make
sure.
Wait, she typed.
You can't transfer an entire
population from one world to another every ten years or so. On the
other hand, who knew? T'sha had shown her an image of the portal they
used to transfer from Home to Venus, but she couldn't explain how it
worked. Vee could give her no words to help out. This was so far up the
line from the world Vee knew that there was no way to talk about it.
They needed a
quantum physicist or something down here.
We would not perform the transfer every ten years,
T'sha's, new words said.
It would be every three thousand.
Vee whistled.
You think in the long term don't you?
T'sha froze. Startled?
Is there another way to think of life?
You'd be surprised. Vee licked her lips.
Look, T'sha,
I think you should know there are those in the government on Earth who
are not going to be very happy with the fact that you've
started colonizing one of our worlds without asking them first.
One of your worlds? T'sha grew and shrank uncertainly for a
moment and then settled down, small but not sagging.
Then
this IS your world?
Yes, replied Vee, wondering at the emphasis.
T'sha's muzzle opened and closed a few times as she watched the
holobubble. Finally, new words appeared.
How is it yours?
Vee pulled back a minute. As she did, Josh leaned forward.
She felt him before she saw him. She glanced back, looking for
suggestions.
"Be careful, Vee," he said. "I think we're probing close to a ,
nerve here."
"You too, huh?" Vee shook her head. "Okay, let's go for honesty."
She typed,
I don't
understand.
T'sha swelled and rattled her wings. Impatience?
How is it
yours?
What do you build here? Where do you live? How do you use this place? I
must be able to speak of legitimate use.
Josh looked down at her and shrugged. Vee felt a chill sinking into
her. Josh was right. There was a nerve under these words, and she had
to find a way around it.
We have our base, Venera, here.
Again, T'sha rattled her wings. Her crest ruffled and smoothed as if
it were breathing.
But your base does nothing. It does not expand,
it does not build or grow, it does not spread life.
Vee hesitated and suddenly wished Rosa were with her. Rosa was the
one who could manage a room full of hostile board members. Rosa would
surely be able to give the right answers to one alien. Actually, Vee
wished there was anyone in this chair right now except her.
We have always considered the planets orbiting the sun ours.
They didn't belong to anyone else.
Even the ones you do not use? They are yours? Now Vee
couldn't see T'sha move at all. The ambassador just hung there, like a
holograph of herself.
The idea has always been we'd find a use for them eventually.
No answer came back. Vee licked her lips and tried again.
I'm not saying this is right, T'sha, but it's an old habit of
thought, and it's going to be hard to break.
No answer. T'sha's muzzle pointed toward the sky and her wings
spread wide. Vee sat frozen with her hands hovering over the keys.
What
do I do? What do I do? What made me think I could pull this off?
All at once, T'sha froze. Vee saw her mouth move, but nothing new
appeared on the translator. This had happened a couple of times
before. T'sha was getting a message from her colleagues over the
spidery headset she wore. Vee sat back and glanced up at Josh. His face
was tight with worry. She knew exactly how he felt.
Outside, T'sha swelled as if she sought to drink in the whole world.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I must go. I… there is word my city is
sick. Someone will come speak to you. I must go.
T'sha launched herself into the air, rocketing into the distance.
The dirigible overhead detached itself from the tent and began to
follow.
Vee lowered her hands onto the command board. "Good luck," she
murmured.
"Her city's sick?" said Josh.
Vee nodded, watching after T'sha until she vanished over the edge of
Beta Regio. "Her city's alive. It's… it's like a friend." She turned
her gaze toward the sky again. The horror of the idea seeped slowly
into her mind. The city was a friend and the city was sick, maybe
dying. It was too enormous to be really understood all at once, and it
overlaid all the previous conversation, where they scrabbled for ideas
and understanding and came up
empty.
Friends were dying, families were dying, and they needed someplace
safe to go. That place, they had decided, was here. Their only question
was whether the humans were here first.
And T'sha wasn't so sure they were.
"Josh," she said, watching the empty perches outside. "I think the
easy part is over with."
* * *
T'sha rose from the World Portal into the miasma of metallic odors
and coughed hard, contracting spasmodically around herself.
When she was able to spread her wings again, Pe'sen was beside her.
"There's a dirigible waiting for you. Let me guide you out of here."
T'sha brushed her wing against his in thanks. "Quickly, Pe'sen."
Pe'sen led the way, calling ahead the securitors and the portals to
clear the way. The metallic walls and struts passed by in a blur. All
T'sha saw was the dirigible's open gondola. She shot inside, barely
hearing Pe'sen's call of "Good luck!"
The dirigible already had its orders. It closed up and lit its
engines before T'sha even had time to grasp its perches. She rocked
badly as the dirigible shot forward, but she didn't care. She was on
her way.
"Ca'aed?" she ordered her headset to carry her voice to her city.
Her stricken city. How bad? Maybe not so bad, maybe just a panic, an
exaggeration. Ca'aed was strong, Ca'aed had survived so much.
"T'sha?" came Ca'aed's voice, strong, but strained. "Good luck,
Ambassador."
T'sha's teeth clacked involuntarily. "Good luck, my city. I'm coming
to see what all the fuss is about."
"I'm not sure I can let you near me, T'sha."
Fear twitched T'sha's bones. "I'm your ambassador, Ca'aed. You
cannot deny me."
"I can't endanger you ei—" The word cut off.
"Ca'aed!" shouted T'sha.
Life of my mother, life of my father,
what is happening to you?
"Evacuation," said Ca'aed. "We must call for evacuation. I am
alerting the safety engineers. Do not come here, T'sha."
T'sha did not answer. She ordered her headset to find her birth
mother.
"T'sha, you are returning?" came her anxious voice. "There is
trouble—"
"I know Mother Pa'and. Listen to me. You must organize the family.
The safety engineers are being called. Ca'aed says you need to
evacuate."
"Life of my mother…" breathed Mother Pa'and.
"I know, I know, but we can't let this get away from us. We are a
million and we may all be ill. A quarantine shell is a priority, but
even before that we must keep everyone from scattering. Spread the
word. Everyone must stay together. We cannot let anyone flee. Do you
understand?"
"I understand Ambassador." Mother Pa'and's voice was firm now. "We
will do as you say."
"Thank you. Good luck."
Hurry, hurry, hurry, she thought
to the dirigible.
I need to be there! But she could hear the
whine of its engines and taste the ozone and electrochemicals. It was
already straining to reach greater speeds, sacrificing smooth flight to
plow straight ahead. She could ask nothing more of it.
She did not even ask it to open its inner eyes. She did not want to
see Ca'aed growing in the distance. She did not want to see its people,
her people, swarming around it like flies. She would see that soon
enough. She had to concentrate, call the speakers, call the archivers.
The city's records had to be stored and saved.
A million people. A million to be quarantined and examined and
provided for, even as Ca'aed itself had to be quarantined, examined,
and provided for. She alone could make promises for her city. She
needed to know what her city had left to give.
If Ca'aed should become sick now, you will have nothing left.
Z'eth's words dropped into her thoughts. T'sha shoved them away. It was
not that bad. She had not been that profligate. Surely not. They had
caught this in time. There would be damage, yes. There would be
expense, but they were a million strong and
they loved their city. They were united and they had acted promptly.
Their city had not let them try to keep quiet and hide this illness
from the world. They would call in help from their neighbors. It would
be all right.
The dirigible banked sharply and slowed. Its portal opened and T'sha
shot out into the open air. She saw her city spreading before her, and
her body collapsed.
Directly in front of her, heavy, fungal blotches filled the deep
crevices of Ca'aed's coral walls. She could taste them with her whole
mouth. Her throat and skin tightened against the sickness. The wake
villages were already being brought around to the leeward walls. The
safety engineers hovered with their tools, draping the villages in the
gauzelike strainers to keep out contagion, if that was possible. Shells
were being lifted from Ca'aed's body and orderly flight chains of
people filed into them. As they filled, the shells were wrapped in
strainers and tethered together with bloodless ligaments. The people
were closed inside to wait for the doctors, to wonder if the sickness
had spread from their city to themselves.
It was so orderly, it was very nearly a dance. The enormity of it
dived straight to the center of T'sha's being and left her stupefied.
Her family was in there somewhere. Mother, Father, her little sisters,
her brother… Oh life and bone, brother!
"Ca—" she began, but she cut herself off. She could not rob Ca'aed
of any of its concentration. She instead ordered the headset to find
her brother on its own. A cluster of dirigibles flew the speaker's
flags. She turned her flight toward them, beating her wings against the
wind until she felt her bones would break.
"Ambassador!"
The voice came to her own ears, not her headset. T'sha saw a solid
red crest spread on the wind and recognized Deputy Ambassador Ta'teth
rising above the dirigibles. She put on a burst of speed and flew to
meet him.
"Ambassador," he gasped as if he'd been the one flying so fast. "I
am glad you are returned. We've been doing our best—"
"How bad is it?" T'sha cut him off, fanning her wings against the
buffeting wind. She could smell the disease from here, cloying and
sweet, just like the scents that had surrounded Village Gaith. The
flies would be descending soon.
"Bad. The engineers are trying to keep up, but it is spreading too
fast, in too many places."
"How did this happen?" T'sha demanded. Ta'teth dipped and shriveled
before her outburst. T'sha cursed herself and dropped until she was
level with her deputy. "I'm sorry, Ta'teth. I'm sorry. I do not blame
you. But does anyone know what happened?"
Ta'teth recovered his size. "The best theories are from the
indentures from Gaith, and they are very serious." T'sha grit herself
against her impatience. Ta'teth was also scared. Ta'teth loved Ca'aed
as she did. He was doing his best. "They think it is a new kind of
virus."
"But that's a fungus!" retorted T'sha.
"No," said Ta'teth. "It's cancer."
"What?" The word was out before T'sha could stop herself. Cancer?
How could that be cancer? A virus might cause a cancer, yes, but not
like this.
"They think…" Anticipation of his own words made Ta'teth shudder.
"They think it is a new strain of virus that has managed to take
advantage of the People's close relationship with the cities. They
think it replicates in sections, part of it in the people, part of it
in the segments of the city's anatomy that are chiefly animal. The
virus sections lie dormant in the hosts, mimicking, they think,
familiar nutritive elements. They possibly even infect the
monocellular nutritives and through them infect the hosts. The
dangerous phase does not start until two or more sections of the virus
are combined, possibly in the presence of an additional chemical
stimulus—"
"In such a place as in the city's bowels."
Ta'teth dipped his muzzle. "Then it replicates furiously, devouring
its host and releasing the undetected spawning segments, working too
fast to be completely stopped or destroyed."
T'sha did not deflate. She felt paralyzed by Ta'teth's words, frozen
as cold as a New Person. "It is a good theory. Is it being
tested now?"
Again, Ta'teth dipped his muzzle. "They are hunting for viral DNA
segments now and trying to map its life cycle."
"And we might all be carriers?"
"Yes," murmured Ta'teth. "Of portions of the disease, at least." He
swelled and shrank. "There might be more than one strain."
The words sank into T'sha and she shivered, releasing old memories.
What is the nature of life? went the first riddle in the story of
Ca'doth. Three possible answers—a stone, a shell, the wind. A stone
because life is strong and underlies the whole world. A shell because
life contains and shelters what is precious. The wind because it is
everywhere and cannot be stopped.
It is everywhere and cannot be stopped. "Have you told
Ca'aed?"
Ta'teth collapsed in on himself. "No. I didn't think… I…"
T'sha flew over him, brushing her fingers against his crest. "No
shame, Deputy. I'll do it now."
T'sha flew past the chains of her people being evacuated to the
isolation shells, past the engineers with their flocks of tools
surrounding them, between the walls patched with this strange, sweet
cancer that mimicked a fungus so well. She knew where she wanted to be.
There were eyes beside the main portal. Pretty silver eyes, which
watched the winds and the world. She wanted to be there when she told
Ca'aed.
"My city?" T'sha hovered before the city's eyes, each one as big as
a whole person.
"Ambassador?" murmured Ca'aed.
"You are very ill, Ca'aed. They think it is a new virus." Slowly,
carefully, she repeated what Ta'teth had told her.
The eyes remained focused on her, drinking her in as if she were the
only thing in the world. Sorrow swelled T'sha's body. She wanted to
wrap the city in her arms and hug it to her belly as if it were a
child. She wanted to carry it away from here to somewhere safe, where
the winds were wholesome and it could be fed and healed. But there was
no safe place, not in any latitude. The whole world might be infected
by now; they had no way of knowing.
"You must cut it out," said Ca'aed.
"What?" blurted out T'sha.
"This theory is sound. I run it through my minds. It holds, life of
us all, it holds. They apply anticancer treatments now, and they have
some effect, but they will take dodec-hours, and we do not have the
time." Ca'aed paused as if gathering its strength. "You must cut out
the affected sections of my body. You must isolate them, burn them if
necessary. If my body is spreading infection, it must be stopped."
There was no room in T'sha for further horror. She would not permit
Ca'aed's words to enter her. "No, a quarantine—"
"Will allow me to stew in my own disease," interrupted the city.
"This way we may be able to save at least my consciousness and keep
the worst of the infection out of the wind." Its voice was calm,
collected. But T'sha still heard the fear.
Cut? Cut my city…
In front of her, a ligament snapped, the ends flapping into the wind.
"I am the shelter. I am the shell," said the city, giving the old
words of the unity chant, the one T'sha had recited every year when the
city passed over the First Mountain.
"We are the bone. We are the embryo," responded T'sha instantly.
"I preserve you."
"We preserve you. Life serves life."
"Life serves life," replied the city. "Cut out this disease from me."
Every bone in T'sha's body clenched. Cut out the disease. It was
barbaric but effective if the anticancer treatments weren't working
fast enough. Cut down the sails, cut out the homes, cut through the
parks, the windguides, the promise trees…
Life and bone, the promise trees, and I've heard nothing from
T'deu. Suddenly, there was no question inside T'sha about where
her brother was. He was deep inside the infected city, trying to save
the beauty and intricacy he had dedicated his life to nurturing. Who
knew what he carried inside him by now?
The safety engineers would have to keep him quarantined even from
the other citizens.
Oh, my brother! And I cannot even go to find you now.
"Are you speaking to Chief Engineer T'gen of your remedy?" T'sha
asked Ca'aed, her voice barely a whisper.
"I am. He resists. Do not let him."
Memories. A thousand, a million memories of a world that grew and
changed, of life, and family and ambition, worry and debate, flight and
stillness. Through all that there was only one constant—Ca'aed. Her
ancient city, her soul's home. "No, I will not let him resist."
"I am ready."
"Stay ready." T'sha turned from the city walls and flew toward the
isolation shells. It was not engineers she needed now but harvesters
with their saws and hooks and pruning sheers. She needed to lead them
deep into their city to places the engineers would numb. She needed
their nets, their patience, and their precision. Ca'aed might be
gutted, but Ca'aed might be saved.
But only if they were fast enough, only if they were right.
Otherwise, they would be doing nothing but killing the city a piece at
a time.
T'sha closed her mind against the thought and flew.
Contents -
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Chapter Fifteen
Ian Su sat in front of the full membership of the Colonial Affairs
Committee of the United Nations. Their hearing room was something out
of another age, with a crystal dome and green marble floor, polished
wooden trim, benches and tables. All around the walls, gold leaf picked
out the words of great sages from throughout history, messages of
tolerance, patience, long thought, and calm.
Calm especially, she needed that today. She surveyed the committee,
all twenty-two of them. She was number twenty-three. She had kept her
appointment by hook, crook, and means that did not always bear the
light of day, but she had kept it. Now, though, her colleagues all
watched her with hard eyes and skeptical faces.
Nothing was eased by the fact that the holotank in the center of
the crescent bench was activated to show the three
Secretaries-General—Kim Sun, Avram Haight, and Ursula Kent. They sat
in their conservative clothes and comfortable chairs with desks in
front of them that had tidy rows of screen rolls laid out for
convenient reference. The Secretaries looked cool, detached. The souls
of worldly reason, they waited to see what the committee brought to
light.
From the beginning, Su had known the events on Venus would end up
here, and she had thought she'd be ready to speak about them. But now
that she was here, she was no longer sure. She had faced down the
committee before, but never had her prepared speech seemed so… absurd.
She was used to arguing civil rights, articles of incorporation, land
ownership, and mineral exploitation rights. She was not used to making
announcements of discoveries. Especially not like this.
Su glanced at the representation of Helen Failia, who sat next to
her in another holotank. The real Helen was in her private office on
Venera, wearing an assembler rig and watching the proceedings through
her wall screen. The image beside Su sat as still as a stone, except
for her eyes. Grim exhaustion still hung about Helen from dealing with
the sudden deaths of the Gusmanos brothers aboard Venera, and those
tired, determined eyes scanned the members of the C.A.C. They looked
for the members' reactions and tried to judge what Helen should do or
say next.
The initial announcement about the contact with aliens had already
been made. Now that the committee had sufficiently calmed down, it was
time to move on and give them something else to chew over.
Su didn't give Helen the chance to do or say anything.
Speed-of-light delays could be so useful at times. Su just cleared her
throat and spoke with a confidence that had more to do with
political experience than honest belief. "I would like to take this
moment to say that Dr. Failia and the governing Board for Venera Base
were quite right in bringing this situation to our attention
immediately. This is a diplomatic event unparalleled in human history,
and as such, it deserves to be addressed with immediate and undivided
attention."
"We must not," Su went on, "no matter how much our imaginations
want to revert to old stories of invasion and attack, forget for a
moment that our first indication that these… people existed was when
they performed a rescue of seven human beings. Let me say that again.
They rescued seven human beings. Seven human beings whose lives would
have been lost if not for the selfless intervention of the
aliens."
Screen rolls rustled and Patrick James, a fat, florid committee
member with a thatch of yellow hair looked up. "What about the eighth
human being? The report says the scarab had a crew of eight."
"Yes," said Helen's projection when the question reached her. "The
eighth crew member, Bailey Heathe, was killed in the initial accident.
His remains were not recoverable." She did not glance at Su. Helen had
told Su why the remains were not recoverable. They had agreed that that
particular revelation should be left for later, if it ever needed to
be brought out at all.
Secretary Avram Haight, a needle-thin man with pallid brown skin and
his hair cut short under his black cap spoke. "Have these… People… said
what they are doing here?"
This was going to be tricky. Su and Helen had worked on the wording
for an hour and agreed that Helen, as the one from the scene, should
deliver it.
"They are interested in surveying the planet," said Helen.
"Just surveying?" Even through the holotank, Su could feel the
weight of Secretary Height's gaze. "This is an exploratory team?"
The question traveled to Venus. Screen rolls were shuffled. Eyes
glanced around the room, measuring reaction, guessing intentions. Su's
gaze met Edmund Waicek's and saw nothing there but cold hostility.
Frezia Cheney had been as good as her word, and Edmund's spinners were
now all in a scramble, re-explaining his every statement against the
colonies, trying to salvage the impression that his judgment was sound
and unbiased. There was even some careful talk of a
conflict-of-interest hearing. Very careful, but there it was.
Every little bit helped. Some people were finally beginning to get
the hint that a completely anticolonial viewpoint was no longer flying
with the entire population of Mother Earth.
Finally, Helen's answer reached the hearing chamber. "No, Sir, it is
not just an exploratory team," she said. Her voice was calm, but Su
could see how tightly she held herself. "They wish to assess the
possibility of establishing a permanent colony on Venus."
Here it comes. Su held her breath. But the explosion did
not happen. Instead the committee just murmured and whispered. Even
Jasmine Latimer, who went in for shouting and pounding the table,
blanched only slightly.
Maybe we can pull this off. Maybe it won't have to be a circus.
"Dr. Failia." Secretary Kent unrolled a screen and swept the gaze of
her overlarge blue eyes across it. "What are the Venerans doing now?"
Again the speed-of-light delay stretched out. Helen's image sat at
Su's side, making motions Helen had made six minutes ago.
Does
Edmund know I raked his background back up? Su found herself
wondering. Probably not, or she would have felt the backlash by now.
No, her campaign to keep him busy appeared to be working.
At least something is. Keep your focus, Su. This is not about
Edmund; this is about Venera.
Helen's image spoke. "We have asked members of the U.N.
investigative team to establish communication with the People."
Helen had her hands folded together in front of her. Su tried not to
notice her white knuckles. The statement was only a minor stretch. Dr.
Hatch was a team member, and Dr. Kenyon was not really a Veneran. "The
People seem quite willing to talk."
Secretary Kent looked down her long nose at Helen. "Has it been
made
quite clear that no one on Venera has any power to negotiate any kind
of treaty?"
When that question reached her, Helen answered with forced
patience.
"Yes, Secretary Kent. Everyone is aware of this."
Su minutely adjusted the table microphone. "Dr. Failia decided
to
address the C.A.C. immediately because Venera lacks trained mediators,
linguists, or diplomats at this time. A new team needs to be assembled
as soon as possible." Several of the committee members nodded in
approval, but everyone else seemed to be waiting for the word from on
high. The faces of the Secretaries were not revealing.
"It is very clear we need a new team," said Secretary Sun. He
looked
like a young, vigorous man with a full head of black hair, a round,
open face, and eyes that rivaled Secretary Kent's for their size. Su
had once heard an estimate of his yearly bill for med-trips and
body-mod. There were counties in North America that didn't make that
much in a year. "What we want to establish here is that Venera Base has
not overstepped its bounds." Secretary Sun looked directly at Helen.
"Why are you still
allowing your people contact with the aliens?"
More waiting. Su's fists tightened until her nails pressed
painfully
into her palms. Too much waiting. It was stretching her thin. She had
waited for Helen to contact her, even after she had found out there
were aliens. She had waited for Mr. Hourani's answers to all the
questions raised by the shipyard bombing. She had waited for each and
every one of her questions to reach Helen sitting up there alone in
her Throne Room as they tried to work out a strategy for coping with a
miracle so huge that Su's mind shied away from contemplating it.
