HER MAID GAVE A LAST TUG to Xian Xi-Qing's robes of faux silk and rolled away. Stiffly seated on a throne of pale poured marble, the ancient Controller stared down the long hall and tried to resemble a goddess without feeling much like one.
Once she had actually felt unshakable, but no longer. The Crux conspiracy had frightened her badly. Fanatics, invading the past to prevent the Time of Troubles, the disaster that created the present world. Who could have believed it?
Her tiny hands clutched each other, stilling a tremor. Ah, thought Xian, what good is all this stem-cell replacement therapy if you lose your courage, if you age inside? I never used to feel I needed protectors. But now...have I found the man to protect me, protect our world?
Goldleafed doors at the end of the hall swung open and a tall, heavy man of Japanese ancestry strode forward, each step covering a precise meter of polished floor. Two Darksiders slouched behind him, spreading a stink that nine censers burning faux ambergris could not cover.
Yamashita halted, bowed. His face was like a brick, his head like sandpaper. The huge, ill-smelling, heavily armed beasts looked over his back, ready to destroy him or anybody else if Xian gave the kill signal. But she said only, "Rise, Honored Chief of Security."
With his friend the Worldsaver, this man had destroyed Crux. He was the logical candidate for the job, and yet....His predecessor had betrayed her. She'd attended the faithless Kathmann's shosho, his interrogation, though she hated the stinks and screaming of the White Chamber. With the needles in his spine he'd confessed everything -- the Chief of Security a traitor!
She'd heard him with her own ears, and though she would never admit it to anyone, at that moment fear had become her companion.
"General, extraordinary measures of security are needed," she began her instructions to Yamashita. "We trust the Space Service to deal with unfriendly aliens, they're quite insignificant. But here at home, ah here at home...."
Her hands were trembling again. "Suppose someone builds another wormholer?" she almost pleaded. "We know now that it's possible; we know that terrorists exist ready to destroy themselves if they can destroy this world of ours! Can we ever be secure again?"
Yamashita needed his marmolitz, his marble face. He'd expected a mere formal welcome to his new job. And here the Controller was demanding an answer to an unanswerable question.
Luckily, he was quick-witted.
"Honored Controller," he intoned, "I have given this problem much thought."
He paused -- gave it the only thought he'd ever given it -- then continued, "There is only one way. A new wormholer must be built under the control of the Security Forces. Reliable people must be trained to journey through time."
He paused, astonished at his own chutzpah, then thundered, "The Security Forces must police time itself! Only in this way can our world be secure!"
Xian thought: What a marvelous bureaucrat. Imagine, working all this out ahead of time, then demanding such an immense responsibility, knowing what will happen to him if he fails!
She looked with new confidence into his face, seemingly impervious to heat, cold and pity. She nodded, extending a hand so thin the fingers looked like tiny sticks from a bird's nest. A magpie's nest, each finger stacked with glinting rings of dull gold and green jade.
"Your proposal is approved. Succeed, General, and three hundred inhabited worlds will praise you. Fail --"
She let the word hang in midair, as Kathmann had hung toward the end of his interrogation, when the skills of Colonel Yost and the technicians of the White Chamber had made his treason clear. Then she said abruptly, "Honored Chief of Security, we permit you to go."
In his big new office, Yamashita grinned boyishly. He yawned, broke wind, sprawled back in a tall chair of black duroplast. His thick fingers drummed on the desktop, a massive slab of Martian petrified wood, a hundred million years old if it was a day.
He was thinking: What the fuck. I deserve all this.
Thirty years it had taken him to get here. Thirty years since those far-off days in the Security Forces Academy when he revealed his ambition to his friend, Cadet Steffens Aleksandr.
"You watch me, Stef. One day I'll be the fucking Chief of Security."
"Why would you want to be?"
A typical Stef answer. The man who had become a cop without believing the basic truths of cophood.
"Because, asshole, that's where the power is."
"And the problems. And the danger of losing your head."
Yamashita smiled, stretched. Stef had gone on to become the Worldsaver, more or less by accident. By plunging into the past to destroy Crux he had also become dead. But his pal Yama was alive in the present, and just where he wanted to be.
"Secretary!" he barked. Obediently, a large mashina whose memory was stocked with the world's most elaborate encryption software rose from a well in the floor.
"Yes, Honored General?"
"Get me Yost."
An instant later a prickle of laser beams created the illusion of a long, sad-looking, intellectual face hovering in the mashina's shadowbox.
"I'm officially in. So here's a few things for you to get started on. First, find the White Chamber new quarters. It's too small and the electrical system is antiquated. Also, change its name. It's got a lousy reputation. Call it, um, Special Investigations."
"You aren't abolishing shosho?" asked Yost, alarmed.
"Great Tao, no." Neither man could imagine running a proper criminal justice system without physical methods.
"Oh, and another thing. Xian wants us to build a new wormholer. Kathmann executed the guys who built the last one, so you'll have to assemble a new team. We'll need young, strong, expendable people to do the time traveling. It's no game for old farts."
"Chief, this is all damned expensive. Where's the money to come from?"
"Don't worry, I know where a lot of bodies are buried. I'll squeeze the Senate. But for a start, we can economize. The budget of the Penal Moons is way out of line. Release all offenders who've served ten years or more if they're fully rehabilitated. Execute those who aren't."
"Will do."
No order bothered Yost. He'd survived Kathmann and intended to survive Yamashita as well.
"In case anybody complains about any of my policies," Yamashita finished, "you're the designated motherfucker, understand? I set people free while you cut off heads. I abolish the White Chamber while you run Special Investigations. When you follow me into this office, you can mistreat your deputy the way I intend to mistreat you. Understood?"
"Yes, Honored General," sighed Yost, and his image evaporated.
Yamashita reared back in his chair and the boyish grin returned to his usually stolid face. He was going to enjoy his new job. A little mosh --power in Alspeke, the only language that all humans understood -- was a pain in the butt. Ask poor old Yost.
But a lot was heaven.
On the nearby campus of the University of the Universe, a knot of students gathered in the warm Siberian sun around a kiosk plastered with job announcements.
"Great Tao," said one. "Timesurfing. How's that for a job?"
"Tailbuster," said another. "Beta test scores, alfa fitness, SECRET/BEHEADER clearance!"
Most of them drifted on. One who didn't was a tall, solid-looking young man who took a notebook from his beltpouch and read the announcement's boxcode into it.
"Gonna apply, Maks?" asked another.
"Why not? Nothing to lose."
Hastings Maks would not have dreamed of admitting how excited he felt. He loved history, loved finding out how things really happened. To explore the actual past sounded too good to be true.
And to do it under the leadership of General Yamashita--the security chief who'd gained everyone's love by closing the White Chamber and opening the doors of the prisons. Why, hardly a day went by without the news programs showing some tearful ex-convict returning home to his weeping family. Nobody in Ulanor the Worldcity was more popular than this strong man, who kept society in order through justice, not cruelty!
Next morning Maks woke up and faced reality. He was not exceptional in any way, mental or physical, and the likelihood that he could get into an elite program was small.
But he was bold enough to defy the odds. Sheer grit would have to substitute for special talents. He called the boxcode from his parents' mashina and registered for the first test -- a grueling athletic trial called the Fizikal.
For the next month he was up before dawn every morning, working out in the campus gymnasium with the young men and women who would be his competitors. He deliberately chose the best of them to test himself against -- for wrestling, a strong young Mongol with the torso of a lion; for running, a woman offworlder named Zo Lian.
Lian was definitely odd. Though human, she'd been genetically adjusted to her homeworld, Beta Charonis; her bones looked almost delicate but her muscles were long, tireless strings. Her chest -- intended for use in air with a lower oxygen content than Earth -- was a barrel; her breasts small, bound for exercise by an elastic bandage.
Lian told Maks that the only thing remarkable about her planet, aside from its rich lodes of metals and natural radioactives, was the fact that the ill-smelling, ferocious creatures called Darksiders came from there.
"When I arrived on Earth and saw a platoon of them guarding the Palace of Justice with whips and guns," she said wryly, "I felt at home right away."
Ambitious, she'd worked her way to Earth on a freighter, won a stipend to study at the University, then applied for the surfer program. Maks found her too strange to be desirable, but he admired her guts and her prowess as an effortless, tireless runner. If he could keep up with Lian, he could keep up with anybody.
After working out in the gym, they put on thin coveralls with cooling units and set out, running through the outskirts of the city and up the dry Butaeliyn Hills in the metallic dust of summer. Invariably, Lian led the way, Maks puffing behind with the heels of her ragged old running shoes flickering like little mirages ahead of him.
One day after a ten or twelve-click run they stopped to rest and drink at a cold spring. In the shade of bent pines Maks sank down, all his muscles quivering, his lungs burning as he gasped for air. Even Lian had found the long uphill run tough; she propped her skinny arms against her knees, lungs working like bellows.
When her racing pulse had quieted she walked unsteadily to the spring and knelt down. Maks joined her and they drank side by side like two weary animals. Then sat quietly on the ground and looked at each other.
Lian had a laconic, flat way of talking.
"We'll both get into the program," she predicted. "I'll make the first cut and you'll make the second or third."
"You know, you've got just the slightest touch of arrogance, Lian."
She plucked a stalk of dun grass and thoughtfully picked her long white teeth. At such moments she looked subtly unhuman, all her proportions just a trifle off the earthside norm. The fact that she had amber eyes heightened the near-alien effect.
"Not really. I'm smarter and quicker than you are, that's just a fact. But I've watched you almost kill yourself working out, Maks. You'll make it on guts alone."
That was the most encouraging thing he'd heard yet. As his breathing quieted, scenes from the past formed in his mind. He saw China's First Emperor dip his writing brush to order the building of the Great Wall. He saw a troop of Crusaders ride down a dusty road in Anatolia, chain mail chinking like a pocketful of half-khan pieces. He saw naked whores dancing in the Red Room of the White House while one of the Decadent Presidents looked on, grinning and munching toasted pork rinds.
The past, the incomparable past, made up of so many presents forever lost, now regained.
Suddenly his fatigue was gone. Like a boy he took out his excitement by jumping Lian. For a few seconds they rolled over and over in the dust like playful puppies. This was one place where Maks's weight mattered; he found himself astride her, pressing her whip-thin arms to the dust. Her strange eyes stared up at him, bright as burning amber.
Embarrassed, he jumped up, helped her to her feet. They brushed each other off.
"Timesurfing -- it's the only life, isn't it?" he asked.
"Yes," said Lian, "there is no other," and began to trot down the mountain, leading the way as usual.
THAT SAME SUMMER -- not that Earth's seasons meant anything in the tunnels of the penal moon Calisto -- Convict Ya7326 prepared for the end of his term of imprisonment.
Sentenced for life, he now had a chance to be set free after only twenty years. Like all the men and women who dwelt in the tunnels, he was bald and muscular. Convicts were routinely depilated for hygienic reasons, and work at the Near Space Refueling Depot, for which the penal colony supplied labor, made you either strong or dead.
Inwardly Ya7326 was exceptionally intelligent, though his prison jobs as cleanup man, oiler, and subtechnician at the liquid nitrogen storage tanks had given him little chance to prove it.
As the "day" approached (days were marked by fluctuations in the automatic lighting) he seemed absolutely unaware of the coming change. Until a robot guard called him to the Out-Processing Unit, he continued to make up his bunk, work in the tunnels, eat every mouthful of food allowed him -- in short, to obey each and every one of the 92 Rules of Conduct he'd learned on arrival.
After receiving a total radial scan to make sure he wouldn't carry diseases back to civilization, he reported to the psychiatrist's office. He sat down on a battered duroplast bench and waited without fidgeting. Memories passed through his mind.
His arrest and his time in the White Chamber would be with him as long as he lived. He'd run an identity-counterfeiting ring connected with the mafya and had spent a long time with the needles in his spinal marrow, screaming and twisting, his back arching until he felt it must break.
Then General Kathmann had entered the room -- a short man with a fat neck, pointed head, and glinting plastic eyes. He sounded impatient as he said to the techs, "You've got all the juice out of this kukrach. Don't waste any more time on him."
Kukrach meant cockroach.
So he survived the White Chamber and became Ya7326 and traveled to Calisto in a freighter's hold. There things got rough again. He still remembered the blinding headache that followed insertion of his control chip and the little explosive sphere of synthetic neurotoxin. Then later in his cell, trying despite the headache to memorize the Rules of Conduct.
Breaking any of the first 12 (lack of neatness in the cell, failure of personal hygiene, etc.) brought punishment by hunger. Breaking the next 21 meant hunger plus sensory deprivation for longer or shorter periods. Breaking any of the other 59 rules brought death, which was so easy: a program running on the mainframe in Central Control reviewed the guard reports, assigned or deleted quality points, sent a signal, and a prisoner keeled over, untouched by human hands.
At first Ya7326 couldn't believe the prison authorities were serious, that there could be so many reasons to die. Then they began culling the new prisoners. First to go were the double-Y-chromosome types. He was glad of that -- scary guys, good riddance. Then the incurably disruptive. A woman convict who threw washwater on a robot guard in an attempt to short it out went down like a poleaxed cow within a meter of him and the guard dragged her away by the ankles.
Yet Ya7326 had survived the culling, too. Why? he often asked himself. Was he reserved for some great destiny? Life in the tunnels gave him endless time to think about such profound and basic questions.
A light blinked above the door and Ya7326 got up, neither hurrying nor lagging even though he knew that for him, the critical moment was at hand. If he was judged rehabilitated, he would go free. If the psychiatrist penetrated his most profound thoughts, he would die like that woman, even now, even after twenty years.
"Well," the psychiatrist greeted him, "I see we have another candidate for release. Why should we set you free, Ya7326?"
"I feel that I'm ready to regain my freedom. Suffering has purified my inner self. I've had no demerits at all for the past five years."
The psychiatrist -- a black box -- checked his record and confirmed his claims.
"That is very satisfactory, Ya7326. Your cell sensors report no rulebreaking activities of any kind, and that is also good. Have you reflected on the errors that brought you to Calisto?"
"Yes," he said, "I often think about those errors."
Now they were getting to the heart of the matter. For the interview Ya7326 sat in a senzit, a chair that monitored a variety of physical reactions. The senzit was part of the psychiatrist -- its lap, maybe.
"Meditation on one's past mistakes is a prerequisite to sound action in the future," it intoned. "Do you agree?"
