Port IPort I July 19, in the Year of our Lord 2229 Chapter 1 PHILIP In the soft summer evening, Senator Richard Boland paced the den of our Washington compound. "That's not just my view, Nick. The puters say—" Stretched comfortably on the couch, Father stirred. "Let the puters tell us what water is available. How to use it is our problem." He brooded. "SecGen Kahn's, these days." I glanced up at Mom, worried the discussion would upset Path. Absently, she stroked my neck, I leaned back against the leg of the settee. If she wasn't alarmed, I need not be. "In technical matters the SecGen relies on his staff," said Mr. Boland, "Kahn's no engineer. I'm sure Philip could absorb the data as well as he." "And faster," said Mom loyally. Across the room, Mr. Tenere, Dad's aide and friend, nodded agreement. I wondered if I should look into it. Even at twelve, there were few math and engineering problems I couldn't tackle, "The real issue is whether the new towers will be occupied before—" Path said, "No, it's that you let puters decide matters that should be in human hands," Senator Boland gave wiy with grace. "You set us a better example in your Administration," Mom shot him a warning look, She hated to see Path reminded of the no-confidence vote that had ended his tenure as U,N, Secretary-General five years before. Adam Tenere smiled easily. "It did make for some long meetings, sir," Path grunted, "I suppose it comes from my Naval back-pound: you don't trust the machinery, Reeheck everything." None of the adults spoke, so I jumped in, "But you were proven right. When you were Captain of Hibernia, the day they were about to Fuse with the wrong coordinates—" "Oh, that was just luck." But Path's eyes didn't leave me, and I basked in the glow of his approval, "Still, I've some amazing behavior from puters. Heroic as well as incredibly stupid." Mr. Tenere said, "Did you hear they trapped an Arfie in Euronet last week?" Father frowned, and I realized he was having trouble with the jargon. My psych texts said adults were slower to adapt than the young, and objectively speaking, I had to agree. "Artificial free intelligence," I blurted, to save him embarrassment. "They're AI constructs that expand beyond the originating programs and cyber into—" "Yes, I saw the article in Holoworld," Path grumbled. "Sooner or later if we keep letting those things loose, there'll be hell to pay." "They're bound by the limits of the ori prog," I told him. "Unless the programmer inserted a—" Senator Boland said, "Robbie's sponsoring a bill on that." He seemed proud of his son, now a U.N. Assemblyman. "The nets are too complex to control, but we 're going to require delimiters in all new AI programs. Then if an AI breaks loose, it can't..." A Hacker would schuss past their legislative roadblocks with a gleeful wave. Whatever ice a puter could build, another puter could eventually crack. And some of Jared Tenere's e-friends might try. I wasn't sure they had the skill to succeed, but they seemed a malevolent bunch of joeys. Perhaps that's why Jar liked them so; they rebelled in ways he only dreamed of. I thought of saying as much, but it was past my bedtime, and adults tended to blame the messenger for what they didn't care to hear. Any annoyance, and Mom would glance at her watch and hustle me out. "P.T.?" It was as if she'd read my mind. "Aw, Mom." She'd gone parental, just as the conversation was getting technical. My eyes appealed to Path, across the room, but he only nodded his agreement. Reluctantly, I said goodnight, gave the expected hugs, and made my way upstairs. Across the compound, Jared would be deep into his nightly vigil at his puter. At fifteen, he got to stay up later. He got to do a lot of things, most of them self-destructive. From time to time I thought of alerting Mr. Tenere, but I gathered there was a code of behavior involved. Certain things adults were supposed to find out by themselves. I sighed. I didn't have friends my own age, and learning the proper behaviors was complicated. My psych, Mr. Skeer, said I shouldn't worry about my emotional difficulties and should try to act as normally as I could, but I didn't know what twelve-year-old norm was. I'd never been there before. I hoped the other twelves I'd run across weren't normal; that would be very depressing. Once, Mr. Skeer said that despite my intelligence, I had the emotions of a nine-year-old. At the time, I was nine. I supposed my emotions were twelve now. I'd be getting hair soon. I checked when I sat on the toilet, but there was none yet. Once I thought I saw some coming, but it didn't grow in. Adolescent Psychology Monthly said puberty was confusing. It'd be nice to talk to Father about it, but I had to be careful not to upset him. He loved me very much. He said so a lot. In bed, the lights off, I worked on irrational numbers. After a time, I drifted into sleep, Chapter 2 JARED "Get away from my puter!" Dad spun my chair, his eyes blazing. "How many times have I told you?" I grabbed his arm to keep from falling. "Don't sneak up on me." "Your puter's in there!" He stabbed a thumb at my room. "This is mine." "You hiding something?" My tone was sullen. The console chimed. "Mr. Tenere?" Dad keyed the caller. "Just a moment, sir." He regarded me, his anger slowly fading to distaste. "1 have a right to privacy, Jared." I snorted. "Now you sound like the Old Man." Dad glanced at the speaker. "Don't call Mr. Seafort that. He might hear." "The Old Man?" I shrugged. "He is one." He turned to his desk, rummaged for a set of chips. "Come along." Drooping red maples swayed in Washington's muggy August breeze, offering welcome shade as we strolled through the high-walled compound to the Old Man's home and office. Across the river from Old Washington, nestled in the Virginia hills incorporated into the broadened District, the compound was a public gift to the Old Man after his forced retirement. P.T. told me the Old Man would have refused it, had Arlene not insisted for their son's sake. The Seaforts lived in the main house; our bungalow was on the periphery, not far from the surrounding wall. Dad said, "Show him more respect." What would I care about a disgraced politician, no matter how famous he'd been in his day? I said as much. "Oh, Jared." A sigh. I knew Dad was hung up on respect. Centuries out of date, but U.N. Naval Academy had brainwashed him for life. Dad smoothed his hair as we reached the patio doors. Within was a hall, and to the right, a sunlit outer office where Dad worked answering mail and handling the Old Man's stream of inquiries and responses. Beyond Dad's office were the doors to the Old Man's sanctum, which had its own entrance to the patio, seldom used. I asked scornfully, "What are you, his trained rabbit?" "That's it. No nets for a month!" He stalked through his anteroom office. "Rolf and I are Unking tonight! We're schussing through—" "Too bad." I tugged at his arm. "If you think I'm ..." I shrugged, pretended I'd thought of something more important. Dad's face had that look. I'd first seen it last month. I'd told Dad it was goddamn nonsense to haul myself out of bed for school when Philip could sleep as long—and his expression had gone tight as he'd moved toward me. I'd jumped back, not quite sure why. Normally I did as I pleased, and told Dad what he wanted to hear. After all, at fifteen I was practically grown. "Adam?" The double doors to the Old Man's study swung open. "What is this nonsense?" He gestured with his holovid. "I had a few questions about the Freshwater Project, and they sent us three gig of—oh. Jared." His tone was neutral, but just barely. There'd been a time when the Old Man's manner to me was cordial, even friendly. Somehow, that tone had dissipated as I grew older. What goofjuice, for me to care what an adult thought, yet there were moments—only a few—when his delight in his son drove me to rage. Why couldn't Dad treat me likewise? Why couldn't the Old Man see I was every bit as good as Philip? Dad gathered his gear. "I'll write Richard Boland directly. He'll cut through—" "When you do, decline his invitation to the Franjee groundbreaking. Other commitments prevent, etc." The Old Man stood aside as Dad passed. "I won't have the media gawking at me just so Franjee can pretend I endorse his ..." The doors closed. I slouched in Dad's console chair. When I heard the scrape of a chair in the study I switched on Dad's puter. I'd broken about half his passwords, but a few were still beyond me. My e-friend Rolf built a zarky password-cracker, but wouldn't give me the code. He lived in Alberta, so I couldn't pound on his door and talk him out of it. On the other hand, I hadn't told him the idea I was working on, after reading about the latest Arfie. Idly, as