PART
I
July,
in the Year
of
our Lord 2241
CHAPTER
1
"...
and so we gather to commission UNS Galactic, the greatest ship ever built, the
pinnacle of human interstellar endeavor."
Surreptitiously,
to avoid the attention of the pulsing hok>-cams focused on the dais, I eased
my aching leg, fixing a glazed stare at Admiral Dubrovik's broad back and the
crowded London auditorium beyond. At my left Derek Carr smiled in sympathy.
Would
old Dubrovik ever wind down? As SecGen and nominal Commander in Chief of all
U.N. forces I could have blocked his posting to Lunapolis Command, but I'd
interfered enough in U.N. Naval appointments over the years. These days, I
tried to limit myself to where it would do the most good. Amid the dignitaries
and officials patiently listening were a considerable number of officers Id
advanced because of competence rather than connections.
Yet
also among the sober blue uniforms and starched dress whites were a few
disgruntled Earth First sympathizers, disgusted that I wouldn't support
retaking the few interstellar colonies that had achieved independence. There
might even have been a few enviro fanatics, although zealots of that stripe
were rare in the Navy. No doubt among the audience were quite a number who
didn't give Christ's damn, as long as no one tampered with their pay billet
**...
not since Earth's first convulsive leap into space two hundred fifty years ago
have so many individuals, so many thousands of diverse corporations,
participated in a public project.
And
with good reason; their profits were enormous. Galactic was an error of
judgment; I'd let myself be persuaded by Admiralty's unbounded enthusiasm and
Senator Robbie Roland's deal with the Territorial Party, our opposition in the
General Assembly, to give us a free hand on the Naval budget through the next
Secretarial election—if we shared the lucrative construction contracts with
their allies. What we needed were Alpha-class vessels like my first command,
UNS Hibernia, not the vast and expensive behemoth we'd constructed.
I
grimaced past my wife, Arlene, to my old friend Admiral Jeff Thorne, with whom
I'd shared my misgivings.
Yes,
Galactic, along with the nearly completed Olympiad and men1 two sister ships on
the drawing boards, would help seed new colonies, but home system had been
establishing colonies for nearly two centuries, and the existing colonies
needed servicing too. I doubted it would prove efficient to send a huge vessel
such as Galactic to supply Derek Carr's home colony of Hope Nation.
I
glanced at the huge holoscreen, and the magnificent vessel that dominated its
view. Lights blazing, she floated high above the planet, off Earthport Orbiting
Station, at whose Naval wing she'd been built.
I shook
my head. After the fiasco with UNS Wellington many years past, there was no
thought of assembling a throng of dignitaries on ship for her dedication. We'd
been lucky to escape with our lives that day, after the fish attacked. The
aliens were gone now, victims of the caterwaul stations I'd devised. From time
to time, in the dark nights when Lord God reproached me, I wondered whether to
add genocide to the roll of my sins.
"Could
even SecGen Seafort have imagined just twelve years ago, as he began his second
administration, when the world was reeling from the Transpop Rebellion and not
yet recovered from the attacks of the dread fish mat he did so much to
abate—"
My
bream came in a hiss. Arlene's bony fingers squeezed my right elbow in warning.
I
scowled at her. 'The damned sycophant! Did you hear what—"
My wife
leaned close, the ghost of a smile smoothing the wrinkles that caressed her
still-bright blue eyes. "Cover your lips, Nick. They'll read you."
"By
Lord God, let them. I—" Common sense finally intruded. I subsided,
seething.
To my
left, a cough that might have been a chuckle. I shot Derek Carr a steely gaze
that would have withered him as a Naval midshipman, but unfortunately those
days were decades past My old friend had a laser glare of his own mat had held
him in good stead since he'd become First Stad-holder of Hope Nation, and he
was unimpressed by mine.
"...
with her vast cargo holds, a crew of eight hundred ninety, transporting over
three thousand passengers, bristling with armaments, she'll carry U.N. prestige
and authority to our far-flung colonies across the infinite reaches of..."
Derek
leaned close. "He does go on."
I
turned to Jeff Thorne, whispering. "Do you hear? Now the idiot's making
policy. 'Carry U.N. authority' indeed. As if we need a warship these days to
deal with our own dominions."
"With
some of them, you might." He raised a hand to forestall my reply. "I
think Dubrovik's wrapping it up."
"...
and so, to commission UNS Galactic, I have the honor to present His Excellency
Nicholas Ewing Seafort, Secretary-General of the United Nations." Turning,
the Admiral flashed me a pleased smile, like a toddler expecting a parent's
approval.
Welcoming
applause rolled across the crowded hall, whose coolers labored to counteract
the sweltering London summer.
I
groped for my silver-headed cane, hoisted myself from my seat, and winked at
Artene, graving, gaunt, and lovely. "Shall I fire Dubrovik right nowr I
was half-serious.
Her
tips barely moved. "Of course, dear. The Territorials would love a martyr
as a candidate, next election.**
With a
sigh, I limped to me waiting microphones.
"Voyager
is landing," Mark TUnitz, head of my security detail, muttered into his
throat mike. Our hen* set down precisely on the cross that marked the center of
Devon Naval Academy's pad.
TUnitz
was an assignee of U,N, Investigations. General Donner was drawn from U.N.A.F.,
Karen Bums from Naval Intelligence, other security agents from New York Police
Command. An odd system, but giving all services a hand in the SecGen's
protection deterred the formation of a praetorian guard, with the resultant
interservice jealousies.
I
climbed out, under the sullen Devon afternoon sun. A security joey was waiting,
to hover at my arm lest I slip. "Do I look feeble?" My voice was
caustic. Perhaps I feared the answer. "Let me be. Here, Artene.** I
extended a hand.
Ducking
through the hatchway, she climbed slowly down toe steps. "What's wrong,
Nicky? You've been cross all day."
"Nothing."
My knee ached. "I hate those public ceremonies,** I forced a smile as
Commandant Hazen hurried to greet us. Overhead, the helis and jets mat
constituted my unwieldy protection detail moved off.
Normally,
security accompanied me everywhere, but from my first administration I'd drawn
the line at Academy or the Naval wing at Earthport. Under no circumstances
would I allow Tilnitz and his eclectic crew to pretend I needed guarding from
the United Nations Naval Service, in which I'd served so memorably. I would
wander the Academy grounds unprotected, except by the Commandant or his staff.
It wasn't, after all, as if Academy were an open campus.
I
looked about. A tall iron fence surrounded the compound, meeting itself at the
guardhouse gate. As always, mulberry and juniper abounded, tended by Academy
staff and cadets. Above, tall maples tent then- shade, Devon Academy had once
been far from town, bat shops and pubs had sprung up to serve it Still, our
buildings were set well back from me fence, obscured by the extensive
plantings, which allowed a modicum of privacy,
Artene
and I had just escaped the huge reception that followed my dedication of
Galactic, and my cheeks were sore with the aftermath of my frozen smile. At
least, standing about greeting dignitaries, I'd had time for a few amiable
words with Derek Carr, before he went off to rejoin his Hope Nation trade
legation, I'd be seeing him again in a day or so, at my retreat outside
Washington.
"Welcome,
Mr. SecGen." Hazen came to attention. Florid, the hint of a paunch lurking
underneath his Naval blues, he still managed to look distinguished, a few
touches of gray gracing his locks.
I
rammed his salute. "As you ware." For a moment my heart eased, Devon
was home to me. I frowned. Had been home, before my betrayal had forfeited all claim
to it Hastily, I turned my thoughts elsewhere. I'd made my peace with my
transgressions years before, or thought I had. Either Lord God would forgive
me, or He would not
As we
walked the unchanged footpath to the administration building I scrutinized the
Commandant I'd met but once, at a Rotunda reception. Once, the Navy had been my
entire life, and I wouldn't have dreamed of allowing the Board of Admiralty to
appoint a Commandant I didn't know well. But since the Transpop Rebellion, I'd
been ever more preoccupied with civilian issues, and the nurture of our
economy.
I
cleared my throat "You've met Ms. Seafort, I believe?" Arlene,
knowing me well, smoothly took over the conversation while I brooded. A former
officer herself, she knew Academy as well as I.
We
strolled past the Commandant's quarters I'd once occupied, past dorms I'd
inhabited as a cadet. Knowing my wishes—my aides had made them clear—Hazen
hadn't interrupted Academy routine to put the cadets on show for me; his
charges were at their usual classes. Nonetheless, the compound seemed almost
deserted. Typically, a handful of cadets could be found scurrying about on
special duty or, as punishment detail, set to manicuring the lawn with
meticulous precision.
Trie
Commandant seemed to read my thoughts. "I canceled outdoor activities, Mr.
SecGen." He glanced upward, shading his eyes. "Sorry, 1 should have
brought lined umbrellas."
I
snorted my disdain. "1 don't need shielding." Nonetheless, I hurried
my pace.
"We've
a radiation alert for the rest of the week, despite the seeding. If the gamma
count gets much worse I'll send most of the joeys to Farside." Lunar
Academy, whose warrens were on die far side of the moon, where cadets did
advanced training. "Over time, it's getting better," He shrugged.
"So they say, but were you ever kept indoors at DevoaT"
"That
was a half century ago." I made a face. "Things change." To my
relief, we were nearing the Commandant's quarters. My knee throbbed, and
besides, I wanted Arlene out of the newly menacing sun.
"How
about Grierson?" I looked across the gleaming rosewood conference table.
Sergeant
M'bovo replied; the boy was of his barracks. "Good attitude, willing
worker, sir. Still waiting to see his Vail." Give your all, we cadets had
been exhorted. Over the years the "Navy all" had become a catchword,
shortened to theYall.
"He's
only fifteen," Arlene's tone was gentle. Where I was often harsh with
green young middies, she tended to be more kind. Her parenting, even more than
my own, had nourished our son, Philip. Of course, in his adolescence even P.T.
had learned that Arlene's tolerance had limits. Lord God protect the youngster
who overstepped them.
Not so
many years ago, as Philip had reached manhood, Arlene and I had spoken seriously
of having more children. But, with the cares of office... I signed. Over my
long career youngsters seemed to seek me out, as if expecting guidance or
assurance only I could provide. In return, I'd gotten too many of diem killed.
"Mr.
SecOetiT Hazen held the file, waiting.
I
snapped my attention back to our conference, "Very well, we'll see."
I slid his folder into the "undecided** pile. Though a putar screen was
inset into the table in front of each seat, the Navy cherished its ttaditioni.
One of them was using old-style paper folders for cadet candidate files,
The
purpose of my Academy jaunt was twofold. First, Devon was one of the few places
outside my own walled home in which I was free of the ubiquitous mediamen. The
Academy pounds were closed, and woe betide the heli that overflew it
My
other motive was more complex. Once, as Academy Commandant, I'd selected a few
cadets as special aides. It hadn't worked out; I'd gotten them massacred in one
of my senseless follies. Yet my successors, blind to my misconduct, continued
the tradition,
Years
later, when I returned to public life as a Senator,
then as
SecGen, I'd tired of the self-serving blather of my politically astute
assistants, and sought out younger adjutants. I'd coopted midshipmen fresh out
of Academy, and to my dismay, watched them grow into political creatures as
unacceptable as those they replaced
The
solution I'd devised was to select them at Academy, before they became middies,
men—with an occasional exception—send them to a year or two aboard ship.
Thereafter, when they were offered a shoreside posting at the U.N. Rotunda, I
had at least a hope they'd remember their traditions and the discipline of
Naval life. Most of mem did, as long as I didn't keep them too long. My current
aide, Charlie Witrek, was a willing joey, one I'd come to like, but in a week
he would be rotated back aloft, and we'd bring down some middy I'd chosen in
previous years.
The
system worked well, overall. Of course, none of the selectees must have any
idea he'd been chosen to ripen in the fleet, else he wouldn't take his shipside
duties seriously. For that I needed the cooperation of Academy's staff, and of
course I had it They too wanted their minions to mature as young midshipmen,
and if mat weren't enough, none cared to risk a SecGen's enmity.
Still,
I found the selection process uncomfortably reminiscent of Final Cull, the
miserable job of choosing who, among the myriad of applicants, was to attend
Academy. One of my great pleasures as SecGen had been to return to the Navy the
long-sought privilege of selecting its own officer candidates.
Today,
for two hours, Hazen, Arlene, and I reviewed files with the staff sergeants,
noting which youngsters showed promise.
Over
the years Arlene and I had developed a fine working relationship. By my
authority, she sat in on many of the conferences I was required to endure.
Here, at Academy, her views were particularly valuable; we'd been cadets
together and shared a knowledge and love of the Navy.
I opened
another folder. "What about—"
The
door flew open. "Commandant!" A sergeant, his breath coining hard. A
red-haired midshipman was close behind.
Hazen
reared up. "How dare you burst in like—"
"We
couldn't reach you; your caller was set to 'don't disturb/ We've had an, uh,
accident Suit training, the pressure room. Rve cadets..."
I
grimaced, recalling cadet days. First, Sarge had taught us how to suit up. We'd
endured his drills several days in a row, skylarking when his eye wasn't on us.
Then, one day, after suiting, Sarge sent us one by one into a foggy room with
an airlock at each end. About half of us, when we emerged, turned green. The
other half had known how to seal their suits properly.
The
five cadets who'd gotten a whiff of the gas would suffer no more man a day's
sore stomach and the indignity of losing their lunch. A tough lesson, but far
more gentle than that of unforgiving space.
"Take
them to sickbay, Oregon." Hazen shot me an apologetic glance. "I'm
sorry, Mr. SeeGen,"
"Sir,
two are dead. The rest... the medics are working on them, but—n
"Oh,
Lord God." My voice was strained.
The
Commandant blinked. "Impossible! How? What..."
**I
don't know!" Oregon sounded near
I
scrambled to my feet, lurched to the door.
"Nick,
wait" Arlene.
I paid
her no heed. Leaning heavily on my cane, I strode through the admin wing,
outside to the late-afternoon sun, along the walkway toward the classrooms, the
dorms, the suiting chamber halfway across the base.
By
interfering, I was muscling in on Hazen's prerogatives, but anxiety drove me
onward. Cadets didn't die in suiting practice. Not at Devon. Farside was
another matter, there was no appeal from the laws of vacuum. If some of our
charges
were dead—I took a deep breath—Academy faced a scandal. Someone had been
unforgivably negligent And the Commandant would write letters this night, that
would ravage families' lives.
By the
time I neared the classroom area, all had caught up with me: the staff
sergeants wbo'd joined our conference, the Commandant, Arlene, the agonized
Sergeant Gregori, the middy who'd burst in with him.
Hazen
panted to Oregon, "Full report!**
"Aye
aye, sir. I took Krane Barracks to the suiting room at seventeen hundred hours.
Later than usual, but we were keeping them out of the sun.** The sergeant
paused for breath. "Twenty-nine cadets; Cadet Robbins was confined to
barracks. I had them help each other suit up. Same as always, sir."
"Get
on with it!**
I
opened my mouth for a rebuke, but held my peace. Hazen was in charge, not I.
"Then
I sent them through. Midshipman Anselm, here, was helping. A canister of the
emetic was already in place; Sergeant Booker used the chamber this morning. The
first four cadets went through without incident"
Where
in God's own Hell was the suiting chamber? I'd never remembered it as so
distant
Gregori
slowed his pace, to match mine. "Cadet Santini doubled over as she came
out the lock. I helped with her helmet and gave her a piece of my mind, but my
eye was on the cadets going through the room." Abruptly he came to a halt,
his gaze withdrawn to a private hell.
"I
told you to report!" Hazen.
"Belay
that!" My voice was a lash. Protocol be damned. I was Commander in Chief,
and could do as I pleased. I limped to Gregori. "Are you all right,
Sergeant?*' He was responsible for the cadets' safety. Lord God knew what he
must be feeling.
"Sir..."
His eyes beseeched mine. "Other cadets were
flailing
ill. It's not their fault they're young, they don't know to double-check the
seals. I was trying to watch them all, and Santini had her helmet off. I knew
she'd be all right Except .. .** He shuddered. "When I looked down she was
in convulsions. There was nothing I could do. Nothing!" His voice broke.
Awkwardly,
I let my hand brush his shoulder.
He
began to walk again, this time more slowly. "In the chamber, Ford pitched
flat on his face. Then Eiken went down. I realized something was terribly wrong
and yelled at Anselm to purge the room, but he didn't hear me, or didn't
understand."
The
middy stirred.
I
raised a hand. "In a moment Mr., ah, Anselm. Go on, Sarge."
"By
the time I ran round to the other door and triggered the emergency oxygen
flush, two more were down. I ordered Anselm to pull them out—he was suited, I
wasn't— and ran back to Santini. She was staring at the sky.** Gregori's mouth
worked. "By the time we got the others out, three more were dying. I
called sickbay, and rang for Lieutenant LeBow.**
At
last, the suiting chamber, a low, windowless, gunmetal gray building behind the
nav training center. I recalled the suit room, with its rows of lockers where
the cadets would enter. The airlock to the main chamber, the waiting lock at
the far exit
A covey
of cadets milled about I said, unbelieving, "You left your squad
there?"
"Lieutenant
LeBow told me to report to you, flank." And the sergeant would, of course.
In the Navy, orders were obeyed.
My knee
ached abominably. I bit back a foul imprecation as we neared the dazed cadets.
Some were weeping. A few slumped on the grass. Among them were five motionless
Forms in gray. Three med techs worked over them, from scramble carts. A
lieutenant watched, arms folded.
A cadet
corporal saw us coming. "Attention!" His voice was ragged.
"As
you were," I rasped. Then I had a glimpse of one of the casualties.
"Oh, Lord." Blood had flowed, from her mouth and eyes. "You,
there, any survivors?"
The med
tech looked up, his eyes grim. He shook his head.
"What
caused it?"
"I
don't know." Wearily, he knelt on the grass. "We couldn't have been
three minutes responding to the call. They were gone. We never had a
chance."
I
turned. "Sergeant M'bovo, escort the squad to barracks." The sooner
the joeykids were removed from the sight, the better.
"Let
me take mem, sir. They're mine." Oregon.
"No,
I want you here." If it was Oregon's blunder mat had killed his cadets, he
should be kept far from mem. "Stay with them. Sergeant M'bovo. See that
they're on light duty for three days."
"Aye
aye, sir." There was little else be could say, to a direct order, Civilian
I might be, and outside the chain of command, but I was SccOen. "You
joeys, back to barracks. Double-time!"
When
the cadets were out of earshot Hazen grated, *Td have laid on extra drills, to
keep them occupied."
So
might I, in my younger days. "Let mem grieve," I turned to me
redheaded middy. "Let's hear your version." My wife flinched, and too
late, I realized it sounded an accusation.
Anselm
stammered out his story, but it corroborated the sergeant's in all details.
Arlene
pulled me close, to whisper in my ear. "Nick, let Hazen handle it You're
stepping on his toes."
True,
but I was beyond that "Where's the emetic canis-terT
"Still
in the dispenser." Sergeant Oregon swung open the panel
"Don't
touch that!" I lowered my voice to a normal tone. "Commandant, have
the gas analyzed. A party of three to take the canister to the lab. Send LeBow,
there. And two sergeants who had nothing to do with the incident Get these poor
children's bodies to sickbay, we can't have mem lying here. Well, what are you
staring at? Get moving, flank!"
"Aye
aye, sir." As if dazed, Hazen reached for his caller. Gregori said
nothing, but his eyes bore mute reproach.
"And
autopsies on the cadets. Tonight" I tried to mink what else. "Seal
the base." If rumors got out, we'd be besieged with mediamen, to the
Navy's detriment All media-men were ghouls. "Gregori, Anselm, wait for us
at the Commandant's office."
Hazen
was busy on his caller.
"LeBow!"
The
lieutenant jumped as if shot "Yes, sir!"
"Suit
up, and go into the chamber. Check out—"
"I
won't need a suit, sir. It's been purged."
"Suit
up," My tone was icy. "We'll take no chances."
"Aye
aye, sir," At least he seemed abashed, as well he should, quarreling with
a direct order. On the other hand, as a civilian I had no right to give nun
orders.
"Look
around, report by radio anything mat out
of place," As he turned to the suiting-room door I added, "Careful
with your seals!"
LeBow's
expedition found nothing. By the time he emerged, the lifeless cadets had been
carried to sickbay, and two staff sergeants had arrived to escort die canister
to the lab. We all watched LeBow disconnect it from the intake. Ignoring common
sense, I held my breath to inspect it gingerly. The customary factory label,
the usual warnings. If the manufacturer had inadvertently sent us a
contaminated canister, I'd see the culprit hanged. I hoped that was the case.
The alternatives didn't bear thinking about
There
was work ahead, and I'd realized I didn't trust Hazen to do it alone. This was
one of the moments I regretted refusing to carry a personal caller. An old
habit, dating from my days as Commandant. As I'd learned on Hibernia, a
commander who carried a caller had no peace.
"Would
you give Branstead a call?" I gave Hazen my chief of staff's code.
"Tell him to cancel my suborbital. I'll spend the night in Devon."
"Nick,
we have to get home." Ariene looked apologetic. "Derek's coming, and
tomorrow there's the delegation from Dutch Relief."
"Belay
that. Commandant. Let me talk to him." I took the caller. "Jerence?
Arlene's on the way home, I'll stay here." Ariene shot me a look of
annoyance. "Lay on transport tomorrow. I'll let you know when. No, I'm
fine. There's been an... incident. What? I don't care, reschedule him. Next
week." I rang off, gave my wife an awkward hug. "Get ready for Derek,
listen to die Hollanders for me. I'll see you soon."
Somewhat
mollified, she rested her chin on my shoulder. "Nick, those
cadets..."
««Yes,
I know. Terrible."
"I
mean the survivors,"
"Death
happens, Ariene, We've bom seen it. They have to get used—"
"They're
bewildered, and in pain."
"It's
not my responsibility."
"You
remember, don't you, Nick?" Her voice was soft.
I
looked away. At last I said, "I'll do what I can."
In the
gathering dusk Hazen and I walked slowly back to
his
office. "How well do you know Oregon, Commandant?"
"He's
a good man. Even if he wasn't watching carefully,
how
could he have caused their deaths? We've used the emetic for years."
My
smile was grim. "Generations."
"It
was surely an accident, Mr. SecGen. Contaminants."
"Do
you believe that?" My own doubts were growing.
A long
silence. "I want to."
Abruptly
I liked him more. "I'm sorry. I know I've been taking over."
"That's
your privilege, sir. You're SecGen,"
I
grinned, remembering an Admiral who'd commandeered my ship, long past
"That doesn't make it easier,"
"No,"
he said, I admired his honesty. He added, "You don't remember me, do
you?*'
I cast
about in my memory. "I was notified of your appointment. You had UNS
Churchill, am I right?"
"I
was in Valdez Barracks," He spoke as if he hadn't heard. "When you
took command." He slowed his pace, so I'd have less difficulty keeping up.
"Sergeant Ibarez,"
"Ah,**
How could I make him change die subject? I loved Academy, truly I did. Yet...
"I
was one of the few left here when you took the cadets to Farside. Else I'd have
volunteered, I know 1 would," His face was red, and his gaze was carefully
averted. "I'd fallen—we were skylarking in barracks. About a week before
die fish attacked. I broke three ribs. Sarge said you were furious."
"It's
a cool night," I said desperately. "After toe sun goes—Commandant, I
atone every night of my life for what I did to those wretched cadets. Be
thankful you weren't among them." During die final alien attack I'd called
for volunteers, knowing, but not telling them, I was sending them to their deaths.
At least, with effort, I now could speak of it For years I could not
"Sir,
do you know what it's like, to be class of '01, die last class Nicholas Seafort
commanded? They say you called die cadets to Farside dining hall." His
eyes were distant, as if reliving a memory he couldn't have known. "You
said there'd be danger, and asked for cadets willing to go to the Fusers. Your
voice ... hushed, urgent, almost desperately casual. Even as joeykids, they
understood."
"Mr.
Hazen ..." How could I divert him?
"For
years, those who refused cast blame one on another, or you. Only Boland and
Branstead could be proud. And Tenere." The pitifully few survivors, who'd
sailed with me in the Mothership.
"And
whenever it came up, I was hurt and defensive." His tone was
conversational. "I would have gone, but how could I prove it? We fought,
at times. I lost friends." He chopped off his words, cleared his throat.
"When I was posted here, I couldn't fathom the honor. To walk where you
walked, sit at your desk, command men you—"
"Stop
it!" My cry echoed through the quadrangle.
He
faced me, determined. "I wanted so to impress you. To make you see I had
matters well in hand. You think I don't know what an idiot 1 sounded, shouting
at Oregon? I could have bitten my tongue off."
"It's
all right, Mr. Hazen. I've done the same."
"Not
in front of your..." He muttered something unintelligible.
"What?"
"Idol."
His gaze was a challenge, as if daring me to object
I
muttered, "Lord God preserve us." We'd reached the steps. I took his
arm, leaned my weight on it as we climbed. "I really ought to have this
leg looked at."
"May
I ask what it is, sir? I noticed you began to carry a cane a few years
ago."
"Arthritis.
The Helsinki crash aggravated it." Arthritis was curable, and had been for
generations. But I deserved my infirmities.
He
paused at the door to his office. "Will you see Gregori and Anselm now, or
wait for the lab report?"
"Wait,
I mink."
"I
could show you to the VIP suite."
"I
know the way. Ring my quarters when you have the report" I limped to my
apartment
I
peeled off my jacket washed my face, combed my hair. I caught a glimpse of the
aging visage in the glass, and paused. Wrinkles on my forehead, and my hairline
was creeping upward. I hadn't let them give me cosmetic enzymes, though I'd had
the primary anti-aging compounds. They were universally disseminated through
drinking water.
Still,
even past sixty, I wasn't all that old. The relentless extension of life was
the main cause of Earth's overcrowding, and a terrible strain on our resources.
I had another quarter century of active life, if I wanted it Perhaps even more.
These days, retirement benefits didn't start until eighty-five.
I
passed a hand over the faint outline of the hideous scar that had once adorned
my cheek. Many years ago I'd let mem remove it at the insistence of Admiralty.
Joeykids had started to emulate my appearance, and that was intolerable.
Nearly
fifty years, since Father had brought me to Academy's gates, guided me within,
and strode off without a backward glance. The U.N. Navy had been then—and still
was—the glamorous service youngsters dreamed of joining. The Army was a poor
relative, and resented it
Of
course, the Navy had the advantage of starting its officers young. The
discovery in 2046 that N-waves travel faster than light and the accompanying
revision of physics, led to the fusion drive, and superluminous travel. But the
stars came at a cost: melanoma T, a vicious carcinoma triggered by long
exposure to Fusion fields. It was an occupational hazard for spacefarers.
Fortunately,
humans whose cells were exposed to N-waves within five years of puberty seemed
almost immune. But the Navy couldn't put untrained children aboard its great
starships. And so cadets were recruited barely into
their
teens, as I had been. After two years at Academy they were shipped off as green
young middies to get their sea legs aboard a starship.
Gaunt
eyes stared at me from the mirror.
As a
middy, I'd been catapulted to Captain of UNS Hi-bernia on the death of her
other officers. Later, on Challenger, I'd fought off relentless attacks by the
alien fish. We'd survived to see home system, but not before I'd damned myself
by breaking my sacred oath, to save my ship.
By
then, to my infinite disgust, I was a media hero. Eventually, Admiralty
appointed me Commandant of Naval Academy. And at Farside, when the fish
attacked, I engaged hi the greatest betrayal since Judas. I sent my cadets to
their deaths with lies.
The
caller chimed. "Yes?"
"Sir,
the lab report." Hazen.
"So
soon?" I glanced at my watch, I'd been staring into the mirror a full
hour. "I'll be right there."
I
smoothed my graying hair. Decades ago, Father Ryson had saved my sanity, in the
hard peace of his neo-Benedic-tinc monastery. Brother Nicholas would be at
Lancaster yet, but for the desperate pleas of Eddie Boss, my transpop shipmate,
whose tribe was under attack by the Territorial Administration. I couldn't
refuse him. Leaving my haven, I'd used my notoriety to enter politics. As
Senator from northern England, then as SecGen, I managed to have the
relocations halted.
Despite
my best intentions, my life had been political ever since. I'd left office in
the Port of London scandal, and been glad. But the Transpop Rebellion of 2229
sucked me into its madness. I'd had no choice; my son Philip was caught up in
it, and missing. His life was worth more than mine. I still thought so, despite
what he'd become after.
When
the rebellion was settled, given the attitude of die
Territorial
Party toward our urban masses, I'd had no choice but to declare my candidacy
once more. I thrust on my jacket, limped to the Commandant's office.
"Nerve
gas." Hazen jabbed a thick finger at the holo-screen. "Deadly
toxin."
Stunned,
I sank into my chair. I'd dreaded something of the sort, and the confirmation
left me dazed. I grasped at straws. "Contaminating the emetic?" I
peered at the screen.
"No,
sir. Nerve gas in concentrated form. One canister, if opened in dining hall,
could have killed the whole lot of us."
"Oregon
said Booker had used the same canister earlier."
"His
cadets are fine. I sent Anselm to check."
I
asked, "Where is the emetic made?"
His
face was grim. "I put in a call to the manufacturer. Chemgen Corporation
specializes in hospital supply. They claim even if they'd made some sort of
error, they produce nothing that could kill so fast"
"And
the canister?"
"I
already thought of mat They construct their own,"
I let
my eyes meet his. "Commandant, do you understand what you're saying?"
"Yes,
sir. It was deliberate."
For a
moment we were silent Then I slammed the table. "That sergeant who used
the suiting room this morning, Booker, was it? Said him and Oregon to F and
D!"
"Sir,
we can't."
"Cadets
are dead."
"But
mere's no evidence. Nothing at alt"
"They
both used the canister."
Hazen
took a deep breath. "That's not evidence of a crime, sir, and you know
it!"
My jaw
clenched. It had been a long while since anyone had spoken to me so. After a
time, my fury abated.
He was
right
A
defendant had no right to silence, not since the Truth in
Testimony
Act of 2026. If there was other evidence against him, he could be sent for
polygraph and drag interrogation. If the tests proved he had told the troth,
charges were dismissed. If he admitted the charges, as sophisticated drugs
forced him to do, his confession was of course introduced as evidence.
But to
keep authorities from fishing in the recesses of a prisoner's mind, the law was
quite clear. There had to be independent evidence of guilt before P and D could
be ordered.
I
sighed. "Sony. Confine Booker to barracks until we sort this out And call
in the middy, would your
Together,
we grilled the hapless Anselm until he was (benched with perspiration, and his
lip beginning to tremble. At last, I relented. The boy was telling the truth:
he'd seen nothing out of the ordinary before the cadets went down, and had no
reason to suspect Oregon or anyone else.
"Pardon
me, sir?" He addressed his Commandant.
"Could
you tell me what mis is about?"
Hazen
and I exchanged astonished glances. Middies, questioning their commanding
officers? What was the Navy coming to? Reddening, the Commandant took bream,
but I intervened. There was no reason the boy shouldn't know. "The cadets
didn't die by accident. It was murder."
"Oh,
no!" The boy's anguished cry was from me heart
"Nerve
gas."
"But,
why?"
"We
don't know." Abruptly I added, "Any ideas?"
"Lord
God, it's impossible. Jimmy Ford? Santini? Who*d want to kill them?" His
eyes were wet "Yesterday was Roony Eiken's birthday."
"You're
to tell no one," I said, "It's quite important the news not get
out" Not until we learned what bad befallen us,
"Aye
aye, sir."
I
glanced at the Commandant "Special duties?" The boy could be isolated
from the other middies, to remove all temptation to gossip.
To his
credit, Hazen shook his head. "Mr. Anselm is an officer, and his word is
sufficient."
Coloring,
I accepted the unstated rebuke, knowing it was warranted. A Naval officer's
word was his bond. The entire Service was based on trust. Had I not been so
distraught by the bloodstained children lying in the grass, I'd have remembered
I was dealing with my cherished U,N,N,S,, not a pack of amoral politicians,
Hazen
took pity, "Dismissed, Mr. Anselm."
The boy
fled,
I
cleared my throat. "Question the sergeants,"
"Oregon
already told us his story."
"Then
we'll hear it again." And so we did. During his recitation Sergeant Oregon
eyed me with downright hostility. I could hardly blame him,
"As
I said, sir, I have no idea what went wrong. The canister was in place,
everything looked as it should,"
"Did
your cadets quarrel among themselves, or with other barracks?"
He
balled his fists, checked himself. "Commandant, permission to speak
freely?"
Hazen
nodded.
"No
one hated my cadets, in Krane or any other barracks. Even if he's SecGen, how
do you stand such nonsense?"
"Sergeant!"
The Commandant was scandalized.
"I've
had enough! Court-martial me if you don't like it!" Oregon subsided,
breaming heavily.
Hazen
blinked, "I understand your feelings, but SecGen Seafort and I have to
know—"
A knock
on the door, A breathless middy saluted and came to attention, "Midshipman
Andrew Payson reporting, sir. Sergeant Booker isn't at Valdez Barracks. His
cadet corporal hasn't seen him since lunch."
I
snarled to Hazen, "The gate!"
He
punched the code into his caller. When he was through, he rose slowly from his
seat "Hooker signed out early this afternoon. That God damned son
of—"
I
snapped, "Don't blaspheme!"
"—a
bitch! The fucking whoreson! That—"
"All
right!" I slapped the table hard enough so my hand stung. "Sarge, we
owe you an apology."
"Bloody
right you do!" Gregori looked ready to launch himself across the table. I
had to admire his courage. Either the Commandant or I could break him.
The
middy glanced between us as if we were all demented.
The
caller chimed. Muttering an epithet, the Commandant answered. After a few words
he handed it to me.
"Sir?
Branstead here. Have you heard of an Eco Action League?"
"I'm
busy, Jerence. Can this wait?" Even as I spoke, I knew better. My chief of
staff wouldn't interrupt unless the matter was urgent
"We've
had a communique*. They claim they've killed half a dozen Academy cadets."
My
knuckles were white on me caller. "Go on."
"As
long as you continue wasting funds on colossal boondoggles like Go/ocfio-their
phrase—while tides continue to rise, they'll strike. It goes on for pages in
the same vein,"
"The
sons of—" I marshaled my whirling thoughts. "Keep it quiet as long as
you can. Get me out of here, before the media hear of my visit and make a
circus of Academy." "Sorry, sir. I got a copy of the communique* from
Holoworld, They want a comment, and verification that you're at Devon. The
Action League says they struck during your visit to show mat no one was safe
from me wrath of the people. You have twenty-four hours to announce a change in
policy, or they'll strike again, and disregard the cost in lives."
I
cursed long and fluently.
When I
wound down, Branstead said, "I'll send your heli."
"No,
I'll see this through." I swallowed bile; my visit had caused the deaths
of unwitting children. I cared not a fig for my reputation. By leaving I'd
hoped only to spare Academy, and the Navy. If the news was out, my presence
didn't matter.
"I'm
sending in the heli; I want Tilnitz at your side. Security has nothing on an
Eco Action League. Whoever they are, if they can strike at Academy, you're not
safe."
"No.
We've been through that."
For a
moment I thought he would argue, but to my relief he didn't press the point.
Instead, he said, "I rang up Win-stead at die Enviro Council, and they're
mystified as well."
"No
doubt" My sarcasm was evident; the Council's hands were always clean, no
matter what vileness their cohorts perpetrated. "Find the Eco League. Pull
out all the stops,"
"I'll
notify Naval Intelligence, Academy's their bailiwick. By the way, I'll have to
set up a news conference. As soon as you get back,"
"Have
Carlotti handle it" Let my portly press secretary appease the vultures of
the media,
"Sorry,
it's too big a story. They'll expect you,"
I
sighed. "Delay as long as you can." I rang off.
"Well,
now." I glared at Gregori. "Are you an enviro, Sarge?"
"No,"
His gaze held contempt
"I
thought not"
The
caller chimed again. I suppressed an urge to smash it Hazen listened a moment
rang off. 'That was sickbay. Autopsies confirm the lab report."
I
grunted.
"Go
home to your cadets, Sarge. Commandant call up the
file on
Hooker, flank. Send a copy to Branstead. Midshipman, you're dismissed"
Sergeant
Gregori favored me with a frosty glare as he stalked off. Well, I wasn't
surprised, despite my apology. I'd as much as accused him of murder.
CHAPTER
2
JL he
breeze was chill, but the sun bore down with bracing warmth. In T-shirt, faded
work pants, and my usual scuffed boots, I loped steadily up the hill, my breath
deep, my heart thumping, my whole body alive with the glory of a Welsh spring
morning. It wasn't often Father let me spend the night at Jason's, and I ought
not annoy him by returning late for chores.
I'd
been running for a quarter hour, from Jason's home to ours. At last I rounded
the rise of the knoll. There, below me, was our cottage, morning mist rising
like a ghost from the stony farmyard. Beyond our fence lay the twisting
Brid-gend road to Cardiff.
I stopped
for a few breaths, hands on my knees. The lee of the hillside was thick with
thistles, but the eastern side was mostly grass, grazed short by our neighbor's
sheep.
Father
would have tea boiling. In a few moments he'd be glancing at the clock, lips pursed
in disapproval.
I loped
down the hill. Gravity and youth sped my steps. My lope became a trot, the trot
a joyous gallop. My hair caressed the wind of my passage. My breath came easy.
I was young, and happy in myself, and could do anything.
I cried
out in delight, and woke myself.
I was
in Devon, in the guest suite of Naval Academy.
Fifty
irredeemable years separated me from the boy who raced down the hill.
I
clutched my pillow like a life vest, washed by a wave of regret so sharp it threatened
to carry me to a place of no return.
When
finally it passed, I was drenched with sweat. I climbed out of bed, leaned
heavily on my cane, hobbled to the bathroom. I stood a long while under the hot
soothing shower, mourning the eager young joey kid I'd once been.
It was
early afternoon, just past lunch. Sergeant Booker was nowhere to be found.
Swarms of mediamen were camped outside Academy's gates.
I
sipped at coffee, irritable from my interrupted sleep. "You had an enviro
maniac on staff and didn't know?*'
"It's
not illegal to favor—"
I
slammed the table, splattering coffee on Sergeant Hooker's file. "Eleven
years an enviro, and you didn't know?"
Hazen
and LeBow exchanged glances. "He wasn't that outspoken, Mr. SecGen. In
fact, other than a few pamphlets in his cabin there's no evidence he was—"
"Bah."
I waved it away. "Screen these people out! It says Booker's sister
suffered kidney failure after the Glas-tonbury spill. His mother died two years
later, same cause. If that doesn't qualify him as an enviro fanatic ..."
Hazen's
tone was hot. "My brother is fighting melanoma, and we think it's from the
California Daze." Incompetent techs had misread Los Angeles ozone
depletion stats six days in a row, and thousands had unwittingly been exposed
to high gamma counts. "Am I a terrorist? Do you want my resignation?"
"Of
course not." I drummed the table, willing reason into my tone.
"Sorry. I suppose we can't call every loonie enviro a security risk,
but..." But they were, I knew. Even my own son had betrayed me. He— I bit
off the thought
LeBow
took up his Commandant's defense. "Sir, they've become a potent force.
Over thirty enviro supporters elected to the Assembly, and Lord God knows how
many Supras or Territorials would vote enviro if they had a chance. Yes, a few
are glitched, but on the whole, Winstead's crowd is respectable. There's no
cause to suspect—"
"Don't
lecture me," I growled. I'd been wading in the political sewer too long,
and knew all its denizens.
"Still."
Hazen sounded morose. "Even if Booker was unhinged by his family's loss,
how could he kill his cadets?"
"Not
his. Oregon's."
"It's
the same." Drill sergeants would die to protect their charges. Over the
years, many had.
On that
sour note our meeting ended. The Commandant, three lieutenants, and a handful
of middies accompanied me to the pad. I waited irritably for the heli blades to
slow. Four grim-faced security joeys jumped out, weapons ready to guard me from
peril. Mark Tilnitz himself headed today's detail. Of all the security agents
I'd had to endure in years of political life, he was the most tolerable.
I
adjusted my tie, oddly reluctant to board.
Hazen
said, "We'll redouble base security, sir. There'll be no more
incidents."
"You
can't guard against everything."
"I
can damn well try." The Commandant's language left me uneasy; in my middy
days more than one officer had been beached for blasphemy. Of course, these
days strict adherence to Church policy was on the wane, though I wished it
weren't so.
Our
state religion was an amalgam of Protestant and Catholic ritual, sprung from
the Great Yahwehist Reunification. Religious union wouldn't have been possible,
had not the Final War devastated Africa and Asia. But Christian resurgence in a
revitalized Europe as well as America led eventually to the miraculous conclave
that established Mother Church, guided by her holy Council of Patriarchs. After
the Armies of Lord God repressed the Pentecostal heresy, the Church was adopted
by and became the underpinning of our United Nations Government.
The
Council of Patriarchs wielded less power today than
in days
past, but they still represented the reunified
Church.
I'd been summoned to meet with them two days
hence,
in New York, and they hadn't disclosed our agenda.
Overhead,
outside the gates, a heli droned daringly close
to
Academy's no-fly zone. It bore the Newsworld insignia.
"You'd
better go, sir. They probably have a lens on us,"
"Yes."
But my foot lingered on the step. "Those cadets
from
Krane. Go easy on them."
"I
will."
They've
been through ..." I sighed, recalling my foolish promise to Arlene. I
beckoned Tilnitz. "Wait here. Til be back shortly."
I
refused to let the Commandant and his officers follow me to barracks, but Hazen
insisted on sending the middy Anselm as an aide. It was easier to allow it than
object.
Moments
later, I stood outside Krane Barracks, breaming heavily from my hike. The dorm
was as I remembered: long, low, wooden, four steps above ground level. I'd
spent two years in—
"Oh,
it's you." Glowering, Sergeant Gregori faced me at the door. Clearly, I
wasn't forgiven. "May I come in?"
"If
you must," With obvious reluctance he stood aside. "What have you
told themT* "That we're investigating."
A young
voice rang out "Attention!" Twenty-five gray-clad cadets dropped what
they were doing, and hastily formed a line.
Five of
the bunks were stripped, the belongings piled neatly on the mattresses.
Sometime this day, each close friend of the casualties would choose an item for
remembrance. Then the remaining gear would be shipped home to grieving parents.
It was the Navy way.
"As
you were." I waited for the jocykids to relax. "I've come about
yesterday's tragedy. You cadets have to understand ..."
They
would never understand. Death was something mat happened to others. Not to
their own kind. Through a haze of years I recalled the sense of immortality
that had buoyed me, until the horrid day I lost my first and closest friend.
Jason lay buried in Cardiff. Decades had passed, since last I'd visited.
"You,
lad." I spoke to the cadet corporal. "What's your name?"
"Dam'1
Bevin, sir." Why did the name sound familiar? I tried to concentrate, gave
it up. He was no more than fourteen. Did he recognize me? No, cadets called
everyone "sir." Anything that moved.
"I'm
Secretary-General Seafort." His jaw dropped, with dawning recognition.
"Did you know them well?" Of course he did, you idiot, they were
bunkies, "I mean, particularly well?"
The boy's
eyes glistened "Jimmy—I mean. Cadet Ford, sir. He and I..."
"Who
else?" I looked about
"Santini
tutored me in nav." A shy girl.
"Ronny
Eiken came from my school."
Slowly,
as if ashamed, the youngsters acknowledged their friendships.
I said,
'There's nothing I can do, nothing die Navy can do, to make up your loss. I'm
sorry." It sounded inadequate. "We failed to protect you. I
apologize, on behalf of Academy.**
Sarge
gaped. My words approached heresy, Cadets were the lowest of the low. One never
apologized to them.
"Sir?"
It was the cadet corporal, daringly. Sarge frowned. Cadets spoke only when
spoken to.
"Yes,
Bevin?"
"What
happened to them? Was it pollution?"
"We'll
get to the bottom of this, I promise you. And when we do, we'll explain, as
best we can." It seemed inadequate. No, more than inadequate: an outright
lie. We knew what had been done. Heavily, I sank to the gray blanket of a
perfectly made bunk. "Gather round, would you please?" I waited.
"Ford
and Santini and the others were murdered. Envi-ros put nerve gas in the suit
chamber. Your bunkies were selected as symbols, you see." It wasn't easy
to face their inquisitive eyes, and I gave my frustration free rein.
"En-viro fanatics used them to teach me a lesson. It's what comes of
letting dissidents preach their poison."
"That's
goofjuice!"
With
one bound Gregori crossed the room, seized Bevin by the nape, cuffed him hard.
"Respect your betters, you insolent young—" "Let him
speak." My tone was low, but it sliced like a knife.
Sarge
thrust the cadet corporal toward me. The boy stumbled, caught himself by
clutching my knees, I winced.
"Well?"
Bevin
took a deep breath, plunged ahead, 'They're not enviros, they're terrorists.
Can't you see the difference?" "Are you enviro?"
**Yes!
And so's my father. Are you making it illegal?" "Bloody whale
buggers," I muttered. "There's no talking to you."
"The
Enviro Council elected representatives to the General Assembly. People are for
them. We—" "A few."
"—don't
need bombs, or nerve gas!" Our eyes locked, The barracks was silent
Gray-clad boys and girls and their sergeant stood transfixed, watching a cadet
beard the administrator of the world government.
I
cleared my throat "Five of you died. If it weren't for the enviros
..."
'Terrorists,
sir!"
"Don't
you see, joey? It's the politicals who smooth the way for the killers, with
their oily speeches, their bills submitted more for the approval of gullible
masses man because they'd do any good." I knotted my fists, recalling the
endless aggravations of the Senate, the clamoring hot-bloods in the General
Assembly.
Repairing
the ravages of the fish war took time as well as endless expense. We had
obligations to our colonies as well as our own people. And there was nothing we
could do to reverse centuries of environmental neglect; land and weather were
in Lord God's hands. Enviros disrupted government, caused endless expense,
divided families ... Why couldn't they understand?
"Is
that really what you think, sir?" The boy's face showed disapproval. More
man that: betrayal.
My
truculence collapsed. "I don't know what I think. I'm tired, and I've been
SecGen too long." I leaned on my cane, hoisted myself to my feet.
"I'm going home."
Bevin
glanced at his sergeant, back to me. "Sir, I'm sorry if—**
"It's
too late for that" I clumped to the door.
Outside,
the middy came to attention. I noticed his eyes were red. "What are you
bawling at?"
"Nothing,
sir." Anselm's spine was ramrod straight, stomach sucked tight
"Stand
easy," I growled. The cadet corporal's brazen behavior wasn't the middy's
fault. By brute force I made my tone gentle as I started down the path, "A
caning?" Midshipmen and cadets were considered young gentlemen, and were
subject to corporal punishment, unlike ordinary seamen.
"No,
sir."
"What,
then?"
"It's
just..." He swallowed. "Yesterday I helped San-tini into her suit.
She always had trouble with her clamps. Always."
"You
were ... friends?" Fraternizing was discouraged, but I recalled a middy,
long years past, who'd made my cadet days bearable.
Miserably,
he nodded, "What do we do, sir?" It was an appeal.
"Our
duty. It's the only answer I know." It wasn't near enough; my hands moved
without my volition. "Come here, boy." Gently, I pulled his red locks
close to my chest.
"It's
not—we weren't—"
"I
know."
"She
tried so hanir
"They
all do."
After a
time he pulled loose, scuffed the earth with a spit-shined boot. "She made
fun of my hair."
"Daring,
for a eadet." We resumed our walk.
"She
knew I didn't mind." He sniffled. "Seeing her He there..."
"I
can imagine."
"Blood
running from her mouth," He recoiled. "Why, sir? Why does it have to
end like that?"
"I
don't know, son,"
His
voice was almost too soft to hear. "I'll miss her."
We
passed the Commandant's office.
"Sir?"
He gestured. 'The helipad's this way." A path forked to the left.
"I
know." I headed onward.
"Where
are you going?"
'To my
duty." As we neared the wrought-iron gates, I smoothed my hair, tugged at
my tie.
Ahead,
a predatory swarm of mediamen focused through the iron rails. My face was a
stone mask.
"We're
home, sir."
Blinking
myself awake, I peered through the foggy heli window. We'd set down on the dusty
concrete pad in my Washington compound.
Outside
the walls, red maples drooped in muggy July heat. Across the river from Old
Washington, the compound nestled in the Virginia hills incorporated into the
broad-cned District. Built to resemble an old southern estate, it was a gift
raised by public subscription after the end of my first Administration.
A large
home, with seven bedrooms and a plethora of verandas and porches, its
outbuildings included sheds, a greenhouse, and a small cottage, all within
protective stone walls.
I'd
been adamant in refusing the unwarranted gift, but Arlene's good sense
prevailed. We needed a home for P.T., and I'd had no savings whatever.
"You deserve it," she'd insisted, and at length I acquiesced.
These
days I found it a nuisance commuting to the Rotunda in New York, and I did so
as seldom as possible. Naturally, when the General Assembly was in session I
had to be present, at least on occasion, to defend my Government against the
ruthless elitists of the Territorial Party, and those independents who would
bolt us for personal gain. A vote of no-confidence in the Assembly would bring
down an Administration.
But
other times I brought work home, and met with del-egations and political allies
in my comfortable den. If the electorate didn't like it, they could vote me
out.
Ours
was a complicated system. Assemblymen were elected from districts corresponding
to regions of constituent nations, and served terms of four years unless the
Government lost a vote of no-confidence or failed to pass major legislation, or
unless the SecGen dissolved the Senate and Assembly and called for new
elections. The Senate, on the other hand, couldn't dismiss the Government with
a motion of no-confidence, but could block legislation indefinitely. Senators
were elected for six years and were maddeningly independent.
I
rubbed my eyes. Despite all the amenities and care lavished on a SecGen,
intercontinental travel was wearing. I'd slept two hours in the noisy suborbhal
from London, but my aging body craved more. With helpless envy I recalled the
lithe form I'd possessed as middy, then Captain. I'd thrived on lack of sleep,
or so it had seemed.
1
yawned. "Where's ArleneT
Mark
Tilnitz whispered a query into his throat mike, cocked his head for the
response. "Cleaning up after the Hollanders, I believe."
Supervising
the staff, that meant. I'd throw a fit if I saw her toting trays of glasses
herself. We'd done enough of that in our private years. There had to be some
compensation for the misery of public office. These days we had help with
cooking and gardening, though I refused to allow anyone but my midshipman aides
to maintain an office in the compound. My Rotunda staff communicated from New
York via caller, nets, and fax.
1 tramped
to the veranda. Glassed double doors from my inner office awaited me. I
hesitated, chose instead the door to the sunlit hall where my aide's desk was
placed, "—like an old lion facing a pack of wolves. Look at him!"
"Yes,
I'm responsible. For my government, for the Navy, for the lives of those poor
cadets. I take the obligation seriously. "
"What
will you do now?"
"Go
home, and set the investigation in motion."
"And
when you find the terrorists?"
"Lord
God willing, I'll attend their execution."
"Oh,
good line."
"He
means it. Uh-oh, he's calling on Vince Canto."
"Mr.
SecGen, the Independents are demanding an investigation of Galactic's funding.
Was there a deal between you and the Territorials?"
"Watch.
He blew his answer."
"There
was an understanding. We all agreed that a strong Navy was necessary, and
funding ships was the way to achieve it."
A
groan. "We're in for it He admitted mere's a deal."
"The
old man won't lie, even if— Oh! Mr. SecGen!" Charlie Witrek, my earnest
young middy, scrambled to his feet. Slower to rise was my chief of staff,
Jerence Branstead. A sardonic wave.
"Hallo,
Jerence." Safe from probing holocameras, I loosened my tie, took off my
jacket, Charlie took it to hang.
"Mr.
SecGen, will you make further concessions to en-viro sentiment as a result
of—"
"The
question is offensive. No. We will not submit to terrorism. These people are
glitched, throwbaeks to a discredited age."
Branstead
nodded his approval at the screen, "Well said."
"Do
you support Rcichschancflor Mundt's call for a worldwide reassessment of costly
pollution measures?"
"No,
The issue's been studied over and again. We'n doing what we can, Mundt is
protective of the Dresden chip works, but our measures won't cause a shutdown,"
I'd
tried to sound conciliatory, I recalled. Mundt was a Supranationalist, a member
of my own governing party, but was obsessed with protecting his nation's
industry from regulation. At times he could be difficult. And Widener, the
British Prime Minister, pressed just as strongly for stiffen enviro
legislation. My role as SecGen could only be to steer a middle course. The
world had been debating environmental spoliation for centuries, and I saw no
need to act rashly.
"Do
you view the cracks in the Three Gorges Dean with greater alarm now that—"
"Turn
that bloody thing off." Wearily, I slumped into a chair.
14—shifts
in rain patterns filled the reservoir thirty percent above rated
capacity?"
My
image faded from the screen.
"You
did well, sir." Witrek, my staff middy. He ran fingers through his hair,
but as always, every strand was in place. He wouldn't allow it otherwise.
I
glowered. "What would I do without your approval?"
He
grinned, knowing me too well to be fazed. "How can you stand those
vultures?"
"I
hold my nose."
Charlie
brought me a coffee, strong and black as I liked it
"Thank
you." A middy wasn't a butler, and shouldn't be treated as one. But
Witrek, with quiet competence, found ways to make himself useful without being
asked. I would miss him.
As if
reading my mind he asked, "Did you pick my successor, sir?"
"We're working on it." "I imagine it's difficult."
If I
said nothing, he would let it drop, but I knew he yearned for me to pursue it.
"Do go on, Charlie."
"I
mean, he'd need to be resourceful, motivated, as patient as Job..." His
tone was bright.
"Yes,
I've missed those qualities the last two years." Not so, but I enjoyed our
byplay. "Any word on your posting?*' He grimaced. "Not yet." No
doubt he'd be sent to a ship of the line. I could intervene, but wouldn't
unless there was need. I wondered if he'd sought Galactic. "What's on for
this afternoon?" Charlie consulted his console. "Mr. Carr's due at
five. He'll stay the night"
"Good."
Despite my weariness, my face softened to a smile.
Derek
Carr, scion of an old Hope Nation family, had been an arrogant Uppie of sixteen
when he'd first sailed as a passenger on Hibernia. After the death of our
officers he'd answered my summons to become a cadet, a difficult role for him
to fill, given my uncertainty and inexperience. Nonetheless, I'd promoted him
to middy as soon as I could. We'd toured his colony together, and over the
years had become steadfast friends.
Jerence
Branstead said cautiously, "Arlene's laid on a small reception for Mr.
Carr."
I
groaned. My wife knew bow little I enjoyed playing host. I could deal with
visitors on business of state; as long as I stood for election I had no right
to complain. But at a private party I felt as awkward as a middy in a gathering
of Captains.
"But
Jeff Thorne's invited."
"Oh."
I smiled. Admiral Thorne, my mentor in Academy days, had been Branstead's
predecessor as chief of staff. Now retired, he lived in London. I checked my
watch. "I'd better get changed." Leaning on the banister, I made my
way upstairs. They'd offered to put in an elevator, but I wouldn't hear of it.
I was aged enough without acting the part of an old man. Next they'd have
someone wiping drool from my lips.
"They
say it's huge." A woman of thirty or so, resplendent in a mauve jumpsuit
and amethyst bracelets. I was trying desperately to recall her name.
My eyes
searched for Arlene. "By comparison, my first ship, Hibernia, had a
hundred thirty passengers. Galactic carries over three thousand."
"That's
a small city. Her Captain must feel like a colonial governor."
"Captain
Stanger?" I'd only met him once; he'd spent
"I
won't tell you how to run your affairs, sir, but—"
"Please
do." He was one of the few I'd listen to.
There's
an odd undercurrent to the conversations I've heard about her."
"How
so?"
"As
you say, GoJocrtc's become a symbol. Everyone's either violently opposed or
very much in favor. For every enviro who bemoans her cost, I've heard a Navy man
defend her, but with such contempt and hatred of the enviros—" Thorne
said, "Joeys get emotional. Pay no attention." I nodded agreement.
Derek
studied me closely. "You're sure?" "Yes." I spoke more
confidently than I felt. Why in Lord God's name had I approved the expenditure?
Even if Galactic hadn't gone over budget...
"I'm
glad you built her," he said simply. Then, with a grin, "You'll learn
Galactic and Olympiad are wasted as supply ships. Their best use will be to
open new colonies." A wry smile. "And the outworlds need all the
allies we can get"
Even as
a jest, it troubled me. "Does Hope Nation need protection, Derek?" My
attention wandered. The crowd was starting to thin; I really ought to
circulate, at least to say good-byes.
"Not
from you, sir. That goes without saying." True. On my visit to
Centraltown, their capital, I was feted as hero, revered almost as deity. I'd
never gone back. Derek's look was pensive. "But you won't be SecGen
forever. And even in office, you can't manage affairs light-years from
home."
I
snorted. "I don't govern your Commonweal." Acknowledging a fait
accompli, as a young Captain I'd granted Hope Nation its independence, after
the Navy had abandoned the colony to alien attack. "Some folk wish you
did. Oh, not at home. Here." He lowered his voice. "That new Bishop
the Patriarchs sent to Centraltown. Know him?"
"No."
Thorne
rubbed his chin. "Andori? He's Saythor's man, and conservative." He
snagged a cocktail from a passing waiter.
Derek
said, "We've locked horns half a dozen times. He's gone so far as to
threaten me with disavowal."
I drew
breath. Disavowal was one small step short of excommunication, a deadly matter.
No citizen caring to preserve his soul could have dealings with a disavowed
individual. And if one were excommunicated, even wife and children were
expected to shun him. "Be careful."
"The
Bishop has less support than he thinks. Religion has waned a bit; if it came to
that, I might carry a vote to disestablish the Church."
"Derek!"
I was scandalized, and not a little offended.
He held
up a placating hand. "Only if it comes to it. Would you rather I wandered
the plantations stealing corn?"
"Lord
God." I drained my drink.
"It's
worse on other worlds. What irks the colonies is how little you realize you
need us. Your imports of food and raw materials have skyrocketed. Soon the
balance of trade will be in our favor. You need our goodwill, Nick. And you
won't get it with heavy-handed threats."
"I
never once—"
"Not
you personally, but your government. Really, you ought to visit more."
"He
can't." Old habits die hard; Thorne rushed to my defense. Even in a
fastship, Hope Nation was a nine-month cruise.
I said
warily, "What haven't I been told?"
"In
the colonies, there've been hangings from time to time, for treason and
heresy." Derek shook his head. "In reality, for nothing more than
political talk. No actual rebellion."
Til
look into it."
"The
Navy, of course, backs the colonial Governors. Some of your less temperate
Captains urge mass executions, or boycott. There's a move in your Senate to
rescind Detour's independence, return them to colonial status. They say—"
"That's
gone nowhere. I've seen to that" Neanderthals, everywhere. Frightened of
change.
"As
I said, you won't be SecGen forever." Derek shot me a look of appraisal.
"Though you have a few years
left."
"We'll
talk about it later." Derek would stay the night, as would my chief of
staff. Jerence Branstead and I were old friends from Centraltown days, when
he'd been but a boy.
The
party was definitely winding down; Arlene's glances were ever more pointed. I
drifted off to join her at the door.
"What
a relief." I eased off my shoes, rested my feet on A hassock.
Wiping
an end table, Arlene frowned. "Your shoes? They're your favorite—"
"The
reception." I gestured vaguely at the nearly empty room. House staff joeys
were quietly, efficiently gathering abandoned glasses and hors d'oeuvres.
Branstead
settled himself comfortably on a sofa, near Derek. "By the way, about your
Devon press conference—"
"Don't
start. Please."
"—when
Vince Canlo asks a hostile question, turn it aside. No need to alienate—"
"Newsnet
hates us," I said sourly. "They're in the Terrie Party's
pocket."
"All
the more reason not to feed him. A diplomatic evasion now and then..."
Derek
grunted. "That's not Nick. Never has been." He raised an eyebrow at
Branstead. "You've been with him long enough to know."
"Would
you have him play into their hands?"
"I'd
have him tell the truth, as he does." Derek pursed his lips. "I
concede they were harrying you, Nick. You don't personally dictate clean air
policy."
"I
didn't raise sea levels, either." I tried not to sound glum. "Or
cause the Santa Monica mudslides."
Arlene
handed a waiter the tray of glasses she'd collected, and perched on the arm of
my chair. "Feeling sorry for ourselves, love?" Her fingers brushed
the back of my neck.
"Not
at all, hon, it's just..." I sighed. "I can't please everybody."
"You
please me." Abruptly her mouth hovered before mine, and rewarded me with a
long kiss. "They snapped and growled at your heels." Another kiss.
"You stood up well. Sounded like the wrath of God. When Canlo brought up
the ruins of Bangladesh..."
I'd nearly
lost my temper. As I had when Holoworld asked about strengthening the New York
Seawall. Didn't they know that their questions gave credence to the
fulmi-nations of the Eco Action League? How could mediamen support those
ruthless murderers?
I growled,
"You've all nothing better to do than stare at a holovid?"
"You're
news, love." Arlene settled into my lap, a beautiful, slender woman. I
felt myself stir.
"Urn."
I looked about helplessly. "We ought to help straighten the house."
"He's
embarrassed," she told Jerence sweetly, getting to her feet. "Or he
doesn't want me."
"Arlene!"
A
wicked grin. 'Tonight you'll have to show me otherwise."
I tried
not to blush.
Chatting
with Derek, I puttered about the room. It was amazing where joeys might set
down drinks and food. Once, I was lighting a fire and found—
"...
the Patriarchs?" Jerence waited expectantly.
"Eh?"
I wrenched my mind to the present.
"We
ought to prepare for your meeting," he said patiently. He'd known me too
many years to be offended.
"How
can we?" I hadn't a clue why I'd been summoned. "It's probably the
religious education budget. Get me next year's figures."
"Will
do, but I doubt they'd hold a special session to—"
"Nicky."
Arlene tapped my shoulder. Something in her tone gave me pause. "P.T.'s
come."
I
regarded her steadily.
"He
wants to talk to you."
"No."
"Please,
love."
"No."
I turned away, but she caught my arm, swung me back. "Don't walk away from
me, Nick Seafort!"
I tried
to disengage her fingers. "What do you want of me?"
"Speak
with your son."
Casually,
Derek swung from his seat and drifted toward the hall. I stayed him with a
gesture. He was my oldest friend; from him I need not have secrets.
"Not
today of all days, Arlene. Not after Devon."
"Nick,
this can't go on. The two of you are like little children."
"Don
Y calJ me a—"
"He's
waiting in the hallway."
I
looked to Derek and Branstead, but they said nothing. "Well?"
Derek
shrugged. "Far be it from me to—"
"Damn
it!"
"How
long have you been estranged?"
I
shrugged. "A year or so."
Arlene
folded her arms. "Almost three."
Derek
said, "And you're miserable."
"I'm
no such thing. He deserves—"
"For
God's sake, Nick. I've known you forty years."
I
capitulated. "Even if I were, it's a matter of principle."
"Mr.
SecGen, don't be an ass." His tone was light, but his eyes were not
"You're
the second person today to read me off." For a long moment I stared at the
carpet. "I don't know if I should see him. It's been so long, and when he
left—"
"Hello,
Path."
I
whirled.
P.T.
stood in the doorway.
At
twenty-four he was everything I'd once hoped him to be. Brilliant, athletic,
dedicated, and handsome, at least to a father's eyes.
"Philip."
I yearned to sink into my favorite leather chair, but that would extend the
conversation, and I wanted at all costs to do otherwise.
"You've
been well?"
My tone
was harsh. "Is that why you've come?"
Derek's
eyes caught Branstead's, but neither man spoke.
"No,
sir." Philip's hands fluttered, found his pockets. "When I heard the
news from Academy ..."
I
waited, refusing to make conversational sounds that would help him.
His
glance flitted to his mother. "Should I go?"
I said,
"Perhaps another time would be..."
"Nick."
Derek.
I
knotted my fists. "Say what you came for."
P.T.
said earnestly, "We had nothing to do with it. I swear by Lord God."
His eyes searched mine for absolution.
"Philip,
the Enviro Council is composed of fanatics that cause us no end of trouble. Did
you plot the murder of my cadets? No. But you created the atmosphere that made
it possible, and I find that unforgivable."
Jerence
opened his mouth to speak, thought better of it. I rounded on him. "Well,
they did! Their constant carping about our policy, the way they undermine us in
the Assembly ..."
"Path,
how can you oppose us? Have you seen holos of
Bangladesh?"
"I've been there." In what little waS left of that hapless
swamp.
"Do
you know what Holland is facing? Louisiana? For that matter, how's Micronesia
holding up?"
"Is
this about politics, you two?" Derek stood, hands on hips.
I
ignored him. "Philip, it would take generations to reverse—"
"No
it wouldn't! At the Council we've done studies of the economic cost I've run
the stats myself, in fact it's my project. In the long run, reversing the
ecological damage will actually save—"
"Over
how long?" I glared. "Generations."
"Stop
it, both of you!" Derek looked every inch the Stadholder of Hope Nation.
"Thirty
years," P.T. said stubbornly.
"Paid
for out of this year's budget. Philip, we haven't the money." How many
times had we been down this road, my intransigent son and I?
"South
Atlantic fish yields are down again. It's the fifth summer—"
"And
colonial food imports are up. We balance."
I
looked past him to the doorway, hoping he'd take the hint, yearning for him to
go.
"I
won't watch this." Derek's eyes had a dangerous glint "Jerence, let's
leave them to their lunacy." He tugged at Branstead's sleeve. "Nick
thinks he's in the Rotunda, arguing with a Territorial deputy." He brushed
past "And
you!
" He stopped short, to scowl at Philip. "You've nothing to be proud
of this day. For a prodigy, you act like a dolt!" And he was gone.
Branstead
followed, squeezing my arm in passing.
Silence.
"Is
there anything else?" My tone was unyielding.
Arlene
said softly, "Remember why you came."
Philip
braced himself. "Yes, sir, there is."
"What,
then?"
His voice
was unsteady. "Path, I love you."
I
bolted past him to the door, but my fingers slipped on the knob, and then he
was there, his hand over mine.
"Father,
I'm begging you!" He sank to his knees.
"DON'T
DO THAT!" With horror, I realized my fist was raised to club him into
submission. Instead, I hauled him to his feet
Once,
in my youth, a man had begged me on his knees, and I'd refused to spare his
life. It was a gesture I could no longer abide.
I
covered my face. "P.T., leave, I beg you."
"Sir,
it doesn't have to be this way between us."
"You
made it so. Who was it rifled my office, copied my private environmental papers
for the Territorials?"
He
cried, "I was nineteen, and stupid! They said it would help." And
sardonically, they'd betrayed him.
"You
were never stupid. Over and again I've asked you to stay clear of the enviro
fringe. You knew the political capital they made of your support. They still
do!"
"We're
not fringe, Path." His tone was reasonable, but he abandoned it. "I
love you so much, sir!" His voice cracked.
Unable
to respond, I faced the door, hugging myself.
"Can't
we be friends again? Please?"
"Yes,
Nicky, can't you?" Arlene's voice was soft.
I
swallowed, until I was sure I could speak. "How's Jared?"
P.T.'s
tone was pitifully eager. "Fine, sir." Jared Tenere had lived with us
once, as a boy, and caused all sorts of trouble. Fd disliked him intensely. Now
he and Philip were paired.
"Still
planning to adopt?"
"He
wants to go monogenetic clone."
"Whose
cells?"
"Mine."
"Derek
is monogenetic clone."
"I
know."
We were
marking time.
I took
a deep breath. "Will you give up enviro politics?"
He
glanced at his mother, with resignation. "No, Path." His tone was
resolute.
It
should have made me furious, but for some reason I was glad. I forced myself to
turn, and faced my son. Something stung my eyes. Damned pollutants. Not that
the envi-ros were right; there was nothing we could do about them.
Philip's
hands began to pick at his shirt. His eyes darted. "Oh, God, I'm
revving." It was a frenzy he'd often worked himself into as a child, when
the breathtaking speed of his thoughts outpaced his ability to cope. He closed
his eyes for a moment, tried to breathe deeply. "I can't stand— about the
cadets, sir, I swear I'll do whatever you say to make it up. Don't shut
me—"
Lord
God, I can't bear any more.
His
fingers scrabbled at the cotton of his tunic. "Oh, Path, please don't
cry!"
I
opened my arms.
With a
moan, he fell into them.
Arlene
leaned against the door, silent. Surreptitiously, she wiped her eyes.
I
yawned. It was late, but I treasured my time with Derek. Arlene nestled close,
holding my hand. Branstead was in the den, communing with his caller. Derek
slouched on a comfortable sofa. "So, it's done," he said.
I
shrugged. "And then he went home." After our fervent embrace, Philip
and I had chatted a while longer. Despite the emotion of the moment, three
years of estrangement couldn't be so easily overcome. Our talk had veered again
to politics, and become strained. Eventually, he'd left, with a vague promise
that he'd visit soon, with Jared. With shame, I realized I was glad to see him
go.
Arlene
stirred the remains of her drink. "I'm glad you reconciled."
"Who
said we did?"
She
snorted.
"You
could say we reconciled, after a fashion." My tone was grudging. I hadn't
told Philip how I'd cherished cradling him in my arms. Perhaps my fragile,
genius son already knew.
"Between
the two of you ..." She shook her head.
She
must have been miserable, these last years. I'd been so caught up in my
stubborn anger... "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to keep you from him."
"Good
heavens, did you think you had?" She looked at me quizzically, but
squeezed my fingers.
"I
don't—you and I haven't talked much about—" I sputtered to a halt.
"Not
since that day you began shouting, at breakfast"
I
cringed. It hadn't been one of my better days. Still, I felt betrayed.
"All this time you've been seeing—"
"Of
course. I'm his mother."
"And
I'm his father!"
"Yes,
love." She didn't quite make it sound an accusation.
Hastily,
I retreated. As always, Arlene would do what she thought right.
"I'm
glad it's over," said Derek. "You can bear only so much loneliness."
"You
forget yourself, sir!" My tone was ice.
"Do
I?" The Stadholder of the Commonweal of Hope Nation met my scowl,
unflinching.
I
struggled to hold on to my vexation. "If I want analysis of my feelings,
I'll ask."
"Is
he abusing you, Derek?" His calls completed, Branstead peered in from the
door.
"No,
but he's trying."
"Don't
gang up on me," I said sourly.
Derek
said quietly, "You've always been lonely, haven't you, Nick?"
Uncomfortable
at the probe, I considered his question. "Not reall—I suppose so."
Life in Father's cottage had been lonesome, except for my friendship with
Jason, though I hadn't considered it so at the time. During my years on ship I
endured the unyielding isolation of a Captain. Command of Academy wasn't much
different. Then had come the monastery. I glanced quickly at Arlene, curled at
my side. "Except for my marriage."
"If
only it were true." She smiled to ease the hurt of her words.
"Arlener
Languidly,
she rose to her feet, wrapped herself around the back of my chair to massage my
shoulders. "You've been a loving husband, and attentive too. But nothing
can penetrate the wall you've built. I blame your father for that."
"Bah."
I waved it away. "What's come over you all tonight?" Gently, I set
aside Arlene's fingers, struggled to my feet. "I have work to do. It's
morning in Asia; Hiroto-san is waiting. And I want to call Hazen about that
murderous sergeant. Has Charlie gone to bed?" My staff middy and I often
worked into the night It was a peaceable time, and productive.
"Witrek
will be transferred in a week," Jerence reminded me.
"Call
someone down. We have a list." The last thing on my mind was choosing a
middy aide. Tomorrow, I'd have to fly to New York; the Council of Patriarchs
waited. The day after, we had the Von Walthers banquet at Earthport Station.
I
paused at the door, disconcerted. At last I muttered, "Derek ... thank
you." A quick wave good night, and I limped to my office.
In
Father's cottage, tongue between my teeth, I bent over my desk, laboring over
my balsa model of UNS Repulse. Jason and I had chosen it on one of our
infrequent bicycle rides to Cardiff. I hoped to have it finished by his next
visit, so we could paint it together.
I
struggled to attach the disk of Level 3 to the central shaft. Repulse was, like
most ships of the line, a three-decker.
Not
that there was much chance I'd ever see her.
I was
twelve, desperate for a year to pass so I'd be old enough to apply to U.N.N.S.
Academy. Last year I'd managed, after months of scrimping and saving, to set
aside enough coin for Neilsen's Naval Academy Entrance Exam Prep Guide, and at
my stubborn insistence. Father now included a heavy measure of math in my home
schoolwork.
"Nicholas,
it's bedtime."
"Aye,
Father." Reluctantly, I set down the model If it was only possible.. .1
closed my eyes, rested my forehead on the scarred desk.
I'd
have to get past transcript evaluation, two interviews, and final cull, before
I might ever see Academy. Each year many thousands applied, and fewer than five
hundred were selected.
I
busied myself making ready for bed, knelt next to the covers for my prayers.
"Lord
God, I beg You, let me serve in the Navy. I'll be
noble,
and good, I swear I'll be true to You forever. " I took a deep breath,
echoed earnestly, "Forever. "
"Nick,
you're kicking me."
"Wha—"
Slowly, I came awake.
Arlene
gently stroked my flank. "You were thrashing about, love."
"I'm
sorry." I put my head down, pretended sleep, felt my eyes burn.
Could I
start over, Lord? You gave me such a magnificent gift, this life. And I've made
such a hash of it.
CHAPTER
3
t's
that racket?" I paused at the heli door.
"Demonstrators,
sir." Karen Bums, deputy chief of security. Her tone was disapproving.
From
the helipad I couldn't see the protesters, of course. A high wall surrounded
our compound. When P.T. was younger, it had been my dread that some crazed
partisan would scramble over the wall and injure him. But then, as now,
Security kept vigilant guard.
"Who
now?" I wiped my face. The day was sweltering. It seemed summers were
worse than ever.
"European
Independencers by the cottages, Earth Firsters south of the gate."
"How
many?"
"I'm
not sure."
"Let's
take a look."
"No,
Mr. SecGen!" Karen grabbed my arm before I'd taken two paces.
I
rapped her with my cane. "Belay that!"
"Mr.
Seafort, how do you expect us to keep you alive?"
"Oh,
come now. How many assassins come here expecting me to visit with them?"
Obstinately, I moved toward the gate.
"Larry,
Ezekiel, take the point! Suko, watch for darters."
Fuming,
I let my nannies surround me as I strode past the gatehouse, along the path to
the street For a moment the clamor lulled. "Open the gate."
"Mr.
SecGen..."
"Do
it" But I did it myself, thrusting into the mass of In-dependencers. Five
hundred or so, I guessed. Well enough dressed, most of them. "What's this
about? What do you want?"
"Freedom
for—"
"Hey,
it's Seafort!"
"Get
away from—"
"Bring
back the E.C.!"
"Stand
clear!" Karen's tone brooked no argument I occupied the sidewalk; pressure
from my guards slowly forced the demonstrators into the street
I
raised my voice. "How can I listen in this uproar?" I raised my hands
for silence. "Have you a spokesman? Will you be quiet?" Slowly, the
din subsided. "Mark, pass me that bullhorn."
A
heavyset man pushed forward. "I'm in charge. We're hereto—"
"I'm
Nicholas Seafort. What's your name?"
"Uh,
Franks. Maury Franks."
"What
do you want?" I handed him the speaker,
"Independence
for the European states."
"All
of them?"
"I—yes."
I said,
"Public opinion in Britain runs seventy percent in favor of union, last I
looked. France is—"
"Polls
can be faked. We want a plebiscite! People, the Government has conspired for
decades to hide the truth. Ever since the Austrian-Italian Merger of 2170,
Administration after Administration has—"
"Oh,
no, you don't" I snatched back the bullhorn. "I'm willing to listen,
but not if you besiege my home. Certainly
not if
you make speeches. Bring a petition to my U.N. office."
"We
tried—"
"I
guarantee you I'll personally deliver an answer within three days."
"We've
heard that goofjuice before. Lies, all of it"
"You
have my solemn oath. Before Lord God." It brought murmurs of astonishment
Franks
blustered, but a glance showed him his congregation wasn't with him.
"Deliver
it whenever you're ready, Mr. Franks." I moved toward the Earth Firsters.
"What are you joeys doing here?"
Below,
Delaware merged into New Jersey. U.N. One would be landing on the East River
strip in half an hour. Washington was too close to New York for a suborbital;
we were reduced to old-fashioned jets, hi-trans rail, or a heli. My jet was
equipped with every sort of luxury, which I never used. Nonetheless, we carried
valets, a butler, security staff, my media secretary, putermen, a Naval
liaison... I sighed.
Mark
Tllnitz selected a bottle from the bin. "Wine, sir?" He had to raise
his voice over the drone of the engines.
"And
meet the Council of Patriarchs reeking of alcohol? Are you glitched?"
"It's
not illegal, Mr. SecGen. You're a civilian." And I was ashore, to boot.
Aboard Naval vessels, alcohol, like most drugs, was strictly forbidden.
"The Beaujolais, do you think?" Tilnitz's voice was smooth.
Perhaps
he was tweaking me to divert my disquiet; he was sensitive to my moods. I
stared moodily out the window at the brown landscape below.
In the
cockpit were two pilots, a navigator, a radar de-fenseman. Behind them in the
galley, two uniformed stewards waited, hoping I'd press a call button. In the
compartment aft of us, Jerence Branstead chatted with a few
favored
mediamen. Farther toward the tail lounged our press secretary, the valet, and
the rest of my swollen entourage.
"It's
ridiculous." I slapped the armrest "An escort of seventy for a trip
to the office."
"We've
been through this." Tilnitz sounded resigned.
"Go
through it again!"
Instead
of answering me directly, he raised an eyebrow. "Sir, I'm sure the Council
has no quarrel with you."
"Don't
patronize me, Mark."
"Why
notr
I
glared, but after a moment his mouth twitched. I grumbled, "Why do I put
up with youT
"Because
Jeff Thorne retired." Admiral Thorne, my former chief of staff, had once
been my superior, and was one of the few who knew how misplaced was the
public's adulation. In consequence, he spoke to me without undue regard for my
rank. During my second term I'd relied heavily on his judgment and discretion.
Perhaps
Mark was right. I seemed to need a goad, to puncture my moods. In earlier days,
I'd had Edgar Tolliver, but he was long gone from my life, first to a
Captaincy, then to retirement.
Mark's
tone was dry, "Karen's rather miffed with you,"
"Why?"
I knew full well why.
"Crowds
are dangerous, sir."
"I'm
no tyrant If the people want to kill me, I should let them, or leave
office."
"You
don't believe that."
I was
silent not sure whether I did,
"You
certainly startled them," Tilnitz admitted. "But what was the
point?"
"I
don't know. I was restless. To shake up their thinking, I suppose. Make them
see me as a person, not an abstraction."
"Oh,
great. At five hundred a pop, how long 'til you win over thirty billion
citiz—"
"Enough,
Mark." I keyed the caller. "Mr. Branstead, join me, please."
"You
rang?" Jerence must have been standing at the en-tryway.
"Ask
the puter for our budget for religious education for the last ten years."
"Surely
that's not why the Patriarchs—"
"Do
it!"
Jerence
and Tilnitz exchanged sympathetic glances. If I'd carried a pistol I could have
shot them both,
I
strode down the mosaic walkway toward the Rotunda,
The new
U.N. enclave—everyone called it that, though it hadn't been new for a hundred
fifty years—stretched along the befouled East River from Thirty-eighth Street
to Forty-seventh. Within its confines were housed the offices of Senators and
Assemblymen, the numerous U.N. commissions, tribunals, and organizations, and
envoys from our former and current colonies.
Many
were in two huge towers whose lines suggested the original U.N. building, long
demolished. Between them, surrounded by manicured walkways, was the magnificent
marbled Rotunda that housed my Secretariat,
I
panted, "Are we late?'
Jerence
checked his watch, "We have twelve minutes,"
"Hmpf."
I strode faster, ignoring a warning twinge in my knee. Dutifully, my retinue
kept pace. In younger days I would have increased my stride until the throng
was forced to lope. It was absurd; even on the walkway I had at least twenty
companions. Why hadn't I put a stop to it in my first term?
I
glanced upward to the Von Walthers Administrative Center, on top of which
sharpshooters doubtless maintained vigil.
The sun
passed behind the shadow of a looming tower. No apparatus as vast as the world
government could be housed in as small a space as the U.N. enclave; only the
heads of each department—Treasury, Education, Planetary Trade, etc.—maintained
offices in the Rotunda.
Unlike
capitols of earlier days, we had no need to concentrate our principal offices,
so departments were spread over several continents, and linked by net Only six
hundred thousand worked in the U.N. complex and its environs. Many of them were
housed in huge towers, amid New York's wealthy Uppies.
Admiralty,
as always, was based in London, and semi-independent. The Territorials had
tried once to bring them into the fold, but the Navy had called in every
political marker it possessed, and sent the administration reeling. No
government had again attempted to rein them in.
We
neared the Rotunda steps. Within, the Patriarchs waited
The
relationship between the United Nations and the Reunification Church was not
fully defined. During the Era of Law that followed the Rebellious Ages, America
and Japan had slowly lost their ability to dominate the world by financial
strength. The U.N. became the only strong global institution, just as the Final
War permanently changed the world balance of power by devastating Japan, China,
and much of Africa.
At the
same time, the miracle of Christian Reunification swept conservative Europe,
now me most influential region of the globe. The United Nations explicitly
governed in the name of Lord God and His Church. Rebellion was more man treason;
it was apostasy.
"Easy,
sir. Let them wait; you're head of Government."
"I
owe them courtesy." They represented the Deity. On the other hand, so, by
law, did 1.1 slowed my pace a trifle,
Despite
the acknowledged relationship, the Church had no specific rights or duties
under the U.N. Charter. The Council of Patriarchs, of which the head of every
major Christian sect was a member, was the principal achievement
of
Reunification. It governed the Church. But it did not govern the United Nations.
Yet,
what fate would befall a SecGen who openly defied the Council's command?
Disavowal, surely. Only once in their history had the Patriarchs ever disavowed
their own Government Not that the infamous Van Rourke deserved any less.
Formal
excommunication was also possible. In that event one would be barred from the
rites of any member sect, and all must acknowledge that Lord God's face was
turned from him. To consort with him would be treason.
Jerence
waved jauntily to the mcdiamen gathered on the lawn. As was my wont, I ignored
the holocams and the reporters' shouted questions. They'd learn soon enough why
I was here, as would I.
Gritting
my teeth, I climbed the innumerable white marble steps to the imposing
entrance. It was a show for the holocams; I could have been whisked by tram
through the tunnel from the landing strip, direct to the smooth, silent lifts.
But Jerence had unearthed a poll that questioned my physical abilities, now
that I carried a cane, and he took every opportunity to put the public's doubts
to rest.
Within,
all was marble dadoes and mahogany paneling, interspersed with solemn portraits
of long-dead leaden, I couldn't imagine why a head of Government would want to
work in such a tomb.
My
staff dutifully following along, I made my way through echoing corridors to the
reception room. Jerence Branstead whispered, "Stand up for your
rights," and stood aside.
Anderson.
chief of protocol, flung open the doors,
I
stopped short. At the head of the vast oval table, where I'd expected to
preside as host, sat Francis Saythor, First Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal
Church, current Elder of the Council of Patriarchs. His hands were folded
comfortably across his stomach.
Surrounding
him, in the closest seats to the head of the table, were all thirteen of the
colorfully dressed Patriarchs. I'd expected that the Executive, at most, would
convene. Certainly not the full Council.
The
dapper Archbishop of the Methodist Synod nodded. At his right was the Roman
Catholic Bishop of Rome, robed in imperial purple and white. At his left, the
elderly First President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in
an old-fashioned business suit He glared across the polished table at his
principal competitor, the President of the Reorganized Latter-day Saints.
Saythor,
rotund and pale, stroking his charcoal beard, gestured to a seat.
Instead
of taking the closest vacant chair, I strode to the foot of the table, took the
seat opposite the Elder's. If confrontation was what he desired, confrontation
he would have.
"Brother
Nicholas." Saythor's voice was soft "Let us pray."
I bowed
my head Even in conflict Lord God must prevail.
After
the benediction, Saythor made a temple of his fingers and smiled affably.
"Thank you for joining us. Nicholas."
Religion
was a serious matter; one ought not nifle witii Lord God. But the Elder had
always irked me, and his behavior today was no exception. So I said, "It's
my pleasure. Francis."
As I
expected, the use of his first name displeased him, but he made no overt
gesture other man to raise an eyebrow. "The Council has concerns we wish
to share." His manner was ponderous.
"By
all means."
"Your
Administration—you in particular—have shown unnecessary hostility to those who would
protect Lord God's most cherished planet"
My jaw
dropped. "You want me to favor the envirosT
"Sarcasm
is unnecessary," Saythor admonished. "We speak of those who'd protect
Earth from the ravages of her selfish colonies."
I
frowned, still not sure what he meant
Stefan
Wendrous, Patriarch of the Greek Orthodox Church, intervened in his heavily
accented English. "Mr. Seafort, we're distressed that you persecute
political groups whose sole purpose—"
"What
groups? Please speak clearly."
Saythor
shrugged at his colleagues, as if to demonstrate my obstinacy. "It's not
necessary to Ust them by name. Your policies—**
"Toward
whom?" I was sailing in a fog.
The
Elder's temper frayed. "The Earth First Alliance, among others. The
Committee Against Colonial Waste. The Council of Economic Realists."
Conservatives, all of them. No, reactionaries, who demanded our funding of the
colonies be curtailed. Why would the Patriarchs demand I support them?
"Now,
wait a minute," I struggled to conttol my tone of voice. 'The Patriarchs
have always favored colonial expansion. In the process we spread the Gospel of
Jesus Christ diroughout—"
"Of
course," Saymor's voice was bland, "But it's past time our colonial
children began paying back our beneficence."
"Began?"
Derek would have apoplexy, were I to repeat that remark. No doubt the other
colonial governments felt likewise. "Do you realize we've crippled their
economies, asking them to pay for our rebuilding?"
Andrew
DeStoat, Elder of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, snorted in disdain.
"The fish who attacked were instruments of Satan, It's appropriate to
require all Christian nations to undo their mischief."
"So
you want me to crack down on die colonies?" My
hand
toyed with the silver head of my cane. What on earth had caused this shift in
policy? I'd not met often with the Council, but they'd rarely interfered so
blatantly. Their usual concerns were more likely to revolve around religious
education, or criminal statutes they saw as overly lax.
"Certainly
not." The Elder looked shocked. "However, considering the vast sums
we've spent—**
"Our
colonies provide foodstuffs, raw materials, manufactured—"
"—on
gargantuan ships such as Galactic, it behooves us to use her well."
I fell
silent, aghast. Never before had the Patriarchs interfered directly in Naval
matters.
"Her
early voyages should both transmit our goodwill, and our insistence that
Earth's needs be met. After all, ours is the one planet in the known universe
blessed by the sojourn of Jesus Christ." He leaned forward, spoke with
grave emphasis. "The miracle of Reunification mustn't be squandered. In
the colonies, unreconciled sects run wild; without our intervention, they'd do
so here as well. To combat them takes funds. Our income mustn't be
jeopardized"
I
clamped my mouth shut. Hie Church was infallible, though I had my private
doubts about its current Elder. Still, 1 had to say something, "I'll ask
Admiralty to take your views into consideration,"
"Favorably?"
"I
can't speak for Admiralty." I'd begun to perspire.
"A
maiden cruise to Belladonna would be a welcome start"
I
swallowed. We'd just negotiated a new trade pact with Belladonna, giving die
distant milling colony greater say in ore quotas, and granting liberal trade
allowances.
It
wasn't mere generosity on my part. Only by keeping our colonies content might
we keep their support, and head off their yearning for self-government Hope
Nation was an example; years ago, I'd had to grant mem independence, after
suppressing a planters' revolution.
We
couldn't afford another upheaval, economically or morally. Revolt against the
U.N. was rebellion against Lord God. Millions of souls hung in the balance. My
own understanding that I was damned caused me ceaseless misery.
Luckily
for the Navy, I had an out "Galactic Fuses in two months for Constantine.
She's carrying the principal wave of colonists and supplies."
"A
few months' postponement won't matter." Saythor's stem visage met mine.
I said
evenly, "Delay would be unwise."
"Look,
Seafort" The Elder's tone was now openly hostile. "We're in agreement
on mis." His gesture included his colleagues. "You understand what
that signifies? Representatives of all His churches concur on His will, without
dissent We have no doubt that in this we speak for Lord God.**
That
was a warning, if anything was. If I defied tile Church on a matter in which
they spoke for the Deity, I could be charged with heresy. Unlikely, 1 supposed,
but quite possible. Nonetheless, I waited in stubborn silence.
"Let
me be frank," Saythor added. "We already know the Territorials will
have no scruples in furthering His cause,** No, they wouldn't The opposition
party saw the Navy as a club with which to strike its enemies. It always had.
In the Transpop Rebellion, the Tcrric government had used Naval lasers to blast
city streets. And they were dead set against colonial independence. Ordering
the Navy to hold the colonies by brute force would be a simple solution they'd
eagerly endorse.
I
hesitated, yearning to comply. But visions of the idyllic Hope Nation landscape
drifted before me, and of the earnest, hard-working folk of Detour, I wouldn't
let the greed of the Patriarchs corrupt U.N, colonial policy, "I will not
send a Naval vessel to menace U.N. citizens who've done no wrong,"
The
Elder's fingers drummed the table. "As you wish."
"Brother
Nicholas." The Bishop of Rome stayed Saythor with an upraised hand.
"Review the matter without haste. I pray you, don't discard a life of service
over a small issue."
"We
speak of finance, Your Holiness." I fished in my pocket for a coin, found
only a credit chip. I held it between two fingers. "This is of Caesar, not
of God. Let temporal matters arrange themselves without your intervention."
"It's
our duty to intervene." Pope Nicholai shook his head. "Still,
Francis, wait a week. Give him time to consider."
A look
of annoyance flitted over the Elder's pudgy face. "In deference to your
wishes, so be it." He looked to me.
I was
beyond tact. "I don't need a week. Let someone else besmirch the
Navy."
"Nonetheless,
we'll wait. The usual press statement, outside? Earnest exchange of views?
Frank discussion?"
"Very
well." What they told the mediamen was of no concern. Mechanically, I
moved with the rest of them to the door.
I would
be free at last. For years I'd sought release from the burden of office, and
now it was at hand. So why did I feel not relief, but disappointment?
Because
my beloved Navy would be used for dishonorable ends. For two hundred years
courageous sailors had sailed the starlanes, not to threaten our colonies, but
to nurture them.
On the
other hand, the Council spoke for the Reunification Church, and the Church for
Lord God. Who was I to set my will against that of the Deity? I couldn't
believe the Patriarchs had actually threatened me with renunciation. Well, they
hadn't, not in so many words. But what did Pope Nicholai mean, "discard a
life of service over a small issue"? Discard my life itself? My service?
My lips
tightened. When I couldn't reconcile my duty with the Church, it was time to
leave office.
In the
anteroom I nodded curtly to Branstead and Mark Tilnitz. Security men formed
their customary ring as we began our walk through the rooms of state to the
holocams waiting outside.
'Trouble,
sir?" Jerence's voice was a whisper.
"Later."
The Patriarchs and their retinues were near.
A hand
touched my shoulder.
The
Elder of the Lutheran Church said quietly, "Bishop Saythor isn't graced with
soft speech. Brother Nicholas, but heed his words nonetheless." A short,
graying man dressed in traditional black, he wiped his brow with a starched
handkerchief.
I
leaned against a marble column, letting the procession pass me by. "I'm
puzzled, Reverend DeStoat What brought on the Council's sudden anxiety about
our colonies?" I could guess the answer the Territorials, out of office
for twelve years, had been whispering in their collective ear. The Catholic
sect, among others, had always favored the Terries.
'They
have more than economics on their mind." DeStoat's smile was wry. "In
the colonies, too many wayward cults have sprung up, in disregard of the one
true way."
"Couldn't
you settle those matters ecclesiastically?"
His
mouth tightened. "Only when colonial affairs are firmly in hand." He
lowered his voice. "The Reunification is a precious gift. If we make
demands of the colonial churches we can't enforce, our unity might be
shattered. It's a risk we can't take. We must keep them under firm control, and
the Navy is Lord God's instrument. Take care, Brother Nicholas." His mouth
smiled, but his eyes did not "Defiance could jeopardize more than your
Administration."
