======================
Burning
Bright
by
Melissa Scott
======================
Copyright
(c)1993 by Melissa Scott
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Science
Fiction
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---------------------------------
*Part One*
*Day 30*
_High
Spring: Parking Orbit,_
_Burning
Bright_
Quinn Lioe walked the galliot down the
sky, using the shaped force fields of the sails as legs, balancing their draw
against the depth of gravity here in the planet's shadow. Stars glowed in the
mirror display in front of her; spots of dark haze blocked the brilliance of
sun and the limb of the planet, so that she could see and read the patterns
that gravity made in the vacuum around her. The low-sail, under the keel of her
ship, vibrated in its cup: the field calibration had slipped badly on the
journey from Callixte to Burning Bright, would have to be adjusted before they
left orbit. She sighed, automatically easing the field, and widened the
cross-sails' field to compensate. Numbers flickered across the base of the
mirror as the ship's system noted and approved the changes; she felt the left
cross-sail tremble under her hand, as its draw approached the illusory "depth"
of hyperspace, and shortened it even before the warning flashed orange and red
across her screen. The galliot continued its easy progress as though there had
been no chance of grounding.
"Beacon," she said to the
ship, to traffic control waiting somewhere ahead of her in the parking pattern,
and a moment later a marker flared in the mirror's display, ahead and slightly
to the left of the galliot's course. She sighed, wanting to hurry, wanting to
be done and parked and free for the five days or more that it would take to
recalibrate the fields, but disciplined herself to safe and steady progress.
The galliot crept forward, sails beating slowly against the weak currents of
hyperspace that were almost drowned by the local gravity. Her hands rested lightly
on the controls; she felt the depth of space in the pressure of the sails, saw
the same numbers reflected in the slow swirl of the currents overlaid on the
mirror's mimicking of reality.
At last she brought the galliot to a
slow stop almost on top of the unreal marker, and shortened the sails until the
system gravity took over, drawing the ship neatly into the designated space.
She smiled, pleased with her precision, and kicked the lever that lit the
anchor field. Lights flared along the mirror's base -- familiar, but
nonetheless satisfying -- and the ship said sweetly, "On target. Anchorage
confirmed."
"Nicely done," a familiar
voice said, and Lioe glanced over her shoulder in some surprise. She hadn't
heard Kerestel enter the pilot's dome, had thought he was still back in cargo
space sorting out what had and hadn't gone on the drop. _And, to be fair,
cleaning up after the bungee-gars_.
"Thanks," she said aloud, and
ran her hands across the main board, closing and snuffing the sail fields. She
set the anchor field then, watched the telltales strengthen to green, and
turned away from her station, working her shoulders to free them of the night's
-- _morning's_, she corrected silently, _it was the beginning of the new day on
Burning Bright_ -- painstaking work. "How's it look back there?"
"Bungee-gars," Kerestel said.
He leaned against the hatchway, folding his arms across his chest. His hands
and bare arms were still reddened from the embrace of the servo gloves he used
to move the canisters that held the cargo safe during the drop to the planet's
surface. "Gods, they're a grubby lot."
Looking at him, Lioe bit back a laugh.
As usual, Kerestel was wearing a spacesuit liner, this one more battered even
than usual, the long sleeves cut off at the shoulder to make it easier to work
the servos. He had stopped shaving two days into the trip -- _also as usual_ --
and the incipient beard had sprouted in goatish grey tufts. The hat that marked
him as a union pilot -- this one a beret of gold-shot grey brocade, pinned up
on one side with a cluster of brightly faceted glass -- perched, incongruously
jaunty, on his balding head.
Kerestel had the grace to grin.
"Well, you know what I mean. And Christ, the pair of them couldn't make up
their minds what was to go in the drop -- if they had minds."
Lioe nodded, and turned to the
secondary board to begin shutting down the mirror. Bungee-gars, the hired hands
who rode the drop capsules down out of orbit to help protect particularly
valuable cargoes from hijacking after landing, were generally a difficult group
to work with -- _you have to be pretty crazy to begin with, or desperate, to
take a job like that_ -- and the two who had come aboard on Demeter had been
slightly more bizarre than usual. "What I don't care for," she said,
"is running cargo that needs bungee-gars."
"You got a point there,"
Kerestel said rather sourly, and Lioe allowed herself a crooked smile. Cargoes
that needed bungee-gars were valuable enough to hijack in transit as well as at
the drop point, and the free space between the Republic and the Hsaioi-An was
loosely patrolled at best, with no one claiming either jurisdiction or
responsibility. She shook the thought away -- there had been no sign of trouble,
from Callixte to Demeter or after -- and keyed a final set of codes into the
interpreter. Overhead, and across the front of the dome, the tracking overlays
began to fade, first the oily swirls that showed the hyperspatial currents, and
then the all-but-invisible blue-black lines that showed the depth of realspace.
The stars blazed out around them, suns strewn like dust and seed, tossed in
prodigal handfuls against the night where the plane of the galaxy intersected
the mirror's curve. Then the shields that cloaked sun and planet vanished, and
the brilliance drowned even the bright stars. Lioe blinked, dazzled, and looked
away.
"But if they'd only make up their
mind," Kerestel said, and Lioe frowned for a second before she realized he
was still talking about the bungee-gars. "You probably felt it, Quinn,
they kept changing which capsules were going, so by the time they'd decided,
the whole ship was unbalanced. I'll bet money that hasn't helped the low-sail
projector."
"I didn't feel we were off
alignment," Lioe said. "She handled fine, and the projector didn't
feel any worse than when we left Demeter. You did a good job, Micky."
She saw Kerestel's shoulders relax,
subtly, and realized that he had been looking for that reassurance all along.
She hid a sigh -- she liked Kerestel well enough, liked his ship even better,
but his insecurities were wearing -- and said, "Speaking of which, have
you scheduled the repairs?"
"Yes." Kerestel's face
brightened. "The yard says they can take us into the airdock tomorrow, and
they'll tear down the projector right away. The whole thing, including
recalibration, ought to take about eight days. Not bad, eh?"
"Not bad," Lioe agreed. _Not
bad at all, especially when it happens over Burning Bright_. "I thought
I'd take off, go planetside," she said, carefully casual. "You're not
going to need me up here."
Kerestel frowned slightly, said, after
a heartbeat's pause that seemed much longer, "You're going Gaming,
right?"
"That's right." Lioe bit her
tongue to keep from adding more. _This is Burning Bright, heart of the Game,
where the best clubs and the best players -- the greatest notables -- live and
work. I'm not missing this chance. Chances like this are only once a lifetime_
--
"It's a game, Quinn,"
Kerestel said.
"And it's one I'm very, very good
at," Lioe retorted. She grinned, forced a lighter tone. "Christ,
Micky, it's not like I'm quitting."
"One of these days, though,"
Kerestel muttered, and Lioe reached across to touch his shoulder.
"Not likely, and you know it.
Piloting's a steady living, and I'm not stupid." _I had to work too hard
to get the apprenticeship, coming out of Foster Services; I'm not giving that
up anytime soon_. But that was none of Kerestel's business; she forced the
smile to stay on her lips, said, "All I'm saying is, I think I'm going to
spend the repair break planetside. All right?" She could force the issue,
she knew -- they were both union, and the union gave her the right to move off
the ship anytime it was anchored in orbit for more than five days -- but she
liked Kerestel too well to use that lever unless she had to. _And besides, he's
getting old, one foot on the retirement line. I don't want to hurt his feelings_.
Kerestel nodded, reluctantly. "All
right," he said, and then made himself sound more enthusiastic. "And
good luck with the Game."
It was those efforts that made him
worth working for, even if he was getting old and querulous. "Thanks,"
Lioe said, and retreated to her cabin to collect her belongings.
It didn't take her long to pack: her
jump bag was easily large enough to hold a couple of changes of clothes, plus
her Gameboard and the thick plastic case that held the half-dozen Rulebook
disks. She seized a hat at random, this one black, with a wide brim, shrugged
on a jacket -- her favorite, heavy blue-black workcloth with a flurry of Game
pins across the lapels -- and tapped into the local comnet to find a
taxi-shuttle to take her across to the customs station. Kerestel was nowhere in
sight when it arrived, and she hesitated, but called her good-byes into the
shipwide intercom. There was no answer; she shrugged again, caught between hurt
and annoyance, and pulled herself through the transfer tube to the taxi.
The landing check was strict and
time-consuming. The officer on duty went over her papers with excruciating
care, and ran the Rulebooks through a virus scan twice before grudgingly
allowing her to carry them onto the surface. She made the orbiter with only
minutes to spare, and collapsed into her seat, resolved to sleep for as much of
the descent as possible.
She woke to the unfamiliar noise of air
against the orbiter's hull, sat up in her harness to see fire rolling across
the viewport. The orbiter bucked and fought the sudden turbulence, and then
they were down into the atmosphere. Servos whined underfoot and in the cabin
walls, reconfiguring wings and lifting surfaces, and the orbiter became a
proper aircraft, banking easily against the heavy air that held it. The engine
fired, a coughing explosion at the tail of the taxi, and the craft steadied
further, came completely under control. Lioe released the breath she hadn't
realized she'd been holding, and craned her head to look out the viewport
again.
"We'll be landing at Newfields in
about fifty minutes," the steward said, from the front of the cabin.
"It's day thirty of High Spring, the end of High Spring -- that's day
ninety-four of our four-hundred-day year. Burning Bright has a
twenty-five-standard-hour day, and you should program your chronometers
accordingly. If you are keeping Greenwich Republican time, the GRTC factor is
eighty-eight B-for-bravo one hundred fifty-two. Ground temperature is twenty-three
degrees. If you need any assistance, or further information, please feel free
to ask. Your call buttons are on the cabin wall above your head."
No one seemed to respond, and Lioe
turned her head back to the window. Clouds flashed past beneath them, thin
wisps that only partly obscured the glittering water. Burning Bright was mostly
water; the main -- the only -- landmass was largely artificial, the new land
built on the inner edges of the giant atoll's original islands, guarded from
floods by a massive network of dikes and storm barriers. The city of Burning
Bright -- city and planet shared a name; the two were effectively identical --
was one of the great engineering achievements of the nonaligned worlds: _even
in the Republic, and even in Foster Service schools_, Lioe thought, _you learn
that mantra_. And it was pretty much true. In all the time she'd spent in
space, piloting ships between the Republic and the nonaligned worlds and
Hsaioi-An, she'd never been anyplace that was at all like Burning Bright.
"Can I get you anything?"
Lioe looked up to find the steward
looking down at her, balancing easily against the movement of the orbiter, one
hand resting on the back of the empty couch beside her. She shook her head, but
smiled. "I can't think of anything, thanks."
The steward nodded, but didn't move.
"I couldn't help noticing your pins."
Lioe let her smile widen, grateful she
hadn't had to set up this encounter herself. "I saw yours, too." She
glanced again at the pair of Game pins clipped just below the company icon: one
was the triangle-and-galaxy of the Old Network, but the other was unfamiliar.
"Local club?" she asked, and was not surprised when the steward shook
his head.
"Actually, it's a session souvenir,"
he said. "It was a Court Life variant, run by Ambidexter about five years
ago."
"I think I saw tapes of
that," Lioe said, impressed in spite of herself. The steward didn't look
old enough to have been playing at that level five years ago. "That was
the one that featured Gallio Hazard and Desir of Harmsway, right? The one that
really made Harmsway a Grand Type."
"That's right." The steward
glanced quickly around the cabin, then lowered himself into the couch next to
her. "I'm Vere -- Audovero Caminesi."
"Quinn Lioe." They touched
hands, awkward because of her safety harness.
"You wouldn't be the Lioe who
wrote the Frederick's Glory scenario," Vere said.
"As a matter of fact, I am."
Vere grinned. "That was a great
session. There's been a lot of talk on the net about it; I'm still trying to
find someone at the club who'll run it. Are you going to be doing any Gaming
while you're here?"
The conversation was going just the way
she'd hoped it would. Lioe said, "I was hoping to. I don't know the clubs,
though."
Vere spread his hands. "I can give
you some names, if you'd like."
"I'd appreciate it."
"There are really only three clubs
that are worth your while," Vere said, lowering his voice until she could
just hear him over the noise of the engines. "Billi's in the Old City,
Shadows under the Old Dike in Dock Road District, and the Two-Dragon House, in
Mainwardens'." He grinned suddenly. "I think Shadows is the best of
the lot -- it's where I play, so take it for what it's worth."
Lioe smiled back. "What's the
setup like?"
"They're all about the same,
really," Vere answered. A chime sounded from farther forward in the
compartment, and he lifted his head to look over the seatbacks for the source.
Lioe followed the direction of his gaze, and saw a call light flashing above
one of the seats. Vere grimaced, and pushed himself to his feet, but leaned
down to finish what he had been saying. "Shadows has newer machines, but
they're not state-of-the-art. Billi's was that maybe four, five years ago.
Two-Dragon is pretty standard stuff, a little older than Shadows."
"Thanks," Lioe said, and Vere
smiled down at her.
"Don't forget me if you run an
open session."
"I'll keep you in mind," Lioe said, and meant it. She
would be needing good players, if she managed to persuade a club to let her
lead sessions, and anyone who could play for Ambidexter was good enough for
her. It was just a pity Ambidexter himself was no longer in the Game.
She turned her head to the viewport
again, was startled to see how far the orbiter had dropped. The water was no
longer just a blue haze, had gained a crumpled texture, and flecks of white
dotted the metallic surface. Burning Bright City was just visible in the
distance, if she craned her neck, but mostly hidden by the orbiter's nose. The
craft banked sharply then, showing her nothing but the brilliance of the sky,
and when it steadied onto the new heading, Burning Bright lay spread out
beneath the orbiter's wing. It seemed very small at first, an island split in
three by a forked channel, but then the orbiter banked again, losing altitude,
and she began to make out the smaller landformed islands that made up the
larger masses. Most of them were thickly settled, furred with brick-red
buildings, light glinting occasionally from solar panels and interior
waterways. Only the high ground at the outer edges of the islands remained
relatively uncrowded. She frowned idly at that, wondering why, and the speakers
crackled at the front of the cabin.
Vere said, "I've just been
informed that we are starting the descent to Newfields. We should be on the
ground in about fifteen minutes."
The orbiter canted again as he spoke, and
when it came level again, Lioe was looking at a scene she recognized. Twin
lakes lay to either side of a piece of land like a small mountain, falling
steeply to the sea on one side and more gently into settled country on the
other. That was Plug Island, where the first-in settlers had first dammed the
shallow lagoon to create more land for their growing city. Double headlands
cradled each of the lakes; the desalination complex and the thick white walls
of the tidal generating stations that closed each lake off from the sea gleamed
in the sunlight. Outside the generating stations' walls, surf bloomed against
the storm barriers that defended the Plug Island lagoons; it frothed as well
against the base of the cliffs to either side. They were coming into Newfields.
Even as she thought it, the orbiter rolled a final time, then steadied into the
familiar approach. They flashed over the clustered houses of the Ghetto where
the off-worlders, and especially the hsai, lived -- still on the inner edges of
the island, overlooking the land, away from the sea -- and then dropped low
over the administrative complex. The orbiter touched down easily on stained and
tire-marked pavement, and she leaned back in her couch, no longer watching the
blocks of warehouses that flashed past beyond the empty field. _Not long now_,
she thought, _not long. I'll find a room in the Ghetto, and I'll call some
clubs, and I'll have a Game to run_. She smiled, losing herself in a dream.
--------
*Day 30*
_High Spring: The Hsai Ambassador's_
_House,
in the Ghetto, Burning Bright_
The ambassador to Burning Bright knelt
in his reception room, facing the hissing screen. A few check-characters
crawled across the blank grey space; the ambassador frowned, seeing them, and glanced
over his shoulder at the technician who knelt in front of the control board.
"Sorry, Sia Chauvelin," the
technician murmured, and his hands danced across his controls. The characters
vanished, were replaced by a single steady glyph: the link was complete.
Chauvelin glanced one last time around
the narrow room, at the plain black silk that lined the walls, at the low table
with the prescribed ritual meal -- snow-wine; a tray of tiny red-stained
wafers, each marked in black with the graceful double-glyph that meant both
good fortune and gift; a molded sweet, this one in the shape of the _nuao_-pear
that stood for duty -- laid out in the faint shadow of a single perfect orchid
in an equally perfect holder carved from a natural pale-purple crystal. His own
clothes were equally part of the prescribed ritual, plain black silk coat over
the pearl-grey bodysuit that served humans like himself for the hsai's natural
skin, a single knot of formal ribbons tied around his left arm, the folded iron
fan set on the bright carpet in front of him. He glanced a final time at his
reflection in the single narrow window, checking his appearance, and found it
acceptable. It was night out still, the sun not yet risen; he suppressed a
certain sense of injustice, and glanced again at the technician. "Is
everything ready?"
"Yes, Sia Chauvelin."
"Then you may go." Chauvelin
looked back at the screen, barely aware of the murmured response and the soft
scuffing sound as the technician bowed himself out and closed the door gently
behind him. The remote was a sudden weight against his thigh, reminding him of
his duty; he reached into the pocket of his coat to touch its controls,
triggering the system. The hidden speakers hissed for a moment, singing as the
jump-satellite bridged the interstellar space between the local transmitter and
an identical machine on maiHu'an, and then the screen lit on a familiar scene.
Chauvelin bowed, back straight, eyes down, hands on the carpet in front of him,
heard a light female voice -- human female -- announcing his name.
"Tal je-Chauvelin tzu Tsinra-an,
emissary to and friend-at-court for the _houta_ of Burning Bright."
Chauvelin kept his eyes on the fan,
dark against the glowing red of the carpet, staring at the five _n-jao_
characters of his name carved into the outer guard. There was a little silence,
and then a second voice answered the first, this one unmistakably hsaia,
inhuman and male.
"I acknowledge je-Chauvelin."
Chauvelin leaned back slowly, raising
his eyes to the screen. Even expecting it, the illusion was almost perfect, so
that for an instant he could almost believe that the wall had dissolved, and a
second room identical to his own had opened in front of him. The Remembrancer-Duke
Aorih ja-Erh'aoa tzu Tsinra-an sat facing him in a carved chair-of-state, hands
posed formally on the heads of the crouching troglodyths that formed the arms
of the chair. His wrist spurs curved out and down toward the troglodyths' eyes,
their enameled covers -- done in a pattern of twining flowers, Chauvelin saw,
without surprise -- glowing in the warm lights.
"This person thanks his most
honored patron for his acknowledgment," he said, in the hsai tongue that
he prided himself on speaking as well as any jericho-human, any human born and
bred inside the borders of Hsaioi-An. "And welcomes him with
service."
Ja-Erh'aoa made a quick, ambiguous
gesture with one hand, at once accepting and dismissing the formal compliments.
The stubby fingerclaws, painted a delicate shade between lavender and blue to
match the enameled flowers of the spur sheath, clicked once against the carved
head, and were still again. Chauvelin read impatience and irritation in the
movement, and in the still face of the human woman who stood at ja-Erh'aoa's
left hand, and braced himself for whatever was to follow.
"I would like to know,
je-Chauvelin, what you meant by this report."
For a crazy second, Chauvelin
considered asking which report the hsaia meant, but suppressed that
particularly suicidal notion. The Remembrancer-Duke had shifted from the formal
tones of greeting to the more conversational second mode, and Chauvelin copied
him. "My lord, you asked for my interpretation of what the All-Father and
his council should expect from the elections. I gave you that answer."
"You recommended that we support,
or at least acquiesce in, Governor Berengaria's reelection." Ja-Erh'aoa's
hand moved again, the painted claws clicking irritably against the troglodyth's
low forehead. "Am I mad, or do I misremember, that she supports the
Republic quite openly?"
Chauvelin winced inwardly at the
mention of memory -- ja-Erh'aoa implied that he had implied an insult -- and
said, "It is so, my lord." He kept his voice cool and steady only
with an effort: he had known that this would become an issue of _an'ahoba_, the
delicate game of status and prestige, but he had counted on ja-Erh'aoa's
support.
"Then why should we not stand in
her way?"
_I gave you my reasons in my report, my
lord_. Chauvelin suppressed that answer, and saw the faintest of rueful smiles
cross the human woman's otherwise impassive face. He said aloud, "My Lord,
the other candidates are not safe. They either have no backing among the people
who matter" -- _or among the people in general, but that's not something a
hsaia would understand_ -- "or are too young and untried for me to suggest
that Hsaioi-An place any trust in them."
"It is not expedient that we
support Berengaria," ja-Erh'aoa said flatly.
"Then, my lord, it is as though my
report was never made." Chauvelin sat back slightly, folded his hands in
his lap.
"Unfortunately," ja-Erh'aoa
said, "your report has become common knowledge in the council halls. I
have suffered some -- diminishment -- because of it. It is even being said,
je-Chauvelin, that you are too close to the _houta_ on Burning Bright, and
would perhaps benefit from a different posting."
"Do you question my loyalties,
lord?" Even as he said it, Chauvelin knew that was the wrong question,
born from the sudden cold fear twisting his guts. It was too direct, put
ja-Erh'aoa in a position where he could only answer yes -- and he himself was
too vulnerable to that accusation to risk angering his patron. No _chaoi-mon_,
citizen by impressment, could risk that, particularly not when he was born on
Burning Bright and served now as ambassador to that planet. He silenced those
thoughts, kept himself still, hands quiet in his lap, face expressionlessly
polite, with an effort that made the muscles along his spine and across his
shoulders tremble slightly beneath the heavy coat. He made himself face
ja-Erh'aoa guilelessly, as though no one had touched his one vulnerable spot,
pretended he did not see the Remembrancer-Duke's fingerclaws close over the
troglodyths' heads.
"No one questions your fealty,
je-Chauvelin," ja-Erh'aoa said, after a moment. "However, it is as
well not to cause even the hint of a question."
_Bad, very bad_, Chauvelin thought. He
bowed again, accepting the rebuke, and said, "As my lord wishes."
"I would also see to your
household, je-Chauvelin," ja-Erh'aoa said. "I am concerned that this
report has traveled so far outside my knowledge, and yours."
Chauvelin lifted an eyebrow at him, stung at last into retort. "My
household is well known to me, save the guest I entertain at your command, my
lord."
There was another little silence,
ja-Erh'aoa's hands slowly tightening over the troglodyths' heads, thumbclaws
perilously close to their carved eyes, and Chauvelin braced himself to offer
his humblest apologies. Then, quite slowly, ja-Erh'aoa's hands loosened again,
and he said, with apparent inconsequence, "How is your guest, Chauvelin?"
"The Visiting Speaker is enjoying the pleasures of the
planet," Chauvelin answered, conventionally. _In point of fact, the
Visiting Speaker Kuguee ji-Imbao aje Tsinra-an, cousin of the Imperial Father, is
spending most of his nights attending parties and most days sleeping off the
effects of Oblivion. Even so, I may have underestimated him -- or at least his
household_. He made a mental note to make a second investigation of the
half-dozen attendants who had arrived with ji-Imbaoa.
"You will convey our
greetings," ja-Erh'aoa said, and Chauvelin bowed again.
"As my lord wishes."
Ja-Erh'aoa nodded, pushed himself up
out of the chair-of-state, at the same time gesturing to the woman behind him.
She said, in her clear voice, "The audience is ended."
Chauvelin bowed again, more deeply,
hands on the floor, straightened slowly when the click of the room door was not
followed by the static of a broken connection. Eriki Haas tzu Tsinra-an,
ja-Erh'aoa's First Speaker, looked back at him without expression, came slowly
forward to kneel on the carpeting in front of ja-Erh'aoa's empty chair.
Chauvelin lifted an eyebrow at her.
"What's made this report so
different from all the others? My lord knows what I think of Berengaria."
He used tradetalk, the informal creole that was the common language of human
beings in Hsaioi-An, and Haas's severity melted into a rueful grin.
"What makes it different is
exactly what he said: somebody leaked it before it could be edited for the council.
And my lord's right, you should check on how that happened."
"I fully intend to,"
Chauvelin said. "This is not the most opportune time to have a
visitor."
Haas nodded. "The problem is, the
je cousins have been getting a lot of attention at court lately -- Norio Mann
is a je Tsinra-an, and he's been the All-Father's favorite son since the petro
strike on Hazuhonae. And the cousins are doing everything they can to
consolidate their position."
Chauvelin nodded back, wishing -- not
for the first time -- that communications between the court on Hsiamai and the
worlds outside Hsaioi-An were a little more frequent. "If I had known --
" he began, and bit off the words. The rivalry between je and tzu lines of
the imperial family -- between cousin and direct-line family -- was ongoing; if
he couldn't anticipate particular events and shifts in favor, he should at
least have made sure nothing in his report could have affected the
Remembrancer-Duke's position in that struggle. _But I didn't count on his
dumping ji-Imbaoa on me. Or his household_.
Haas smiled sourly. "For some
reason, Tal, they've decided to pick on you -- you are in an anomalous
position, after all. And my lord is vulnerable through you, don't forget."
"I don't forget," Chauvelin
said.
"Good."
"Tell me this," Chauvelin
said, and in spite of his best efforts heard the anger in his voice. "Do
you want me to retract my report? It's my best advice -- my lord never used to
prefer a political lie to common sense, but I am at my lord's command."
"No." Haas waved one hand in
a hsaii gesture, negation and apology in one. "What's done is done. But
you might look for some way to reaffirm your loyalties in public, Tal. My lord
would find it helpful."
"I'll do that," Chauvelin
said, a new, cold fear warring with the anger. He had earned his place on
Burning Bright, earned the right to return to his homeworld, a favor almost
never granted to _chaoi-mon_, and that did leave him open to just this accusation,
that he favored his origins over the imperial clan that had adopted him.