if paying no attention, I tapped at Dad's keyboard, one eye on the screen. The Old Man had made my challenge more interesting: he wouldn't allow an intelligent puter in his home, not even personality overlays or voicerec. "For years they harassed me. No more." There was no use arguing: he was stubborn enough to drive anyone to a rebalancing ward, as he'd done to his second wife. Naturally he never spoke of it; hormone treatment was certainly nothing to brag about. I stuck out my tongue at Dad's silent screen. After the net-locks on a superbox, his passwords should be a zark. If only I could hammer his ice with a CLIP. Central linked processors sliced through the hardest glacier, if you knew how to couple them and had the nerve. Luckily, in our cottage, at least I had access to my nets. Each night, I would don my mask and gloves and schuss the white powder hills of access. Tonight, after Dad went to bed, I'd link with a few e-friends and slalom the gates. He'd never know, and by tomorrow, I'd talk him out of his punishment. It always worked. I opened some of his directories I'd already crashed. A letter to Senator Boland, Uncle Robbie's father. Why did the Old Man bother with that old stuffed shirt? All Boland did was make speeches. He wanted to rebuild the Navy, bulldoze the crumbling cities to make a clean beginning, that sort of goof juice. Yet everyone knew we had no money for the cities; defense came first. Only a few years before I was bora, an alien armada had rained terror from the skies. We lost cities, and suffered untold casualties. At last, now, the menace seemed abated, but thanks to the attacks, and the Old Man's stupidity in letting two of our colonies go free, my generation would be dead and gone before good times came again, "Hi." I whirled, but it was only Philip. "Prong yourself, P.T." I had to keep him in his place; he was only twelve. I tried to break another code, failed. "Try the base eleven algorithms; your Dad likes weird numbers." P.T. flopped into a seat. "Careful he doesn't catch you." "He's with your Old Man." Glancing at the door, Philip frowned. "Path's in one of his moods. Someone told him the Senate wants to reorganize Devon Academy." 4 "God forbid." "Path has a thing for tradition." P.T. rested his chin on his hands, looking glum. "He and Mom are fighting," "Again?" "They try to hide it." His face twisted. "I'm just a kit." Dad's birthday in base eleven cracked another file. It was only next year's budget; nothing of interest. The Senators merely kept the Old Man informed as a courtesy. "Need help with homework?" Philip sounded hopeful. He studied with private tutors, and was dumb enough to miss the drudgery of the common school Dad made me attend. "I never need help." Not true, but no reason to tell him. Better if he thought I was doing him a favor by letting him write some of my essays. How unzark, his being ahead of me. Had to be his mother's genes; couldn't be the Old Man's, I hesitated. "I gotta write a history report by Wednesday. Anything government-related in the last hundred years," "Zarks." He brightened. "Your room?" I said sourly, "If your Mom won't have a kitten—'* "Bail out!" I slapped the screenblank just as the office door opened, Dad shot me a skeptical glance. "What are you up to?" I put on my most sullen look. "P.T. was in the other chair, so I used yours. So sorry." I got to my feet. "Hi, Philip," As I hoped. Dad chose to ignore me. "Good afternoon, sir." P.T. stood. The sodding joeykit was always polite, except with me, because he knew I'd wipe his face in the grass if he tried it. Not that he had much choice, with adults. His Mom and the Old Man buzzed him like flies on a trannie. I couldn't figure why he didn't Mem to mind. Dad said, "Sorry, P.T., I forgot your holochips. Why don't you come over tonight and—" Footsteps, along the tiled hall. A light voice. "Kidnapping my son again?" As Arlene Seafort appeared Dad's face lit with a smile he rarely offered me. But I wasn't jealous. Soon I'd surprise them all. "Not exactly. It's just... I mean, I—" Dad swallowed, shut his eyes. Silently, I counted off five seconds with him. When his eyes opened they held a mischievous glint. "Yes, I am. You won't see Philip again until he finishes my son's homework." I stared stonily at the window. Damn him; why cut me in front of the queen bitch, just to tell me he knew about P.T.? Her voice dropped. "How is he today?" Dad glanced at the closed door. "Well... moody." Arlene grimaced. "Tell me what I don't know." Her hand fell on Dad's arm. "Sorry, Adam." She sounded weary. "Trouble?" It was as if they had forgotten we were in the room. "No more than usual. It's just..." Her gaze lit on P.T.S then on me, "We'll talk later, perhaps." She bestowed a pretended frown on her son, though her tone held no rebuke. "Philip, do your own work before you, ah, watch Jared do his," "Yes, ma'am." She ruffled P.T.'s hair as she left. "Adam, join me for a drink after dinner." "I'd like that," I caught P.T.'s eye and grimaced. Granted, his Mom wasn't as bad as most seniorcits, though she had a mania for physical fitness, a carryover from her military days. But hearing her with Dad was like a holodrama from the Romantic Ages. "The Vegan resettlement?" "Who cares." I rolled over on the bed. P.T. sat at my puter, ready to translate my ideas into respectable prose. The arrangement suited us both; it wasn't my fault Philip was far ahead of his tutors, while I got nothing but drudge work. What good was general ed? Puters were useful, and a zark. Dull useless facts weren't. Dad knew school didn't suit me, but paid no attention. It wasn't as if he had to send me; education was optional, and had been for a century. Hell, even the Old Man said he'd been taught at home. Try convincing Dad, though. He shrugged and changed the subject. "Well?" P.T. prodded my bed with his foot. "The founding of Lunapolis? Nah, I did that last time and she'll remember. The response to the fish armada?" He snorted. "That's current events, not history." "It's been eleven years since the last—" "Trust me." "Think of something." "Social effects of the Augmented Fusion Drive? Too easy, I could quote it right out of D'Aubison's book. Let's do the Planters' Rebellion. Hope Nation." "It was your Old Man who put down the revolt. How can you call that history?" P.T.'s eyes widened. "Jar, that was before I was born," The Old Man's three trips to Hope System were the stuff of holodramas, but I was thoroughly sick of it. Growing up with a living legend was no fun, especially given his attitude toward P.T, and Dad's toward me, "It's boring," I said, mostly for spite. As I hoped, Philip was outraged, "Putting down the rebellion? Blowing the Station? How can you call—" "He did it just for the fireworks," My tone was sour. Everyone applauded the Old Man because he nuked Hope Nation's station to destroy a flotilla of attacking fish. But did he stop to think who'd pay to replace it? Even Dad claims taxes are too high to raise my allowance, P,T, was indignant, "That's not fair. Path hated what he did," Yeah, sure. The Old Man gathered guilt like some joeys collect butterflies. After Hope Nation they called him a hero and made him Commandant of Naval Academy. "The Fisherman," he was called, though never to his face. But when he got all those cadets killed, he cowered in a monastery for ten years, gnawing the marrow of his remorse, I had a hunch the published reports left out part of the story. Someday I'd get Dad to tell me. After all, he was there, a middy aboard the mothership Trafalgar, Whenever I asked. he would only look grim and shake his head. Maybe the truth was in a file I hadn't broken. If so, I could sell it to Holoworld for a fortune. Retired or not, the Old Man was still choice meat for the mediamen. Perhaps that was why he hated publicity. I debated. Hope Nation had plenty of juicy incidents to hang a paper on, but my goal in life was to escape Nick Seafort's frazzing compound, and I'd be damned if I'd glorify him. "Nah. Let's do..." I thought furiously. "The Hacker Revolt." "Revolt? They crashed the Treasury, but that was—" "A zark." I knew I was safe with P.T.; he'd never repeat what I'd said. In school or elsewhere, I had to keep my mouth shut. As our teachers loved to remind us, the Rebellious Ages were long past. The Reunification Church and its U. N. Government wouldn't tolerate anarchy. "I suppose," P.T. said doubtfully, "we could write about the safeguards put in place since—" "Sure. You write the intro." I lay back, A moment later, I came awake with a start. "Don't shake me." "It's done. All of it," "Already? Let's see." I scanned the printout, yawning. The Hackers' invasion of the U.N. Treasury in June 2129 was, like the barbarians' sack