Legacies
by Tom Purdom
This story copyright 2000 by Tom Purdom. This copy was created for
Jean Hardy's personal use. All other rights are reserved. Thank you for
honoring the copyright.
Published by Seattle Book Company,
www.seattlebook.com.
* * *
Deni Wei-Kolin was asleep in the childcare
center at Hammarskjold Station when the fifteen assault vehicles began their
kamikaze run into Rinaswandi Base. Rinaswandi was in the asteroid belt, about a
third of the way around the sun from the Earth-Moon system, so it would be a
good twenty-five minutes before a signal carrying news of the attack reached
Hammarskjold and the other man-made satellites that orbited Earth and Luna. The
signal would actually reach Hammarskjold a full second later than it reached
some of the other habitats, in fact. Hammarskjold was the off-Earth military
headquarters of the UN Secretariat and it had been placed in a lunar orbit, for
the kind of accidental political reasons that usually decide such matters. Given
the positions of the Earth and the Moon at the time the signal started its
journey, the message from Rinaswandi actually had to zap past Earth before a big
antenna sucked it into Hammarskjold's electronic systems.
Deni's mother, Gunnery Sergeant Wei, got the news a
bit earlier than most of the fifteen billion people who currently inhabited the
solar system. The military personnel stationed in Rinaswandi Base had been under
siege for seventeen days when the attack began. For twelve hours out of every
twenty-four, Deni's mother had been plugged into the Rinaswandi defense system,
ready to respond the moment the alert signal pinged into her ear and the
injector built into her combat suit shot a personalized dose of
stimulant/tranquilizer into her thigh.
All around
Sergeant Wei people were beginning to stir. There were twenty of them crammed
into the command module -- a place that was only supposed to provide working
space for six -- and you couldn't shift your weight without disturbing someone.
Half of them were merely observers -- support people and administrative wallahs.
Gunnery Sergeant Wei could hear little whispers and murmurs as they caught
glimpses of the symbols moving across the screens in front of the combat
specialists.
The stimulant/tranquilizer started
spreading its chemical blessings through Sergeant Wei's nervous system. The
long, carefully groomed fingers of her left hand slipped into position just
below the key pad she would use to direct the missiles, guns, and electronic
devices under her control.
The acting commander of
Rinaswandi Base, Logistics Captain Tai, was a slender young man who tended to
relate to his subordinates with a lot of handclapping and mock-enthusiastic
banter. Even now, when the arrows and icons on his screens represented real
vehicles armed with real ammunition, the voice in Sergeant Wei's earphones
sounded like it was sending some kind of sports team into a tournament.
"All right, people. As you can see, ladies and
gentlemen, they're all bunched up on one side of our happy little home, in
Quadrants III and IV. Apparently they're hoping they can overwhelm whatever
we've got on that side. Gunner Three -- take the eight targets on the left in
your quadrant. Gunner Four -- take everything in your quadrant plus the four on
the right in Quadrant Three. Gunner One, Gunner Two -- be prepared to switch
your attentions to the other two quadrants. But I would appreciate it -- to say
the least -- if you would keep an eye out for anybody trying to slip in on your
side while we're looking the other way. Let's not assume they're as dumb as we
think they are."
In the childcare center,
twenty-five light-minutes away, Sergeant Wei's son was sleeping with his right
arm draped across the stuffed animal he had been given when he was two -- a
hippopotamus, about half as long as he was tall, that Deni had named Ibar. Two
of the children sleeping near him had parents on Rinaswandi. Six had parents on
the four hydrogen-fusion torch ships that had accelerated away from Hammarskjold
Station, crammed with troops and equipment, two days after Rinaswandi had come
under siege.
Every day all the children in the
childcare center stretched out on the big shaggy rug in the playroom and
listened to a briefing. Every day, the younger ones focused their best
I'm-a-good-student stares on an orbital diagram that showed the current
positions of Hammarskjold Station, Rinaswandi, the four torch ships, and a place
in the asteroid belt called Akara City. They all knew, as well as their young
minds could grasp it, that Akara City had been ruled for five decades by a
strong-willed mayor who had turned it into a bustling commercial center in which
half a million people took full advantage of the raw materials available in the
asteroid belt. The mayor had died, her successor had been caught in a financial
scandal, and the turmoil had somehow led to a classic breakdown of social order
-- a breakdown that had been manipulated by an obscure married couple who had
emigrated to Akara City after they had been chased out of a Zen-Random communal
colony. In the last six months, according to the teachers who gave the briefing,
Mr. and Mrs. Chen had done some "very bad things." One of the bad things they
had done had been killing people -- about three hundred, according to the most
believable news reports. They had also engaged in approximately two thousand
involuntary personality modifications -- but that was a crime young children
sometimes had trouble understanding.
Six weeks ago,
a hundred troops could have torched into Rinaswandi Base, picked up the weapons
and fighting vehicles stockpiled in its vaults, and deposed Mr. and Mrs. Chen in
a few hours. As usual, however, the international politicians had dithered about
"sovereignty" and the exact border that defined the line between "internal" and
"external" affairs. And while they dithered, Mr. and Mrs. Chen had managed to
establish communications with an officer at Rinaswandi who had been greedier
than his psychological profiles had indicated. The equipment stockpiled in
Rinaswandi had become part of the Chens' arsenal and the personnel stationed in
Rinaswandi had crammed themselves into their command module and started watching
their screens.
The teachers at the childcare center
would never have told their charges the politicians had "dithered," of course.
They were officers in the Fourth International Brigade. Proper military people
never say bitter things about politicians during official, approved briefings.
Nobody on Hammarskjold told Deni they felt sorry for
him, either. That was another thing military people didn't do. If anyone had
given Deni a pat and a sympathetic word, however, he would have thanked them
very politely and even looked a little thoughtful. For a moment, in fact, he
would have thought he really did feel sad.
Deni's
mother had been stationed on Rinaswandi for two months before the siege had
broken out. For most of the second month, his father, Assault Sergeant Kolin.
had been trying to convince him a boy his age shouldn't sleep with a stuffed
hippopotamus. It hadn't been as bad as the time his father had made him stop
wetting the bed. That time Deni had been forced to endure almost six weeks of
hand slappings, sarcastic baby talk, and "confinement to quarters" in a sopping
bed.
Deni was was seven years old. For four of those
years -- over half his lifetime -- one of his parents had been away on some kind
of military assignment. When his mother was gone, he lived with an easy-going,
enjoy-it-while-you-can father whose basic indolence was punctuated by periods in
which Assault Sergeant Kolin became obsessed by the belief his son needed
"discipline." When his father was away, Deni's days were dominated by a
goal-oriented mother who believed every moment of a child's life should be as
productive as she could make it. When they were both home, he frequently found
himself pressing against a wall, knees doubled against his chest, while they
engaged in "domestic disputes" that sometimes ended in bruised faces and even
broken bones.
Deni's day to day life in the
childcare center had its flaws. He still had to sit through the daily message
Sergeant Wei videoed from Rinaswandi, in spite of the siege. He still had to
send his mother a return message in which he assured her he was practicing his
flute two hours and fifteen minutes every day -- the minimum a boy as talented
as her son should practice, in Sergeant Wei's opinion. He still had to spend
three hours a week talking to an officer named Medical Captain Min, who kept
pestering him with questions about the way he felt about different things. All
in all, however, the last fifteen days of Deni's life had been a lot pleasanter
than most of the other two week periods he could remember. Somewhere in the
center of his personality, sleeping with his hippopotamus, there was a little
boy who would have been quite happy if neither of his parents ever came home
again.
And that, of course, was the problem.
