"GIMME YOUR WATCH!"
"Huh?"
The chopper was still heading southeast with its sinister escort swooping around high overhead. Despite a hollow-eyed shortage of sleep, Cedric had been staring out the window with steadily growing excitement. Holos gave sight and sound, but reality was so much more—smells and vibration and the sense of motion. He marveled at the greenness of grass and leaves below the gray drizzle; it made Meadowdale seem like a desert. He had just registered that there was no new building in progress here. The towns were not abandoned, but they had a seedy, neglected look to them, so probably they did not have long to go. Then he had caught a whiff of an unfamiliar scent and decided that it must be the sea.
"You heard me, dummy. Your watch." The thick man had been brooding in silence for a long time and was glowering at Cedric's wrist.
Puzzled and distrustful, Cedric unclipped his watch and passed it over. Bagshaw put both thumbs on it and squeezed, setting his teeth with effort. The watch bent and split, and then spilled parts. Ignoring Cedric's yell of complaint, Bagshaw tossed it into a corner.
"What the hell, mister? Gran sent me that for my—"
The bull grunted. "Babysitter."
Cedric's fair skin tended to flush easily. He felt it do so now. Three times in the last year he had gone over the screens at Meadowdale—small wonder that his freedom had always been so short-lived. "Tracer? That was how you found me last night?"
Hooded eyes gleamed mockingly. "No. I do my own babysitting."
Cedric worked that out and it was even worse. He had behaved exactly as expected—likely they had not even had to call on System for a psychoplot. Sucker! How could he have been so stupid? He felt like a circus animal. He was going to meet his grandmother face to face at last, and now he wondered how he would hold up his head.
So full of shame that he could taste it, he went back to watching the landscape unrolling below, but the magic had gone clammy and sour. Sucker! Sucker! Sucker!
But if he had not ruined everything, what did Gran have planned for him? She had refused to be specific on the com, saying only that there was a job waiting. Rangers must need a long training program, and she had not mentioned training.
Bagshaw had gone back to his brooding, staring malevolently at the shimmer of oil rainbows in a dished floor panel.
Now the land was stark and wasted. The farthest reach of storm tides was marked by long ridges of debris, the remains of buildings and machinery. Cedric reminded himself that those had been people's homes, people's cars and possessions, hopes and dreams. Tree trunks, shattered asphalt, concrete rubble—those told of other damage. In places the piled refuse still smoked. He knew it was fired as soon as it dried out, because it always contained animal carcasses. Or worse. Every storm moved the ridges farther inland . . . and storms were still growing more frequent.
The desolation became worse—barren, salt-soaked flats where nothing grew. Lonely concrete ruins stood in forlorn defiance between oddly rectangular patches of swamp marking choked cellars. In places the ground had been stripped to bare bedrock.
"Why are we coming here?" Cedric demanded suspiciously. This could certainly not be the way to Headquarters.
Bagshaw roused himself from his scowling reverie and gestured idly northward. "Earthfirsters have a missile post there-abouts. Easier just to go around it."
Cedric gaped at him, trying to decide if Bagshaw was stringing him along. "They'd shoot at us?"
"At anything going in or coming out."
"They can get away with that?"
"Sure they can—until we get mad enough to send in gunships and burn their nest. Then they open up another. Crazy bone-heads!"
Cedric swallowed his last crumb of pride. "Last night there was no fog on the holo. I saw things I'd never seen done before. I mean like sex. And the news had no foggy bits, either."
Bagshaw glanced at him and just nodded. Then he went back to staring at the floor, a hummock in a blanket.
"They censored our holo? Why?"
The blanket moved in a shrug. "Kids are easier to handle if you keep their minds off that stuff. Especially big kids."
Cedric clung tight to his new humility. "But the news? I never knew that Earthfirsters besieged the Institute. I've almost never heard of Earthfirsters."
Bagshaw gave him a curiously opaque stare. "There's probably a lot of things you don't know, Sprout."
"Like what?"
"It'd be quicker to list what you do know. Did they teach you anything other than skeet lasering?"