of Rome, a decisive turning point in social relations. The chaos resulting from loss of half a year's taxes shattered a growing nostalgia for the Rebellious Ages, and thenceforward most societal institutions were united behind the Rule of Law, as our era is now known. Though stringent security safeguards have since been put in place, continued reliance on puters means that danger remains— I grunted. "I'll have to change some words." "My grammar's fine. Run your spellcheck, you won't find—" "Oh, cork it." That was the trouble. If I turned in a report using terms like "thenceforward" and free of grammatical errors, our frazzing teacher would guess I hadn't written it. After P.T. left, I would throw in a few typos to look like I'd been too lazy to run the speller, and string a couple of sentences together. For Philip's benefit I said grudgingly, "It's all right. I'll fix it up." "Fine. Do your own work!" He snatched the printout from my hand, turned back to the puter. "I'll erase it and—" "Don't even think about it, joey." I tried to make my voice cold, like once I'd heard the Old Man's, when he was still SecGen. Philip's finger hovered over the wipe. "Or you'll stuff more grass in my mouth?" His tone was acid. "I don't mind helping, you frazzing grode, but don't ever treat me like your personal trannie!" He sounded like ... I wasn't sure what, or whom. "Cool jets. It's a good essay." He didn't seem mollified. "Better than I'd have written," I added with gritted teeth. Soon, I'd be out of here. If all went as planned I'd savor my revenge. His thumb left the keyboard. I let out my breath. Tomorrow, I'd reenable the unwipe in case he pulled that again, P.T. sulked. Despite my efforts, my anger dissipated. With Philip, it was hard to stay mad. He had a quality that made me yearn to stroke him, I'd never tried, "Gotta go." Curfews. I snorted. Dad thought I had one, too, but he didn't know I used the hall window. "I'll walk you back." It was nearly ten; the floods were turned off for the night. We crossed the darkened lawn in silence. Our bungalow was at the far end of the drive, between the compound gates and the helipad, Not much of a home for a retired Captain, or me. Dad had made Captain shortly after the Old Man became SecGen, and had commanded U.N.S. Vesta before Admiralty sent him to act as Naval Liaison to Seafort. When the Old Man lost his vote of confidence and resigned, Dad had volunteered to stay with him rather than return to the Navy. I don't know why. Maybe the shuttle crash that killed Mom had something to do with it; Dad said only that an interstellar liner was no place to raise a child. Selfish of him; it'd be a zark to have the run of a starship instead of being stuck in common school. Nobody would give me trouble as the Captain's son. Instead, when the Old Man retreated to Washington, Dad followed. As we neared the main house I said, "Thanks for the paper." P.T. shrugged. "I mean it." A little butter wouldn't hurt, for next time. "They loaded me with math and—" "Shh!" He grabbed my arm, tugged me back. The soft sound of voices overrode my annoyance. I strained to hear. "No more than usual." Arlene. "It's that damned hadj he takes next week." I knelt below the dim glow of the patio light, motioned to P.T. to follow. After a moment I crawled closer. "Hadj?" Dad's laugh sounded nervous. Arlene said crossly, "Whenever he comes home from that bloody monastery he's sick from the memories, and from shame at all the parishioners crowding for a glimpse of him." "It's only once a year. He needs the retreat." "I know!" P.T. stirred uneasily at the anguish in her tone. I put a hand on his shoulder; he shook it off, speared me with a laser glare that warned against touching him again. A long pause. She added, "Perhaps more than he needs me." Dad sighed. "But he does need me. When he resigned he was so ... hurt." Dad said, "He didn't deserve their contempt. I know how he felt." "I wonder." She hesitated. "Adam, keep this between us, but part of his hurt was his suspicion that he did deserve it." Dad sounded tired. "I thought he was past that." "He doesn't have much confidence. His self-respect is ... fragile." I glanced at P.T., but his face was in the shadows. "That's hard on you." Her laugh was brittle. "I manage. For weeks after Lancaster, I look at him with adoring eyes, and bite my tongue when I want to criticize. Well, it's not as bad as all that. But for Christ's bloody sake, I wish he wouldn't keep going to that place!" Dad cleared his throat. "Sorry," she said presently. "No blasphemy meant." She didn't have to worry in Dad's company, but in public a remark like that could have her up for sacrilege. One had to be careful; though public piety might be fading, the elders of the Reunification Church were still immensely powerful. Last year I'd told my teacher what I thought of our stupid canon law, and got hauled into the principal's office for a whipping. Worse, Dad hadn't shown much sympathy. Maybe I should report Arlene anonymously. That'd show them. "I wish I could help," Dad told her. "An evening chat with you is enough." Her tone lightened. "Let's round up our offspring." I scuttled away from the house, tugging at Philip. When he was clear, I leaped to my feet, ran toward the veranda, spoke as if breathless. "There you are! We were coming to find you." I addressed Dad. "Isn't it your bedtime, young man?" "Very funny." He caressed the back of my neck; I refrained from flinching at his touch. Arlene put her hands on her hips, her tone mocking. "Philip, what mischief have you been into?" P.T. fell into her hug. "Nothing, Mom. Jared was showing me his puter." Dad and I said good night, strolled back to the bungalow. At the outer door he paused. "How long were you listening?" "Huh? I don't know—" He shook his head. I followed him inside. "All I said—" Dad spoke softly, as if resigned. "I hate lies, Jared." "That's right, accuse me again. All you do is find fault. We were only—" He turned away. "Go to bed." "Yeah, don't listen. You never—" "Now!" It brooked no argument. I retreated, slammed my door in futile protest. I'd show them, someday. Dad, Arlene, all of them. Someday. Chapter 3 POOK Fat man sigh soft, grab at my wrist. I holdafort, proud. He slide down da wall, like his legs tire. I reach down, pull shiv from his stomach, watch blood spurt 'til it stop. I wipe my blade on his coat, stick it in belt. Nobody mess wid a Mid. I look roun', don' see no one inna dark. Gotta grit teeth checkin' out his pockets. Make me feel all glitch, him still warm. Can' fin' nothin'. But ya never know; he mighta had com. For a min I think 'bout making Mid mark wid blood onna wall. Dis be Mid turf, even if alia Rocks not know it yet. Nah. Smarter ta leave it for Midboss, 'less Karlo think Pookboy try in' ta crash. Ain' had my upbringin' yet, but it gonna come any time now. Den I be reg Mid. Old neut Changman say I be fourteen, moreless, but he so glitch wid old, I dunno. Sometimes Chang make me drink his tea while he remem-ba how Fisherman come see him, 'fore 1 born. Boolsheet. Ain' no Fisherman; he jus' scaretale fo' joeykits. Still, better I hang roun' Chang's place than onna street, special nighttime. Now dat Mids be pushin' out Broads an' Rocks, lotsa rumb nighttime, an' Karlo say joeykits sposc ta stay outa. I tellim I big enough, but he jus' laugh, whop me on side a head. Someday I show him. Alladem. Like fat ol' Rock tonigh', think he c'n cross Mid turf. "Fadeout," he say, hopeful Ri'. I fade him out bigtime. I look aroun', don' see no Rocks. Back ta lair, I spose ta, but too wired try ta sleep. Careful, crouchin' in shadows, ! duck 'cross street, run roun' corner. Knock three time. Nothin'. Knock again, three time. Voice growl, "Go away. Close." "It be me." "Dunno any 'Me'." I sigh. Stupid ol' man. "I be Pook. Lemme in 'fore Rocks gemme." Bolts slide open. Time be passin'. I peer inta dark, my back itchin'. Be a soun', in build 'cross street? Dunno. Door open. Scrunchy ol' man in robe look down his nose, suspicious. "Watcha done, Midboy?" "Nothin'." I close door quick. "Pah." He shuffle ta table, take his cuppa, sip loud. "Joeykit thinks he's talkin' to dumbass Mid. Try ta swind Pedro Telamon Chang, hah?" I sniff at pot. "Whazzat, tea? Feh." Coffee better, when he give, even if he think tea be only fo* special fren. "Tea, yah." He padded 'cross room. "Allri5, I giveya. Trayfo?" "Ain' got." Anyway, I be glitch ta tray somethin' I wan' fo' tea I don' like. "Lemme see." He stick his han' in my pocket. I make face, but lettim. Coupla times he catch me holdin' out, and whop me good. I old enough now he can' do it, 'less I let him. Dunno why I do; I almos' big as he. He pat me down. "Whazzis?" 