Haas looked at him from under lowered
lashes. "My lord is vulnerable through you," she said again.
"The threat was clear the first
time," Chauvelin said.
"I hope so," Haas murmured, and ran a finger along the
elaborate enameling that decorated the cover of her implanted wrist spur. The
picture wavered and died. Chauvelin swore, and reached for his own remote,
closing down the local connection. Check characters flickered across the
screen, and then the wall went dead, a blank grey space at the end of the room.
Chauvelin sat staring at it for a long
moment, mastering his anger, and the fear that anger masked. _So my lord will
throw me to the wolves_, he thought, testing the idea, and found he could view
it without great surprise. _So I will find a reason for him to have to keep me,
and I think I will begin with finding something, or something more, to
discredit ji-lmbaoa. Not that that will be that hard, or particularly
unpleasant_. He pushed himself slowly to his feet, wincing a little at the ache
in his knees. Outside the window, the sky had lightened visibly, the sky even
to the west, over the city, showing clear signs of dawn. There was no point in
going back to bed -- the conference had been scheduled at ja-Erh'aoa's
convenience, and he himself had other appointments later in the day. Better to
eat -- _assuming the kitchen staff is awake, which they had better be_ -- and
then take steps to deal with this.
He returned to his own rooms to change
clothes, discarding the unflattering bodysuit and heavy coat with a sigh of
relief. One of the servants -- the hsai preferred living beings to mechanicals;
service given and received in kinship was the glue of their society, and this
morning Chauvelin was oddly comforted by his place in the hierarchy -- had laid
out everyday clothing, shirt and plain trousers, and a less formal coat of
green brocade. The fabric was of Burning Bright weave, shot through with
strands of the iridescent pearl-silk rendered from the discarded shells of the
sequensa after the more expensive paillettes had been cut, and he hesitated for
a moment, wondering if it would be more tactful to wear something less
obviously identified with his world of origin, but then shrugged the thought
aside. The damage was done; it was better to pretend he hadn't heard about the
rumors. And besides, the cool drape of the fabric was a reassuring luxury. He
slipped it on, running one hand down the unshaped lapel just for the feeling of
the heavy silk under his touch, and left the room.
The sun was fully up now, the rising
light pouring in through the seaward windows, casting long shadows toward the
city below the Ghetto cliff. The breakfast room, overlooking the gardens that
dropped in terraces toward the cliff edge and the Old City, was pleasantly
shadowed, only the food tables softly lit by the stasis fields. Chauvelin
smiled with real enjoyment for the first time that day, and crossed to the
tables to pour himself a cup of flower-scented tea.
"Sia Chauvelin."
He turned to face the speaker,
recognizing his steward's voice, and saw a second person, jericho-human rather
than hsaii, standing beside the steward, so close and so exactly even in the
doorway that their shoulders touched. The woman was part of ji-Imbaoa's
household, and Chauvelin set the tea aside untouched.
"Yes?"
"My lord wishes to speak with
you," ji-Imbaoa's servant said, her voice completely without expression.
"The Visiting Speaker has only
just returned from the city," the steward murmured, under lowered lashes.
Her fingers curled with demure humor as she spoke.
Chauvelin lifted an eyebrow, his mind
racing. _What the ninth hell could ji-Imbaoa want, at this hour, when he's
bound to be hung over, or still drunk, if I'm particularly unlucky? I should
change to wait on him, but I'll be damned if he deserves the honor_ --
"The Visiting Speaker will have to pardon the delay," he said, and
indicated the informal coat.
"My lord will excuse,"
ji-Imbaoa's servant said, still without expression.
"As the Visiting Speaker
wishes," Chauvelin said, and could not quite keep the irony from his
voice. "Iameis" -- that was his steward, who bowed her head in
acknowledgment -- "you'll join me for breakfast after this. We have some
things to discuss."
"Yes, Sia," the steward
murmured, and stepped aside.
Chauvelin looked at the other woman.
"Lead on."
He let her conduct him through the
ambassadorial palace, as was proper, for all that he knew the building far
better than she ever would. She stayed the prescribed two paces ahead of him
and slightly to his right, unspeaking, and Chauvelin watched her back, rigid under
the black tunic, and the short swing of her left arm. A conscript's mark was
tattooed into her biceps, just below the fall of the cap sleeve. Chauvelin felt
his eyebrows rise, controlled his expression instantly. _Why would anyone be
stupid enough to trust ji-Imbaoa with pressed servants? Loyalty can only be
created by favor, not by fear -- though some of my own first masters were no
joy to serve, but nothing like him_. He filed the observation for later use,
and braced himself as the woman came to a stop outside the door of ji-Imbaoa's
suite. They were technically Chauvelin's own rooms, by virtue of his rank as
head of the ambassadorial household, but Chauvelin himself rarely used them,
since any visitor of higher rank could usurp them. Ji-lmbaoa had taken
particular pleasure in moving his household into the rooms, and Chauvelin had
had to keep a sharp grip on his temper to keep from betraying the existence of
a second group of rooms. Ji-Imbaoa would have been happy to move in there, at
the expense of his own comfort, just to win a few points in _an'ahoba_.
"The ambassador Chauvelin,"
ji-Imbaoa's servant announced to the invisible security system, and the carved
and lacquered doors swung open.
The Visiting Speaker Kuguee ji-Imbaoa
je Tsinra-an stood in the center of the suite's reception room, feet firmly
planted on the silk-weave carpet that lay before the chair-of-state. _At least
he hasn't chosen to take the chair_, Chauvelin thought, and suppressed his
anger as he saw the mud on ji-Imbaoa's feet, caked between the claws and
trampled into the carpet. It was a familiar way of showing power, but Chauvelin
added it to the Visiting Speaker's account: the carpet was too beautiful to be
treated as part of _an'ahoba_.
"_Ts'taa_." The word was
untranslatable, carrying contempt and impatience and a concise statement of
relationship, superior to inferior. Chauvelin raised his eyebrows, hoping that
ji-Imbaoa had finally made a mistake -- he and the Visiting Speaker were too
close in the hierarchy for that to be anything but a deliberate and deadly
insult -- and realized with regret that ji-Imbaoa was addressing the woman
servant.
"You are careless, and slow, and I
am diminished by your habits." Ji-Imbaoa glanced sideways then, toward Chauvelin,
and added, "_Chaoi_ have so much to learn."
He had used the shortened term, the one
that had once meant "slave." The woman's shoulders twitched once, but
she mastered herself, and bowed deeply. "I abase myself. I beg my lord's
forgiveness."
Ji-Imbaoa waved a hand in dismissal,
and the woman turned away, but not before Chauvelin saw the bright spots of
color flaring on her cheekbones. _It's not wise -- it's downright stupid -- to
abuse your servants to get back at your enemies_. He said, in his most neutral
voice, "And yet the All-Father commends the practice."
Ji-Imbaoa's head lowered, suspiciously,
but he said nothing. Chauvelin waited, running a quick and appraising glance
down the Visiting Speaker's mostly humanoid body. Fingerclaws and spurs were
painted a vivid red, the spurs protected only by a small cap of filigree-work.
The bright ribbon clusters that flowed from bands around his upper arms,
forming his only clothing, were badly crumpled, and Chauvelin glanced lower. The
salmon-pink tip of ji-Imbaoa's penis was only just visible at the opening of
the genital sheath: still drunk enough to relax some inhibitions, but sobering.
"I've summoned you because I've
been hearing worrisome news," ji-Imbaoa said abruptly. _News you should
already know about_, his tone implied.
Chauvelin murmured, "Indeed?"
They were close enough in rank to omit honorifics in informal speech, and
ji-Imbaoa had used the common forms.
Ji-Imbaoa's hands twitched, as though
he regretted his choice, but he could not change modes without losing face.
"You have an agent in the city, a _houta_, Ransome, it's called."
"Ransome is under my patronage,
yes," Chauvelin answered. "He's been _min-hao_ for some years."
The gap between _houta_, nonperson, and client-kinsman was vast; Ransome needed
the respect and protection of _min-hao_ status.
Ji-Imbaoa flicked his fingers,
dismissing the difference. "Decidamio Chrestil-Brisch is showing a great
deal of interest in him. I wonder why."
_And so do I_, Chauvelin thought. He
said aloud, "There are a number of reasons that Damian Chrestil might be
interested in Ransome, not least that Ransome's an imagist of some note in the
city."
"That may be," ji-Imbaoa
said, "but what I have seen is that Damian Chrestil -- or that woman, his
whore -- wants very much to lure your agent back into the Game. Why would that
be?"
"I don't know," Chauvelin
said.
"Such pressure against an agent of
yours, I'd think you'd want to know what's going on. They leave lures on all
the nets, hints and pressures. It's not like Damian Chrestil to care about the
Game -- "
"Cella, his mistress" --
Chauvelin laid the lightest of stresses on the word -- "is a well-known
Gamer, however, and Ransome was a notable for a long time."
Ji-Imbaoa flicked his fingers again.
"I think it's worth investigation."
Chauvelin sighed. "So do I."
"And I also think," ji-Imbaoa
went on, as if the other hadn't spoken, "that it would be worth doing what
Damian Chrestil wants, if only to find out what's going on."
"If it seems a reasonable
risk," Chauvelin said softly. "I don't send my people into difficult
situations unprepared."
"Of course, if he can tell you
what they want," ji-Imbaoa said, equally softly, "it wouldn't be
necessary."
"As you say." Chauvelin got a
grip on his temper with an effort, knowing his anger was sharpened by fear.
"Will that be all? I have business this morning -- "
Ji-Imbaoa cut him off with a gesture.
"There is one other matter. This Ransome: you say he's not _houta_ but
_min-hao?_"
"Yes." Chauvelin gave no
other explanation, uncertain where this would lead.
"Then there is a matter of charges
lodged against him on Jericho, which are actionable if he is _min-hao_."
"At the time, he was _houta_, and
served sentence on appropriate charges," Chauvelin said. _Not now_, he
thought, _not now, of all times, to bring that up. Christ, it was fifteen years
ago, and he spent time in jail; that ought to be over and done with_. But it
had been a matter of _an'ahoba_, a game that Ransome played with regrettable
skill and no status to match it -- _and I should have known this would come up
at the worst possible time. I can deal with it_.
"The larger matters still stand,
in court record." Ji-Imbaoa made a small gesture, almost of satisfaction.
"But I trust you will handle these matters appropriately."
"Of course," Chauvelin said,
in his most colorless voice. _Twice in one day -- that's twice someone's
threatened me, and it's not yet midmorning. Not one of my better days_.
"I am sure," ji-Imbaoa said,
and gestured polite dismissal. Chauvelin bowed his thanks, and let himself out
into the hallway.
He made his way back to the breakfast room through corridors
that were slowly filling with people, responding mechanically to the respectful
greetings of his household. _Three things_, he thought, _three things I have to
do. Find the weaknesses in ji-Imbaoa's household so that I can counter his
threats, find out who leaked this report of mine, and then find out why Damian
Chrestil wants Ransome back in the Game. And why it should worry ji-Imbaoa so
much. Which means I will have to talk to Ransome: it doesn't do to have him
keeping secrets from me_. He paused in the door of the breakfast room, mentally
reordering his list, then went in to give orders to the waiting steward.
--------
*Day 30*
_High Spring: Canal #291, Fisher's_
_Isle District, Burning Bright_
Damian Chrestil woke to sunlight and
the steady sway of the john-boat against the forward mooring. The stern tie had
parted in the night. He was certain of it even before he stopped blinking, and
moved his head out of the thin bar of sunlight that shone in through the gap
between the snuggery's canvas top and the side of the boat. He was angry even
before he remembered what lay next to him in the bunk. It was his fault, the
stranger's -- he had been the one to place the stern tie -- and he propped
himself up on one elbow to study the situation, and the body beside his. He
couldn't remember the stranger's name, nor very clearly why he had picked him
up the night before; whatever had been interesting or endearing had vanished
with his clothes. _Slumming, certainly_ -- and the stranger turned over onto
his side, dragging the thin sheet with him. That was quite enough, especially
now that the inevitable headache was starting behind his eyes. Damian kicked
away the rest of the sheet and reached for his discarded clothes, wriggling
awkwardly into briefs and shirt and trousers. The stranger -- _whoever he is_
-- was lying on top of the storage compartments. There was nothing useful in
them, not in a borrowed boat, but Damian added the extra inconvenience to his
account anyway, and crawled out of the snuggery to deal with the stern tie.
Luckily, he had had the sense to pick a
quiet lay-by. The john-boat was swinging only sluggishly, the soggy impact of
the hull against the piling barely audible over the gentle slap of the water,
not even enough to bruise the paint. He made his way aft along the sun-warming
decking, and as the boat swung in against the pilings, caught the dangling ring
and made the tie fast. He stood there for a moment, balancing automatically
against the deck's gentle heave, and blinked up at the sky and the white-hot
light. The john-boat lay at the bottom of a blue-toned canyon. Shadowed factory
buildings rose six stories high along either bank of the canal, their unlit
windows showing only blank glass. This was not a deliveryway; there were no
lesser docks or vertical line of gaping doors beneath an overhanging cranehead.
It was just a traffic alley, not much used -- it might even once have been a natural
stream, by the gentle curve of its banks. The rising sun was pouring down from
the near end of the channel, a wedge of almost solid light that turned the
murky water to liquid agate. No one was moving on the narrow walkways that ran
alongside the factories; no one else was tied up to the mossy pilings, or
tucked under the cool shadow of the piers. He made a face -- the heavy sun was
doing nothing for his headache -- and went forward again, shielding his eyes
from the shards of light that glinted off the water.
The stranger was still asleep in the
snuggery, face now turned to the empty pillow beside him. Damian Chrestil
squatted in the entrance to the cavelike space, staring into air turned
honey-gold by the worn cover, and felt a detached malevolence steal over him.
Why should _he_ sleep, when Damian himself was awake, and feeling unpleasing?
There was nothing in the round face and showily muscled body that aroused the
least compassion; his thin mustache was intolerable. _I must give up slumming_,
he thought, and leaned sideways to release the lock that held the cover's frame
erect. He caught the nearest hoop as the wind took it, guiding it down onto the
deck. The frame folded neatly, as it was supposed to, with only a soft creak
from the well-oiled mechanism, and the cover collapsed into a rumpled U-shape
at his feet. The stranger slept on.
Damian stood for a moment longer,
glaring down at him, automatically tugging his own thick hair into a neat
queue. He remembered perfectly well _how_ he'd acquired the stranger -- he was
a bungee-gar, and C/B Cie., the holding group that managed the Chrestil-Brisch
import/export interests, had successfully received a shipment of red-carpet,
the fungus that fed the family distilleries. Red-carpet was expensive enough on
its own, especially on a world that had few native sources of alcohol, valuable
enough to justify employing bungee-gars, but it had also served to cover the
two capsules of lachesi that had traveled with the declared cargo. Oblivion was
made from lachesi, and Oblivion was legal inside the Republic, but the
Republican export taxes on drugs were deliberately high. Evading those duties
not only increased his own profits, but allowed him to do favors for two
important parties, one in the Republic, the other in Hsaioi-An. And that was
how Burning Bright had survived free of control by either of the
metagovernments: the web of favors given and received that made it entirely too
dangerous for strangers to interfere in Burning Bright's internal politics. It
was never too early to start collecting favors, either, not when he intended to
be governor in five years.
The stranger shifted uneasily against
the mattress, drawing Damian out of the pleasant daydream. His head was really
throbbing now -- _Oblivion and bai-red rum, not a wise combination_ -- and he
wondered again why he'd invited the stranger aboard. He was decent-enough
looking -- a dark man, young, canalli dark, with coarse waves in his too-long
hair, heavy muscles under the skin, and buttocks Damian could vaguely remember
describing as "cute" -- but not cute enough, not with that silly
mustache shadowing his full mouth. He hadn't been that good a fuck, either: if
the previous night's performance had represented his sexual peak, his future
partners were in for some serious disappointment. Damian slipped his foot under
the sheet, flipped it nearly away. The stranger rolled over, groping blindly
for it, mumbling something that sounded regrettably like _darling_, and fetched
up with his shoulder resting on the edge of the boat. Damian Chrestil smiled
slowly, and stepped onto the bunk beside him, his feet sinking only a little
way into the hard foam of the mattress. He dug his foot under the stranger's
rib cage, saw him start to roll away automatically. The stranger's eyes opened
then, a sleepy and entirely too cocksure smile changing to alarm as Damian
tipped him neatly out of the boat. Instinct kept him from yelling until he
surfaced again.
"What the hell -- ?"
"Rise and shine." Damian
smiled, some of his temper restored, and turned his attention to the mess in
the snuggery.
The stranger trod water easily, shaking
his hair out of his eyes, but knew better than to try to climb back aboard.
"What'd I do?" he asked plaintively, and pushed himself a few strokes
farther down the channel, out of reach of the cargo-hooks racked along the
gunwales.
Damian paused, the stranger's clothes
in one hand. He had them all now, except for one crumpled shoe, and he found
that almost in the instant he realized it was missing, tucked in between the
mattress and the bulkhead. He rolled them all together into a compact ball, and
tossed it, not into the canal as he'd intended, but up onto the walkway between
the pilings. It was not, after all, entirely the stranger's fault.
"I have work to do," Damian
said.
For an instant it looked as though the
stranger might protest, but Damian scowled, and the other lifted both hands in
dripping apology, the water drawing him down for an instant.
"Fine." The stranger stopped
treading water, lay back, and let the current take him, exerting himself only
when he spotted the splintering ladder nailed to one of the piers.
Damian turned away, his mood lifting,
and stepped out onto the narrow bow platform to loosen the tie there. His
headache was fading now, in the morning air, was just an occasional pang behind
his eyebrows. He could hear splashing as the stranger hauled himself up out of
the canal, but did not bother to watch, walked aft instead and loosed the stern
tie. He pushed hard against the piling, edging the stern toward the main
current, and stepped down into the shallow steering well to hit the start
sequence. The engine whined, then strengthened as the solar panels striping the
deck woke to sunlight and began feeding power to the system, supplementing the
batteries. The john-boat had already caught the main current, was drifting
stern first toward the shadow of the factories. He swung the wheel, felt the
rudder bite, tentative at first, then more solid as the propellers came up to
speed, and eased open the throttle. The john-boat slowed even as the stern, the
steering well, slipped into the wall of shadow. He felt the sudden chill on his
shoulders, was blinded, looking out into the light, and then the propellers hit
the speed that counteracted the current. The boat surged back into the
sunlight, the water churned to foam in its wake. On the walkway, the stranger
was shivering even in the sunlight, stamping his feet to let the worst of the
water run off before he pulled on his clothes. Damian Chrestil wondered again,
briefly, precisely who he was, and opened the throttle further, letting the
pulse of the engine reverberate between the factory walls.
It was good to be back on the canals
again, if only for a few hours, and he gave himself up to the pulse of the
steering bar and the kick of the deck beneath his feet. You never really lost
the skill, once learned; would always be able to run a john-boat, but it was
good to feel the old ease returning. He grinned, and gave his full attention to
the delicate job of bringing the boat out of the alley and into the feeder
canal that led down to the Factory Lane and the Inland Water. There wasn't much
traffic yet, none of the swarming mob of gondas that would fill the lane and
the service canals in an hour or so, carrying midrank workers to their
supervisory jobs. The water buses that carried the ordinary workers to the
assembly lines had been and gone, were tied up in the parking pools along the
edge of Dry Cut to wait for the evening shift change. He reversed the
propellers, cutting speed, and slipped the john-boat into the buoyed channel,
bringing it neatly into line behind a barge piled high with shell scrap.
A light was blinking amber in the
center of the control panel, had been for a few minutes, since before he left
the feeder canal. He eyed it irritably, but knew he could not ignore it any
longer. "Check-in," he said, and the screen lit, the compressed in-house
iconage skittering into place in the tiny display. He scanned it quickly, still
with half an eye on the traffic in the channel, saw nothing that required his
instant attention. He was about to switch off when the string of messages
vanished, and a second message replaced them: _Jafiera Roscha received third
endangerment citation; please instruct_.
Damian Chrestil stared at the message
for a long moment, all his attention focused on the tiny characters, and had to
swerve sharply to avoid a channel buoy. He knew Roscha, all right: one of C/B
Cie.'s better john-boat drivers, competent, aggressive, not one to ask awkward
questions when she had a job to do. She was also what the canalli politely
called accident-prone, except that she usually caused the accidents. He shook
his head, said to the speaker mounted just below the screen, "Check in,
direct patch to the wharfinger. Authorization: Damian Chrestil."
There was a moment of silence as the
system hunted for an unused uplink, the hissing static barely audible over the
engine and the rush of water along the hull, and then the day dispatcher said,
"I'm sorry, Na Damian, but Na Rosaurin's on another line. Can I give her a
message, or will you hold?"
"Give her a message," Damian
said. "Tell her to find Roscha and bring her in. I want to talk to her.
And get me a copy of this endangerment complaint."
"Absolutely, Na Damian." The
dispatcher's sharp voice did not change, but Damian could imagine the lifted
eyebrows. "I'll pass those messages to Na Rosaurin, and put out a call for
Roscha."
"Thanks, Moreo," Damian said,
and added, to the system, "Close down."
The system chimed obediently, and a
string of icons flickered across the screen, their transit too fast to be read.
Damian glared at the now-empty screen for a moment longer, then made himself
concentrate on the increasing traffic as he came up on the buoy that marked the
turn onto the Inland Water. He would deal with Roscha later.
The Water, the massive deep-water channel
that bisected Burning Bright, was as crowded as ever. Enormous cargo barges
wallowed along in the main channel, warned away from the faster, lighter
john-boat traffic by lines of bright-orange buoys. Dozens of tiny, brightly
painted gondas flashed in and out of the double channels, day lights glittering
from their upturned tails. Damian swore at the first to cross his path,
matching his words to the jolting rhythm of the swells, and felt the john-boat
kick as it crossed the gonda's wake. He lifted his fist at the gonda driver,
and got a flip of the hand in return. He swore again, and swung into the lane
behind a seiner, its nets drawn up like skirts around the double boom. It
wallowed against the heavy chop -- Storm was only two days away, and the winds
had already shifted, were driving against the current, setting up an unusual
swell. The seiner's holds were obviously full: on its way back from the
sequensa dredging grounds off the Water's Homestead Island entrance, Damian
guessed, and throttled back still further to clear its heavy wake. It was
likely to be the last cargo they'd see for a few weeks, until Storm was past.
Even at the slower pace, it didn't take
long to come opposite the mouth of the Straight River, and he slowed again to
thread his way sedately through the bevy of smaller craft that swarmed around
the entrance. The main wharfs loomed beyond that, massive structures filling in
the bend in the bank between the Straight and the channel that led to the
Junction Pool and the warehouse districts beyond. He felt a distinct pang of
regret as he edged the john-boat into the channel that led to his own docks --
_if not for business, and if not for Roscha in particular, he could have spent
more of the day on the Water_ -- and transformed it instantly into anger. It
was time Roscha learned her lesson: that was all. He edged the john-boat
between the barges tied up at MADCo.'s end-of-dock terminal, and let himself
drift down easily, nudging the boat along with short bursts of power, to fetch up
against the worn padding almost directly beneath C/B Cie.'s antique ship poised
against a flaring sun. A familiar face looked down at him -- Talaina Rosaurin,
one of the wharfingers -- and a couple of dockers ran to catch the lines.
"Morning, Na Damian. I've the
day's plot set up, and Roscha's on her way in," Rosaurin said.
Damian nodded in acknowledgment, and
leaned sideways to catch the webbing that covered the fenders. He held the
john-boat steady with one hand and tossed the stern rope up onto the dock. The
nearest docker caught it, began automatically looping it around the nearest
bollard. "Thanks, Rosaurin. Finish the tie-up, will you?"
It was not a request. The wharfinger
nodded, and dropped onto the bow.
"I'll take a look at the plot as
soon as I've seen Roscha," Damian went on, and swung himself easily up
onto the dock. "Send her in as soon as she gets here."
"Right, Na Damian," Rosaurin
said, but Damian was already walking away.
His office was in a corner of the main
warehouse, insulated from the noise and smell of the moving cargoes by a shell
of quilted foam-board, and well away from the wharfingers' station at the end
of the pier. He threaded his way past the gang of dockers busy at the cranes
unloading the barge that had brought the drop capsules in from the Zone, and
glanced sharply into the open cargo space. He was moderately pleased to see
that only two capsules remained to be brought onto the dock, and made his way
past a whining carrier into the shadows of the warehouse. A pair of factors
looked up at his entrance, and the taller of the two touched his forehead and
came to intercept him, leaving the other to preside over the newly opened drop
capsule.
"I'm sorry, Na Damian, but there's
some minor spoilage in this shipment."
"How lovely." Damian bit back
the rest of his response, said instead, "Finish checking it and give me a
report. Is it TMN again?"
The factor nodded. "I'm afraid
so."
"I need to talk to them," Damian
said, and continued on toward the office. The door opened to his touch, reading
his palmprint on the latch, and admitted him to the narrow lobby, empty except
for the secretary pillar that guarded the inner doorway. The sphere that
balanced on the truncated point of its slender pyramid glowed pale blue, tinged
with green at the edges; threads of darker blue danced in its center, shaping a
series of brief messages. At least two of the code-strings signaled longer
messages backed up in the system -- probably from his siblings, if they were
sent here -- but he stepped past the pillar into the inner office.
Behind him, the secretary said, in its
cultured artificial voice, "Na Damian, you have messages waiting."
"Oh, shut up," Damian
Chrestil said, and closed the door behind him.