*
* *
Medical Captain Dorothy Min was a tall young
woman with a round, pleasant face and a manner that correlated with her
appearance. Deni Wei-Kolin might have liked her very much, in fact, if she had
been a teacher or a childcare specialist. At 23:07 Hammarskjold time --
forty-two minutes after the Rinaswandi defense system had decided it was under
attack -- Captain Min was sitting in front of the communications screen in her
personal quarters. She was revising a statement in which she requested, for the
fourth time, that she be allowed to communicate with Deni's parents. She was
staring at a paragraph in which she explained -- once again -- the major reason
she wanted to apply a procedure that she and her colleagues usually referred to
as an "esem."
I can only repeat what I've already
said before, the paragraph under consideration read. The death of one of
Deni's parents -- especially in combat -- could result in permanent, lifelong
psychological damage if we do not apply the appropriate preventive measure
before that happens. Fantasies about his parents' deaths have become an
important component of Deni's emotional structure. The death of one of his
parents could trigger guilt reactions no seven-year-old personality can possibly
handle. It has now been fourteen days since I originally asked for permission to
discuss this matter with Gunnery Sergeant Wei and Assault Sergeant Kolin. If
either of his parents is killed in combat before we can provide him with the
benefits of at least one session with an ego-strengthening emotional
modification procedure, the prognosis for Deni's future emotional development is
about as hopeless as it can get.
Half the space
on Captain Min's screen was cluttered with paragraphs and charts she had
included in the three memos she had already addressed to the commander of the
Akara Assault Force. She should keep her memo short, her contact on the torch
ships had told her, but she shouldn't assume General Lundstrom had read her
previous communications. This time, her contact had assured her, the message
would bypass the general's over-protective staff.
She touched the screen with her finger and drew an X
over the now in 'It has now been fourteen days'. The now added a little
emphasis, in her opinion, but her contact had made it clear every word counted.
A light glowed over a loudspeaker. "Captain Dorothy
Min has a call from Dr. Bedakar Barian," the communications system murmured.
"Emergency Priority."
Captain Min tapped the accept
button on her keyboard. A plump, bearded face replaced the text on her screen.
"There's a report on Trans-Solar, Dorothy -- an
attack on Rinaswandi. Have you seen it yet?"
Captain
Min grabbed her stylus and scratched a command on the notebook lying beside her
right hand. Dr. Barian's face receded to the upper left quarter of her
communications screen. A printed news bulletin started scrolling across the
right half.
"I told my system to monitor the Akara
crisis and alert me if it picked up any major developments," Dr. Barian said.
"Trans-Solar may not be as trustworthy as the stuff you people get through
channels, but it looks like it's a lot faster."
Captain Min had been wearing her working uniform
while she dictated. Now her hands reached down and automatically tightened the
belt on her tunic. One of the purposes of military training, her father had
always claimed, was the development of a military alter-ego -- a limited
personality that could take control of your responses whenever you were
confronted with realities that would have overwhelmed any normal human. The
surge of emotion reached a danger point, a circuit kicked in, and the hard,
clear responses of the professional officer or NCO replaced the messy turbulence
of the human being cringing inside the uniform.
There were no pictures yet. All Trans-Solar had was
a few messages from Rinaswandi and a statement from Mr. and Mrs. Chen claiming
that the "center of international militarism" on Rinaswandi had been
"effectively terminated."
"That's crazy," Captain
Min said. "Even for them it's crazy."
"It's what
they've been telling us they were going to do for the last seventeen days."
"It's still crazy. They could have pulled a quarter
of our assault force away from the attack on Akara City just by maintaining a
low-level threat against Rinaswandi. Now they don't even have the threat."
"Apparently their assessment of the situation
doesn't conform to standard military logic."
Dr.
Barian lived in Nous Avon, the smallest of the Five Cities that housed most of
the human beings who inhabited the space between Earth and Luna. Captain Min had
never met him in person but his face had dominated her communication screens --
and her dreams -- from the day he had become her mentor for her training in
family therapy. She was especially familiar with the look he got on his face
when he was contemplating the follies of people who wore uniforms.
Dr. Barian was, in her opinion, one of the best
teachers she had ever worked with. The lectures, reading materials and learning
programs he had chosen for her had always been first-rate. His criticisms of her
work had almost always made sense. He just happened to believe the human brain
turned into sludge the moment you put a blue hat on top of it.
"You'd better call the childcare center," Dr. Barian
said. "Right away. Tell them you want Deni kept away from any contact that may
give him the news -- video, other children. Make it clear you're the one who's
going to tell him -- no one else."
He lowered his
head, as if he were examining some notes, then looked up again. "Then I think
it's time you and I stopped playing games, young woman. We're both well aware
that everything you've been saying in all your memos only proves that Deni
should have been put through the complete modification procedure the day his
father went riding off to war. You're supposed to be a therapist, Dorothy -- a
healer. The people who wrote the laws can't make your decisions for you."
Captain Min stared at him. This was the first time
Dr. Barian had made it absolutely clear he thought she should have applied the
esem without waiting for the parents' consent. He had been dropping hints every
since the Akara crisis had started developing, but he had never put it quite so
bluntly.
"We still don't even know Sergeant Wei is
dead, Dr. Barian. Don't you think we should verify that before we start asking
ourselves if we've got a right to start ignoring the law?"
"From what they're saying, it sounds like most of
the control module has been blown up. If she isn't dead, then we've had a scare
that should convince you we're risking that child's welfare -- unnecessarily --
every day we sit around trying to avoid the inevitable. There's no way anyone
can determine a child has received the benefits of an esem, Dorothy. If you can
arrange things so you give him the news in your office, you can apply the
procedure in complete privacy -- without the slightest possibility anyone will
know you've done it. If his parents give you a nice legal, properly authorized
permission statement later on, you can pretend you executed the esem then."
"I'm well aware no one will be able to prove I
administered the esem without a legal authorization, Dr. Barian. You've pointed
that out to me at least four times in the last two weeks."
"I understand your feelings, Dorothy. You aren't the
first therapist who's been put in a position like this. All I can tell you is
that if he were my patient I would have resolved the whole issue two weeks ago.
The whole idea of requiring parental consent in a situation like this is absurd.
Deni's parents are the last people in the universe who could possibly understand
why he needs that kind of help."
"Sergeant Wei would
have agreed to the esem sooner or later. Every report I've given you for the
last ten weeks contains some indication she would have given me her consent
sometime in the next few months. We both know her husband would have given in
sooner or later just to keep the peace, once she started working on him."
"But she didn't. And now she's never going to."
Captain Min's screen blinked. The face of her
commanding officer, Medical Colonel Pao, popped onto the lower left hand corner.
"I have a message for you from General Lundstrom,
Dorothy. Can I assume you've already been advised of the news regarding
Rinaswandi?"
"I've just been looking at the report
on Trans-Solar, sir. My mentor, Dr. Barian, is on the line with me now --
listening in."
"General Lundstrom apparently
recorded this message only five minutes after she got the news herself. She
wants to know if you still want to discuss the esem procedure with Sergeant
Kolin."
Captain Min swallowed. "Does that mean
Sergeant Wei is definitely considered a casualty?"
"Are you serious?" Dr. Barian murmured. "I can't
believe you could still think anything else, Dorothy."
"I'm afraid that has to be the assumption," Colonel
Pao said. "We're still listening for messages from Rinaswandi, but I don't think
anybody's very optimistic."
"Can you advise General
Lundstrom I said yes, sir? Tell them I'll need about an hour to prepare a
statement for Sergeant Kolin. The communications time lag between here and the
ships is almost eleven minutes now. There's no way I can engage in a real
discussion with him."
"Let me talk to your colonel,"
Dr. Barian said.
Captain Min stared at him. She
started to turn him down and reluctantly decided the combative glint in his eye
was a good indication he would respond with an embarrassing flurry of argument.
"Dr. Barian would like to discuss something with you, Colonel Pao."
"Can you ask him if it's absolutely necessary?"