'Fore I c'n stop him, he yank out my shiv. He lean ta Valdez perma, ta sec it better inna ligh'. "Gimme!" My voice jump too high. It do a lot, nowtime. He inspee' shiv. "Blood? Cut?" His voice worry. "Naw." He try ta hide his relieve. "Who?" "Fat or Rock joey." I shrug. "Why?" I surprise at dumb question. " 'Cause he Rock." "Thassall?" His eyes anger. "A Rock on Thirty Seven! Mid turf." "But what'd he do?" "He be dere, what he do!" Stupid ol' man slap me hard, an' it hurt. I let out yelp. "Nobody whomp on Pook no mo'!" I snatch shiv. Ol' Changman bristle like cat some buncha scroungers figga for stewpot. "Midboy gonna diss Chang, hah?" He shuffle close, pull open his robe. "Right here, ya want to stick it. G'wan! Chang go down fas'." "I din say no—" He grab holda my ear an'twis'. I squawk. He yell, "This Chang house! No snotty Midboy tells Chang what he look at. Put dat back where I lef it! An' stop cryin'!" "I ain'cry in', y a oF— all ri'!" I drop shiv on table. He leggo ear. Ain' no talkin' ta Chang sometime; gotta do what he say. But inside, he ain' so fierce as he think. An' he take me in, afta I pissoff Karlo. He trot ta back room, drag out 'notha chair. "Sit. Drink tea, feel better." "Don' wan' none." T sit. "Wipe ya eyes an' sip. Ain' too hot." He wait. "Why ya comedown on Pook? Rocks ain' nothin' ta Neut." I sniff. Can' help it; I hate when Chang be mean. "Tea don' stay hot fo'eva." He slurp his cup. I sip tea, keep Mm happy. Ain' too bad. Outside, streets quiet fo' night. I look roun' shop, see what Chang got new. On chair, usual piles a clothes, all wash an' fold. Jumpsuits, like Uppies got. Broads like 'em, but won' catch Pook in a jumpsuit 'less he bareass widout, Frazzin' Uppies think they own N'Yawk. Don' wan' look like 'em. Buncha boxes inna corner "Whazzat, Chang?" His eyes go narrow. "Mista Chang," I fix quick, 'fore he grab my ear. He grunt, like he satisfy. "Permas." Valdez permas, Batries we use fo'light, fo'cook. Uppies use fo"l6ctricars an'helis, "Why so lot?" "So many." He wait 'til I say it his way, which I gotta do if I wan' him ta tell. Else, he too stubborn. "Savin* fo' trayfo," he growl. Dat don' 'xplain nothin'. Changman save everythin' fa trayfo. He be a traytaman. He trayfo perrnas or threads or cansa fo' trannie scrounge. He trays wid alia tribes. Even wid Subs, once in while. Not much, cause no one mess wid Subs, even fo' tray. Usetabe, they dissya soon as ya go on they turf. Now they jus' take yo* trayfo, whomp on ya har'. Inna day, even Rocks an' Broads c'n come ta Chang's door. One time he make me hide behin' curtain 'cause two big ol' Easters come. Argue some, trayfo lotsa. After, he jus' smile 'cause I mad he make me hide. "Easters don' wan' tribes know what they trayfo. See ya here, they give Pookboy 'nother mouth." He make sign cross throat. I finish my tea. "Gotta be makin' big trayfo, so lot— so many permas." "Min' ya own biz," Chang grumble. He fill his cup. Afta while, he shake his head. "Two month I work buildin' truce, an' stupid Midboy mess it up dissin' Rock." "He be on—" "Yah, yah, Mid turf." Chang sip tea. "Turf fallin' down, an' govermen takin' what ain't. Still tribes rnmb, fo' nothin'." "Turf ain'nothin'!" "Hah." He rock hisself, breathin' hot tea. Eyes go faraway. "Cross street, down Thirty Six, big store usetabe Mace turf." Never been no Mace, since 'fore ! born. Jus' oF man's dream. Still, he act like they real tribe, Sighin' inside, I nod, "Giant store, took up whole block. They lived in. Little Mace boy came knockin' on Chang door once, like you. Scared, mad, needed help." When ol' man look otha way, I stick out tongue. I ain' little, an' ain' scared, "Eddie Maceboy wasn't like Pook. He listened, when Chang toF him smarts. He learned, OF Eddie knew better manners than stick tongue at Pedro Telamon Chang," Damn; he not spose ta see, I get ups stand by his chair. "Din'mean nothin'." He no answer. 1 pat his shoulder, feel funny inside, like bad. " 'Pologize," One a big words Chang try ta teach. Make him smile, anyway. He sigh. "Maces died to keep their turf, Couldn' keep. Where Mace now? Turf ain' worth dyin'for. Or killinY' "You don' unnerstan', Mista Chang. You ain' tribe." "Afta govermen done, tribes'11 be gone." His blue eyes squint at mine. "Joeykit can' imagine, but that day comin'." "No one pushout Mids," 1 go proud. "Midboys can5 stop Unies," „ "Unies?" 1 laugh scorn. "They sick oF tribe, by riva. Can' even get pas' Sixth." "Bah." He push me 'way, "Not Unie tribe; real Unles! Govemmen!" He search my face, don1 fin* what he wan'. "When Goverman Bolan' get his way, Unies '11 tear down city, put Uppie tower where Chang shop be." "How you know—" "It's inna holozines, stupid Midboy. Filmatleven. If you let Chang teach read—" "Don' wanna read," I grumble. "Ain' no Uppie." "Ya never gonna be, not know nothin'!" That stop our talk a while. He go wash cups, I pace shop, nervous, pickin' up stuff, puttin' down. Maybe Rocks fin' ol' fat man, an' come fo' venge when Pook run ta lair. Chang peer from behin' curtain. "Okay okay, Midboy c'n stay night. Get hisself killed 'nother day." "I ain' 'fraid a no—" "Yah, yah, Chang heard it before. Wash." Chang be glitch 'bout allatime wash. It ain' trannie way. Howya gonna wash threads, onna street? He think everyone got Valdez permas ta dry wid? Think alia tribe got good nm-nin' water, like Broads 'n few Mid lairs, or live near seawall? Chang ruffle my hair as I pass. Stupid ol' man think he my motha. Nex' day, sun shine warm. Wind blow dus' around rubbly lot ol' Chang call Mace. Daytime, streets ain' like night. Tribes go about, sometimes even innifo passby each cftha turf. Still, I gotta watch out, case someone knows I diss Rock. Mids live in lairs. Always secret place. Mids don' like uppa flo'; mos'ly stay on groun' or basemen'. I look roun' 'fore goin' in. No one see. Karlo be boss our lair. I wait fo' him to look at me. He ain' so pissoff since I brung innifo, but sometime he have a bad day. He nod, don'say nothin'. I figga it be all ri'. Longtime back, my motha go ta 'nother lair, leave me behin'. Don' matta; Bigsis look afta me 'til I growed. I be reg Mid joey kit, waitin' fo' upbringin'. But Karlo gotta say okay firs', an' he make me wait extra, causa pissoff. Rab an' Swee had they upbringin', an' I bigger 'n Rab. I ain' gonna cry like Swee, neitha, when they cut Mid mark. I ready. I peek in stewpot. Bigsis gimme look like jus' ya try. I know stew be fo' later, when alia tribe home in lair. Daytime eat, my biz. Tribe don' care if joey kit go hungry inna day. "Whereya been?" I shrug. "Changman." Bigsis give me checkout look. "Why spen' ally a time wid Neut?" "Dunno. Somethin'ta do." "How ya gonna learn, hangaroun' allatime wid glitch ol' man? Gonna be half Uppie like him?" I laugh. Chang no Uppie. "He shaggin' ya?" She soun' curious. "Nah." Gimme idea, though. I gotta see if he merest. Gemme buncha trayfo, if he do. She don' much care. "He gon' die soon, anyway." My heart go pump, but I say casual, "We gonna dissim?" Maybe I warn 'im, if. "Diss a Neut?" She look at me like I glitch. "Naw. I say in' he ol'." She frown at stew, stir. "Been ol' since I was joeykit." I can' imagine street widout Chang. Gotta ask 'im if he think he die soon. Ol' Chang spose ta be bes' traytaman eva. Mids say, one time he even trayfo laser, back when Rock try takeova. If ya need cansa, Chang always got, long as ya bring trayfo. He got shivs, threads, even window glass. Dunno where he get. "Yo! Pook!" Bigsis squint at stewpot. "Gimme help." "Innifo?" She gotta give me somethin', jus' little, else why I do fo' her? Wha's inni fo' met Her face get ugly. "I'll innifo ya, dreckface joeykit! Wan' eat tonigh', or no?" "Watchew wan?" My voice what Changman call sullen. "Who got cansa veg? Tomatoes or somethin'?" "Dunno." She scrounge unner table, pull up boots, good all roun', jus' little hole one side. "Go find trayfo." "Me?" My voice come in squeak. I bring it low, redface. "I mean, sho', Bigsis." I grab boots 'fore she change min'. Trayfo be job fo' grown Mids, an' she askin' me do it. I go proud. "Can' giveaway boots," she warn. "Not fo' two, three cansa." "Don* tell Pook howta trayfo," I say, scorny. Already I thinkin', checkout street, fin' someone wid lotsa cansa. Don' even talk ta trannie wid jus' a couple. If I can' fin' enough cansa, I go ta Changman. He help. On otha han', maybe he skin me on trayfo. Chang worse 'n tran-nies onna street. Chapter 4 ROBERT "What do you think, Robbie?" I snapped off the holovid, squinted into the glare of reflected sunlight on Dad's worn cluttered desk, "You're really pushing the upside/' "Bah." He waved it away. "After thirty years of politics I know to come out swinging. Besides, what I say in the speech is true. The increase in land values alone