He kept clean clothes in storage here,
and there was a small but comfortable bath suite tucked into one corner of the
space. He showered and shaved, washing away salt and sweat and with it the last
holiday feeling of freedom, took two hangover capsules, and dressed quickly in
the shirt and trousers and short jacket that he found in the storage cell. He
spent a little extra time coaxing his thick mane of hair into a kind of careful
disorder; he was vain about his hair, thick and naturally gold-streaked brown,
and the fact that it looked good long did something to make up for the way the
fashionable long coats sat lumpishly on his thin body. Willowy was good,
scrawny was not, and he was forced to dress accordingly.
He returned to the inner office, and
settled himself at the apex of the chevron-shaped desk. The smaller secretary
globe -- really just an extension of the larger machine in the lobby -- chirped
softly at him, and he swung to face it.
"Well?"
"You have mail in your urgent
file."
"Well, isn't that pleasant,"
Damian said. "How many items?"
"Two."
"Print them." Damian Chrestil
ran his hand over the shadowscreen to light the various displays set on and in
the desktop, then leaned back in his chair as the tiny mail printer whirred to
life. It buzzed twice, chuckled briefly to itself, and spat a sheet of paper
with an all-too-familiar pattern. Damian took it, scowling down at the
dark-blue border marks of a formal Lockwarden complaint sheet, and scanned the
sharp printing. Roscha, it seemed, had excelled herself -- or had she? He read
the complaint a second time, more carefully, then set the sheet aside,
frowning. The complainant's name was unfamiliar, but he was a journeyman member
of the Merchant Investors' Syndicate, and the MIS was particularly hostile to
C/B Cie. It would be nice to know just what, or even who, had persuaded the man
to file a formal complaint: the threat to throw him off the cliff face was not,
on balance, a likely cause, at least not in a bungee-gar bar like the Last
Drop. He fingered the shadowscreen again, putting the complainant's name into a
basic inquiry program, and glanced at another screen, this one filled with the
running reports from the factors working on the cargo they'd collected the
night before. Roscha would have to learn better, however; for a start, she
could pay her own fines.
"Na Damian," the secretary
said. "Jafiera Roscha is here."
Damian paused, flicked a spot on the
shadowscreen to mute the various displays. "Send her in."
The door opened almost at once, and a
woman stood for an instant outlined against the lobby's buttery light. She was
tall, and exquisitely built, her waist narrow between perfectly proportioned
breasts and hips. Snug trousers and a dock-worker's singlet only emphasized
that perfection; the light jacket that trailed from one hand was a shade of
indigo that matched her eyes. Damian had forgotten -- he always forgot,
remembered again each time he saw her -- just how striking she was, and despite
the previous night felt a stirring of interest in his groin. Roscha came
forward into the light, the corners of her wide mouth drawn down in an attempt
neither to smile nor frown, and Damian slid the complaint across the desktop at
her.
"What the hell was this?"
Roscha took it warily, studied the
printed message, her eyes flicking back and forth between the paper and the
other's face. Somehow, despite the hours she spent on the Water, she had kept
her skin dazzlingly fair, the color of coffee cream; her red hair flamed
against her shoulders, held out of her eyes by a strip of black ribbon. More
black bands -- braided ribbons or strips of leather -- circled each wrist, and
Damian recalled himself sternly to the business at hand.
Roscha set the paper carefully back on
the edge of the desk. "I guess I had too much to drink last night."
"I guess you should be more
careful where you drink," Damian answered.
Roscha shrugged, looking rather sullen.
"There were a bunch of us, celebrating, and enough of us making noise. I
don't know why they picked on me."
"Just accident-prone, I
guess," Damian said.
Roscha looked away, not quickly enough
to hide the flash of anger. "I just got carried away. I'm sorry."
"I don't pay my people to get
carried away," Damian Chrestil said. "I pay you to do your job, and
do what I tell you. Not to go around collecting complaint sheets." He
glanced down at the slip of paper again. "Do you even know this man?"
Roscha looked at the intricately
patterned carpet, visibly mastering her temper. "By sight, mostly, and I
know the name -- he's in the Game, I've seen him playing on the nets. I did
know he works for the MIS."
"Do you know what he does for
them?"
"Works for one of the factors, I
think," Roscha answered. "Computer jockey."
"Ah."
In spite of his best efforts, there was
enough satisfaction in Damian's voice that the wary look in Roscha's eyes faded
to something more like curiosity. Damian glared at her, and she met his stare
with a stony face.
"They give you a choice," he
said, after a moment. "Pay the fine, a hundred and fifty _real_, or take
it to court. You'll pay."
There was another little silence, Roscha's too-large mouth
thinning slightly, and then she said, without inflection, "I don't have
that much in my account."
Damian looked at her for a long moment,
and she returned the stare unflinching. A little color might have touched her
wide cheekbones, but it was hard to tell. "All right," he said, and
ran his hand over the shadowscreen. The second printer, the one loaded with
draft forms, chirred softly under the desktop, and spat a slip of soft paper.
"Here, give this to Rosaurin, she'll give you a voucher -- and I'll stop
you twenty-five _real_ a paycheck to cover it. Agreed?"
"Agreed." Roscha still looked
grim, but the tight set of her mouth eased a little.
Damian nodded, and slid the draft
across the desktop toward her. Roscha took it, pocketed it without looking at
the faint printing. "Right, then," Damian said, and the woman turned
away, accepting that dismissal. Even before the door had closed behind her,
Damian reached for the shadowscreen, raising the priority of his inquiry about
the MIS complainant. A member of the Merchant Investors, even a low-ranking
one, who was also a computer jockey and who was around his warehouses often
enough for Roscha to recognize him by sight, was a man who would bear watching.
It just might explain how local Customs had come to question a shipment of his
last month. On the whole, he thought, it was worth paying Roscha's fine -- he
might not even bother taking all of it out of her check.
He sighed then, and turned his
attention back to the waiting messages. As he'd expected, his eldest sibling,
Altagracian, the Chrestil-Brisch Pensionary, was at the top of the list. Damian
scanned the curt message -- _call at once_ -- but dumped it into a holding file
without answering. Chrestillio always overreacted; he could wait a little
longer.
The secretary chimed again, and said,
"There is an incoming message under your private and urgent code. Do you
wish to accept?"
Damian frowned, but none of his
siblings had that set of numbers. "Yes. Put it on the main board."
The central panel of the unimpressive
triptych on the far wall -- _I should commission something better_, he thought,
not for the first time -- slid apart to reveal the main screen, and a moment
later the connect codes streamed across the black glass. The Visiting Speaker
Kuguee ji-Imbaoa looked out at him, heavy body framed by the curtains of an
enormous bed.
_Ambassador Chauvelin does well for
himself_, Damian thought, and hid a grin. He said aloud, "Good morning, Na
Speaker. I trust everything's well with you."
"Na Damian." The Visiting
Speaker was making an effort to be polite, unusual for him. Damian Chrestil
waited warily.
"You had some concerns about one
of the ambassador's agents," ji-Imbaoa said abruptly, and Damian glanced
involuntarily at the security telltales embedded in the desktop.
"Na Speaker, our conversation was
rather more secure -- "
"I have taken precautions,"
ji-Imbaoa interrupted. "My end of this transmission is safe."
The hissing accent made the words even
more of a rebuke, and Damian frowned, looking again at the security readout.
"So is mine, but it's not a chance I like taking."
"You had been concerned about this
agent, this Ransome," ji-Imbaoa went on, and Damian resigned himself.
"Yes. I was and am." _And
I've been trying my damnedest to get him back into the Game and off the main
nets. The bastard spends too much time on the nets, he's bound to see what I've
done to move the lachesi_ --
"I have told Chauvelin that you
want Ransome back in the Game," ji-Imbaoa went on, "and that I
believe Ransome should do what you want -- so that we can find out what you are
up to, of course."
"Christ." Damian controlled himself with an effort,
said only, "Don't you think that's a little obvious, Na Speaker?"
_And what if he actually does find out?_
"I rely on your bait to be good
enough." Ji-Imbaoa inspected his fingerclaws, a smug and satisfied
gesture.
"As I relied on you to get him off
the nets," Damian snapped. "Na Speaker, if you want this cargo that
you've invested so heavily in to get where it's supposed to be going, Illario
Ransome has to be distracted."
"I do not understand why he is so
important." Ji-Imbaoa sat down abruptly on the bed, flicked claws in
impatient dismissal.
_Because he's the best netwalker I've
ever seen. And he plays politics_. Damian said aloud, keeping a tight rein on
his temper, "Illario Ransome is brilliant on the nets. He is also an
imagist, he taps all the nets, all of them, he goes trawling for images for his
story eggs, and he remembers everything. He's the only person who would be at
the right place at the right time to spot the paper trail, and the only one who
has enough outside information to put the pieces together. Does that make it
clear?"
There was a little silence, and then
ji-Imbaoa looked away. "Still, you should have what you want. He should be
distracted, investigating your Game."
"I hope so." Damian paused,
considering. It might work, at that, might give him the time he needed to --
adjust -- the customs nets to accept his new cargo. If Ransome did as he was
told, of course, and if Cella's scenarios were enough to catch his eye ... But
Storm was coming, too, and the first few days of Carnival were celebrated on
the nets, as well as on the streets. The two things together might be enough to
let him get away with it. "Have you gotten the destination codes?"
"I am still waiting,"
ji-Imbaoa said. "I will pass them on to you as soon as I have them, you
need not worry."
_I always worry_, Damian thought, but
said, "All right. The sooner the better, though, Na Speaker, because
without them I can't get this cargo into Hsaioi-An." He paused, seeing
annoyance in the sudden clenching of ji-Imbaoa's hands, made himself add,
"Thanks for dealing with Ransome, though."
Ji-Imbaoa's hands relaxed. "We are
in this together, Na Chrestil. Now, I have had an active night, and wish to
sleep."
"Sleep well, then," Damian
answered, and cut the connection. He leaned back in his chair, ran his hand
across the shadowscreen to close down the link. The triptych slid slowly back
into place over the now-empty screen, and he stared at it for a moment. _I
wonder what it would cost me to commission Ransome to do a piece to replace
it?_ he wondered, and grinned at the thought. _It might keep him busy for a
while, and he'd be furious: it's an insultingly minor job. Hell, it might be
worth asking just to see the look on his face_. He fiddled with the
shadowscreen, filing the thought for later consideration, and touched another
icon to bring up the rest of his mail. The secretary, programmed to be helpful,
appended a to-do list as well. Damian considered it for a moment, and succumbed
to temptation. Rosaurin wanted him to approve the next week's shipping plot,
and that was much more fun than the painstaking records-melding that needed to
be done. He pushed himself away from his desk and out the door before he could
change his mind.
--------
*Day 30*
_High Spring: Ransome's Loft,_
_Old
Coast Road, Newfields,_
_Above
Junction Pool_
Ransome half sat, half lay in the chair
that conformed itself to his thin body, barely aware of the shifting cushions
that held him exactly where he wanted to be. Images filled the air around him,
ghostly yet substantial-seeming, all but blocking out the cityscape spread out
below the loft windows. The windows dimmed again, cutting out the sunlight --
they had been dimming steadily since sunrise, following the house programming
-- but Ransome did not notice, lost in the flickering narrowcasts that held and
surrounded him. The implants set into the bones at the outer edges of his eye
sockets caught and amplified the conflicting signals; his wire gloves, thin and
flexible and warm as blood, let him sculpt the space around him, defining each
unreal volume according to his whim. The offerings of half a dozen different
narrownets danced in the air around him: Gamers to his left, four different
sessions played out in as many different venues, three old, pretaped, the
fourth a late-night session that had dragged on into the morning. Faces and
streets and shadows, culled illegally from the Lockwardens' security systems,
wove in and through the other images, overlaying them with a bizarre patchwork
of morning light and shade. The matching audio murmured on a dozen channels
from the speakers at the base of the room's walls, backing the images with the
solidity of sound. His attention was fixed on a single image, floating
overhead, at the apex of the cone of light and noise: flickering market glyphs
from the port computers spun in delicate linkage, legitimate public numbers and
private taps combined into a single database, strings of numbers combined into
a dazzling three-dimensional shape that had a weird organic beauty all its own.
He let the shapes wash over and around
him, put out his hand to draw in another narrowcast band. The air glowed
briefly amber, control icons sparking in the system space that he had placed
within easy reach, and then cleared again. A woman's face appeared, a mask of
white paint and strong black lines and the vivid red of her mouth; he watched
for a moment and pushed it away, to one side of the dancing market numbers. For
a brief instant, his hand seemed to sink into the image, marring its edge, and
then it moved, obedient to his touch. He reached again into the control space,
found the symbols and the tool he wanted, and a second image, identical to the
delicate, complex shape that was the graphic representation of the elaborate
transformational database overhead, appeared in the air in front of him. He
chose another tool, the wires of his gloves growing faintly warmer around his
hands in confirmation of the choice, and then reached for the shape. He wrapped
his hands around it, squeezed gently, compressing it, until it hung in a space
no more than a dozen centimeters in diameter. Some of the delicacy had vanished
in the compression, become little more than texture. He frowned, and reached
for a second tool, used its all-but-invisible point to pry the numbers apart,
untangling the channels, until the various strands were distinct again.
He lay back against the shifting cushions, studying the image, set
it slowly rotating in front of him. The shape derived from those twining
numbers would be the main focus of one of his story eggs, a commission for a
Syndic of the Merchant Investors, a woman who lived and died by the movements
of the trade that created the numbers coiling in the air in front of him. He
reached for the face that hung in the air beside it, brought it down, until the
strands of numbers slowly writhed behind the mask, like DNA beneath the skin.
It was interesting, but not, he thought, what was needed now; it detracted from
the bizarre beauty of the shifting numbers. He banished the face with a wave of
his hand, leaving only the intertwining numbers, bronze and green and all the
shades of metal, floating in unreal space. He smiled, contemplating it, and
reached into the control space to preserve the image in one of the dataspheres
waiting linked to the main consoles. The sphere would store both the algorithm
that transformed the numbers to this graphic and the formulae for the
connections to the financial nets -- even the private ones, one of which had
been donated by the client -- that provided the raw data. All that remained was
to set the image into a proper casing, and that was already waiting, ready on
the shelf: a smooth, pale green egg the color of old, well-weathered copper,
with streaks and spills of stronger green, and the ghost of the metal showing
through. He smiled, savoring the satisfaction of a job well done, and closed
the particular volume.
A voice that had been speaking from one
of the floor-mounted receivers for some time now, he realized belatedly, was
calling his name.
" -- Ransome, I know you're there.
I can see your taps." There was a brief pause, and then, reluctantly,
"It's important, I-Jay."
Ransome sighed, suddenly aware that it
was morning and that he had been awake most of the night, and that it was
Chauvelin himself who was making this connection, not one of the apparently
numberless ambassadorial servants. He muted the remaining images with a wave of
his hand, and reached into control space to connect himself with the
communications channel. "I'm here."
"About time."
The familiar face, elegant and worn and
lined beneath the brown hair just going cloudy with grey, bloomed in the air
above him. Ransome winced, and moved it to a less dominating position. "I
was working," he said, and winced again at the defensive note in his
voice. "What is it?"
Chauvelin smiled slightly, sourly, a
faint quirk of one corner of his long mouth. "I need to talk to you -- not
on the nets. The Visiting Speaker has come up with some interesting information
you and I need to discuss."
"Fuck the Visiting Speaker,"
Ransome said, and Chauvelin's smile widened into something approaching humor.
"A privilege not likely to be
granted." Chauvelin's smile vanished as quickly as it had appeared.
"Tell me something, why would Cella Minter want you back in the
Game?"
Ransome blinked, wondering where this
question had come from, and what it really meant. Cella he knew, both as Damian
Chrestil's mistress and as an accomplished Gamer, but only from a distance.
"I've no idea," he said, and then, because it was usually best to tell
Chauvelin the truth, "I didn't know she wanted me back Gaming."
"So ji-Imbaoa says,"
Chauvelin said, and held up a hand, forestalling any answer from the other.
Ransome grinned, and let him continue. "And so it looks to me, too,
looking at the nets. I tied in to some of the club gossip boards. There's a lot
of talk about Ambidexter, and usually Cella hinting in the background that he
ought to come back to show people how his templates are supposed to be
played."
Ransome shrugged, felt his face go
wooden. "Ambidexter's dead -- "
In spite of himself, the words came out
bitter, and it was the bitterness that Chauvelin answered. "You're not
dead yet. I don't have time for self-pity, I-Jay, I need your help."
Ransome lifted both eyebrows, a
deliberate imitation of Chauvelin's gesture. "You must be desperate."
He paused then, shook his head, shaking away the bad temper that was becoming a
habit with him. "I'm sorry. I don't know why Cella would want me on the
Game," he said again. "Unless it's something Damian Chrestil
wants?"
"I'd say that was highly
likely," Chauvelin murmured. "Which raises the question of why he
would want it. And that is something I don't want to discuss on the nets."
Ransome made another face, though he
had to admit the wisdom of it. He himself was not the only netwalker on Burning
Bright, or the only imagist who tapped unlikely lines looking for good sources.
"I suppose you'll want me to come to you."
"Yes." Chauvelin's tone
blended forbearance and the resignation of an adult dealing with a child.
"I think that would be best."
Ransome laughed, gestured apology,
miming the hsai gesture that linked wrist spurs. The scars where his implanted
spurs had been removed touched briefly, an odd, unpleasant feeling; he jerked
his hands apart without finishing the movement. Chauvelin said nothing, did not
move at all, as though nothing had happened, and Ransome said, "I'll be
there in an hour." He knew he sounded curt, made himself add, by way of
further apology, "It'll take me a while to pull myself together. I was up
all night working on a commission."
Chauvelin nodded. "May I
see?"
"It's a private commission,"
Ransome said, with genuine regret -- Chauvelin was one of the very few whose
opinions mattered to him -- then grinned suddenly. "But I've done
something for you, I'll show you when I get there."
"That will be the first good thing
that's happened all day," Chauvelin said. He gave a twisted smile, as
though he regretted the admission, and said, in an entirely different voice,
"In an hour, then." He cut the connection before Ransome could
respond.
Ransome sighed, staring at the
still-busy images without really seeing them, then brought his chair upright.
The net taps whirled around him, readjusting themselves to his position, but he
waved them away, then closed both fists to shut down the system. Glyphs and
code-strings flickered past, too fast to be understood at more than the
subliminal level, and then the pictures vanished. Ransome sighed again,
stretching, feeling the long night's work claw at his back, the old familiar
ache in the bones and tendons of his hands. He peeled off the tight gloves,
wincing a little, and set them aside. His chest was tight, catching in his
ribs; he could hear the fluids at the base of his lungs, a harsh rasp that cut
each breath too short for comfort. He reached instinctively for the cylinder of
Mist, flipping it backwards to unfold the facemask, but stopped abruptly. The
red light glowed under the trigger button, warning him that he had taken a dose
within the last two hours. He stared at it for a second, his mind forming a
curse to override the fear, then made himself set it aside.
"Input," he said aloud.
"Housekeeper systems." The words caught in his chest, the lack of air
catching him by surprise. He coughed, hard, the spasm driving painfully deep.
His mouth filled with phlegm that tasted like bitter copper; he spat it into a
sheet of tissue, and saw the familiar thick white laced with a froth of red.
That was answer enough. "Cancel," he whispered, voice harsh and
strange to his own ears, but the room responded calmly.
"Input canceled."
Ransome scowled, hating the sickness,
hating the fact that his systems remembered that choked voice as his own, and
pushed himself up out of the chair. The injector lay on the shelf where he kept
the story eggs' shells. He went to get it, feeling the too-familiar giddiness,
laid the cold tip against the veins of his neck as he had been taught, where
the skin was more or less permanently reddened from the injections, and pressed
the trigger. The machine stung once, painfully, and he imagined he could feel
the drug spreading like cold fire under his skin. The doctors swore it was a
hallucination, a common side effect. It felt real enough, and he stood for a
long moment, waiting, eyes fixed on nothing, as the chill spread through his
chest and down his right arm, and the pain eased and his breath came easier,
the rattling in his lungs fading slightly. It had been three years since the
maintenance drugs, the ones that had kept the white-sickness at bay, had failed
him, as he had known they would: five to seven years, he could expect the
injections to work, and then he was dead.
Ransome stuffed the injector into his
pocket, made himself shower and shave and find a clean shirt and jerkin, going
through the motions until the fear and anger had retreated again.
White-sickness was common in hsai space, a common killer of jericho-humans; it
was also incurable, though onset and death could be delayed for decades with
the right drugs. It was just his bad luck to have shared a cell with a carrier,
back on Jericho. _My mistake to have been on Jericho at all, to have worked for
the Chrestil-Brisch in the first place_... He shook the thought away, and
glanced for a final time in his mirror. He was looking haggard -- _too little
sleep; nothing new_ -- but the hectic flush from the injection still burned on
his cheeks, two ugly, fake-looking spots of red. The black jerkin and trousers
and the loose white shirt had been meant to complement his usual bone-white
pallor. He suppressed the instinct to rub his face, to scrub the red away, and
reached instead for the handful of carved stones waiting on his workbench. He
slipped those into his pocket, and left the loft, double-sealing the palmprint
lock behind him out of habit.
His flat was one of a dozen in a
converted warehouse, purchased cheap by one of the artists' cooperatives now
that most cargoes moved through the new Junction Pool cargo lifts rather than
the long way around, from the ramps at Dry Cut along the Old Coast Road that
skimmed the cliff edge. The old warehouse districts were no longer convenient,
or profitable; the buildings that had not been converted to other uses -- ght
manufacture, particularly, and in this district the embroiderers' shops that
made the embellished fabrics that were Burning Bright's primary export product
-- stood empty, their windows cracked, frames emptied by last year's Storm. The
lift was occupied, as usual -- there were enough heavy-materials workers in the
building to ensure that the single lift was always in use or out of order --
and Ransome made his way down the side stairs. It had been a fire access once,
running along the outside of the building, and the outer wall was pierced at
intervals by narrow panels of wire mesh. The air that flowed in was soft and
heavy with the salt smell of the canals, and warm with the promise of Storm.
There were more signs of approaching Storm in the corners of the stair, or at
least of the Carnival that took up most of the two-week period: a raki bottle
stood empty on each landing, and the lowest level, where the walls were solid
to prevent unauthorized access, stank of urine. Ransome made a face, and
stepped carefully over the puddles to unlock the gate.
The alleyway was crowded with
denki-bikes and two- and three-wheeled velocks, the latter chained to anything
substantial enough to defeat a standard wirecutter, the denki-bikes clustered
around the charging bollards, a blue haze showing where the security fields
intersected. Ransome reached cautiously into the tangle of cables and locks to
free his own machine, and winced as the fizzing security stung his fingers.
Then he backed the bike out of the tangle -- for once without setting off
someone else's security system -- checked the power reserve, and climbed
aboard. The machine was woefully underpowered, for his taste, but it was
serviceable, and better than the tourist-trolleys. He edged the throttle
forward -- the bike whined and shivered -- and let it carry him sedately into
the traffic stream.
He took the short road to the Ghetto
where Chauvelin lived with most of the rest of Burning Bright's noncitizen
residents, skirting the cliff edge above the delivery basins of Junction Pool,
then cutting straight through the industrial zone past the spaceport at
Newfields. A column of smoke and steam hung in the distance, the winds slowly
bending and fraying it to nothing: someone was saving money on launch costs,
flying chemical rockets. The pilots who ran the orbital shuttle would be
cursing, Ransome thought, and smiled.
The ambassadorial residence stood on
one of the highest points in the Ghetto -- on all of the Landing Isle, the
largest piece of the original landmass: the hsai liked heights, and most of
Burning Bright's inhabitants didn't care. The household staff had been told to
expect him. Ransome paused at the gate only long enough to identify himself --
most of Chauvelin's household knew him by sight, after nearly fifteen years in
the ambassador's service -- and then a pair of hsai servants came out of the
main house to meet him. The male took the denki-bike, and the hsaii --
Chauvelin's steward Iameis je-Sou'tsian, Ransome realized with some surprise --
bowed politely.
"Sia Chauvelin has asked me to
bring you directly to the garden," she said, in tradetalk, and Ransome
answered in low mian-hsai.
"I'm honored by the
courtesy." _And very surprised by it_, he added silently. _What the hells
is going on, to make me rate this treatment?_ He followed without question,
however -- he knew better than to ask that question -- and je-Sou'tsian brought
him through the sudden cool of a service passageway, bypassing the main house,
and led him out as suddenly onto a path that ran between tall walls of
flowering hedge. Ransome blinked, momentarily confused, then oriented himself.
This was the maze, a part of the garden derived from hsai tradition, and one
that Chauvelin rarely used. Je-Sou'tsian followed the turns without hesitation,
however -- _maybe it is true_, Ransome thought, _that there really is only one
pattern in use on all the worlds of Hsaioi-An_ -- and let them out through a
red-lacquered gate onto the carefully landscaped lawn of the upper terrace.
Chauvelin was waiting a few meters away, seated comfortably in the shade of a
bellflower tree, a luncheon tray beside him and a data manager resting in his
lap.
"Na Ransome is here," je-Sou'tsian
said, and the ambassador looked up with an abstracted smile.
"Ransome. Join me, why don't
you?" To je-Sou'tsian, he added, "Thank you. That'll be all."
"Yes, sia," the steward
answered, bowing, and backed away.
Ransome made his way down the terraced
slope, stepping carefully around the elaborately casual plantings. He was very
aware of the ambassador's residence looming behind him, the sunlight polishing
the white-stone walls and glinting off the long windows. It felt unpleasantly
as though someone were watching him, and he seated himself deliberately on the
wall that overlooked the lower terrace. Chauvelin glanced up at him, gave a
quick smile, and Ransome smiled rather wryly in return. If it had been the
cliff wall, overlooking the hundred-meter drop to the Old City, he would never
in a thousand years have settled himself there, especially with Chauvelin
sitting less than two meters from him, and they both knew it.