"The people establishing contact with the aliens are not my
people,"
said Helen. The gaze from her image met the gaze of Secretary Sun's
image without hesitation. "They're yours. The optical specialist you
sent us, Dr. Veronica Hatch, has taken charge of the communication
project."
Su wondered what Dr. Hatch was going to say when she heard how
Helen
worded that particular fact.
"She did this without your permission?" Like Secretary Kent,
Secretary Sun had perfected the art of looking down his nose. Su
supposed it was something that came with high office.
Images stared at each other while their physical bodies shifted
in
offices continents apart
. And here we sit with these
illusions,
waiting to pass judgment on each other. Stop it, Su. You're being
ridiculous.
Helen's image spread its hands. "I was directed by the C.A.C. to
cooperate fully with their team in all matters pertaining to the
Discovery. Communicating with the People to determine if they built the
Discovery and for what purpose it was built, seemed pertinent to the
Discovery."
Silence, except for a few coughs and the rustling of fabric and
screen rolls. Su suppressed a smile. They'd scored a touch with that
one, but it was a long way from a telling blow.
"Forgive my ignorance, Dr. Failia," Jasmine Latimer glanced at
her
colleagues and the Secretaries, as if seeking permission to speak. "But
how is an optical specialist helping to communicate with the aliens?
"
Helen cocked her head, looking intelligently interested, an
expression Su had seen her use at a hundred cocktail parties.
The question reached Helen, and her answer returned. "We have so
far
been unable to establish whether the People can hear on frequencies we
use or whether they hear at all. They do, however, have eyes that are
similar in construction to human eyes. Because of this, Dr. Hatch
speculated that we might be able to communicate visually."
"So," said Jasmine. "Dr. Hatch is teaching them English?"
Helen held her interested pose. The question went out, the
answer
came back. "We've had to teach them very little."
The words were out of Helen's mouth before Su could do anything.
They had already been spoken six minutes ago. There was no way to
censor them or talk over them. They were spoken.
"We are perfecting the communication hardware," Helen's image
went
on. "Dr. Hatch is working on a holography display that will give us
both mobility and a full range of communications options."
Su did not crumple in her chair, but she wanted to.
Too
late,
too late.
"Just a moment, please, Dr. Failia," Secretary Kent interrupted
by
raising her hand slightly. "Would you please elaborate on that earlier
point. You had to teach them very little? About what? About English?"
Helen kept her expression admirably placid. Su felt certain that
she
spent the whole long time delay inwardly kicking herself.
"The People seem to have a facility with language," said Helen.
"They are picking up English rapidly."
"Dr. Failia," said Secretary Haight sternly. "How long do the
aliens
say they've been on Venus?"
For the first time, worry lines creased Helen's forehead. "They
haven't said."
"Have you asked?" Secretary Haight reached for one of the rolls
on
his desk and opened it. "Wait." He held up a hand, but his attention
stayed focused on the roll. "Let me change that question. How long have
you been aware of their existence?"
"For ten days," said Helen. Her voice was still calm, but Su
could
hear the strain creeping in around the edges. "As soon as we learned
they were there, I contacted Ms. Yan and asked her to arrange this
session."
"I wonder." Secretary Kent laid her hands, one on top of the
other,
on her desk.
"About what, Secretary Kent?" asked Su.
Secretary Kent blinked her huge blue eyes. "Your people were so
resistant to having a team of U.N. observers come to Venera Base. It
was almost as if you were afraid the team would see something you did
not want them to see."
At last, Su saw a chance to step in. "The only reason Venera
Base
did not want the U.N. team on Venus was that they were concerned about
possible interference with an ongoing scientific investigation of the
first importance. The team members were unknown quantities and the
Venerans had no say in their selection." Well, little say, Su
added silently. Now was not the time to bring up Helen's lobbying
efforts or Su's own covert maneuvers.
"And yet," said Secretary Sun, "there are these reports that the
Discovery was in fact fraudulent." He gestured to the rolls on his desk.
Helen hesitated, visibly gathering her inner resources. Su
answered
for her again.
Save your voice, get your bearings, Helen.
"The investigation of the Discovery is ongoing."
"And I understand from this report that the Venerans are making
use
of the laser that is part of the Discovery in order to communicate with
the aliens?" Secretary Sun sounded overly innocent, as if there was
nothing behind his question but honest curiosity.
All at once, Su saw where the questioning was going. For the
first
time in her whole political career, her mouth went completely dry. She
felt the eyes of her colleagues on her, Edmund Waicek's most of all.
I
missed it. I had all the facts in front of me, and I completely
missed this interpretation. Oh, Mother Creation…
"It is part of the holography system, yes," came Helen's
answer.
She hadn't seen it yet. Or maybe she had. These words were six minutes
old. Maybe it had dawned on her by now.
"Convenient that it was in working order, isn't it?" said
Secretary
Kent. "And just what you needed?"
Cut it off, Su. Su leaned forward. "Secretary, fellow
committee members, we are all aware that when a complex occurrence is
scrutinized, the separate events rarely add up directly. Loose facts
can be stuffed into any number of boxes."
Heaven knows I've done
it often enough, and there's enough going on here that you could find
an interpretation to fit every need. "What is before us now, and
what must remain before us, is that for the first time, we are speaking
to another intelligent species. We must send a diplomatic team to
properly welcome them and begin formal contact."
"A diplomatic team will most certainly be sent," said Secretary
Haight. He sounded far too righteous for Su's liking. "But there are
one or two other background matters that need to be cleared up first.
The first is this photograph we were sent."
Photograph? The photo
appeared on Su's desk screen. A
copy
sped toward Venus. Su, suddenly afraid, looked down at the
black-and-white satellite shot that caught the alien's portal.
Su's heart thudded once, hard.
Where
did they get that
from?
They shouldn't have that. The room was tense, silent. Su
realized
they were waiting for Helen to receive the image. Su looked to the
holotank and saw the representation of her old friend trapped inside,
almost as if it were Helen herself who sat in that clear cage. The
image looked down, and focused, understood what was before it, and Su
saw no possibility of explanation appear on Helen's tight, distraught
face.
"According to the satellite record," said Secretary Haight,
"this
picture was taken over a year ago. That's well before the original
Discovery was announced and certainly well before you saw fit to report
to us that you had met aliens in your personal backyard."
They had plenty of time to study the confusion on Helen's face,
how
her jaw began to work back and forth, how she had to struggle to still
it, the way her hand trembled as it lifted to brush one white lock of
hair back behind her ear.
But, in the end, Helen lifted her gaze and spoke firmly. "I am
sure
you are aware that our satellites record thousands of hours of images
in a single year. We do not have the personnel or the computing power
to analyze all of them carefully." She glanced down at the photo's
caption and her voice took on an added measure of calm assurance. "This
was not of an area under active study. It bears a close resemblance to
a land feature known as a 'tick.' Like the vast majority of all our
satellite imagery, it was filed for later study."
"But you must see it from our point of view, Dr. Failia."
Secretary Kent had a smile on her face. She was once again, all
innocence, all righteousness. All for the cameras and public record.
"This looks a little strange."
"A scientific inquiry is not a political or legal inquiry,
Secretary," Su said smoothly. "Particularly from a privately funded
project. The researchers must concentrate on areas most likely to yield
interesting or useful results. As Dr. Failia said, this"— she gestured
at the photo—"appeared to be a common Venusian land feature. Nothing
to excite additional inquiry. A review of Venera's work practices can
certainly be arranged for another time. What is most important now—"
"Is that we understand exactly what our position with regard to
these aliens is," said Secretary Haight, cutting Su off. "And to do so,
we need to know the truth about how long the Venerans have been in
contact with them and exactly what they've been negotiating."
When the question reached her, the color drained from Helen's
face.
"And when we have established this, then what?"
Secretary Haight looked at her as if Helen had just missed
something
glaringly obvious. "Then Venera Base will be placed under the direct
control of the Colonial Affairs Committee, which will oversee personnel
assignments and all other requirements
pertaining to the alien dialogue."
The words crept the long, slow way to Venus. Helen's face
remained frozen and paper white. "I see," was all the reply that
returned.
"You are not being accused of anything yet, Dr. Failia."
Secretary
Kent's voice was soothing, almost sweet with reassurance. "We are
merely asking for clarifications."
"I see." Without another word, Helen's representation vanished.
Su stared at the empty box, along with everyone else. She looked
mutely up at the Secretaries and the committee and then back at the box.
"A recess, please, Secretaries, committee members." Su got to
her
feet. "Surely there's been an outside interruption in communications
from Venus."
The Secretaries gave their assent. It was still being seconded
as Su
turned and hurried out of the chamber, the sounds of her footsteps
echoing off the marble walls.
What does she think she's doing? Su ground her
teeth as
she
marched across the lobby.
This is
not productive. She could be
cited for contempt. She could be arrested…
What if she doesn't care?
Su staggered and caught her balance against a marble bench. She
sat
down heavily, as if pushed bodily by her thoughts.
This might have done it. They had attacked Helen's integrity,
her
management of her people and her world. It might have been enough.
After all the work and the caution and the planning, this
confrontation might have pushed Helen over the edge into rebellion.
Su took a deep, slow breath. "Oh, Helen," she whispered. "Oh,
Helen,
my friend, be careful."
* * *
Michael watched as Helen slowly, deliberately, removed the
assembler
rig goggles and set them on her desk. She blinked at them a moment
before she could make herself look up again and focus on Michael and
Ben.
"That," said Michael mildly, "was probably not extremely
productive. They're going to haul you down there for contempt."
"Then they are going to have to come and get me." She pulled the
gloves off, one finger at a time.
"Helen…" began Michael. A cold sensation crept through him as he
watched her eyes. This was not Helen angry. This was not even Helen
furious. She had gone past those emotions into some new world, and he
wasn't sure how to pull her back.
"No." She swiveled the chair and stabbed a finger at him. "No.
We're
finished with them." She stood up a little bit at a time, as if all her
joints protested the move. "They are not taking our world away from
us."
"Amen," whispered Ben. Michael whipped around to stare at him.
"That's not the word I'd use." Helen smoothed her scarf down.
"Michael, someone here sent the committee that photograph. I want you
to find out who."
"Does it really matter?" Michael spread his hands.
"It matters!" Helen began to shake. "The U.N. is about to take
Venera away from us and one of our own people is trying to help them!"
Her fists clenched involuntarily.
Michael licked his lips. "Okay, Helen. I agree, we need to know
who
sent that picture, but just so we can head off a complete takeover. We
can tell the C.A.C. somebody's been spreading lies and then they'll—"
"And then they'll still conclude we are even more out of control
than they thought we were and come up with a few extra security
people," said Helen bitterly. "It's done, Michael. Whatever spin can be
put on that photo, it's not going to change anything. They are coming
and they are taking over." She smoothed down her scarf. "I just want to
know who it was so we can keep them out of the info loop. Start with
Grace Meyer. She might just have done it to see me out of here."
"Helen, we don't know—"
"Then find out!" Helen's fist slammed against the wall. "That's
your
job!"
"All right, Helen, all right," said Ben. "We'll find out for
you.
Don't worry about it."
"Good. Good." The tide of her more-than-anger subsided in her a
little. "While you're doing that, I'm going down to the surface to talk
to our neighbors. We're going to need them. Ben, have a couple of
pilots meet me in the hangar, and warn Josh and Vee I'm coming down."
She left the office without looking back. Michael stared after
her as she walked down the stairs and began crossing the farm, with
her shoulders hunched and her hands knotted.
He turned to Ben. "What are we going to do?"
Ben shrugged. "I'm going to send a message to Dr. Hatch and Dr.
Kenyon. I assumed you were going to start checking out whether Grace
Meyer gave the C.A.C. that photo."
Disbelief flooded Michael. "Ben, she's over the edge. She
doesn't
know what she's doing."
"Yes, she does." Michael could practically hear the
finally
Ben added in his thoughts. "She's saving her home, and she's asking us
to do the same."
Michael's hands fell to his sides.
You're
on your own now,
Michael, whispered a voice in the back of his mind.
He's gone
with Helen or taken her with him.
"All right," he heard his own voice say. "But you'd better hope
I
don't find out you sent that picture."
Ben's jaw tightened, just a little, but he said nothing. He just
turned and left, following Helen's path across the farms.
Michael rested one hand on the windowpane and tried to think,
but
before he could sort out what had just happened, his phone spot chimed.
Michael touched it to take the message, a little relieved.
"Code 360-A," said a recorded voice.
Michael swore under his breath and rounded Helen's desk, it woke
up
when he touched the command board and he shuffled her icons until he
got the security overview and entered his own passwords. The desk took
a reading of his fingerprints and let him in.
A was unauthorized access to com archives. Yes, there it was,
the
serial number. It didn't use Venera's ID system. Probably a briefcase
jacked into the system for somebody's fishing expedition. Probably
Stykos and Wray trying to get their story out. Maybe Peachman, but he
didn't seem like he had the expertise, although he certainly had the
love of publicity. They'd tripped one of Michael's bugs, and it had
pinged their case and dumped the report for him.
He couldn't really blame them. Somebody had to try. In their
place
he'd have done the same. Maybe he could have Helen talk to them again.
He glanced toward the door. Or maybe not. Helen was not at top form
right now.
So, where are you? He typed in the appropriate
commands.
The answer appeared a split second later.
The infirmary? Michael
frowned.
Who'd…
Michael swore again, loudly this time. He tossed down the
command to
shut the intruding case terminal out of the com files and ran out the
door.
By the time he reached the infirmary cubicle, Angela and Philip
had
their briefcase packed away, and they both had the nerve to look
affronted.
"What the hell were you trying to do?" Michael demanded in a
hoarse
whisper as he touched the control for the cubicle's sound dampener.
"You've been holding out on us, Michael," said Phil. "You've got
this base bugged into the middle of next week, and you didn't think you
should tell us about it."
"I showed you all security measures pertaining to the
Discovery,"
said Michael slowly, enunciating each word. "I gave you every
authorization—"
"You've got a private copy of every single conversation that
goes on this base," croaked Angela. "E-time or face-time. Wouldn't the
good
citizens of Venera like to know about that? Does Grandma Helen even
know?"
Of course she does; she approved
the design. Michael
didn't
say that. There was nothing he could say. The files existed. Gregory
Schoma had created the programs and done the wiring. Michael had never
needed to resort to them for any case he'd supervised, but they were
there all the same. Everyone more or less expected message logs to be
kept, but message texts? Usually written permission had to be obtained
before private e-mail could be stored. Venera was very proud of its
privacy regulations.
But what was he going to say to these two? That he didn't
approve of
those copies? That he'd never used them? He'd never erased them either.
"If you'd told me what you were looking for," said Michael, "I'd
have given it to you without the hackwork."
"Would you?" Philip lifted his eyebrows. "I want to believe you,
Michael, but—"
Michael waved his hand to cut the other man off. "I'm not going
to
play Prove-It-To-Me with you. What do you want? If I've got it, I'll
give it to you."
"Who faked the Discovery?" asked Angela.
Michael blinked. "Derek and Kevin Cusmanos. They confessed.
"
Angela shook her head gently. For the first time since entering
the
cubicle, Michael found a moment to wonder if she was still in pain. She
still had plenty of tubes and monitors taped to her bare arms.
"They didn't do it alone. You know that, Michael," she said.
"You're
not stupid and you know the people around here much better than we do."
Her voice took on a rasp. Philip drew a glass of water from the
dispenser and handed it to her. She sipped. "So who else faked the
Discovery?"
Michael weighed his options. He could stall, he could lie, or he
could be straight with them. He didn't really like any of the choices.
At last, he said, "I don't know."
"Was it Dr. Failia?"
"What?" The word jerked Michael out of his slump. Angela didn't
bat
an eye; neither did Philip.
"She has complete control of Venera's financial records," said
Phil.
"The base is her whole life, and it was about to die. People around
here worship her. They'd start a war if she asked them to. It would not
be hard for her to funnel the necessary money down to the Cusmanos
brothers so they could do the deed."
"No," said Michael.
"No, you know she didn't do it, or no, you don't want to
believe
she would?" Philip looked down his nose at Michael. "You're a v-baby,
aren't you?"
Anger rushed through Michael's veins. He clamped his jaw shut
around
the words that wanted to tumble out.
When he was certain he had control of his voice, he said, "There
are
some things Helen wouldn't do, even for Venera."
"Are there?" whispered Angela. "There are two dead men next door
to
us, Mr. Lum. Who else on this base would people kill or die for?"
They were trying to anger him, trying to get him to doubt what
he
knew. It was a good tactic, and they played it out like the pros they
were. But a tactic was all it was, a game, a way to try to turn him
against Helen and Venera. That was all.
"The Cusmanoses died of food poisoning," lied Michael, slowly,
reasonably. "We found a whole batch with the same contamination and
have closed the brewery. It was bad luck."
"It was dead convenient," said Philip. "And you're being
deliberately obtuse."
Michael just smiled a little. "And you two are completely
objective
and did not get sent up here with any agenda at all. The C.A.C. just
wants what's best for the planets. Am I right?"
"Come on, Michael." Angela rolled her eyes. "You're too smart
for
this."
Michael nodded again. "You're right. I am."
He left them there and made his way back to the main corridor
and
joined the flow of life that swirled through Venera, all day, every
day. This was his home, his place, his life. He knew its upside, and
its underside. He knew what the people sheltered here would and would
not do.
The yewners were used to chaos. They were used to looking for
rebellion and conspiracy and greed. They weren't used to people being
happy. They didn't understand. This was another world. His world. He
would not let them turn him against it.
He would not.
* * *
After Michael stormed out, Philip got up out of his chair and
closed
the cubicle door.
"Well," Angela said mildly. "I don't think he's going to be able
to
kid himself for more than three days, maybe four, tops."
Philip shook his head and returned to his seat. "Less than that.
He's good people, at bottom. He knows where his own lines are, and
they've been crossed."
"They've been erased." Angie fell back on her pillows. "If we're
right."
"You've got to be kidding? How could we be wrong?"
"We could always be wrong." She let her head flop toward him.
God,
it felt good to have those earphones off. "We've got more simulations
than direct evidence. One good lawyer, and we're suspended for
negligent harassment and God knows what else."
"Won't stay that way." Phil picked a spot at the tip of her
fingers
that didn't have any tubes sticking out and patted it. "I just wish we
could have got to him before the Cusmanoses had to die."
"Yeah," Angela coughed. Phil practically jumped to hand her the
water. She smiled as she took it. "Thanks."
She drank. It tasted good. It felt good going down. The pain was
almost gone. She couldn't believe how good it felt, just to move an arm
under the sheets and not have it feel like hot sandpaper. To be able to
turn her neck freely, to not have every sound screaming straight
through to her brain. "I wish we could have told him we know about the
C.A.C. accusations. That might have pushed him over."
"Now, now, we don't want him to know how many of his landmines
we
did get around." Phil looked at the door thoughtfully and fingered his
beard. "We might be wrong about how long it takes him to come around. I
want a back-up plan, just in case."
"Let's get to it." Angela pushed herself up a little higher on
her
pillows. Work felt good. Working was easier than thinking about what
was waiting outside the walls. Aliens. Living creatures, intelligent
creatures right here, right next door to Mother Earth, and they'd saved
her life. Saved all their lives.
And Helen Failia might have known about them for years. She
might
have defrauded to keep her secret. She might have killed. She was
definitely in contempt of committee.
And right now this woman, this maybe-murderer, was controlling
all
human contact with these new people. That could not be allowed to
continue.
Contents -
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Chapter Sixteen
"This is ridiculous." Vee shoved her briefcase back on the
scarab's
kitchen nook table. "Why don't we just fly over there? We know where
they are."
"Maybe because we've been told to stay here?" suggested Josh.
"We haven't been told anything lately." Vee glanced toward the
main
window. The perches and the holobubble sat there in the gray twilight,
unattended. Naturally, they'd been out to take a look at it all, and
they had good measurements and great pictures, but they had completely
failed to elicit any response out of the nobby "cortex box" at its
base that functioned as translator.
"Not to mention that if we left," Josh went on, "we wouldn't be
able
to talk to any of the People we met." He waved his hand at the plans
for the modified survey drone they had been hashing out on the
briefcase screen. "This is a long way from finished."
Vee and Josh were working up simulations for a mobile
communications
drone which used parts scavenged from survey drones and his lab. The
problem was, of course, that while the drones had all kinds of
recording equipment attached to them, they had zilch in the way of
projection equipment.
Vee found herself wishing she could talk to Derek Cusmanos.
He'd
done such a job on the laser in the Discovery, they could use him now.
She shook her head, a little sad, a little angry, a little confused.
First he'd blown his talents on a fraud, then he got caught, then he
went and died from a bad batch of
yeast.
How did you even start to deal with something like that?
Especially
when you were the one who helped catch him in the first place? Guilt,
cold and unfamiliar, took hold, and she set it aside with difficulty.
"We don't need to talk to them; we just need to let them know
we're
still here." Vee chewed her lip thoughtfully. "T'sha said they have
politics. Maybe the local bureaucracy is having a hard time deciding on
a replacement for her. If we showed ourselves, it might be a motivator."
"It might be seen as a sign of aggression. We really don't know
that
much about them, Vee." Josh was trying to be reasonable. He was even
succeeding, but Vee wasn't in the mood for reason right now.
"We know a little. We know they're ready to talk." She pressed
her
fingertips against the tabletop. "We know they have a hierarchical
social infrastructure, and we know they really want to settle this
planet because their own is in trouble." She met his gaze. "Personally,
I think it'd be a bad idea for all concerned to let them talk too much
about that in private."
Josh watched her thoughtfully for a long moment. "Plus, you're
bored, right?"
She smiled her patented number-fourteen vapid smile. "You know
me so
well."
"Mmmph," snorted Josh, exaggeratedly unimpressed.