"Lots of things. Like farming and riding . . . canoeing and woodsmanship. Like rock climbing."
"You still got forests out west?"
"Some. In the drier parts. Desert trees resist UV, they say. The rain doesn't hurt alkali soils as bad."
"Not like forests used to be, I'll bet." Bagshaw scratched himself. "What good is all this outdoorsy stuff going to be to you? You going to be a cowboy when all the grass has died? More and more food has to be synthetic."
"I want to be a ranger," Cedric began, and wished he had not when he saw Bagshaw's lip twist.
"Ranger? Rangers don't go outdoors, sonny. They stay inside their skivs. Been watching too many holos, you have. Stone of the Institute? Or maybe Ranger Stone and the Killer Cheese. 'You will thrill as fearless Stone Craig battles the—'"
"Awright! What—"
But Bagshaw was enjoying himself. "You know what skiv means?"
"Self-Contained Investigatory Vehicle."
"So? Self-contained! No sane ranger leaves his skiv unless he must. He reads dials and keeps the equipment running and that's all."
"Tell Devlin Grant that!" Cedric said hotly. "Or Baker Abel! Or Jackson Wilbur!"
"Okay. A few. But I know a lot o' rangers. Mostly they're a dull bunch. They're only cabbies for the big shots—the planetologists, geologists, and so on. The rangers spend most of their duty time lying around watching holo coins or playing craps. Believe me, I have that on good authority. Can you read?"
"Of course!" But Cedric felt his face warm up again.
Bagshaw wrinkled his dermsym in wry amusement. "And write?"
"Yes."
"Well, or just so-so?"
"Well! Well enough!" But Cedric knew he could not compare with Madge, say, or Ben, at reading and writing. He was much better than most of the kids at Meadowdale, though. No one had ever taught him. He had picked up reading from watching holo, and big words really bothered him. He could write his name and not much more, picking out the keys with one finger. He had always meant to start practicing in earnest, but somehow there had just never been time.
Bagshaw looked skeptical and laughed.
"What of it?" Cedric demanded, angry that the big man could so easily make him feel angry. "I saw a Frazer Frankie special last week that said half the Ph.D.s in the country can't read'n'write."
"Including that slime Frazer himself, I'd think."
Cedric turned back to the window. The copter was curving over the sea, a wide bay dotted with ruins.
"Ranger's gotta be able to read, though," Bagshaw said, "because a skiv can't carry much of a System. Ranging's chicken work, Sprout. It's not exciting and dangerous; it's just dull and dangerous. Stay home and watch it on the holos—you'll see as much as they do from the skivs, anyway. And it's risky."
"Yeah, but how risky?" Cedric was skeptical. "Really—how risky?"
"About one party in fifty."
"Bull!"
"No bull. Not killer cheddar, just broken strings. Next window comes due, and the techs punch in the numbers, and there's nothing there, no world at those coordinates. It happens. Tough if you happen to be overnighting!"
"Maybe overnighting's risky," Cedric conceded. "But how often do they overnight, though? Surely that's only done if a planet's really got something exciting?"
Bagshaw shrugged. "It's done a lot oftener than they let out. But even quickies can be dangerous. Suddenly there's instability—and if you don't get your ass back here real fast, the window may be gone. And that's it, Sprout! They never find a broken string again. When a world's lost, it's lost. Creepin' rotten way to die."
Cedric was gazing out at the bay but not seeing much. He was thinking of parents he could not remember. He always felt guilty about that, always felt that there should be something there, some vague baby memory of giant smiling faces. But there was nothing.
"So maybe ranging isn't romantic," he said, and felt like a traitor as he did so. "But it's important! We've got to find a Class One world. Even if the worst of the troubles is over—"
"What makes you say that?"
Holo did. Cedric had gotten his own set when Clyde left and he became eldest, and he had been watching all kinds of educational stuff. "The ozone's started to come back—"
"Wrong. The ozone's stopped getting less. That's not the same thing at all."
Why should this beef tub know anything about that? "The ozone was destroyed mostly by fluorocarbons," Cedric said firmly. "And we stopped using them a long time ago."