Captain Min stopped for a moment and switched to the
section of her brain cells that contained her ability to speak in Techno
Mandarin. She had been talking to Colonel Pao in Ghurkali -- the official
working language of the Fourth International Brigade. Dr. Barian had picked up a
good listening knowledge of Ghurkali, but she knew he would be more comfortable
speaking one of the three international languages.
"Colonel Pao wants to know if it's absolutely
necessary, Dr. Barian."
"At this point I would say
it's about as necessary as anything I've ever done."
She raised her eyebrows a fraction of a centimeter,
to let Colonel Pao know she was having problems, and the colonel gave her a nod
and answered in the language she had chosen. "Go ahead, Dorothy."
She tapped the buttons that would turn the situation
into a full conference call and Dr. Barian started talking as soon as Colonel
Pao's face appeared on the screen.
"Dr. Min has made
three attempts to communicate with Deni Wei-Kolin's parents, Colonel Pao. I
assume you've read the reports she's submitted to General Lundstrom."
"I read every word in them before I forwarded them
with my approval, Dr. Barian."
"Then I assume you
recognize the gravity of the present situation. The ego-strengthening
personality modification is the treatment of choice in situations in which a
child is being subjected to the strains Deni has been absorbing. It's an
absolute necessity when one of the parents who has been responsible for those
strains dies prematurely. We are discussing one of the best documented phenomena
in the literature. No child Deni's age can deal with the guilt that is going to
begin eating at his sense of self-worth the moment he hears his mother is dead.
His primary reaction to his mother's death will be the creation of a cluster of
unconscious guilt feelings that will distort his entire personality."
Colonel Pao nodded politely. "I'm well aware of
that, sir. Captain Min included all that information in her reports."
"Under normal circumstances," Dr. Barian said, "we
could continue with the standard procedure Dr. Min has been following. Dr. Min
would continue counseling the parents three times a week for another year.
Eventually they would acquire some insight into Deni's needs and give her
permission to proceed with the modification procedure. Dr. Min asked for
permission to continue the counseling sessions when the Akara crisis broke out
and it was denied her on the ground that it would subject Denis parents to too
much stress at a time when they might be forced to carry out the more violent
aspects of their military duties. She then asked for permission to discuss the
situation with them just once, to see if they might agree to the modification as
an emergency procedure. We've now spent two weeks waiting for a reply. All our
efforts to contact Deni's parents have met with bureaucratic delaying tactics.
And now that we're in an emergency situation -- now that the very thing we
feared has happened -- your general has finally seen some sense and agreed to
let us ask a man who's under extreme stress for permission to do something we
should have done days ago."
Colonel Pao frowned.
"Are you telling me you don't believe Captain Min should accept General
Lundstrom's offer, Dr. Barian?"
"I think it's time
someone pointed out that Captain Min hasn't been permitted to talk to Deni's
parents. We're going to be talking to Deni's father under the worst possible
conditions. If our efforts fail -- the primary reason will be the fact that
we've been forced into this position because your general and her staff have
spent the last two weeks doing everything they could to evade their
responsibilities."
Colonel Pao belonged to a
sub-group that the sociologists who studied the military community sometimes
referred to as the "military aristocracy." Members of his family had been
serving in United Nations military units since the years in which the first
international brigades had been formed on Earth. From his earliest days in the
army, when he had been a young intern, people had been impressed by the way he
always conducted himself with the controlled graciousness of the classic
Confucian gentleman.
Two weeks ago, just before the
torch ships had left Hammarskjold, Captain Min had spent a few hours with a
young surgical captain who had been responsible for loading the hospital
equipment. The captain had let his mind wander at a critical moment and the
entire loading process had been snarled into a tangle that could have delayed
departure by ten hours if Colonel Pao hadn't suddenly started offering
courteously phrased "suggestions." The captain was one of the most self-absorbed
young men Captain Min had ever known, but even he had been forced to admit that
he would have disemboweled a subordinate who had created the kind of mess he had
manufactured.
"I realize General Lundstrom may have
behaved somewhat cautiously," Colonel Pao said. "I must tell you, however, that
I might have tried to postpone a decision on this matter myself, if I were in
her position. General Lundstrom is responsible for the lives of four hundred
human beings. If Sergeant Kolin does go into combat -- and we've been given
every reason to think combat is unavoidable -- the lives of all the people
around him could depend on his reactions. General Lundstrom wouldn't have been
doing her duty if she hadn't worried about something that could have a
significant effect on his emotional state."
"Your
bureaucratic maneuvering may have destroyed the future of a defenseless child.
If --"
Captain Min's hand leaped to the keyboard.
She jabbed at the appropriate buttons and cut the link between Colonel Pao and
Dr. Barian.
"Dr. Barian and I will get to work on
our statement for Sergeant Kolin right away, sir. Please thank General Lundstrom
for me."
"Please give Dr. Barian my regards,
Dorothy."
A neutral background color replaced
Colonel Pao's face in the lower left quarter of the screen. In the upper left
quarter, Dr. Barian was looking at her defiantly.
"We needed to get that on the record," Dr. Barian
said. "I made a recording of my side of the conversation, with a record of who
else was on the line."
"Colonel Pao is one of the
most respected men I've ever known." Captain Min said. "He always treats
everybody around him with respect -- and they normally respond by treating him
the way he treats them."
"He's a military bureaucrat
just like everybody else you're dealing with, young woman. You should have put a
statement like that in your files the day he and the rest of your military
colleagues started giving you the runaround."
*
* *
The director of the childcare center looked
relieved when he realized he wouldn't have to break the news to Deni himself.
Two of his full-time charges had parents on Rinaswandi. Eleven of the kids who
had parents on the torch ships were old enough to realize Mr. and Mrs. Chen had
just demonstrated their parents really were charging into danger.
"I'm sorry we didn't call you right away," the
director said. "I'm afraid we've really been in a turmoil here."
Dorothy nodded. "How long can you keep Deni
quarantined?"
"He should be all right until just
before breakfast -- until 07:30. We've made it a point not to make any mention
of the news when they first wake up, just in case something like this happened,
but there's no way we can keep it quiet once the day kids come in."
"He's going to know there's something odd going on
as soon as he sees me showing up that early. I'm not exactly one of his favorite
people."
"We'll make a private room available. I'll
tell the night counselor you need to take Deni into her room as soon as you get
there."
Dr. Barian's precise high-speed Techno
Mandarin broke into the conversation. "Dr. Min needs to take her patient
directly to her office. This situation has important therapeutic ramifications.
She needs to see him in a place where she can spend as much time with him as she
needs."
"Have somebody tell Deni I've got some extra
questions I need to ask him," Dorothy said. "Don't tell him any more than that
-- make it sound like one of those things grownups do and kids have to put up
with. Tell him I'm sorry -- tell him I've promised you I'm having strawberry
muffins with real butter brought into the office just to make up for it. He
claims that's the best thing he and his father eat for breakfast when they're
alone together."
* * *
Given the communications lag, there was only
one way to handle the situation. An autonomous discussion program had to be
transmitted to the torch ship. The program would be outfitted with a general
strategy and equipped with critical information and pre-recorded discussions of
the treatment. Then they would sit back and watch as their screens told them how
Sergeant Kolin had reacted eleven minutes ago.
Dr.
Barian had reviewed almost every session Dorothy had spent with Sergeant Kolin.
He quibbled with her over some of the numerical estimates she plugged into the
program. but no one could argue with her overall evaluation of the sergeant's
personality structure.
Deni's father had grown up in
an "extended family network" that had been created by a complicated series of
divorces and regroupings. He had spent his formative years in a complex web of
relationships in which no one and everyone was responsible for the children. His
emotional development had been shaped by a situation in which he and nine other
children were involved in a ceaseless competition for the love and praise of
thirty adults who were heavily involved in their own competitions and
interactions. He had never experienced the love of someone who considered him
the absolute dead center of the universe. He had covered up his own lack of
self-esteem by convincing himself he had enough self-esteem for twenty people.