Ya7326 had often noticed that black boxes were even more tiresomely moralistic than humans.
"Emphatically, Doctor, I do agree."
"Do you blame yourself or others for your crime of counterfeiting identities?"
"I blame no one but myself."
"Very good," said the box, after checking his reactions. "Now, this is a question you will need to answer with perfect honesty. Your answer will be noted purely for medical purposes and will not be reported to the prison authorities."
Despite everything, he felt increased tension that he knew the box was reading from the senzit. Of course it was lying -- everything would be reported.
"Do you desire revenge against the authorities who subjected you to shosho and later sent you to prison?"
Ya7326 took a few seconds to compose himself.
"Let me be precise," he said. "I admit to hating General Kathmann, who ordered my shosho. But he's dead. I have no desire whatever to become the kind of contemptible criminal I used to be. I don't want to harm any human individual."
A few silent seconds passed. Then the psychiatrist said, "Your involuntary reactions and brainwave patterns, Ya7326, indicate that you have spoken the truth as you see it. It can therefore be said that your rehabilitation is complete."
Next day Ya7326 was sitting on the examining table in the dispensary, waiting for the surgeon to appear. A locked instrument cabinet stood in front of him; he looked at his reflection in the mirror duroplast and smiled, thinking of the psych interview. How stupid black boxes were!
No, he had no desire to commit again the acts he'd been convicted of. If he had to commit them in furtherance of his plan, he would. But he had no desire to.
Yes, he blamed himself for being such a fool as to imperil his godlike self for the trivial rewards of petty crime. No, he wanted no revenge on any human individual
He turned as the door opened. The surgeon bustled in, washed his hands at a little sink on the wall, and prepared for business.
"Had your mediscan?"
"Yes, sir."
"Psych interview?"
"Yes, sir."
"Ready to go, then?"
"Definitely, sir."
"Lie on your stomach. This will hurt a little, even with the local anesthetic -- the back of the neck has so many nerves in it."
"I don't mind pain," said Ya 7326, truthfully.
During imprisonment his pain threshold had risen so high that he could hold his fingers in an open flame, smelling the flesh burn but feeling hardly a sting. It was part of the transition he'd undergone in the tunnels, an aspect of his entry into a new kind of being.
"Cut away," he said, and closed his eyes.
The first day of the Fizikal was devoted to gymnasium sports. Maks got along well enough, and Lian did splendidly until the candidates paired off for wrestling.
Then the powerful young Mongol who used to wrestle (and invariably throw) Maks sprang into the circle with Lian, seized her around her slender waist and with one violent contraction of the arms broke her back.
Maks, horrified, rode with Lian to the hospital. A few centuries in the past so serious a spinal cord injury would have meant permanent paralysis. Now it meant an operation to replace the damaged section with nerve fibers from genetically altered embryo monkeys. Then it meant lying in bed for months, waiting for the regeneration to be complete, followed by more months of therapy to restore full function.
Maks paid as many visits to Lian as he could. But the first year of the timesurfer program -- he'd barely made the third cut after screwing up a math exam -- was especially arduous, designed to weed out anybody who couldn't take it. When Maks did visit the hospital he felt guilty to be talking about his progress.
"Now they're taping me with archaic English," he said. "It's pretty easy; after all, I know the modern dialect. At least I get a chance to sleep while the mashina's on. Aside from that it's run, run, run all the time."
Lian sighed. As of today she'd been looking at the ceiling of the hospital room for seventy-three days. She knew every crack in the paint by heart.
"It'll take me forever to get back in shape," she muttered.
"I'll help you."
"You're a dear friend, Maks, but you won't have time."
That was true. The harder truth was that Lian's injury made things easier for Maks. One competitor less -- and a tough one, at that.
"It's just something that can't be helped," Lian added.
Lying in bed she looked pale and yellowish. Her face had gone wan and ascetic and her normally thin body was a sack of bones. Maks was sitting in a chair by the bed, sleek with muscles, glowing with health.
"Well, I'll be back as soon as I can," he said. He pressed her hand, and it felt like a fossil.
Maks meant what he said, but in fact he did not go back to the hospital. He was too busy. The place was too depressing. People his age were not supposed to be left broken and helpless. He felt guilty about not going, but not guilty enough to go. Instead, he celebrated his twentieth birthday with his first trip through the wormholer -- just a year to the day alter the Fizikal that had been so disastrous for Lian.
Miniaturization had reduced the device to a cylinder encircled by two rings: the first held the gravitron accelerator, the second massive electromagnets wrapped with coils of superconductors cooled by liquid nitrogen to prevent meltdown when gigawatts of energy were poured in. Behind a shield, techs watched the monitors of the mashina that ran the show.
"Recite the Standing Order!" demanded Makluan, a red-haired tech with an ugly face and an irritating manner.
"'The past is not to be changed in any manner, however slight. No one can tell what effect a change may have upon the present. If I have to choose between changing the past and destroying myself, I must destroy myself.'"
"Let's go then. I don't have all day."
Carrying a small hand control to signal for his return, Maks relaxed and listened to the hum of the metal slide that carried him into the cylinder. He adjusted opaque goggles over his eyes to prevent retinal damage, and felt rather than saw the intense flash of light that marked the Big Bang-like burst of photons created by the sudden torsion of spacetime.
He removed the goggles. He was lying on the floor of an empty room in the academy. He got up and noted the time recorded by the clock on the wall: 1534.6/7/2465. A year had been subtracted. The door of the "receiver room," as they called it, was locked and sealed shut to prevent accidental contacts between now and then. But a square window, said to be mirrored on the outside, gave him his first sight of the living past.
For long minutes he stared clown with some unsayable emotion at the world of a year ago -- then saw something that almost stopped his heart.
Lian, carrying a gym bag, was hurrying toward the Fizikal. Waiting for her, Maks knew, was the Mongol wrestler.
Suddenly Maks found himself beating on the window, trying to attract Lian's attention, trying to cry a warning. But she hastened past, disappeared from Maks's angle of vision. Maks put his face into his hands. More time passed before he could pull himself together sufficiently to press the control and return to his own time.
When Makluan helped him out of the wormholer, he was still pale and shaken. With a superior smile on his ugly face, the tech remarked, "Assholes never learn."
One sandy eyebrow was raised; the tech seemed to be enjoying some joke that he alone understood. Maks suddenly realized that the path to the gym didn't go anywhere near the receiver room.
The "window" hadn't been a window at all; the scene had been a mashina-generated image. In an instant his grief turned to blinding rage.
"You fucking bastard," he gasped. "I ought to kill you."
"If you do," the tech said coolly, "you'll never be a timesurfer. Incidentally, this was a test. You flunked it."
Maks stared at him, his hands clasping and unclasping. Then he slammed out of the room.
For the whole of the ten-day week that followed, Maks waited to hear he'd been plowed in. But nobody said anything; gradually he began to breathe again. Maybe, he thought, you were expected to fail the first time.
Nevertheless, the experience had reminded him of Lian. One evening he looked her up. Since her discharge from the hospital, Lian had been living in a dormitory for offworld students at the University. The room, painted sickish green, was crowded with six folding beds and fragrant with moldy towels.
But Lian was looking better, as if the environment didn't touch her. She smiled, tried to make Maks welcome. She wore shapeless overalls that sagged as if there was no body inside.
"I've started exercising again, but it's tough," she admitted. "I run half a click and get winded. Still, I'm hoping to apply again in the fall."
You'll never make it, thought Maks, somehow forgetting that he had succeeded by grit alone.
"I wish you luck," he said and put on what he hoped was an encouraging smile. He took her hands and squeezed them; if she hadn't looked so...odd, he would have kissed her, out of sheer pity.
Ulanor, the Worldcity, the capital of the human species, the arena where people struggled for boundless wealth and mosh, was blase about visitors, even important ones. Heroes of the alien wars in Far Space returned to find themselves forgotten; offworld senators were ignored.
Perhaps no visitor had ever been as thoroughly overlooked as the former Ya7326. He reached Luna as he'd left it, in a freighter's hold. He dozed in the shuttle port until an empty seat came up and he could be thumbed aboard.
But at least he arrived back in the city of his birth carrying a passport with his convict ID exed out. He was now Vray Dak, the name under which he'd been arrested two decades before.
His first duty was to report to the polizi in the ziggurat Palace of Justice and sign in, giving his current address. Then he spent an hour walking the hard, polished corridors, gazing at carved dragons and snarling lion-dogs and quotations from the Great Unifier of Humankind, Genghis Khan. Such as: "He who breaks my law will vanish like an arrow among reeds."
A recovered arrow, he ventured downstairs, the level of the former White Chamber. Now it held the offices of a small Security Forces agency. When a guard frowned at him, Vray apologized and departed.
He loitered for a time outside the building standing by a trirad stand so that he'd seem to be waiting for a vehicle if anybody challenged him. In fact, nobody did -- he was a casual, slouching figure, a bit overweight as a result of gorging himself on non-prison food. The only remarkable thing about him was his wig cheap and often askew, that gave his head a faintly comic appearance. Some passersby smiled at him, and he smiled back.
Next day he found a legitimate job with the Water and Waste Monopoly, operating an autominer similar to the ones used on Calisto. He worked there patiently until he no longer had to report to the polizi. By then he'd made contact with some other graduates of what the underworld called Kalist'akad, Calisto Academy. With mafya help, he quit his job and entered the city's trade in stolen goods.
He was cool and cunning and seemed to draw on boundless supplies of energy, going sometimes for four or five days without sleep. A year of effort made him fairly prosperous.
With money in his pocket, he adopted new hobbies. He obtained a portable holographer, bought a license and began to appear on streets around Ulanor, taking people's pictures against projected 3D backdrops for a silver half-khan. One of his favorite posts was outside the Palace of Justice.
"So," said a guard who recognized him. "Got a new line?"
"Yes, sir. In business for myself, you see."
"Lemme see your license."
The license checked out. Rather reluctantly -- he would have liked to run the bugger in, on general principles -- the guard returned it to him.
"Quit your job digging sewers?"
"Well, sir, after you've lived underground for twenty years, it's nice to work where you can see the sky."
"Making a living?"
"Scraping by, sir."
"Well...watch your ass."
"Always, sir."
By offering free samples, Vray managed to capture the likeness of a number of civilian employees of the small agency that occupied the former White Chamber. Then he disappeared from the street.
If anyone had been interested, they might have found him at home in an apartment he'd rented in the Clouds and Rain District -- the redlight district, named for a poetic Chinese description of intercourse, the "play of clouds and rain."
He spent much of his time staring at a stolen mashina he'd kept for his own use. He was studying an interactive book called The Glorious Language: Archaic English for Beginners. He read history, everything he could find on the 21st Century, and mythology, memorizing stories of forgotten gods. He was fascinated by a book called America in Decline: The Decadent Presidents, enough so that he and the prosts at the cheap brothels he frequented tried out some of the games the decadent presidents had played.
Vray Dak had become a successful minor criminal, an autodidact and a self-made bore. That was how they knew him in the District; outside it, few people knew him at all.
Lian had astonished Maks by passing the entrance test, including the Fizikal, though just barely -- thirty-six candidates were admitted and her class number was thirty-five. But that was only the beginning.
Slowly she'd made her way forward. At the end of her first year she stood twenty-first in a class that resignations and failures had reduced to twenty-nine. In her second year, Lian cracked the midpoint: twelfth out of twenty-four.
When she came to Maks's graduation, she was almost unrecognizable: a third-year student, confident of her future, marked out from her classmates only by her strange physique and amber eyes. Her class standing was now sixth out of twenty. Maks's final standing had been seventeenth in his own class of nineteen men and women.
"You see," Lian told him at the end of Maks's graduation ceremony, when they embraced amid a crowd of well-wishers.
"If you hadn't been injured," Maks admitted, "my class standing would've been eighteenth."
"That's true, it would have been."
Maks laughed helplessly at this blunt immodesty. But it was hard to be offended by the truth. After three years of training Lian made him think of a steel string on some strange instrument, perfectly tuned, perfectly taut.
She still didn't attract him, but she fascinated him. In spite of everything -- her injury, her offworld birth, her poverty -- he could see now that she was one of fate's darlings, possessing a bit more of every talent than most people could ever have or hope for.
"Lian," he said honestly, "I'm lucky to know you."
"Yes, my dear friend," she answered gravely, "you are."
ON HIS POSTGRADUATION leave Maks took a girlfriend to Antartica for the summer skiing. On his return he reported to the grim step-pyramid of the Palace of Justice and entered, brushing past a fleshy man in a wig to reach the guard station.
Pastplor, the Office for the Exploration of the Past, had been operating for only five years -- the new kid on the bureaucratic block, distrusted by the uniformed thuggi whose idea of policing did not include time travel.
Maks had Pastplor's status forcefully brought home to him when he realized that its offices were on the first level underground, in space formerly occupied by the White Chamber of infamous memory.
Searching for the right room, he walked down soundproofed corridors lined with small tiled cubicles and an occasional larger room. The steel doors were gone and desks had taken the place of metal tables with electrical attachments and blood drains. The narrow punishment cells now imprisoned only brooms and mops, ceilings had been painted sky blue, and there were no Darksiders about.
Yet Maks felt anxious and oppressed. He didn't need this atmosphere for his first day on the job.
Eventually -- after asking twenty or so people and getting nineteen wrong answers -- he found the room where his orientation was to take place. At once he relaxed. It was full of his friends and Maks forgot his first impressions of the place in happy gossip about how everyone had wasted the summer just past.
Then a black box at the front of the classroom beeped them to attention.
"What," it demanded, "are the Authorized Uses of the Past?"
The young surfers took out recorder disks, warmed them between their hands and started taking notes.
"The first," said the box, answering itself, "is to maintain everlasting vigil against criminals like the Crux conspirators.
"The second, newly imposed by the Controller herself, is to reach practical solutions to questions of scientific importance."
Maks now learned that weather stations the size of grains of sand had been sent to a variety of times and locations to build up a reliable picture of temperature variations for the last 100,000 years. These tiny globules stuffed with nanomachines were unlikely to be spotted by baffled stari (the old ones, the people of former ages). They were also cheap to send and recover, and that was important: the biggest item on Pastplor's budget was energy. In time the globules would yield the finest database ever assembled on the world's weather, its past and probable future.