"Unfortunately,
I'm not the one you have to convince. Adrian!" he called up the
corridor to the pilot's compartment. "You hearing any of this?"
"I'm trying not to," Adrian called back.
"All I'm suggesting"—Vee stepped into the aisle where she could
see
Josh at the table and Adrian crouched in front of the pilot's chair,
checking the inventory in one of the storage cupboards—"is that we fly
in, showing that we are in fact still here, and come back. It's just to
start things up again." God knew they weren't having any luck appealing
to Venera. Supposedly Helen was talking to the C.A.C. today, but no one
upstairs seemed to be willing to tell them how that was going, if it
had happened yet. That, even more than the empty perches outside, was
making Vee nervous.
"Look," Adrian straightened up. "I'm not sure I want things to
start
up again, all right? I'm even less sure I want to have to explain to
the governing board that I helped start them."
"Dr. Failia's last orders to us were keep them talking," Vee
pointed
out. "We're currently failing in that assignment."
From his face, Vee could tell she'd scored a hit. "I don't think
going into their camp was part of what she had in mind," said Adrian.
"Keep them talking," repeated Vee. "Which we currently are not
doing." She folded her arms. "If the U.N. wants to know what our
current status is, what are we going to tell them?"
Adrian's shoulders sagged. He looked past Vee to Josh. Josh
shrugged. "I almost hate to say this, but she's right. If we have to
give an update, it's going to be lean."
Adrian turned away and carefully slotted his inventory roll into
its
rack. When he faced them again, his expression was grim. He was
remembering the crash, Vee was sure. He was remembering the aliens
carrying away the body of copilot Bailey Heathe. They still didn't know
why. Vee had been reluctant to ask the question. Okay, Vee had been
afraid to ask the question. She wanted the aliens to be… good people,
understandable people. She'd been unwilling to compromise the image
she was building in her mind.
Going to have to get over that and
fast, Vee, she told
herself.
Or you are going to be no
good to anybody.
"If we do this," Adrian said, laying the emphasis heavily on the
first word, "we do this quickly. We go in, we fly a couple of circles
to let them know we're still around, and we come back. That's it. Okay?"
Vee nodded soberly, covering her private triumph. Finally!
Something
to do besides sitting around and watching the world blow by.
"I'll go inform Sheila of our new assignment." Adrian slid past
Vee,
heading for the rear of the scarab. Sheila had probably heard every
word and decided to keep out of it, something she was very good at. Vee
hadn't been able to get more than two words out of the woman since
they'd dropped down. Vee suspected
she was withdrawing from the utter strangeness of what was happening
around her, which Vee could understand intellectually but not
emotionally. How could you not want to know everything there was about
the People? How could you not want to find a way to make friends?
Especially since it sounded like they were determined to be
neighbors.
Had anybody else thought about that? Everyone had seen the
transcripts of all the conversations, but had they really thought about
it? The People were coming. No, they were here, and they were here to
stay. They planned to transform Venus. Had anybody really thought about
what that meant?
Adrian came back up the aisle followed by Sheila, her mouth
pressed
into a thin, straight line. Another thing she wasn't happy about. Vee
turned to Josh, who just shrugged again, as if to say, "It was your
idea."
I'll buy her a coffee when we get
back. It seemed to be
the
official beverage of Venera.
"If you two could strap down please," said Adrian as he settled
into the pilot's chair.
"Right." Vee patted Josh's hand. "Come on, back to the cocoons."
Josh didn't say a word until they were both strapped in and
their
couches' indicator lights all shone green. Then he turned his head
toward her.
"What if they say no?"
"What?" She lifted her head just a little so she could see his
whole
face over the edge of the couch.
"When we show up, indicating we want to talk some more. What if
the
People say no?"
"Then we'll know." Vee let her head drop and focused on the view
screen. "Anything's better than not knowing."
Through the intercom, she could hear Adrian and Sheila running
through the preflight checks. The tourist-guide banter had completely
vanished, and Vee found herself missing it. It had made her feel they
really were a united team, that they all agreed this was something
worth doing. Maybe she'd been kidding herself, but that was how it felt.
"I hope you're right," said Josh as the scarab lifted off the
ground. The soft hum of the flight engines crept through the walls. On
the screen, the twilight landscape of Venus sped by under the scarab.
"Are you afraid?" she asked.
Josh was silent for a moment. Then he said, "Yes. I wish I
weren't,
but I am. I mean, I was there. I saw them rescue Scarab Fourteen too.
I've sat here and talked with T'sha, and she's civilized and curious,
and incredible, and I'm scared to death of her and everything she
represents." He licked his lips. "They might be stronger than we are .
If they decide they don't want us here, there might not be anything we
can do. But at the same time, I don't want anybody else thinking that
way, because I'm afraid somebody down at the U.N. is going to do
something really stupid, like decide we don't want them here under any
circumstances."
"Oh, good." Vee gave him a watery smile. "I thought it was just
me."
They lapsed into the silence of their individual thoughts. Venus
continued to slip by underneath them, twilight deepening into
darkness. The wind rocked the scarab gently, just to make sure they
didn't forget it was out there. Vee knew where they were going. They
had detailed satellite images of the portal now. But what would they
find when they got there? Was T'sha there, or was she still with her
sick city? Vee thought that was likely. If T'sha had come back, she'd
surely have returned to talk with them. Unless something or someone had
prevented her…
No, there was no reason to believe that. Except that the People
had
politics too. Politics made human people do strange things. Who knew
what it made aliens do?
"God and Mother Creation," came Sheila's stunned voice through
the
intercom. "They're everywhere."
Vee's gaze jerked to her view screen. It showed nothing but the
Venusian surface, glowing brightly in the darkness. She unsnapped her
straps and struggled to her feet.
"You're not…" Josh stopped himself and undid his owns straps.
Swaying with the rocking motion of the scarab, they both made
their
way out into the main corridor. When Vee could see what lay outside the
main window, she stopped dead in her tracks.
The people soared and wheeled in the night like birds, but they
had
none of the random motion or simple, obvious purpose of birds, and
they glowed. Each one of them was a shimmering, living flame. Those
flames rode the winds surrounded by clouds of their shining jellyfish.
They tied new, big, shimmering white bubbles to their established
base. They launched silver-scaled dirigibles into the air. They
hovered, staying still relative to their base in knots of twos and
threes, probably talking earnestly. They lit the night with their very
presence, and Vee knew deep inside she'd never forget the pure beauty
and wonder of this one moment, no matter what happened next.
What happened next was that they were spotted.
A trio of People broke away from the others and dived toward
the
scarab. Sheila's hands convulsed on the wheel.
"Wait for it," said Adrian, gesturing to her to relax.
The People pulled up sharply in front of the main window, close
enough that Vee had to squint against the light they radiated until
her eyes adjusted. She could see their muzzles opening and closing and
their flexible lips covering teeth that looked like a forest of tightly
packed toothpicks. Their shining wings rippled minutely in the wind,
each centimeter of skin adjusting itself to keep them from being blown
away. Their jewel-colored crests spread wide. What were they for?
Stabilizers? Sensory organs? She hadn't asked. It seemed like she
hadn't remembered to ask anything important.
But, God and Mother Creation, they were beautiful.
One of the People drifted forward from the others, until its
(his?
her?) muzzle floated a bare centimeter from the thick layer of quartz
that separated the humans from the outside.
"Isn't he one of T'sha's engineers?" Josh traced the air with
his
finger, indicating the interlocking circle pattern on the underside of
its wings. The tattoos stayed black, despite the surrounding light.
The effect was startling.
Vee nodded
. They never told us the
engineers' names. Why?
But he did look familiar. She stepped forward, leaning between Adrian
and Sheila, and looked straight into his eyes.
Do you see me? Do you know me?
Outside, Semi-Familiar swayed from side to side, as if he were
taking the measure of the window. Adrian seemed torn between working
the controls to keep them steady and staring at the People to try to
guess what Semi-Familiar might do. Semi-Familiar circled the scarab. He
flew above and underneath. He peered into the rear hatch window. He
hovered a long time beside the treads.
"What's he doing?" demanded Sheila all of a sudden.
"He's an engineer," Josh smiled. "He's saying, look, here's a
cool
new machine. How's it fit together?"
Vee managed to stifle her laugh. But Josh was right. That would
be
the first thing an engineer would do.
At last, Semi-Familiar returned to the main window, and he
stayed
there for a long moment, doing nothing but looking in at them, not
quite touching the window while his fellows talked—maybe argued—behind
him.
Finally, he backed away, drawing almost level with his
companions.
He said something, and they responded by lifting their muzzles, and
deflating and reinflating. Agitatedly? Approvingly? She could tell
nothing from their eyes.
Semi-Familiar flew off to the northeast a little and then darted
back. He repeated the move several times.
"I think he wants us to follow him," said Vee.
Adrian's hands clenched the wheel and then released it. "Okay,"
he
dragged the word out like a sigh.
"I am officially protesting this," said Sheila. "I end up like
Heathe, I'm coming back and haunting the hell out of you, Makepeace."
"You end up like Heathe and I'll deserve it." Adrian adjusted
his
controls and eased the stick forward. The scarab flew gently after the
Person they thought they recognized.
Their passage did not go unnoticed. The People swarmed around
them, thrusting their glowing muzzles toward their windows,
and peering inside the scarab with their silver eyes.
"Keep out of the damn way," breathed Sheila, but it was more
like a
prayer than a curse.
They did, barely sometimes, but they did. They were born knowing
what was needed for flight, and they did not interfere with the
scarab's wing or block the forward path. They did swoop in wide circles
all the way around the transport and hover alongside, keeping pace with
the machine easily.
"I swam with the dolphins once, in Hawaii," said Josh. "That was
like this, only, this is more…"
Vee nodded, understanding perfectly. She remembered the time her
mother took her and her brothers and sisters to a butterfly atrium in
St. Louis. She'd stood still in the middle of the garden, sweat and
humidity soaking her clothes, while butterflies fluttered all around.
The little blurs of color appeared here and there, holding still for a
moment before taking off or landing, according to their needs of the
moment. She'd felt herself to be in the center of a whole new world,
one that belonged to butterflies instead of people.
That feeling came back to her now, impossibly magnified.
Now the portal spread underneath them. Vee hadn't been prepared
for
how big it would be. It must have been at least a kilometer across.
More. It stretched out until the darkness hid the far edge in her
sight. The support struts hunched up like mountain ridges.
The air at the portal's center trembled, and the scarab
vibrated in
response. Adrian gritted his teeth and eased the scarab backwards and
up. He glanced at Vee as if he wanted to tell her they were leaving
now, but he didn't say anything, and Vee silently thanked him.
Outside, Semi-Familiar stopped, fanning his wings to keep his
place.
Another Person rocketed up from the portal's edge. This one had a
blue-and-white striped crest that Vee definitely recognized.
"Ambassador D'seun," she said. Josh nodded once.
D'seun swelled up in front of Semi-Familiar, and whatever he was
saying, he was saying it fast and there was a lot of it.
Up until then, Vee would have bet nothing could make her take
her
eyes off the People, but, beneath them, the center of the portal began
to glow.
A net woven of strands of pure, white light formed in the
massive
portal. The strands thickened and strengthened until they became a
sheet of light that twisted and folded, and Sheila and Adrian were
shouting at each other, and the scarab was backing away and the world
clenched itself up for a minute and a whole flock of shining golden
bodies shot out of the center of the portal like a living fountain.
D'seun turned his back on Semi-Familiar. We have to find
out
what this one's real name is. The ambassador swooped down into
the
center of the arrivals. They lost sight of him among the others
wheeling and diving in the twilight air.
Semi-Familiar looked over his shoulder at them, trying to send
them
some message they had no way to understand, and followed Ambassador
D'seun down into the flock of newcomers. His arrival stilled them, and
they fanned out in an uneven sphere around him.
"Scarab Three, Scarab Three," called the intercom. Everybody
jumped. "Scarab Three, where are you?"
"Not where we're supposed to be," muttered Sheila.
Adrian shot her an aggravated glance and opened the radio.
"We're
doing a reconnaissance on the aliens, Venera. Everything's okay.
What's up?"
Or maybe they're doing
reconnaissance on us. The
newcomers
were heading their way, fanning out like geese, if geese fanned in
three dimensions.
"Dr. Failia's on her way down to the Discovery site. She wants
to
talk to the People for herself. Is your ambassador back?"
The latest crowd of People surrounded them, hovering, peering
and
talking, unheard and uncomprehended, to each other. One large, bright
Person with an amethyst crest hovered alone in front of the main
window. The wavering tattoos around its muzzle matched both D'seun's
and T'sha's.
"I think we've got a new one, Venera," said Vee.
"Then bring them back with you, but get back there. Everything's
blown up, and we need to sort out what they're doing here."
"Roger that, Venera," said Adrian, fervently. "We're on our way
back."
"Okay, kids," said Sheila as she and Adrian worked the
controls,
banking the scarab in a wide arch. "Time to play follow the leader."
* * *
"That was the New People?" asked Z'eth, both wonder and
amusement
filling the air between her and D'seun.
D'seun dipped his muzzle. "Their engineers, rather than their
ambassadors. No ambassador would have been so rude." He could not
believe Br'sei had brought them here to disrupt the welcome he had
planned for Z'eth and the other ambassadors, to display the New People
before D'seun had a chance to say
anything.
"I would have thought they'd be bigger," mused Ambassador
P'eath.
"From your description, Ambassador D'seun, I was expecting monsters."
"Should we follow them?" piped up Ambassador K'ptai. "They only
have
a single working station for communication. Is that not correct?" She
turned an eye toward D'seun.
"That is correct, Ambassador K'ptai," he said, deflating a
little
in deference. "I was hoping we could take counsel first so that you
could be fully conversant with the current status of New Home…"
Z'eth overflew him, gracefully, with plenty of distance.
"Perhaps
we can hear what the New People say and then what you say. It is rude
to keep even mere engineers waiting, surely."
The whistles of assent buffeted D'seun from every side.
"I hardly think we need a formal vote here," remarked Z'eth.
"Will
you lead the way?"
D'seun forced himself to swell. "Of course, Ambassadors." Well,
let
the New People show them. Let the ambassadors see what he had seen. It
would happen. It could not help but happen. The ambassadors were not
fools, not like Br'sei. They would see the truth.
Besides, he had Z'eth's promise. With that secured, all would be
well.
All the dirigibles that were not out with the engineers and
surveyors were quickly summoned, including the one D'seun had been
using since the beginning. It knew its way perfectly by now. It needed
no prompting to take them across the plain and over the Living Highland
76 to where the two transports waited, low and gleaming in the dim
twilight.
The dirigibles slowed, reaching out their anchors to each other
so
they made a waiting chain while the ambassadors spilled from the
gondolas. The ambassadors swam against the thickening air to hover just
above the crust, circling around the transports and the communication
screens, peering closely at all they saw. The air rippled with their
excited commentary.
Only D'seun came immediately to hover beside the perches T'sha
had
left behind.
The translator, activated by his presence, read the words that
appeared on the New People's screen along with the familiar image of
Engineer Vee. Now though, instead of shades of red, she was many
colors—cream and pink and gold in coverings of pale blue and green. The
New People's engineers had been busy.
"Ambassador D'seun?" The translator's clear voice cut through
the
swirl of exclamation. "Good luck to you and to everyone who has
accompanied you."
The words touched the circulating crowd of ambassadors and
reminded
them that the formations in front of them were not just some growth on
this strange crust. The ambassadors arrayed themselves in a politely
interested tier, all facing the transports. Ambassador Z'eth came to
hover directly beside D'seun.
Lest I forget who is senior here,
thought D'seun.
I
forget nothing, Ambassador. You will understand what I am doing, soon.
"With me is the Law Meet of New Home," said D'seun to the
translator. "They wished to hear you speak on matters pertaining to
this world on which we find ourselves. Is this you to whom I wish good
luck, Vee?"
Let it be seen that I am
civilized and polite. That
I am a whole person.
There was a pause while the translator displayed the words for
the
New People and they formulated their response.
"Vee is here, but does not speak. I am Helen Failia. I am the
ambassador for Venera Base." The image of the New Person on the screen
shifted slightly and became smaller, rounder, more wrinkled, and a
little darker, with a more abbreviated gray crest. This image too
raised both its hands in greeting.
Finally they see fit to send
someone we can truly speak to.
"Good luck to you, Ambassador Helen."
"Ambassador Helen," spoke up Ambassador Z'eth. "Forgive me if I
do
not observe necessary ceremony, but the Law Meet is assembled here to
seek an understanding of your claim to this world." D'seun reformulated
her words into the translator's command language.
Words appeared under the New Person's, Ambassador Helen's, feet.
The
translator read the words out.
"Our claim to this world is that we live here. Before we came
there
was no life at all on Venus. Now, there are ten thousand of us in
Venera Base. Four thousand of those were born in that base and have no
other home. Our work is the study of this world. That study gives us
both individual reward and our means of exchange with others of our
kind. Without it, we have no home and no purpose to our lives."
Behind and above, D'seun heard the rustle of wings and skin.
"Now,
there," said K'ptai, "is an answer that is neither greedy nor insane."
"Such a difference to deal with an ambassador," said D'seun, his
voice carefully neutral. He spoke to the translator. "Then why is there
no life beyond your habitat? Why have your people not expanded in the
last eighty years?"
A pause. "You have been watching us for that long?"
"We have been working with New Home that long. We needed to see
what
your claim to this world is."
"And because you do not recognize our claim, you will throw us
off
this world?"
K'pta froze. "Is that what they think? That we're
insane?"
Ambassador Z'eth swooped a little closer to the translator. "We
make
no claim on anything used to support and maintain your life or the
lives of the other New People on this world. These things are yours and
are acknowledged as such without question."
New words appeared on the screen. "I understand you wish to make
this world your home?" read the translator. "How will you do that?"
D'seun looked to Z'eth for permission to speak, but it was
P'eath,
Ambassador for Ba'detad in the Far Southerns, who came forward to
answer, swelling her aging body as she did. "We have already
established that this world is capable of supporting the life that
supports us. If, and only if, no one else has a valid claim to this
world, then we will attempt to establish a biosystem." She waited while
D'seun translated between her and the tools. "If the biosystem takes
hold, then we will birth settlements for our people and we will live
here while the changes on our home rebalance themselves and we can
again live there. When we are gone, this world will be left as fallow
to rebalance itself." P'eath had proposed the original idea of New
Home. She carried her pride of that accomplishment like an extra tattoo
on her wings. But her vision extended no further than finding a new
world. She did not see the wider implications of allowing the New
People to remain here.
"What about the rest of the planets that orbit this sun?" asked
the
translator for Ambassador Helen.
"We do not need them," said Z'eth without hesitation. "They will
not
help us spread life."
"What about us?" The image gestured toward the clouds. "The
humans
here on Venera? While you are… spreading life, what will you do with
us?"
"Ambassador," murmured D'seun to Z'eth, keeping his words light
as
pollen. "Do not answer. Make no promises. There are consequences here…"
But if Z'eth heard him, she gave no sign. She kept her gaze
fixed on
the communicator.
"Community is a resource," said Z'eth. "One which we hope you
will
provide for us. You have studied this world for a long time and we hope
you will share your knowledge with us."
No, no. There can be no community here.
This world must be ours
alone. They cannot be controlled, cannot be predicted.
I
hold your promise!
"In return," said Z'eth, spreading her wings to show their scope
and
the canopy of her tattoos to the New People waiting in their shelters,
"we hope we can help you." No one questioned her right to speak or her
words. D'seun's gaze swept the assembled ambassadors, and he wondered
how many of them owed promises to Z'eth.
The image of Ambassador Helen bobbed its face several times.
"This
all sounds very good, but what assurance can you give us that you will
not change your position later, when there are more of you here?"
That was a tricky question. It raised implications of sanity. If
the
People were insane, they'd lie. But there was no way to prove sanity in
advance. After a moment, Ambassador P'tkei descended to within the
translator's range and spoke. "What assurance would you accept?"
There was a long pause, even after the words had been fed to the
translator. "Good question."
D'seun fluttered, inflating and deflating rapidly, angry at this
show of understanding and aware his anger was absurd. They would betray
themselves soon enough. This was a thin shell. It would crack. "This
world was declared New Home by the High Law Meet. Since then, miles had
passed under us both and we have done nothing but debate your status
and save your lives. If we were insane, as you fear, and meant to
destroy you, would we not have done so already?"
Another pause. Were they debating over there? Or were they just
trying to understand?
At last, the answer came. "I can accept this."
"Then we have our understanding?" said Z'eth. "You agree this
world
is ours to make our new Home?"
"Yes," said the translator. "To you, this is New Home, and
together
we have community. You will help us if we need it, as you helped the
others in the scarab that crashed?"
"Life helps life," said Z'eth. "We will do what we can."
"Our situation here is not easy." The image of the ambassador
seemed to shrink a bit. "There are those with whom we disagree about
our rights to this world, and consequently yours. They might attempt to
cut off our supply routes from the other worlds. We may be forced to
ask for a great deal of assistance in maintaining ourselves here."
Hope and fear burned together inside D'seun. There was clear
acknowledgment that this was New Home. That would relax many of the
ambassadors at his back. But there were words in this delectation that
would raise the questions he needed openly debated. Here was the first
crack in the New People's shell.
D'seun opened his muzzle to speak, but Z'eth spoke first. "This
is
our world, together. We will of course help you."
Ambassador Helen's image raised its hands again. "Thank you,
Ambassadors all. We will talk more in the future. Hopefully our
engineers can find a way to make this easier."
"I am certain they can." Pride swelled Z'eth. She hadn't heard
it,
then. That was all right. He would make her hear.
"Good-bye, then," said the words beneath Ambassador Helen.
"Good luck in your life."
Z'eth a apparently resisted the urge to trumpet her triumph, but
she
did spread her wings to the assembled ambassadors. "We have them. We
have this world. Clean and clear, it is ours."