A
warning, or a threat, barely disguised. We reached the door. Dutifully, I took
my place beside Elder Saythor, letting my presence endorse his platitudes to
the mediamen.
"I
hope it's not Galactic," said Charlie Witrek. He put another chip in the
holovid, scanned it We were in my Washington study, attacking my endless paperwork.
I
snorted. "You're probably the only middy in the U.N. Navy who doesn't want
her. Why?"
"She's
too big. Too many middies. I'd never be first." The first midshipman, on
any Naval vessel, had special privileges, and was in charge of his fellows. But
seniority applied; the midshipman with the longest service was automatically
first.
Charlie
was no doubt right; on a ship such as Galactic it would be years before he'd
have hope of making first middy.
"You're
how old? Eighteen?"
"Nineteen
in September." Young, by civilian reckoning, but not for a middy, Witrek
would have joined at fourteen or so, as a cadet. He filed his chip, reached for
another. "It's not like they'll have a lot of ships to choose from."
I
grunted. UNS Wellington had just left for Casanova, and Braeburn was already en
route to Vega. Over seventy star-ships, but not more than two were in home
system. A far cry from the days of the fish war, when we'd recalled nearly our
entire fleet. Nowadays the Navy was desperately busy ferrying colonists
outward, hauling their produce back home.
"Mr.
Seafort?" For once, he sounded tentative, unsure. "I don't want to
take advantage, but..." He steeled himself. "Could you see that I get
a ship? Not an administrative posting?"
I could
have sworn he held his breath. Any thought of twitting him vanished. "Yes,
Charlie. You deserve that much."
A sigh.
I was right. He had been holding his breath.
Ariene
faced me, hands on hips, a disapproving frown creasing her lined face.
"For heaven's sake," I said. "I have to go; it's the Von
Walthers Award, and I'm the guest of honor." They'd named the moral
leadership award for Hugo Von Walthers, the legendary Captain who'd discovered
the wreck of Celestina, gone on to be a colonial Governor, and ended his career
as Secretary-General over a century before.
Canceling
the trip was impossible. They'd laid on the awards banquet at the Earthport
Hilton. I felt vaguely uneasy about it; I knew our easing of the Charities Tax
Act had played a significant role in their selection of me as this year's
recipient though there hadn't exactly been a quid pro quo. Not really, although
Jerence had discussed it with the nominations committee. In any event, while I
was aloft, I wanted to consult with Naval brass; the Council's ultimatum made
doing so even more urgent
Of
course, now that my tenure as SecGen was about to come to an ignominious end,
perhaps my consultations didn't much matter. Regardless of what Admiralty said,
1 wouldn't cany out Saythor's policy.
"Micky,
you've been pushing yourself. And the acceleration—"
I
snorted. "Since when have I had problem with liftoff?" I'd spent my
life clawing my way out of one planetary gravity well or another,
"You're
getting older.**
"I'll
be fine." I sought to mollify her, "1*11 have Bransiead make time for
a nap after we dock."
That
brought a smile, as I hoped it would. But it faded. She said, "Don't mock
my worries."
"I'm
not, hon, but as long as I'm SecGen, I have to keep up appearances." I
checked her expression; my reassurance seemed to have little effect. "Care
to change your mind and come along?"
"Well,.,
yes,**
I did
my best to hide my surprise. "Very well, get packed; we leave in two
hours." In tjum, I was finding liftoff more difficult each trip, and I
didn't want Ariene along to observe me. She herself seemed to bear acceleration
as easily as when she'd been a cadet eager for her first trip to Farside. On
the other hand, she'd always been a fitness fanatic. She taught Philip
self-defense, far more competently than I could have. She'd have made a
formidable drill instructor. Even today she kept herself in fine shape.
Normally
we'd lift from Potomac Shuttleport. About half the size of New York Von
Walthers, it was North America's fourth largest spaceport. It handled
suborbitals to Europe and Asia as well as the massive shuttlebuses that lifted
cargo and personnel to Earthport Station and beyond.
Unfortunately,
our Secretarial shuttle was docked in New York, and Tilnitz merely laughed at
my suggestion that we book a commercial flight. So we trooped into a heli,
heading for Potomac Shuttleport, where we would board the jetliner that would
save an hour compared to a heli flight to New York. I bore it with ill grace;
I'd have preferred flying the jet heli directly to Von Walthers Shuttleport,
but it couldn't have carried the entourage mustered for my visit aloft
We flew
over the old White House, where the American President still reigned over his
regional government. Washington still bore the scars of the huge bureaucracy
that had throttled it: vast white stone buildings in federal style and glass
monstrosities linered the landscape. The remains of the Pentagon scarred miles
of lowland.
At
Potomac Shuttleport Arlene and I walked the red carpet to the jetliner,
followed by my numerous aides. I seethed at the fuss.
Perhaps
sensing my mood, my staff gave us a wide berth once the doors were sealed.
Carlotti, my press secretary, made himself comfortable in the aft compartment;
Mark Tilnitz settled with the crew in the cockpit. Arlene, knowing my moods,
sat peaceably across the aisle scanning a holozine. Only Jerence Branstead,
with the ease of long familiarity, sat near me, holovid in hand.
"You
wanted to review the Von Walthers seating, sir?"
Seating
approval for the banquet was one of the terms we'd negotiated.
"Oh,
yes. The chart?' I peered at the arrangements. The Von Walthers affair would be
among my last public appearances; I might as well enjoy myself. "Have them
put Kahn elsewhere. We've never been friends." Besides, a seat other than
at the center of the dais would thoroughly annoy the former SecGen. That sort
of power was a perk of office I'd rarely exercised. "Where's Metzner? No,
put him on the dais. He supported our cuts to the U.N.A.F. budget."
The
engine whine grew louder. Almost imperceptibly, we began our taxi.
"Now,
make sure Boland's seat is near mine. It'll make him happy, and irritate the
devil out of Rothstein."
My
chief of staff looked askance. "Are you sure, sir?" , "If the Terries don't like it, they can
eat in the lobby." My tone was gleeful. After a moment Branstead smiled
too.
At
last, we began our takeoff roll. j
"Now, as to the Naval brass—" j An unexpected bump lifted me from my seat. Almost
instantly, the craft braked, rocking side to side. I braced my-I self.
| Mark Tilnitz darted out of the cockpit. He
reached past i Jerence, tore off my seat belt, threw me to the deck. | He
whipped across the aisle, pulled Arlene clear. He ; hauled her to a seat
several rows forward. He dived back to ' the chair I'd vacated, scrambled to
lower the porthole shades.
Swerving,
the craft slowed. I snarled, "What in God's—"
Ignoring
me, Tilnitz barked into his shoulder mike. "Ground team, we've got a
scramble! Shots fired from the west. Seal the terminal!" He whirled to the
cockpit. "Pilot, stay away from buildings! Roll to the far end of the
field!" The door to the aft compartment flew open. Two burly security men
dashed in. One knelt over me, protectively.
"Stay
clear of windows, Branstead! Get down!" Mark drew his pistol, peered
cautiously past a shade. "No one in sight. Anyone hurt?** He glanced about
"They shot out a tire."
I
pushed the security agent aside, hauled myself to a seat on the far side of the
craft. "How do you know?*' The rush of adrenaline left me shaky.
"I
saw sparks on the tarmac. Their first two shots missed. Get down, sir!" He
tugged at my arm. Again, he keyed his caller. "Armored vehicle to the
north end of the field. I want troops, a heli, full air support."
I
twisted free from his grasp. "I'm as safe here as anywhere. Arlene?"
"I'm
all right** Her face was grim. "Mark, catch them.**
"Our
joeys know the drill.** He muttered into his caller. "Mr. SecGen, we'll
take you home to the compound."
I
slammed the armrest "The hell you will." I felt a moment's guilt for
my language. "I'll not be made a prisoner by some lunatic with a
rifle."
"Nicky—"
"No,
Arlene, I'm going to Earthport Stay home if you're afraid." I could have
bitten my tongue off, but it was too late. Instead of erupting, though, Arlene
compressed her mouth and said nothing. I knew her outrage would be slow in
cooling.
I tried
to sound reasonable. "Mark, I'll accept protection while you sort this
out. An hour. Two, no more. Then we go on to New York."
"This
is my show, sir. Shots were fired."
"You
heard me."
"And
you heard me. Or I'll resign." We exchanged glares.
Jerence
growled, "Enough, the both of you.'*
I gaped.
My chief of staff never spoke to me so.
"Mark,
he's the boss, whether we like it or not Mr. SecGen, stop throwing your weight
around. Mark knows what he's doing."
"I
never said he didn't" Why did I sound peevish?
In the
distance, sirens screamed. Flashing lights drew close, wheeled to surround us.
Mark's
gaze grew distant as he listened to his earplug. "Area secured. Off the
plane, Mr. SecGen."
"Very
well. Arlene?" I held out a hand, but she stalked past me.
Tilnitz
led the way, pistol drawn and ready. Surrounding me, security agents hustled me
down the steps. In seconds, I was huddled inside a dim-lit armored truck.
Mark
snapped, "Go!"
"Not
without Arlene."
"She's
in the next car. Go go go!" We lurched off, gained speed rapidly.
"Where
are we headed?"
"A
hangar."
"Why
there?"
His
tone held resignation. "It's by the book, sir."
An hour
later, I paced the cold concrete of the hangar. "I want to see the
body."
"
"111 we search every inch, the terminal's not secure."
My mood
was foul. Arlene was barely willing to acknowledge my existence, despite my
apology. I knew my comment had been inexcusable; on Wellington, Arlene had
faced attack by the alien fish without qualms. To question her courage ...
Jerence
Branstead stood by the truck, arms folded, disgusted with my resolve to be on
our way to Earthport
I took
a deep breath. Then another. I'd have to practice patience.
Jerence
sighed loudly, for the third time.
No, by
Lord God, I would not. I was about to be disavowed by the Patriarchs; I would
do as I wished. "Mark, look at me." I took his hand, placed it on my
chest "Who do you think I am?" "The Secretary-General." He
sounded puzzled.
"Not
Lord Christ? I'm just a man, do you agree?" He nodded. "So I can be
killed despite all your efforts. I spent all my Navy years in one sort of
danger or another. They shot at me aboard Hibernia, and on Hope Nation. They
wounded me on Challenger. Fish hurled acid at my ships. I damn near died in the
Rebellion." I was skirting blasphemy; I'd have to rein in my tongue. I
made a short prayer of contrition.
He
said, "Those days are past."
"Not
if Lord God wills it!" I brandished my cane as if it were a laser. "I
won't go skulking about, do you hear? Show me the damn—the blessed body." ;
Mark
threw up his hands in defeat "Very well." We piled back into the
truck.
The
terminal lobby had been cordoned off. I knelt by the / bloody corpse still clutching its ancient rifle. A sallow
blond-haired joey, about thirty. Faded jumpsuit, with a scorched hole in the
chest. Receding hair, sallow cheeks. No one I'd ever met. I hadn't really
expected otherwise.
Around
us, civilian police and U.N. security staff milled about recording the scene,
note-taking, interviewing. Thank j
heaven, Carlotti was keeping the mediamen at bay. It was the only reason I
tolerated him.
I
looked down at the vacant eyes. "Was he alone?"
"Except
for his driver."
"ID?"
"We've
taken prints and DNA. It shouldn't be long. He's E.A.L., though." Mark saw
my mystified look. "Eco Action League. Had a manifesto in his pocket"
"A
new one?"
"Fairly
similar to the first" He grimaced. "We should have been prepared. At
Devon they warned they'd strike again."
"Where
is it?**
"Forensics
has it; I'll get you a copy."
I
fingered the scorched jumpsuit "Was your enviro goofjuice worth dying for,
joey?"
"I
don't think he expected to die." Mark gestured to the outer door. "He
almost got away. A car was waiting."
"Did
you get a description?"
"Oh,
we have it But in the confusion the driver bolted and escaped. I want you out
of here. Have you seen enough?"
"Yes."
I was profoundly disturbed. How could the ecos murder innocent children, attack
my transport? The Rebellious Ages were long past, thank Lord God. Our
population wasn't under the heel of a tyranny; across the world, the public
embraced the strictures that bound us together and made war and terror relics
of history. Yes, the urban trans-pops had once rebelled, but they'd been driven
to it by desperation, by the threat of extinction.
Acts of
terrorism were punishable by death, regardless of their success or failure.
That was just But when had the penalty last been meted? Public dissension was
so rare these days ... and since the upgrade of the laser installation at
Lu-napolis, what point in insurrection? America's eastern seaboard, seat of
government and our primary industrial base, was so heavily protected that no
earthly force could threaten it
I
sighed. What was the world coming to? Well, it wouldn't be my problem for long.
"Get us to Von Walthers."
Mark
led me to a heli.
Earthport
was the largest orbiting station ever built. In geosync orbit over the eastern
U.S., its bays moored interplanetary vessels for Lunapolis, Deimos, and other
nearby settlements and, more importantly, vast Naval starships for our more
distant colonies. Its bonded warehouses stored cargo for transshipment as well
as ores and grains ferried home from distant provinces awaiting transfer to
Earth or other local ports. Earthport's numerous hotels and restaurants served
throngs of passengers en route to and from the sixty-seven planets and
satellites on which the human race had established beachheads.
Eleven
of those outposts had been colonized during my terms of office.
Surreptitiously
I rubbed my chest, not yet recovered from liftoff. For decades, ever since my
lung replacement... ah, well.
"Welcome,
sir," said Geoffrey Rand, civilian administrator of Earthport. 'Thank Lord
God you're safe.**
I
frowned. No doubt the news zines were already trumpeting the shuttleport
fiasco. "Have you met Ms. Seafort? Arlene ..." She nodded curtly,
still miffed.
Rand
gestured toward the waiting electricart. "This way, sir." As I passed
the sparse line of officials, Fleet Admiral McKay saluted stiffly.
At my
side, Mark Tilnitz eyed each face, his glance flickering down to the hands. I
supposed I couldn't blame him, given the day's events. I beckoned Branstead.
"What's the drill?"
"I
scheduled you a couple of hours in your Hilton suite, but that was before the,
urn, delay. I'll cancel the Naval tour so you'll have time to rest before the
banquet."
"Nonsense."
I took a deep breath, tried not to wince. "I'll skip the nap."
"You
need it, Nick." Artene's voice was acid.
"I'll
decide that." I pressed my lips tight, unwilling to quarrel in front of
strangers.
The
cart rolled through bright-lit corridors, each punctuated by emergency hatches
that would slam shut at the first sign of decompression. For security reasons
we'd docked on Level 5, near the Naval wing, far from the civilian concourses
and their shops.
As a
Captain, I'd oft walked these corridors and thought nothing of it. My knuckles
tightened on my cane. I could do so again, if need be. My staff coddled me too
much, and I suspected I was becoming soft as a result. I had half a mind to
stop the cart and walk. In fact—
I
raised my cane. "Hold it." Startled, the driver carefully braked. I
slid off the cart. Hurriedly, Mark followed.
All
were staring at me. I couldn't very well demand to walk, could I? I'd
inconvenience Rand, the Admiral, my staff...
I had
to give a reason for stopping. "What's this?" I pointed to a hatch.
'Traffic
control, Mr. SecGen." If Rand was surprised at my abrupt diversion, he
gave no sign.
"Let's
see." I slapped open the hatch, from the access pad at its side.
Within,
a small anteroom. I peered past the startled guard. Beyond, a row of consoles,
manned by techs. "Why aren't they in uniform?"
"They're
civilians, sir."
"Oh.
Of course." I felt an idiot. If I'd visited Earthport as often as I ought,
I'd know better. The Navy operated out of its own wing, and the rest of the
station was under the administrator's control. "Very well." Casually,
I eased myself onto the cart. "Cany on."
In
moments, we rolled to a stop at the closed and guarded hatch to the Naval wing.
I shook hands with Rand, the station administrator, and confronted Tilnitz.
"Mark, I'm in Navy territory. Get some rest. Take Arlene to the hotel.
Unless ... T I gestured to the hatch.
Arlene
shook her head. "The hotel."
"Mr.
SecGen—"
"Jerence,
tell Mark I'm safe with the Navy. Admiral, let's go." I left Tilnitz
protesting.
The
conference room was spacious enough to hold the entire Board of Admiralty,
fifteen in all, but we were only five, including a Captain. Gray-flecked
Admiral McKay took a place across from me. Farther down the table was Admiral
Hoi of
BuPers, thin of face, his expression somber. Johanson of the Governmental
Affairs Office was mere also, and an officer I didn't recall, whose stern blue
eyes regarded me steadily.
"Mr.
SecGen, may I present Captain Stanger."
Oh, of
course. I'd seen his holo, spread across the zines. "How do you find
Galactic, Mr. Stanger?"
"She's
wonderful, sir." His gaze softened hi a brief smile.
I
grunted She ought to be, for what she cost. But I owed him more courtesy than
that "And the loading?" Galactic'* cargo holds were huge, and most of
her stores had to be hauled from groundside, a shuttle load at a time.
"We're
coming along well. Two months, according to schedule." He saw me grimace,
added quickly, "It's all right, sir, really. We're using the time to whip
the crew into shape."
That,
at least, I understood. As difficult as it was to train new crewmen, it was
twice as hard when the entire ship's company had been transferred from other
vessels, and had to learn the quirks and peculiarities of a new craft.
Admiral
McKay cleared his throat, switched on his holovid. "Well, then—"
"Would
you like a tour, Mr. SecGen? We'd be honored." Stanger waited expectantly.
"I
wish I could. I have the Vdn Walthers banquet—" On the other hand, my
schedule tomorrow held nothing of great importance, and it was time I saw the
great behemoth that was such a bone of contention. Besides, after I next met
with the Patriarchs, I doubted I'd have another chance.
I'd
delay my return shuttle. Tilnitz and Branstead didn't have to like it
"Very well, in the morning. I'll look forward to it" I saw McKay's
eyes were frosty. "Sorry, Admiral, on to business."
We ran
through half a dozen routine items: staffing concerns, out-of-budget special
appropriations, home fleet dispositions.
There
was an awkward pause.
"Well?"
I looked from one to another. "What is this meeting really about?"
"Mr.
SecGen ..." Admiral Hoi's tone was cautious. "We wanted you to be
cognizant of concerns shared by a great number of Naval officers."
I'd
endured similar mind-numbing circumspection from the Patriarchs, and was
thoroughly sick of it. "Speak plainly."
"We
all love the Navy; that goes without saying. We're concerned about
Administration priorities."
I
stirred. Why was it so difficult for him to reveal his thoughts? Perhaps
Captain Stanger sensed my impatience. He coughed discreetly, and Hoi nodded in
relief.
Stanger
leaned forward, his blue eyes serious. "There's little enough money to
rebuild New York, aid the ravaged Netherlands, and support the expansion of the
Navy to protect us from colonial dissolution. The Navy doesn't want funds
squandered on ecological boondoggles. There, it's said."
"What
boon—how is this your business?"
"Officially,
it isn't" For a moment he dropped his eyes. "Would you prefer we
didn't speak?"
Yes.
"No, of course not It's just..." I was floundering. "Go
ahead."
Stanger's
smile was grim. "All of us here are loyal to our last breath, as are all
the officers we've spoken to."
"Naturally."
Why did I feel a chill?
"Nonetheless,
officers throughout the Service are troubled. I believe you'll confirm, Admiral
Hoi, will you not? Just so. The Seafort Administration hasn't opposed the
Greenhouse Gases Reduction Act for exam—"
"Cutting
industrial emission of greenhouse gases will slow global warming, at least to a
degree. And it's only five percent"
"On
top of four percent three years ago. But any reduction
cripples
our industry and will slash Government revenues. And to what purpose? Frankly,
Holland is beyond saving. Cut our losses."
1 shook
my head. "It's not just the Dutch. The same tides roil across Florida,
Louisiana, Japan—"
"A
seawall is a hell of a lot cheaper, Mr. SecGen, than foolish enviro fantasy on
a global scale. You see, sir"— Stanger waited for my nod to
proceed—"expansion of the fleet is vital. Surely you must agree. The
colonials are restless, but if trade with a single colony is disrupted, our
economy could tailspin. Now, if ever, we need a firm presence among the worlds,
and that means more ships. And it's not just factory emission controls that
hamper us. There's no real proof ozone reseeding works, or—"
"But
we ought to try." Why did I feel I was parroting the enviro line?
Essentially, Stanger was right. There was little we could do to change the
course Lord God had set for us. But I mustn't tell Stanger that; he was
challenging Administration policy. "We're under increasing pressure from
the enviros. Not just Winstead and his Council; now there's the loonies of the
Eco Action League. Casting aside enviro programs would be as bad as giving in
to their terrorism. Can't you see we have to maintain a steady course?"
"I
see the Naval budget in disarray. Don't make it worse with useless
enviro—"
I said,
'The Navy spent more this year than last"
"Yes,
we had an increase, but almost all of it went to Galactic and Olympiad,"
I
slammed the table. "You wanted those ships!"
"Of
course we do." Slanger's tone was soothing. "They can carry thousands
of troops, if it comes to that No colony will—"
"We
won't use them to browbeat other worlds!" I reined myself in. We were far
off topic. "I won't abandon the Greenhouse Gases bill. It's not
expedient" We'd decided, Branstead and I, to give the enviros what little
we must, to keep them quiescent.
"You'll
continue playing into the Enviro Council's hands?"
"I
didn't say that." A pause. "How many officers agree with your
sentiment?"
"Most
I've spoken to." He passed the ball to McKay. "Sir, what is
Admiralty's view?"
The
Admiral looked uncomfortable. "On the whole, we've little disagreement Mr.
SecGen ..." He looked to me in appeal. "You've been the Navy's
staunch supporter all your lire. Can you not see that mis is no moment to
falter?"
I got
slowly to my feet "Is that what I'm doing?"
Johanson
of Governmental Affairs spoke for the first time. "Absolutely not, sir.
But we're worried about the immense pressure put on you by the enviro fringe.
They're totally unrealistic on budgetary constraints."
"What
if..." I was almost afraid to ask, "I don't do as you ask?"
"Why,
sir." Stanger's guileless eyes met mine, "We'll do our duty, as
always. But we'll be disappointed."
"Very
well. See that it comes to no more than that" My skin was clammy.
"Pll think carefully on what you've said. Next month when I meet with Admiralty
on me budget—" But I wouldn't be meeting with Admiralry next month. At
best, I'd be retired. Or facing a heresy charge if me Patriarchs were so
minded.
"1*11
think hard on it" I finished lamely. "Believe me, I too want the Navy
strong and vigilant" On that note, we adjourned.
The
confrontation left me troubled. Whether I viewed their remarks as threat or
warning, they made dear I'd been too long out of touch with the working
officers. Well, it would be my successor's problem, not mine. Unless I chose to
throw my lot in with the conservatives, mount a show of
force
for the colonies, and by doing so win the Patriarchs* favor.
"Oh,
Mr. SecGen." Admiral Hoi seemed cordial. "Could we stop at my private
office? I've something to show you."
"Very
well." In the corridor, Jerence Branstead waited with my security chief. I
scowled. "I thought I told you to rest."
Tllnitz
waved it away. "My job's to keep an eye on you."
Hoi was
present, so I held my peace. I followed him to his hatch.
"That
way, sir."
"I
know." My tone was curt. A decade ago, I'd come aloft to this very office
to demand Admiral Jeff Thome put an end to the decimation of the transpops. The
place reminded me of tragedies I'd as soon leave buried, of days before P.T.
and I had grown apart.
Hoi
stood aside. 1 limped in, caught a glimpse of the huge holoscreen dominating
the far bulkhead, "It hasn't chang— Lord in heaven!"
The
Naval officer who came to his feet wore a shy grin. "We wanted to
surprise—sir, are you all right?"
I
steadied myself at the console, "Yes, I,., Alexi, how have you—it's so
good to—I didn't know—" I swallowed, "Come!"
He
extended his hand; I started to take it, pulled him instead into an embrace.
*'Oh, God. Lord God." I could say no more.
Alexi
Tamarov had been a fellow middy on Hibernia when I first reported to her
wardroom, a hopeful boy with the ruin of my life still ahead. Afterward, I'd
made him lieutenant, sailed with him again years later, seen him through a
terrible wound and the anguish of amnesia.
I wiped
my eyes. "How did ... where did you., ,** "Melbourne docked two days
ago, sir" "It's been how long?"
"Twelve
years." Several cruises, on his part, elections and politics, on mine.
I
closed my eyes. How could it be? Where did a life go? "Let's have a look
at you." Still slim, a finely chiseled face, wavy hair only now showing a
touch of gray. "You're Captain." His shoulder patches told me that,
but I'd already known. From time to time I watched the few names I still
recalled, as they climbed the Captains' list
"For
six years, I've been out of system a year and a half, I arranged extra leave;
Josh Fenner has Melbourne for the Titan run. Moira is a bit unhappy I left her
with the joey kids, especially as Mikhael—is Ms, Seafort along?"
My
smile vanished at the thought of the amends I must make. "At the hotel.
She'll be delighted to see you. And we'll have you down to—oh!"
"What,
sir?"
"Derek's
in town!"
His
face lit in delight "The three musketeers, together at last!" Barely
more than boys, together we'd endured Cen-traltown's upheavals.
I
giggled. Somehow, his presence swept away my burdens. Alexi was a good-hearted
joey, and steadfast unto death. If only I'd had him with me, these cheerless
years.
Someone
coughed. Dimly, I realized we weren't alone. "Ah, Mark, you've never
met,.. Admiral Hoi, would you do the introductions?" I sank into a chair,
my head in my hands.
Once,
in Hope Nation, Alexi and I had shared a tent outside the Plantation Zone.
"Sir?" I'd been young, still eager, struggling to know my duty.
"Sir, are you well?"
"Of
course, Jerence." I groped for his arm. "Make time for Alexi, Fit him
in, regardless of what else I have on my plate. And put him on the dais
tonight."
"Done."
Two
levels below, Earthport's corridors were wider, the fittings more stylish, as
befit public areas. Our cart slid to a halt at the Milton's main hatch,
resplendent in gold trim.
I waved
cordially to the gawkers, delighted to have Alexi at my side. We made our way
into the crowded auditorium. The audience had undergone stringent security
checks, beyond those they'd already endured to reach the Station.
Half an
hour later, in view of the hundreds who'd paid astronomical sums for the
privilege, and watched by millions on worldwide nets, I toyed with my roast
chicken and peas. I was thinking of Arlene, wishing I could discuss with her
Stanger's assertions, and regretting my vile accusation of cowardice, but she
was in the front row, having steadfastly refused the dais.
Somehow,
I'd have to undo my folly.
Senator
Rob Boland leaned close. "I hope I won't embarrass you tonight."
"You
won't if you tell truth." If he weren't up for reelec-tion, I wouldn't
have agreed to his giving the principal address. But Robbie Boland had served
well in his father's old Senate seat, and deserved another term.
We'd
long since set aside our differences over the trans-pops, and his moral failure
to support them. Politics required me to be practical. His help was instrumental
in shepherding through the Senate many bills that our party thought important.
At the
far end of the dais, former SecGen Kahn chewed stolidly.
Robbie
reached across my plate to offer Alexi a hand. "Mr. Tamarov, I don't
believe we've met."
"A
pleasure. Senator."
"You
served on his first ship, right? How I envy you."
"How
so?" Alexi shot me an apologetic glance, but I didn't really mind them
talking past me.
"I
met Mr. Seafort when he was Commandant." Boland
had
been a cadet men, in my care. "But you knew him when he was young."
"We
were all young then." Alexi smiled at the memory, turning to me. "And
now, look at you." He read from the glittering emblem on the screen behind
the dais. "The Von Walthers Award for Moral Leadership."
"Lord
Christ, Alexi. Er, sorry." For an instant I bowed my head in contrition.
"Don't you realize it's all political? How could I actually deserve
this?"
"How
could you not?"
The
lights dimmed; the chairman rapped on the podium, began his introduction. I
tried to achieve a look of polite interest
First
he had to thank the event's organizers. Then he handed off to Anton Bourse, the
world-famous holo star, who gave the world's millions a capsule biography of
Captain Von Walthers. Next, the head of the Von Walthers Foundation spoke of
their charitable work, and of the award they sponsored.
My
polite smile began to congeal. I coveted my mourn with my napkin.
Alexi
whispered, "Patience, sir. It won't be long.*
I
grunted.
His
eyes glowed, "I had no idea when Melbourne docked that you were getting
the Von Walthers, It's so fitting."
"You're
an innocent"
"Don't
you understand, sir? I'd have dropped out years ago if not for your example.
Even today, middies revere you. I can't tell you how good it feels to know the
public feels die same."
"Alexi,
how often must I tell you? We engineered mis, Branstead and I." 1 turned
away, took a cautious sip of wine. Through the glass, one of the lights looked
like a porthole. I toyed with my goblet Like a porthole at UNS Helsinki's aft
airlock.
/
strode down the Level 2 corridor. Up the ladder, turn
left.
Sixteen, green and awkward, I was a nervous young middy reporting for the first
time to the bridge. I'd not yet met Mr. Hager, the first midshipman who'd
control my destiny, or the Captain, so far advanced on the ladder of life that
I was sweating in anticipation of our coming encounter.
I had
to make a good impression. My whole career depended on it. All my striving, all
my training, had led to this interview.
Help
me, Lord God. I am Yours, wholly. I dedicate my service to You.
My
footsteps slowed. I was outside the bridge.
Clutching
my orders, I smoothed my jacket, ran a hand through my close-cropped hair. This
is it, Lord. My career starts in this moment.
Help me
make it right.
Help me
to be proud.
A round
of applause. I looked up, startled. Robbie Boland slid back his chair, strode
to the podium.
"Ladies
and gentlemen, it is a sobering honor to be here tonight. For our honoree is a
comrade, an old friend, my late father's long ally, my ..." He hesitated.
"My mentor. The man who showed me right from wrong, who was"—a rueful
smile—"responsible for my political eclipse." That brought friendly
laughter.
Boland,
disa-aught at the death of his friend Adam Tenere that he'd done nothing to
prevent, had resigned as Assemblyman to raise Adam's troubled son Jared. It was
five years before he reemerged into political life.
"Nicholas
Seafort is a man who will not lie. A man who will not prevaricate. A man who
hates falsehood. A man who does right, as he sees it, no matter what the
cost."
Alexi
squeezed my arm. Tm so proud of you! I wouldn't miss this for the world,**
I
stared at my goblet, but the bridge of Helsinki had faded beyond recall.
Lord,
why must it be so? Why cannot I go back, be again that earnest boy?
At the
far left, SecGen Kahn looked fixedly at his plate.
Why am
I here, Lord?
"...
a man who is at once kind, resolute, brilliant, innovative, and a moral beacon
for all mankind. I give you the Captain of Hibernia, Challenger, and Trafalgar,
the recipient of this year's Hugo Von Walthers Award, Secretary-General
Nicholas Ewing Seafort!" Boland turned, led the thunderous applause.
Lord,
take me back to boyhood. I'd beg on my knees, if it would sway Thee. Give me
another chance.
"Sir,
it's time."
Please.
How could I have gone so wrong?
"They're
waiting!"
There
was nothing but to go through with it. A few words of thanks, and it would be
over. Slowly, reluctantly, I got to my feet. The thunder hadn't abated. Across
the hall, guests had risen, offering a standing ovation.
It was
intolerable.
I
reached the podium, leaned my cane against the stand. Smiling widely, eyes
shining, Robbie Boland offered me his hand.
Waiting
for the applause to subside, I scanned the hall. Arvin Rothstein was banished
to the second row of tables, as I'd planned. He'd paid over a thousand Unies to
participate. Lord God, he looked elegant in his black dinner apparel.
I
raised both hands, waved the multitude to their seats. How many of the
attendees did I know? Admiral Hoi, of course. Deputy SecGen Cisno Valera, with
a table of his aides. Connie Histung, of Holoworld. Vince Canlo from Newsnet,
so many others.
Slowly,
the applause dwindled.
I
squinted past the lights, past the banks of holocams that would send my words
to the world.
In the
front row, joeys were waving, as if to attract my attention.
Oh, no.
My son
Philip and Jared Tenere grinned up at me, delighted at my shock.
No,
Lord. Not this. I glanced back to Alexi. His mouth formed silent words.
"Bravo, sir!"
The
scrape of a thousand chairs. At last, the hall quieted
Only a
few words. Then it would be done.
"Ladies
and gentlemen, I thank you—**
"Midshipman
Nicholas Seafort reporting, sir! " The eager young boy's voice cracked. He
stiffened to attention. The Captain of Helsinki turned piercing gray eyes upon
him.
"—thank—"
I faltered.
No.
I stood
a long moment, staring at the podium.
In the
hall, murmurs of unease.
I
gripped the lectern, with knuckles turned white. At the front table, my son
P.T. gazed upward, misting and proud.
I
raised my head, "—thank you for the honor you wish to confer." I
searched the audience, for a face that might understand.
"You
would fete my moral leadership. Yet last winter I approved revision of the
Charities Tax Act, benefiting me Von Walthers Foundation, among others. I knew
mat bestowal of mis award was contemplated as a result In what I can only
describe as an act of moral negligence, I allowed my nomination to
proceed."
Gasps,
from throughout die hall.
In the
front row, Philip watched, his lips parted as if to protest, Jared's hand slid
across, protectively grasped his.
"Am
I* overall, an evil man? I mink not, yet I allowed political revenge to dictate
the seating of this banquet Mr. Sec-Gen Kahn, you should have been seated more
prominently, and would have been, had I not interfered. Mr. Rothstein, though
you are a director of the Von Walthers Foundation, I
had you
removed from the dais for your opposition to the wheat tariff bill. I apologize
to you both for my moral lapse."
"Mr.
SecGen, don't!" Jerence Branstead's hiss carried from the dais.
"Rumor
has it that the Von Walthers Award has been politicized before. So be it. That
is no excuse for my participating in a tawdry sham."
Murmurs,
that stilled to shocked silence,
I
swallowed a lump in my throat. "As I've sat here with an old shipmate, in
the presence of my son of whom I'm immensely proud, and a fine boy who was once
my cadet. I've been reminded of what once, decades past I strove to become.
It's too late to be that person. But I can make a token effort to redeem
myself. So, you see, if I have any pretense to moral decency, I cannot accept
an award for moral leadership. I decline the honor you would do me
tonight"
I gazed
serenely at the holocams. "Thank you for your intentions, May Lord God
bless you all."
Grasping
my cane, I limped from the silent hall.
CHAPTER
4
We were
gathered in my luxurious Hilton suite. Spacious portholes overlooked UNS
Galactic, and beyond it, the immense sphere of Earth.
Jerence
Branstead slumped, head in hands.
Arlene
made a place for herself on the arm of my settee. "Ah, Nicky. Will you
ever change?"
I
snorted. "Not likely." Not at this late date.
"It's
a shame. Aside from your Puritan morals you're a pretty decent joey."
Scandalized,
I glanced about. Though I respected her criticism, she rarely went at me in
public. True, I thought of Branstead and Alexi almost as family, but...
Alexi
blew his nose.
I
snapped, "For heaven's—this isn't a wake!"
"It
might as well be," said Branstead. "Politically." His
penetrating gray eyes settled on mine.
I waved
it away. "It doesn't matter." The Patriarchs would put paid to my
account in a very few days. But Jerence and Arlene didn't know, and I didn't
care to tell them. There was no way I could criticize the Elder without
disparaging the Church itself, and that I was loath to do. It would put me in
conflict with Lord God Himself.
"It
was such a fine moment, sir." Alexi. "Why ruin it?"
"It's
not your concern." I spoke before thinking. "Sony, you deserve
better." Wearily, I leaned back, resting my head, wishing Philip had
chosen to join our gathering, but he'd told Arlene he wanted to be alone, and
disappeared from the auditorium. "I've become rather imperious of late.
Surely you've all noticed. You should have stopped me."
"We
tried." Branstead's tone was wry.
"It's
as if I treat my office as a right I get so impatient with the fools who block
our progress." I sighed, wishing I had words to explain. "When I
first took office, the scars of the alien bombing were still raw." Cities
obliterated, the populace in shock that our brave conquest of the stars had
sown such havoc.
"And
then, my second Administration, after the Transpop Rebellion ..." New York
had been in flames, and unrest had spread to Chicago, Detroit, London.
As a
Naval officer, as a civilian, I'd been a war hero, then peacemaker. But as
SecGen I'd labored to restore the damage, ease the world's economic strains. To
quell emotion, to keep us on the steady path to recovery. In the process I
constantly traveled the globe, offering myself as solace to those overcome by
incessant disaster. The Berlin spew, the New Orleans flood, the Kiev meltdown
... would it never cease?
No. It
seemed a crowded, injured world took chances, too many of them, to restore its
faltering economy. But I showed myself, exposing myself to fouled air,
cholera-ravaged homeless, polluted waters, raging fires, doing what I could to
galvanize the machinery of Government. Over and again I'd toured the cities of
Earth, letting myself be seen, touched, heard, in contrast to my aloof
predecessor, SecGen Kahn.
In
foreign affairs, I rebuilt our relations with our many colonies, disgruntled at
abandonment in their moment of need when the remorseless fish were attacking so
many outposts. I'd altered the exchange rate in their favor, to encourage their
industries and promote trade.
And,
throughout, I'd told the truth, an unvarying policy that eventually earned the
world's begrudging trust
And
yet, I'd handled so many matters so poorly. "I suppose, as we age," I
said, "we all yearn to be young again, to have more life before us. But
that's not quite how I feel. What I really want is to go back and change whom
I've become. But that's impossible, and it drives me mad."
"Someone
tell him." Alexi spoke to the wall, as if afraid to meet my eye. "If
anyone should have pride in whom he's become, it's he."
"I'm
not proud of myself of late."
"Bah.
You never have been."
'Those
acts you call heroic—"
Jerence
said, "You're as wrong about yourself now as you ever were."
"Oh,
nonsense. I know I abused you as a child, and as for Trafalgar—"
"God
damn it, you listen to me!" Branstead's voice was hard. I gaped at his
blasphemy, but he paid no heed. "Where would I be if not for you? Dead, or
in a prison colony pining for goofjuice!" The horribly addictive drug had
seized him as a boy, and he'd writhed in its clutches, until I'd encouraged his
escape.
A
fourteen-year-old joeykid swam before me, on the fast-ship Victoria. He put his
hand for comfort in mine. "I swear on my immortal soul that I... won't...
ever use ... goofjuice again." He was weeping. "It was so hard, Mr.
Seafort So hard!"
But
he'd done it. And made a life to be proud of.
"And
me." Alexi's voice was soft. "If not for you, Mr. Seafort, what would
I be?"
"As
you are now. Recovered from your troubles, a successful officer—"
"You
taught me how to be an officer. Then you taught me again."
"Alexi,
I had little to do—"
His
words were almost a whisper. "Don't discredit what you were to me. And
still are."
I threw
up my arms. "I don't know what to say."
Arlene
tentatively raised a hand, like a joeykid at school. "That you're wrong,
and you're sorry?"
Lord
God, how do I deserve friends such as these?
I bowed
my head.
An hour
later, our company gone, Arlene settled across the room. She regarded me
warily. "Nicky, what in God's name is troubling you? No, don't look away.
It's time we..." She swallowed. 'Tell me."
"It's..."
My heart pounded.
"Say
it"
"There's
a woman. I—we've been in love."
For a
moment her eyes closed, as if in some unbearable pain. Then, with resolve,
"Is she beautiful?"
I
studied her, wondering how much more she could be hurt "Yes. Lord God,
yes."
A moan.
"Blue
eyes, auburn hair..."
Her
tone was bitter. "You've known her long?"
I
forced myself to meet her eyes. "Finding her was the miracle of
my..." My throat caught. "I abhor myself for not doing more for her.
I've loved her since I was sixteen, and I still don't know what I'd do
without—"
"Oh,
Nicky!" She flew across the carpet, threw herself into my arms.
I
wrapped myself around her, breathing in her fragrance, exulting in the sturdy
beat of her heart. "I'm sorry, my love. I'm so sorry." I could say no
more. "So sorry."
From
the porthole of our launch, UNS Galactic was a disappointment. She was large,
but not all mat immense. Her lights beamed from her mooring a kilometer or so
from Earthpon Station. Actually, she wasn't moored; she merely floated at rest
relative to the Station.
Galactic
was too vast to be accommodated at Earthport's usual locks; she would block
five bays at a time. The Station's extension bay at which she and her sister
ship would dock wasn't completed yet. A minor inconvenience, all told.
The
starship had four launches and two gigs, to carry passengers back and forth.
Her middies must be beside themselves, striving to earn the boon of piloting
between Station and ship. In fact, a gig was just setting off; its running
lights glowed green and white. Utterly dwarfed by Galactic, it steered a course
for a Station bay.
Alexi,
Arlene, and I had boarded Galactic'& launch from one of the Naval locks. A
night's sleep hadn't changed my mind that I'd acted appropriately at the Von
Walthers banquet. A pity I hadn't come to my senses earlier, and refused the
nomination.
Some
idiot had arranged for mediamen to record our jaunt from Earthport, and their
shouted questions still echoed hi my ears.
"Mr.
SecGen, have you seen the polls?"
"How
long did you plan—"
"Is
this die start of your reelection camp—"
"Did
you mean to set an example for the Assembly?"
The
hiss of a sliding hatch had restored blessed silence.
We
decelerated, as our pilot began his approach to Galactic's launch bay. Off our
starboard bow, the gig floated toward the Station.
I
caught my breath. That wasn't a gig, it was another launch, several times a
gig's size. That meant...
Suddenly,
I saw Galactic in perspective. If her launch looked like a gnat on a bison, she
was truly gigantic. I pressed my forehead to the porthole, straining to take in
her glory. At last, I leaned back, assimilating what I'd seen. Arlene squeezed
my hand.
"What
I'd give to have her," said Alexi.
I
nodded agreement. Any Captain would give his right arm for the posting; I
wondered again what influence had swayed Admiralty hi Stanger's favor. Perhaps
I should have taken a stronger role in the selection. Galactic was the Navy's
greatest vessel, the largest ever built Only her sister ship Olympiad, still
under construction, would be comparable.
As if
reading my mind, Alexi said, "They could have built ten starships for the
cost"
I
nodded.
"Well,
no doubt she'll satisfy the hotheads." He turned to the porthole.
"Sorry, shouldn't meddle in politics."
Almost,
I let it go. "What are you saying, Alexi?"
"Surely
you've heard the talk. The Navy's mission of destiny. Lifeline to the colonies.
Earth's ungrateful children, that sort of rubbish." His eyes roamed the
distant hull. "Lord, she's big."
"How
will Galactic—"
"Oh,
just by being there. An unstated threat, should one be necessary." He made
a vague gesture.
"Is
that sort of talk common?"
"Common
enough. I didn't mean to tell tales out of school." A placating gesture.
"It's just... well, we've grown so dependent on imports, it makes joeys
nervous." He smiled. "Captains on a long cruise have too much time to
brood"
I knew
that was so.
"Look,
sir, the launch bay hatches are open. The ship's so massive you can barely see
the bay."
I
joined him at the porthole. Behind us, Arlene watched quietly, her face without
expression.
The
pilot began braking maneuvers.
Soon
our vessel inched into the launch bay. At last the capture latches clicked into
place, and the huge outer hatch slid shut behind us. A short wait, while the
bay was pressurized. Naturally, as on any ship, there was a lock between the
bay and the working areas of the ship, but one didn't want to herd passengers
about in suits if it was avoidable, so the bay was normally kept aired.
We
climbed down, cycled through the lock to the Level 3 corridor.
A voice
roared, "Stand to!"
Twenty-two
officers resplendent in dress whites stiffened to attention. At their head,
Captain Stanger snapped an Academy salute. Despite myself, my heart quickened.
"Gentlemen,
as you were.**
Stanger
stepped forward smartly. "Welcome to Galactic, Mr. SecGen."
"Thank
you." I glanced about All circumference corridors had a curve, but
Galactic's was far less pronounced than on any ship I'd known. Her disks were
far wider, so that was to be expected, but it gave the ship a sense of grandeur
and luxury I hadn't expected.
Ariene's
eye flitted about "Good Lord.'*
I
understood her awe. The typical ship's corridors were painted Naval gray, but
here the corridor was richly detailed in wood tones, with an astonishing amount
of intricately molded trim. Hatch surrounds were outlined in gold
I
looked down, scandalized. "Carpeting? On a corridor deck?" Corridors
had riveted plates throughout. Always.
"We're
on Level 3, sir. Passenger country. Level 1 is more what you're used to."
I
scuffed my feet on the obscenely soft material. After a moment I relaxed enough
to grin at Arlene. "She's something, isn't she?" Almost, I didn't
regret the cost.
Alexi
said, "She puts Hibernia to shame."
"Hmpff."
Loyalty made me frown.
The
officers seemed suspiciously young. My eye flitted among shoulder stripes and
length of service pins. "Lord in heaven, how many middies do you
berth?"
"Eleven,
sir."
"All
in a wardroom?"
"Not
exactly. We call it one, but it's divvied into two compartments."
The
first middy would have his hands full, if Galactic was like any ship I'd ever
known. I'd found it a trial to keep track of three middies. Ten subordinates
would be...
"Who's
first?"
"Mr.
Speke, step forward."
A lanky
joey strode from among his fellows, saluted. "Midshipman Edwin Speke
reporting, sir."
I
glanced at his service pins. "Six years." Plenty of experience.
Useful. But why hadn't he made lieutenant? Well, six years as middy wasn't all
that long. Eyebrows wouldn't begin to be raised for another year or so.
One by
one Captain Stanger introduced his lieutenants, who all seemed eager to shake
my hand. I wondered how many of them would still brag of meeting me, after my
coming disgrace by the Patriarchs.
"Shall
we visit the bridge, sir?"
"Please."
I had to negotiate the shoals of protocol. Even as SecGen, I had no right of
command in Stanger's ship; the Navy took its chain of command most seriously
indeed. He and his crew had come to attention before me as a courtesy, not an
obligation.
A ship
could have but one Captain, and Stanger was he. No civilian, even the Commander
in Chief and head of Government, could legitimately issue a direct order on
ship. Even an Admiral was required to operate through his subordinate Captain,
who had actual responsibility for the vessel. The Admiral's recourse was to
remove a Captain who offended; even an Admiral couldn't countermand his
Captain's orders.
It was
well this was so. The Navy survived by maintaining an absolutely clear line of
authority.
Ultimately,
I could have Galactic'* crew do as I wished, but only by issuing directives to
Admiralty, and having their orders filter through the chain of command. Of
course, in practical terms a request from me had the effect of a direct order.
No sailor in his right mind would alienate the SecGen.
We
started down the corridor, several officers trailing behind.
Like
any starship, Galactic was composed of disks. Imagine a series of foam rubber
circles, stacked one on top of another. Then picture a rather thick
old-fashioned pencil stuck through the center of the disks. The part of the
pencil forward of the disks contained the voluminous cargo holds that justified
the ship's existence. Aft, below the disks, were the fusion drive chambers that
generated the N-wave that drove the ship. But the disks were where passengers
and crew worked and lived.
Most
starships contained two levels, or three. Galactic had six, and they were huge.
Through the middle of each disk ran a circular circumference corridor, divided
into nominal east and west. The disks were connected by stairwells, which by
Naval terminology were ladders.
"I
feel..." I couldn't say it aloud, even to Arlene. I felt more at home on
this ship, unfamiliar as she was, than ever I'd be in the corridors of the
Rotunda.
Why can
we not retreat to what was? More to the point, why had I ever abandoned life as
a Captain? I sighed.
Stanger
stopped abruptly at a hatch, slapped the panel. The midshipmen continued on
until they were beyond the corridor curve.
A hatch
slid open. I gaped. "Elevators, in a starship?"
"For
passengers, mostly. Remember, we have six levels." He smiled. "The
lifts are off-limits to middies."
"I
would hope." How soft would the Navy grow, if middies rode elevators from
level to level? Why, in my day ...
"Shall
we?"
I asked
brusquely, "Do you normally ride?"
"No,
sir. But..." His eye flicked to my cane.
That did
it. "Neither do I." I stalked down the corridor.
The
ladder was farther than I'd thought Surely the stair to
Level 2
was no steeper than usual. Lips tight, I negotiated the steps, transferring as
much weight to the rail as I could. As I climbed, though, my discomfort
lessened. At the top of the ladder, on Level 2,1 felt almost light-headed.
Stanger
read my mind. "We have three gravitron units. They're intended to mesh,
but I keep the bow units set low. About a third gee. It's better for our
health."
"Is
it?"
He
shrugged. "I like it that way." As Captain, he could set them as he
chose. Light gravity was rather refreshing, once you got used to it. Most
unusual; a ship such as Hibernia had but one set of gravitrons.
We
climbed to Level 1. It was, as Stanger had said, more as I'd expected. Gray
bulkheads, alloy plate decking. Utilitarian. To my eye, comfortable.
A
quarter of the way around the long corridor, we came to the bridge. Stanger
slapped open the thickened hatch. A bridge was built like a fortress; if sealed
from within, only a heavy cutting rig could penetrate it
The
watch officer jumped from his console, stood at attention.
"As
you were." Automatically, Stanger glanced at the console readouts. My own
eye was drawn to the simulscreen that dominated the front bulkhead. As on any
bridge, it provided a view of the stars, as seen from the ship's prow. But most
ships weren't moored just off Earthport Station. The view from Galactic was
beyond spectacular. It was breathtaking.
"Mr.
SecGen, Ms. Seafort: First Lieutenant Garrow."
I
grunted, still lost in the Station's blaze of lights.
"An
honor to meet you, sir."
"Of
course." After a moment I tore myself from the simulscreen, realized what
I'd said. "I mean..." I flushed "Sorry. You've been on ship
long, Lieutenant?"
"I
came from Seville two weeks before commissioning."
I
forced myself to concentrate. "Captain Stanger's last command." I'd
read as much, in a briefing.
Stanger
drifted to the hatch. "I brought Garrow with me. A good man. Would you
like a brief tour, Mr. SecGenT
"Very
well." Reluctantly, glancing behind, we followed him from the bridge. Two
middies tagged along, apparently at the Captain's behest.
The
dining hall on Level 2 was elegant beyond words; its decor would have been
suitable in the finest French restaurant in Lunapolis. Alexi and I exchanged
skeptical glances. "Rather ornate," he allowed.
I tried
to count the tables. If Galactic carried three thousand passengers... "Mr.
Stanger, surely you don't hold two seatingsT
"No,
this is only first class. Most passengers are served in the second dining hall
below. We—"
I
spluttered, "First class?" In all my Naval years, it had been a proud
axiom: the Navy traveled with but one class of passenger. While wealthier joeys
could buy certain amenities, such as parties and receptions in the lounges,
passenger cabins were all the same size, and meals were alike.
"It's
not really a class, sir, it's—"
**Why
wasn't I told of this?"
"I
don't know, sir,**
"Show
me the other dining hall."
Grimly,
we proceeded two levels down the ladder.
Alexi
scowled at the pressed celulex tables, the rows of straight chairs, "Hah.
Not really a class?"
I
muttered, "Inexcusable." Compared to the opulent first class dining
hall, the compartment was dreary and utilitarian.
Arlene
gave my hand a warning squeeze, but her eyes said she was as disgusted as I.
I shook
my head. "I'll be paying Admiralty a visit." I rounded on Captain
Stanger. "I suppose the cabins are equally classless?"
"There
are differences among them." Stanger's tone was frosty. "Remember,
Mr. SecGen, that I'm not the architect"
I
wasn't about to be mollified "You, of course, dine on Level 2?"
"It's
nearer the bridge."
"But
of course." My tone dripped contempt.
The two
middies exchanged glances.
"Easy,
sir." Alexi touched my arm,
"It's
an outrage." He and Arlene were right: mere was no point in alienating
Stanger, but... the Captain wasn't even ashamed of the disgraceful arrangements.
Still, I'd treated him poorly in front of his own midshipmen. For the sake of
ship's discipline I tried to rein in my ire. "No need to drag you about
the ship; a middy will suffice. You, there. Speke, is it? Would you care to
show us the engine room?"
"With
the Captain's permission." A touch insolent, per-haps, but technically
correct. It was Stanger's ship, not mine.
Stanger
nodded his consent Then, to me, "Would you care to lunch with us before
you leave?"
"No,
thank you. We have a shuttle to catch," Not quite true; our shuttle for
Von Walthers would depart when we were ready. Earthport was in geosync over the
southeastern Amerieas, so we need not be concerned with an entry win-dow.
Still, I doubted I'd enjoy a meal in a galley masquerading as a luxury hotel.
The
Captain's face was wooden. "As you wish. 1*11 have the launch crew stand
by." Another salute, and he left us.
Perhaps
Midshipman Speke had taken umbrage at my dismissal of Stanger; he was
distinctly cool as we went about our tour. It annoyed me enough so that
obstinately, after the engine room, I asked to see more. Arlene looked about
with interest; she'd been a lieutenant for a number of years in one of the
Navy's proudest ships.
"This
way, sir." Speke's tone was sullen. Well, if that was his attitude, no
wonder he hadn't made lieutenant
I had
the middy lead us to die comm room—an impressive establishment, bristling with
radionics and sensors— and then an elegant passenger lounge, complete with
ornate bronze statuary. With every step, I was more uneasy, more sure the Navy
had made a grave miscalculation.
Galactic
was stunning, there was no denying it But the Navy was in the transport
business, not the hotel trade. A voyage could last well over a year; Galactic's
cruise to the new colony of Constantine would take a full nineteen months. On
such long voyages class distinctions ought to be suppressed, not encouraged,
else they would fester, and resentments burst forth.
I
asked, "Where are hydros?" Despite her capacious holds, the starship
would depend to a large degree on the produce of her hydroponics chambers,
Speke
said, "Below, on Level 6."
I gaped
at Alexi, but he had seen it too. The impatient middy had rolled his eyes.
Alexi shook his head. I knew what he was thinking: on Melbourne, or for mat
matter, on any ship of mine, a middy who showed such disrespect would be
brought up short. Well, Galactic was Stanger's to command. I wouldn't
interfere.
Passing
cabin after cabin, we trudged down die sumptuous corridor toward the
hydroponics chamber, my knee aching. We passed an airlock, one of half a dozen
the ship boasted, Two seamen waited for the entry light to go green, stiff and
awkward in their pressure suits.
Alexi
said, "Hullo, what's this?"
The young
middy's voice was cool. "Machinist's mates, sir. 1 believe they're
checking another sensor Problem SIR
"Four
external airlock sensors have gone bad so far." That sort of thing
happened, especially on a new ship. That's why Galactic tarried so long in home
system after her commissioning. Speke shook his head. "Shoddy Navy
parts." I bit back a savage reply.
By the
time we'd looked at the rows of tomatoes, legumes, and greens growing in East
Hydros, I'd walked as much as I could tolerate. We started back to the launch
berth.
At the
Level 3 launch bay lock, I opened the inner hatch from the corridor panel.
'That will be all, Mr. Speke."
Alexi
cleared his throat. "Middy, please give Mr. Stanger a message."
"Yes,
sir?" The boy waited.
Alexi's
voice was stern. 'Tell him Captain Tamarov is offended by your behavior, and
wishes to call it to his attention,"
The
middy gulped. "Aye, sir."
I
whistled under my breath. The boy was in for it now. At twenty, he was by
custom too old to be caned, but he'd have to work off demerits as would any
other middy. If I were his commander, he'd get a full ten demerits, for the
folly of irking a fellow Captain. Each required two hours of hard exercise.
I'd
been prepared to let the matter go, but Alexi wasn't so charitable. Well,
coming off a ship of the line, he expected shipboard discipline. No doubt, on
Melbourne, he got it, though Alexi was one of the most kindhearted souls I
knew.
Still,
I hesitated. It was I who'd kindled Speke's resentment in the first place, by
being so brusque with Stanger. Nonetheless, I'd see ten midshipmen caned before
I'd alienate my oldest friend. I flashed Alexi a glance of apology. "Your
outrage is warranted. Captain Tamarov." I favored the hapless middy with a
steely glare, "Tell me, Mr,, ah, Speke. Can you imagine making
Captain?"
"Urn—I..."
It was every midshipman's dream. "Yes, sir,**
"And
if one of your middies—no doubt a good joey at heart—went about sulky and
sullen, sighing under his breath, rolling his eyes ,.. You'd be pleased?"
"No,
sir," He reddened.
"And
this in front of a distinguished Captain and the Sec-Gen?"
"No,
sir." He was sweating.
"You
were annoyed, perhaps, that I was curt with Captain Stanger?"
"I—there
was no—it's none of my business, sir."
"Ahh."
My glance softened. "Perhaps I might prevail on Mr. Tamarov to countermand
his order?"
Glowering,
Alexi nodded.
"Very
well, no need to report the matter to Stanger. But joey ... think on it"
The
boy's gratitude was pathetic. "I will, sir. Thank you. Please forgive
me."
"Good
lad." Out of habit, I saluted, and automatically, he stiffened to return
it
In
silence, we passed through the lock.
"I
wish I'd been at the banquet" Derek Carr lounged on the soft blue divan in
my Washington living room, swirling his drink. "After you left the hall,
the media were at a loss. I've never heard such blather on the nets." His
sharp blue eyes met mine. "Though you shouldn't have done it"
"I
had to."
"Why?
Because you're not perfect?*
"I'm
much less than mat"
On the
couch opposite, Arlene lounged with Alexi. Though they'd never known each other
in the Service, they'd hit it off from the moment they'd met, years ago. In
fact during the Transpop Rebellion, we'd stayed with Alexi and his wife, Moira,
while searching for Philip, They'd had one toddler, I recalled, and another
joey kid on the way.
Again I
wished P.T. were with us, but he'd left word in response to my query. He needed
time, he said, to assimilate what I'd done. I knew my refusal of the Von
Walthers hurt him deeply, though I wasn't sure why.
Alexi
sipped at his scotch. "1 haven't followed the news. What's the line?"
Derek
grinned. "First word was that the SecGen's glitched and should resign. But
then they read the early polls."
"And?"
"I'd
say he got'away with it The newsies go on about his unyielding moral rectitude,
his refusal to compromise, Ms—"
"So,
Mr. SecGen." Alexi raised his glass in mock salute. "You'll hold the
Rotunda awhile yet"
"No."
It was time I told them. "In a few days it'll be over."
Arlene
gazed at my face, silent, waiting.
"I—it's—you
see..." I hadn't expected it to be so hard. A deep breath. 'The Patriarchs
intend to disavow me."
"Why?"
"Because
of the Navy. Colonial affairs. No, that's not it The real issue is that I
refuse to support Mother Church. They want me to coerce the colonies into
economic and social submission, and I refused. But they're right, you see. They
have to be." For some unfathomable reason, my eyes stung. "They
represent Lord God, Only a fool would oppose His wiU,"
"But
you're not that." Alexi set down his drink, "Sir, they*ve no right
to—"
"Be
silent!" I slapped the table with open palm, MNot another word!" He'd
come close to blasphemy, and perhaps damnation,
"No,"
Alexi gave an apologetic smile. "We're past that, you and I. I'm long
since adult, and a Captain. I take responsibility for my acts. If the
Patriarchs condemn you, they're wrong. It's that simple."
Derek
uncurled himself from the divan. "Doss Branstead know? Has he started to
fight? Plant stories in zines, get out the word that—"
"He
doesn't know, and we'll do no such tiling." My tone was firm.
"They've every right to censure me. And even— no, let me finish—even
supposing they're wrong, if you think I'd raise my hand against them, you know
me not at all."
Silence.
"Besides
..." I made my tone more reasonable. "I'll retire at last. You've no
idea how much I want out of office."
Abruptly,
Arlene got to her feet, padded to the door.
"What's
up, hon?"
"I'll
make tea." She disappeared into the hall.
"Excuse
me." Perhaps she wanted tea, but that wasn't all. "Hon?" I
followed into the bright-lit kitchen. "What is it?"
"Nothing,
Nick. You have enough troubles." She set a ceramic pot in the micro.
"Until it boils," she told it
"Go
on, hon."
"Retirement."
"I
look forward to it so much."
Her
gaze was speculative. "You've said that for years. When did it stop being
true?"
"What?
How can—I've always dreamed of—"
"You
meant it at first. The night you announced for re-election, atop the Franjee
Tower, you almost wept. When did it change?"
"It
didn't!"
'•Swear
it, Nick. By Lord God."
"Of
course I do. I—"
"Say
the words."
"Oh,
Arlene ... By Lord God Himself, I swear to you, I yearn..." I faltered
"Water
boiling." The micro lapsed silent.
I
blurted, "I don't know when. Until tonight, I didn't realize..." I
met her gaze. "I like being SecGen. I want to hold on to office. I like
the power. And I'm good at it; I make decisions and get them carried out. It's
like being Captain again; when I speak, joeys jump. That's Lord God's
truth." My smile was bitter. "See what I've become?"
"It's
important you see also."
"Why?"
"So
you can have what you want Let's fight them."
"No.
Tell me, what do you want?"
"A
cup of Darjeeling." She busied herself with the pot "All right,
that's not honest. I hoped you'd retire, because I thought that's what you
wanted. I can make a life for myself either way, Nick." Suddenly her eyes
teared. "I always have."
"Oh,
hon." I drew close.
She
fended me off with a palm. "If we're to tell truth... You love me, I
think, though sometimes I'm not sure. But you don't need me. I've stayed busy.
1 raised Philip, and did a damn fine job of it So did you; we were good
parents, weren't we? I wish he were still young."
She
sipped at her tea, made a face. "I played at First Lady when I had to.
I've read, and gone back to school; you know how proud I was of my doctorate."
She paused, reflecting.
"Arlene..."
"But
for years... I've been marking time. I have a few friends, but not many."
She stared into her cup. "So we'll leave the Rotunda for good. It's all
right. It's just... Galactic reminded me of my years on Wellington, and what it
was like to see other worlds. Of the life I lost."
I
whispered, "You too?"
"More
than you'll ever know." She lifted her tea, splashed the counter, set it
down. "Damn. Sorry. But—damn!" She fled to the hall. "Say good
night for me."
"Hon—"
"Please,
Nick!" She was gone.
"Hooker's
disappeared from the face of the Earth." Mark Tilnitz looked grim.
"We've searched, Naval Intelligence is hunting, U.N. Security has pulled
out all the stops."
"And?"
I tapped my desk, wishing I'd held the meeting in the comfort of my Washington
compound, but I'd hoped the formality of my Rotunda office would spur the
world's security forces to greater effort
"We're
falling all over each other," Karen Bums said, "and getting
nowhere."
General
Donner glowered. As head of U.N. Security Forces, he was nominally Mark's boss,
but he knew that in reality Mark was answerable only to me. "We've run
analyses on the two manifestos. We think one person wrote them both."
"That's
a great help." I sounded too sarcastic, and regretted it.
"The
joey in the terminal was Brian Keltek," said Tilnitz. "From
Vancouver, a metallurgist for BP Shell. A loner, no surviving family. Father
was a fisherman until the North Pacific die-off."
"The
fish kill wasn't our fault. The temperature inversion had nothing to do with
global warming." Why did I sound defensive?
"A
number of scientists agree with you. Keltek contributed to the Enviro Council
for seven years." Mark regarded me steadily.
"It
figures." Let them claim what they might; Winstead headed a gang of
loonies.
Captain
Binn of U.N.A.F. Security asked, "Does this Keltek have friends?
Associates?"
"Neighbors.
Naturally, they saw nothing."
"Now,
look." My tone was sharp. "A man can't just disappear unless he goes
transpop. There's hotel records, travel vouchers, credit billings—"
"Don't
tell me my job." Donner was blunt. "We're working on it."
Captain
Binn demanded, "Who knew the SecGen would visit Academy?"
Tilnitz
said, "We've been over that. The Commandant,
two of
his lieutenants, the SecGen's security detail. The media wasn't informed until
he was on the way. That's routine/'
"The
Eco Action League manifesto referred to the Sec-Gen at Academy. That means a
leak."
I
rubbed my temples, hoping to soothe the first intimations of a headache.
"Anyone could have known. Once we announced it to the media..."
"Lots
of enviro sympathizers in that bunch." Mark sounded gloomy. "We're
checking."
"This
is nonsense." I flipped off my holovid. 'These Eco League joeys are
glitched. They're throwbacks to some other century. We simply don't have
terrorism anymore."
"I
know, sir. Perhaps we imagined the gunshots." Tilnitz withstood my
withering glare.
I
suppressed an urge to pull out my hair. "What about the airport joey's
car? The driver?"
'The
electricar was stolen the morning of the attack. No clues. We've taken it apart
looking for prints or DNA, but all we get is the owner's."
"Find
the Eco League. We're running out of time."
Timer'
Mark looked puzzled. "How so?"
I
cursed under my breath. Nobody in the room knew about my impending dismissal,
and I couldn't tell them. Only fear of my impatience would spur them on. The
E.A.L. may attack again," I said. "Worse, every day that passes sends
a message to the public that we can't catch fugitives. This isn't some untamed
colony, it's Earth itself." I stood. "We meet again in two days. I
want results."
The
massive jet droned toward New York, my third trip this week. I might as well
move there, I thought disgustedly.
Charlie
Witrek, my middy, sat across from us, reading a holozine. As always, he was
immaculately groomed.
Alexi
sat comfortably at my side. He was hitching a ride back to Moira, he said,
though 1 knew he had come along to provide moral support for my showdown with
the Patriarchs.
Derek
would have joined us as well, but with the Patriarchs' attitude toward our
colonies, I wanted him out of harm's way. Lord knew what the Elders might do at
the sight of him.
Hope
Nation was no longer a colony, thanks to my highhandedness years before.
Derek's government had maintained its independence through several SecGens,
despite unrelenting pressure from the Church. Perhaps, if the Patriarchs had
their way, Galactic might someday appear over Centraltown, bristling with
lasers, to reassert our control over a free people.
I
sighed.
Alexi
said, "What's wrong, sir?"
"It
won't be my problem much longer."
A
pause. "Sometimes you're too cryptic even for me."
Across the
aisle, Charlie Witrek nodded emphatically.
I
couldn't help but smile. "Hope Nation, I meant"
Alexi
said, "What will you do after, ah, you retire?"
"After
I'm dismissed? Travel, I suppose." If they let me.
"Sir,
I know you're worried they might—"
"Why
do you keep calling me 'sir'? You have more seniority than I ever did."
"Would
you rather I called you 4Mr. SecGenT'
"
'Nick.'"
A
moment's silence. "I never called you that"
"Start."
"I
don't think I could." He waved his glass at a steward, waited until his
drink was poured. "It'd be sacrilege."
I
frowned. Lord God shouldn't be taken lightly.
"You
never cease to amaze me, you know." A long sip. "When we were young,
you'd have reamed that middy Speke so he never dared to be rude again." He
stared at his liquor. "We were terrified of crossing you, back on
Hiber-nia. You had a way about you."
Charlie
slowly put down his holovid, all ears.
"I
was harsh."
"When
needed. But you were gentle with Captain Stanger's middy."
I
stirred uncomfortably, as if at an accusation. "We'd provoked him, and he
was too young to deal with it"
"He'll
revere you now." A bleak smile. "You've mellowed, sir. Kindness comes
easily to you."
"Preposterous."
I frowned at the porthole, while we droned over billowy clouds.
"Those
joeys who come to stare at your compound wall— why do you think they do
it?"
"They're
deluded."
"You
offer them a hope. Of what they might be."
"Bah.
All this from not making Speke turn himself in?"
"Of
course not It's your honesty, your refusal to dodge blame ... I've tried to
raise my Mikhael in that mold." Alexi sighed. "I've work to do
yet"
"Problems?"
"He's
fifteen. Should I have brought him on Melbourne! I wanted him to have a normal
life. After my last cruise, Moira and I agreed to raise the joeykids at
home." His eyes were moody. "I don't mink it worked."
"If
there's anything I—"
"It's
my problem." But he brightened. "There, you see, sir? You're SecGen,
the busiest man in the world, and without thinking, you offer yourself."
"It's
only words." There was nothing I could do for his son, and I knew it.
People made too much of polite phrases. Then, before I had time to stop myself,
"Alexi, why don't you bring the family to Washington? Stay with us
awhile." What was I doing? He needed time alone with them, to rebuild
relations. "You could stay in the cottage, if you prefer."
He
brightened. "I'll ask Moira." Then, after a pause, "For
all
these years I've treasured you as a friend, more than you can ever know. But
I'll continue to call you 'sir.'"
I
stared out the porthole. Slowly, as if by its own volition, my hand stole
across and settled on his arm.
"I
thought you were going home to Moira." We clumped along the walkway, in
the shadows of the U.N. towers.
"After
you meet with Bishop Saythor."
"I've
Jerence, Carlotti, and Witrek, here—a whole bloody squadron. Look at
them!" Behind us, ahead, alongside, some twenty-five aides, security
joeys, and flunkies hurried to keep pace.
Charlie
said brightly, "I could have stayed home, sir. You wanted me along
to—"
"I
was wrong." My tone was gentle.
Alexi's
face closed into a stubborn mask. "I'll see you through your
meeting."
I
nodded, knowing what outcome he feared. It would, no doubt, be a short
conclave. This time, I'd have no choice but to face the baying pack of media
gathered on the front steps. My disavowal by the Patriarchs would be world
news. Many in my own Supranationalist Party, I suspected, would be glad. Too long,
I'd barred the way to their ambition.
We
negotiated the steps. Perhaps I should let the doctors have at my knee. Old age
would soon be upon me. There was no reason to go through it in pain. I nodded
grimly at the mediamen.
"Sir?"
Alexi paused, to let me go first through the massive doors Charlie held. We
strode down the ornate hall. "You could buy time, you know."
I
stopped, leaned against a marble column. "I won't prevaricate." And
if I found Elder Saythor in my seat, I'd evict him. By force, if necessary. I
gripped my cane.
"Consider
a strategic retreat." Alexi spoke with urgency. "Tell them you'll
look favorably ... hell, you know the words better than I. Tell them
you'll—"
Whump!
Alexi
receded toward the far wall, as if seen through a zoom lens in reverse. A thump
shook my chest. I sought bream, found none. The room tilted. I slammed into a
lamp, crashed to the floor, skidded to the wall. My head slammed into a panel.
The day dimmed
Pandemonium.
It was
time to get up. I had chores to do, and Father would be annoyed. I reached for
my shoes.
"Don't
try to move, sir." The voice was far distant
My arms
flailed as I struggled to get out of bed. Pain lanced my side. I tried to
wiggle my toes. My legs were asleep.
Blood
dripped onto my forehead. "DON'T MOVE, MR. SECGEN!" Why was Mark
Tilnitz in Father's house? Why was he bleeding? I wiped my brow.
"Where's
the fucking ambulance?"
I
strained to hear. My ears were clogged.
"It's
landing on the lawn." Jerence Branstead, weeping.
"Shape
up, Cadet." My growl was barely audible.
"Stand
back, all of you! Give him room! Karen, how many dead?"
I
blinked, trying to bring the room into focus. Gingerly, my fingers probed my
side, came away red.
"Four,
so far."
"The
SecGen gets the first ambulance.**
"The
med helis hold three—"
"You
heard me. Where in God's name is a gumey?"
They'll
have their own. Easy, Mr. Tilnitz."
"Easy,
hell! If I'd shielded him as I was supposed to.. .**
"Mark..."
I struggled for breath. "What happened?"
"You're
hurt, sir. A bomb."
I
laughed, and coughed up salty blood. "And they missed? Incompetent
idiots."
The
clatter of running footsteps.
"The
column blocked the blast. Please, sir, don't try to talk."
"Why
not? It may be my last chance."
"Don't
say that!" His tone was agonized. "You, this way! It's the
SecGen!"
Strangers
bent over me. "His side, any foreign objects protruding? Bind it. Sir, can
you feel this?"
I
gasped. "Christ, yes!" Sorry, Lord, but it hurt so.
"Move
your fingers, if you would."
I did.
"And
your toes."
I did.
"Try
again." A pause. "Don't lift him. Slip the stretcher underneath.
Careful, an inch at a time. Sir, you've lost blood, we're starting an IV."
'Tell
Arlene I ..." It seemed too much trouble. Anyway, she knew. I closed my
eyes, let black claim me.
CHAPTER
5
My mind
was clouded. Joeys leaned over me to ask incomprehensible questions. I slept,
woke again. Arlene sat alongside me, holding my hand. Sharp pain. I groaned.
Someone adjusted a tube. I slept.
I
drifted back from a far place.
"Where
am I?" My throat was so dry I could barely make a sound. I licked my lips.
A
white-clad nurse turned from the holovid that helped pass her vigil. "At
Boland Memorial, sir." She held a cup so I could drink from a straw. Never
had water tasted so good.
I
struggled for memory. "A bomb went off." A sudden panic. "Mark
Tilnitz?"
"Outside.
He's taken over the floor. We all have special passes." She showed me
hers, pinned to her tunic.
"How
long have I..."
"Four
days."
"Lord
God above." I tried to throw off the covers. Something stabbed at my side.
"I have work waiting."
"Lie
back, Mr. SecGen." She spoke urgently into a caller.
"Where's
Branstead? What's on my schedule?" Tubes snaked from under the covers.
Others were attached to my veins. "Unhook me."
"Wait,
sir. I've called the doctor."
I tried
to swing my legs out of bed, but couldn't "Am I tied? Help me up."
The
door burst open. "He's awake? Good. Sir, I'm Dr. Rains." He wore the
white coat that was the uniform of his profession.
"Hello.
Let me out of here."
"Sit
back, Mr. Seafort." It was a command, sharp enough to give me pause.
Gently but firmly, he helped me ease back onto my pillows. "You've been
hurt."
"How
badly?"
"Your
forehead is only bruised, and your concussion is fading. You've regained most
of your hearing. The hole in your side is repaired with skintape. Two broken
ribs, but we've applied the bone growth stimulator every morning."
"So,
then." I had no patience with his recital.
He
flung off my covers, revealing my nakedness and the catheters invading my body.
I flinched. "Mr. SecGen ..." His voice was unexpectedly gentle.
"Move your right foot."
"What
is this nons—" I couldn't. I tried again.
"Your
left."
I
grunted with the effort.
He
tapped my ankle. "Feel this?"
"No."
Suddenly, I was clammy with sweat.
"There's
been, uh, spinal damage. We operated to stabilize you, to fuse the cracked
vertebrae that—"
"How
long 'til it heals?"
"It
won't heal," said Dr. Rains.
I
gagged. Nothing but spittle came up; I hadn't eaten for days. I fought back
terror.
"Mr.
Seafort, there may be hope. We've procedures that—"
"Get
out!"
"Neurosurgery
has come a long way."
"I
don't want to hear." I twisted wildly, trying to move my legs.
"We
can help you adjust—"
I
pulled myself to a sitting position, pounded my knees. No sensation. I was numb
nearly to the hips.
Dr.
Rains caught my hand. "You'll do yourself damage."
"Let
me go!"
"Nurse,
twenty cc's of Almonel, stat"
"What's
that?" Desperately, I tried to twist free.
"A
calmative."
"No!"
I struck at his wrist "Don't put me to sleep!"
He
grabbed my forearm, held me still, brought the hypo to bear.
"Mark!
MARK, HELP!"
The
door crashed open. My security chief skidded in, laser ready. "Get away
from him!"
"He
needs a sedative."
"For
God's sake, don't let him do it!" I scrabbled to twist free.
"GET
AWAY!" Mark's face was like death. Gaunt unshaven, a jagged scab crossed
his forehead. He knelt aimed two-handed.
Hastily,
Dr. Rains stood clear. In the hall, running steps.
"Put
that down." Tilnitz slammed the door in the startled faces of a pair of
orderlies.
"He
needs—"
"Now!"
Carefully,
Dr. Rains set down the hypo. This man is my patient**
"He
was going to..." I tried to bring my voice under control. "Get him
out!"
"Do
you need a sedative, sir?"
With
more effort than anyone would ever know, I made my tone calm. "No, I need
to be left alone."
"You've
got it Mr. SecGen." He herded Dr. Rains and the nurse toward the door.
"I'll be outside."
Before
the door closed I called him back. "How long have you been on duty?"
"Four
days."
"I
thought as much."
"When
I go to the bathroom Karen and Tommy take over. The security zone is two floors
below, two above. You're safe."
"Thank
you." My tone was tremulous. "Get some sleep. Call Alexi, he'll sit
with me."
Mark
came to the bed, knelt by my side, as if a child seeking his father's blessing.
His eyes sought mine, fled quickly to the distance. Nonetheless, his tone was
resolute, "Captain Tamarov is dead."
An
awful cry, that echoed from the cold unforgiving walls. After a time, I
realized the wail was mine. "How ... when—"
"The
bomb, sir. He felt no pain."
I feel
it. My eyes darted to the door. He took the hint, patted my shoulder, and left.
Over
and again I pounded the mattress. Let it have been me. Lord, He deserved to
live,
I
stifled a moan. Lord God still toyed with me. Bereft of my truest friend,
helpless, bedridden, with no reprieve in sight A pitiful old man. In the open
closet, near what was left of my clothes, lay my silver-tipped cane. I'd not
need it again. I retched. Come, night. Take me to your bosom.
I don't
know how long I lay, lost in misery. Across the room, the holovid chattered
softly. It was set to a newsnet.
"—according
to the latest bulletin from Boland Memorial"
"Any
word on when he'll be up and around?''
"A
highly placed source says within days, despite the rumor of serious injuries
that would keep the SecGen bedridden for months. Phil Bansel, reporting live
from Boland Memorial Hospital. Back to you, Dan."
"Meanwhile,
Acting SecGen Valero confirms that little progress has been made in identifying
the Eco Action League, which claims it carried out this third terrorist attack
on the—"
A soft
knock. Arlene peered through the half-open door. "You're back with
us." She came to the bed.
I tried
to turn away, but only the upper half of my body moved.
"Nick..."
She rested her hand on mine. I flinched, and her eyes widened. "What is
it, love?"
I
pulled my hand free. "I can't abide pity."
"What
on earth..." She sat, a tired expression flitting across her lined face.
"It's
just... I..." I tried to turn away. "Not now, Ariene. Please." I
prayed she would leave, before I lost control.
"Nick,
whatever happens, we'll get through this. I'll be with you."
"Can't
you see I—" My voice was ragged "Arlene, if you love me, leave me
alone! For the sake of Lord God!"
When at
last I looked up, she was gone.
For
days I lay abed, mindlessly staring at the holovid. I left most of my food
uneaten. Dully, I answered doctors* questions, tried to move my limbs on their
demand, allowed them to manhandle me into a wheelchair to change the bed.
Jerence
Branstead came to sit with me, tried to talk business of state, but I paid no
mind. "It doesn't matter, Jcr. I'm done,"
"With
whatr
"Office,
Life," Wearily, I shut my eyes.
**Oh,
you've come a long way." His voice held something that might have been
contempt
"From?"
I wouldn't let him goad me.
"From
Wcforio, you sad son of a bitch,** From the fast-ship, on which we'd sped home
from Hope Nation, decades past
I
gaped. "How dare—**
"Yes,
how dare I! I know all your lines." Jerence flung his holovid to the bed,
barely missing my legs.
"Get
out!"
"Gladly."
He stalked to the door.
"And
take your bloody holovid!"
He
strode back, snatched it from the sheets. I grabbed his wrist, stayed him.
"What did you mean about Victoria?'
"It
wasn't for the Navy that I gave up juice. It was for you."
I
reddened. "I know." In all the years, we'd never spoken of the mighty
effort by which he'd mastered his craving,
"I
yearned to be like you. You never quit. Whatever cards life dealt, you played
on." His gaze found mine. "You always have."
Thank
you." My tone was gruff.
"
Til now."
"I
have nothing to live for.**
"That's
how I felt" He'd drowned himself in juice, careless of his own
destruction.
"You
were a boy, your whole life ahead—"
"Coward!"
His eyes blazed. He jerked his thumb at the window. "If only they knew,**
"Who?"
His
brow wrinkled, "No one told you?**
'Told
me what, damn you?** An offense to Lord God, but I was beyond caring.
He
strode to the door, flung it open. "Mark, Karen, give me a hand" He
fished in the bedside drawer, "Comb your hair."
"Why?"
"Do
it!*'
Meekly,
I complied. This was a Jerence I'd never seen.
"Help
hoist him." He rolled a huge, heavy wheelchair to the bedside.
"Where
are we taking him?*' Tilnitz positioned himself at my arm.
"To
the window.** Together, they manhandled me into the chair.
Jerence
flung open the shades. "Look outside, you selfish bastard."
"Easy,
there." Mark's tone was cold
"Shut
up. Look, damn you."
I
peered down. My room was on the fifth floor of the hospital, in what had once
been a miserable transpop slum. Twelve years ago, Earthport's lasers had
crumbled buildings, buckled streets, sent untold thousands in the district
fleeing to their deaths. Now it was a mixed area, and business and middle-class
immigrants were slowly taking hold, a harbinger of the city's rebirth.
I
caught my breath. Streetside, outside the hospital gates, hundreds—thousands—of
joeys had gathered. Some wore the colorful costumes of the Sub or Mid tribes,
others were in casual jumpsuits. Many carried signs that were too distant to
read.
Someone
pointed. The word spread. In moments they were all gazing upward. A clamor
swelled to a roar.
"Wave."
"Take
me back."
"Wave.
You owe them that."
I did.
"How long have they been.. .**
"All
week. More each day."
I waved
again, pretending cheer, while my soul lay charred and lifeless. "Put me
in bed."
"Sir,
it's time you thought about—"
"NOW*
My tone brooked no refusal.
It was
as if air had gone out of a balloon. Defeated, Jerence pushed the chair to my
bedside. I clawed at the mattress. Mark helped lift me in.
I
grabbed my leg, hauled it on top of the other so I could face the other way,
"Good-bye."
I
didn't hear them leave.
After a
time, the nurse brought dinner. I left it untouched Slowly, the room darkened,
A soft
knock at the door.
'Take it
away. I'm not hungry."
"It's
me, Path." Philip shut the door behind him, pulled up a chair.
I said
nothing.
"I
hear you've been difficult." His tone was light. He waited, got no answer.
"I'll be staying awhile. Shall I read to youT'
"I'm
in no mood for visitors."
"So
I hear."
"Please
leave."
"No,
sir."
I
grasped his arm, hauled him close, transferred my grip to his collar. "Do
as I tell you."
"Not
today." Without rancor, he loosened my fingers. "Before I forget, I
apologize for leaving after the awards banquet. I was... upset."
"Thank
you." I tried to make my voice cold.
He
regarded me. "You've lost weight. Have some soup."
"Damn
it, Philip, get out or I'll have Tilnitz throw you out."
"Do
it." His tone matched mine. "He'll nave to hurt me."
"Mark!"
After a
moment the door opened,
P.T.
said, "My father wants you to eject me, sir, I'm going to resist." He
peeled off his jacket, took the defensive stance his mother had taught him,
years past,
"Mr.
SecGen?" Tilnitz looked helplessly between us.
I
pounded the bed. This was absurd. "Enough, both of you."
Mark
asked, "Do you want me to..."
"No."
I lay back, defeated, "Let him stay." Why did my heart beat faster,
more eagerly? Tilnitz left, shaking his head.
"Eat
your soup." Philip held a spoon to my mourn.
"I'm
no child."
"I
know, sir. Stop acting like one."
Grumbling,
I ate, surprised at how hungry I felt
Afterward,
P.T. read from Holoworld, then Newsnet. I lay back on my pillow, drowsing.
After a time I said, "Wherc's your mother?"
"Home,
in the compound." He looked to the floor.
"I
hurt her."
"Oh,
yes."
Tm
sorry."
His
hand rested on mine, "I think she understands."
"It's
just that,,, Philip, do you remember when Mr. Chang was dying?" We'd all
assumed it would be his heart that took the old transpop, but it was a stroke
that felled him. "He lay in that forlorn bed, unable to move, only his
eyes showing his misery."
"You're
not in mat condition. Path."
"Close
enough." How could I explain what I dreaded more than anything else in the
world? If Dr. Rains wanted to subdue me, he had but to grab my arm. I couldn't
flee, couldn't fight. "Philip, I'm ready for the end." I could face
death, and my long delayed reckoning with Lord God, but helplessness...
"Goofjuice.
No, that's not strong enough. Bullshit."
"P.T.!"
I grimaced. "You never used such language,**
He
grinned. "Jared taught me,**
"Ah,
Jared." I tried not to flinch at tite mention of his lover. After a moment,
"How is he?** Hormone rebalancing was losing some of its stigma, but the
thought of Jared's treatments still made me uncomfortable. On the other hand,
in his case they'd been utterly necessary.
P.T.
misunderstood the source of my discomfort. "Fain. I'm omni, not gay."
His last attachment had been with an earnest ait student, who was as fascinated
with Rodin as he. She'd been determinedly pleasant, but I'd never warmed to
her.
"I
know, son,** My hand crept over his, I was ashamed of what I'd let him feel.
"I
know you don't like him."
Jarcd
had caused all sorts of havoc with the nets in the Transpop Rebellion. His
lawlessness had led to the death of his father, my aide and friend. Only Robbie
Boland's influence had saved Jared from a prison colony, even at fifteen.
"I
never said ... It's just..." I sighed. "Tell him I said hello."
"You
could do that yourself. He's downstairs." P.T. said nothing more, but his
eyes watched, waiting.
"Arghhh."
What had I gotten myself into? "Not like this." I wouldn't have
Philip's mate see me flat on my back, helpless. "You'll have to get me out
of bed,"
"If
you wish, Path."
I
frowned. He made it sound my idea.
"Where's
Charlie Witrek? He'll help,"
Philip's
mouth tightened.
I
hadn't seen Charlie since the blast "He isn't dead!" It was a plea,
to Philip, or Lord God.
"No.
Blinded." He wheeled the chair alongside.
"Oh,
Charlie!" For a moment, I forgot about my useless legs. "Where's his
room? Take me there."
"They
flew him to Johns Hopkins." P.T.'s tone was gentle. "Lean toward the
edge of the bed. We'll see him another day."
Karen
and Mark helped prop me in the chair. Someone gave me a mirror, and 1 agreed I
looked like hell, A nurse fussed at helping me shave. I ordered Philip to fetch
a shirt to replace the hospital gown. Someone handed me a tie. Mechanically, I
knotted it, tugged it tight
While
P.T. went to get Jared, I smoothed a blanket over my legs. "How do I
look?"
"Like
yourself again." Mark Tilnite stifled a yawn.
"Is
my hair smoothed? I'm not an idiot, by the way. I know I've been
manipulated."
"Not
by me, sir." He opened the door. "Do you want Tenere on the permanent
access list?"
It was
of no consequence; I didn't expect to be in office long. "When he's with
Philip." A silence. "Where's Branstead?"
"At
the Rotunda."
"At
this hour?"
"He
said there was work to be done. Is there anything else?"
"Call
him." Abruptly, my voice was husky. "Ask him to forgive me."
Hie
door opened. "Hello, sir." Jared Tenere sounded nervous, as well he
ought
I
thrust out a hand. "Good to see you." If I spoke too heartily, no one
seemed to notice.
P.T.'s
eyes met mine. They glowed with gratitude.
I said
reluctantly, "All right, I'm ready for Dr. Rains," I sat in the
motorized chair, propped with pillows so my hands were free. I'd never known,
until a few days past, how essential one's leg and thigh muscles were in
sitting upright I had a great deal to learn, most of it insufferable.
P.T.
went out, spoke to the nurse. He had stayed in New York, camping out at Robbie
Boland's apartment, since the night of his visit. My suggestion that he resume
his own life fell on deaf ears, and I couldn't reveal how pleased I was,
Ariene
remained in Washington, Over me caller she was cordial, but said she'd wait to
see me at home. Time and sincerity, I knew, would earn her forgiveness. I
resolved to do whatever it took. I began by sending her a note of apology, of
which I meant every word.
I
fidgeted, but it was only a few moments before Dr. Rains appeared. With him
were three other doctors, one of whom I'd already met.
Rains
introduced his colleagues: a radiologist, another neurologist, and Dr. Knorr,
an expert in space medicine. Rains regarded me warily.
"WeU?"
My tone was frosty. "What news do you have?*'
He
cleared his throat "Mr. SecGen, you have a partial spinal cord
transsection at the T-12, L-l level, resulting in paralysis of the lower
extremities, but—**
"Is
there any good news?"
"Quite
a bit, actually. First, as you're aware, your paralysis is from the thighs
down. A portion of the bomb casing hit you like a piece of shrapnel, but didn't
quite sever the cord. There's partial sparing of sensation in groin and hips.
That's one reason you aren't incontinent"
If I
were, I would be facing Lord God's judgment My life was not worth preserving if
it meant that indignity.
"Nor
are you impotent"
"Get
on with it**
"Listen,
Path."
"It
hasn't left you—"
'Tell
me what it has done!" I ignored P.T.'s silent rebuke. I wasn't about to
answer to a child I'd raised.
"You
have no feeling in your legs. You can't walk."
"I
know that. Will there be any improvement?" I tried to sound casual, but
betrayed myself by holding my breath.
"No.
The nerves are too crushed to heal. I can show you just where." He flipped
on a holovid, dialed up my chart "Here, just below your rib cage. Look
where—"
"I
believe you," Lord God, damn those enviro terrorists to Your ultimate
Hell,
His
colleague Dr. Knorr pulled up a chair, leaned forward. "Mr. SecGen, you
won't heal, but there is some hope. Not much, I'll grant you, but have you
heard of the Ghenili procedure? No? Well, occasionally nerve tissue can be
replicated. In some cases it's possible to insert replacement nerve tissue and,
ah, reestablish the connection."
My
heart leaped, "Some cases?'*
"Yours
might be one,"
"Do
it" Anything to be out of mis hated chair,
"It's
not that simple. First, we have to wait for the trauma to dissipate.
Then—"
"How
long?"
"Months."
He saw my despair. "A few weeks, at any rate. Tissues are swollen, the
nerve ends are still dying. When that's settled, as it were ..."
They'd
examine me again. If the gap wasn't too wide, they would operate. In most
operative cases, over time, the subject would regain sensation and motor
function. The procedure had been discovered by researchers in Lunapolis trying
to aid survivors of the fish war. When the warrens had been bombed, the result
was similar to the collapse of coal mines. Spinal injuries were common. Loath
to transport paraplegics groundside by shuttle, the medical community treated
many survivors locally.
Dr.
Ghenili and his team tried their new procedure on hopeless cases, and found
encouraging results. They'd refined their techniques, studied how the nerve
tissues slowly reknit Eventually they'd devised protocols to determine which
patients were suitable candidates.
"And
I might be one of them?" Despite myself, my pulse quickened.
"There's
a possibility. We have no way to tell. But there's a catch."
I shot
P T. a glance of dismay. There was always a catch.
Ghenili's
achievement galvanized the neurological profession. Eagerly, surgeons all over
Earth tried to replicate his results. And failed.
Yet, on
Lunapolis, he continued to have success. They finally discovered the cause.
Nerves reknit only in zero to one-third Terran gravity. At one gee. Earth
normal, the inserts slowly died,
"What
about after? Can the patients go homeT1
"After
full recovery, yes."
Dr.
Rains intervened, "We're way ahead of ourselves, you understand; you may
not be a candidate at all. If you are, the period after the operation is
critical. You'd be bedridden for weeks. Then very limited movement. Any
strain..." He shook his head.
"That's
fine." I'd soon be done with public life, and if they'd operate, I'd be
free to devote myself to recovery. "How soon can I leave the
hospital?"
''You've
been resisting physical therapy. We need to—"
"Answer
my father's question." P.T. spoke softly, but in a tone edged with steel.
I'd known a drill sergeant to speak so to cadets. They'd leaped to obey.
"In
a few days. He needs to bond with his chair, to learn the mechanics of
daily—"
"Very
well." I waved it away. I would undergo Ghenili's operation, or kill
myself and go to Hell. "Bring in the therapists."
I
passed two days in a haze of impatience. I learned to hoist myself from chair
to bed, bed to chair. I found out why the motorized chair was so massive, so
heavy. Fitted with Valdez permabatteries under the seat, visual sensors fore
and aft, it had a speaker in one arm, a pickup in the other. The chair's frame
itself incorporated the cybernetic brain. It would take me where I told it to
go. The contraption was more puter than chair.
Not as
versatile as a ship's puter, it had to learn to understand me. Naturally, it
had a program for that. "Say a few sentences, please."