"The final Authorized Use," the atonal voice went on, "is to investigate the origins of the Time of Troubles. This great catastrophe -- the war of 2091, the Two Year Winter, and the Nine Plagues -- created our world; we can hardly learn too much about it. You, young ladies and gentlemans, will find in these endeavors your lifeworks.
"You must, however, be aware of the danger. Last year a surfer was sent -- at the cost of a gigawatt of energy, chargeable to this agency's budget -- to the Imperial Chinese People's Republic in 2041. A defective accent in Archaic Mandarin gave him away and he was arrested as a spy. His control device was taken from him before he could use it to escape, and when we attempted to recover him we got instead an officer of the Imperial People's Liberation Army. Interrogation of this officer revealed that your poor young colleague died while undergoing a torture called 'the points,' which I will not describe as you might find it too distressing.
"Remember that past times may be dangerous," the black box concluded solemnly, and dismissed them for lunch.
Maks followed his friends to an underground cafeteria filled with the clash and rattle of trays and people yelling at each other to be heard above the din.
"What fiendish torture, young ladies and gentlemans, was the captured Chinese officer compelled to undergo?" demanded a class comic, mimicking the blank, flat tones of the black box.
"The points?" asked Maks.
"No. He was forced to eat this soyloaf."
Everybody groaned in sympathy with the victim.
"You're getting beautiful," said the woman with whom Vray Dak had finally settled down. To the polizi she was a registered prost, but that only proved the headquarters supermashini were behind the times.
Getting too old to live by whoring, she'd gone to a school that billed itself as the Academy of Beauty and turned herself into a skilled cosmetician. Now she earned her living from the brothels in a new way, making up the inmates for their evening work. In one of the houses she'd met Vray.
He was rather proud of the fact that he'd lost six kilos lately. Most of the flab he'd added as a free man was now gone; his hairless body was sleek as a fish.
"Yet I have to lose a bit more," he said.
"Why? I like you the way you are."
"I have to get down to about seventy kilos before Great Genghis Day."
"Why?"
"If you don't stop asking questions, I'll kill you."
An odd duck, she thought. He talked about losing weight and killing in exactly the same tone of voice.
She looked at him narrowly. She was seventy, well into middle age, and she hadn't been a beauty even when young. She had never quite understood what he saw in her, a younger man with good connections in the mafya.
"Loki, my love, I won't ask even one more," she promised.
That was the name he preferred to be called. He said it was connected to his religion. He smiled, and she nestled into the crook of his arm.
"Oh, incidentally," he said.
"Yes?"
"I want you to get me some things. A new wig, some contact lenses. And I'll need you to make me up for a job."
Ah, she thought, so that's what he sees in me. But she was a realist; she not only didn't resent his making use of her, she was glad of it. It was another bond between them.
"Whatever you want, my dear," she said, and soon -- his body reacting as it usually did to submissive words and acts -- she had her reward.
Maks's first year as a surfer turned out to be frustrating, then infuriating. Instead of surfing, he found himself turning into a glorified technician and button-pusher.
People he knew went to the past, but not Maks. His own classmates returned to London, New York, Moscow. Then people from the next class started going. Even Lian: she had graduated number one at the academy and from her first day at Pastplor everyone treated her with respect. With a stab of envy, Maks realized that she was regarded by Colonel Yost as the agency's great hope for the future.
When Lian was picked to visit New York in 2025, Maks decided to complain. He asked for an appointment with Yost and was refused. Too angry to be scared, he went to the top: asked for an appointment with General Yamashita himself. Somewhat to his surprise, he was granted five minutes and for the first time entered the Security Forces' command suite, sixty meters down in the most secure part of the Palace of Justice.
The first thing he noticed was the ubiquity of Darksiders. Smelling atrociously, the huge beasts, with their four arms, thick-furred pelts, mandrill faces and red-amber eyes, seemed to stand at every corner of the long, zigzag marble corridor leading to Yamashita's den. Every one of them clanked in cartridge belts and fingered five-kilo impact weapons that looked like toys in their massive fists.
Sometimes in Pastplor Maks almost forgot that he was part of the Security Forces; down here, mosh in its nakedest form was on display everywhere.
A black box ordered him to stand at attention just outside the General's office, where he remained immobile, his nose itching devilishly, for twenty-seven minutes by a large wall clock. Then, just as abruptly, the box ordered him into the sanctum.
The big office was clean as a Zen temple, hard as a tomb. In the center reposed a wide empty desk like a frozen lake, a huge mashina, and Yamashita himself, a bemedaled monolith in a tall black chair.
"What the fuck do you want?"
That didn't sound promising. Maks had not been invited to stand at ease, so he stared at a far-off blank wall and spoke as much like a black box as he could.
"Sir, I've been a timesurfer for two years and have yet to be sent into the past. If I'm an asset, I deserve assignment like the others. If I'm not, I want to know it so I can resign and look for a meaningful job elsewhere."
"You wasted my time with this?"
"General, you can settle the rest of my life in two seconds. Nobody else can."
Considering that the room was cool, Maks was astonished to find himself sweating in so many different places. One large cold bead traveled down the furrow of his spine; he would have given anything to stop its ticklish progress.
Yamashita barked at his mashina, "Record of this T/S1 you gave the appointment to." Glancing at the record, he said, "Yost doesn't trust you because you fucked up on a test."
"Sir, I didn't know it was a test."
"Those are the only tests that matter. Do you want to stay with the program?"
More than I want to live, Maks almost said. But no, the general didn't deal in exaggerations.
"Very much, Sir."
"You'll be tested again. Now -- out. I got work to do."
Recovering his equanimity in a toilet outside the command suite, Maks thought with narrowed eyes of Makluan, the red-haired tech who'd tricked him. The man now worked at Pastplor, and Maks had to see him almost every day. Maks wasn't a hater, but he made an exception for Makluan.
Yamashita was as good as his word. New orders were received, and a few days later, in the company of Timesurfer Mogul Peshawar, Maks went back to Pastplor's offices as they had been just before the agency occupied them.
The outside doors were still sealed. The cells of the White Chamber stood empty, dark and abandoned. Some of the light switches worked, some didn't. With Mogul beside him, Maks walked the echoing corridors, observing and describing, his hand-held recorder disk growing slick with chilly sweat.
Dread invested everything. The thick cell doors, some covered on the inside with ratty carpet for added silence. The lingering smell of Darksiders. The graffiti in the holding cells, which he traced painfully under a light held by Mogul. Hundreds of dates, curses ("Fuck all thuggi"), questions ("Why am I here?"), prison names and boasts ("Red Pepper too tough, never break"), pleas ("Tell my wife Dzhimi still loves her"), despair ("Death call me").
"Why'd they send us here?" he whispered to Mogul.
"Still trying to toughen you up, I guess."
"I'm not a coward."
"No, you're just a sweet kid. Time travel's not for sweet kids."
While Mogul paused to take down an inscription that interested him, a seething Maks walked into what had certainly been a torture chamber. It was larger than most of the cells, and deep in shadow. His handlight showed nothing but the usual battered metal table, the dangling wires, the blood drains.
Skin crawling, he turned away. Then sensed a movement behind him. He spun around to see an immense Darksider that seemed to have sprung out of the walls lurch toward him, swinging a huge spiked club over its head. He gasped, almost broke and ran out of the chamber, out of Pastplor, out of the whole goddamn business of dealing with the unspeakable past.
Then, inside his head, he heard his father's voice say firmly Once but not twice. He stiffened, stared into the animal's red/black eyes. Realized suddenly what some deep part of his brain had already noted: He couldn't smell the Darksider.
Suddenly he began to laugh. As he did, the image broke up, dislimned, evaporated. Around the ceiling a prickle of tiny lights in laser projectors darkened.
Mogul dawdled into the chamber. "I guess we can go back now," he said.
~~~~~~~~
BY COMPARISON WITH that test, Maks's first trip into what surfers called the "real past" was easy -- at first.
He and Mogul went to Washington in 2052 and spent two weeks recording data in the Library of Congress. The aim was to discover America's role, if any, in bringing on the Time of Troubles.
For the first time Maks absorbed the sense of another age -- the strange food, the metallic taste of polluted air, the babble of archaic words, the dizzying throngs on the streets. The stari were a strange bunch, with their odd hairstyles and odder clothes and their abrupt, informal manners. They talked about the Century When Everything Went Wrong, about the party strife paralyzing the government, about the Chinese ambassador's public remark that he no longer bought congressmen because renting them was cheaper. Cynicism was in style.
The picture he and Mogul assembled from documents confirmed popular opinion. The long-dominant American economy had stalled. The gigantic Chinese industrial machine ruthlessly outproduced and undersold all rivals. Nature had been merciless -- California had been devastated by the worst earthquake in history, the nation's other rich coastal regions flooded by a sea rising faster than anyone had predicted. The whole insurance industry had gone under along with the coastline, and the stock market had followed.
As wealth declined, taxes soared and a small antitax rebellion in the West had been fanned by foolish policies into a major regional uprising, the first since the Civil War.
To Maks's surprise, the current President, Derrick Minh Smith, was a break from the long run of Decadent Presidents who disgraced the midcentury. Tough and able, he tried to suppress disorder while winning himself the nickname of The Peacemaker for his tireless efforts to avoid war with China. America seemed to have had nothing to do with fanning the rivalries that led to the Troubles.
Instead the picture was of a great nation undergoing slow internal decay. The library building was still ornately beautiful but falling apart for lack of upkeep. Carpets were worn, tiles displaced. The quaint toilets overflowed. Bits of glass fell from mosaics and tinkled on the marble floor as Maks walked by.
Outside, the summer heat was stifling and brownouts and blackouts increased the tumult of the nights. Some merchants refused to accept dollars, demanding good solid rubles instead. Programs on the tivis --crude and brainless mashini -- touted "An Age of Gold: The Twentieth Century." Or the nineteenth. Or the eighteenth. Any time but now.
Toward the end of Maks's visit, the disorder began to hit home. Political parties had multiplied, fielding private armies of agitators and thugs who battled each other in the streets. Rioting over some incomprehensible issue broke out one evening and troops carrying big clumsy rifles and wearing primitive night-vision helmets trotted up to guard the library.
That evening the murmur of mobs sounded like summer thunder and fires glowed in the distance. Maks and Mogul climbed to the roof of their rooming house to watch. Odd-looking aircraft buzzed like big wasps, dropping an irritant gas that drifted with the wind and forced the two surfers to go to their room and sit there, sweating, with closed windows.
Next morning Mogul was too sick to work. During the day he got sicker, despite the so-called universal inoculations they'd had before leaving Ulanor. By the following day his condition had become so bad that Maks had to call for help; they were both returned early and immediately put into an isolation unit until the virus, an ancient and lethal form of influenza, could be identified and destroyed.
Maks got a promotion for saving Mogul's life. He'd done well in a simple assignment; other and better ones loomed. His time of waiting was over. He called the girl he'd taken to Antartica; her name was Maia; he hinted that he'd had great adventures, asked her to join him at Lake Bai for Great Genghis Day, and she agreed.
Suddenly his world looked rich indeed.
Great Genghis Day had expanded to a three-day midsummer holiday, and traditionally people went wild the first evening, which was called pyatnit, or Drunk Night. The second night was for the fireworks display and patriotic oratory about humanity's forward march. The third was for recovery, with a workday looming ahead.
In the Clouds and Rain District, the morning after pyatnit was celebrated with bloodshot eyes, headaches and hot cups of strong green tea. In the Four Seasons teahouse, however, a bore in a wig seemed to have no hangover at all. He was questioning a sleepy-looking man --pale-faced and red-haired -- who'd spent the night in one of the cheaper brothels.
"So you're in time travel," said the bewigged one. "Tell me this: do you know what the basic factor of history is?"
"Don't ask me. As I told you, all I do is run the goddamn machine."
"Well, let me tell you, then. The basic factor is context."
"No shit."
The tech had put in a strenuous night. He lived alone and when he visited a brothel tried to make up for lost time. Last night he'd gotten drunk and ended up spending far beyond his means.
"Yes. Move an event from one temporal context to another and it changes like a chameleon moving to a new leaf. If Hitler had tried his tricks under Kaiser Wilhelm, he would have been sent to an asylum; if under the Federal Republic of Germany, to jail."
"Hitler who?" asked the tech, taking out a kif pipe and waving it at a waiter. He would have gotten up and moved away from the bore except that he felt so tired.
Thank the Great Tao today's a holiday, he was thinking. One pipe and I'll go home to sleep.
"Or consider the Time of Troubles."
"Must I?" asked the tech, stoking his pipe with a thin pinch of kif that the waiter had brought him.
He couldn't believe, looking back, that he had spent every khan he owned. Not a silver half-khan, not a copper tenth was left to chink in his pockets. His bank account was overdrawn. What would he eat on until payday? Who would he eat on? For he was not a man with friends.
"In 1950, nuclear war would have mined a few cities and that's all. In 1970, it would have caused an immense but endurable catastrophe. In 2091, it devastated the Earth and almost annihilated humanity. But by then there were offworld colonies to resettle our lamentable planet."
The tech, never a polite man, was growing irritable.
"Mister, I've known sweeper robots had more original ideas than you."
Vray gave no sign of being insulted. His quiet voice droned on -- a white sound, not unpleasant. He signaled for more tea for both of them.
"My point is that there was a window -- shall we say -- a window of opportunity. A time when sophisticated weapons existed but the offworld colonies weren't yet self-sustaining. Let's say from about 1980 to 2070. If the war had occurred then --"
"We wouldn't be drinking green tea and three hundred planets would be empty of the human life that infests them," said the tech, puffing.
He bowed slightly to thank Vray for the fresh tea. Vray noted that his companion had already reduced his pinch of kif to ashes.
"Allow me to buy you a decent quantity of kif."
"Don't mind if you do."
By the third pipe they'd gotten quite chummy. The tech's name was Makluan and his view of life was anything but cheerful.
"I work with the world's most complicated and most useless goddamn machine," he groused, "and I get paid peanuts for doing it. I keep thinking things will get better, my life will turn around. I wish I could go to sleep for a thousand years, wake up and see if things've improved. If not, go back to sleep again."
"A man of your intelligence deserves better."
"You're fucking right. By the way," said Makluan, "what's your business?"
"Oh," said Vray, "I buy and sell. Electronics, mainly. Twice-owned mashini, calcs and so on. I wonder, could you use some extra money?"
"Absolutely," said the tech, suddenly alert.