"But we still have a problem," said D'seun, deflating humbly.
"Ambassador?" Z'eth shrank to something close to her normal
size.
"The other New People. Their distant family on their other
world."
He swelled and lifted his muzzle, making sure his words touched all the
Law Meet of New Home. "Did you not hear the ambassador? They are
willing to dispute the clear and legitimate claims to this world, when
they have no counterclaims in place. They are insane."
* * *
Vee watched D'seun and the other ambassadors spread their wings
and
rise gracefully into the sky like a dream of golden birds.
"I cannot believe you did that," she whispered harshly to the
command board. "Holy God and Mother Creation, I cannot
believe
you did that!"
I can't believe I let you do that.
Vee looked down at
her
own hands on the command board. Helen Failia once again sat in the
pilot's seat.
"I didn't do anything," said Helen, firmly. "I just made sure we
had
backup in case the C.A.C. tries to force us to do things their way."
"Didn't do anything?" Vee stared at her in complete disbelief.
"You
just got an alien race involved in a pissant bid for revolution that
they can't possibly understand. You called yourself an
ambassador,
for God's sake. Do you know what that means to them? It means you speak
for a whole city, that you have the right to make decisions for an
entire population!"
"I do speak for a whole city," replied Helen.
"Did Michael and Ben know what you were going to say?" asked
Josh
from his position in the back of the cabin. They'd rigged up a
monitoring station in the Discovery so that he wouldn't have to leave
the scarab to keep an eye on the equipment.
"They knew." Helen nodded once. But she did not, Vee noticed,
look
at either of them.
"Did they approve?" inquired Josh.
Helen turned and gave him an icy glare. "That is none of your
business."
"The U.N. could be doing anything," said Vee hoarsely. "They
could
be planning an embargo. They could be sending in soldiers!"
"Maybe." Helen's voice was flat and practical, just like the
expression on her face. "That's their problem."
Vee got slowly to her feet, her hands shaking with rage. Josh
scraped his chair back a little, and she saw his expression urging her
to caution. She didn't care. He didn't get it. None of them got it.
"You idiot!" she rasped at Failia. "You stupid, bloody-minded,
idiot! If we get them involved with this, they may decide the Terrans
are greedy or crazy. Do you know what that means to them?"
"No." Helen regarded her calmly. "And neither do you. Sit down,
Dr.
Hatch."
"And remember who I'm talking to?" shot back Vee. She swept out
her
hand. "How could I forget? I'm talking to a woman who is willing to get
an entire alien race involved in her stupid little pissing games!"
Helen's face flushed a dark purple, even though her voice
remained
soft and calm. Her gnarled hands clenched the seat's arms.
"Dr. Hatch, thank you for your help in facilitating
communication
with the People. I think, however, you had better be aboard the shuttle
which will be returning your colleagues to Earth."
Josh laid a hand on Vee's shoulder. He opened his mouth to start
to
say something.
"No, Josh," said Vee, coldly. "I think you'd better distance
yourself from me." She met Dr. Failia's gaze without blinking. "I think
I'm a very bad person to be near right now."
But if you think I'm going to let this
happen, Dr. Failia,
think
again. Think hard.
They held their ground, staring each other down. There was no
way
for her to win here, Vee knew, and her only exit options lacked
dignity. But a display of petulant
vulnerability now might be
beneficial later on.
God Almighty, Vee you have been doing
this for too long.
"They shipped all the dissenters out of Bradbury too." She
whirled
around and stormed down the central corridor and into her cabin. The
door swished shut behind her. She wished it would slam.
Vee dropped onto the edge of her couch and pressed her fingers
against her temples. Think, think.
This has to handled. You can't
let them do this to T'sha. To the world. To everything. A sad
realization came over her. Nobody
even asked about T'sha. We don't
know what's happening to her.
She stayed like that until she heard the door swish open again.
She
unfolded herself. Josh stepped over the threshold and let the door
close behind him.
"How's life outside?" she asked lightly.
He sat on the edge of the couch facing her. "Helen's calling up
to
the base to say mission accomplished. Adrian is going a little nuts
checking and rechecking the soundness of the scarab." He glanced at the
door. "I think he really does not want to be here."
Vee laughed, once. "That makes two of us." She looked down at
her
fingertips. "What are you going to do?"
Josh sighed and looked around the cabin, a little bleak, a
little
annoyed. Vee sympathized. This was a lousy place to be having this
discussion. Neither one of them could stand up straight. The
crash-couches weren't comfortable to sit up in. Her shoulders ached and
she bet his did too, and who knew when Helen was going to come walking
through the door to see what they were conspiring about. The whole
situation stank.
"You know what's the worst?" Josh asked suddenly, as if reading
her
thoughts. Vee shook her head. "That I can't win. If I go home, I'm
turning my back on what might be the most important thing that's ever
happened to humanity. On the other hand, if the Venerans start
anything, you know the propaganda machine on Mother Earth's going to
paint Venera as a bunch of mindless Fullerite rebels. So, if I stay,
it'll look like I'd rather be with traitors and aliens than my friends
and family." He glanced at Vee and shook his head again. "It'll look
like I'm a traitor."
"I know," she said. "It's pretty much a disaster." She reached
up
and pulled her veil off, picking out the pins and dropping them into
her lap. "Maybe the smart thing is to leave it to the disaster makers."
Josh's mouth quirked up. "You don't mean that."
She shrugged. "Not really." She wound the scarf through her
fingers.
It was real silk, a blazing paisley pattern. Amber, her
next-to-youngest sister had bought it for her, for some birthday or the
other. "What's going on here, it's stupid. If I can stop it, I have to."
"Because it's stupid?" he said quizzically. "Not because it's
right,
or wrong, but because it's stupid?"
He looked incredulous, and she supposed she couldn't blame him.
It
sounded hard, even to her. She searched herself for an explanation.
"You know why I do my act? My Vee-the-Temperamental-Artiste act?"
"I have a few ideas." Josh leaned back on both hands. "Most of
them
have to do with getting attention."
Vee waved his words away with the end of her scarf. "When I hit
college, the beauty fads had cycled back around to tall, skinny, and
pale." She spread her arms wide. "Ta-daa. Suddenly, and for the first
time in my life, I was it. I was the ideal. As a result, I had people
sidling up to me and saying"— Vee leaned forward and gave an imaginary
person a confidential nudge—" 'My dear, wherever did you get yourself
done?' I'd say I'd never been 'done.' This"—she gestured at her
torso—"was just me. They'd look smug or sour, and not one of them would
believe me. So"—she shrugged—"I started telling this long story about
this bod shaper in the Republic of Manhattan and how much physical
therapy I had to go through after he added ten centimeters to my
height, and how he'd died last year in a boating accident, and I was
just devastated because what if I needed to get short again…" She
dropped her voice back to normal. "Nobody with a brain believed me for
a second, but the ones without a brain…" She tightened her hands around
the scarf. "Right and wrong can be difficult, but stupidity is easy to
spot, and this situation is brimming with stupidity."
The corner of Josh's mouth twitched. "Must be a nice view from
up
there."
"Maybe." Vee looked at the door. It remained closed. "Will you
help
anyway?"
Josh dropped his gaze. A dozen different kinds of indecision
played
across his face, one after another. Did he have family on Earth? Vee
wondered. She didn't know. She'd never asked. She'd accepted the
appearance of a bachelor researcher, without ties to bind or to
anchor. The realization hit Vee hard. She'd become so used to being
judged by her surface appearance, she'd somewhere started doing the
same with other people.
And here was the one person of unquestioned substance in this
whole gigantic mess, and he might be about to slide through her
fingers.
Josh sighed, interrupting her thoughts. "I will help. I think we'd
better start by talking to Michael Lum. He's the steadiest member of
the governing board, and has the fewest political interests."
Gratitude rushed through Vee. "Thank you," she breathed.
Josh studied her, looking for what she had not said. Maybe he
found
it. She hoped he did. She hoped there'd be a chance to say it later.
"You're welcome." His smile was small, but it reached his eyes. "What
do we do now?"
Vee considered. Much to her relief, ideas sparked quickly to
life.
"You need to go out there and make obeisance. Make sure she knows
you're still on her side so you can keep working on the mobile com
drone. We may need to be able to talk to the people without
interference." She gave him a wry grin. "Nobody's got you down as a
troublemaker yet. You'll be able to work the system more easily than I
can."
"All right." Josh uncrossed his legs. "While I'm working behind
the
scenes, what are you going to do?"
Vee grinned at him. "Make trouble."
* * *
"Ambassador Helen has with her own words condemned the New
People's
distant family as insane." D'seun flew with the Law Meet over the New
People's transports and his words were heavy with assurance. "They
would hold back the spread of life if they could. Do we permit New Home
to grow in the presence of this threat? Do we refuse to do our best to
help this life with which we now share our new world?"
This life
which cannot survive without its distant family, unless they turn to
us, and then we will have the control we need. Yes, all could still be
made right.
"Do we know that this is the best?" countered bloated K'ptai,
overflying him without regard to rank. D'seun might be younger, but he
had been an ambassador longer than she. "Our understanding is still
incomplete."
"Helen is an ambassador." Z'eth steered her path between D'seun
and K'ptai. "We must agree that her words are more accurate
than any engineer's could be."
"Ambassadors, Ambassadors." P'eath lifted herself up until it
seemed
as if she would touch the clouds. "We are not children playing about
the edges of our village. These are not appropriate questions for the
open air. We must return to our debate chamber, crude as it is, and
make proper consideration of all matters there. Our haste is unseemly.
We have not examined all the evidence." But D'seun did not miss the way
she glanced up at Z'eth as she spoke, almost as if she were seeking
permission to be reasonable.
"There is one question we might think on as we return, however,"
said D'seun softly, lifting himself up so they would all feel his
words. "The New People require raw material from the world they call
Earth
to maintain themselves. We have many records of this fact. The distant
family is threatening to withhold this. Do we deny our neighbors access
to the raw materials they need to survive and spread their own life
because an insane family stands in their way?"
Silence spread across the wind. D'seun flapped his wings, taking
himself outside the quieting circle of ambassadors and saw what he
expected. They all looked to Z'eth. Could they all owe Z'eth? Had she
brought every vote with her? And she had promised her vote to him.
If that was true, it was done. Even if T'sha returned this
minute,
she could not ruin what he grew here. The New People would be
contained or destroyed. The health of New Home was assured.
D'seun swelled. All was finally well.
* * *
Helen watched the People filter into their dirigibles and
depart.
She felt empty, as if somehow drained of purpose.
Not surprising, I suppose.
I just gave the world away.
She
brushed her hair back behind her ears and tried not to hear Vee's
accusations ringing in her ears.
The radio crackled to life. "Scarab Ten, this is Venera Base,"
came
Tori's voice.
Helen leaned forward and touched the Reply key. "This is Scarab
Ten.
Go ahead, Venera."
"I'm glad we got you, Dr. Failia. There's a message here
incoming
from Earth, and they won't talk to anyone else on the governing board."
Won't talk to anyone else? Is it
Su? "Can you send it
down?"
"It'll be audio only, but yes, I can."
Helen pushed herself up a little straighter in the chair on pure
reflex. "Okay, Tori, put it through."
"Everything okay up here, Dr. Failia?" Adrian's head poked
around
the corner from the analysis nook.
"Fine." She picked a coffee cup up out of its holder and stared
at
the dregs in the bottom. "It's just the C.A.C. calling to tell me I'm
in contempt, I'm sure."
Or to find
out what I think I'm doing, at
the very least. She tried to remember whether the cup was hers
or
not, and couldn't. She put it back.
"Helen?" said the voice from the intercom. "This is Su. I have
Secretary Kent with me. You've raised a great deal of concern with
your… abrupt disconnection from the committee meeting."
I'm sorry to have to drag you into
this Su. "Good
afternoon, Madame Secretary Su."
Venus spread out in front of her. Beta Regio lifted itself out
of
the ragged plain. The plateau was the color of ashy coals in the
twilight, but with bright ribbons of lava lacing its side from the
volcano that forced itself up from the tableland's edge. It steamed and
smoked in the wavering air and would continue to for centuries to come.
Unless, of course, the People wanted to do something else to it.
Could they stop a volcano? They could travel instantly across
light-years, and they were talking about transforming an entire world.
What was one volcano compared to all that?
"Dr. Failia," came Secretary Kent's voice. "I'm not going to turn
this conversation into a total farce by informing you that you've been
charged with contempt of a governmental committee."
I'm so glad.
"What I am going to tell you is that in accordance with the
articles
of incorporation for Venera Base, you
are being
removed as head of the governing board."
"By whom, Madame Secretary?" asked Helen.
The time delay dragged out. Helen watched the smoke of the
burning
mountain. She remembered her first glimpse of the volcano. She'd been
dropped down with Gregory Schoma in a very crude version of what would
become a scarab. Theirs was more like a cross between a turtle and the
original lunar rover. It was cramped as hell, they were strapped in to
the point of suffocation, and despite the shielding, despite the
scrubbers, despite everything, the cabin still smelled strongly of
rotten eggs.
Helen hadn't cared. No one had ever been below the cloud layer
before. Oh, they'd sent some probes down, but never a person. They were
first, and they'd see… they'd see…
Then had come that moment when the blanket of clouds had parted
and
she looked down and saw what they'd been guessing at and arguing over
for literally centuries. She saw the mountain lifting above the rugged
tableland with lava running freely down its charcoal slope.
"It's alive!" she had shouted to Greg, delight making her
foolish.
"It's alive!"
"You can help keep this process as smooth and open as
possible,"
Su
was saying
. Did they give you a
script to read from, Su? This
doesn't sound like you. "We will need to consult closely with
your
people about their experiences and the data they've gathered thus far
on the aliens."
"No," said Helen.
Alive. Almost no one seemed to understand what that meant. This
world still had a living heart. It wasn't broken, like the Moon, or
burned out, like Mars. It had fire, it had air, it had earth. There was
even water, if only just a little in the heart of the clouds. It had
all the ancient elements, the only world that did, aside from the home
world herself. It was Earth's neglected twin, but because they
couldn't mine it or build on it, no one cared.
"I beg your pardon?" came Secretary Kent's astonished reply.
"Your people will not be consulting with my people. Your people
will
not be allowed to land."
No one cared how beautiful this world was, how rich and
vibrant,
how much they could learn about the origins of their own home from this
mysterious and fiery place. No one at all cared what she might have to
offer.
Except the people in Venera, and now, the People.
"Helen. Be very sure you understand what's going on here." Su
again, sounding much more like herself. "You are not being given a
choice. The
Golden Willow
will be leaving in two days. It has
a complement of C.A.C. diplomats and support staff, as well as a full
company of peacekeepers to make sure that this transition goes smoothly
and to advise in case the aliens become overtly threatening." Su
paused to let that sink in. "If you try to break your charter, all
flights to Venus will be halted. There will be no transport of goods or
people between Venera and Earth. All satellite support will be shut
down. You will not be able to speak to any of the other worlds. You
will be completely cut off." She spoke the last words slowly, making
sure Helen heard each and every one.
Su was trying hard. She was a good friend, and she genuinely
cared.
A sort of colonial mother hen was Yan Su.
"It doesn't matter, Su," sighed Helen. "This little call is just
for
show and we both know it. The Secretaries and the committee are going
to
do what they are going to do, and so am I." She shut the connection.
Take good care of my world,
she thought toward the
vanished
aliens.
You're all we have now.
She got to her feet. She didn't want to have to shout at Adrian, but
they needed to get back in
the air. There was still Venera to consider, after all, and looked like
Venera was going to be put under siege.
Contents -
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Chapter Seventeen
Michael glanced at the clock on the livingroom view screen.
4:05
a.m. Not a time anybody should have to know about. There should be a
rule that everybody was allowed to sleep through four in the morning.
Because when you were awake at four in the morning, you felt like the
last person alive in the world. In any of the worlds.
He'd kissed the kids good night hours ago, running through the
rituals of tooth care and storytelling on autopilot and hating himself
for it. Even Jolynn had gone to bed at last, not saying anything when
he didn't join her. He'd just lie there, staring at the ceiling, all
his thoughts running circles. They both knew it. They'd been there
before, although not quite under these circumstances.
In four hours, Helen would be taking off from the surface to
come
back home. In less than that, every single person aboard Venera would
have heard what happened between her and Secretary-General Kent. Half
of them already knew before they'd gone to bed. It was the only subject
being talked about in the Mall, in the labs, up and down the
staircases, and along the halls.
She'd come back tomorrow, and then what?
The lights would come up to full morning, and he'd still have
Bowerman and Cleary trying to get into the base system and calling him
a hypocrite. He still wouldn't know who killed Derek and Kevin. He
didn't even know who sent that picture that Helen had decided was a
direct attack against her and Venera.
Or rather, he might know. He just didn't want to look.
What if it were Ben? Without Ben's urging, she might give up his
whole revolutionary idea. Maybe she was just grasping at the straws he
held out. Without him, Michael could talk her out of this.
But he'd have to do it quickly. He'd have to have the evidence
in
hand when Helen got off the shuttle. He couldn't give anybody time to
think.
Which meant he'd have to open Schoma's com files.
Well, maybe he'd nursed this particular secret long enough, he
was
expecting everybody else to take responsibility for their actions in
this farce; he had to be ready to take on his.
Once he'd shown Helen what a mess they were really in, they could
call Yan Su in on their side and hash out a compromise with the U.N.
Then he could find out who had taken Derek and Kevin's lives, and
everything could get back to the way it was supposed to be. Well,
mostly. They'd still have the aliens to deal with, but at least the
human order would be restored.
Right then, alone, in the silence and the darkness, the human
order
was all Michael cared about.
* * *
D'seun had never seen an experiment house as crowded is Tr'es
had
managed to make hers. Yards of encapsulated folding racks made a stiff
net strung wall to wall and floor to ceiling.
The net left no room even for one person to stretch his or her
wings. Tr'es climbed clumsily from rack to rack with her recorder
bobbing through the air behind her. The racks were full of specimen
spheres and microcosms that held the raw materials from both the New
People they had acquired. Most of them, D'seun saw, were solutions of
various colors—red, blue, yellow, gray, even a deep greenish purple.
There was a skull, recognizable mainly by its eye sockets. Tr'es's
tools
had separated it neatly into plates, exposing the wrinkled gray matter
underneath. It was remarkably compact. Tr'es had told him it was the
major nervous center. The New People, it seemed, thought with only part
of their bodies.
"Good luck, Ambassador," said Tr'es, climbing over the nearest
rack, carefully not touching the spheres encasing the raw materials,
D'seun noticed. "How can I help you?"
D'seun held onto the threshold with one hand to keep himself in
place. "Good luck, Tr'es. Your work is going well?"
Pride swelled the engineer up until D'seun thought she would
burst.
"There is such a wealth of material here, Ambassador. We lost next to
nothing this time, because we had appropriate stasis containers and
microcosms ready to hold the materials." She spread her crest out. The
individual tendrils brushed the racks surrounding her. "It is a vision
of an entirely different way of arranging and spreading life. But"—she
went on excitedly before he could speak—"there are some shocking
familiarities on the molecular level. This may be confirmation that
life is patterned, not random. That the life we see is as it is because
this is
the working template…"
D'seun clacked his teeth at her enthusiasm. "Engineer, while I
sympathize with your eagerness to reshape our notions of the nature of
the universe"—she shrank in on herself, abashed— "are you aware of the
nature of the debate happening in the Law Meet?"
Her crest ruffled. "I had heard, Ambassador."
D'seun dropped himself directly into her line of sight. "It is
becoming increasingly likely that the distant family of the New People
will be declared insane. We need to know if you have found anything in
terms of a molecular solution, should we need to separate out their raw
materials."
Tr'es stilled and shrank. "Insane?"
D'seun dipped his muzzle. "One family of them may be."
"A deep shame that they let this happen to themselves." Her
words
barely reached him. "They are so elegant, so complex."
"Perhaps because of their complexity, they were unable to
prevent
this tragedy," suggested D'seun. The words felt good as he said them.
After all, how much damage had the People themselves done because they
didn't understand the true complexity of Home? But New Home was a
simple world. They would be able to control what they did here. No more
cities would die under their hands.
Tr'es's gaze drifted from specimen to specimen. "There are
several
possibilities," she said slowly. "Like us, they actually live in
symbiosis with all manner of monocellulars. There is a particular one…"
She clambered through the racks, climbing over and under them without
regard to orientation.
We have to get this child more room,
thought D'seun
idly.
Surely
we are not that pressed for resources.
She stopped by a specimen microcosm full of a hazy gray solution. "I
found it in some of the orifice membranes. It seemed to be doing no
harm, but when I cultured it in some issue and bone samples, it seemed
willing to feed on whatever it found, very like a wild yeast. I think
it maintains a balance in the New Person's body. But that balance can
be tipped, by, say, increasing its concentration in the body or
possibly
a chemical trigger that would turn the benign strain virulent." She
paused again, studying her brew. "It uses the chemicals trigger method
naturally, so that might be the course to follow."
"Could you pursue that line of research?" asked D'seun, swelling
slightly. "If we need it, we will need it soon." He gazed
around her ordered chaos. "I will see you are granted help and more
space."
"Thank you, Ambassador." There was gratitude in her words, but
still
she deflated where she clung. "Are they really insane, Ambassador?"
"Some of them are," he said, kindly. He could tell her more
later, if
that became necessary. "Only some. As are some of us."
"Then it will be a kindness to the rest if we do this." One of her
forehands hovered over the specimen sphere.
D'seun was tempted to clack his teeth at her piety, but he did
not.
Even after all she had seen, Tr'es still believed that life truly did
help life, on all levels and in all ways. It was one of the qualities
that made a good research engineer. If she needed to justify what she
was about to help do to the New People in order to work well and
quickly, he would willingly help her.
"A true kindness, because the insane family is threatening to cut
the sane off from the resources they need to live." That startled her.