"So good of you to come,"
Chauvelin said, with only the lightest note of irony.
Ransome let his smile widen. "I
was working," he said. "What is this about Cella, and the Game?"
"That's the very question I'd like
you to answer," Chauvelin said.
Ransome spread his hands -- a human gesture,
not hsai, and deliberately so. "I don't know. I've been out of the Game
for three years, I barely pay attention to the Game nets except when I'm
trolling for images. I don't know what Cella wants -- except that if she wants
it, Damian Chrestil probably wants it, too."
Chauvelin nodded slightly, though
Ransome could not be sure if the movement was a response to his words or to
something on his screen. "I need to know why. Ji-Imbaoa came in this
morning -- "
"Sober?" Ransome murmured,
with just the right note of shock, and allowed himself a brief smile when the
word surprised a laugh from Chauvelin.
"Mostly so. At any rate, he came
to me complaining that Damian Chrestil is interested in you, via Cella -- he
knows you as my agent, so don't ask -- and demanding to know why. When I
checked him out, I found the same thing: lots of agitation to get you back into
the Game, and usually Cella's at the back of it. I want to know what's going
on."
"I told you," Ransome began,
and Chauvelin nodded.
"I know you've been working. A
commission for Syndic Leonerdes, and that big installation for the governor.
But I need to know what's going on, I-Jay. Ji-Imbaoa -- well, I won't bore you
with hsai politics."
"Bore me," Ransome said.
Chauvelin grinned, sobered instantly.
"Suffice it to say that ji-Imbaoa has more influence than he should, and
he wants this done. And that's the other thing I want to find out: why the hell
should he be so worried about Damian Chrestil?"
Ransome shrugged one shoulder.
"Maybe they had a bar fight, their tastes seem similar enough. Though I
don't think Damian Chrestil drinks quite so much."
"Let me put it this way,"
Chauvelin said, and his voice was suddenly devoid of all expression.
"Ji-Imbaoa is worried enough to remind me that, since I made you
_min-hao_, you could still face charges in Hsaioi-An, for lese majesty."
"Lesser treason," Ransome
murmured, through lips grown suddenly stiff and unresponsive, "but still treason."
"Just so."
They sat in silence for a long moment,
the only sounds the faint whistle of the seabirds and the whine of a denki-bike
passing in the street. Ransome slipped his hand into his pocket, found the
handful of carved stones he had collected, turned them over one by one. He had
been glad to be tried as _houta_ back on Jericho; insults up the social scale,
from person to person or from _min-hao_ to a person, could be construed as a
kind of treason, and the sentences for that were more severe than they were for
theft. Insults by _houta_, on the other hand, were "no more than the
barking of dogs," or so the hsaii judge had said through the human
translator, and therefore didn't count against him. Unfortunately, the hsai had
a very long memory for insults.
He slipped one of the stones out of his
pocket, fingering the delicate features without really looking at them. His
eyes traveled instead beyond the lower terrace, beyond the Straight River,
where he thought he could see the bow of the Crooked River, dividing the Old
City from the Five Points District. It was a trick of the light, he knew that,
of the hazy sunlight and the water-heavy air, that turned all distances vague
and soft-edged, drowned in a blue-grey haze like a watercolor wash. Even so,
his mind filled in the outlines, drew a second steely curve beyond the more
solid line of the Straight. Five Points proper, the five projecting pieces of
cliff edge where the descendants of the city founders lived, lay beyond that curve,
invisible, tantalizing, and the third of the points belonged to the
Chrestil-Brisch. He had been there once, years ago -- before Chauvelin, before
Jericho, before he'd even thought of leaving Burning Bright, when he had still
thought he could play certain games without penalty even though he'd been born
poor canalli, child of a Syncretist Observant, playing games on equal terms
with the second child of Chrestil-Brisch....
He put that thought aside. Cella Minter
was nudging him back into the Game, and the hand behind her was Damian
Chrestil's: that was what mattered now, that and whatever hsai politics
Chauvelin was tangled in. Chauvelin had been adopted into the tzu Tsinra-an,
and was relatively a modernist and a moderate even within the moderate faction
that dominated the court. But where he stood in the greater conflict that lay
behind the factional quarrel, Ransome had never been completely sure. Hsaioi-An
wanted to control settled space -- the hsai needed to control settled space,
because their culture could not admit that other species equalled their own;
the whole elaborate fiction of adoptions and legal kin-species had been set up
to allow the hsai to pretend that other beings were really a part of their own
species. Chauvelin had embraced that fiction, heart and soul, or he wouldn't be
here.
But he had been careful, all the years
Ransome had known him, never to say whether he supported the wider definition
of kinship, one that would eliminate the concept of _houta_ and replace it with
an acknowledgment of a basic kinship between all intelligent species, or the
older, more conservative version. Most conscripts Ransome had known supported
the old, narrow definition: why should others get for nothing what they had
worked so hard to win? That sort of selfish self-aggrandizement wasn't
Chauvelin's style -- but then, it was equally unlike Chauvelin to keep silent
even about risky political beliefs. More likely, Chauvelin had thought of
himself as hsaie for so long that it no longer occured to him to think of
himself as involved in that debate. Chauvelin had made one thing very clear. If
Ransome didn't serve Chauvelin's interests, Chauvelin would no longer be able
to protect him. That knowledge had a sour taste, and he looked away, stared over
his shoulder toward the shimmering towers of Newfields. Even at this distance,
he heard a rumble like distant thunder, and squinted skyward in spite of
knowing better, looking for the pinpoint light of an orbiter already long out
of sight. He looked back, dazzled -- the sun was starting the decline over the
highlands, turning the sky to a white haze -- and saw Chauvelin looking at him.
"The sound of money," Ransome
said, and deliberately turned his back on the port. Chauvelin lifted an
eyebrow, visibly decided the comment did not deserve an answer, and returned
his attention to the data manager that rested on his lap. The subject was
clearly closed, or else, Ransome thought, even Chauvelin was a little ashamed
of himself for this one. He watched Chauvelin work for a little longer, the
long hands busy on the input strip, the grey-brown hair fading even more in the
afternoon light, the slight, faintly quizzical hint of a frown as he studied
something on the screen. Ransome did not like being ignored, did not like being
ignored after being threatened, said, not quite at random, "Do you think
it's wise to annoy Damian Chrestil?"
"Why not?" Chauvelin's voice
sounded bored, his eyes still on the screen in front of him, but Ransome got
what he was looking for, the subtle shift of expression that meant the
ambassador was listening closely.
"He's not a fool," Ransome
said. "Or a child. They say he'll be coopted to the Select next
year."
"Is that what they say?"
Chauvelin did not move, but Ransome smiled to himself, hearing the slight
change in tone. He had confirmed something that Chauvelin had suspected -- and
a seat among the Select, the elite advisory council that handled much of
Burning Bright's foreign policy, was the first step toward becoming governor.
"Among other things." Ransome
lowered his eyes to look at the carved head, pinching it between his fingers,
glanced up through his lashes to watch Chauvelin's response.
"Well, that's what I pay you
for," Chauvelin said. "And for finding out what in all hells Damian
Chrestil wants." He leaned back in his chair, stretching long legs in
front of him, and touched the manager's screen. The machine shut itself down
obediently, its chime muted in the heavy air. He was wearing a hsaie greatcoat
over plain shirt and trousers, a sweep of unshaped river-green brocade that set
off the weathered ivory of his skin. His hands were starting to betray his age.
Ransome looked down at his own fingers, saw the same lines and shadows starting,
tendons and bones starkly outlined under the roughened skin. Not that he was
likely to see the end of the process: by the time he reached Chauvelin's age --
and there were not ten years between them -- he was likely to be dead.
"Among other things," he said
again, putting aside the familiar recognition, and tilted his head toward the
terrace, toward the hardscaping he himself had designed. Chauvelin nodded,
acknowledging the point, and by coincidence a breath of wind shook the
bellflower tree beside him, bathing them both in its musky perfume. _It would
have been a nice effect_, Ransome thought, _if I could've planned it_.
Chauvelin set the data manager aside on
the stones of the wall, leaned back in his chair, taking his time. The sunlight
cast a delicate pattern of shadow over him, pouring down through the
bellflower's fan-shaped leaves and striking deep sparks of color from the
draped greatcoat. Even in the shadow, the lines that bracketed his mouth and
fanned from the corners of his eyes were very visible. The crows'-feet
tightened slightly, a movement that might become either a smile or a frown, and
Ransome bit his tongue to try to copy the other's silence, to keep from
speaking too soon. The bellflower's leaves rustled gently, and another orbiter
rumbled skyward.
"I have to know what he's up
to," Chauvelin said at last. "You're the best chance I have for
that."
_Do you mean ji-Imbaoa, or Damian
Chrestil?_ Ransome wondered. _Or both?_ He sighed, looked down at the sculpted
head that still rested in the palm of his hand. _I would have done this anyway,
regardless of threat or flattery -- or love or whatever it is that's between
you and me, Tal Chauvelin. For the love of this game that's better than
anything the Game has ever produced_. "All right," he said, easing
himself off the terrace wall, and reached into his pocket for the rest of the
handful of carved stones. Chauvelin looked up, one eyebrow rising slightly.
"You said you had something to
show me?"
Ransome nodded. "Hold out your
hand."
Chauvelin extended one long hand, both
eyebrows lifting now, and Ransome opened his fist, letting the stones --
grey-silver, a shower of frozen mercury -- fall into the other's palm. Several
of them bounced away before Chauvelin could catch them, but he made no move to
gather them, sat staring at the four that remained in his hand. Ransome watched
him turn the carvings, roll them curiously beneath one probing finger, then
lean to pick up the ones that had fallen, one by one, until he had them all.
The delicate faces, some white as the hazy sky, one dark as slate, the others
grey and silver, stared at nothing with knowing, provocative eyes. Chauvelin
nodded once, silent approval, looked up at the other man.
"I thought I'd pave your paths with them," Ransome said,
and, slowly, smiled.
There was another little silence, and
then Chauvelin nodded again, this time in agreement. "How soon can you
have it done?"
"And in place?" Ransome
paused, thinking. The idea of paving the paths was new, had come to him on the
denki-bike ride from his loft; he hadn't even begun to work out the quantities
he would need, or the time it would take for an automated workshop to fabricate
them from his models. "A week, probably -- no, Storm's coming, everyone
will be working on Carnival stuff. A week and a half, two weeks, probably. Give
or take a couple of days."
"I want them in place by my
party," Chauvelin said.
Ransome frowned for an instant; he had
forgotten how late it was, that tomorrow was the last day of High Spring, and
the date of Chauvelin's annual grand reception. "I don't know," he
said involuntarily, and Chauvelin nodded.
"I know. But I'm willing to pay
double costs, and a rush bonus on top of it, if you can find a way to get it
done."
"I can try," Ransome said,
absurdly pleased by the demand. There were a few places that might be able to
do the production run on this kind of notice -- stonecrafters didn't get too
much extra business for Storm, unlike most artisans -- and Chauvelin's own
gardeners could handle the installation.... This was one of the things he liked
without reservation about Chauvelin: when he played patron, he did it in grand
style. _And the money wouldn't hurt, either_.
"I mean it," Chauvelin said.
"Post the costs on the house net, I'll authorize the draft."
"I'll do it," Ransome said,
and added, knowing the workshops, "if I can."
Chauvelin nodded, smiling slightly, and
Ransome turned away, not waiting for the steward to take him back out through
the maze, walking up through the garden toward the house and the well-watched
passage to the street.
--------
*Part Two*
*Evening, Day 30*
_High
Spring: Shadows, Face_
_Road,
Dock Road District_
_Below
the Old Dike_
Lioe started for Shadows just after
sundown, riding the tourist-trolley to the elevators at Governor's Point, then
one of the massive cars down the cliff face to Governor's Point Below. The cab
stand was empty; when she consulted the information kiosk, fingering worn keys
while her other hand rolled the old-fashioned ball that grated in its socket,
she estimated Shadows was about twenty kilometers away. She hesitated,
wondering if she should try one of the other clubs the steward -- _Vere, his
name was, Vere Caminesi_ -- had mentioned, but when she checked the kiosk again
Shadows was the closest. She sighed, punched in the codes that would alert the
velocab companies to a waiting fare, and lowered herself onto a stone bollard
that seemed to exist to keep the cabs from getting too close to their
prospective passengers. It was getting cool, would be a chill night, by her
standards, and the breeze that swept up from the southeast raised goosebumps
even under her jacket. It carried the faint tang, damp and salty, of the sea
that was never far from anyplace in Burning Bright; brought with it too a whiff
of heavy foliage from household gardens, the delicate mustiness that rose from
basements, and even a momentary sharp taste of the oil that tainted the Inland
Water, gone as quickly as it had come. She cocked her head, listening, but
could not hear the dull polyphony of the bell buoys that tolled to mark the
channel. She knew she should not be surprised -- at this point she was almost
as far inland as one could be and still stay on the Wet side of the Old Dike --
but she was oddly, vaguely, disappointed.
The cab appeared a few minutes later,
the whine of its motor audible well before it turned the corner. Lioe rose to
her feet, slinging the bag that held her Rulebooks and Gameboard more securely
over her shoulder, was aware of the driver's frank stare as he keyed open the
door to the passenger compartment.
"Evening, pilot." He had a
young voice, a cheerful voice, that went oddly with the lined and weathered
face. "Where you bound?"
Lioe had almost forgotten she was
wearing the hat, this one a small toque, suitable for Gaming, that marked her
as a pilot of the Republic. "A place called Shadows," she said.
"I'm told it's on Face Road, at the center of the Dike in Dock Road
District?"
She was reciting the address from
memory -- no house numbers here, but all the buildings had names and were then
placed within the district according to the nearest landmarks -- and was
relieved when the driver nodded.
"You're a Gamer, then."
"That's right." Lioe levered
herself into the narrow pod. It smelled of smoke and fish, an odd, unfamiliar
combination, stronger as the low door closed behind her.
"It's a good club, Shadows,"
the driver said. "Or so they tell me. I'm a home Gamer, myself." The
engine whined as he stood on his pedals to get the cab moving again.
Lioe leaned back cautiously against the
thin padding, feeling the vibrations of the little motor through the soles of
her feet. The cab swung left in a gentle arc that brought them out into a
larger trafficway -- not a busy street, only a few other vehicles, velocabs and
pushcarts, moving between the bollards that marked the edges of the road. They
swung left again, the driver hesitating for an instant to gauge the faster
stream of traffic on the wider street, and then standing hard on his pedals to
bring the cab up to their speed. The cab slid neatly into a gap between another
velocab and an empty flatbed carrier belching steam, but Lioe was looking at
the shape that soared above the street, cutting off the sky. The Old Dike was
festooned with lights, strings and streamers of them flashing in sequence to
warn off wandering helio pilots, but they only seemed to intensify the black
mass of the wall itself. More light like fog flowed along its top, fading into
the sky at least a hundred and fifty meters above them. Lioe shook her head,
amazed and wondering, and the driver shot her a look of triumph.
"It's something, isn't it? That's
the Old Dike. The first-in people built it to reclaim the Old City."
Lioe nodded, still staring, barely
aware of the other vehicles now crowding the road. "What's that on
top?" she asked, after a moment. "Another road?"
"That's Warden Street," the
driver answered. "Runs all the way along the Dike, from Lockwarden Point
to the Governor's House. There's good shopping up there, the best shops in town
for fashion, if you're interested."
"Maybe," Lioe answered. It
must've been one hell of a project, building that, she thought, even if Burning
Bright's first-ins were a different breed from the usual first settlers.
Burning Bright had never been intended to be anything but an entrepot -- could
never have been anything else, at least under human settlement, given the
minuscule landmass -- and the first settlers had all been merchants and
bankers, bent on turning the planet's favorable position astride the main
hyperspace channel between the Republic and Hsaioi-An into solid profit. And
they'd certainly done that: despite the best attempts of worlds like Ky and
Attis/Euphrosyne, Burning Bright remained the busiest transshipment point for
goods going from one metagovernment to the other. Even in the first years, the
settlers would have had the capital to bring in the best technicians to build
the Dike.
Traffic was picking up, more and more
vehicles cramming the road, and crowds flowed along the walkways outside the
brightly lit shops. Only the foodshops seemed to be open, but light and bright
snatches of music spilled from their doorways, clear notes like plucked metal
strings. She heard laughter as well, over the constant rumble of the crowd and
the traffic, looked instinctively to see a woman caught in the blue-white light
of a store's display window, her head thrown back, hair spilling in untidy
curls around a lined, handsome face. Her skirt -- no one wore skirts in the
Republic, except for ethnic festivals -- was starred with little mirrors,
reflecting the store's lights like chips of diamond. And then the cab was past
her, and Lioe resettled herself against the padding, wondering what she had
seen. A shape flashed through the pedestrians, a man's head and shoulders moving
with unnatural quickness above the people surrounding him, and then he shot
between two men and a bollard, darting into the traffic stream on a battered
bicycle. No one used bicycles much in the Republic, either.
The road rose ahead of them, and Lioe
was suddenly aware, over the noise of the crowds and the snarling rush of the
assorted vehicles, of the dulled, steady tolling of a buoy bell. She leaned
forward a little, and the driver said, before she could ask, "We're coming
up on the Straight now."
There were more bicycles in evidence on
this stretch of road, and on the high-arched bridge, as well as cabs and
three-wheeled cycles and a handful of the motorized denki-bikes. Most of the
cabs and human-powered vehicles turned right or left onto the street that
paralleled the as-yet-invisible river. As the driver stood on his pedals again
to coax the cab up the steep rise, Lioe began to understand the reason. She
could guess why there didn't seem to be many fully motorized craft on Burning Bright
-- fossil resources were scarce and inaccessible, electrics were still
impractical for heavy loads, and solar was even less practical on something as
small as a velocab -- but it was still strange to feel the cab wavering from
side to side as the driver added his muscle power to the engine's whining
output. Strange, and somehow improper. Lioe was glad when the cab reached the
top of the arch, and started the long glide down.
Across the bridge, the streets were
quieter. The buildings turned blind faces to the road, and there were few
pedestrians. Once or twice the cab crossed a wider street, both times with
trees or flowers growing in a center island, framed by soft lights, and Lioe
caught a glimpse of figures moving in that pastel radiance. More often, the cab
flashed over the low hump of a bridge, and she saw shards of light reflected
from the canal water less than two meters below. The driver -- he had caught
his breath, after the bridge -- said, "This is Dock Road -- Dock Road
District, that is."
"Mmm." Lioe glanced from side
to side, staring at the blank-walled buildings. Most of them seemed to be four
or five stories high, made of something dark that might have been poured stone.
Nearly all of them had lighter inclusions: a band across the front, or
outlining a door, or defining the corners of the building, but there were no
windows, or at least nothing she recognized as a window. She had thought the
on-line guides had said that Dock Road was primarily a residential district,
but these looked more like factories or warehouses than any house she had ever
seen. And then the cab swept past a building with all its windows open,
shutters folded back against the empty dark stone of the facade, a gate open
too into a courtyard where people swarmed around a blue-lit fountain, and music
spilled out into the quiet street. She craned her head as they slid past, and
out of the corner of her eye saw the driver smile briefly over his shoulder.
They pulled up outside Shadows a little
before the nineteenth hour. The club was a more ordinary building, three
stories high with bricked-in windows and a brightly lit sign over the door, in
a neighborhood full of buildings that had visible windows and doors that locked
with metal grills. There was a food bar on the nearest corner -- and a heavyset
bouncer leaning his chair against the wall outside the entrance, so she
shouldn't have to worry too much -- and some kind of shop across the street,
its display windows shut down for the night. She paid the driver what he asked
and added the tip the guides had said was appropriate, then turned toward the
club's well-marked door. The cab's motor whined behind her as the driver pulled
away, but she did not look back.
After the glittering strangeness of the
rest of the city, Shadows was refreshingly ordinary, another Gaming club like a
hundred others she'd seen on other worlds. The door was painted with the images
from hundreds of Gaming pins -- conferences, competitions, specific sessions
and scenarios, most of the Grand Types and even a few faces that had to be
local favorites -- but before Lioe could study them more closely, the door
swung open onto a narrow hall.
The carpet was worn, with a few squares
of a brighter shade of moss to show where the worst damage had been replaced.
The white-painted walls were mostly empty, except for a few display boards and
a Gameboard under glass. The displays were of sessions that had attracted
attention on the intersystems nets, and Lioe gave a mental nod of approval.
There weren't many -- there couldn't be many, if Shadows was as new as the
steward Vere had said, and it was a good sign that the club hadn't tried to
inflate its reputation by adding displays of merely local interest. The
Gameboard, the gleaming screen below it said, had belonged to the club's
founder, Davvi Medard-Yasine. Lioe didn't recognize the name.
The hallway ended abruptly in a softly
lit lobby, walled on three sides with multiscreen virtual-display-in-real-time
wallboards. Only four of the screens were displaying the broadcast bands, and
two of those showed the same session, but telltales glowed green on a few of
the others, and the couches opposite those boards were occupied by people whose
faces were hidden behind the mirrored mask of their shades. Telltales flickered
on the temples of the shades, too, indicating that they were tuned to a
narrowcast from one or more of the wallboards. There were smaller,
lower-resolution VDIRT tables scattered around the rest of the lobby, but not many
of them were occupied yet. They would be busy later, Lioe knew, when the main
tanks filled up and Gamers needed to kill a few hours between sessions. That
is, if Shadows was like every other club in human-settled space. She glanced
one last time at the session playing on the screen overhead -- it was a Court
Life variant, familiar iconography identifying Count Danile and the Lady
Hannabahn, but it was impossible to follow the scene without the direct-line
voice feed -- and turned her attention to the checkroom that controlled access
to the club's session rooms. A young man was sitting behind its counter,
Gameboard balanced in front of him, but he looked up quickly as Lioe
approached.
"Can I help you, pilot?"
"I hope so. Do you do temporary memberships?"
"We do." The young man
touched keys on a terminal tucked out of sight below the lip of the counter.
"It's forty _real_ a week -- we have a ten-day week, you know -- and you
get all privileges except priority for limited-access sessions."
"So I can run sessions, if
anyone's interested," Lioe said.
"Yes, no problem." The young
man consulted his terminal again. "Can I get your name?"
"Quinn Lioe."
The young man looked up sharply.
"The Lioe from Callixte?"
"That's right."
"I admire your sessions a
lot." His clear complexion was slowly turning a delicate pink, and Lioe
watched in fascination. "We just got a good tape of the Frederick's Glory
session, downloaded from MI-Net a couple of days ago. It looks wonderful."
"Thanks," Lioe said.
"Are you going to be running any
sessions while you're here?" the young man went on.
"I hope so," Lioe answered.
"I was wondering who I should talk to about it."
"The night manager," the
young man said, and touched keys on a different machine. "She can help you
-- and we're having a slow week right now, with Storm coming up."
"Storm?" Lioe had heard the
term half a dozen times since landing, hadn't had the chance to ask what was
meant.
"Yeah. It's our fifth season,
lasts twenty days, about. There're so many big storms every year about this
time that it makes more sense for things to shut down. So we hold
Carnival." A tone sounded softly under the counter, and the young man
turned away to touch some hidden control. The door to the inner rooms swung
open.
Lioe turned, her idle question already
forgotten, and found herself facing a tall, grey-haired woman, who held out her
hand in greeting.
"Na Lioe? I'm Aliar Gueremei,
_dit_ Lia."
Lioe murmured a greeting, and clasped
the fingers extended to her. Gueremei was weather-beaten, as though she'd been
in space, but more so, her brown skin crossed with a web of fine lines and
faint, bleached freckles. She wore coarse workman's trousers, but with an
expensive-looking and impractically wide-sleeved jacket over it, clasped at the
waist with a circle that glittered with tiny iridescent disks. Even if sequensa
were less expensive on Burning Bright, where the shells were seined and cut
into tiny perfect shapes, they would never be cheap, and Lioe found herself
revising her assumptions about Shadows and Burning Bright's Gamers.
"Come on into the back,"
Gueremei went on. "I know your work, from the nets, and I'm delighted you
thought of coming here. Can I ask where you heard the name?" She palmed
open the door as she spoke, and gestured for Lioe to precede her into the inner
hallways.
"The steward on the inbound
shuttle -- orbiter, I mean -- recommended you," Lioe said, "and then
of course your name is good on the Game nets."
Gueremei nodded, though whether in
agreement or thanks Lioe could not be sure. "Were you looking to run
sessions while you were here -- how long are you staying, anyway?"
"Probably about five days,"
Lioe answered. "The ship I was piloting for is down for repairs,
recalibration of the sail fields. And, yes, I would like to run a session or
two."
Gueremei nodded again. "I'll be
frank with you," she said, as she led the way quickly through a maze of
corridors. "We'd be very interested in your running something here. I've
seen your Frederick's Glory scenario -- and the Callixte board summaries, of
course, the ones that went with the award -- and a couple of others, and I'm
very impressed."
"Thanks," Lioe said again,
and waited. This was familiar territory, like the white-painted walls filled
with quick-print sheets of network downloads, the padded doors and one-way
glass windows that gave onto the session rooms, the banks of food-and-drink
vendors tucked into every available alcove. Gueremei, or Shadows through
Gueremei, wanted something, and the praise was just a prelude.