"It's a great piece of luck for me, meeting you this way. I'm thinking of adding certain sophisticated devices to my inventory, but I'm just not capable of understanding their fine points. I'd pay a thousand khans to have a man of your intelligence advise me."
Makluan tried to conceal his delight, not very successfully.
"It sounds quite, ah, quite interesting," he muttered. "When would you like me to look these gadgets over?"
"If you're free," said Vray, rising, "there's no time like the present. And please -- allow me to pay your check."
AFTER THE LONG, long years of preparation, things were speeding up. It's now or never, Vray thought. Before Makluan's absence is noted at Pastplor. Before they make changes in the wormholer codes that he so kindly gave me just before dying. Now.
Fierce lines of afternoon sunlight burned around the shutters of the small room where he sat, dreaming of what was to come. He returned to the present when the woman sitting across the duroplast table from him -- dumpy, washed-out, utterly forgettable, but a genius at her trade (which, oddly enough, had once been his trade) -- asked:
"Well, what d'you want me to do with this?"
"First, I want you to read the code. Can you do it?"
She frowned at the square of hard ceramic lamina he'd given her, at the stacked layers of dotcode and the hologram of a pale-faced, red-haired man imprinted not on the ID but in it. She turned and snapped it into a monitor and dropped a pirated memory cube into the queue.
"Standard polizi code," she said. "Name, Makluan Artur; Age, 31; Height, 2.01m; Weight, 68.5 kg; Profession, Wormholer Technician; Employer, Pastplor; Clearance, 1A; Police Record, None. Description...Well, that's the problem. You can't just insert your own picture and a new description to match yourself."
"Right. The mashina at the guard station would pick it up. Description and picture must match those in the system's memory. At the same time, a human guard will be looking from the ID to my face. He'll be looking casually, stupidly, the way those people always do. But he'll be looking. I want you to retain the hologram on the ID but morph it until it closely resembles this one."
She took the new hologram, frowning. It showed Vray wearing, not the cheap wig he'd received from the penal colony, but an expensive red wig precisely the color of Makluan's hair. Vray's dark/pale face had been made up to resemble the tech's red/pale coloring, with a sprinkle of ginger freckles. Contact lenses changed his eyes' soulful brown to the peculiar blue-gray of Makluan's.
"Huh," she muttered. "You're rather good-looking, he's ugly as a stump, and yet the bone structure is quite similar. And so is the height. Is that why you picked him?" She made a few quick measurements. "Didn't shut your jaws for the picture, did you? Bit your tongue. Lengthened your face a centimeter or so. Gave you that horsey look."
She nodded. "I can do it."
"Today?"
"That will cost you double. I've got a ton of work."
"Perhaps I can come back tonight, bring the money and pick up the card."
"Very well," she said. "Come about nineteen. It's none of my business, but I'm rather curious about your interest in Pastplor. I hope you don't mean to try and steal the wormholer. That's a beheader, and I don't mess with capital crimes."
"Hardly practical, since the wormholer weighs seven metric tons. I deal in small electronic devices of all sorts. The offices of this outfit are full of them and the security, once you're past the guard post, is negligible. By the way: if you ever need a new monitor, let me know."
She gave him a washed-out smile as he left. He almost regretted having to kill her.
"At nineteen then," he said, and went away.
Arriving back at work the day after the holiday -- he and Maia had become more than friends at Lake Bai -- Maks found a knot of polizi at the guard station and signs of strain among the technicians.
"What's the problem?" he asked Mogul, now back at work, a bit stringier and leaner than before.
"You know that red-haired guy, the wormholer technician? Well, the polizi found his body early this morning. He'd been tortured to death."
Maks felt shock. Not that he wouldn't have liked to kill Makluan himself, but
"And there's been a security breach, too. Don't know exactly what. But the whole place is boiling like a teakettle."
In the hall, Lian grabbed Maks and pulled him into a vacant office and shut the door. One of the surprising things about her was her talent for picking up gossip.
"Maks, they've gotten back the medical examiner's preliminary report on the time of death for that son of a bitch Makluan. You remember him, don't you?"
"Only too well," said Maks.
"Well, somebody used his ID to enter Pastplor a good twelve hours after he'd been killed."
Maks gave a long, low whistle.
"That's not the worst of it. The intruder might have been just a thief. But the wormholer's been tampered with."
They stared at each other.
"Another Crux?" whispered Maks. Lian shrugged.
"All I know is, someone totally unauthorized has gone into the past. Back before the Time of Troubles. Why, nobody seems to know."
By lunchtime other tidbits had been fed into the gossip mill.
"The polizi are finding other bodies," Lian reported to Maks and Mogul. They were eating together at a corner table in the noisy cafeteria. "They've found physical evidence to connect Makluan's death with the murders of two women."
"It's a conspiracy," said Mogul.
"Either that or somebody who really gets around."
It was late in the afternoon of a stressful day when Colonel Yost called a meeting of the timesurfers. Because of the crowd the white-tiled walls soon became steamy with moisture.
Maks had always vaguely liked and trusted Yost's long pale face and his precise intellectual air. Stories that he presided at shosho sessions Maks dismissed as gossip.
Today Yost seemed undisturbed either by the heat or by catastrophic events. He repeated quietly the news that everybody already knew, then delivered some new tidbits.
"I must tell you that this incident has the makings of a major scandal."
He sighed, his most emotional reaction so far.
"Tentative identification of our intruder has been made from the DNA in traces of semen retained in the body of one of his victims. Though he sometimes went by the name of Loki, he is really a criminal named Vray Dak, who served time in a penal colony."
"Are we sending somebody into the past after him?" Lian wanted to know.
"That has not yet been decided."
But as the members of the agency filed out, Yost called Mogul and Maks aside. In a low voice he told them that, while Vray had erased his destination from the wormholer's memory, a backup memory retained it.
"I believe this may have been Makluan's last contribution to Pastplor," he said. "To conceal the existence of the backup. Or he may have died before he could give the necessary code. The tortures to which he was subjected indicated a certain inartistic crudeness on the part of the murderer. Or perhaps simply haste."
Something about the quiet, pedantic way he said this gave Maks a chill. Then Yost's next words made him forget everything else.
"His goal is Washington, two years before you men visited it. Please prepare at once for a new transit. I have no one else who knows anything about the city. You must go first, prepare a hiding place, and guide the polizi when they arrive. My statement that no decision has been made," he added apologetically, "was not entirely true."
How splendid it all is, Loki was thinking.
He sat on a broad marble terrace gazing into the dense pollen-colored light of the setting sun. In the distance a battle was raging on one of the city's broad avenues -- a scuffle of black beetles, it looked like from this hill. Primitive noisy firearms exploded here and there.
He smiled blissfully. He had discarded his useless and inappropriate former names once and for all. No more Vray Dak, the counterfeiter of identities. No more Ya7326 the convict. Instead the name of an ancient fire god, a malicious being whose business was destruction.
To lounge upon a high place, looking down on a world, knowing that its future and its fate lay in your hands -- if being a god didn't mean this, what did it mean?
If he had ever doubted the fact of his deification in the tunnels of Calisto, he doubted it no longer. For this he had undergone torture and exile, to burn away the merely human, to make him the fated master -- or the master of fate -- he had become. He curled his fingers around empty air, feeling he held such mosh as no human had ever known.
Gas grenades popped and a column of masked soldiers double-timed toward the disturbance. They carried knives on the ends of their firearms and the points glinted and waved like a field of shining grain on the fertile fields of the Gobi.
He stood up and craned to see better, then ducked involuntarily as a bullet whistled overhead. He frowned at himself: as if a bit of metal could injure him.
Commands were shouted nearby and he turned to see a file of soldiers appear around the corner of an antique domed building looming behind him. A sergeant shouted at him and gestured coarsely with one thumb. Loki thought of killing him -- he was carrying an impact pistol under a loose shirt he'd procured from the costume room at Pastplor.
No, he thought, retiring down a long flight of stained and worn marble steps, better do nothing to call premature attention to myself. There'll be killing enough later on.
That night was noisy and humid. Loki padded down a tree-lined street, reflecting on his first day here. The language was more of a problem than he'd expected. You couldn't learn much about the way real people spoke from a book, even an interactive book like the one he'd studied. Especially this ancient gobbling, mispronounced, full of allusions to things that had vanished centuries ago.
On the other hand, some things were unexpectedly easy about living in this world. The fact that he had an unintelligible accent didn't seem to bother anyone. The same was true of half the people in Washington. So far nobody had asked him for an ID. There seemed to be no checkpoints, no random arrests. The lack of social controls made him feel first giddy, then anxious.
Why, he thought, you can hardly call this a society at all -- everybody doing whatever they please!
He was still brooding about the deplorable lack of order when he spotted an elderly woman who had come out to buy food. At once he forced her into an alley, killed her with a blow to the nape of the neck and robbed her. For a little time he hovered over the corpse whispering to the woman (as he'd whispered to Makluan and his lover and the woman who forged identities), Welcome, welcome to my kingdom.
Then he went to dinner.
He ate in a small food shop, paying five thousand dollars from his store of stolen cash, and left the shop picking his teeth. Spotting a sign in a dimly lit window, he rented a room nine or ten blocks from the Capitol building. When the landlord tried to find out something about him, he relapsed into Alspeke.
"Ya kam' syuda vas destrukta," he smiled, telling the truth for once. I came here to destroy you. You plural -- all of you. "Oh, a Russian," said the landlord. Mr. Santana wore his gray undershirt and permanent stubble of beard like a uniform of his calling. "I guess your luggage'll be along later?"
"Yess," said Loki, with what he hoped was a friendly smile.
"One thing I got to say for you people, you know how to run a country," said the landlord, showing him to a bed-sitter three flights up. "Not like them fuckers down the street."
Left alone, Loki counted his money, checked the impact pistol he'd bought on Ulanor's black market, and went to bed. Sleep proved difficult, for the heat was oppressive and a brownout had reduced the bed-sitter's primitive aircooler to tentative gasps. He got up, sweating, opened a window, dragged his mattress onto a little halfmoon-shaped balcony and stretched out there. A bit cooler, though not much.
In the distance, a shot. Closer at hand, a scream. Just below the balcony, a laugh. Ah, my brothers and sisters, he thought. They're all about, the hunters prowling the dark, rejoicing in the disorder that frightens everyone else.
Eventually he fell asleep and dreamed of slaughter until he was awakened by the sun.
On their second trip to Washington, Maks and Mogul found the city much as before. Sometimes it was hard to remember that they were two years deeper into the past than the last time they'd been here, since everything seemed just about the same.
President Derrick Minh Smith was completing his second year in office and his record so far was the subject of noisy debate. A big, solid, slow-talking politician, he had the necessary ethnic mix -- part white, part black, part latin, part southasian. (Southasians were current favorites with Americans because of their heroic resistance to Chinese aggression.)
He came to power with a mandate for restoring order, but his use of force so far had been brutal and inept. In Idaho several National Guard units had gone over to the rebels; people were talking about a downward spiral, but nobody knew how to stop it.
As for Vray Dak, he was invisible in a disorderly city of nineteen million. Completely untrained in police work, Maks and Mogul had not a clue as to how to proceed, except to get a place to live and prepare for the arrival of the professionals who would manage the search. They found an apartment in the lower reaches of Capitol Hill near the Burned-Out District, in a hundred-and-fifty-year-old red-brick rowhouse owned by a slatternly widow named Mrs. Crane.
Here they laid out their small valises with a change of 21st-century clothing, impact pistols, their own wormholer controls and two extras --one to return Vray's body to their own time, one for backup in case a control was damaged. Then they went shopping, using a counterfeit cashcard manufactured by the Security Forces' digital imagers. They needed to be in electronic contact with this world, and so they bought first a tivi that received the local thousand channels.
"A thousand!" said Mogul, shaking his head. "Great Tao, Ulanor gets along with three channels. In the offworlds, there are whole planets that have exactly one. I don't see how the government can maintain control, do you? Why, anything might go out over the air! Do you suppose the polizi watch all thousand?"
Maks shook his head. This world grew stranger, not more familiar, the longer he stayed in it.
"It's no wonder everything's in such a mess," he had to agree. "Nobody's in charge here."
The day was hot, the walk long. The tainted air made them cough, and the crowds were mind-numbing. Street-corner orators bawled their messages and small crowds of red-faced, sweating people shouted yea or nay.
In another electronics store they bought a second kind of primitive mashina. This one had a brain, and was called a kompyutor.
"Everybody's got one," a baffled clerk told them. "Where you guys from? No, you don't need a license to own it. What do people do with it? Well, they all send and receive whatever they please, including invitations to attend riots. It's up to you what you use it for."
They returned to their apartment weary and soaked their feet, sitting side by side on the edge of a pink plastic tub that sported the hair of unknown people embedded in a gray ring. Then they unboxed and began to examine the purchases they'd made during the day.
The tivi was a disappointment -- just sex, sports, baffling comedies, ranting Old Believer priests. They set the kompyutor up on a battered plastic kitchen table and were just about to try a few commands when the room flickered.
A sudden hot wind rushed through the apartment, tossing their unpacked clothing against the walls. A figure condensed as if a billion pixels had rushed together from the far horizons to form a single image. The image moved, smiled -- the woman was wearing the clothing of the 21st century and carrying an impact pistol in her hand -- and she was Zo Lian.
At once the kompyutor was abandoned. For an instant Maks wanted to ask Lian how she'd found them so precisely, but then he forgot the question. Instead they embraced and laughed, and then they all went out for dinner.
The soy house had its own gasoline-run generator and a big fan that whipped the hot air into furious motion. Afterward they strolled a few blocks and sat down together on the grass in a small park while dusk darkened into breathless night. The heat was such that forty or fifty people were resting on the grass nearby.
They chatted softly in Alspeke, a language that only one other man in the city could have understood.
"Why'd they decide to send you, Lian?"
"I harassed Colonel Yost until he agreed." She touched Maks's arm. "I thought you might need help."
"Since you're here to help us," said Mogul with a slight ironic accent on help, "perhaps you've got some idea of how to find one photon in a nova. In other words, one criminal in a 21st-century metropolis."
"Well, I do have a idea. Basically, this is why Yost allowed me to come. We're assuming that Vray Dak wants to change history. So how's he going to do it?"
"I've asked myself that question ten-to-the-tenth-power times," admitted Maks, "and I still don't know."