She had not heard this part. She stared at him, horrified. D'seun
dipped his muzzle. "It's true. You'd best get to work, Engineer."
"Yes, Ambassador." She started speaking in a command language
so
specialized, D'seun understood only one word in three. A number of
tools detached themselves from the caretakers inside the crystalline
racks and began creeping toward the gray-filled microcosm.
D'seun left her to her work.
* * *
New Home's world portal had no securitors, no recorders, no
gates.
But it had no privacy either. The entire base knew when it was in use
and exactly who was going through. Br'sei had spent the past dodec-hour
engineering a need for fresh monocellular templates, because there
were still some mutations around Living Highland 98 that he didn't like
the look of and he did not want them to work their way up the chain
when there was a chain for them to work their way up, of course.
He had not asked Ambassador D'seun for permission to return to
Home. He had asked Ambassador K'ptai instead while she was on the way
to the grand debate D'seun had called. She had quickly granted his
request and vanished into the new debating chamber that his people had
grown for them.
For now we have ambassadors again,
and we must do nothing
without their official notice, thought Br'sei as he waited in
the
center of the portal for its light to reach for him.
Oh yes, we
all have a voice, and we all have a vote, but what does it mean, unless
those who overfly us all approve?
They were bleak, cynical thoughts, but he did not even try to
disperse them as the portal's light enfolded him and carried him back
to Home.
T'sha had been an engineer. T'sha saw the patterns of life.
T'sha
would not let this happen without a hearing.
T'sha did not owe D'seun her future.
Br'sei rose from the light into the vast metal cage of struts
and
supports that held the World Portals of Home. The technicians
fluttered and fussed about drain of generators and danger to delicate
connections. Br'sei apologized to them all and flew out of there at the
lowest possible height to show his shame at having put them through any
trouble. It was quicker than trying to assert his rank, and the whole
sky knew he'd had enough practice at humility lately.
Out in the open air, he returned to his proper size and flight
path.
Several public-use kites were moored to the portal cluster's chitinous
outer frame. Br'sei picked the closest and settled himself onto its
perches.
"Take me to Ca'aed," he said in the kite's command language.
"The
flight is urgent."
But the kite hesitated. "Ca'aed is under strict quarantine. I
cannot
take you there."
Br'sei pulled his muzzle back. Of course. Ca'aed was ill. In all
his
turbulent worry and need, he'd almost forgotten why T'sha was no longer
on New Home.
I have flown in a dead world too long.
I've forgotten what
it is
to be part of the greater balance of life.
But nothing had changed. The debate on New Home was forging
ahead,
whether Ca'aed was sick or well.
"Take me as close as you can," Br'sei ordered the kite.
The kite's ligaments trembled, but it was a lawful order and the
kite could not refuse. It unfurled its sails and tails and lifted
itself free of the mooring clamp.
The canopy sped away under them, filling the wind and Br'sei
with
rich life. He felt pleasantly dizzy drinking in the living air, but he
could not make himself relax. He kept watching the colors rushing away
underneath him, looking for gaps in the canopy's growth, or worse, the
telltale grays, browns, and blacks that indicated an untended patch of
disease.
How sick was the world? He was not sure anyone really knew
anymore.
Oh, they made reports and projections, and filled microcosms with
guesses. But no one really knew. D'seun thought he did. But then,
D'seun thought he knew the New People were insane and needed to be
killed. Br'sei might even have believed him if he hadn't seen them for
himself and if he hadn't known how early D'seun had reached that
conclusion.
Br'sei no longer had any doubt that it was D'seun who was
insane.
Could it be proved, though? That was the question. Br'sei owed D'seun
so much…
If D'seun were found insane, then Br'sei owed him nothing. But
if
insanity could not be proved and it was Br'sei who made the accusation,
then D'seun could take him into court, denounce him for malice, and
seek his indenture.
Br'sei had been indentured before. He wore the marks of it. He'd
sworn it would not happen again. Not even for something as important as
this.
I am a coward. Br'sei
shrank in on himself, but he did
not
tell the kite to change direction.
At last, the kite slowed its flight. "This is as far as I may
go,"
it said, furling its wings and banking away.
Br'sei looked to the southwest. Warning beacons floated in a
tidy
net in front of the kite, each barely a thousand yards from the other.
They seemed to be guarding nothing but the busy, healthy canopy,
though. He heard no sounds except for the wind. He tasted the currents,
and they seemed clear. On the horizon sat a single gray smudge, which
he supposed must be Ca'aed.
A warning net this far out?
No one was taking any
chances.
The situation must be very bad.
Br'sei lifted himself off the perches. The kite quivered and
breezed
away before he had even cleared its tendons. Br'sei rattled his wings,
uncertain whether to be amused or worried. Regardless, he flew toward
the warning net and felt his skin begin to prickle from the currents it
sent out.
"Attention," said his headset automatically. "You are
approaching a
quarantined area. Please select an alternate path."
"Quiet," ordered Br'sei. "Find me Ambassador T'sha. Tell her I
am
waiting at the quarantine boundary."
Silence stretched out around him, except for the distant noise
of
the wind through the canopy. No one came, no one went. He was used to
solitude and emptiness but not in a world where he could taste life. It
was eerie.
He strained the wind through his teeth. His engineer's palate
had
lost some of its sensitivity but not too much. He cataloged the flavors
and sensations in his mind.
His headset remained silent. Br'sei searched tastes and scents
for
the rank sweetness of disease and found none. Good, perhaps this was
an overreaction. There had been so much illness that it was better to
be safe, especially if some vectors remained unidentified.
Eventually, the headset spoke. "Good luck, Engineer Br'sei. This
is
speaker Pa'and. Ambassador T'sha cannot answer you now. I offer my
help."
Br'sei beat his wings impatiently, but kept the emotion from his
voice. "I have come from New Home. There is an emergency. I must see
Ambassador T'sha."
Silence for a moment and then, "There is an emergency here too,
Engineer."
"I know." Br'sei dipped his muzzle, although there was no one to
see
except the warning beacons. "I am an engineer. Perhaps I can help."
Silence again. "I thank you for your offer, Engineer Br'sei, but
if
you enter the quarantine, I cannot promise you will be allowed to leave
it."
Br'sei hesitated, fanning his wings uneasily. Well, he would
find
his way back when the time came. Without T'sha, D'seun would have no
opposing voice on New Home. It would become his world.
"I will come in. I may be able to help."
"I would thank you for your help," answered Speaker Pa'and. "I
have
sent the entry command to the quarantine net."
While Br'sei watched, four of the beacons faded from green to
brown.
He darted through the gap. On the other side, he took his bearings on
the gray smudge on the horizon and beat his wings until he found a
soaring wind to carry him forward on its back.
Br'sei had been to Ca'aed many times. As an apprentice, he had
been
required to study in each of the twenty-four ancients, where life had
grown layer upon layer for more centuries than anyone could accurately
count. While he explored the depth and breadth of its body, he had
talked to the city. He'd found a kind of openness in Ca'aed that was
sometimes lacking in the other truly old cities. There had been
contentment there, beyond duty and pride, and kindness. He'd briefly
considered asking for adoption, but his own birth city needed free
citizens so badly that he never had.
The horizon distortion began to clear, and Ca'aed came into
focus.
Something was wrong, though, and Br'sei couldn't quite make it out. He
strained his eyes. He saw the gold shadows of the citizens flying about
their business. He saw the wake villages, but why did they look like
they were being towed by their people?
What am I seeing? Br'sei
angled his wings to find more
speed in the wind.
Voices touched him. The faint voices of people called to each
other
through the air. Between them came the strong voices of the city,
directing, arguing, reassuring. Under it all, Br'sei heard pain. Pain
restrained with great strength, but it was there.
At last, his eyes resolved portions of the panorama in front of
him,
but for a long, agonizing moment, his soul refused to believe his eyes.
He saw a gleaming white bone, as broad as his own torso, laid
bare
to the wind and a cluster of people layering it over with something
pink and translucent.
He saw six people rise from the city with a quarantine net held
between them. Inside the net hung something misshapen and patched with
gray.
He saw that what surrounded Ca'aed were not its wake villages.
Those hung in the distance, like children afraid to come too close.
These were great segments of coral wall, tangles of muscle, tendon and
ligament, sections of skin and flesh gone colorless with fungal tumors,
air sacs, intestines, veins, even a heart. One of the city's huge,
precious hearts hung, blackened and distorted, in a quarantine blanket
with a flock of tools inside the blanket, and a flock of engineers
outside.
They're cutting the city. Life and
breath, they're
cutting the
city. Horror drew his bones together.
The delicate perfume of disease touched him, and it was all
Br'sei
could do to keep going.
As he drew near the very edges of the furious activity, a
female
flew toward him. For a moment, Br'sei thought it was Ambassador
T'sha. But as she reached him, he saw she was older than the
ambassador, although they shared a coloring of crest and skin. She and
T'sha were birth family though, that much was clear.
"Good luck, Engineer Br'sei." She raised her hands in greeting.
"Good luck, Speaker Pa'and," replied Br'sei, reading her tattoos.
They touched hands, but Br'sei could not keep his gaze focused
on
her. It kept skittering over her back to the surgery, the desperate
butchery, of Ca'aed.
"I didn't know," he murmured, shrinking in around his apology.
The speaker just dipped her muzzle. "How could you, Engineer?
But
perhaps you see now why the ambassador cannot speak with you."
Br'sei lifted his muzzle. Sounds and scents filled him— strained
voices, blood, rot, pain, the sounds of knives in flesh and saws in
bone. He could not escape it or turn away.
I should leave, or I should help.
Ca'aed was one of
the
first cities, an ancient life, a good soul with irreplaceable memories
and knowledge locked inside it. He should not be scheming to take away
its ambassador at the time she was most needed.
Even knowing that, he spoke. "Let me see the ambassador, Speaker
Pa'and. I swear to you, this is not a small thing. It affects the
entire future of New Home and it needs her voice. Our future, our hope,
Ca'aed's hope, needs her voice."
Speaker Pa'and pulled back. She fanned her wings to rise a
little
above him. Br'sei worked to hold his bones still.
She will refuse. She will not
believe me. Tension sang
through Br'sei's soul. I will have
to go back alone.
"She is consulting with some of the other speakers and the
archivers," said Pa'and. "I will take you to her."
"Thank you," replied Br'sei fervently.
Pa'and gave him no answer. She just turned on her wingtip and
led
him a long a curving path around and over the edge of the ruined city.
People dived in and out of its body, calling to one another. Br'sei saw
engineers, harvesters, and conservators, and dozens of others whose
tattoos he could not make out, all borne up by hard purpose and fear as
much as by the wind underneath them.
They do feel the death. They will
not say the word to
themselves, but they feel it. Br'sei kept his muzzle closed and
followed the speaker.
Around a bulbous outcropping in Ca'aed's wall, Br'sei finally
saw
T'sha. She hung swollen between the city and three males, as if she
sought to protect Ca'aed from their approach.
"We cannot promise them any of our people until all the vectors
for
this cancer have been analyzed," T'sha was saying. "We can promise them
full and free use of any knowledge their people discover, and surely
there are some futures they'd be interested in."
One of the males deflated. Br'sei thought he might be a brother,
for
he shared his colors with both T'sha and Pa'and. "We've spread the
offer of knowledge too thin, Ambassador. It's losing its value. We are
going to have to offer people or, at the very least, skills."
Frustration ruffled T'sha's crest. She turned toward the male
speaker. "What volunteers have we…" The sentence died away as she saw
Pa'and and she saw Br'sei.
"Your pardon," said T'sha to her advisers. She rose above them
and
flew to meet the new arrivals. "Engineer Br'sei, what are you doing
here?"
No words came. What was he doing here? What had driven him to
the
heart of this disaster? For a moment he honestly couldn't remember.
"A moment please, Speaker?" said T'sha to Pa'and. Pa'and dipped
her
muzzle and soared away to the cluster of waiting males.
She was exhausted, Br'sei could see that at a glance. The color
had
run from her skin, leaving her pale and gaunt as if she could not
inflate herself fully anymore. Her words felt brittle against his
muzzle as she spoke.
"Tell me what has happened, Engineer."
Br'sei deflated. "Ambassador D'seun is trying to convince the
New Home Law Meet that the New People should be turned to raw
materials."
He expected an explosion, but it did not come. She just settled
lower in the air as if she had lost all strength and only the wind kept
her from falling. "Openly now? What changed?" She looked up at him,
sorry and tired, and too full of these things to be afraid.
He let himself drop until his eyes were level with hers, and he
told
her how the New People came to the base as the ambassadors arrived and
how they spoke with each other and all seemed well, until D'seun… until
D'seun…
"Until D'seun and his words overrode whatever the New People
actually said." T'sha brushed her wing past her eyes. "Life of my
mother, Br'sei. He'd have them kill a whole world full of people?"
Br'sei dipped his muzzle.
"And they're listening?" A spark rose in her, burned, and
swelled
her skin with its heat. "No one has called this what it is?"
But Br'sei noticed even she did not say the word insanity.
"There are promises involved," he told her. "I haven't tracked them all
yet."
"Ambassador Z'eth." T'sha turned her face to her ruined city.
Its
miasma of scents and voices washed over her.
She stretched her wings to their limits. "Why?" she whispered
to
the wind and the pain and the ruin. "Is it my greed? Did I destroy the
balance of our lives?"
"No." Br'sei pressed closer, making his words strong and heavy
so
she could not mistake them. "Not yours, D'seun's. You have to go back.
You have to tell them what's happening. They'll listen to you. You're—"
"I'm what?" she whirled to face him, and he felt a dare in her
words. "I'm nothing, Br'sei."
"You're an ambassador," he said evenly. "One of their own."
She dipped her muzzle. "An ambassador who tried to do everything
at
once, who tried to compass worlds, and now her own city is dying
because of it."
Br'sei shrank under her words. He couldn't help it. "This
disease
is not your fault."
"Perhaps not." She fanned backwards. She was shrinking again as
the
spark within her faded away. "But it is my responsibility."
Br'sei felt his bones go absolutely still. "You will not come
back?
You will let the New People die?"
"Are they children?" she asked bitterly, dismissively. "Have
they no
ambassadors to speak for them?"
"Yes, they are children." He swooped closer. She could not do
this.
She could not turn away and leave him, leave them, he
corrected himself, alone to face the insane and the greedy. "They do
not understand what their words mean to us. I am sure of it."
T'sha drew closer, until her muzzle touched his. "What changed
your
mind, Br'sei? You were not so sure of them when you and I went to view
their city?"
Br'sei held size and place. "I had not met them then. I had not
seen
them for myself." He pressed his muzzle even more tightly against hers.
"You were an engineer once, Ambassador. You understand how deep the
roots of our instincts sink. You know what it is to feel the balance,
the wonder of new life that is sane and whole. You've brought such life
into the world with your own work. There have been moments when you
just knew that this was good and it would work." Now he
pulled away and spread his wings. "I looked at them when they came
fearlessly to meet us, and I just knew."
For a moment, he had her. He could tell by the shine in her eyes
and
the angle of her wings and the taste of the air near her skin. But in
the next moment she had swollen, and risen, and turned away.
"I will not leave my city."
All the air left Br'sei at a rush. He had lost. They had lost.
He
had tried to bring protection for himself and the New People, and that
had failed.
Now what? he asked himself,
but he already knew the
answer, and it frightened him.
"There is nothing I can say then." He spoke his words to her
wings
and crest. "But, you must forgive me, I am going back. I am going to
warn them. Maybe they can defend themselves, maybe not.
But life helps life, and I must do what I can."
He banked around and flew away. There were still the quarantine
checks with their bother and worry to get through, but he would deal
with that. He had to. He was all the New People had now, all New Home
had. Himself, alone and afraid.
In some small part of his soul, he hoped to feel the touch of
T'sha's voice against his back, but it did not come.
Contents - Prev / Next
Chapter Eighteen
"Scarab Ten approaching the runway. Welcome home, Scarab Ten."
Tori's words reverberated through the P.A. From the internal
speakers, Michael heard a tinny reproduction of the cheers filling the
corridors.
At the sound, his fists clenched until his knuckles turned white.
Michael remembered being selected for the governing board. He
remembered reading the notice on his briefcase screen, leaping up,
yelling like a fool, and dancing Jolynn, who was then six months
pregnant, around the apartment.
Gregory Schoma had retired and moved back to Mother Earth. Helen
and
Ben between them had decided that his replacement should be someone
born on the station. They had noticed the prestige schism growing
between research and nonresearch personnel. That was a problem all
outposts had dealt with since the first permanent settlement in
Antarctica. They had also noticed, however, that a growing number of
the nonresearch personnel were native Venerans.
That did not suit either of their visions for the base. So they
looked for a Veneran who would be acceptable to the various funding
groups and found Michael Lum. Veneran-born, Earth-educated, a talented
administrator, trained by Schoma himself, and married, with a baby on
the way.
"I know," he'd told Jolynn, when they'd collapsed breathless on
the
sofa. "It's partly a face appointment, but that's okay. Just think what
I can do from up there. Think about it! I'll be doing the security and
infrastructure maintenance, but I'll be constantly meeting with Bennet
Godwin. Access to Dr. Personnel himself."
From the beginning, Ben had shown concern for the issues Michael
raised. Ben had listened. Ben had worked with him to improve the base's
on-site education facilities, had worked to get Terran equivalencies
and Terran accreditations for Venera's schools. He'd worked quietly to
see that the details of tech and maintenancer jobs were publicized to
those children so that they could be someone important to the
well-being of their world, rather than just a janitor.
And Grandma Helen had smiled on them all, and it had been good.
And now? Michael's knuckles
ached. Now he had opened
the
files he swore he was never, ever going to use. He had his people
looking at Grace Meyer as a murderer and Ben Godwin as a traitor, and
he didn't know what to do.
He heard the faint rumble of the hangar airlock cycling for the
scarab.
"Airlock open, you're clear for the hangar, Scarab Ten,"
announced
Tori.
Michael had seen Tori take her post at flight control this
morning.
He'd done high school equivalencies with her. She was a cynic. She took
nothing at face value. But at that moment, she had looked like she had
seen a miracle, or at least a really fine illusion.
She wasn't the only one. The whole base had turned out to
welcome
Helen home. Somehow, her trip down to talk to the aliens had traveled
through the rumor mill and become a Historic Meeting of Peoples to
Reach a Great Accord. Everyone had heard about Secretary Kent's
conversation with Helen, along with one version or another of its
unveiled threats.
A copy of the transmission had even shown up in the base's
public
stream. Michael suspected Ben was responsible for that. Ben was
responsible for so many things.
You wait, he thought toward
the man standing tall, and
strangely serene, at his side.
What
will you do when she finds out
you are the traitor?
Michael and Ben stood in the passenger clearing area, watching
on
the wall screen as the hangar doors parted and the scarab, its cermet
hide scarred and pitted from use, rolled in between the silent rows of
machinery—shuttles on the left side, the other scarabs on the right. It
slotted itself neatly into the empty bay.
"Extending ramp," said Tori as a walkway stretched itself
toward
the scarab's airlock. It wasn't all that hot out there, and the
pressure was almost exactly one atmosphere, but the combination of CO2
and hydrogen sulfides was not healthy to breathe for very long.
There followed a series of rumbles and whooshes familiar to
anyone
who had traveled in space, as more airlocks opened. Then, Helen Failia,
looking as straight-backed and determined as ever, marched down the
narrow connector.
"Welcome home, Dr. Failia," announced Tori over the intercom.
Helen looked only a little startled. "Thank you, Tori," she said
in
the general direction of the open intercom. Then Helen faced Michael
and Ben. "A full welcoming committee, gentlemen?"
Ben practically beamed. "It's not just us." He swept a hand
toward
the intercom. Helen's eyebrows rose as she identified the rushing noise
as voices and exclamations.
"Well," she said, sounding slightly pleased. "We'd better not
keep
them waiting."
"Helen." Michael quickly sidestepped into her path. "There's
been a
couple of developments you need to know about, right now."
Helen frowned, but Ben scowled. A dark-red flush crept up his
neck.
"Okay." Helen glanced around. There was a small lounge off the
corner of the clearing area for the occasional passenger who came down
sick and dizzy from the transitions between weightlessness and full
gravity. "Gentlemen…" She gestured for them to follow her.
But movement caught his eye, and Michael glanced back toward
the
connector. Josh Kenyon and Veronica Hatch walked out into flight
control. Veronica caught Michael's eye and
lengthened her stride.
"I'd like to talk with you," she said as she brushed past him.
Then
she set her jaw and headed for the hallway, shouldering her way through
Helen's crowd. Michael looked back again at Josh. Josh simply nodded
and turned away, vanishing back into the scarab for reasons which he
obviously did not feel like sharing.
Deal with that later.
Michael hurried to catch up with
Helen and Ben.
The three of them crowded into the lounge, with its small table,
a
couple of chairs, and an old-fashioned fainting couch. Helen walked to
the back wall, turned around, and folded her arms.
"Well?"
Which first? Michael
thought of the cheering crowds and
the
recording of Helen's conversation with Mother Earth.
"We know who sent the photo to the C.A.C."
Helen took a deep breath and expelled it slowly. Michael
couldn't
help glancing at Ben. He'd gone ghost white, and Michael smiled
inwardly with a kind of grim triumph.
Helen looked from Michael to Ben. He saw the realization come to
her. Her face shifted, the expression turning from impatience, to
shock, to disbelief, and finally to sorrow.
"No, Ben. You didn't."
"I'm sorry," Ben spread his hands. "I… I wanted you to see what
Mother Earth really planned for us. It was the only way."
"Trying to push us into a revolution was an answer?" demanded
Michael. Ben looked regretful, but not at what he'd done. He was only
sorry he'd gotten caught. "I'd hate to hear the question."
Ben just shook his head. His color was returning, and now he was
a
little too pink. "You did hear it. You just weren't listening."
Which didn't even deserve an answer.