"True, but all the junk they put up there back last century is still there—still hard at work, catalyzing merrily. We're down to a basic equilibrium now. If it's going up at all, it's going up so slowly it'll take centuries to get us back to where we were."
The copter had crossed the bay and was over land again, rows of shabby houses, each set in a patch of bare mud or rank weeds. Cedric looked away quickly. "And the transmensor's done away with fossil fuels, so we're not stuffing all that CO2 in the air anymore."
"Oh, yes," Bagshaw said. "Thank God for the transmensor. But it's too late now, Sprout. The damage is done. The CO2 caused the greenhouse effect, and that screwed up the weather and melted the ice." His voice grew angrier and louder, although he had already been shouting over the engine. "And it feeds on itself now. Plants are the only thing that can take CO2 out of the air, at least on our time scale, and look what we've done to plant life! Zapped it with ultraviolet, burned it with acid rain, starved it with soil erosion, poisoned it with pollution, shriveled it with drought, drowned it with too much rain there, cut down the forests . . . "
"Tropical forests just ran a rot and grow cycle and—"
Cedric was shouted down.
"But those forests weathered the rocks they grew on, and that gets the carbon out of the air, and they held down a lot of soil that's mostly gone into the sea now, and the seas took a lot of CO2 out of circulation, too, and we're still poisoning the seas. The weather's gone mad, and every storm removes some more plant life or more soil for it to grow in. Hurricanes in January? Any change in climate hurts vegetation, laddie! Species after species is just giving up, and each one takes others with it. So the CO2 level's still rising, and there's enough of it in the air to do a powerful lot more damage. The ocean's going to keep on rising. We still don't know when the Earth's going to find a new equilibrium, or where. It'll take thousands of years to get back to where we were.
"Furthermore—" He thumped a fingertip on Cedric's chest. "—the fall in population isn't matching the drop in arable land, and the Cancer Curve keeps—"
He stopped suddenly—the copilot had twisted around to watch, then grinned and turned away again. Bagshaw scowled like a constipated gorilla.
"So where did you learn all this?" Cedric demanded, trying not to believe as much as he did. Real world now—don't trust anyone!
Bagshaw grunted. He seemed ashamed of his outburst.
"That's one of the things they kept from us at Meadowdale?" Cedric asked.
"Naw. It's kept from most everyone. Talk like that and you're called an alarmist."
"The Institute?"
"Not many even there," Bagshaw muttered. "See, I'm—I was—pairing with an ecologist. Till recently. She told me. They don't like to frighten people, but she told me."
His manner had changed completely, and Cedric sensed something left unsaid. "It's that bad?"
Bagshaw nodded in silence.
"So we need a Class One world desperately!"
The motor changed its note. The copter was starting to lose altitude.
"Guess so." The sneer crawled back into place. "Then they'll send for you to do the canoeing. Maybe that's the job your grannie's got in mind for you."
Cedric turned his head to watch the fast-approaching ground. There were still six billion people left on earth, though. Transmensor windows were always short, and eventually any string ran out. How many people could you move to your Class One world if you found it?
And which ones?
"What's that?" He pointed down at high wire fences and watch towers. Armed guards were inspecting vehicles at a gate.
"The Institute."
Cedric had never dreamed that such precautions would be needed in Nauc.
"That's just the outer fence," Bagshaw said. "There are two more." The copilot was jabbering into his mike, identifying himself.
"But . . . " Cedric stared at his companion in bewilderment. "If HQ is guarded like this . . . Does it work?"
Bagshaw was in Security. Of course he would say it worked. "Completely. There has been no successful penetration in seventeen years—not in Zone One, anyway."
Cedric shook his head, hurt and baffled. "Then why Meadowdale? Why did she send me there when my folks died? Wouldn't I have been just as safe growing up here?"
"Safe from violence, maybe. But there's other nasty things, that even Security can't keep out."
"Like what?"
"Drugs. Disease. Debauchery." Bagshaw grinned mockingly.