Then he had buried his insecurities a couple of meters deeper by telling himself
other people were just as bouncy and assertive as he thought he was. His son, he
had told Dorothy on several occasions, was about as stuck on himself as a boy
could be. Deni would have been a lot easier to handle, Sergeant Kolin believed,
if his mother hadn't succumbed to the delusion she had given birth to a genius.
Sergeant Wei and Sergeant Kolin belonged to the
class that created some of the worst problems military family therapists had to
live with. They were both people who responded to the enticements of the
recruiting commercials precisely because their own childhoods had been
developmental disasters. Deni's mother had pushed and punished because she
herself had grown up in a family that had lived on the edge of chaos. His father
had hammered at him because it was the only way Sergeant Kolin could deny the
existence of the hungry boy inside himself.
If
someone had put Deni's parents inside an esem treatment chamber at some point in
their childhoods, their son might not be facing a psychological
catastrophe. Essentially, the esem was supposed to endow Deni with a powerful,
totally unsmashable feeling that he was a worthwhile person. In families where
everything was working the way it was supposed to, the child developed that
feeling from parents who communicated -- day after day, year after year -- a
normal amount of love and a general sense that the child was valued. Deni would
get it in two hours, with the help of half a dozen drugs and an interactive,
multi-sensory program. The drugs would throw him into a semi-conscious state,
immerse him in an ocean of calm, and dissolve his defenses against persuasion.
The program would monitor all the standard physiological reactions while it
bombarded him with feelings, ideas, and experiences that "rectified the deficits
in his domestic environment." The intervention was usually applied three times,
over the period of a month, but even one application could be helpful.
"In the midst of winter," a twentieth century
philosopher named Albert Camus had once said, "I found that there was in me
an invincible summer." For the rest of his life, no matter how he was
treated, Deni would be held erect by the summer the esem would plant in the
center of his personality.
So how should they
convince an exceptionally un-esem'd adult male that he should let them transform
his son into the kind of person he thought he was? Dorothy had originally
assumed Deni's mother would be the one who accepted the need for the esem. Once
Sergeant Wei had acquired some insight into the realities of her family life,
Dorothy had believed, there was a good chance she would buy the esem for the
same reasons she bought expensive learning programs and other products that
could help her son "achieve his full potential." And once Deni's mother had made
up her mind, the relevant analyses all indicated Sergeant Kolin would eventually
let her have her way.
Their best hope, in Dorothy's
view, was an appeal to some of the most powerful emotions nurtured by the
military culture. Normally Sergeant Kolin would have rooted himself behind an
armored wall as soon as anyone claimed his son needed special treatment. Now
they could get around his defenses by claiming Deni was a combat casualty. The
program should play on the idea that Deni had been wounded, Dorothy argued. It
should portray the esem as a kind of emotional antibiotic.
Dr. Barian wanted to work with the emotional
dynamics that coupled guilt with idealization. The Kolin-Wei marriage, in Dr.
Barian's opinion. had been one of the worst mixtures of dependency and hostility
he had ever examined. It had been so bad he felt confident they could assume
Sergeant Kolin had already started idealizing his wife's memory. Their best
approach. therefore, would be an appeal that treated the esem as if it were
primarily supposed to help Deni deal with the loss of his mother. Dorothy was
correct when she objected that the idealization process usually didn't acquire
any real force for several days -- but Dr. Barian wouldn't be surprised, in this
case, if it had kicked into action the moment Sergeant Kolin had been advised
his wife might be dead.
"We're talking about one of
the fundamental correlations in the literature, Dorothy. The worse the
relationship, the stronger the tendency to idealize."
Dorothy started to argue with him, then glanced at
the clock and compromised. The program would open with the combat casualty
approach and follow it with a couple of tentative comments on the special
problems of boys who had lost their mothers. If Sergeant Kolin made a response
that indicated he was already locked into the idealization process, the program
would shift tracks and start developing the idea that the boy needed special
help because he had lost the support of a special person.
The really divisive issue was the description of the
therapy. Dr. Barian wanted her to prepare a description that talked about the
procedure as if they were merely going to bathe Deni in love. They might include
a hint that they were trying to replace the love Deni had lost when his mother
had died. But there would be no reference whatsoever to the effect on the
patient's self-image.
That was a little like
describing an antibiotic without mentioning it killed germs, of course. Dr.
Barian apparently had his own ideas about the meaning of the term "informed
consent." In his case, the important word was obviously "consent."
*
* *
Deni would have been surprised to hear it.
but he and his parents were only the second family Captain Min had ever worked
with. Her original doctorate had been a Ph.D. in educational psychology, not
family therapy. The Secretariat had paid for it and she had assumed she would
pay off the debt by spending six years in uniform working with military training
systems. Instead, the military personnel experts had looked at the data on their
screens and discovered the Fourth International Brigade had a pressing need for
family therapists. A crash program had been set up and she had spent her first
eighteen months as an officer working on a second doctorate -- under the
guidance of a civilian mentor who apparently believed there was an inverse
relationship between intelligence and the number of years someone had spent in
the military. In her case, in addition, Dr. Barian had seemed to feel her
childhood had subtracted an additional twenty points from her IQ.
It was the first time she had encountered someone
with Dr. Barian's attitude. She had spent two years in a lunar "socialization
academy" when she had been a teenager but 80 percent of the children in her
cohort had been the offspring of military people and international bureaucrats.
At first she had thought Dr. Barian was trying to probe her responses to the
kind of stresses she might receive from her patients. Then she had decided she
would just have to ignore his comments on her "contaminated upbringing."
Dr. Barian had hammered at her resolution as if he
thought his career depended on it. Much of her training involved long sessions
with simulations of patient-therapist relationships. Most of the simulated
people who appeared on her screens were trapped in simulated messes that were so
foolish -- and believable -- that she frequently found herself wondering how the
human race had made it to the twenty-second century. In the critiques that
followed the simulations, Dr. Barian loved to remind her that her reactions to
her imaginary patients had probably been distorted by the "inadequacies" in her
own "formative environment."
"My upbringing was
about as good as it could be, Dr. Barian," she had told him once. "I may have
more sympathy for the way military people look at things than you do, but it
isn't because anybody indoctrinated me. My father may not have been the most
loving man who ever lived, but he was so responsible he must have scanned half
the research that's been done on military families in the last fifty years. He
must have interviewed half a dozen foster care candidates every time he had to
leave me alone, just to make sure they really would give me a consistent
environment, just like all the literature said they should."
Naturally, Dr. Barian had then started questioning
her feelings about her father.
Nineteen years ago,
when Dorothy had been six, she had sat on a rug that had looked exactly like the
shaggy rug Deni and his schoolmates sat on when they received their daily
briefing. In her case, the orbital diagram on the screen had only contained two
symbols -- a circle that represented a single torch ship and an oval that
represented a Lumina Industries mining asteroid.
The 150 men and women who had taken over the asteroid had belonged to a group
that had somehow convinced themselves the city of Rome, on Earth, was the center
of all evil and the sole reason mankind could not achieve political perfection.
They had killed fifty people in a surprise attack that had put them in control
of the torch that was supposed to shove the asteroid and its load of minerals
into orbit around the Earth. Then they had set up their defensive weaponry and
placed the asteroid on a course that would bring it down somewhere on the
southern Italian peninsula. Her father, Pilot Sergeant Min, had made eight ferry
trips to the surface of the asteroid, carrying assault troops and heavy weapons.
Her father had been her only parent for most of her
childhood, but there had been no danger she would ever succumb to guilt feelings
if he had happened to die in combat. After her mother had left them, her father
had shouldered full responsibility for her upbringing -- and carried out his
parental duties in the same way he had fulfilled every other obligation life had
loaded on him.