Helen collapsed into one of the chairs. She pressed her
forehead
against her palm and huddled in on herself as if she were cold or
frightened. Michael didn't blame her. He'd felt the same way when he
saw the files. Ben wasn't who he'd pretended to be all these years. He
had lied and manipulated them all from the start. This was just the
latest in a long series of deceptions. Michael wasn't even sure it was
the worst.
Michael opened his mouth to tell Helen, but she lifted her head.
"Well, it doesn't really matter," she said.
Michael choked. "What?"
"We need Ben." Helen got to her feet. "It would have come down
to
this sooner or later anyway. I need you both to keep Venera working."
"I'm with you Helen," breathed Ben, all sincere loyalty.
"Holy God!" Michael swung around to face him. "You! She doesn't
even
know who you are!"
Helen stayed still, swaying a little on her feet.
She must
be
exhausted, thought Michael.
Or
just stunned. Maybe that's
good. Let me show her how bad this is. Shock her back to her senses.
"His name is Paul Mabrey," said Michael, looking straight at
Ben.
The pink tinge to his skin faded, then darkened, until he turned red
with what? Shame? Anger? "He followed Fuller through the Bradbury
Rebellion and then disappeared under cover of an alias, leaving the
Paul Mabrey identity as one of the sharpest clip-outs our two U.N.
security drones say they've ever seen." Ben's eyes narrowed, just a
little, and Michael wondered what he was thinking. It didn't matter.
"He used you, Helen. He used you and Venera."
"No." Ben scrubbed his scalp. "Never. Not until the yewners
threatened to take us over. Helen, I just wanted Venera to be free."
For the first time in his entire life, Michael saw Helen look
her
age. She stepped slowly and carefully around the table and stopped when
she reached Michael's side. She laid her hand on his forearm, and he
felt the dryness of her skin, and the deep grooves in her palm.
Grandma Helen looked up at him with her dark eyes. "It doesn't
matter Michael," she told him. "We've already taken the first steps and
we can't turn around." She squeezed his arm, and continued past him
toward the door. Ben flushed even darker
with
triumph.
No, no. I will not let it go like
this. Michael had
control
of his voice again. "First steps?" he demanded of her back. "And we're
standing on, what? Fraud? Murder? Grace Meyer murdered Derek and Kevin
to keep them from tagging her as one of their bosses. Are you going to
say that doesn't matter?" He strode forward until he was beside her, at
least partly in her line of sight. "They were Venerans, Helen. They
were born here. They expected you to look out for them." His hands
flailed helplessly in the air. "Are you going to let them down?"
That stopped her. She stood there, just on the edge of the
door's
sensor range. Michael's heart hammered hard in his chest. She had to
listen to that. She had to.
"Give Grace to the yewners," she said. "They can take her down
to
Mother Earth for prosecution."
"Helen!" Michael cried. No other word would come.
"No, Michael," she said softly. "It's too late. The U.N. wants
to
take the world away from us. We are not going to let them."
She stepped forward. The door swished open. She walked through
the
empty staging area and out into the crowded hallway beyond, with Ben
right at her heels.
There was nothing Michael could do but follow along.
By the time he got to the corridor, the noise was deafening.
People
lined the sides of the staircase three deep. Applause, cheers, and
cries of "Welcome home!" showered down on Helen from all sides.
As Michael and Ben trailed behind, Helen descended the stairs.
She
shook hands, clasped arms, waved, looking for all the world like a
politician or like royalty. She had been both in her time, without the
titles, but with the jobs, and she was milking that experience now for
all it was worth.
Helen turned off the staircase when they reached the Mall. The
entire place was jammed. Parents held their children on their
shoulders. People whistled through their teeth and waved as Helen
worked her way through, laughing and trying to shush the crowd,
shouting she had something to say.
A space cleared in front of them. Someone shoved a table
forward.
Ben saw what was coming and held Helen's hand while she stepped up on a
chair and then up onto the table, turning it into an impromptu dais
with himself and Michael flanking her like an honor guard.
Now, Helen's arm-waving could be seen, and silence spread out
from
around her like a wave. She looked small up there, but pride gave her
stature. Pride and confidence. Helen knew exactly what she was doing,
or at least she thought she did. Michael glanced at the public screens
and there was Helen. Someone had been on the ball and gotten the
cameras going.
"You have already heard that I cut the line on the C.A.C.," said
Helen, loud enough to be heard over the ambient noise of the gathering.
"Now I want you to hear why."
Yes, tell us why, Grandma Helen,
thought Michael as he
felt
his neck muscles tense.
"I did it because they were about to remove from us the one
right we
have always had. The right to conduct our lives, our work, as we see
fit. They intend to tell us what to think about the new race of people
who have come to our world. Our world, not their world. They have not
spoken with these new people. They have not listened to them. But we
have. We know that they are scientists and explorers, just as we are.
They are looking to make new homes for their people, to carry out their
work and live their lives, just like we were when we created Venera
forty years ago. Their world is in crisis, and they want only to
alleviate that crisis."
"This is what we heard. This is what we told the C.A.C. How did
they
respond?" Helen spread her hands as if amazed at the wonder of it all.
"They told us we knew nothing. We didn't count. Our research, our
expertise, our collective experience meant nothing, nothing at all,
because we were not politicians." She stressed the word
politicians
like most people stressed the word
bastard.
"The politicians from Mother Earth, on the other hand, have
determined that our new neighbors are dangerous, despite the fact that
those neighbors have done nothing but watch us until lives were in
danger. Then they intervened and saved all those who could be saved."
"But that doesn't matter. The politicians of Earth have decided
our
neighbors are dangerous, so dangerous they are. Because we do not
agree, because we know that judgments must be based on facts, on the
evidence, not on rumor and fear, the yewners are going to invade our
home, push us aside, and tell our neighbors that they must leave or
die."
She paused for breath. No one moved. No one murmured or stirred.
She
had them. They heard her and they understood. Only some of this had
actually been said out loud by Secretary Kent, but the people around
her accepted Helen's expansions without question.
Cold fear reached inside Michael's mind.
"To make good on this threat, they need Venera. They need our
home,
our equipment, the products of our sweat and our vision. They need our
minds, our experience, and our inspiration. If we deny them Venera, if
we deny them ourselves, they cannot threaten the murder of the only
other intelligent species humanity has ever met."
"I cannot, I will not, order anyone to cooperate with this aim.
I
can only say I will not permit this invasion. I will not permit this
usurpation of everything I have worked for. I will stand alone if I
need to, but I still stand, here." She stabbed her finger toward the
floor. "On this deck which I helped build, in this place that I helped,
that you helped, bring to life. No one is going to take it away from me
and use it for murder, or threat of murder. No one. Ever."
The cheer was deafening. It rang off the walls and the ceiling
and
reverberated through the deck. It surrounded the people who thrust
fists into the air, hugged each other, stomped their feet, clapped
hands, babbled out their agreement. A few, a very few, Michael noticed,
stood stock still, their eyes cast down and their faces pale. A very
few had the good sense to stand in the presence of that speech and be
afraid.
And you? he asked himself
as he watched the storm of
energy and anger pouring out around him.
She's doing it. She's
starting her own little dictatorship right here. Look at it. The first
steps have already been taken. What are you going to do about it?
Michael searched the crowd for familiar faces, looking to see
what
friends and colleagues were doing. A shock of fear ran through him. He
couldn't recognize anybody. They'd been transformed out of all
recognition by their excitement, by Helen.
I can't even see Jolynn.
Where's Jolynn?
Helen held up her hands for silence. It took a moment, but the
crowd
quieted down and turned its attention fully on her again.
"This is not going to be easy. This is not going to be without
risk.
The C.A.C. is sending up the military to take Venera from us. They've
threatened a trade embargo and a complete communications shutdown. If
we're going to resist, we're going to be placing ourselves and our
children in danger."
"I do not want anyone at risk who does not believe in what we
are
doing. I do not want any children at risk at all. The Queen
Isabella enters high orbit tomorrow, and they will take with
them
anyone who wants to leave."
"We only have a few days to perform an evacuation and set our
defense plans into motion. Fortunately, we only need a few days. I want
everyone to consider their lives, their needs, and their beliefs and
then make up their minds. No judgment will be cast on anyone who wants
to leave. If you cannot support us honestly, then you are better off
elsewhere, and we are better off with you elsewhere."
Silence. Some shuffling feet and rustling cloth and a few
coughs,
but mostly profound, attentive silence.
"Finally, let me say this. Our new neighbors have promised to
help
us. We are not alone in what we do. We will never be alone and at
anyone's mercy again."
Another cheer, just as deafening, just as prolonged, and just as
transforming. Michael looked from Helen, who looked grimly satisfied
with her work, to Ben standing beside her. Ben's face was flushed, but
not with anger. This time it was with an unfamiliar excitement, as if
he were looking forward to what was coming next.
Suddenly Michael couldn't stand it anymore. He turned on his
heel
and walked away. He didn't know if Helen or Ben looked after him. He
didn't care. He was barely aware of the touch
of bodies against him as he pushed his way toward the stairs. He had to
get out of the hall, away from the crowd of strangers around Helen.
Where is Jolynn?
The residential corridors were empty. Everyone who hadn't
crammed
into the Mall was in their rooms, he supposed, watching the spectacle.
Stop. Wait. Michael made himself halt. He stood there,
hand
on the wall, feeling the slight padding of the soundproofing under his
fingers, as if it would keep him grounded and remind him where he
really was and what was really going on.
Jolynn is at home. She's with the
kids. Everything is okay.
He took a deep breath. You need to
work out what you're doing. Are
you just following along, or are you going to make your own plans?
Like talking to Veronica Hatch about the
possibility of
useful
action?
He barely knew Dr. Hatch. There were a thousand other people he
would have rather had on the tip of his mind right now. But she was
outside it. She didn't have the visceral connection to Venera that
almost everyone else here did. Even more important, she'd actually
talked to the aliens. She was on the front lines of the whole mess, at
least when it came to information, and information was what he needed
if he were going to explode Helen's inspirational speech.
He redirected his steps, up one level and around one of the
inner
corridor rings until he stood in front of Dr. Hatch's guest quarters.
The door scanned him and opened automatically.
You were expected, he
thought as he went inside.
Dr. Hatch sat cross-legged on her bed, doing something with her
briefcase. She looked up as he came in but did not look surprised.
"That was quick," she said, shutting the briefcase down. "Thank
you
for coming."
Michael nodded and took a seat on the desk chair. "What did you
want to talk about, Dr. Hatch?"
She met his gaze, and he knew what she saw. She saw fear and she
saw
anger. She probably even saw disbelief at the display he had just
witnessed. How had it happened? How had it gotten so bad so fast?
"We need help with a little espionage," said Dr. Hatch.
"We?"
She nodded. "Me and Dr. Kenyon." Dr. Hatch leaned forward,
resting
her elbows on her knees. "We've got to talk to the People, without your
friends on the governing board knowing about it."
"We do?" Michael's eyebrows lifted.
Dr. Hatch frowned, hard. "Look, the People don't know what
they're
getting dragged into. They haven't been told. It sounds like we're
asking them for more rescue help or maybe a technology exchange, not
help dealing with an invasion. We're playing games with them. It is not
fair and it is not right."
"What the aliens think is the least of our problems," said
Michael,
remembering the crowd cheering Helen on. Helen didn't know what was
really going on. She hadn't heard him the first time. That was the only
answer. He could walk in there and show her again what Ben had done,
what Grace had done, and then, and then…
And then what? She'd be alone in the Throne Room, with him, and
what
would he say to her then? How would he stop this, stop her? What if he
said the wrong thing and she decided he was a traitor and should be put
on the ship as well? Would she think to send Jolynn and the boys with
him? Would he have to ask to be allowed to remain with his family?
Michael didn't know if he could stand that.
I can't believe I'm even
thinking like this. Holy God,
what's
happening to us?
"What the aliens think is the least of our problems, is it?" Dr.
Hatch was asking as she raised her own eyebrows, in mockery of his own
expression, Michael suspected. "This is all happening because of the
People. Because the People came here. Because Helen and Ben think they
have the People's support for what they're doing. Without the aliens—"
she waved her hand—"poof! Nothing happens, except the exposure of a
little well-perpetrated fraud."
"So what do you want to tell them?" asked Michael. "Sit back
while
we sort this out?"
"Essentially." Dr. Hatch dropped her hand back onto her knee.
"They
understand politics. If we tell them this is a political debate that
needs to be resolved, I think they'll give us the time."
"This is a little more than a political debate." A little
more?
Who am I trying to kid?
"Let me talk to them," said Dr. Hatch, low and earnest. "Let me
get
them to talk to you. Together we can at least try to pull them out of
the equation. Without them, Failia and Godwin will have to deal with
the U.N., because without the People, Venera cannot make a real stand."
Michael chewed the inside of his lip and turned the idea over in
his
mind. Hatch and Kenyon. Josh he had known for years. He was steady,
quiet, uncomplicated. He did his work and he went home. Dr. Hatch acted
like a fool some days, but she was the one who spotted that the
Discovery was fraudulent.
"It's a good idea," he said. "It's worth a shot. But I've got to
tell you"—he tugged on the end of his pony tail—"I'm not sure how much
I can help you right now. I'm not sure about a whole lot of things."
Veronica nodded, all the bluster and kidding gone from her face.
"Just help me not get thrown out of here. I'll take care of the rest."
Michael searched her eyes for a moment. She meant it. She wanted
to
stay, and he wanted…
What do I want?
He wanted to talk to Helen. He wanted her to see what she was
doing,
to herself, to Venera, to everybody and everything. But he didn't know
if she would hear him anymore or if she ever had. He saw the flush in
her face as she addressed the crowd, as she finally made Venera truly
her own. How could he reach past that? How could he make her hear?
God, God, God, what am I going to do?
Jolynn, Chord, Chase—I
can't risk them. If I can't make her hear, what do I do?
The image of Jolynn's golden-brown eyes flashed in front of his
mind's eye, and he knew. There was one thing that might still reach
Helen, and if it didn't work, well, the Queen Isabella would
be right there.
* * *
The engineers had grown a debating chamber for the Law Meet, but
there had not been time to grow a very big one. The pink-and-cream
shell was barely big enough to hold all the ambassadors who hovered in
the air, finding still pockets between the currents of the distracted
wind.
Eighteen ambassadors had been assigned to New Home. Each of the
twelve specialties was represented, along with six seniors to act as
administrators. D'seun knew only a handful of them, but that did not
matter. He held Z'eth's vote. The rest would follow along with them as
soon as the formal debate was over with.
D'seun hovered near a speaker box improvised from some of
Br'sei's
lacelike cortices and a frame of stiffened ligaments shielded by
nothing more than sail skin. Through the light gaps in the shell's
side, he could see the joyous activity of the newly arrived engineers.
Surveying expeditions were being set to ride the major latitudes. All
the living highlands needed to be located and tested. The winds had to
be gauged and mapped, along with as many of the cross-currents as
possible. The wind seed that had sprouted needed to be analyzed in
terms of growth and evolution so it could be determined what could be
best layered on top of it.
So much work, so many minds and souls needed. So many
complications,
but soon those would be lessened. While all his colleagues listened,
the speaker box pulled the record of Z'eth's last conversation with the
New Person, Ambassador Helen, and repeated it smoothly. Hearing it
again, it sounded no better.
"There are those with whom we disagree about our rights to this
world, and consequently yours." The box used its own soft, unimpressive
voice to repeat Ambassador Helen's words, as it had no reference for
how she really sounded. "They might attempt to cut off our supply
routes from the other worlds. We may be forced to ask for a great deal
of assistance in maintaining ourselves here."
The final words died away and D'seun expanded himself, body and
wings. No matter what promises he was certain of, he
was an
ambassador with a case to present.
But before he could begin, Ambassador T'taik rattled her wings.
She
was from the Calm Northerns, like T'sha, and had the red-and-white
crest and burnished bronze skin to prove it.
"Ambassadors, I ask you to keep in mind two things," T'taik
said.
"The first is that this engineer, Vee, has made no promises or
exchanges for representational power among her people. She is just an
engineer, trained in the use of tools, not of words. This Ambassador
Helen is basing all she knows of us on potentially inaccurate
information. This may have led to a poor choice of words. Second"—she
raised her hands—"T'sha was in a similar position. Despite her title
and power to promise, she is only very new at our work and it may be
she misrepresented herself. Ambiguity can be seen for example—"
D'seun ruffled his crest and broke across her words. "You are
too
hard on our colleague, Ambassador. Her words made the situation
abundantly clear. The New People are obviously composed of several
different families. The ones who are our neighbors and offer us
community are one group, and they are, probably, sane. But these
others, this distant family, are not sane. They are greedy and seek to
stop the spread not only of life, but of their own offshoots."
T'taik swelled at his words. "Ambassador D'seun, you have been
so
ready to condemn someone as greedy or insane during this undertaking,
I wonder at it."
D'seun shifted his weight on the perches. "I have. I have been
overzealous in my desire to claim this world as New Home. I admit this.
If the Meet wishes to poll the members about my fitness to give opinion
on this issue, I will not argue the question."
It was a good strategy, and one that D'seun could be confident
of
winning. The ambassadors debated it briefly and the question was soon
called. The consensus was that D'seun recognized his overzealousness
and would not be denied a voice and vote in future.
"It must be acknowledged, however," said Ambassador D'tran,
"that an
engineer, someone responsible for building and creating, must know what
uses the resources of the world she lives on are being put to. If the
New People have a legitimate claim here, why did she not say so? T'sha
did make that point clear in her previous conversations." T'sha's last
conversation with Engineer Vee had also been played for the Law Meet.
"We do not know for certain that Ambassador T'sha's words were
completely clear," replied T'taik. "The New People are not cortices. We
cannot read their imprinting to be certain the information has been
properly received."
They are listening to her,
D'seun felt his bones
tighten
with worry.
How could they be
listening to this?
"It may be that you are both right."
D'seun turned gratefully to Ambassador Z'eth. A stray breeze
blew
past, carrying the touch of Z'eth's words on it as she spoke.
"It may be that this New Person, Engineer Vee, did not properly
understand what she was being asked and so improperly transmitted and
translated that information for her ambassador. It may also be that she
is in fear of a family of her people that are insane. Which of us could
clearly speak of such a thing to strangers, whose motivations we do not
know?"
Z'eth beat her wings twice, lifting herself up over the center
of
the Meet. "So my first belief is that we need much more time to speak
with Ambassador Helen, Engineer Vee, and any other New People who
present themselves."
No, no, there is no more time!
"However," Z'eth went on, "if the distant family of the New
People
is found to be insane, we need to ask what should be done about them."
"Clearly, they need to be prevented from interfering with the
New
People and New Home," said T'taik. "Their means of transport should be
fairly easy to identify and disable."
T'sha must have sent T'taik to speak in her place. That was the
only
answer. What promise lay there? He had not had time to research this
all as thoroughly as he should have. If they listened to this now…
"I say that's not enough, Ambassador T'taik." Ambassador P'eath,
who, like D'seun, was a refugee from the Southern Roughs, inflated her
body fully. "When has any insane being been
allowed to exist as more than raw materials to build a sane future
from?"
T'taik dipped her muzzle. "That is the way it has been, yes. But
we
have it from Engineer Vee that the New People do not have the same
views of how to deal with insanity."
"They would allow insanity to live? To grow in its own way and
risk
smothering sanity?" P'eath extended her wings. Relief lifted D'seun's
body. "With respect, T'taik, it sounds as if our neighbors may be
slightly insane themselves."
"Is difference insanity?" inquired T'taik mildly, letting her
crest
rise as if in surprise. "If it is, we are in great trouble, because
the Equatorials and the Northerns will be at each other's throats in
the civil courts again."
A general whistle of assent, and some clacking muzzles in
chagrin
and amusement. Disquiet filled the pockets between D'seun's bones. He
looked to Z'eth, who made no move to silence the words. What was she
waiting for? Why was she permitting this to continue? She had
promised! He had agreed to give her everything he had. He should put an
end to this right now, call for a vote and end this display…
The chamber portal opened. All the ambassadors fanned their
wings,
turning themselves to see what this interruption was.
It was Engineer D'han, shrunk so small he was almost cringing
as he
floated through the threshold.
"Ambassador, forgive me, but… Ambassadors," he stammered,
beating
his wings and bobbing his head, looking for a friendly face. "We have a
translation of one of the last transport-to-base transmissions from the
New People…"
Several crests ruffled quizzically. "The New People exchange
patterned radiation, as I have told you," D'seun reminded them. "Most
of it heads off into the vacuum, but some of it passes between their
base and their transports on the surface. We have been monitoring and
translating it since they first began, although it is still slow going
because it is so tangled with their command languages. The practice
greatly improved our speed of communication when we were finally able
to speak to them."
"Thank you, Ambassador." Z'eth dipped her muzzle to him and then
she
dropped herself to D'han's level. "What do they say in this translation
you have made?"
D'han seemed to have pulled himself together. His size
normalized
and his sentences smoothed out. "They say the distant family is insane."
The chamber erupted. Questions and exclamations buffeted D'seun,
but
even so he swelled in triumph. Now the debate was over. Now they could
move.
Z'eth rose up high, spreading her wings and swelling her torso
to
its fullest extent. "Ambassadors! Ambassadors, please!"
Did you know? D'seun gazed
up at Z'eth in awe and
admiration. Did you time this
entrance? She might have. It
was well within her skills to delay a message just a little so it might
be used to bind the Law Meet together whether they were promised to her
or not.
Stillness settled slowly. Z'eth fell back beside D'han, who
looked a
little dazed now. "How is the distant family insane, Engineer? Tell us
exactly."
D'han's gaze darted around the room, amazed to find all the
ambassadors pinning him down with their attention. "The distant family
says they are sending a force to New Home. They will cut the New People
off from the resources of their world and force them to comply with the
wishes of the distant family."