will justify—" I jumped in before he found his full voice. "Not the whole spiel, Dad," "Wouldn't hurt for you to hear it again," Dad grumbled. "So, how do I handle the launch?" "Prep the party faithful, so they follow with their own speeches in support." "Of course. I don't want to be hung out to dry on this one." He brooded. "Could we get Nick on the bandwagon? I've tried, but he keeps asking for more data," "The Captain won't even consider a public stand." "Letters, to some of our friends?" "Possibly." "Ask him," He shoved his caller across the desk, "Why not you?" "He has a soft spot for you, Robbie, I'm just another pro,** I sighed. After knowing him twenty years or more, I still felt uneasy pressuring the retired SecGen, The man was an enigma. Seafort had joined the U.N. Navy at thirteen, and sailed as a middy to Hope Nation. After a series of tragedies, he brought his ship home as Captain, More important, he brought news of the first aliens mankind had ever encountered, the fish that nearly destroyed us. Captain Seafort's second voyage ended in disaster when a fool of an admiral abandoned him on the disabled Challenger with transpop passengers the commander disliked. With courage and tenacity, Seafort fought off the aliens and returned home with his crippled ship. He sailed again to Hope Nation, but became entangled in a seething planter rebellion. Desperately ill, left in charge after the fleet's recall, Seafort managed to put down the revolt. Then, he went aloft in a shuttle and blew up Hope Nation's orbiting station to destroy hundreds of marauding fish, believing that his act was treason and he would be hanged. Had not the law been overturned during his absence, he'd have been tried rather than feted. After, Dad and the Admiral of the Fleet wouldn't let him retire. The Captain was made Commandant of Naval Academy, where'd I'd been sent as a green young cadet. A few months after, I'd been allowed to accompany him on his fateful cruise on Trafalgar. Dad moved restlessly. I asked, "Couldn't it wait?" "Rob, I need to know." Reluctantly I dialed, waited for the connection to Washington. "Adam? Rob Boland here. The Senator's fine, thanks. I'm going to send you a speech Dad's planning. We'd like Mr. Seafort to look it over. I could call, um, tomorrow." I ignored Dad's frown. It was he who'd taught me patience. If we rushed the Captain, he'd just say no. Adam's voice was warm. "Why don't you catch the sub-orbital and join us for dinner? I know he'd love to see you." "I don't want to impose—" "Don't be ridiculous." I gulped, a carryover from the days when he'd been a lofty midshipman, and I a mere cadet. "If you're sure, sir." "See you at seven. Bring the speech along; he'll read it if I tell him I gave his promise," "Thanks, Adam." "Looking forward to it. We'll have drinks after, you and I." "Zarky." I rang off. Dad looked smug. "See? I've always known what lever to push." "Is that what I am to you?" I smiled to remove the sting from my tone. Dad's grin turned the lines around his eyes to crinkles. "That, and much more. Besides, you love to visit them," "Of course." I gathered my things. "On the other hand, Adam's son will be there." Dad's mouth tightened. "Your ... nephew?" "I wish I'd never agreed to that 'Uncle' business. He's a distasteful young joey." A few minutes later I went home to pack; the Captain would no doubt invite me to stay the night. If he didn't, Adam would. While selecting a change of clothing, I mused on my friend Tenere. He had made his own bed; he'd failed to put Jared over his knee when the boy had been small enough. Instead, Adam let the boy walk over him, until it was all but too late. Still, even at this late date, firm discipline such as the Captain had given me might yet save him. On the other hand, who was I to know? I'd not yet married. Perhaps raising a child was more difficult than it seemed. I glanced at my watch. Time to leave for the shuttleport. "What, Mother?" I tried to concentrate through the static of the caller, and the engine's drone. "I saw you on the news the other night." "The Freshwater Station? I had no choice but to go." As General Assemblyman for Seaboard Cities, I'd had to be seen at the ribbon-cutting, though the Hudson Station was another of SecGen Kahn's infamous boondoggles. I beckoned the steward to refresh my gin. "Richard looked grim," said Mother. "How is he?" "He's fine." Since their divorce, my parents tended to use me as a conduit for news about one another. I didn't mind; their mutual interest was benign, perhaps even amicable. Mother gave Dad curt advice about his public image, and he'd helped her through the dreary weeks following her transplant. "He'd better do more than show up, or that prick Kahn will preempt the water issue." Mother was forthright, as always. "Dad knows." We'd had no choice but to support Kahn's Freshwater Project. Our New York tower constituents were squeezed for clean water, and the upcoming Delaware diversion wouldn't help. "You'd think we'd have more drinking water, with the ice caps melting. When I was young ..." She sighed. "It was ago, and you're too busy to listen," "I'm free 'til we land." I checked my watch. "Nineteen minutes." "I was eleven when your grandfather took me to watch them build the seawall." Slow but persistent global warming caused more snow, but the evaporation was also greater. The seven-foot rise in sea level obliterated Bangladesh, menaced Holland and other low-lying countries, and forced the hasty construction of the New York Seawall just below Wall Street. New York was threatened at high tides, but even more so by the furious summer storms that swept northward with ever greater frequency. "When will your father take his stand?" My eyes strayed to Dad's speech, in my holovid. Not for the first time, I wondered whether Mother could read minds. Or perhaps she knew Dad too well to think he'd stay politically quiescent. I said, "It's, ah, an insecure line." "Bullshit. The Territorials know he's ready to make a move." "Mother, please" Caller to my ear, I flicked on my screen, perused Dad's speech. The Cities Redevelopment Project was the key to his political future. He'd been Senator from the Northeastern Quadrant for longer than I could remember, but our Supranationalist Party was out of power, and had been ever since the Seafort Administration's fall. "I'll let you go, dear. Back to my roses." "Sorry, Mother. Should I stop by the house?" "Only if you can stay a while. I hate those flying visits of yours. You flit through the parlor like a bat and disappear." "Perhaps next week. I love you." "Take care, Robbie." A click. Really, I ought to see her more often. Despite her heart replacement, she wouldn't be around forever, and I cherished her blunt advice. I finished my gin and leaned back, musing on the collapse of Seafort's government. The crowning irony was that the March 2224 vote of confidence was unnecessary. The Captain himself demanded it, against Dad's advice, after the Territorials had worried at his heels for months over the Wade affair. He had known nothing of Senator Wade's corrupt dealings, but the opposition had made that innocence itself sound like criminal negligence. If Seafort had sidestepped rather than admitting his fault at every opportunity, we might still hold office, and could deal directly with the towers' water problems. Well, no matter. The Captain was out of political life, retired in his prime. Now, Dad was staking his claim to the SecGen's red leather chair. Reconstruction was the issue that had catapulted him to party leadership, and hopefully would lead to the Rotunda itself. "Care for a refill, Assemblyman?" I glanced up, annoyed at the steward's interruption, but careful to hide it. "No, thanks." Too bad the Hudson Station wasn't large enough to solve the city's water shortage. Regardless of the potential unrest, we would have to rechannel the old city mains. After all, the burgeoning towers were bulwarks of civilization, and the source of many steadfast Supranationalist votes. They had to be supplied. If Dad eventually won the Rotunda, I'd try for his seat, and thanks to our name, I'd likely win. A big step for me; the U.N. Senate was far more powerful than the overcrowded General Assembly, with its thousand and fifty-five assemblymen. If. As my heli set down on the well-lit pad I tried to swallow my unease, knowing the warm welcome that awaited me. But, as usual in the Seaforts' presence, I felt myself the fumbling youngster Dad had brought to Academy gates. Years later, as an Assemblyman, I wasn't often received at the Rotunda during the Captain's Administration. At our meetings he'd seemed cold and distant. Though it hurt, I did my best to conceal it. Perhaps my abandoning a Naval