"Whatr
"Anything."
"My
name is Nick Seafort.**
"More."
"I
was born in—this is bloody nonsense!"
"Referent
not understood. Say a few sentences, please."
I
swore. "What can I—all right. I, Nicholas Ewing Seafoft, do swear upon my
immortal soul to preserve and protect the Charter of the General Assembly of
the United Nations, to give loyalty and obedience for the term of my
enlistment
to the Naval Service of the United Nations and to obey all its lawful orders
and regulations, so help me Lord God Almighty."
A
pause. "Syntax integrated. Linguistic idiosyncracies assimilated."
"Whatever
the hell that means."
"It
means I understand you. Waiting for input"
I
practiced dressing, hygiene, all the tricks that the normal world was unaware
paraplegics had to master. At night, I had unbearable dreams of loping through
the wind, though my knee hadn't allowed me more than a steady, painful walk for
years.
Yet,
slowly, 1 began to accept that life would go on. I called Baltimore, got
through to Charlie Witrek's room. Over the phone he was determinedly cheerful,
though Lord God knew what it cost him. Transplants might be possible, he said.
They were waiting for a match.
After a
time, I found myself looking forward to going home. I called Moira Tamarov,
asked if there was any way I might help ease her loss. There wasn't
Impulsively, I invited her to bring the family to Washington, as I'd invited
Alexi. Listlessly, she accepted, but we left the date unsettled.
When
I'd been in the hospital some three weeks, and was thoroughly restless, I
summoned my staff for a long overdue conference to wrap up our Administration.
Branstead, Tilnitz, Philip, Karen Bums, and General Donncr, the U.N.A.F.
security specialist, met with me in a secluded room.
I
asked, "Have the Patriarchs made their announcement?" Ample time had
passed since my defiance of Lord God's authority on Earth. I assumed Mark and
Branstead were conspiring to shield me from the details.
Jerence
said gravely, "I have some bad news." He glanced at Mark.
"Did
Saythor call for excommunication?" Arlene would
stand
by me, if no one else, though I wasn't sure I'd let her risk her immortal soul.
"Not
quite." He handed me a Holoworld chip.
I
fitted it to my holovid. "Good Lord!"
The
Elder had expressed, on behalf of the Patriarchs, outrage at the Rotunda
bombing, and full confidence in my Administration. His praise was more than
perfunctory, it was effusive. "What's this about?"
"Renouncing
you now would endorse terrorism. Besides, Saythor's seen the polls."
Branstead's tone was sardonic.
"I—what?"
"It's
not just the crowds outside, you know. We're overwhelmed with letters. I put
Warren to answer the E-mail, else it would have taken months." Warren was
our chief puter, who had something of a literary gift. "It started with
the Von Walthers banquet, and since the bombing... your approval ratings have
never been so high." A grin wiped the exhaustion from his eyes.
I
slammed my fist on the table. "Alexi died, and three good souls with him.
Six more gravely hurt, to attain the esteem of fools. Don't mock the dead! It's
obscene!"
Across
the table, Branstead got to his feet, loomed over me, his fingers spread on the
gleaming wood. "Don't call them fools, Mr. SecGen! I won't have it. They
respect you. Some even love you. The least you can do is respect their
intelligence."
Taken
aback, I swallowed. "Well. Urn."
No one
spoke.
So, I
would continue my labors. From a Lunapolis hospital bed, perhaps. My mind
whirled. If I was to stay in office we had work to do. 1 asked Tilnitz,
"What have we learned about the ecos?"
"Still
no sign of Academy's Sergeant Booker. And clues in the bombing are
scarce."
"Mark,
it's the Rotunda." How could terrorists manage to plant a bomb in so
heavily guarded a place?
"I
know, sir. We interrogated the staff and got nowhere. Valera wants to declare a
state of emergency, to suspend defendants' rights."
That
would allow P and D questioning, without evidence of guilt. I pursed my lips.
Why not? Killing cadets was horrible enough, but when the enviros bombed the
U.N. enclave itself...
"Don't,
sir." Branstead.
I
raised an eyebrow.
"When
terrorists force Government to curtail civil rights, they win."
"You
know so much about the subject?" My tone was sour. For generations, since
the Rebellious Ages had given way to the Era of Law, civil disobedience, to say
nothing of terrorism, had been almost unheard of.
"Hope
Nation had its dissidents, when I was a boy."
I
flushed. In his distant colony, I had set civil liberties aside without cavil,
to put down the colonial rebellion. "What information do we have?"
General
Donner stirred. "The bomb was old-fashioned plastique. We're trying to
trace its chemical signature. It's in my report."
"Which
I haven't read. Was I the target?"
"According
to their communique^ yes."
"Why
so small a bomb, then? For that matter, why not a missile, or a..." I
trailed off. I'd been about to say "a nuke," but one had to watch
one's language. Since the days of the Belfast nuke, even to suggest the use of
nuclear weapons in home system was treason.
"Lack
of access, I assume."
"General
Donner?" Philip looked apologetic. "If Father goes home..."
"Yes?"
"Can
you protect him?"
I
growled, "Now wait a minute—"
"Of
course." Donner.
Mark
Tilnitz rapped the table. "That's our responsibility."
"You
failed. He's lucky he wasn't—"
"We
didn't fail!" Karen Burns overrode the two of them. "But we're lucky
you survived, Mr. SecGen. It's time you cracked down. Go with Valera's
declaration. Have Donner arrest the leaders of the enviro fringe. Only by
showing the world we won't knuckle under can we—"
"Nonsense!"
Branstead.
"You
can't just—"
"The
law doesn't allow—"
I
raised my voice. "Enough!" They subsided. "Karen, I won't let
the ecos push me into repression. That would play into their hands."
"But—"
"Subject
closed."
"I
never got an answer." P.T. sounded apologetic. "Can you protect
Father? The ecos have struck both times in your presence."
"Actually,
sir..." Mark Tilnitz looked abashed. "It's easier now that you're less
mobile. You have—had—a habit of darting off unexpectedly."
I
fought an icy rage. P.T. clasped my hand, but I pulled loose. Mark saw my
paralysis as an advantage, did he? I'd break him. I'd have him pounding a beat
in Senegal. No, Er-itrea was more remote.
Somehow,
before I ruined another companionship, I restrained myself. "Get me a
coffee."
Philip
jumped to comply.
"Thank
you." But my annoyance flared anew. "Now Charlie's gone, I need a
middy. He should be doing this."
Branstead
said, "I meant to ask Admiralty for a replacement, but I've had a lot to
deal with."
I
flushed. My sulky refusal to deal with matters of state had added to his
burdens.
"I
don't mind, Path." My son headed for the door.
"I
do. Jerence, get me our list of candidates. No, by
heaven,
let mat bloody enviro cadet fetch and carry for a while. Show him what havoc
his politics cause."
"Sir?"
Jerence looked blank.
"The
cadet, don't you—oh, you weren't there. Bivan, or whatever. Bevin, that's it,
from Academy. Tell Hazen I want him seconded for special duty."
"Mr.
SecGen, are you sure—"
"Quite."
I allowed myself a small smile of satisfaction. The boy would learn the hard
way the effect of his enviro fantasies.
Mark
asked, "When will the hospital release you, sir?"
'Tomorrow."
I would wait no longer. Arlene hadn't replied to my note.
CHAPTER
6
you
sure you want to do this, Path?" From the wings, Philip cast a dubious eye
on the mediamen gathered in the hospital auditorium.
"No,
but I must" I knotted my tie, smoothed my jacket.
Facing
the mediamen would be, as always, a nightmare. Branstead had suggested they
sneak me out in an ambulance, and announce the fact afterward. The public
should be introduced to my handicap slowly, so they wouldn't see me as a
cripple.
But I
was crippled. To suggest otherwise was a lie. Disabled, handicapped,
differently abled, impaired, minimally limbed, maimed, physically glitched...
all the weasel words of the past two centuries wouldn't lift me out of this
hated chair. I yearned for the day I might be free of it.
"I'm
ready." At my own insistence I would wheel myself onto the stage alone,
without the help of the puterized chair. Crippled didn't have to mean
dependent. I caught a glimpse of my security chief's disapproval. "You
inspected their gear, Mark."
"And
we'll be standing in front, between you and them. It's not enough."
"Shoot
the lot of them, then. It's fine with me." On that
note I
rolled myself onstage, maneuvered myself to the center of the battery of mikes
and speakers.
A blaze
of lights, the whir of holocams, as the world got its first view of the new,
improved SecGen. For a stunned moment there was silence. Then, cacophony.
"Mr.
Seafort, do you—"
"Mr.
SecGen!"
"Will
you be able to walkr
"Have
you located the—"
"MR.
SECGEN!"
They
were always like that. I simply waited. When at long last the din abated, I
pointed to the second row. "Ms. Sear-lesr
"Sir,
do you have a comment about the Eco Action League?"
"The
terrorists known as the Eco Action League will be caught and tried. I presume
execution will follow." As was fitting, the law provided no lesser
penalty.
I
pointed elsewhere.
"Does
the government know who they are?"
General
Donner wanted me to claim we did, but that was nonsense. The killers knew
otherwise. "Not yet"
"Sir,
there's a rumor you'll declare martial law. Is that—"
"We
will not" My voice was a lash,
"Mr.
Valera said yesterday a martial law bill was being drafted"
My
Deputy SecGen had always been impetuous. I said firmly, "The bill will not
be introduced." A shocked murmur, I'd publicly cut the legs from under
him. He—and the party—would be outraged. It served mem right for not getting my
approval.
"Does
this indicate a rift within the SupranationalistsT
I
hesitated. "No, it indicates that I'm still SecGen."
A wave
of mirth swirled around die hall. Suddenly, I had them, and the tone of the
questioning changed.
"When
will you leave the hospital?**
*Today."
I nodded to the correspondent for Holoworld,
"Sir,
when will you resume work at the Rotunda?"
"When
there's a meeting I can't avoid. I prefer to work from home."
"Mr.
SecGen, will you ever walk again?"
I tried
to look at all the holocams at once. "I don't know." Offstage,
Branstead flinched. Well, too bad. He'd become too political. Best he remember
he was a Navy man. With reluctance, I turned to an old adversary from Newsnet.
"Mr, Canlo?" He, too, was entitled to a question.
"Sir,
what do you say to charges that you were negligent in the deaths of your
aides?" From elsewhere, a sharp intake of breath.
I'd
learned over time that answering his questions directly got me nowhere. "I
haven't heard any such charges. Have you?"
"Yes."
"From
other reporters in a bar?'
Nervous
laughter, here and there through the hall.
Canlo
held his ground. "Will you answer the question, sir?"
"Detail
your charges. How am I responsible?*'
"A
bomb was placed in the Rotunda, Isn't the Secretary-General responsible for the
U.N, complex?"
"I'm
responsible for the entire United Nations." I paused, to rein in my
disgust. Lord, I hated press conferences. "That doesn't let you sue me
personally if you trip in the General Assembly."
Gales
of laughter. Was I turning political at this late date? Heaven forbid. I added,
"I take seriously the deaths of Press Secretary Carlotti and Security
Officer Bailes, as well as my great friend Captain Tamarov and communications
aide VanderVort I don't hold myself responsible." Or was I? Had the ecos
not gone after me, Alexi would be home with Moira and me joeykids. And Charlie
would be on his coveted star-ship. Quickly, I found another hand "Ms.
Gier?"
Canlo
stayed on his feet. "What do you say to calls for your resignation?"
Til
resign when the public so demands." Or the Patriarchs. Under my jacket, I
was sweating. I glanced to the wing, where P.T., unseen, was earnestly giving
the media a sustained finger. Abruptly, my equanimity was restored. "Ms.
Gierr
"What
measures are you taking to find the terrorists?"
"We're
analyzing their writings, sifting the rabble for clues, determining who had
access to the Rotunda, questioning witnesses. We've sought the cooperation of—I
tried not to let my lip curl—"legitimate enviro groups, to identify who
among the fanatic fringe might have committed these despicable acts.** As far
as I was concerned, they were all the fanatic fringe, but I wouldn't say that
Not now,
"Mr.
SecGen, do you—"
"I'm
not finished. I appeal to every citizen, wherever located, to come to our aid.
To attack the United Nations, the Government of Lord God, is an assault on Lord
God Himself." My voice trembled. "It is worse than treason. It is
abominable beyond words. 'The powers that be are ordained of God, Whosoever
resistfth the power, msisteth the ordinance of God: and they shall receive to
themselves damnation,' Any of you who have useful information, I beg your
assistance. In the holy name of the Lord Almighty, as you cherish your immortal
soul, I beseech you to come forward, to escape the fires of Hell.'* Throughout
the hall, absolute silence, "Good day." I turned my chair, wheeled
slowly off the stage.
P.T.
met me in the wing, his eyes glistening. Without a word, he bent and kissed my
cheek,
"Son,
take me home."
"Wait,
sir. Another few minutes." Mark Tilnitz held up a placating hand,
"Now
what?" My chair was parked just inside the hospital door.
"Joeys
are swarming out there. It's not safe. Karen has jerries setting
barriers."
"What
do they want?"
P.T.
patted my shoulder. 'To see you."
"Why?"
A foolish question. Crowds haunted me everywhere. It was the reason my compound
needed walls. Ever since I'd sailed Hibernia home ... I'd spent my life trying
to escape them.
And
look where it got me. I snapped, "Open the door." Mark shook his
head. "Not yet."
"Now."
I rolled to the entry. "Let them have me." "Path?"
^ft's
all right, Phittp. Onward, chair." Before they could stop me, I pushed
open the door, rolled into the dusk.
Karen
and her detail raced across the lawn. "Mr. Sec-Gen—"
They'd
strung police barriers from the door to the lot in which my heli waited.
A muted
roar. The throng surged forward, broke through the barricades. My security
joeys formed a circle around my chair, faced outward with lasers drawn.
I
clawed at Karen. "Don't fire! Hold!" Desperately, I slammed my chair
through the wall of my guards. "On, chair. To the street" I risked a
glance back. With looks of horror, Karen and Mark scrambled after me, the rest
of the detail trailing behind.
I
rolled to a stop. A blizzard of frantic hands. Someone held out his arms, made
a barrier. "Give him air!"
I
clutched at fingers. "It's all right Thank you for coming."
"Mr.
SecGen—"
"We're
praying for— "
"I
waited all day—" His hand darted out, back again. I offered mine, and he
seized it
Tin all
right Thank you."
"I'm
so sorry, what they did—"
"Go
with God." I squeezed a wrist. An elderly man blinked back tears.
Mark
cannoned into a stocky joey looming over me, shoved him aside.
"NO!"
Somehow I made myself heard. "Surround me if you must, but leave a space
open. Let them through a few at a time." I adjusted the blanket over my
useless knees. "Thank you. I'm all right." I grasped eager hands with
both of mine. "Thanks for coming, joey."
Slowly,
with curses, with rage, my security organized the chaos into an impromptu
reception. The word was passed
(i>wn
a /me of aweJ wefl-wisners, and' a fine formed, impatient at first, but calmer,
as it became known I would remain.
Two
full hours and then some, I sat in the misty lot until the last hand was
clasped, the last shoulder squeezed with silent reassurance.
Wearily,
I flexed my fingers.
P.T.
stared down at me with respect, and something more.
"What
is it, son?"
"It's
as if... You've heard of the king's touch?"
"I
didn't heal these poor joeys."
"Perhaps
inwardly."
Mark
said heavily, "As SecGen you have no business exposing yourself."
I
thought a moment "As SecGen I have no business not."
In the
compound, all was familiar, yet strange. Simple tasks such as getting me
upstairs to my bedroom had become immensely complicated. I bore it determined I
wouldn't be forced to live out my life in the cursed chair.
Still,
bit by bit, I learned to get around, to maneuver through doorways. Sometimes I
let the chair do the work, other times, stubbornly, I insisted on navigating
myself. We rearranged furniture to ease my passage. My body seemed
healed,
except within. Lower back pain made me irritable, and I tried not to lash out.
It would fade in a while, they'd told me, and in the meantime I had pills,
though I'd vowed not to use them.
Arlene
was stiff at first. "You recall denying you built a wall I couldn't
penetrate?"
"You
said that at Derek's reception." I paused. "Hon, in the hospital,
when I found I was paralyzed, I was beside myself. I'm truly sorry."
"I
tried to give you space. You needed to lick your wounds in solitude." A
pause. "And I was hurt. You thrust me away, when I wanted to give you
ease."
"Can
you forgive me?*'
At
length, her hand crept to mine.
Over
time, the calm she offered was her greatest gift. I let myself go, muttering
and wincing at the wearisome pain, until I saw her rubbing her own spine in
unconscious sympathy. From that moment on, I tried to hide my discomfort, and
hers seemed to ease.
My
relief at returning home faded, I longed for recovery, and worked dutifully
with the two therapists who made daily visits. Mark Tilnitz scrutinized their
security files, and refused to leave the room when they were present. I made a
note to give him my special thanks, and asked Arlene to find a suitable gift
Since I'd been rushed to the hospital, he'd devoted himself to me utterly.
These days dark circles lined his eyes, and he bore a haunted look.
I wrote
to Moira Tamarov, repeating my invitation.
Philip
visited the compound almost daily, from his flat in Maryland. Slowly, finally,
we began to grow at ease with each other, as once we'd been. From time to time
he stayed for dinner.
"No,
Path, it was the year you hurt your knee." We were in a bright-lit nook in
the kitchen, just the three of us. Arlene had chased out the servants, and in
unaccustomed intimacy we dined on lasagna we'd prepared ourselves. Confined to
my chair, I was graciously allowed to cut and mix a salad.
"Hon,
when did you teach him to shoot? Wasn't it earlier?"
"If
P.T. says he was fifteen..." She shrugged. Philip had an uncanny accuracy
with numbers, with data of any kind. His mental gymnastics no longer surprised
me.
"You
came home when I was thirteen, Mom." Philip glanced between us. Arlene and
I had separated, briefly, after the Transpop Rebellion.
She
raised an eyebrow. "Shouldn't I have?"
Dutifully,
he gave her a hug.
She
released him, pushed him gently toward Ms seat. "Twenty-four, a grown
man... where did the time go?"
"Would
you rather I was still a child?"
"No,
but..." She looked thoughtful. "Parenting was fun, damn it And now
you don't need me."
"Of
course I do." He tried to look injured. "Don't I caU you from work?
Don't I ask your advice—"
**Yes,
love. But you don't need it"
*Tm
sorry. I'll try to be more dependent." He held the lasagna for me to
scoop. "If you don't like my growing up, have another child."
I
snorted. At least Philip was young enough to be thoroughly unrealistic.
I threw
myself into long-neglected affairs of state. I was working on the hefty
U.N.A.F, budget when mere came a knock on my study door. With i sigh, I set
down the file, massaged my back. "Yes?"
A
red-haired midshipman marched in, came to attention, a gray-clad cadet
following suit "Midshipman Thadeug Anselm reporting, sir!" He snapped
a salute.
"At
ease."
Smartly,
he assumed the at-ease position, hands clasped behind him.
"Who's
your... ahh. Mr. Bivan."
"Danil
Bevin, sir." The boy's voice still hadn't settled entirely into the lower
registers.
I
ignored the cadet. "What brings you here, Mr. Anselm?"
"I'm
the cadet's escort, sir!"
"Very
well, consider him escorted.**
"Yes,
sir." The middy hesitated. "Am I dismissed?"
I
unbent. "What are your orders?**
'To
return to Devon base when released, sir.'*
If he
was like every middy Fd ever known—like myself, at his age—he'd cherish leave
in a foreign town. "Very well, you're not dismissed just yet. Have you an
overnight travel allowance?"
"No,
sir." Hazen had been stingy with his budget, it appeared.
Well,
it was my own fault, for meddling. I buzzed security. "Show the midshipman
a guest room. Mr. Anselm, I require your presence over the next few days, in
case"—I glowered—"the cadet needs rebuke.** If Bevin had any sense,
he wouldn't take me seriously; cadets should expect a modicum of verbal hazing.
"However, you'll not be needed until midnight each day. You need not stay
on the grounds.**
Anselm's
face lit "Yes, sir!"
"That's
all."
With
Academy precision, the middy about-faced and marched out.
"Chair,
go around—oh, never mind.*' I wheeled from behind my desk, faced Bevin.
"See what your enviro friends did to me?"
"They're
not my friends!"
I
rasped, "Are you looking to be caned?"
"Not
again, sir."
Then
watch your mouth." I paused. "Again?**
He
flushed. "After you left, Sarge wrote me up."
"For?"
"Arguing
with—with my betters." The words came reluctantly.
"It's
not what you say, Bevin." I had to admit the boy had courage. "It's
how you say it." No need to chew him out, at our first meeting. "So.
Tell me about yourself. You're English?"
"From
Manchester." A shy smile.
"I
was a Cardiff boy." But of course he knew that. Everyone did. "A
Naval family?" Many of our officers were third generation, or more.
"Why,
no." He looked puzzled.
"What's
your father's occupation, then? Or is it your mother?"
He said
tentatively, "Are you teasing me, sir?"
"No."
I glowered. "If you don't want to tell me—"
"My
father is Andrus Bevin, of the Enviro Council. He's Mr. Winstead's
deputy."
I
recoiled. "He's that Bevin?" I knew the name had sounded familiar.
"Yes,
sir."
"Why
didn't you tell me? Sneaking into my house without—"
"I
never asked to be posted here!" His face was hot. "Besides, I told
you the first time we met"
Dimly,
I tried to recall. I'm enviro, the boy had said. And so's my father. I cursed
under my breath. I would send him home to Devon, of course; I couldn't have a
spy underfoot.
I
colored. Do you want my resignation, Hazen had asked. He, too, had enviro
sympathies. Not every enviro supporter was glitched.
"He's
what, Winstead's assistant?" Perhaps if I kept Bevin from sensitive
data...
The
boy's head shot up proudly. "First vice president of the Enviro
Council."
"Vice
president"
"Yes,
sir. He's your son Philip's boss."
If I
dismissed the cadet, surely it would cause repercussions for Philip. Dismayed,
I searched for a solution. Let the boy go, with orders not to tell anyone
that... Call Win-stead, explain that the posting had nothing to do with ...
No. I
would have to make the best of it. I took a deep breath. "Did Haz— Did the
Commandant explain why you were sent here?"
"No,
sir. Sarge said you wanted to keep an eye on me."
I
smiled. "Not quite." I explained my custom of young Naval aides.
"I won't keep you more than a few months. You'll graduate with your
bunkies." Some of them, at least. Academy had no set graduation day;
cadets were released when deemed ready.
Bevin
opened his mouth, shut it again. A cadet didn't question his officers.
I
sighed. I really should have selected a middy; look where pique got me.
"While you're here, you may speak before being spoken to. There'll be no
penalties."
"Thank
you, sir. If you didn't know my background, may I ask why you picked me?"
"I
knew you were enviro. I meant to show you what your enviro cohorts did." I
grimaced. That wasn't the only reason. "Because you stood up to me in
barracks. I loathe yes-men."
He
regarded me quizzically. "You chose me for what Sarge caned me for?"
"Life's
like that."
"After
I'm done here, sir..."
"Yes?"
Impatiently, I tapped the desk.
"Do
you think— If I do well, could I be posted to Galactic when I make middy?"
"Of
all the gall!" Was there no end to his effrontery? Galactic was the prize
posting of the Navy; it had the finest accommodations, the most modern
instruments, the most powerful lasers, the best-equipped bridge. No doubt
seasoned middies from every ship in home system were vying
for a
berth on her. I growled, "Have Security show you your quarters.
Dismissed."
He
saluted smartly.
"Bevin!"
He
paused at the door.
"Don't
ah... it would be better... Perhaps you shouldn't tell anyone here you're
related to the Andrus Bevin. Some of the joeys I work with might not
understand." Why was I perspiring?
"Aye
aye, sir." He left.
*To the
veranda, chair." The motor purred, I struggled with the door, managed
finally to help the chair maneuver outside.
My back
throbbed. I'd been hoping to find Arlene, tell her of my fiasco, but she was
nowhere in sight I went back to my office, buried myself in chipfiles.
Later,
I wandered to the living room. Arlene lay curled on the couch, reading a
holovid. Newsnet, it was,
I tried
to negotiate the narrow path between settee and chair. Muttering, I tried to
haul the settee out of the way and nearly dislodged myself from my seat, I
swore under my breath. "Hon?" I gestured at the obstacle,
Arlene
purred, "Yes, Nicky?"
She
knew bloody well what 1 wanted. Nonetheless, I said humbly, "I need your
help,"
"Very
well." She moved me chair.
"Thank
you." I rolled past "Do I get points for asking?" My tone was
hopeful. "You know I hate to be dependent"
The
corners of her mouth turned up. "Is that another apology?"
"Yes,
if it's needed,"
She
kissed the fading scar on my forehead.
After a
moment I asked, "What's in NewsnetT
"Your
political obituary." She scrolled to the head of the article. "They
say you'll resign within a month."
"Wishful
thinking."
"Nick
..." Suddenly she was serious. "How long will you stay in
office?"
"Until..."
I ground to a stop. How long, indeed? I'd been sure each term would be my last,
but my second Administration had been in office twelve years, through three
elections. Despite my contempt for the political process— Jerence claimed it
was because of it—the electorate kept my Supranationalists in power, and the
party wasn't about to abandon me. I wasn't sure why. All too often, for their
taste, I appointed Indies or Terries to vacant posts.
If
Bishop Saythor had carried out his threat, the question would be moot
"I
don't know. Every day, a small, quiet part of me still yearns to quit.
Especially now I'm paralyzed.** I paused. "But as I told you once, I've
grown to like power. Isn't that despicable?"
"Have
you used it well?"
"Yes,
of cour—no, not really, I appoint my friends to office, bully the Navy, squelch
the Earth Firsters every chance I get"
"What's
the despicable part?"
"I
ignore the wants of my party, I'm rude to the Senate."
"I'm
still waiting,"
"I
break the rules when it suits me."
"Not
for your own benefit. For the public good."
"Who
am I to decide that?"
"Who
else should?"
"The
public. That's what a democracy is about."
"The
public is—ore—fools."
I
smiled sourly, "Jerence tells me to respect them for loving me. You tell
me they're fools."
Her
smile was lighter than mine. "We might both be right"
I
leaned forward to kiss her, lost my balance, ended up sprawled on her bosom.
"Is
this an advance, sailor?" Her tone was wry.
I was
helpless, and it enraged me. How else might I find myself incompetent?
"God damn—" I caught myself, but my mood was shattered. I hauled my
legs back onto the footpads, spun the cursed wheelchair.
"Nick,
what..."
"Out
chair." I fled to my office.
CHAPTER
7
A hilip
moved back home. He spent two energetic hours hauling his belongings upstairs
to his old room, and rushed back to work. Subdued, I realized that in the years
he'd been with the Enviro Council, I'd never visited his office, or even asked
his duties. How must he see my indifference? Was I truly so cruel? I slipped
into the den, closed the door to be alone with my turmoil.
I'd
named P.T. after Philip Tyre, a heroic young middy I'd known.
We'd
been so close, when he was young.
One
day, when my son was five or so, I had him on my lap, showing him holos of
Father and the run-down Cardiff farm on which I was raised. In those far gone
days, P.T. had called me "Daddy." Solemnly, in his babyish voice, he
asked if I'd like him to call me "Father," as I had my own parent.
"If you'd like," I'd said.
Thereafter,
I was "Path." "Father," when he wanted to be formal.
With
wonder and delight, I'd watched him grow toward adolescence. His goodwill was
boundless, his intelligence awesome.
He was
Lord God's undeserved gift.
The
Transpop Rebellion scarred him, in some way I never
fully
understood. We didn't quite grow apart, but he became ever more moody. In his
teens he adopted the enviro cause with dismaying fervor, and finally left my
home in a swirl of mutual recriminations. I was heartsick over his invasion of
my files. If there was anything I'd hoped to teach him, it was inflexible
honesty, and the honor I'd tried to espouse before my fall.
I'd
hoped that he'd be better than I.
My joy
at his return was tempered somewhat in that he brought Jared Tenere home. I
couldn't well refuse; it would jeopardize our reconciliation.
Well,
perhaps hormone rebalancing had stabilized the Tenere boy. Time would tell. At
least, he'd lost the unbearable cockiness he'd flaunted as a youth.
What
with the newcomers and other changes, my home life had developed an outlandish
aspect. Each night, to my infinite disgust, security joeys hauled my weighty
wheel-chair up the stairs a step at a time, while I prayed fervently that
nobody slipped. I was even tempted to install an elevator. Pride was one thing,
a broken neck quite another.
Danil
Bevin quickly learned his way around the house, and tried to make himself
useful, in his less-than-timid fashion.
His
second night with us, Thadeus Anselm, the middy, came staggering home past
midnight, crooning a ribald ballad as he negotiated the stairs. Aiiene merely
giggled and went back to sleep, but if it hadn't been too much trouble I'd have
hauled myself out of bed and given him a piece of my mind. I resolved to do so
in the morning, but his pale and shaken countenance dissuaded me. Some lessons
were self-taught.
Besides,
his conduct wasn't my concern. Another day or so and I'd send him home to
Devon.
Meanwhile,
crowds gathered each day outside the walls. I didn't know what they sought. No
doubt they came because
I was a
public figure, and my injury unsettled them as a private person's would not
Confined
to my relentlessly helpful chair, restless and irritable, I buried myself in
work. Luckily, there was plenty of that. I pored over budgets, arbitrated
colonial disputes, struggled with the Dutch relief situation.
The
overriding problem was where to settle the refugees, now that most of Holland
was reclaimed by the sea. Pakistan had taken in most of the Bangladeshis, but
the Netherlands had no ethnic sister, and Belgium's patience was wearing thin;
she'd absorbed as many as her local economy would handle.
Across
the globe, lowlands were swamped as never before in human memory.
The
Dutch could be absorbed; even teeming Earth could find room for its refugees.
But dispersal would cost the Dutch their national identity, and their leaders
strenuously fought for other solutions.
I'd
already authorized putting the Hollanders at the top of the list for emigration
to Constantine, the newest of our colonies. But I didn't see how we could ship
more than fifty thousand refugees over the next few years, and though that
would make Constantine thoroughly Dutch, it wouldn't make a dent in the refugee
problem. Besides, the Colonial Affairs office argued vehemently against
allowing ethnic concentrations in our colonies.
A
knock. "Cadet Bevin reporting for duty, sir."
"As
you were. I'm a civilian, so we'll relax military courtesies."
"SirT
"Don't
come to attention each time you come into my bloody office!"
"Aye
aye, sir."
"Take
these chips, file them in the case next to the hotovid, where—"
The
caller buzzed. General Donner, of U.N.A.F. Security.
I left
the desk speaker on. If I couldn't trust my aide's discretion, I'd best find
out now.
"Mr.
SecGen, we may have a break in the Academy matter."
"Goon."
"We've
had that Sergeant Hooker's family under intense surveillance. Sisters, cousins,
the works."
"And?"
"His
father's niece Sara had a couple of odd calls. Nothing overtly incriminating,
but the conversation was out of focus, as if it was in code. Discussing
groceries for no reason, for example."
"You
traced?"
"Public
callers. The first in London, the second in Manchester."
"So
he's in England."
"Sorry,
sir, the voice wasn't Booker's."
"How
would you know?"
"We
ran the recording past your Commandant. He's under surveillance too, by the
way."
I
reared up in my chair. "That's an outrage!"
"You
think so, Mr. SecGen? Who'd be better placed to arrange an accident?"
I
spluttered. "I would. Is my caller tapped too?"
"Of
course not." The General chuckled, unconvincingly.
If the
Navy heard that its rival, U.N.A.F., had one of its officers under
surveillance, there'd be hell to pay. "The Commandant was shocked when we
heard about the murdered cadets. I was with him, and it was no act." I'd
stake my life on it. I hesitated. Or would I? What if... no, I was becoming as
paranoid as Donner. "Remove Hazen from your suspect list. We won't spy on
the Navy."
"Sir,
if he's involved in any way, even in covering up the—"
"I'll
take responsibility."
His
voice fell. "Yes, sir. About the cousin ... we're going for P and D."
"You
have an order?"
"This
evening. We have a tame judge."
I
opened my mouth to object, thought better of it The less I knew of our
investigative techniques, the better. Sometimes these things had to be done,
and no one would really be hurt. I had the rights of our cadets to consider, as
well as Hooker's cousin. "Very well. Proceed." I rang off.
Bevin
turned from the holovid. "We all want the murderers caught, but how can
you send joeys to P and D with no evidence?"
"Mind
your business."
"A
tame judge? Is that honorable?"
I'd had
enough. "You're asking for a caning."
"Fine,
if it would get me home to Academy." His cheeks were flushed. "I
thought, whatever else you are, you're an honest man."
"Whatever
else I—you impudent young joeykid! What's that supposed to mean?" I
wheeled around the desk, planted my chair inches from his legs.
"You're
a— I'm sorry, sir. I'd better keep quiet**
"Far
too late. Finish the thought I'm a what?"
"A
bigot. You hate your political enemies. You hate all enviros, without
thought"
I was
more scandalized man offended "Bevin, don't you see that working with the
SecGen is an honor? Well? Don't just gape, answer!"
"Is
that why you hauled me from Academy? To watch you play favorites, trample
public rights, bully your staff—"
"ENOUGH!"
I turned to the desk, clawed for my caller, thumbed it to the upstairs
speakers. "Anselm! Get down here!" I waited, seething.
The
thud of racing footsteps. A knock, and the door crashed open. "Sir,
Midshipman Ansehn repor—"
"Take
this lout and thrash him! I want him to remember—
Now,
Middy!" If I'd had the use of my legs, I'd do it myself, with joy.
Bevin
shot me a look of contempt. "Truth is no defense?"
"Not
for an insolent, cocky—what do you mean?" Ansehn had the cadet nearly to
the door. I raised a hand to stay him.
Bevin
rubbed his pinched forearm. "You canceled surveillance on Mr. Hazen
because he was Navy, but you didn't on Sara because she was a civilian, and
Booker's cousin. That's playing favorites. You're sending a girl to P and D for
talking about groceries. They're bastards, whoever killed Santini and the
others, but they have rights too. You couldn't get away with that with an
honest judge."
"Go
on." My voice was ominously low.
"I'm
staff, and you bully me. My thoughts are my private affair, but you order me to
tell them to you. Then you punish me because you don't like them."
"You
were insolent beforehand,"
"Yes,
I was."
"Whyr
His
eyes teared. "Because I wanted to believe better of the SecGen!"
A long
time passed,
I said,
"Anselm, let him go." I wheeled to my desk, got myself behind it
Now
what?
You're
the SecGen, come up with answers.
Sighing,
I picked up the caller. "Get me General Donaer." I waited. "This
is Seafort, Cancel the P and D on Booker's relatives until you have more
evidence. No, you heard me." I listened to his protest, repeated my
instructions, and rang off,
"Middy,
get me a coffee, if you'd please."
Anselm
left.
"Are
you satisfied. Cadet?"
"That's
not for me to say."
"Modesty,
at this stage?"
He
opened his mouth, thought better of it, bit his lip. "How should I answer?
I'm in trouble if I keep silent, and in trouble if I speak."
"Arghh."
There was a certain justice in that. I asked, "How is it you're not afraid
of me?"
"I
am!" He squirmed. "Do you think I like a caning? It hurts!"
"I
know.*' I too had been a cadet. "Yet you don't hesitate to reprimand my
conduct"
"I'm
sorry." His face was red. "But... isn't that why you chose meT
We eyed
each other warily.
Anselm
returned, beating coffee, I sipped from the steaming cup. To Bevin, "I'm
several times your age, and SecGen. Don't you think it inappropriate to
admonish me?"
"Yes,
sir. Please send me home." His eyes beseeched me.
"Very
well, if that's what—"
Again,
the caller buzzed.
"Branstead
here." His voice was tense.
"Not
now, I'm in the middle of—"
"There's
been an incident in London. They attacked the Victoria and Albeit Museum."
"Christ
Almighty." I didn't know I said it, until Anselm's eyes widened.
"Amen," I added quickly.
"They
weren't well armed, thank the Lord. Still, eleven casualties, and they managed
to set the place on fire. The en-viros left two of their own among the
dead."
"The
London garrison—"
"Details
are still sketchy. It seems U.N.A.F. was caught off guard."
"Typical.
Keep me informed." I rang off, keyed the caller to Mark Tilnitz, told him
the news. "Ready my plane. I'm off to Britain this afternoon."
"The
hell you are." His voice sharpened. "Mr. SecGen, you're not mobile.
You can't fly into a war zone when-—"
"Yes,
I can. We'd better show the flag, and I need a firsthand look at this
mess." I set down the caller. "Anselm, find Arlene, help her get me
packed. Bevin, gather your gear."
The two
scurried off. I began putting away my holochips.
Mark
met me at the helipad. His voice was maddeningly reasonable, as if dealing with
a small child. "We can't arrange secure travel on short notice. The plane
has to be fueled and propped, we have to run security sweeps, arrange
logistical support for forty people—"
"And
make hotel reservations, gather my far-flung staff. I know." Suddenly I
was fed up. For twelve years I'd traveled trailing a flock of joeys I didn't
need, or even Uke. Some, I barely knew. Now mat I was paralyzed, perhaps for
life, I would do as I wished. "Skip the lot of it."
**What
nonsense are you—"
This
heli," I jabbed at the fuselage. "It's got Valdez per-mabatteries,
right? It could fly to London, or around the world.**
*So? We
couldn't all fit—"
**We
won't need to." I cast caution to the winds. "Darius of Persia didn't
travel with as huge a retinue as mine. No more, do you hear? I'm done with
it" I forced myself to stop pounding the chair arm. I wouldn't get his
help by sounding a spoiled child.
His
voice was scornful. "Whom will yon leave behind? The press crew? Security?
Your therapists?**
He'd
goaded me beyond endurance. "All of them! Help Anselm and Bevin lift me
into the heli. I'll take die two boys to help with my chair. You can pilot.
That's it"
"You're
out of your mind." Mark folded his arms.
Again,
I pounded the chair. "Put me in the heli! Middy, take one end. Jump when I
give an order!"
"Aye
aye, sir." Anselm struggled with the chair.
"Wait,
slide me in first b'ft the chair after. Mark, help me, or find another
job!"
Abashed,
Bevin stood aside, trying to make himself small.
"You're
asking for my resignation?" Mark withstood my glare. "Damn it, I'm
responsible for your safety."
"A
fat lot of good you've done." Immediately I was sorry, but it couldn't be
helped. "When we sally out in force, in a huge jet swollen with staff, the
whole world knows. We'll be just as safe traveling incognito. Who's to know I'm
in this helir
"It's
a breach of protocol. Go abroad with only one security man? Donner would fire
me, and he'd have cause."
"I
suspend the protocol. We'll put it in writing to protect you."
"You're
risking more man your life!" His face was red, "If you're
assassinated, there'll be chaos."
"Let
it be so. Mark, you know me. I tell you, I'm going, and I won't let you
persuade me otherwise. Will you help or not?"
He
wavered, but convincing him wasn't that easy. It took nearly an hour before he
strapped me in. Even then, he passed our first hundred kilometers trying to
persuade me to turn back to Potomac Shuttleport.
Anselm
sat beside me during the long sullen ride.
I
sniffed. "What's that I smell? Alcohol?"
The
middy flushed. "I... had a drink," Seeing my look he blurted, "I
was off duty, sir. You told me last night..."
"Very
well." I folded my arms, I had more on my mind than a miscreant middy. The
Eco League's attacks were escalating at an alarming rate. First cadets at
Academy, then a bold attack on my plane that failed, then a bomb that nearly
killed me. Now an outrage on civilians, in broad daylight What next?
It also
troubled me how well organized the ecos seemed. We'd run into a wall, tracking
them. How could such a well-knit organization have formed under our very noses?
Where did they get their arms? Rifles and lasers weren't readily
available;
mere possession of an unlicensed laser warranted the death sentence.
We
droned on over the Atlantic. From time to time Mark made calls over the secure
line. Lord God knew what sort of fit Security was throwing.
T)o we
return tonight, sir?" At least, Mark's tone was civil.
"It
depends what we find." I wasn't sure why I had to visit the bomb site, but
I knew it was so. If Londoners had endured their first taste of war in over a
century, my presence would be reassuring. Or perhaps not; the sight of my chair
wheeling itself through the nibble of a national monument might give them
pause.
"Sir?**
Bevin sounded timid,
Anselm's
voice was sharp, "Don't bother him.**
A boy
who drank in daylight, presuming to tell the cadet his place? I'd have none of
it "What, Danil?**
"We'll
be so near Devon.,, while we're there, could you post me back to Academy?**
*Tm
fretting about terrorists, and you whine to go back to Academy? Joeys died!** I
grabbed his collar, hauled him close. "I need your help to get about. Not
another word or—** I shook him.
"Aye
aye, sir! No, sir!" Almost, he raised his hand to mine, but he came to his
senses. "I'm sorry, sir!**
"Four
demerits,** As a civilian, I wasn't sure I had authority to log them, but he
wouldn't contest the matter.
"I'm
sorry." Bevin's voice was small. He stared at his lap. I stole a glance;
he was near tears. It served me right for snatching a callow youngster out of
school. In my desk I'd had a list of perfectly suitable middies.
We let
the heli guide itself to Kensington, I'd have preferred navigating my way via
the Thames, but I sensed Mark Tilnitz was at the limit of his endurance.
I'd
intended to set down at the V & A's imposing entry on
Exhibition
Road, but the street was filled with military and emergency vehicles. We
circled.
I'd
expected more damage than was visible. A section of wall was shattered, a number
of windows were in shards, and the east facade was badly smoke-stained. But the
building still stood.
"Set
down there, on Cromwell."
"And
then what? Wheel up and announce you're the Sec-Genr
"Why
not?"
Mark
seemed, but did as he was told.
A
uniformed jerry bustled over while Mark and the boys manhandled my chair to the
pavement. "Move that machine, mate! You're in a security zone!"
"Help
me out" I clutched Anselm's shoulder, slid myself from the seat of the
heli. "You there, name and rank!"
The
jerry blinked. "By what authority?"
"Take
a good look. I'm SecGen Seafort. Chair, back up." I wrapped an arm around
each boy's shoulder, together they dragged me to the waiting chair.
"Careful, Bevin!" They eased me down. "Name and rank, I said."
"I—Sergeant
Rourke, uniformed division. Are you really the Sec—let me see some ID."
Mark
bristled.
"No,
it's a reasonable request" I leaned to one side, managed to extricate my
wallet, flashed him my chipcard. "Satisfied? Chair, to the front door,
that's to my right. Find a ramp and take me in." We rolled forward.
"Come along, Sergeant You'll help explain."
Tilnitz
loped alongside. "Sir, mis is insane. How can I watch for—"
"Don't
bother. You think assassins are standing by, in case I show up? Go lock the
heli; I don't want my suitcase stolen. I have the boys if I need
any—whoof!" The chair lurched over a chunk of debris. I hung on.
"While you're at it, reserve three rooms at a decent hotel."
"Government
House is—"
'The
atmosphere's like a tomb. A good hotel, I said. Chair, halt Mark, we're doing
this my way. Glare again and I will accept your resignation. On, chair."
"On
what?"
"On.
Forward. Continue."
"I
think I bent a wheel." The chair's tone was plaintive.
We
wobbled on our way.
The
bodies were gone, but the inside remained a scene of carnage. When my wheels
skidded in a sticky pool of drying blood, Anselm turned green. I swallowed bile
over and again, battling not to disgrace myself and dishonor the dead.
The survivors
among the staff clutched at the reassurance of my visit Over and again they
repeated their ghastly tale.
Five
joeys, hooded and armed, had burst through the front gate. They'd cut down the
guards with lasers, set off an incendiary bomb in the principal exhibit,
Colonial Dress Through the Ages from India to Belladonna. Sprinklers went off
and alarms clanged.
Perhaps
the din unnerved die invaders, or perhaps they'd intended a bloodbath all
along. For whatever reason, they barred the front lobby and fired
indiscriminately at fleeing visitors and staff. Among the slaughtered were a
five-year-old boy and three nuns from Lahore,
When
the first sirens wailed in the distance, their leader blew a whistle. They
escaped to me street, where mey met the heroine of me day.
Her
name was Indira Raj. A museum guard, she'd crouched behind a parked lorry,
waiting for reinforcements. When the gunmen raced down the steps, she'd come to
her feet, coolly opened fire. She downed two terrorists, winged another before
their comrades snuffed out her life. They fled to a waiting car, drove off.
I heard
out the grisly recital. By now the lobby was full. The Lord Mayor had arrived,
along with several MPs and the local U.N. Assemblyman.
I
rolled to the waiting mediamen, gave a grim statement sent live over the nets,
while Mark Tilnitz, despairing of my safety, had quiet paroxysms. I understood
his misgivings; there was no point in arriving incognito, then announcing my
presence to the world. On the other hand, there was no way to show my support
if I didn't let Londoners know of it.
When we
emerged, young Bevin was pale and shaken. I felt a moment's regret at exposing
a cadet to such a scene. But still, he was an officer in training, and Naval
life had its perils. Sooner or later he'd have to face death. The sight of a
sailor exposed to vacuum was every bit as horrific as the carnage in the
museum.
Mark
had taken me at my word when I'd said "a good hotel"; he'd booked us
into the New Dorchester. We landed on the rooftop heliport and rode down to the
lobby. As a security precaution he'd used his own name for all three rooms, but
I was recognized immediately.
There
was a brief delay, no doubt to assign us better rooms, while the awestruck
middy and cadet peered about at the immaculately uniformed bellmen, the brass
rails salvaged a century ago from the old edifice, the paneled and dadoed
walls. Then we were ushered to a three-bedroom, four-bath suite strewn with
fruit and flower baskets. Jaded as I'd become, it took my breath away.
Well, I
was on U.N. business. Hie government would cover the bill.
For two
hours I lay on my bed, making calls. There was the family of the slain guard; I
made sure they'd be well provided for, I conferred with Metropolitan Police;
their investigation would need coordination with ours, but U.N.A.F. had a way
of brushing aside local constabularies that left bad feelings.
I
called Moira Tamarov, for the third time since Alexi's death. I urged her to
bring their son and daughter to Washington the next day, to stay a week at our
compound. I'd hardly known Alexi's wife, but perhaps Arlene and I, together,
could offer solace.
The
moment I rang off, Jerence Branstead was on the line. "Are you glitched,
Mr. SecGen? A private heli? No staff?"
"Not
you too."
"A
public hoteir
As
usual, I had visuals off, but I could picture his expression. "Stop
spluttering."
"Sir,
your erratic behavior plays right into the hands of Valera. One of these days
the Deputy SecGen will engineer a vote of no-confidence."
"Let
him. Is mis why you called?"
"No.
Bishop Saythor wants a meeting."
I
groaned. "The Patriarchs, again? So soon?"
"Just
the two of you, private and unofficial. And promptly."
Interesting,
but I had no idea why. "I'll be home tomorrow,"
"I'll
set it up at the Rotunda."
"No."
I shook my head, forgetting he couldn't see.
"You
prefer the Cathedral?"
"If
he's so anxious, let him come to my compound.**
"Sir,
he's the Elder."
"And
I'm the SecGen. Good night, Jerence." I rang off,
I
glared hatefully at my overnight bag, across the room. It seemed too much
trouble to work myself into the chair to retrieve it. For a moment I was
tempted to let myself sleep as I was, fully dressed, atop the covers.
Well, why
had I brought along the middy and cadet? I struggled to a sitting position,
rang their room. "Anselm? Come over, I need you."
In a
moment he popped through the connecting door. His collar was awry, as if he'd
adjusted it in haste, "Yessir?"
"My
bag."
"What
about it?"
I
pointed angrily to the dresser. "Get it"
"Aye
aye, sir." He strode across the room, stumbled, caught himself. Face
flushed, he dropped my gear on the bed. "Anything else?"
"Would
you hang my jacket, please?" I tried to shrug loose an arm.
"While
you're wearing it?" He giggled.
I
peered suspiciously. "Let me smell—you're drinking!"
**I
am," he said with dignity, "off duty." A belch. He clutched his
stomach, folded slowly, vomited on my shoes.
"Anselm!"
I tried to spin away, could not; my lower limbs were encased in cement. The
middy fell against me, moaning. Desperately, I held him off. "Danil, get
in here, flank! Bevin!" I could have been heard in the lobby, twenty
floors above.
The
cadet dashed in, wearing only shorts and T-shirt. He stopped short "Cadet
Bevin repor— oh, my God!"
"Take
this—this person out of here! Don't let—hold him!" Too late. Anselm
sagged, upsetting my precarious balance. He flopped atop me, pulling Bevin onto
the pile.
Beside
myself, 1 flailed at any available limbs. In a moment Bevin recovered his
balance, dragged Anselm off die bed. He thrust out his hand; I seized it,
hauled myself upright. "Get that joey out of my room!" The cadet
struggled, to no avail. "Don't you see he can't walk? Drag him!" With
a mighty effort, Bevin complied.
My
shoes and cuffs were soaked with vomit The stench was vile. I bit back a sob.
Please, Lord, don't let this be my life. I'm covered with a middy's puke,
unable to clean myself,
Bevin
poked his head through the door. "Shall I—do you want help?"
I
screamed, "Put your clothes on!" He disappeared. In moments he was
back, hopping from foot to foot as he slipped into his carefully polished
shoes.
By then
I had my pants unbuckled. Straining, I lifted my
buttocks
off the bed. "Pull them down—help me get— Jesus, Lord Christr I was
shaking.
"Sir,
it's all right." His voice was soothing. "It's only— here, let me do
that." He worked my pants to my ankles, got them off. He ran to the
bathroom, returned with towels, covered the mess on the rug. "We'll get
you into the chair, sir. It'll only be a moment." He spoke in the same
tones I'd used to Philip, when he revved.
A few
minutes later, I emerged cleaned and calmed from the lavatory. Danil sat calmly,
watching a hotel servitor clean and dry the rug. "I hope you don't mind my
calling them, sir."
"No,
I—thank you." I found it difficult to meet his eyes. While I'd thrown a
tantrum, he'd taken care of my needs.
When
the houseman had gone, I rolled my chair close, I spoke quietly. "How long
has this been going on?" I gestured to Ansehn's room,
"I've
only known Mr. Anselm a short time," he said carefully. "Since he
brought me to Washington."
I
flushed; I'd asked him to betray a mate, no, worse, a superior officer. In the
Navy mat was not done. "Sorry, Mr, Bev—Danil. I wish ..." I patted
his knee, as if to give him comfort "It's difficult"
"What
is, sir?"
"Being
paralyzed." Being SecGen, Growing old and impatient Living apart from Lord
God.
He
waited.
"Danil,
help me out of the chair. No, not to me bed." I pointed to the floor, near
enough to lean on the mattress. Else, I would topple.
"What
are you going to do, sir?"
"Pray."
"On
your knees?"
"I
don't think Lord God hears me any other way." As a joeykid, Father had
made me pray on my knees. These days.it was out of fashion, and 1 felt
self-conscious before the boy, but I was determined.
I had
no muscle control at all; I wasn't really kneeling, but sitting on my legs. It would
do. I leaned forward, made a tent of my fingers.
To my
utter astonishment, Danil Bevin slipped down, knelt by my side. He bowed his
head. "I thought you enviros were freethinkers.'* "Well, I'm
not." He sounded defiant It had been too long. I'm sorry, Lord, Sorry for
what I've done, and who I am. But You know that If You hear me—if You listen
despite my abominations—I beg You to help me. I thought of asking to walk
again, blushed at the effrontery. Help me to be just, to deal wisely with those
in my care, to catch the mad eco anarchists who would lead Your people astray.
Bless Indira Raj, who died doing her duty, andAlexi, who died for no reason I
can discern. And bless this passionate young joey at my side, with whom I've
been so impatient. And if, somehow. You could grant me—I don't deserve it, but
I long for it so—a little peace...
"Amen."
I didn't realize I'd spoken aloud. I blinked away a sting.
Bevin
helped me to the bed, took a nearby chair. I sat quietly, eyes on the floor. It
had been a long day,
A
knock. Midshipman Anselm, his face red. "I'm terribly sorry."
"Danil,
go to your room. This is between us alone."
"Aye
aye, sir,"
"And
thank you. For everything."
A shy
smile. He disappeared.
I
pointed sternly to the chair. Meekly, Anselm sat.
"Did
you know you're an alcoholic?" My voice was cold,
"I'm
not, sir, I just—"
"Did
you bring the wet stuff with you?" Normally, a boy his age couldn't order
a drink, without risking a penal colony both for himself and the server. But,
by act of the General Assembly, a midshipman was a gentleman and an adult He
could vote, drink, and bring his life to ruin.
"Yes—no,
I... no, sir."
"Which
is it?" The comparison between him and Bevin was odious. The cadet,
impetuous though he was, had a good heart and a sense of decency. This drunken
lout was a disgrace to the Navy.
He
squirmed. "Both, I had some in my gear, but it was— I ordered it from the
hotel,"
"And
you claim you're not alcoholic?"
"I
didn't break the law." His tone was sullen. "And I wait 'til I'm off
duty."
I was
relentless. "Since you came to Washington, has there been a day you didn't
drink?"
He
stared into the middle distance. His eyes seemed troubled, "I guess not.
It's just mat... with a couple of drinks, the world seems brighter."
"I
imagine you worked hard to make middy."
He
gulped. "Oh, God, you're cashiering me."
"Only
your commander can do that." As a civilian I couldn't do much about him,
other than send him home to Devon.
I
signed. At Academy, Ansel m would be fortunate to escape with a caning; Hazen
would be more likely to dismiss him from the Service, as the boy feared. Why
should that trouble me? It was what he deserved. Not only had he been drunk,
he'd sullied the Navy's cherished relationship with the SecGen. And if word
ever got out that he'd vomited on me ... I'd never hold up my head.
"Sir,
I..." Abruptly, he began to weep. "I'm so ashamed."
"You
should be."
"Your
shoes"—a sob—*T11 pay for them. If there's anything 1 can do, any way to
,.," He raised a tear-streaked face, "You're the SecGen, and once you
were our Commandant I was so proud to meet you. And I threw up on you." He
began to rock, hugging himself. "Oh, God, dear God."
If he
thought his performance would move me, he was sadly mistaken. I had no sympathy
for a stupid young jackanapes who ... dimly, I recalled a horribly sick young
middy, on his first leave, hugging a toilet in a bar in Lu-napolis.
I
cleared my throat. 'To start with, you're not to drink again, for six months.
Not a drop."
He
paled, but said only, "Aye aye, sir."
"You've
dishonored the Navy."
He
looked to the floor, and blushed anew. "Yes, sir."
"Call
Mr. Tilnitz. He's in the next room."
In a
few moments, Mark stood in the doorway, arms folded.
"Mr.
Anselm, you'll be caned." I leaned forward, steadying myself with one
hand. With the other, I raised the boy's chin. "I'd do it myself, if I
could."
His
eyes pleaded, but he said only, "Yes, sir."
"As
a civilian, I'm not sure I have the authority. If you contest it, I'll deliver
you to Commandant Hazen with a note of explanation."
"Oh,
no, sir!"
"Very
well. Mark, you'll do the honors. We have no barrel and no cane, so use your
belt. Go, boy, and consider yourself lucky."
Anselm
stood unsteadily, brought himself to attention. With reluctant resolve, he
marched to Mark's bedroom.
I lay
back in bed, turned off the light, and listened to the middy's anguished yelps.
CHAPTER
8
I
yawned; the day had started early, I'd had a long transatlantic trip with a
sleepy cadet and a subdued middy. Then, brunch with Arlene, Philip, and Jared
Tenere. I'd had to make small talk, which I found difficult in their presence,
all the more so because my mind still swam with images of blood and
destruction. It didn't improve my mood that Jared's manner was inoffensive,
almost deferential.
Afterward,
in my office, I glowered at the caller. I hated holoconfercncing. Karen Bums
was at my side, Branstead at the Rotunda, and General Donner in Paris.
"You
call that progress? Bah." I glared into Ae screen. On top of my other
troubles, my back ached.
Donner
drummed his fingers, causing his image to flutter, "We've identified both
their museum casualties. That's a breakthrough."
"The
one was already dead,**
"Obviously
not I said he'd been reported dead, four years ago."
Karen
listened to our byplay, silent
Branstead
rapped his desk for attention, "What disturbs me even more man the
attack..." He rubbed his eyes, "The terrorists are too well
organized. They can smuggle a bomb into the Rotunda, gather weapons, track the
SecGen's move-
ments,
provide false identities for their cohorts. How big a group does that
imply?"
"Huge."
Karen leaned forward. 'Too large to let them continue flaunting us. Crack down,
Mr. SecGen. With P and D we'll break them."
I said,
"If they're so many ..." Why had we found no trace of them?
Branstead
cleared his throat "The public won't support this sort of thing; it's
right out of the Rebellious Ages. It takes just one loose mouth in a bar. One
braggart, and someone calls us with an anonymous tip. A dozen joeys would be
their secure limit, I'd guess. So why haven't we gotten so much as a
hint?"
We
traded glances, each hoping another would speak.
I mused
aloud. "We're looking for the wrong sort of group." It brought stares
of surprise. "I mean ... what if they aren't as many as we think?"
Jerence
said, "So many separate attacks—"
"I
was in London last night, and I'm back home today. We can move; why can't they?
No, hear me out, Jerence. How many of these joeys do we actually know about?
One in the airport; he's dead now. Sergeant Booker at Academy. Someone to
smuggle a bomb into the Rotunda. Five in the museum, but they lost two. They could
be as few as half a dozen." I shifted, trying to ease my spine.
"The
false identities, the canister of nerve gas?"
"Think
how much easier to hide two or three men than a large force. Assume Booker
smuggled out a canister and his Mends filled it"
"How'd
they get the toxin?"
"How'd
they build a bomb?" Karen Burns.
"How'd
they get it in?**
I said,
"What if we're making this too complicated? We know how the nerve gas got
to Academy: Sergeant Booker. The airport was easy; they drove up to the gate.
Concentrate on the bomb. List every joey who in the three days before
the
bombing had, or could have had, access to the Rotunda. One of them is our
terrorist"
"There's
hundreds," said Donner. "Senators, Assemblymen, their staffs..."
Karen looked
grim. "P and D would tell us." I said, "Not again, Karen. We
haven't the authority." "You would under martial law."
I felt
a chill. "Out of the question." She was outraged at the bombing, no
doubt, but even so, her urge to crack down seemed almost vindictive. "How
many more would you see die?** "That's not—" A knock at the door.
"Yes?** Midshipman Anselm, his uniform immaculate, his hair brushed, his
face scrubbed. A crisp salute. "Pardon, sir, but Bishop Saythor's arrived.
Two helis on the pad." "Why are you telling me? You have no duties
here." "Yes, sir. I mean, no, sir. I had Cadet Bevin stay to greet
them. I thought you'd want to know right away." "Very well. Who's
with him?" "I don't know, but three of the joeys had guns."
Karen keyed her caller, "Amie? Who's out there. Church security? Can you
disarm them? Well, keep them out of the house. No, that's final. I'll be right
along." She strode to the door.
"Middy,
show the Elder inside. Try not to vomit on him." Anselm flushed beet red.
"Aye aye, sir," From the screen Branstead asked, "What was that
about?** "Last night something came up. Never mind." "Mr.
SecGen..." Jerence hesitated. "Last time I argued against P and D,
but after the museum ... I agree with Karen."
"I
won't declare martial law. Whatever I'm remembered for, it won't be that."
I scowled at Donner. "Any more conversations about groceries?"
"No." The General made no effort to hide his distaste.
"We're
alert to trace calls. I stationed rapid response teams throughout England."
Despite
myself, I giggled. "You'll swoop down on the greengrocer at the first
mention of cabbage?"
"It's
not funny, Mr. SecGen. You of all people should know that" His screen went
dead.
"That
wasn't necessary, Mr. Seafort." Jerence sounded annoyed. "He's
frustrated beyond bearing."
I
sighed. "I'll make it up to him. That's all for now."
"Be
diplomatic with Saythor, would you?"
"I'm
always diplomatic." I gave him no chance to respond. "Out, chair. Tb
the living room."
Bishop
Saythor sat placidly on my favorite sofa. Around him stood and sat three aides.
Across the room, Bevin had assumed the at-easc stance.
"Hold,
chair. Is this to be a private conversation?'*
"Why
ask me? My job is transport."
"Be
silent, chair. I was speaking to the Elder." My back twinged.
"These
gentlemen have my confidence,** Saythor's tone was pious.
He'd
demanded a private conference, and now this, I was in no mood for games.
"As do Karen Bums and my cadet And my wife. I'll call them."
'That
won't be necessary. Your point is taken." He gestured, and his joeys moved
to the door.
"Can
1 be of help, sir?" Bevin.
"Yes.
Take a position outside the door. See we're not disturbed." See that
Saythor's aides don't listen at the keyhole, but I couldn't say that. I ought
not even think it, but a sore backbone shortened my temper.
The
Elder regarded me skeptically.
I
waited,
"I
pray you're recovering from your dreadful injuries."
"Yes."
He didn't give Lord God's damn whether I was well; of that I was certain.
"Mr.
Seafort, what I have to say is difficult. You've been ill, and you're still not
your old self."
True,
but soon they would evaluate me for the Ghenili procedure. It was my lifeline.
"The
bombing shook public confidence in all our institutions. Many influential
citizens are upset at your policies."
My face
was stony.
"Let
me not beat around the bush. Mr. SecGen, I want you to resign.**
"Very
well.**
"Very
well, you'll resign?"
"Very
well, you want me to resign.**
"Will
youf
"No."
"Whynot?"
A good
question. He did, after all, represent the power and authority of Mother
Church,
No, he
did not. The Patriarchs did, in conclave.
"Well,
Mr. Seafortr
I hated
to be pushed. If he weren't so arrogant, he'd know that. I leaned forward,
clutching the armrests so as not to fall out of my chair. "Bishop Saythor,
what in hell gave you the idea you could meddle in politics?**
He
gasped. ,
I
hurtled on, "You demand I resign, but surely you don't speak for the
Church, The Patriarchs have every confidence in my Administration; I know so
from your statement to Holoworld,^ He flushed. "But even if you gather
your colleagues in conclave, you haven't the right to order me to re-
"We
represent Lord God's will!"
What in
His name was I doing? I thought to rein myself in, but Saythor's sneer
unraveled my intentions. "You may disavow me, excommunicate me if it comes
to that. No more. Hie Assembly may dismiss me by a vote of no-eonfidence, or
the electorate by voting for my opponent at a general election. That is how a
government is removed."
"It
comes to the same thing. If we declare we've lost confidence—"
"Do
so. Reverse yourselves publicly. I'll have no quarrel."
Then
why be so obstinate?"
"Because,
sir, you overstep yourself!" My eyes blazed. "The Eco Action League
would crumble our Government, reduce our system to chaos. There are paths,
legitimate ones, for them to express their views. They ignore the proper means,
proclaim themselves with bombs. They thwart the will of Lord God, whose
Government I head."
"But—"
"And
you do likewise! Where does the U.N. Charter give an Elder the right to dismiss
His Government? Where does Church doctrine allow the Patriarchs to ally
themselves with a particular party?"
"Listen
here—"
"No,
sir, you listen." I spun the wheels of my chair, lurched forward. "I
will do the work of Lord God, as He gives me to see that task. Ask the Assembly
to dismiss me, if that is your mind. Perhaps they would." No doubt they
would. Especially if they heard me speaking so to His representative on Earth.
Saythor
rose, white of face. "You skirt blasphemy!"
Then
excommunication is your remedy." Obdurate, I faced his wrath. "Until
you're prepared to use it, I'll hear no more apostasy."
"Apostasy?"
He was nearly apoplectic,
"What
else? You attempt to subvert our Charter and Church doctrine to bring down His
Government!"
His
eyes bulged
"Out
of love for His Church, sir, I will say nothing of what transpired here. Feel
free to make any public statement you wish." I gestured to the door.
"Anselm! MIDDY!"
The
door crashed open. "Midshipman Anselm reporting—"
"Our
conference is concluded. Show Bishop Saythor to his heli, if he will not
partake of refreshments."
I
waited, alone in the room, for my heart to steady, for my breath to calm. I
leaned back. A stab of warning, from my spine. I groaned.
After a
time, a knock.
"Nowwhat?"
Danil
Bevin shut the door behind him, marched across the carpet, came to attention,
threw a parade-ground salute.
"Yes,
Cadet?"
His
eyes shone. "You were... magnificent, sir!"
I
reared up, or tried to, "You spied? Despicable." I pounded the chair.
Til have you caned. No, dismissed from Academy. If you haven't the honor—"
"You
ordered me to stand outside the door!"
My
mouth worked. How dare this insolent, impudent child defend anything so
contemptible as eavesdropping? What effrontery. What—
I had
told him to stand outside the door, to stop Sayihor's aides from doing
precisely what he'd done.
"Hmpff."
It was all I could say.
"May
I speak?" His tone was pleading, I nodded. "Sarge used to tell us
stories about your days in Academy. How you and Admiral Thorne went on secret
missions raiding the coolers. How later you stood up alone to the fish. Sir,
I,,," He squirmed. "Sometimes I didn't believe everything they—but
today you were wonderful. The Elder was out of line, and you faced him down
without a qualm. Now I see how it could all be true."
"Goofjuice.
I've never heard such nonsense."
"Yes,
sir. Thank you so much for assigning me. It's— I'm--M
"Yesterday
you begged to go home,**
It was
as if I'd knocked the wind from his sails. He deflated "Yes, sir.
I'm..." He bit his lip. "Shit."
"Bevin!"
I'd have said more, but his eyes were damp. "It's all right, boy.
Come." I grasped his hand. "We'll say no more about it."
"Thank
you, sir." It was barely a whisper.
"Help
me awhile in my office." I rolled to the hall, basking in the gleam of his
approval.
For two
hours, Danil and I worked diligently, making significant inroads on my stack of
paperwork. To my surprise, I found the cadet a willing and cheerful worker,
toiling without complaint at whatever task I gave him. When he came upon the
Boland report concerning the Volgograd gravitron works, he scanned it quickly,
posed a series of acute questions that had me thinking. Yes, we needed its
production, but was it absolutely necessary mat it spew so many metal" lie
by-products? I scrawled a series of queries.
Moira
Tamarov arrived at midday. She'd brought the children by Hitrans train from New
York, and by taxi from the station. The gate guards confirmed their
authorization on their list, admitted them past the guardhouse. Why she hadn't
come by heli, I didn't know. Certainly, with Alexi's pension, she could afford
it, I made a note to ask.
Arlene
greeted the Tamarovs while I extricated myself from my office. I joined the
women in the kitchen, over tea. My wife perched on the counter, smiling down at
Moira in the breakfast nook.
"Mr.
Seafort." Moira came to her feet. Her dark hair was tied behind her neck.
Her oriental eyes were dull and lifeless, much changed from the last time I'd
seen her, a decade Past.
"It's
Nick, please.'* I rolled forward, gave her an awkward embrace. "I'm so
sorry about Alexi."
"I
know."
"I
was sedated when they held his funeral." Perhaps I
might
have begged his forgiveness. "Where are the children?"
"Outside,
I think, with your middy." She seemed uneasy.
"Is
there something wrong?" Of course there was, you idiot. Her husband had
been blown to pieces a month before.
"I
hope, while we're here... I warned them."
"Who?"
"Carla
and Mikhael. They're... it's mostly him, but she goes along."
"With
whatr
A
commotion, at the door. "Excuse me, could we have—** lad Anselm, two
teeners in tow. He glanced among us. "Oops. I'm intruding."
"Nick,
you've met our joeys, have you not?**
The
girl was about twelve, awkward, with the promise of grace.
'This is
Carla, and... Mikhael, don't hide in the hall. Come say hello."
"Good
to meet..." I ground to a halt, sucked in breath, "Akxi?" It
couldn't be so. The room spun. "But you're—** I covered my face.
"It's
all right, Nick." Arlene slipped from the counter, hugged me from behind,
I wept
The boy
was his father, as I'd met him many years ago, on HibernuL To the life. His
face, his height, his slim form, his hair. Every aspect but the sullen look he
wore.
"What's
the mutter with him?"
"Mikhael!"
His mother was aghast
I
mumbled, "How old is her
"Fifteen,
and don't talk past me."
I wiped
my eyes. "Sorry. You gave me a start."
"Ask
me if I give a fuck." Mikhael thrust through our stunned tableau to die
hall. A moment later, the slam of the veranda door.
With a
grimace, Anselm backed out of the room.
Moira's
hands fluttered. "I'm so sorry. He's been wild and angry ever since Alexi
left on Melbourne. Disobedient, and .. .** She seemed oblivious of Carla's
contempt. "It's /Utff we ga, PAaik n
"Stop
that." I tried to smile. "I'm glad you're here; we'll work it
out"
Caria
snorted.
I
wheeled on her. uAre you angry too?"
"Not
especially."
"Is
your brother usually like this?"
"When
there's reason."
•What's
the cause?"
"If
you don't know, there's no point discussing it."
Moira
threw up her hands. "I can't deal with them, and they know it We lost
Alexi so suddenly, he's not there to reassure them, and ..." Her eyes
filled.
I
rolled to the door.
"Nick,
where are you going?" Arlene's voice was soft
"TofindMikhael."
"Be...
understanding."
"As
always. I'll join you at dinner. Chair, outside, and this time don't scrape the
wall."
"I
didn't—"
"Be
silent" I was in no mood for argument
The sun
beat down. I glanced up, debating. Should I carry a sunshield? I hadn't heard
the day's ozone report. Well, I wouldn't be out long.
"To
the gate." I beckoned the guard. "Have you seen the Tamarov
boy?"
"No,
sir."
"Chair,
circle the house." Thank heaven the ground was dry; I could imagine the
chair backing and filling its way out of soft mud. Well, I wouldn't wander the
lawn often, and I wouldn't live in the chair long. Death was infinitely
preferable.
We
bounced over the lawn, to no avail. I tried the sheds, the helipad, the
guardhouse at the rear wall.
I found
Mikhael at the bungalow that once belonged to
though
occasionally, when the house was full, the cottage served to accommodate
guests.
Hie boy
was sprawled on a chaise lounge in the shaded patio, where Adam had liked to
sit
"May
I join you?"
He gave
no response; I took it for assent rolled past the hedge.
"It's
hot." No answer. I had to do better than that and knew it "Mikhael,
why are you angry?"
He
folded his arms, looked away.
"Is
it about your father?"
"I
didn't need him. I'm almost grown."
"I'm
sorry you lost him."
"What's
it to you?" His tone was scornful.
If I'd
dared speak so to Father, Lord knew what ... a strapping, at best. Where did
this sullen joey find the gall to sneer at the Secretary-General of the U.N.?
"You
done glaring?" He spat the words.
"Well,
your dad wouldn't fault your courage."
"Don't
speak of him!"
I owed
Alexi the effort but the boy was unreachable. Defeated, I resettled in the
chair to ease my aching back.
Steps,
behind me. "Oh. I didn't realize . . ."
I
twisted. "Jared."
"I'll
leave you." Philip's partner shifted awkwardly.
"No,
stay."
With a
look of distaste Mikhael uncoiled his lanky form, brushed past Jared to the
path.
"Get
back here!" I spoke without thought
The boy
turned, hands on hips.
"This
instant r If he ignored me, I was helpless.
Slowly,
Mikhael returned to the patio.
"Plant
yourself in that chair! How dare you walk off without excusing yourself!"
"You're
not my—"
"Father?
No, but I'm adult and you're a child. You'll show me courtesy, or..."
"Yes?"
"Try
me." My tone was level. After a moment his eyes dropped. "You'll stay
put until we're done." Still annoyed, I looked to Jared,
Tenere
said hesitantly, "T didn't mean to intrude.**
"Jared,
this is Mikhael Tamarov, son of my old friend Alexi. Mikhael, take his hand
or... take it!" I'd had enough.
Jared
blushed. "If that's how you'd dealt with me when I was a boy, I'd,,."
His voice trailed off.
I
studied him. He was what, now? Twenty-seven? Three years older man Philip. Had
we ever spoken in depth, in the dozen years since he'd fled our compound? From
time to time I'd met Jared in his guardian Rob Boland's company, and he'd
murmured something polite. On my part, I'd had little desire to speak to him.
"You'd
whatr I sounded testy,
"I'd
have been better off." Again, he colored. "Perhaps I shouldn't bring
it up."
**Why
not?' I was barely civil. How could I extricate myself? I'd thoroughly
alienated me boy I'd wanted to engage, and found myself in a conversation with
a joey I wished to see as little as possible.
He
glanced uneasily at Mikhael, plunged ahead. "Mr. Seafort, there's
something I've wanted to say for years."
"Get
it said, men." In a moment I'd order the chair inside. Somehow, we would
all make it through the week,
"I
was horrible as a teener, I see that now. I resent—I hated you," His gaze
was almost defiant, "Because you gave P.T. what I never had,"
"Love?"
His father had literally died for him. If he didn't understand the depth of
Adam's love, I had no sympathy.
"More.
A sense of ... order. Of P.T. knowing his place in the family, and your limits.
Of knowing he had to behave."
I wasn't
having it. "The difference is that he wanted to."
"Yes,
sir." His glance was shy. "I used to sneer at P.T. for calling you
'sir.' "
From
Mikhael, a snort of contempt
"And
now?"
Abruptly
his composure wavered. "I wish I could undo so much! If Dad had thrown my
puter out that window"— he jabbed at the bungalow — "and if you —
that night you caught me on the roof . . ." He'd been spying on Rob Boland
and his father, in our guest room, "If you had put an end to it , ,
,"
Had I
possibly ... I shied from the thought. Could it be that I'd misjudged him?
"Adam wanted me to discipline you," My tone was gruff. "He
didn't know how,"
Abruptly,
Jared seemed to change the subject, "You know, I love—"
"I'm
going inside." Mikhael, truculent.
I turned,
wheeled my chair to his seat. Deliberately, I slapped his face.
"God
damn you!" He clawed at my eyes.
Somehow
I caught his fingers, his wrist, managed
to twist his arm behind his back. Struggling, he fell across my chair. I raised
his wrist ever higher between his shoulders, until he squealed.
"You'll
sit until I tell you." No answer. "Right?"
"Okay!"
"Yes,
sir!"
"I
won't — stop twisting— yes,
I let
go, Mikhael fell back, nursing his arm. Breaming heavily, I turned back to
Jared, thankful for my incredible luck. The boy could easily have pulled me
from my chair, left me flopping helpless on the ground,
"You
were saying?"
"I
love Philip." Perhaps my savagery had unnerved nun; his tone held a
challenge.
"I'm
aware."
"He
doesn't speak much of you. He doesn't want to hurt me, you see. He's dom, even
though I'm older. He knows so much more, and..." Blessedly, he left it at
that
"What
do you want of me?"
"I
don't want you between us! Oh, God, that's not how I meant it. I know I was
awful. Only Uncle Robbie saved me from prison. And Dad.., what I did was
terrible, but I love P,T. so, and we..." He broke off. "I want to
crawl into mat cottage, and be fifteen again, and come out right, not glitched
like I've been. If only you knew how I dream of it"
A long
silence, broken only by Mikhael's breathing.
My
voice was soft, "I do, son." More than Jared knew.
"Mr.
Seafort, could you possibly forgive me?"
Slowly,
shyly, I offered my hand.
Minutes
later I watched him go, warmed by I knew not what.
Time to
cope with the disaster I'd caused. I turned to Mikhael, my face grim. How could
I explain this fiasco to Moira? I had no more right to touch her son than,,,
man... I rolled myself toward him, He recoiled, flung up an arm to cover his
cheek, *! came to get you to stop hating me. Now I don't care. Hate me all you
like." I glowered. "You're not to show it in my presence." A
subdued nod.
"Now,
before we go in, I want... no, mat's not fair. I'm asking you, not ordering. Would
you please tell me why you're so angry at me? What did I do?** "You know
goddamn,.." He swallowed, "It's all right. Tell me in anger, if
that's the only way." He studied my face, to see if I meant it Apparently
reassured, he said bitterly, "You killed him."
"Nonsense."
"You
might as well have. You dragged him to the U.N., knowing they'd already tried
to assassinate you."
I
cried, "Wild horses couldn't have stopped him!" He stared in
surprise. "Son ... Mikhael... you didn't know your father very well, did
you?"
"Dad's
last cruise to New China... it was a year and a half. I begged to go, but he
and Mother decided I should stay in school. When he brought Melbourne home he
arranged six months' extra leave, so we'd get to know each other again. Only,
before he could..." His voice caught
I spoke
to the hedge. "Once upon a time, your dad was a middy with me, on Hiternia
He was... how can I make you see him? Conscientious, of course. Handsome, as
you are. Poised. In fact he looked so like you I thought I saw a ghost
today."
I
waited for his scorn, but none came.
"We
lost several officers, so we were shorthandcd. Captain Malstrom appointed him
to defend a sailor at his court-martial. No defense was possible, and the man
was condemned to death."
"So?"
"I
found Alexi on his bunk in tile wardroom, crying." How could I make him
understand? "The sailor set up a still to and sell illegal drugs He
clubbed a petty officer. He deserved conviction, but your dad tied his best to
him. He was heartbroken he couldn't That's the sort of man he was,"
I stole
a glance; Mikhael contemplated his fingers.
"1
comforted him. I wasn't good at it but I stroked him, tried to give him
peace,"
A
sniffle.
"Of
course he went wim me to the Rotunda, ton. I was to be dismissed by the
Patriarchs mat day, and he couldn't let me face it alone."
The
boy's eyes rose, tormented
y voice
strained. "If you pray to Lord God that we switch places, he and I, I'll
pray it with you."
We sat
in silence.
"I'm
going to give you a special present. If you don't want it, don't reject it in
scorn. That's all I ask. Treat it with respect.**
"What
is itr
"A
surprise. After I have your promise."
A long
while passed. "I promise."
"I
promise, sir"
A pause
I thought would last forever. "I promise, sir."
CHAPTER
9
Safe at
last in the privacy of my study, I called my Rotunda office. "Where's
Derek Carr?"
"In
Singapore, arranging wheat contracts. He's due back Monday next."
I
frowned; Derek lost no chance to subvert our colonial policy. Now he was
bypassing the Import Bureau. "Put me through to him."
In ten
minutes the caller buzzed. I said softly, "Derek, old friend, I need you.
Will you come?"
"Whenr
"As
soon as you can."
"I've
negotiations in progress ..." A sigh. "I suppose I can move some of
them to Washington, and do others by holo. Tomorrow morning. I'll wrap up a
meeting tonight and catch a suborbital."
We rang
off. Thank Lord God for Derek. Knowing I wouldn't summon him lightly, he didn't
ask my cause. Fifty years of trust will do that.
I did
my best to bring cheer to dinner, but nothing could salvage the day. There'd
been too much emotion, and we were all tired. Afterward, I apologized to Moira
for striking her son. To my astonishment, she threw her arms around me.
Late in
the evening, I retreated to my study, where Midshipman Anselm found me.
He
hemmed and hawed, before at last he came out with it "I want a
drink."
"I
told you—"
"Yes,
sir. I spent the afternoon thinking of going out. I could jump the wall, if I
had to. But I don't; I found every kind of liquor in your cabinet."
"You
sneaking little—two demerits! Four!"
"I
didn't say I drank it." His shoulders slumped. "I was stupid to come
here. I thought perhaps you'd help." It could have been contempt, and
insolence. Or desperation.
I
shifted, to ease my back. "Why me?"
"Who
else, sir? You're my commanding officer."
Why did
every bloody joey I knew toss his problems in my lap? I had too many of my own,
and no more strength. "Very well, my order is rescinded. Drink all you
want."
He
blinked. His fists clenched, relaxed, clenched again.
"Anything
else, Anselm?"
He
sagged, as if defeated "No, sir." He trudged to the door.
Let him
sink or swim. He hadn't been bom an alcoholic, he'd become one. He'd made his
bed, now he could sleep in it
It was
always day somewhere. When the Americas were in moonlight, functionaries in
other parts of the world were toiling at their desks. I took as many calls as I
could, but in an hour I was yawning uncontrollably. Giving up, I rang Security,
wheeled myself to the stairs. In a few moments, three burly guards gripped my
chair.
I
sighed. "Not yet." I wheeled myself to the living room.
Anselm
sat before the liquor cabinet, staring moodily.
"How
much have you had?" My voice dripped scorn.
"None
yet"
"Why
not?"
"God,
you're a cruel son of a bitch." He swallowed a sob. "I suppose you'll
cashier me, but I don't think I care."
Lord
Christ, what had I done? I maneuvered into the room, swung shut the door.
"Anselm ..."
He drew
himself up. "I apologize, Mr. SecGen. On duty or not, I'm way out of
line."
"Not
when you tell the truth. I am cruel. I've never been able to help it." I
patted the couch. "It's I who apologize. Come sit near." He did.
"You're how old, seventeen?"
"Well...
in two months."
"When
did you start drinking?"
"Three
years ago."
"Devon
has ample opportunity." Half a dozen pubs within walking distance of the
gate. Still, he'd have been only a cadet, then. Someone risked the law's wrath.
I wondered why.
"It's
zarky. They don't even ask ID; my uniform is enough."
"On
your honor, Midshipman. Do you ever drink on duty?"
He
bristled. "Never. Not once."
"But
you report back to base soused?"
"Not
exactly." A grin flickered. "Anyway, I wouldn't be the only
one."
I
didn't rise to the bait. Servicemen were the same, all over the world. "Do
you get leave all that often?"
"Almost
every week. Commandant Hazen is ... kind?" He colored. "Generous is a
better word."
"Foolish"
was more apt. As Commandant, I'd allowed my middies occasional leave, but not
so often as to make them sots.
'Too
much leave," I mused aloud. "And you're on holiday even now. That was
a mistake."
"You're
sending me back." For some reason, he sounded crestfallen.
That
would be putting the fox in the henhouse. He had littie self-control, this lad,
and to place him unsupervised among the brewhouses ...
"No,
Tad. I'll have orders cut. You'll be posted with us." Though Danil Bevin
was willing and good-natured, it was too much to expect the cadet to cope alone
with a cantankerous SecGen. I needed a middy, and Anselm might as well be he. I
owed him something for my cruelty.
His
expression was that of a boy who found an Arcvid console in his Christmas
stocking. He gulped, unsure it was real. "Working for you, sir?" His
voice was tremulous. "You approve, Mr. Anselm?" "Yes. Oh,
yes."
I
grunted, glad of my decision. "You've had all the leave you'll see for a
while. No drinking, on or off duty. You're not to leave the grounds without
permission from me or Mr. Branstead."
"Aye
aye, sir. Anything else?"
"Yes.
It's unthinkable to disobey a direct order, but if you do—that is, if you have
so much as a sip of liquor, you're to put yourself on report immediately."
"Aye aye, sir."
"And,
I might add, Til have you caned within an inch of your life. Perhaps the threat
will help."
He
looked wistfully at the cabinet. "You'd trust me around all these bottles,
and to tell you afterward?"
"I
hope you understand honor, boy. Else the Navy has no place for you." It
was no more than was asked of any middy: to log the strenuous exercise that
worked off a demerit, for example. Nobody ever checked. To lie about such
things was unimaginable.
"Yes,
sir. What are my duties?"
Til try
to keep you busy. Start by leading Bevin in his calisthenics each morning. I
don't want you two getting soft."
I could
have sworn I heard a snort of derision.
After breakfast,
Philip caught me on the way to my office. "Why was Jared in tears last
night?"
I
stopped short. "I have no idea,"
"You
had a talk with him, did you not?"
"Rather
the reverse. I don't recall being harsh." I hesitated. "Did you
ask?"
"He
wouldn't tell me, except he was glad to be home at last" Philip grimaced.
"I hope it isn't mood swings. He'll be devastated if he needs more
treatment."
I
patted his arm. "You've always looked after him, haven't you?" At
twelve, he'd followed Jared to the urban jungle of Lower New York in a frantic
attempt to rescue him.
"I
tried. Path, we need to talk."
"In
my study." I led the way.
"You
look grim. Is something wrong?"
"No,
it's ..." I shook my head. "They called from Johns Hopkins. Charlie
Witrek's transplants failed. They'll have to try again." I made an effort
to put it behind me. "What is it, son?"
P.T.
pulled up a hassock, sat at my knees, as he had as a boy. "In the old
days, a man could ask the king a boon."
I
snorted. "I'm no king."
"Merely
an autocrat." He smiled, to take the sting from his words. "How
difficult was your trip to England?"
'Terrible.
Blood was everywhere. I called some of the families. And the water damage ...
The exhibits were ruined. They'll be ages cleaning—"
"I
meant, how difficult for you to travel?"
I
wanted no pity. "I'm fine. Well, obviously, I'm less mobile than before.
Otherwise, have no concern." I ought not be so short with him. His motives
were only the best.
"In
that case, I ask a favor."
His
formality startled me. I made a noncommittal sound.
"A
few days of your time."
"I
know I've been busy since you came home. I'll try to
do
better." Lunch, just the two of us. And after dinner, I could squeeze—
"I
want to take you on a trip."
"Where?"
"I'd
rather show you."
"Son,
I have a huge staff. The advance team, security ... I can't just take
off—"
Mischievously
he raised an eyebrow. "What about Lon-donr
"That
was different."
"Please,
sir. If there's anything you want in return. Til do it." His tone was
quiet, his manner calm, as if he'd found some inner peace.
"Give
up your enviro politics?" I was only half joking.
A long
pause. "If that's the cost,"
After a
moment I looked away. "I won't ask that" Not if I had a shred of
decency.
"Path,
I need you. Will you come?"
My
breath hissed. How could he know I'd summoned Derck with the exact words?
I had
no idea into what marsh I was casting myself. "Yes, son. How soon?"
We
negotiated, settled on five days hence. It would give me time to clear my
schedule, and I wouldn't abandon the Tamarovs.
I sent
my chair racing to the pad the moment I heard the drone of Derek's heli. Bevin
sprinted desperately to keep up; we'd been in the study, working on Admiralty
dispatches.
At the
pad, we waited for the blades to slow. Danil panted, That wasn't fair. You kept
telling it to go faster."
"Only
once."
"'Flank,
chair, flank!'" He bent, hands on his knees.
"All
right, twice. Ah, Derek. Thanks so much."
He took
my hand. "No fire? No one's ill?"
"No,
but I needed—"
"I
could actually have had a night's sleep? Why is the cadet's face red?"
"He's
out of shape. Danil, find Mikhael Tamarov, tell him I have his present. We'll
be in my office."
Derek
and I settled over iced drinks. I waved at a waiting stack of chips, all
classified too highly to send over the nets. "It never ends."
"Delegate,"
he said.
"I
try, but..." I slipped one into the holovid. "Here's an example.
Admiral Dubrovik's been injured in a fall. The Board of Admiralty wants to
appoint his aide Simovich as Acting. If the old man doesn't recover, he'll be
named to the post. Should I—"
"What
post?"
"Lunapolis
Command. Should I involve myself, or let them do their job? Yes, phrasing it
mat way answers the question. But sometimes they appoint idiots, and it's hell
removing them."
"Do
you know Simovich?**
"No,
but he can't be worse man Admiral Dubrovik," At Galactic'& dedication,
to my embarrassment, he'd lauded me beyond reason.
The
door swung open. "You wanted me?" Mikhael. Hii tone wasn't combative.
Not quite. At breakfast his manner had wavered between belligerence and
civility.
"This
is my office. Knock before you enter."
We
glared.
"Go
out and do it properly. I'm waiting."
He
didn't quite slam the door. After a long moment, a knock.
"Come
in, Mikhael." I waved to a sett. "This is Mr, Can, from Hope Nation.
He served with your father on Hibernia and Portia, He's going to sit with you
for an hour and tell you stories."
'This
is why you called me from Singapore?" Derek's tone was plaintive.
"I'll
explain later."
"That's
your present?" The boy snorted. "I have your promise, Mikhael: no
scorn. Reject my gift if you wish, and I'll send Derek home with my
apology." I waited, holding my breath. He was silent "Go on, you
two." I shepherded them out.
Nervous
as a cat, I rolled from window to door and back. I'd never realized how much I
needed to pace. In a chair it wasn't the same.
What in
the Lord's name was I doing? I'd summoned Derek from work he deemed
important—for which he'd endured the nine-month journey from his home—to help a
sulky, spoiled joeykid who didn't esteem the gift of his company. And all for
what? The boy wasn't mine to raise. If he were, I'd have long since wiped the
petulance from his manner, Alexi had erred, leaving him home with Moira. A ship
was a healthy environment: no drugs, no Arcvid, middies to set an example of
discipline. And of course, Mikhael would have been under the stern eyes of his
father.
I
thumbed the caller, dialed Anselm. Another boy who couldn't be left alone for
long. Perhaps I should mark my liquor bottles. "Middy? Report to my
office," I rang off.
In a
moment, the thunder of footsteps racing down the stairs. "Midshipman
Anselm reporting!"
"As
you were. Where's Danil?"
"Ms.
Seafort offered him lunch."
"I
suppose you're hungry too?"
"Not
really." He made a face. "My stomach hurts."
"Withdrawal
pains?"
"Sir,
even if I'm an alcoholic like you say, it's not gone that far."
"Pray
it hasn't. Help me file. Those chips on the desk are sorted by—now look what
you've done!" With clumsy enthusiasm he'd knocked a dozen chips to the
floor. "You're just begging for demerits, aren't you?"
His voice
was small. "No, sir, I'm not" He gathered them up.
"No
matter." I tried to hide my contrition. "It's my backache." And
worry over Derek and Mikhael. "Put each in the holovid, check the header,
file them—now what?"
My
caller buzzed. The private line that few knew.
"Mr.
Seafort? Jerence Branstead. I'm at the Assembly." He seemed grim. 'The
Territorials pulled a surprise vote to kill the Greenhouse Gases Act"
"Can't
you stop them?"
"They're
calling the roll."
Over
fifteen hundred members to poll. An arduous process, but if the Terries had
organized themselves and we hadn't, the result was inevitable, I'd planned to
persuade our waverers, rally the doubtful. I said, "We'll ^introduce next
session.**
"It's
not just the one bill. They'll claim they defeated us on a major package, that
it's a vote of no-confidence."
"Goofjuice."
The vote was a tactical surprise, and we'd had no opportunity to gather our
forces. Assembly rules al-lowed no proxy votes, no call-ins or puter tallies.
Members had to vote in person; the Terries must have worked hard to spring this
on us. Why the sudden lunge for power?
"You
and I think so, but that's not how the media will play it. Sir, we'll look
hopelessly inept The Government could even fall."
'That bad?"
If I retired, I wanted to hand over my Government to a Supra, even a ditherer
like Cisno Valera. Our opposition, the Territorials, were too heavy-handed,
both with the colonies and our own joeys at home. It was they who'd sent
U.N.A.F. heavy brigades into hapless transpop neighborhoods, they who had aimed
Lunapolis's lasers at New York, I'd tried to strike a balance between the
enviro fringe and legitimate business needs, but the Terries would sell home
system for a short-term profit
"There's
no way to stop the vote?" My fingers ached, from gripping the chair arm.
"None.
In three hours we're done."
Three
hours. That was the key. "Jerence, get to the floor.
Stall."
"How?
Why?" "Have our joeys switch their votes, call points of order.
I'm on
my way."
"You're
whatr
"Meet
me at the Assembly entrance. I'll be there in... two hours or so. As long as
the vote's still in progress, we have a chance. In the meantime, stay on your
caller; round up every Supra you can find, pressure the Indie caucus.
We—"
"You can't be here in time. Mark has to secure the site—"
"Get
to work." I spun my chair. "ANSELM!" He jumped. "Jesus, I'm
right here! You scared the life—" "Find Derek, tell him we're
borrowing his heli, meet me at the pad. Run!" I thumbed the caller.
"Cadet, to the hallway, flank speed! Mark, report to the helipad. Chair,
to the veranda." I flung open the door, cannoned into a pair of legs.
"Ow!"
"Get
off of—sorry, Jared. Hold the outside door, will you? Bevin, where in blazes—ahh,
there you are. Put down the sandwich, we're in a hurry."
'To
where, sir?"
"New
York. Chair, I could crawl faster than you—haie!" I clung desperately to
the armrests. "Not that fast."