Cedric chewed a thumbnail. "And understanding?"
"Yucch! Know something? You're getting contaminated already!"
The sheer size of HQ was astounding. It was a small city in itself. As the helicopter angled in for a landing, Cedric saw tower after tower, obviously including both offices and apartments, plus canopied playgrounds, an STOL field, and local lev stations. Yet Bagshaw said that it was not especially large, not as HQ's went; not when compared to some of the multinationals', like BEST Place, or Greenpeace Township, or the various media centers. After all, 4-I was only a minor research facility, an arm of Stellar Power, Inc.
If you believed that, Cedric thought, then you'd believe that rainwater's good for you.
This was HQ, Bagshaw added, the political and fiscal end of things. The real work was done in Cainsville, up in Labrador. That was much bigger. And Gran ran all this? Cedric had never realized.
By the time they landed, Bagshaw had donned his bull suit again—probably the easiest way to transport it. Cedric's percy remained on the floor. He felt very vulnerable and shivery as he jumped down onto concrete in the misty rain to find himself facing a circle of armored men, and another fusion cannon pointing at him—he ought to be getting used to that by now. His only consolation was that Bagshaw seemed unconcerned, and even a bull suit would not stop a plasma jet. Apparently this was a standard welcome.
The newcomers were escorted across to a doorway, and then the real trials began. Bagshaw cheerfully relinquished Cedric as though he were delivering pizza, blew into a sniffer to establish his identity, and then departed. His great bulk seemed to fill the corridor from wall to wall. Surprisingly, Cedric was sorry to see him go. The man was sarcastic and offensive, but since falling seventeen stories into his arms, Cedric was inclined to trust him.
His new owner was saturnine, cadaverous, and not much shorter than Cedric himself. He gave no name, but his white coat was labeled McEwan. He was middle-aged and bored; his obvious indifference hurt more than Bagshaw's sarcasm.
The first exercise was to establish that Hubbard Cedric Dickson was truly Hubbard Cedric Dickson. A sniffer matched his exhalations against records that must have come from Meadowdale, or from hospital records of his birth. Fingerprints, footprints, and DNA came next, and then he was told to speak his name, confirming his truthfulness with a polygraph cuff and vocal stress patterns. When he had passed all those tests, the last two armed men departed, looking disappointed.
"Why not retinas?" Cedric asked, but no one bothered to answer.
The ensuing medical outdid any ordeal he had ever experienced, involving a dozen people and a hundred complex machines. They began by removing his clothes and continued by systematically stripping away every last shred of human dignity, as only medics could, stopping just short of skinning and gutting.
With increasing reluctance, he submitted to the escalating humiliations until he discovered that his entire alimentary canal was to be explored in detail. It was not easy to be assertive when crouched on a table in the nude surrounded by several strangers, but at that news he lost his temper. "Why?" he shouted. "I've never been sick in my life."
"That's not what we're looking for," one of the women said from somewhere in the background. "Take a deep breath and try to relax."
"Then what is all this—ouch!—all this about?"
"We just want to be certain," McEwan said.
"Certain of—Ouch! Hell! That hurts!—certain of what?"
"Certain that the Sierra Club has not packed you full of explosives, that you contain no Greenpeace transmitters, Earthfirster receivers, BEST's little silicon wonders, unaccountable radioactive materials, custom-designed viruses, or toxic wastes. Little things like that."
"Do try to relax," the woman said.
And once they had counted and tagged every corpuscle, they made a small incision behind his ear and drove a screw into his skull. That was an earpatch, they told him, so that System could talk to him in private. System was fortunate, Cedric thought, that it could not hear his feelings at the moment.
When all that was over he was sent to a cubicle to dress—a sop to modesty that seemed strangely unnecessary after his public ordeal. He had never worn formal city clothes before. He had known that he would have to do so in Nauc, and the outfit hanging there was worse even than he had feared. System knew his size, of course—System no doubt knew the size and shape of every organ in his body by now—so the fit was perfect. Perfect fit in a business suit meant no room to breathe. Formal clothes fitted tighter than skin. That was okay, Cedric supposed. But the color was an eye-jarring fluorescent green. Hideous!