It hadn't been a natural thing,
either. Her father was currently living in retirement in Eratosthenes Crater, on
the Moon, and she knew he was perfectly content with a relationship that was
limited to bi-weekly phone calls. He was, at heart, the kind of man who was
happiest when he was hanging around with other adults like himself. As far as
she could tell, he now spent most of his waking hours with a group of cronies
whose idea of Heaven was an NCO club that never closed.
The last time she had talked to him, she had been
looking for advice on the best way to speed up consideration of her request to
speak to Deni's parents. It had been a serious matter, but they had both enjoyed
the way he had folded his arms over his chest and pondered the subject with all
the exaggerated, slightly elephantine dignity of a senior NCO who had been asked
to give a junior officer his best advice.
"Are you
asking me, Captain, if I'm still connected with the sergeant's network?"
"I did have something like that in mind, Sergeant."
"As it turns out, I do have a friend who has a
certain position on General Lundstrom's staff. I'd rather not mention her name,
but I suspect she might be willing to give me some useful advice on the best way
to slip your next report past the General's aides. She might even give it a
little judicious help if I gave her some good reasons to do it."
"That would be most helpful, Sergeant."
"Then I shall attend to it with the utmost dispatch,
Captain."
Military parents like Deni's father and
mother had a well-documented tendency to think of the family as a military unit,
with the parents as the officers, and the children, inevitably, as members of
the lower ranks. Her father had called her "Lieutenant" from the time she
was two years old. For most of her childhood, she had seen herself as a younger
person who was being guided and supported by an experienced, gently ironic
senior who respected her potential.
* *
*
It was 02:04 by
the time they got the program ready for transmission. At 02:15 the transmission
began to arrive at the ship. At 02:20 Sergeant Kolin sat down in front of a
screen and started watching Dorothy's presentation. At 02:31 his face appeared
on Dorothy's communication screen and she got her first look at his response to
her efforts.
The program opened with a recording in
which Dorothy discussed the effects of combat deaths on children. The
presentation was calm, statistical, and scrupulously accurate. On the auxiliary
screen on her right, she could watch her neat, fully-uniformed image and
correlate the statements it was making with the reactions flickering across
Sergeant Kolin's face.
"Do you have any questions
about anything I've said so far?" the recording asked.
Sergeant Kolin shook his head. He had always kept
his guard up during their counseling sessions and he was falling into the same
pattern now. Most of her information about his personality came from his
responses to inter-active video dramas. The dramas that had worked had usually
been designed so they practically forced the subject to make a response.
Dorothy's hands tightened on her desk top. She hated
watching herself make presentations. Every flaw in her delivery jumped out at
her. She saw her head dip just a fraction of a centimeter -- a brief, tiny lapse
in concentration -- and she winced at the way she had telegraphed the fact that
she was about to say something significant.
"In this
case," the Dorothy on the screen said, "there's the added factor that the parent
who's become a casualty is the child's mother. The relationship between a young
boy and his mother frequently includes emotional overtones that can't be
replaced by any other kind of relationship."
Her
image paused for a carefully timed instant -- a break that was supposed to give
Sergeant Kolin the chance to start a response. He leaned forward with the
beginning of a frown on his face and a subtitle lit up on the auxiliary screen.
Light positive response detected. Continuing probe.
The program's visual interpretation capabilities
were limited to relatively large-scale body movements, but Dorothy had been able
to list three actions that should be given extra weight -- and the first item on
the list had been that tendency to lean forward. Sometimes, if you waited just a
moment longer. Sergeant Kolin would lean a little further and say something that
could lead to three minutes of real discussion.
This
time he just settled back again. If he had started idealizing his wife's memory,
he apparently didn't feel like expressing the feelings the idealization had
aroused.
"I'm afraid there's a good possibility he's
just angry," Dorothy said. "This isn't the first time I've seen that kind of
tight-lipped expression."
"Angry at us?" Dr. Barian
said.
"He really hates the whole idea of people
examining his feelings. He looks like he's in one of those moods where he'd like
to pick up his chair and throw it at the screen."
The program had apparently reached a similar
conclusion. Her image had already slipped into a sentence that treated the
mother-son relationship as if it was merely a side issue. The sound system let
out a blip, to remind Sergeant Kolin he was looking at a recording, and the
program switched to her description of the therapy.
Dorothy had drastically revised her standard
description. She had included a shot of the treatment chamber, but the shot only
showed part of the cover and it only lasted a couple of seconds.
She had done everything she could to make it clear
they weren't "rewiring" Deni. "To a large extent," the video Dorothy said.
"we're just giving Deni in advance the effects of all the love he's going to be
missing during the next few years." She had touched on the danger of guilt
feelings, but she had skipped over the relationship between guilt and the anger
evoked by demanding parents.
The program reached a
check point. "Do you have any comments you would like to make, Sergeant Kolin?
Please feel free to speak as freely as you want to. This program can answer
almost any question you can ask."
Sergeant Kolin
leaped out of his chair. His head disappeared from the screen for a moment. The
camera readjusted its field of vision and focused on a face that was contorted
with rage.
Deni's father had been trained in the
same NCO schools every sergeant in the Fourth International Brigade had
attended. Sergeants never bellowed. Their voices dropped to tight, controlled
murmurs that made the anger on their faces look a hundred times more intense.
"My son doesn't need people poking into his brain,"
Sergeant Kolin said. "My son will get all the attention he needs from the person
who's supposed to give it to him."
Dorothy's image
stared at him while the program raced through alternative responses. The screen
dissolved into an abstract pattern that was supposed to be emotionally neutral.
An avuncular synthetic voice took over the conversation.
"We're sorry if we've angered you. Sergeant Kolin,"
the voice said. "We're trying to explain this procedure under difficult
circumstances. Captain Min has prepared answers to most of the questions people
raise when they're asked to approve this type of emotional intervention."
Dorothy bit her lip. Her right hand hovered over her
notebook with the stylus poised to start writing -- as if some part of her
nervous system still didn't believe her orders had to cross eleven light minutes
before they evoked a response from the program.
She
had prepared a statement the program could jump to if Sergeant Kolin expressed
his basic hostility to the very idea of psychological "tampering." The program
should have switched to the statement, but it had responded to his display of
anger instead.
"This isn't working," Dr. Barian
murmured.
Sergeant Kolin dropped into his armchair.
He rested his hands on his knees and stared at the screen.
"Tell Captain Min to continue," Sergeant Kolin said.
Dorothy's hand started inscribing instructions on
her notebook. "He knows he's being recorded," she said. "He knows he has to give
us a minimum amount of cooperation. He may be ready to explode but he's still
thinking about his career, too."
"So he'll sit
there. And listen. And say no."
Her image had
returned to the screen. The program had switched to her review of the
psychological dangers faced by children who had lost a parent -- a review she
had included in the program so it could be used in situations in which they
needed to mark time. The program was still reacting to his anger. There was no
indication it was going to deal with his feelings about psychological
intervention.
She drew a transmit symbol at
the bottom of her last instruction and her orders began creeping across the
Solar System. Eleven minutes ago the program had made a misjudgment. Eleven
minutes from now -- twenty-two minutes after the original mistake -- it would
receive a message ordering it to deal with Sergeant Kolin's hostility to
psychological tampering.
"You've done about as well
anyone could have. Dorothy," Dr. Barian said. "I couldn't have done it any
better myself. It isn't your fault they made you wait so long you had to work
through a program."
"It should have understood,"
Dorothy said. "It should have switched to the psychological tampering track as
soon as he made that remark about people poking holes in his son's brain. It
shouldn't have let that slip past it."
"The anger
response was too strong. It picked up the anger and it didn't hear the content.