Lian had brought a meshok -- beltpouch -- of kif and three folding pipes with her. Since other people lying in the dark grass among the katydids were smoking various substances, the surfers lit up as well. Traffic rumbled on the nearby streets and polizi hovercraft buzzed and sputtered overhead, drawing white fingers of searchlights across the city.
"Here's a suggestion," said Lian. "The one thing he has that could make him a man of influence in this world is his knowledge of the future. Suppose he tries to set himself up as a prophet?"
Maks smoked quietly, letting the drug relax and clarify his mind. It was Mogul who spoke up.
"That's an idea," he admitted. "And if you're right, I think I know how to find him."
"Ah," said Maks. "The kompyutor."
At this point a man lying on the grass nearby asked in Russian, "Izvinitye, pozhal'sta. Vi govoritye po-russki?"
"Not a word," said Lian, and the three surfers got up, stretched themselves, and strolled away into the night.
"I could swear," said the man querulously, "that those guys were talking some sort of Russian. I worked in Moscow for five years with our embassy and I recognized a word here, a word there. But it's not like any Russian I ever heard."
"Don't ask me," said a man who was lying next to him. "Not all so well I don't know Inlish mine self."
Then he rose and slouched casually away into the darkness, following the surfers.
The Russian speaker sighed and stretched out again, hoping for a breath of cool air but finding none. What a city, he thought. Nineteen million people and no two of them can really understand each other. No wonder things are in such a mess.
Working with the primitive kompyutor wasn't easy, Maks quickly discovered.
In spite of all their training in archaic English, it was always misunderstanding their commands -- even Lian's, who spoke the language best. Though its cyberspace was limited to the Earth and Luna and ought to have been fairly simple to move around in, in fact it was more complicated than anything Maks had ever seen.
As the clerk had told them, all sorts of totally unauthorized people used it for every imaginable purpose and finding things required a knowledge of mysterious icons that meant nothing to the time travelers.
Maks was still confused and angry at the gadget when a thunderstorm swept in, relieving the heat but shutting off the electricity and blanking out the kompyutor. So they went to bed, waking only for the watch Mogul insisted they keep, sitting up one at a time with their backs against the apartment's flimsy door.
Just after dawn, Maks, who'd had the last watch, again tried his luck on the strange mashina. He felt like a 21st-century navigator compelled to use an astrolabe, contemptuous of the primitive instrument yet baffled as to how to use it properly. Aside from offers from an array of sex services, the only thing of interest he seemed able to get was an infopage called The Moon Today, inserted by the International Space Agency.
The sound of the kompyutor's nonhuman voice woke first Lian, who was sleeping on a divan, and then Mogul, who entered from the bedroom.
"Things must be really crude up on Luna," Maks reported. "It's not a self-sustaining colony yet. They're just installing the first laser-fired pure-hydrogen reactor and it's a new technology and everybody's expecting it to blow up. They've found the deep permafrost beds under the Sea of Tranquillity, but they haven't figured out a way to extract the water efficiently. Everyone's living in domes half buried in the dust and drinking recycled urine."
"I think I had some of that with dinner last night," muttered Mogul, for the city's water supply was contaminated and resembled tea in color though not in taste.
Maks continued to try his luck, wasting some time futilely looking for Prophets.
"Try psychics," suggested Lian.
"I don't know that word. What does it mean?"
"Just try it."
Sure enough, the keyword yielded a directory of names and specialties. Some psychics apparently did nothing but find lost pets; some, lost children; some gave tips on the stock market; some helped with errant lovers. Apparently President Smith was a believer, for some psychics averred that they were "Often Consulted by the White House."
Many predicted the future, and here Maks concentrated his efforts. One advertisement followed another, every one rich in promises of better times.
"Poor bastards," he muttered. "l suppose I could tell them, 'The future won't only be worse than you imagine; the future will be worse than you can imagine.' But who'd want to believe that?"
Lian got up and stood behind him. Suddenly she said, "There!"
"Where?"
"'The Future So Real. Firm tip on whats happening politicly.' Only our friend would be likely to write like that."
Maks tapped the screen. A face startlingly like the dead tech stared out at them. The come-on promised, "Absolute tip on next year doing in high level political thing. Aks and you sail get all you wish to know bout Congress & Pres outcome world event cetera. Cost merely $12.5K per suces." A long string of symbols followed, concluding, "Futureman.psi."
"I wonder how many customers he's gotten with this," smiled Lian.
Mogul had joined them. "Can you ask him a question?"
Maks enunciated Vray's address in his best Archaic English and ordered, "Call."
All three tensed: for the first time they were about to speak directly to their quarry.
"How can I assist you?" asked a cool female voice.
They looked at each other.
"I would," said Maks slowly and clearly, "like to know Futureman's prediction for the outcome of the current fighting in Montana. Will the government be successful or will the rebels?"
"Please leave your E-address. Futureman will return your call within thirty minutes. Cost to you will be only 12,500 dollars."
They looked at each other. Mogul was saying, "Well, of course we don't have an E-address," and Lian was saying at the same time, "It's some sort of answering service, don't you see," when they heard a scream from downstairs.
Then a small, dull sound on the staircase, more like a cough than anything else.
Lian recovered first, diving for her weapon as feet pounded up the wooden stairs. Maks, slower to respond, was just beginning to grasp the danger when the flimsy door burst open and a tall man with red wig askew stepped into the apartment, raised an impact pistol with both hands and touched the firing stud.
The round hit Mogul square in the chest and flung him backward over the kompyutor. Maks was halfway to the floor by then and the second round clipped his flying hair and blew a small hole in the wall of the building. In the same instant Lian's answering shot struck the intruder in the belly and tore him in half.
Suddenly and with amazingly little noise the room had become a bloody shambles. Blood sprayed the walls and ceiling; dust drifted in the air, and a ray of sunlight entering through the crater blown by Vray's round illuminated a slow-swirling universe of motes. Maks raised a head whitened by plaster and stared uncomprehendingly at the ruin, the shattered bodies.
Lian got up quietly, gun in hand. Warily she approached Vray's body, turned its lower half over. She knelt and spent a minute or two going through the pockets. Maks turned his attention to Mogul, but the sight was horrible and trying to help was pointless. Mogul was dead, the center of his ribcage pulped, twenty centimeters of his spine missing.
Shuddering, sick to his stomach but unable to vomit, Maks turned away. He stumbled to the window and stared out. The street looked absolutely normal. The hole was in a side wall and would go unnoticed unless the neighbors happened to look up. The impact weapons spoke so quietly that even the birds in the small, heat-dried plane trees outside continued to flutter and sing in celebration of dawn as if nothing had happened at all.
Lian showed Maks her bloody gleanings. Vray had almost 80,000 dollars in notes -- "Not much," remarked Lian, "he'd have had to start stealing again pretty soon" -- and several important items of information as well.
Makluan's ID was there, with the picture Vray had used to set up his page. Several stained and folded pieces of paper: a receipt from We Speak 4 U Arbot Service; another from the landlord of a rooming house on Capitol Hill not ten blocks from this one. Then Lian held up like trophies two metal keys for mechanical locks.
"Entry to his den," she said.
Maks was still full of shock and sickness. He felt like a child; he wanted to cry, but controlled himself.
"I guess I wasn't much good in the crisis," he muttered. He kept thinking that somehow he ought to have saved Mogul. Lian understood at once and spoke soothingly.
"You couldn't have saved him, Maks. Anyway, he was the senior member of the party and the fact that we were caught off guard was more his fault than yours or mine."
Maks nodded but felt no better. If not exactly a friend, Mogul had been his companion in adventure and they had trusted and depended on each other.
"I suppose we'd better be preparing for transit," Maks said. Then suddenly he turned and embraced Lian.
"Thank you. For saving me. I'd be like Mogul except for you."
Even in his distress he noticed yet again the oddness of her body's feel. She stood quietly, not responding to his embrace, just experiencing it. Then gently pushed him away.
"You're welcome," she said. "But we've got things to do. Before we go, we have to visit Vray's apartment and clean out anything that might show he was from the future."
"You're right, you're right," Maks muttered, wondering how he could have overlooked something so obvious. Lian gave him another gentle shove, this time toward the bathroom.
"You can't go outside like that," she said. "Wash off the blood. And get the plaster dust out of your hair."
Now she's treating me like a child, thought Maks resentfully as he scrubbed. Drying his head, he reflected on his career thus far. All his life he'd been a mediocrity, and Lian -- cool and daring and inhumanly detached -- had shown him only too clearly that he was one still.
He rejoined her looking clean, sober. They walked down the stairs, avoiding their landlady's shattered corpse, disturbing a few green flies. Out into the hot sunlight, where the air tasted like iron filings and the murmur of a mob could already be heard in the distance, preparing the day's demonstration.
"I'll be glad when we get home," said Maks. Lian raised her eyebrows.
"Oh yes?"
"Yes. I'm going to resign once this job's done," said Maks, and they walked the rest of the way to Vray's dwelling without speaking.
Finding a dour-looking, undershirted man seated on the front steps of Vray's building, they waited until he finished reading a crumpled piece of hardcopy -- the four-page "morning paper" that could be bought for a 500-dollar coin from containers at streetcorners -- and shuffled away on some errand or other.
Then they used the two keys to enter first the house and -- after much fruitless trying of locks -- Vray's own room. It was big, airy, with odd pieces of hardware left over from earlier centuries. Pipes for illuminating gas dangled from the ceiling and ancient painted-over copper wiring was still tacked to the baseboards.
They quickly searched Vray's neatly made bed and closet, finding that he had carried his habits of deception and anonymity into the past with him.
"The only things he had that clearly say 'Future' we've already got," said Lian when the search was over. "I thought he might have some extra rounds of ammo here, but apparently what we found was all he had."
Maks shook his head. "I still don't really understand his plan. What was he after, committing those murders in Ulanor, coming to this place? What could he hope to accomplish?"
Lian shrugged.
"I kicked that around with Colonel Yost before I left. It's debatable, of course, but the date -- 2050 -- may be significant. The histories all say that tensions between America and China were high at the time, until President Smith made concessions to buy peace. Vray might have hoped to influence Smith to set off the Time of Troubles early, which would have meant the end of humanity. Rather a pathetic hope, considering he couldn't even speak the language decently. But then Vray may have been paranoid, with delusions of omnipotence. Whether he was born that way or driven around the bend by torture and isolation, who can say?"
Maks nodded slowly.
"It amazes me how you can figure things," he said. "Well, come on, Lian. Let's clear out. We've got some messy work still to do."
Lian shook her head, smiling.
"Maks, Maks," she said, drawing her pistol. "It's too bad. You're such a nice guy, but so dumb. We're not going back. I'm going to carry out what Vray started. Only I'm going to do it right."
IMPROVISING A KANG was easy enough. Lian had Maks remove two slats from Vray's bed and cords from the window blinds and wet them in the sink.
Then Maks had to lie down with his neck and wrists on one board while Lian laid the second over his Adam's apple. She knelt on the second board, almost throttling him, and tied his wrists and head tightly between the boards. As a kang it was imperfect, but it served.
Lian tied his ankles as well. Finally, she gagged Maks with a torn pillowcase and left him lying on the floor while she returned to the other building to dispose of the corpses, sending them to the future. She was an efficient worker; forty minutes later she was back, carrying a bag with her personal items.
Her last job before resting was to call up Vray's web page and rewrite it in clear, elegant Archaic English. Then she removed Maks's gag and sat down on the floor beside him to have a chat.
"I sent a note with the bodies, explaining that Vray had a confederate and that you and I were going after him. I added that no backup would be needed. I think that our success in getting rid of Vray will impress them enough to trust our judgment. Kif?"
Lian held the pipe to Maks's lips to help him smoke. Then, like old friends, they talked quietly together.
"How long have you been thinking about destroying us?" asked Maks. His voice was still hoarse from Lian kneeling on his throat; it hurt just to swallow his spit.
Lian thought for a long time. She had turned on a small lamp. Sitting on the floor (she wouldn't sit on a chair, as if politeness forbade putting herself on a higher level than Maks) she looked even less human than usual.
Like an extinct beast -- what was its name? Maks wondered. Oh yes, the cheetah. A kind of cat, skinny, long-limbed, with a great barrel chest and a killer's heart. Dimly, from some long-ago Earth Biology class, he remembered that the female of the species had been the most accomplished hunter.
"Do you know," Lian finally asked, "how the Darksiders became servants of humanity?"
"No."
"My planet, Beta Charonis, has an unusual motion: one side always faces its sun, the other always away. A civilized race called the Slat gradually won dominance of the warm side. The Darksiders were primitives -- intelligent but mute, with a crude material culture -- and they were forced back gradually into the penumbra, the twilight between the two hemispheres. Often when they were under attack they had to retreat into the region of everlasting cold. They acquired the eyes of nocturnal beings, the fur of creatures acclimated to cold and the howling winds that always blow between the two sides of the planet. They lived in nomadic societies that you might call either packs or tribes.
"Then came the humans, and their mosh changed everything. The Siat resisted their attempts to take land and mines. So the humans allied themselves to the Darksiders. Without fighting themselves, they supplied modern weapons to their barbarian friends, who proceeded to wipe out the Slat with unimaginable savagery. The Darksiders imprisoned their foes in pits and spent -- I don't know how long; a long time -- dragging them out a few at a time to flay and burn and eat. The humans took what they wanted from the planet, mainly ores, and in time they began to use the Darksiders as mercenaries."
Maks said, "That's a horrible story, but it doesn't explain your actions."
"It's hard to convey," said Lian, frowning. "There aren't any words for what I feel because there aren't any precise words for what I am. When the mining companies were looking for a way to adapt humans to Beta Charonis they borrowed a few surviving Siat slaves from the Darksiders and the mediki experimented on them. Of course our mediki weren't the best by any means, and they came up with synthetic genes that changed more than they were supposed to change. Sometimes I think I'm more Siat than human. Certainly I've never felt human. And if I can bring this off, the whole episode of the human invasion will never have happened at all."
"How can you hope to destroy a whole species?"
"It's very, very difficult," she sighed. "But I didn't come to Earth expecting it to be easy. In fact, until the timesurfer program was set up, I didn't have any clear plan at all."
At this moment the kompyutor chimed. Lian listened to the query for Futureman -- how would the coming congressional elections come out? She answered that the party split would be: National Union, twelve percent; Revolutionary All-American, seven point five percent; Constitutional Conservative, seven percent...and so on down to Democratic, three percent, and Republican, one point eight percent.