"Well then." Z'eth whistled and lifted her muzzle to the entire
Meet. "It appears the New People have ended our debate for us. We
cannot permit the insane to overrun the sane."
As the whistles of agreement filled the chamber, D'seun's soul
swelled.
At last, he thought. At last. This world will be
ours
and the New People will be ours or they will be raw materials to serve
us and our life.
At last.
Contents - Prev / Next
Chapter Nineteen
Crowds thronged in the corridors outside flight control.
Children
clung to their mother's tunics or their father's arms. Teenagers
slumped against the walls, torn between looking tough and being
uncertain. Whole families stood around and sorted through bags, trying
to make sure everything precious had gotten packed.
Five thousand people—half the base—had decided to stay and sit
out
whatever the U.N. was going to put them through. A whole five thousand,
and Helen was grateful for each person.
But according to the note in her desk that morning, Michael Lum
was
not one of them.
The crowds parted around her, saying hello or just looking
guilty as
they did. Helen still had to crane her neck, searching for a truly
familiar face amid the crowd that suddenly all looked alike to her.
At last she spotted him. He stood patiently with his wife and
their
two children. He had one arm around Jolynn and one hand on his older
son's shoulder. Jolynn rested both of her hands on the shoulders of the
younger boy and looked straight ahead with a kind of grim
determination, as if she could make the line move by sheer willpower.
Helen's name rippled through the crowd as she marched up to
Michael
and his family.
"Good morning, Michael," she said. "Good morning, Jolynn. May I
speak with your husband?"
"Certainly, Dr. Failia." Jolynn shuffled backward a fraction of
an
inch. She and Michael exchanged a look Helen couldn't read, and she
felt an irrational stab of annoyance run through her.
Michael said nothing, just crossed to the other side of the
corridor
a half-step behind Helen. She had to pivot to face him. When she did,
she saw his face was full of the gentle humor that had characterized
him for so many years.
"I take it you got my resignation," he said.
"I did." She nodded once. "I do not accept it."
"Helen." He dropped his gaze to the floor. "You're going to have
to."
A hundred emotions flooded through Helen—sorrow, betrayal,
loneliness, desperation. She had no words, no words at all. He was a
child of Venera. He was everything they had worked for.
"This is your home, Michael." was all she could think to say.
"And that is my family, Helen." He stabbed a finger at Jolynn,
who
had her arms around Chord and Chase. "Whom I love. Now, you've got this
great idea about saving the world from the madness of Earth and that's
fine, but you're doing it by creating more madness."
"I am trying to put an end to—"
"To what?" Michael threw up his hands. "Our stability? Our
safety?
How many lives is this glorious ending worth? We've got two dead
already, Helen. I will not stand around and watch the body count rise."
Helen felt her chest constrict until the pain ran down her arms.
She
could not lift a hand against his words, which struck her like blows.
She could barely think. Michael, Michael who had gone away and returned
to become one of the people she trusted the most in all the worlds. How
could he say this to her? How could he abandon Venera?
"Do you have any idea what's about to happen?" she asked him
coldly.
"They are not just coming to end any independent research, any good
science we might ever do; they are coming to decide what all of us are
going to do with the rest of our lives." She stepped up close to him,
trying to fill his world with her words. He had to understand. He had
to. "And what about the aliens? Do you really think the U.N. is going
to let them build
a new home here? The yewners are coming to rob us and them of the
future, of our future."
"Our future?" Michael's voice cracked sharply on the second
syllable. "Our future based on
what
Murder? Deception?
Wounded pride? Don't you see what you're doing?" He swept out his hand.
"You are demanding that the people of Venera give up their lives, their
freedom, their futures, their families so you can keep your pretty toy.
At the very least, you are going to prison. You might manage to get
killed if the U.N. troops decide to come in shooting, and if you don't
stop this disaster right now, you are taking five thousand people with
you."
"What's happened to you Michael?" Helen searched his face,
looking
for something she could understand. "The only way we're going to lose
is if they divide us. By leaving, you are going to let them walk in
here and take whatever they want to, without understanding what's
really at stake, without caring—"
"You just don't see it anymore, do you Helen?" His hand swept
out,
encompassing the corridor, the crowds, the whole of Venera. "You don't
care what anyone does or who they really are." People were starting to
murmur, starting to stare. Michael didn't seem to notice. He stabbed a
finger at her. "All you care about is your vision and your pride, and
your pride is Venera!"
Helen's fists clenched. This was not happening. Michael could
not be
leaving her. Not when she needed him.
"If you've got a problem with me, you take it up with me. But
right
now—"
"If I have a problem." Michael barked out a short, sharp laugh.
"That's almost funny."
Helen's whole body trembled. "Why are you doing this?"
He met her gaze without hesitation. "Because I will not leave my
family to help you start a war." He shook his head. "You need fanatics
to help you now, Helen. I'm sorry to say you've got them."
Fear sent another spasm of pain through Helen's chest. "I don't
need
fanatics, Michael. I need you."
"No, you don't." He shook his head sadly. "You want me because
I'm
a v-baby and I fit your picture of what Venera ought to be. You've lost
your ability to see what it is."
"No," said Helen softly, firmly. "This is not about me. This is
about Venera's survival." She gripped his arm, as if she could transmit
understanding from her flesh to his. "This is about the U.N. This is
about the People flying through the Venusian clouds, looking for New
Home."
This is about you abandoning your
position and your
responsibilities.
Helen met his gaze and held it. "If you won't fight for your
home,
for your people, maybe you should go." She released him and stepped
back.
Even through her anger, she saw how the years of life and
service
weighed him down, pressing him into the deck and demanding he remain
there. "I was going to stay, Helen, I really was, but I can't." He
stretched both hands out to her, pleading. He was still so young,
really. Younger than she'd been when she first flew through the clouds
of Venus. He'd given his heart to so many things. He wanted to do
right, but with so much to love, how could he see clearly what was most
important?
"I can't stand what's going on here," Michael was saying. "Grace
was
the last straw."
"Grace…" Helen felt the blood drain from her face. "She'll be
punished on Earth."
The look he gave her was pure, stunned disbelief. His hands came
up
as if he meant to strangle the air between them. But his fists closed
on emptiness. "Earth," he breathed. "Mother Earth can't be trusted.
Mother Earth is the villain. But Mother Earth gets to decide how to
punish the woman who killed two of our own." He looked back at Jolynn
and his children and shook all the years of his service off. "Good-bye,
Helen."
Helen just stood there and stared. Michael reached his family
just
as the line began to move again. Michael picked up his bulging satchel.
Jolynn wrapped an arm around his waist, almost as if she meant to pull
him along if he faltered. He put his arm back around her shoulders and
together they and their children walked onto the shuttle.
Helen's balance rocked. Her knees buckled and she had to put one
hand on the wall to steady herself.
"Dr. Failia?" said someone timidly. "Are you all right?"
"Yes, yes." She pulled herself upright. "I'm fine." She turned
away
from the crowds that were working so hard to get away from what was
coming and started down the stairs to the Throne Room.
She did not have the luxury of time to mourn Michael's leaving
right now. No matter what else happened, Venera still needed taking
care of. Venera needed her. Venera could not betray her. She would not
give it away as she'd been forced to give away Venus.
Venera, at least, at last, was hers.
Contents - Prev / Next
Chapter Twenty
T'sha nestled against the central heart of her city. She felt
the
ticking and timing of its valves and sacs underneath her body. Above
her swarmed clouds of flies so thick they blotted out the sight of the
clouds, and she could barely hear the rustle of her own skin under
their triumphant buzzing.
All around her Ca'aed was dying and the flies had come to
celebrate.
She could smell nothing anymore but the scents of the rot. There was
nothing to hear except the flies, and the wordless mewlings and
keenings as the pain became too great for its smaller voices.
"Stop," Ca'aed had said, how many hours ago? T'sha didn't
remember.
Maybe it was only a few minutes since. She didn't know. "There is
nothing to be done. Stop."
They had fought the disease with knives and shears. They had
fought
with monocellulars and antibodies and killer viruses. Its people had
fought hand, wing and heart, and it had not been enough.
Now their city, exhausted and in agony, asked to be left alone.
T'sha had sent all the engineers to the quarantine shells, but
she
herself had descended into the exact center of the city, where she
could touch the deepest part of its ancient, ravaged body.
Let the cancers take me too.
She sent the thought
freely
onto the wind.
Don't leave me here
alone with nothing but my
failure.
"I remember when we grew the first park," said Ca'aed. Its voice
shook. It sounded old.
"Tell me." T'sha nestled closer.
"I was so excited. I had spread out far enough that it was quite
a
flight sometimes for the people to get out to open air. So we were
going to make a place just for gathering, just for dance and beauty in
my heart. I think I drove the engineers to distraction. I insisted on
testing every graft myself for its strength and vivacity." Ca'aed
stopped. "I don't remember their names. The engineers. They were so
patient, and I don't remember them."
"That part of you was probably removed," said T'sha. "It's not
your
fault."
"Ah. Yes."
The city fell quiet for a moment. Under her torso, T'sha felt
one of
the heart sacs collapse, and it did not swell again.
"Tell me about the New People," said Ca'aed. "I want something
different to think about."
T'sha stirred her wings. "They are very different from us," she
began hesitantly. "They do not fly naturally. They spend long stretches
of time doing this thing they call
sleep,
where they lie down
in darkness and are still. At this time, their whole consciousness is
changed from one state to another. It is part of their refreshment
cycle." She paused. "I admit I do not quite understand it."
"It sounds frightening," said Ca'aed.
"It is natural to them," T'sha reminded the city. "They speak of
sleep as if it were another place. They say 'We go to sleep.' I found
it a little easier to think about that way. It made it a journey they
must undergo."
Ca'aed thought about that. "Yes, that is a little easier." The
muscles under T'sha cramped and smoothed, and one of Ca'aed's other
voices gasped. "Tell me how they live on their world," its main voice
asked.
Vee's pictures soared through T'sha's memory. So strange, so
different, but spoken of with such pride and delight. "They live on the
crust of their world where the air is the thickest. It is so cold
there, they have great pools of liquids filling the valleys that they
call lakes and oceans. Vee lives in a city on the
edge of one of these lakes. Their cities stay in one place," she
explained, "and the New People travel to them, as ambassadors do to
the High Law Meet."
A whole world of High Law Meets,
T'sha remembered
thinking.
How grand that must be.
"She says her city is an
ancient place, encompassing revered centers of science and learning.
Its people are great engineers and merchants and have been so for
centuries. She spoke of the lake it sits on and how it sparkles blue
and silver in the sunlight, and how it has a wealth of legends that
belong just to it."
"Then they do love their cities?" asked Ca'aed.
"Yes, very much." T'sha rubbed her muzzle back and forth against
Ca'aed's skin, as she could not dip her muzzle pressed so close to the
city. "They write poems about them and tell each other stories of their
greatness." She paused again, remembering. " 'Come and show me another
city with lifted head singing so proud to be alive, and coarse and
strong and cunning.' Vee told me that was written about her city."
"I like that," said Ca'aed. "And their cities love them?"
"No," said T'sha as gently as possible. "Their cities are not
such
as they can return the love."
"What a great thing it is," murmured Ca'aed. "To be able to love
even that which cannot return your love."
T'sha had not thought of that before, but the idea felt
comfortable
inside her. "Yes, it is a great thing."
"I heard Br'sei when he came."
A cloud, thick with the smell of illness drifted across them.
T'sha
coughed. "I'm sorry, Ca'aed. I did not mean you to."
I thought you
too distracted. I should know better than to underestimate you, even
now.
"Will you abandon the New People?" asked Ca'aed.
T'sha stiffened. "I cannot be with them and with you. You are my
city."
"You cannot choose which life you serve," whispered Ca'aed. Its
heart labored unevenly as it spoke. T'sha lifted herself until her
skin just brushed Ca'aed's skin. She could no longer control her size.
Her body shuddered and wavered to the uneven
rhythms of Ca'aed's last heart.
"I must choose," she said.
Something stank, thick, rank, and choking. She could sense it in
every pore. The flies landed on her wings to taste her flesh, and she
lacked the strength to shake them off.
"Perhaps I am not dying," whispered Ca'aed. "Perhaps I am going
to
sleep."
"Perhaps you are."
Ca'aed's heart spasmed. It jerked twice. Another foul cloud rose
around T'sha, and the heart lay still.
T'sha settled slowly onto the still skin that covered the heart. She
could not move her wings or even her bones. Around her she heard sounds
of collapsing air sacs and loosening muscles.
She heard herself moaning.
But she did not hear Ca'aed. She would never hear Ca'aed again.
Her
mind clutched at the last few words, drawing them deep into her soul.
All the words she would ever have. There would be no more. No more,
ever.
You cannot choose which life you serve.
What a great thing it is, to be able to
love even that which cannot return your love.
T'sha rose from her city's silent heart. She swelled herself, aware
she was exhausted, but no longer caring. She beat her wings until her
body caught the soaring wind and she shot out of the city's body.
She saw no one. She heard nothing. She was aware only of where
she
must go and what she must do. There were vague voices somewhere,
calling and arguing, but they meant nothing. All the meaning was in
Ca'aed's words. Those and her body were all T'sha could call her own
now, and she could not forsake them.
* * *
Vee had thought that seeing the People through a wall screen, in
the
familiar surroundings of Josh's lab, would lessen some of the impact.
She was wrong. They were just as grand, just as golden, and just as
awe-inspiring in their aerial dances.
Well, the camera's working,
she thought.
This was the test flight of the new drone they had dubbed "His
Ambassador's Voice." Vee and Josh stood beside a desk in Josh's lab,
surrounded by dismantled lasers and survey drones. Josh had the
specialized keypad for flying the drone in his hands, and Vee had her
briefcase with its image catalog and updated software open and jacked
into the drone controls. A tangle of cables held them together. It was
probably symbolic of something.
The fly-by drones were already remote controlled. They used the
communication satellite network that ringed Venus to send their signals
back to Venera, so they were natural candidates when Vee and Josh
began to think about a mobile communications device.
The problem had been, as ever, mounting a projection device
that
wouldn't melt or be crushed.
Their reworked drone was a big, blocky confabulation that only
stayed up because it was supported by Venus's atmosphere. Most of the
size was a consequence of the insulation and housing for the projection
laser and the last sheet of Vee's film. The drone didn't fly so much as
lurch, but that was all right. It moved. Now they had to see if it
could speak.
Through the drone's camera they watched a flock of the People's
attendant jellyfish scatter in all directions. A trio of people floated
up to look into the main window, close enough that Vee could see their
tattoos clearly. She spotted the interlocking circles on their wings.
These were all engineers, but she couldn't see Br'sei among them.
"Your turn," said Josh softly.
"Right." Vee licked her lips and pressed the Send key to
execute
the commands she had waiting.
A strip at the bottom of the screen lit up with the message that
was, hopefully, at this moment being displayed on the film right next
to the camera.
Good luck. We would like to see
Ambassador T'sha or
Ambassador
D'seun, please.
One of the People broke away from the others and dived toward
the
base. The other two stared at the drone, each other, and their
vanishing companion.
"Think they got the message?" asked Josh dryly.
"Looks it. Can we hover here?"
"After a fashion. Nothing like them." Josh worked the stick and
the
keyboard for a moment, and the drone slowed its flight. The propulser
readouts that appeared on the desk crept up from green toward yellow.
Josh hit a few more keys and they faded again. The view on the camera
bobbed unsteadily up and down, but it stayed where it was.
"You'll be up for Adrian's job next," remarked Vee.
"You couldn't pay me enough to do Adrian's job." The sourness
in
his voice told Vee that Josh was thinking about Kevin, and the exodus
that was going on over their heads, and whatever might be coming next.
She touched his arm, but he didn't look at her.
Two People rose from the base. As they got closer, Vee was
surprised
to see the Engineer Who Looked Familiar beside the stranger. He carried
a lumpy, mottled gray-green package clutched in his hands.
He did not stop level with the others. He kept going until he was
almost on top of the drone. His muzzle and tattooed wings blocked out
the rest of the view.
Vee sucked on her cheek and typed.
Hello,
Engineer. What is
your name?
The engineer stared at the message and then looked straight at
the
camera lens. He raised both of his forehands, a greeting gesture, Vee
remembered T'sha saying.
The lumpy package the engineer carried turned out to be a knotted
ropelike thing with several objects clinging to it. Without looking
down, he ran his hands over several of the objects, and Vee realized
that most of the time the People couldn't see what their hands were
doing.
What must their hands be like? Are they
more sensitive? Less? Do they have more senses than the five humans
have?
"I think he's about to make a few improvements," remarked Josh.
"Oh good," said Vee. "Always room for improvement." The engineer
plucked something off the rope and spread it on the drone's hull. It
was silver skinned and glistened. It spread out tendrils that gripped
the hull as tree roots would grip a stone.
Josh typed quickly, bringing up status readings that flashed
past on
the deck. Vee couldn't understand half of them, but they all shone
green. Whatever their engineer was doing out there, it wasn't hurting
their experiment.
The engineer pulled a clear disk off his rope and nestled it in
the
center of the tendrils. Then he took what looked like a balloon filled
with pinkish jelly and settled it on the disk. The bag swelled, puffing
up as if being inflated by an invisible pump, until it became a perfect
sphere about the size of Josh's head. When it stopped growing, the
engineer pulled a small white box with a grainy surface that reminded
Vee of unpolished coral and slid it next to the sphere. He backed away
with one stroke of his wings. Words appeared inside the sphere.
Good luck. I am Engineer Br'sei, Is this
hybrid harming your
transport? Is your visual field blocked? This hybrid should function
down to the freezing point of, wait… water. Will that be cold enough?
"Good luck? Good lord," laughed Vee. The thing clinging to the
drone
looked ridiculous. It looked like a child's clay masterpiece
surmounted by a pale-pink crystal ball.
It's probably an incredible
jury-rigging, she thought.
"Everything's still green," reported Josh. He looked at the
conglomeration again. "Doesn't block too much of the camera."
The hybrid is not harming our
transport. The temperature
tolerance is more than adequate. What is its range? Vee typed
out
the new message.
At the moment, the hybrid is
limited to vocal range,
came
the reply. He shifted his weight. Embarrassed? I must ask you to
feel these words, Br'sei went on. Ambassador T'sha is not
here. She is trying to save the life of her city. If she were here, she
would surely tell you that you need to warn your families. D'seun is
trying to get you all declared insane.
"What?" said Vee before she remembered that Br'sei couldn't hear
her. She typed her question.
What?
"The Law Meet has determined that your
distant family is
insane. We are finishing the means to separate their souls from
their raw materials.
"Distant family?" said Josh.
Vee's heart thudded once, hard. "They mean the Terrans."
The words almost choked her. She typed, "You are going to
kill the Terrans? The people on Earth?"
Br'sei dipped his muzzle. An affirmation. They say the
Terrans are insane. The sane and the insane cannot live together.
"Josh," croaked Vee. "I think you'd better go get the governing
board."
But Josh was already gone. Vee typed. Her hands had gone
completely cold.
What are they going to do?
The words spelled themselves out in front of Vee's eyes. A monocellular to be launched through the
portal… A chemical trigger that
would turn a benign monocellular life form in the human body into a
lethal strain… Deaths within hours…
"Holy God and Mother Creation." Vee could barely control her
hands
anymore. She couldn't encompass this. Earth. They were going
to wipe out the human race. They were going to kill everyone.
Everyone.
No, Br'sei, the Terrans are not insane.
They're different.
We disagree, that's all.
Br'sei swelled a little as he studied the words. They did
not
threaten to cut you off from the resources you need to live? We
misunderstood? She thought he might be hopeful.
What is misunderstood is the
reason for it, Br'sei.
"Come
on, come on, you have to understand this!" It is an internal
conflict, nothing more.
Br'sei did not respond. He pulled back, and D'seun swept into the
camera's view followed by a Person Vee did not recognize. D'seun spoke
to Br'sei, swelling his body and flapping his wings as if to shove
Br'sei aside.
Br'sei spoke.
I am asked if I think I am
now an ambassador, read the
screen. I am asked—
D'seun dived at him, beating him away with his wings. Vee saw
his
skin tear open, freeing wisps of vapor. Br'sei fell back under the
attack, shrinking and dropping as he did.
Stop! Stop! Vee typed
frantically. But he did not stop.
He
drove Br'sei backward. His wings smashed against the display bubble,
tearing it open. It flopped sideways, spilling out a pink fog that
dispersed into the clear air.
Vee looked down at the torn bubble and up at the strange members
of
the People. The one who had arrived with D'seun spoke to Br'sei's
companions. One of them vanished.
Vee didn't stand still to watch what happened. She had to tell
somebody. Warn Earth. Who? How? The communications were blocked by
Michael. But Michael had left. Had he thought to turn the blocks off
before he went?
Vee shoved the drone controls aside and began typing so fast and
hard her fingers screamed in protest.
Rosa, Rosa, Rosa, be there, be
there, be there. Vee
grasped
the edges of the desk and leaned over the screen, gasping for breath
around the panic that filled her throat. Would it work? Could she open
a line? What if she couldn't?
She glanced up at the wall screen. Br'sei's friend had returned
with a string of lumps. A tear ran down Vee's cheek.
The desk screen cleared, and Rosa's concerned face looked up at
her.
"What's the matter Vee?"
Vee almost laughed. There was no time. "Rosy, listen to me. I
haven't got any time to explain. There are live aliens on Venus and
they have decided the Terrans are too dangerous to live. They're
launching a virus or something like it through their portal. They're
going to try to kill the Terrans, Rosa. All of them. If we can't stop
them, it's going to be soon." On the other screen, the Person had new
tendrils spread out on the drone's hull and had produced another pink
bag. "Rosa, you have to tell the U.N. They have to figure out a plan.
I'll try to get more information through as soon as I've got it."
The delay ticked by, and the pink bag grew. Her manager's face
went
white, then gray.