You aren't the first person who's seen a program make a mistake she would have
avoided."
Sergeant Kolin had sat like that for a big
part of half the sessions she'd had with him. His eyes were fixed on the screen.
His face looked attentive and interested. And she knew, from experience, that he
wasn't hearing one word in three.
"It isn't your
fault, Dorothy. You might have had a chance if they'd let you talk to him when
the time lag was only a couple of minutes. They fiddled around with your request
and now you've got a hopeless situation."
She wrote
another set of commands on her notebook and bent over the dense, black-on-yellow
format she had chosen the last time she had felt like fooling around with her
displays. Somewhere in the mass of information she had collected on Sergeant
Kolin there had to be a magic fact that would drill a hole through his
resistance.
"Your patient is in exactly the same
position as a child who's dying of a disease," Dr. Barian said. "Would you wait
for his father's permission -- or some general's permission -- if he needed a
new lung or a new spinal cord? Your first responsibility is to that child -- not
some set of rules thought up by people who are still living in the Dark Ages."
The last useless paragraphs in Sergeant Kolin's file
scrolled across her notebook. She raised her head and discovered Dr. Barian was
regarding her with an expression that actually looked understanding.
"There's another consideration you might want to
factor into your decision making process," Dr. Barian said. "It may be your
friend Colonel Pao is right -- maybe General Lundstrom's staff did do the right
thing when they decided her mental state is so delicate they might be
endangering four hundred combat troops if they bothered her with a difficult
matter like this. It's also true that the military personnel on those ships are
all volunteers. They agreed to take the risk they're taking. Deni didn't
volunteer for anything."
* *
*
She had
dispatched her new set of instructions at 02:58. At 03:09 it arrived at the
torch ship. At 03:20 she saw the program switch to the path it should have taken
in the first place. At 03:40, she ordered it to switch to the termination
routine and started waiting for the images that would tell her Sergeant Kolin
had refused permission. Dr. Barian started talking the moment she took her eyes
off her notebook.
* * *
She picked up Deni at the door of the
childcare center, in a cart she had requested from Special Services when it had
finally occurred to her they would probably provide her with anything she asked
for "under the circumstances." She had even been given a route that had been
specially -- and unobtrusively -- cleared of any traffic that might cause her
problems. A few of the pedestrians stared when they saw a cart with a child
sitting in the passenger seat, but they all looked away as soon as their brains
caught up with their reflexes.
Hammarskjold Station
was a military base, so its public spaces looked something like the public
spaces of a civilian space city and something like the decks of a torch ship.
The corridors had been landscaped with trees, fountains, and little gardens,
just like the corridors in lunar cities, but it had all been done in the
hyper-manicured style that characterized most military attempts at decorating.
The doors that lined the walls came in four sizes and three colors. The gardens
were spaced every hundred meters and they all contained one tree, a carpet of
flowers that was as trim as a major's mustache, and two (2), three (3), or four
(4) shrubs selected from a list of twenty (20).
"I
thought I wasn't supposed to see you until after lunch," Deni said.
"I had to make some changes in my schedule," Dorothy
said, with deliberate vagueness.
"Am I going to have
to see you during breakfast from now on?"
"It's just
this once."
The big, utilitarian elevator near the
childcare center opened as soon as the cart approached it. It went directly to
the fourth level without stopping, and she turned left as she cleared the door
and started working her way around the curve of the giant wheel that had been
her home since the day she had been born.
* *
*
The strawberry
muffins had big chunks of real strawberries embedded in them. The butter had
been synthesized in a Food Services vat, but to everyone who lived off-Earth, it
was "the real thing" -- an expensive, luxurious alternative to the cheaper
look-alikes. The milk in the big pitcher was flavored with real strawberries,
too -- and laced with a carefully measured dose of the tranquilizer that had
given her the best results when she had slipped it to him in the past.
"Did I get the muffins the same temperature your
father gets them?" Dorothy said.
Deni stopped
chewing for a moment and nodded politely. He never talked with his mouth full.
His mother had dealt with that issue before he was three.
"Are we talking about my feelings some more?"
"Maybe later. Right now -- why don't we just relax
and have breakfast? I'm kind of fond of real butter myself."
"How many can I have?"
"Well, I bought six. And I'll probably only be able
to eat two myself. I'd say you can count on eating at least three."
She glanced at the notebook sitting beside her
coffee cup. The chair Deni was sitting in looked like a normal dining chair, but
it was packed with the same array of non-invasive sensors that had been crammed
into the therapeutic chair he normally used. His heartbeat, blood pressure,
muscle tension, and movement-count all agreed with the conclusion a reasonably
sensitive human being would have drawn from the enthusiasm with which he was
biting into his muffin.
* *
*
Deni had finished
the last bite of his second muffin and given her a quick glance before he
reached for the third. The numbers on the notebook were all advancing by the
appropriate amount as the tranquilizer took hold.
She stood up and strolled toward her desk with her
coffee cup in her hand. "Take your time, Deni. Don't worry about it if you
decide you can't finish it."
She called up a status
report on her desk screen and stared at the same numbers she had gone over only
two hours ago. The drugs she needed for the esem were all sitting in the
appropriate places on her shelves. The devices that were supposed to deliver the
drugs were all functional. The components that would deliver the appropriate
images. sounds, and sensations all presented her with green lights when she
asked for an equipment check.
She had thought about
putting Deni under and checking the current state of his feelings but she had
known it was a stupid idea as soon as it had popped into her head. She knew what
his real feelings were. Every test she had run on him in the last three months
had confirmed he was still in the grip of the emotions she had observed when she
had begun working with him.
She had begun her
sessions with Deni with a two hour diagnostic unit in which he had been drugged
and semi-conscious. Deni didn't remember any of it, but she had stored every
second of the session in her confidential databanks. Any time she wanted to, she
could watch Deni's hands curl -- as if he was strangling someone -- as he
relived an evening in which his parents might have killed each other if they
hadn't both been experts in the art of falling. She knew exactly what he really
thought about the time his father had taken his flute away from him for two
weeks. She had observed his childish, bitter rage at the cage of work and study
his mother had erected around his life.
She scrawled
another code number on her notebook and the results of the work she had done
last night appeared on her desk screen. She had been ready to crawl into bed as
soon as she had made Deni's travel arrangements but Dr. Barian had insisted they
should prepare a complete quantified prognosis. They had spent over fifty
minutes haggling over a twenty-two item checklist. Dr. Barian had insisted
nineteen of her estimates were wildly out of line and tried to replace every one
of them with the most pessimistic numbers he could produce.
In the end, it hadn't really mattered which set of
numbers you used. The most optimistic prognosis the program could come up with
merely offered some hope that someday the boy might
voluntarily seek out a therapist. Someday, just possibly, he might
ask for the treatment that would pull him out of the emotional swamp that was
going to start sucking at his psyche the moment he learned his mother had died.
And that's your best prognosis, Captain. Based on
numbers most experienced therapists would consider hopelessly optimistic.
"How are you coming, Deni?"
"I think I'm starting to feel a little burpy,
ma'am."
She waved the numbers off the screen and
turned around. His glass still held about three fingers of milk.
"I've got a pill I'd like you to take. Can your
tummy hold enough milk to help you get a pill down?"
*
* *
On the main communications screen, Mr. and
Mrs. Chen were holding a press conference. The "reporters" were all "volunteers"
from their own Zen-Random congregation, but that was a minor matter. The
questions would have been a little different if the Chens had been facing real
media types, but the answers would have been the same.
A bona fide journalist, for example, might have
asked them how they would answer all the military analysts who thought they had
made a tactical mistake when they destroyed Rinaswandi. The phony reporter on
the screen had merely asked his leaders if they could tell the people how the
attack had improved their military position.