"You have a remarkable memory," murmured Maks.
"I read your report on your first trip to Washington two years from now," said Lian. "It was truly informative."
They smoked a while longer, until Maks got up the courage to ask another crucial question.
"What do you intend to do with me?"
Lian let thin trickles of smoke exit her nostrils.
"I'd like to let you live for whatever time remains," she said. "Of course I can't. But killing you will be...painful. I've had such an awful life and for a while I thought --"
She coughed on the smoke, didn't finish.
Maks twisted his head against the cords. Stared at her. Great Tao, he thought. So that's it.
Then despair took over again. What if he was the window in the wall the experimenters on Beta Charonis had built around her? She knew he'd never love her, and so she'd kill him in time.
The kompyutor chimed. The voice of the answering-service arbot said, "The customer you just replied to wishes to know how you can make such precise predictions?"
"Because," said Lian. "I am not a psychic. I am a messenger from the future, come to prevent dreadful things from happening. President Derrick Minh Smith is the key figure, the pivot upon whom the ages turn. If he chooses right, the whole human species will live, and if he chooses wrong they will all perish. I'm here to give him such help as I may."
Lian smiled at Maks.
"That should attract the idiot," she remarked.
The kompyutor chimed again.
"Yes," said Lian.
"The previous customer has now paid 37,500 dollars," said the service. "His new question is this: What will be the outcome of the present fighting in Idaho and Montana? Will the federal forces win, or will the rebels?"
"Neither," answered Lian promptly. "Both will still be engaged in pointless conflict when the Chinese attack occurs."
Apparently the cool-voiced arbot wasn't prepared for phrases like "Chinese attack."
"I beg your pardon?"
"Repeat my words exactly as I have said them," said Lian, and smiled at Maks.
"We have a fish," she said.
Night came on with a sudden shower of rain, unexpected coolness. Lian fed herself and Maks. When Maks complained of pain in his shoulders, Lian massaged him gently but firmly.
"You ought to practice patience," she admonished. "Pain is only pain, after all. With the proper attitude, one can endure anything."
She sounded now like one of Maks's childhood amahs.
For the night, Lian dragged and lifted Maks onto Vray's bed, made him as comfortable as possible, tied his feet to the footboard, then put out the lamp and curled up like a cat on the floor. A little while later, Maks heard the regular breathing of deep sleep.
In the darkness, immobile in the kang, Maks could only think of Jesus, the god of the Old Believers, who had died on a cross. It's a rotten way to go, he thought. I wonder if he had as little choice in the matter as I have.
He woke when the kompyutor chimed. Tall windows had turned gray and slow rain was falling. Lian spoke quietly to her caller, jotted something down on a scrap of paper. Then she cleaned herself up and put on fresh clothes.
"Someone important wants to interview me," she told Maks. "I'll try to be as quick as I can. Perhaps you'd like a drink before I go?"
Maks drank the water. He didn't bother to mention that he hurt, that he was stiff. Lian would simply tell him to practice patience. He also needed to urinate, but was embarrassed by the implications if he said so.
Just before she gagged him, he said, "I suppose I could have had a worse executioner than you."
"Oh, very definitely."
Then Lian was gone. Quietly, checking the stairs first to be sure the landlord was not about, then locking the door behind her. Distantly the front door closed.
The rain fell like the slow drumming of bored fingers. Maks tried to keep his circulation going, clenching and unclenching his fists, wiggling his toes. His skin felt as if it had been sandpapered; he itched intolerably. A cockroach climbed ticklishly up one leg, explored his face, and fed on fluid oozing from his nose until he sneezed and sent it scuttling away.
He needed to urinate, to defecate, tried to hold it, couldn't. He had heard about prisoners who were forced to lie in their own excrement, but he had never thought he could be brought so low.
In a sudden fury, he twisted and wrenched at the cords until his neck and wrists bled. It was hopeless. He began to sob and the tears ran out of the comers of his eyes and down his cheekbones. Thunder muttered a long way off. The rain stopped, then started again.
Footsteps were ascending the staircase. At first he thought Lian had returned, then realized that the steps were too heavy and too slow. A key rattled in the lock, and a weighty middle-aged man backed in. His arms were full of sheets, pillowcases and towels. It was change-the-linen day.
He turned, displaying the permanent bristle of gray beard, the permanent undershirt. A cigarette was sutured to his lower lip. When he caught sight of Maks, his jaw dropped but the cigarette clung to its place.
"Sheeeee," he muttered. "Who's this?"
Maks made incoherent sounds and the landlord approached, wrinkling his nose. He pulled the gag off roughly and repeated his question.
"I own this joint," he added. "Name's Santana. Now talk."
"Your tenant kidnapped me," gasped Maks, his speech unusually thick because the gag had dried his mouth.
"Good Christ, another Russian," said Santana. "What is that guy, Mafia?"
"Yes, mafya," said Maks.
"Well, I'll be goddamned. They know you at the embassy?"
"Yes. Could you please untie me?"
The landlord frowned, debated the question in his mind. What if this guy was Moscow Mafia, too? On the other hand, he looked different from the tenant; a different kind, more like a college kid. Slowly and reluctantly, he began to untie Maks.
"The Mafia must be like the Boy Scouts."
"Why?"
"Teach 'em to tie good knots. What'd he want from you?"
"Money and cashcards," said Maks promptly. "He's out right now, trying to use my cards."
"We'll call the cops as soon as I get you loose."
Just sitting up was agony. Every muscle seemed to have frozen and rusted in place. Maks's arms were dead white, his feet and ankles swollen. At first he couldn't stand. Santana helped him, but with obvious reluctance.
"I can see you've had a rough time, young fella, but frankly, you stink pretty bad."
"Sorry."
"Don't apologize. Go wash."
Maks did, while the landlord shook his head over the stained and fragrant bedding he'd left behind. He took the sheets with obvious distaste and threw them into the hall.
Somewhat restored to decency, Maks rejoined him, wearing a set of Vray's clothing with only moderate discomfort at armpits and crotch.
"You call the polizi," he told Santana (the Alspeke word just slipped out). "I'm going straight to the embassy to report this. My name is Ivanov Nikolas -- pardon me, Nikolas Ivanov -- and I'll be there when they want me."
"What if he comes back?"
"Go stay in your apartment until the polizi come. Have you a weapon?"
"You bet I do. The most illegal one I could find."
"Shoot him if he tries to come in. Oh, and he has a confederate who's even worse than he is -- a young woman with weird-looking eyes. Stay completely out of her way. Tell the poliz -- police that she's armed with a new type of exploding ammo the Moscow Mafia's been trying out. Tell them she's extremely dangerous."
Suddenly the forgotten cigarette burned the landlord's lip and he cursed and flung it away.
"Christ, that thing cost me twelve bucks on the black market," he muttered and lurched away into the shadowy hall.
Maks waited at the head of the stairs until he heard the door of Santana's first-floor apartment close and four separate locks snap into place. Then he called the answering service on Vray's kompyutor.
"I've lost my note on that address you gave me," he said. "Would you please repeat it?"
"Room 3657B, Executive Office Building."
His last chore was to unplug the kompyutor and wrap it in an extra shirt. A minute later he was on the street, hungry and tense and happier than ever in his life just to be free, to be moving, to be capable of action again. The blood pumped deliciously through his whole body, erasing the last traces of stiffness.
Lian, Lian, he thought. You should have killed me when you had the chance. If you don't know that yet, you will.
HE SMILED GRIMLY. Adrift in a disorderly city centuries before his birth with no money, no weapon, and no way to communicate with his own time or return to it, he was recalling Mogul's remark that time travel was not for sweet kids.
Yet he had a plan. Maks was searching for the kind of shop where small loans were made. The Alspeke word was zlog, but for the life of him he couldn't remember the Archaic English; all he could think of was, for some reason, the game of chess.
He plunged into the streams of people flowing past the Capitol, with its peeling iron dome and mellow stone walls and small groups of soldiers idling near the autogun emplacements on the weedy lawn.
He'd walked nearly three clicks when the word "pawn" suddenly registered in his mind. It was painted on a small windowless building equipped with a steel door and two hired thuggi lounging on a bench outside. Each man had a pistol stuck in his belt. They looked at Maks with the eyes of bored dogs as he entered. A few minutes later he emerged, richer by a thousand dollars -- enough to buy breakfast, which he did at a greasy food kiosk down the street.
With food in his belly and vengeance on his mind, he found the rest of his walk to the White House easy. All that running and wrestling and swimming is paying off, he thought. But the White House was easier to look at than to approach. The streets that ran by the Treasury were blocked off and patrolled by uniformed thuggi and by others in civilian clothes, each with a little button of a jabber mike stuck in his ear. They were, Maks decided, probably more dangerous than the uniformed types and he gave them a wide berth.
He had to circle wide, up 14th Street to Franklin Park, where more soldiers were encamped under spreading green trees, then along Eye Street to 17th and south again, giving Lafayette Square a wide berth. Must have been a riot there, he thought, eyeing the throng of soldiers and polizi and the meat wagons from the Medical Examiner's office and the mediki removing bodies.
It was one P.M. -- that is to say, thirteen -- or a little past when he reached the old multi-columned Executive Office Building. On the rooftop, batteries of television cameras and laser-activated automatic weapons turned slowly from side to side; within the building, Maks assumed, kompyutors were watching for suspicious behavior. Further down 17th Street smoke was rising from the hulk of the Corcoran Museum, recently torched.
Intent as he was on finding Lian, he loitered for long minutes in this dangerous region, fascinated by the sight of his own world, the world of the Darksiders and the Security Forces, already -- more than forty years before the war of 2091 -- beginning to emerge from the decay of what textbooks called the Democratic Century.
Getting into the building seemed hopeless. Only one entry was open and people going through it were being checked and scanned. Lian had passed through that door at the invitation of someone within. But nobody had invited Maks, and if he lingered too long the kompyutors would spot him as a suspicious person.
For an instant he considered getting himself picked up for questioning; at least it was a way in. But a shudder went through him just to think of it; he knew now what being a prisoner meant.
Instead, he drifted with a passing group of federal workers, all equipped with metal ID collars, back to Pennsylvania Avenue and up it toward the northwest. He could not get at Lian inside the building, but he could wait for her to come out. Assuming, that is, he could tolerate waiting at all.
For Lian, the morning went first well, then badly.
The presidential aide who'd vouched for her at the guardpost was lowly, a young man worthy of nothing more than a tiny office in a deep basement. The aide had dandruff and pinkish eyes and even a trace of acne, as if he'd finished with adolescence only last month. A youngster whose life was a long series of putdowns from his superiors, he glared at her with defensive arrogance.
"So you're from the future?"
Lian smiled. "Just so."
"I'll try to explain in simple terms why I'm wasting time with you. We've got these arbors, little bundles of artificial intelligence with complicated algorithms that can carry on lengthy conversations. We put them into cyberspace to entrap subversives by drawing them into conversations where they give themselves away.... "
"I'm familiar with the technique in possibly more sophisticated form," said Lian patiently.
The aide frowned. "Well, false prophecies are politically useful in some instances but dangerous in others. So we have arbors check the psychics and draw them out. The odd thing about you is that your data on the next election's quite close to some highly classified computer estimates done for the President. We'd like to know where you got your information."
"From a history," said Lian, "that will not be written for three hundred years. If your estimates are in basic agreement with my data, I'd say they're quite accurate. May I make a suggestion?"
The aide raised sandy eyebrows.
"Certain objects were taken from me when I passed through the checkpoint. If you ask to have them brought here, you may find what I'm saying a bit more believable."
Sighing, the aide touched a button and spoke to a small, shiny intercom. Then he took some papers out of his desk and ostentatiously worked on them until the door opened and a uniformed guard placed in front of him a ceramic disk and two oblong devices with metal studs and cyrillic lettering.
Lian picked up the disk and warmed it in her hands. "Say," she told it.
"What time you get your break?"
"Ten to."
"Long time to go."
"Tell me 'bout it."
"Fuckin' Redskins lost that preseason game."
"Deadskins, I call 'em."
The sparkling conversation at the guard post continued to unroll. The aide took the disk and examined it for controls, finding none.
"So you just talk to it," he said with mild interest. "Neat."
"Do you have anything similar?"
Immediately the aide's face became blank.
"Maybe and maybe not."
"Perhaps," said Lian, losing patience, "you'd be kind enough to direct me to someone less stupid than yourself?"
The aide spoke again to the intercom. "Send a guard. I got somebody who's leaving."
"Do you have something like this?" asked Lian. Playing her trump card, she handed over one of the controls.
"I'm not touching one goddamn thing," said the aide, rising. "You, lady, are a nut, and this thing I bet is a bomb."
The door opened. A fat guard stood in the doorway, the one, Lian remembered, whose break was scheduled for ten-to. Without hesitation Lian handed her other control to the guard, who took it with a baffled look.
"Watch out!" yelled the aide.
Lian touched the return stud and jumped back, shoving the aide against the wall. The guard's plump body flickered, they saw his guts, they saw his bones, they saw nothing at all. The doorway was empty.
Lian pushed the aide into his chair, closed the door, and sat down across from him again.
"Do you know where he's gone?" she asked, taking back the remaining control.
"To the future?" asked the aide, weakly.
"Yes."
They sat looking at each other for the greater part of a minute. Finally Lian's patience ran out again.
"Hadn't you better notify your superiors?" she asked.
"Oh," said the aide. "Yeah. I guess so."
In the ammoniac fumes of a men's toilet, Maks bent over the recumbent body of a federal worker he had followed in and rapped lightly on the base of the skull.
He examined the ID collar closely, then stood up with a curse. There was no way to remove it except to saw it through or cut off the man's head. He was tolerably certain that cutting the collar would inactivate it, and he wasn't willing to decapitate anybody but Lian.
With a muttered apology, he took the man's money -- 120,000 dollars, he carried a fair sum -- and his cashcard and slipped out of the toilet and the restaurant it belonged to, unobserved.
So now I'm a thief, he was thinking. I wonder if they have penal colonies in 2050. My guess is they do.
HOW TRUE the saying is, Lian reflected, that government is a system devised by geniuses to be run by idiots. It was as true in the 21st century as in her own; no doubt it had been true in the Venetian Republic, in the Tang Empire, in thrice-ancient Ur of the Chaldees.