Gueremei touched another doorplate,
this one badged with the Gameops glyph, and ushered Lioe into a crowded and
comfortable office. The air smelled faintly of cinnamon, and there was a thin,
dark-red stick smoldering in a holder on top of the VDIRT table that served as
a desk. The chairs were Gamer's chairs, designed for long hours of relative
immobility, and when Lioe lowered herself into the nearest one at Gueremei's
absent invitation, she felt more at home than she had since she'd come to
Burning Bright.
Gueremei settled herself on the other
side of the VDIRT console, and unearthed a workboard from the mess of
faxsheets, quick-prints, Rulebooks and supplements, and a couple of
expensive-looking Gameboards. She touched keys, peering down at the tiny
screen, then looked back up at Lioe. "As I said, Shadows would be very
interested in hosting you. There was word on the Callixte nets you had a new
scenario in the works."
_So that is the way things are going_.
Lioe smiled, and said, "Yes, I've been working on a new scenario --
Rebellion variant with Psionics overtones, set on Ixion's Wheel."
"Baron Vortex's prison
planet," Gueremei said, testing the words. "That sounds hard to pull
off."
Lioe shrugged. "I'm using one of
the rival claimants as a primary focus. I think that gives them enough
firepower to stand a chance."
"Interesting." Gueremei
glanced down at her workboard again. "If you were willing to give us an
exclusive deal for the duration of your stay -- and copies for later use, of
course -- we'd be willing to offer you twenty percent of the special-session
fees."
"That's a generous offer,"
Lioe said automatically, temporizing while she sorted out the implications. It
wasn't a bad deal at all, but twenty percent of fees was the standard rate, and
if Shadows wanted to buy a copy of the scenario, they ought to pay more.
"Still, I'd like a little more if you want to keep the scenario for your
own use -- either a higher percentage, or, better still, a flat purchase
fee."
"That's hard to come up with when
we haven't seen the scenario," Gueremei said. "We might be able to
offer a slightly higher percentage, though, maybe as much as twenty-five
percent."
"That really doesn't cover what
I'd make from the nets," Lioe answered. "I'd need at least
thirty-five."
Gueremei glanced down at her board
again, shook her head with what looked like genuine regret. "I don't have
the authority for that. What if you run the session here first, we'll give you
twenty percent of the fees, and you'll be under no obligation to stay with us
beyond tonight. If it's good, I'm sure Davvi -- Davvi Medard-Yasine, our
principal owner -- will want to purchase more rights."
_And you'll have the prestige of having
run the first session, whatever happens_, Lioe thought. Still, it seemed
worthwhile; it would be a nice bit of extra money, and there was a good chance
she could sell the scenario afterwards. She nodded, and said, "What about
players?"
Gueremei consulted her board, then
touched the input strip to light a second screen under the surface of the VDIRT
table. "Actually, we've a very respectable crowd in tonight. How many
slots will you have?"
"Eight. Six-player minimum."
Gueremei nodded. "I can get you
eight players, all rated A or higher. That's MI-Net rated, by the way."
Lioe nodded back, impressed in spite of
herself. MI-Net was the toughest of all the Game nets, demanded the most from
its players. "Then I'm willing. Twenty percent of the take, up front, and
no strings."
"Agreed," Gueremei said, and,
quite suddenly, smiled. "I'm looking forward to this, Na Lioe."
"So am I."
Gueremei fingered the workboard's input
strip again, studied the results. "Room five is free for the night. It's a
standard tech setup, Gerrish table, standard Rulebooks already in place, and
we've got all six editions of _Face and Body_ backed up on a separate datalink,
so you get instant access when you need it."
"That sounds good," Lioe
answered. She could feel the edges of her disks through the thin fabric of the
carryall, wanted suddenly to get to work again. "When can I load in?"
"Anytime," Gueremei said, and
pushed herself back from the table. "I'll get you started, then I'll see
who's free to play."
"Excellent," Lioe said, and
followed the other woman from the room.
Gueremei led her through a second set
of hallways, and then out into a wider corridor where one wall opened onto a
central courtyard. There were more VDIRT tables set out under the carefully
tended trees. Lioe tilted her head, curious, and saw light reflecting from a
glass dome that enclosed the courtyard. A group of players, perhaps half a
dozen, were clustered around a bank of food-and-drink vendors: probably on
intermission, she thought, and turned her attention to her own scenario. It was
solid; if the players were halfway competent, it would go well. If they weren't
-- well, she would have to trust to luck and her own improvisational talents.
Gueremei stopped in front of a door
marked with horizontal silver bands on a deep, brick-colored background, and
laid her hand on the touchpad beside the lock. The mechanism hissed softly, and
the door popped out from the frame. She tugged it open, and motioned for Lioe
to precede her into the dimness. Lioe did as she was told, and swung her
carryall onto the massive VDIRT table that dominated the space. She found the
room controls, set into a dropboard at the session leader's seat, and touched
the keys that brought up the lights. The room was just as it should be, banks of
blank-faced processors, telltales red or unlit, and she settled herself in the
heavily padded chair. The chair shifted under her weight, squirming against her
as the oilcushions adjusted themselves to her body, but she was only dimly
aware of the movement, concentrating instead on the panels that opened to her
touch. She checked the air and temperature -- _comfortable and stable_ -- and
folded that board away, reaching for the table controls. The VDIRT display came
to life under her fingers, the tree of lights that defined the library and
display connections slowly changing from red to orange to yellow, and for a
moment a faint haze of static filled the air above the center of the table.
Lioe smiled, seeing that, imagining it filled with her own images, and touched
keys to tune the system to her own specifications. A red light flashed instead,
and glyphs filled the smaller, monitor screen.
"I need a password," she
said.
"Sorry." Gueremei pulled
herself away from the doorframe where she had been leaning, came around the
table to lean over Lioe's shoulder. She touched keys; the screen, as usual,
showed nothing but placeholders, but Lioe looked aside anyway, out of old
habits of politeness. "I'm setting up a temp account for you," Gueremei
went on. She worked one-handed, like a lot of older Gamers, using chord-keys to
speed her input. "You can set your password now."
Lioe hesitated for a moment, then typed
a single word: _hellequin_. The letters hung on the screen for a moment, and
Gueremei lifted an eyebrow.
"What's it mean? If you don't mind
my asking."
Lioe shrugged one shoulder, already
regretting the impulse. It was no more than superstition that made her use that
name; she should have known better. "It's my full name. Quinn's the short
form." _It was the only name I could remember when the Foster Services
people found me, the only thing I have that isn't theirs_.
"So." Gueremei nodded, and
touched another sequence of keys. "Like Harlequin, right? You're all in,"
she added, and stepped aside.
"Thanks," Lioe said, and was
glad to concentrate on the larger screen that windowed under the tabletop.
Familiar glyphs and query codes filled the blank space, laid out in an outline
form as familiar to her as the hyperspatial maps of a star system's deeps and
shallows. She spilled the rest of her disks out onto the table's smooth,
slightly spongy surface, and began slotting Rulebooks and databoards into the
waiting readers. On the screen, glyphs changed shape, queries smoothing into
acknowledgment as the VDIRT systems found the data they required and forged the
links between them. More lights flared on the wall systems, the machines
whirring slightly as they came on-line. Faces and shapes, familiar icons, began
to appear in the haze of static.
"That's Desir of Harmsway,"
Gueremei said abruptly, and Lioe looked up in some surprise. "And Gallio
Hazard. You did know they were local Types?"
"Yes," Lioe said, and
wondered why it mattered. Notables generally didn't mind other people using
their character templates -- that was one of the definitions of a notable,
someone whose characters were played by a lot of different people.
Gueremei's smile widened. "I think
I'll definitely sit in on this session." Lioe looked at her questioningly,
and Gueremei turned away. "Oh, don't worry, there's no problem. It's just
they're Ambidexter's templates, and he hasn't played in years."
_And in a situation like that_, Lioe
thought, _I bet there's one hell of a debate about how to play those
characters. Oh, well, too late to change now_. She looked back at the screen,
saw the stand-by symbol fade, indicating that file transfer was complete. The
planning form for session parameters was flashing in the screen, and she
touched a key to submit the various supplemental rules she preferred to use.
Those slots lit, and vanished from the screen, leaving her with the bare bones
of the situation. It was a convention of the Game that Baron Vortex, the
villain who opposed the Rebellion and wanted to make himself Emperor, was
involved in secret psionics research; it was also a convention that he
controlled the prison world of Ixion's Wheel, from which no prisoner had ever
escaped. She had combined the two, made Ixion's Wheel the center of the Baron's
illegal research project -- aside from the ethics involved, psions were illegal
on the worlds of the Imperium -- and then given the Golden claimant to the
Imperial throne, Royal Avellar, a good reason to get himself sent to Ixion's
Wheel. Avellar was a secret telepath, one of the last four survivors of a
clone-group who had shared a telepathic link; and the one person who could
restore his power, the electrokinetic Desir of Harmsway, was a prisoner in the
research sections there.
"It looks good," Gueremei said, and Lioe jumped at the sound
of her voice. An instant later, one of the printers whirred to life, spat a
piece of paper, and Gueremei retrieved it. "I'll get you some players,
then."
"Thanks," Lioe said. Her eyes
were on her screens before the door closed behind the other woman.
Most of the relationships in the Game
were familiar, formalized; everyone who played knew the characters and their
backgrounds, and the pleasure of a session came from seeing how well a player
could perform within those constraints. About half the characters on Ixion's
Wheel were drawn from someone else's scenarios: Harmsway and Gallio Hazard from
Ambidexter's sessions of five years ago; Avellar from an old, old session that
everyone had said was wonderful, but no one had used; Lord Faro and Ibelin
Belfortune from a session she herself had played on Demeter a few months
before, whom she had salvaged from certain death because their templates were
more interesting than her players had been capable of making them. The rest --
the telekinetic Jack Blue, unofficial leader of the prison population; the
Rebel technician Galan Africa, who hated blood telepaths, with good reason; the
research scientist Mijja Lyall, part of the prison staff, living in fear that
someone would discover her own low-level talent and transfer her to the
experiment -- were her own creations, but she had been careful to tie them to
familiar places and characters within the larger Game. She studied the numbers
for a moment longer, balancing skills and quirks and basic numbers, then
touched the keys that dumped the templates to the system. A light flashed,
confirming her choice, and she turned her attention to the setting.
She had a good library with her, settings
she'd laboriously compiled through her years of travel, walking through the
various cities on all the worlds she visited with her palmcorder in her pocket,
waiting for just the right combination of light and space, of architecture and
atmosphere and attitude, that would make a perfect place in some Game. Ixion's
Wheel had been harder to find than most, and she had had to transform her
stored images more than usual, to get the harsh world suggested by the
planetary statistics.
Frowning a little, she pulled her
shades from the carryall, plugged the datacord into the socket on the temple,
and touched the keys that opaqued the heavy lenses and displayed the image
directly in front of her eyes. She touched more keys, and the statistics for
Ixion's Wheel hung in blank space: a hot planet, desert-dry except for sparse
bands of grassland to the north and south. The prison complex lay just south of
the dry line, in the softer desert; the port lay to its north, just far enough
away from the complex to seem unreachable. She had already pulled images for
the prison -- mostly from government buildings on Ardinee, a cheerless place if
she'd ever seen one -- but the port was less defined. And there wasn't much
time; she would have to fall back on her old standby for hot planets, images
taken on Callixte itself, her home base.
She pulled that file, let it open, the
images blossoming in front of her eyes. Plain, flat-fronted buildings painted
in sweeps of shocking pastels floated against a multitude of skies. She picked
a dozen buildings at random, pulled a port-and-city blank from a general
pattern file, and began fitting the buildings into the open spaces of the map.
A town, a port town, took shape behind the shades, outlines only at first, as
she moved the buildings like the pieces on a chessboard, shuffling them for
maximum effect. She rotated the image until she was seeing it edge-on, to view
the skyline; then, as satisfied as she would be with this set of images,
touched the controls to fill in the rest of the buildings. She chose a sky as
well, the hot, thunder-hazed blue of Callixte's summer, and was pleased with
the vivid splash of the painted walls against that metallic background. She
replaced that sky with a storm, and watched the light bleed away into an
ominous luminosity, the ramparts of cloud looming over the low roofs. It was
good, an effect to be stored for later, but the first sky was the one she
wanted now. She recalled it, and filled the empty space around the town with a
generic grassland. It would do -- nothing unique, and maybe not as good as some
of her efforts, but it would do.
"That's very nice," Gueremei
said, and Lioe jumped.
"I didn't hear you come in."
She worked the toggle that cleared her shades, then dumped the cityscape to the
main library.
"Sorry," Gueremei said, not
sounding particularly repentant. "I've got a cast for you."
"Thanks," Lioe said, and held
out her hand for the disk. Gueremei slid it across the table, and Lioe slipped
it deftly into the last reader.
"You should be pleased,"
Gueremei went on. "I had to turn some people away. I've pulled you a good
group, though, if I do say so myself. Roscha's a handful, sometimes, but she's
a damn fine player, and she likes the scenario outline. I think she'll behave.
Savian's a Republican, of course -- " She stopped abruptly, bit off a
laugh. "But so are you. I'd forgotten."
"That's all right." Lioe
smiled, and did her best to hide the excitement welling up in her, making her
movements too quick and clumsy.
"So you'll be used to the
style," Gueremei went on, as though the other woman hadn't spoken. She
came around the curved side of the table, leaned over Lioe's shoulder to strike
a chord of keys. "This is what I've done."
A secondary window bloomed in front of the main datatree,
displayed a double list of names. Lioe stared at it blankly, matching unknown
names to the characters opposite. Roscha -- Jafiera Roscha, who could be a "handful,"
according to Gueremei -- would be playing Galan Africa: _not a bad part for a
troublemaker_, Lioe thought. _At least there should be enough meat in it to
keep her happy_. Savian, Peter Savian, the other Republican, would play Lord
Faro -- and a name seemed to leap out at her from the foot of the list:
Audovero Caminesi, cast as the telekinetic Jack Blue.
She highlighted the name with a touch,
and looked up to see Gueremei nod.
"He volunteered," she said,
"and I like his style. You said you'd met." She paused, and when she
spoke again, her voice was oddly formal. "Does this meet with your
approval, Na Lioe?"
"It looks fine to me," Lioe
answered, and swept the disks she had prepared for the players into an untidy
stack. "Bring them in."
Gueremei nodded, stepped back to work
the door controls. The door sagged open, and at her gesture the players filed
into the room, carryalls and cased Gameboards in hand. Lioe looked up from her
screen to watch them file in and take their places at the players' seats around
the curved side of the table. A big bearded man came first, followed closely by
a slimmer, hard-faced man with the silver disks of implant lenses gleaming in
both eyes. They sat side by side, the bearded man grinning at something, and a
young man in a supportchair followed them in. His thin wrists were heavy with
jeweled bracelets, and there were more jewels in his ears. The silver-eyed man
pushed one of the chairs away from the table, and the other eased his
supportchair into the new space, murmuring thanks under his breath. A handsome,
hook-nosed woman with an expensive Gameboard followed him, and then Vere, still
in his steward's uniform, as though he'd come directly from Newfields. He
glanced at Lioe with a smile that hoped for recognition, and Lioe grinned back
at him, grateful for something like a familiar face. The striking red-haired
woman behind him raised an eyebrow at the sight, her dark blue eyes, the color
of the sea seen from near orbit, flicking up and down in insolent assessment.
Lioe cocked an eyebrow at her, still smiling, and was rewarded by a faint,
betraying flush of color: _not used to someone taking up her challenge_, Lioe
thought, and filed the notion for later use. A slim man, with Asian eyes and
implanted hsai spurs on both wrists, followed her, bony face expressionless.
Lioe's attention was caught by the spurs -- _is he hsaia, jericho-human, or
adopted, or does he just admire the hsai principle of kinship?_ -- but pulled
her thoughts sternly away. Politics had no place in the Game. That was only
seven, and Lioe frowned. It would be hard to eliminate any of the characters --
easier to be rid of two than one -- and she glanced sharply at Gueremei, then
back at the cast list. All the names were filled, so they were still one short.
"I've decided to sit in
myself," Gueremei said. "I play under Fernesa -- Gameop's
privilege."
_A mixed favor_, Lioe thought. Gueremei
would be good -- you didn't get to be a Gameop without being at least a
double-A player -- but it was also a little unnerving, having her on-line for
the first session. "Suit yourself," she said aloud, and Gueremei
settled herself in the remaining chair.
"All right," Gueremei said,
not loudly, but all attention shifted instantly to her. "This is Quinn
Lioe, everyone, who wrote the Frederick's Glory scenario some of you played
last week. Na Lioe, let me introduce your players. Peter Savian -- "
That was the bearded man, sitting so
close on her right that he could extend a hand, Republican-fashion. Lioe murmured
a greeting, met and matched the pressure of his grip, and saw a new amusement
gleam for an instant in his dark eyes.
" -- Kazio Beledin -- "
The man with the implant lenses touched
his forehead, a formal gesture that went badly with his crumpled, brightly dyed
and patched shirt and dock-worker's trousers.
" -- Alazais Mariche -- "
The hook-nosed woman nodded very
seriously, her fingers playing over the controls of her expensive equipment.
" -- Vere you know, and Serenn
Imbertin -- "
"_Dit_ -- everyone calls me
Imbertine," the young man in the supportchair said. Lioe nodded in
acknowledgment, wondering if the chair were a permanent necessity. It was hard
to tell -- he was thin, certainly, but not wasted -- and it was none of her
business, in any case.
" -- Garet Huard -- "
The man with the hsai spurs looked up
from his Gameboard to nod a greeting. He didn't have a hsai name -- most
adoptees used some hsai forms -- and Lioe wondered again what the connection
was.
"And Jafiera Roscha,"
Gueremei finished.
Lioe nodded to the redhead, startled
again by the contrast between the woman's striking beauty and the aggression in
her face.
"It's good to meet you,"
Roscha said, her voice low and unexpectedly musical.
"Thanks," Lioe said. She
looked around the table, feeling the familiar excitement building in her, and
said, "Na Gueremei has outlined the scenario to you, I assume?" Most
of them nodded, but she continued anyway. "This is a Rebellion/Psionics
variant, set on the prison planet of Ixion's Wheel. Baron Vortex has, unknown
to anyone until now, been running a secret research project in the prison
complex, trying to find a way to bring psis of all types under his personal
control. You are all part of that project, either as prisoners or as part of
the prison staff. One of you, however, has an ulterior motive: you have come to
rescue an old friend and antagonist, now a prisoner, and in order to escape
yourself you will all have to work together." She smiled then, and most of
the players grinned back, even Roscha softening slightly, caught up in the
preliminaries of the Game. "Assuming no one wants to back out, I have
casting disks and the scenario supplements."
No one did. Lioe felt her smile widen
even as she tried to control it, and looked down at the display to check the
cast list a final time. She dealt the disks around the table, and slid the
session supplements after them. Huard, with his hsai spurs, would play the key
role, Royal Avellar, potential if distant claimant to the Imperial throne; she
wondered for a moment if he were really jericho-human, and if he was, what it
would do to his play. Savian would play Lord Faro, Beledin the half-mad vampire
Ibelin Belfortune -- a good choice, given the visible chemistry between the two
men -- and Vere would play Jack Blue. Imbertine and the hook-nosed woman,
Mariche, would play Gallio Hazard and Desir of Harmsway -- not easy parts,
requiring a lot of coordination, and Lioe hoped they had played together
before. Roscha would play the technician Africa, and Gueremei would play Mijja
Lyall. That was an interesting choice -- Lyall was superficially a minor
character, but could become pivotal if played right -- and Lioe gave a little
nod of approval. She fiddled with her own controls as the players slid disks
and supplement boxes into their Gameboards, and linked the boards to the VDIRT
table's main systems, bringing the prison complex into focus just above the
tabletop. She kept it dim, the outlines vague and colors dulled, but she saw
her players glance warily at it, assessing the setting. Savian ran a fingertip
along the ridge of bone below one eye -- there was a scar there, Lioe saw,
faint as a thread against his brown skin -- and studied the displays on his
screen. Mariche busied herself with a pull-out input strip, typing something
into her Gameboard, her face still and intent as she studied the shifting
numbers.
"Is everything clear?" Lioe
said at last, when the first flourish of activity slowed, and there were nods
and mumbled agreement from the players. Even Roscha looked almost eager. Lioe
glanced at her main boards a final time -- everything was ready to go, all the
linkages in place and the libraries on line -- and looked back at her players,
excitement coursing through her. This was what made the Game worthwhile, all of
them gathered for the one purpose of playing her scenario -- She put the
thought aside and said, "Then let's go."
She reached for her own shades, settled
the temples on her ears. The broad double screen, dipping almost below her
cheekbones, stayed black for a moment, and then she adjusted the controls so
that she was watching her players through one completely transparent lens and watching
the Game they would create in the other, darkened lens. Savian lifted a
half-helmet, settled it very deliberately on his head. The matte silver backing
hid eyes and nose, but his mouth, framed by the neatly trimmed beard, remained
visible and expressive. Most of the others wore shades similar to her own;
bands of black or grey plastic covered half their face, turning them into icons
of justice. Imbertine leaned back in his chair, hands caressing the bright
stones of his bracelets. Looking more closely, Lioe could see the thin cables
that connected each one to the sockets of his Gameboard. She smiled to herself,
unable to resist prolonging the moment, then touched her controls to bring a
scene slowly into shape in the players' view. The buildings of the prison
complex, blank grey walls, a single row of slit-windows visible just below the
tops of the buildings, grew more solid in the air above the tabletop. The same
image was reflected in her shades. She touched controls again, and wind swirled
around the buildings, driving great sheets of sand against the prison's force
dome.
"Welcome to Ixion's Wheel."
--------
*Evening, Day 30*
_High Spring: Ransome's Loft,_
_Old
Coast Road, Newfields,_
_Above
Junction Pool_
Ransome sprawled in his chair, caught
in his web of images that all but blocked out the cityscape spread out below
the loft windows. A solitary firework burst into a flower of golden rain --
someone on the far side of the Water getting a head start on Storm -- and he
watched it fall and fade into a last trail of sparks, ignoring the dancing
images. Most of them were Game nets -- he was trying to do what Chauvelin
wanted -- but his heart wasn't in it. There was nothing new in the Game, had
been nothing new for years, only the same sterile repetitions, theme and
variations all gone stale with overuse. His eyes stole to the image sitting
alone to the left of his chair, a direct feed from one of his dataspheres. The
last of the tiny stone heads looked back at him, a faint, sly smile on its
carved mouth. Idly, he reached into a secondary control space, flicked on the
controls that would allow the Imani Formstone Works to produce copies of his
originals. The head looked back at him, caught now in a maze of numbers and guidelines.
It had taken him most of the morning to find a workshop that would admit it
could do the job in the time required -- and the hefty surcharge, twice what
the job should actually cost, was the only reason the shop manager had agreed
at all. But the ambassadorial accounting system had accepted the charges, and
he was left to deal with the Game. Voices babbled from the floor speakers, no
channel given priority; Ransome made a face at the noise, but did not bother to
adjust the tuning.
A light flashed in communications
space, and at the same time an identifying glyph crackled in the air overhead.
Ransome sighed, recognizing the image -- knowing too well that the caller was
the kind who did not give up -- and muted his images with a wave of a gloved
hand. With the other hand, he reached into the main control space to connect
himself with the communications channel. "What the hell do you want,
Sanci?"
"About fucking time,
Ransome."
There had been no delay. Ransome sighed
again, shoved the familiar face -- sharp chin framed by a short and tidy beard,
eyes always slightly narrowed, as though he were looking into a bright light --
to one side of the Game net images. "What do you want?"
"Have you been tracking the Game
nets -- the Old Network, by any chance?" Sanci smiled. "You might
want to tune in."
"I doubt it," Ransome said.
Sanci's smile widened, and Ransome
realized the other man was tracking his net hookups. "Someone's playing
with your toys."
"What channel?"
"The mainline feed out of
Shadows."
Ransome shoved Sanci's image farther to
his left, reached into control space to fiddle with the icons hanging there. He
opened a connection to the Old Network, not even thinking of the costs. Shadows
was easy to find, its distinctive icon flashing to signal an interesting
session in progress, and he brought it on-line, feeding the image into a small
space directly in front of his eyes. Figures moved in an unfamiliar, cell-like
room, altogether too like Jericho's prison system. He reached for the session
precis even as he recognized two of the templates. Lord Faro was an old
favorite, and so was Ibelin Belfortune, and if they both were there ... He
flicked the precis into prominence, skimmed quickly through the screen. Desir
of Harmsway's name seemed to leap out at him.
"Who's running this?" he said
aloud, and felt rather than saw the malice in Sanci's look.
"I knew you'd be interested in
this one. And it's not a fill-in-the-background session, either. That's Ixion's
Wheel you're looking at."
_I put those characters on Ixion's
Wheel to keep them out of other people's hands. And Desir of Harmsway is my
character, my property -- more than that, my creation. Who the hell does this
session leader think s/he is, using my persona in a session?_ Ransome bit back
his instinctive reaction -- Sanci didn't deserve the satisfaction -- and said
again, "Who is it?"
Sanci sighed, rather theatrically.
"Woman named Lioe, out of the Republic. She did the Frederick's Glory
scenario everyone was so hot about."
Ransome said, "She's good, or so I
hear." His hands were busy in the control space, expanding the picture, so
that hand-high figures moved in a cube of space half a meter square.
"Good enough?" Sanci
murmured, still with that knowing smile, and Ransome managed a shrug.
"It's possible, I suppose. I don't
follow the Game that closely these days."
Sanci sneered, but said nothing.