In
moments we were at the pad. Anselm galloped to meet us. Jared Tenere followed,
slowly at first, then breaking into a trot
"Get
me in there." I pointed to the fuselage. "Danil, Tad, lift me."
I tried to help. "Where's Tilnitz?"
"Did
he come back?" Bevin. "He went out the gate about an hour—"
"Jared,
give a hand, will you? I'm too heavy for them." Damn. I was counting on
Mark to drive the heli. "I don't suppose any of you can pilot? I would,
but my legs ..."
My
three assistants flung me into the heli.
Anselm
said tentatively, "I've had lessons, sir." Learning to pilot was one
of the joys of Academy. Ironically, many of our cadets could fly long before
they could drive a ground-car.
"How
many? Did you qualify?"
"Only
a few, but—"
Jared
Tenere said with quiet confidence, "I have my license. I'll fly you
there."
"Did
Derek leave the keys? Good. Get us started Put that chair in the back."
With effort 1 hauled myself into a seat, brushed off my jacket "Call
Philip and tell him you won't be home for dinner."
In a
moment Jared had our blades turning. I jabbed at the caller. "Arlene, I'm
off to the Rotunda. Tell Mark, when you see him. We'll be back tonight"
"Nick,
be careful."
"Of
course."
"Who's
with you?"
'The
boys and Jared."
"I
mean, for security."
"The
boys and Jared. I'll be all right" I devoutly hoped it was true.
"Fly
northeast." I gave Jared the coordinates. "Let the autopilot handle
it Ignore the speed limit I'm in a hurry."
We
hurtled across the landscape. I called Branstead. "Clear a flight path.
They're a bit trigger-happy at the Rotunda these days; make sure we're not shot
down. Jared, what's our transponder?" I fed Branstead the code.
"We'll set down in an hour and a half, if mis youngster doesn't
dawdle."
Abruptly
the engine roared. Satisfied, I sat back.
We put
down on the browning grass in front of the General Assembly, where no heli was
allowed to land. Instantly my excited crew flung open the door, threw my chair
to the ground, hauled me after. I glanced about; thank heaven, the only
mediamen present had their view blocked by the heli. Else I could imagine the
zincs' lead: SecGen Seafort dragged protesting across the lawn.
They
bundled me into my chair. I ordered it up the ramp. Branstead swung open the
door. "Where's Mark? Get in, before someone takes a shot at you. They're
almost through the roll. I couldn't slow them much. We'll be down a hundred
eleven. I met with seven of the Indies—"
"Jerence,
take a breath."
**—and
they won't agree—"
"A
deep breath. Now." I rolled along the marble corridor, toward the
Assembly. "Call Perrel out, and Bosconi." I stopped. The SecGen never
entered the Assembly chamber during a session; it just wasn't done. On the
other hand, I knew of no rule that codified the custom. "Never mind.
Straight ahead, chair. Boys, come with me."
"You're
not—" Branstead seemed to read my mind.
"Watch
me." A uniformed officer stood by the entry. "Mr. SecGen? There's a
session in—" He flung open the door to save it from collision damage.
"Where's
Assemblyman Perrel?" I peered at astonished faces. "Ahh. Make
way." I rolled down the aisle. Perrel was a weak man. Venal, but weak. If
I could break him, I'd make a start.
The
President of the Assembly looked up. A flicker of surprise. She nodded to the
clerk, who droned on.
"Jared,
find Denlow; he's the fattest man here and has a walrus mustache. Bring him
here." As the young man rushed off I swung to Perrel. "You're voting
against us, Howard?"
Perrel
had the grace to blush. "Sorry, but—"
"No
time for reasons. You're ready to see a change of Government?"
"It
doesn't have to come to that."
"Of
course it does."
"If
you'd given in on the mining bill..."
"Never
mind. How many did you carry along?"
He
shrugged "A few."
"Thirty?"
"Thirty-seven,
I figure." He sounded proud.
"Get
busy. Reverse their votes."
"Why?
You can't threaten me. I have an understanding with the Terries. Once you go
down—"
"Minister
of what? Resources?"
He
flushed. "That's none of your concern."
"Resources?"
"Yes."
"Very
well." I backed the chair, to turn. "Cadet, have Mr. Branstead round
up the Indie caucus."
"What
are you going to do?" Perrel.
"Hold
a news conference, the moment the vote's done."
'To say
what?"
I
smiled. "Why, Howard, nothing but the truth. That you made a deal with the
Terries, that you brought them thirty-seven votes in exchange for a ministry,
that I find such sordid dealing despicable and wonder if the electorate will
stomach it. That's all." I rolled a few paces, said over my shoulder,
"The voters probably won't throw you out of office. But the Terries won't
touch you with a ten-foot pole. Say good-bye to a ministry. And who'd trust
you, after?"
He
licked his lips.
"Bring
back your thirty-seven votes, and I'll send Rob Boland to talk about the mining
bill. No promises." I strained to see over a bulky figure. "Where are
the Indies?"
With
some I cajoled, with others, pleaded. As the President finished the roll, one
by one, members of Perrel's cohort rose reluctantly to switch their votes. It
all took time, which I badly needed. I promised the Indies support on education
funding that I'd already intended to give. Sixteen votes; two refused to go
along. I wheeled about the chamber, forcing down my gorge, buttonholing
politicians. While Branstead snapped hushed orders into his caller, Jared
Tenere raced from one aisle to another, summoning those I wished to browbeat
They
might not have liked me, but still I was SecGen; they came at my call.
As the
vote narrowed, Branstead and his staff fanned out through the hall, luring
others into the fold. With each vote we gained, the remainder became easier.
And my chief of staff had made a heroic effort; absent Supras rushed into the
chamber, recalled by suborbitaJ from their far-flung destinations.
I
careened around the Assembly chamber.
When it
was done we'd won by three.
"Relieved?"
Derek sat comfortably, legs crossed, nursing his evening drink.
"I
suppose." I mused. "It's ironic; we nearly fell, over an enviro bill
I don't really support. That's not how I'd care to go out of office."
"Why'dyou—"
"We
have to give the enviros something." The Greenhouse Gases Act was all I'd
concede, though. It would play havoc with our economy, and I wasn't at all sure
it was necessary. Yet a surprising number of Assemblymen supported it
I hated
the compromise of politics. Richard Boland, Rob's father, had tried to teach me
his love of dealmaking, but I couldn't abide it
Across
the room, Moira Tamarov drowsed in the sofa. Carla played listlessly at a
video. It reminded me of unfinished business. "How was your talk with
Mikhael?"
"I
reminisced. At first he was surly."
"And
then?"
"He
liked the part about Alexi and the Admiral. When I told him about Portia, he
had to wipe his eyes. Nick, what's this about?"
"You'll
see." I keyed the caller. "Mr. Anselm, join us downstairs, and bring
Mikhael, if you would."
In a
moment the boys appeared.
"Mr.
Anselm, you were to begin exercises with the cadet Did you?"
"Not
yet, sir. This morning, we—"
"One
demerit. You'll start tomorrow." I turned to Mikhael. "Did you like
my present?"
"I
guess." He perched on the arm of a chair.
"If
that's all, go back upstairs."
He
stayed put "All right, I liked it"
"Very
well." My tone was frosty. "You'll be here five more days. Every
morning, Mr. Can* will tell you about your father." I paused. "An
hour of stories for every hour you exercise with the middy and cadet."
"Forget
it!"
"It's
forgotten. Go to bed."
He
stalked to the door. Footsteps pounded upstairs.
"Sorry,
Derek." I made a face. "It didn't work."
"He's
not an easy one. Unpleasant snotty—"
"Like
you, at his age."
Derek
colored. "Yes, you knocked some sense into me. But he's a civilian; you
have no authority over him."
"I
have to try."
Derek
said gently, "Nick, I had urgent business in Singapore. For you, I don't
mind rearranging my schedule, though it's not as efficient But for him..."
"Make
allowances. He lost his father."
Derek's
tone was sharp. "I lost mine." Randolph Carr had been killed in the
explosion of Hibernians launch. "It didn't turn me into a..." He
paused, reflective. "Still, for months, I was in shock. If you hadn't
befriended me..."
I sat
moodily, drifting through old times. "Nick, you have so much on your
plate; why discommode yourself for him?"
"Not
for him, for an old shipmate. I owe Alexi that."
"He
was my first friend, after you." Derek stared into his glass. "In the
wardroom, Vax Holser was ... difficult Alexi helped me through."
'Tell
him. The boy."
"It's
hard to speak of. But we were good friends. And later, after you left for
Challenger, it was grim. I was afraid Alexi would get himself beached for his
open contempt of the Admiral."
"He
never told me."
"There's
a lot he never told you." Derek was moody. "Ah, well. Days long past.
Do you think you can salvage the boyr
"Unlikely.
You were his only chance."
"Why
make me work?" Mikhael, from the doorway.
I said
without turning, "Why, sir"
"Why,
sir?" He spat the words.
"Because
you're spoiled and sullen, and I don't like you. Because you'll never see Mr.
Carr after he goes home; you have a once in a lifetime opportunity you don't
appreciate. Because ..." I threw up my hands.
Derek
asked, "Why me? You served with Alexi, too."
"He'll
believe you. He'll never be sure I'm not lying."
"I
never said that." Mikhael was petulant.
"You
didn't have to."
"I
don't want to exercise."
"Then
don't, joey. Middy, what time will you start?"
"Eight-thirty,
sir."
"Be
mere or not, as you choose. Say good night civilly, before you go."
Fuming,
Mikhael did as I bade.
"Derek,
if your negotiations suffer, I'll make it up to you.
We'll
fiddle with the transport rates, or—" My caller
chirped.
With resignation, I keyed it. "Yes?" "Branstead, here. What do
you think?" "Of the vote? About all we could have—" The message
on your puter. Didn't you see it?** "No."
"Read
it. You pushed him too far. I'll talk to you after." He rang off.
"Chair,
to my office." I was too weary to roll myself. The message was on my
opening screen.
Mr.
SecGen Seafort:
It
is with regret that, for personal reasons, I resign as Director of Security for
the Secretary-General. I wish you the best of fortune.
Mark
H. Tilnitz
"Damn."
My cavalier jaunt to New York had pushed him over the edge.
"Problems,
sir?" Anselm, from the doorway.
I
didn't know I'd spoken aloud. "No. Yes. Come in and be quiet." I
keyed my night secretary, in New York. "Can you reach TilnitzT*
"Just
a moment, sir."
A
click. Another. "Karen Bums."
"I
asked for Mark."
"I
understand he's left the detail." Her voice was cool. "And I believe
he went on leave."
"Very
well."
"I'll
be in Washington in three hours. Do you travel tomorrow?"
"There's
nothing planned."
"I
knew that, Mr. SecGen."
So.
Bums, too, was annoyed at my impetuosity. Perhaps it would mean mass
resignations, but I wouldn't allow myself to be a prisoner of my security
detail. In mutual hostility, we rang off. I punched in Branstead's code.
"Can we get him back?"
"Will
you accept protection?" I debated. "Jerence, security drives me
crazy." "A short drive." It was little over a whisper. I
whirled. The middy studied the ceiling. "I heard that. Fifty
push-ups."
"Aye
aye, sir." He loosened his tie. "What's going on?" Branstcad.
"A
minor mutiny." Was it my wheelchair? The relaxed atmosphere of home?
Something in the air? Not only Anselm, but Bevin and, for that matter, Mikhael,
felt free to say whatever came into their heads.
Intolerable.
Why, then, did I feel like grinning? Why did I bear the midshipman no
animosity? Why did it remind me of Philip's younger days? "Jerence, can
you work a compromise with Mark?"
"So
he'll only protect you from the waist up? Oh, I make jokes, but it's not funny.
None of us want you killed." The middy grunted, halfway through his
labors. "Mr. SecGen, I'll try, but I'm with Mark on this." "I
know, Jerence."
"By
the way, you not only won the vote, you won me zines. 'SecGen Races to Save
Administration.' 'Surprise Visit Turns Vote.* 'Seafort Saves Enviro
Cause,'" I snorted. "I'm done, sir."
"Thirty
more. Take off your jacket." Let the boy twit me if he must. He'd learn
that all things came at a cost. Then, "Give yourself a rest if you need
one." My tone was gruff.
"We
have messages of support pouring in. It's not just Winstead's crowd. Suddenly
everyone's behind me greenhouse bill. The Paki Prime Minister, the FHipinos,
Tomorrow's Calcutta Times calls it the most important legislation of the
decade. Andrus Bevin of the Enviro Council lauds
your
staunch leadership. You know, the Terries lated badly."
"Hmpph."
So had we, if I'd unleashed a new flood of en^ viro fervor.
"It's
a groundswell," said Branstead, as if to irritate me further.
"Mothers For a Sane Tomorrow, the Swedish Better Government League, the
Small Business Council—"
"All
right, Jerence." I threw up my hands. "Send me a summary."
"Will
do, sir. Congratulations,"
After
we rang off, I had Anselm get himself a softie, "Have a seat. If you're as
insolent as you are, no need to stand on formality,"
He
blushed, "You weren't supposed to hear mat."
"Are
you sure?"
His
eyes danced, "Well.., not quite, sir."
Abruptly,
his mischief recalled Alexi, as a boy. Saddened, I asked, "Do you know
what's wrong with Mikhael Tamarov?"
"Didn't
he just lose his fattier?"
"Beyond
that"
His
tone was bleak. "Is mere anything beyond mat?"
I fell
silent. I'd never seen the middy's file, never thought to ask. "Tell
me,"
"Three
years ago. I was at Academy, The Berlin subor-bital."
I
winced. A corroded engine cowling; me shuttle had been based near the Volgograd
plant. Some blamed pollution. Whatever the cause, the fiery crash had left
three hundred dead. We were lucky at that; the craft was only half full
"I'm sorry."
"It's
just..." He sought me last of his drink, "It doesn't matter,"
I
rolled myself close, "Tell me."
He
shook his head. Just as I decided to let him be, the words spewed out "He
was on his way to visit me. My first leave. We were going ... going to
..." His shoulders shook in a silent spasm.
Lord
Christ, why couldn't I have left well enough alone?
"Mr.
Hazen called me in. He tried to be kind." A sniffle. "When I saw his
face, a blade twisted in my gut. I started to cry before I heard a word."
Helpless,
I squeezed his shoulder.
"My
mother had died years before, alii had was a distant pair of aunts. I spent my
two weeks* leave at Devon, in a daze." His smile was bitter.
"Evenings, a middy took me out"
A
window opened. "That's when you began to drink."
"We
found a barkeep who didn't notice I wore gray."
"Oh,
Tad."
"I'd
been ... I couldn't wait for Pa to arrive. My ratings, my reports were decent.
More than that. He'd have glanced at them, smiled in mat way he had, looked at
me with such pride." His eyes were wet. "But that's not how it
was,"
I
yearned to hug him, but I was stuck in a bloody chair, and it wouldn't be
right. Not if I was SecGen and his C.O. to boot.
"And
now, to whom do you show your ratings?"
A
shrug. "No one. It doesn't matter." His tone was elaborately casual.
We'd
both lost fathers at Academy. His had vanished in fire, mine simply strode
away. Would he ever recover?
Would
I?
"Come
here, lad." I tugged him nearer the chair. To his astonishment, I pulled
him to my chest.
After a
time, my jacket was damp.
CHAPTER
10
1 wo
dreary days passed. Branstead toiled in New York with the aftershocks of the
failed Territorial coup. I sought Mark Tilnitz, but he made himself
unavailable. Meanwhile, the Victoria and Albeit investigation made slow
progress. We now knew a great deal more about the terrorist dead, their
families, their friends, their work. But nothing about their living cohorts.
Seething,
Mikhael Tamarov joined Anselm and the cadet at exercises. He stalked off after
forty minutes; I gave him forty minutes with Derek.
The
next day, he worked an hour and a half.
Outside
my home, throngs gathered each day; tourists, me curious, the desperate. Word
of my sojourn outside me hospital had spread. On a whim, I made Karen open the
gate, let the seekers in a few at a time, while I sat in the courtyard.
In the
afternoons I struggled through paperwork with Bevin and the middy. In three
days* time I would leave with Philip for whatever mysterious journey he had in
mind. I had to clear my desk.
I had
an appointment with the neurologists; to keep peace I let Karen Bums arrange
the outing. Arlene insisted on going as well. With reluctance, I acquiesced. If
the news were bad, I wasn't sure I wanted her to hear. I'd
have
arrangements to make, preparatory to my end, that she might want to block.
I'd
considered making a life of it in the chair. If that was what Lord God wanted
for me ...
But I'd
defied Him so often it was becoming a habit. There was no way I could earn his
Hell more than I already had. So I would kill myself, rather than struggle to
hoist myself on the toilet, toil to dress myself, roll about my compound
dependent on aides to lift me up the stairs.
Life
wasn't so precious as that. Not when I'd sailed to the stars.
"May
I come in, please?" Mikhael. His wiry hair was neatly brushed, his shirt
pressed.
I
gestured to a seat.
"I
want more ,.." He reined himself in, started over. "There's just so
much calisthenics I can handle. What if 1 want more time with Mr. Carr?"
"Cadets
exercise two hours a day."
"I'm
no frazzing cadet!"
"Certainly
not; there's no way they'd have you."
"That's
not fair."
1
couldn't abide his sullenness. "Get out,"
His
running steps faded up the stairs.
I toyed
with my holovid, furious at him. At myself. I wheeled out, to the foot of the
stairs, opened my mouth to call him down.
A faint
sound. Was it a sob?
Bevin
and Anselm were nowhere in sight. Who would lift me? With a muttered epithet I
hoisted myself to the bottom step, sat facing downward. One stair at a time, I
dragged my lower body upward. Halfway up I stopped, worked my way out of my
jacket so as not to roast. Then I labored on my way.
At the
top I met Carla Tamarov. She'd been watching. "Go down, please. Find
someone to help with my chair."
"You
made him cry."
"Yes.
I do that."
She
trotted down the stairs. Sitting, I dragged myself toward Mikhael's room. I
knocked, reached up, swung the door open.
"Get—"
His eyes widened. Disheveled, perspiring, I was a sight.
I
hauled myself toward his bed. "Alexi would give you comfort. I don't know
how."
"I
don't need you." His tone was scornful.
"You
do." I was bitter. 'There's no one else,"
'To do
what?"
"Help
me up. 1*11 show you,**
Puzzled,
he helped hoist me onto the bed. I pulled my legs straight, paused for breath.
I took his chin, held it so his eyes faced mine. "I'm sorry I chased you
out. I loved your father. If I were dead, he'd have cared for my son too."
He
jerked from my grasp, spun to the wall,
"Your
mother is ... overwhelmed."
"I
know," His voice was muffled.
"Shall
I ask her if you can stay awhile?" What was I saying? I hadn't time enough
for my daily holochips, to say nothing of the middy, Arlene. P.T..,,
"We
wouldn't get along a minute,"
He was
right. Thank heavens one of us had sense to know it.
"Don't
discredit what you wen to me. And still are,* Alexi, in my Lunapolis suite,
I
considered,
Mikhael
looked away. "You're scowling.**
"If
your father saw how you behaved in my house, what would he say?"
"I
have no idea."
"Tell
me!" I gripped his wrist,
He
shrugged, but I held him tightly. "He'd... I don't—*1
Suddenly
his voice became Alexi's. "Straighten out, joey, and I mean RIGHT
NOW!" He reddened.
I
turned his face to mine. I said slowly, levelly, "Straighten out, joey,
and I mean right now."
"What
do ... he's gone and you can't—"
"I
did. I'll ask your mother."
"Ask
me what?" Moira stood at the door, her daughter watching from behind.
"If
Mikhael can stay a couple of months. He needs .. ." I wasn't sure what.
"It's
up to him." Softly, she brushed a lock of hair from his eyes. "Or you
can go with us to Kiev,"
We
waited.
"I'm
spoiled and sullen, remember? And you don't like me."
"Can
we be alone a moment?" I waited until the door shut. "You're all that
I said, joey. And I despise your behavior."
He
bridled.
"As
Alexi would." I let go his chin. "You need kindness. More than I'm
used to giving. But that's not all of it,"
His
voice was subdued. "I've been upset."
"Cry
for Alexi. I'll respect that. But act to make him proud. And yourself." It
was all I knew of life.
"I
miss him so!" A cry from the heart.
"As
do I. Are you staying?"
•Til
think about it."
"Decide
now." My back throbbed abominably, I was near tears, and I needed an end
to it.
"You'll
be rough on me.**
"When
you deserve it."
"I'm
almost grown. I don't need someone trying to be my father."
"Then
leave with Moira. Or go off on your own." I raised my voice. "Moira,
is my chair upstairs?"
He
pounded a pillow. "All right, God damn it, I'll stay!"
"No
dinner tonight," I shot back. "I won't tolerate blasphemy."
Straining, I managed to reach the doorknob. Bevin and Arlene waited with my
chair. "Roll it in, would you?"
"And
if I say it again?"
'Til
have you strapped. On the other hand, two hours with Anselm tomorrow and you
get as much with Mr. Carr. And more time with me. I'll try to think of stories
he doesn't know. Cadets manage two hours. You can."
"I'm
going to hate this." His wave took in the room, the house, me.
I
smiled. "But it's good for you."
In the
morning, when Bevin and I came in to work, a hand-scrawled note was propped on
my holovid. "Sir, I'm placing myself on report as ordered. Midshipman
Thadeus Anselm."
I
groaned. "Where's our middy?**
"In
his room, I think."
"Get
him."
Bevin
glanced at the caller.
"Run
upstairs and fetch him. I expect him here in the next minute." I was
barely civil.
"Aye
aye, sir!" He dashed out.
When
they raced in Anselm was still thrusting his shirt into his pants.
"Midshipman Anselm reporting!"
"Stand
at attention. Danil, wait outside." Holding his note, I regarded him
balefully. "You disobeyed?"
His
eyes were locked front. "Yes, sir."
"Give
me specifics."
"I
had—" He took a deep breath. "Yesterday afternoon, sir, while you
were with Mikhael, I went to your liquor cabinet, helped myself to some
bourbon,"
I
roared, "You won't get away with it!" My fist crashed on the desk,
sent the holovid flying.
He made
no response.
"Well?"
I knew that was unfair. I hadn't asked a question, and held at attention, he
wasn't free to speak.
"Yes,
sir, I won't get away with it. I knew that when I put myself on report."
His forehead had a faint sheen. "How much?" "Bourbon? A few
slugs."
Thanks
to my dead legs I couldn't launch myself from my chair. I pounded the arm.
"Contemptible. Disgraceful."
"Yes,
sir, it is." His voice quavered. I eyed him sourly. His stomach was sucked
tight, hands pressed to his sides. Sighing, I reached for my official
letterhead. It didn't take long to write my note.
"Finish
dressing. Go at once to the Potomac Naval Station, give this to the duty
officer. This time you'll be put across a real barrel." "Aye aye,
sir," He took the note. "On your return, stop at a liquor store and
replace my bottle of bourbon from your own funds." "Aye aye,
sir."
"Report
to me afterward, Mr. Anselm. We'll talk. Dismissed."
With
proper precision he saluted, wheeled, and marched out.
Whatever
work we dealt with that morning, I barely knew. It was just before lunch when
Anselm knocked dejectedly at my door.
"Midshipman
Anselm reporting discipline, sir," He had no need to tell me. It was
evident in his gait and the misery in his countenance.
"Very
well. That's all for now, Danil. Tad, stand or sit, as you prefer."
Gingerly,
Anselm put himself in a chair, twisted so he rested on his side. "I wish
it hadn't been necessary to cane you. I admire your courage in placing yourself
on report. You acted honorably."
"It
was an order."
"So
was not drinking."
"I
couldn't..." His eyes misted. "I couldn't help that."
My tone
was gentle. "Help me understand why."
"Must
I?"
I
relented. "No." I could punish his acts, but not invade his thoughts,
For a
long time there was only the sound of his breathing. Then, "You ever have
a dream that came back?"
"When
I was younger." I would wake sweating, with the image of Father striding
from Academy's gate. No doubt Father loved me, after his fashion, though he
rarely showed it.
"I
have one. It's ... sir, I know I've no right to ask, especially today,
but..." He swallowed. "Don't laugh at me. I couldn't stand it."
"I
won't."
"I've
had it about a dozen times. I'm in a train station, the HiTrans terminal, I
think. I'm on the platform. I'm with my father, and a train is about to
leave."
Silent,
I rolled from behind the desk.
"We
board the train. Only, he's inside, and I'm not. I don't know why, I try to get
on, but the doors are shut And then the—the ... the ..." He fought for
control. "The train starts out of the station. Slowly at first. Pa is
standing by the door, looking sadly through the glass. I'm running alongside,
trying to get in, to go with him. The train moves faster, until I can't keep
up. He's looking back at me through the glass as the train pulls out. Leaving
me alone."
I
didn't dare speak.
"And
then I wake. Usually I'm crying."
"God
in heaven."
"I
dreamed it again yesterday,**
"And
so you had my bourbon."
"Yes,
sir. I did."
"Very
well. I know your rump smarts; take the afternoon off."
"Aye
aye, sir. Thank you."
"If
you drink again, you'll be caned again. It's that sim-pie."
"Yes,
sir."
I
hesitated, decided to throw caution to the winds. "A standing order: if
you have the dream again, you're to wake me immediately. Acknowledge."
"Orders
received and understood, sir. If I have the dream again, I'm to wake you.**
"Dismissed."
In a
bright-lit examining room at Boland Memorial, I buttoned my shirt.
"So?"
Dr.
Knorr said brightly, "It's going as well as can be expected."
Arlene
tapped her foot. "Which means?"
"The
incision is healed, there's no infection."
"He
has horrid stabbing pains. Sometimes, at night—"
I
squirmed. It was my body, my decision whether to complain.
"It's
a good sign, actually. The connections aren't entirely severed." Knorr's
hands spread in an apologetic gesture. "And now you're using muscles you
never used. Imagine an old house that's stood for years. You replace half the
basement beams. It will creak a bit, as it settles." "That's the
silliest—" "Nick." Her warning tone. "Well, it is. Can't
any of you speak plainly?" "What do you want me to say, Mr.
SecGen?" I took a deep breath, and another. "The operation to restore
my legs?"
"It
looks promising, especially as you still have some feeling at groin level. I'll
want you to see Ghenili."
"How
soon can he be here?"
"You'll
have to go to Lunapolis."
I
bristled. "I'm paraplegic and I have work waiting. Call him here."
"That
won't be possible." He raised a hand to forestall my objection. "All
his diagnostic equipment is at his clinic. He can't relocate his practice for
one patient.**
I
struggled from the table to my chair. "Good day."
"Nick,
let him—"
"Out,
chair. To the helipad." We lurched to the door.
My wife
sighed, followed to the hall. Karen Burns and her detail fell into step.
Arlene
asked, "What did that accomplish?"
"The
arrogance of him. That snide, supercilious, pompous—"
"Hold,
chair." Her tone was a command. Surprisingly, the machine obeyed.
"What did you achieve, Nick? A call aloft, and Ghenili could refuse to see
you."
"I'll
break him. I'll call challenge. I'll have him--'*
She
bent to put both hands on the arms of my chair, faced me eye to eye.
"Enough."
I
swallowed. "Am I that out of line?"
"Yes.**
"Arggh.
It's just... I hate doctors." The image flashed of Dr. Uburu, on Hibernia,
whose gentle decency succored me more than once. Of Dr. Bros on Portia, who'd
delivered my first child. "Well, most of them."
She
regarded me a moment, kissed me gravely on the nose.
"Arrange
it for me, will you, hon? I don't want to speak to Knorr again."
"All
right."
"Let's
go home."
"In
a bit. I've arranged a surprise."
"Karen
doesn't like surprises." We'd achieved a truce, of a sort
"She
knows."
The
heli lifted off as soon as we were strapped in. It set down, a few minutes
later, on a rooftop. "Which tower—"
"Franjee
Four." It was one of the many towers that had sprung out of the rubble of
Lower New York, in the horrid ruin of the Transpop Rebellion. After the
devastation of the lasers, it had been all I could do to preserve their
culture. For every tower, I'd seen that blocks of neighborhood were rebuilt.
"Robbie
Boland?"
She
nodded. "Dinner."
Perhaps
he wanted to toast our defeat of the Terries in the Assembly. I wouldn't
begrudge his celebration.
We
crowded into the elevator. As always, Karen sent security joeys ahead. Lord
knew how many residents of the tower were barred from their lifts, so I could
descend in safety.
Hands
at their guns, Security took us to his apartment. I insisted they wait in the
hall. Only Karen accompanied us within.
"Welcome,
sir." Robbie stood aside.
In the
living room two handsome young men waited to greet me. Jared Tenere, and my
Philip.
"Hallo,
boys." I held out a hand. Jared shook with me. P.T. hugged me. I patted
his back.
We
started with cocktails. "What did the doctors say, Fathr
I
grimaced. "Don't remind me."
"Are
you well enough to travel?"
"If
I don't have to dance." Why did my load seem lighter for P.T.'s presence?
How
could I have let our estrangement drag on for
years?
Over dinner and wine, we chatted amiably about poli-
tics,
sport, the Navy. For almost the first time, I observed my son with Jared,
outside my home. Now and then Jared rested a hand on his. I wondered if they
would adopt, as Philip suggested. If he was omni, as he'd said, would I ever
see grandchildren of my blood?
Moodily,
I refilled my wineglass.
He was
my only child. There was Nate, of course, long dead. And perhaps I could call
sons the many youngsters who'd followed me to their doom. Even now, I held
innocent lives in my hands. Danil Bevin, fearless in the passion of truth.
Anselm, accepting even my harsh guidance to save himself. Young Mikhael,
desperate for a father forever lost.
If only
I could offer more. All I had was myself, flawed, choleric, helpless.
"Path,
why are you weeping?" Philip rose, hurried around the table.
"Because
I'm becoming an old man. Because I'm drunk. Because I love you." I fell
into his embrace.
Wisely,
they gave me little more wine. Over time, my head cleared. After dessert, we
adjourned to a huge room whose balcony and picture windows overlooked the
reclaimed park, a view only the very wealthy could afford. When I'd been a
young officer, I'd visited apartments such as these, and felt only contempt for
the occupants.
They
said time brings wisdom.
Our
mood was mellow. I reminisced about my better days in the Navy. Karen sat
quietly in the corner.
Jared
perched cross-legged on the floor, near his guardian. "Have you seen
Galactic, Uncle Rob?"
"Not
yet. I keep meaning to go aloft." As Senator, and confidant of the SecGen,
Boland would have no difficulty gaining entry.
"We
could have toured her with Father, if we'd stayed at Earthport." Philip.
"And
Mother." Arlene's tone was tart. "You always speak as if Nick was the
only officer in the family."
"Oops.
Sorry, ma'am." Philip smiled weakly. Even in the depths of his
adolescence, he'd been unstinting in his courtesy. "You were aboard. Tell
us what we missed."
"A
floating palace. I'm not sure I approve."
"I'm
appalled," I said. "Rob, how did we let the Navy go so wrong?"
"Admiralty
has a mind of its own. We can't micro-manage every detail."
The
devil," Jared said, "is in the details." I eyed him
suspiciously, not sure whether he was blasphemous.
He
blushed. "I read that somewhere." Rob patted him absently. "Sir,
have you met with the Board of Admiralty lately?"
"Not
all of them," I said, "but I intend to." There's a clique of
officers who aren't shy about expressing their views. Their politics are ...
outdated." "I've met a few."
"They're
a danger. We can't start a war to reclaim the colonies; anyone with sense knows
that, but these joeys would devote our whole budget to Naval expansion. I'd
like to know Admiralty has a grasp of the situation." Rob was blunt.
"The sooner you weed them out, the better." I waved it away. "A
long cruise or two will settle them." "Do it soon, then." Boland
sounded uneasy. "What with the eco-terrorists, your disability, the
hotheads in the Assembly—"
"Rob,
don't be alarmist. I'll look into it." No matter what, we could count on
the Navy. The Naval Service was our lifeline to the colonies; it carried the
cargoes that nourished our world. And the Navy knew it. Her officers were
steeped in honor and proud of their myriad responsibilities.
I
drowsed on the ride back to Washington, glad for once that we flew in a huge
jet instead of the clattering heli. I dialed my light low, stretched out in my
seat, dozed contentedly.
Home at
last, I got myself ready for bed, remembering just before I climbed out of the
chair to say good night to Mikhael. He was half-asleep, and if he resented my
intrusion, he gave no sign.
Gratefully,
I dragged myself into bed. I snuggled next to Arlene, reveled in her warmth,
fell into sleep.
The
Venturas were stunning. Their bristling peaks dominated Hope Nation's
uninhabited western continent. Derek sweated happily as we scrambled through
scrub and brush to the far side of the valley. We caught glimpses of the icy
pool that was our goal.
"Race
you, sir? "
I was
Captain and he a mere middy, but on our glorious furlough we'd relaxed the
rules. "Don't be silly. What's that?" I pointed up the MIL
As soon
as his head turned I charged ahead, branches whipping at my face.
"Hey!
Wait!" He came crashing after.
I
thundered down the slope, pulling my shirt from my pants, fumbling at the
buttons. I risked a glance back. The middy was gaining.
My legs
pumped. My chest heaved. God, it was fine to be young.
"Nick?"
/ would
just beat him. It would be close. I thudded through tall grasses, panting. A
low-hanging branch loomed; I scrambled through the gap.
"Nicky?"
"Got
you, Middy!" I could barely gasp the words. "Last one in is a—"
"Nick!"
I came
awake, heart pounding.
"Hon,
you were thrashing about. Was it a nightmare?"
No.
The
nightmare was in waking. I clutched her like a drowning man a liferaft, my head
pressed to her breast.
Wretched
hours later, soothed at last by the soft steady stroke of her palm, I slept.
PART
II
September,
in the Year
of
our Lord 2241
CHAPTER
11
1 ou'll
behave?"
Mikhael
looked uncomfortable. "Yes, sir."
"What
do I expect?" I rolled from behind my desk.
He
rolled his eyes. "You know I won't think of everything."
"I'll
give you a start. Courtesy to Arlene, while I'm gone. Calisthenics with Mr.
Anselm. A bath every day."
"Why
are you down on me? I'm trying not to give you trouble."
"You've
done well the past few days. I'm proud of you."
"When
you get back, Mr. Carr will be gone."
"He
has to go back to work. We'll see him again." Derek's ship wouldn't leave
for a month.
"Why
can't I go with you?"
"P.T.
needs me alone. I don't know why. I'll call every day."
"Yeah."
I
waited.
"Yes,
sir." It still came hard. After each day of Derek's stories, Mikhael came
farther out of his shell, made a greater effort to please me.
I'd
asked Derek why. "Not all of my stories are of Alexi," was all he
said. "Some are of you." Incomprehensible.
"Tell
Philip I'm ready." I keyed the caller. "Danil?" In seconds, the
cadet appeared with his duffel. He must have been waiting on the stair.
"Where's my gear?"
"In
the heli, sir." Bevin grinned from ear to ear, like a foolish puppy. As
instructed, he was in civilian garb so as not to call attention to me.
"What's
your problem?' I tried to sound severe.
"Nothing,
sir. I'm just happy."
At the
helipad, Karen Burns intercepted my chair. Her tone was cold. "Mr. SecGen,
again I protest."
"Noted.
I'll check in at least once a day, and I'll call in an emergency." As if
that would be any use.
"We'll
monitor your transponder."
"Very
well."
P.T.
and Jared Tenere strolled to the heli, carrying their gear. Arlene walked with
Philip, arm in arm.
"Hon,
do you know where they're taking me?"
"Don't
ask.**
That
means you do."
"Philip
and I had a chat." She gave him a casual hug. "Take care of your
father."
"I
will. Mom." He busied himself helping Jared load the duffels.
"I
didn't know what to bring." My tone had a hint of reproach,
Arlene
was firm. "It's Philip's show."
I
growled, "It's my heli."
"Look
again, love." I did. The machine was smaller than my usual craft, and
showed more wear,
P.T.
said, "I rented it"
"Where'd
you get the coinT* I doubted his work with the Enviro Council paid much; they
were always strapped for funds.
"The
money Grandma Sanders left me." He seemed untroubled. "I told you it
was important, Path."
We said
our good-byes and lifted off.
Strapped
into the front seat, my chair stowed between Jared and the cadet, I tried to
let myself relax. P.T. was a competent pilot; I'd taught him myself.
I
peered at the compass. "Now, will you tell me?"
"Soon,
Path." We were heading west. "I thought you'd end up taking
her."
"Mom?
Oh, you mean Karen." I shrugged. "You can't blame her for trying to
do her job." I thought a moment. "That reminds me." I reached to
the dash, keyed off the transponder.
P,T,
raised an eyebrow.
"Otherwise
they'll track us. I presume you want privacy." If Karen traced our
transponder, next would come overflights, then open surveillance.
"Why
provoke them?"
"Adolescent
rebellion." It made no sense, but it quieted him awhile.
In the
back seat, Jared chatted animatedly with Danil, about puters, Arcvid, and nets.
The cadet was polite at first, as he was required to be with civilians. Soon he
warmed to Jared's enthusiasm, and the two were deep in discourse,
I
dozed.
"Path,
we're here," The engine was silent.
"That
was fast,"
"You've
been snoring three hours,"
I
peered about, "Where are we?"
"South
of Lawrence, Kansas." He jumped out, came around, swung open my door. To
Jared, "Help with the chair, love." The boys manhandled the machine
to the dusty ground. Philip made me comfortable, gave me a reassuring pat. Did
I seem that old, that doddering?
"Now
what?"
He
hauled out the sunshields, inserted an umbrella in the receptacle in my chair,
handed the others around, "lake a look. Path."
At
what? The remains of a swaybacked farmhouse sagged
in
tired defeat. Rusty barbed fencing still stood for most of its length, but
behind them acreage was gone to weed. Past the house, the lower half of a silo
jutted angrily at a lowering sky.
Philip
had brought me here for a reason. It was my job to figure out why, but I could
not. "Son, it's just an abandoned farm." The American countryside was
littered with them.
"Let's
sit on the porch." He strolled ahead. I was forced to follow, Bevin and
Jared flanking my chair. P.T. perched on the floor under the splintered rail,
his feet dangling. I rolled as far as the broken steps.
I
shivered. "It's cold."
"The
wind will be up soon. It's early afternoon. I'll have to get you under
cover."
I
glanced up at the sunshield. It would do. "I'm not afraid of a little
wind."
He
smiled, sat peaceably. Somewhat bored, I looked about, while the cadet scuffed
his feet in the dust
The
house had once been painted soft green, faded now to gray. An animal skittered
under the porch.
"The
last owners were the Wattersons. Janice and Tom. They bought it from her
father, in 2199."
Forty-two
years ago. I shrugged. "So?"
"The
place had been in her family for two and a half centuries, Path."
"Philip,
don't be cryptic. If you've something to—"
"When
did you stop trusting me?" His voice was sharp.
Why had
I agreed to this jaunt if I had no faith in my son? "I'm sorry."
They
grew sorghum, wheat, corn. Sometimes they'd put in beans. Janice's father was
named Roland. Roland Kitner. His friends all called him Rollo. He fanned here
with his own father. The high school he attended is three miles down that
road." He pointed.
Dutifully,
I peered, saw nothing.
"Janice
died a few years ago. She was a widow by then. Jared, roll Path's chair so he
can see the bam."
I
suppressed my annoyance, let the boy move me, scowled at the cowshed.
"She
became a widow in 2212, when Tom Watterson blew his brains out in that barn.
Their joeykids were seven and nine. The older girl—"
Enough.
"Son, why are you telling me this?" Wind ruffled my hair.
"I'm
personalizing, so you'll understand. With you, it's the only way."
I
snarled, "Don't patronize me!"
"Be
quiet and listen!"
I
gawped.
"I've
staked everything I have on this expedition! You owe me my chance."
"I'll
pay for the heli."
"You
will not!"
We glared
in mutual fury.
Jared
cleared his throat. "Please..." He looked from one to the other of
us.
I said
heavily, "Go on, Philip."
"First
National Bank of Irvington held a crop mortgage, Fanner's Bank the second.
Wheat prices were sky-high, but for some reason the Wattersons couldn't keep a
crop. The first year—2208—was a fluke. Everyone said so."
"And
they lost the farm. Get on with it."
"Not
the first year. Not until July 2212, after they tried every damn crop they
could plant, one after another!" Viciously, he tore a blade of grass that
poked through the floor.
"I'm
sorry for them, but that was twenty-nine years ago."
"Aye."
It startled me to hear him use the old speech. It recalled Father, in Cardiff.
"It wasn't just the Wattersons, sir. How many American farms went under in
2212?"
A gust
swirled dirt in a small dust devil.
I said,
"I've no idea."
"Six
thousand two hundred twelve, according to census." "How do you know
all this?" My wave took in the house, the barn, the fields.
"I've
studied." Philip sounded bitter. "How many were abandoned last
year?" "Ask my agri minister."
"Eleven
hundred fourteen. Not many, except as a percentage. There are so few left to
abandon. Did you know America was once the breadbasket of the world?"
Yes, I
knew. But that was what our colonies were for. I glanced upward at the
darkening sky. "Times have changed."
"Yes!"
Abruptly, he stood. "We'd better get you in the heli." Without leave,
he turned my chair, rolled me along the walk.
hi a
few moments I was glad he did. The wind had come up sharply. Clouds scudded
overhead. Dust swirled.
"Help
me cover the intakes!" Philip had to shout to be heard. Danil scrambled to
help. Agile as a monkey, he climbed atop our craft, helped P.T. adjust tarps.
"Please,
Lord." Jared spoke softly, almost in my ear. "No tornadoes. Not
today." He rocked. "Are you frightened, son?"
"No.
Yes." His hand sought mine. "I'm supposed to avoid anxiety. It throws
me out of balance." "We'll be all right." My tone was gruff. A
sudden roar, as the door was yanked open. P.T. and Danil jumped into the heli.
The cadet was panting happily. "What a zark!" Jared smiled weakly.
"This
would be a dust bowl," Philip shouted, "except for the daily
rain." As if on cue, a few drops splattered the windshield. "Nothing
but weeds would grow for Janice and Tom, you see. Any crop that grew high
enough, the wind got. But rainfall was up by thirty-two inches a year. It
washed out the
seed.
The fields were a sea of mud and weeds. If you'd like, in an hour I'll show
you. I'll have to carry you, I think."
"We
have to stay here an hour?"
"I
can't fly in this, Path." Around us, wind howled and battered at the
windows. Our blades swung wildly, disengaged.
Jared
moaned.
Outside,
the drumming crash of hail.
I said
harshly, "Let Danil sit in front with me." Startled, P.T. gave way,
moved to the rear with Jared. I hoped it would help.
Late in
the afternoon, the weather calm, we lifted off from a soggy field. Philip spoke
loudly, over the engine's whine. "Notice the landscape, Path. This was
once the most productive land in the world." Obligingly, he tilted to
provide a view of the lacerated land.
I hung
tight
"Now
where?" It was getting late.
"I've
booked us rooms in Florida."
"Zarky!"
Bevin bounced in his seat
"Cadet!"
He
subsided. Grumbling, I tightened my strap.
"Where
the hell have you been, Mr. SecGen?" Karen's voice was tight.
I
grimaced at the caller. I'd intended to be apologetic, but her manner irked me.
"Out," I said coolly.
"I
have you at the Searest in Tampa." She was showing off.
"Very
well, next time I won't call."
"If
you're spotted..."
"There'll
be a nuisance. Autograph seekers, who knows what." I made no effort to
hide my sarcasm. We'd checked into the hotel without a problem. Of course, I'd
sat in the heli while Philip made the arrangements.
"I
see why Tilnitz resigned."
That's
quite enough." I broke the connection. I'd promised to call, not to put up
with her presumption. Were they my detail, or I theirs?
Fuming,
I punched in Arlene's code, waited. "Hi, hon."
"All's
well. How goes it?"
"Lord
knows what Philip hopes to accomplish. If he expects me to go mushy and tearful
at a rotting farmhouse..."
Her
tone was dry. "I think he knows you better than that."
"Hmpff."
I changed the subject. "Is the middy behaving himselfr
"I
suppose. I don't take inventory."
**I
left him chores. See that he's kept busy, would you?"
"I'll
have him to dinner tonight."
"No
need to spoil him. How was Mikhael?"
**A bit
sullen, after you left I put him to work in the sheds."
"He
didn't mind?"
"Yes,
he rather did." Her tone was cool.
I
grinned. An old salt like Arlene, used to handling middies shipboard, wouldn't
take guff from a teenager. Mikhael would have to learn.
"Moira
doesn't object?"
"She
asked me to do the same with Carla. Nick, some joeys just shouldn't be
parents."
"Don't
bring that up." During the Kahn Administration, the licensing bill had almost
wrecked the Terrie Party. It failed, but Arlene and I had differed sharply on
its provisions.
"I
almost wish P.T. were young again," she said wistfully.
"He'd
set Mikhael an example."
"He
was a good lad," I said. Then, grudgingly, "Still is."
Her
mind was still on Moira Tamarov. "It was no accident," she said.
"We made him so."
We
chatted a bit longer, and rang off.
In the
morning, the boys and I had breakfast in the hotel restaurant I ignored odd
looks and whispers. One joey actually peered at me and told his wife, "He
looks just like the SecGen." Of course, they knew it was out of the
question for the head of Government to spend the night in such a seedy,
run-down inn; my resemblance to the SecGen was mere coincidence. I found I was actually
enjoying myself.
On the
way to the heli, Bevin picked up a handful of pebbles, skipped them one by one
across the lot
"Cadet..."
It was a warning growl,
P.T.
said, "Why not let him play?"
"Because..."
I searched for a reason, gave it up. "Carry on, Danil." My own fault
dragooning a joeykid out of Academy. He hadn't even the maturity of a middy. I
snorted. The maturity of a middy like Anselm. I asked Bevin suddenly,
"Have you ever tasted liquor?"
Danil's
eyes widened. "No, sir. It's illegal.**
Our
gear packed, we lifted off. Squinting into the unrelenting glare of the sun, I
asked, "Where to?"
"A
few miles south."
Below,
an incomplete causeway stretched across a spacious bay. Philip slowed, banked
to give me a view.
"All
right I've seen it Where are we headed?"
"This
is it" We swooped down. When the blades came to a stop he flung open the
door.
The air
was a soggy brick: hot heavy, unyielding. I wore no tie, but I felt like
whipping off my shirt "People live in mis climate?"
"It's
worse than it used to be."
I
rolled my eyes at the lecture I'd no doubt triggered. "Do tell."
"We're
on the run-up to the Tampa Bay bridge. The causeway began as an American
interstate connecting Tampa to St Petersburg. Let's get you in the chair."
Danil jumped out tugged at my transport tongue in his teeth.
"Easy,
joey." Jared worked the other end. Between them, they lowered the machine
to the ground. "Let me help you, sir." With surprising gentleness,
Jared guided me to the chair. Abruptly he pulled a handkerchief, wiped my brow.
"You'll need your umbrella." He raised it. RT. looked on, a smile in
his eyes.
I asked
my son, "What do you want me to do?**
"Ride
along the roadway."
Til be
ran down."
That's
not possible." He sounded sad. "It's been closed twenty years."
"Whyr
"Tell
your chair to go south."
In for
a pence... "South, chair. Along the roadway."
The
concrete roadbed was cracked and broken. We veered around huge potholes, past
piles of driftwood. Philip trotted to keep pace. 'Tides, Path. They're
up..."
'Two
point seven feet." The zines parroted the figure, over and again.
"No,
sir, that's only the last four decades." He drew breath. "The bridge
is a hundred seventy years old. Add another foot and a half."
"Slow,
chair." If I weren't careful I'd give RT. heatstroke. "Surely they
built five feet over water level?"
"More
than that; they weren't idiots in the twentieth. It's storm surges, Path."
"Hold,
chair." He leaned on the arm; I patted his hand to forestall his speech.
"Get your breath. I'm sorry." I waited.
"A
hundred years ago, high tides began to wash over the roadway. The road people
repaired the damage."
"Get
under my shade."
"Yes,
sir. After a time, water again undercut the roadway. We rebuilt. That is, the
old American Government; they were still independent then. Two billion of their
dollars. Fifteen years later, water was again lapping over the road. No one
knew tides would rise so fast. See over there? It was a fishing pier. Joeys
would drive out to the bridge, park, fish any time of day or night."
"Why
don't they still?"
He
looked at me strangely. "Path, they can't get here. The road's washed out
in thirteen places."
"Oh."
I felt a fool.
"Look
at the bridge."
"I
did."
"No,
really look."
I
studied the mighty span that soared into the distance. Elegant, slim supports
soared to the clouds. The causeway ran many miles, hugging the waterline, until
it reached the bridge. "It's beautiful."
"And
horribly expensive."
I
shrugged. "A pity." I wiped my face. At least the heli was
air-conditioned.
"Care
to see it up close?"
"Yes."
"We
can't reach it The bridge is isolated. I suppose in a stunt heli it might be
possible to land between the pillars."
Huge
cables, mighty pylons, a few gulls. Other than ourselves, not a soul was in
sight
"At
its peak, this roadway served ninety million vehicles a year. SecGen Von
Walthers authorized vast sums for dredging the bay. See those rocks? They were
a breakwater."
"Are
we done?"
"Path,
don't you care?"
"Yes,
it was a stupid waste of resources. I don't mink I've let money be spent so
foolishly on my watch."
"Path,
ninety million vehicles. Even discounting multiples, that means millions of
citizens who can't cross the bay."
"Isn't
there a new bridge?"
"Yes,
but the feeder routes..." He made a face.
The sun
was broiling me. "Anything else, son?"
"I
guess not" He sounded disconsolate. "We'll talk over lunch."
A few
minutes later we lifted off. I basked in the blessed cool.
We
headed north. Somewhere in the Carolines, he set us down. The restaurant was
pleasant enough. Philip fished in his pocket, gave Jared and Danil coin.
"I need to speak with Father alone." The two settled at another
table.
Philip
waited for me to dig into soyburger and rice. "Path, do you see a
theme?"
The
world's going to hell." There was nothing I could do about it
"Anything
else?"
"You've
been brainwashed by your lunatic friends."
His
fingers tightened on his glass. "Is that all?"
"What
do you want me to say?"
"Excuse
me." A woman, tawdry in a purple jumpsuit and matching shades. "Are
you by any chance the SecGen?"
I
rolled my eyes. "Of course." My voice dripped with sarcasm.
"Well!"
She went off in a huff.
Philip
grinned. "You have the damnedest way of not Lying."
"Don't
blaspheme." But it had dissipated the strain between us. I took a fork of
rice. "P.T., I'm not an idiot. You're showing me enviro disasters. I don't
know why. Are you looking for a change of heart?"
"A
change of policy. Radical, extreme, fundamental. We haven't much time."
"Before
what?"
"Before
we make the planet vmsurvivable."
The
planet will survive." I made my tone light. "If it gets too rough,
there's always emigration. We'll board a liferaft"
He
gripped my arm with an iron hand. "Be serious. For once in your life,
don't evade me on the issue."
I tried
to twist loose, found I could not. "Let go my wrist!" My voice was
ice.
"Do
as I ask!"
"Let
go.r' At last, I clawed free. That's it, laddie. I'm
going
home." I spun my chair.
"You
gave me three days."
I
wheeled out of the restaurant. "Not anymore." He'd laid hand on me.
Were I younger... no, were I not tied to this bloody God-cursed chair...
He
caught me at the door. "I'm sorry."
"Out
of my way!"
He
stood aside. I barreled past. I'd find an air taxi, or call Karen Burns. I
wasn't dependent on him. Not yet.
He
found me in the lot. "Sir, I apologize. Truly." He dropped to one
knee, to my level. "I'll never hold you again."
I was
shaking. "If you were a boy I'd..."
"I'll
let you beat me now, if you'll forgive me after."
It was
like a splash of ice water. I closed my eyes, willed my heart to slow.
"Oh, Philip."
"I'm
going to rev in a moment Hold me."
I did.
I could feel him tremble.
When we
were calm, I gave him an awkward pat.
"Fath,
there's two more places I want to take you."
I
sighed. "All right" I'd nave to hold my temper.
"But
if you respect me as much as I do you, you owe me an answer. Why do you reject
enviro policies out of hand? Why won't you even discuss it?"
"Son,
I—"
He held
up a hand. "No. The truth or nothing."
I'd
raised a formidable child.
In the
sweltering parking lot I sat and mused. Enviros were all fundamentally
glitched, wanting to reverse Lord God's changes to our world. But there was
something more. I wasn't sure why I was loath to discuss it; there was no cause
for shame.
"Philip,
do you believe in Him?"
"Yes,
sir. Not quite the way you do."
I
wasn't sure what that meant but let it pass. "He is the center of my life,
no matter how badly I act."
"I
know."
"He
made the world in seven days. I'm not sure how, or how long were the days. I
also accept physics and geology." I smiled "And paleontology."
Father had taught me there was much we would not know. He accepted it, and
therefore, so did I. "This is His world. I believe that with all my soul.
But... soon or not, it will end."
"You
speak of the Apocalypse?"
"What
else? For the Lord Himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the
voice of the archangel Philip, don't you see how presumptuous it would be, to
try to alter His world?"
"We've
already altered it"
"But
not as a deliberate act, for the purpose of change. It suggests we're here to
stay, that His promise is false. That we have to safeguard the world for
infinite generations."
"But
we do!"
"That's
His role, not ours. To say otherwise is impertinent"
"We're
stewards of His—"
"No,
we're inheritors and possessors. Lord God gave us this Harm to do with as we
wished." My voice was hot "Ye shall inherit their land, and I will
give it unto you to possess it, a land thatfloweth with milk and honey. And
that's what
we've
done." He leaned over my chair. "Path, you'd let the Earth go to
hell
for some half-baked theology?^ "I ought to slap your face." My voice
was tight Philip nodded, unmoving. I turned away, or tried to. "If you
don't understand, I can't make you." His voice was dull. "We'll go on
as I planned. Perhaps..."
"Yesr
"You
asked if I believed Tonight Til get on my knees, as we did when I was young.
I'll pray for a miracle."
"Don't
blaspheme." But my heart wasn't in it
"Near
Ravensburg."
I
stretched, feeling every one of my years.
"A
valley in southern Bavaria, below the Alps. Tourists used to come from all over
the world."
"And
now the tides—"
"Please
don't joke. Those peaks"—he pointed past rolling hills—"they're over
twelve thousand feet high." In the distant heights, lightning flashed.
Gloomy
fields, brown grass, a lush fetid odor. A road, curving into a valley.
"That
chairlift. It was for skiing. There's still snow occasionally, but not enough
to make the business profitable."
"I
know the climate's warmed; it's true everywhere. Hauling me around the world
won't—"
"That's
not why we're here. Do you smell it?"
"Yes,
it's sort of a rich ..." I sniffed "Like a marsh."
"Rotting
wood. Come." He turned my chair. "Jared, care to hike with us? You
too, Danil. Bring the masks."
I
asked, "What for?"
"It
gets worse." We started down the road.
It was
a pleasant afternoon, though the sights would be gloriously enhanced if the sun
broke through the sullen clouds. We left the solar umbrellas behind. We
wouldn't be out all that long, and the weather report said gamma counts were
down.
The
road had been paved, but hadn't seen traffic for years; eager stalks of grass
sprang from cracks and fissures.
P.T.
strode at my side. 'This town was inhabited for two thousand years. The
earliest tourists were Roman."
Danil
squinted at the hills. "There's no trees."
"Very
few."
I said,
"Global warming doesn't kill trees."
"No,
Path. Acid rain does, and chemical pollutants."
"That's
under control. We've reduced emissions by thirty—"
"No,
we haven't We've reduced their rate of increase. It's by no means the same. The
trees started dying in earnest seventy years ago. Manfred Rolf was
burgermeister then. He lived by the stream, in a... never mind, you'll see it
in
a
moment."
The air
was humid, but tolerable. Altitude had its advantages. I let myself relax,
while Philip wheeled me along, past ancient dwellings with picturesque mansard
roofs. No one was in sight. Was the town abandoned?
"Old
Manfred was a difficult man. Big bushy eyebrows, a hot temper. His house
belonged to his grandfather, and his grandfather's grandfather before him. It
was built after the Last War."
"Did
he shoot himself in the barn?"
"Please,
Path. I'm really begging you. No more."
"I'm
sorry." Too late, I was contrite.
I
jounced past scraggly bushes, sodden fields, the ruins of what might have been
a store.
"He
died in bed, as a man should. When he wasn't mayor, he was a puter technician.
Quite good at it, for his day."
I held
my peace. Philip would come to the point
"Town
business didn't take much of his time. The only industry was tourism, and that
consisted merely of the hotels and restaurants that fanned out from the
square."
Danil
stooped to pick up pebbles. Ahead, the road turned.
"You
can hear the stream. We'll see it in a moment All these villages started out as
mill towns. Water ground the grain."
Near
the stream, the cement roadway gave way to gravel A crude, temporary metal
footbridge had been thrown over a brisk stream whose channel was lined with
large rounded rocks. Beyond was the center of town. P.T. jounced and rocked my
chair across. "There's Manfred's house."
"Wherer
"Those
foundations. The flood of '99 was the highest in
memory.
By then all the lower houses had gone; folk retreated to the hills."
I
stared balefully at the jagged stones. Roods had been with us a long time. Ever
since Noah.
The
road curved sharply. P.T. strode at a brisk pace, pushing my chair.
We
turned the bend. "The last burgermeister was Hermann Rolf. Manfred's
grandson, as it happens. He lived with his wife—"
I
caught my breath.
It was
a scene of appalling devastation. Windows, doors, walls lay strewn about Downed
trees had been buried this way and that.
"Hurricanes?
Tornadoes?"
"No,
Path. Floods. You see, those hills used to be covered with trees. The
pollutants killed them, and vegetation holds water. Each year, the floods get
worse."
"So,
one town—"
"It
isn't one town, Path. The wind blows from central Europe."
I
stirred, for once on sure ground. "The Balkans are catching up at last.
Finally their economies are strong enough to compete." Coal production was
up, iron was being gouged from the earth at a prodigious rate. And
manufactories like the state-of-the-art chip works at Dresden were a symbol of
Europe's brave new times.
He
said, "Lung cancer deaths are up thirty-seven percent Despite
anticars."
I
protested, 'That's worldwide." Aghast, I realized what I'd said. Rivulets
of doubt trickled through the stones of my certainty.
As if
understanding, P.T. patted my shoulder.
We
picked our way through rubble. A few raindrops splashed.
"Hermann
Rolf lived there, above the stream. He was
sixty
when he married; she was nineteen. They were deeply
in
love."
"Brake,
chair." I looked over my shoulder. "Son, how do
you
know these things?"
He
knelt by my side. "That's what I do, Path." His tone was sober.
"It's my project, when I'm not analyzing Win-stead's stats. I do research
for the Enviro Council, to put a human face on the disaster. Some of their P.R.
joeys make it up. All my stories are accurate."
He was
so solemn I yearned to hug him. Of course they were accurate. This was P.T.,
the boy I cherished.
"I
speak to survivors, to descendants. I find pictures, read old records. It's
much more interesting than stat analysis." "You can do anything you
set your hand at" The rain picked up. I wrapped my jacket tighter.
"Mostly." He was free of false modesty. "Her name— Frau Rolf—was
Marlena. She played piano like an angel. Had taken lessons since she was five.
No children, but they kept hoping, despite the difference in their age." I
steeled myself. "What happened to him?" "They had six years
together. The spring of 2219, Burgermeister Rolf attended a party conference in
Berlin. It was a bad season for rain. Most of Europe was drenched." He
glanced at the grim sky, the brooding peaks, above which ominous lightning
flashed. "In fact, we should get going." "Finish." After my
derision, I owed him that. "What's to say? A terrible storm swept the
hills. The callers were out, he hurried home. Three days later when they dug
out the house, they found Marlena wedged under the bed clutching a bisque doll.
She'd drowned in mud." "Lord Christ."
"Amen.
It broke him. He's still alive, at a nursing home in Munich. I'll take you to
see him if you like." "No. Please, no."
Surreptitiously,
Bevin ran a sleeve across his eyes. As if by chance, Jared's arm fell across his
shoulder.
A slow
roll of kettledrums in the distant hills.
"They
didn't need a mayor after 2219. No one wanted to rebuild. Path, it was the
trees. Tall leafless stalks line those ridges mile upon mile, like ghostly
sentries of His creation. Saplings struggle, and fall half-grown. When the wind
is right..." His voice was ragged. "I wish I could show you. Today we
don't need a mask."
"I
believe you." I could barely hear myself.
"I
collected cards, pictures, holos. I couldn't stop. Bavaria was so beautiful,
Path. This was Eden." He tried to speak, fell silent
Jared
took his arm, led him to a secluded pile of brush. I huddled within my coat,
watching raindrops strike the gravel.
After a
time Danil said, "Do something, Mr. SecGen."
"What,
boy? Send cadets to replant the mountainside? Close the Dresden plants? Ruin
Eastern Europe?"
"We
already did that" His tone was bitter. "My father thinks the only way
to save—"
"Don't
start I warn you."
"Sir,
I— Aye aye, sir. May I speak my mind?"
"No."
I could abide Philip's passion; he was my son. But not an enviroist lecture
from the cadet Not today.
Footsteps.
"Sorry,
Path." P.T.'s tone was brisk. "You're soaked. Let's get moving."
He turned my chair. Danil, impatient, ran ahead.
My legs
were sopping, but I couldn't feel them. I'd have to be careful to avoid colds.
Any injury, for that matter. Without sensation, I risked—no, it wouldn't come
to that In two weeks' time I was to see Ghenili. Surgery would follow within
days. If it went wrong, I'd make an end.
'The
whole valley's abandoned?"
"Mostly.
A few farmers eke out—"
Danil's
shrill voice rose. "Hurry!" He dashed our way.
"Sir,
the creek..." He skidded to a halt. "The water's much higher. Louder
too. I don't like it." "Shit!" RT. pushed harder. "Jared,
ran ahead." "I stay with you."
I
snapped, "Are you all glitched? No one stays. Chair, faster. Across the
bridge. Don't throw me out." "I can't judge—"
"Stop
if you hear me yell from the ditch." "I'm not programmed to comply
with distant commands. Only when you're sitting—"
We
jounced over a rut. "Reprogram, then." All my life, puters had
plagued me. I hated them.
Bevin
had been right. The burble of the brook was definitely louder. We neared the
metal bridge. Under it, torrents swirled and eddied. The rocky walls of the
channel were submerged. White froth licked at the bridge supports. "Holy
Christ, it's moving!" Jared licked his lips. "No." I ordered the
chair to slow, approached cautiously. "Just vibrating. Help me across.
This bucket of chips may miscalculate."
"My
guidance systems—" "Stow it, chair."
Water
frothed and churned, barely a foot under the decking. Philip was calm.
"Path, I'll run across and get the heli. I can reland here."
"No
need. Boys, on three. One ... two ..." I spun my wheels.
They
raced me onto the bridge. A wheel caught; my chair lurched. I pitched to the
deck, struck my head.
Thunder
rattled. I lay dazed. Water splashed my chin.
"It's
moving!"
A plate
shivered under my ear. The bridge lurched. I rolled, caught myself at the edge.
"Hold
him!"
I
clawed at the rail. Philip snagged one arm, Jared the other. They dragged me
from the edge.
"I'm
all right"
The
bridge wasn't. Wavelets splashed on the flooring. "What's—"
"It's
rained hard in the hills." Philip.
"Put
me in the chair!"
"No
time. Pull, Jared!" Together they half dragged, half carried me to the
bank. Dam'1 danced helpless around us.
I
called, "Chair, roll! Now!" Without a passenger, the chair careened
off the bridge, sank itself in mud. Bevin ran to dislodge it, worked it free.
Water dripped in my eyes.
The
bridge groaned.
"We
need high ground!" P.T. spun, looked about.
"Put
me down!" They still held me; I was helpless. I tried to wriggle myself
free. As one, they let me go. I flopped in the mud, knocked my head yet again.
"P.T, start the god— the heli. Did you hear me. Move! Jared, put me in the
bloody chair!"
Philip
sprinted.
"Cadet,
I lost a shoe. Do you see it?"
To my
horror, Danil darted onto the bridge, scooped it up. I was a fool. He raced to
safety.
Granting,
Jared dragged me to the chair, heaved me in.
I
flopped in my seat, squishing, mud-soaked. I wiped water from my forehead; my
hand came away red.
Angry
white swirls chewed the banks of the creek.
"Chair,
to the heli!" We reeled down the road to the higher ground on which we'd
landed the heli.
Philip
jumped out, threw open the door. "You're injured?"
"No."
The
chair said reproachfully, "If you'd let me guide myself, I wouldn't have
overturned—"
"Shut
the fuck up!" Philip gave it a mighty kick that dented a wheel.
I
caught his hand. "I'm not hurt, son. Truly."
He
stifled a sound.
They
worked me into the heli, like a sodden sack. Danil pawed through my gear,
emerged with fresh trousers. Minutes later, the engine running, I sat shivering
before the heat vent, holding a handkerchief to the cut on my scalp.
Philip
strapped himself in.
I
muttered, "I could use a drink."
"So
could I.** Danil.
I
raised an eyebrow. "You said you didn't"
"Today
I'd start." His gaze was defiant.
When we
lifted off, the bridge still stood, engulfed in turbulent eddies.
CHAPTER
12
We've
got them." General Donner sounded triumphant
I
stared at my caller, biting my lip. "How can you be sure?" I lay on
my bed in a posh Munich hotel. A warm bam had done wonders, though getting
myself out of the tub unaided had been a battle. Afterward, I'd flopped on the
bath-mat like a beached fish.
"We
monitored every call every joey made, who had anything to do with the dead
terrorists, or Booker's family. The puters watched for patterns."
I
asked, "Only seven?"
"There
have to be more. That's why we haven't picked them up."
"It's
a risk."
"To
a degree, Mr. SecGen. But they can't sneeze without our knowing. We've
parabolic mikes, sensors above and beneath their flats, wires in their cars,
agents following everywhere."
"One
of your joeys will let himself be seen. They'll catch on."
"And
we take them in custody. It's under control, Mr. SecGen."
"Have
you found Booker?"
"Not
yet. P and D will reveal his whereabouts. One of them has to know."
"And if not?" He sounded patient. "We keep looking.**
"Be
careful, Donner. If they escape I'll..." No need to threaten. He knew.
"Keep it under wraps."
"No
one knows we found them but Ms. Burns from Naval Intelligence, and three of my
own U,N. Security aides. I didn't even tell the jerries."
"Very
well." We rang off.
I'd see
that P and D was authorized for the lot of them. This time we had the evidence,
and no rational judge could object. Our cadets would be avenged. And Alexi. I
sat brooding, until the caller woke me from a doze.
"It's
Mikhael, Ms. Seafort said I could call."
"How
are you?"
"Let
me go home." A silence, which I did nothing to break. "It's a
mistake, staying with you."
"Your
mother said two months."
"She
won't mind."
"I
will." The gash in my forehead throbbed. I would have a lump. Lord God
knew what the mediamen would make of it
"1
hate it here. I'm calling Mom."
"Be
silent!" I spoke as to a middy,
"She'll
send a frazzing ticket I'm out of here."
I
choked the caller, wishing it were he. "For the moment I'm your guardian.
You'll-"
"So?"
I
roared* "Put Arlene on the line! Do it now!"
"Aillsaid—*
This
instant!"
Long
moments passed.
Her
tone was cautious. "I hear you're on the warpath?"
"Give
him calisthenics 'til his tongue hangs out Put him
to
work, and ground him to his room otherwise. I'll be back day after tomorrow.
He's not to use the caller."
"He
irked your
"I
won't put up with—" Distant, impotent, I fumed. "I've caned middies
for less!"
"No
doubt."
I
gathered the shreds of my calm. "He wanted to go home. Why?"
"He
told a few tasteless jokes. I was a bit short with him."
"Such
as?"
"What
do you call a Hollander with a life vest? Bob. What's a Hollander doing in a
boat? Camping out"
"Ugh."
"N
icky, those joeys have been through hell since the polders flooded. I wish
you'd been here to greet them, that day you stayed at Academy. I wasn't that
hard on him, after all he's an adolescent, but—"
"Alexi
would be disgusted." I was sure of it Once, he'd heard our middies make
jokes about the transpops, and... I brought myself back to the present 'The
jokes were obnoxious, but more important Mikhael was rude to me. Deal with him,
hon. You have a knack with joeykids."
"Easy
for you to say, from across the globe." Her tone turned serious.
"Love, I spoke with Philip. He's rather upset."
It took
me aback. "Why?"
"He
says he hurt you. And that you mock him."
"Hon,
it's ..." I couldn't explain; it was too complicated. "I'm all right
And I won't mock. Now, as to Mikhael—"
"I'll
set him straight" Her tone was grim. Almost I pitied the boy. Arlene was
quite capable of enforcing her will. Even P.T. had learned that in Ms teen
years.
A
knock. I rolled to the door.
Jared
Tenere, shifting from foot to foot like an errant
Schoolboy.
"May I come in?" He squeezed past "P.T. thinks
I'm out
for a walk."
"Whyr
He sat.
"Mr. Seafort, I haven't known you long enough to... I mean, since our
talk..."
"It's
all right"
He
studied the carpet "I came to explain him."
I
snorted. "There's no need,"
"You're
wrong." His quiet assurance startled me. "You think he's...
impulsive, as he was as a boy,"
I
smiled. "You were more so."
"I
was glitched," A calm acceptance, that earned my approval. "But he's
planned mis trip for months. Years."
I
swallowed.
"My
Philip..." He came off the chair, settled on the floor at my feet, crossed
his legs. "He's the most passionate joey I ever met." A sudden blush.
"I don't mean that way, though even there..." A shy smile. "He'd
give his life for his beliefs. He's so intense he frightens me."
I said,
"A fanatic."
"Not
at all. He listens; fanatics don't You can convince him he's wrong, but that's
seldom,"
"I
wish I could,"
"He
wants desperately to persuade you, Mr. Seafort. I don't know what he'll do if
he fails."
"There
are other politicians."
"We've
lived together... how long now, five years? I love him. But you're still the
focus of his life. He reveres you. When he saw your blood... tonight I held him
for over an hour. He couldn't stop revving. He held it off all afternoon; he
couldn't let you see."
"Why
not?*
"He
was afraid you'd commit to help him, from pity,"
Oh,
Philip.
He
whispered, "You've so much power to hurt him,"
That's
not fair."
"It's
not that you try." He groped for words. "But you won't truly listen.
You won't open your heart to him. And you know, is it so terrible what he
wants? To bring the world back from ruin?"
"It's
not so simple."
"It
is, if you do it." His hand darted to my knee, for a fleeting moment
"If you simply do it."
I sat
silent a long while. "Rob Boland did a good job with you." My tone
was gruff.
"Uncle
Robbie saved my life." A tentative smile. That's all I came to say."
I
leaned forward, kissed him softly on the brow. 'Take careof my son."
Just
past midnight, the caller buzzed. Groggily, I switched it on. "Yes?"
"Mr.
Seafort? Cisno Valera."
I tried
to sit up, realized I'd have to haul my legs into position, gave it up.
"Something's gone wrong?"
"I
do wish you'd turn on visuals," My Deputy SecGen sounded peevish.
"It's so much easier, seeing who you're talking to."
I hated
visuals, and he knew it. Everyone knew, who'd ever called me. But no point
alienating Cisno* I'd embarrassed him enough in my hospital press conference. I
tried not to sigh aloud, "Just a moment."
With an
effort, I dragged my legs into position, sat up, propped pillows behind my
back, brushed back my hair. I flicked the visuals switch, waited for the
intellilens to find me, lock in its focus,
"Yes?"
Valera's
sallow face loomed. "Oh, sorry, I didn't realize you'd gone to bed. You're
going too far, with the enviro bills. The natives are restless,"
"What
natives?"
"The
Senate is up in arms," He spoke from his Rotunda
office.
He was staying late. No, it wasn't that late in North America. "For one
thing, why haven't you cracked down on the enviro fringe?"
I
raised an eyebrow. "You demand my explanation?" "Not I."
His tone was unctuous. "The Senate does. We have to show those eco loonies
we won't dream of caving in. Instead, you push enviro legislation, and let the
Eco League go unpunished. You haven't—" "We're searching for—"
"—a
state of emergency would let us use P and D—" "—any sign of them. And
until—" 44—you've gone soft!" His words rang in the sudden silence.
Valera cleared his throat, spoke with less vehemence. "Look, you can sway
the Assembly with foolish enviro sentiment, but Senators tend to ally
themselves with business interests, regardless of party. You know that's
so." "Cisno, what's the crisis that provoked your call?"
"The Senate won't go along with your Greenhouse Gases Act." Did I
detect a hint of satisfaction? "I had word today from Rob Boland. Such a
massive reduction in emissions—"
"Five
percent is a pittance!" Now I sounded like Cadet Bevin, or worse, his
father. Forgetting I had visuals, I rolled my eyes.
"Interstellar
Ltd. doesn't think so, or Boeing Airbus, or—"
"Spare
me the list" I rubbed my face. "You support the
Administration
on this?" "I always support your Administration." His voice was
silky.
"Mine,
or ours?"
"You're
the SecGen. It's your policy."
"And
if we fail in the Senate..." The Government wouldn't fall; only an
Assembly vote could unseat us. But a defeat on legislation that had so caught
the public eye would bring calls for my resignation, some from my own party.
Valera, of course, would be waiting quietly in the wings. I could almost sense
his glee.
"So,
now." I savored the moment. "How shall we handle this? Dissolve the
Assembly and Senate and call new elections?"
"Mr.
SecGen!" That would be the last solution he sought: my bringing the battle
to them, on my own terms. The game of politics was truly dreadful. I quelled my
distaste.
"Or
perhaps I ought to reshuffle the Cabinet," I mused. "Give you that
Colonial Affairs post you always wanted. Bring Robbie Boland in as Deputy
SecGen."
I'd
resign before I put Colonial Affairs in Valera's hands, but he needn't know
that. He would be aghast at my proposal; what he'd hoped for was the colonial
ministry in addition to his post as deputy, not in place of it.
As I
expected, he launched a flurry of protest I let him persuade me to leave things
as they were.
Regardless,
he'd heard my unspoken message; I considered him expendable, and would throw
him overboard if I heard a hint of disloyalty. He'd still work against me,
perhaps, but with much more caution.
One of
these days, I would have to squeeze him out of Government. He had worked
assiduously to cultivate the party, and many were beholden to him. But if I
pitted my approval against his, he would lose.
For
now.
Breakfast,
in my suite, was a miserable affair. I hadn't slept an iota. In the small
hours, I'd crawled out of bed, done my best to kneel, spent an hour in
unanswered prayer.
Now, I
was tired, irritable, and sore.
"Path?"
Philip's hand covered mine. "One more favor?"
"Whatever
it is, all right."
He
looked startled. "You mean it?"
"Yes."
Did he doubt me?
"When
we get in the heli, I want..." He looked uncomfortable. "I'd like you
to sit on the floor." I roared, "Whatr "So you won't see where
we're going. It won't take long."
"Absolutely
not! Out of the question." Was he twitting me? Of all the disrespect...
"Very
well, sir." He said no more.
Bevin looked
reproachful. Almost, I slapped him. "One demerit. Change your
demeanor."
"Aye
aye, sir." He threw down his napkin. "May I leave the tabler
"Make
it two."
I
gulped my lukewarm coffee, poured more. Maybe it would help.
While
Philip loaded the heli, I called the desk, asked to pay our bill. Philip
already had. 1 told them to change it to my name. They refused; he'd left
instructions not to allow it. I slammed down the caller.
Danil
held the doors for my chair. At the heli, I sat in the doorway, useless legs
dangling, while they loaded my battered machine. Jared threw in the duffels.
I eyed
him sourly. "Sit in front, with Philip."
"And
you, Mr. Seafort?"
"Back
here." I tried to make myself comfortable on the hell's deck. "Give
me a cushion." Philip shot me a look of such gratitude it was almost worth
the discomfort
With
the sun behind clouds, I had no clue as to our heading. The engine droned. I
dozed. Bevin sat, arms folded, staring out the window. I debated canceling his
demerits; if he'd looked at me even once, I would have.
An
acrid odor woke me. I raised my voice over the motor. "How much
longer?"
"Soon,
Path."
"I
ache."
"This
is our last stop." His voice was sad. x
Home. A
decent bed. Ariene's warm embrace.
A while
later we swooped down. In moments the blades came to a halt Wearily, I
stretched. Danil threw open the door. A stench assaulted my nose, my throat My
eyes burned.
"We'll
need these today.** Philip handed out masks. I slipped mine on. After a moment
my breathing eased. The heli's filters had done well; the pollution hadn't been
a problem until we landed.
"Where
are we, Volgograd?" The pollution from heavy metals outside the sprawling
gravitron plant was infamous.
Philip
made no answer. From the deck of the heli, all I could see was a roadway,
barren dead trees beyond.
P.T.
said, "Danil, help Jared with the chair." He climbed in, sat beside
me. "Let me tell you about the joeys—"
"Don't
personalize it Not again." An effective tactic, until one grew weary.
"—who
lived here last. Three generations." His voice was muffled in the mask.
"Farmers, two of them. The son went off to the Service. Later, he brought
his wife home, to stay. By then, the land was no longer fanned. They divorced.
She lived on awhile, with her second husband. They sold out"
"No
one died? No flood?" I'd promised not to mock, but the night had unraveled
my intent
"No,
they just left. Hie neighbor who bought it hoped to add it to his farm. But
that wasn't possible."
"Because
of the smell. Show me what you came for. It must be exceptional, if you saved
it for last"
He
grasped me around the shoulders, slipped his hand under my arm. With strength I
didn't know he had, he moved me to the doorway. Together, he and Jared lifted
me to the chair.
"Behind
us."
The
heli blocked my view. For a moment in our bulky masks, we were huge ungainly
flies come to survey a win-dowsill.
"Chair,
around the heli." Obediently, it rolled. "Philip, what am I looking
for?" He couldn't hear me. I tore off the mask. "P.T.!" Sulphur
gagged me. I coughed, spluttered, wheezed. Hastily I donned the mask.
I
blinked to clear my streaming eyes. I'd rub them, but the mask interfered.
Placidly, Philip rushed my chair along a walk, down a slope toward a dimly seen
house.
"I
don't need to see, son. You've made your point."
He
squeezed my shoulder, turned, and walked away.
Danil
took his place. "Sir, where are we?"
"Some
godforsaken hellhole. No doubt he picked the worst place on the planet, to
impress me/' I blinked; my vision began to clear. Brown, unhealthy grass. A
neglected fence. A few scraggly trees, struggling against impossible odds.
"It's
just a farm," said Danil. "A ratty old place, if you ask me. Mr.
Winstead could show you a thousand—"
A cry
of despair.
He
leaped, as if galvanized.
"No.
Not here. NO!"
"Sir,
what—"
'Take
me away!" My fists beat a tattoo on the chair.
He drew
back, stared at me hi shock.
Father's
farm, the home of my boyhood.
Cardiff.
The
remains of blistered paint hung from sagging siding.
A
quarter century, since I'd last been home. Not since my wife Annie... I'd left
her here with Eddie Boss, and fled to the monastery. Eventually she divorced
me. The farm was a last gift. I hadn't wanted to see it, see her, recall life's
promise I'd squandered.
The
gate I'd oft vowed to fix lay rotted across the walk.
The
hill behind, down which I'd run, arms spread wide to catch the wind, was gray
and dead.
In my
mask, I began to weep.
Danil's
hand flicked to my shoulder, darted away as if burned.
"Philip!"
It was a plea.
"Yes,
Path." His breath rasped in his mask.
"Why?"
"I
had to personalize it" His tone was gentle. "So you'd
understand."
It
undid me.
When he
thought I could hear, he said, 'Tart of it is the reopened mills." He
gestured toward Bridgend road, and Cardiff.
"We
have pollution laws—"
"After
the fish bombed us, the regs were waived. We needed every iota of production.
But the worst of it isn't ours. It blows across from the continent"
"It's
unspeakable!"
"I
tried to tell you."
I
clutched him. 'Take me away."
"Not
just yet, Path. You mustn't forget" Then, softer, "We must none of us
forget"
"What
happened to... them?"
"Annie
died, a few years ago. Eddie lives in Prague."
"Would
he let me see him?" Why did I ask?
"I
imagine so, sir."
"You
said they sold it" My wave took in the house, the land, my past
"To
Garth." The neighbor, whose straying cows so maddened Father. "He
gave it up."
"Who
owns it now?"
"I
do, sir." He met my gaze. "Uncle Rob lent me the money. I pay him
each month."
I
surveyed the abandoned house, the useless land My tone was bitter. "It
couldn't have been much."
"Enough."
I stared
at the rotted gate. Abruptly I whipped off my mask, leaned over the side of the
chair, retched
"Easy,
sir. You'll be all right"
"Oh,
no. I'll never be that." I fumbled with the mask. "Forgive me."
Was it
Philip, or Lord God, to whom I spoke?
Neither
answered.
After a
time I said, "Why did you buy it?"
"I
hope to live here before I die."
A long
time passed.
"You
will." My grip on his arm was iron. "I swear so, Philip. You
will."
We sat
in the heli, drained. Jared produced a flask; eagerly I swallowed the stinging
liquor. I handed it back; he drank deep, offered it again. I poured a small
amount into a tiny cup, gave it to Danil. "None of you see me."
SecGen or not, it could land me in gaol. The boy likewise.
Manfully
he downed it, and spluttered until his face was red.
Philip
started the engine. "The hotel?"
"Where
is it?"
"I
booked us in Devon." He tried to sound casual, know-big I'd be pleased.
"Not
quite yet. Can you find the cemetery?"
"From
the air."
Again
we set down. I visited Father's grave. Those around it were untended and
forlorn, but his plot was neatly mowed. A few flowers drooped. I raised an
eyebrow within my mask.
Philip
shrugged. "It doesn't cost much."
Thank
you." It was my task, unfulfilled. Forgive me, Father.
"Shall
we go?"
"In
a moment." I tried to wheel my chair up the hill. Breathing heavily
through his mask, Danil came behind to push."Over there, to the left. Two
rows back." I could find the place in my sleep.
Oftentimes,
I had.
"That
granite marker. The brown one." We stopped. "Help me out of the
chair." I hadn't knelt for Father, but I would here.
He
lowered me to the ground. "Who is it, sir?"
"My
best friend, Jason. He was just your age." As I had been, in the distant
past
I bowed
my head Presently, I became aware of a small form, kneeling at my side.
Somehow,
it gave me solace.
A few
minutes later, I struggled into my chair. The demerits are canceled."
Thank
you."
"I'm
sorry I'm cruel."
"I'm
sorry I provoke you. I'll try to do it less." A wise young joey. He didn't
promise the impossible complete reversal." Jerence Branstead looked
stunned.
Til do
what I can to help." I dmmmed my desktop. It was an immense relief to be
home. Outside the complex, a crowd had once more gathered. Perhaps I ought to
make time to see them, but shaking each outthnist hand could fill my day, if
not my life. I sighed. With what I had planned, I'd probably not be in office
long. Perhaps somehow they sensed that, and were saying their farewells.
Tm not
sure who'll stay faithful," he said. "It'll split the party."
"Yes."
So be it I'd spent a sleepless night debating my course. "Jerence..."
Automatically, I looked about to make sure no one heard except Philip, sitting
quietly in the comer. "About a third of the Terries are closet enviros. If
we hold half our Supras, and pull in the Enviros and the Indies, we'll have
just enough votes."
"Form
a new coalition? Sir, on an issue this big, there's no going back. The parties
will realign." He seemed awed.
"Perhaps
that's for the best" The Terries and the Supras had traded Governments
between them long enough.
"But...
scrap the Greenhouse Gases Act, after we barely saved it?"
"I
won't pretend that a five percent reduction is enough."
"Last
week it was too much for you."
I
closed my eyes, recalling our long deliberation at Devon. During the course of
the evening P.T. had overwhelmed me with figures, with charts he called up on
my puter, with frightening statistics. He gave me his word they were not
exaggerated, and Philip's word was rock.
Why,
during all my years, had I not seen?
I'd
been occupied with the fish wars. Busy restoring our desperately injured
economy. Busy halting the extermination of the transpops, the spoliation of our
cities.
It was
fundamentally wrong to interfere with His plan; nothing Philip showed me
changed my belief. But we had interfered. Surely, Lord God couldn't have meant
us to befoul Father's homestead. Or reduce Bavaria to a sodden ruin. Or
devastate Volgograd, or Amsterdam, or Louisiana...
I'm
sorry.
When
You send me to Hell, You will hear me bleat, as always, "I'm sorry."
I said,
"We need a full sixteen percent reduction."
"Unachievable,
politically."
We'd
see.
"That's
only the start," I warned. "Of course we'll work on cleaning up the
filth we spew—that goes without saying—but atmospheric warming is our biggest
problem. Every time we burn a fossil fuel, we're releasing the energy of
sunlight stored millions of years ago. That, in addition to our normal
complement of sunlight today. We simply put out too much energy."
"I've
seen the briefings."
"We
can reduce the energy we expend, or the energy mat reaches us. A top priority
will be the Solar Umbrella." As I spoke, P.T. watched with approval that
was almost parental
Branstead
folded his arms. "Not that wild scheme again."
"It's
been around almost two hundred years. Set a shield between us and the
sun—"
"It
would be two thousand kilometers across! Mr. Sec-Gen, no matter what we make it
of, we can't lift that much mass from our gravity well."
"We
don't have to. We'll buy ore from the asteroid mines.'*
"The
Navy won't be amused." The vast majority of asteroid production was
earmarked for Naval hulls, years in advance.
"The
Navy will do what it's told."
Jerence
sighed. "Give me a few days to break it to our joeys." He shook his
head. "A shake-up this big... You'll have to lead. Actively."
"Very
well. I'll work the caller, and make speeches."
"Deals,
also. Not every pol is a visionary."
I'd
known it would be necessary. "That too." I smiled, thinly. "What
shall we call ourselves?"
Philip
cleared his throat. "The Born Again Ecos?"
My
smile vanished. "That's not funny." We would birth a political party,
not a religious revolution. To suggest otherwise, even in jest, skirted heresy.
"And
then there's the Eco League." Branstead looked grim. "It'll look like
you're caving in, no matter how we phrase it."
"Not
after they're captured." Even Jerence didn't know the extent of Dormer's
surveillance.
Our
meeting drew to a close. Jerence shook hands gravely, wandered off with P.T. to
find Arlene. I rolled to the door. "Is our cadet up? Oh. You." I
frowned.
Mikhael
stood quickly. "May I see you?"
"Very
well."
He shut
the door, leaned against it. "I apologize. I won't do it again, sir. I'm
here for two months and I won't give you any more goofjuice about it"
I
regarded him. He was sweating. "Getting along with Arlene?" My tone
held a gentle malice.
"She's—"
Whatever he intended to say, he thought better of it
"Not
to be trifled with," I finished.
"No,
sir."
"Take
a seat" Promptly, he did so. Perhaps mat was the solution to all my
problems: pass them to Arlene. "Did she hit you?"
"No,
she—" He swallowed. "Almost"
"Anything
else she told you to say?"
He
flushed deep red. "I'm to call you 'sir,' agree with you or keep my
opinions to myself, and that it's decent of you to take me in."
"She
went a bit too far." I permitted myself a wintry smile. "You're that
afraid of her?"
"Not
afraid, exactly. It's... sir, the next time you take a trip, could I come
along?"
My
smile widened I'd have to ask her technique. On the other hand, perhaps I
didn't want to know. "Easy, joey. I want you civilized, not
terrorized."
"Thank
you." He hesitated. "Would you tell her I spoke to you?"
"Ann."
I made a tent of my fingers. "What was her deadline?"
"One
o'clock sir. Would she really ..." He squirmed. "May I be excused?"
"Yes."
As he stood, I said, "No, stay awhile." I liked the new Mikhael much
better. On the other hand, fear wasn't respect; I still had to reach him.
"I'll be going on a speaking tour. Would you like to come?"
"Yes,
please." His response was instant Then, "Does it have to do with your
closed door meetings? All the calls?"
"It's
none of your— Yes." I shouldn't tell him; he had no discretion. But he was
Alexi's son, and in my care.
"We're
planning a major change in policy," I said.
"Enviro
policy.**
If I
could, I'd have bolted to my feet. "How'd you know?**
"I'm
not stupid.** Seeing my face, he added hastily, "Bevin, sir. The cadet's
had a goofy smile on his face ever since you got home. He's enviro, isn't he?
Told me his father worked for the Enviro League.'*
"Council.
The Eco League is an entirely ... the Enviro
Council."
"Whatever. So, if it made him so happy .. .** Mikhael
shrugged.
For an
instant I hesitated, then thrust my future in his hands. "We're going all
out for enviro restoration.**
"Why?**
It wasn't a challenge, just curiosity.
"Don't
you think we need it?**
"Who
cares what I think?" His tone was bitter.
-I
do.**
"I
suppose. The sea levels are.. .** His face twisted. '1 didn't mean anything by
that Dutch joke, sir!** "I know, Mikhael.** My tone was gentle. "She
made me feel like I drowned them myself. It wasn'tfair."
"We
don't laugh at people in pain.** I told him of the visit from the Dutch relief
committee, described the appalling devastation of Bangladesh I'd seen on my
overflights. "Ar-lene was with me. She cried." Mikhael scuffed his
foot. "I'm sorry.** "She'll be glad to know."
"But
Holland is nothing new. What changed your mind?" "Philip. Though it
was there for me to see." He studied me, as if weighing my answer. I said,
"In Academy nowadays, they don't let cadets outdoors when gamma radiation
is high, and it happens more and more often. We've had spills, spews, horrid
floods, fires, an upsurge in cancers for the first time in a century. Food
production is in chaos; we're utterly dependent on the colonies. It's all
eco-related."
"It's
not your fault"
"I
made myself blind!" I rested head in hands. "How many died while I
was obstinate?"
"Dad
told me, don't take on the cares of the world."
"Father
taught me otherwise. The joey who shot at me... his family lost their fishing
boat in the Pacific die-off. That sergeant who killed those cadets: his family
died of toxic contamination. The Eco Action League is wrong, and irresponsible,
but I ignored their pleas, goaded them until..." I cut it off, appalled.
"Yes?"
I
couldn't say it
No. Let
it be part of my punishment.
I
whispered, "You were right I killed your father. If I'd seen reason, the
Eco League wouldn't have set off the bomb."
"Oh,
Mr. Seafort!" His eyes glistened. "I want so much to hate you."
A long pause. "But Mr. Carr told me all about you and Dad. I know why he
wanted to go to the Rotunda."
I
swallowed. "I'm sorry, Mikhael."
"I
miss him so damn much." He hugged himself. "But I won't blame it on
you."
A
silence, in which we found a sort of peace. Eventually, I cleared my throat
"Let's sit on the veranda. I'll pretend I'm Derek, and tell you
stories."
"Yes,
sir." He jumped to his feet still anxious to show his good behavior.
I
gestured to him to open the double doors.
It was
one of those increasing rarities, a cool summer day. A few years ago I'd had
alumalloy awnings installed to block the sun. Unconsciously, I now realized,
I'd made my accommodations to the growing enviro calamity.
I
patted a nearby seat "I met Derek—I mean, Mr. Carr— when he was about your
age."
"You
enlisted him. He told me."
"As
a cadet, first I couldn't make him middy directly.**
"My
dad thought it was a stupid idea. He told Mr. Carr— I'm sorry!" Mikhael
jumped to his feet. "Sir, I didn't mean
that!"
This
had gone far enough. "Sit" I waited for him to comply. "I'll
tell Ariene you're my responsibility, except when you irritate her. I'll handle
the rest."
"I
feel like a fool/' He stared at his shoes. "I'm being so careful, I
stumble over my tongue,"
"You
need not be quite so afraid of me. Or her, for that matter. Til allow you an
occasional lapse. Now, go change your shirt, you've sweated through it. And then
I'll tell you about your dad and Mr. Carr."
Three
days passed, in relative calm. As far as I knew, Anselm stayed out of my
liquor. He helped me in the office, and during his off-hours coached Bevin at
his studies. The fact that the cadet was off campus didn't excuse him from his
learning. Or, for that matter, from physical labors. From time to time, of the
mornings, I took a break and wheeled myself to the lawn, where the middy led
two perspiring youngsters at calisthenics.