The dandruffy aide's superior was indeed that: superior. Paranoid, perhaps, but not to be accused of stupidity. He examined the ceramic disk and simply nodded. Nobody needed to tell him that it was the end product of a technological evolution that had hardly begun.
"I suppose if I have it X-rayed there won't be anything showing inside," he muttered, adding with a faint smile, "I'd like to have seen the business with the guard."
He was a small man, balding, his flesh burnt away by a lifetime of trusting nobody. His name was Gray.
"Unfortunately," Lian told him, "I've only got one control device left. If you need to see it work, call in another guard."
"You wouldn't mind being marooned in this goddamn century?" asked Gray, continuing to smile bleakly.
"I can help you to make it better. Better than you might believe. Because, unlike anyone else now living, I know what happened."
Gray put up a tent of thin bony fingers that were stained with some drug, probably nicotine.
"Tell me what 'happened,' as you put it."
"China will soon take advantage of America's distress to attack you. Your Russian and European allies will express horror, but do nothing."
"Of course," said Gray, who looked as if he could believe anything about anybody, especially allies. "You won't have heard yet, but China's sending a peace delegation to discuss our outstanding differences. Quite a suspicious act in itself. What better time to start a war than while you're talking peace? Please go on."
"A brief period of peace will be bought by the sacrifice of roughly ninety-two million American lives. But it's only a breather. In circumstances that remain unclear, general war breaks out in 2052 with a thermo/bio exchange so massive as to create a two-year winter while launching lethal epidemics of genetically enhanced influenza viruses that decimate the survivors. Twelve billion people will die."
Gray nodded. "About in line with projections. Every once in a while one of our engineered viruses gets loose and there's hell to pay."
"I have been sent to urge you as strongly as I can to take the only action that can forestall this terrible catastrophe, which is known to our small community of survivors as the Time of Troubles. I refer to preventive war."
Gray said slowly, "That possibility has been...discussed. May I see that gadget?"
Lian handed over the control. Gray sat back and looked at it, then, with a wry smile, said to his intercom, "Call the guard station and tell them to send in Harry."
To Lian he added, "He's the one I can spare best. I hope the people in your time don't mind being sent another idiot."
The door opened and a hulking man entered. Harry looked like a Darksider without fur. Lian waited for the new experiment, her mind dwelling with amusement on the astonishment at Pastplor as still another bewildered stranger came through the wormholer.
"Arrest her," said Gray, and Harry grabbed for Lian.
She reacted without thinking, jabbed the big man's adam's apple with karate-hardened fingers and hurled him back a step into the hall with a gargling sound in his throat. Then Lian turned on Gray, only to find herself facing a crude pistol the man had pulled from some recess.
There was a sound of thunder.
"Whatever the truth may be," Gray told the President, "I could hardly have allowed this person into your presence until she was rendered helpless and thoroughly scanned. We've had too many cases of suiciders swallowing plastic microbombs, passing through the screens and blowing up everything in sight."
Smith, staring at the control, merely nodded.
Of course they weren't in the Oval Office: that light-flooded room, for all its triple-paned bulletproof glass, was occupied only by a robot resembling the President, which moved about, conferring with other robots, appearing to drink coffee. It was there to draw fire. Recently a maniac had tried to crash a small plane into the office, only to be stopped in midair by a missile.
Thirty-six meters below, the President kept to his bunker, a complex of offices and guard posts, communication centers and dispensaries, dining halls and dormitories. This comfortable room was his favorite, its walls decorated with trompe l'oeil images of rare books. The furniture was deep-cushioned Victorian; the pictures on the walls, historic portraits.
A rosewood armoire and the walls of creamy old plaster hid the electronic spiderweb that connected the President to the outside world. Overhead, faux candles flickered in a chandelier with one hundred prisms. An imitation fire burned in an imitation fireplace.
"Still, it's too bad she's dead," said Smith in his deep, heavy voice. "I'd like to know just what her game was."
"Well, the ME's working on the body now," said Gray. "DNA's still being analyzed, but parts of the genome have been replaced with sequences that are either nonhuman or else artificial. Her body's undergone some kind of modification, possibly for life on another world."
"That doesn't seem to fit the story she told you."
Gray looked at his leader gratefully. He liked working for somebody who was almost as smart as he was.
"Exactly, Chief. If there's to be a general catastrophe, if nothing's left three hundred years from now but what our visitor called a small community of survivors, how did she happen to get modified for life on another planet? For that matter, how did such a community manage to produce the sophisticated technology that brought her here? Something's wrong."
"And," said the President, shaking his head in wonder, "she came here to persuade me to wage a preventive war."
"Ironic, isn't it?"
The two enjoyed a quiet smile together, members of an exclusive club of less than a dozen who knew the great secret.
"So," Gray murmured, "our woman of the future died never knowing that her mission was needless, perfectly needless. Well, that's luck of a kind, I suppose."
Maks had seen a meat wagon draw up to the executive office building, turn in through steel gates and vanish down a ramp. He had seen it reappear with a screaming motorcycle escort. The thought that Lian might have overplayed her hand occurred to him, but he had no way to be sure.
By three o'clock -- that is, fifteen -- he was inclined to think that the body removed by the wagon had in fact been Lian. Either that, or she'd penetrated to the very center of power and was at this moment trying to persuade Smith to launch a war. In either case, Maks was clearly wasting his time.
"Either she's succeeded or she's dead," he thought.
Time for plan two, except that he had no plan two. In fact, he could imagine only one line of action, though it seemed to promise little. Vray's house was clearly off limits to him, since the landlord would long since have called the polizi. But Mrs. Crane's house might still be empty, and he had a key to the front door. He could at least search the place.
There had been four controls for the wormholer remaining after Lian dispatched the pile of bodies, and four pistols. He couldn't imagine Lian carrying such a load of hardware into the executive office building, where everything might be confiscated. And where could she have left what she did not take but in that house?
Maks caught a decrepit subway back to the Hill. The tunnels were defaced with slogans urging war, peace, offering sex, recording the names and initials of unknowns. There was no aircooling and the trains moved at about three clicks an hour. The crowds were stolid, silent, each person sweating and giving off organic fumes. At a station called Capitol South Maks exited, climbing escalators that were immobile and rusted into place. Hastening past the Library where he'd do his research two years from now, he reached the back of the Supreme Court, or what was left of it after a recent riot.
He found Mrs. Crane's house, all dull redbrick and rusty ironwork, and for a few minutes loitered outside. Looking up, he could see the hole in the side wall where Vray's shot had gone through. Yet no polizi showed themselves and the block was deserted except for plastic cylinders of uncollected garbage. Perhaps nobody had noticed the violence of yesterday, or the missing woman.
Taking a deep breath, Maks climbed the iron steps to the front door, inserted his key, and opened it quietly.
The house was silent. He poked around downstairs, in the part of the house Mrs. Crane had kept for herself. Battered furniture, a convex mirror with a gilt eagle perching on it, paper doilies on the backs of the chairs. The kitchen was clean, bare and shoddy. Just outside the back door flies buzzed around a garbage can that had not been put out.
He closed the door, returned to the hallway and climbed the stairs. On the step where Mrs. Crane had died was nothing, not a stain, not a questing fly. He was surprised that Lian had found time to clean so thoroughly. On the second-floor landing, the door to the apartment he'd shared with Mogul was closed. He turned the knob. Locked. He sniffed an unpleasant smell and concluded that Lian had failed to get rid of the bodies, after all.
He pushed his key into the lock and the door swung open. As it did a huge two-thumbed hairy hand reached out and seized him by the shoulder and dragged him inside.
The Darksider transferred his grip to the back of Maks's neck. Its three other hands gave him a rough search. Meanwhile, from the bedroom emerged two thuggi in blue-gray uniforms and the crossbone insignia of Subsek, the antisubversion unit that ran a mysterious program called Special Investigations. Behind them came Colonel Yost, his long gray face bleak and frigid.
"So," said Yost. "Hastings. Perhaps you can explain why -- as Lian reported -- you chose to betray your comrades, murder one of them, and join forces with the criminal Vray Dak."
The story that Maks told did not go down very well.
"Zo Lian is in every way a rising star of our organization," frowned Yost. "We granted her a secret commission in the Security Forces. She passed every test of loyalty we could devise."
"Just as Vray passed every psychological test the penal colony could devise," Maks pointed out wearily.
The Darksider was standing just behind him, enveloping him with its indescribable aroma. He was thinking of the image that had attacked him in the White Chamber. Well, this one was real enough.
"It's true," Yost conceded, "that no test has yet been devised that can penetrate the most secret places of the mind. But tell me, do you have a single shred of evidence to back up your version of what happened here?"
Maks's head fell slowly forward as despair gripped him. Was there anything? Then he slowly pushed back the sleeves of his shirt and stared at his wrists. The red lines of the cords that had bound him were still visible. Along each red furrow ran, like a small rosary, dark beads of dried blood.
He held out his wrists. Then he raised his hands -- one of the thuggi reached for a gun -- and opened his collar. Yost leaned forward, staring intently at the bruises.
"I see," he said. "Yes, this is evidence -- of a sort."
"Do you think I did this to myself?"
"No. But I don't know how it happened. Perhaps when Lian discovered your treason she tied you up."
But there was now uncertainty in his eyes. As he meditated, a point about Maks's story suddenly registered with him.
"You say that you saw Zo Lian enter the Executive Office Building," he muttered. "One of our wormholer controls returned to us with a very astonished fat man who was unable to give any coherent account of what had happened to him. But he claimed to be a guard at that building. That's why I came here myself -- to see what the devil was happening."
Suddenly he made his decision. "Can't you see that Timesurfer Hastings has no weapon?" he snapped to a thug. "Arm him at once."
He gestured at the Darksider, which freed Maks. An instant later, an impact pistol was in Maks's grip, and he hefted it, feeling a profound urge to kill somebody. Almost anybody, though Zo Lian headed the list.
Sweet kid, eh?
"Now we must find the traitor," said Yost, "and try to undo whatever trouble she's causing."
"How can we reach her?" asked Maks, envisioning an assault by Darksiders on the White House, an event sure to attract unwelcome attention.
Yost smiled less bleakly than before. "Via the Worldcity," he said. "Via your time and mine. Every control device contains a tiny homing device no bigger than a grain of sand, but packed with nanomachines. We got the idea from the weather stations. We'll follow the signal to the place where Lian is, after a detour of eighteen thousand kilometers and three hundred years.
"Surely our trip will give a new meaning to the old phrase about the shortest distance between two points."
In the presidential bunker, Smith and Gray sat in overstuffed chairs smoking long cigars.
The doors to the armoire stood open; the TV glowed. In three dimensions and a variety and depth of hue as rich as the portraits on the walls, a semicircle of bemedaled officers sat around a table.
Smith liked the new TVs, with their built-in receiver-senders and the near-perfect illusion of depth that enabled him to feel the presence of his subordinates without actually having them in the room with him. He distrusted his generals, just as other politicians as varied as Lincoln and Stalin had distrusted theirs.
"I take it, then, that the majority of the Joint Chiefs advise against attacking the Imperial Chinese People's Republic," said Gray quietly.
"We consider it excessively risky. Our space defense system remains untested in actual combat," said the chairman, Admiral Simms.
"How is it to be tested in combat if we never go to war?"
Gray enjoyed this kind of fencing. Besides, as National Defense Adviser, it was his role. By posing as the advocate of a war policy, he enabled Smith to give the appearance of sitting in impartial judgment on a matter he had already decided.
"Simulated attacks -- "
"Have given excellent results, according to your memorandum of 23 January 2049," said Gray. "Shall I read it to you, Admiral?"
The admiral looked uncomfortable. Of course the JCS always claimed to be ready for war: that was their business. To be in the position now of claiming that, after all, they actually weren't created a problem in logic that they were not subtle enough to solve.
General Shabazz spoke up. Tall and slender as only a descendant of the Watusi could be, she owned a brace of doctorates in addition to her stars. She might have been chairman of the ICS, except that it had been the Navy's turn.
"I would remind you, Mr. Gray, that as a result of treaty commitments American forces overseas are largely under the command of Russian generals, and that Russia has not given prior assent to our unilateral attack on China."
Smith bestirred himself at that.
"Balancing diplomatic and military considerations is the job of the President alone," he growled.
"Absolutely," said Gray. "Besides, once our common enemy has been pulverized it's the judgment of the Foreign Policy Adviser that the Russians will follow our lead."
"Surely that's intolerably risky -- "
"May I say," put in Gray smoothly, "that until today I never knew that military officers were so averse to risk?"
That produced an uncomfortable silence. Gray smiled inwardly. These people, he reflected, spend their lives convincing themselves and others that they're daring. For them to urge caution goes against their own self-image.
General Pozniak of the Air Force spoke up.
"In my opinion, preventive war is by far the best policy in the long run," he declared. "China will only get stronger. We control our own strategic forces -- or to be precise, the Air Force commands them. I'm convinced that a decisive attack on China will not only win support from the Russians but spark a general uprising against Chinese occupation forces in Japan, Korea and Vietnam as well. I hope that the President will opt for war."
"When do you recommend we attack, if the President decides upon that option?"
"The first launch window will occur this afternoon between 1340 and 1920 hours, when our killer satellites will be in optimum position vis-a-vis the enemy's orbital launch platforms. Here's a schedule of other such windows for the next year."
Something hummed in the comm system as a decrypt fax sent a long piece of hardcopy whispering into Gray's hand.
Smith stirred again.
"Pending my decision I wish Condition Yellow to be instituted throughout the United States on the grounds that a new offensive is getting underway against the western rebels. Thank you for giving me your views, and have a good evening."
Gray closed the doors of the armoire on the now silent and dark TV screen, then resumed his seat. For a few minutes he and Smith smoked in silence. The decrypt lay on a small 18th-century table, neglected. They weren't interested in any launch window but today's.
"At last we're at the point of action," the big man remarked. "Congress can debate the war after it's won. I don't like the attitude of the Army and Navy chiefs. Simms thinks of nothing but his pension and I never should've appointed that bitch Shabazz. Well, we won't need land forces anyway for what we've got in mind."
Gray nodded. "I've covered all the bases I can think of. Of course, things could go wrong. We might lose a few cities ourselves."
"No pain, no gain," said the President philosophically. "We're going to revise this old world, Gray. Stop the downward slide. Save the good, and as for the bad -- "
He blew a smoke ring. Gray nodded. There was no need for the President to complete the sentence.