career had disappointed him. At least I'd made lieutenant, and I don't believe my father had a hand in it. I was vastly proud of the achievement. One day, in the midst of a stiff discussion about colonial tariffs, the Captain had stopped short, spun his chair to the wall. When again he spoke, his voice was halting and pained. "Robert, forgive my rudeness." "I didn't notice—" "Of course you did" He rose, stood at the tall, velvet-draped window, hands clasped behind him, and looked down to the filthy river. "I don't—" "You see, you make me remember." He turned, with a deprecating smile. "Some memories are ... difficult." I got to my feet. "I'm truly sorry, sir. It's not necessary that we meet in person. I didn't mean to cause—" "Oh, stop. Please." The force of his entreaty left me bereft of words. "Something I must tell you." "Yes, sir?" His eyes met mine. "I was proud of you as a boy, and I am still." I gulped. Damn it, I was not a cadet. I was grown. Why the lump in my throat? He'd come around his massive desk, touched my shoulder lightly. "I'll bear my discomfort without inflicting it on you." His eyes focused with determination on mine. "You're welcome in my office, and in my home." Shyly, as if fearing rejection, he embraced me. For a moment, I let my head rest on his shoulder. It was as if I had two fathers. I strove to please them both. Arlene curled on the couch, her head on her husband's shoulder. I sat opposite; Adam sprawled in an easy chair. "I won't stand in his way," Captain Seafort said, I said, "I was hoping for more, sir." "I know." He perused the printout, biting his lip. I studied my mentor. Lean, prominent cheekbones, sunken eyes through which one occasionally glimpsed private pain. The Captain was trim and fit, and though he was of average height, one came away with the impression of great stature, a cold strength that was more than muscular. I prompted, "Perhaps a speech to the Naval Veterans ..." "No speeches. I'm done with that, thank Lord God." As usual, his candor was disconcerting. How had such a man been elected SecGen? He was an elk among wolves. Well, eventually they'd brought him down. Td known he'd reject a speech out of hand, and retreated to a fallback position, my real goal. ""We^re fifteen votes short in the Senate, sir. If you wrote to a few friends ..." "They'd ignore me, or would if they deserved to hold office." He shook his head. "Besides, I'm not sure I like Richard's approach. Aside from the enormous cost, he's trying to rebuild the cities from the top down. You really think more towers are the answer?" "Sir, I know that we're pouring Unibucks into vast new buildings. But that's what hooks the construction interests, and without them we won't have the votes for renewal." The Captain fixed me with a disapproving eye. "You'll be displacing a lot of people for your ... steel elephants." "Yes, streeters." No point in denying it, with him. "But Dad's a realist. The choice is that or nothing. Which do you prefer?" He was silent. I added, "The cities are falling apart, sir. London, Denver, New York; in a few years they'll all be too far gone to save. Is that what you want?" Arlene and Adam spoke at once. "Don't lay it at his—" "You're pressing, Robert." Adam looked abashed. "Sorry. Go on, Arlene." Arlene's head moved slightly, as if to shield her husband's from my gaze. "It's not Nick's doing, and he no longer has a say in politics." I chuckled, to ease the tension, "He'd still be the most quotable man on the planet, if he cared to be quoted." "But he doesn't." Adam's tone was sharp, "All right," I said agreeably. Undisturbed by the silence, I gazed at the couple on the overstuffed couch. Absently, the Captain's hand curled around Arlene's shoulder. Still a lovely woman was Arlene Sanders Seafort, Their marriage in the Rotunda during the first year of his Secretariat had made worldwide headlines. As Terran First Lady, Arlene had chosen to remain in the background, helping her husband manage political chores rather than adopt public causes. Now, they made a devoted couple, I'd heard persistent rumors of discord, but found them hardly credible. They respected each other, a more vital ingredient to marriage than mere love. And they treasured their boy. A half hour before, Philip had padded into the den in his pajamas to bid us good night. As the youngster made his rounds his father watched with fondness so unrestrained I felt an intruder. "Good night, Mr. Boland." P.T. embraced me. "You're getting big, joey." My voice was gruff. How does one talk to a lad almost a teener? "Yes, sir. Thanks again for the model." I'd brought a 1:100 replica kit of U.N.S. Challenger, his father's old ship. P.T. would probably complete it in a day or so; he had deft, fast hands and a breathtaking intelligence that left one slightly uneasy. Where I'd have pored over blueprints, he memorized the schematics with a quick glance. I'd given him a hug, not only because I liked him, but also because it would please his father and make him more amenable to my request. Such was politics. Now, I smiled at Adam. Since the Captain had retreated from public view, Tenere had become fiercely protective. My task would be difficult enough with his support; without it, I couldn't win over the Captain. I wasn't sure I'd want to try. Lord God, how I'd revered Adam. My first year as a cadet had been utter misery. Sergeant Ibarez was especially hard on me, perhaps to prove that my family connections carried no clout with him. My bunkies were uniformly hostile; they were certain Dad had arranged easy passage through Academy, and found constant proof where none existed. When Mr. Seafort had summoned me to his Commandant's office and caned me without mercy for my misdeeds, I was undone. For weeks, sick with guilt and shame, I couldn't find myself. It was Midshipman Adam Tenere who had succored me. Sarge had been decent; the Obutu woman was kind, but only Adam was close enough to my age to know what I'd felt. On long walks through the compound I'd blurted out my woes to him. He was tongue-tied and awkward, but nonetheless, he was there. Once, when he was sure no one saw, he'd actually hugged me. I cherished boyish fantasies about him, never expressed, which later I outgrew. I was best man at his wedding. Elena was lovely; she made me regret bachelorhood. I still missed her. Elena's death had sobered Adam; after, he comprehended that life bore pain that couldn't be eased. Some youthful quality left him, but he embraced solemn adulthood willingly enough. It was at my suggestion that he'd gone to the SecGen's office as liaison. I'd no idea he and the Captain would become so attached that Adam would gladly follow him into obscurity. Looking at me across the Captain's living room, Adam's expression softened. "I didn't mean to push," I said humbly. The Captain frowned. "Pushing isn't the issue. You know I won't take offense, though I may refuse. But I have misgivings about your policy, and the sixty billion cost will come in part from the Navy's budget." He forestalled my reply. "It has to; we're the—that is, the Navy is the U.N.'s single biggest military expense." Most of the ships lost to the alien armada had been replaced. Of course, compromises were made. Many of the new ships were smaller, and therefore carried fewer passengers. Our colonial expansion was slowed, even if the Caterwaul Stations had abated the menace of the fish. The Seafort Administration had been steadfast in its support of the Navy, a factor which had eventually benefited our opponents in the Territorial Party. Many old-line industries that didn't profit from the shipbuilding had gone over to them. That made Dad's plan all the more important; if we could recapture the housing lobby, our campaign war chest would be fully funded. Multinational campaigns were damnably expensive. It wasn't much past eleven when Adam glanced at his watch. I took the cue, and we bade good-night to the SecGen and his wife. I walked Adam back to his bungalow, chatting amiably. "Watch," he said as we neared. "Jared's light." Through a curtained window, a glow lit the wall. "What about it?" His voice rose. "We'll send Bennett a tightbeam in the morning. I think he'll come around." The light flicked off. Adam lowered his voice, his smile grim. "They tell me he falls asleep in class. He thinks I don't know he's up half the night wargaming his puter." I hesitated, unsure if my opinion was wanted. Then, "Take it away." "The one thing he's passionate about?" He shook his head. "No, he's smarter than he acts, Rob. Puters are the only arena in which he proves it." "Set his hours." "Why attempt what I can't enforce?" He waved it away with a sigh. "Join me for a drink." "A light one." We settled on the patio