Bevin
exercised without complaint, as was fitting. Cadets were worked hard, and
thrived on it Wistfully, I remembered my own Academy days, the slow filling out
of my form, the gradual growth of pride and confidence.
Mikhael
was another matter. Though trim and relatively fit, he hated the exercises with
a passion, particularly in that Anselm led them. He decided to test me; I was
adamant in refusing him reminiscences until he earned them with calisthenics.
He responded with a volley of curses, and was made to spend a day in his room.
Next time I'd be harder on him. The next morning he joined Anselm and Bevin for
their full two hours. I was lavish in my praise, and wracked my brain for tales
of my youth.
Toward
the end of the week I began to prepare my tout For a major campaign I would
rely heavily on my official
staff;
the sat-relays between Washington and the Rotunda crackled with our
conferences.
We
would announce our enviro proposals two days hence, at a session of the
Assembly. I'd follow with a whirlwind of interviews and appearances. I busied
myself dragooning local officials into joining me on bandstands. As more and
more joeys were taken into our confidence, rumors began to swirl. I did my best
to keep Cisno Valera in the dark, sure that he'd trumpet the news of our
reversal if he saw advantage in it.
Nonetheless,
my speech, which I wrote myself, was kept totally under wraps, except from
Jerence Branstead. No speechwriter, no staffer, not even Karen Burns was
allowed to see it.
At last
the time came to pack. It would be many days before I was home. Eagerly,
Mikhael readied his own gear, helped me with mine. He was crestfallen when he
learned Ariene would accompany us, but made a manful effort to contain himself,
no doubt fearful I'd tell her.
He was
more disconcerted when she went through his suitcase, smoothing and repacking
Ms dress clothes. That she did the same for Anselm mollified him to a degree.
Though Mikhael and Bavin got along well, there was a rivalry between Tamarov
and the middy that threatened to flare into something more contentious.
It was
late in the evening; we were to leave in the mom-ing. I sat in my office,
reviewing chipnotes. Danil Bevin looked in.
"Yesn
frowned.
"Sorry,
sir." He turned to go. Then, "What will you tell them?"
"The
Assembly?" A momentary annoyance, that a mere cadet had the gall even to
ask. "That we're doing an about-face."
"Will
they understand?" Unbidden, he took his customary workseat.
A
wintry smile. "I certainly hope so."
"You
ought to tell them about our trip."
"Don't
be ridiculous." I'd marshaled my logic, worked endlessly to get the facts
straight and in proper order.
"But
the places he took you make it interesting. Poor Philip." He chewed a
fingernail. "He must have been terrified he wouldn't convince you."
"Ohr
Danil
blushed. "Sorry, it's none of my ... sir, I have to
say it.
Thank you so much."
I
raised an eyebrow. "For?"
"For
doing what you're about to. For taking me along so I could see how it happened.
I think... I'm watching history in the making. I know our work's confidential,
but do you know how much I want to call my father, make sure he'll be at the
holovid?"
"Have
no fear." My tone was sour. There'd been rumors aplenty; every enviro on
the planet would be glued to the
nets.
"I
cried, that night."
"When?'
"In
Munich, after the flood. The joeys in mat town... lives, generations drowned in
mud." His eyes glistened. "If Philip—Mr, Seafort—if he hadn't—"
"Easy,
boy. You're overwrought."
He
nodded, ran a hand over his eyes. "May I see your speech?"
"No."
A sigh.
"I'm sorry."
"It's
all right" Almost, I showed it to him, but there were limits. "Your
father's enviro work is that important to you?'
"He's
how I got interested, but... is it true you used to be able to go out whenever
you wanted? Play ball in the sun?"
"You
still can, if you're careful." I leaned back. "When Jason and I were
joeykids..." No. I wouldn't follow mat thought, or I'd become as emotional
as he. "Someday,
Danil,
when you're grown, it will be that way again. If we can get the ozone layer
reseeded ..." It was our biggest unsolved problem. "You deserve a
time in the sun."
"Will
they understand, Mr. Seafortr* A whisper.
I
tapped a copy of my carefully reasoned speech. "We'll make them
understand."
My
staff, my family, and I left for New York in full panoply. The news zincs
covered our departure, having for days trumpeted the rumors, now grown to near
certainty, that the Seafort Administration would either resign or turn itself
inside out.
We took
a suite for my family at the Skytel Sheraton, completely rebuilt after the
invasion of the Transpop Rebellion. If the accommodations made Jared Tenere
uncomfortable, he gave no sign. P.T. seemed troubled, and wheeled me to the
stairwell that once we'd climbed to escape smoke and flames.
To ease
his mind I asked, 'Have you heard from Pook?** The young Mid transpop had been
sent to an Uppie tower school.
"Not
since Mr. Chang died. Path, you're doing the right thing."
"I
know." Day by day, I grew more comfortable witti my conversion.
"They
may crucify you for it"
"I
hope not literally."
My
humor failed in its goal. Philip slumped on a concrete stair. "It's vital
that we cleanse the planet. But I don't want to sacrifice you to it." His
fingers toyed with his shirt
"Philip...
no, look at me. Into my eyes. Do you recall mat day in the launch?* We'd sailed
almost into Earthport's lasers, to end the transpop war.
"Yes,
sir." His voice quavered.
"We
were prepared that day for a greater sacrifice. If I'm
made to
retire, I'll still have you. We lost each other for a while. Now I have you
back, little else matters."
Something
in his eyes seemed to calm. Slowly, his fingers stilled.
I sat
at the well of the Rotunda, resplendent in my best clothes. I'd instructed my
chair to wheel itself in, and then, in full view of holocams and the Assembly,
had Philip and Mikhael transfer me to an armless chair. I wanted no mechanical
curiosity to distract from my theme. Poor Mikhael, in his best crisply ironed
jumpsuit and neckerchief, was so nervous he almost dropped me, but I didn't
think anyone noticed. It was important that he understand the extent of my
trust
I
stared at the expectant Assembly. In die front row, Ar-lene and Philip glowed
with pride. The boys had retreated upstairs, in the galleries. Seats below were
unavailable. Branstead had heard they were being resold, at scalpers' prices.
Many wanted to witness the fall of the perpetual Seafort Administration. Row
after row was filled with prosperous politicians, their hair perfectly coifed,
their suits the
latest
style.
At
various levels of the hall, holocams pulsed. No address since my fervent plea
to the world during the Transpop Rebellion, a dozen years prior, had been
beamed to so wide an audience. My words would be simultaneously translated into
more than fifty languages.
The
hall quieted. I cleared my throat, looked down at die expectant faces.
Ml have
come to confess my error. An error you share," My hands lay still in my
lap. "For years—for decades—our gaze has been turned outward. To die
produce of our colonies, to die exploits of our magnificent Navy, to warding
off, and then repairing, die depredations of die fish."
My
voice was flinty. "And now we must pay die price. One which would have
been lower, had we acted sooner.
One
which will strain our purse, but which can and must be paid."
An
uneasy stir.
And
then I laid before diem my grand strategy. A massive reestablishment of
agriculture, corresponding cutbacks in industry. An end to die filth that
poured into our air, and to die particles that devastated our ozone layer.
All die
wild-eyed schemes for which I'd belittled die En-viro Council over die years.
As I
spoke, my tone was serene, but I saw I was losing my audience. There was dial
look of calculation, while Assemblymen contemplated which industries in their
districts might falter, which wealthy contributors would shut off die tap of
their munificence,
I had to
persuade die fifteen hundred men and women in die room, else my aspirations
would miscarry. The joeys in die fine leather chairs before me were die world's
only hope.
My
speech slowed.
No. It
wasn't so.
They
were only die delegates of my true audience. It was die joeys of die world I
dared not lose, not these self-satisfied politicos stuffed into dieir
well-padded seats.
I would
have to sell die world my ideas. Or failing that, sell myself. Above all, die
people trusted me. For years I'd scorned diem for it. Now I would call upon
that oust.
But,
how to reach diem?
Danil
Bevin's earnest face floated before me. You ought to tell them about our
trip,..
I
abandoned my memorized text.
"Perhaps
some of you, in your cities, your villages, your towns, saw how I traveled
tonight, to reach diis Assembly. A heli from my compound, a jet from Potomac
Shuttleport to New York, a fleet of helis to carry my staff to die Rotunda,**
Mediamen
held up tiny recorders, aghast that I'd departed from die speech Branstead had
just distributed. Now they'd actually have to think.
"I
don't always travel that way. Sometimes I jounce around in a motorized chair, a
cumbersome contraption with a mind of its own." As I'd hoped, titters
loosened the mood of the hall.
"And
then there's the trip my security joeys hope 1 won't reveal. A few days ago, I
hopped into a heli—well, hop isn't quite the right word." I grinned.
Chuckles, that broadened into guffaws. "It was an old battered heli, a
rental. 1 won't tell you which company supplied it." Laughter. "And
once we were aloft, 1 switched off my transponder. No doubt I had U.N. Security
climbing the walls." 1 had them now, every ear.
"And
we went on a holiday of sorts, my son and I, and two aides. The joeys who saw
us dismissed out of hand my resemblance to the SecGen. After all, even Seafoit
wouldn't be such a fool as to travel alone." A roar of mirth.
I told
them of the woman who'd accosted me at (he Carolina restaurant. My evasion
evoked gales of laughter. I spoke of the Kansas hail, the Bavarian floods, the
bisque (toll in the drowned hausfrau's hand. Of the broken highway in Florida
that symbolized America's dream,
Casually,
I mentioned every town we'd overflown, every motel at which we'd slept, every
restaurant in which we'd eaten, 1 strove to make my audience see me not as a
remote authority, but a fellow voyager roaming the same world as they. 1 told
them how Philip dented the chair mat had the effrontery to fling me to the mud,
My tone
was gentle, cheerful, in fact, very much like the manner in which I'd spoken to
Mikhael about Alexi, after his daily exercises. Just old friends, enjoying a
quiet chat
I told
them what I'd seen on my journey, and the horror it evoked, and my resolve mat
while I remained in office, I would not allow it to continue. I laid out our
plans that would reverse the worst of our depredations in a very few
years.
Moving so fast would cause greater turmoil, I said, but it had the incomparable
advantage of producing results quickly enough to persuade citizens that their
sacrifices were not in vain.
I spoke
of the vast combination of interests that would oppose our design, that
included many of the joeys in this very chamber. An uneasy rustle.
MIt is
up to you," I said. "AH of you across the world, who hear me today.
We cannot allow politics to prevail. We cannot let economic self-interest
threaten the continuance of our very race,**
I
paused, gazed solemnly into the holocams. "If the Assembly and Senate of
the United Nations support us, weU and good. But those members who don't, 1 ask
you to remove. If our bills are amended without my consent, I will dissolve the
Senate and Assembly—**
A
murmur of protest. But from more than a few, willing applause.
"—and
call new elections. Fellow citizens, we have edged our way to imminent
disaster. It is time to reverse course. The need is great, the goal achievable,
and the reward infinite. For yourselves, your children, and me honor of Lord
God, I ask your support and your trust. Thank you, and may He bless us all,**
At
first, silence. My face impassive, I stared back at mem, daring their
hostility.
The
applause began slowly, uncertainly. Then, like swell ing thunder heralding an
approaching storm, it rolled in great waves across the hall. Whistles. Calls.
The gallery rose in enthusiastic ovation, followed, shortly, by much of the
Assembly itself. But there were those few, Terries and Supras among them, who
remained seated, arms folded.
Through
it all, engulfed in adulation, I sat unmoving, trembling beneath my calm, It
was the greatest performance of my life, and the most
dishonest.
I'd spoken to the holocams as to a friend. I'd offered a version of myself I
knew to be untrue: a friendly, cheerful soul revealing himself to the public
for the first time. An Everyman, a neighborhood joey who happened to hold a
special office, a...
Enough.
What I'd done was for Philip, and for Father. Over many years I'd done worse,
and for less.
I would
abide the cost.
CHAPTER
14
Interviews
with HoloworUL Newsnet, and Holoweek, from the Skytel Sheraton. A much
publicized visit to die New York Seawall, where I scowled at the Hudson esmary
lapping at its massive algae-stained blocks. Then a subor-bital to Brazil, and
a tour of the wasteland of worked-out farms that generations ago had been rain
forest.
Vehement
speeches in Rio, Sao Paulo, and Brasilia. Then on to Buenos Aires and La Plata,
Montevideo, Mexico City.
Our
days fell into a wearisome routine. Mikhael, Tad Anselm, and Bevin helped me
get in and out of my chair, ran errands, took charge of our gear. When mere was
time, I let mem out to explore,
Arlene
reviewed drafts of my speeches, amending mem to keep me on point and lucid.
Jerence
Branstead orchestrated quiet meetings with local leaders, in which I tried to
win them to our program, I soon became adept at emphasizing the new
manufactories that our enviro crusade would call forth.
Still,
persistent questions dogged us. Why had I submitted to Eco League extortion?
Would a covey of anonymous terrorists dictate enviro policy? I tried my best to
keep my temper.
Over
dinner, Arlene soothed me. "It's part of the process. Every political
leader has gone through it."
"Oenghis
Khan didn't."
Anselm
snorted. Mikhael repressed a grin.
"Be
patient, Nick. You're succeeding." The polls showed us holding our
support. Our foes in the Assembly would take note. Few dared oppose us openly;
I'd crafted a weighty coalition. Instead, they would kill our plans with
hearings, with studies, with helpful amendments.
I
called Cisno Valera. "Tell them it won't work. The package goes to the
floor in three weeks, or I dissolve the Assembly."
"They
can't move so fast."
"They'd
better." I would make the issue their political
survival.
"Mr.
Seafort..," He sounded uncomfortable. "As Deputy SecQen I can't
support what amounts to a coup against the legislative process."
"Is
this a parting of the ways, Cisno?"
He
backpedaled. 'The Senate has rules, procedures, customs ..."
"Hurry
them along. Three weeks.** I was too tired to be
diplomatic.
The
next morning we were hi Ireland. I spoke at the Naval training station, near
the site of the Belfast nuke, "There are those who would counsel delay.
Perhaps they mean well. Meanwhile the tides rise two inches a year. We can
afford no caution. We need action, strength, and resolve."
That
night Anselm failed to come home to the hotel. Karen Burns woke me at three:
he'd been arrested in a drunken brawl at a Navy bar. Did I want him released?
"No." I went back to sleep.
In the
morning, groggy and disgusted, I reversed myself, sent an aide to arrange bail.
When the middy appeared, I sent him for a caning, with instructions not to go
easy. Mikhael saw his demeanor afterward, and laughed outright
Trouble,
but no time to deal with it; we were on to South Africa. Forty-seven U.N.
Senators announced they would block my legislation after the Assembly was
through with it Jerence Branstead scrambled for a key to their conversion.
Finally,
after fifteen exhausting days, we flew home. A conference with the Patriarchs
awaited.
Anselm
sat next to me on the suborbital. I'd barely spoken to him in the days since
his lapse. "I've decided to send you back to Devon."
He
flinched. "Yes, sir." Then, "You don't know why I was
fight—"
"I
don't care."
'They
called you a traitor to the Navy!**
"Who?"
"Lieutenants
and middies, on leave from Seville. They said—"
"I
don't want to hear it"
"That
you sold out. That you went over to the ecos!"
"Bah.
Idle talk, by drunken louts. And you were one of them."
He
flushed. "I—yes."
"Why'd
you drink? The dream again?"
"No,"
He squared his shoulders. "I was feeling sorry for myself."
"You
imagine you did me honor, standing up for me? I despise it,"
His
voice was tremulous. "So do I» now Tm sober. But when I heard them—"
"Perhaps
you'll do better in your next posting."
"Yes,
sir." His tone was forlorn. A last appeal. "I don't think I'll do it
again."
"Too
late."
"I'm
ready to swear—**
"You
already swore to obey all lawful orders. Your word is worthless," Brutal,
but I no longer cared. The Senators
were
inflexible. I had too many burdens, and a miscreant middy was more than I could
deal with. He cried, "Help me rather than ruin me!" 'Tad, you're not
the center of my life." He put his head in his hands. After a moment I
asked gruffly, "How?" A glance, as if hoping against hope. "Keep
me busy. Give me extra duties. Those letters you wanted, to the Norwegian
legislators. Til draft them. You said you'd like to have Charlie Witrek visit.
I'll arrange it. Anything you say, I'll do. Just let me talk..." He
blushed furiously. "Let me talk with you and Ms. Seafort sometimes. I get
so lonely."
On
base, or aboard ship, middies were among their own kind. They had the wardroom,
their mates, for companionship and solace. While I mused, he fidgeted.
"Sir, I won't drink. I can't
stand
it anymore." "Being drunkr The caning. You don't know what it's
like."
"Of
course I do."
"I'm
seventeen next week. That's supposed to be too old for—I'm sorry, no criticism,
sir. But I'm not a joeykid. To be bent across a barrel, and have some
lieutenant beat me, his knowing that I disgraced myself, that I was slobbering
drunk..." He bit back a sob. "It hurts so. And then to come home to
Mikhael's laughter, and your contempt, that's the worst part." His eyes
were damp. "Sir, it won't—I don't know how I'll stop myself, but I
will."
If I
didn't send him home to Devon, I'd be responsible for the consequences. And
yet... "A caning every time you drink: that won't change." "Yes,
sir." "And if you fail to inform me, you're dismissed from the
Service."
Honor was everything. "I know, sir." "Tell Mr. Branstead you're
to help with my appointments
list
Evenings, you can help Warren sort my mail." I rarely spoke with my puter
in the Rotunda, preferring to let him handle routine inquiries. He sounded more
like me than I did myself.
"Sir,
I thank you with all my heart." An old-fashioned phrase, that moved me
unduly.
We
broke out of the clouds, into the smog of the Northeast.
"Most
unwise." Bishop Saythor glowered. His colleagues seemed to agree; their
expressions were unfavorable, some downright unfriendly. All the Patriarchs
save one were assembled in Council, at the magnificent, soaring Reunification
Cathedral in Chicago. I sat alone, facing them, nervously tapping the arms of
my chair.
I said,
"It must be done."
"Just
as our economy was starting to rebound—"
"Sir,
is this about wealth?"
The
President of the Latter-day Saints wagged a finger. "Not wealth, but what
it represents. The power of Lord God made manifest, His embodiment on
Earth—"
I was
still jet-lagged, and resented being summoned so abruptly. "Was Jesus not
that?"
The
Bishop of Rome bristled. "You dare argue theology with us?"
"No,
sir, I apologize. I was wrong." Inwardly, I cursed my folly. Theirs was to
speak on matters ecclesiastical, mine to obey.
"By
shattering the wealth of nations, you threaten Mother Church herself."
Saythor was stern. "It's vital that we advance the good name of the Church
at home and in the colonies."
"What
would you have me do?"
"Scale
back your ambitions. Accomplish what you may without wreaking havoc."
"You
wouldn't have me forsake enviroism altogether?"
"You
spoke publicly, for die Government You mustn't be seen to reverse
yourself." But I had reversed myself, in my speech to the Assembly.
Abruptly I'd revoked a decades-old policy of benign neglect. What the Patriarchs
meant was that my proposals had gained too much popular support to be
abandoned
utterly.
Bishop
Saythor said, "As much as we dislike the thought, the Church must be run
as a business. Destabilizing change, one that leaves our parishioners in
poverty, impacts inevitably on Church finances and on its work,"
I
watched curiously. Would Lord God strike him dead? Surely He would not allow
such thoughts to be uttered in the name of His Church.
But He
was silent
So was
I.
"Well,
Mr. SecGenr
"I'll
think on it" Why did I temporize?
"We
need more than that"
"We've
had this conversation before, sir." I held his gaze.
He
flushed "Yes, we can disavow you. We've discussed
it"
"Andr
"The
time isn't opportune," They'd read the polls. I'm sorry, Lord. I apologize
for Your vicars.
Later,
I called Arlene. "I still hold office."
"Shall
I say it's a relief r
"Not
for you, I know." My tone was gentle. "It won't be long now. I have a
sense."
"Before
I forget, Mark Tilnitz called. He's most anxious
to see
you."
"What
about?"
"He
wouldn't say. Nicky, something's wrong; I think he's gone glitched. Be careful.
Talk to him by caller."
"I'm
not afraid of Mark. If he wants his job back I'd be delight—"
'Twice
he asked me who else was on the line. Security's a horrible job; the pressure
may have been too much—"
"Mark's
as stable as they come." I shrugged, forgetting Arlene couldn't see.
"Call him back, have him to the house tonight." A few hours wouldn't
matter.
On the
way to Daley Shuttleport a priority call from General Dormer. "We have a
lead on Broker!"
"Praise
God." The murderer of my cadets would be brought to justice. "How?
When?"
"Our
phone taps. He finally called the cousin. He's in Barcelona."
"We've
waited long enough. Round them up."
"I
concur. This evening, in a coordinated sweep."
In the
plane, I was exultant. The terrorists were broken. I called in Karen Bums,
shared a toast "They'll hang, every one of them,"
"Naturally."
"P
and D will tell the whole story." I wondered why we'd waited. Still,
better safe than sorry.
"Congratulations,
sir."
I
exulted, "Now, the enviro bills will sail through the Assembly. A lot of
die Terries hesitated because they feared I was giving in to blackmail."
"It
must be a great relief,** She'd been present, I recalled, at the Rotunda
bombing. To have her principal injured on her watch must be a nightmare.
I
poured more champagne. "Mark wants to see me. Does he want back on the
detail?**
"I
wouldn't know." She sounded cool. "You haven't spoken to him?"
"This
evening. He's coming to the compound."
Home at
last, I let them help me from the hcli to the chair. Karen excused herself to
make some calls. I summoned Danil, During my long trip, a mountain of paperwork
had accumulated.
The
cadet slipped into my office.
"Start
with the summaries of the zincs. File them by— good heavens* let me see
that"
Reluctantly,
he came close. A mouse, under his right eye. "How'd that happen?"
He
shuffled his feel. "1, uh, ran into something, sir." It served me
right, asking him to criticize a superior. He'd never betray his midshipman,
not if he wanted my respect
Unlike
middies, cadets were considered children, subject to the discipline of their
betters. But I'd never allowed a middy to punish a cadet, not once in my
career. It too easily led to abuse. The gall of Anselm, after my own leniency.
"Why did he do itr
Danil
shuffled his feet "We had a fight" I went off like a skyrocket.
"ANSELM, GET DOWN HERE!" I slammed down the caller. "Get some
ice, boy."
"Sir,
he—"
"Don't
argue! Put ice on that bruise, this very moment"
"Aye
aye, sir." He rushed off.
"Midshipman
Anselm reporting, sir!"
"Take
that jacket off! Fifty push-ups. Move!"
"Aye
aye, sir!" He dropped to the ground.
I
fumed, rolling my chair from side to side, as if to pace, "Faster! If you
mink you can get away with—"
"Is
mis good enough, sir?" Bevin, with a cloth full of ice. He held it to his
cheek.
"Why'd
he hit you? None of that guff about not telling
me. I
won't—" "Sir, I—"
"Middy,
be silent Thirty more push-ups. Well, Cadet?" "It wasn't Mr. Anselm,
sir. I tried to tell you!" At my feet, Anselm labored. His breath came
hard. "Who, then?" "Mr. Tamarov, sir."
I
gaped. Then, at last "As you were, Anselm." Gratefully, the middy let
himself sag.
"I'm,
er, sorry." I grimaced at the panting boy. "How many demerits have
you accumulated?"
"Three,
sir."
"One
is canceled." It was the least I could do.
"Thank
you." Anselm hesitated. "Could I do eighty more for another?"
Amazingly, his eye held a twinkle.
"No.
And don't twit me or—" Well, I couldn't always be an ogre. "Yes, you
may."
With
delight, he dropped to the floor. Canceling a demerit normally required two
full hours of calisthenics.
"Danil,
did you strike Mikhael first?"
"No,
sir." Firm, no hesitation.
"Very
well, file those zincs; you know where they go. Chair, out" I found
Mikhael in the den, watching a holo. "You. Come along," I led him to
the office. "Apologize to Mr. Bevin."
"Mister?
He's a frazzing cadet!"
"Fair
warning, Mikhael. You've gone too far." If he retracted his horns now, I'd
let him be.
Fists
bunched, he took a step toward Anselm, "Don't smirk, you fucking
grode!"
"Danil,
Tad, excuse us,** My tone was low, ominous. I whirled on Mikhael. "You
have a foul mouth,"
"Who
cares?"
What
possessed a joeykid to speak so to an adult? Did he flunk we still lived in the
Rebellious Ages? "Fetch a bar of soap,"
"You're
out of your mind! Nobody's going to—"
"You'll
do it yourself."
"The
fuck I will!"
With
great effort, I wheeled from behind the desk, skidded to the door, turned my
chair. "That's it, Mikhael." I fumbled at my belt.
"You're
not touching me."
I
rolled toward him. He darted behind my desk. Laboriously, I rolled after.
Mikhael
threw open the veranda doors, bolted into the dusk.
Cursing
under my breath, I retraced my path, opened my door. "Come in, boys."
I indicated chairs. "What was this about?' They exchanged glances.
"None of that! Speak.'*
Bevin
looked uncomfortable. "He was ragging Mr. Anselm again."
"Andr
"Instead
of decking him, Mr. Anselm walked off. I told Mikhael what I thought of
him," A sheepish grin. "And he smacked me."
"I
would have too," I said sharply. Since when did a cadet berate a civilian,
no matter what his age?
'It's
my fault, sir." Anselm. "Danil should know better." As middy, he
was in charge.
"Most
certainly. Whatever is the matter between you? I won't tolerate it Go to your
rooms."
"Sir,
I'm—"
"Now."
They
departed, I rolled from door to desk, muttering epithets.
The
caller buzzed. "Wilkins, at the gate. Mark Tilnitz is
here,
sir. He's no longer on the list."
"Let
him in. Call Karen to escort him; she'll want to bring him up-to-date." I
wiped my brow, resettled myself. It would be a difficult interview. I liked
Mark, but I would no longer let security dictate my day. I'd go where I wished,
speak
with—
The
door flew open. Karen Burns, her laser drawn,
"What
the devil—" I stared.
She
hauled me out of my chair, clubbed me in the temple. Dazed, I tried to drag
myself to safety.
"Come
here, you prick." She whipped off my belt, lashed my hands behind my back,
yanked off my tie, used it for a gag. She threw open a closet, dragged me
inside. "I'll be
back.
Then we'll go for a ride." Locking my hall door, she dashed to the
veranda.
In the
dark, I flopped about, to no avail. My hands were firmly bound.
Frantically,
I chewed at my tie. I couldn't tear it, but I managed at last to thrust it to
one side. "Hehp! Shecuhity!" My voice was muffled. "Ansem!
Ahhene!"
Nothing.
I couldn't be heard.
"HIDDY!"
My voice held a note of terror,
I
rolled from side to side in desperate frenzy, "Ahhene!" My mouth
ached. I could barely articulate.
Lord
God knew what madness possessed Karen. Arlene was in the house, as was my son.
If Karen... a chill shivered my spine.
Karen
had to be stopped, I struggled to free my hands.
I was
helpless.
Not
quite. "Chailu coe heah!"
The hum
of a motor,
"Chaih,
ahsweh he!'*
"I'm
here,"
"Get
hehp!"
"Reference
not understood.**
"Get
hehp, you vucking bucket ah ebJfs!"
"I'm
assigned to Nicholas E. Seafort, U.N. SecGen. Outside commands not
recognized."
Th no
outsaideh, I'h Sehavoht!" I tore at my belt, but couldn't free my wrists.
"Nicholas Sehavohl!"
"Please
speak clearly. Commands must be entered in—**
"He
silent!" I was beside myself. "I cah't talk. I heed you to caw fob
hehp,**
"First,
I need positive identification.**
"Nicholas
Sheavoht, Hod damhh it, ghaph hy voice! Neveh hind the wohds!" I held my
breath, hoping it would understand.
"Voiceprint
graphed. Tentative ID as Nicholas Seafort**
"Fihd
Ahhene, do you uhdehshandf*
"Command
interpreted as 'Find Arlene, do you understand.'" "Thah's iht"
"I'm
not programmed to comply with distant commands. I may respond only when you're
sitting in my seat." "In Vavaria I tohd you to rephogham."
"Response modified. I may obey a distant command." "Chaih, cahn
you heave the ofvhiceT The door is shut." "Ham it. Dhive thew
it!" "And then?" The chair sounded dubious. "Fihd Ahhene.
Tehh huh I said dangeh. Kahen Vuhms has a laseh. Tehh huh I an tied in by
ofvice closet. Confihm cowwand!"
"You
want me to tell Arlene you said danger, Kahen Vuhrns has a laser. Tell her you
are tied in your office closet."
It
would do. "Huhhy, chaih!"
"You
command me to destroy property, an office door?" "Yesh."
"This
door belongs to you?" "Yesh!"
The
whir of a motor. A crash. Another. Splintering wood. The motor, coming closer.
A pause. A tremendous smash. Silence.
From
the yard, shouts. A desperate shriek, that faded into a ghastly moan. Running
feet. Silence. I waited, in an agony of suspense. "Nick, where are
you?" "Ihheah!"
The
door rattled. "The bitch took the key!" The whine of a laser. A
crackle. Burning wood. A kick. The door gave way. Arlene, pistol in hand. She
clawed at my gag, At last, my mouth was free. "Never mind me, get Philip
to safety!" She flopped me on my stomach, worked loose the belt.
"Did
you hear? Find P.T.!"
"I
will. Chair, where the hell are you?"
"Here."
It rolled through the door.
Grunting
with effort, she dragged me toward the chair. I helped her haul me into it
"Nick, where's your pistol?"
"In
my desk." She threw open the drawer, checked the charge. "Watch for
Karen. I'll roll you—"
"Back
me to that wall; I can watch both doors. Save Philip."
A peck
on my cheek. She shoved my chair toward the wall, peered cautiously out the
door, dashed down the hallway.
I sat
sweating. My arm trembled; the pistol wavered.
On the
lawn, pounding feet I took aim with both hands.
Hie
doors crashed open. Karen gaped at the sight of me, 1 fired. My bolt singed her
hair as she dived outside, to safety,
"Seafort,
put down the gun. Else I'll kill you,**
I
waited, my hands steady now.
She
flung herself past the doorway, firing. A bolt sizzled my desk, between us. I
returned fire, but she was gone.
Shouts.
She muttered something foul. Running steps, fading. The distant whine of a
laser. A cry of pain,
"Chair,"
It was almost a whisper. 'To the veranda door."
Instantly
the machine began to roll.
I
braced myself with one hand, aimed. My legs would emerge first; there was no
help for it. If she fired into menu at least I wouldn't feel it.
"Through
the door, fast right turn,**
We did.
Nobody was mere.
I
lowered the gun. "Back inside,"
"Nick,
what in hell are you doing?" Arlene hauled my chair backward. "You
lunatic,"
"Where's
ET.r
"With
Jarcd, in their room, Anselm's guarding me stairs,"
"With
what?"
"I
gave him a rifle.'*
"We
don't have a rifle."
The
guard won't be needing it. P.T. wanted to fight. I
wouldn't
let him." "Good." "He's furious." "Mr.
SecGen?" A voice, from the yard As one, we raised our pistols. "Who
goes?"
"Wilkins.
Come out where I can see you." "No." Arlene. "Drop your
pistol and show yourself with your hands raised."
"I
can't How do I know you're not a prisoner?" "I'm not** No longer.
"I'm coming in. I'll have my weapon.** "I'll kill anyone who enters
this room armed,'* Arlene, with a note of finality.
"Enough,
you two." I rolled to the door. "We can't have a standoff." I
peered outside. Wilkins was alone. About twenty paces behind him, a guard knelt
covering him with his rifle. "Where's Karen Burns?" "She
escaped. Tilnitz is dead." "Oh, no!"
"It
was his scream you heard." Wilkins waved to the other guard, "The
SecOen's all right," Slowly, we sorted ourselves out.
If
Karen was an enemy, who could I trust? Had Tilnitz been her accomplice? Why in
Lord God's name did she assault me?
We had
no answers. I called the Potomac Naval Station, had the duty officer rouse his
commander, "Send me two squads of Marines, well armed, flank. They'll
guard the perimeter."
We were
groundside; I should have called U.N.A.E instead of Navy, To hell with the
niceties.
I
rolled across the lawn, halted at Mark's body.
The
laser had caught him at close range, burned an arm entirely off. I tried not to
retch.
Two
gate guards were dead, one burned.
I rang
Jerence Branstead in New York. Two hours later, he was on his way, with a
company of reliable troops. General Dormer was hah0 an hour behind.
Anselm,
flushed with tension, reluctantly surrendered his rifle. Bevin put down the bat
with which he'd guarded the top of the stairwell. Jared and P.T. emerged.
Philip was white-faced. "It was wrong, Mom. Dead wrong."
I left
them to argue,
Mikhael
Tamarov was nowhere to be found. I was frantic; after Alexi, his son's death
would be unendurable. Someone thought to check the gate log. Mikhael had signed
out just after he'd run from my office. Destination left blank. It was one
vexation too many. I cursed long and fluently, felt slightly better.
Branstead
landed on the pad, in a huge military craft filled with soldiers. "You're
all right? Thank God." Fervently, he embraced me.
"We
have to untangle ourselves. What in God's name—**
"Mark
called me on his way to you, distraught He thought Karen was one of mem,"
"Of
whom?"
'The
Eco Leaguer
"Why
the hell didn't you call? He died, two gate guards—"
"You
don't think I uied? Your callers were down. Even your personal line was jammed"
"But..."
I spluttered to a halt
"I
went half out of my mind sir. No one could reach you."
"Why
tonight Jerence? What was she up tof Then it hit me. "Lord God I'm
responsible," I pounded my insensate knee.
"How?"
"1
told her, on the plane. That we'd caught the Eco League
and
were founding them up tonight. She knew she was out
of
time. I broke security and killed Mark."
"She
killed Mark." His voice was firm.
"It
was my stupidity.**
"Ours.
We all share the blame. Donner, me, you... at least we know who planted the
Rotunda bomb.**
"Who?"
I puzzled it out. "Good Christ. Karen?"
"Opportunity,
motive .. .**
Donner's
craft landed. An hour later we met in the kitchen, a council of four. Arlene
handed around coffee, sat grimly. They invaded my home."
"We'll
get her, Ms. Seafort."
"My
home!" She smashed the table. "She was one of
yours!"
I said,
"That's not quite fair, hon. She—" "From now on, I personally
approve every security file." Arlene's tone brooked no refusal.
"Done."
The General seemed glad to comply, "We grabbed the suspects. Karen made a
flurry of calls, no doubt to them, but your personal lines can't be traced.
Four of the eco bastards were throwing clothes in their kit, one was out the
door."
"You
have them all?"
"All
we know of, except Karen. And Hooker."
I
swore. "You said you had him."
"I
think we do. They're combing the streets. He called his cousin from the
Barcelona Ramblas; they're watching—"
1 shook
my head. The one I wanted most had escaped. Perhaps I should invoke martial law
after all.
Jerence
asked, "What shall we tell the mediamenT
The
truth. We were attacked, and have three dead."
"And
about the Eco Leaguer
That we
have them in custody. Put Booker's picture on the holonets. Ten thousand Unies
as reward. Twenty."
"Very
well." We adjourned.
Late in
the night, a call. Bishop Saythor, aghast. He offered me his sympathy, his
prayers. He seemed sincere.
At
last, holding Arlene, I slept.
In the
morning the street was swarming with mediamen, their holocams surveying the
gate. To General Donner's dismay, I ordered them invited in, allowed them to
photograph the lawn, gave a terse statement.
I
awaited the poly and drug examiners' report.
At
noon, a call. "Sir, Edgar Tolliver here," My onetime aide, later a
Captain, now retired and settled in Philadelphia.
"Edgar!
Good of you to call. We're, urn, having a bad day."
"I
imagine." His tone was Ay. "I have the Tamarov boy,"
"Good
heavens. Why you?"
"His
father and I were friends. Mikhael says he fled your compound and your custody.
Shall I deliver him? I'm off to Lunapolis tomorrow night. Vacation,"
"Is
he willing?"
"Not
particularly. His attitude lacks a certain, ah, suavity. Do you want him?"
"Not
unless he agrees." Not even then, but I owed it to Alexi to do what I
could,
"You'll
of course soothe and coddle him when he returns?"
Tolliver!"
"Just
asking." I could hear his grin. He'd always taken pleasure in tweaking me,
and for years I'd let him, "Mikhad's floundering, sir. He wants me to talk
him into going back, but he's wary of your, ah, renowned kindness,"
"Don't
bother."
"Why,
Mr, SecGen, it's no trouble at all." Abruptly, he turned serious. "My
condolences on the attack, sir. Is there anything I can do?"
"No,
but thanks."
"My
best to Ms. Seafort."
Take
care, Edgar." We rang off.
Another
terse conference with Branstead and Donner. "Cousin Sara implicated two
more joeys, but they'd flown the coop. We'll catch them."
"What
in God's name," Jerence asked, "possessed them to go on a killing
spree? All those attacks ..."
Donner
grimaced. "I'm not sure if they're political fanatics, or a form of cult
Death didn't matter, they said, because our enviro neglect already killed so
many."
Satan
worked in mysterious and subtle ways. I shivered. Jerence said, "Karen
Burns and that Booker joey are still loose. Mr. SecGen"—he tapped my
appointment book— "you have to stay under guard. At least until they're
caught." "Why, if my own guards are—"
"Karen
must have meant to kidnap you, else she'd have burned you down. She may
still—" "How do you know?" "She said she'd take you on a
ride, right?" "But where?"
He
shrugged. "Your guess is as good as mine." "But why, damn
it?" Silently, a small prayer of contrition. "The E.A.L. was
desperate to alter your policies, despite your speech. They wanted even more
change."
"Was
I supposed to shut down our entire economy?"
"Apparently."
I
shrugged. Lunatics. Like all glitched enviros, they—no, I'd switched sides. I
must remember that
"Guard
Arlene and Philip," I said. "I won't take a company of soldiers to
the head to relieve myself."
Branstead
and the General exchanged glances. "Now your speaking tour is wound down,
we feel—"
"We?"
"Donner
and I talked it over. Sir, you travel too much. Until we catch those bastards,
stay here or at the Rotunda. There's no guarding you when you go gallivanting
about"
"I
will not be their prisoner!" I slammed the table.
"a-
;»»c r»nlv for a little—"
"No!
I have appointments. Dr. Ghenili has me scheduled in four days: should I
cancel? My future depends on it"
"There
are committed terrorists roaming—"
I
shouted, "I don't care!"
Arlene
poked her head into my office. "Bellow more softly, love."
I waved
her in. "These joeys want me to lock myself in the compound. Cancel all
travel. Did you ever hear such goofjuice?"
"That
reminds me, Donner," she said. "I want a laser license for P.T."
He
frowned. "I can swing it, but public policy ..." Few were allowed to
carry a laser pistol. I was licensed, of course, and Arlene.
"He
shoots well; I taught him myself. And he has sense."
"Very
well, I'll see to it But if you stay under wraps ..." Donner looked
hopeful.
"How
well do you know my Nick?" Arlene's tone was sardonic. "He won't
agree, no matter the cost." She looked thoughtful. "On the other
hand, I could disable his chair."
"On
the other hand, I could crawl." I didn't see the humor. Yet, my
stubbornness risked whoever traveled with me. And I'd have a hard time forcing
P.T. and Arlene to stay at home, if I left the compound. "Look, what
if..." I puzzled it through. "Jerence, what if I traveled in secret?
Why announce that I'm going to Lunapolis to see GheniliT*
"The
media watch your jet, your official heli."
"Smuggle
me aloft in a military shuttle. Dock at the Naval wing in Earthport, transfer
me to a private craft."
"Word
will get out."
"Branstead,
you're a born plotter. Look how you smuggled goofjuice onto Victoria. I have
faith in you."
"You're
bigger than a vial of—"
"We'll
use this trip as a test. If it works, fine. Else we'll try something else. In
the meantime, catch Karen and
Sergeant
Booker. I'll expect to see their holos every hour on
the
news. See to it"
"The
nets don't always—"
"See
to it"
Midafternoon.
I took a break from a series of dreary political calls, sat on the veranda.
Thadeus Anselm leaned in the doorway, hands in pockets. "May I join
you?"
"If
you'd like." I sounded ungracious, at best. I made an effort "Sit Get
yourself a softie."
Shyly,
he relaxed into a lounge chair.
I
recalled he'd told me he was lonely. Awkwardly, I sought a topic of
conversation. "What's between you and Mikhael,boyr
"I
don't know, sir. Maybe it's the exercise."
"Arc
you hard on him?'
"I
can't be; I have no authority. I tell Bevin what to do, and Mikhael does it or
not as he chooses. I've never complained."
"What
then?"
For a
moment he looked troubled. "I guess I'm not that
likable."
"You
had friends, at Devon?"
"A
few. Cadet Santini, but she ..."
"Was
murdered. I'm sorry." I cleared my throat. "When you're not drinking,
I find you likable."
"Thanks."
He brooded. "Danil was crying last night"
"During
the... commotion?"
"After."
"Understandable."
I should have found the boy, comforted him. He was but fourteen. "Look
after him, Tad."
"Aye
aye, sir." It would be good practice, for when he was
first
middy.
The
caller rang. Senator Uzuki, stubborn as ever about our enviro package.
Reluctantly, I went back to work.
By
evening, alone in my office, I dared hope I was making progress. Using every
pressure I knew, I'd gotten seven Senators to reconsider their opposition. Not
much, but it was a start. I was confident I could carry the Assembly, but if
the Senate dug in, our legislation was dead in the water.
A
knock. Mikhael Tamarov, his jumpsuit rumpled, his hair awry. He eyed me
uncertainly.
"You're
here for your clothes?" My face was impassive.
"And
to talk to you."
"That's
not necessary."
Unbidden,
he flopped into the chair across my desk. "I'm messed up, Mr.
Seafort."
"I'm
aware." My tone was flinty.
"I
think I'm glitched, sometimes. I was waiting to talk to Dad. He understands
these. .. understood." His fists clenched. "Understood."
He
looked so much like Alexi, my heart ached. "And now he's gone. You'll
never again have a talk with him. Never have his caring, the rest of your
life." Brutal, but I saw no choice. "You're on your own."
"Am
I?" His cheeks were wet.
"You
sure are, joey." I took up my caller. "Shall I send the cadet to help
you pack?"
He wept
openly.
I
waited him out.
"Where
should I go?"
"Kiev,
I suppose." I let the silence lengthen. "Unless you ask me to take
you back."
"Would
you?" It was a whisper.
"This
time, only with a judge's custody order." With his consent and his
mother's, it could be arranged.
"Why?"
How to
make him understand? "We're a family. Arlene and I, P.T.... we treat each
other a special way."
"I'm
not part of it."
"You
are, when you live with us."
Footsteps
in the hall. Philip peered in. "Am I interrupting?"
"Yes,
we're—no, wait. You can help." I waved him to a seat, wheeled myself from
behind my desk to join them. "Remember when you were sixteen, and we had
that talk?" He flushed. "Vividly."
"Mikhael
needs to understand. Would you tell him?" "If I must." Philip
crossed his legs, pursed his lips in thought. "I was giving Path a hard
time that year. We fought, and he rarely let me have my way."
I
opened my mouth to protest the unfairness of it, but subsided. I'd asked him to
speak.
"Partly
it's that I was certain 1 was right, which made courtesy unnecessary. I worked
myself into a decision to leave. If you won't bother to look at me, why should
I talk to you?"
Mikhael
jumped as if shot. "I'm sorry. I didn't mean ..." He crossed his
arms, hugged himself. "Go on." From time to time he threw Philip an
anxious glance.
"Where
was !?...! was ready to leave. I dared Fatfi to call the jerries. He said he
wouldn't. I called him ,.." P.T. swallowed. "I called him a liar,
told him he wouldn't really let me go.
"Til
help you pack,' Path told me. Til give you food for your dinner, and escort you
to the gate. Then you're on your own.*"
The
room was hushed.
"He
sat me down—right where you're sitting, in fact— and told me Mom and I were his
reason for living. We had a bond, a family bond, that was sacred to him. There
was absolutely nothing I could do—nothing—that would make him throw me out I
could spit at him, steal his heli, scream curses at him all day long. I was
still his son and I would share his home. He would endure any behavior at all
because of our bond.
"But,
Path added, he would respond to that behavior. With
discipline.
And if I chose to break that bond by walking out, he would not take me back,
ever. And, Mikhael... he meant it"
I said
quietly, "Thank you, son."
Mikhael
licked his lips. "What happened... after?"
"I
got a strapping, for the second time in my life. And then we made up."
"He's
not ever going to hit me."
"AH
right Anything else, Path?"
"Did
Mom talk to you about a pistol?"
"Yes,
sir. It's a good idea." He stood, stretched. "Good night."
When we
were alone, I busied myself witfi papers. "Make your decision, and be
quick about it"
"Mr.
Seafortr
I put
down my holovid, tried not to sound impatient "Yesr
"What
would Dad want me to do?"
I
pondered. Alexi loved Moira, of mat I had no doubt Had he known she was a weak
parent? Did it matter? "I'm not sure. If I'd died and Arlenc couldn't
raise P.T., I'd hope Alexi would. Or Derek,"
"Why
them?"
"They
knew who I was, and what I wanted for my son,"
"I
won't let you hit me." His tone was stubborn,
"Good,
the decision's made. Get your clothes."
Instead,
be sat hunched forward on his arms, staring at a scuffed shoe. Minutes
stretched into a quarter hour.
I
fussed at holochips, battling not to give in.
A sigh
of resignation. "What do I have to do, sir?" His voice was subdued.
"I
warn you, any more of yesterday's curses and I'll wash out your mouth. As for
your conduct it's been unacceptable. Bend over the desk."
He made
as if to speak, chose not to. With a grimace, he bent himself across the desk,
rested head in hands.
I
tugged off my belt, the same one Karen had tied me with Carefully, I maneuvered
my chair. I gripped the side rail, raised my arm high, cracked the leather
across his rump. "Straighten out, joey," 1 said. "And I mean
right now.
CHAPTER
15
t our
Devon guest quarters, I peered into the mirror. "Smooth your hair, Anselm.
It's a matter of respect."
"Yes,
sir."
"It's
'aye aye, sir.' Have you forgotten everything? Mikhael, we'll be back soon.
Danil, are you ready?"
The
cadet bounded into the room, his gray uniform neat and crisp. "Yes,
sir!"
It was
a memorial service for the five slain cadets. I'd put off Hazen's suggestion of
a service until the capture of the ecos; somehow it seemed obscene to memorialize
our joeys while their murderers ran free.
For the
solemn ceremony, he'd assembled the entire Academy at Devon, even calling down
his cadets stationed at Farside Base.
We met
in the dining hall, the only Academy chamber large enough to hold the whole
company. Soberly, Hazen eulogized our dead, whose blood-soaked bodies I'd found
in the grass, that awful July day.
If I be
bereaved of my children, I am bereaved.
When
Hazen was done, I wheeled to the front of the hall to speak. I spoke of the
hopes unfulfilled, the lives cut short, the friendships shattered.
"I
have come out of respect for your fellows who died,
but
also out of respect for you, and to address the wrong we did you." I
forced myself to look into their eyes.
"The
Service is honor and trust, and no more. You have the right, the absolute
right, to trust your fellow cadets, the midshipmen, your instructors, your
officers. As they have the right and obligation to trust you." Throughout
the hall, not a sound.
"When
the joeys of Krane Barracks passed through the suiting room, they were
entitled, each and every one of them, to the certainty that no person in God's
Navy would wish them ill. That no one, regardless of his politics, would betray
the trust that binds our lives together. We each of us, as we sail the stars,
depend on our mates for our very lives. At Devon Academy, that trust was
shaken. I hope and pray that you will allow it to be rebuilt.
"On
behalf of the United Nations, of the Government of Lord God, I humbly apologize
to you all."
I took
a long slow breath.
"Dismissed."
In his
office, Hazen swirled the ice in his glass. "Well said. It's what we
strive to teach them."
"Thank
you." I noticed that he, or a predecessor, had replaced much of the
furniture I'd removed as Commandant. I'd found it impossible to pace without
barking a shin.
"I
wish everyone felt that way." He spoke lightly, but with an undercurrent
of tension. There was something he wanted to tell me. "Who doesn't?"
"You've been around longer than I, sir. Has the Navy always been so
political?"
I
thought of Admiral Duhaney, in my youth, and his machinations with the Senate.
"From time to time."
"These
days there's a certain ... vehemence." Hazen hesitated. "That damned
Galactic is a symbol. All my cadets want her. Three middies have put in for
transfers." "How is that political?"
"I've
had half a dozen calls from officers aghast at your—excuse me, our new enviro
policy. They're afraid it will scuttle Olympiad and the three unbuilt sister
ships. Do I have any influence with you, et cetera."
My eyes
narrowed. "Who called?"
"You
spoke, sir, of trust?"
I
closed my eyes. Infuriating. If I ordered him outright, he'd likely tell me,
but then he'd despise me. I should be grateful he was concerned enough to hint
at all. I made another note to confer with Admiralty as soon as our bills
passed the Senate. What with our vote-seeking and the savage attack on my home,
that resolve had gotten lost in the shuffle.
"I
think," he said, choosing his words carefully, "the Navy needs to
hear that our emphasis on ecology won't disrupt shipbuilding, or ultimately
weaken the Service."
And
that was precisely what I couldn't promise. Our enviro measures would do so,
beyond a doubt Should I tell him so? I hesitated, unsure of his divided
loyalty.
Outside
the window, cadets drilled at precision march in the fading light. I suspected
he'd arranged the show for my benefit. "You'll send the Farside lot back
aloft?"
"Soon.
I may grant leave while they're groundside." At Farside Base, on the far
side of the moon, our joeys were cut off from even routine contact with Earth.
There were no public callers, no sat-relays except those operated by the Navy.
Parents
would be grateful for the unscheduled leave. I pictured Bevin preparing eagerly
for his father's visit, and sighed. "I suppose I should collect my joeys
and move on."
"You've
found the Bevin boy satisfactory?"
"Quite."
Now that I'd become an enviro—a shift that still left me dizzy—I could hardly
object to his politics. I
"AndAnselm?" ••
Should
I tell him his middy was a souse? No, it would
put a
black marie on his record, one that I wasn't yet ready to chisel in stone.
"A pity about his father."
"Eh?
Oh, that. Yes." He stood. "I'll see you to your heli."
Two
U.N.A.F. commandos accompanied us, on a nigged military heli. My trip to Devon
had been unannounced, as was our return. Bevin and Anselm chattered above the
whine of the engine. Near me, where I could keep an eye on him, was Mikhael.
From time to time, miserable, he wiped his mouth with a handkerchief.
I
frowned, crossed my arms. The boy was impossible, When we'd returned to guest
quarters for our gear, he'd accosted me, laden with petulance. "Why
couldn't I go?"
I'd tucked
my coat into my duffel. **It was a private memorial, for Naval officers."
The cadets deserved my apology, but it was unthinkable to wash the Navy's dirty
linen in public. No one outside the Service, even family, ought to be present.
Mikhael
had muttered something, turned away. Outraged, I caught his arm. "What was
that?" He shrugged.
"I
heard, 'Fucking nonsense."* He said nothing, but his stare was defiant,
"Into the head." I pointed to the lavatory. "Whyr
"Movel"
I followed him, half pushing. I grabbed the soap from the sink. "Use
it." "You can't make me!"
'Two
days ago, you promised me a new start." In my office, after his
chastisement, a tearful reconciliation, pledges of good behavior. "I
tried."
"I
won't have your foul language. 'Whoso curseth his father and mother, his lamp
shall be put out in obscure
darkness.'"
Eyes blazing, I thrust out the soap. "Do as I say!"
Now, in
the heli, grimacing, he spit a foul taste into his handkerchief. Perhaps he'd
learn. There was ample soap, and I'd reached the end of my tolerance. My
surprise was that his defiance had crumbled, that he'd meekly washed out his
own mouth. Perhaps he sought a father after all. Certainly the Alexi I knew
wouldn't have borne the boy's behavior. Not for a moment.
Casually,
as if unaware, I threw an arm across his shoulder,
"We'll
win in the Assembly. We've lost the Senate." Branstead looked glum.
"Robbie?"
I turned to Senator Boland, down from New York for the day,
"He's
right. I can't swing enough votes."
"Our
campaign, my speeches .. .**
"It's
helped. North American mail is running three to one in our favor, European mail
two to one. But only a third of the Senate faces election next year, and—*'
"What
can we offer we haven't already?" They stared. I could hardly blame them.
For years I'd eschewed the give-and-take of compromise. "The emigration
bill? Banking reform?"
"We'd
gain ten, at best," Robbie said. "We're still nineteen short. I've
scratched my head over and again, asking what tricks my father would have used.
If there's a way, I can't find it,"
We were
undone. Short of martial law, there was no way to override a veto by the United
Nations Senate, "We can't persuade them?*'
"Sir,
they're insulated from their constituencies by longer terms, and they resent
the pressure you put on the Assembly. I've run out of arguments. Frankly, if
the SeeGen were anyone else, I myself might be on the other side."
I said
gently, "You'd vote for me, not the enviro package?"
"I
trust you, sir. Despite your disclaimer at the Von Walthers banquet, your moral
compass is truer than mine." We'd parted company over the transpops, years
back, and he'd come to regret his failure of conscience.
"If
somehow the Patriarchs would climb aboard ..." Jercnce eyed me hopefully.
"That's
out." I wouldn't encourage them to meddle in politics, and in any event
their sympathies lay with the opposition.
"What,
thenr
"I
don't know. Play it out," Sometimes, on ship, it was
all I'd
known to do. At times, it had worked. But under the
circumstances,
that was unlikely. How, if we failed, could
I face
Philip? "Does Valera have a hand in—"
"Excuse
me." Anselm was at the door. "May I join you?"
Had he
no sense? "Senator Boland is the majority whip, Jerence is my chief of
staff, our enviro package is failing, and you'd barge in for a chat?"
"I'm sorty." "Out!"
He
swung shut the door. Boland and Branstead exchanged glances,
"ANSELM!" He reappeared.
I
beckoned him in. "Sit." To Robbie, "Is Valera undercutting
us?"
"Not
actively, but you're destabilizing the party. He wants to hold the Supras
together; he's heir apparent."
Idly, I
toyed with my puter, keyed up an Arcvid simulation, turned the screen to the
boy. He gaped. "Go on, show
He
grasped the controls, braced himself, took a deep breath.
Boland
asked, "Did you and Cisno have words? He's, ah, more cautious than
usual."
My
smile was bleak. "I didn't want him to bolt us."
"I'm
glad I'm not in his shoes." A glance at his watch. "By the way, I'm
taking Jared to dinner. Care to come along?"
"Thanks,
no. You ought to have time to yourselves."
"Oh,
I see him often enough. Join us. It's a new Ukrainian restaurant. Real
meat."
I
hesitated, reluctant to abandon Arlene. On the other hand, it would give her
time alone with Philip. And if Ghe-nili accepted me as a patient, who knew how
long I'd be away. Charlie Witrek was scheduled after dinner; a therapist from
Johns Hopkins would drop him off at the compound. Still, I would enjoy a good
meal out "All right." Security would go ballistic, but that was their
problem.
Later,
when Robbie had gone to change clothes, I asked Anselm, "What was that
about?"
"I
was bored, and wandering the house." He shrugged, "I found myself in
the living room, staring at your liquor cabinet."
"So
you came to me?"
"I
shouldn't have interrupted, sir."
True,
but I'd kept him on staff, knowing his disabilities. I said, "All
remaining demerits are canceled. Well done. Mr. Anselm."
He
broke into a pleased grin. "Thank you."
"Inspection
tomorrow morning. Have your gear ready."
"Aye
aye, sir, but Ms. Seafort told me."
I
raised an eyebrow, 'Told you what?"
"About
Lunapolis, What time do we leave?"
So much
for secrets. "And you, of course, told Bevin." Who no doubt told a
guard, who told Newsnet, who would tell the entire world.
He drew
himself up. "I did not."
"Hmpff.
The shuttle lifts at nine in the morning."
Til be
ready. She said you're taking us all."
"Bevin
may be useful. And it's not fair to leave Mikhael
behind.
He's my foster son." The court had approved our
petition.
Jerence Branstead, as usual, had worked with
smooth
efficiency. "Five of us, counting Ms. Seafort." "You have some
objection?" "Of course not. It's just... sir, Danil is no difficulty.
But if
you're in the clinic, who's to look after Mr.
Tamarov?"
"Arlene."
"Won't
she be with you?"
"Most
of the time." It would be a problem. I added, "I think I have a
solution."
We
raced through blocked streets in an armor-plated groundcar, pulled up directly
to the restaurant As quickly as they could manage, my guards hustled me inside.
Thanks to my speaking tour, my chair and 1 were instantly recognized. I had
time for a quick wave at a blur of astonished faces before I was rushed to a
private room. Jared Tenerc and Robbie were already seated. Security checked the
room, waited just outside.
We
fussed over wine, ordered dishes of genuine meats
off the
lavish menu. Jared raised his glass. "Thank you, sir. You're making
Philip
very happy."
"It's
still only words. The Senate ..."
Boland
nodded glumly. "They're a problem." He brightened, patting Jared's
knee. "My boy tells me you saw my... ah, investment."
I
puzzled it out. "Cardiff, you mean? I'm embarrassed P.T. came to you for
the mortgage."
"It
was my idea," said Jared modestly. "I knew Uncle
Robbie
would understand. And P.T.... once he saw the place, he had to have it."
I said
without thinking, "You truly see yourselves living there?"
"When
the air's breathable. In the meantime we could hermetically seal the house,
but..."
I
nodded agreement. Quite impractical. "Why outside Cardiff, of all
places?"
His
voice was quiet. "It's a good place to raise a child."
My wine
spilled, and I dabbed ineffectually at the cloth until the waiter came.
"I'm
sorry. Shouldn't I have said that?*'
"No,
it's just..." I gave it up. "You startled me." P.T. and Jared
were more serious than I'd known. I tried not to imagine myself as a grandparent.
How could it be so? I'd barely finished raising my son.
Jared
smiled. "P.T. will make a good father."
I said
something polite.
Later
in the meal Robbie Boland leaned close. "A word, if I might." To
Jared, "This is private. You won't repeat it to anyone."
"Of
course not, Uncle Rob."
I
waited.
Boland
kept his voice low. "That Burns woman. Are you sure she was the only bad
apple on your staff?"
A stab
of alarm. "We rechecked everyone. As far as we know ..."
"Sir,
make absolutely sure."
He had
my full attention. "Rob, what do you know?"
"Nothing."
A grimace. "That's what's so frustrating. But I've rarely seen politics so
unsettled. If the enviro bills go through, joeys stand to make fortunes, others
to lose them. Someone else might have a go at you."
"There's
not much I can do. Besides, it all comes back to the Senate. We're losing
them."
"Yes."
A frown.
Jared
said softly, "I'm not in politics, but growing up around you and Uncle Rob
..."
"Yes?"
I hoped my voice didn't show my irritation.
"Why
don't you just announce you have the votes?"
I
stared.
He
licked his lips. "I mean, you know how politicians are about getting on a
bandwagon. Declare you have pledges from enough Senators to pass the bill.
It'll bring others on board."
I said
coldly, "That would be lying."
"Oh,
goofjuice."
"Jared!"
Robbie's eyes were sharp. "He's the SecGen."
"Yes,
I'm sorry, but it's not lying, it's a ruse of war." His tone was defiant.
"I'm
not at war, Jared."
"Of
course you are. A war for their hearts and souls. A war to save the Earth from
itself. And don't tell me it isn't done; candidates always claim polls show
them ahead, even when they're behind."
"I
never did."
Rob
Boland's mouth twitched in a smile. "You never
had
to." "And I wouldn't have. I'll speak truth, no matter what
the
cost." "Well..." Jared toyed with his bread, "Would it be a
lie,
if you
make it true?"
*Tm
sorry," Charlie clutched my shoulder as I rolled to the sofa. "I
don't know the living room as well. In the office, I could find the chair
blindfol—as I am." He feh for the upholstered armrest. "Ah. I have it
now." Cautiously, he sat. "I don't mean to inconven—"
"Don't."
It was a plea, "Charlie, don't apologize. We did mis to you."
"No
you didn't." His voice was cheerful, "Those fucking eco bastards did.
Oops, Sorry for the language."
"Nonsense."
I waved it away, forgetting he couldn't see.
"Just
one thing I beg of you. Catch them."
"We
have most of them, and we'll get the others." I spoke with confidence I
didn't feel. I poured him a softie from the waiting tray, placed it in his
hand. "So. The doctors will try again?"
"In
a week or two, they say." His fingers brushed through his hair. "This
time it had better work."
"I
feel responsible. If there's anything I can do ..."
"You're
doing it." A wry smile. "I was thirsty." He made a show of
tasting his drink.
"Charlie
,,,"
"I
know." His voice was quiet. "It's ghastly, isn't it? Do you have
scars?" His hand flitted to his ravaged face.
"No,
son."
"They'll
repair mine. They're waiting to know whether the eyes will be real, or
cosmetic. But..." A long silence.
"Yes?"
"Even
if the transplants take, I won't see well enough for the active list, I won't get
a ship," A smile, that seemed forced, "If I see at all. Most likely,
I'll be the youngest middy on the retired list"
I
raised my head, to the heavens. Lord, if You have any mercy, any decency ...
"What
will you do?"
"I
wonder that, sometimes, at night" A laugh. His voice was bright. *There's
a lot of night nowadays,"
My
luxurious dinner sat congealed in my stomach, "Oh, Charlie," I
wheeled myself to his side.
"Don't
feel pity, Mr, SecGen," He shied away, 'These things happen. You're by far
the worse off. I'm so sorry for what they did to you,"
"I'm
managing." For now. Until Ghenili healed me, or I ended matters.
We sat
quietly.
"Funny
thing," he said at last. "When you have no eyes, you can't cry."
Late in
the evening I sat in my living room, staring at my unexpected visitor.
"Are you out of your mind?" "I don't believe so." Derek
Carr's tone was cool.
"You
already lost a week's negotiations when I called you for Mikhael. I'll be fine;
even if Ghenili accepts me, he may not operate immediately."
"I'll
set up holoconferences, and fly groundside next week for final negotiations.
I'm going with you."
Mikhael
watched the byplay, as did Arlene.
"Isn't
that for me to say?"
"Only
if you close all of Lunapolis." Derek folded his
arms.
"I appreciate ..." I swallowed a lump in my throat.
"Truly,
it's not necessary."
"Say
then that I'm going in Alexi's place.*'
"He
wouldn't have—"
"The
hell he wouldn't!" For a moment, Derek's gaze was fierce. "I'll have
no more of it. You insult me."
I stole
a glance at Mikhael, His eyes were riveted on Derek.
"I
suppose," I grumbled, "we can make a place for one more,"
The
boy's mouth relaxed into a goofy smile. "I don't suppose you have any more
stories?"
"A
few."
"Not
a one, if you hear anything from his mouth not fiT for a nunnery."
Derek's
eyebrow shot up. "Mikhael, have you been giving him trouble?"
"No,
sir. Not—I mean, not lately."
"Come
along, joey. Let's take a walk." He uncoiled his lanky frame from the
couch. "Did I ever tell you about the time Alexi got caned?"
That
night, slowly, carefully, Arlene and I made love. We'd been sixteen, our first
time, middies on our first leave. Then, I'd been ignorant, unsure, and she'd
helped me along. She did so now. It was hell, having legs that wouldn't go
where you sent them, muscles that failed to respond, nerves that sent only
erratic sensations from my groin.
Afterward,
content in the fullness of satiation, we lay drowsing.
"Nick,
you know I've had eggs frozen."
"What?"
I snapped awake.
"We're
not too old. Having Mikhael.,, seems to make you whole."
"I'm
doing it for Alexi."
"And
for yourself. You take joeykids under your wing. Look at Danil and Tad."
"What
are you saying?"
"That
it's not too late to have another child."
"When
he was grown I'd be ..." I was scandalized. "In my seventies!"
"So?
If you'd start enzyme treatments ..,"
"I'd
look younger, and still be seventy. It's not natural."
"Neither
are tooth implants. You've had your share of those."
"That's
different,"
"Or
new lungs,**
I
propped myself on an arm. "Hon, do you want a child?"
A long
while passed. "I'm not sure." She nuzzled my chest. "But if so,
it would have to be yours."
I tried
not to cry. "God, I love you,**
Her
hand crept lower. Presently, I murmured, "Quiet, love. We'll frighten the
horses,"
They
sneaked us out of the house in Branstead's heli, and in Derek's, just past
dawn. We all of us were giddy as children, giggling at the subterfuge. Arlene
and I sat together, entwined, on the deck of Derek's machine. The boys rode
with Jerence. From time to time Arlene jabbed me, like cadets when Sarge wasn't
looking. I tickled her beneath the neck, one of her few vulnerable spots.
DereJc
tolerantly kept his eyes on the instruments, ignoring the guffaws from the back
seat.
"I've
decided," she said, "that I do."
I
blinked. "Do what?"
"Don't
claim senility on me, you old fool." She hushed my indignant protest with
a kiss.
"You
want a child?" My voice soared, almost to a squeak. "You're
serious?"
She
nodded.
Bemused,
I lay silent, cuddling her all the way to the
shuttleport.
Potomac
Naval Station had its own hangars, part of the shuttleport complex. To get to
Lunapolis we had to transfer at Earthport Orbiting Station. Most shuttles to
Earthport were run by U.NA.R, but the Navy jealously guarded its prerogative to
maintain its own.
If I
had to trust one unit over the other to maintain secrecy, I'd choose the Navy
every time. My own prior service would help ensure their loyalty, but even
more, the Navy's long tradition of honor was something the more prosaic
U.N.A.F. lacked. For further security, only two people at Earthport had been
told I would be aboard, and one of them was Admiral McKay.
We
boarded the shuttle in a closed hangar, for secrecy. Jerence had gone directly
to the shuttleport's commander, who sent a lieutenant to direct operations. At
the sight of him, Anselm fidgeted, blushing. I raised an eyebrow. "He's
the one who caned me," he whispered. The lieutenant introduced the Station
medico. "Mr. SecGen, it's not often we send a paraplegic aloft.
Understand, the seats are not designed to accommodate—"
I
groaned. "Get on with it. I'll be all right."
"And
in zero gravity, once the shuttle breaks free of Earth..."
"Arlene,
tell him I'm no greenie."
"Hush,
love."
I bore
his anxious instructions with what grace I could muster. Afterward, I craned my
head to Mikhael. "You've been aloft?"
"Dad
took me. I'm used to it."
At
last, liftoff. Strapped securely in my seat, I practiced relaxation, as Sarge
had taught his eager cadets. I could still hear his chuckle. "Relax your
chest muscles, Seafort. Feel it press you. Just like a woman lay atop you, but
I guess you wouldn't know about that" At the time, I hadn't.
After
an endless roar and interminable pressure, the red receded from the corners of
my eyes. I sucked in air, loosened my straps, floated off the chair.
Behind
me, Anselm happily undid his straps. Mikhael gulped, his face green.
I
roared, "Don't even think about it! Sit up straight! Behave
yourself!"
It
worked. He was too startled to remember he felt sick.
More
gently, I said, Take deep, slow breaths, son. You'll be fine. If not, there's
the bag."
"Yessir."
He clutched it like a security blanket.
"Danil,
see if you and Mikhael can spot Earthport." Greenies tended to lose their
breakfast in zero gee. A diversion would help.
Derek
winked.
"How
are you feeling, love?" Arlene floated overhead.
"Fine."
My ribs were sore, but no need to mention them.
The
cockpit door opened; the copilot swam back, from handhold to handhold.
"Mr. SecGen, a priority message from your chief of staff."
"Very
well." I took the scrawled note. "Admiral McKay killed in
depressurization accident at Earthport. Whom do you want as replacement?
Otherwise, Admiralty will appoint Hoi of BuPers."
Without
thinking, I hauled myself upright. In zero gee, I realized, I had again the
freedom for which I yearned. "I need to speak to Branstead. Have you a
secure caller?"
"Of
course, sir. In the cockpit."
He and
the pilot would overhear my end of the conversation, but it couldn't be helped.
"If you please."
"Nick?"
Arlene looked between us.
'Trouble
at Earthport. I'll be right back." Hand by hand, I hauled myself forward,
my useless legs trailing.
I
punched in codes. "Jerence?"
"That
was fast." Branstead's voice crackled.
"How
did it happen?"
"A
freak accident. Exterior maintenance. Someone lost control of a tool carrier,
and it smashed a porthole."
I
swore. A tool carrier was halfway between a giant thrustersuit and a tiny gig.
Just large enough to be ungainly, too big for fine control. I hated them, never
used them on ship.
"You're
sure it was an accident?"
"There'll
be an inquiry, of course. But I imagine a seaman's attention wandered. McKay's
dead, in any case."
"Right.
What do we know about Hoi?"
"You
met him on Earthport, didn't you?**
"Ah,
yes." At Admiral McKay's conference, the one at which they'd lectured me
about GaJact/c. A smaOishjoey, dapper, concerned about the Navy's colonial
role. "Do we have a preferred candidate? Someone you recommend?"
Jerence deserved a say in our appointments; pay couldn't adequately reimburse
his loyalty.
"No
one in particular. I could check the list, but Admiralty's collective nose
would be bent out of joint."
"Then
go with their man. And summon the Board of Admiralty to a conference, as soon
as I'm back groundside. Reserve a whole day." I would warn them off of
politics, and break the news about canceling Olympiad and her sisters.
"And send the usual condolences to McKay's family." I hadn't known
the man well.
"Done.
Promise you'll call when you've seen Ghenili."
"I
will."
"The
very best of luck, sir.** He rang off.
I
maneuvered myself back to my seat. Mikhael seemed better, and was talking
earnestly with Derek. As I buckled myself in, Bevin pulled himself alongside.
"Are you busy, sir?"
"Speak."
"I've
been—Mr. Seafort told me details about our enviro bills. Your bills, I
mean."
For a
moment I was puzzled, until I realized he'd referred to Philip.
"And?"
His
face lit. "They're wonderful, sir. You should be proud."
"You're
grading my policy, at fourteen?**
"Yes,
sir, I'm out of line. But it's still wonderful.**
"Hmpff.
Don't get your hopes up. The Senate is against us.'*
"You'll
find a way. Like you did with the Assembly," He spoke with the misplaced
confidence of youth.
"I
doubt it. Besides, they were Philip's ideas, not mine,H
"No,
sir, if you'll pardon me. It was his idea, but your doing."
Arlene,
swinging back to her seat, ruffled his hair in passing; Danil grinned like a
foolish puppy. Appalling. Next she'd have him on her lap. How were we supposed
to train cadets to manhood, if she coddled them constantly? Sometimes Arlene
had no sense.
As
Earthport neared I squinted out the porthole, hoping to spot signs of the
damage that had killed Admiral McKay. But I knew I wouldn't; Earthport was so
vast that the accident site would be invisible. A shame he'd been in that
particular compartment at the moment; one chance in ten thousand. But if it
hadn't been he, it might have been someone else. Space travel was as safe as we
could make it, which meant it was still dangerous. There was risk, albeit
small, in bringing Mikhael aloft. As his guardian it was my job to fret about
such things.
Arlene's
suggestion that we have another child astounded me. Despite my own
upbringing—I'd never seen my host mother—my wife and I were both rather
old-fashioned about parenting. Could we count on being around and in good
health long enough to raise him, or her?
I
wasn't, truth be told, all that old for current times. There were Captains on
the active list well past eighty; old Hoskins couldn't even walk without aid.
Despite the overwrought popular holodramas, command was exercised by cool
decisions from an experienced master, not by a wild-eyed young hero sporting
matching platinum lasers.
Did I
want another son? For that matter, should we choose the sex? Could I raise a
daughter? Would I strangle the first young middy who eyed her?
I sat
musing while we neared the Station, Our docking berth was on Level 7, amid the
Naval cargo bays.
It was
unusual, though not unheard ©f, to seal entry to a bay before unloading; some
cargoes were military and classified. We emerged into a deserted bay, and were
whisked directly to a lunar shuttle, Mikhael was bitterly disappointed; he'd
hoped to go exploring. Derek took him aside and spoke rather sharply, before I
could erupt. A fine father I'd be: I had no patience. Lord God only knew how
P.T. had turned out so well.
A few
hours later we were in Lunapolis.
Dr.
Ghenili's clinic was near the terminus of a clean but seedy warren, three
levels belowground. Half my face covered with a disguising bandage, we wheeled
past indifferent throngs, past emergency corridor seals and the occasional
shop, to the entry hatch.
The
clinic installed me in a modest room. I'd have preferred a hotel, but it was
out of the question if secrecy was to be maintained. Even if I bunked in a
Naval warren, word would sooner or later escape. The clinic was better schooled
in protecting the privacy of its patients. As it turned out, Ghenili himself
was an avid enviro; he was delighted to accommodate me.
Arlene
and Derek fussed to make me comfortable. I lacked only my motorized chair; it
would have been a prodigious waste of fuel to haul it aloft, and to what
purpose?
The
three boys wandered my room, bored, touching everything, picking up
instruments, sensors, my gear. I called them together. "Mr. Anselm, you
and Danil may go on leave." A momentary twinge of doubt. "Not a drop,
Tad. Agreed?"
"I
will not drink." A formal resolve that startled me,
"Visit
me daily, and the moment you feel the urge. Don't hesitate. Keep an eye on
Danil, and report to the Hilton by midnight."
"Aye
aye, sir,"
"What
about me?" Mikhael,
"Watch
holodramas at the hotel." It devastated him, as I knew it would. Before
his protest burst forth I said, "Or you may go out with Mr, Anselm."
He shot
the middy a dubious look.
"Under
his supervision,"
"No!"
Pure dismay,
"You're
fifteen, and I know Lunapolis too well. You won't go out alone." The lowermost
lunar warrens were famous for entertainments that would make a sailor blush.
"He's
only a year—"
"But
Mr. Anselm is a gentleman and an adult, by act of the General Assembly,"
It was so for all officers, even if
they
were but sixteen. "Middy, you're in charge. Treat him civilly, but don't
take any guff. He's a minor and I place him in your custody."
"Aye
aye, sir." Anselm's tone was cool.
Mikhael
said angrily, "I'll stay in the room."
"Boys,
outside a moment." I held Mikhael back. "I know you don't like it,
but it's good practice. You have to learn to control yourself. Any cadet
would—"
"I'm
no cadet."
"You
interrupted me." My tone was cold.
He
gulped. "Sorry, sir."
"Good
lad. Mikhael, your father joined the Navy at thirteen. He learned the very
discipline I'm trying to teach you. Give it a try for him, if not for me."
"I
hate Anselm. I won't call him 'sir.'"
"It's
not necessary. Be polite, and do what he tells you," He folded his arms. I
added softly, "Please?"
After a
moment he nodded his surrender. "Yes, sir."
Not
knowing what else to do, I ruffled his hair.
"Yes."
My
heart leaped.
"There's
no guarantee of success," Ghenili added. "In fact, you have only
about a forty percent—" That's good enough." "You understand
there's a certain possibility you won't
survive
the—"
"I
know. Get on with it."
"Listen,
love," Arlene squeezed my hand.
For two
days they'd poked and prodded, probed and palpitated me until I was on the
ragged edge of frustration,
"How
soon?" This very moment, if it was possible.
"Friday."
Three
days. It would suffice.
"Then
at least a week before we can get you out of bed. You'll be immobilized,"
I
know." They'd told me, over and again.
Time
slowed to a relentless crawl. Hours became weeks. I climbed into an unmotored
chair, rolled around the room, and into the hall beyond.
Arlene
spent as much time with me as possible; from time to time we had to separate to
save our marriage. Perhaps I was difficult.
When he
wasn't making business calls from his hotel room, Derek spent hours stretched
out on my bed, while I groused in the chair. At times he brought Mikhael, and
together we gave the boy a double dose of reminiscences,
Anselm
and Bevtn reported daily. They seemed to be enjoying themselves. Well, a young
middy could certainly expand his horizons in lower Lunapolis. I hoped he was
leaving Danil behind.
I
watched holos, tuned in the news. The enviro battle dominated the newsnets;
Senators and Assemblymen pontificated before the holocams as they maneuvered,
Branstead
called me, using the best security circuits we could devise. He wanted to claim
we had enough votes in both houses.
"This
is your idea?" I favored him with a scowl,
"Well,,,
no. Rob Boland thought of it, actually."
I
suppressed a smile, "Did he, now?"
"I
suppose you'll call it lying, Think of it as subterfuge." His voice jp'ew
somber. "We don't have many other options,"
"I'll
think on it." Decades past, I had spewed forth lies that sent innocent
boys and girls to their death. Perhaps it was necessary, but nothing in Lord
God's firmament would get me to do it again. I'd see the Earth crumble first.
It was all that kept me sane.
"1*11
make the announcement, sir. You don't have to say a word."
I
wasn't custodian of Branstead's morals, was I? Still, it left me uneasy.
"Wait. I'll let you know."
Admiral
McKay's funeral made the news, as did the strange death of a U.N.A.F. officer
who'd been posted to Lunapolis, but was found in an abandoned New Jersey
warehouse. I wouldn't have noticed, except that she reminded me of Karen Burns.
Burns
eluded our net. Our investigation was leading nowhere; we hadn't even found out
where she'd have taken me, or why. Sergeant Booker, too, remained at large.
Donner should have blockaded Barcelona, the moment Booker *s call came through.
If I'd been properly prepared, declared martial law on the instant...
I
sighed. Von Rourke had begun his infamy before the Final War by declaring
martial law; perhaps Hitler had as well. Booker would no doubt be caught. If
so, I'd attend his execution, to rejoice. Thank Lord God executions were
public.
Jerence
urged me to speak anew in favor of our program, in the hope of persuading a few
Senators. He'd evolved a wild scheme to beam my broadcast home on a private
sat-relay, and issue it from my compound as if I were speaking from there. He'd
even have our puter Warren replace the white-walled background of the clinic
with the familiar paneling of my office.
I
refused, of course. Not only was it too close to lying outright, though the
point was debatable, but I doubted one more speech would turn the tide.
"Hello,
Path.** P.T. and Jared stood grinning in the clinic
doorway.
"What's
this? Wherc'd you boys come from?"
"We
caught a shuttle." Philip brandished a small holo-cam. "Before and
after. This is the before." He aimed.
"No!"
I threw my covers over my torso. "Not while I'm wearing mis ... this
..."
"All
right, I'll stop." But he didn't "Mom says you've been charming, as
usual."
"She
can bring her complaints to me."
'To our
autocrat?" At last, he stopped filming, bent close to kiss the top of my
head. "Winstead asks after you. I didn't tell him you're here."
"Give
him my"—it hurt to say it—"best."
"Andrus
Bevin just learned you have his son on staff. He's ecstatic."
"I
can imagine." A mole for the enviros, placed in—no, I was enviro too. I
sighed. A year past, I couldn't have imagined being allied with the fanatics of
the Enviro Council. "Jared, don't block die doorway; that nurse wants
through."
"Sorry."
I bared
my arm for the usual punctures. "Ms. Gow, the joey with the holocam is
Philip Seafort, and the one fidgeting by the door is Jared, my
son-in-law." It wasn't quite correct; they were paired, not married,
but...
Jared
broke into a pleased smile. Was it possible I'd never publicly acknowledged our
relationship? Well, it was long since time. Gruffly, I patted the bed.
"Sit awhile."
At
least one day of my vigil passed quickly.
Friday,
I sent last-minute messages to Rob Boland, and notes begging support from a
pair of recalcitrant Senators who no doubt assumed I was safe in my compound.
Before
the relaxants left me too groggy to concentrate, a final good-bye to Jerence
Branstead. He rang off abruptly, almost in mid-word, just as I was telling how
well I thought of him. A grave hug from Philip, another, to my infinite
surprise, from Jared.
Derek's
hand flitted across my brow. "I'll be here, sir, when you wake."
"I
know." How could I deserve him?
He
snorted. "Feel free to take me for granted."
"You
were a fine boy. I was proud to ..."
"Was?"
"Am.
Will be, if I come out of this. If not..." , "Damn." He blinked rapidly, disappeared from view.
I
drifted in soft mist.
Mikhael's
face loomed over my bed. "Sir—Mr. Seafort..." He was dressed in his
est, and immaculately groomed.
"Can't
call me that. Have to find something else." His father couldn't be a
"mister."
"Yessir.
I just wanted to say—" His glance shot back, to Arlcne. "Get well.
Thank you for everything. I mean it. Get well, sir." To Arlene, a look of
appeal. She nodded,
"Very
good, Middy." Why did he seem puzzled? He'd been promoted ... when? Where
was he posted? I'd recall in a moment. Right now it was too ... too ...
Black.
An
endless expanse of white scrolled overhead. A bump; a sickening wave of pain.
Oblivion.
I
drifted in and out, visiting with Father, chewed out Mikhael for his
belligerence, watched P.T. grow. One day I could lift him on my shoulders, the
next...
Hot. So
hot.
Sleep.
**—fection
is taking hold. I increased the antibi—"
"Nick?
Squeeze my hand."
The bed
jounced. Red waves of torment.
My
mouth was dry and cracked,
"—been
three days and he's not responding. If his kidneys shut down—"
White
haze. Pain.
"Sir?"
Derek. "Hold on, sir. Please."
"Farewell."
I tried to clear my throat. "Old friend,"
"God
damn you!" Arlene's voice was a nail on slate. "Don't die on me, you
son of a bitch!"
"It's
... time."
"The
hell it is!"
I
drifted toward sleep.
"Breathe,
Nick. Breathe deep." Fingers squeezed my shoulder. "Stay with me,
sir." Derek's voice was tight. I tried.
Red
faded to white. My breathing eased. The world faded.
I
blinked. Derek, grizzled and gray, hunched in the corner.
"What
time is it?" A voice from an ancient grave.
He
jumped. "Lord Christ!"
"Don't
blaspheme,"
"Thank
God." He ran to the bed, fell on his knees. "On, thank God."
"Don't
weep."
"I
thought I'd lose you.**
"Where's
your dignity? You're head of Government."
"You're
..." Resolutely, he raised his head. **... my head of Government,"
I
drifted off.
When I
woke, Arlene and the three boys were keeping vigil. I was ravenously hungry.
They fed me pablum from a spoon.
"Give
me real food."
"Dr,
Ghenili says—"
"Where
is her
"Right
here," From the doorway, "Welcome back, Mr. SecGen."
"I
was ... lost" Perhaps it was always so. I tried to wiggle my foot, could
not, "It failed?"
"You're
in a full body cast, Don't try to move."
"It
itches,"
"Does
it, now?" He regarded me gravely.
After a
puzzled moment I cried out in joy. "I can feel!" Despite his warning
I wiggled my toes frantically. Bcvin danced from foot to foot, Anselm's eyes
glistened.
I
looked to Arlene. "Where's Derek?"
"He's
drunk. Mikhael's looking after him."
"Good
Lord. Doctor, how long will I be laid up?" "Three more days, even
with the growth stimulator. You
have to
heal. Then restricted movement for a month. After
that,
you should be well." My eyes slid to Arlene. "Long enough to raise a
child?"
Her
smile warmed my soul.
CHAPTER
16
Lf time
passed slowly before my surgery, afterward it stopped entirely, I was even more
helpless man before, serviced by tubes snaking under my sheets. If 1 used the
caller, the time lag from Lunapolis to New York and back would give away my
location, so ! could do no politicking on behalf of our enviro bills,
I spoke
to Brnnstead, who sounded glum. There was no hope in the Senate. He and Robbie
were determined to claim victory, stoke all on a last throw of the dice. I
acquiesced
Philip
and Jared sat with me when Arlene was out
The
second night. Tad Anselm didn't return to their hotel. Mikhacl told Arlene,
perhaps out of spite. She went back to sleep, informed me the next day,
I was
saddened, more man anything else, Despite intimations I should have heeded, I'd
come to expect better of Anselm.
Derek
came to visit, sat awhile. "I'm going groundside to wrap up my trade talks
,.. Sometimes you have to be in me room, and watch their eyes,**
I
smiled, "To learn what?*
"The
last Unidollar they'll go. Nick, the gram tonnage we'll be sending ,.." He
shook his head MIfs huge, and your delegates have no choice but to buy. Only
the Navy's outlandish freight charges keep a semblance of a trade
balance."
"Enjoy
it while you can. In a few years our production—" "You've said that
before. I hope this time it's true." "Why? You've got us where you want
us." "Ultimately, our interest coincides with yours. Most of us know
that." He glanced at his watch. "When do you leave?" 'This
evening."
There
was no reason to feel betrayed. None at all. "Very well." We'd had
little enough time together over the years. "Mikhael will be sad."
"Nick,
may I give you advice?** "Of course."
"You
gave him a terrible scare."
"Me?
What are you talking about?" I'd punished him, true, but he was hardly
terrorized.
"He
lost Alexi. You reached through his misery and made him trust you. Then you
threatened to abandon him." "It was he who ran away, not—"
"Nick, the way Alexi left him." I was silent. "I mean that much
to him?" "He's moping about the hotel, fragile and weepy."
"He needs rebalancing." "He needs you."
"I'm
no psych. These things are—" "Midshipman Anselm reporting, sir."
Thadeus, from the doorway. His tone was belligerent, his uniform disheveled and
stained.
"How
dare you show your face!" "Shall I go to the hotel?"
"Where
were you?" Not that it mattered. He'd broken one rule too many.
"The
lower warrens, mostly."
"Get
out of my sight. I'll decide what to do with you." • "Aye aye, sir." He was gone.
I asked
Derek, "How would you handle him?"
He
shrugged. "I never made it past middy."
"Still."
"He's
not much different from Mikhael, really. Young, lonely, and in pain."
"We're
all in pain, Derek. And he's not my son."
"Why
did you take him on?"
I fell
silent.
"In
the old days, you saved them. Us."
"I've
nothing left to give."
"You'll
cashier him?"
"I
don't see how to avoid it."
"Damn
it, Nick, the Navy is more than calisthenics and canings." Derek was
immensely proud of his five-year enlistment. "What about mercy?"
"They
shouldn't have graduated Anselm. He's not ready."
"Don't
destroy his life."
"He
did that."
Derek
had no reply.
I
watched Jerence Branstead on Newsnet. He sounded utterly convincing. We'd won
the Assembly, had six votes to spare in the Senate. Would that it were true.
They
cut me out of my body cast. I could move, slowly, carefully, only in the moon's
one-sixth gravity. Earth's one gee could shatter my healing spine.
Mikhael
came to see me. "Don't dismiss him. Please."
"You
made sure Arlene knew he was missing."
"Yeah."
He slouched.
"Sorry
you did?"
"Yeah."
He stirred. "Mr. Carr talked to me."
"Why
do you hate him so?"
"Because
you like him so!" He scuffed the deck. "Whatever I do isn't good
enough." His tone was bitter. "See, I'm not one of your frazzing cadets.
I don't wear a godda—a uniform and stand stiff at attention. I don't shout 'aye
aye.
sir'
and jump at your every command. But Anselm does, so you respect him."
Because
I like him so. I tasted the idea. Anselm disappointed me, infuriated me. A seasoned
middy, he knew better than to fail to report to barracks. And it wasn't his
first offense.
Yet...
I liked
him so.
"Mikhael,
I don't expect a middy's behavior from you. And I'm sorry I was so ill."
"What
does that have ..." He ground to a halt, blinking
tears.
"Come
take my hand." We sat awhile, peaceably. Then, "I like who you're
becoming, Mikhael."
"You're
all over me. Sit up. Get that tone out of your voice. Behave."
"Know
how to make your children like themselves?"
He
shook his head.
"Make
them likable."
"Is
mat what you're doing, Mr. Seafort?"
"I'm
trying. And I told you not to call me mat." I'd asked for custody. This is
what came of it.
"What
should I call you? I have a dad."
"Pa.
Father. Sir."
"You
really take this seriously, don't you?"
I said
wonderingly, "You don't?"
He sat
for a moment. "May I tell the truth?" I nodded. "Yeah, I do. I'm
lost, sometimes. Dad is gone, and I'm glad to have someone who understands.
I'll call you anything you want, but not 'Dad.' Not ever. He'll always be
that."
"I
wouldn't have it any other way." I was proud of him.
"I'll
try 'Pa,' but it's embarrassing. And, about the middy ... he was nice to me,
when you had him in charge."
"It's
my decision. I'll think on it"
"Yes,
sir. Pa."
Arlene
thought I should cashier Anselm. As always, she stated her opinion, but didn't
try to impose it, aware I followed her advice more often than not. "He
knew better," she said. "And did it anyway. What if he were on
ship?"
"He
wasn't." Restlessly, I wheeled myself about the clinic cubicle.
"It
makes no difference."
Still,
I was reluctant to do as I ought.
Derek
was coming in the afternoon, to say good-bye. P.T. and Jared would be in
tonight. I summoned the midshipman, to get our confrontation out of the way.
Anselm
came to my clinic room, deep circles under his eyes.
I
released him from attention. "You drank, of course?"
"I
went from one bar to another. The warrens are full of them."
"I'm
disgusted with—"
"But
I didn't have a single drink."
"Nonetheless,
you—"
"Not
one."
I
shouted, "Stop interrupting!"
"That's
why I went. To drink myself unconscious."
"Are
you glitched?" A Captain ought to be as God to a middy: august, remote,
uninterruptible. And as SecGen I was so far above a Captain ... yet he overrode
me at will.
"Yes,
I think I am." His eyes met mine. "I didn't forget your orders.
Midnight, you said. I chose to ignore them."
"You
leave me little choice."
"I
know, sir." He sounded regretful. "Get it over with."
"Very
well, you're—" Cashiered, I was about to say. "Why didn't you
drink?"
"I
wanted to know I could stop myself. Just this once. At first I didn't intend to
stay out all night. I wanted scotch, and it made me so bloody angry I couldn't
have it, nothing else
mattered."
He was bitter. "I'll have plenty of time for liquor,
after."
My tone
was gentle. "Anselm, I can't risk leaving you in command of cadets, or a
squad of sailors. You're not fit. As Commander in Chief of U.N. military
forces, I withdraw your commission." Tin cashiered." "No, you're
back to cadet." His jaw dropped.
It was
the only alternative I saw. To let him off with any lesser rebuke would be an
insult to his comrades. And he knew it Yet I wasn't ready to wash my hands of
him. "You can do that?"
"I
just did. And of course a caning. Report to the Naval quartermaster and indent
for a set of grays. Then see Arlene for your punishment."
"Ms.
Seafortr He blanched.
"I'd
send you to the Lunapolis duty officer, but it would call attention to my
presence. This way, I doubt you'll try this stunt again." Arlene would see
to that. She'd been first lieutenant in Wellington, and had little tolerance
for middies' nonsense. "Pull in your horns, Anselm. A cadet is treated as
a child. You'll call everything that moves 'sir' or 'ma'am.' I won't hesitate
to enforce cadet discipline." "Yes, sir!"
"This
misbehavior is about missing your father?" "I don't know." His
eyes were tormented. "You wanted to show him your ratings, eh? Very well,
we'll do that Write him a letter." "What?"
"You
heard me. A letter explaining what's happened since his death. Address it to
him. Tell him how you act, how you feel about it Mention everything."
"You can't make me do that." The caller buzzed, but I ignored it.
Unsteadily, using the
two
sturdy alumalloy canes they'd provided, I hoisted myself from the bed. "I
can't, Cadet?" Lightly, I cuffed him.
It was
a reminder of his status, and had the desired effect. He crumpled. "Aye
aye, sir." A defeated whisper.
"Dismissed.
Get your grays."
Derek
stood aside for him in the hatchway. "Very interesting."
"How
long were you listening?"
"Awhile.
I assumed if you wanted privacy you'd shut the door." He shifted.
"Nick, my shuttle leaves at eight. Two hours."
"I'll
see you again?"
"I
doubt it. My ship sails in a week, and I'm way behind in my negotiations."
"I'll
miss you."
"And
I you. Will you get to Hope Nation again?"
"Unlikely,"
I said. "I'm getting no younger."
Our
eyes locked. "Is this really farewell?" His voice held a note of
wonder.
"Oh,
Derek."
The
caller buzzed again.