As he heaved the last zipper closed and straightened up to regard himself in the mirror, the drape over the door was thrown aside.
"Great Merciful Heavens—the leek that ate Denver!" Bagshaw was resplendent in an equally snug uniform of brick red, and Cedric suppressed a comment that his bodyguard resembled a mutant beetroot. Neither of them looked good in skintight suits, he thought, but scrawny was surely no worse than bulging. Bagshaw carried his fearsome Hardwave slung on his shoulder, and he sported several impressive badges. His bald scalp was concealed by a red helmet.
"I could eat a fair piece of Denver about now," Cedric remarked hopefully.
"Your decision. Next thing we have to do is code you into System, but I was told that Grandma's waiting to meet her darling. You decide, after this." Bagshaw wheeled and strode away. A few oversize strides put Cedric level with him.
"What happened to my coins?"
"The data will be inserted into System keyed to your voice, file name 'Baby Talk.' The originals will be destroyed."
"Why? You frightened that they might be booby-trapped, too?"
"They were."
"What?"
Bagshaw glanced up at him with a grimace. "Physically you were clean, but not your coins. We'll be finding out who arranged that, and how. We ran a decon program on them. They were hot. In here."
Computer viruses? Who could have tampered with Cedric's coins? No one. There comes a time when a man just stops believing . . .
"Speak your name," said the tall, saturnine man in the coat named McEwan. He was seated at a comset that seemed more complex than most.
"Hubbard Cedric Dickson."
"In command mode." McEwan was obviously eager to be off doing something else. Rapidly he ran through a routine to introduce Cedric to the Institute's System. Its responses all seemed much the same as Meadowdale's, except its voice was male and had an Eastern accent. It had no trouble distinguishing the intonation of Cedric's command tone. He was given a wrist mike.
"Up in Cainsville you're almost never more than a few steps from a wall unit," McEwan explained in a fast monotone. "Confidential replies come through the earpatch. Confidential questions you input with a keyboard, right?"
"Right." Cedric was careful not to catch Bagshaw's eye.
"You do understand about ranking?"
"He doesn't understand anything," Bagshaw said.
The tall man frowned as though he also was long overdue for breakfast. "There are nine grades. As a beginner you'll probably start as a Nine, but you may have a work grade that's higher, depending on what they give you to do. You'll learn that later."
Cedric had learned one thing already: that he was going to be asking a lot of questions. "What's the difference?"
"You're not supposed to use the higher rank for personal prying."
"Who knows?"
"System does, of course, and your supervisor will be informed. Look . . . say I'm a Five—"
"Not a chance," Bagshaw remarked nastily. "I'm only a Six, and I sure as hell outrank you."
McEwan shot him a glance of powerful distaste. "All right, I'm a Seven. I can call Six-level data, though, if I need it for my job. Sometimes system will ask me to justify my request." He turned to the com and asked in command tone: "What grade is Hubbard Cedric Dickson?"
"Information confidential below Grade Three," System told them.
"See? You'll have to ask it yourself."
"What grade am I?" Cedric inquired.
Through the bones of his skull came a spectral reply: "Four."
"What did it say?" McEwan asked innocently.
Cedric might be dressed as a two-meter leprechaun, but he was not green enough to answer that query—not after Bagshaw's careful hint. "Nine," he lied. "What's my work ranking?"
Again the hollow voice echoed in his head, creepy but quite distinguishable—and completely unbelievable.
"Eight," he told the waiting men. He might have hidden his shock from McEwan, but Bagshaw was appraising him with eyes like awls.
"Where now, Sprout? Hotcakes, bacon, steak, coffee, toast, eggs—or Grandma?"
Cedric shrugged sadly. "What big teeth you have."
"Right!" Bagshaw wheeled and headed off along the corridor. Cedric followed blindly, wondering if this was a test, wondering again what was in store for him, and totally unable to imagine what sort of job he could handle that would require a Grade One ranking on System.