Yamashita stared at Yost while Maks waited outside.
What! The prison release he'd ordered had set this Vray Dak loose? The surfer program for which he was responsible had allowed some semi-alien to go through the wormholer to destroy the world?
He thought of Kathmann's end and knew that Yost would use the needles on him without hesitation if the Controller gave the order.
"And where is the missing control -- the one that's beeping out this message?" Yamashita demanded.
"It's gotten very faint," said Yost. "It's underground, we think, in or near the White House in the lost city of Washington in the year 2050."
He added, "Maybe it's been put away in a vault or safe. If so, an arriving surfer might have his atoms jammed into a mass of solid steel. That's why I'll send young Hastings first."
Yamashita hardly heard him. He was turning his head slowly, eyes panning the big, gleaming office toward which he'd been striving for most of his life. Was anything in the world as fluid as mosh, so apt to slip out of your hands?
He stood up, strapped on a pistol. Better to die in some goddamn primitive city than sit around here waiting for the laser to take off his head. He would trust nobody to handle this except himself.
"Yost," he said, "take over while I'm gone." Outside, in the marble corridor, he collared Maks.
"I want a volunteer to lead the way," he said. "You're my volunteer."
The two of them hastened to the nearest lift, up to Pastplor, down a long corridor to the transit room. Along the way they were joined by the rest of the task force, two thuggi and one Darksider.
Yamashita viewed the wormholer with deep distrust that verged on loathing. He was remembering how Steffens Aleksandr, the Worldsaver, had entered the capsule of a bigger, cruder version of the device and returned as a shattered corpse.
Then he shook himself and gave Maks final instructions. "Press the signal stud on your control when you arrive. As soon as we get the message I'll be right behind you."
Maks jumped on the slide, pressing an opaque black cloth over his eyes to shield them from the flash. The instant he felt something hard beneath his feet he pulled the hand away and the cloth fell to the floor.
The haste was needless. He was alone in an elegant and quiet room filled with furniture of a type he'd never seen before. He signaled as
Yamashita had ordered, then began to explore. Almost at once he spotted the missing control and Lian's recorder disk on a small table and put both into his beltpouch.
A fire seemed to be burning, but when Maks approached it he saw that the back of the fireplace was a three-dimensional screen broadcasting a fire. The books that lined the walls turned out to be fakes, too. Yamashita materialized behind him, tore off his goggles, and looked around with astonishment.
"Where are we?" he demanded.
"In a house of illusions," said Maks.
While the thuggi materialized, followed by the Darksider, Maks opened the armoire. A row of studs with icons lined the big screen inside; recognizing some of them, he touched On. Elegantly convincing, the image of President Derrick Minh Smith sprang into view, speaking to the nation in a firm sonorous voice:
"...like 7 December 1941, this day will live in infamy. Without warning at 12:53 this afternoon, Washington time, our nation's space defense system began to intercept incoming missiles. Computer calculations left no doubt of their origin: we were under attack by the Imperial People's Republic of China, even as the diplomats of that aggressive nation were arriving to negotiate with us!
"Was ever any nation so betrayed as ours? But I assure you that this dastardly act has not gone unpunished. Within seconds a counterstrike by our missiles destroyed the enemy's orbital launch platforms! At the same time, our Space Defense System intercepted the approaching enemy missiles and -- "
The picture flickered, the sound went out. Maks darted a glance at Yamashita, who stood erect, staring at nothing. The air in the room was still disturbed by the materializations, and papers overflowing Smith's wide desk whispered to the floor.
Then a deep shudder passed through the bunker. Portraits rattled against the walls and a fine snowfall of creamy plaster dust descended on the scattered hardcopy and the Persian carpet.
"Oh Great Tao," whispered Maks. "Lian succeeded."
His knees buckled and he almost fell, not from the impact of whatever weapon had exploded outside but from the dreadful realization that his world and every human world, past, present and future, was ending. The war was coming forty years too soon; the Earth would be ruined, the Luna colony would perish when its lifeline was cut. Maia's face flashed across his mind, and he clung to her image, the last his brain would hold.
"Bullshit," snapped Yamashita, shattering his tragic mood. "She didn't have time -- Wait. I see! Good for Zo Lian! We'll have to put her statue next to the Worldsaver's!"
Suddenly he was pounding Maks's shoulder with a karate-hardened fist. Maks retreated a step, wondering if the General had gone insane.
"Asshole!" he shouted. "Don't you see? These people went to war for reasons that have nothing to do with Lian. But by bringing us here she gave us a chance! We have to get back to Ulanor, quick, quick!"
He pressed the return stud on his control and Maks followed so fast it was a wonder their atoms didn't mingle in a horrific explosion in the wormholer. But in fact Maks collided only with Yamashita's big feet as the general flung himself off the slide, shouting: "Send us back! Four hours earlier! Send us back!"
He jerked Maks out of the wormholer, threw himself back onto the slide, burying his face in his hands as the violet-white light flashed. Maks followed, and suddenly they were standing together, dizzy and disoriented, in the same office as before. But not the same.
The false fire burned quietly and the armoire stood closed, its mahogany front dully gleaming. On the walls the portraits of gentlemen in white wigs or high gleaming leather stocks and black coats and spotless shirtfronts hung quiet. Then the room's heavy steel door -- in appearance, richly paneled wood painted a creamy enamel -- slid abruptly into a slot and a big man strode in.
He was talking, his head half turned to direct the stream of words at a smaller man following him. Smith's impetus carried him two full strides into the office before he saw what was awaiting him.
By then Yamashita had a pistol to his face. The smaller man suddenly hared off down the hall with Maks pounding in pursuit. The man stopped suddenly, whirled and raised one hand in a strange gesture, as if his empty palm were holding something, and then Maks slammed into him, a young heavy body hardened by training crashing into an aging bureaucratic wraith.
Gray collapsed on the floor, and Maks dragged him unceremoniously back into the office by the heels.
He found Smith seated in a leather chair behind his desk, staring at Yamashita. They were about the same size, and Smith had never seen an impact pistol before, but he seemed to have no doubt that his best course in the circumstances was to sit still.
Maks felt Gray's pockets, found nothing; checked his breathing, found him alive though unconscious, and left him lying on the carpet. As he turned, President Smith blinked twice and growled, "How'd you find me? Traced that damned gadget, did you?"
Maks tried to imagine himself walking into such a situation and realizing almost at once what it meant. The world, he felt -- not for the first time -- seemed to be full of people who were smarter than he was.
"I'd like to smoke," Smith muttered.
Only Maks knew what he meant; Yamashita looked around for a kif pipe but saw none. Maks opened a gold-chased humidor on the desk and presented their large captive with a cigar.
Smith fished out a gold lighter, snapped it, and puffed slowly.
"It kills you," he remarked. "We've known that for a hundred years. Are you people friends of the creature?"
"Not friends," said Yamashita. He spoke so deliberately, with such emphasis, that translating was easy for Maks. "We'll get to her in a moment. The crucial thing is this: you must rescind your order for preventive war, and do it now."
Smith frowned. "Suppose I refuse?"
"Do I look like a man who'll take no for an answer?"
Two more puffs on the cigar. "In short, I can have my war, but only if I die for it."
"You'll die for it anyway. Your defense system will not work adequately. You'll die in your bunker, however deep it may be."
Maks watched, under a curious impression that each man was holding cards, and that they were dealing them one by one. But there was no doubt who held the aces.
Smith sighed and looked at Gray stretched out on the floor. "He was the one who talked me into it," he said. "A very brilliant man. He killed that creature, too. Still, if you say the war policy's unsuccessful...."
He gestured at the armoire. "Open the doors, young man. If I must countermand the order, I must. Please stand back, the two of you, out of the picture."
Yamashita turned away, but the corner of Maks's left eye caught a slight movement where no movement should have been. Gray had raised himself slightly and a pistol slid into his hand so suddenly that it seemed a magic trick, as indeed it was -- like a stage magician, he'd had it up his sleeve.
Then his small body seemed to explode, almost noiselessly, like a rodent struck by a meteor. Hand steady after the shot, Maks turned his gun on Smith, who once more proved his intelligence by sitting absolutely still.
So, thought Maks without surprise, now I'm a killer, too.
He bent and checked the weapon in Gray's hand, pulled up his sleeve far enough to expose the piston-and-cylinder device and the trigger that ejected the gun when Gray pressed his right elbow to his side.
Yamashita turned on Smith, his eyes like jet reflecting flame, but the president was unmoved.
"I didn't tell him to do it," he pointed out. "He heard enough to know he was out of power, and for him that's worse than death, so he played his last available card." He puffed and gazed steadily at Yamashita. "Would you have done any different?"
Maks touched the On icon that in a previous time-stream he wouldn't touch for another three hours. The screen sprang to life, bland and blue this time, awaiting orders. Smith edged his chair in front of it and spoke a series of commands with codewords the machine wouldn't have recognized in any voice but his.
Maks and Yamashita stood to either side against the wall, while the president reversed his orders, to the delight of the Army and Navy and the fury of the Air Force.
Still Maks and Yamashita could not return to their own time. Maks knew by now that cleanup was as much a part of the job as the job itself. So hours elapsed, while Smith ordered the medical examiner to deliver Lian's body and all specimens taken from it to the White House bunker. Empty time ticked on and smoke rose and turned the room blue, until baffled guards wheeled a big metal casket fuming with frozen carbon dioxide into the hallway outside the bunker and withdrew, leaving it behind.
Things stretched out so far that a rush of hot wind swept away the smoke of the President's cigar and again set papers whirling off the desk. Smith had something new to stare at as two thuggi and a Darksider materialized in the room, plus translucent images of Maks and Yamashita that instantly faded and disappeared.
"Good gravy," he muttered, adding to Yamashita, "I can honestly say that you, sir, have given me a day like no other in my life."
Yamashita stopped supervising his minions in dispatching two ruined bodies to the Worldcity and turned to Smith.
"I regret to tell you, Mr. President, that the day isn't over. We have one more interesting experience for you. We're going to another time."
"By 'we' you mean -- "
"By 'we' I mean us." With triumph assured, even Yama relented, though only a hairsbreadth.
"Don't worry, you'll be returning to your White House very shortly. But -- trust me -- you'll return a different man."
GILDED DOORS swung open and Maks stepped back to allow Yamashita to enter Xian's reception hall. He followed and stood at rigid attention while the General advanced and bowed from the waist. "Rise," said Xian. She stepped forward and extended a tiny hand. Yamashita bowed again, this time to kiss it.
"General," she said in a voice unsteady with emotion. "How can the State repay you? As I read in your fascinating report, you learned of a new and grave danger, an impending war in 2050, and sent agents to explore the situation."
"Yes," said Yamashita coolly. "That's exactly what happened."
Maks stared at him, thinking with a cynicism new to him: so this is how history is invented. The losers die, and the winners make up stories to suit themselves.
"And then you yourself led an expedition that ended the menace!"
"Yes, Honored Controller."
"And how did you deal with this -- this President person?"
"Our mediki inserted a control chip and an exploding poison pellet in his head, just as we do with convicts. If the nanomachines we've scattered across his world report a sudden increase in radioactivity from any source whatever, the chip will blow his head off. The same if anybody tries to remove it. I advised him strongly to become his century's most ardent advocate of peace. And I know from the documents this young man" -- he gestured at Maks -- "saw in the Library of Congress two years later that he followed my advice."
Xian clasped her hands as if in prayer. "Profoundly mysterious is the Great Tao!" she exclaimed.
For the third time Yamashita bowed. "So all the sages have taught, Honored Controller."
A robot servant rolled in a wagon with a tea caddy and Yamashita and Xian drank a ceremonial cup together. Then she pinned on new stars, until he had seven on each shoulder.
"I chose well when I chose you," she congratulated herself.
"Honored Controller, if I were the Senate, I would vote you the titles All Wise and Ever Victorious. Who but you made this triumph possible by commanding me to build the new wormholer?"
Xian's thin face now held a porcelain smile. She remembered perfectly well that the idea had been his. But how clever of him to present it as a gift to his superior!
In the same spirit she accepted it.
"I'll have them do just that," she murmured. "I haven't had a new title in some time. And now, Honored Chief of Security, we permit you to go."
Back in the Palace of Justice, in Yamashita's office, Yost pinned the insignia of a lieutenant in the Security Forces on Maks. Lian's death had opened a slot, and Maks was the only candidate given serious consideration for it. Meanwhile Yamashita was cleaning things up again, barking orders into his mashina.
"Contact Calisto. All prisoners, regardless of sentence, will be held for life. Contact Admiral Hrka of the Space Service and inform him of the Controller's order to liquidate all 'modified humans' on Beta Charonis and anywhere else where that misbegotten experiment has been tried. I want a goddamn clean sweep, understand?"
"Of course, Honored General. The orders have been sent, Honored General."
At last Yost was able to lead Maks before the big desk to salute his commander. Yamashita rose slowly and saluted back.
"I like you, Hastings," he said. "Not real bright, but reliable, and character means more than intelligence. Look around you. Once I was a young guy like you, and I knew where I wanted to end up -- here. It took me a while, and it'll take you a while. Others' turns will come first."
He nodded at Yost. "But keep at it, and one day you may sit here and hold incalculable mosh in your hands.
"Meanwhile, accept my congratulations and the thanks of all loyal people. You've helped to save this world of ours -- Xian and me and Yost and the whole Security Forces and the Worldcity and the Darksiders and everything else besides."
Maks saluted and marched out of the room as Yost was saying,, his normally soft voice raised a little so that Maks couldn't help but overhear, "A fine young man."
Outside, a little crowd had gathered, Maks's fellow surfers, ready to hug him, pummel him, pour congratulations on him with a delicious mixture of joy and envy in their voices. Maia waited at the edge of the crowd, ready to reward him with a kiss, perhaps more.
Then why was he suddenly tasting blood? Why did he have to bite his lips to keep from shouting, No, No, No?
~~~~~~~~
By Albert E. Cowdrey
Albert Cowdrey made himself a lot of new fans when he turned his talents to science fiction--his novella "Crux" in our March issue was very well received. Here he ventures back to the same milieu: a period several centuries from now, when much has changed and yet the human desire/or power remains the same. Mr. Cowdrey lives in New Orleans and thinks these tales of Ulanor will ultimately link to form a novel.