"It's
been ..." He couldn't finish.
Ms.
Gow, the nurse, hurried into the room. "A Mr. Branstead says he's
desperate to reach you. Are you ignoring your caller?"
"Wait
a moment, Derek. Hello?"
'Turn
on the news!" Branstead's voice was panicky.
I
fumbled with the holovid, keyed in Newsnet.
"—missing
and presumed dead in his Washington home, where he was recovering from injuries
in the Rotunda bombing. "
I tried
to sit bolt upright, gasped with pain.
"Rescue
workers say due to the intensity of the laser attack there's no chance of
finding bodies in the smoking ruins. SecGen Seafort was best known as the implacable
enemy
of the alien race known as the fish. Born in Cardiff, Wales, in—"
"Lord
Jesus Christ!"
A
helicam floated over a mass of rubble. A few pieces of the outer wall remained.
Of the house, nothing.
"Amen,"
said Branstead.
"Who?
Why?'
"Lasers,
from aloft. Defense puters say Earthport or Galactic. At the moment they're so
close together—"
"Who's
in charge on the Station?'
"Admiral
Hoi. There's more, sir. Admiralty in London took a radio intercept. Just over
an hour ago Galactic sent a launch full of sailors to Earthport. They stormed
the civilian command center."
"Lord
in heaven."
Iron
fingers gripped my arm. "Where's your pistol?"
"Not
now, Derek. What about the Naval Station?"
"WHERE
IS IT?"
"In
the drawer. Has Earthport Naval Command responded?"
"I
can't get through to Admiral Hoi."
Derek
crossed to the hatch, slapped it open, took up position outside, my laser
charged and blinking. The safety was off.
The
hatch slid closed.
Branstead
said, ''Captain Stanger is apparently leading the coup. He beamed an ultimatum
to the Rotunda, the Senate and Assembly, and U.N.A.F. Command. We're to abandon
the enviro legislation at once. SecGen Valera's to meet him on Galactic no
later than Wednesday, or their lasers will target as many cities as it takes to
end resistance. He wants an answer in six hours. The first target is the
Rotunda."
I
asked, "What about Dubrovik in Lunapolis?' The Admiral ran our lunar Naval
base, at the opposite end of the city from the clinic.
"He's
on sick leave, you'll recall. Injured. Captain Simovich is Acting Commander. I
can't reach him either,"
I said
heavily, "Full-scale mutiny."
"If
we're lucky, sir."
I
exploded. "Lucky? What else would you call it?"
"Revolution."
The
room spun. I marshaled my thoughts. "What ships have we?"
The few
seconds lag was just enough to madden me. Finally Branstead's voice crackled.
"In home system, nothing to speak of. Melbourne's gone to Titan, with a
full load of tourists. New Orleans is docked at Earthport awaiting a refit You
know the problem." These days, virtually all of home fleet had been
pressed into service between colonies and the homeworld. We desperately needed
more ships.
Captain
Stanger's point exactly. The irony was that the ships he demanded, I'd use
against him.
"You
can't get through to Hoi?" I grasped at straws. "Is it possible he's
still loyal?'
"McKay
was killed. Probably to put Hoi in place."
I
groaned. I'd had warning, and ignored it Warning too of the Navy's dismay at
our policies. I'd ignored that Warning mat our officers were becoming
politicized. I'd ignored mat as well.
My
follies had destroyed us.
"Sir,
now what?"
"You're
at the Rotunda? Get out, before they level it"
"I
have time yet Will you fight?"
The
hatch opened.
I
laughed, a hawking, bitter sound. "With what? We've no ships, no command,
and a gun to our heads."
Ariene
strode in, Bevin in tow. "U.NA.F. has ground defense lasers." Her
mouth was grim. "Use them. Blast Galactic out of home system."
"You
heard?'
"Their
ultimatum is on the rids."
Jerence
overheard. His voice was strained in the caller. "Mr. SecGen, be aware
that Galactic was boarding passengers all this week. There's two thousand
civilians already
aboard."
Aiiene
grated, "Destroy his ship. He's mutinied." Never in history had the
Navy faltered. Now, two hundred years of honor were forfeit. 1 said, "It's
mass murder/' "I don't care." "We can't do it."
Hands
on hips, she glared down at me, "What, men? Surrender?'
I
didn't know. "Jerence, who's with us?** 1 can't tell yet. It all happened
so fast,.." He took a long slow breath. "U.N.A.F. Command, most
likely, once they hear you're alive. The Board of Admiralty, I hope. But they
endorsed the changes in command that put Simovich and Hoi in position. It's
dicey." "What's public opinion?*'
The
public thinks you're dead. The news zincs are running retrospectives. De
mortuis nil nisi bonum." "We'll have the colonials, the trenspops,
the enviros,** "Right. No one with guns. They'll have the Senate, half the
Assembly, and the Navy. The worst—** They do not!"
"They've
got the Naval forces that count: Lunapolis and Earthport bases, and Galactic,
the only major ship near Earth. They've got absolute laser superiority. Sir, we
have to rally public support. Tell them you're in Lunapolis, taking charge;
that will firm up U.N A.F,** "How? From a hospital bed?**
**We
don't say you're at the clinic,** A pause, "You went aloft for a
conference, and you've assumed personal control." "Lies."
"Mr, SecGen, this is war,**
I
cried, "No, it's not!** We couldn't do battle with our own Navy. It was
abominable. My spine throbbed. "Let Valera handle it"
"You're
not serious. He'd go over to them in a minute. He's an Earth Firster at
heart"
I said,
"ITien we'll talk to Stanger."
Ariene
shook her head. "If you let him know you're alive, he'll launch a massive
manhunt or, worse, a laser strike,"
"Wait"
Jerence. "I'm getting something on the U.N. pub* lie info circuit" A
long pause* "Valera explained Stanger's ultimatum. He says he's giving in,
to save the U.N. complex." A pause. To save lives. Misguided enviro
policies—"
"The
son of a bitch!"
"Regrettable
death of the SecGen, et cetera... you bastard!" Branstead's voice shook
with rage, "As Acting Sec-Gen he's ordering U.N.A.F. and Admiralty to
offer no resistance until the situation is clarified.**
"Clarified!"
A long
string of oaths from Jerence. "Valera's been in touch with Stanger,
Galactic will hold off blasting the Rotunda, He's calling a joint session of
the Senate and Assembly at seventeen hundred hours to vote down the enviro
package. He'll make a public statement just prior,**
I swung
out of bed, ignoring a warning stab. "Arlene, my domes. Bevin, find a
video caller in me clinic office. Set it up against a white wall; I don't want
any clues where we are from the background. Move! Jerence, take over the nets
for an emergency announcement**
"On
whose authority? Valera will—"
"Special
Rule three eighteen, you know the Mil. In mis confusion no one is likely to
stop you, even if they mink it's Valem's call to make."
"For
what timer
"Sixteen
thirty Eastern.** I checked my watch. Two hours, "We'll feed to you.
Rebroadeast from there." Perhaps mat would conceal die origin of my
transmission.
"What
are you—"
"I'll
speak to the world. They will not take over my Government. They will not
scuttle my legislation!" Feverishly, I threw on a fresh shirt. "From
now on, go armed, Jerence. If we lose contact, call through Jeff Thome in
London. He'll be with us no matter what."
"Yes,
sir."
I rang
off.
"Why
are you out of bed?" Dr. Ghenili, from the doorway, peering past Derek.
"Leave
us alone." My voice was tight.
"I
told you, fifteen minutes a day. Any more and you'll injure yourself."
"We
have a crisis."
"I
don't care. You're due for a session with the growth stimulator. The orderlies
will take you—"
"Out!"
It was a snarl. "This instant!"
He
retreated, shock and hurt mingling.
"Bevin,
shut the door!" I worked my pants over my leg, as the hatch slid shut in
my savior's face.
In a
medical conference room, framed by a white drape, I rubbed my knee, glad of its
familiar ache.
What in
God's own Hell was keeping them? The circuit should be established by now.
"JerenceT*
No
answer. I rubbed my sweating palms.
Galactic,
I tried to wipe its image from my mind. Our magnificent new ship, opulent
corridors sparkling, passengers settling into their elegant staterooms. The
vigilant purser and his mates, smoothing every concern. Courteous young
middies, hurrying to their duties in that stride just short of a run that would
earn them demerits. Laser turrets, bristling from the hull.
And on
the gleaming bridge, a cancer had metastasized and was coursing through my
beloved Navy.
And the
worst of it was that I'd had warning. Robbie
Boland
tried to tell me the Navy had gone awry. Hazen, too. Even Derek. Smug in my
authority as SecGen, I'd ignored them all.
Under
my nose, they'd replaced loyal Admirals with their own men. Dubrovik, injured
and shunted aside. McKay. Idly, I'd even asked Branstead if it was an accident
But I hadn't investigated.
Unwilling
to deal with distasteful politics, I hadn't even confronted Admiralty. Not
about politicized officers, or the folly of Galactic, or cancellation of the
new fleet
I'd
left them to their anxieties and fears.
My smug
blindness had fomented rebellion.
If I
abandoned the clinic, I risked lifelong paralysis. In no event could I return
to Earth, direct my Government's response.
No
matter, even were I mobile, what could I do?
Resign.
Accept the consequences of my folly.
No. Not
yet
I would
play it out
I had
no time to write a speech. I would speak off the cuff. I would ask the world's
help, ask time to resolve the crisis. Ask their patience. It was all I could
do.
Sixteen
hundred thirty hours. A silent circuit to the Rotunda.
Across
the conference room, out of holocam view, Ar-lene, Derek, Mikhael, two solemn
boys in gray. Anselra was back from Lunapolis Base, properly dressed. If he
resented his forced return to childhood, he gave no sign. Perhaps the coup had
driven it from his mind. He said that indenting for his grays at the Naval
base, he'd noticed nothing out of the ordinary. Interesting.
I
glared at the holocam. I was one of the few in public life who hated visuals,
and rarely used them.
Where
in Lord God's name was Branstead? It was sixteen forty-five. If we waited much
longer, Valera would be on the nets.
"Are
you there, Mr. SecGen?"
I
jumped. "Yes."
"Sorry,
but the situation is... strained. Valera's men ... they demanded your office.
I've been stalling. I don't see you. All we have is audio."
"Derek!"
He
fiddled with the holocam.
"Here,
let me, sir." Bevin, eager. Derek stood aside. The boy tapped the keys. In
a moment we had full visuals.
"Sir,
Valera's on the air!" Jercnce.
"Can
we cut in?"
"I
doubt the nets would let us."
I
fumed. "The moment he's done!"
"Right."
Valera
spoke solemnly of the tragedy of my death, and further tragedy to be averted.
Of my misguided idealism.
He
praised the patriotism of the Navy. I muttered curses without end, until Arlene
reached across, took my hand.
The
Senate and Assembly were in session even as Valera spoke. In moments, they
would, by voice vote, permanently table the enviro bills. Afterward, he would
speak again.
He'd
left me no time. Before I could rally public opinion, the issue would be lost,
The screen
went blank.
Hie
whole purpose of my speech was confounded,
"Now,
Mr. SecGen, You're on in three ,.. two.. ,**
I
smoothed my hair, straightened my tie.
"One...
go!"
MI am
Secretary-General Seafort, I was not injured in the cowardly attack that
destroyed my home, I speak to you today from an undisclosed location, where I
rally loyal U.N, forces to suppress the rebellion led by Captain Ulysses
Stanger of Galactic"
It
wasn't enough, and I knew it. In moments, by repudiating our legislation, the
Senate and Assembly would endorse Stanger's coup.
There
was left only the unthinkable.
So be
it
"By
authority of the Charter of the United Nations, by the grace of Lord God, I now
declare martial law The U N Charter is suspended throughout Earth, Lunapolis,
Earthport Station, and all home system's colonies, ships, and stations."
My
words rang out in the hushed clinic.
"The
Senate and General Assembly of the United Nations are dissolved. All their
edicts, proclamations, acts, and decrees issued henceforth, I declare void. Now
do L Nicholas Ewing Seafort, assume personal government of the worlds *
PART
III
October,
in the Year
of
our Lord 2241
CHAPTER
17
v_Asno
Valera was unreachable.
Derek
took charge of the clinic. On the considerable authority of his steely
personality, he had the administrator postpone or cancel appointments. The
staff that didn't know of my presence—most of them—was sent home. He stationed
Bevin and Anselm at the clinic's outer hatch, with my precious laser, one of
our only two weapons. Arlene had the other.
It was
a stopgap measure, I'd have to find More important, I had to find allies.
Despite my brave words, I didn't dare show myself, and had no forces under my
command.
Branstead
reestablished contact an hour after my broadcast. "Sir, it's ...
difficult. Squads of U.N.A.R roam the halls. No one's sure whom to mist. Or
who's in command/'
"Where's
Valeraf Seconds passed, while my words flew to Earth, and his sped back,
"At
the Assembly. They've set up a headquarters."
"He's
gone over?" I'd hoped my declaration would steady him.
"I
don't know. Probably. When can you come ground-side?"
Not for
weeks, according to Ghenili. If I subjected myself to a full one gee, I might
lie on my back the rest of my life.
"Not
yet, Jerence." I massaged my spine. The pain was worse. "Set up a
relay to Stanger." I had still to hide my whereabouts, and communicating
through the Rotunda would produce the expected lag.
"Very
well, sir. Visuals?"
"No.
Well, yes." I needed to see Stanger, to appraise his
state.
In an hour, the Rotunda puter was ready. We made contact
with
Galactic.
"Mr.
SecGen." Stanger was haggard. He spoke from his bridge. "We need an
end to this."
"I
agree."
"Despite
your speech, we still hold the cards. I don't want to cause deaths. Will you
cooperater
"What,
exactly, do you want?"
"Drop
your enviro package. That includes the five percent greenhouse gas reduction
you proposed earlier. Use the funds to speed construction of Olympiad and her
sister hulls. A public pledge to expand the Navy to its full pre-war
complement,"
"How
do you know I'd follow through?"
He said
simply, "You'll give me your word."
"It's
better than your oath?"
He
flushed "You left us no choice, I don't know how you corralled enough
Senators to pass your insane enviro fantasies. We were sure they'd stand firm.
Your plan would gut the Navy,"
"Not
so. It would slow the growth—"
"Sir,
ships are vital. The colonies are restless. We can't afford another Hope
Nation,"
In the
side of my vision, Derek frowned.
"So
you mutinied."
"Against
what, sir? The Government is of Lord God. We have His support"
"Presumptuous
of you."
"Don't
you believe the Patriarchs represent Him?"
"They've
taken no stand." I spoke with an assurance I didn't feel.
"Not
in public." He glanced aside. "Later, Mr. Speke." To me,
"Sir, I've tried to show good faith. We could have blasted the Rotunda to
ashes while you spoke. We didn't. Do you want me to open fire?"
"No."
'Then
you haven't much choice. If a single groundside laser targets Galactic, we'll
return fire with everything we have. So will Earthport and Lunapolis. Give us
our ships, and put a halt to this enviro madness."
"Why,
damn it? Why?"
"We
need ships to hold the colonies, the colonies to safeguard our supply of grain
and ores. Earth will remain strong, Mr. SecGen, despite your glitched enviro
cohorts."
"And
if I give you my word?" At that, Bevin grimaced in dismay.
"You'll
put it in writing, of course, A treaty, or memorandum between the Government
and the Navy, Then you're free to go,"
"Gor
"I
want you aloft, aboard Galactic, No political aides, no troops, no Marines,
Just you. We'll cement our understanding,"
"When?"
"Day
after tomorrow, at the latest," Wednesday, "Sir, Admiral Hoi has an
eye on incoming shuttles from Earth and Lunapolis, but I'll want your word you
won't try anything. Don't try to storm Galactic, We've innocent civilians
aboard, and besides, you don't want to damage the most powerful ship in your
arsenal."
"MY
arsenal?"
"It
was, and will be again, sir," Stanger's voice wavered, "I hate what
you're making us do. I want to be loyal." He
glanced
away, at an officer off-camera. "Let me know in three hours, else we'll be
forced to show our power.**
"How?"
"From
Earthport, Lunapolis Base, and Galactic, we have our choice of targets. I want
this over with, so we'll go for maximum effect Major cities. Paris, Madrid,
Sydney. Caracas. The civilian warrens of Lunapolis. Don't look so shocked mat
we're as ruthless as you." His blue eyes met mine, unflinching.
"You'll
kill thousands. Millions.**
**If
you make it necessary.*'
"Very
well. Three hours." Fuming, I cut the connection.
"Branstead!"
"Here, sir.** "Cut orders for U.N.A.P. installations with a clear
line of
fife."
"They
may not comply."
"But
some will** If I was forced to give the order,
"I
want to consult Robbie Boland and Senator McGhan."
"You'll
do no such thing." I glared, but he couldn't see me; I'd rolled away from
the intellilens. "They're removed from office with the rest of the
Senate." I rang off.
"Well?"
Derek raised an eyebrow. "How will you fight?"
"Do
we know who's with us?" My question wasn't clear. "Has Lunapolis Base
truly gone over to the rebels?*
"Captain
Simovich is—"
"Yes,
but what about his sailors? If 1 go to the warren, will they let me assume
command?"
"You
can't take the risk." Arlene.
It's my
job,"
"If
they capture you, who'd rally the Government?
Valera?
Kahn7"
Tad
Ansclm stirred. "I could go—'* "Be silent" She didn't even look
at him. I needed all the help I could get "Go on, Tad"
"I
could go back to the Naval warrens, wander around. Pretend I was delivering a
message. See what the talk is."
"They'd
tell you nothing. You're just a cadet"
He
flushed. I hadn't meant it as criticism.
"No
cadets are stationed at Lunapolis," I added gently. "You'd stand out
like a sore thumb. And they just saw you dressed in middy blues. If I go,
perhaps I can rally the Naval base."
"And
start a civil war," said Arlene, "Simovich is their commander."
"If
we get control of their lasers—"
"We
can target Galactic, And she can target us. How many would die?"
In my
mind, alarms shrieked. Airlock doors slammed shut, crushing the unlucky.
Warrens crumbled in thick clouds of dust. Smoke, screams, the crush of rock.
And then there was Galactic, its immense cost wasted. Hundreds writhing in the
merciless laser light. For a fortunate few, vacuum.
The
vision faded. "No," I agreed. "We won't provoke war."
Yet if
we gave in, I'd foment enviro disaster. And the Naval dictatorship would
inevitably grow, not wither.
I was
helpless. I could call no Army, no Navy, no political allies.
There
was nothing but resignation and disgrace.
"Nick,"
Derek rested his hands on my shoulders. 'There's nothing between war and
surrender,"
I
thought a very long while, My heart beat faster. "Isn't there?"
I set
down the caller, Commandant Kazan's questions ringing in my ears. I'd finally
snarled an acid remark about obeying orders, or giving over Academy to someone
prepared to set a better example. Unfair, I'd only called him because ! was
almost certain of his loyalty.
By now
he should be on his way.
I
waited impatiently for Branstead's call. Finally it came.
"Well?"
"Lincroft,
Andersen, Polluck..." And four other Naval officers, all members of the
Board of Admiralty.
"That's
alir
"Bondell
and Petrov refused. 'Personal reasons.' The rest are out of touch."
Branstead sounded ironic.
Seven
out of fifteen. I would convene a rump board.
"Dismiss
Bondell and Petrov," I said. "Give the rest two hours to answer your
call, then do the same. What have you told the seven?"
"That
they're to meet in London this evening. Admiral Thorne's been summoned back to
duty. He'll pass along your orders."
I could
rely on Jeff Thome. For anything. "The shuttle's
ready?"
"Yes,
sir. You're sure? It complicates matters,"
"It
has to be face-to-face, and I can't go to them.'*
"Reconsider,
sir. Let me come aloft too."
"No."
Branstead was a civilian, and no longer young. I wanted him out of harm's way,
A sigh.
"What's left to do?"
"Leave
the Rotunda, Ue low." I cleared my throat "Jer-ence, when mis is done
..."
"Don't
say it,"
"Don't
say what?"
"That
you may not be coming back. This is another of your harebrained schemes, isn't
it?"
"Nonsense."
My tone was gruff.
"You
forget, sir, I was with you on Trafalgar, And I saw you nuke Orbit Station.
Whatever you have in mind, let someone younger, more agile, do it,
Someone—"
"That's
quite enough, Jerence." I had no one to carry out my hapless plan, and
besides, I might be called on to make some small measure of atonement.
His
tone was somber. "You'll call me?"
"Before
dawn. Eastern."
"I'll
be up. Godspeed."
When I
rang off, Arlene massaged my shoulders. It helped. "Nicky, you're going to
tell me."
"Yes."
"Now."
"No."
She might still try to stop me. I temporized. "It's almost time to call
Stanger." The slightest miscalculation on my part, and my slim hopes were
dashed. With great difficulty, I persuaded her to go to the hotel to retrieve
P.T. and Jared, If Stanger contemplated bombing Lunapolis, I wanted our party
together.
I
waited for me connection, reminding myself Stanger still thought I was on
Earth. I would have to insert a small pause before each reply,
"Stanger.**
"I'll
come to Galactic" Idly, I nibbed my aching knee.
A sigh,
that might have been relief. "Very well."
"You
want me mere Wednesday?"
"The
longer we wait, the more chance some hothead will open fire,"
I
agree, I'11 make shuttle arrangements. You have my that I'll be on Galactic
Wednesday next'*
"No
tricks. No weapons, no military forces. Just you."
"Captain
Stanger, I swear to you by Lord God mat I will come to Galactic alone and
unarmed, that I will bring aboard no Marines* U.N.A.F. troops, or Naval
officers, Or sailors, for mat matter. Not even a London jerry."
A
chuckle.
I
asked, "Will you be prepared to negotiate'.?"
"Only
to draft the memorandum we spoke of. No changes."
"I
may try to persuade you otherwise." My tone was sardonic. "Anything
else?" I held my breath.
"You
swear all this without reservation? You will put nobody armed onto Galactic,
including yourself?*'
"Yes.
My solemn oath. Alone, unarmed, Wednesday."
"As
an act of good faith, tell me your whereabouts."
"No."
"Why
not?"
"There
are others with me you might harm."
"You
son of..." He left it unfinished.
"Stanger,
how many of your crew are aware of what you've done?" He controlled his
comm room; it was possible no one aboard Galactic save a few officers knew of
his perfidy.
"I've
told those who need to know. They'll be sailing with me. We're off to
Constantine, you know, when we take on our remaining passengers. We're loading
our last supplies even now."
The
gall of the man. A minor mutiny, an overthrow of government, and then a routine
cruise. I found myself trembling. "Good day, sir."
"Really,
son, I'm fine now. There's no need for you to
stay."
"Path,
why are you so grim?"
"I've
a lot on my mind."
Philip
regarded me. "Jared, please wait outside." In a moment, we were alone
in my clinic room. "Sir, shall I start lying to you?"
"No."
"Then
don't lie to me." He made himself comfortable in the side chair, as if
prepared for a long chat.
"It
wasn't a lie."
"Don't
quibble. Between us, truth is more than a technicality."
He was
right. "There's something I don't want you to know. Get some rest. In the
morning, I'll—it will be clearer."
"You're
agitated You're trying to send us off. All right, mere's a crisis. What's your
scheme? Why are you evasive? Why is Derek furious with you?"
"Is
her
"He's
sitting with the cadets, like death incarnate. I wouldn't want to cross
him."
"He's
a tad miffed because I won't tell him." I sighed. "You're making it
harder. You both are."
"Shall
I call him, so we hear it together?"
I threw
up my hands. "If you must"
I
wheeled about the room, in a forlorn attempt to pace.
"Path,
you can't do it There are courts, laws, the machinery of government Let them
bring Stanger to justice."
At that
even Derek shook his head.
I said,
"When he spoke of loyalty, I almost laughed in his face. Power is
seductive." I glanced from Derek to my son. "Believe me, I ought to
know. You see..." I wheeled from wall to wall. "If we submit—if
U.N.A.F. and the Assembly go along—it'll only get worse. They'll want a higher
Naval budget, more ships, guaranteed autonomy, control of the colonies. One
demand will lead to another. I know we risk innocent lives, but I see no
choice."
Derek
asked simply, "When do we go?"
"You
don't Only the cadets."
"Why
them?"
"They're
available, they're trained, they're military and have accepted the risk,"
"I'm
available, trained, and accept the risk."
"You're
not even a citizen. What matter to you if my Government falls?"
"It's
more personal man that."
"Sorry,
Derek, but no."
His
eyes blazed "Listen well, Nick. I was a boy when you refused me passage on
Challenger. Never again. I choose to
go.
Don't shake your head; refuse me and I'll tell Stanger
what
you plan."
"You
wouldn't."
"I
swear to Lord God I will." He held my gaze until I had to turn away.
"I won't abandon you twice."
I
sagged, defeated. "Three of you, then."
"Four."
Philip.
"I
go with P.T." Jared.
"Then
none of us go," Beyond words, I flung my cane across the room. It bounced
off the hatch, just as it opened.
"I
won't have it,"
"Hey,"
said Mikhael. He stooped for my cane. "Weren't you teaching me to hold my
temper?"
"No
lip from you!" I hobbled across the room, snatched the cane from his
hands.
"Why's
the middy wearing gray, Pa?"
"He's
been demoted. Where's ArleneT'
"Here."
She studied Derek, her son, then me. "Who won?"
My back
throbbed, "It's a standoff."
"Your
husband," said Derek icily, "is acting an ass,"
A sharp
intake of breath, from Jared,
I
debated hurling the cane at my old friend's head, restrained myself.
"It
wouldn't be the first time," Arlene said sweetly. Smoldering, I
contemplated a new target.
"Father's
not the enemy," P.T. said quietly. "Stanger is."
"Thank
you." By brute force, I quenched my ire. "Only: the cadets go with
me."
"Go
where, sir?" Bevin, from the hatch. Anselm peered
over
his shoulder.
I
surveyed the small room, suddenly so crowded. "Yes, where?" Dr.
Ghenili, behind them all. "I'm checking out," "You mustn't
leave." Ghenili stood on tiptoe, to look over
the
crowd. "Nerves knit slowly. If the ganglia fail to heal..." He thrust
Bevin aside, crossed to my bed
"I
know."
"Mr.
SecGen, God knows what damage you may do yourself. Paralysis, this time
permanent. Or worse."
I
disengaged his hand. "I understand," If that was the cost, I'd pay it
I owed my people much. Perhaps I could atone to the countless millions whom my
neglect, my stupidity, had betrayed.
Walking
in my cumbersome suit was more difficult man I'd hoped. The throbbing in my
spine had become a persistent ache, then a glowing ember. Perhaps it was the
twisting, when I climbed into the suit Regardless of the pain, the helmet hid
my face, for which I was immensely grateful. I'd sweated through my clothes
during the long trudge through , the warrens, but I'd remained unnoticed.
Perhaps the three " risterous youngsters running about and whooping, as
I'd bade them, had distracted unwanted attention. I'd have to commend them, when
all was done.
Most
shuttles were operated by U,N.A,F. or the Navy. We
Vt dare
show ourselves in an area under their control.
There
were only a few public airlocki from the upper ins, One, of course, led to the
famous light show. At rthis hour, nominal night the show was closed though we
were in the long dark.
We
dutifully signed out as a private party, in rented suits. Idiots were allowed
to loll themselves on the surface, if they really cared to. No watchmen were
posted, except when the light show was scheduled
We
cycled through the lock.
Rope
guides led toward the nearby crater where the show was held. Breath rasping in
my suit I practiced the peculiar Lunar gait groundsiders found so hard to
master: half jump, half tread.
Ahead,
Bevin and Anselm played at long running leaps,
landing
in slow motion in sprays of Lunar dust. The last time they'd been on the Lunar
surface, it had been across the globe at Farside, under the strict tutelage of
their sergeants. Mikhael clutched Arlene's hand as he took small, careful
steps. No stranger to a pressure suit, he was nonetheless cautious and unsure.
A healthy attitude.
Derek,
an old hand, walked nonchalantly. P.T. and Jared were less acclimated, but
managed well enough. I shook my head, marveling that I'd been weak enough to
allow them all on my odyssey. On the other hand, I couldn't leave them at
Lunapolis to face Simovich's wrath. I'd have to find some way to detach Arlene
and P.T., at the very least. And Mikhael; he was too young to risk himself. My
foster son was older than Bevin. Still. I owed him parental protection. P.T.
touched helmets. "Now where, Path?" **A kilometer northeast of the
crater." It was a long walk, even in Lunar gravity. It was made longer by
my reliance on two canes. In a pinch, I could just manage with one, but after a
few steps it was too painful, and my steps were wobbly and unsteady.
After a
time I found Arlene's arm under mine, gently supporting my weight. Casually,
Derek took up station on the
other
side. The ember grew to a blowtorch. I grunted with each step.
"I
need a rest." Derek.
"Don't
patronize me." I spoke through gritted teeth.
"All
right. You need a rest."
"It
can't be much farther." I checked my readout. Two A.M. local.
"Anytime now. Watch the horizon." Unlike the portrayals in
holodramas, shuttles glided in at an angle, rather than straight down. Until
final descent, that is. Then they braked and landed as any other VTOL. I peered
through
My
visor. "I see it!" Mikhael's shrill scream nearly burst my
eardrums.
Too late, I dialed down my volume. He jumped up and down, in high, slow-motion
leaps. "Over there!"
The
tiny shuttle's engine glowed as braking propellent spewed. Slowly, it settled,
a good half kilometer distant
I
sighed, took hesitant steps.
At long
last we were climbing the shuttle's ramp.
A
suited figure met us at the lock. "Good morning, sir. I'm Pilot Van
Peer."
The
hatch closed; we cycled through. I checked the air gauge, unscrewed my helmet
"We haven't met in years," I said. "Not since Portia."
His jaw
dropped. "But you're... you're—Mr. SecGenT
"The
very same." The Commandant had followed orders to the letter, his pilot
had been told to pick up a party beyond the crater, but not whom to expect
Well, the only way to keep the secret any longer would be to wear my sweltering
suit all the way to Farside, and I wasn't in the mood. I wiped my damp
forehead.
"Sir,
it's ... I'm amazed." Van Peer had been quite a young man when I'd had UNS
Portia. Casual, irrepressible, as interested in chess as I was. He'd aged
gracefully, like Derek.
"Shall
we?" I indicated the cockpit
"Aye
aye, sir." Van Peer made preparations for takeoff.
As we
strapped in, Mikhael took in every fixture, the oxy bottles secured to the
bulkheads, the thirty-one seats normally occupied by cadets. "Care to sign
up, son?" My tone was as jovial as my aching back permitted
"No
way." He bent forward to get a better look at the cockpit "What's he
doing?*'
"Preflight
check." If the bloody puter would cooperate. I'd found shuttle puters
notoriously stubborn.
I tried
to find a tolerable position. We would be hours on board the tiny craft, and I
was in considerable pain.
I was
afraid liftoff would be a problem.
It
wasn't I passed out
* *
»
"Careful.
Lift him gently."
"I'm
all right." I thrust away helpful hands. "I'll walk."
"Let
me help." Mikhael's voice was subdued. He offered a shoulder on which to
lean.
"You've
been crying?" I eased to my feet. Thank Lord God for the low gravity;
Hazen had been told to turn the gravitrons down.
"No."
Mikhael wiped reddened eyes.
Bevin
made a word without sound. "Liar." I pretended not to notice, leaned
more heavily on Mikhael than I might
have.
A burly
figure came to attention just past the lock. "Commandant Hazen reporting
as ordered, sir."
"Very
good. Stand easy." The corridor was deserted, as I'd expected. I looked
about. "Your staff?" "Most are groundside, with the cadets. The
rest are—" "You've no cadets aloft?" I'd forgotten; he'd sent
them all to Devon for the memorial. My plans were wrecked.
Seafort,
you fool. All my schemes assumed I'd have use of his cadets. Now what?
"I'll
get a chair." He disappeared. In a moment I found myself sitting, taking
deep breaths of relief. "I've a barracks ready if you'd care to rest"
"Yes." My head swam. Arlene said, "Call your med tech." I
said, "Don't be ridiculous."
"At
least he can block the pain. Commandant, call him. Nicky, it's an isolated
base, and almost deserted. No one but the med tech will know you're here. Don't
glower."
At
times, Arlene had to have her way. I nodded. At snail's pace, I tottered to the
dormitory.
"I
put you in Thomas Keene," the Commandant said. "The new
barracks." Fifteen years old, and still they called
it new.
It was named after the brave boy I'd killed, one heartless afternoon in the
training boats.
"Who
knows we're here?"
"No
one. They're aware I have special guests, of course." That couldn't be
helped. In a small base such as Farside, the Commandant's mysterious
preparations couldn't go unnoticed.
"When
is Admiralty due?"
He
checked his watch. "Six hours. Van Peer will meet them as arranged. Sir,
it's all been done. You're pale as a ghost. Please, get off your feet."
"All
right." I was too spent to argue.
I
warned the med tech not to give me anything that would cloud my mind. Perhaps
as a result, my back throbbed unbearably.
I woke
to the murmur of the boys' voices. "I'd like another softie." An expectant
pause.
"All
right, Mr. Tamarov." Anselm. He crossed the dormitory to an improvised
refreshment table, returned with a cold drink.
I
opened one eye. Mikhael sat cross-legged on a bunk.
"You
trained here, huh? Were you in this dorm?"
"No,
sir." Anselm's tone was level.
"It
must be for the smart ones."
"I
don't know, sir."
'That's
enough, Mikhael." Anselm, like all cadets, had routinely endured hazing
far more intense than my foster son could mete out, but it wasn't for Mikhael
to dispense. Carefully, I shifted. Nothing broke, but a wave of fire swept my
spine.
1
wasn't doing anything, Pa."
"Come
here." I gave him my sternest eye. "Twenty pushups. Right this
moment"
He
gulped, but complied. In the weak gravity, it wasn't hard.
"Put
that chair at the foot of the bed. Stand on it You heard me. Now, what's the
capital of Ireland?"
"Dublin."
"Argentina.**
"Brasiliar
"Wrong.
Don't you ever study? Are you an idiot?"
"Pa,
I—"
"Ten
push-ups. Quick!"
He
jumped off the chair. When he was done, I patted the bed. "That's hazing,
son. Leave it to the experts."
"Yessir."
Casually, he wiped an eye.
"And
you aren't an idiot." My tone was gruff. Then, "Anselm, come
here." I regarded him. 'Take this joey outside, and settle it between you.
I don't care how."
"Aye
aye, sir." With a polite gesture to Mikhael, he indicated the hatch.
I
hadn't slept well in ages. 1 dozed anew.
I woke
to a dull haze of pain, and the blare of a zinc. Idly, Danil played with the holovid
receiver.
"—declared
SecGen Seafort's claim illegal Valera will
command
from— "
"Admiral
Hoi pledged loyalty to the Valera-Stanger government as—"
"—imprisoned
pending charges of treason. Branstead
was
chief of staff to former SecGen—"
"—tomorrow's
editions."
"LEAVE
FT!" I struggled to sit
"What
sir?"
"Put
it back!"
"Jerence
Branstead, a Hope Nation colonial, served despite the objection of
traditionalists who felt only a citizen should be chief of staff. His capture
by a U.N.A.F. patrol outside the Rotunda—"
"Oh,
God." I hadn't heeded the warnings, and now this.
And a
trial for treason ... they would execute him, out of sheer vindictiveness.
I
stirred. I could move, but barely. Even if Hazen's cadets weren't groundside, I
might not be able to carry out my forlorn plan. Without them, I faced almost
certain failure, and death.
I
thought a long while.
Very
well. I deserved no less.
The
hatch slid open. Jared Tenere.
I
beckoned. 'Talk with me." He took a chair. "Jared, if Philip goes
with me he'll be in considerable risk. Dissuade him."
His
smile was a touch sad. "How might I do that, Mr. Seafoit? His mind's made
up."
"You
said he listens to reason."
"When
he's wrong. Is he?"
"Of
course. He may get himself killed."
Jared
asked, "Would you allow him to go off and risk his life alone?"
"Of
course not. I'm his father."
"He
feels the same. He's your son." A pause. "I don't know what you plan,
but I have to go too."
"I
don't want that."
"Because
I'm fragile?"
"Partly."
"I'm
no wallflower, you know." Jared's tone was almost conversational. "I
killed joeys in the trannie war. I can do it again. Especially to protect
P.T."
A chill
rolled down my spine. For a moment, there was something fierce about him, that
I'd not previously seen.
"I
don't want you to kill."
"I
won't let Philip die." It was final, unarguable.
Derek
peered in, saw I was awake. "Nick, the shuttle's here."
At
last. 'Tell Mr. Hazen we'll use his office." I struggled out of bed.
"Pa—"
I was
shaken by my long, grueling meeting, and had no patience. "You'll stay
here." I'd have Hazen look after him. "Don't argue."
"But
why?"
I was
blunt "You could get killed."
Mikhael
said, "Let me do something brave. Dad would have. It's time I learned.
There's more to me than whining and running away." His eyes beseeched
mine. "Please, Pa."
I
pulled him into an embrace. "Not yet, son. But I'm proud of you."
He
stamped his foot "I came to live with you like you asked. I'm doing what
you tell me. I call you 'Pa' like you want I let you punish me like I'm your
joey. Now, when it counts ..." His lip quivered.
Derek
took me aside. "Are you trying to drive him to a rebalancing ward? You
offered him a home. You can't abandon him now."
"Our
home is blasted to rubble." "You 're his home!"
We were
almost out of time. I struggled with my thruster-suit To Anselm and Bevin,
"You're sure you understand?" "Yes, sir." Danil looked for
reassurance to the older cadet "Sir?" Pilot Van Peer, from the
hatchway. "If you want to make your deadline..."
As
casually as I could, I said, "Arlene, keep an eye on Mikhael. P.T., I'll
see you in a day or two. Derek, I won't
need—"
"You've
been SecGen too long," Derek remarked. "You think the entire world
follows your orders."
I
rounded on him. "Don't start!"
He
tightened his suit seals. "Accept the inevitable. I'm part of it"
1
order—"
Arlene
kissed my lips to quiet me. "Hush, you foolish man. You don't decide our
lives!"
"And
Mikhael?"
"I
agree, he stays."
"Ma'am,
no!" Mikhael was so earnest, I could barely abide it "Let me go as
far as I can. On the shuttle, at least If I have to say good-bye..." He
hugged himself.
Derek
said, "The shuttle itself won't be in danger. Van Peer can drop him at
Earthport if we ..." He grimaced. "If he has to go to Kiev."
"Very
well." It was a minor mercy, one of the few I could bestow. We trudged to
the shuttle lock.
"Your
extra tanks?"
"Full."
I peered past Derek, trying to spot Earthport Station against the backdrop of
stars.
Derek
cleared his throat "Mr. Seafort—"
"I'm
no longer 'Nick'?"
"Not
at the moment." His tone was grave. "Sir, Godspeed."
"And
to you." Awkwardly, dangling my alumalloy canes, I embraced him.
I
turned to the others. "No weapons. For all of us, I gave my word."
"Agreed."
Arlene looked cross. From the rest, nods.
"Good-bye,
Mikhael. I'll see you soon." But I wouldn't He'd come to grips with his
loss. He had Alexi in him.
I had
to pry his fingers loose.
"All
right, Pilot"
Van
Peer took up the caller. "Academy Shuttle T-455 to Earthport Approach
Control."
The
speaker crackled. "Go ahead."
"We'll
be docking at a Naval bay. We have a middy aboard whom Mr. Hazen wants drilled.
Permission to maneuver before docking. I'd guess fifteen minutes."
"Outside
two-kilometer docking zone, shuttle."
"Naturally.
Changing course to 025,36,198."
I
cycled the lock. "No radio. Nothing.*'
"Understood,
sir." Van Peer's eyes never left his controls.
I
switched off my radionics, stepped into the lock.
When
the chamber was pumped to vacuum, I grasped a handhold, pulled myself out of
the shuttle. The lock was nearly in zero gee, which helped immensely. If I
could somehow live between planets, my spine would ache not at
all. I
waited, searching among the uncaring stars until I saw
the
blazing lights of Galactic.
There
would come a moment in Van Peer's maneuvers when he was at rest relative to the
great starship. In about fifteen minutes, if all went according to plan. I had
merely to let go my handhold, drift far enough to be out of range of his
maneuvering thrusters. I locked my gaze on the
ship.
When
the time came I let go, floated dreamily into space. In a shuttle porthole,
Arlene's anxious face. I waved, but she watched me recede, unblinking, as if to
etch my form into her memory.
After a
time, the shuttle was gone.
Carefully,
so carefully, I nudged my thrusters.
The
trick was to move hardly at all.
Galactic,
like Earthport itself, had numerous external sensors. But, especially near an
orbiting station, space was filled with abandoned tanks, lost tools, waste
packets, and other slow-moving debris that drifted endlessly, until sucked into
Earth's gravitational well. If I floated ever so slowly toward the starship, I
wouldn't register.
At any
rate, that was my hope.
My rate
of speed was so slow it would take me eight
hours.
I'd
reach Galactic at seventeen hundred.
On
Tuesday. I'd promised Stanger I would be in Galactic on Wednesday.
I would
be.
I meant
to kill Stanger, if I could. That went without saying. I owed Lord God a life,
Stanger's or mine.
Drifting,
I struggled to stay awake. Sleep was deadly; I'd have to adjust my course with
the most minute of corrections, rather than change direction when I was close
to Galactic. The last thing I wanted was some alert middy noticing debris
homing on his ship in a great arc.
From
time to time I prayed. For Mikhael, for poor Anselm, for Jared. For those I'd
misjudged.
After a
time my boyhood friend Jason drifted with me in companionable silence. Then Vax
Holser, my great enemy, then my friend. Vax was among the first I murdered.
I
snapped awake. Watch your tank, Seafort. Still green, but you'll have to change
it soon.
Where
was I?
Nearer
to Galactic, but still a good way off. I contemplated a quick burst from my
thrusters. But I might as well activate a beacon. Or blast an announcement of
my presence across all frequencies. I sighed.
Where
was Van Peer's shuttle? His instructions had been to finish maneuvers, dock for
four hours, then, on Wednesday, separate from the Station.
Again,
I reviewed my plan. It had one overwhelming advantage: I need not survive to
win. As long as Stanger was thwarted...
Arlene
had spoken of having another child. A pity. Perhaps she'd use my stored DNA to
build one. I'd be a better posthumous father than a living one. For years I'd
alienated P.T., thanks to my stubborn refusal to countenance his en-viro pleas.
And I'd beaten Mikhael, brutalized him. If he weren't so desperate for a model
he wouldn't have allowed it.
My
death was no great loss.
Laboriously,
I made ready to switch tanks. It was an awkward maneuver, but not impossible. For
a brief time I'd be
dependent
on the air in my suit, but that would last minutes, and the switch would take
seconds. I undamped the old tank, moved the nozzle to the new, secured the
clamp.
There.
When
had I last changed tanks Outside? I must have been Anselm's age, a middy. Poor
Tad... a cadet again, at sixteen? In all Academy's history I knew of no similar
demotion. A midshipman made his bed, and was expected to sleep in it If he
couldn't cope with middy life, he washed out Though... I had to smile. Anselm
had lost his legal majority. As a cadet he couldn't buy liquor. Perhaps I'd
done him a favor after all.
Ahead,
the hull loomed. Would I need a correction?
No.
My feet
would hit first That wouldn't do; if I jarred my spine I'd probably pass out At
the last moment I'd touch the rear thruster just so ...
Closer.
I braced myself.
Switch
on your hand magnets, you idiot! Do you want to
bounce?
Now
nudge the thruster.
Softly,
gently, contact
I clung
to the huge hull, a barnacle on a whale. Where was I? Outside a disk, but which
one? I was too close to tell; why hadn't I paid attention? Only the Level 1 or
Level 2 lock
would
do.
Don't
panic. It'll be labeled. You wouldn't be the first sailor to go Outside and
become disoriented.
Avoiding
mounted sensors, I clambered from handhold to handhold. The hull stretched into
the distance. It was longer than three football fields, and I had to pull
myself along a vast section of it, my canes hanging from my back.
Normally,
a sailor in a thrustersuit would jet off from the hull, propel himself to his
goal, and reattach. But I was most anxious not to trigger any external sensors.
Only
zero gee made my labors possible.
A good
hour later, I clung to a handhold near the Level 2 airlock. Carefully, I pulled
myself onto the hull, clumped step by step to the sensor mounted just above the
lock. I took from my pouch the one tool I'd brought: a wrench. Careful not to
float into the sensor's view, I unbolted the sensor's housing and yanked loose
the data cable.
Now,
the hardest part Waiting for some poor joey to come fix the sensor.
Just
above the airlock, I hooked my arm through a handhold, and began my vigil. I
might use all my air and asphyxiate before my plan came to fruition.
Seconds
dragged into minutes, then into an hour. Two. I contemplated my last bottle of
oxy. I'd have to change while my old one was well in the green, so my attention
wouldn't be diverted at a critical moment.
Three
hours.
What if
I disconnected another sensor? Would it make them suspicious, or—
The
outer lock indicator began to blink.
I
opened my pouch.
I
didn't dare crouch down to peer through the airlock porthole. I'd have to hope
there were no more than two sailors.
The
lock pumped to vacuum. The outer hatch slid open. A suited figure emerged,
clinging to the handhold. I pressed myself against the hull, making myself
smaller.
Spanner
in hand, he hoisted himself over the lock, toward the sensor by which I
crouched. I waited for his mate. No one emerged.
Could
there possibly be only one?
He was
almost on me. No more time. Clutching the handhold against recoil, I raised my
wrench high over my head, smashed it into the helmet as hard as I could.
A puff
of air. No time even for a scream. The figure jerked, clawed at a shattered
helmet, twitched.
Forgive
me, Lord. He was one of Your innocents. I call it duty, but in truth it's
murder.
His
suit was standard ship's issue, not a thrustersuit like my own. Thrustersuits
were white, mag suits gray. That meant... I grabbed his already-stiffening arm,
climbed down the handholds into the lock, trailing him like an ungainly
balloon,
Hurry,
before some bored rating peeks into the porthole. I slapped shut the outer
hatch, re-aired the lock. First my own suit, a piece at a time. The helmet. The
thruster pack. The torso and legs. It was harder now, under the influence of
Galactic*$ gravitrons. A lance of pain; I'd twisted in the wrong direction.
Crouching
below porthole level, I pulled the sailor's smashed helmet. A gasp. My own.
Soft brown hair, unseeing eyes, a woman's face.
Gritting
my teeth, I stripped off the rest of her suit. Would it have made a difference?
Could I have killed a woman in cold blood?
I
already had, in my foul past.
Thrusting
the thought to some dark recess of my mind, I began to don her suit. I had
trouble working my legs into the opening; the effort sent warning twinges down
my spine. The exertion left my clothes drenched, but finally I was ensconced in
the mag suit. Thank heaven helmets were interchangeable. But that was to be
expected; if each fit only its own suit, in a crisis, disaster could result by
snatching the wrong helmet,
I
cycled to vacuum, dragged the body to the outer lock. When the hatch slid open,
I shoved out the sailor's corpse, watched her tumble toward Earthport Station.
In a moment my thrustersuit followed, not before I'd secured my alumal-
loy
canes.
Close
the outer hatch. Recycle. Open the inner hatch. Hopefully, if someone on the
bridge noticed the lock cycling, they'd simply assume the woman repairing the
sensor
had
forgotten a tool. Perhaps they were calling her now. No, in that case I'd hear.
I was wearing her suit
I'd
chosen Level 2 for several reasons. First, it wasn't Level 1; I'd be less
likely to meet an officer before I wanted to. Second, Stanger kept only Levels
1 and 2 at reduced gravity. I'd be unable to walk if I emerged belowdecks.
Last, according to Admiralty's specs, the berth of the master-at-anns was on
Level 2.
Letting
my canes support most of my weight, ungainly in my ill-fitting suit, I clumped
down the carpeted corridor past curious passengers, past two ratings on cleanup
detail, Where was the master-at-arms? To my right, a passenger lounge. Helpful
plates above the hatch identified each compartment An exercise room. Purser's
storage.
Sweat
ran down my spine. At any moment I might be stopped, my subterfuge unveiled, as
I strolled halfway around an opulent circumference corridor the length of a bloody
jogging track. In a stolen suit a size too small, supported by a cripple's
canes. If they caught me, would they take me to the cells or to a psych?
At
last, the compartment I sought
I
slapped open the hatch, hobbled in.
In any
Naval ship the master-at-arms was a petty officer, and wore a sailor's blues.
Short, muscular, swarthy, he put aside his holovid, turned from his console,
rolled back his learner chair. "What do you want, Sailor?"
"Just
a moment" Balancing on one cane, I undamped my helmet, took a welcome
bream of ship's air. "Would you help with mis, please?" I unclasped
the front of my thrustcr-suit
A Crown
of annoyance as he helped peel off my suit
He
froze, gaping. Perhaps it was the Admiral's dress whites I wore beneath.
CHAPTER
18
JL ou
are ... T
"Admiral
Seafort. Stand at attention."
Military
discipline is automatic. He stiffened. 1 fished a chipcase from my pocket,
slipped the chip Admiralty had given me into his console.
"United
Nations Board of Admiralty to Nicholas Ewing Seafort, United Nations Naval
Service," I read aloud. "Effective October 4, 2241, you are
reinstated into the Naval Service with the rank of Admiral. You shall command a
squadron consisting of UNS Galactic, a vessel moored alongside Earthport
Station, and all other ships and boats now or hereafter sailing within home
system. You are to direct the said squadron in the performance of its duties as
may be determined by you, until relieved of your command ..." When done, I
flipped the holovid for his inspection.
"Yes,
sirT*
"Stand
at ease. Your name?"
"Master-at-arms
Yvgeni Tobrok."
"I
trust you're familiar with Naval regs?" While most sailors relied on their
officers' assumption of authority, a ship's jerry would know more of the law.
"Yes,
sir."
"Listen
carefully, Mr. Tobrok. First, I hereby take command of this squadron. Second, I
relieve Ulysses Stanger as Captain of this vessel, and place him on the
inactive list Third, I appoint myself in his place. Do you question either my
identity or my authority?"
Beads
of sweat lined his forehead. "No, sir."
"Acknowledge
my command, please. I caution you that if you err in this matter you will in
all likelihood be hanged." No doubt he already knew. An officer—or any
sailor—owed unquestioned obedience to his lawful Captain. To relieve a Captain
without authority was a hanging offense, and the penalty was almost always
carried out.
To his
credit, Tobrok hesitated. "Let me see the holovid again, please." He
read it carefully. When he was done his uniform was almost as damp as mine.
"Sir, I acknowledge your authority. By your declaration, you're Captain of
this vessel. But we have to tell Captain Stanger."
"Do
we, now?" I took his chair, grateful to be off my feet
It was
a convoluted maneuver I'd performed.
A ship
could have but one Captain, else its lines of authority would be muddled. By
Naval regs, when two or more members of a ship's company held similar rank,
seniority prevailed. The most senior was deemed of higher rank. I knew the
provision well; I'd used it to steal a vessel to put an end to the Transpop
Rebellion.
Captain
Stanger, a seasoned hand, had far more seniority than I'd accumulated in my
relatively brief Naval career. If I'd had Admiralty appoint me a mere Captain
instead of Admiral, I'd have lacked authority to relieve him, were he to resist
As
Admiral, I couldn't command directly, but I could dismiss Stanger. I could then
appoint myself to the vacant Captaincy, as I had.
Why did
1 bother, instead of relying on the vast powers I'd assumed under martial law?
Because
of the very threat of hanging, of which I'd
warned
Master-at-anns Tobrok. Officers wouldn't chance my vague claim of authority
against their Captain's, unless I dismissed him in proper Naval fashion.
They
still might not. But now at least I had a chance.
"What
weapons have you, Mr. Tobrok?"
"Sir,
we have to log your change of command."
"We
will."
"I
can't go against Mr. Stanger merely on your word, sir."
"You
acknowledged my command, did you not?" Unarmed, I had to secure this man's
weapons, but he could physically overpower me with ease. It was vital he accept
my authority.
"Yes,
sir. But"—a sheen of sweat—"I shouldn't have. Mr. Stanger has to be
informed, and your relieving him recorded in the Log."
Tobrok
was right: assumption of command must be logged, but the problem was, my doing
so would alert Stanger. The Captain would hardly allow me to take over his
ship; he'd already committed mutiny, a hanging offense. What matter that he
defied Admiralty as well?
I
cursed under my breath. All had been going so well, until I came upon this sea
lawyer. No, that wasn't fair. A conscientious petty officer, trying to do his
duty. "In due time, Mr. Tobrok. The ship's safety—" "Regs
require it." "I override the regs." "Aye aye, sir. I insist
your override be in writing and
logged."
I
regarded him. "Are you changing sides?'
"There
are no sides." He sounded desperate. "There's Galactic, and the Naval
Regulations and Code of Conduct."
Time
was wasting, that I could ill afford. "If I find authority in the regs for
not logging my assumption of command, will you be satisfied?"
"I'd
have to be, sir." Almost, I felt sympathy. He was trying at all costs to
avoid the threat of hanging.
"Very
well. Let me mink." As a youngster, in hazing such as Mikhael had toyed
with at Farside, the middies had set me on a chair in the wardroom to make me
recite regs. I'd uncovered an unexpected talent in memorizing them, that had
served me well over the years.
"Section
135, General Provisions. Any ship's officer may rely upon the apparent
authority of a superior, in carrying out—no." That supported Stanger's
apparent authority as Captain, not my own as interloper. "Disregard
that"
He
waited, while I wracked my brain.
"During
General Quarters routine ship's functions may be disregarded or delayed.
Section 50 something."
"Only
the Captain can pipe General Quarters, sir. Are you Captain if you haven't
logged it?"
"I
bloody well am." But my mere assertion wouldn't convince him.
"Somewhere in Section 12. Any lawful order is valid, written or
otherwise."
"Sir,
no disrespect, but the question is whether your order is lawful." He
shifted from foot to foot, like a joeykid needing to use the head.
I'd run
out of regs. "Your console. Can you access the ship's puter?"
"Yes,
sir, but only the Captain—"
"What's
his name?"
"Baron,
sir."
I
sniffed. "Pretentious." Puters thought they ran the Navy. "Call
him up."
"How
may I help you?" A slight note of impatience in the outer's tone.
I fed
in my Admiralty chip, and my own new ID code. "Acknowledge.**
"Receipt
of Admiralty orders acknowledged. Identity of Admiral SecGen Seafort confirmed
through ID and voicerec."
"Very
well." For Baron, I ran through the rigmarole I'd
onducted
for Tobrok: I took command of my squadron, relieved the Captain, appointed
myself.
"Assumption
of authority acknowledged."
"Puter,
can you make a copy of the Log?"
"Of
course."
"Duplicate
the Log as it existed prior to my assuming
command."
A
millisecond's pause, "Done."
"Very
well. Freeze the second copy of the Log in its current state. Provide that copy
in response to any request from the bridge. Acknowledge."
"Orders
received and acknowledged, Captain." I wiped my brow. "Now, Baron.
Enter my orders relieving Captain Stanger and appointing myself Captain only in
the original Log. Deem the original copy the official, current Log. Provide it
upon request by Admiralty, or me." "Noted. Captain, mis is a most
unusual—" "Do you claim it's a violation of your programming?' A most
distinct hesitation. "No.** I glowered at Tobrok. "Satisfied?**
"Yes, sir, that should do it.0 He saluted. "Master-at arms Yvgeni
Tobrok reporting, Captain." Thank Lord God. "What weapons do you
have?** "Two stunners, sir.**
My face
showed my dismay. "That's all?** "Mr, Stanger keeps the rest locked
in the armory.** "On Level 1?"
"Yes,
sir.** He gave me an odd look. Armories were always on Level 1. "What arms
does he keep on the bridge?** Immediately, I
knew it
was a foolish question.
"I
have no idea, sir." Stanger would have no reason to inform his
master-at-arms of his weapons. No doubt he kept a laser pistol, if not more, in
the bridge safe.
"Let's
have the stunners.**
Reluctantly,
he parted with them. I shoved one in my pants, the other in my jacket
"Who
has the engine room?"
"Chief
McAndrews."
"Have
him—you're joking!" The stolid, reliable Chief Engineer of Hibernia, here
on Galactic!
"I'm
not, sir." Tobrok seemed puzzled.
"He'd
be eighty, if he's a day."
"Oh,
no, sir. Forty at most." A different man. My heart crept down to its usual
place.
"His
father was in the Navy too, I think."
An
eager thump. "Let's go—no, I can't Call mm here."
"He's
my superior, sir. I can't order him."
"Find
an excuse. Get him here flank, but don't mention, uh, our doings."
"Aye
aye, sir." Tobrok paused in thought He keyed the caller. "Engine
Room, master-at-arms."
"Go
ahead," The voice seemed almost familiar.
"Chief,
I collared one of your joeys rummaging through a passenger's cabin. She's
willing not to press charges, I thought perhaps you—"
"HI
be right there." A click.
"Excellent,
Mr. Tobrok. You're to be commended."
He
flushed with pleasure.
After a
time, the pounding of footsteps. The hatch was flung open. "Where Is
he?" A broad-shouldered man, with the physique of a village blacksmith. He
ignored my braid.
Helplessly,
Tobrok looked to me.
I put
the Chief at attention, identified myself, ordered him to read the Log.
When he
was done I said, "Well?**
"Well
what, sir?"
"Do
you acknowledge my authority?"
His
brow knitted in puzzlement. "Of course."
Tobrok
reddened.
"I
believe I knew your father."
The
Chief's ruddy face broke into a slow grin. "Aye, sir. I grew up on tales
of the old days. I've always hoped to meet you."
"Is
he alive?"
"As
of last mail. He retired to Vega. Has a new wife."
"Marvelous."
We'd passed many evenings over the fumes of his antique smoking apparatus.
"Sir,
this is about the envirosT
"No,
it's about treason." Too late, I regretted my harsh tone. "What do
you mean, the envirosT'
"The
Captain told us the Navy was called in to put down an enviro insurrection. That
you made your speech dissolving the Assembly because you were captive to a
fanatic cult"
"You
believed him?"
"Are
you glitched? Of course not, after Pop's stories." A grin. "But I
couldn't very well tell him so."
"Chief,
Stanger has the bridge and I'm not sure how to dislodge him. Whatever happens,
I don't want him to be able to Fuse, and we may need to cut power to the
lasers."
"Fusion
is no problem. I simply won't do it Laser power is another matter. I'd have to
reroute buses from the mains. He'd know, of course. There's no way to
disconnect the
safeties."
I
pondered. "We have to lure him from the bridge." I glanced at my
watch. "We only have an hour."
"What
happens then, sir?" Tobrok.
Could 1
trust him? I hesitated. How could I not, after what he'd put me through? And
Tobrok had summoned the Chief with a clever ruse. As for McAndrews, he was his
father's son, and that would do.
"Reinforcements."
Tobrok's
eyes widened. "Marines?"
"Unfortunately,
no." I'd sworn not to put anyone armed Jfc the ship. I'd deliberately
broken one oath in my life. BjiHljw.
was a
matter that haunted me yet. Nothing in Lord God's creation could make me do it
again.
"We
need the comm room."
"I
could call the comm room duty officer." Tobrok sounded dubious. "But
he can't leave his post"
"What
Level?"
"Three,
sir."
Off-limits,
unless I wanted to crawl; I couldn't walk in high gravity. "I can't manage
it" A sudden thought. "Chief, you have the gravitrons?"
"Not
the units themselves; each is at the center of its own vortex. But the
controls, yes." He frowned. "Well, I have them, but can't adjust them
unless the safeties are disconnected at the bridge console."
"Very
well. Chief, back to your engine room. Stand by for my orders. Seal your
corridor hatches."
His
expression tightened. "Aye aye, sir."
"I
don't suppose you keep weapons."
McAndrews
paused in the hatchway. "Why, no, sir."
*Then
we'll need cutting tools to breach the armory."
"No
problem. I'll send a pair of my more reliable joeys." A salute, and he was
gone.
I
turned to Tobrok. "How many of your detail can you trust?"
"In
this, sir? Let me ... Two or three, at best. The others may, uh, waver."
"Call
them. Have them wait for us outside the comm room." When he was done I
asked, "I don't suppose there's a wheelchair about?"
"In
sickbay, I imagine."
"Get
it."
Waiting,
I toyed at the console. With a chair, I'd risk Level 3. If we took the comm
room, we had a chance. The hatch slid open. "Did you find—"
"Who
are you?" A sailor, rather unkempt
"Stand
to!"
"You're
not from the ship."
A
desperate lunge that toppled me from the chair. On the way down I touched him
with the tip of the stunner. He collapsed.
White
jagged lightning, that threatened to cleave me
asunder.
I lay groaning.
"I
have the wheel—good Christ!" Tobrok knelt "What happened?"
"I
fell."
"Did
he—7" A glance at the sailor. If he'd touched me unbidden, it was a
hanging offense. No crewman was allowed to touch the Captain.
"No."
I held ou|a hand, an invitation. "Can you..."
Gently,
he helped me to the wheelchair. "Now where,
sir?"
"Brig
him. Then the comm room, and hurry." I clutched my canes, heavy,
alumalloy, useless objects. Tobrok dragged the unconscious sailor through the
inner hatchway, to the
brig.
Uneasy,
glancing both ways, I followed him to the lift halfway around the corridor. Its
hatch slid open. Two passengers made way, incurious, preoccupied with their
conversation. I suspected they were unable to decipher one rank from another.
On the
way below to Level 3 our weight altered. Even braced in the chair, I felt it as
unbearable pressure. My face went pale and pasty.
With
effort, I wheeled myself along in Tobrok's footsteps. The plush carpet eased my
journey, but I held on to the armrests as if my life depended on it
Two
grim-looking joeys with billy clubs waited outside the comm room. Tobrok
introduced mem, quickly told them the situation. He rapped on the comm-room
hatch. "Attention!" His bellow had the watch instantly on their feet
With
the ship in a state of undeclared war, I expected to find the comm room fully
manned, and it was. Five ratings
at
their blinking consoles monitored Station traffic, watched the ship's many
sensors.
"Mr.
Tobrok, give them the news." Concisely, he did so. I had all three of them
call up the revised Log, to verify our entries. "Who's in charge?"
Silence.
"Mr.
Tobrok, throw the senior watch officer in the brig. The charge is
insubordination."
"I
guess I am, sir. Sorry." A beady-eyed joey, fingers clenching and
unclenching. <(Comm Specialist Panner."
"Very
well. Hold, Mr. Tobrok. Mr. Panner, ignore all further communication from the
bridge. Acknowledge."
"Orders
received and acknowledged, sir. Ignore the bridge." He was sweating.
"What if the Captain—"
"The
former Captain."
"Yes,
sir." He fell silent.
"Disconnect
the bridge. I don't want them to have access to Earthport Station or
Earth."
"Aye
aye, sir, I can't." He licked greasy lips. 'The bridge can't be cut off.
The Captain can call out, or overhear anything sent from this
compartment."
"What
about other ship's stations?" I was afraid I already knew the answer.
'The
bridge and the engine room can call anywhere. Maybe in complete powerdown
they'd be cut off, but I doubt it."
"Very
well. Put incoming communications on your speaker."
He
tapped a few keys. The hiss of carriers, and an occasional bored instruction
from Earthport's traffic control.
We
waited. It was twenty-three fifty. Minutes passed at a glacial pace.
Twenty
minutes later, a voice I knew. "Galactic, this is SecGen Seafort's
shuttle." It was my shuttle. Had been.
Captain
Stanger, his voice cold. "Identify yourself."
"Pilot
Walter Van Peer, of Naval Academy Shuttle T-455."
"So
that's where the son of a bitch was hiding. Who's
with
you?" Van Peer's tone was laconic. "Sir, there's nobody else
aboard.
You have my oath."
Good.
He'd said it exactly as we'd rehearsed.
"Very
well, approach the Level 4 lock. He can swing across." Stanger was playing
it safe. Forward of the Level 2 lock I'd used was a cargo bay, with capture
latches for mating airlocks. But the Captain wanted no suspicious vessel moored
to his starship.
We
watched the sensor screens as Van Peer maneuvered the shuttle close.
Tobrok
whispered, "How many does he have aboard?"
"None.
He gave his oath on my behalf."
The
master-at-arms gave me a fixed stare.
Van
Peer brought the shuttle to rest a few meters from the
airlock.
"Send
Seafort through the Level 4 lock. Be warned, we have you targeted. Laser Room,
prepare to fire."
Why had
I taken over the cornm room instead of laser control? I felt clammy inside my
unfamiliar uniform.
The
speaker crackled. "Mr. Tobrok, call the bridge."
We
exchanged glances. I nodded.
He
keyed the caller. "Master-at-arms Tobrok reporting,
sir."
"lake
a squad to the Level 4 lock. If Seafort is alone, let him in. Otherwise, defend
the lock and report to me by caller."
I
nodded.
He
said, "Aye aye, sir."
I
stirred. "Mr. Fanner, seal your hatch, open only for me or the
master-at-arms. Tobrok, get me to the Level 4 lock. Bring your joeys."
He
slapped open the hatch. Outside, a midshipman stood
poised
to knock. His gaze flickered past Tobrok. "The Sec-Gen, here?" His
tone was unbelieving.
"Grab
him!"
He spun
and bolted. One of Tobrok's men gave chase, but it was hopeless.
"Run!"
Canes in my lap, I flailed at my wheels. "Level 4! Hurry!"
We tore
down the corridor past a gaggle of startled passengers.
The
lift was a quarter turn beyond the stairwell. Too far. "Carry me! No
time!" Only Tobrok dared touch me, at first. "Pick me up, damn you.
Down the stairs! You, carry the chair. CHRIST JESUS, DON'T JOUNCE!" Sorry,
Lord, but that was a bad one.
Alarms
shrieked. Stanger, on shipwide circuit. "Repel boarders, Level 4 airlock!
All passengers, to your cabins!"
At the
foot of the ladder they threw me into the chair. We raced toward the lock.
Tobrok panted, "Why, sir? Who's coming aboard?"
"My
reinforcements." Just six, but Lord God willing, it might be enough. I'd
gained the comm room and the engine room, stopped Stanger from Fusing. And I
had the master-at-arms.
"If
they're not on the shuttle, how... T
On a
cable, tethered a hundred meters abaft the shuttle. Far enough so the gentle
spurts of the shuttle's thrusters wouldn't roast them. Near enough to haul
themselves in quickly. Van Peer's delicate touch had brought the shuttle to rest
without swinging them into the hull.
Behind
the shuttle. Not aboard it. I'd told truth.
No time
to explain. 'Trust me."
"Attention,
ship's company!" Stanger's voice rasped in the corridor speakers.
"The master-at-arms is aiding the boarders. Apprehend him. Mr Tobrok is
relieved from his post. Speke, Wilkins, Tarnier, to the armory, flank!"
Stanger
had reacted with commendable speed. From the
middy's
skimpy repent, he'd pieced together enough to mobilize his defenses.
We
skidded to a stop at the airlock, the first to arrive. I peered through the
porthole, saw two suited figures. Then a third. The outer hatch gaped wide,
held open by an alumal-loybar.
Hurry.
I hammered at my armrest.
"Sir,
the override!"
I
glanced at the panel; the bridge override was flashing. Damn Stanger to hell.
My party wouldn't be able to open the inner hatch. Neither would we, from the
corridor. How could— "What's in merer*
"A
suit locker, sir."
No
help. I churned my brain. Aha. "Tobrok, the Chief left a cutting assembly
in your berth. Get it, flank."
"Force
the airlock?" He was incredulous. No sailor could easily contemplate
damaging his ship.
"MOVE!"
I had
both the stunners. I handed one to each of his joeys. "Give me the
frazzing billy!** The startled sailor dropped the club in my lap. It wouldn't
do much good, but it was better
than
nothing.
"There!"
Down the corridor, a handful of Galactic's sailors pointed at us, gathered
their nerve for an attack.
"Charge
them!** I prodded my crew.
Tobrok's
two men took off, stunners aimed two-handed, stretched in front as they ran.
They pounded along the carpet. The opposing sailors wavered. One turned,
bolted. Abruptly, they all fled.
"Come
back! Quick, to the lock!" Somehow, my joeys heard me above the rush of
their adrenaline. They loped
back.
The
airlock was filling. Four figures. Five. I caught sight of Derek, Who was
missing? Where the hell was Tobrok
with
the torch? Running steps. The master-at-arms trotted round the
bend,
lugging a heavy cutting assembly. His face was red from exertion; I should have
sent two men.
I
snapped, "Check the far ladder. Yell warning if they attack." Not
that it would do much good. And they could come at us by the elevator as well.
Tobrok
dropped the torch at my feet, leaned against the lock, chest heaving.
"Quick,
get it set up!" He and his mate scrambled to put together the assembly. A
click. Another, and we had flame.
Around
the corridor bend, voices. I shoved my billy club at Tobrok. 'Take your men,
hold them off." I peered down the corridor. "Use those fire
hoses!" Stanger could cut off the pressure, but it would gain us time.
Especially if he first relayed his command through the engine room, where die
ship's water was controlled. I snatched up the torch.
I
pounded the airlock porthole. For Lord God's sake, hurry. There were six in the
lock. Then, strangely, seven. Derek kicked free the bar. The outer hatch slid
shut He secured it, slammed down the pressure lever.
As the
lock pressurized I began to cut. I needed to shear the bolts that held the
hatch shut; the airlock control panel was disabled from the bridge. The bolts
were at midlevel of the hatch. From my chair, I worked at a spot of the
alumal-loy, the torch assembly heavy on my lap. My canes were in die way; I
tossed them to the deck.
Shouts
of rage from the east. Tobrok's high pressure fire hose had found a target A
pity about the fine new carpet I bent to my task. The alumalloy glowed, sagged.
I jerked my feet away from the flow.
"Hurry,
Captain!"
I
grunted. To the west, Tobrok's man had pocketed his stunner and wrestled with a
second fire hose. Clever. He could down more joeys with the icy water than the
stunner, which had to be close enough to touch.
I had
cut half through one of the two bolts. Stanger would have the water off any
moment
A
scream. I glanced up. The corridor bulkhead smoked from a distant laser bolt.
Lord help us. Fire hoses were no match for lasers. Tobrok retreated farther
around the bend,
toward
me.
The
first bolt was severed. I started the second. Was the bloody torch on full? Why
hadn't I brought a torch of my own? Lasers? Or a nuke?
In
excruciating slow motion, the second bolt glowed and
began
to separate.
"Now,
sir! Hurry!" Tobrok was almost upon me, retreating from the laser. The
fire hose was stretched tight. Only the curve of the corridor protected him,
and he could retreat no farther. One good shot, and he'd be a blistered corpse.
Half
the bolt cut. Two-thirds.
I held
the torch steady, risked a glance to each side. To the west, Tobrok's man stood
waiting with another hose. To the east, soggy carpet, a steady torrent of water
slapping the
bulkhead.
At the
corridor curve a middy appeared, uniform immaculate and dry. Coolly, he aimed
his laser pistol, I flinched. With a cry of rage Tobrok bounded forward, hose
in hand, A bolt sizzled the bulkhead to his right. He charged the middy,
dragging his hose. The middy aimed anew. Tobrok's burst caught him full in the chest,
hurled him against the bulkhead. The laser went flying. The middy scrambled for
it.
Pounding,
on the hatch. I looked up. Christ, Seafort, you idiot. The bolt was cut, and
still I played the flame at it. I twisted oft the torch, slapped the panel just
as someone in the lock did the same.
The
smoking hatch slid open, grating against its pocket. Half-suited figures poured
out the lock. Arlene. Philip. Bevin. Others still in helmets.
I threw
down the torch, grabbed my canes. "Tobrok! You men!" I beckoned
frantically.
The
master-at-arms abandoned his hose. It flopped
wildly,
like a beached fish. He raced down the corridor toward us.
"This
way!" I pointed west, away from the armed party with the laser.
Someone
grabbed my chair handles. I lurched along the corridor, hanging on as best I
could.
Pounding
feet* the rasp of breath. We thudded down the corridor. Jared tore off his
heavy helmet
Behind
us, shouts.
"Faster!"
I tried to spin the wheels. Where to God's own Hell was the ladder?
Three
men lunged out of a cabin, brandishing billies. Derek ducked under one. Jared,
with all his strength, swung his helmet in a vicious arc. It caught his
attacker in the forehead, dropped him like a stone. We raced on.
Ahead,
the ladder. As we neared, a dozen sailors charged down the steps from Level 3.
We were
trapped. Someone hauled my chair backward. I pitched forward; a hand clutched
my collar, hauled me into my seat as we retreated.
'This
way!" Tobrok ran back the way we had come, "Fast!" That way lay
the laser pistol, and death. "Hurry, sir!"
We had
no choice. As one, we followed.
Twenty
paces from the stairs, Tobrok dived to a hatch in the bulkhead. The lift.
He
pounded the call button.
The
hatch slid open. We piled in. We were too many. I grabbed someone onto my lap.
Bevin. Derek, Anselm, and Jared swarmed into the packed lift like demented
students in an electricar.
"Wherer
I
gasped, "Two!" I had to get out of full gravity, no matter the cost
There
they are!" Our pursuers charged the lift
Someone
slapped the hatch panel. The door slid, A billy
flashed;
Derek cried out. I waited for the inevitable laser
bolt
that would end us all. None came.
The
hatch closed. We started up.
"Bevin,
hold still." My back was breaking. "Tobrok,
where
to?"
"My
berth."
"They
know you've gone over to us."
"The
dining hall, then. West." It had several entrances, I recalled, and was as
good a goal as any.
My load
lightened. We were passing into the vortex of the
bow
gravitron. The hatch slid open. I braced for the thud of clubs, the
flash
of lasers.
Nothing.
"Send
the lift back down to six." It might throw them off.
"Quick!"
Tobrok led us along the corridor past lounges, exercise rooms, cabins. At last,
the dining-hall entry.
We
dashed in.
Within,
a deserted island of calm. Elegant crystalware.
Plush
seats. "The galley, sir. It has hatches to the corridor,**
"Go."
In a
moment we were there. Well past midnight, it was deserted. Tobrok flicked off
the light. By the glow of the emergency bulbs, we huddled behind a row of
freezers, taking
stock.
"Anyone
hurt?" "No, sir." Bevin. "NotI."Anselm, I looked
about. "Good, everyone's—Lord God damn it,
what
are you doing here?" Mikhael squirmed. "I brought him." Derek's
voice was calm.
"Why?"
"Because
he's your son."
"1
told you—"
"He's
your son. Is he not?"
"Yes."
That was why I wanted him in safety.
"You
allowed Philip."
I had
to. At twenty-four, he was beyond my control.
Mikhael
would never grasp the distinction.
I said
deliberately, "You're right. Mikhael, I apologize. It was wrong to forbid
you." His eyes glistened.
"Nick,
we need guns.** Arlene paced, a tigress on the prowl.
"I
couldn't get to them," I felt a fool. "All we have is two
stunners."
"And
knives." Derek fingered the kitehenwarc.
"Fire
axes, if it comes to mat** Philip.
"Sir,
they're my mates," said Tobrok. Til defend you, but don't ask me to take
down my sailors with a fire ax."
"I
understand.** I'd already asked more of the man man was decent.
While
they caught their breath, I brought my allies up-to-date, Questions; I did my
best to answer.
Philip
said little. When we were done he knelt by my chair. "The engine room has
a tool shop. We can arm ourselves,**
"No
time to fabricate weapons,"
"They'd
have torches. Metal for clubs. Acid, Oil for firebombs," His voice was so
calm, it belied the bloodthirsty implication of bis words.
"Son,
we're not looking for a bloodbath." I wanted to take the ship, not
slaughter the crew.
"If
we had lasers, we'd use them,**
"True,"
With
great caution, I rose from my chair, grateful for the light gravity. My spine
twinged, but I had full feeling, and my legs moved. With my canes, I paced.
What we needed was to break into the bridge. Or the armory, if Stanger bad left
any arms.
"Stanger's
our goal. Capture him and resistance will collapse."
"Not
necessarily, sir. Anyone who supported him faces hanging. They'll be
desperate." "Only if they know I've relieved him." "Make a
shipwide announcement." Arlene. "Put them all on notice, drive a
wedge into his forces." Derek said, "For that we need the comm
room."
"No.
Just a caller." I looked about. "The comm room can switch us to
shipwide circuit."
"Hold,
sir." Tobrok. "If we call, the comm techs will know where we
are."
Yes,
but they'd acknowledged my command of Galactic. Would their loyalty revert to
Stanger? Philip's and Arlene's lives were at stake. And Mikhael's.
Philip's
voice was sharp. "Where's Jared?*'
"He
was here a minute ago." Anselm looked about.
"Find
him." Philip strode to the serving doors to the eating room.
I
snapped. "Stay in the galley." I cane-walked across the deck.
"If one of them looks in—"
"I've
got to find him."
"Do
as you're told." My voice was ice.
"Path—"
"This
minute!"
"But
I—" He sagged. "Yes, sir."
Jared
was expendable. Any of us were. "Mr. Tobrok, send
a
man—"
"Seafort,
this is the Captain." His voice was hard. "Wr destroyed your shuttle.
You have no way off the ship. Put down your arms and surrender. "
Arlene
snorted. "What arms?"
"Shush."
14 If
we must, we'll seek you out compartment by compart' ment, and my men will shoot
to kill. Call the bridge to give yourselves up."
I
waited, but there was no more. "Now what?" I looked about
"Make
your announcement," said Arlene. "Before he rallies the crew against
us."
'Tobrok,
send a man to the comm room with a stunner. If we keep an eye on them, they
won't betray—"
Outside,
the murmur of voices. I put my finger to my lips. "The stunner!" It
was barely a whisper. Arlene took up position by the door.
We'd
barely come aboard, and already it was over. A futile, token resistance, and
we'd be overwhelmed. I eased out of my chair, balanced on one cane, gripped my
billy club.
Come
on, you bastards.
"Move,
God damn you!" A midshipman stumbled through the door, hands in air, his
mouth set in a sneer. Behind him, a sailor. Another. To the rear, Jared,
brandishing a laser. "Watch them, sir." Gingerly, he handed the laser
to Derek.
Philip
bounded across the galley. He slapped Jared hard, swept him into a fierce hug.
"You idiot. You fool."
Derek
smiled at the sailors. "Breathe funny. Try it" They stood perfectly
stilL
I found
my voice. "Jared, how in God's name did you—**
His
words were muffled, from P.T.'s shoulder. "You needed guns."
"Where—why—"
"I
slipped out the side entrance.**
"They
might have killed you."
"I
realized..." He raised his head, pulled clear of my son's embrace.
"How many passengers have been ferried up? Two thousand? And they just
boarded. Nobody would know me. So I was a frightened passenger looking for
help. They're near my cabin, sir, come quick. The number? I don't know, but
it's over—" His hand swept out, as if knocking a weapon from someone's
grasp. "I didn't know what else to do, so I brought them here."
I
turned to the middy. "You!" We'd met before.
"Edwin
Speke."
"What
Level were you on? What were your orders?"
"Edwin
Speke, Midshipman. ID 76L542—"
"Answer!"
"Edwin
Speke." His voice shook with hatred. "That grade asked for help! We
were helping him when he attacked!" The unfairness overwhelmed him.
"You goddamn frazzing—"
I
raised a warning finger. There were limits.
He
folded his arms. "That's all you'll get."
"I'm
Nick Seafort. I've relieved your Captain, and appointed myself."
"I
don't care."
What
kind of middies was Academy sending us these days? "Care, boy. Your Me
depends on it."
"You'd
shoot me?" His contempt dripped.
"Admiralty
will hang you. I'm Captain of Galactic, you're subject to my orders."
"Prove
it"
I
glanced about, saw no console, said lamely, "It's in the
Log."
"Show
it to—"
"Sir,
time's wasting." Derek.
"Tobrok,
take your men and try to reach the comm room. Leave one of them to make sure
they don't tell Stanger our location. Call here." I would broadcast my
assumption of command to the ship.
"Aye
aye, sir. And these two?" He indicated the sailors.
A
problem. I couldn't brig more than a few of them; there was no room. That's
assuming we could reach the brig, and that Stanger's forces didn't release them
the moment we
left
The
ship was simply too big, and with a crew of eight hundred, there were more on
his side than on ours. I tried to puzzle it out
"Arlene."
My face was impassive. With the stunner, she touched one of them in the ribs.
His eyes rolled upward as he fell. She whirled to his companion, dropped him
before he could protest
"You
bastards!" The middy's fists clenched.
"Two
demerits. Four."
"You
can't issue me—"
"Five."
He fell
silent
I said,
"We need to break into the armory, unless Stanger's emptied it." But
the armory, like the bridge, was built as a fortress. Cutting through its
reinforced plates would be a major undertaking. "I left the torch at the
airlock."
"Stanger's
territory, by now."
"No
doubt" I needed help. Balefully, I eyed the middy. "Joey, where's the
nearest console?"
"I
don't have to tell you. The Captain—"
"Derek,
shoot him. I've had enough."
"No!"
A cry of genuine fear.
Obligingly,
Derek aimed between his eyes. I wondered if the boy saw the safety was still
on.
"Please,
sir!"
"You'lldoaslsayr
"Yes!"
Reflexively, the middy ran fingers through his hair. His hand trembled.
"Go
to the brig. It's a few hatchways past the bend. Sit at the console and call up
the bloody Log!"
"Nick,
he'll run to Stanger." Arlene.
"No,
he won't. Not until he looks. Decide who's Captain, Mr. Speke. If it's me,
enter your demerits. Hurry back." I glared. "Well?"
"Aye
aye, sir."
"Don't
let him go! We're all at risk."
"It's
all right hon." Though he might not know it the
middy
had acknowledged me when he lapsed silent at the threat of my demerits.
The boy
slunk out
Stanger
had been quiet a long while. What was he up to? Would he turn his wrath on a
world held hostage? "We need the laser room."
Derek
checked his pistol. "Probably enough charge to bum through the hatch. But
if they're waiting inside..." A shootout, with Lord knew how many killed.
"We
need more guns."
P.T.
said, "I'll go out as Jared did. Have Mom and Derek bide in a cabin, and
Til lead sailors into an ambush."
"You're
too well known." As my son, his face had at times been in the holos.
"Not
so well—"
Til
go." Mikhael.
"Out
of the question."
"Who
else can you send? The cadets' uniforms would give them away. Jared's already
been out Mr. Carr? He's in the holozines too. And I'm just a joeykid, who'd be
afraid of
me?"
"Mikhael—**
If I faced Alexi before Lord God, and had to explain I'd sent his son to
slaughter...
"Please,
Pa. Watch!" Mikhael jumped up and down excitedly. "Joeys with guns
and stunners!" He pointed, "I was coming out of the lounge,
and—"
I
looked to Arlene.
She
shrugged. "It might work.**
"I
don't want him hurt"
"Please!
Let me be brave!"
While I
hesitated Arlene said, "Tell them you're in cabin two sixteen. Lead them
past the exercise room, that's where we'll be. Now, we have only one pistol. I
can take four, perhaps rive, with surprise. Don't lead a troop of fifteen to
us."
"No,
ma'am,"
"If
they're too many, walk up to them and ask if it's all
right
to be out of your cabin. They'll tell you to get lost. Derek, let's go. Nick,
make your announcement You know where we'll be."
Knowing
it was dangerous folly, I let them depart.
Waiting
helplessly, I tried to plan. First, my announcement. Then the laser room.
Somehow I'd disable Galactic'* lasers, if I had to burn their consoles into
smoking puddles. If I could secure the ship, Stanger could have the bridge. He
wasn't taking Galactic anywhere; Chief McAndrews wouldn't let him. I'd starve
him out if necessary.
Hobbling,
I paced. "Tobrok should have called by now,"
P.T.
said, "If he ran into a patrol..."
"Shall
I risk calling the cornm room?"
"No.
Wait,"
I
should have taken the master-at-arms to the laser room as soon as I'd boarded.
With that disabled, I'd have had time to figure out the rest. But he'd disputed
my authority, and there was the comm room to secure, and we had to cut through
the lock, and... I sighed.
Distant
shouts. A scream.
I sat.
After a time, my nerves were stretched tight
Footsteps,
in the dining hall.
P.T.
pulled out his stunner, took position just inside the double door. He crouched,
Anselm had a knife, Bevin an iron cooking pan with a long handle. They planted
themselves in front of my chair.
"Micky,
it's us." Arlene. I let out a breath I hadn't known I was holding.
The
door swung open. She dropped her booty on a counter: three pistols, an ugly
laser rifle, even more accurate than a pistol. Derek, behind her, put his
weapon on safety.
My
voice was hoarse, "Where's Mikhael?"
"Outside.
You'd better go to him."
Oh,
Lord God. He was hurt. I leaned hard on my canes, practically launched myself
in the light gravity.
I
passed through the serving doors into the sumptuous
dining
hall. Mikhael, his back to roe, sagged against a pillar, sobbing.
"What
is it, son?"
His
shoulders shook in a silent spasm. I put aside a cane, laid an arm across his
shoulder. 'Tell me."
"Look
what I did." Scarlet with mortification, he faced me, revealing his damp
pants. "Like a... like a..." He wept "I wanted to be brave like
Dad, and now this."
Relief
swept through me. "Is that all?" I buried his head in my chest.
"You must have been terrified."
"That
middy, Speke. He saw me, and I thought he'd tell mem, and men Ms. Seafort
she—"
It
would have been grim, at close range. "I can't go in. I can't let them
see." "I'll tell you a secret" I raised his chin, "It
happened to me, once." An alien form skittered through the wreck of
Tel-star, close enough to touch. Fuse, Vox. Fuse the ship. I shuddered.
"You're
just saying that" Misery permeated his features.
"I
want to die."
"It's
true. I wet myself. What makes you mink you're immune to fear?"
"You
and Mr, Carr, you're so brave. Homing frightens—'*
"Oh,
son. Courage isn't living without fear. It's in what you do despite your
fear."
It
seemed, after a time, to calm him. Clinging to me like a bashful toddler, he
allowed me to guide him to the galley,
I was
desperate. We'd apparently lost Tobrok and his men. The middy Speke hadn't
returned. Stanger would come for us at any moment I dared not call the comm
room; it would give away our position. The laser room was on Level 1. We had
the firepower to force its hatch, but the Captain almost certainly guarded the
ladder wells, Even if, by some miracle, neither Speke nor Tobrok had told him
our
whereabouts,
he'd certainly know his Level 2 patrols weren't disappearing by accident
"I'm
coming in." A voice from the darkened dining hall.
"Lord
Jesus!" I tried to surge to my feet, and recoiled from a white-hot lance
of pain.
"Don't
shoot." Midshipman Speke poked his head into the galley.
Arlene
grabbed him by the collar, slammed him against a cooler. "Where'd you
go?" A shake, that rattled his teeth. "Answer!"
"Easy,
hon,"
"Don't
'easy' me/' She drew her pistol. "If you betrayed us..."
"Ma'am—Captain,
sir, I didn't!" He looked to me for succor. "I read the Log, and
you're the lawful... You needed lasers, so I went to the bridge. Mr.
Stanger—"
"Don't,
Arlene!"
"I
told Stanger I'd lost mine in a firefight that you were on Level 4, could I
indent for another, and he said—" The boy blushed furiously. "If I
lose another pistol he'll have me caned. I'm supposed to lead CPO Fahren's
squad. They're assembled on Level 5, I have lasers and billies and
stunners."
"WhereF
"Just
inside the corridor hatch." I peered into the dining hall, saw weapons
piled on a powered cart.
I
glowered. "How many demerits have you?"
"Eight,
sir. Including your five." He blushed furiously. "Midshipman Edwin
Speke reporting for duty, sir."
"Very
well." His exploits deserved more, I cleared my throat "Well done,
Middy." I forced my thoughts to the problems we faced. We had arms, but
needed more men. How ... Ah. "Mr. Speke, find CPO Fahren's squad. Bring them
here,"
"But..,
aye aye, sir."
"If
you run into opposition, I trust you can talk your way out of it?"
He
looked sheepish. "Probably."
He'd be
in little danger. Our party was concealed in the mess hall, and to the enemy,
Speke would appear to be carrying out Stanger's orders.
Ten
minutes later, I surveyed my new command. Fahren's squad consisted of
twenty-two sailors under the chief petty officer. Speke had assured them with
calm confidence mat I was the lawful Captain, and seemed to be carrying the
day. CPO Fahren nervously pledged his support.
Time to
sally forth. The only reason we hadn't been discovered was that the dining hall
was such an unlikely, useless place for us to hide.
Galactic
was larger than any other vessel I'd known, but its structure was like all the
Navy's starships: two stairwells crossed each level, east and west. If we held
bom ladders, we could defend Level 2. Oops, I'd forgotten the lift Bom stairs
and the elevator*
"No."
Derek
and P,T. looked at me strangely; I hadn't realized I'd spoken aloud. We didn't
want to defend Level 2; we needed to seize Level 1, Officers' quarters, the
laser room, the bridge.
"Mr.
Speke, reconnoiter the east ladder."
In a
few moments he was back. "Guards at the foot, sir. Probably also at Level
1, out I couldn't get close enough to see."
"Try
the west*1 He did. It was the same.
"Midshipman,
assemble your squad in the corridor. I want to mount a charge to the east
stairs. You've how many lasers, ten? Laser carriers in front. Pick men who know
how—"
"Nicky,
let me lead."
"You're
a civilian, hon." I frowned at Arlene. They can't follow your orders, even
if they had a mind—"
"Enlist
me."
"What?"
I wanted to say more, but I was speechless.
"You
heard me. Appoint me lieutenant."
P.T.
watched, solemn.
"Hon,
this is no time to..." I sought a valid argument. "Enlistment is for
five years." I added hurriedly, "Of course there's always
remission." As Admiral, I could remit the enlistment of any officer. We'd
done so for the passengers I'd impressed on Challenger,
A
ridiculous notion, hers. A wife a subordinate officer, subject to her husband's
commands, yet equal within their cabin? True, there were officers who had
married, but none had been Captain.
Yet,
why had I consented to her joining my mission, if I wouldn't use her skills? I
temporized. "Hon, if you enlist, whatever orders I give—"
"For
Christ's sake, Nicky. I know."
"Very
well." Twenty-five years after her discharge, she'd be a lieutenant once
more, "Raise your right hand. I do—"
"I,
Arlene Sanders Seafort, do swear upon my immortal soul to preserve and protect
the Charter of the General Assembly of the United Nations, to give loyalty and
obedience for the term of my enlistment to the Naval Service of the United
Nations and to obey all its lawful orders and regulations, so help me Lord God
Almighty," She spoke without hesitation.
With a
tug at my jacket, a quick smoothing of my tie, I snapped her a formal salute.
Crisply, she replied.
Lord
God, I loved her. "Go to it. Lieutenant/'
"Aye
aye, sir."
"You
joeys heard: she's Navy now. Follow orders. Middy, detach three men from their
squad, take my two cadets as well. Guard the rear of Fahren's squad. Take
position between the dining hall and the west stairs."
Not to
be outdone, Speke snapped an Academy salute. "Aye aye, sir," He
strode off, Bevin and Anselm in tow.
"What
about us?" Jared,
"You
and P.T. will help me up the ladder, the moment it's safe." My tone was
gruff. "Mikhael, the boys will need your help."
"Yes,
sir." His gratitude was pathetic.
P.T.
stirred. "Get in the chair, Path."
"I
don't need it" Now that we were in light gravity, I'd be able to walk. I
hoisted myself on my canes. In fact, if I was careful, I could do with just
one.
P.T.
said, "Jar, check the corridor near the stairs. We need to know when Mom
attacks,"
Jared
gave him a quick hug, left on his errand.
"Thanks,
Path."
"For
what?"
"Not
sending him into danger."
"He's
very protective of you."
"Odd,
isn't it? It's I who should be protecting him."
We
waited.
Derek
was pensive. "Mr. Seafort, you might give me men to command."
"Not
you too. The same objection applies."
"That
I'm civilian? You know the remedy."
"You're
too old for midshipman." He was graying.
"But
not for lieutenant"
I waved
it away, "Next you'll have me enlisting Mikhael, Or Jared"
"Very
well sir," His tone was frosty. He turned to stare at the hatch.
I
muttered something.
"What?"
"I
said, 'Prima donnas.*"
A long
moment, in which the temperature hovered around that of interstellar space.