Ransome hesitated, wanting to lie, to deny that he would follow this scenario
now that it had been brought to his attention, but knew that Sanci would
recognize the truth -- knew too that Sanci would probably try to trace the
taps, and blocking him was hardly worth the trouble. _But I'll be damned if
I'll thank him for this_. "Good-bye, Sanci," he said instead, and
flicked away the other man's image. The movement cut the communications channel
as it sent the bearded face spinning, so that it turned end over end three times
before it disappeared.
The gesture had done something to
soothe his feelings, but Ransome was still frowning when he sat up fully. The
image-shell shifted with him, so that he looked down at the narrowcast from
Shadows as though it were a desktop screen. He banished the rest of the images
with a quick gesture, brought up the sound until he could follow the dialogue
in the little world that hung in the air in front of him. One did not forget
the Game, not when one had spent as much time in its worlds as he had done, but
one did get out of practice. He scowled at the characters, reading the
iconography of clothing and _Face/Body_ numbers, and reached into control space
to tap the session leader's display bar. In the Game, Belfortune and Lord Faro
whispered together, fearful of interruption, and a familiar figure moved
through the hall behind them, deliberately eavesdropping. _Avellar_...
He studied the string of glyphs and
numbers that bloomed along the base of the main image, skimmed quickly through
the overlapping screens to confirm what he suspected. The overall shape of the
Game was almost as familiar to him as the layout of his studio, and it was easy
to see where this scenario would fit into the whole. It was ostensibly a Rebel
scenario, but it was tied both to the Psionics variant and the Rival Claimants
offshoot of the Court Life Game -- _and all of that done through Avellar and
Desir of Harmsway, who was my character, and the situation between them was my
invention_ -- Ransome reached out to expand the image, drawing out the details.
Some of the players were old friends, old rivals in the Game -- Peter Savian
he'd known for years, and Kazio Beledin; Imbertine was another familiar name,
as was Roscha, though he'd never met the latter off-line. But they were
players, not session leaders: it was the leader who'd chosen to play with these
characters -- _my characters, and it should have been my Game. This Lioe's got
nerve_.... He rolled the name over in his mind, recalling the little he'd
heard. She was a notable-in-the-making, or so everybody said, a pilot out of
the Republic, off Callixte, which was a good introduction in the Game ... and
her first name was Quinn, Quinn Lioe. He hesitated for a moment, running down
the list of friends who still followed the Game and who would give information,
and reached into control space to open another line. The Game session still
swam in front of him, the characters murmuring to each other, and he pushed it
aside to make room for the new image.
A disk of static appeared, a hazy oval
that flickered through so many colors so quickly that the eye could only read
it as grey: the system had made contact. "Hally?"
A face took shape, forming from the
disk itself, so that it became a mask hanging in space, a face thin and rather
fine beneath the canalli weathering. Earrings gleamed in both ears, and a fine
chain -- a datawire, Ransome guessed -- ran from one particularly elaborate
stud to a jewel-rimmed socket at the inner corner of his right eye. The iridescent
strand seemed to glow against his pale brown skin. "Ransome?" Thin,
delicately arched eyebrows rose in surprise, then contracted into a frown.
"I'm watching a Game," Hally Ventura said, and broke off, seeing the
face in his own screens.
"From Shadows?" Ransome
asked, and was answered by a brief, lopsided smile.
"That's right. So what do you want
to know about her, I-Jay?"
"What do you know?"
"About what everyone does. She's
been a name on Callixte, everyone says a notable-to-be. And she's a pilot,
union pilot, also works out of Callixte for that. Angele up at the port says
her ship's in for repairs, and she's come to play. People've been at her to
quit space, go into the Game full time, but she's not been interested."
"Piloting's a good job," Ransome said. "I'd
think twice before I quit."
Hally shrugged. "She's very, very
good at the Game." His eyes shifted, looking at something outside his own
display. "Look, I-Jay, I want to watch this session. Was that all?"
"I just thought, if anyone knew
anything, it would be you," Ransome said, and was rewarded by a quick
smile: the apology was acceptable. "Thanks, Hally."
"Not at all," Hally answered,
and the hanging mask dissolved into the oval of static. Ransome cut the
connection.
The Game session floated back in front
of him, expanded at a gesture to display its full detail. Belfortune sat with
his head in his hands, answered, low-voiced, Lord Faro's questions. The tension
between them was palpable: the players' affair had been over for years, but its
memory still informed their play. Mijja Lyall, the scientist/technician,
watched uneasily, her gaze flickering between the two men and the metal face
that hung on the wall overhead. Baron Vortex, the Game's great villain, was
overseeing this himself.
Ransome frowned, reached for the
library icons, and had to shuffle access spaces until he found dead storage. It
had been a long time since he had gone looking for his template libraries. He flicked
them back into the working volume, searched the most recent issues until he
found Lord Faro's listing. He had forgotten that Faro had become one of the
Baron's henchmen -- that had happened almost two years ago, just after he'd
quit the Game. He leaned back in his chair, the images tilting around him, and
saw another firework flare through the pattern of the Game. _You couldn't ask
for better_, he thought, and reached for a hand-held remote to summon the
drinks tray.
The machine trundled over, the lid
sliding back to give access to the freezer compartment. Ransome chose
abstractedly, opened the container, his eyes still on the session unfolding in
front of him. Faro was clearly torn between his loyalty to Baron Vortex -- a
loyalty bought with fear and the promise that Faro's lost estates would someday
be returned -- and his -- _love? desire?_ -- for Belfortune. Belfortune clearly
shared both passion and fear, and Baron Vortex watched from the wall. Lioe was
handling him well, he admitted grudgingly. Too many leaders made the Baron too
villainous right from the start; Lioe was keeping him just reasonable enough --
though still with that edge of madness -- that it seemed suicidal to oppose
him.
Abruptly, he wanted to be there, at
Shadows, watching firsthand -- or, better still, to be in the control booth
with Medard-Yasine. It was the first time in three years that he'd actually
wanted to attend a Game, and his lips quirked upward as he realized that at
least he now had an excuse for doing what Chauvelin wanted. He closed both
fists, shutting down the system -- in the corner of his eye, glyphs tumbled
headlong as the slaved machines ran through their shutdown procedures -- and
reached for a stand-alone com-unit and punched codes that would cycle through
the helicab companies until he found one that could respond. It took perhaps
two minutes, the bar of light flashing in front of him, not quite blocking his
sight, and he spent the time searching for his jacket and the cylinder of Mist
he was forced to carry. The com-unit beeped at him before he found the
red-banded tube, and he scrabbled impatiently for the hand-held unit.
"How can we be of service?"
It was a machine voice, or so the
telltale at the base of the unit said -- it would have been impossible to tell
from the sound alone. Ransome curbed his impatience, and smoothed his tone to
be as emotionless as possible. "I need transport to the helipad closest to
Shadows -- Face Road, by the center of the Dike in the Dock Road District. I
think that's Underface."
"Just a moment, please."
There was a little silence, not even the hiss of static, while Ransome scanned
the cluttered space of his loft for the missing cylinder, and then the machine
said, "Yes, Underface is closest. Your location code is Warehouse?"
"That's right." The cylinder
was lying on the shelf beside the shell for the Syndic's egg.
"Thank you. Your helicab will
arrive at the Warehouse helipad in fifteen minutes."
"Thanks," Ransome said, in
spite of himself, in spite of knowing it was a machine, and broke the
connection. He collected the cylinder, shoved it and his credimeters into the
pocket of his jacket, and left the loft.
It took him almost fifteen minutes to
reach the helipad -- the computers were scrupulous in their calculations -- and
he barely had time to catch his breath before he heard the soft beat of the
muted rotors. Somewhat to his surprise, there was a live pilot, who grinned
cheerfully at him as she popped the passenger hatch.
"To Underface, right? Going to
Shadows?"
_Does everyone on the planet know about
this fucking game?_ Ransome wondered. "Yes, to Underface -- and, yes, to
Shadows, too."
The pilot nodded, closing the hatch
behind him. "I hear there's one hell of a session in progress there.
You're like the fifth person I've dropped there in the last two hours."
"Really." Ransome settled
into the center seat, the most comfortable of the three, and adjusted the door
controls so that the whole panel went transparent, an enormous curved window on
the city spread out below the cliff face.
"Yeah." The pilot manipulated
her controls, and the helicab lifted easily, pivoting toward the cliff edge and
the descent to Underface. She was on-line, Ransome saw, bound into the cab's
systems so that her arms and legs seemed to end in the black boxes of the
control consoles; more wires, a complex, braided band of them, fell from the
junction box at the base of her skull. Her hair was shaved around that
connection, but the rest of it fell in a scarlet tail from an untidy topknot.
"I wish I wasn't working."
"You're a Gamer, then?"
Ransome asked, and saw, too late, the pins studding her left sleeve. MI-Net,
Court Life V, Vimar Nessen's Game, RedApple, Old Network, and dozens of others:
she was a Gamer, all right, and a committed one.
She didn't seem offended, however, just
shrugged that shoulder to make the pins glitter in the light from the
instrument panel. "That's right."
"So what have you heard about this Lioe?" Ransome
asked. This wasn't his style at all -- this was the kind of information he
preferred to find on the nets -- but the chance was too good to pass up.
The pilot shrugged again, both
shoulders this time. "What haven't I heard, really? Frederick's Glory got
an A-double-star on Callixte, which those judges don't hand out like candy, and
she wrote it. She's supposed to just be running a sample session for Davvi
tonight, but what everyone's saying is that it's turning out to be something
kind of special." She looked sideways, into the space that showed her the
passenger camera view. "What I heard from one woman was, she's pulled one
of Ambidexter's characters out of storage, playing him as a major character."
Ransome nodded, caught up in spite of
himself in the old habits of the Game. "Desir of Harmsway. I was watching
for a while on the nets."
"_Sha-mai_." The pilot's
curse was more admiring than anything. "Ambidexter's going to murder her.
Very God, I wish I wasn't working."
Ransome gave her a bitter grin. If he'd
ever wanted confirmation of how the white-sickness had changed him in the past
three years, he had it now -- not that he'd really needed it. Even a year ago,
before the disease really took hold, she would have recognized him as
Ambidexter, even if he hadn't been in the clubs for a year or so before
that.... He shook the thought away, annoyed that he'd even acknowledged it,
made himself pay attention to the pilot.
"That's assuming Ambidexter's
still around, of course," she went on, quite cheerfully. "There was
talk he was dead, not long back."
"I don't think so," Ransome
said, with involuntary pique, and the pilot shrugged again. The helicab banked
sideways into the airpath that paralleled the Old Dike; its lights, and the
glow of the shops on Warden Street, filled the cab's interior with patches of
bright color.
"The work on the nets under that
name hasn't been very like him, that's for sure."
Ransome drew breath for an indignant
response -- _how dare she accuse me of not being myself?_ -- and stopped
suddenly, wondering if this was Cella's doing. It wouldn't be unlike her, to
whisper that he was dead, that his work was not his own. He opened his mouth,
trying to figure out how to phrase the question, but the helicab tilted again,
and he realized that the pilot's attention was once again on her craft. After a
moment, his mouth twisted into a wry smile. That would be very like Cella, to
assume that the rumor of his death would bring him back onto the nets -- _and
it would have worked, too, if I hadn't been so busy with other things_.
The helicab tipped again, responding to
wind or air currents or an unseen traffic signal, and the door panel was filled
with the city lights. Ransome stared, caught once again by the breathtaking
beauty: the tidy geometry of the well-lit squares and canals of Dock Road,
bounded by the twin lines of the Straight to the north and the Crooked to the
south. In the distance, the broad triangle that was the landformed extension of
Mainwarden Island jutted into the Water, dividing the massive stream into two
channels. A line of light ran from apex to base, broke slightly at the edge of
the low cliff that rose to Mainwarden Island proper: Compass Road, where the
Lockwarden Society had their main offices. The Society's certification
officers, the elite of the Wet Districts around the Water, generally lived in
the tidy, decent neighborhoods to either side of that main thoroughfare. The
Great Island light blazed at steady intervals from the tip of the Extension,
directing the all-but-invisible traffic that filled the Water even at this
hour.
"Coming down," the pilot
said, her voice distant and professional again. The helicab straightened and
slowed to hover, almost motionless. Ransome craned his neck to see through the
lower curve of the door, and could just make out the blue concentric lines of
the helipad below them. One band of light blinked, as though something had
moved across it, and a moment later another one did the same. _Kids, probably_,
Ransome thought, and in the same instant a strong white light flashed from the
cab's underbelly, all but drowning out the landing lines. Ransome saw a last
small figure scramble over the low barrier. The pilot smiled, and the helicab
began to sink delicately toward the ground. They touched down almost without a
thud, and the credit reader unfolded itself from the wall of the passenger
compartment, beeping politely but insistently. Ransome fed his card through the
reader, winced slightly when the total was presented, but touched the
confirmation code without further protest. The door opened, and Ransome swung
himself out onto the brightly lit pavement. The cab lifted away as soon as he
was clear, trailing a diminishing cone of light.
It was not a long walk from the
Underface helipad to Shadows, but Ransome felt his lungs clog and falter,
stopped in the mouth of a half-enclosed courtyard to breathe from the cylinder
of Mist. He grimaced at the bitter taste, grimaced again as the drug took hold,
the cold pain clearing his lungs. He waited a moment longer, listening to a
strand of distant music, a single violo drawn against the night, that floated
down from somewhere above him, closer to the base of the Dike. The pain faded,
and he kept walking. Shadows appeared out of the darkness a few minutes later,
all its windows unshuttered and blazing with light, a suppressed excitement
humming in the air around it. Even the food shop across the intersection seemed
quiet by comparison, both the bouncers, conspicuous in their rusty black
jerkins and studded wristbands, sitting comfortably in chairs just outside the
doorway, a thermoflask on the ground between them.
There was no trouble gaining admission
to the club, despite the crowd that overflowed from the main lobby into the
access hall. Most of them wanted only to maintain their view of the large
display screens, and were perfectly willing to let Ransome past as long as he
showed no desire to linger. He fetched up against the far wall, beside the
little office. The dreamy-eyed woman behind the counter only reluctantly took
her attention from the display board balanced in her lap.
"What can I do for you?"
"Is Davvi here?"
The abrupt request raised her eyebrows,
and then she frowned, visibly searching her memory to match the face in front
of her. Ransome smiled, unable to keep the expression from turning sour, and
said, "Tell him Ambidexter's here."
The dreamy eyes widened almost
comically. "At once, N'Ambidexter. It's good to see you back again."
A few of the Gamers close to the desk
heard the name even over the direct-input sound from the room systems, and
turned to look. Ransome met the stares blandly, and turned his attention to the
displays overhead. In the screens, Gallio Hazard confronted a figure he didn't
recognize, an enormously fat man in prison clothes. Bricks and stones, a halo
of debris, floated in the air around him, and Ransome realized that the fat man
was a telekinetic.
"She is good, isn't she?"
Davvi Medard-Yasine had come quietly through the door that led to the session
rooms, and smiled at Ransome's shrug.
"So far, yes," Ransome
answered. "Look, Davvi, I need a favor."
"You can ask," Medard-Yasine
answered, but his smile widened.
"I want to watch, up close. Can
you get me into the control room?"
"I figured," Medard-Yasine
said. "Come on."
He led the way through the door and
into the depths of the club. These hallways were less crowded, but in nearly
every side room a group had gathered around the VDIRT tables, and the same tiny
figures moved in each tabletop display. The central courtyard was busier than
Ransome had ever seen it, groups standing three deep at the larger tables
there. Security was standing outside the control room, a thin unsmiling woman
with specialists' badges on her shoulders, and the Gamers who had ventured into
this area gave her a wide berth. They clustered at the far end of the hall,
where someone had hooked a trio of series-linked Gameboards into a datanode,
dividing their attention between the display screens and the door that led to
the control areas. Medard-Yasine ignored them, said something quietly to Security,
who nodded and stood back from the door controls. Ransome waited while
Medard-Yasine keyed the entrance codes, looking politely down the hall away
from the keypad. The people on the edges of the group looked back at him,
frankly curious, and a couple of them put their heads together, murmuring to
each other. Ransome smiled then, and a woman in the front row nudged the man
next to her. Her voice carried quite clearly: "That's Ambidexter, I'm sure
of it."
"You've been found out,"
Medard-Yasine said cheerfully, and pushed open the door.
Ransome followed him into the control
room, crowded with Gamers and display equipment. A massive VDIRT table, twice
as large as most club models, dominated the room; the scenario played in the
air above the tabletop, the images almost solid enough to block out the real
objects behind them, and the virtual screens in the tabletop itself glimmered
with technical displays. Ransome glanced quickly at them, skimming the lines of
symbols, looked away again to scan the crowd. Most of the Dock Road notables
were here, all right -- and there were maybe a dozen of them; Dock Road was a
Gamer's ghetto, especially around Underface -- and the flickering tie-in lights
on the wall consoles meant that a lot more people were tapping in through
MI-Net. He looked sideways, at Medard-Yasine, and saw a faint, feline smile of
satisfaction on the other man's face. Ransome touched his forehead in
acknowledgment, and turned his attention to the Game.
--------
*Interlude*
_Game/varRebel.2. 04/_
_subPsi.
1.22/ver22. 1/ses 1.26_
They crouched in the uncertain shelter
of the cargo bay, hearing the clatter of boots on the walkways to either side.
The overhanging shelves, piled high with crates, gave some cover, but they all
knew that if the Baron's guards came out onto the center catwalk it would take
a miracle to keep from being seen. Galan Africa/JAFIERA ROSCHA worked
frantically at the powerpack of their only heavy laser, trying to mate a
salvaged blaster cell into the nonstandard housing. Mijja Lyall/FERNESA
crouched at his side, unable to concentrate on either the gun or on Jack
Blue/VERE CAMINESI, who sprawled gasping against the nearest stack of crates.
His bulk had displaced the lowest one slightly, and Gallio Hazard/IMBERTINE
gave the whole stack a wide berth, kneeling well clear of its line of fall, his
pistol drawn and cocked. He had laid the fresh clip on the decking beside him,
ready for use. Lord Faro/PETER SAVIAN and Ibelin Belfortune/KAZIO BELEDIN
crouched as always a little apart from the rest, Faro a little ahead of the
wild-eyed Belfortune, as though he could somehow protect him.
"Where the hell is this
contact?" Desir of Harmsway/ALAZAIS MARICHE hissed, his light pistol
already drawn and ready. "Come on, Avellar, you can explain this one,
too."
Avellar/GARET HUARD ignored him, went
to kneel on the warped flooring beside Jack Blue. "How is it?" he
said, as much to Lyall as to Blue, but it was the telekinetic who answered.
"Not so good." Blue's voice was thin and wheezy, and
Lyall shook her head, reaching into the much-depleted medical kit.
"If you weren't so damn fat,"
Harmsway sneered, and Blue frowned sharply. A cracked piece of the floor tiling
snapped loose and flung itself at Harmsway's face. He ducked away from it, but
it still struck him a grazing blow along one cheekbone, raising a thin line of
blood. Avellar snatched the falling tile before it could hit anything else.
"That's why I'm so damn fat,"
Blue said. The mass a telekinetic could move was directly related to his/her
body weight; that he could throw even a kilogram, exhausted as he was, was the
direct result of his obesity.
"Save your strength," Avellar
said to Blue, and looked at Harmsway. "The ship is there, Desir, and my
contact's waiting. Go right ahead."
Harmsway looked longingly at the cargo
door, just twenty meters away across the width of the warehouse. It was even
open, the ship's hatch gleaming in the loading lights, and he could feel that
the last barrier was sealed only with a simple palm lock, the kind of thing he
could open in his sleep ... if he could only get there. His lips thinned, and
he looked away.
"Avellar." Lyall's voice was
suddenly sharp with fear, and Avellar swung to face her.
"I think -- " Lyall began,
then shook her head. "No, I'm sure. They've brought in a hunter."
Harmsway swore, and Hazard looked back
over his shoulder at him.
Africa said, as if he didn't really
want to know, "Hunter?"
"Another telepath," Blue
said. "One who specializes in sensing out his own kind."
"How close?" Harmsway
demanded, and Lyall shook her head again.
"I can't tell. He -- she -- it's
shielded."
Avellar's lips tightened, and he looked
at the two men who stood apart from the rest. Faro shifted his position
slightly, almost in spite of himself, putting himself between Avellar and
Belfortune. Belfortune did not seem to notice, but his free hand rose to the
stained bandage on his left shoulder, pressed hard as though that would ease
the pain. Avellar lifted a hand and looked instead at Africa. "How's it
coming, Galan?"
The technician shrugged, his hands
never slowing on the balky connection. "We won't know until I try to use
it. I think I've got it."
Avellar grimaced, looked back at
Belfortune. "Bel."
"Let him be," Faro said.
Belfortune passed his hand over his face, then reached for the gun he had laid
beside him on the tiles. He still would not meet Avellar's eyes.
"Bel," Avellar said again.
"We need you."
"There's nothing I can do."
Belfortune spoke flatly, without lifting his eyes from the floor. His useless
left hand was tucked into the front of his jacket, held as if in a crude sling.
"Bullshit," Harmsway said.
"That's fucking bullshit, and you know it. Just because you don't like
thinking you're one of us, just because you and him" -- his free hand
swept out to indicate Lord Faro, who lifted an arrogant eyebrow in response --
"have had the Baron's favor, you don't want to admit what you are. You
could get us all killed, or you could save us. You're a vampire, damn you, and
right now that could save all our lives."
Belfortune's good hand closed
convulsively over the gun, and he brought it up in a single smooth motion,
leveling it at Harmsway. Harmsway stared back at him unmoving, handsome face
set in his mask of habitual contempt. Avellar stirred, but said nothing after
all.
"I'm not a vampire," Belfortune
said after a moment, and the gun's muzzle wavered and fell. "Yes, I'm psi,
I've never denied it -- "
"Like hell," Harmsway said.
Belfortune swept on as though he hadn't
spoken. " -- but I'm only an interference maker. All I can do is fuck up
somebody trying to use their psi. I can't stop them. I can't take their power
away."
"But you can." Lyall's voice
was very soft, but they all heard her. "The tests were conclusive, I was
there, I ran them. When you want to, you can stop all psi use cold."
"And then what?" Belfortune
asked. He smiled bitterly, without a trace of humor. "That's the part no
one ever asks about, do they, Mijja? Because what happens is they die. I take
their power, and they die without it."
"Bel." Faro's voice was
gentle, as though there was no one else near them, and all the time in the
world.
"You know what happens."
Belfortune's voice scaled upward, toward hysteria. "You know how they die.
Oh, God, the taste of it in my mind -- "
Faro reached out to him, but Harmsway
cut him off. "Jesus Christ. It's a hunter. And if you don't kill him,
we're dead."
"Shut up, Desir," Avellar
said. He looked at Belfortune. "Bel -- "
Belfortune shook his head. "I
can't, Avellar. Not won't. I can't do it."
"Let it be," Faro said, with
unexpected authority. He and Avellar locked stares for a moment, and then
Avellar turned away.
"Ready," Africa said, and
held out the laser. Hazard took it warily, slipped his pistol and its spare
clip back onto his belt.
"What do we do now, Avellar?"
he said.
"Without Belfortune -- "
Lyall began, and broke off with a gasp.
Avellar took a deep breath. "We
have to get on board the ship. And if the Baron's brought in a hunter, they'll
know where we are any minute now. We'll have to fight."
"What a wonderful plan,"
Harmsway jeered. "And how typical of your planning. Damn you, Royal, why
didn't you leave me here?"
Avellar looked at him, face absolutely
without emotion. "I told you once, I need you, need your talent. I can't
take the throne without your help."
Africa looked up as though he'd been
stung, and Hazard spoke quickly, cutting off anything the technician might have
said. "But to fight, Royal?"
Jack Blue said, "He's right,
Avellar. The odds aren't in our favor."
Avellar looked at Belfortune. "You
hear them, Belfortune. It's your choice."
"I can't," Belfortune said,
his voice little louder than a whisper. "I can't."
"He's found us," Lyall said. Her eyes were closed, face
furrowed with concentration as she brought her minimal telepathy to bear on the
problem. "He's at the east entrance, and the chase squads are joining
him."
"Oh, shit," Harmsway said.
"Shit, shit, shit." He flung himself out from under the shelter of
the shelves, started down the corridor toward the eastern entrance. Overhead, a
light fixture exploded in a shower of sparks; to his left, a cargo robot spun
awkwardly on its treads, and started toward the entrance as well. Fat sparks
gathered around him, snapped from his fingers and flickered away from him
across the metal shelves and the walkways overhead as he tapped into and
overloaded the cargo bay's electrical systems. He turned down the first side
corridor, and vanished.
"Desir -- !" Avellar began,
closed his mouth over whatever he would have said. "Hazard, get after him,
get him back if you can."
Hazard nodded. "But not for you,
Royal," he said, and started after the electrokinetic, the laser still
gripped in his hands.
Avellar looked down at Belfortune, who
still crouched against the cases. "Damn you to hell, Belfortune," he
whispered. "Give me a reason I shouldn't kill you now."
Belfortune did not answer, did not even
seem to hear, and Faro said, "You pushed him too hard, Avellar, you and
Harmsway. If you'd given me time -- "
Avellar stared at him for an instant,
but then nodded, acknowledging the rebuke. "All right," he said,
"get moving, all of you. Head for the hatch."
"We can still back him up,"
Africa said.
Blue shook his head, said, in a voice
suddenly as old and tired as he looked, "He's dead, man. They're both
dead. They'll be on him in a minute."
As if to underscore his words, the
whine of laser fire sounded from somewhere near the east entrance, followed a
moment later by the distinctive crack as an electrokinetically induced overload
destroyed a laser's powerpack.
Avellar winced. "All we can do
now," he said, "is get to the ship."