outside Adam's bedroom, on the far side of the cottage. Adam brought me a gin, uncapped an ale. "God, I miss her." I didn't need to ask. "So do I." He gestured to the house. "She'd have prevented—that." "Jared? He'll come around." He snapped, "Don't bullshit me. You never have before." "Aye aye, sir." It was only half in jest. "Well, that put me in my place." Now his smile was genuine. "Sorry, Rob." I shrugged. " Jared's what, sixteen? This is the worst of it." "Fifteen, barely. I look at him and see ... you." He added, "And others, from Academy days. The contrast is obscene." "Adam, why don't you rein him in?" A long silence. "I... can't." Perhaps Adam saw too much of Elena in the boy's finely chiseled face, the long dark lashes. Sensing his discomfort, I changed the subject. After a time we spoke of the Captain. "It's painful to be near him," Adam said. "He's so determinedly ... sincere." He studied my face. "You didn't really know him when you were a cadet; he resigned after the, um, Trafalgar incident. I had the fortune to know him before." He looked beyond me, to another time. "He took me to the Training Station, just the two of us. Lord God, what a privilege. You should have seen him then, Rob. Bold, decisive, determined to do right by us all." I stirred, restless. "Now, he's ... tentative. Yes, that's the word. He's mislaid his moral beacon. I think he was glad his Administration lost the vote of confidence." He saw me fidget and grimaced, "Well, I can see you're tired. Sony to—" I blurted, "It's not that. I need to use the head." My bladder was ready to explode from the drinks I'd sipped all evening. I stood, feeling a foolish boy once more. "Back in a minute." I'd been in Adam's home often enough. I opened the screen door, headed down the darkened hall toward the bath. Under the boy's door, a gleam of light. Perhaps it was the ale, perhaps the shuttle-lag. Emboldened, I knocked once, flung open the door. Jared, still dressed, glanced up from his puter. "Hello, Uncle Rob." "Turn that off and get into bed, before I do what your father won't." He gaped. "You can't make—" "Try me, joeyboy!" He hesitated, thought better of it. With a contemptuous flick he snapped off the puter, sat on his bed, slipped off his shoes. I shut the door, continued down the hall. By the time I got to the patio I'd realized what a mistake I'd made. I was "Uncle" only by courtesy, and had no rights with this wayward joeykid. Best not to tell Adam; it would make things worse between us, and not only did I like him, I needed his support to persuade the Captain. While Tenere led the conversation back to our youth at Academy, then to Elena, I sat wondering what had come over me, ordering his son about as if he were my own. "Remember when we couldn't find her room at the Lunapolis Sheraton, and hollered at that fuddled old lady to open the bloody door?" I nodded. I had either to tell Adam or make it right with the boy; I couldn't leave things as they were. I waited for my opportunity, excused myself once more. I knocked. "Jared?" No answer. "This is Uncle Rob." I tried to quell my distaste at the title. "May I come in?" He must be asleep. I turned the knob, peered inside. The room was empty. Chapter 5 PEDRO It almost time, but Frad not quite ready. "Ain' even a holochip," I grumbled. "Jus' papah book." Frad breathed hard, annoyed. "Gonna trayfo', Neut? I ain' got all nigh'." I shrugged. "I already offa two cansa fo' fallin' apart book. Wan'mo', bring mo'book." If he had one. Dunno. Filmatleven. "Got three, maybe four mo'." I looked at teapot, decided couldn' warm my cuppa 'less I gave him some. Better I waited. "Silly Broadboy think he swind Pedro Telamon Chang, hah? If he got four book, he'd brung widim. He got jus' one." "Four, tolya!" He glowered. "C'n bring lata." "Hah." I trotted across shop, messed with box like I lookin' for trayfo. "Two cansa. One small veg, one big chicken, like I tolya." His eyes flickered, and I knew I gottim. Before, I'd said two veg, one big, one little. Now he thought Chang be glitch. "How much fo' otha papah?" "Don' need no mo'." Hurt tongue to say it, but hadda, if I wanted to get 'em. "I'll trayfo the one you brung, look at others 'nother day." "I c'n run get, they ain' so far—" "Nah." I pulled out cansa, put on table. "Chang got five book already, why he nee' three mo'?" "Four mo'." Now he committed. Good. "Okay okay, three, four, no diff. Take cansa 'n gwan; Chang don' allow more'n one trayfo in shop atta time. Ya messin' wid Chang biz." Frad grinned, showin' no teeth. Been in rumb. Allatime trannies fight each otha. Stupid tribes. Sad. I managed to wait 'til he gone 'fore I picked up book. Stranger Inna Strange Lan'. Two hunner' year old. Mine. I clutched to chest like joeykit. Book go in backroom, Chang's room. Book not trayfo, anymore. From back, a snicker. I raised voice. "Stupid Midboy laughin' at Chang, hah?" Pook poked out his head. "When Chang run outa cansa, he gonna eat papah?" I growled, "Run outa cansa, eat Midboy." He snickered again, pushing aside the curtain. "You funny, Changman." He thought about it as I headed towar' him with look in my eye. "Cool jets," he said quick. "Mista Chang." Hadda be careful with Pookboy. He might be socio. Wasn' sure, but didn' think so. He seemed to like me, mosta time. Wanted me take care him, but would he shiv me someday, like poor Rock beggin' for passby? Did Pook know diff, right an' wrong? I went in backroom, to shelf. Put book under H, real gentle. Read later, when boy wouldn' interrupt. Pook was stay in' my house for while. The girl Mids called Bigsis sent him to trayfo boots for cansa. Joeykit wandered round, finally wen' back with seven cansa. She shout at him some. Pook don't got no control, mouthed her back, she told Karlo not enough cansa. Karlo got pissoff again. Pook came knockin' at Chang house, needin' bed. I asked him if he tryin' to join Neut tribe stead of Mids, but he didn' think was funny. What I spose to do? Send him back inna streets, he wouldn' make it to initiation. Upbringin', as Mids called it, where they cut Mid mark on chest. After while Karlo would cool jets. He was like that, hop-pin' mad, then forget. Wasn't Chang's fault. How was joeyboy gonna learn not giveaway his trayfo, unless hard way? No good tellin' him, gotta show. Anyway, boots weren't so good, hadda hole. Chang wasn' traytaman for joke; it his biz. And Pook coulda said no. Pook shoved a book deeper on shelf. "What they say?" "Say, a Midboy don' touch, or he fin' hisself on street fas'." He grinned. I hated when he did that. Traytamen couldn't afford seniment. "Ain' 'fraid a you, Mista Chang." He looked up. "Books say, 'Looka me? Coulda had two cansa steada me?' " "Hah." I patted him on back. "They tellya 'bout wort'. Everyt'ing in books. Read, ya fin' out." I waited, with hope. It was like tray with Frad I just finished. Hadda ease him along, wait 'til he ready. If I tol' Pook the world of books open his eyes, let him see how insignificant was trannie life, he'd scare, wouldn't read. Prolly was best not to push. Tell Pook books ain't for him. Tell him keep away. Then maybe he'd want. I warmed my cuppa tea, sat by Valdez perma, sipping. Wasn't easy bein' traytaman. Hadda weave my way 'tween tribes, takin' sides with none. An' always remember use right talk. Trannietalk, for tribes. Natural; I trannie born. Don' use big words, keep tenses simple, like before I found firs' cobwebby books and sat to read by light from gaping hole in roof. Never make mistake talkin', or tribes'll hear an' think I got high pretenses. Won't trust. Book talk for books. When author friend speaks, answer him same way. What you referring to, Ayn Rand, when you say selfish? What was so terrible about London, Charles Dickens? I'd tray it for Lower New York in a minute. How Chang would talk, he be Uppie. An', Changtalk for inside Chang. Prolly closer to Uppie talk now, with alia books. But not quite. More easy in it than book talk. Made head spin, sometimes, but used to it now. Pook stirred. "Don' need nothin' in book. Wan' know, ask Karlo." "Yah, ask Karlo. He know lot more'n Chang." Joeykit hopeless. Why I bother with him? Dunno. In morning I got out wheelcart, made boy loadup permas in outer room. Eat Chang's food, gotta work. Fair, but he didn' like. Went sullen for while. Hot summer, but I put on coat so have pockets for innifo. "Whereya go, Mista Chang?" "We, Pookboy. You be comealong." He made face. "Naw. Stay." Maybe lose him, but time to settle; he old enough now. I went to him, touched his face, gentle. "Lissenup, little Midboy." He waited. My throat went dry; longtime I lived alone. I liked havin' someone talk to. Even Midboy, who wouldn' look at book. I said stern, "Wasn' me, asked Midboy come