I
growled, "Raise your right hand,"
CHAPTER
19
Ms.
Seafort says five minutes," Jared was breathless, "She wants a
diversion at the west ladder,"
I
grimaced. "She needs more men,"
"I
suppose I just stand here, sir?" Derek's tone was dry.
"You're
my reserve." I came to a sudden decision. "Did you see a caller in
the exercise room?"
"It
was rather bloody in there, I didn't notice."
"Go
check. If you find one, call the comm room. Get an idea whose side mey're
on." If my war party had to retreat to the galley, no point in alerting
Stanger to our location by calling from it, "Hurry."
"Aye
aye, sir," He strode out. Amazing how easily one reverted to the
formalities of Naval life. I wondered if I could do the same, were I only to
return as Captain. I dismissed the fancy,
Jared
returned to his post, behind the attackers.
In a
few moments Derek was back. "No answer, sir,"
"Impossible,
The comm room's always manned,"
"You
heard me." His tone was tart "I rang, and they didn't respond. Or
wouldn't"
"Find
Arlene, Help her."
He
left. 1 wished I hadn't given all the lasers to our war party. We had nothing
but a billy among us.
P.T.
said, "Maybe the comm tech's playing it safe. If he—"
Jared
burst in. "Now, Mr. Seafort!" I hobbled to the dining-hall exit. P.T.
hesitated, ran back for the chair. "Will you for God's sake get in?"
"I
don't—" I gave it up, handed him my canes, settled myself. Jared ran ahead
to hold hatches; P.T. and Mikhael raced me to the corridor and the east ladder.
Mikhael skidded to a stop. "Ukk." The carpet was stained and sticky.
Bodies lay where they had fallen. A horrid stench of charred meat pervaded the
corridor.
I
lurched out of the wheelchair. P.T. and Jared each grabbed one of my arms,
helped me up the ladder. Mikhael scrambled up with the chair.
On
Level 1, Arlene loped around the distant corridor bend. Her jumpsuit was
splashed with blood. She cupped her hands to her mouth. "The laser room's
in section nine!" She spun, ran back the way she'd come.
I tried
to orient myself. This level was sparse, utilitarian, like the ships I knew.
But so large ... The bridge was west, the laser room east. Of course,
ultimately it didn't matter; the circumference corridor was circular. But on a
ship with disks so large, one didn't want to go the wrong way.
I
hurried down the corridor on my canes. Where was the armory? We'd need that
too.
"Attention,
This is Captain Stanger " I froze,
"There's
been some confusion." "Hurry, Path." "Listen." I
limped on.
"In
an act of desperation, former SecGen Seafort forced his way onto Galactic with
an armed party of attackers, violating his oath. He's murdered some of our
sailors, and is roaming Levels 1 and 2. He's made a false claim to be Cap*
tain
o/Galactic. He is not, but even if he were so, I relieve him on the grounds
that he is insane."
"The
bastard."
"Quiet,
I said."
"Crew
to Battle Stations, flank. Corridor hatches will seal in one minute. If you
encounter the invaders, contact the bridge immediately. Passengers, do not,
repeat, do not venture into the corridors."
I
dropped into the chair. "Move me!" Once the emergency corridor hatches
sealed, only authorized codes or a signal from the bridge could open them.
Piping Battle Stations was a move I'd expected Stanger to make, sooner or
later. By dividing the ship into isolated segments, he denied us the freedom of
movement we needed.
We
raced to the end of section seven. Through to eight At a cabin, an officer
emerged. He stopped dead in his tracks. We flashed by. He tugged at something
black in his belt The skin of my spine crawled as I waited for the shot
"PA,
IT'S CLOSING!" Mikhael scampered ahead.
P.T,
thundered down the corridor, pushing my chair. Hatches flew past in a blur.
Corridor
hatches were designed for decompression. When they shut, mey shut fast Philip
raced toward me hatch, but too late. Abruptly realizing we were trapped, he let
go my chair, spun back the way we'd come. I rolled onward, help-less against
the momentum he'd achieved. Mikhael grabbed the handles, braced himself to slow
me. The speeding chair yanked him off his feet; he fell with a mump.
Slowed,
I crashed into the solid hatch. The impact almost threw me from my seat
Half-dazed, I wrenched the wheel.
Philip
galloped down the corridor. Jared followed, legs pumping madly. The officer
we'd passed stood waiting, stunner aimed.
With a
shout Philip launched himself. He struck die officer full in the chest, fell
slack to the deck, rolled over twice.
Jared
hurtled down the corridor. The officer aimed anew as Jared hit him. They went
down, flailing.
Jared
sprang to his feet. He kicked the officer's limp form once, twice, three times,
ran to Philip, knelt.
Slowly,
aching, I wheeled myself toward them. Mikhael, shamefaced, came alongside and
helped push.
Jared
cradled P.T.'s head.
I
patted his shoulder. "It's just a stunner. He'll be all right
in an
hour."
Jared's
eyes were sorrowful. "He didn't warn me ..."
"I
know son." I looked about. "We can't stay here." Any moment we'd
be found.
"Where—r
We were
locked in our section, until I devised a way out. "There." I picked a
compartment at random. Anything was better than the middle of the corridor.
"I'll
drag him." Jared got his arms under P.T.'s shoulders.
"Use
the chair." I struggled to my feet, balanced on my canes. Any second now,
someone would come. My back prickled.
Jared
and Mikhael hauled my son into the chair. Insensate, he looked far younger than
his twenty-four years. I swallowed, hobbled faster.
At the
unlabeled compartment I slapped open the hatch. "In here." We hustled
the chair inside, closed the hatch. I
looked
around.
Six
bunk beds, four abandoned in haste. Built-in dressers.
An
inner room, with more beds.
The
midshipmen's wardroom.
"Now
what?" Jared.
"You
and Mikhael put on middies' clothes."
His
eyes widened. "You're enlisting us?"
"No,
but you're too conspicuous in civvies." Was it possible Mikhael's look was
disappointment?
"What
about P.T.T'
"Yourselves
first. Deal with him when he wakes."
Mikhael
pawed through a drawer, found middy blues and a shirt. With obvious relief he
stripped off his damp pants.
Jared
would have more trouble; he'd filled out as an adult
"Mikhael,
can you manage the tie?" Bloody anachronism; at times I wondered why the
Navy bothered. On the other hand, tradition was everything.
"No,
sir." He sounded subdued.
"Come
here." I made a clumsy knot. Good for a demerit, but tonight it would do.
"You look handsome." Heartbreak-ingly like Alexi.
"Thanks,
Pa. Here, Jared, try these, they're bigger."
We were
fit to venture out, but to what purpose? "Where's the caller? Ahh." I
hobbled to it I'd try the comm room, or—
"All
armed sailors on Level 1, to the laser room! Call the bridge to have corridor
hatches opened. Lieutenant Percz, take charge outside the laser room."
"There's
our chance." They stared, so I elaborated. "We go to the section nine
hatch, call the bridge. In the confusion we'll get through." Lord God
willing. "Leave P.T. here. We'll—"
The
hatch slid open. A middy ran in. "What are you joeys—hey, you're
not—"
As one,
without my prompting, Jared and Mikhael tackled him. They rolled on the deck;
Mikhael swarmed onto his chest I managed to skirt the fracas, reach the hatch
control, slap it shut
The
middy bucked and heaved. I prodded him with my cane. "That will do!"
At the
sight of my uniform, momentary confusion. "You're ... SecGen Seafort"
"Yes.
Mikhael, is he armed? No? Let him up."
"He'll—"
"This
instant!" I was used to obedience from joeys in middy blues.
Jared
hurtled down the corridor. The officer aimed anew as Jared hit him. They went
down, flailing.
Jared
sprang to his feet. He kicked the officer's limp form once, twice, three times,
ran to Philip, knelt.
Slowly,
aching, I wheeled myself toward them. Mikhael, shamefaced, came alongside and
helped push.
Jared
cradled P.T.'s head.
I
patted his shoulder. "It's just a stunner. He'll be all right
in an
hour."
Jared's
eyes were sorrowful. "He didn't warn me ..."
"I
know son." I looked about. "We can't stay here." Any moment we'd
be found.
"Where—r
We were
locked in our section, until I devised a way out "There." I picked a
compartment at random. Anything was better than the middle of the corridor.
"I'll
drag him." Jared got his arms under P.T.'s shoulders.
"Use
the chair." I struggled to my feet, balanced on my canes. Any second now,
someone would come. My back
prickled.
Jared
and Mikhael hauled my son into the chair, Insensate, he looked far younger man
his twenty-four years. I swallowed, hobbled faster.
At the
unlabeled compartment I slapped open the hatch, "In here." We hustled
the chair inside, closed die hatch. I looked around.
Six
bunk beds, four abandoned in haste. Built-in dressers. An inner room, with more
beds.
The
midshipmen's wardroom,
"Now
what?" Jared.
"You
and Mikhael put on middies' clothes."
His
eyes widened, "You're enlisting usT
"No,
but you're too conspicuous in civvies." Was it possible MikhaeFs look was
disappointment?
"What
about P.T.T'
"Yourselves
first. Deal with him when he wakes."
Mikhael
pawed through a drawer, found middy blues and a shirt. With obvious relief he
stripped off his damp pants.
Jared
would have more trouble; he'd filled out as an adult
"Mikhael,
can you manage the tie?" Bloody anachronism; at times I wondered why the
Navy bothered. On the other hand, tradition was everything.
"No,
sir." He sounded subdued.
"Come
here." I made a clumsy knot Good for a demerit, but tonight it would do.
"You look handsome." Heartbreak-ingly like Alexi.
"Thanks,
Pa, Here, Jared, oy these, they're bigger,"
We were
fit to venture out but to what purpose? "Where's the caller? Ahh." I
hobbled to it I'd try the comm room, or—
"All
armed sailors on Level 1, to the laser room! Call the bridge to have corridor
hatches opened. Lieutenant Perez take charge outside the laser room,"
"There's
our chance." They stared, so I elaborated. "We go to die section nine
hatch, call the bridge. In the confusion we'll get through." Lord God
willing, "Leave P.T. here. We'll—"
The
hatch slid open, A middy ran in, "What are you joeys—hey, you're
not—"
As one,
without my prompting, Jared and Mikhael tackled him. They rolled on the deck;
Mikhael swarmed onto his ehest I managed to skirt the fracas, reach me hatch
control, slap it shut
The
middy bucked and heaved. I prodded him with my cane. 'That will do!"
At the
sight of my uniform, momentary confusion. "You're... SecGen Seafort"
"Yes,
Mikhael, is he armed? No? Let him up."
"He'll—"
This
instant!" I was used to obedience from joeys in middy blues.
Face
flushed, Galactic'& middy scrambled to his feet. "What are you doing
here?" "Come to attention.**
He
hesitated. "How should I know whom to obey? Captain Stanger says you're
relieved."
"By
Admiralty directive, I relieved your Captain first. He's been placed inactive
and has no authority to relieve me. And in any event I'm still SecGen."
"He
says—" Whatever it was, he thought better of it. After a moment he drew
himself up. Watching from the bulkhead, where he thought I couldn't see,
Mikhael sucked in his chest, put his arms to his sides, died to stiffen. A
passable imitation, for a civilian. To the middy, "Why are you here?"
"For a permalight. The Captain's going to—" His lips tightened.
"Go on."
"I
won't betray my shipmates." "Betray? Have you any idea what he's
done?* "He's saving the Navy,"
My face
grew red. "Go/aeric's at Battle Stations, so in» W subordination is punishable by death. Summary proceed' * ings. What's Stanger up to?* "I'm
not sure."
**Do
you acknowledge my authority?' Along moment. "I guess so... yes, sir.
Midshipman Pyle reporting. I'll work for you, but don't ask me to tell you what
they're doing. It isn't right."
I
hesitated. It was as good as I'd get, and his position had merit. "Very
well. Mikhael, who's in the corridor?'
He slid
open the hatch. "A few sailors. No officers that I—oh, there's one,"
He ducked back inside. "They'll know we're not from the ship, right?"
"The
officers will." Our fraudulent middies' uniforms might pass muster with
the crew—Galactic was a new ship.
and a
huge one—but lieutenants would know their own midshipmen.
I had
to use Pyle to pass through the corridor hatch, to reach the laser room in
section nine. "Mr. Pyle, where were you expected to go?"
"Below
to Level 4."
"Which
stairs?'
"He
didn't say, but.. .**
The
east ladder was far closer, and it was the wrong way; to get to it Pyle should
pass through to section seven, not nine. On the other hand, Stanger had a lot
on his mind, and might not notice. "We'll try it."
Cautiously,
I peered into the corridor. No officer in sight. "Lift Philip to that
bunk. Let's go."
"Let
me stay with him." Jared,
"No.
He's as safe here as anywhere, and we need you."
He
frowned, but gave a reluctant nod. "Your chair?"
"It's
too obvious." As if my Admiral's uniform wasn't, or my pair of canes, I
tried standing without them; it was just possible. If we were seen, I'd thrust
them aside, hope somehow to brazen it out. Not a great plan, but from the start
my attempt to Galactic had been an act of
desperation, with little chance of success.
We went
out to the corridor.
Pyle's
eye searched for Mikhael's length of service pins, found none. "What
ship?'
"Melbourne"
Mikhael blushed. It had been his father's. Now Melbourne was off to Titan, on
one of the tourist cruises that so annoyed interstellar Captains. Though this
cruise, with the holo star Anton Bourse aboard, would be something special.
I
hobbled to the sealed section hatch. At the panel, a caller waited. "Pyle,
tell him—"
"Now
hear this, Seafort, Ms is far you."
A voice
tinged with fear. "Mr. Seafort? Cadet Bevin reporting. They say they'll
execute us for piracy unless you—" The speaker clicked off.
"Pick
up the caller, Seafort. Do it now."
I
shoved Pyle. "Get us past the bloody hatch!"
He
keyed the bridge. "Midshipman Pyle, sir. Please open the section nine
hatch so I can go below." He listened. "Thank you."
The
hatch slid open.
I
growled, "Where's the laser room?"
"At
the far end of the section." Just past the corridor bend. "Sir, who's
with us? How many Marines do you—"
Pyle
had helped us; I saw no reason to distrust him.
"None."
He gaped. "But they attacked with lasers. Whom did you
bring?"
My
smile was grim. "A few friends." In his ill-fitting
middy
uniform, Jared flushed with pride.
"Two
minutes, Seafort."
"Pyle,
run ahead to the laser room. Report back."
"Aye
aye, sir." He dashed off.
If we
held the laser room, we had a chance. With the en-gine room to power the
lasers, we could counteract the threat from Earthport and Lunapolis. As much as
I dreaded civil war, I wouldn't allow civilians on Earth to be bombed.
In a
moment Pyle was back. "We—I mean Captain Stanger—has the laser room
blockaded. Lieutenant Garrow is in charge. There's no sign of your joeys. Are
they inside?"
They
must be, if Stanger had the compartment under
siege.
1 spotted a caller by a hatch panel, keyed it to the laser
room.
A cool
voice. "Lieutenant Sanders."
"Hon?"
"Nick!
I mean, Captain."
"Sanders?"
It was no time to ask, but I wondered why she'd used her unmarried name.
"It's
how I was known in the Service." Calm, but with a bite. She must think me
glitched, for bringing it up at this juncture.
"Very
well. Your situation?"
"Fifteen
of us. We burned through the hatch. I had Fahren reseal the door by
laser-welding it. It won't hold long."
"The
laser techs?"
"Bound
and under watch, sir."
"The
rest of your squad?"
"Three
killed. The others went with Bevin and Anselm as a rear guard."
"One
minute left, Seafort. I have every right to execute them, and 1 will."
"And
Derekr
She
said, "He's with us."
'Target
Earthport Naval Station and the Naval warrens in Lunapolis. Open fire if you
don't hear from me within an hour." My words came fast. "Defend the
laser room, but surrender before you're killed."
"Aye
aye, sir." A hesitation. "I believe that decision belongs to the
commander on the scene."
"Obey
orders, Lieutenant." I wouldn't let her sacrifice herself for naught
"Aye
aye, sir."
"Pyle,
take these middies back to the wardroom, flank. Stay there until I call or come
for you."
"But,
sir—"
"Four
demerits!" I was out of time. Deflated, Pyle led Jared and Mikhael back to
the wardroom. As they ran off I keyed the caller. "Captain Seafort to
bridge."
A voice
I didn't know. "Just a moment, sir, for the Captain."
Stanger.
"Ah, there you are. Your cadet was a tad worried."
"You
are relieved."
"Goofjuice.
I have the support of the Senate, of SecGen Valera, of the Patriarchy."
"I
am head of Lord God's Government"
"It's
debatable. Valera's nullified your proclamation. U.N.A.E's falling in line.
You'll be impeached in a few hours. Just a moment Mr. Garrow, Seafort's at the
section eight corridor hatch. Seize him."
Take
warning! Harm my cadet and I'll hang you myself. I swear to Lord God!" I
slammed down the caller.
No
time. No place to run. The hatch behind me was closed. I blundered to the nearest
compartment. It was locked. The next
It was
the lift. I hammered at the call button. A light
bunked.
Around
the bend, voices. Garrow's patrol was coming for
me.
Slowly, the hatch slid open. I staggered in, slapped the
hatch
panel.
The hatch
began to slide. A shower of sparks, a searing burst of heat as someone fired a
laser. Screaming, I lurched aside, slammed the first Level indicator I saw. The
smoking hatch shut. The lift dropped.
Level
2. We plummeted downward. My eyes bulged. Level 3. Desperately, I hung on to my
canes, as the full weight of Terra descended onto me.
Level
6. Somehow, I was still standing. Inch by inch, I dragged myself along the
corridor. The pain was beyond belief. My legs were virtually useless; I doubted
I could stand
unaided.
The
engine room was at the end of section nine. I'd blocked the lift hatch with my
jacket, all 1 could manage. Stanger's crew would have to use the ladder in
section seven. It gained me a few moments.
I
dragged myself toward the engine room.
The
corridor speaker came to life. "Please, Mr. Seafort!
Oh,
God, please answer/" Danil Bevin, near tears. "I'm begging you!"
I tried
not to retch. Minutes passed into hours, into days. I felt a sickly pallor.
Sweating, faint I moved at a snail's pace.
The
engine-room hatch was ajar. I worked my way through. Two ratings stood by their
panels.
"STAND
AT ATTENTION!" I'd intended my tone to be harsh, but the haze of agony
made it something more. They leaped to their feet "Where's Chief
McAndrews?"
"In
the brig, sir." One of the sailors broke position to wipe his brow. I
didn't blame him; I wanted to do the same, but didn't dare let go of a cane.
"Where
are the gravitron controls?"
"In
the electronics compartment, sir."
"Show
me."
Nervously,
he led the way.
Three
series of boxes, with cables snaking from one to another. Chief McAndrews had
said he couldn't adjust the controls.
Very
well.
"A
torch! Move, damn you!" I made an effort to control my voice, but my spine
wouldn't have it The rating ran to a locker, returned with a cutting unit
"That panel. Melt through the lid."
"Sir,
I can't damage a gravitron, the Captain will—"
I
shrieked. "I'll hang you! Do it this very second! I'm in command!"
It was
too much for him. He aimed the torch. In a moment, the panel glowed. Alarms
wailed. Lights blinked urgently. At last, the cover melted through. I had him
play the flame on the circuitry within. A shower of sparks. He flinched, but
they subsided harmlessly.
"Now
the next" One by one, I had him melt through the panels. The alarms
redoubled.
Suddenly,
the pressure on my spine lessened. In a moment, it was gone. I pushed down on
my canes, floated off
the
deck. Thank You, Lord. I couldn't have lasted much longer.
A
horrid mess I'd left the Chief, but it could be repaired. If I'd damaged the
gravitrons themselves, a lifetime of pay wouldn't reimburse the cost.
The
engine-room console caught my eye. I pushed off from a bulkhead, snagged it.
Wrapping an arm around the chair, I keyed in my ID code. "Baron!"
"Puter
responding. Voicerec of Captain Seafort."
"Erase
the frozen copy of the Log I told you to show the bridge. Substitute the real
Log." Stanger knew I was aboard, and what I was up to. No need to hide it.
"And while you're at it, disable bridge communication with—"
"There
he is!" I glanced to the corridor. Hatches were open for as far as I could
see. A squad of angry sailors worked their way from handhold to handhold toward
the engine room.
"Bridge
communication cannot be disabled. I'm hardwired to allow-—"
I
pushed off with my canes toward the hatch. I made it through, ricocheted from
bulkhead to deck to overhead, until I got the hang of it. Then I moved with
surprising
speed.
Zero
gee narrowed the odds. Now all I had to contend with was Stanger's vast
numbers, against my one.
Section
ten. I caromed off a bulkhead, straightened my course. The canes were actually
rather an advantage; I didn't have to be close to a surface to make headway.
Section
eleven.
One
sailor was more adept at zero gee than the rest. Slowly he gained on me,
brandishing a stunner.
Section
twelve. The west ladder. Like a mutant spider, I kicked and clawed my way. The
sailor was breathing down
my back.
He
launched himself from a handhold. I stabbed with the cane, just touched a
bulkhead, floated aside. As he passed I
elbowed
him viciously in the face. He bounced off the bulkhead, floated unmoving. I
tugged the stunner from his unresisting hand, set the safety, shoved it in my
belt.
Pulling
myself up the ladder rail, I worked my way up to Level 5. Passengers blocked
the top of the stairs, drifting helplessly, calling for help. Why the devil
weren't they in their cabins? Even Stanger had ordered them out of the way.
Ignoring
their pleas, their questions, I shoved them aside in growing fury. When the way
was clear I swam upward to Level 4.
Half a
dozen sailors with billies clung to the top of the rail. I tucked my canes
under my arm, launched myself at them, leading with my stunner. Two came at me;
the rest scattered.
I
caught one in the forehead. A galvanized flop, and he floated past, inert. I'd
killed him. Stunners were meant for the body, not the brain.
The
second joey swung his club in a whistling arc. Lack of gravity weakened the
blow. The recoil drove him upward with the same force it drove me down.
It was
enough to numb my shoulder. I flipped the stunner to my left hand, kicked off
the bulkhead. In midair, he was unable to escape. I left him twitching.
My way
was clear. Upward, to three. The pain was returning, despite zero gee, I tried
not to use my feet to propel myself, but it made the going slower.
The
rasp of breath, over the speakers. "Lieutenant Sanders to Captain Seafort,
We've broken out."
Bless
you, love. You saw a chance, and took it. The ship must be in chaos. Sailors
were given zero-gee drills, but not that many. On the other hand, lasers Fired
just as well regardless of gees. Clever of you to announce your move over the
speaker. No doubt Stanger already knew you'd fought free, so you used the
opportunity to tell me as well.
Where
would she head?
The
galley. Level 2. Just what I had in mind.
* *
*
The
dining hall was brightly lit. I kicked off with my canes, floated through the
hatch.
"Get
him!" Figures moved. I was pinned in a crossfire, if they chose to shoot
"BELAY
THAT!" Arlene's voice was a scream. "Hold!" She showed herself
from behind a pillar. "Captain!"
For her
sake, I couldn't say what I yearned to. "Lieutenant" I tried to make
my nod casual. "How many left?"
"Eleven,
sir." Her eyes never left mine.
"Did
you disable the lasers?"
"No,
I thought you might need them against Earthport
Naval
Base."
A
terrible error, but no time to say so, "Send a squad to force the brig.
It's around the corridor bend. They'll have it guarded. Free Chief
McAndrews,"
"Aye
aye, sir." No questions. Just an officer, doing her duty. "You,
Tyrol. Bennett. Peng. Fall in." They couldn't do it literally, in zero
gee, but they pushed forward, toward the hatch. All were armed with lasers.
She
took mem outside, "We'll go handhold by handhold to mat cabin." She
pointed. "Then we'll launch across the corridor to me far bulkhead. We'll
have a view of the brig. Fire when you have a target. No sounds."
"Aye
aye, ma'am."
Within
the dining hall, we waited.
Shrieks,
from the corridor. Hie crackle of lasers. Minutes later, Arlene kicked through
the hatch. "Lieutenant Sanders reporting, sir. Two down." She sounded
shaken. "We took the brig. They only had four guarding it They're
dead."
Behind
her, the bulky form of the Chief. His face was battered. "Sorry, sir. The
engine room has too many hatches." He'd been overwhelmed.
"Arlene,
you took three men."
"Peng
is coming." Four sailors appeared in the hatch. One
was
Peng, his laser aimed. 'These joeys say they're with you, sir."
"Mr.
Tobrok." My face lit. Two ratings trailed the master-at-arms.
"We
never had a chance. They were waiting at the comm room with lasers."
"I
understand." For Comm Specialist Fanner, there'd be a reckoning. To
Arlene, "Can we hold either the engine room or the laser room?"
"Not
the laser room. The hatch is useless."
"Pardon,
sir." McAndrews. "In my stores I have plates to reinforce the hatch,
and all the tools you'd need. But I doubt we could get to them."
"Why
not?"
His
bruised face brightened. "You took out the gravitrons, didn't you? Stanger
will want them on-line, flank. Lord knows how many joeys he's got working down
there."
"He
won't get them on-line from the engine room."
"That
bad?"
I
nodded.
"He'll
bypass the controls, then. Activate the direct power lines. Still, I imagine
he'll post guards at my hatches so we can't make more trouble."
"Arlene—Lieutenant
Sanders can take them out"
"Not
forever, sir." She looked glum. "I lose men each time, and we don't
have many."
"Sir,"
Derek Carr.
I
turned to him, "You're alive,"
"More
or less." His knee was soaked with blood. "May I ask the plan?"
I
closed my eyes, savoring the sour taste of defeat. "Evae* uation."
Stanger was too strong, too organized.
"How?"
"We'll
seize a launch." One of the four launch bays was reached from Level 1,
where Jared, Philip, and Mikhael hid in the wardroom.
"Just
a moment."
I
bridled. Chief McAndrews knew better than to talk to a Captain so, even in a
crisis. Especially in a crisis.
"You'll
let him steal the ship?" He rubbed his swollen face. "And take my
engine room?"
I said,
"Have we a choice?"
"What's
changed since you came aboard?"
Derek
said quietly, "It was hopeless from the start Why give up now?"
"Be
silent, Lieutenant." A gallant, futile charge was a noble idea, but I
wouldn't see Philip killed to no purpose. Or my wife.
"Sir,
may I speak?" Arlene.
"Yes."
"Galactic
is the key. It's the only ship taking part in the rebellion. Her lasers can
devastate North America and Europe, or mey could—"
"I
know that"
"Pardon,
please let me finish. Or they could be turned on Earthport and quell the
mutiny. If we lose Galactic, we lose our U.N. Government, Stanger's ilk will
take over. If they do, the enviro cause is finished. There'll be a Naval
dictatorship, in fact if not in name. The Patriarchs will eliminate the last
freedom of relig—"
"Sor
"Would
you die to prevent it?"
I said,
"Yes."
She
took a deep breath. "So would I."
One
can't pace in zero gee. I flailed at nothing, until I drifted up to the
overhead, and deflected myself. "I'd give my life to defeat Stanger. But I
don't want to die in a useless gesture. I'm out of ideas."
"Get
me into my engine room." McAndrews. 'Til find you torches to cut through
the bridge hatch. The big ones, with the power cables." "Four Levels
down, then we'd have to fight our way back
up. And
Stanger won't sit idly while we burn our way into the bridge."
Arlene
glowered. "Damn it sir, it's better than nothing!"
"That's
quite enough, Lieutenant Sanders!" She fell silent. At that moment I
didn't think either of us remembered she was my wife.
Master-at-arms
Tobrok said, "Captain, there's a way to— look out!" He hurled me
aside. I sailed across the dining hall. So did he, the opposite direction. I
fetched up against the far bulkhead.
"Thank
God I found you." It was a hoarse whisper. Midshipman Edwin Spckc.
"May I come in?" He pushed off from a bulkhead, snagged a chair,
wrapped his legs around it
"Where
the hell have you been?*' I was past niceties.
"Hiding."
He blushed beet red. "It happened so fast Outside the laser room they came
on us from the rear, and took the cadets and Jensen. Hickley was shot, and the
other joey. I ducked into the purser's cabin before they saw me. They had
lasers and I didn't" He took breath. "Then you were gone from the
galley. I was afraid Captain Stanger knew I'd gone over to you, so I couldn't.,
.** A look of mute appeal. "I'm sorry,"
"Very
well, you're back. Any weapons?"
"Just
the billy club."
Before
we raided the brig Arlene had eleven men, but she'd lost two. I'd joined her,
and now the middy. And we had Tobrok's squad. Philip, Jared, and Mikhael made
eighteen, if we could reach them. Nineteen, with Midshipman Pyle.
"Very
well. The wardroom, to get P.T. and Jared, then we'll attack the engine room.
Get organized."
"Sir?"
"Not
now, Derek," A foray onto Level 1 would be risky. Should I send the whole
party, or only a few. If—
"Sir!"
Hands on hips, he floated just off the deck. His
blazing
eyes scorched any humor from the situation. "You will listen!"
"What,
then?" I'd deal with his insubordination later.
"Doesn't
the wardroom have a caller?"
I
opened my mouth to reply, found nothing to say. I gawped like a fish.
"Well. Yes. Um." My ears burned. "Arlene, give them a call. Have
whatshisname, the real middy... Pyle. Have him check the corridor. If it's
safe, send them down. Meet them at the ladder."
"The
real middy?"
"It's
a long story. Go."
She
kicked off to the galley caller.
The
east ladder was unguarded. Stanger couldn't think of
everything.
Finally,
we were together again. I embraced Philip, then Mikhael. Jared seemed a natural
third. I drew the line at
Pyle.
The middy looked about. "Pardon, sir, is this all of usT
"Yes."
He
gazed from one to the other, "You attacked Galactic, half wrecked her,
with ,.. civilians?" He shook his head in wonder.
We
girded ourselves to assault the engine room,
Arlene
distributed our remaining lasers among us. We had few recharge packs, just
those we'd salvaged from the enemy. Cautiously, we made our way along deserted
corridors. The emergency corridor hatches were open; apparently zero gee and
closed hatches were too difficult a combination for Stanger's untrained crew.
Galactic
had a crew of eight hundred; where the devil were they hiding? Not at the east
ladder. We pulled ourselves down. I worked mostly with my canes, that had
become admirable zero-gee tools.
At
Level 4 we met resistance. Tobrok and Derek took aim
with
their lasers. They missed, but abruptly the stairwell was deserted. We hurried
past the landing.
We
worked our way down to Level 6. The engine room was in section nine. We
advanced. Section seven. Then eight Mikhael had the most trouble moving in zero
gee; I stayed near, gave him a hand when I could.
We were
in the midst of eight, propelling ourselves to nine, when abruptly the hatches
closed. The long-silent speakers came to life. "We have them trapped on
Level 6, section eight! All sailors who *ve been issued arms, assemble outside
the engine room!"
Instantly
Arlene snatched a laser from Speke's hand, slapped it in mine.
"What
are you—"
Gripping
the handhold, she gave me a mighty shove toward the section seven hatch. She
launched herself after. I braked myself with my canes, nearly tearing out my
arm sockets. Arlene seized a handhold, aimed her pistol at the hatch seal from
close range. Mikhael, in his stolen midshipman's uniform, hauled himself
laboriously toward us. The rest of us dived into cabins, behind whatever cover
they found handy. Philip shoved Jared behind him, aimed coolly at the hatch to
section nine. He waited for the enemy to appear.
The
section eight hatch seal smoked and sputtered in the relentless beam of
Arlene's laser. "Come on, God damn you!"
I
muttered, "Don't blaspheme." It was unthinking. She paid no heed
The
seal gave way. Grunting with effort, she forced the hatch panels apart
"Move, Nick!" She blocked a panel with a foot, used her freed hand to
shove me through. With a cry of alarm, Mikhael thrust himself after.
"What
wiU you—"
''Save
yourself. Captain! I love you." She glanced at her
laser;
it still had a charge. She kicked off to defend the entry to nine. Unimpeded,
the corridor hatch slammed shut.
Mikhael
clung to me. "Get us out of here!"
I shook
him off. "Steady, son."
"Hurry!"
I was
hurrying, but to where? My voice was dull. 'The laser room." As a last
gesture, I would disable the lasers. I pulled myself along the handholds.
"Mikhael, it's over. I'll put you in a cabin. When things quiet down,
surrender. They won't harm you." I devoutly hoped it was true.
"I'm
staying with you."
My
heart was leaden. "No." Arlene was likely dead, and Philip. I would
join them. But not by my own hand. I might, with great fortune, surprise the laser-room
guards. And the hatch couldn't be defended.
We took
the ladder to five. No one stopped us, I hammered on the first cabin hatch I
came to. No response. I remembered the corridor panel, slapped the hatch open.
"Mikhael, inside." I pushed him through. "Don't make a sound.
Wait until—"
A wiry
form swarmed atop him, flailed with fists and feet. A blow caught Mikhael in
the forehead. Fingers clawed at his eyes. "Out of my cabin! Out!" The
frantic passenger caromed off a bulkhead, launched himself anew. "You
frazz-ing—" He slammed Mikhael into the bulkhead. "Get—"
I drew
my pistol, fired, caught him square in the chest. A bubbling sound. Clots of
blood spewed forth. I grabbed Mikhael by the scruff of the neck, threw him into
the corridor. I slapped the hatch shut, and drifted, shaking from adrenaline.
Mikhael
kicked desperately at the far bulkhead, shot back across the corridor. With a
squeal of terror he wrapped himself around me. I tried to pull free. One of my
canes went sailing off. I wrenched at his fingers. "Mikhael..." No
use. He was a straitjacket. I bellowed, "LET GO THIS INSTANT! BEHAVE
YOURSELF!"
"I'm
scared, Pa!"
"STOP
THAT SNIVELING!"
It
shocked him into letting go. He recoiled. I snatched his arm before he could
drift off. "Easy, son. I'll take care of you."
"Oh,
God!"
"Fetch
my cane." Carefully, I shoved him in the right direction. He snatched it
as he sailed past, bounced off a bulkhead. With the cane as an oar, he managed
to propel himself back to me. His face was ashen.
There
was no time. But if nothing mattered, everything did. "Do you need a
hug?"
"Yessir,"
I swept
him into an embrace, squeezed as if to crush the life from him. After a long
while, the tension oozed from his body. He rested a hand on my shoulder, buried
his head under my chin. A sound, that might have been a sob.
After a
time I held him away. "You all right now?"
Unable
to meet my eyes, he nodded.
"Good
lad. Let's go." I pushed off, a firm grip on his arm,
We
worked our way upward toward the laser room.
"Sea/art,
it's over. " Captain Stanger. "We have a few of your survivors,
There's no one hose except you, Turn yourself in. "
"I'll
see you in HelL" Had I spoken aloud? I wasn't sure. We labored up the
ladder to Level 3.
"Pa?"
"Yes,
son?"
"I'm
so scared I can't mink."
"We
all arc."
In the
corridor, near the stairs, three sailors maneuvered a cart with electronic
gear. I brandished my laser. They fled Their abandoned cart drifted idly in
midair.
Level
2.
"I
want-—" Mikhael's breath shuddered. "I want to say this while I
can." He helped me around the landing, "I know
You're
not really my father. But..." He squirmed with embarrassment. "I wish
you were."
"Don't
ever say that." Alexi's reproachful face floated beyond the bulkhead.
"I'm
sorry for all the stupid things I did. I know I'd never mean to you what P.T.
does, but that's all right." He clutched my arm. "That's what I
wanted to say. It's all right."
I
should reproach him, but I couldn't. Not after he'd unwrapped his soul.
"Thank you." It was a whisper.
"You're
going away." It was more statement than question.
"I'm
going to die now, yes." Strangely, I felt peace.
"How
can I—"
"There
he is!"
I
whipped up my laser, fired without aim. A yelp, a shower of sparks. With one
cane I launched myself up the ladder. A shadow. I fired.
"Get
him, Middy!"
They
let off a shot that wasn't even close. The bulkhead blistered. I grasped the
rail, hurled myself upward with a vigorous shove. I rocketed past the landing,
firing as 1 slammed into the overhead. A screech. More shots.
Silence.
I'd
lost most of my momentum. Helpless in midair, I waited for inertia, in slow
motion, to carry me to a bulkhead,
Mikhael
kicked off, caught me, transferring his inertia. Together we sailed into the
stairwell landing. I snatched a handhold, propelled myself to the ladder.
One
more Level.
"How
can I help, Par
"You
can't. I want to save you."
"No."
His voice was tremulous. "I'll help."
Years
past, I'd offered P.T. his death. Gladly he'd joined me in the launch to brave
the lasers of Earthport.
It was
my fate to annihilate the youngsters who laid their trust at my feet.
"You're
sure, son?"
"Yes,
sir." He looked down at his pants, and blushed.
Level
1. Here, the corridor hatches were sealed. Voices. Instinctively, I thrust
Mikhael down the ladder.
"Got
him!" A laser rifle, aimed unwaveringly at my chest "No, you frazzin'
grode, push yourself up. Let go the laser!"
I'd be
dead before I could raise my pistol. Bleakly, I did as he told. Three of them,
all armed. But only one laser* the other joeys had stunners and billies.
"Stand
at attention, all of you!" The voice was ice. A very young middy launched
himself from the ladder.
One
tried to stiffen, realized he couldn't in zero gee. The others gawked.
"Who are you, sir?"
"Midshipman
Tamarov. I'm new.** The voice was proud. "You caught him? Wonderful. Til
take him to the Captain." He held out his hand. "Hand over the
rifle."
"Sir,
I'd better—'
'That
was an order."
Discipline
was a reflex. "Aye aye, sir," Edging away from me, the sailor handed
Tamarov his rifle.
"Come
here, you." The middy hauled me closer. "You joeys. Lieutenant Garrow
needs help in the galley. Give him a hand"
"If
this one gets away ..."
"1*11
be the one gets the caning,**
It
brought nervous smiles. "Aye aye, sir," They retreated down the
ladder.
When
they were gone, Mikhael thrust the rifle into my arms. "I mink I'll be
sick!H
"No,
you won't" Casually, I squeezed his shoulder, gave him a reassuring pat,
as if his courage were no more than I expected. "The laser room's in
section nine. Let's go."
At the
corridor hatch to eight, I aimed the rifle, fired into the seals. Alarms screamed.
I fired again, higher. Mikhael forced open the panels, We squeezed through.
"Fast
as you can!" One section to go, I shouldered the
rifle.
Using my canes as ski poles, I bounced off bulkheads and deck.
The
rifle still had charge. I raised it, began firing many meters from the section
hatch. The seals smoked, melted. A panel buckled. Mikhael dived to grab it.
"Careful, the metal's hot."
Cautiously,
he forced open the corridor hatch. I pushed through, firing as I went. A face
ducked behind a cabin hatch. Passenger or sailor? No matter, I couldn't take
the chance, 1 fired into the bulkhead. From behind, a moan.
1
strained to reach a handhold, worked my way onward with desperate haste. Alarms
shrieked. Stanger knew exactly where I was.
Outside
the laser room, three guards. Only one faced my way. At the same instant, we
fired. Heat kissed my boot; the deck under me smoked and sizzled. The guard
dissolved in a burst of blood and flame. I yelped, kicked away from the heat. A
warning beep. I fired again, caught a bulkhead. Fiery droplets splashed a
sailor's face. He bounced screaming from bulkhead to deck. The third guard
fled.
My
rifle glowed empty. With a savage curse I hurled it along the corridor, pulled
out my pistol. Thrusting Mikhael into a supply compartment, I launched myself
at the ruined laser-room hatch.
Inside,
frozen with fear, three techs.
I
pushed off, sailed to a chair bolted to the deck. "GET OUT!"
They
clawed at each other in their haste to reach the corridor.
Two rows
of laser consoles, each with its simulscreen and radionics. In battle, every
chair would be manned.
No time
for subtlety. Steadying myself with my canes, I took aim at the first console,
pressed die trigger. The console glowed, burst into flame. Alarms wailed.
The
second. I would need a recharge, to disable them all.
The
third
"Move
and I'll kill you." A low voice, deadly. One I knew.
Slowly,
I turned my head. It couldn't be. But it was.
Karen
Burns.
I meant
to swing my laser. I wanted to. Instead, turned to a pillar of salt, I gaped,
uncomprehending.
"Don't
even twitch, Seafort" Her pistol was aimed and ready, the charge light
green and unwavering.
"What
are—how did—my God!"
"Eloquent,"
Her pistol moved, in a suggestion. "Put the laser down."
"Why
are you on ship?**
"You
never had a clue, did you?" A harsh chuckle. "Bet you thought I was
one of those Eco League loonies.**
"Aren't
you?"
"Stanger's
rather annoyed; you led us a merry chase. Set down the pistol, or Til blow your
arm off. I'd just as soon kill you, but the Captain wants a public
execution."
"Shoot."My
laser remained at my side. I would have answers. "The Eco League was
against supporting the Navy. If you're not with them, what were you
doing?" My knuckles tightened on my canes.
"The
ecos were too timid. They prodding; I
was glad to help. The Rotunda bomb got things moving. It was a win-win
situation. Either you'd be dead, and we'd have Valera's support for the Navy,
or you'd survive, and you'd have no choice but to crack down on the enviros/* A
frown. "Only you didn't Somehow, you kept the lid on. Damned if I blow
how, but you were doing it. We had to escalate."
"By
kidnapping me? Why?"
"You
were founding up sweet Sara and her joeys. Tliey didn't know my name, but
they'd seen me. I was out of time, so we went after you. If I'd gotten you out
of the compound, we had a groundcar waiting, and eventually a shuttle. We'd
have brought you here. If I succeeded, we'd have the power
of your
proclamations at our disposal. How the hell did you
get out
of that closet? You can't walk." "1 teleported Why, Karen? What was
the point?" "Ultimately, to restore the Navy. You knew mat For a
time,
we even hoped you'd join us. Keep your hand quite
still."
I did.
"So why bomb my compound?"
"Even
you can figure that out You wouldn't work with us, and you were in the
way."
They'd
won. Utterly, completely, with finality. The United Nations would be no more.
The Navy, in its arrogance, would rule the worlds.
"And
Bookerr
"Dead.
A weakling. Such pangs of remorse. He'd have
given
us all away."
"Barcelona?"
"The
call? Faked."
We'd
been gulled, down the line. I steeled myself. There was nothing left. Only
useless revenge. The safety was off; I had only to let go the cane, whirl,
fire. If I took her with me ... To distract her, I asked, "How did you get
here?'
"I
found a woman who looked like me and borrowed her ID. She was U.N. A.F., but it
got me to Earthport" Her smile was cruel. "And then I called
Stanger."
Numbly,
I reached for an ancient rite. Hail Mary, full of
grace...
Karen's
eyes narrowed. Her pistol steady as a rock, she reached for a chair to steady
herself.
Abruptly
I felt it too. Slowly, the deck came up to meet me. Reflexively, I threw out my
canes, caught myself. My laser skittered along the deck.
I began
to grow heavy.
I was
too far from a console to reach it. In seconds we were at a full gee, Terran
standard, as the bow gravitrons came on-line. Beads of sweat popped from my
skin. Desperately, I clung to my canes. Somehow, balanced, I re-
mained
on my feet, but white fire clawed at my spine. I breathed in shallow gasps.
"Why,
Mr. Seafort." Her voice was a purr. "You have difficulty standing?
You've been to Dr. Ghenili?"
I
gritted my teeth.
"All
crew to the Level 2 dining hall. Machinist's mates, report only when you've
restored midship and aft gravitrons. " Stanger.
Karen
made as if to push me. I flinched, expecting to break in half.
A lithe
form hurtled from the corridor. It leaped onto her back. She staggered.
Fighting to stay erect, I could do no more than watch. Mikhael snaked a forearm
around her throat, squeezed with all his might.
With a
convulsive lunge, she threw him off, A paralyzing chop to the shoulder. A kick
to his stomach; he squealed and clutched himself.
Coolly,
Karen glanced to me, saw I was no threat She hauled Mikhael to his feet.
Methodically, brutally, she began to beat him. Panting with exertion, she drove
blows into his ribs, stomach, chest. Her fists hammered his face.
"Stop
it!" My voice was hoarse.
A
vicious blow to the gut; Mikhael's spittle flew. His face was deathly green.
I tried
to take a step. Lightning surged along my spine. I gasped.
Mikhael
sagged, semiconscious.
"Don't,
I beg you! Let him be. I'll do whatever you want!"
"He
jumped me." With a grip of iron she held him against the bulkhead,
slamming her fist into his side, his stomach, his groin. "I don't like
that"
"Karen,
for God's sake—"
Blows
to the face. A backhand across his mouth that was a rifle shot. Another.
At
last, she let go. Mikhael slid senseless to the deck. His blood oozed.
She
sucked air into her lungs, until her breathing eased. "Now, where were
we?"
I dared
say nothing. Only white-hot rage held off the all-consuming pain. If I opened
my mouth it might all come rushing out, and engulf the laser room. With
tremendous effort, I held myself erect.
She
reached to a console, keyed the caller. "Bridge, Lieu-teaaatBurns/epofting
rvegothim. Captain. He's he)p)ess; he can't walk m gravity. Where do you want
him?"
A
pause. Idly, she turned her back, covered one ear. Ignoring what passed beyond
agony, I eased more weight onto my left foot
"Aye
aye, sir. He's in bad shape; I might have to carry him. It'll be a few
minutes."
She
replaced the caller. "He'll let you witness the exec—"
I
flipped my right-hand cane, caught it by the toe. As I fell, I whipped it
around in a vicious arc. The handgrip slammed into her temple.
She
toppled to the deck. I crashed nearby. Something wrenched. My legs drummed
convulsively, I clenched my teem, desperate not to bite off my tongue. The pain
was beyond horrid.
A
ghastly sound. Mine.
Silence.
To my
dismay, Karen struggled slowly to her knees; I hadn't hit her hard enough. I'd
never get anomer chance, "You ... fucking ... son of a bitch." Her
words were slurred. She groped for her pistol.
The
safety was on. She clawed at it, shook her head, froze as if listening. A moan.
She clutched her temples, rocked back and form. Tormented eyes met mine. Her
hand came away from her ear, red and dripping. Slowly, as if in a dream, she
pitched forward onto her face. Blood poured from both ears. Massive cerebral
hemorrhage. A pity.
I tried
to retreat from the spreading pool. A lance of fire. Somehow, I hunched onto my
elbows, waited for the red haze to dissipate. I dragged myself toward the
hatch. Mikhael slumped against the bulkhead, as if asleep. His breath was
shallow and ragged. His face was pasty.
I
inched toward Karen's pistol. There were consoles to burn. I clasped it in a
deathly grip.
The
speaker crackled. "Lieutenant Burns, bring him to the dining hall. We 're
waiting,"
Why the
dining hall? Executions were held in the engine room, were they not? Or was it
just the way I'd done it as Captain? I lay dreaming.
I'm
sorry, Lord God. You pushed me too far, I can do no more, and I don't think I
care, I hate them, Stanger, Admiral Hoi, Karen. No, she's dead. Still I hate
her. Perhaps I hate You,
A sob.
I bit it back. Slowly, shuddering with each motion, I raised myself to my
knees. Trying not to scream, I reached back, dragged one leg forward. Then the
other.
I
couldn't do this.
Crooning
mindlessly, I hunched my way to the bulkhead, leaned against it. Try again. It
was easier, marginally, if I gave of my weight to its panels. Pistol tucked
into my belt, my shoulder rubbing the alumalloy, I worked my way on my knees to
the hatch. My legs wouldn't lift; dragging one cane, I had to raise mem by
hand.
Outside,
Along the deserted corridor,
It took
forever,
We have
sinned, we have sinned grievously, we are a sinner, we repent our sins... You
don't listen. Perhaps You never did. Why, then, do I do mis? Duty? Oh, Jesus,
that hurt. Breathe. Hold a moment. What is duty without You? Well, perhaps You
listen, now and then. But why don't You ever answer?
I'm
sorry, I think. To tell truth, I'm not sure.
A head
poked out of a cabin. A passenger. Her eyes fastened on mine, ducked away. The
hatch slammed closed.
I
inched past an exercise room. Scorched carpet, a stench mat made me gag. Foot
by endless foot, I crawled, the bulkhead my constant friend. My hand ached from
the effort of dragging my useless legs.
The brig.
Tobrok was there, was he not? No, he was dead, with Arlene and Philip. Or
awaiting execution. I'd bullied him into a fight that was not his.
On my
endless journey, I crawled past the master-alarms' hatch.
Wait,
Seafort. You're forgetting something.
Yes,
you're forgetting it's hopeless. You've lost. You're crawling to see Arlene's
purple tongue, your son's final twitch.
No.
Something else.
Reaching
cautiously with the cane, I punched the hatch panel, over my head. I didn't
know what I sought. Inside, the console, where I'd met Tobrok. Beyond, cells. A
chair. No more.
On my
way again.
Wait.
The chair. Unlike those at the laser consoles, it rolled.
This
will hurt. Lord. Will You— No. You won't. I clutched the console with one hand,
took a few breaths, let go the deck with the other. Hanging from the console, 1
raised myself slowly, as if trying to kneel.
I
learned what Hell would be, so very soon. No worse than now.
Sweating
from every pore, I inched toward the chair. My biceps strained. I drew myself
up, bent over the console as if for a caning. My vision blurred.
Carefully,
so cautiously, I inched backward. I wouldn't be able to do this more than once.
In fact, I wasn't sure that even once—
The
chair, at the edge of my slacks. Another inch. Another.
I
hummed to myself, eyes squeezed shut. The brig was unbearably hot. After a time
I blinked, tried to focus.
My
shirt was soaked through.
But I
sat in the chair.
With
care, I reached down, grappled for my cane. If I pushed against the deck ...
no, from that angle, so. And again.
Like a
deranged lover in an ancient canoe, I paddled my way down the corridor.
The
carpet made it slow going.
"—to
death for piracy and murder. The sentence will now be carried out."
Paddle,
Seafort. Don't get your feet wet. Lord God won't like it. In a tippy canoe,
with Saythor too...
I
snapped awake. I was almost to the dining-hall hatch. A final lunge, that made
me cough bile. I couldn't do that often.
I was
in the hatchway. The dining-hall aisle was blocked by rows of sailors, lined in
the at-ease position, hands clasped smartly behind their backs.
Before
them, Arlene stood dazed, blood matting her auburn hair. Derek lay slumped over
a starched linen tablecloth. Their hands were tied behind, their mouths taped.
A
middy, the young one who'd taken my demerits. A sailor, one of Tobrok's. All
bound.
Tad
Anselm, his cadet gray stained a dull maroon, swayed as if asleep on his feet.
His eyes were dull, unfocused.
I was
sitting on my pistol. I tugged at it, fought a wave of torment.
Two
sailors held Jared Tenere, standing, on a sturdy table. A noose was tight
around his neck, secured to an overhead panel. He kicked, twisted against his
ropes, struggled frantically to escape. I yanked at the pistol; my weight held
it in my belt.
Jared
squealed through the skintape. I could hear it across the hall. He wrapped a
leg around the sailor's, worked the bonds tying his hands. Blood dripped from
his torn wrists.
Below, two
burly sailors grappled with Philip. Gagged by skintape, he kicked and lunged in
a desperate frenzy to reach Jared. His pleading eyes were fastened on his
friend.
I
wrenched loose the laser, keyed off the safety. At Stanger's nod, the sailors
shoved Jared from the table. He dropped like a stone.
I
fired, downing a crewman. Another, who held P.T.'s arms. His blood gushed.
Dangling, Jared convulsed and was still. Sailors dived to the deck. Screams and
shouted commands. Stanger's eyes met mine. I aimed. He ducked behind a pillar.
I sprayed a wide arc where he'd stood.
Someone,
braver than the rest, lunged at my chair. A mighty kick missed me but sent the
chair hurtling out the hatch. The hatch slammed shut.
I
fetched up against the far bulkhead. My back arched in a spasm. I whipped the
laser in front of my face. Two-handed, I fired without cease. The hatch smoked
and sizzled. A beep. I was out of charge.
In
blind fury, I lunged with my cane, rolled myself east I'd find another laser. I
paddled past a section hatch.
"This
is the Captain! Lieutenant Garrow, shut all corridor hatches. I'll use my
override codes. Watch for me; I'll direct from the bridge. We'll execute the
rebels when that maniac is dead,"
Behind
me, the hiss of a hatch. I turned. The dining hall. A sailor emerged, braver
than most, or maddened by the carnage. He brandished a laser. His wild eyes
found mine. The corridor hatch slid shut He dived through, almost losing his
legs. He scrambled to his feet.
My tone
was like ice. "Drop it joey." I aimed my empty laser at his face.
His
eyes darted to his pistol, at his side.
"Do
it and you'll die. Let it go." My voice had a ragged edge mat frightened
even me.
He
swallowed. The laser fell to the deck.
"Turn
around." He did. Laser in my lap, I paddled myself across the corridor.
"Kneel, pick up the laser by the barrel, hand it behind you." I'd
never be able to bend without passing out
I
fingered the second laser, turned off the safety.
"Will
you kill me?" His voice quavered.
"I
think so."
Kneeling,
he crossed himself, bowed his head.
I came
to my senses. I took my discharged laser, rapped him sharply behind the ear. He
slumped to the carpet
Section
hatches were all shut Even if I burned the seals, I had no strength to force
them open.
I
rolled past the airlock I'd torched foolish years ago, to help my marauders
aboard. Stanger's crew hadn't had time to repair it; warning tape plastered the
entry.
In a
moment Stanger would reach the bridge to organize his manhunt The crew would
fan out with merciless intent
I had
one goal left in life.
It was
a long way to the end of section seven. How to force the Christ-damned corridor
hatch? Meters away, I stared at it balefully.
No.
There was another way.
Ignoring
a blaze of pain, I paddled back the way I came.
To the
damaged airlock. Only the outer hatch stood vigil against decompression.
Past it
to the suit locker alongside. I aimed my laser, burst the flimsy latch.
Straining, I hauled down a suit from a hook above my head.
Now for
the impossible part. I wrestled with the torso. Anns would be no problem, but
my legs... ?
Gritting
my teeth, I bent forward, worked the stiff suit leg over my own. I had to stop,
lean against the cool alumalloy
of the
locker, wait for the pain to recede to a throb that threatened to suck the life
from me.
Why
hadn't they opened the corridor hatch to get at me? Were they waiting for
Stanger to reach the safety of the bridge? For sailors to work their way
around, attack me from both sides at once?
One
leg. Now the other. When I was done, I would somehow have to stand, to seal the
suit.
I
mumbled curses under my breath, snatches of old songs, remnants of lessons
Father had taught me years ago, over the worn Bible and the steaming pot of
tea.
"Damn
You, God, I can't do this alone."
The
legs were on. I stretched into the torso. The helmet would wait, until I'd
sealed the rest.
"Come
up unto me, and help me, that we may smite
Gibeon!"
What
was I muttering? I no longer knew, I paddled to the lock, keyed my pistol,
fired into the porthole of the ruined inner hatch. The porthole dissolved. I
took several breaths to steady myself, I hooked my arm through the opening,
clenched my teeth, hauled myself up by sheer willpower. Oh, God. No. I can't
stand it.
With my
free hand I clawed desperately at the suit seals, clasped them tight,
Done, I
eased myself back into the chair, tried not to black out. No time, Seatbrt.
They're coming for you.
Back to
the locker. Lift die helmet. Screw it on. The oxy bottle. Never mind its pouch;
set it in your lap. Reach behind, tighten the clamps. Back to the lock.
I
reached through die porthole, found the lever. My cutting torch had utterly
destroyed the inner hatch; it slid easily. I rolled inside.
The
outer hatch wouldn't open against air pressure, no matter what I did. And I had
no way to seal the inner hatch. For a moment I hesitated, knowing of the
passengers* lives that would be lost. But Stanger must be stopped, else his co-
terie
would foment a dictatorship, crush the colonies, and imprison the billions
trapped on Earth.
I aimed
my laser at the porthole. It glowed, dripped. Alarms shrieked. Abruptly the
porthole vanished. I bowed my head against the roar of escaping air.
All was
silent, in the vacuum of the ship. Only my section was decompressed; Stanger
had sealed all corridor hatches. Should I pray for the passengers I'd chosen to
kill? No. It would be blasphemous.
There
were few cabins near the dining hall. Perhaps their occupants had fled. Perhaps
Stanger had relocated them, away from the danger of the lock. Perhaps ...
I'd
never know.
My
breath rasped in my suit. I slapped open the outer hatch. With my cane, I
pushed the chair far enough forward to grip a handhold. I launched myself
outward.
The
alloy hull negated the field of the gravitron; abruptly I was weightless. The
pain in my spine diminished to a sullen volcano.
I
switched on my hand magnets. My legs floating behind, 1 worked my way along the
hull toward the bow, A hand at a time, trailing my cane* I inched forward.
Lord
God knew what Stanger assumed at mis point, or planned. I was trying to escape;
that much he'd figured. Would he pursue me? Would he be glad to see the last of
me?
I
didn't know.
I no
longer cared.
CHAPTER
20
O
lowly, laboriously, I passed from one huge disk to another. Alongside the Level
1 disk was one of Galactic** giant launch bays. Hand by hand, I crawled toward
it.
A
lifetime later, I floated in front of a vast hatch that opened the bay to its
launch. There was no way I could
breach
it.
But I
had no need to. Alongside was a service hatch, for
crewmen
working on the bay.
1
slapped the panel.
The
hatch slid open.
Stanger
hadn't thought of securing the bridge override. But then, why should he? For
safety's sake, locks were left openable from Outside. What crewman would
venture on a repair detail otherwise? To be abandoned in space, unable to gain
entry ... despite my misery, 1 shuddered.
I knew
enough to crawl into the hatch in a prone position. Immediately, gravity pinned
me to the deck. 1 reached up with my cane, slapped shut the hatch, waited for
the lock to cycle. Panel lights flashed, at the lock and on the bridge,
Now
Stanger knows you're here. I jabbed at the inner hatch. It slid open, just as
the override light began to flash.
Stifling
a moan, I forced myself to crawl through.
My
helmet was fogged. With a curse, I tore it off. My laser was in my pouch. I clawed
it free.
Crawl,
Seafort. Let It hurt. It won "t be for long.
The
launch bay was immense, but I was near the safety lock that led to the Level 1
corridor. I squirmed my way across the deck, pulling my legs with my hands.
I
passed to a realm beyond hurt. It helped me crawl faster. If I remembered, I
would save one charge to blast myself to Hell. Satan could inflict no worse
than I now endured,
Behind
me, the launch sat gleaming and silent. They would assume I intended to steal
it.
As I
expected, the airlock sensor between the bay and Level 1 began to flash. I lay
on the launch bay deck, waiting, my beam set to high. The inner hatch slid
open. I sprayed the lock. Screams, muffled by suits. My laser beeped. One
charge left. I clicked the safety.
"This
is the Captain. He s in the launch bay. Panner. Cosset, assemble a squad of
twenty and meet me in section seven; we'll end this. If you see him first,
shoot to kilL "
I
crawled on, toward the lock. Into it.
Over a
smoking body.
I jabbed
the inner hatch. Both sides were pressurized; no need to cycle. The hatch
opened.
The
corridor.
I was
near the bridge; that much I knew. But which direction was it?
West.
It had to be west. I had no strength to be wrong.
The
corridor was empty. That was to be expected; the crew had been sent to the
dining hall. But someone would man the bridge, Garrow, Stanger had said. A
lieutenant
I used
the tried and true bulkhead method, lifting one leg at a time with my hand.
Admiral SecGen Seafort, practicing his distinguished crawl. Singing to himself.
Reeking of the sweat of torment,
A lump
on the decking ahead No rime to look. Move, Seafort. You're about played out
I
flopped the last few meters to the bridge.
Trembling,
I lay on the deck plates, facing the sealed hatch.
To my
right, a body, bombfy burned. J couJd barely discern thai the charted uniform
was gray.
Sightless
eyes, an unmarked face contorted in agony.
I made
a sound.
My hand
crept out, clasped the limp hand of my Danil Bevin.
Together,
we lay in the corridor outside the bridge. From time to time I checked the
safety of my laser, rechecked the charge.
I
failed you so. I failed You. You were only a boy. I snatched you from Academy.
I mocked You. I'm sorry, Danil. Or is it Lord? I'm very tired. Both of you.
You
left him in my charge, and I destroyed him, as I destroy them all. Why didn't
You stop me?
I
patted Danil's cold wrist. All will be well, I'll get you a fresh set of grays.
Tad will brush off the char.
Lord
God, I hate You for not stopping me. Always, You could. You turned Your face
from me, but why from him? He was one of Yours.
The
corridor was silent and still.
My chin
on the deck, I drowsed, a meter from the thick alloy bridge hatch. My pistol,
in my right hand, aimed straight ahead. From time to time I toyed with the idea
of turning it to my face, and joining Danil and Jason. If they'd have me.
Danil's
voice piped. "Do you think*—if I do well, could I be posted to Galactic
when I make middy?'
The
nerve of him. Well, I'd shown him, I'd granted his wish. He'd never be posted
anywhere else.
Some of
us are Satan's instruments.
Cast
forth lightning, and scatter them: shoot out thine arrows, and destroy them,
One
shot left. My finger tightened.
Hot
knives twisted in my spine.
Danil
slid to his knees at Jason's grave, his small form brushing mine. Have you met,
you two? Will you speak of me? Will you revile me, as you should?
Reassuringly,
I squeezed Danil's hand. I would resist the temptation to live. Slowly, the
barrel of the pistol turned. It crept toward my eager mouth.
The
bridge hatch slid open.
A pair
of gleaming boots.
My
wrist turned. I squeezed the trigger. The boots dissolved in a flash of fire.
A thud.
Captain Stanger's cheek hit the deck. His eyes bulged. He shrieked. Flopping on
the deck, over and again, he shrieked.
Someone
slapped (he panel. The hatch slid closed.
I lay
on the throbbing deck, caressing Daml's hand.
"Captain
Seafort?"
I made
no answer.
"Sir,
hold your fire. Please, sir."
I
couldn't move. The torment in my back hod passed to another state. I was
mercifully numb.
"I
read the Log, sir, when 1 entered the Captain's death, I want to come out I'm
unarmed That is. Til leave my pistol on the console. Do you hear me?"
I lay
silent, my cheek on the cool deck. He could come out if he wished, My laser was
discharged. All I could do was bite his toe.
The
hatch slid open, I was eye to eye with Ulysses Stanger. His were dull,
unmoving. Mine flinched.
From
around the hatch, a head peeked, "Sir? Don't— Lieutenant Avrara Garrow
reporting for duty." The bulk of his body was shielded by the bulkhead.
Something
stirred, calling me back from a great distance. "You knew,"
"Knew
what, sir?**
"What
Stanger was up to." My laser sought him. "We all—not really. He was
Captain. What could we doT The ready excuse the Navy—all of us—wore as a
protective garment. Satan, get thee behind me. "Take responsibility.
Relieve him." "He had Admiralty's blessing, didn't he? They'd have
hanged—"
"He
had no such thing."
"May
I come out? I saw the exchanges myself, sir. He was in touch with Admiralty in
London."
Admiralty,
or what was left of it, awaited my report at Farside Base. Stanger and his
cohorts must have rounded up the members who refused my summons. Perhaps even a
majority. "Send all sailors to their bunks. All officers to their cabins.
Release my people."
"Aye
aye, sir. Excuse me, I'll just go..," He backed toward the console, trod
in blood. "Oh, Jesus Christ," He leaped aside, wiped his feet. He
glanced to the console. "Just the caller, sir. Not the laser."
"Very
well." Oarrow snatched the caller, issued a disordered jumble of commands.
Throughout
Galactic, the nimble of corridor hatches sliding into their sockets, "Sir,
may 1 help you up?" I shook my head. I might come apart. "You'd
better know ..." He licked his lips. "I called Łarttywt m. After Mr.
Stanger died. To tell them." "That you'd take charge?"
"Only
for the moment. They said they'd send someone. And..." He swallowed.
"Before that, the Captain told them you blasted your way on board. Admiral
Hoi offered to send Marines, but Stanger said they would only add to the
confusion. That he could flush you out." It was as if Garrow was under
compulsion to confess. "Bring me the caller," I keyed it to shipwide
frequency. "Attention all crew and
passengers."
My voice was a croak. "By order of the Board of Admiralty of the United
Nations, I, Nicholas E. Seafort, hereby take command of UNS Galactic."
There, it was done. A few lives late. "All officers and crew are to
approach the bridge, as directed by their superiors, to acknowledge my
command."
Behind
me, in the corridor, footsteps pounded. Arlene, with Derek not far behind.
"Oh,
Lord God. You there, get a stretcher. Get him to sickbay."
"No."
My voice was muffled.
"Call
the Ship's Doctor. Hurry!** Gently, she lifted my head.
"lake
your hands off me!" My tone was glacial. "I am Captain!"
"Nick—"
"'5«r/'"
If I let her beseech me, I'd be unable to resist
Her
eyes were wet. "Sir, let me help you."
"I've
got work to do." Admiral Hoi still controlled Earth-port; Simovich held
Lunapolis Base. Their banks of lasers targeted our planet, My mind wandered; I
forced myself back. "Philip?"
Thank
Lord God,
"Sickbay.
He's . . ."
I
nodded. He would be, with Jared dead. "Send someone to the laser room.
Mikhael's hurt."
"Aye
aye, sir."
An
officer raced down the corridor. "Who's injured? My God, the
Captain!" Aghast, he brushed past me, stared down at the remains of
Stanger.
With a
growl Arlene spun the Doctor around, forced him to his knees before me.
"Help him!"
"What
do you need, sir?"
"He's
had spinal surgery. He's badly injured."
"Get
me to a motorized chair."
The
Doctor looked from one to the other of us.
Tm
Captain. Do it!"
They
had to pry my fingers from Danil's.
Ten
minutes later, I sat ashen in a wheelchair from sickbay, tight against the
Captain's console. "Pain blocker. Give me one. Now." I specialized in
short sentences. And desperate screams, if I opened my mouth farther.
"Aye
aye, sir."
I
caught my reflection in the screen. My eyes had a glassy sheen. My tie was
undone, my shirt a filthy mess, my jacket gone. Meet Admiral Seafort,
commanding the Galactic
squadron.
By twos
and threes the ship's officers presented themselves to the bridge, came to
attention, acknowledged me as their commander. Then the crew, a squad at a
time, I sat as one carved in stone, my knuckles white on the armrests. The pain
blocker wasn't working.
Tad
Anselm was brought to the bridge. Dully, he saluted.
His
face was slack. I bade him sit, in a watch officer's chair. "You were with
Daniir
"Yes,
sir." A voice from a distant galaxy, I looked to Arlene, to Derek.
"Leave ttie bridge.** From the console, I slapped shut the hatch, 1
studied the boy a long while. "What happened?* "I want to resign. To
go home.** "Ml me," I said softly, "what you're afnid I'll
hear,** Without warning, he began to weep. Then, after a time, "They
brought us to the bridge. Me and Danil," He wiped his nose on a grimy gray
sleeve. "Stanger told Danil to call you, to make you surrender. He showed
Danil his laser, said he'd shoot him if you didn't give up." I put my head
in my hands.
"Danil
cried. Stanger slapped him, thrust the caller in his face. Danil made the call.
You didn't surrender." His race
was
bleak. "Stanger waited, opened the hatch. He took Danil to the corridor.
Stanger had to drag him. Danil was beside himself. He gibbered and begged.
Stanger put the pistol to his chest and fired. He left him there. A warning, he
said, if you reached the bridge."
I bent
to the side, vomited bile.
"And
what I felt..." Tears coursed down Anselm's face. "In Washington, you
told me to look after him. But 1 was so ... so... so g-g-lad, sir. That it
wasn't me. I wanted it to be Danil." He was alone with his anguish. 'Tm
going home,
I've
got to." "Oh, son." I tried to gather him into my arms, but he
was
a
leaden weight.
"Where
is he? Where did they take him?" "The sickbay has coolers."
"That's
where I'll be." No salute, no wait for dismissal. He wandered to the
hatch, slapped it open. He vanished into the corridor.
I
called Arlene in. "Is the laser room manned?" "I don't know,
sir,"
"See
to it. Three consoles are down, but the rest,, .** By redistributing the laser
cannon among available consoles, we'd restore our firepower. "Aye aye,
sir."
"Get
yourself a uniform. And Derek," I keyed the engine room, "Mr. Me
Andrews. Have we power?" "Yes, sir," "Fusion drives?"
"Unharmed," The gravitrons?"
"You
made a mess of them. We'll work CM it." "Give me power to the
thrusttrs." I keyed the caller, "Cornm Room."
Arlene
watched impassively, standing at 'Tech Specialist Fanner reporting, sir,"
"You!" My lip curled. "Report to the brig; tell Tobrok
you're
under anest" He had surrendered the comm room to Stanger, the moment we'd
left
"Sir—aye
aye, sir, but Mr. Tobrok's dead. The Captain hanged him."
I
flinched. "Report to whoever's hi charge. Put your replacement on the
line." I waited Then, "Set up a transmission on all available
frequencies, Naval and civilian. Half an
hour."
Now,
for what must be done. I could wait no longer. I closed the hatch, looked up at
Lieutenant Sanders. "We're off duty."
"Are
weT'
"Yes."
I waited, hoping against hope.
Her
hand brushed my shoulder.
1
seized it, pressed it to my lips. "Could you forgive mer
"There's
nothing to forgive. You're Captain. ! accepted mat when I took the oath. No,
Nick, I mean it Don't you know me at all?" She knelt "I love you.
Don't cry, I can't stand it"
Her
lips were soft, and sweet
"Let
me get you to sickbay"
"After."
There'd be plenty of time. "I'd like to see
Philip."
"He
won't speak,"
"Bring
him. Hon, find me a shirt and jacket Insignia, I have to make a broadcast from
the bridge. Perhaps you'd help me dress."
"Are
we on duty again?"
"In
a moment"
Quickly,
she bent and kissed me. "Don't be too stubborn, the said as she strode to
the hatch. "Preserve yourself."
For
what?
"Attention,
UNS Galactic. Admiral Johanson aboard Earthport local shuttle Zebra 12, I'm
come to take command by Admiralty authority. We'll mate at your Level 2
bay."
"Shall
I refuse him, sir?" Lieutenant Garrow. Another of his persistent efforts
to be helpful.
"By
no means. He's welcome."
"Galactic,
confirm please. Be advised that we'll enter armed and ready."
"Confirm,
Lieutenant Ask how many. Get IDs."
He did.
Nine. Three lieutenants, a handful of Marine sergeants, Deputy SecGen Valera's
chief civilian aide.
"Mr.
Carr to the bridge, flank!" Waiting, I drummed the console. What I was
about to do was vile.
Derek
Carr hurried in, distinguished in his crisp Naval uniform. A pity he'd let his
enlistment run out, those many years ago. "Lieutenant Carr reporting,
sir."
"These
are the orders I ask you to volunteer to carry out If you refuse, I won't hold
it against you."
Silent,
he waited.
"Have
the master-at-arms* men evacuate Level 2, section five. You'll have to move
fast, but be certain to miss none of the passengers. Don a thnistersuil. Put a
spanner and a fully charged laser in the pouch. Understood?**
"Aye
aye, sir," His face showed nothing,
"In
your suit, greet Admiral Johanson's party at the sec-don five lock on behalf of
Captain Garrow. Treat him with courtesy and respect. Show him the suit lockers
near the lock. Explain that you were on your way Outside to repair another
faulty sensor. Galactic's been plagued by them. When his party has desuited,
call the bridge and ask Mr. Garrow where the middy is who was to escort them.
Then enter the lock,"
"Aye
aye, sir."
"Cycle.
When the outer hatch opens, block it with the spanner. Then take your laser
from the pouch and bun through the inner lock porthole."
"Sir!"
1
waited, impassive.
"Mr,
Seafort, that will..." He swallowed.
They're
guilty of treason, Derek. They're armed. They'd kill or arrest me on
sight"
"But..."
He held up a hand, to forestall any further explanation. He perused the deck
for several moments. Then, "Orders acknowledged and understood, sir. Will
there be anything else?"
"As
His representative aboard ship, I absolve you, now and after." It was but
one of many abominations I'd committed in His name.
Thank
you, sir. That won't be necessary,**
In
fresh clothes, braced with a double dose of pain block-ers, I faced the
simulscreen. Its holocam transmitted my haggard face, my grim visage around the
world, and throughout home system. Offscreen, by the bulkhead, Ar-lene held
Philip's hand.
Belowdecks,
a machinist's detail worked to replace the section five porthole. When they
were done section five would be re-aired.
This is
Admiral and Secretary-General Seafort, acting under authority of martial law.
UNS Galactic is again in Government hands. All forces, UMA.E and Naval, are to
return to barracks and await instructions. The commandants of Earthport Naval
Station and LunapoUs Base shall place themselves under arrest,"
I
glowered. "Cisno Valera is removed as Deputy Secretary-General of the
United Nations. He is summarily tried in absentia, found guilty of treason, and
sentenced to death. The sentence is commuted provided that he surrenders
himself to Potomac Naval Station forthwith. Beginning in four hours"—I
checked my watch—"noon Eastern Standard Time, any Government officer,
civil or military, who encounters Mr. Valera outside Potomac Naval Station is
to carry out the sentence of death."
I
looked sternly into the camera. Those Senators who convened in defiance of
authority are unseated from office,,
and are
barred from elective office for the remainder of their lives. I shall tolerate
no act of rebellion, no disregard of edicts while this crisis continues.
"Other
matters. Jerence Branstead is to be released forthwith, and to resume his
duties as chief of staff.
The
enviro package of bills, as submitted by my Administration, is deemed enacted
as first submitted, the effective date one week from today. They will be known
as the Jared Tenere Enviro Acts." Jared was no enviro fanatic, but Philip
would be pleased, when he was again among us.
That is
all." I keyed off the simulscreen.
I
leaned back, savoring an exquisite torment in my spine.
"Nick.
Captain." Arlene's voice was soft.
I
turned. P.T.'s hands scrabbled at his shirt, at each oner. His fingers were red
and raw. He stared unseeing past the console.
I
rolled my chair as far as I could. "Philip."
Nothing.
His lips moved whispering silent numbers,
"Son,"
I held his hands in mine, **We love you. You're all right. Try not to
rev."
His
hands jerked away. He made fists of them, thrust them beneath his arms.
"Base twelve works. Leave me alone."
I
cried, "I couldn't pull the pistol loose. It wouldn't budge,"
Dully,
he looked from me to his mother, and back,
"I'm
so sorry, Philip!** Stupidity, Incompetence, Worse, I'd held Jared's life in my
hands, and thrown it away,
"He
was terrified," P.T.'s tone was conversational, as if discussing the
weather, "We all die. He would too,**
"Son,
I—"
"But
no one should die like that. No one.** He hugged himself,
"I
could have rolled fatter. I should have had the laser—"
"I
couldn't save him. I was there, and couldn't help. Couldn't comfort him. Even
at the end. he looked to me."
No
more. God, take me now. NO MORE.
"Sir."
Lieutenant Garrow. "An urgent call."
"Later."
His
voice was awed. "It's Bishop Saythor. The Patriarch."
"You
understand, Path? / couldn ) help! "
I drew
Philip to me.
He
thrust me away. 'Take your call."
"It
doesn't—"
"I'll
be here. Take it"
From my
console, I stared into the simulscreen, with sunken eyes.
The
Elder's pudgy face glowered, "This is Bishop Saythor, on behalf of the
Patriarchy."
"Very
well."
"Retract,
this instant Valera is not condemned. It wasn't an insurrection; the Senate has
authorized—"
"No."
Francis Saythor headed my Church. Our Church. The only true Church.
'The
enviro legislation is madness. Cancel it before—"
"No!"
He spoke for Lord God, in all matters ecclesiastic.
"Seafort,
this isn't your Washington study. This time I speak from the Cathedral, for the
Patriarchs of His Reunification Church. Your Government is in error and mortal
sin, I order you—"
"NO/"
My voice trembled. He was Lord God's representative on Earth.
"Else
we'll disavow you this very day, A public statement, on the steps of the
Cathedral. A drastic step, one we've rarely taken. Be warned, unless—"
I
reared back in my seat, ignoring a blazing comet of pain. "Beware, lest I
disavow you!"
His
eyes narrowed, as if perplexed,
"Disavow
you, Saymor!" My eyes were wild, "And your Patriarchy!" I felt
something snap in my soul, as it had in my spine. My bond with Him was severed,
utterly and irredeemably,
"You'll
be burned. Heresy—"
"And
disavow Mother Church!" Tears streamed down my face. "The Church, do
you hear, Saythor? Will it be treason, if I declare my doubt that you could
possibly be His instrument? If I wonder how we surrendered our conscience, our
moral certitude, to an intolerant Church concerned of its prosperity more man
our survival?"
"How
dare you!"
"Likewise
must the deacons be grave, not double-tongued, not given to much wine, not
greedy of filthy lucre. What are my polls, Elder? Which of us will joeys
follow, when they read the zines? Think it's worth the risk?"
He and
I sat appalled.
I was
excommunicate. I had threatened Lord God Himself, and spat upon His Church. Whether
the Patriarch declared me so or not, I was barred forever from His community,
"Shall
I disavow you. Bishop?" My unsteady hand hovered over the caller.
"Shall I tell the world my mind?"
"You
wouldn't besmirch—"
"By
all that is holy, I swear that I will tell only truth. I'll speak of our
meeting at the Rotunda, of your visit to my home. Of this call, which will be
your last. Lift a finger to interfere, and it will come to pass," My voice
could scratch glass, "As long as we live. Bishop, never speak to me
again!" My fist slammed down on the keys, cutting the circuit,
I sat
shaking, in awe of my ultimate folly.
Yet
thou shall be brought down to Hell, to the sides of the pit,
I dared
not pray. Not ever again, lest I be blasted from the Earth.
Yet how
could I live without prayer?
How
could I live?
There
were only Arlene and Philip. Mikhael. And duty.
Prom
her quiet Arlene at me with awe,
FT,
picked at his shirt
"Son,
come to me." I held out my hands, pleading.
His
eyes met mine, alone, tormented, sealed.
"I
am bereft of Lord God, and have nothing save you!" My voice broke. "1
beg you, as you have mercy!" I could say no more, from weeping.
Slowly
at first, as an automaton, he rose from his chair, padded across the deck. A
gentle hug. He fell into my arms, onto my lap as a small child. Our tears
merged, mine for myself, his for his forever-lost Jared.
"U.N.A.F.
Washington command to UNS Galactic" I jerked awake. I'd been sleeping; I
hoped the lieutenant sharing my watch hadn't noticed.
1 took
up the caller. Unusual, for the Captain to answer directly, but I still didn't
fully mist any of Stanger's officers. Td issued standing orders to the comm
room that all communications be routed to the bridge. "Galactic, go
ahead." "General Dormer reporting. I may not have much time. Sir,
U.N.A.F. is going to sit it out." "What?"
"The
ranking generals conferred over the net. They won't respond to either side.
They'll wait for a winner. We're supposed to be shut down for off-planet calls,
but I know a colonel in communications."
The
fools. Neither side would trust mem, after. "It's treason, Donner."
"Technically.
More realistically, caution." 1 grunted my disgust "ValeraT' "No
sign of him, sir, I'd better make myself after
this call. Any orders?"
"Fly
to London, Find Thorne." He knew Jeff; they'd worked together when Thome
had served as chief of staff. "Have him call Galactic by sat-relay from
Devon Academy, Tell him Farside is reliable, if he finds the other nets locked
out*
"Yes,
sir.r
"And
thank you." Lord God knew what he risked by alerting me.
I
brought my ship to General Quarters, started the repair of the many damaged
corridor hatch seals. I'd prefer going to Battle Stations, but if I put the crew
at a high state of alert after a night of chaos, they'd soon be asleep on their
feet
I dared
not leave the bridge for long, and of my lieutenants, I trusted only Derek and
Arlene. That meant I couldn't share a watch with them, else they'd be too fatigued
to stand their own. I shared instead with men and women of whom I knew nothing,
except that they'd failed to relieve Stanger, when their oaths demanded it
Reeling
with exhaustion, I had Midshipman Speke wheel me to the sickbay.
Mikhael's
face was puffy. He lay listlessly in a bunk, Hie Ship's Doctor recited his
injuries. Among them, three broken ribs, a bruised spleen, swollen testicles.
"The bone growth stimulator will reknit the ribs in a few days. But the
lassitude... me beating took something out of him."
I
wheeled to his bed. "Mikhacl..." I was at a loss. His eyes went
elsewhere. "I'm sorry. Pa,"
"For
what? You were magnificent"
"I
thought I could stop her. Knock her town. But she—** His contorted.
"You're
fifteen. You can't expect—"
"Captain
to the bridge!" Alarms shrieked, "Battle Stations!"
"Lord
Christ" I wheeled, "Middy! We
raced to the bridge.
Derek
and Midshipman Pyle jumped to their feet "Sir, incoming lasers. Target
acquisition mode."
"The
Station?" For the moment Earth loomed between us and Lunapolis. Admiral
Hoi would have tone better to wait for his ally,
"Yes,
sir." Derek looked grim.
"What's
our heading?" I peered at the simulscreen. At Earthport, defense lasers
bristled from every aperture, a legacy of our defense against the marauding
fish. "Acquire targets! Aim only at their lasers." The destruction of
Earth-port would be a catastrophe; we'd have no way to transship the vast
quantities of cargo that filled her warehouses. Perhaps Admiral Hoi counted on
that fact.
What
skill had Stanger drilled into his laser techs? No time to check his records.
"Laser
Room, stand by to fire. Pilot to the bridge, flank. Chief Me Andrews!"
"Yes,
sir?"
"Stand
by to Fuse. Coordinates follow. Full power to the
thrusters."
"Aye
aye, sir. Captain, we haven't achieved Fusion safety." If we Fused too
close to a large mass, we'd destroy
ourselves.
"Not
yet. Derek, calculate Fusion coordinates." "To where, sir?"
"Pilot
Jasper Oren reporting." He sounded breathless. "Anywhere nearby.
Ceres. Pilot, how far to Fusion
safety?'
"Just
a moment, sir." He took in our coordinates. 'Two and a half hours, more or
le—"
"Bloody
hell." I savored the language. Admiralty wouldn't beach me, and the
Patriarchs would be silent.
We
faced the Station almost head-on. Our vast cargo bays at die bow offered extra
shielding against incoming fire, but few of our own lasers would bear.
Fight,
or flee?
"Pilot,
bring the ship about. Port side to the Station, broadside to the Naval wing.
One-half kilometer distance,"
"One-half
T* Oren's tone was unbelieving.
At that
range their powerful lasers would blast us to shreds, but our own fire would
severely damage the Station,
"Now!'
"Aye
aye, sir." His fingers flew at the thruster console.
Ponderously,
we came about. It was a matter of inertia. Galactic had huge mass, many times
that of a typical vessel. Our thrusters would move her, but we required an
equal expenditure of propellent to halt our swing. Thank heaven we had a Pilot
aboard. Turning a behemoth like Galactic was an exercise in nerve and patience.
"Galactic
to Earthport Naval Station. Put on Admiral Hoi."
It took
barely a moment Hoi must have been glued to his console, as was I. His pinched
face loomed in my simulscreen. "Turn away, Seafort If I have to wreck you,
I will,"
"Our
lasers are trained on the Naval wing. You'll die."
"I'm
not in me Naval wing."
"Very
well, we'll retarget," It would be mass murder, of civilians, and I couldn't
do it
He
smiled, "We know you, Seafort. You'll do no such thing."
Inwardly,
I cursed. "You know me not at all." I poised my finger on the
console. "Activating fire controls. Laser Room, stand by."
"We
have more firepower, Seafort! You'll be destroyed."
I
shrugged. "I don't really care." That much was true.
"Why
notr
"My
body is ravaged, my Government a shambles, my Navy disgraced." My covenant
with Lord God shattered beyond repair,
"Put
on Johanson!"
"Why?"
"He'll
negotiate us out of a standoff,"
"Not
from my ship,"
"Send
him here."
My tone
was casual. "If you wish,"
"You'll
speak to him after?"
"If
he calls." "A truce until then?" "Six hours, no more."
"Very well." He broke contact "Derek, go to sickbay. Have them
load Johanson and the rest onto their launch." "You wouldn't."
"I beg your pardon, Mr. CarrT "You heard me. Isn't that a touch
macabre?" "Do h." I'd be damned if I'd give a traitor like
Johanson a formal funeral. I keyed off, had Lieutenant Garrow assign a sailor
to pilot the launch.
Six
hours of truce. More than enough to reach Fusion safety. I could escape
Earthport's lasers, but to where? I snorted; Galactic was set to cruise to
Constantine. Her crew was functional, her stores nearly complete. We could
repair our damage en route. It would serve them all right if I fled the madness
into which we'd descended. With a sigh, I put aside my fantasies. How to retake
Earthport? No troopship could run the gauntlet of the Station's powerful
lasers. And in any event, what troops would respond to my call? Perhaps some
isolated U.N.A.F. base would ignore the perfidy of its leaders and stand by the
Government, but how would they board a shuttle unnoticed? And what would
persuade Earthport to let
it
dock?
In the
meantime, my hundreds of passengers had to be tended. Perhaps Hoi would allow
me to off-load them; tiwir presence foreclosed the option of battle. But he
knew that; why would he let me?
I
pondered. The two middies, Speke and Pyle, fidgeted
under my
gaze.
Lunapolis
Base was also a factor. It had free access to the Station; their commanders
were allied. And its were I devastating
threat, both to me and Barm*
If 1
attacked LunapoUs from aloft, I might kill thou-
sands.
Certainly there was no way to subdue it by ground attack. Any troops I sent
would have to be transshipped through Earthport, which was impossible until
Admiral Hoi was ousted. Worse, Earthport guarded Lunapolis, and Lunapolis
Earthport, unless I could somehow time an assault for the hours when they were
out of each other's sight.
I knew
of but one way, and the risk was enormous.
Failure
was death. Not so unwelcome.
Midshipman
Speke blurted out, "What did I do?"
I
raised an eyebrow.
"You—I
thought you were angry. You were glaring like—**
"Two
demerits." How dare he interrupt a Captain's thoughts?
A look
of dismay. "Sir, that makes ten."
I
drummed the console. "Very well. One. Go work it off,"
"Aye
aye, sk," He made his escape.
Anthony
Pyle stared carefully at his console.
A
crackle, from the speaker. "Admiral Thome to Galactic"
I
snatched the caller, "Jeff!"
A few
seconds* pause, "Hello, sir."
"I
need you."
A
hesitation. "How?"
"You
have doubts?" Better to face them now, though I was disappointed. I'd
rallied Jeff from cynicism years past, and I'd hoped to count on his loyalty.
A
pause. "Sir, it's the lag. I'm calling London to Devon to Farside to
you."
"AhiL"
"The
joey at Devon Academy didn't want to put me through. I had to drop names,"
"Whose?"
I waited out the lag.
"Every
Admiral I could think of. You. The Commandant."
Midshipman
Pyle smiled, until he saw my scowl.
"Jeff,
may I recall you to duty?" Under martial law I had
authority,
even without his consent. But this was my mentor, my oldest living friend.
"Of
course." He knew 1 wouldn't ask, if the need weien t
desperate.
I said,
"There's risk."
"There's
always risk. What are your ordetsr
1 told
ram.
Pyle's
eyes widened.
CHAPTET
21
.NA.F.
Security Command to Galactic, Mr, Seafort, if you're there, for God's sake
answer!"
I
wheeled onto the bridge, breathing hard. General Don* ner's saturnine face
filled the simulscreen. "Go ahead."
"Valera's
marching on the Rotunda. He's got the Thirteenth Armored, the Fifty-first
Auto—"
"U.N.A.F,
would sit it out, you said."
"I
was wrong," His voice had a touch of asperity. "Ibiera and Taubeck
always were hotheads. It's only a few units, sir, but we have hardly anything
to stop them. I've rounded up what I could, A few guard units. There's a store
of old projectile rifles in storage; I outfitted the U,N. Military Band.
They—"
"Ridiculous."
"They
were handy and they're fully trained soldiers, sir. It's just they don't
nonnally carry,,, we've taken up position inside the retaining wall/*
"Civil
war is the last tiling we—"
"Sir,
there's more. Valera preempted HoloworU and Newsnet for a six o'clock
announcement. The other nets will no doubt follow—'*
"No!"
"I
agree, but how will you stop him?"
"Where
are you now?"
"Branstead's
office." He flushed. "Don't take offense. Valera's people have him in
custody, and his puter had links to everyone from—**
"Get
me McFrcy from Holoworld"
The
president? I'll try." His stubby fingers stabbed at
keys.
We got
a machine, then a stubborn puter, men a secretary, By the time we worked our
way up to McFrey's chief aide, I was fuming. I leaned into the simulscreen, my
voice shaking. "Put her on this very moment This instant!"
The
aide's face disappeared. A few seconds later, Belinda McFrey, the world's most
powerful netizen, looked down on me from the screen. She said coolly, "You
rang, Mr. Sec— ah, Seafort?"
"Valera
gets no bandwidth," That's not for you to say,*' "But it is. Under martial
law—" "Which the Senate has repealed." "Valera is engaged
in treason, I won't allow him access—" "You don't control the
nets," Her tone was smug. "Don't even try."
"As
Secretary-General—** "You may not still be SecGen. That's debatable."
Perhaps it was only that she interrupted my every sentence. Perhaps it was her
smug superiority. Whatever the cause, I snapped, "Dormer, flash this call
to Newsnet, live feed. In fact, transmit worldwide. Hank,"
"Just
a moment." Clicks. A buzz, and silence, "Done," "Belinda
McFrey has insisted on giving aid and comfort to those who would overthrow the
ordained Government of Lord God, Now do I—" "I did not"
"—Nicholas
Seafort, sole executive of His Government and plenipotentiary of the Patriarchs
of His Reunified Church while martial law remains in effect—"
"You
take on a lot, Seafort"
My eyes
blazed. "—declare Belinda McFrey, former president of Holoworld,
excommunicate of His Church and His people. We do, on behalf of Lord God
Himself, turn from her aspect, reject her perfidy, and banish her from our
midst!"
Her
face was pale. "Now, look. You can't just—"
"GET
THEE GONE, CREATURE OF SATAN!" With a slash of the hand, I cut her off my
screen, "I do warn and adjure every citizen that to consort or do business
with a person excommunicate is a capital offense, and merits excommunication of
the offender,"
I
glared at the screen and at the world. "Let all media take notice: Cisno
Valera shall not be heard while he stands in opposition to Lord God. Trifle not
with perdition!"
I
snapped off the screen, sat trembling. What I had done was arguably legal. The
authority panted under martial law was breathtakingly broad. I represented His
Government in its every aspect, including that normally exercised by the
Patriarchs.
Nonetheless,
what I had done was a travesty. No, an obscenity, I had defied the Patriarchs
outright, spurned and insulted them to their faces. Didn't I deserve
excommunication far more than the frightened woman whose soul now teetered on the
edge of damnation? Was I not already excommunicate, in His eyes, if not in the
view of the cowardly Patriarchs? If I were to declare any traitor
excommunicate, why choose a mediaman whose sole offense was to allow Valera a
voice? Why not villainous Admiral Hoi, or Sirnovich, (town in Lunapolis? Was
not their treason far more overt man hers?
No time
for disgust "Cornm Room, connect me with the chief of staff's office in
the Rotunda." I waited. "Donner? Evacuate your troops. No, you heard
me. Why? Because they're not the enemy. Til fire on Lunapolis if I must And
on
Earthport. But not on ground forces, however misguided. Oh? Perhaps you didn't
understand: that was an order."
I bore
out his protests. He was a brave man, and stubborn.
When at
last he acquiesced I said, "You yourself may stay, if you care to give me
a hand. Key into the outdoor public address system. Hurry, please. And aim your
caller's vidlens out the window. I want to see the troops I'm talking to. Feed
picture and sound live, to whatever nets will run it"
We had
more time than I'd supposed; it was a full half hour before the first patrols
of the Thirteenth Armored Cavalry moved through the undefended gate. They held
their laser rifles at the ready, moved cautiously, eyes searching the many
windows above.