"He's right," Blue said, and
hauled himself to his feet, steadied by Lyall and Africa. "Let's go."
--------
*Game/VarRebel.2.04/subPsi.1.22/ver22.1/ses1.27*
Harmsway moved through the corridors in
a hailstorm of electricity, glorying in a strength and skill he hadn't known he
possessed. Lights exploded overhead, spilled streamers of fire from the open
circuits; he caught and shaped that inchoate power into bolts, and flung them
in the faces of the Baron's troops as they moved to engage him. Outside the
sphere of his influence, lights flickered, control panels flashing yellow and
red as he overloaded the system. He felt it, reached out to compensate, groping
for access to the main power grid.
The first laser bolt spun him sideways
into a stack of crates. He caught himself against their metal sides,
electricity crackling unheeded from his hands, turned to point at the soldier,
using his finger as focus and guide for his power. Stored electricity leaped
from the nearest output node, flashed along his arm and across the intervening
meters to strike the laser's powerpack. It blew in a sheet of flame, and the
soldier fell, screaming. Harmsway caught his breath, aware of a new pain in his
chest, tried to flex his shoulder and failed, and shrugged the other shoulder
and kept walking, back toward the east entrance where the hunter had been
waiting.
There were more of the Baron's guard
waiting around the next corner, crouched behind the shield of a heavy gatling.
Harmsway took a deep breath that burned in his lungs, concentrated, and reached
out for the gun's control circuits. The guards fired in the same instant, a
brief hail of lead before Harmsway found the gatling's electronics and
destroyed the system. They had barely had time to aim, but two of the bullets
struck his hip and leg. He staggered against the nearest stack of crates, tried
to take a step, and fell, sliding against the bare metal until he was barely
sitting, propped up against the crates. The first of the two surviving soldiers
leveled his laser. Harmsway fought back the pain, and reached for the nearest
output node. He drew power from it, but his side and leg burned and throbbed,
and the electricity streamed out uncontrolled, writhed across the intervening
metal of the floor like a fiery snake. The soldiers fell back for a moment, but
then the second man, better protected by the gatling's smoking carcass, raised
his laser again. There were more soldiers coming up the corridor behind him,
and an airsled rode in their midst: the Baron himself was coming to see the end
of the hunt. Harmsway braced himself to die.
Hazard rounded the last corner at that
moment, and the soldiers swung instinctively to cover him. He took in the
situation at a glance -- Harmsway down, blood and burned flesh everywhere, the
soldiers with leveled lasers and the rest of the troop coming up behind them --
and started to raise his heavy laser for the last time.
"Don't shoot," a whispering
voice said from the airsled's closed cabin, and Hazard froze. Harmsway made a
small, painful sound, but the voice went on anyway, as though no one had
spoken. "Hazard, you're not a fool. Put down your gun, and I'm sure we can
come to some agreement."
Hazard hesitated, the muzzle of the gun
wavering slightly -- to fire was suicide, his and Harmsway's, but the speaker
was Baron Vortex, and his word could never be trusted.
"Your friend is badly hurt, maybe
dying," the voice went on. "But he could be saved. Put down your gun,
Gallio Hazard, and I'll see that he lives."
"And me?" Hazard asked, with
a short laugh.
"And you," the voice agreed.
"Both of you will live."
"Why?"
"You're running short of
time," the voice murmured, with a note like amusement, and Hazard shook
his head.
"Why?" he said again.
"I need telepaths," the voice
said. "Electrokinetics of Harmsway's talent are rare, to say the least; he
may even be unique. You were not badly treated here, and if you cooperate, you
can live quite well -- you both can live quite well. Is Avellar's rebellion
worth that much to you?"
Hazard hesitated for a moment longer,
then, very slowly, laid his laser on the tiles, slid it hard toward the waiting
soldiers. "All right," he said. "We surrender."
"Excellent," the voice
purred, and changed instantly to a snap of command. "Medics, see to that
man. You, guard, search this one properly."
Hazard lifted his hands, and submitted
to the search, watching over the soldiers' shoulders as a medical team swarmed
over Harmsway's unconscious body, loaded it into a medsled, and sped away. The
nearest soldier prodded him, and he forced himself to move, walking back toward
the entrance and the long trek back to the prison complex.
--------
*Game/varRebel.2.04/subPsi.1.22/ver22.1/ses1.28*
There were only two guards by the cargo
door, both staring nervously toward the sound of Harmsway's attack. They were
sheltered by the hatchway, not an easy shot at all, and Avellar paused in the
shelter of the final rack of crates, considering them cautiously. After a
moment, he beckoned to Africa. The man frowned, but slipped forward to join the
rebel leader.
"You're the best shot of all of
us," Avellar said, leaning close, his voice an almost soundless whisper.
"Can you take them?"
Africa frowned. "Not with a
pistol."
Avellar made a face, but eased back
into the shelter of the crates. After a moment, Africa followed, still
frowning.
"Let me," Faro said.
Avellar shook his head. Before he could
say anything, Jack Blue interrupted.
"I can draw them out, Avellar.
Leave it to me."
Avellar looked uncertainly at him for a
moment -- a fat man, wheezing, leaning awkwardly on Lyall's shoulder -- but
slowly nodded. "If you can lure them out here..."
"We can take them," Africa
said. "Can't we, Faro?"
Lord Faro nodded, snapped the last
power cell into the butt of his pistol.
"Do it," Avellar said.
Blue closed his eyes, frowned, and let
himself sink cross-legged onto the tiled floor. Slowly, the frown eased away
from his heavy features, and his hands lay lax on his thighs. A few moments
later, something stirred in the corridor to their right: it sounded like
someone walking, the heavy, uncertain footsteps of a wounded man.
Lyall said, almost in the same moment,
"They're buying it."
The first of the guards peered out of
the hatchway, put up his faceplate to listen more closely. Africa leveled his
pistol, but Lord Faro laid a restraining hand on his arm.
"Wait for the other one," he
said, very softly.
Africa nodded, lowered the pistol
again.
Blue was sweating lightly now, forehead
furrowed in concentration. In the corridor, the footsteps faltered, something
metal fell with a clatter, and then the footsteps picked up again, more slowly.
The guard cocked his head to one side, listening, then pulled the faceplate
down again. Avellar held his breath, afraid to move. Very slowly, Lyall crossed
her fingers, closed her eyes, and played out her minimal power the way a
fisherman plays a line, easing out a tendril of curiosity to draw the guard
toward the strange noises. The guard held up his hand at last, and beckoned to
his partner. The second guard came up to the edge of the hatch, but stopped
just inside the heavy frame. Africa breathed a curse: the hatchway still
blocked their shot.
"Wait for it," Faro murmured,
the words almost a mantra. "Wait for it."
The guards stood still for a moment
longer, visibly conferring via the helmet links. Then the first guard started
toward the sound of the footsteps, and the second man moved out of the hatchway
to cover him.
"Now!" Avellar said.
The others fired almost as he spoke.
The second guard fell without a sound, crumpling back into the hatchway. The
first guard spun around, staggered by the shot, but fought to keep his feet and
bring his laser to bear. Africa fired again, and this time he went down.
"Did he warn the main party?" Avellar demanded, looking
at Lyall.
The telepath shook her head. "I
don't think so."
"Then let's go," Avellar
said. He looked down at Blue, who was slowly opening his eyes, extended a hand
to help him to his feet. Faro did the same, and together they pulled the
telekinetic upright. Belfortune stepped forward without a word, took Avellar's
place. He winced when his share of Blue's weight hit him, but made no sound.
"Let's go," Avellar said
again, and started across the open corridor toward the hatch. The others
followed, Africa still with his laser at the ready, but nothing moved to stop
them.
They crowded into the narrow space, and
Avellar laid his hand against the sensor panel that regulated access to the
freighter's cargo lock. There was a soft click, and then a high-pitched tone.
"Royal Avellar," he said
distinctly, and waited. A heartbeat later, the cargo lock creaked open.
Familiar people, familiar faces, were waiting inside the lock, and Avellar
allowed himself to relax for the first time since they had left the prison
complex.
"Thank God you made it," a
well-remembered voice said, and Avellar grimaced, relief and chagrin equally
mingled in his face.
"Danile. I didn't get him."
"I know." The man -- greying,
thin, a long, heavily embroidered coat thrown over expensively plain shirt and
trousers -- looked back at him gravely. "But you're safe, and alive, and
well out of this place. And the rest of you, too." His eyes swept over the
others, stopped when he saw Faro. "So." The word was little more than
a hiss. "You found something you wanted more than your lands, Faro?"
Faro glared back at him, then
deliberately reached out to touch Belfortune's wounded shoulder. "Yes. And
I've paid, Danile. I can't go back to the Baron now."
There was a little silence, broken by
one of the crew saying urgently, "Sirs..."
Danile nodded. "All right, Faro.
All of you, we have to hurry. We're cleared for departure, let's go while we
can."
There was a ragged murmur of agreement,
and the group began to move further into the ship, following Danile and
Avellar. The cargo door slid shut behind them, closing off their last view of
Ixion's Wheel.
--------
*Evening, Day 30*
_High Spring: Shadows, Face_
_Road,
Dock Road District_
_Below
the Old Dike_
There was a little silence after the
session ended, the images fading slowly from the VDIRT table, and then a murmur
of satisfaction, of pleasure, before the applause began. Ransome joined with
the rest, but long before they'd finished, he was pushing his way through the
crowd to Medard-Yasine's side. "I want to meet her, Davvi."
Medard-Yasine looked blank for a
moment, then visibly pulled himself out of the Game universe. "So long as
you're not planning to kill her, I-Jay. I want her working here."
Ransome gave his crooked smile.
"No, I wasn't planning on it. She did a pretty good job with that
scenario." _Better than pretty good; it was her players who held her back.
God, wouldn't I love to play a session, show them all how it should be done_...
It had been a long time since he had felt that way about any of the Game
versions, and his smile widened for an instant.
"Can I quote you?"
Medard-Yasine said.
"Maybe. Once I've met her."
Medard-Yasine laughed. "Come on,
then."
The players were gathering in one of
the larger lounges, where food and drink were already set out for the players
-- on the house, Gueremei said loudly. Medard-Yasine nodded his agreement, and
moved off with only a quick word of apology to supervise the house staff.
Ransome stood just inside the door, content to watch from a distance for now,
matching names and real faces to voices that had become oddly familiar. Savian
and Beledin he had recognized instantly, despite the new implants glimmering in
Beledin's eyes, and seeing them standing with their arms around each other, he
guessed that their old affair might rekindle for the night. A thin,
olive-skinned young man in a steward's jacket stood blinking for a moment in
the doorway, the mark of his shades prominent on his nose, and Beledin detached
himself from Savian's hold to embrace the newcomer. _Jack Blue?_ Ransome
wondered, and the steward's voice confirmed it. Huard he knew also, admitted
grudgingly that the man had done a good job within conventional limits, as had
Mariche. He searched the crowd for an instant before he found her, was not
surprised to find her hooked up to another terminal, waiting to see if her
ratings had changed. Imbertine -- _who did better than I expected, given the
others' conventional play_ -- floated in his chair at her side, rubbing his
wrists as though the bracelets chafed him. Ransome allowed himself another
quick smile -- Mariche had always been overly concerned with rankings. That
left Roscha -- _Galan Africa_ -- and Lioe. He looked again, and realized that
the stunning redhead talking to Huard must be one of the players. _Roscha, then
-- and it's a shame her mouth is that hair too big, or she'd be perfect. So
where's Lioe?_
Even as he thought it, the door from
the session room opened again, and a tall, lanky woman came into the room. She
was dark, her skin the color of old bronze, and her face was made up of stark
planes, a severe and sculptural beauty. A pilot's hat, a small one, just a
narrow toque with a knot of spangled fabric wound around it, hugged her
close-cut hair. Then someone called to her, a voice out of the crowd
congratulating her on the session, and she turned to face him, her expression
breaking into a smile that shattered the stony beauty and gave her instead a
vivid plainness. Ransome caught his breath -- he hadn't expected that, had
expected a woman with looks like that to use them, to stay always grave and
expressionless, to fear the sudden change -- and in that moment someone spoke
his name.
"Having fun, I-Jay?"
He looked down and down again, to the
upturned face and half-bared breasts of a tiny, perfect woman. She smiled up at
him, well aware of and comfortable with his regard, and Ransome was unable to
keep his own smile in return from twisting slightly out of true. "Oh,
enormously," he said. "Are you here professionally, Cella, or are you
here to play?"
If the barb touched her, she gave no sign of it. "To play
-- or to watch, rather. It was nice of you to drop in, I-Jay, after all this
time. But then, somebody was playing with your toys."
She kept her tone light, masking the
insult, but Ransome was not deceived. "Why do you care if I'm out of the
Game?"
Cella laughed at him, a lovely,
practiced sound. "We've missed you, I-Jay, missed Ambidexter. Though with
this Lioe around, that may be less of a problem. She does very well with your templates,
don't you think?"
"Well enough," Ransome said.
_But I'm better_. He controlled the impulse to boast, said instead, "Have
you been playing much lately, Cella?" He knew perfectly well that she had
been, that her most recent session had been panned by most of the nets as too
political, and that the one before that had gotten an A rating on- and
off-world -- _and did she deliberately blow a session, set it up so you couldn
't miss the politics, just to try to lure me back on line?_ It didn't seem
likely -- one did not waste a session that way, not if one was serious about
the Game -- but he couldn't shake the sudden suspicion.
"Oh, I've been running a session
or two," Cella said. "But we've all missed your input."
"I'll have to see if I can remedy
that," Ransome said slowly, and was not reassured by Cella's blinding
smile. _I'm doing what you want, Chauvelin, but I'm not at all happy about it.
At least I've got an excuse. Except that Lioe's good, good the way I was, and I
don't think I'd've missed her play_.
"I'll look forward to it."
Cella touched his arm lightly, and slipped away into the crowd. Ransome watched
her make her way between the groups of much taller men and women, a tiny,
opulent shape in rich violet silk, her blue-black hair piled in braids
interwoven with strands of the same clear color. She paused to speak briefly
with one of the other Gamers, and then vanished among the crowd. Ransome stared
a moment longer, wondering what she and Damian Chrestil were up to this time,
then resolutely looked away.
"I-Jay!" Beledin was waving
to him from across the room. "I should've known you'd come."
Ransome made his way to join the other,
allowed himself one genuinely mischievous smile before he smoothed his
expression. "Hello, Bel. It was a good session."
Beledin nodded. "It was."
"That's what I always liked about
you, Bel," Ransome murmured. "No false modesty."
Beledin ignored him, gestured to the
two men standing with him. "You know Peter, but I don't know if you've met
Vere?"
Ransome started to shake his head,
looking at the steward's jacket, then frowned, a vague memory teasing him.
"Audovero Caminesi, _dit_
Vere," the young man said with prompt courtesy.
"Illario Ransome." Ransome
held out his hand, still frowning. "Have we met?"
"I played a tenth-run session of
yours a few years ago, back when you -- when Ambidexter was still working out
of Two-Dragons," Vere answered, and took the other's hand.
Ransome nodded, unable to sort him out from the hundreds of other
players, and took refuge in present truths. "It was a good session,
quality play, tonight. I liked what you did with Jack Blue -- did you set the
weight, or was it a given?"
"Player's choice," Vere
answered. He shrugged, trying for nonchalance. "I figured he'd need all
the help he could get, playing with Grand Types, and the heavier he was the
more powerful he was."
"Makes sense," Ransome said.
In spite of himself, in spite of everything he'd ever said about the Game, it
was too easy to get caught up in the old interests. He shrugged one shoulder,
annoyed at himself for no reason, and looked away.
The servers had already been around
with the drinks tray. Savian drained the last of his glass, and lifted a hand
to wave to someone in the crowd. "Na Lioe! There's someone here you should
meet."
"Peter." Beledin frowned
quickly at him, at the emptied glass, and looked at Ransome. "I-Jay. She's
good -- "
"Trust me," Ransome said, and
turned to face the woman as she emerged from the crowd.
Lioe looked warily from Savian to the
stranger, aware of undercurrents but uncertain of their meanings. The stranger
smiled back at her -- a gaunt, white-faced man with deep lines that bracketed
his mouth, turning his expression crooked -- and said, "I'm pleased to
meet you, Na Lioe."
Lioe nodded, waiting for the name, and
the stranger's smile broadened.
"I'm Illario Ransome."
"Na Ransome." Lioe held out
her hand, and the stranger took it, his grip neither testing nor
condescendingly weak, still with that crooked smile.
"He's Ambidexter," Vere said,
and for an instant sounded all of twelve years old. Ransome gave him a
fleeting, amused glance, and the younger man flushed to the roots of his hair.
"You left some good
characters," Lioe said, mildly annoyed by his treatment of her player.
"It's a shame you quit the Game."
There was a sudden silence, spreading
from her words, and she was aware of Savian's open grin, daring her to say
more. Beledin kicked his friend just above the ankle, not gently, but the
Republican ignored him. Ransome stared back at her for a long moment, and then,
slowly, the crooked smile widened, became real and unexpectedly appealing. The
whole shape of his face changed, gaining sudden lines and hollows; his coarse
grey-streaked hair fell untidily into his eyes. He pushed it back impatiently,
as though he were no longer conscious of the movement, said, "I
mightn't've done, if there'd been sessions like this to play in. I enjoyed
watching."
"Thanks," Lioe said. _I will
not apologize for playing your characters_.
"I'll be looking forward to seeing
more of your work," Ransome said.
"That's high praise, from
Ambidexter," Savian murmured.
Ransome cocked an eyebrow at him, but
did not answer. Lioe said, with deliberate nonchalance, aiming for exactly the
tone she would have used with anyone, "Thanks. You should come and play
sometime."
The expressive eyebrows rose even
higher. Lioe met the stare blandly, and, quite suddenly, Ransome laughed.
"I might, at that. It was a pleasure to meet you, Na Lioe."
"And you," Lioe said, and
couldn't keep a hint of irony out of her voice. She was already speaking to his
back, however; she was sure he heard, but he made no response. "I
think," she added, mostly under her breath, and was rewarded by a rather
nervous giggle from Vere.
"Would you like some
_methode?_" Beledin said hastily, and Lioe nodded.
"So that's Ambidexter," she
said, and accepted the glass that Beledin held out to her. The liquor was thick
and fizzy, and cheaply sweet. She took a careful swallow, waiting for their
answers.
"Indeed it is," Savian said.
"He's a good player," Beledin
said. "Nobody's matched his Court templates, outside the Grand Game."
"Harmsway's a great
character," Vere agreed.
Once diverted into the Game, they could
go on for hours. Lioe glanced away from the conversation, searching for
Ambidexter -- Ransome -- among the crowding bodies. He was not a tall man, and
it took her a minute to find him. He was standing with Gueremei and the man who
had been pointed out to her as Davvi Medard-Yasine, Shadows' primary owner --
standing between the two of them, so that he seemed to be holding court, the
other two dancing attendance. _Does he do that on purpose?_ she wondered. _It's
obnoxious -- but he does do it well_. "Why did he quit gaming?" she asked,
and the others looked at her in surprise.
"Ransome, you mean?" Beledin
asked, and Lioe nodded.
"Sheer pique," Savian said,
with a wicked grin.
"Give it a fucking rest,"
Beledin said. He looked back at Lioe, shrugged one shoulder. "He said he
was bored. And he's got his story eggs to keep him busy."
There was a note of constraint in his
voice, the faintest hint of something unspoken. Lioe cocked her head, wondering
how to ask, and Savian said, "They're easier than real people."
Beledin scowled, opened his mouth to say something, and Savian
held up both hands. "I'm not being bitchy, that's the truth. I think he
got tired of trying to bully his players into doing what he wanted." There
was something in his voice -- a certainty, maybe -- that silenced Beledin.
"So what did Ambidexter
want?" That was Roscha, emerging from the crowd like the avenging angel in
a popular film. Lioe caught her breath, impressed in spite of herself -- in
spite of being all too familiar with the type, of having written the template
for the type -- by the streetwise swagger and the striking figure.
"He said he enjoyed the
session," Vere said.
Roscha whistled softly. "From him,
that's a compliment and a half."
"So what does he do?" Lioe
asked. "Now that he doesn't play."
Roscha shrugged -- clearly, the world
outside the Game meant nothing to her, Lioe thought, not sure if she admired or
was annoyed by the attitude -- and Beledin said, "He's an artist, an
imagist, actually. He makes story eggs."
"What are those?" The others
looked rather oddly at her, and Lioe smiled broadly to hide her embarrassment.
"I don't know them." _And I dare you to comment, either_.
Beledin gestured, shaping a sphere, an
ovoid, about twenty centimeters long, miming a size and weight that would be
reasonably comfortable in the hand. "It's ... they have these pictures in
them, like a holofilm loop, that tells a story -- suggests it, more like. You
look through a lens at one end to see the display. They're really neat, the
ones I've seen, very stylized, so you do a lot of guessing." He stopped,
shrugged. "I'm just a musician, though. I don't know much about it."
There was frustration in his voice, as though he was still looking for the
words to describe what he'd seen.
Savian said, all trace of malice or
mischief gone from his tone, "They really are spectacular, some -- most of
them. I saw one, it was just a plain, black metal case, smaller than usual,
something you could put in your pocket, but when you looked into it, it was as
though you were looking into a Five Points palazze. It was all golden lights,
and carved furniture, and jewels, and velvets, and you could just see two
figures moving through that setting, in and out of the clutter of things. You
could turn the egg, rotate it, I mean, and you could see more bits and pieces
of the scene, but you could never be quite sure what the two were doing,
whether it was courtship, seduction, or one of them trying to escape. And you
never could see the end of the scene, either, no matter how hard you
tried." He shook his head. "It was very -- well, sensual, more than
sexy, but ambiguous, too, so you couldn't be comfortable with it." He
paused, tried a smile that carried at least some of his former detachment.
"I don't think Ransome likes you to be comfortable."
_I can believe that_, Lioe thought,
glanced again through the crowd. Ransome had moved away from Gueremei and
Medard-Yasine, was standing for that moment a little apart from all the rest, a
glass of _methode_ in one hand, the other deep in the pocket of his plain black
trousers. For just an instant, his face was without expression, held nothing
but its lines and a bone-deep exhaustion. Then someone spoke to him, and Lioe
saw his face change, take on a mask of detached amusement. _So that's where
Savian got it_, she thought, and had to hide a grin, deliberately turning her
back to Ransome.
"That was a great session, Na
Lioe."
Lioe turned to face the speaker, a
stocky, dark-haired man with a horus-eye tattoo on one cheek, half concealing
the delicate data socket.
"Thanks," she said, and
Gueremei, coming up behind the man, cleared her throat gently.
"I don't think you've met Davvi --
Davvi Medard-Yasine, our main owner."
Lioe murmured something, and
Medard-Yasine grinned, rather sheepishly.
"Sorry, Na Lioe, I've seen enough
of your work on the intersystems nets that I feel as though I know you. But it
was a great session tonight."
"I enjoyed it," Lioe said,
and waited.
"I wonder," Medard-Yasine
began, and turned a shoulder to the other players, deftly easing her away from
the others, "if you'd consider coming to a temporary agreement with us
here at Shadows. I understand from Lia that you're only on planet for half a
week?"
"Five days at minimum," Lioe
said, and then remembered that Burning Bright kept a ten-day week. "The
ship I'm crewing for is in dock for recalibration of the sail projectors, so
I'm dependent on the dockyards. They told my boss it would take five to eight
days."
Medard-Yasine nodded. "Would it be
presumptuous to assume you meant to spend most of that time gaming?"
"This is Burning Bright,"
Lioe said, with a smile to take the sting out of her words. "I'd call that
a reasonable assumption. Yes, I was hoping to get in as many sessions as
possible."
"After tonight's session,"
Medard-Yasine said, "we'd be interested in anything else you might have
ready to run. We'd be willing to offer twenty-five percent of the fees, and
free machine time to prepare any new ideas."
"That's very generous," Lioe
said, and meant it. Most Gaming clubs made a good proportion of their income
from the fees they charged for use of the club's equipment. A session could be
outlined easily enough on a Gameboard, but fine-tuning the details took the raw
power -- and often the more extensive libraries -- available through the clubs.
It had cost her over a hundred credits to complete just the prison segments of
Ixion's Wheel.
"We're very interested,"
Medard-Yasine said.
Lioe grinned. "Would this be an
exclusive deal?"
"We'd want it that way,"
Medard-Yasine agreed.
"I see." She hadn't really
meant much by that, was just buying time, but Medard-Yasine's thick brows drew
together slightly.
"We'd also be prepared to pay an
exclusive-use fee, for Ixion's Wheel, on a time-limited basis."
"You are serious," Lioe said,
smiling, and Medard-Yasine nodded. His face was completely without expression,
and Lioe realized for the first time that he meant to buy her -- her presence
at the club, as a session leader -- and her scenario, whatever it cost him. It
was an unfamiliar feeling, and somewhat unsettling; she wondered if she had
been selling herself short, back on Callixte. That was an unpleasant thought,
and unproductive; she dragged herself back to the business at hand. "What
kind of a time period?"
"The length of your stay,"
Medard-Yasine said promptly. "Or, since you're not sure how long that will
be, a week -- ten days. We're prepared to offer you five hundred _real_, over
and above your cut of the session fees, and of course the free machine time, on
a second-priority basis, if you'll let us have an exclusive license on Ixion's
Wheel for the next ten days. And, of course, if you'll run at least five
sessions for us."