"Vee, you don't mean this—"
The new pink bag was a full bubble outside the wall screen low.
The
stranger beside D'seun spoke.
I am sorry you had to
witness that, Engineer Vee. Br'sei
does
not speak for the People. I do. I am Ambassador Z'eth.
Vee bit down hard on her lip. "I mean it Rosy," she whispered,
wiping at the tears on her cheeks. "Call Yan Su. She'll confirm what
I'm telling you about the aliens. Tell her about he virus. I'm doing my
best, but… Please, call my family. Tell them they've got to get off
Earth, go to Luna. Give them my account access, but you and they have
to get out of there. I've got to go." She cut the connection and it
felt like her heart was torn in two.
Ambassador, she typed with
her cold, trembling fingers.
This
is Vee. The people of this world do not want the Terrans dead.
Rosa would not stay on Earth. Rosa would get away. They wouldn't kill
her family. Mother, Father, Gramma, Grampa, Kitty, Lois, Tom, Amber,
Auden. Rosa. Nikki. Everybody.
No, no, no, they would not die. She couldn't let them. She had
to
think of something to say. She had to think of something. They—
You are not an ambassador,
replied Z'eth. You
cannot
say what your people want.
"No, but tell her I can."
Vee jerked around. Helen and Ben hurried
into the room with Josh on their heels.
"Thank God." Vee wiped at her cheeks and stepped away from the
board,
letting Helen take her place. She bumped against Josh, who just laid
his hands on her shoulders. She leaned against his chest, drinking in
his warmth.
Helen's hands shook as she lifted them to the command board.
I am Ambassador Helen, Ambassador Z'eth.
Good Luck. I am asking
you to stop whatever plans you have for the people of Earth. Let us
talk. Let us explain.
Ambassador Z'eth swelled. Ambassador
Helen, there is
nothing
to explain. We have your own words condemning the Terrans as insane.
They seek to cut you off from the source of your life for no reason.
Helen took a deep breath. The trembling in her hands stilled for
a
moment. Ambassador Z'eth, please,
try to understand. We don't
think they're crazy. We think they're wrong, but there's a difference
with us.
I understand that, but it is not
only a question of what you
think, replied Z'eth. This is
now our home too. You promised
this world to us, and we must protect ourselves.
Josh's hands tightened on Vee's shoulders. Vee clenched her
fists.
She had to do something. She couldn't just stand there shaking like a
frightened child. She had to do something.
There was nothing she could do. Nothing at all.
Yes, read Helen's new
message. But not like this.
There are six billion people on Earth, Ambassador. Most of them have
nothing to do with this. Most of them don't want a war. They just want
to go about their business.
Z'eth's crest lifted. Then why
are they permitting this?
Why
has there been no poll?
"How fast can you explain representative democracy," whispered
Vee.
She couldn't help it. Josh just held her close. He understood. Oh,
God, he understood.
Ambassador, surely you do not believe
there is only one
right
way to do things.
Z'eth swelled even further. She was enormous. It looked
as
if she meant to fill the whole world. No
right way can involve
submitting to greed.
"Damn you!" Helen's fist thumped against the desk. She typed.
We are not submitting. Listen,
please, listen. Helen's
whole body was shaking now. Ben shoved a chair behind her, but she did
not sit. Words spilled out of her fingers onto the screen.
Once, our only world was Earth, but
there were too many of
us
living there and we needed too much to support our lives. Earth was
choking on us; it was dying. We moved out to fresh worlds to seek the
space, the minerals, the power that we needed to live and keep our
world of Earth alive.
We spread to our Moon, and to a world we
call Mars, as well
as
this world of Venus. Before we came to these places, there was no life
at all here. We spread our life beyond the confines of our own planet
for survival yes, but also because we found those other worlds
beautiful and we wanted to know all of their
wonders and secrets.
It is true that even after all this time
the colonies like
ours
still need Earth to live. But Earth also needs us. The people of Earth
are trying to stay alive. Without the colonies the world will choke on
itself again.
They fear that because of you they will
lose us. They are
trying
to prevent that. But we need them and they need us. If we took the
colonies from them, they might die. If you take Earth from us, we will
die. You will kill us all. Is that spreading life?
Vee's breath caught in her throat. They'd have to listen to that.
That was their own language. They'd have to understand what.
Ambassador Z'eth glided closer to the screen, filling the world
and
blocking out options.
It is you who do not yet understand. You
will no longer be
forced
to depend on your insane family to survive. This is our world now, and
we will help you and make sure you live.
The implications of Z'eth's words reached inside Vee and squeezed
her heart.
"Jesus God," whispered Josh. His arms trembled even as he pulled
her
closer. "We're going to be another experiment for them. They're going
to
use us…"
Movement in the corner of the screen caught Vee's eye. A
familiar
shape, beating its wings so fast she could barely see its markings, but
she knew its color and its crest.
"T'sha!" Vee broke away from Josh and thrust her hands onto the
keyboard.
T'sha! They're trying to kill
Earth! Her family's names
ran through her mind, blocking out everything else. There's six billion
people down there! They—
The message line went dead.
The screen went blank.
Vee lifted her trembling hands off the keys. "What happened?" she
whispered as she backed slowly away. "What happened!"
Ben came up to Helen's right side and touched a few keys. When he
turned, his face was paper white. "It's the satellites, they're down.
The U.N.'s started their attack."
"NO!" screamed Vee.
Beside her, Helen's mouth opened soundlessly and she clutched
Ben's
arm. In the next moment, Helen Failia slid to the floor.
* * *
While T'sha watched, the message faded from the New People's
display. The tool foundered in the air and began to sink, gathering
momentum as it fell.
D'seun did not move to stop it. Neither did Z'eth. T'sha darted
down
and grasped the cold, clumsy thing without thinking. It burned all her
palms, and she shrieked, but she kept hold of it. Br'sei swooped after
her and grasped one of the thing's extensions, pulling it toward a
construction shelf where it could rest.
"A malfunction, apparently?" said Z'eth overhead.
Her hands stung, but T'sha ignored them. She rose to meet
Z'eth's
gaze.
"Ambassador, did you not see their plea? We cannot do this
thing."
"Why not?" asked Z'eth, her crest lifting as if she were
genuinely
surprised. "We have declared them insane. This world is ours, and we
have every right to protect it from insanity. There is nothing wrong
here, Ambassador."
T'sha stretched out hands and wings to Z'eth, "Please,
Ambassador,
this cannot be done. It is wrong,
wrong."
Z'eth rose over her, her voice sad, but stolid. "I have given my
promise, T'sha. What can you give me to change that? This is too much;
there are too many ties. I cannot just break my words because you wish
things were other than they are."
T'sha shrank. She had nothing, nothing except Ca'aed's last
words,
and Z'eth would not accept those. "You must stop this. You know it is
wrong. D'seun is insane!"
Z'eth's muzzle lifted. "That doesn't matter!"
No, you did not say that. You
could not possibly have said
that.
But D'seun hovered behind Z'eth, swelled to his fullest extent, pride
and triumph filling the world. "How can what is right not matter?"
Z'eth flew so close to T'sha that she could not even see D'seun.
"Because D'seun is also right! We need this world, and we
need it now. Not fifty years from now, not twenty. We are dying T'sha.
Your own city, T'sha, how does it do?"
A moan burst free from her. "Ca'aed is dead."
For a moment they were all silent and still. T'sha's wings folded
over her eyes, and she wished she were dead with her city. She had
failed. She was nothing. The New People would die as Ca'aed had died.
Her wings fell away from her eyes and she looked up at Z'eth
hovering
in front of her.
"I am sorry." Z'eth brushed her muzzle against T'sha's. T'sha could
barely feel it, her skin was so contracted. "But if we do not create
our life here, in just a few years, all the cities will be dead. What
good will sanity and right be then?"
"What can I promise you to change your words? What can you
be seen to accept that is worth the lives of the New People?"
D'seun rose from behind Z'eth, a great cloud lifting up from the
horizon. "Ca'aed is dead, T'sha," he announced, as if he savored the
words. "Your people must be indentured so their children will be
adopted by what cities still live. You have nothing left."
T'sha looked at him and hated what she saw. Greed and insanity
and
the terrible power of both. But he was right. He was right and she
could
not dismiss his words. What did she have to promise Z'eth? Nothing.
Z'eth had given a promise to D'seun, and T'sha had nothing with which
to counter that promise. She had Ca'aed's last words and her own wings
and that was all…
Her own wings. T'sha jerked her muzzle up to stare at Z'eth.
Her own wings. No one had made such a promise in centuries, but
it
was still legal. It could still be made and accepted and it was the
richest offer, the final promise of all.
T'sha swelled to her full size. "My life, Ambassador Z'eth."
"What?" Z'eth pulled her muzzle back.
"My life," T'sha repeated. "I give it to you as promissory. If
you
do not kill the distant family, my life is yours. Not your city's.
Yours."
Z'eth's whole body tensed. "That's a very old-fashioned idea,
Ambassador."
"It's still legal."
Life of my
mother and my father… Oh my
sisters, my brother, forgive me, forgive me. "And it's all I
have
left."
"T'sha." D'seun thrust his muzzle at her. "Why are you doing
this?"
T'sha rounded on him. "Because there is nothing else I can do,
D'seun! No matter what the New People said for themselves, no matter
what you heard, or saw, you wanted them gone. You have blocked me at
every turn, and raw materials and soul are all I have left!" She shrank
in on herself and sank down until her belly touched the thickening air
and she could fall no further. Memories of Ca'aed and all its beauties
filled her. If Z'eth agreed she'd never have a home again, never fly
anywhere without orders. Gone, everything would be gone.
But she had to make this work. The New People were not insane.
Vee
was not insane. "My life, Ambassador Z'eth. You will have a promise
such as no ambassador has had in two hundred years."
Z'eth hesitated. "The teachers do not favor such promises."
T'sha swelled yet again. Every tendon, every pore strained to
the
fullest. "My city is dead. Yours is dying. I can promise nothing to
it. We have only each other."
"No!" cried D'seun, flapping his wings as if he meant to strike
T'sha. "Ambassador Z'eth, I hold your promise. You will follow my vote
about the disposition of the New People."
"The New People on this world," Z'eth told him. "On this world
only,
and you have already argued they are sane." She turned her back on him
and swelled her body until her size matched T'sha's. "If we do this, we
must truly do this. I cannot turn around in a year, or two, or ten and
set you free again. This will be a legal, binding promise. You will be
enslaved to me, and I will use you as such."
T'sha glanced over Z'eth's wing and she saw Br'sei there,
hunched in
and shrunken. His skin was torn. Something had happened, and she could
not ask him what. She had meant to repay him for all he had done to
help her, but if this worked, she would never be able even to make a
promise of her own again. All that she had, all that she was would be
Z'eth's until her soul flew away free, to go to
sleep with
Ca'aed's perhaps.
T'sha dipped her muzzle.
"Done," said Z'eth.
"Ambassador!" shouted D'seun.
"It is done," said Z'eth calmly. "And it is not done." She faced
D'seun. "Do you wish to protest, Ambassador? How many promises do I
hold for you, D'seun? What shall I call in first?"
T'sha swelled, even as she felt her future slide off her skin
like
wisps of cloud. No husbands, no wives, no children of her own.
Nothing left at all, except six billion of the New People who were
free to prove what they truly were.
"It will be worth it," she said to Br'sei, knowing they would be
her
last free words. "It will."
* * *
A voice nibbled at the edge of Helen's hearing and tugged at he
comfortable blanket of darkness. She did not want to hear and she did
not want to wake up. There was nothing to wake up to.
"Helen, come on, Helen, you can't leave it like this, Helen…"
Can't leave it like this? Can't
leave what like this?
She'd
have to wake up to find out. Helen strained for a moment, but,
gradually, her eyelids fluttered open.
At the sight of Ben's frantic face, memory flooded back, the New
People, the threat to Earth, to them all…
"What's—" she croaked.
"It's okay, Helen." Ben smoothed her hand. "You're in the
infirmary.
It's going to be okay."
Another voice. "The New People have given in. They're not going
to
kill Earth." Veronica Hatch, that's who that was. "They sent up a
balloon to tell us so."
Helen coughed. "Get to the shuttles. Tell Michael, tell the
yewners."
She squeezed Ben's hand as if to drain his strength into her.
"Tell them we give in too. Get them back here."
"No, Helen, it's all right," whispered Ben anxiously. "The New
People relented. There's no need—"
"Do it." Her head fell back against something soft that had been
placed there.
Don't you see? she wanted
to tell him.
We were
wrong.
We were seeing only in terms of ourselves, our futures, our pasts. We
didn't see in terms of worlds, in terms of time and all the lives that
are connected to ours. We thought, I thought, Venera was all there was,
all I was. I was wrong, I was so wrong, and Michael was right. We have
to make peace now. We have to remember how much more there is to us
than just what we've done here.
"He'll do it," said Veronica firmly. "Trust me."
I do, Helen closed her
eyes. It would be all right.
She'd
get better. There was work to do, for Venera, for herself, and for all
the human beings for whom this would now be a point of new beginning as
they reached out to the People, came to understand them, taught the
People about the breadth of humanity so both sides could truly
understand their neighbors.
It all began now.
Contents -
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Epilogue
Yan Su's apartment was two stories above the main deck of U.N.
city.
Her small balcony faced west and let in the magnificent colors of the
sunset over the waters. Standing by its rail, she could even see Venus
shining peacefully in the darkening sky. No matter how hard she looked,
she couldn't see any sign of the chaos going on up there.
When she had received Rosa Cristobal's call telling her about
what
the aliens had decided, she had stood frozen in place for several long
seconds. Then she called the Secretaries-General. They in turn had put
every single satellite on high alert to try to detect whatever missile
the aliens would hurl at Earth to launch the virus, carefully ignoring
the fact that the aliens could probably just make it appear anywhere
they pleased. They spread the word to every major disease-control
center on the planet. Every doctor who could be reached by the long
arms of government bureaucracy was awake and on alert.
They waited, Su waited, in the darkness of her own apartment,
frightened both by the magnitude of what was happening, and her own
inability to do anything at all about it.
Then nothing happened.
Su looked down from the stars. Below her balcony, she could see
a
familiar figure crossing the deck.
She gripped the wrought-iron railing and watched Sadiq Hourani
present himself to the door of her building for identification and
admittance. The swish of the door was lost under the roar of the ocean
waves, but she did see him enter.
Be here any moment.
She felt strangely calm. She had a fair idea what had brought
him to
her door this late at night without calling ahead, but somehow she
could not get herself to fear it.
Perhaps I believe I deserve
whatever comes.
She walked back into her living room. The room was comfortable,
even a little luxurious with its thick, Persian carpet, the carved
tables, and vases of fresh flowers. The balcony's etched glass doors
glided shut behind her. As they did, the front door chimed, and its
panel showed her Sadiq waiting in the hallway with his endless patience.
Su took a deep breath. "Door. Open."
The door did as it was told, and Sadiq walked into the foyer. He
looked tired, she thought, and a little sad.
Well, they had been friends for a long time, and this had to be
something of a disappointment for him.
"Good evening, Su," he said, walking forward. "I'm sorry for
calling
so late—"
"There's no need for you to apologize to me." She waved his
words
away. "Won't you sit down?" Su gestured toward one of her low, faux
leather sofas. "I don't see why we should stand on ceremony after all
this time. Can I send for some coffee?" It was astonishing how easily
she fell into the hostess role. Then again, she'd had a great deal of
practice at play acting.
"No, thank you." Sadiq remained standing. Su smoothed the hem of
her
long, rose tunic under her as she sat. She looked up at him, not
weighing, calculating, or judging, just waiting to see what he had to
say. She always tried to avoid planning her next move until she had all
the required facts in her hands. That was one of the things that had
made her so good at what she did and helped keep her at her post for so
long.
Sadiq sighed, and she saw actual indecision on his face. She
imagined he wanted to be angry, to let righteous rage fill him up and
carry him through this, but it wouldn't come.
"Why did you do it, Su?"
She raised her eyebrows and curled up the corner of her mouth.
"I
have a busy schedule, Sadiq. Which 'it' are you talking about?" She
thought she knew, but she wanted to be certain.
Sadiq bowed his head and folded his hands behind his back. He
looked
at the pattern of the carpet, burgundy and gold, so many knots all tied
together to make their own pattern. A nice metaphor. "I've been having
an extremely interesting chat with a feeder named Frezia Cheney, who
let slip some facts about a conversation she had with your son, Quai.
Quai, in turn, told me you asked him to set up a stream corporation
called Biotech 24 so it could donate money to Grace Meyer, who, we now
know, was the brains and funding behind the falsified Discovery on
Venus." He looked at her. She sat very still, trying to keep her face
impassive. She mostly succeeded, but she felt her eyes widen slightly.
"How did you get Quai to talk to you?" she asked softly.
"I told him about your surveillance on his private mail."
"Oh." Su dropped her gaze. So here was the payment for that. Her
heart swelled with love and sorrow until her entire chest tightened,
but she couldn't blame her son. No, she could not blame him at all.
"There is even an implication"—Sadiq moved just a little
closer—"that you and some of the Venerans have known about the aliens
for years." He spread his hands, appealing to her. "Why, Su? What were
you doing?"
Su smoothed the fabric of her tunic across her knees. She
reached
out and minutely adjusted the small jade-dragon carving on her coffee
table.
"I thought," she said, drawing her hand back but not lifting her
gaze from the sinuous reptile, "that I was creating an unprecedented
opportunity for the colonies to gain political capital."
Sadiq sank onto the sofa, facing her. "Tell me," he said.
She touched the spines on the dragon's back, gingerly, feeling
their needle sharp tips dent the skin of her fingertips.
"Grace Meyer sent me an agitated message three years ago. It
seems
that while searching for her UV absorber, she found a satellite photo
of what looked like an alien artifact. She was telling me rather than
Helen Failia, because she did not like Dr. Failia and wanted to go over
her head."
"Do you know the source of this feud?"
Su smiled thinly. "It seems Dr. Failia was unwilling to
actively
seek funding for Dr. Meyer's projects. Dr. Failia was afraid that
searching for life, which had failed so many times before in so many
more likely places, would make Venera look silly and spoil its ability
to get serious funding and serious attention. Dr. Meyer never forgave
her." Su shook her head. "And we think the in-fighting in the
legislature is bad."
"So, she gave you this photo and told you her theories—" Sadiq
prompted.
"And I asked her to keep them both quiet for a while." Su pushed
at
the dragon so that its focus shifted from looking directly at her to
looking at the wall past her right shoulder. "At first, I didn't
believe it could possibly be what it looked like, and I also did not
want public ridicule to fall on Venera."
"Grace said she would do no such thing, however. She was tired
of
having her work suppressed, she said. She was ready to sign off in a
huff, when the idea struck me." She rubbed her palms together.
"Suppose there were aliens on Venus. Suppose they made contact,
not
with the government of Earth, but with Venera base. Venera would have
the chance to do what no one had ever done. It would have a first that
could not be taken away from it. A colony with a contact that not even
the C.A.C. could take away, no matter how hard they tried. It might
even lead to a successful independence bid. One without bloodshed this
time." She looked up at him. The sadness had deepened on his face. "The
C.A.C. is never going to let the colonists go. Their status as
second-class citizens has become too ingrained and in some ways too
convenient. I came to believe that to get full civil and human rights
restored would take a revolution, but not a bloody one, not like
Fuller's." She smiled softly. "If anyone could make it work, it would
be Helen Failia, I was sure. Her people were so loyal to her."
"I added in the fact that Grace wasn't going to keep quiet. She
wanted her recognition, and she wanted it now, and I started getting
ideas."
"I suggested we create what became the Discovery." She turned
her
hands this way and that, examining the backs, the nails, the deeply
lined palms. "It was brilliant, actually. I was
very proud. It served to focus public attention on the colonies. It
raised all sorts of questions about Terran rule from places other than
Bradbury, and it got the scientific world to take Grace Meyer
seriously. Grace found help from some of Venera's many underfunded
departments, and I found there were plenty of places between Earth and
Venus to hide the money they used for the construction." She smiled at
her hands. "Actually, except for gold for the laser, it was quite an
economical operation."
"I see," said Sadiq.
"It also got the Venerans actually looking for aliens. I felt if
the
news came from anybody on the base other than Grace Meyer, Helen would
have an easier time of things."
Sadiq turned away. He paced slowly over to her balcony doors and
looked out onto the night.
"Tell me what you're thinking," asked Su.
He shook his head slowly. "So many years of fighting. So many
years
of a single goal in mind—equal rights for the colonies. It blotted out
everything else, even the stunning wonder of meeting another form of
life, other minds from other worlds. Everything was just there to be
used. Nothing could be left alone to just happen." He turned around and
his eyes were shining a little too brightly. "I'd hoped you were above
that."
"I'm sorry." Su clasped her hands together. "What do we do about
this?"
"I don't think there's anything else to do." Sadiq turned back
toward her. "The story will be breaking soon, and your attempt at a
bloodless coup killed two men. I'm sure that will keep you busy enough."
Su bowed her head. "I am sorry, Sadiq. It looked like the only
way
to break the C.A.C.'s hold on the colonies."
"I'm sure it did." He paused. "Do you know, Veronica Hatch tells
me
that one of the People's ambassadors sold herself into slavery to save
us all."
"Did she?" murmured Yan Su. "What a fine thing to do for
strangers."
"Yes." He looked down at her. "I wonder if we'll ever be able to
show such a fine thing to them."
He left her there and walked out the door. Su sat where she was
for
a while. Then she rose and walked back onto the balcony to breathe the
salty night air and look up at the sky. She did not know, after all,
how much longer these privileges would be hers.
Daylight had dwindled to a patch of gray on the horizon. The
gentle
yellow streetlights had come out, lighting the deck and dimming the
stars overhead.
Su turned her face to the evening star.
"Thank you," she whispered, hoping somehow her words would touch
the
stranger who had saved them all. "Thank you."