I took
a deep breath. These moments might be my last chance to brace my falling
Government
"Soldiers
of the Thirteenth!" Far below, my voice boomed over the Rotunda speakers,
"1 am the Secretary-General. Go no farther. By entering the U.N. compound,
you war on God!"
Three
or four joeys exchanged nervous glances.
"General
Ibiera and General Taubeck are relieved of command- Go no farther^ I say. You
there! Sergeant, with your hand on the gate!" The man stopped as if struck,
"As you value your soul, fall back! Through the gate, this instant!**
Uneasy,
he took a few steps back,
"I
have ordered General Donner's troops to stand down. We will not shoot you this
day. We will not defend the Rotunda with bullets or beams. We will defend it
with the righteous wrath of Lord God,**
For a
moment all was still,
"The
world watches your every move. Let the vengeance of humankind strike dead the
first man to befoul these precincts. Shoot any officer who orders you through
those gates. It is treason, and abominable in His eyes. Shoot any officer who
bids you fire on your fellow troops within me compound.
"Soldiers
of the United Nations, go to your homes. This revolt, this treason, is not of
your making. It will collapse of its own weight You need not die, or kill, for
traitors' greed.
"This
is Secretary-General Nicholas Seafort, wishing you the blessing of Lord
God."
I keyed
off my caller, held my breath.
At the
gates, no one moved.
"You
vile son of a bitch!" Admiral Hoi was livid, "Lieutenant Tse was my
nephew. You goddamn murderer!"
"They
were armed rebels boarding a U.N, warship."
Arlene
had summoned me to the bridge for Hoi's call. I was tired, disheveled, and
cross.
"You're
the—" He bit it off. "How can I send the boy home to my sister? He
looks like... in two hours I open fire!" Our trace would be done.
I said,
"We've passengers aboard."
"That
didn't bother you before."
"Let
me off-load them."
"No.
I won't let you anywhere near the Station."
I
glanced at Arlene, "Why not?"
"You're
too devious, and besides .. .** He grimaced. "Tbo many of my officers know
only your public image. They oust you, I won't risk subversion.**
Impasse,
"Mr,
Hoi, surrender now and I'll spare your life."
"Goofjuice,
I have the upper hand. Two hours." The screen went dark.
I keyed
the caller. "Engine Room, flank speed. Pilot, all power to the thrusters.
Get us to Fusion safety. Lieutenant Sanders!"
Arlene
jumped, "Yes, sir? I wish you wouldn't do that**
"Sorry.
Fusion coordinates for Titan, Have Mr, Pyle run calculations as well," On
my ships, Fusion coordinates were checked and rechecked. "Baron, you
too,"
Two
hours, before we'd need their coordinates, I yearned
to
pace, but even in light gravity, I dared not move. When Dr. Ghenili saw me
again, he would not be pleased.
I'd
told Jeff Thorne to make a very special call. I rolled my chair from one
bulkhead to another, waiting for the response to come through. If I didn't hear
back within two hours, my plan would be stillborn.
Anthony
Pyle bent to his calculations, tongue between his lips. I smiled. Once, when I
was a youngster, I'd been made to do the same.
This
wasn't my watch; I was free to leave the bridge. But I was too keyed up to sleep,
Besides, I'd have to be back when we Fused. No Captain would dream of letting
subordinate officers Fuse on their own. If something went wrong, he'd be the
one who had to explain.
Of
course, if something went wrong, there'd be little to explain. The ship was
unlikely to be found.
"Thome
to Galactic."
Thank
Lord God. Once we were Fused, he'd have been unable to reach us.
"He
agreed, sir. But he said to tell you a personal invitation would have been more
polite." Thorne's tone was disapproving.
I
rolled my eyes. "That's like him. Pay no attention. Now, as to the
rest?"
"In
hand. A few hours. Best of luck, sir."
"And
to you,H
Thorne
had been circumspect, I approved. It was unlikely anyone was listening in to
secure Naval frequencies, but one never knew.
Fifteen
minutes later, I fed Fusion coordinates to our puter. "Bridge to Engine
Room, prepare to Fuse."
"Prepare
to Fuse, aye aye." A moment's pause. "Engine Room ready for Fuse,
sir."
I ran
my finger down the screen. The fusion drive kicked in. The stars shifted red,
men blue. As the drive reached fuU strength they slowly faded to black. We were
Fused, hurtling
past
normal space at supraluminous velocity. Our external sensors were blind.
Galactic was dependent entirely on her own resources, as was any Fused ship.
We'd be
no more than a few hours. Hardly enough time to settle to sleep. At her
console, Arlene yawned conspicuously, twice. She must be exhausted. We'd none
of us caught up on our rest.
She
yawned again.
"That's
quite enough, Lieutenant." I glowered. "If you want me to go to bed,
say so."
"I'd
like you to go to bed, Captain."
Well,
I'd asked for it. "Hmpff. Send a med tech to our cabin, to help me out of
the chair." I rolled off.
When
I'd first captained Hibernia, I'd been awed at the size of the Captain's
quarters compared to the wardroom I'd known. Compared even to Hibernia, the
Captain of Galactic slept in awesome luxury. The compartment was easily twice
the size of our passenger cabins, which themselves were lavish. My cabin was
fitted out in magnificent splendor. Wasteful. An outrage. Nonetheless, the head
was a marvel of design and comfort, and the bed ...
I'd
first seen the cabin a few houre earlier, when it still held Stanger's gear.
I'd summoned the purser, brusquely ordered him to remove it, I needed no
reminders of the man I'd murdered, No, executed. It was one death for which I
felt no regret.
The med
tech left me lying on my bunk, spine throbbing, waiting for a new dose of pain
Mocker to take effect,
Still,
I felt a strange of peace. My
confrontation with Bishop Saythor had been so calamitous, so absolute, that I
had nothing left to rue. Having rejected the God I loved, I was alone, in the
forever of the universe.
Yet,
that me for the present. I could nourish Philip, cherish my beloved Arlene, Mikhael for what little time was left before
I sank into the fires. And, for the moment, I had my ship.
I'd
been raised to Lord God, and duty. Now there was only duty.
I lay
staring at the overhead. There was no possible way I'd sleep, not with my pain
and my anguish. I slept
Some
hours later we Defused. Two hundred twelve thousand miles outside Titan's
orbit, amazingly close for one jump. Fusion drives were inaccurate by about one
percent of the distance traveled. I made a quick recalculation, and a
corrective jump. We emerged so close mat Melbourne registered immediately in
the sensors.
Atexi's
old ship had left Earthport before the coup. An interstellar vessel performed
many roles. One of mem, unfortunately, was to serve as tourist transport. The
cruise to me Jovian satellites, for example, was famous. An intrasystem Fuse
made the voyage a tolerable length, and the public approval gained by
occasional tourist jaunts helped support the Navy.
The
Titan cruise was another such waste of resources. Alexi had been wise to
arrange his leave to coincide with the journey. The ship would be filled with a
gaggle of politicians, celebrities, mediamen, and the like. No fit company for
an honest sailor.
I had
no idea where Captain Fenner's loyalties lay, but Alexi had spoken approvingly
of him. It would have to suffice. In any event, I doubted he'd try to flee.
Moored at Titan's Orbiting Station, he was too close to Saturn's satellite to Fuse,
and in any event Galactic bristled with laser cannon.
I had
Lieutenant Oarrow summon Melbourne's Captain aboard to receive dispatches from
Admiralty. I rolled my chair back and forth, to the middies' growing annoyance,
waiting to team if he'd comply. Certainly Fenner knew my visit to Titan was no
routine matter, ships were spread so
thin
that it was rare one encountered another outside home port
To my
vast relief, his gig soon appeared in our simulscreens. Not long after, he was
piped aboard.
Josh
Fenner was a rather short joey, with a grave mien. We reviewed my orders from
Admiralty, that gave me authority over his ship. "Very well, sir. What can
I do for you?"
"I
need to, ah, borrow Melbourne"
"You
do." His eyes bored into mine.
"For
a few days, no more. Anton Bourse is aboard, is he not?"
He
gaped. Even such an eccentric as I wouldn't disrupt the schedules of two great
liners merely to meet a holostar. Even if he was the world's premier
entertainer. "You want to meet him?"
"No.
I want him dead,"
Almost
two days to wait. It nearly dissolved what was left of my sanity. I roamed the
ship in my motorized chair, or at least those parts of it I could reach. I had
the midships and aft gravitrons turned low for my visits, but the improvised
controls were erratic at best; sudden gravitational surges left me breathless
and gasping with pain,
Chief
McAndrews supervised repair of the corridor hatches; the circuitry was
complicated and difficult especially as to the bridge overrides,
I
joined the passengers for the evening meal. They were immensely relieved that
some form of routine had been reestablished, even if the Captain they'd known
was a bloody mutilated corpse, and his replacement gaunt and silent.
Mikhael
languished in sickbay. I visited every few hours, even when I should have been
stretched in my bed, warding off me effects of exhaustion.
His
eyes were red, bis body sore. His spirit deflated.
"Would
you like to visit the bridge?" In other days, joeykids had been awed by
its splendor.
He
shook his head. "Not really."
I said
brightly, "How about Melbourne's bridge? Alexi would have wanted you to
see it."
"1
did, before his last cruise. I don't want to think about
it."
"Him."
He turned away, tucked his pillow under his head, left me contemplating the
curve of his back. "Son.. r
"I'm
nobody's son." His tone was sullen. "You're angry I couldn't save you
from Karen?** "When I try to be brave I wet my pants or get beaten to a
pulp. It's not fair. I can't be like you. Nobody can,"
"Don't
ever try," I said through clenched teeth, "to be like me. You don't
want to be that."
Something
in my tone caused him to peer over his shoulder, and slowly, reluctantly mm.
"Pa?** I nodded, not quite able to speak. "What is it? What's changed
hi you?** "Nothing." I couldn't tell him Yd defied the Deity, and
been broken. But "nothing" wasn't the truth. "I don't have much
left in life, Mikhael. I'd truly like you to be my joeykid."
He lay
listless, from time to time sniffling. Then, "Pa, am
1
glitched? Do I need rebalancing?** "No, son, you're a teener. You need
love, and a bit of aging."
By now
I could at least recognize my lieutenants, and was forming an impression of
their abilities. Arlene, in our precious hours of privacy, broke tradition to
discuss her observations with me. It was one of the few perks of the Captain's
wife.
On a long cruise an officer in her position would be
lonely.
No crewman would trust her. Whether or not she revealed their confidences, they
would assume she had. But for now it didn't matter, we were only briefly posted
to Galactic. When this was over, if I lived, I'd seek some quiet comer for
retirement A place with low gravity. Lunapolis, perhaps. They were building new
warrens there, with comfortable quarters.
"Nick..."
We snuggled in bed. I'd tried lovemaking, but my spine wouldn't allow it. The
movement was too much.
"Yes,
hon?"
"That
child.,. promise me we'll have it,**
"After
all we've been through?**
"You
changed your mind?" A tinge of sadness.
"No."
I hoped it was truth, "I'm... lost inside, hon. How could I raise—"
Her
palm covered my mouth. "Don't think about it Trust your instincts. You
were as troubled then as now, and look at P.T."
"Yes,
look at him." Grief-stricken, morose. Lethargic. And articulate as always,
so the cause of his sorrow came easily to his lips. If I could add his misery
to mine, gladly would I have done so.
"He'll
survive," Her pity was less than I expected. "Wounds heal. He'll find
another boy, or girl."
"A
girl this time, I hope."
She
giggled, "So do L" Tten, "Promise."
"I
swear by Lord—" I couldn't do that. "I promise by everything 1 hold
dear, we will make another child,"
'Thank
you, love," Drowsily, we drifted in space.
"You're
bloody right it's canceled! It brings him up to ten." I flung my holovid
across the console. "Who told you to issue my demerits?"
"I'm
first middy," Edwin Spoke's face was tense. "Anselm's moping about the corridors. You should have
how sloppily he came to attention when I—"
"Who
told you to put him at attention? Mind your own affairs."
"If
that's the way you want it, sir." I sat fuming. I'd assigned Tad no
duties. I wasn't even sure he was a member of the ship's company. His darkness
of the soul had enveloped him like a shroud. I'd have to spend time with him.
Or better yet, put him with someone who could set an example. I tottered on the
edge of despair. Yes, a cadet was subject to midshipmen's orders, and Anselm
should have been more responsive. But he wasn't a member of Gatocfic's
wardroom, and Speke needn't have
noticed
him.
It was
chance, pure seniority, mat made a first middy. As Jeff Thorne had known when I
was a boy, no leader could ask a willingness, a spirit, he himself couldn't
provide as example.
Later,
I visited P.T. in the cabin they'd assigned him, struggled out of my chair in
the light gravity, gave him a fierce hug. "I love you, son. Remember that
always." "Path?" He searched my face. "You make it sound a
farewell"
"It
is. 1 have to go.** "Where?" 1 told him.
When I
was done, he stirred. "I'll—" "No," I spoke softly, but
with a finality that brooked no argument, as in his youth. "Not this time.
Perhaps I'll be back. With Lord God's—" I bit back the obscenity,
"Perhaps."
Below,
in the engine room, Chief McAndrews looked morose. "The corridor hatches
will seal, but the bridge overrides—the wiring's fused, somewhere in the
bulkheads. We'll find it, sooner or later." He scowled, "Make that
later" "Keep at it." I glanced up to his panels. "And the
gravi.
tronsT'
"Directly
wired." He glowered at the mess I'd made of his
circuits.
"It'll give me something to do on the way to Con-stantine. In the meantime
..." The grudging hint of a smile. "Hope you don't mind a drop to
zero gee now and men."
"I'll
survive." I'd do more than that; only light gravity made my injury
tolerable. "But the passengers..."
"I
know, sir." Groundsiders were notorious for their ineptitude in anything
less than Terran gees.
I was
wheeling myself back to the bridge. As I rounded the corridor, voices ahead,
"... thrash you myself, do you hear?" Derek Carr. "The Captain
canceled—"
"I
don't care what Mr. Seafort said. His every move is agony, he's hanging on by a
thread, and I won't have a whiny cadet adding to his worries!" I would
turn my chair, go around. A long way, but... "I wasn't—"
"Stand
at attention, Anselm! Did I release you?" "No, sir!"
"By
God, mat does it! Now what, you're crying? What in hell is the matter with
you?"
"I
don't know," The boy's voice was tormented. "Cashier me. Beach me.
Let me go home."
I
braced myself for Derek's explosion. It never came. His tone was reflective,
"I felt mat way once. I was just your age. Like you, too old to be a
cadet," No response.
"I
begged to be cashiered. I whined, just like you, I had snot running from my
nose, just like you. Not on your sleeve, damn it!*' His voice softened,
"Use this," "Thank you, sir," A whisper. "What
happened?" "He took me into me corridor. He let me cry, and—I don't
know how, but he sent me back to do my duty, and I was glad to. For him,"
A pause. "Is mis by any chance about Bevinr "Yessir." "Ahh,
Did I ever tell you about my friend Sandy Wilsky?
A young
middy on Hibernia. Come along, we'll find a softie. He was killed, on airlock
watch I should have been standing. I blamed myself, of course. As you do."
"I
prayed for it to be Danil!"
"God
doesn't hear such prayers. He just understands. Don't cry again, I didn't
mean... well, perhaps I did. Come along, joey. A part of me was grateful it was
Sandy had the airlock, and for months I felt such contempt for myself..."
The
voices faded.
Thank
You, Lord God. For doing what I could not.
A
tenuous peace held at the Rotunda. U.N.A.F. made no effort to enter the gates.
Neither did they withdraw. The six o'clock hour came and went, with no
broadcast by Valera.
From
what we could gather from transmissions, both factions had paused, awaiting my
capture or death, or the unlikely possibility that I'd oust Hoi and Simovich.
The Assembly had supported my enviro package and was generally assumed to be
with me; the Senate was firmly in opposition. It didn't matter; I'd dissolved
both bodies.
U.N.A.F.
Command remained neutral, with only a few isolated units committing themselves.
One such patrol had captured Jerence, and still held him.
All
depended on timing, I called Arlene, Derek, and Captain Fenner together for one
last conference. Again, they assured me all was arranged.
I set
the caller to shipwide frequency, "By order of Admiral Seafort, Lieutenant
Arlene Sanders is granted the temporary rank of Captain."
Fenner
returned to Melbourne.
We
Fused,
The
cadet asks to speak to you, sir." Midshipman Spckc was exceedingly stiff
and formal. Escorted to the bridge, Anselm waited to be released.
Then,
"I'm sorry, sir. I'll try to do better." He shifted. "That's all
I had—that's all, sir."
'Thank
you. Dismissed." As he turned to go, I blurted, "DaniFs death was my
fault, not yours. Attacking Galactic was a suicide mission. I shouldn't have
allowed—"
"Pardon,
sir. But that's what we're for. Cadets and middies, I mean. We're military. We
accept the risk."
"Did
Daniir
He
gulped. "Not of outright murder. He was terrified."
"So
were you,"
"Yes."
His eyes met mine. "Yes, I was."
"I
couldn't imagine otherwise. Could I ask you a favor, one which no commander may
require of an officer?"
"What,
sir?**
"Would
you pray for him wim me?"
"Oh."
His eyes filled. "Oh, yes. I'd like that"
"Tonight,
then. I'll call you to my quarters."
I
watched him go. Something in his stride resembled the assured young middy I'd
first met.
"They're
bringing him out now, Ned, The casket is wrapped in poly, to protect it in
handling. Level 7 portholes an lined with spectators. Few have dry eyes,"
The
death of Anton Bourse shocked the public. It was per* haps the only event that
could drive the attempted coup from the front pages, Melbourne's Captain, in a
universally applauded gesture of respect, had suspended his cruise to return
the beloved holostar's body to Earthport Station for transshipment and burial.
Even
for Melbourne, Admiral Hoi would have been suspicious, had she proposed to dock
at a bay. But Captain Fenner hove to alongside, in full view of the Station,
and well within the range of her defense.
"The of decompression are not for the squeamish.
The will remain closed. Burial is slated In California for Wednesday,"
Restless,
I flipped my suit radio from one frequency to another news zines, Earthport
Traffic Control, even distant
Lunapolis.
Mediamen
and their holocams lined Earthport Station's portholes as the joey who'd made
millions weep was brought out of Melbourne's vacuum hold and floated into her
launch. A sealed coffin, due to the tragic decompression accident that claimed
him.
"Tomorrow,
a special shuttle will carry Bourse ground-side, to his many admirers."
The
launch sailed slowly into an Earthport bay, his grieving retinue aboard. Squads
of armed sailors were vigilant, even now fearing a ruse. But only a handful of
Bourse's young staff passed through the airlock. Many were in shock.
Melbourne
would resume her itinerary, two days late. Two dozen of her passengers
disembarked, and were ferried across to the Station. Perhaps they'd booked the
cruise only to mingle with Bourse. Their places would be taken by others.
"Permission
to disengage capture latches." Captain Fen*
ner,
from his launch.
"Bay
is cleared and decompressed. Disengage when
ready,
Melbourne."
"—famous
for his portrayal of William, last king of—" The launch released its hold
on the Station, sailed back to
Melbourne.
"^-departure
control, bearing 090, 64, 282, repeat—"
A
tremendous crash. I groaned.
A distant
voice, "Are you all right, sir?"
Scraping
sounds, A wrench. Light.
"Help
him with his helmet."
"Aye
aye, sir."
"Careful,
his spine is injured." Sergeant Oregon frowned at his anxious cadet.
Together, gently, they lifted me from the coffin, set me in a wheeled chair.
Laboriously, we stripped off the rest of my suit
"Where
are we?"
"Level
4 overflow accommodations, sir." A crowded sparse gray cabin, one of
several we'd been assigned.
"They
didn't put you in a hotel?"
Sergeant
Gregori looked pious as he stripped off his civilian shirt. "We insisted
on staying with our idol's body. The Hilton refused."
"How
many are we?" I knew the answer, but needed reassurance.
"Seven
sergeants, two middies, eighteen cadets." With a grunt of satisfaction,
Gregori donned his Academy blues.
"The
laser pistols?**
"Passed
through in Bourse's gear, sir."
I eyed
him. "I've owed you an apology a long while, Sarge. Since the Hooker
incident."
He held
up a hand. "We were all rather upset, Mr. Sec-Gen."
I
nodded acknowledgment. "The rest of it?**
"No
word yet."
As
expected. But I fretted nonetheless. If Jeff Theme's arrangements fell through,
I'd have loosed a bloody fiasco.
Our
intricate plans had left my nerves in shreds; every phase had to fall into
place just so, But it was the only way I could see to free both Earthport and
Lunapolis,
Our
sleight of hand with Melbourne was one part of it Admiral Hoi would assume I
remained on Galactic; no one (Mi the Station knew I'd transferred to Melbourne
at Titan.
Jeff
Thorne had flown to Devon, bearing Hazen's orders to send all Academy's Mil
sergeants and three hundred advanced cadets aloft to Academy's Farside Base. To
make sure, the Commandant said, mat they weren't caught up in civil war.
I
couldn't risk interception of Hazen's orders from Far-side; I could oust only
Thorne to deliver them.
Hie
enthusiastic cadets, along with half a dozen midshipmen, were bused to London
Shuttleport, their duffels neat-
acked,
uniforms crisp, faces scrubbed. We were aware that Earthport Station's new
masters vigilantly watched incoming shuttles from Earth, lest I smuggle troops
aloft But Academy craft always bypassed the Station, sailed directly
to
Farside.
In the
silent, airless night the cadets left their shuttles and clambered across the
dust to Farside's waiting locks. Within the Academy base, Hazen addressed them
on my behalf. He asked those who'd scored best in riflery, athletics, and
hand-to-hand combat to volunteer for a dangerous mission.
I'd
been most explicit in my orders in mis regard. Once more, I would use cadets
beyond their years. But this time, I'd tell truth. Our heroes would die
undeceived.
They'd
volunteered, to a man. But only a few were chosen for Earthport Station; an
Academy shuttle lifted them aloft once more, where they'd waited for Melbourne
to Defuse from Titan. Then they'd swung across to her waiting lock on a cable,
to save the time of the two vessels mating. We had to Fuse again, and quickly,
before the starship emerged from the far side of the moon to reveal our
presence to Admiral Hot or Lunapolis.
We
Fused back to Titan and confirmed to Ariene, Captain of Galactic in my absence,
that we'd taken on our small expeditionary force, Were Titan's scientific
station more spacious. I'd have off-loaded Melbourne's passengers, willing or
no, so as not to put them at risk. I'd had no choice but to involve them in my
schemes,
Melbourne
had Fused once again, to Earthport, with die sad news of Anton Bourse's demise.
We'd
concluded mat white Melbourne might off-load to Earthport a few of my middies
and cadets disguised as Bourse's staff, if more man a handful disembarked.
Admiral Hoi's suspicions would be raised, and we'd risk Captain Fenner's
passengers to no avail.
Fenner
had taken personal charge of his comm room, to make sure no unauthorized
messages were tent In actuality,
none of
Melbourne's passengers were allowed onto Earth-port, save our small fighting
force.
Anton
Bourse roamed Melbourne's corridors, his discomfiture soothed by the thought of
untold millions in free publicity awaiting him. Meanwhile the starship cruised
to Fusion safety. Shortly, it would Fuse to Titan once again, and continue its
cruise.
I'd
used Ariene as well. I could entrust Galactic to no one else; at all costs the
vast, magnificent starship must not fall again into the rebels* hands. Derek
was trustworthy, but until days past he'd never been more than a middy. Ariene,
on the other hand, had served with distinction as a lieutenant But who was I to
thrust such grim responsibility on her? When I apologized, she kissed me on the
nose.
At
Earthport it was now fourteen hundred hours. We would strike at nineteen
hundred, to coordinate with Far-side's remaining cadets, who had their own
mission.
Here on
Earthport, our goals were Naval Headquarters, where the Station's laser defense
control was located, and the civilian administrator's complex.
Eleven
emergency corridor hatches were between our quarters and laser defense control.
Sergeant Oregon assured me each cadet knew his target, I called up a Station
map on my holovid, insisted that each youngster show me his assigned hatch.
"You
have the barsr
"Yes,
sir," Midshipman Speke, his cheeks flushed. He pointed to a stack in the
closet "We're to take them as we tetve,"
"If
someone tfies to stop you?"
"No
warning. We shoot" His eyes were solemn, "Sir, you can count on me. I
swear it" He'd come a long way, this lad who'd rolled his eyes with
impatience, and so infuriated Alexi.
I
smiled. "Who's in charge of my transport?"
"Until
we seize a cart I am." Oregon.
Try not
to throw me out**
He eyed
the chair with distaste. "You won't wait here?**
"Of
course not. Getting me there is half our goal."
I
sweated out each minute, checking my laser pistol over
and
again, making sure I had ample recharges in my pouch.
I
slipped on my helmet, for its radionics. I keyed my stunner
on and
off.
If
necessary, we'd try to take Naval HQ by force, but I had lingering hopes that
my presence might persuade some of the rebels to lay down their arms. Hoi had
admitted to the same fears, and I couldn't see a reason for him to lie. Unless,
of course, he'd meant to lure me to the Station, but he wasn't so devious as then
to refuse me entry. Was he? Seventeen hundred hours. "Any news?"
Oregon looked at me strangely. "No, sir." I flushed. We'd have no
news, unless of a catastrophe. "UNS Galactic to Earthport Naval
Base." Arlene, relayed from my suit radio. "We're returning to
Station. Hold your fire." At this moment she'd be some two hours' cruise
from Earthport, minimum Fusion safety.
It was
a long while before the reply came. "This is Captain Landon, speaking for
Admiral Hoi. Do not, repeat, do not approach the Station."
"Sir,
1 intend to off-load our passengers." Eighteen hundred hours.
"Earthport
Traffic Control to Galactic. Take up station at coordinates 320, 31, 108 until
farther—"
"1
must disembark my passengers." Arlene's tone was cool. "/ will
proceed to within one-third kilometer, opposite bays four through six." No
response.
Eighteen
thirty. A handful of Academy sergeants in civilian dress strolled out for a
walk. I had Gregori help me into my cumbersome thrustersuit If we had to
retreat from the Station, I'd be less of a burden already suited. At eighteen
fifty, Edwin Speke handed out alloy bars.
Awaiting
their send-off, cadets fidgeted, tapping bars against the deck, checking their
pistols, shifting from foot to foot. It gave us opportunity to reprimand them
sharply, and reduce our own unbearable tension. Eighteen fifty-five.
"Go!"
With
the energy of youth the cadets crowded through the hatch, raced off to secure
the corridors.
"Lunapolis
squad to Seafort." A voice I knew well. "Hang on, sir." Gregori
spun my chair, whipped me through the hatch. He pounded down the corridor. An
Academy sergeant took up position at each side.
I keyed
my suit caller. "Go ahead, Tolliver." We'd finally decided on
ordinary public comm channels, on the grounds that they were the least likely
for a military force to use, and therefore the least likely to be watched. In
Melbourne, I'd had my suit modified to receive them.
"They're
cycling through, sir. Lieutenant LeBow has charge of the lock. No casualties as
yet." As yet. My lips tightened.
Jeff
Thorne had summoned my old aide Edgar Tolliver from his Lunapolis vacation.
Shortly before zero hour, Tolliver had wandered to the Lunapolis airlock from
which the crowds emerged to see the light show in the crater.
On his
own, he'd overpowered the bored watchmen, who carried not even a stunner. At
once, cadets had begun pouring in, fresh from debarkation from the Academy
shuttles that had landed just past the crater, not far from where we ourselves
had been picked up, on our own flight from Ghe-nili's clinic to Academy.
Eighteen
fifty-eight In our Earthport corridor, an alarm clanged. Perhaps a midshipman
had been spotted blocking a hatch. Perhaps some alert joey in the
administrator's office noticed a stampeding herd of cadets on his screen.
We
passed a hatch. The cadet guard fell in alongside, his laser drawn. I snarled,
"Set the safety!" A stumble and he'd blow us out of the Station.
Nineteen
hundred. The corridor hatch ahead slid out of its pocket, slammed toward
closure, stopped with a jolt at the bar. Nearby a cadet danced with dread.
"Hurry! Hurry, sir!"
"Hold
tight, Mr. Seaf—" Oregon new at and over the blocking bar. For a moment I
was airborne. We hit the deck with a thump. My spine exploded, but I gripped
the armrests as if my life depended on them. Perhaps it did
The
next hatch, and the next A corps of cadets panted to keep pace. It must be
Oregon who led Devon's morning
runs.
"UNS
Galactic to Earthport Naval Base. Approaching on
course
320, 31—"
"You
are targeted, Galactic. Seafort begin braking immediately, or we'll—"
"Sir,
Captain Seafort is not aboard."
Galactic'*
role was ambiguous. Her presence, and the power of her lasers, added a factor
to the situation that wouldn't be entirely to Earthport's liking. She might
have to rescue us, she might simply be held in reserve. In any event, if I'd
ordered Arlene to remain at Titan, I wasn't sure she'd have obeyed. I assumed
Hoi wouldn't allow Arlene to offload passengers, but her reminders that they
were aboard might stay him from firing his lasers, if she engaged in no overtly
hostile acts.
Nineteen
oh three. Ahead, the hatch to Naval HQ, blocked open. Outside, three guards,
spread-eagled on the deck. Sergeant Oregon looked grim.
"Of
course, Seafort's aboard. Abandon course before
I—"
"Lunapolis
to Seafort. Our joeys are halfway to the Naval base. No alarm yet. Don't know
why."
"Straight
through!" I pounded the chair. "Hurry." I whipped off my helmet
"Where
toT'
"Admiral
Hoi's office. Second corridor. Third hatch, or fourth." Just past the
corridor to the Naval shuttle bays.
He
raced me through the hatch. "No prob—"
A
withering blast of fire. Sergeant Oregon coughed, fell away. My chair careened
forward on its own. A cadet threw up his arms, spewed thick gobbets of blood
from a smoking cavern in his chest.
I
screamed, "I'm Seafort! Hoi wants to see me!" I spun the wheels,
avoiding a looming bulkhead. "Hold your fire!"
A face
darted out from behind a hatch, ducked back. "Kill the son of a—"
Sergeant
Smith's tone was low and urgent "Get Seafort out!"
"No,
Sarge!" I spoke loudly, so all could hear. "Admiral Hoi will see
me." Carefully I rolled my chair clear of the protective fire of my
cadets. "Will he not?"
A laser
pistol appeared, aimed at my chest For a moment it was touch and go. Then a
pair of very nervous sailors dashed out, hauled my chair into the seclusion of
their inner corridor. I slipped on my helmet. "Seafort to Lunapolis squad:
proceed as planned. Seafort to Earthport squad: hold your positions. I'll be in
touch. Galactic, hold your fire."
Pistols
aimed, safeties off, the Lunapolis seamen wheeled me into Hoi's inner office,
the one in which we'd once met. A huge simulscreen dominated his far bulkhead.
Lights gleamed. Perhaps they were from Galactic, fast approaching the Station.
There were few other ships in the vicinity, except local transports and vessels
in the repair bays.
Admiral
Hoi rose from behind his desk, haggard, drawn, eyes like coals. "I'll take
that" He checked the laser's safety, pointed it at my forehead.
"Anything to say before I execute you?"
"Yes.
Out you two." My tone was peremptory, and to my astonishment, the sailors
started to obey. Hoi drew in his breath with a hiss. They hesitated. Grimacing,
he motioned to the hatch. They fled.
"Hoi,
Simovich here. The bastards are in my warrens."
Hoi
ignored the speaker. "Try anything and I'll kill you instantly." He
regarded me. "Why did you come?*'
'To take
your surrender."
"Why
would I do that?"
I took
in his unshaven face, the sunken eyes, the sneer in his tone. And suddenly I
knew. I would tell truth. But given his agitation, it would likely result in my
death.
"Because,"
I said, "you want to."
"Goofjuice."
I
leaned forward. "Because you know what you've done
is
wrong."
"Ah,
the great moralist." His pistol didn't waver. "I thought you'd have
better cards."
"Because
you know mutiny is never the answer."
"So
you burst into my office, killing my joeys."
"Because
you know revolution is an affront to Lord God."
"You're
hardly one to tell me—"
"Because
you hate what you've done."
"I've
done nothing that—"
"And
what it's made you become."
"STOP
THAT! " A hint of anguish. He sat on the edge of the desk, aimed the
pistol with both hands. "For God's sake,
Seafort"
"Yes. For His sake." My gaze was steady, never leaving
his.
"Mr.
Seafort, we're at the Lunapolls Naval warrens. They've set up defenses. Heavy
fighting,"
"Who
in hell**—his eyes nirrowed""sre you to lecture me? You murdered my
nephew. You burst Ws eyeballs! You boiled his blood so it burst through his
skin! Did you give decompression warning, Seafort? Did you?**
"No."
We all made our beds. Now 1 lay in mine,
"You
vile creature."
"Hot,
ore you ui control? They'll take my laser cannon in a few minutes.
Answer!"
His
eyes locked on mine, he groped for his caller. "Hoi here."
"/
need you to blow six of my warrens, surrounding the Navy wing."
"Simovich,
I've got Seafort."
"Where?"
"In
my office. A laser sighted between his eyes."
A sigh
of relief. "Thank Lord God, I'll get out word. His itfefor their
surrender,"
"It
won't work." I looked apologetic. "TTieir orders were quite specific."
"There's
a complication, Andre. Galactic's back,"
"What's
her intent?"
"It's
not clear. Seafort will tell me."
"Actually,
I won't. I've a laser in my pouch. Push too hard and I'll reach for it"
'Til
kill you."
"Precisely.
You'll have no communication with Galactic, and no means to surrender."
Hoi
frowned into the caller. "Simovich, tell your men we have Seafort I'll get
back to you." Hoi set down the caller. "Now, as to the capitulation
of your forces—**
"Your
forces. You'll surrender."
"Why?"
"For
the of your soul,"
"Don't
trouble yourself about my soul.**
I
looked unflinching into the black emptiness of his eyes, "If I
don't," I said, "who will?"
From
his innermost depths, a strangled sob. Then, "Goodbye, Seafort"
I gazed
into bis eyes.
He
fired.
White
fire parted my hair. Behind me, over my the bulkhead crackled. I sat like a
stone,
"Do
you want to die?"
“Perhaps
I must, to end this." I hadn't answered him, but he didn't seem to notice.
"It
made perfect sense," he said. 'The way they laid it out You're a traitor,
of course."
"Yes."
To Lord God, and to His vicar on Earth.
He
spoke as if to overcome an objection. "In the ultimate sense, you are.
Truly. Our survival depends on colonial imports. To secure them, a strong Navy
is vital. And now, when it counts, you withdraw your support. We had to stop
you."
"Not
by threatening your people."
"MineT'
"Ours.
The laser cannons aimed at Earth are an abomination we never should have allowed.
We'll put an end to them." I stirred. "It's time, Admiral. Hand me
the pistol, and call your sentries."
His
tone was reflective. "It wouldn't be for you."
"No."
My voice was soft. "For you."
"Show
me Captain Seafort alive and well, or I'll blow the Station apart."
Arlene, in a tone that brooked no argument In the screen, Galactic loomed ever
larger. Her rear thrusters flickered out. In a moment she would begin to brake,
from the bow thrusters.
"Mayir
Wearily,
he nodded.
I
slipped on my helmet. "Captain Sanders, I'm unhurt. Stand by for
orders."
"But—"
"Captain."
"Aye
aye, sir." Her smoldering voice promised a reckoning.
"Hoi,
why are you letting him transmit? Does he have the
Station?"
The Admiral's pistol wavered. Stolidly, I watched the
screen.
"Not ycc." "These goddamn lunatics..." Simovich's voice
broke.
"He
sent cadets! He's making my joeys shoot children! I can't hold, unless you
blast out their warrens." Abruptly, bis voice took on a chilling
resolution. "I'm taking out Galactic."
Hoi
lunged for the caller. "Wait we'll negotiate a—"
"Mr.
Sarnaur, banks five through seven. Full fire!"
"NO!"
I tried to lunge from my seat fell back gasping.
Light
travels from the surface of the moon to Earthpoct Station in three seconds, no
more.
It was
a lifetime.
"Hoi,
stop him!"
The
invisible beam caught Galactic to starboard, well aft of the disks in which
crew and passengers dwelt The hull glowed and melted. If that were all... if
the relentless laser beam flickered out...
"Simovich,
hold your fire!"
From
Galactic"& innards, a flare. Fire spewed, was instantly extinguished
by vacuum.
"What
did he—" Hoi.
"Oh,
God, no." I swallowed, "Propellant He hit tank storage."
Galactic,
like any vessel, was driven by thrusters. In smaller ships, the propellant was
wanned in a central tank, men pumped to thrusters as needed. Galactic, because
she was so much larger, had several such tanks. A major one was in the aft
cargo hold.
Powered
by tens of thousands of pounds of igniting pro-peUant, Gotocric's stem began to
swing to port
To
compensate, Arlene fired port thrusters. The maneuver swung Galactic full on to
Earthport. Propellant spewed from her forward thrusters as we\\; she was \rying
to stem he* hurtling approach to the Station.
Her
port thrusters began making headway against the relentless blast of fire from
her starboard breach. Her course steadied.
The
beam from Simovich's Lunapo/is lasers flicked anew.
A small
section of the intricately curved alloy of Galactic's Fusion tube melted. The
starship was too close to Earth to Fuse safely, but in desperation, Captains
had been known to take the gamble. Some got away with it. Now, Arlene wouldn't
have the chance.
"Shut
down your lasers, Simovich! Cease fire or I'll bomb you myself!" Hoi's
voice was wild. "Turn them off!" He stared at his simulscreen.
Galactic grew larger. And larger.
Hoi
stood frozen, like a rabbit in onrushing headlights. The starship grew
inexorably. He shook himself, leaped for the caller. "Christ, she'll hit!
Lasers, fire at will! Break her up!" Instantly, as if they'd been waiting
for his order, tracking beams locked on the approaching behemoth.
I
lunged my chair to Hoi's desk, tore the caller from his hand. "BELAY THAT!
HOLD FIRE!"
Agonizing
seconds passed, under the pitiless play of the laser beams. Galactic*s bow
portside thruster burst into flame, sputtered out. The vessel could no longer
brake.
The
tracking beams faded.
Coolly,
Arlene shut down her port thrusters, fired starboard thrusters at full power to
slew the unstoppable ship away from the Station.
Alarm
bells shrieked. "Decompression alert. All Station personnel abandon Levels
4 through 6!"
Galactic's
bow swung ponderously away from the Station's vast disks. The great starship
loomed huge in Admiral Hoi's simulscreen. Paralyzed, I could only watch,
desperate for a reprieve from the laws of physics.
"Captain
Seafort, Edgar Tolliver reporting. They—I mean, we have the Lunapolis laser
cannons. Simovich is—"
MStation's
corridor hatches to shut in thirty seconds/"
"Come
on, Arlene!"
Galactic
filled the screen.
"Please
please p\ease please." HoVs voice v*as a dull monotone.
"Please."
Full
emergency power to the thrusters, Arlene. Burn mem out if there's need. Turn.
The bow is clear. The blast of fire from the wounded stern will swing her,
sooner or—
Galactic
struck.
In
desperate, terrible slow motion, she scraped along the unyielding mass of the
Station, opening jagged rents in her starboard side beginning a hundred meters
from her bow. As her inertia dragged her past the Station the gash spread aft,
into the ship's Level 1 disk. Into Level 2.1 groaned. Level 3.
"Earthport
Level 5, sections three through six decompressed! Relief personnel report to
emergency stations!"
A great
gout of flame spewed from Galactic's forward hold. I clasped shut my helmet,
automatically ran my hands down my suit seals.
"What
have we done?" Hoi's voice was tormented. "Seafort, what have we
done?"
The
great starship scraped clear, momentum still rushing her onward. In a
slow-motion spin, she drifted slowly past the Station's holocam, into the dark
night.
"First
Officer Reyins aboard UNS New Orleans. We're heavily damaged and decompressed
at Earthport bay six. I'm trapped on the bridge, can anyone help?"
1 was
on my feet, bearing my own weight and that of the heavy thrustersuit. How I'd
gotten there I had no idea. Sweat poured off my frame.
"Now
hear mis." Hoi's voice was hoarse. "I return Earth-port Station and
all its facilities to Admiralty and to Secretary-General Seafort's government.
Cease all resistance."
Grasping
my canes I lurched to the hatch.
"Seafort."
The Admiral's eyes were anguished. "You were right. I surrender." His
right hand offered a ragged salute. His left raised the pistol to his temple.
Steaming
blood splattered my suit, the side of my helmet I staggered through the hatch.
Walking
with canes wasn't so bad, if one ignored the
white-hot
lightning, the vicious stab, the blunt fork all
slowly
sawing me in half.
"Mr.
Seafort, are you all—"
"Out
of my way!" I swung past the startled Midshipman Speke. If I locked my
knees just so, I could swing past the upright position, launch into the new
step without pause. And each one took me closer to the shuttle bays.
Twenty
meters. Fifteen.
"UNS
Galactic to all vessels and Earthport Station, Mayday. " Arlene's voice
was calm. "Request immediate assistance from all boats to evacuate
passengers and crew." Galactic had four launches. Each could hold
thirty-six. And two gigs. Eight each.
"Sir,
let me get the chair—"
"Damn
the chair to hell." I'd never use it again. First I'd
die.
Ten meters.
Beyond
the shuttle bay lock, the bay's giant outer hatches were open to the night. I
caught a glimpse of Earth, huge and splendid against a black velvet cloth. I
stabbed the panel, lurched into the lock.
Midshipman
Speke, unsuited, could only watch. "Where
are you
going?"
'To my
ship!" The launch bay hatch slid shut. In moments that lasted eons, the
lock cycled.
Safe in
their pressure suits, half a dozen service personnel stared from the open bay
hatch as the blazing liner sailed
past.
Two
hours of air in my tanks. Legs stiffened, I leaned against a bulkhead, stowed
my canes. We were in vacuum, at near Terran gees. That meant I'd need nearly
full power, until I was free of the Station's gravitrons.
I keyed
my thrusters, launched myself.
"Galactic,
we are mining vessel Anaconda III moored at Earthport. We're sending our
launch. Stand by."
I'd
miscalculated; I was too low. I keyed more lift, but I
was
late. As I sailed out the hatch my foot caught a sailor's helmet I wondered if
I shattered it
The
problem wasn't in my overtaking Galactic, she'd made a mighty effort to brake
her momentum. The problem was matching velocities, as she slowly rotated.
"Galactic
advising we've lost most of our thrusters. Will attempt to stabilize
spin—"
Her
Level 2 launch bay was open. Suited figures milled about the bay. Braking, I
drifted into the bay, waiting for the kick of the gravitrons to pull me down.
Nothing.
Cursing, I reversed my lifters, touched the propulsion. Not too hard; my legs
couldn't stand much of a jar.
"All
passengers, don your suits. This is no drill Chief, can you stabilize the
gravitrons?"
Passengers
would be nearly helpless in zero gee. An officer—I couldn't recognize the face
behind the fogged helmet—had one arm wrapped around the shuttle's hatch
stanchion. With his free hand he swung one flailing passenger after another
into the hatch.
I keyed
my thrusters, floated toward the airlock that separated the shuttle bay from
the Level 2 corridor. As I ducked inside, the lock hatch slid closed Leaning
against the bulkhead to support myself, I waited impatiently for the lock to
cycle. Finally the inner hatch opened. A horde of suited figures swarmed in
from the corridor. They knocked me to the deck. Men and women clawed for
handholds. Someone trod on my arm, pinning me. I prayed my helmet wouldn't
crack.
The
corridor hatch slid closed; the lock cycled. The frantic mob tumbled out into
the launch bay, leaving me dazed, but breathing. My suit was unpunctured. I
slapped closed the hatch, pulled my stunner from its pouch. Once again I
cycled.
A dozen
figures launched themselves at the lock, flailing at anything in sight
"All
passengers should now be suited. We're in imminent danger of decompression. If
you need help—"
A
stunner would work through a suit, if pressed hard to the torso. Apparently the
milling joeys knew that, even in their panic, and managed to avoid me. One
frantic woman, however, clawed past me with desperate haste. "You can't go
through—"
"Out
of the way!" Her elbow caught my helmet, snapped back my head. For a
moment I thought my neck was broken. I jabbed her with the stunner. She went
limp. I pushed her from the lock.
She'd
been unsuited.
"You
there, break open the next suit rack!" Derek Carr, stunner in hand, held
back a frenzied throng. A sailor rumbled at the panel.
"I've
got it. Stand away." Tad Anselm's hair and uniform were awry, as if he'd
been hi a fight. I gripped his arm. "Get suited." "Aye aye, sir.
As soon as—** "You, before the rest." "Aye aye, sir." He
opened the rack, grabbed a full-size
suit
This
section of the corridor was aired. Regs absolutely prohibited use of
thrustersuits in an aired environment. I thought of fumbling with my canes.
Bloody hell. I glanced behind to make sure no one would be caught in my
exhaust, lifted toward the next section, and the ladder.
The
corridor hatch was sealed siait. Midshipman Anthony Pyle stood guard. "You
can't—oh, it's you, Captain." A clumsy salute, to his helmet. "Vacuum
on the other side, sir. I can't open for you, else this section will
decompress."
"Get
me to the bridge."
"A
few minutes ago the west ladder was still open. I don't know." His eyes
were troubled. "We're losing sections, sir. The heat melts—"
I was
already gone. I fired my thrusters at full power, skimming over the heads of
milling passengers and crew.
The
west ladder was four sections away. None of the intervening hatches were shut.
I sailed through, tilted myself to soar up the stairs.
"Slow
down!" Panting, Derek pulled himself from one handhold to the next. His
blue uniform was plastered to his wiry frame.
I
snarled, "I told you to get suited."
"You
told Anselm. Where are you off to?"
"Is
Arlene all right?"
"Issuing
orders from the bridge, a few moments ago."
I
grabbed his wrist, let my thrusters push us along. "Mikhaeir
"On
the first lifeboat, with the children. Crying but unhurt. I checked his suit
tanks myself."
"Thank
you."
"He's
one scared joey. I'm going to kill whoever fired on us."
"That
ass Simovich, down hi Lunapolis."
"Chief
Engineer, water's gone on Level 5 and I need it NOW!" Arlene's tone was
grim. "The fire's out of control. I can't put it out by decompressing
sections where passengers—"
Derek
said simply, "I'll call challenge." Dueling was legal, though frowned
upon. Though, while Admiral Simovich held an active commission, he couldn't
be... I thrust down the thought. It wasn't time for reprisals.
"Path!"
P.T. launched himself from a handhold. "Mom's on the bridge. She won't
leave. Galactic'& breaking up."
I
snagged him, drew him close. "Get yourself suited!"
"The
problem is our oxygen stores and hydrazine propel-lant. The hold's on fire, and
so is launch bay one. The internal bulkheads aren't as strong as the hull,
so—"
"PUT
ON A PRESSURE SUIT!" I shook him like a puppy.
**—they
collapse, and the fire spreads. We can't de-air
until—"
"Where's
a suit rack?" I peered. Derek said, "Just past the corridor hatch.
Back in a moment" He swung along the handholds with an agility that belied
his years.
P.T.'s
fingers picked at his tunic. "Path, only vacuum will quench the fire, and
vacuum will kill passengers. Mom's got the engine room joeys working with hoses
but—" Derek swam back, a suit over his arm. Again, I shook him. "Son,
put on your suit!" "When Mom does, but she won't listen. Path, we're
losing the ship. She won't let me on the bridge to—"
Derek
raised an eyebrow. I nodded. He touched Philip's ribs with the tip of his
stunner. Philip's back arched. His eyes rolled up and he went slack.
Together,
Derek and I manhandled him into the suit. I checked and rechecked the seals,
made sure the tanks were full. I gestured to the rack. "Now you, old
friend."
That
was the last one." He shrugged. "There's more below. Let's get him to
a lifeboat** "How many are launched?"
"Two
I know of. Probably three by now." Out of four. Thank Lord God Galactic
foundered near Earthport, and not in the vast emptiness of interstellar space.
Groundsiders sometimes asked why starships carried so few launches to serve as
lifeboats. The answer was obvious: the ship itsetf was our lifeboat If she
failed, what mercy was in off-loading passengers and crew to ill-equipped
launches, light-years from rescue?
Between
us, we guided Philip's limp form down the lad* der, in the direction of the
launch bay,
"Purser
Doom, call the bridge! AH purser's staff to Level 5, section eight. We've
almost two hundred passengers trapped without suits in section nine."
Ariene's voice was hoarse. "Empty the section seven and eight racks and
stand
by. I'm
sending the master-at-arms to blow the hatch to nine."
Two
suited sailors stopped us. "Fire in section seven, sir, just beyond the
bay!"
"The
corridor hatch?"
"Holding."
"The
lifeboat?"
"Launched,
sir, but I hear there's another docking." Earth-port would send any boat
it had, regardless of hostilities.
Clasping
a handhold, Derek grunted as he pulled on the leg of P.T.'s suit. "I'm not
sorry,"
"What?"
That I
came. I want you to know that.**
"I
am." It sounded too gruff, "If any harm comes to you, what of the
Hope Nation Government?"
He
snorted. "They'll manage. My grandson's been praying I'll step aside. He
needs a bit of seasoning, but... here, I've got him." He steered Philip
toward the bay airlock. "When we were boys, you wouldn't let me follow you
to Challenger. All these years I've wondered what would have become of us.
You've given me a chance to retrieve my youth, and ..."
"Yes?"
"I'm
grateful. Haul him mrough the lock, 1*11 suit up."
Fewer
passengers obstructed our path than when I'd arrived. Letting my thrustcrs do
the work, I wrapped an arm around Philip's limp form, maneuvered toward the
launch bay lock,
"Master-at-armst
have you reached Level 5?" Arlene would be beside herself, pacing the
bridge, piecing together scattered reports of disaster.
The
airlock hatch was closed^ hammered on the panel. The hatch slid open. I hauled
P,T. inside. A wide-eyed passenger grappled her way in, hauling another figure
behind, A middle-aged man, heaving for breath within his helmet His face was
purple.
The
lock cycled. I snapped, "He's hyperventilating. Turn down his mix."
"Radwin,
you hear him? Turn it down!"
The
outer hatch opened.
The
launch bay was empty, its hatch gaping. Scores of suited passengers milled
about.
"Oh,
God! Oh, Christ!" The woman's voice was shrill.
I
growled, "Don't blaspheme." It was automatic.
From
the Level 2 corridor we'd left a hollow boom. The vibration coursed through my
boots, jarred my spine.
I said,
"There are lifepods—" They, too, were gone from their rack. "You
don't need a boat"
"Are
you glitched? We can't stay here, the ship is—"
"Launch
yourselves. Key your emergency beacon. Let the Station find you,"
"Easy
for you to say, in a thrustersuit If they don't,, .** She shuddered. They would
drift helpless. It was every sailor's nightmare.
"They'll
find you. Every vessel in orbit will be looking."
"I
can't!" She dragged her companion to me hatch. "Try another lock.
There's got to be a boat—"
"This
is my son, and I'm sending him." I keyed Philip's emergency transmitter,
pressed my helmet to his, in what would have to pass for an embrace. "Go
with God." I looked to the others, "If you stay together..."
"No!"
She fled into the hatch.
"How?"
An older man, whose limbs trembled.
"Use
your utility ropes. Grasp each other, Here!" I hauled another figure
close. "Tie yourselves together, like this. With all your beacons sounding
as one, there's no way they'll miss you!" First a few, then more and more
frightened passengers joined our subdued conga line. I keyed my suit mike.
"A ship's officer to bay two, flank!" If they had someone to lead
them... The last of my passengers clutched at me as 1 tied him to
the
others. His eyes were wild. "Pray for us sinners in the hour of our—"
I made
sure Philip's own rope was secure. "Step out. You'll float, just as you're
doing here. It's the same zero gee. Hurry, joeys are behind you."
The
lock cycled. A figure stumbled through. "Midshipman Aaron report—Jesus,
what are you doing?"
'Two
demerits. Mind your tongue. Tie yourself to the last of them. Be quick."
"Aye
aye, sir." He brushed soot from his helmet. "There's fire in the
corridor."
"Out
the hatch! Aaron, transmit every five minutes on emergency channels. Tell them
you have—count helmets, and tell them. They'll come for you, Keep your joeys
calm."
"Aye
aye, sir. What about you?"
"I
have a thnistersuit. Kick off hard. Try to pull them clear of the ship."
None of their suits were powered. If a gout of flame reached out... Lord God
forbid.
Please,
Sir. Philip is innocent of my sins. Send me to my punishment, if it saves my
son. Please. Please.
Please.
I pushed Philip's limp form after the others.
My
child, my brave boy, drifted unconscious into ever' lasting night. Would he be
cold? Perhaps he'd need a blanket, as I'd given my son Nate, when I pushed his
casket out of... I swallowed.
"Seafort,
this is Cisno Valera, You've been impeached by the Senate, Give me one good
reason I shouldn V take the Ro* tunda,"
I keyed
my mike. "Hang yourself, Valera. Save us the titsuble,"
I
turned to the corridor airlock. The hatch was open. I bent forward, tapped my
thmsters, sailed into the lock, 1 jabbed the panel. The lock cycled, The inner
corridor hatch refused to budge. Cursing, I reached for the spanner in its
emergency panel. Making sure the airlock hatch behind me was properly sealed, I
manually spun open the hatch.
In the
corridor, die overhead panels were scorched and blackened. A fine mist pervaded
the air. Sprinklers don't work as intended in zero gee.
"Anyone
here?" No bodies, thank heaven. I jetted toward the far hatch, sealed now.
In the
suiting room, something moved. I slowed, reversed
course.
Amid
the empty racks Derek sat on a bench, half-suited, an annoyed look on his face.
His lips were stained with
blood.
I
pulled myself down, hooked a leg around the bench.
"What—"
"1
think my ribs are stove." His voice was steady enough. The blast hurled me
into the bulkhead. I was bending..." He tried to shrug, grimaced in pain.
I
finished clasping his suit, "Where's your helmet?"
Derek
pointed to a shattered visor. "Some joey borrowed it Left his."
"The
bastard."
"1
wasn't in condition to object" His tone was wry.
I
looked about; the racks were empty, "There's more suits in the next
section. Or a passenger cabin; someone will have left one behind. Come."
"I'll
wait"
"No."
Gently, I put my arms around him. "I prefer your company," A gout of
flame had blackened the corridor before the hatch slammed shut Lord God knew
what lay beyond the section hatch. Vacuum, or perhaps the fires of Hell.
Keying
my suit, I lifted him from the bench. Even in zero gee, the stress made him wince.
The
first cabin we came to was locked. So was the second. Desperate, I pulled free
my laser and blasted the lock* Inside, a swirl of belongings, but no suit
I tried
a third, nearer to section seven, "There's got to
. -''I
backed into the corridor. From the corridor hatch, a crackling.
Oh,
Lord God.
I dived
into the cabin.
Arlene
was tense in the speakers. "Level 2 section seven hatch failing! Passenger
alert, section inflames!"
A gout
of fire roiled past the open hatch. A blast of heat. I slapped the cabin hatch
panel, knowing it was no use; I'd lasered the lock. Derek clung weakly to my
neck.
"Hang
on, it's—" Abruptly, the flames receded. "There, you see?*'
"That
was close." Derek's face was gray with pain.
From
the far end of the corridor, a popping sound.
I
blanched.
A rush
of air.
"NO!"
Perhaps
it was the defective launch bay hatch. Perhaps it was the hatch to five.
The
cabin erupted in a cyclone.
Derek's
arm tightened around my neck.
Our
eyes met. In mine, horror. In his, resignation.
Section
six decompressed.
Derek's
eyes never left mine. His bloody lips formed the words, "Not sorry."
1 launched myself at the section five hatch.
The
hatch was sealed. I slammed the panel. My spine contorted in agony, 1 slammed
it again.
Nothing.
Derek
stiffened, kicked. His hand scrabbled at my shoulder. Teeth clenched, I forced
myself to watch the unbearable.
Hie
friend in my arms grew still. But not before I saw what eyes were not meant to
witness.
/ hate
You, Lord God.
From
the depths of my twisted soul, I
You,
W
earily, I launched myself back to the launch bay airlock.
It was
the launch bay hatch. The blast of fire had over-stressed the damaged seal.
Setting down my precious burden I wrenched the useless hatch out of the way.
The bay
was empty, deserted. Emergency lights pulsed in
the
gloom. Breath rasping in my helmet, I bent forward, launched
myself
at the gaping outer hatch.
From
without, the ship seemed solid and indestructible, until one perused her more
closely. A great rent in the cargo hold still spewed fire. Most of Levels 2
through 4 were ablaze, except those sections in vacuum.
I
checked my tanks. Half an hour. It would suffice.
The
hatch to the Level 1 launch bay was sealed. With a puff of propellent I drifted
to the service hatch, jabbed at the lock panel. I cycled through.
Pandemonium.
"Purser
Doom, report! Damn it, has Doom abandoned ship? Anyone see him?" Arlene
drew breath. "Now hear this. Any sailors left on Level 3 or 4, report to
the suiting party on Level 5. The fire's nearing section nine, we've got to get
the remaining passengers suited and out—"
At
least a hundred figures clung to the packed launch. Some joeys were suited,
some not
Half
were sailors.
I set
my suit mike to shipwide frequency. "Passengers only, on the launch!"
I drew my stunner and, after an instant's reflection, my laser. "All crew
off!"
Not a
soul moved. If anything, they struggled more desperately to gain access.
There
was no pilot
"You!
Name and rankr
"Prong
yourself, ya frazzin—**
I
lunged with my stunner, caught him in the torso. He folded. Someone lunged at
my arm; I twisted the barrel, stunned my attacker insensate. "Get those
two off! You, name and rank!"
He was
barely more than a child "Armando Flores, sir! Seaman first class."
His eyes were wide.
"Off
the launch. Give me a hand!"
For a
moment he clung to his stanchion. Then, reluctantly, he kicked free.
Someone
edged behind me. I whirled, menacing him with the stunner. Her. A woman,
unsuited, mouth working in panic.
"Get
away, joeygirl!"
She
launched a vicious kick, forgetting she was in zero gee. Windmilling, she
drifted off the deck, helpless.
"All
sailors off!" I brandished my laser. "I'll count to three. One...
two..."
Half a
dozen sailors lunged to the hatch. Twice as many clung to seats, to stanchions,
to the hull. I'd have to do it
Gritting
my teeth, I fired.
A blast
of flame and sparks. A figure jerked from a seat, floated twitching.
Screams.
Curses.
Every
sailor in the launch kicked toward the hatch. In a moment there were none but
passengers aboard.
Ten in
suits, thirty without. And 1 had seventeen unsuited sailors. "You, with
suits! Take them off. You'll be safe in the launch."
No one
moved.
"I'll
count to three. One... two ..."
"Wait!"
A woman tore at her clamps. "You bastard!**
"Be
quick?"
In
minutes ten sailors outside the launch eagerly donned suits. I motioned to the
unsuited passengers. "Crowd into the launch. It's only for a few minutes;
the air will last. Now, you sailors without suits."
The
launch was packed beyond capacity.
"Anyone
rated to pilot?"
A hand
shot up, went down again. Armando Flores. Hesitantly, "Lieutenant Garrow
is signing me off next week, sir."
It
would do. "Get in; you'll drive. Take her out gently, do you hear? Drift
free of the ship. The Station will guide you." I slapped shut the hatch.
"Chief
McAndrews to bridge; the fire's almost on us. We're retreating to the emergency
engine room airlock. Power may not hold—"
"What
about us?" A suited sailor.
"Tie
yourselves together. Launch yourselves toward the Station. Use your emergency
beacons."
"Evacuate
Level 5, sections three and four! Midshipman Pyle, report by caller!"
Arlene sounded haggard.
"What
if they don't work? What if—"
"If
you prefer, stay here and die." I kicked off to the corridor airlock.
The
Level 1 corridor was deserted. Emergency lights glowed gray in cold dim
silence. No sign of fire.
"Lieutenant
Mains, is there a frazzing lifeboat in bay three or not? These damned
sensors—"
My suit
readout flashed yellow; I was low on thrust. Best
save
what I had. I hauled out my canes, propelled myself from bulkhead to deck to
bulkhead.
As I
neared the section hatch, it slid open. Hardly believing my fortune, I drifted
through. It slammed shut behind.
I was
in section four, wherein lay the bridge.
I
propelled myself toward the corridor bend Ahead, a mud vibrated the bulkheads.
Another. Light flickered rhythmically.
"Station,
we need every launch you can muster at Level 5 launch bay. Attention rescue
vehicles: we've two hundred passengers and no—"
I swam
onward.
A hatch
slid open. Inside, Arlene hung on to a console, awkward in her cumbersome suit
"McAndrews, are you there? Don't abandon the power grid!" She keyed
her caller. "Bay three!" She stabbed at the console. "Someone in
the comm room, respond to bridge!"
The
hatch slammed shut
I
gaped. The bridge was a fortress; nothing short of a demolition team could
force it
Abruptly
the hatch opened.
"Arlene!"
Through my suit radio, our words went ship-wide; I didn't care.
"Watch
the hatch, Nicky, the damn puter's glitched. Must be the heat Fire in section
four below."
"Get
out! Abandon ship!"
"Passengers
are trapped on five!"
The
hatch slammed shut immediately opened again.
"You
can't help them!"
A slim
figure kicked along the handholds. Cadet Anselm. "Sir, what should I do
next the—"
The
hatch shut
I asked
him, "Any lifepods left?"
"I
don't think so."
The
hatch slid open. Arlene said quickly, "If McAndrews feeds us power, we
have the lift, I have corridor hatches. The
goddamn
purser jumped ship; I have middies and sailors helping joeys into suits. We
rounded up a hundred fifty suits, there's still—"
"Hon,
we're out of time!"
"I
can save them, Nicky. Five minutes." She slammed the console.
"Goddamn readouts!" She keyed her caller. "Burns, round up more
suits for Level 5, section eight! Pyle, how many? ... Sixteen, Bums!"
Alarms
flashed. No doubt they screamed as well, but in vacuum we couldn't hear them.
Arlene's thick-gloved fingers jabbed the console. The warning lights faded.
Seconds later they flashed anew. The hatch slammed closed.
The
deck under my feet lurched.
The
hatch opened. "Arlene, right now!"
"Damn.
All right." She thumbed the caller. "Away all boats! Middies, leave
off your search and—**
The
lights dimmed. Controlled by the crazed puter, the alloy-reinforced hatch began
to drum open and shut with breathtaking speed.
"How
the hell do I get out?" If the hatch caught her, it would crush her to
pulp.
"Block
it! A console chair!"
Or your
cane, you idiot.
I
lunged across the corridor.
The
hatch shut, its frenzied flapping stilled.
I
waited in a frenzy, to jam my cane into the opening.
WHOOMP!
The
deck buckled. I shot into the air. Into the vacuum.
Anselm
hauled me down.
The
hatch slammed open.
Arlene's
suit smoldered. Deck plates caromed off the bulkhead. A spinning fragment of
plate slashed a jagged tear in her suit. The console burst into flame,
instantly quenched. Tongues of fire licked greedily through the broken deck.
A last
puff of air, from her suit.
The
hatch slammed shut, and open.
Arlene
whipped off her useless helmet, shot me a look of longing and regret so fierce
my heart turned to ash.
The
hatch slammed closed.
I
lunged toward the bridge.
A hand
hauled me back.
"Don't
touch me! I'm Captain!"
"No,
sir. She is."
A
staggering blast. The bulkhead bulged The hatch burst from its panel. The
bridge was a white river of fire.
"Abandon
ship, sir! NOW!" Someone tugged at my suit "NOW!"
I broke
free. "Arlene!"
"No!
You can't!" Somehow, Anselm barred my way.
I
yanked free my laser, aimed at his head. "MOVE!"
The boy
recoiled. I brushed past, dived to the volcano of the bridge.
From
behind, arms enveloped me, knocked the laser from my grasp.
Fighting,
crying, screaming, I was dragged backward along the shattered corridor.
In my
helmet, a cacophony of terror.
"Abandoning
Galactic's engine room, send assistance! We're five holding on to a pod—"
"Help
me! Help me! Someone help—"
"—Level
5 lock and it won't open! Can anyone hear! I'm trapped in—"
"—on
fire and we 're burning, Christ we 're burning up the heat hurts—"
Level
2.1 had no recollection of the journey.
The
ladder to three.
"Wait!
Let me get Derekr
No
response, just the relentless pull on my suit Dully, I struggled to break free.
My legs wouldn't cooperate.
"Two
minutes'air left. Is my beacon working? I can see the Station. The readout's
flashing red, why don't you ans—"
"—Machinist's
Mate Vinson in the gig. How do I steer this thing? Where the fuck are we?"
"The
Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in—"
An
airlock. Its hatch wouldn't respond.
A
corridor drifted past. My breath rasped in my foggy helmet.
"Anaconda'5
launch unloading at the Station. We'll be back as soon as—"
Galactic'*
lights flickered.
A
corridor hatch, hanging crazily from one socket. The cadet pulled us through.
"Almost there, sir."
"Christ
I'm lost. I'm spinning, everything's a blur!"
"Let
me go! I'll break you. I'll cashier you. I'll—"
"Mama!"
"Almost
there." His voice was soothing.
A
gaping hole in the hull. Anselm disappeared.
Free at
last, I tried desperately to orient myself. Which way to the bridge?
"Yea,
though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death—"
Where
were my canes?
"No
more air and I—"
The
relentless cadet kicked his way from a passenger cabin, with a blanket. He
draped it over the ragged gash in the hull. "Careful, sir. Don't touch
where it's sharp."
Derek,
old friend. Arlene, my love. I won't leave you. I promise. I swea—
"Now,
sir!" He pushed me to the hole. Into the night. I flailed in unexpected
terror, but his fingers were firm on my wrist. In a moment he slipped through
after.
"—for
thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff—''
"Galactic,
Earthport Control. Say again your condition. We are sending every
possible—"
"Sir."
We
drifted from the stricken ship.
"Sir!"
My
voice came from far, far away. "What is it, Ansehn?"
"Key
your beacon. Have you any propellant?"
"Some."
"I
know you're in shock. Can you aim your thmsters?"
"—goodness
and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the
house—"
"Yes."
My voice was weary.
"—of
the Lord—" Very softly, "forever."
My tank
gauge blinked a warning. I sighed with regret Ten minutes: enough to reach
Earthport Even oblivion was denied me.
I
gathered the boy to my chest. He wrapped himself around me, hugging tight, his
helmet in the crook of my shoulder. I sighted on the distant Station, keyed my
rear thruster.
Silent,
lost in our separate miseries, we watched the stricken ship diminish. From time
to time a detonation wracked her bowels; a flare of light, that slowly faded.
She was
so great an undertaking, so proud a vessel. So many hopes had ridden in her. So
many lives.
Abruptly
her lights flickered, and vanished.
Together,
as one, Anselm and I sailed toward the Station.
A
tremendous explosion, aft of the disks. Tongues of fire licked the night Galactic'*
hull crumpled. Spewing a gout of propellant the aft third of the great ship
broke away. It spiraled toward the blue sea of Earth,
Absently,
1 stroked the boy's shoulder. "It's all right lad." One of us wept I
wasn't sure which.
Reluctantly,
wearily, I turned my eyes to Earthport Station.
Epilogue
An
honor to meet you, sir."
I
acknowledged what was meant as a compliment. "So you'll be off to
Constantine. What's your specialty?"
"Crop
engineering. Now that Earth's doubled its agricultural imports..." A quick
smile, at her husband. "Fallen is an A.I. psych. He'll be monitoring
puters for psychoses.** She shifted. "Well, I don't want to take up your
time."
"A
pleasure to meet you." It was almost true. I grasped my canes, worked my
way to my feet
In
Lunapolis, Dr. Ghenili's eyes had been reproachful "Severe damage. I tried
to warn you."
"What's
my prognosis?" I'd endured two lengthy operations, to repair the trauma
I'd caused. A month, flat on my back in a rigid body cast. A ceiling I'd come
to know all too well
"You're
incredibly fortunate. You'll walk, after a fashion."
"With
canes?"
"Atfirst.
Perhaps, with enough therapy..." He left the hope unstated. "But the
matter of gravity..."
"The
gravitron chamber hurt like hell."
"And
that was only ten minutes. You'll never standJuU
Terran
gees again. Oh, perhaps lying on your back, loaded with painkillers,
but..."
"I
understand."
"It's
feasible, in an emergency. But once you went groundside, you'd have to remain,
in unending misery. Your ganglia can't tolerate another liftoff."
I'd be
permanently grounded. "How much gravity can I
take?"
"When
the inflammation's subsided, I'd guess half a Tfcr-ran gee. Perhaps a touch
more. Let the pain be your guide."
"It
hurts even now. Will it ever stop?" Not that I deserved
relief.
"The
truth? I'm not sure. I think the pain will lessen considerably. If it isn't
tolerable, we increase the pain blockers. There's a good chance that in
time..."
Did the
man ever finish a sentence?
"I'm
sorry, Mr. Seafort. You brought it on yourself."
"Aye,
I did that." By my thrashing about, aboard Galactic. By my wiUful
disregard of His wilL
"AriBmYuffef."
"You're
Israelir
"Palestinian."
His voice dripped with contempt
"You're
seventeen. Where are your parents?"
"My
father's at prayer."
"You've
had schoolingT*
"Some,
It's not mandatory."
"I'm
aware. Have a pleasant voyage.**
With a
disdainful toss of his head, the boy stalked off. Nineteen months to Constantine.
Perhaps he'd learn—or be taught—manners.
An
Admiralty Board of Inquiry had convened to assign blame far the loss of
Galactic, with eleven hundred passengers and crew. As Anselm had reminded me in
extremis, Arlene, not I, had been acting as Captain when the ship foundered.
Perhaps
it was that Admiralty now consisted only of those members who'd flown to
Farside in response to my summons. Or perhaps there was blame enough, without
besmirching the name of my wife. Arlene had merely followed orders in returning
her ship to Earthport. She'd fired no weapons, even when fired upon. Admiral
Hoi was held responsible, and particularly Admiral Simovich.
For
eleven days Boris Simovich had held out in the depths of his innermost warrens,
while U.NA.F. troops and Navy cadets had waited patiently outside. Only after
the food ran out did he emerge, shrunken and fearful, to submit to arrest.
His
trial lasted three days. No political arguments were allowed, or heard. It was
not at my behest that he was sentenced to hang at Lunapolis, where he'd been
captured and tried. Hanging at one-sixth gee is a drawn-out affair. I was told
he kicked and struggled for many minutes. A prisoner of Dr. Ghenili 's clinic,
I did not attend. But General Donner, newly appointed Secretary of the
U.N.A.F., did.
I
turned to the attentive middy, "Why did you put in for Olympiad, Mr.
Speke?"
"Same
reason as Galactic" Perhaps he realized how curt he sounded; abruptly his
tone became more congenial. "They're sister ships, sir, It's the same
cruise,**
"But
Captain Stanger chose you personally. Without him...**
"It
will be different, yes, sir." He blushed. "1 know you've thought ill
of me. That day we met,.."
I
nodded. His impatience had irritated even Alexi.
"And
my speech can be, ah, extravagant." When Jared had tricked him out of his
weapon, he'd responded with a torrent of foul language.
"If
you were a cadet.,,"
"Yes,
sir. Mr. Stanger warned me about my temper. Once"—he blushed
furiously—"he had me caned."
"On
the other hand," I said, "you performed admirably when we retook
Galactic. Well, no doubt the first middy will keep an eye on you." Speke
wouldn't be senior, mis cruise. The middies had been chosen with great care.
From my
clinic bed I'd worked overtime signing decrees, to embed our enviro policies
before relinquishing martial powers.
Starting
in three years, time enough to enter into con-tracts with the colonies, Earth
would forgo virtually all harvest of its seas. It was hoped that a five-year
fishing moratorium would allow the myriads of ocean dwellers to reestablish
themselves. Virtually the entire resources of the Navy were consigned to ship
home substitute protein. Much of it was soy-based, though on Pampas and Rolleo,
beef was a prime export.
The
sudden increase in demand would be a heavy economic strain; we'd be a far
poorer system when we were done. Perhaps power would shift permanently to the
colonies. I doubted it. Earth's resources were simply too stupendous, her
resilience a matter of legend.
At the
same time, we would end once and for all the indiscriminate pouring of waste
into the seas. Numerous new sewage facilities were planned. Their construction
would be given highest priority, along with air scrubbers for every manufactory
on Earth, without exception.
A
colossal undertaking? Of course. Expensive? That was hardly the word. The trick
was to spread the contracts among so many industries, so many powerful
corporations, that every one of them would avidly resist any lessening of our
commitment. Branstead had taught me well, and Robbie Boland.
Jerence
Branstead emerged from imprisonment shaken but unharmed. The rebel U.N.A.F.
unit mat seized him had twice threatened him with summary execution.
Cisno
Valera had disappeared entirely. He'd last been seen on the outskirts of the
U.N. compound, where he'd been encamped with his troops ever since my
broadcast. Some thought that as his U.N.A.F. units melted away he'd gone
underground to foment new rebellion, others that he'd been shot by some joey
loyal to the government
It
mattered little; he'd become a joke, a figure of derision, for his vacillation.
The streets surrounding the U.N. compound had once been held by the Easters and
the Fdears, two of the more formidable transpop tribes. Perhaps he'd wandered
too far from camp, and met a rough justice. In some quarters I was still known
as the trannie SecGen.
Even
while the remains of Galactic spun slowly into the wisps of Earth's outer
atmosphere, the finishing touches were being put on Olympiad, her much vaunted
sister ship. There'd been some hasty restructuring of cargo bays, to further
separate—and reinforce—storage of hydrazine and bottled oxy.
A
horrid waste of resources, Olympiad, but she was so far along in construction it
was far less expensive to complete her than to abandon her. Scandalously
opulent, even more so than Galactic, she held thirty-four hundred passengers, a
crew of almost nine hundred. A city, more than a ship.
Galactic's
seven hundred surviving passengers, and much of her crew, had been transferred
to the gleaming new star-ship.
It was
too late to eliminate separate dining halls and the more spacious cabins, but
my intervention caused swift upgrading of the lower dining hall, to match the
decor of the upper. And cabins were assigned by the number of occupants, not by
social ranking. Those who didn't like it could wait a few years for another
ship.
By the
time I emerged from Ghenili's clinic, trying not to wobble while walking on one
cane, Olympiad's loading was well under way.
Not
many passengers refused boarding. In part, that was because Galactic'* tragic
loss wasn't deemed a design flaw. All Naval ships had laser shields, but none
were designed to stand up to the massive laser cannon of Earthport or
Lu-napolis, the searing weapons that ravaged the streets of Lower New York in
the Transpop Rebellion.
Built
to break up asteroids thrown at Earth by the fish long years past, they no
longer served legitimate need. I took advantage of my military and moral
authority to dismantle them entirely. Marauding fish were less of a danger than
was some General or Admiral facing too great a temptation. Earth must never
again be held hostage.
There
is a mood in public affairs that by some mystery becomes pervasive. In the case
of the rebellion, it was to put the matter behind us as quickly and quietly as
possible. Reluctantly, I acquiesced. The terrorists, including all of the Eco
Action League, were hanged. So were five former mem" bers of Admiralty. In
most other cases I allowed clemency.
However,
/ was determined not to Ue or evade the truth, especially as to my own
responsibility. At the repeated entreaties of my chief of staff, I declined
media demands for interviews. Jerence Branstead knew I wouldn't speak so
lightly of politicians' misfeasance as public opinion would wish.
Nonetheless,
those stories that leaked out tended to glorify my role. They ignored my
stupidity in sacrificing the head of Hope Nation's Government, to no purpose.
And my callous use of cadets, mere children, to bear the brunt of our fighting.
The fact that many of them emerged as heroes was no excuse; there were those
who died before their time,
The
media knew nothing of how I brutally rejected Danil
Bevin's
plea for life, when I might have surrendered to Stanger and perhaps talked him
out of his treason. Or how I hesitated that fatal moment that killed Arlene.
Had I thought to thrust my cane in the hatch a second earlier...
In all
this, the Patriarchs were ominously silent.
To my
infinite surprise, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Rome visited Lunapolis, and
heard my confession according to his ancient Rite. After, he blessed me, and
failed to rebuke my overt renunciation of Lord God. Bishop Saythor, he said,
was impetuous, and my admonishment that my coin belonged to Caesar bore truth.
The Church was no more than man's attempt to understand Lord God, he told me,
and I shouldn't lay her failings at His doorstep. He kissed my dampened cheeks
before he left.
Nonetheless,
the Patriarchs must have found my presence as uncomfortable as I did theirs.
Saythor had a number of choices: to renounce me, to ignore me, or to embrace my
views. None were palatable; perhaps that was why they urged Admiralty to offer
me a remarkable alternative to my Lunapolis retirement.
"You
wanted to see me, sir?"
"Come
in."
At my
insistence, Charlie Wttrek wore an officer's blues, though Admiralty had placed
him permanently on the disabled list.
He
peered myopically across the bridge, ''Ah,** He faced me, saluted stiffly.
They
hadn't done a bad job with nil features* though it was disconcerting to see him
with brown eyes instead of blue.
**As
you were," He relaxed; I regarded him gravely. "I'm so glad you came
aloft." I'd written two long letters, finally prevailing on him to join
Olympiad's cruise.
"Thank
you, sir," His face relaxed into a familiar smile.
"You've
settled in your cabin?"
"Yes,
sir." A pause. "It's a bit awkward. Not," he added hurriedly,
"that I'm complaining."
"What's
the problem?"
"It's
just... I dress like a middy, but don't sleep in the wardroom. I call you
'sir,' as I should, but have no duties because I'm not on the active list and
never will be. It's... strange. I'm sure I'll get used to it" A bright
smile. He inn his fingers through his hair, tugged the knot on bis tie.
"Yes,
I've been thinking about that" I leaned back. "I doubt mis will work
out"
A
momentary alarm. "Sir?"
"Admiralty,
in its wisdom, has declared you disabled You couldn't possibly return to active
duty."
"No,
sir."
"Unless
you were so ordered."
He
frowned. "I don't... are you toying with me?"
"Why,
yes, I am." I savored the moment "Charlie, when we set sail, I am the
absolute authority aboard ship."
"Of
course."
"As
soon as we cast off, I'll recall you to active duty. I want you in the
wardroom."
"Sir,
1 can't stand a watch. I don't see well enough to monitor the instru—"
"We
have eleven middies; I don't need watchstanders. But some of mem are quite young;
you'll be a good influence. And I need you elsewhere,"
He
blinked. "Why?"
"Look
at mis behemom." I waved past the bulkhead, to me entirety of me ship.
"We've three thousand passengers. Charlie. Three thousand! And more crew
than—Olympiad is more city than ship, and I have to keep it running smoothly.
From day one mere' 11 be complaints, demands, delegations, disputes..."
His
lips twitched. "Like the Rotunda."
"Only
worse, because mere's no escape. Til need help managing." I'd thought it
makework, when I'd dreamed up
his
assignment but now I wasn't so sure. "You know my style, and how I
operate; you're the ideal candidate. Help me." My voice grew soft
"Please."
"I'd
give anything to... but sir, are you doing this out of pity?"
"No."
I realized it was true. "I need officers I trust absolutely."
A
subtle tension seeped out of his frame. "Aye aye, sir, I'll report to the
first middy. Who is he?"
"You,
Charlie." I'd arranged it most carefully. The omer middies already knew,
and were under orders to say nothing until I'd told Witrek.
A look
of wonder, mat dissolved into joy. "You mean it? Really?"
"Yes."
"Lord
God bless you." He couldn't contain himself, did a little dance on the
bridge decking. "Nothing could thank you enough!"
"Keep
an eye on Speke, by the way. He needs steadying."
"Aye
aye, sir," He shook his head, still dazed. After a moment he dabbed at his
eyes. "Look!" He laughed aloud. "Look what I can do!"
Why dtd
/ accept Olympiad.7
/don't
know.
It was
time I ceased to be SecGen, After martial law, the populace needed someone
more... well, mom clement. From a brooding retirement I would dominate the
Senates deliberations, the Assembly's every vote, whether I wanted to or not,
(f / stayed in home system, I couldn't avoid the media forever, and sooner or
later I'd be ashed a question that forced me to reveal my opinion of the
cowards who pop* ulated our government.
And
where could I go? Certainly not home*
I had
no home. My Washington compound had been bombed out of existence. Cardiff was a
fetid nightman, I
fervently
hoped Philip would have his wish, to end his days there. Besides, 1 couldn t go
home to Earth again. I'd live in torment, unable to lift off to gentler climes.
Arlene
had said it first, though it was the stuff of my dreams. The only contented
days of my life had been on the bridge of a starship. Derek understood; that's
what had drawn him to his death. Of the same mind, Arlene had resumed her
uniform without a moment's hesitation, served happily, and sacrificed herself
to save hundreds.
Even
now, 1 dreamed of my lost youth. The physical exuberance, the unmitigated joy
of being. The joy of a life unspoiled. But Arlene was dead, forever lost. My
life would not, could not, ever hold jay. I felt empty within, scoured clean of
passions. It brought a curious freedom,
1
couldn Y return to my youth, but some small part, I would reclaim.
"Sir,
capture latches ready to disengage." Pilot Van Peer. To my astonishment,
he'd survived the destruction of Academy's launch by the simple expedient of
jettisoning himself the instant Stanger's first laser struck. He'd clung, in
his thrustersuit to Galactic'* hull until he judged it safe to set out for the
Station. He Uked chess, I recalled, as did I. Perhaps, during the long silent
watches
"Very
well." I keyed the caller, "Departure Control, Olympiad ready for
breakaway."
"Proceed,
Olympiad. Vector one five nine from Station. Godspeed"
"Pilot,
take her out, and set course for Fusion safety."
My
resignation as Secretary-General was transmitted to the Assembly, and would be
effective the moment Olympiad Fused.
"Sir,
Mr. and Mrs. Catharta and their children." Midshipman Rafael Delgado,
sixteen, dapper and assured. Brilliant in nav and math, his file said. We'd
see.
"Very
well." I swiveled.
"A
pleasure to meet you, Captain." Hector Catharta held out a callused hand.
I took
it We chatted awhile, about his work as hydronicist and agrobiologist His wife
was a lovely woman, a poet Their four children were unformed as yet, and
squinny. I was glad when they left the bridge, though I couldn't fault their
manners.
"Pa!"
Mikhael Tamarov burst through the hatch, Cadet Anselm a step behind. 'The
lounge has Arcvid!"
"Wonderful."
My tone was sour. I ignored his breach of protocol; I'd opened the bridge to
passengers this day. As for the cadet, he was off duty, and I would allow him
almost anything. Except alcohol.
"It
has a dual consoler MikhaeTs shut was damp from exertion. A stylish new tunic,
one of several I'd selected for him, in the expensive Earthport shopping
concourse. I smiled; we'd have ample time to encourage grooming. He exulted,
"Tad plays too!"
"Very
well. An hour of Arcvid for every hour of calisthenics,**
A
squawk. That's not fair!"
"Such
is life." If I didn't impose such a rule, he'd soon become a glaze-eyed,
finger-clenched Arcvid addict
"You
can't do that!" His eyes blazed,
I said
nothing. After a time he fidgeted "I take it back. Pa,"
Still,
I waited.
He
wilted. "Sir, please. I apologize. An hour for an hour."
I
tousled his hair, gave him a casual hug despite the undisguised curiosity of
the lieutenant and Pilot on watch.
Mikhael
had mounted an impressive campaign. An alarming number of costly vidcalls to
Moira, in Kiev with her daughter. Tearful pleas, to me. Promises of good
behavior. At last he'd secured our mutual consent
I was,
frankly, glad to have him share my huge and luxurious cabin. He was a promise
unkept a debt unpaid, and, to
boot,
he was becoming a rather likable joey. A touch too casual about bathing, too
quick with his temper, but... each day, Alexi's likeness was more pronounced.
Several evenings, I'd made him sit and memorize a verse of the Old Testament,
while I sipped at steaming tea. I wasn't sure why. Did we all become our
fathers, in the end?
In any
event, Mikhael didn't seem to mind. And his constant questions to Tad Anselm
about a cadet's life ... Well, if it came to that, ship's stores included a set
of grays.
And
Anselm could use a companion, in the months I'd make him wait before I restored
him to middy. Whatever Derek had said to him, in the intimacy of their private
talk, his soul seemed refreshed. He went about his duties with renewed
determination, yet, despite all, I caught an occasional wistful look, a silent
plea for acknowledgment and praise that for once in my life I wasn't loath to
give.
Perhaps
I had mellowed.
Perhaps
age had made me softheaded.
The
next passenger entered, escorted as always by a middy. "Hello, sir."
"Edgar?"
I shot up from my seat.
"Interesting
place." He looked about, made a show of examining the consoles. 'They call
it a bridge?"
"Tolliver,
what in hell—what in the dev—" I gave up. "What are you doing
here?"
"You
ruined one vacation." His tone was acerbic. "I'm not entitled to
another?"
"Vacation?
Nineteen months of—"
"I'm
retired. My children are grown. What else should I—"
"Nonsense!
Goofjuice!"
"All
right, I knew you were aboard. I admit I rather enjoyed your brief summons to
duty, at Lunapolis. And I thought in a quiet watch we could talk over old
times."
"Passengers
aren't allowed to visit the bridge."
"Odd,
then, that I'm standing on it And surely even Captain Seafort is occasionally
off watch."
I
glowered. "Who put you up to mis?"
"Up
to?" His eyes widened in innocent protest "You suppose I'm not
capable of—"
"Edgar..."
A warning in my tone.
"I
gather I'm supposed to quake. I remind you I'm a civilian. Only Naval officers
quiver in their boots."
I
rolled my eyes. His goading knew no bounds; it would be a hellish voyage.
"Who did this to me? Donner? Jeff Thorner*
"For
you. Both of them."
"You
gave up a normal life to—"
"Why,
Captain, isn't your company tantamount to normal lifer
I
glared.
Imperturbable,
he met my gaze.
"Only
as lieutenant" I finally growled, quelling a contentment I would never
admit "A ship has but one Captain."
"Hmm.
You assume I'll jump to reenlist Now, if you add my seniority as Captain to my
years as lieutenant—"
"You'll
be senior lieutenant. I know, I can read length of service pins." I'd make
it up to Lieutenant Gather, one way or another.
"At
least I'd have charge of the barrel. I'll be able to shield the middies from
the worst of your tantrums."
"Tolliver!"
"Yes,
sir?" He raised his eyebrows. After a moment "I suppose, if you
insist, you'd better swear me in."
A few
moments later he left, accompanying Lieutenant Gather to orchestrate a hasty
rearrangement of Level 1 cabins. I sat bemused, while we thrust toward Fusion
safety.
All was
well belowdecks; I'd insisted on Chief McAn-drews in the engine room, and no
other. Perhaps, somewhere, I'd find a tobaccoing apparatus such as his father
had ignited in my distant past and teach him the odd habit
The
ship's many passengers would, from time to time, have to abide an abrupt
reduction of gravity, as I made my inspections. And those who preferred full
Terran gees could dine on Level 5. I'd had the forward gravitron set to one-third
Terran. At my orders, Chief McAndrews would raise it an imperceptible fraction
each day. Nineteen months to Constantine, nineteen months back. Eleven hundred
fifty days; I had time for patience. Perhaps, just perhaps, Dr. Ghenili's
prognosis might be thwarted.
So. I
stirred in my luxurious leather chair.
Does
life come full circle? No, not really. But once in a while, if one is truly
blessed...
My
smile faded. I was hardly that Lord, I meant every word I said about hating
You. I still do. You took Arlene and Derek, in a manner most contemptible.
Don't tell me You couldn't have prevented it; I know better. I can't forgive
that, and never will.
I know,
having renounced You and Your Church, I'm not supposed to talk to You. Do I
even believe in You? Perhaps not. I promised I'd never speak to You again. I
certainly don't expect You to answer. I don't even expect You to listen; I know
I'm utterly damned. But as You no doubt know, I'm too old to change my ways.
So, I find myself talking to You, now and then, with wary, reluctant respect.
It's all right You don't have to listen. I'll just talk.
"We're
approaching Fusion safety, sir.** The Pilot
"Kristen,
Fusion coordinates for Constantine, please."
"Aye
aye, sir." The puter's response was prompt. She flashed the figures onto
the simulscreen.
"Mr.
Van Peer? You too, Rafael." Obediently, the Pilot and the duty midshipman
ran their duplicate calculations.
"Figures
agree, sir, to six decimals."
"Very
well. Feed them to the puter."
"Coordinates
received and understood, Captain." Kris-ten's tone was cheerful.
"Thank
you." I thumbed the caller. "Engine Room, prepare to Fuse."
"Prepare
to Fuse, aye aye."
I gazed
with longing at Earth, receding in the screens.
Philip
had visited, three days before launch.
He was
more somber now, but with a hint of imdimin-ished pain in his eyes. I'd
embraced him, kissed him gently on both cheeks. "I'm so sorry," I
told him for the tenth time. "I could have saved her."
"No.
You forget I attended every session of the Board of Inquiry. I have their
report on download."
"If
I'd only—"
"Path,
Mom wasn't yours to save. She died doing what she thought right"
"And
Jared—"
"Don't
Please!" He waved off my unspoken thought "I'm not over that. I
can't—" A deep breath. "Sorry. I get emotional. But don't imagine for
a minute I think it was your fault** He took a few breaths for calm. "You
got die package?"
"It's
in cold storage." A most carefully packed, sealed container from the
Fairfield Fertility Clinic, containing what remained of Arlene on this earth.
Dr. Janson would soon perform the implant into the young, healthy, extremely
well paid woman in a cabin on Level 5, who'd contracted to be host mother.
I'd
made a vow, one I'd keep. We would make a child, Arlene and 1.1 hadn't yet
chosen the sex, but I suspected we'd have a girl. She'd carry on for her
mother. And in some small foolish way, I might atone. When she matured I might
be past seventy, but so what? I examined my newly unwrin-kled face in the
mirror. Damned if enzyme treatments didn't actually work. And for the first
time in years, my knee didn't ache.
Still,
hon, I'll miss you so. Now and forever:
"We're
ready for Fuse, sir."
"In
a moment"
In my
cabin, Philip had smiled. "I have another gift. Open it when I've gone
groundside." He handed me a small box, rather heavy.
"Thank
you, son. You're sure you won't come along?"
*Tve
work to do." His eyes turned serious. "Andrus Bevin has been distracted,
since Danil..." He made a face. "And with your new legislation, we're
overwhelmed. You have no idea. Path, what started out as your edict... enviro
restoration's well and truly caught public imagination. New ideas keep popping
up... Bernili has a plan for reseeding the ozone, one that will actually work.
And the solar shield—even ski-lift stocks are rising! You did it, Path. You
remade the Earth."
"You'll
do it. I only ordered it"
His
tone was sad. 'The man who saved the oceans, the air, the fields..." He
stood, thrust hands in pockets, and said with anguish, "I'll show you
holos, but it won't be the same. Why can't you be allowed to see it?"
"I
don't deserve to."
"Thou
shall see the land before thee; but thou shah not go thither unto the land
which I give the children of Israel," His eyes glistened.
"Oh,
son, I'm not Moses,"
"Aren't
you?" He pulled me into a fierce hug. "Good-bye, Path, Come home
safely."
Now,
three days later, on the bridge, I unwrapped Philip's present
"Oh,
no." I turned anguished eyes to Midshipman Speke.
"Not
this."
"What,
sir?"
Father's
old, worn Bible. Hie one from which I'd learned my lessons, at our rickety
Cardiff table. In the corner, the teapot hissed gently. Father watched with
dour approval.
Where
on Earth did P.T. find it? I'd given it, with all Father's things, to Annie,
when I left her in Cardiff. She'd
since
died. Philip must have traced Eddie Boss, her husband, and retrieved it from
him. I wondered if Eddie had known it would go to me.
I
slipped open the Book, glanced at a passage.
Whom
shall I fear? The Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?
Hah.
We'll have to talk about that You and I.
In the
meantime, mere was my ship. My boy Mikhael, and Tad. My daughter to be. My long
exile, in a city in space.
And
duty.
"Engine
Room, are you ready?*
"Engine
Room standing by."
A last,
long, wistful look at Earth. I slid my finger down the screen.
"Fuse!"