"I
think the answer to that is obvious," Mrs. Chen said. "The forces that were
guarding Rinaswandi Base can now join the force defending our city. The
Secretariat mercenaries will be faced with a force of overwhelming size, with
every weapon and vehicle controlled by a volunteer who is prepared to make any
sacrifice to preserve the state of moral liberation we have created in our
city...."
Every two or three minutes -- for reasons
Dorothy couldn't quite grasp -- the Chens let the camera pick up a bald,
slump-shouldered man who seemed to shrink against the wall as soon as he
realized a lens was pointed his way. If there was one person in this situation
who wasn't going to come out of it alive, Dorothy knew, it was Major Jen Raden
-- the officer who had betrayed the equipment stashed on Rinaswandi.
Her father was only one-eighth Gurkhali. but no one
had ever had to remind him -- or any other member of the Fourth International
Brigade -- that he belonged to an institution which could trace its origins to
the Fourth Gurkha Rifles, the ancient, battle-scarred infantry regiment the
Indian government had donated to the United Nations in the years when the
Secretariat had acquired its first permanent forces. I will keep faith, the
Gurkha motto had run -- and they had proved it in battle after battle, first in
the service of the British Empire, then in the service of the Republic of India,
and finally under the flag that was supposed to represent humanity's best
response to its own capacity for violence.
A light
glowed on Dorothy's communications board. A line of type appeared at the bottom
of the screen. Call from Pilot Sergeant Min. Non-priority.
On the couch, Deni was still sleeping peacefully.
The monitor she had clipped to his wrist was still transmitting readings that
indicated he would sleep for the full two hours the deep-sleep pill was supposed
to deliver. There were two messages from Dr. Barian in her communications
system, but she hadn't looked at either of them.
She
tapped the appropriate button on her keyboard. Her father stared at her out of
the screen with a blurred, puffy-eyed look that immediately triggered off a
memory of beery odors -- a memory that was so strong it was hard to believe the
communications system could only transmit sounds and images. She wasn't the only
member of her family who had been up most of the night.
"Good morning, daughter. I hope I'm not disturbing
anything."
"I was just sitting here watching the
news. I've got something I'm supposed to do, but I'm giving myself a little
break."
"I've been thinking about the family you've
been concerned about. It seems to me you indicated one of the parents was
stationed on Rinaswandi...."
She nodded. "It was the
mother. The son's sleeping on the couch in my office."
Her father leaned back and folded his arms across
his chest -- but this time neither of them smiled. She had realized, at some
point in her teens that it was a body posture that frequently indicated he was
trying to keep his reactions under control. He arranged his arms like that, she
had decided, so he wouldn't run his hands across his face or do something else
that might affect the image a good sergeant tried to maintain.
"I was afraid something like that might have
happened. Have they told him yet?"
"I told them I'd
do it."
"That's not the easiest job you can
volunteer for."
"I still haven't told him. I'm
letting him sleep while I think about the best way to approach it."
"I only did that twice all the time I was on active
duty. If you don't mind me giving you some advice -- I never talked to anybody
who thought they'd found a good way to do it. Whatever you do, you're not going
to be happy with it."
"There's some special problems
in this case -- some reactions he'll probably have because of the family
problems I was trying to deal with."
Sergeant Min
frowned. "You were trying to get permission for some special procedure... for
something that would help him with the possibility his parents might become
casualties...."
"We tried to get permission from his
father last night and we couldn't do it. Dr. Barian thinks we failed because
they stalled us for so long we had to communicate across a big communications
lag. I'm inclined to think we might have failed anyway."
"And what does that mean?"
"It means basically that we end up with a human
being who's permanently crippled psychologically. I could show you the numbers
and explain them but that's what they all add up to. He'll be just as much of a
casualty as anybody who's been physically wounded."
"And nobody ever asked him if he wanted to
enlist...."
"That's essentially what Dr. Barian
said."
"I'm sorry, Dorothy. It sounds to me like
you've done everything anyone could have."
"I'm not
blaming myself, papa. I'm just sorry it's happening."
"There isn't anything else you can do? There isn't
some possibility he'll get some kind of therapy later? When he's old enough to
make his own decision?"
"It's possible, but the odds
are against it. We're talking about something that will eventually affect almost
every aspect of his personality. When a child has certain kinds of problems with
his parents, the death of one of his parents can create unconscious feelings...
guilt feelings... that are so powerful they influence everything he does. People
tend to protect the personalities they've acquired. Somebody who's rebellious,
unruly, and angry usually isn't going to feel he needs a treatment that will
give him a different outlook -- even when he isn't satisfied with the kind of
life his emotions have led him into."
"Major Raden
has a lot to answer for."
"Dr. Barian seems to feel
it's mostly General Lundstrom's fault."
"Or some of
those babus on her staff."
She shrugged. "They were
trying to protect her -- to shield her from distractions."
"She's a general. She's supposed to look after her
troops. If she can't put up with a little pestering from a medical captain
without going into convulsions, she shouldn't be wearing the pips."
*
* *
When Dorothy had been fourteen, one of her
best friends had been plagued with a father who had "confined her to quarters"
almost every other weekend -- usually for some trivial matter like a dusty piece
of furniture or a piece of clothing that didn't look "inspection presentable."
Her first boyfriend had been a wary thirteen year old whose father seemed to
watch everything his children did for signs of "weakness."
There were people, in Dorothy's opinion, for whom
military life was a kind of moral exo-skeleton. Their upbringing had left them
with no useful values or goals. The ideals imposed on them by their military
indoctrination were the only guidelines they had.
She had never experienced the kind of problems Deni
had lived with, but she had no trouble relating her records of his case to the
things she had observed during her own childhood. Press one set of buttons and
the data base presented you with a recording of a counseling session in which
Sergeant Kolin justified a punishment by arguing that people would behave "like
animals" if no one imposed any "discipline" on them. Press another set, and you
got to watch Sergeant Wei, in a message she had transmitted from Rinaswandi,
telling Deni she hoped he was practicing his flute and spending enough time with
his learning programs -- and never once suggesting she loved him or hoped he was
having a little fun.
Press a third combination, and
the database gave you a look at the hour she had spent with Deni on the day he
had received his tenth message from his mother. They had sat on the couch, side
by side, and she had spent most of the session stubbornly trying to evoke some
kind of comment on his reactions to his mother's exhortations.
"How did you feel about the length of the message?"
the Insistent, Patient Therapist had prodded. "Was it too short? Would you like
it better if she sent you a longer message every two or three days?"
Deni shrugged. "It was all right."
The Therapist stifled the natural response of a
normal adult and produced an attempt at a conciliatory smile. "Try again, Deni.
Is there anything else you wish your mother had talked about? Besides school?
And music practice? We're not here to play, soldier."
She had been dealing with the great problem that
confronted every therapist who tried to get military children to talk about
their emotions -- the trait that had been observed by almost every researcher
who had ever explored the child-rearing customs of this odd little sub-culture.
The one thing that seemed to be true about all military children was their
tendency to pick up, almost at birth, the two great commandments of military
life: don't complain. don't talk about your feelings. Her solution had been to
tell him it was a task -- a duty the officer in command of the situation
expected him to fulfill to the best of his ability.
It had helped some, but only some. The resistance
she was dealing with couldn't be eliminated by direct orders and nagging
persistence. Talk therapy was only a second-best stop-gap -- a procedure that
she kept up mostly so she could convince herself she was doing something while
she waited for the day his mother finally agreed he needed the only help that
could do him any good.
He won't have the
slightest idea you did it, Dr. Barian had said. His father won't know you
did it. No one. Somebody may wonder, fifteen years from now, why a kid with his
prognosis has turned out so well, but they'll probably assume he just happened
to beat the odds. He'll just have the kind of life he should have -- the kind of
life you've got.
* * *
Deni looked up at her from the couch. His
right hand made a little twitching movement.