knockin' at Chang door. Boy still wanna stay, okay okay. Or he c'n ask Rocks fo' place to sleep." Vein in his forehead throbbed. Couldn' stop now. Too late. "Midboy almos' growed, gotta decide for hisself. Onna street, tell Chang go prong his-self. But in Chang's house, yes Mista Chang, I do whatchew say, I help. Midboy got choice." Boy's eyes sliced through Chang like shiv. I shrugged, like didn' matter. "Midboy think Chang's life be all sippin' cuppa? Trayfo be har' work. You help, or get los'." He said shrill, "Don' need glitch ol' Neut! Keep ya cansa! I take care a self!" In rage, he kicked over table. Teapot and cups went fly in'. Steam rose from wet floor. I didn' move. "Lucky I don' dissya, Changman!" His face red, he clawed at locks. "Maybe will, nextime!" Got door open. Out. Slam. I sighed, muttering to self as I cleaned up mess. Chance I hadda take, but sorry I lost. Put table back in place. Midboy gonna be allri', I tol' self. He has shiv, he plenny rowd. I washed cup, refilled pot. Water ran rust today, an' real low. Usetabe, have a problem, soonalate, govermen fix. Now they didn' care. More water for Uppies. At last, I ready. Wheeled cart to door. Draped it with cloth coverup. Bright day, hot and sunny, an' everyone knew Chang be Neut. Still, I opened door careful. A few people aroun', none too close. Went out, locked three locks. Took chalk from pocket, drew eye on steel panel, Didn' mean nothin', but tribes weren' sure. My shop on Thirty Five. Mid turf, now. Rock, usetabe. Rocks got pushout down to Thirty Three. Secon' time; 'fore that they was Americas an'Fifty Four in Rockcenta. I pushed cart to comer. Heavy. "Watcha got, traytaman?" Ravan, a boss Mid, come alongside. "Got enough sense to min' my own biz," My voice gruff. Ravan grinned. Everyone used to my talk. He walked with me. "Any good trayfo?" "Usual." Wondered what he want. "Whatcha lookin' fo' special?" "Don' make no diff. Bring it, Chang trayfo." I turned corner, started uptown. 'Mother block, would reach Broad turf. Ravan asked, casual, "Chang got new water pipe?" No, didn' have, but knew where to get. Not copper, like old, but heavy plastic snapons, like in towers. Careful, Pedro. I stopped, looked him over. "Whaffo Mids wan' water pipe, hah?" Smile went from his mouth. "Fin' water main, maybe. Run to lair for new." Heart wen' thump. Lotsa pipe, big trayfo. I'd make Mids find me jumpsuits 'n stuff I could tray uptown for cansa, coin, anything. Then tray that to other tribes ... Big tray. "Pipe never been used cos' a lot," I said, cautious. "How much?" "Lot." I met his eye. "But I maybe c'n get. Firs', tell me how much. Then we have tea—coffee, I mean, 'n decide." Ravan was stupe in trayfo. Bit right away. "Mids c'n pay if Chang don' tryta skin us." His look held warning. I had him, for anything I wan'. I started thinkin', tray up, tray up more, back an' forth, maybe even to new roof fo' shop. Who know? I hesitated. Chang could tray lotta pipe. On other han', Mids be pissoff, if they pay for new pipe an still find they had prollem. Like I told Midboy, growed man gotta decide for hisself, I was trannie too. I sighed, roof fadin' in my mind. My voice curt. "It ain' the pipes, Ravan." He went cold. "Whatcha mean?" I hoped he remember I be Neut. "I mean, Mids see water stoppin' in lair. Can't cook, can't drink, it be so muddy. Ya try changin' lair, but no good. Mids gotta find water quick." His eyes dangerous. "Who tolya? Pookboy? I dissim!" I talked quick, 'fore he blew. "Think a Mid c'n swind Pedro Telamon Chang, hah? I know. Alia lair, same t'ing. Ain' pipes," "What it be, Neut?" "Water. Govermen lettin' it go off. Ain' enough for tran-nies 'n Uppies both." "Off?" He spat. "Now I know ya glitched. Water can't be off. Water is always, 'less pipe fill up wid goo." "Time is new. Govermen don' care. Won' fix old pipe." "Govermen neva go inna street." His voice all scorn. I said, quiet, "Not for longtime. Did, once." Before Chang. His look unsure. "Changman, what we gonna do?" "Mids, all by self? Nothin'." I peered into face. Couldn' lose this chance; time runnin' out. "Maybe, wid' alia tribes, think of somethin'." —•—•:—_ "Alia tribes? Think Broads gonna run wid Rocks? Mid with Unies? You glitch." "Won' be easy, naw. No trus'. But if everyone losin' water, we c'n—" "You glitch." He strode away. Ah, Pedro. Who asked you to be charga savin' trannies? I rolled cart toward corner, where Broad tribesmen waited, Neuts had it too easy, some ways. Free of tribe, free to live alone, do what they want. Read books no one else care 'bout. No upbringing, no scars. Not a lotta trannies went Neut, Too alone for most. Those that did learned to stay clear of tribe feuds, keep mind on trayfo. But couldn' forget, bein* Neut was responsibility too. Others, they jus' Mids or Broads, Subs or Easters. Us Neuts, we be the true trannies. "Whoa, traytaman." Broad put out big hand. I acted annoyed, "Ya wan' innifo? I ain' no dumbass Mid, askin' passby. I Neut." He shrugged. "Don' matter. Broad turf, Neut or no.H Was worth a try, I dug can outa pocket. "Thasall?" "Neut shouldn't haveta pay innifo, nohow," I grumbled, "How else gonna get trayfo, hah? Broads come ta Chang store, wanna see empty?" He scowled. "Might as well, Chang trayfo so high." I got ready ta move on, done with small talk. He say, "Two cansa, man." I reared back, anger real now. "Since when two cansa fb* passby, hah? No Broad gonna swind—" "One fo' each." He pointed to cart. I looked. Pook was at handles, waitin' to push. I swallowed, wantin' to hold cart for steady. My tone went hard. "Gwan home, joeykit! Don' need no snotnose won' do what hetol'!" Boy looked at sidewalk, like tryin' to read cracks. His voice small. "Please." He studied my face, added reluctant, "I do whatchew say, Mista Chang. I help." "Fo' how long?" He sighed. "Long I stay in Chang house." I cuffed him, light, so no hurt. "Push, den. Think I got all day? Work to do!" Chapter 6 PHILIP Mom was waiting at the chem lab at three. I climbed into the front seat, glad she'd come herself. When she was busy she might ask Mr. Tenere to pick me up, or a guard. Or send a helicab. "How was your lesson, hon?" She waited for an opening, pulled out into traffic. "Fine." I watched her feet work the pedals. If anything happened to her, some sudden illness, I might have to drive her to a hospital. Unlikely, objectively speaking, but I liked to be prepared. "Homework?" "The usual." Mr. Bates had thrown me an entire chapter of college text, but if I concentrated, I could sail through it in an hour or two. I was fast. It was one of my problems. I asked, "Are we going anywhere special?" Mom squeezed my hand. "What would you like?" That was another of my problems. Take me to the Jefferson Memorial, and I would read the documents in a few minutes, memorize the statue and want to be gone. At the Museum of Science, I could visualize better exhibits than they'd constructed, and it made me restless. I said hopefully, "The National Gallery?" Rodin was onto something; his sculptures had a hidden message. Each time I studied them, I came closer to understanding. But I wasn't there yet. "Oh, hon." I pouted. Eleven visits weren't so many. I'd asked Mr. Skeer if Mom had attention deficit syndrome, but he said he doubted it. "Maybe another day, P.T." "Sure." I tried not to sound disconsolate. We drove past the city center to the compound. To amuse myself, I kept tally of cars and trees. We came to the gates. Thirty-seven distinct species, a hundred four models. Did that prove anything? I'd count again next week. The trees wouldn't change much, but I'd get a better average on the cars. The guards recognized Mom, but didn't wave us through. They hadn't since the day she'd swarmed out of the car and shouted at them for five minutes straight. She was serious about Father's safety. And his privacy. Jared wasn't home from school. I went to my room and flopped on the floor. Perhaps I should take up yoga; it was said to be calming, I did breathing exercises whenever I felt my nerves iiazz\e. 1 wasn't supposed to know 1 was genius level, but one drawback was you figured those things out. 1 didn't want to trouble Path by asking him how to handle it, because I once heard Mom tell Mr. Tenere that Father got upset easily. On January 12, 2223, he and 1 were looking at holos. I was five then, sitting in his lap, and was used to calling him Daddy, even though he was still SecGen. We studied the solemn picture of Grandfather, who was dead. Daddy said his father was a good man and had loved him, but didn't know how to express affection. I asked what Daddy called him. He said, Father. I asked if he'd like me to call him that. If I wanted to, he said. ft foot me a wee£ to gef my mmJ tfra/gAteaetf s& /