"You
fell asleep," Dorothy said. "I thought I'd let you rest."
He frowned. He was old enough to know she gave him
medicines that affected his feelings, but she wasn't sure he realized she would
do it without telling him first.
His eyes shifted
toward the time strip on her desk. "Can I go home now? Are we finished?"
He pulled up his legs and sat up. "They start play
time in ten minutes, Captain Min. It isn't my fault I fell asleep."
"Deni --"
"Yes, ma'am?"
"I'd like you to go sit in the chair you usually sit
in. I'd like you to do it now, if you don't mind. There's something I have to
talk about with you -- something that happened last night."
*
* *
The ceremony for the people who had died at
Rinaswandi took place in the biggest theater in Hammarskjold, two days after the
attack. Deni sat in the front row, with the other children whose parents had
been killed. Dorothy could watch him, from her place in the ranks of the medical
personnel, and note how he was still maintaining the same poise he had adopted
in the cart when she had driven him back to the childcare center.
It was the same ceremony she had attended with her
father, nineteen years ago, in memory of the people who had died in the assault
on the Lumina mining asteroid. The names of the dead would be read one by one.
(Twenty this time, thirty-three then.) A lone trumpeter would play The Last
Post. The minute of silence -- timed precisely to the second -- would end with
the bagpipes roaring into one of the big, whirling, totally affirmative marches
the Gurkha regiments had inherited, three hundred years in the past, from the
British officers who had introduced them to European military music.
That was how you always did it at a military
ceremony. First, you remembered the dead. Then -- the moment over, the tribute
paid -- you returned to the clamor and bustle of life. She lived in a world in
which people sometimes died, her father had said when he had explained it to
her. You never forgot they had died, but you didn't let it keep you from living.
Her father hadn't asked her if she wanted to go to
the Lumina ceremony. And she had known, without being told, that it wasn't
something they could discuss. There were some things that had to be left unsaid,
even with the kind of father she had. She had never told him, for example, about
the nights, the whole year after he had returned from the Lumina "incident,"
when she had stared at the ceiling of her bedroom and tried to ignore the
pictures that kept floating into her head.
* *
*
She had given
Colonel Pao a recommendation for a week of deep-sleep therapy, to be implemented
sometime in the next month, and he had indicated he would probably approve it.
Colonel Pao didn't think there would be any problems, either, with her
recommendation for a long-term follow-up, from now until Deni's legal maturity,
that would include any legal procedures that might reduce the damage. If there
was one thing everyone in the chain of command understood, it was the plight of
a child who had lost a parent in combat.
"... It's
the same basic idea you always come back to," she had told Colonel Pao. "The
point they always emphasize in all those courses on military ethics they make
you take in baby officer's school. My father even explained it to me when I was
a child -- when I asked him how he could be sure he was doing the right thing
when he helped kill people. If you're a soldier... then for you morality is
defined by the law. A soldier is someone who engages in legally authorized acts
of violence. If you take away the law, then there's no difference between us and
a bunch of thugs. If we can't obey the law, too... at least the important
laws...."
Dr. Barian hadn't been particularly
impressed with her attempts to explain herself, of course. He had stared at her
as if she had just suggested they should deal with the Akara situation by
poisoning half the people in the asteroid belt.
"The
only difference between an army and a bunch of thugs," Dr. Barian had told her,
"is that armies work for governments and thugs don't. You turned your back on a
helpless child because you felt you had to stick to the letter of some rule a
pack of politicians set up so they could appease a mob of voters who can't tell
the difference between an esem and a flogging."
* *
*
Behind his desk,
to the left, Colonel Pao had set up a serenity corner with a composition
composed of green plants and dark, unevenly glazed pottery. He had arranged two
chairs so they faced it from slightly different angles, and he had insisted they
should sit in the chairs and drink tea while they talked. On the sound system a
wooden flute had been tracing a long meditative line.
"I take it," Colonel Pao had said, "that you feel
you might have proceeded with the esem if you had been a civilian."
Dorothy shrugged. "My father always used to claim
that a good sergeant took care of the people under him. I have a feeling that if
you took it to a vote, half the people on this base might have felt I should
have thrown the rules out the airlock and given a casualty whatever he needed."
"And how do you feel about that?"
She shrugged again. "When I think about it that way
-- I feel like Dr. Barian's absolutely right and I've acted like a priggish
junior officer who thinks rules are more important than human beings."
The left side of the serenity corner was dominated
by a thin, long-necked jar that would have thrown the entire composition out of
balance if it had been one centimeter taller. She focused her eyes on the line
of the neck and tried to concentrate on the way it intersected a thin, leafless
branch. Then she lost control and snapped her head toward the trim, carefully
positioned figure in the other chair.
"He was
sitting right in front of me, sir! I had to look him in the face when I told him
his mother was dead. I could be watching what this has done to him for the next
ten years if I decide to stay in. If I had my way we'd have a law that let us
set up some kind of committee -- without giving the parents an absolute veto --
whenever we got into this kind of emergency. If all the people like Dr. Barian
had their way, there wouldn't be any rules at all and we could spend our lives
arbitrarily altering people's personalities just because we felt it was good for
them. My father, the people on Rinaswandi -- they spent their lives trying to
build a wall around chaos. There has to be a law regulating personality
modification! Even when it's as benign as this one. Just like there have to be
laws that tell you when it's all right to engage in violence."
Colonel Pao folded his arms over his chest. He
tipped his head to one side -- as if he were concentrating on the long arc the
flute was describing -- and Dorothy settled back in her chair and waited while
he collected his thoughts.
He had shifted his
thought processes to the formal, somewhat bureaucratic phrases he tended to
adopt when he communicated in Techno Mandarin. "It is my personal opinion," he
said, "that any responsible observer would have to agree that you did everything
anyone could reasonably expect you to do. You took everything into account --
including a point many civilians have trouble understanding. You did everything
you could to get a favorable response from Sergeant Kolin. You made a real
decision, furthermore, when you arrived at the moment when a decision couldn't
be postponed. You didn't just stand there and let the situation drift into a
decision by default."
Colonel Pao raised his bowl of
tea to his lips. He stared at the center of the serenity composition over the
top of the bowl and Dorothy waited again.
"I could
tell you that I think you made the right choice and try to ease your feelings by
providing you with whatever authority I may possess. I could even tell you that
you did the wrong thing and try to give you the comforting illusion someone
knows what's right and wrong in these situations. The truth is I can't tell you
any more than I've already said. If I understood the principles of ethical
philosophy as well as I would like to, I think I would conclude that you applied
the Confucian principle of reciprocity, even if I couldn't guarantee you made
the most ethical choice. You treated Deni the way you probably would want to be
treated yourself. If you or I were in Deni's position ... if someone had to make
a decision that might affect us the way this one affects him, then I think we
would want it to be someone who's been as thoughtful and conscientious as you've
been."
He rested his bowl on the tray beside his
chair and switched back to Ghurkali -- the language of her infancy. "Does that
help you, Captain? Does it give you any comfort?"
"I
think so, sir. Yes, sir."
"The other thing I think I
should say is related to something you and I have in common, so perhaps I'm
biased. Still, there have been moments -- during the less illustrious interludes
in my career -- when it's been the only thought that's kept me functioning."
He reached across the space between the chairs and
rested his hand on her shoulder. It would have been a perfectly unremarkable
gesture if anyone else had done it; in his case it was the first time he had
touched her since she had been six years old and the duty officer at the post
clinic, young Surgical Captain Pao. had held her hand while the first aid
equipment had repaired a greenstick fracture in her left arm. Colonel Pao
frequently touched patients who needed encouragement or reassurance, but he
tended to be physically reserved with everyone else.
"Just remember, Dorothy -- Deni isn't the only
person who didn't volunteer."
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