Lioe hesitated, juggling numbers in her
head. She could expect to clear about fifty _real_ per session, if Shadows'
fees were in line with the rest of the club system's; that plus the five
hundred would pay all her bills at the transients' hostel, and the machine time
would let her explore some ideas that had been nagging at her for most of the
trip, ideas that sprang directly from Ixion's Wheel.... She curbed her
enthusiasm. It also meant that someone else would be running her scenario
several times a day, without her having any control at all over how it was
handled. But then, most of those players would be household Gamers anyway,
people who couldn't handle the scenario without a highly interventionist
session leader, not at all the kind of players she wanted to be bothered with
anymore. "What if it turns out that people want to play more than five
sessions, and my schedule lets me handle it?" she asked, still playing for
time.
Medard-Yasine said, "From what
you've told me, I don't know how likely that is." He grinned, and looked
suddenly years younger. "With Storm coming -- the Carnival, that is -- I'd
expect you to want to see some of the celebration. Frankly, I don't expect my
full-timers to do much work, this time of year." Gueremei gave a short
bark of laughter, and Medard-Yasine gave her a conspiratorial glance. "But
if you do find time to give us some extra sessions, I'll match whatever you
make from fees."
Lioe nodded. "All right," she
said. "It sounds like a good deal. I'm willing to try it."
"Excellent," Medard-Yasine
said, and smiled again. "I'll draw up a contract, and you can drop by
anytime tomorrow -- "
"Anytime?" Gueremei said, and
Medard-Yasine grimaced.
"All right, anytime after noon.
I'll have a voucher for the fees waiting then, too."
"It sounds good," Lioe said.
"I'll see you then."
"It's good to have you in the
house," Medard-Yasine said. "Even if it's only for a few days."
They clasped hands again, and then he and Gueremei moved away.
Left to herself, Lioe took a careful
step backward, away from the crowd of Gamers. She was flattered by
Medard-Yasine's praise, flattered and startled and suspicious in about equal
measures, and she wanted time to think. It wasn't that she disliked the noise
and the babble and the flying cross-talk that surrounded her, compliment and
critique and commentary filling the air around her, but it distracted her, made
her feel almost too much at home. Her decision wasn't irrevocable -- she could
always refuse to sign the contract the next morning -- but she felt the sudden
need to sit down somewhere quiet and work out what she'd done. Nothing but
good, seemingly: a damn good session, a contract, even a compliment from
Ambidexter, which, after she'd used his character without permission, was an
accomplishment indeed. From what the others had said, Ambidexter had a
reputation for being possessive -- _and I probably wouldn't 've done it if I'd
realized he was still around_.
She scanned the groups of players,
looking again for Ambidexter -- _Ransome_, she corrected herself, _Illario
Ransome_ -- but the thin figure had vanished. _Out of sight, or gone?_ she
wondered, and the stab of disappointment was unexpectedly keen. _Why the hell
should I care? Except that he was -- is? -- Ambidexter, and he complimented my
play. That's reason enough for any Gamer. But ... I want to talk to him again_.
"So."
That was Africa's voice, at her elbow,
and Lioe turned, was vaguely startled to see Roscha's striking face instead of
the session's icon. Roscha went on, apparently unaware of the other's surprise,
or so used to it as to be immune to the effect.
"Did he make you a decent
offer?" She held out a glass of _methode_ as she spoke, added, "I saw
you weren't drinking."
"Thanks," Lioe said, and
accepted the tall glass. The wine was comfortingly familiar, and she drank with
pleasure.
"So will you be working
here?" Roscha asked.
Lioe lifted an eyebrow, and the other
woman stared back, unimpressed and still curious. "We're --
negotiating," Lioe said after a moment, and Roscha grinned, not the least
abashed.
"Shadows is a good club, and the
play's quality. You ought to think about it."
"I am thinking about it,"
Lioe said, and laid the lightest of stresses on _thinking_. The party was
winding down around her, session participants and observers alike edging toward
the door. She glanced sideways to call up the implanted chronometer's display
-- one of the minor conveniences that came with a pilot's job -- and saw
without surprise that it was past local midnight. Savian and Beledin stood close
together near the far wall; even as she watched, Beledin smiled, and touched
the other man's shoulder, easing him toward the door. He caught her eye, and
the smile widened to a grin, and then they were gone. Vere was nowhere in
sight, nor Imbertine; Mariche was deep in conversation with a handsome,
greyhaired man, who leaned close, resting a tentative hand on her waist. Huard
stood next to a full-bodied woman with gold flowers painted on her dark skin
and hsaii ribbons woven in her hair. Even as Lioe watched, the woman reached up
to touch Huard's face, the flowers glittering in the cold light.
She looked away politely, feeling
vaguely jealous -- why should she be the only one going home alone? -- and
Roscha said, "If you're interested, I know a good after-hours bar. After
that session, I owe you a drink."
Lioe glanced curiously at her,
wondering if she really had heard a double invitation, and what she would do
about it if she had. Roscha was a striking woman, there was no doubt about it,
the strong sexy curves well displayed by the plain workcloth trousers and the
thin knit shirt beneath the worn jerkin. More than that, though, she was
something familiar, a kind of Gamer Lioe knew and understood, and all of a
sudden she was hungry for just that familiarity. "Thanks," she said.
"I'll take you up on that."
Roscha's smile in return was dazzling.
"It's the least I can do. You gave me a great character."
_I didn't choose you, unfortunately_,
Lioe thought, _and Africa's pretty conventional_. She mumbled something in
answer, and looked around for Aliar Gueremei. The older woman was standing with
a group of Gamers on the far side of the room. Lioe lifted a hand to catch her
eye, and started toward her, but Gueremei waved her away, her expression at
once amused and approving. Lioe waved back, and turned toward the door. Roscha
followed her from the room.
The hallways were less crowded than
they had been, but players still clustered in the courtyard, busy at the food
bars and in the lobby. A few of them called congratulations; Lioe nodded back,
called polite responses, and felt the sense of satisfaction growing in her. She
had done well, and she deserved the praise. Outside Shadows, the street was
quiet, only dimly lit by the cool spheres at each intersection, and Lioe
checked in spite of herself. The food shop seemed all but deserted, the orange
light behind its open door like the glow of a banked fire. Music no longer
spilled into the street, and even the bouncers had disappeared.
"The club's down toward the
Straight," Roscha said, and Lioe jumped a little.
"How are the streets, this
late?" she asked.
Roscha shrugged, looking rather
surprised at the question. "Not bad -- not in this quarter, anyway."
She tossed her head to send her thick hair tumbling back over her shoulders.
"Come Storm, of course, everybody will be out all night, but I don't know
if that makes you any safer."
_True enough_, Lioe thought, _true on
any planet. But I wonder if your definition of "safe" matches mine_.
"That's the Carnival, right?" _Keep her talking, and see what it is
she wants. Since I think I could want her too_.
"Yeah. The winds have already
shifted, you can feel it, but the weather people aren't predicting anything
yet. There'll be fireworks tomorrow night -- the Syncretist Congregations are
sponsoring that -- and a big display on Storm One, that's day after tomorrow.
There's a lot going on -- people have scheduled stuff for the whole three
weeks."
There was an amusement in her voice
that Lioe couldn't translate. Was it because the city had scheduled events for
the whole period, as though there was a chance that nothing would happen? Or
was it just that she thought Storm was funny? Vaguely, she remembered reading
stories of floods and damage, docks and whole waterfront neighborhoods washed
away. Burning Bright City nestled inside the circling islands as if it lay in
the bottom of a bowl; let a storm into that confined space, and wind and water
would wreak havoc. She shivered, thinking of Callixte's summer storms, the
blue-black clouds marching along the horizon, lightning striking fires to scour
the central plains. She couldn't quite imagine that force unleashed on a city
-- a crowded city -- or with the force of the sea behind it. _Maybe all you can
do is laugh_.
"The Syndics parade is tomorrow
night," Roscha went on, and Lioe dragged her attention back to the
conversation. "That's on the Water."
"Parade?" Lioe asked.
"Yeah. They run barges -- the big,
flat-bodied ones, set up pageants on them." She grinned again, a look of
pure mischief, and Lioe wondered just how young she was. "They do all the
fittings outside of Mainwarden Island -- that's the big island, sits astride the
southern end of the Water?"
Lioe nodded.
"They try to keep the
presentations a big secret," Roscha said. "When I was a kid, we used
to sneak out there, try and see them ahead of time. It's Beauties and Beasts
this year -- that's the theme. You should get yourself a costume, if you
go."
"I'm not much one for dressing
up," Lioe said doubtfully, and Roscha sounded a little subdued when she
answered.
"I could recommend a good
costumer."
Lioe looked sideways at her, and Roscha
looked away, as though she'd said something wrong. "Thanks," Lioe
said, but the other didn't answer. Lioe sighed slightly. She wasn't much one
for costume, had never really learned how to play those games: Carnival wasn't
part of Callixte's heritage, and Foster Services hadn't wanted to offend the
Neo-pagans by encouraging its client-children to mask at Samhain.
They walked on in silence, through the
dimly lit streets, passing from the pool of light that marked each intersection
to the brief edge of almost-dark where the first light ended and the next did
not quite reach, then into the light again. The neighborhood was not very
different from the one where Shadows lay, the same flat-fronted, oddly
decorated, anonymous buildings that could be shops or houses or factories; the
same tiny parks and gardens, half hidden behind grillwork and brick walls; the
same sudden bridges arching over an all-but-invisible canal. Lioe found herself
concentrating on them anyway, trying to drown her sudden awareness of Roscha
walking next to her. The cold, blank walls with their cryptic patterns, bands
of lighter stone against the dark main body, were no help at all; she imagined
she could feel the heat of the other woman's body, a subtle radiance in the
night air. She looked up, looking for the stars, for that distraction, but the
star field was drowned in the city lights. A moon showed briefly over her right
shoulder, an imperfect oval just past or not quite full; ahead -- to the north,
beyond the Straight and the Junction Pools -- a shuttle rose like a firework
from Newfields, a familiar and comforting flare of light and almost invisible
cloud. She was not surprised when Roscha's hand brushed her own.
She closed her hand around Roscha's
fingers, felt calluses under her touch, calluses across Roscha's palm and on
three of the fingertips, all sensed in a single rush of sensation, and then she
slipped her hand, still awkwardly twined with Roscha's, into the pocket of her
trousers. Roscha's knuckles rested against her thigh; the sudden movement
pulled Roscha sideways a little, so that she stumbled, and made a small noise
like a laugh, and their shoulders touched. Lioe smiled, said nothing, too aware
of the warmth and weight of the other's touch to speak. Then Roscha's hand
wriggled in hers, loosened and shifted its grip to shape a familiar code.
_Sex?_ the shifting fingers asked, and Lioe moved her own hand to answer,
_Yes_.
_Plain or fancy?_
Either.
Latex?
_Nothing oral without it_. Lioe felt
Roscha pull away slightly, knew her own answer had come too quickly, and looked
sideways to see Roscha looking at her with an expression that hovered between
amusement and irritation. "Well, you don't know where I've been,
either," she said aloud, and Roscha's anger dissolved in a shout of
laughter. She flung her head back, the light from the intersection gleaming in
her hair, and Lioe couldn't help laughing with her.
"Your place or mine?" Roscha
asked, after a moment, and Lioe shrugged.
"I'm staying in a hostel in the
Ghetto," she said. "You're welcome, but it's a long way."
Roscha laughed again, more quietly.
"I live on my boat. I drive a john-boat for C/B Cie., deliveries and
stuff. The tie-up's not far -- as long as you don't mind a boat."
"Your place, then," Lioe
said, and they walked on. Roscha freed her hand from Lioe's pocket, slipped it
around the other woman's waist; a heartbeat later, Lioe did the same. She was
very aware of the gentle pressure of Roscha's hand against her skin, and at the
same time the texture of Roscha's stiff jerkin under her hand. It felt a little
like thick leather, but the surface was oddly patterned, like scales. She
squeezed Roscha's waist, trying to feel her body under the jerkin, and felt
Roscha's fingers tighten in answer against her shirt. It was not satisfactory,
to be touched, and to feel so little in return; she squeezed Roscha's waist
again, and then released her, sliding her hand and arm up under the skirts of
the jerkin so that her hand now rested directly against the thin shirt. Its
weave was loose; she prodded experimentally at it, working one finger into the
fabric so that she could feel warm skin, and Roscha jerked and gave a stifled
giggle.
"That tickles."
"Sorry," Lioe said, and
stopped poking, but she did not take her hand away.
They reached the edge of the Straight
at last, a broad stretch of road, quiet now, only a few bicycles and a single
flatbed carrier visible along its length. The Old Dike loomed in the distance,
towering over the housetops. The noise of the carrier's engine echoed oddly
between the housefronts and the water; a bicycle whispered past, tires singing
against the pavement. Lioe caught a glimpse of the rider's face stern with
concentration as he flashed under the nearest streetlamp. They crossed the
trafficway cautiously, mindful of bicycles, and Roscha stepped up onto the wide
poured-stone ledge that edged the river. Lioe copied her, more cautiously, and
looked down to see the water black beneath her, shadowed from any glint of
light by the stone wall that was its bank. Bollards, low iron things with
rounded tops like fantastic mushrooms, sprang up at regular intervals along the
wall, one or two with a coil of bright yellow safety line looped around them.
Roscha led the way along the ledge, Lioe following a little more slowly -- the
wall was broad, but the black emptiness beside and beneath her, and the low
rush of the water, were enough to encourage caution -- and stopped beside a bollard
that carried a double loop of safety line around its base.
"Here we are," Roscha said,
and nodded at a rope ladder that was hooked into two of the holes drilled into
the bank. Lioe looked down rather dubiously, was reassured to see the soft glow
of a steering lamp. In its dim light, she could see most of Roscha's boat, a
long, narrow shape, blunt at both ends, with an arched section at the bow that
vanished into the shadows. The deck glowed gold directly under the lamp, and a
solar strip glittered softly. Roscha frowned absently down at the boat, one
hand buried in a pocket, and a few seconds later Lioe heard the faint double
chime of a security system disarming itself. "I'll go first," Roscha
said, and let herself down the ladder without waiting for Lioe to agree.
Lioe lifted an eyebrow at that, but
waited until the other woman had reached the deck before easing herself onto
the unsteady ladder. It took her a moment to find her balance, but then she had
it, and lowered herself cautiously onto the deck. Roscha was waiting to steady
her, and Lioe accepted the support for a few seconds, until she caught the
rhythm of the boat in her feet and legs. She nodded to Roscha -- the boat moved
less than she had expected, but it was a jerky movement, unpredictable -- and
Roscha released her, moved forward to the shelter and crouched on the deck to
release a hidden latch. A section of the deck came up in her hand, revealing a
short ladder and a dim, red-toned light. Lioe grinned, even though she knew perfectly
well why any boatman -- _or pilot, for that matter_ -- kept red lights in the
sleeping quarters, and came forward to join her. Roscha smiled and said,
"After you."
The cabin space was mostly bed, a thin
mattress on top of a good-sized platform that probably concealed storage space.
Lioe sat on the edge of the mattress -- there was no room for two to stand in
the narrow stairwell, and the arched ceiling kept her from standing upright
except in the very center of the cabin -- while Roscha secured the
double-doored hatch behind them, and turned at last to face her. One hand was
in her pocket still: the security system chimed again, resetting itself, and
the red light strengthened slightly. In the comparative brightness, Lioe could
see more details, the crumpled blankets and the cases of disks, Rulebooks and
session supplements, mounted on the bulkhead just above the bed. Roscha slipped
out of her jerkin, hung it on a hook mounted beside the hatch, and seated
herself on the mattress beside the other woman. Lioe smiled and reached for
her, and Roscha reached back. They kissed, lips meeting and parting, slow and
awkward until they'd settled on who would lead. Lioe leaned into Roscha's
strong embrace, let herself be held and touched, Roscha's callused fingers
fumbling under her clothes to free her breasts, pinching her nipples into
stiffness. And then they were scrambling with clasps and zippers and catchtape,
struggling to get all the way onto the bed without letting go, either one of
the other, until they were lying nearly face to face, legs tangled, thigh to
crotch. Lioe leaned back a little to let Roscha's hand between her legs, to let
the deft fingers slide between her labia, circling and searching and teasing in
the thick wetness until she found the right stroke. Lioe buried her face
against the other woman's shoulder, riding her hand and the rhythm of the boat
until she came. Roscha came a few minutes later, driving her crotch against
Lioe's thigh, and they lay tangled, breathing hard, until finally Lioe shifted
her shoulders so that she could lie flat, displacing most of Roscha's weight
sideways onto the mattress. Roscha mumbled something, already half asleep. Lioe
craned her neck awkwardly to look at her, caught between amusement and chagrin
-- _no particular sense of prowess, I didn't_ do _anything_ -- but it was late,
and there was no place she needed to be. She shifted again, freeing herself
from the uncomfortable parts of Roscha's embrace, and let herself relax toward
sleep.
--------
*Part Three*
*Early Morning, Day 31*
_High
Spring: The_
_Chrestil-Brisch_
_Palazze,
Five Points_
It was very late by the time Damian
Chrestil came home to bed, a bored helio pilot lifting him from the Junction
Pool helipad up and over the light-streaked mass of the Old Dike to the
Chrestil-Brisch compound on the headland that was the third of the original
Five Points. Most of the lights were out in the narrow buildings, only faint
security lights glowing behind the arches of the first floor. The second and
third stories, solid walls of dark stone broken by unlit slit windows, looked
ungainly, top-heavy, without light to give them balance. Only the
ring-and-cross of the landing pad glowed blue through the darkness, and the
helio pilot landed them with the rotors barely moving, balancing the weight of
the passenger pod against the gas in the lifting cells. Damian nodded his
approval -- _no need to wake everyone in the house_ -- and let himself in
through the security ring, raising his hand in greeting to the single human
being sitting sleepily at the center of the glowing banks of controls. Like all
the Five Points families, and most of the other groups that dominated Burning
Bright's commerce, the Chrestil-Brisch had good reason to employ a private
police force. It was a matter of pride that theirs was smaller than many. The
guard nodded back, and said, "Na Damian, there's a visitor waiting in your
suite. She's on your admit list."
Damian lifted an eyebrow at him. The
only woman the guard would describe as a visitor whom he would let into his
rooms was Cella, and he couldn't imagine what she would be doing here. Her
regular nights were the fourth, fourteenth, and twenty-fourth. "Is there a
message?" he asked, and the guard shook his head.
"No, sir. She just asked to be let
in."
"How charming."
Damian turned away, made his way down
the echoing corridors toward his own suite of rooms. The palazze's floors were
seamarble, quarried from the uninhabited, and uninhabitable, Midseas Islands;
his footsteps sounded hollow on the green-veined stone, and he found himself
stepping lightly, trying not to wake the distant echoes. The automatic lamps
lit at his approach, fretted globes held in fantastic sconces, and closed down
again after he had passed, so that he walked in the center of a moving tunnel
of light. His private rooms were at the northwestern corner of the palazze,
where short domed towers sprouted like mushrooms, looking out over the old city
toward the rising mass of the Landing Isle and Newfields. As he approached
them, the security board outside the main door lit, and chimed softly for his
attention. The lights glowed green and yellow among the wide leaves and thick
clustered fruit of the frieze of sea grape carved around the doorway, spelling
out a familiar pattern. Even so, Damian Chrestil slid his hand into his pocket,
curled his fingers around the familiar shape of his household remote, feeling
for the control points by instinct. He trusted Cella as much as he trusted
anyone, but it was as well to be prepared. He palmed the device, cutting off
the system's programmed announcement of his presence, and let himself into the
suite.
Cella was waiting in the reception
room, as he'd known she would be, in the corner of the room under the arches
that held up the main tower. Moonlight poured in through the window on her
left, draping her with the shadow of the fretwork tracery outside the window,
drawing blue fire from the seabrights scatter-sewn across her fractal-lace
overskirt. Behind her, the Old City was spread like a faded carpet, the regular
lights of square and street broken by the darkness of the distant reservoirs
and the unlit lines of the Straight and the Crooked rivers and the velvet
texture of the parklands. She was wearing a violet bodice above the lavender
and silver lace, dyed raw silk cut close to her full breasts, rising and
sweeping outward to expose her shoulders; braids of the same clear violet were
woven into the glossy black of her hair. The double light, the moonlight and
the city lights behind her, rounded even further the lavish curves of her body.
Damian Chrestil caught his breath as she turned to smile at him, and saw the
faint pulsing light of an orbiter rising over her shoulder from the pens at
Newfields. It was perfectly timed, it had to have been timed, and he knew he
should laugh, tease her for it, but the effect was too perfect, good enough to
convince even him. Then she took a step forward, and he saw from the look on
her face, the uncalculated, crooked grin so different from her usual cool
smile, that effect was the last thing on her mind. He blinked, but touched the
remote to light the wall lamps and opaque the windows, and said aloud,
"What brings you here, Cella?"
Her grin widened. "You told
me," she said, "you told me you wanted Ransome back on the nets, and
by the very God, he's back."
"So?" Damian was suddenly
very tired, not in the mood for games or the Game. "So you're good. I knew
that, it's what I pay you for."
Cella tilted her head at him, still
smiling, but turned away toward the sideboard bar. She ran her hands across the
carved border of lions and deer, fingers working deftly on the disguised
controls, and then extracted bottles and two ice-lined tumblers. She poured two
drinks, _ardente_ cut with the sweet-and-sour syrup distilled from sugarwort,
and brought one across to him. The ice in the tumblers cracked sharply as the
warmed _ardente_ hit it. She said, over the random noises, "But I didn't
do it, Damiano. He came back on his own."
Damian lifted an eyebrow at her, and
settled himself on the long, low chaise, deliberately stretching out his legs
to keep her from sitting beside him. Cella smiled, not the least put out, and
seated herself demurely in a willow-work chair opposite him. She might, from
her expression, have been the perfect salarywife greeting her corporate
husband.
"I've been trying to lure him in,
get him interested -- I even botched a scenario on his account -- but he's been
too damn careful." She grinned suddenly, lopsidedly, an expression as
unexpected as her attempts at respectability. "Or at least too busy with
those story eggs of his. I was beginning to think you'd do better to commission
one, Damiano."
"But he came back," Damian said. "Do stick to the
point, Cella, I'm tired."
One eyebrow flickered up in mute but
pointed question, but Cella said only, "That's right. He came back because
there's a new notable in town, and she had the temerity to play one of his
Grand Types. And she did it well, too. So I think Na Ransome will have his mind
on the Game for at least a week -- that's how long this woman is going to be
here. Or maybe longer. When I left, he was buying Rulebooks, and I haven't heard
of him doing that in years."
"So." Damian sipped at his
drink, considering her news, and slowly allowed himself to smile. The Game, or
at least the new notable, would keep Ransome busy in the Game nets, and he
could slip the lachesi quietly into the system, and ship without interference
from the Republic, local Customs, or Chauvelin. It seemed that ji-Imbaoa's
interference hadn't roused anyone's suspicions after all. "Tell me about
this new notable."
Cella shrugged, a calculated
indifference. "I don't know much. She's a Republican, union pilot -- from
Callixte, or at least she plays out of Callixte's nets. Her ship's supposed to
be in dock-orbit for repairs, and she's planning to spend the time gaming.
Decent-looking woman, if you like them thin and stern. And a damn good session
leader."
"Find out about her," Damian
said. "Politics, background -- whatever."
Cella nodded. "Ransome was really
interested," she said. "I haven't seen him in a club in years, he
won't let it rest at just one session. He'll be busy with this scenario for the
rest of Storm, at least."
"Not bad," Damian Chrestil
said, and allowed his approval to color his voice. He considered the invitation
that he knew was waiting in his files, added, "Are you working tomorrow --
I mean, tonight?"
Cella frowned slightly, slipped a hand
into the folds of her skirt to consult a scheduler hidden somewhere out of
sight. "Tonight, no. Why?"
"Chauvelin is having his annual
night-before-Storm party," Damian said. "I'd like you to accompany
me."
Cella paused, shrugged slightly.
"All right. Our usual arrangement, I assume?"
"Of course."
"All right, then."
"Excellent," Damian said.
"Not bad," Cella answered,
"not bad at all." She set her now-empty tumbler aside, and came to
sit next to him, pushing his legs out of her way. "All things considered,
I think I have every right to be pleased."
"For whatever it was you
did," Damian said. He eyed her almost warily, recognizing the mood. It was
neither drink nor drugs, but the solid high of an unexpected success, and he
would reap the benefits of it, whether he liked it or not. She smiled down at
him, well aware of her own excitement and his lack of immediate response, and
ran two fingers up the inside of his thigh. It was a touch that rarely failed
to rouse him; he laid one hand flat against her breast, and felt her nipple
already stiff against the palm of his hand, easily discernible through the
rough silk. She had done the job he wanted, however she'd done it, and her
choice of coin was sex: sex of her choice, for her pleasure, at her whim. He
caught his breath as her hand moved higher, brushed past his groin, and came to
rest flat against his lower belly, a steady, urgent pressure. Not that it was a
difficult payback -- _a hard one, maybe_ -- but it was unavoidable, if he
wanted to keep their tacit agreement. Cella's smile widened, as though she'd
read his thoughts, and she slid an expert hand under his clothes, ending all
possibility of protest.
He woke in his own bed the next
morning, to sunlight and the steady shrilling of an alarm. He swore, wondering
for a bleary instant why Cella let it sound, then reached across the empty bed
for the remote. The time was flashing on the far wall, the red numbers almost
drowned by the bright sunlight: almost the ninth hour. He had slept through at
least two earlier wake-ups. _No wonder Cella hadn't waited_. He sat up, wincing
-- he wasn't hung over, but he functioned badly on fewer than six hours' sleep
-- and touched the remote again. His fingers slid clumsily over the rounded
surface. It was a pretty thing, shaped like a wide-web node with a single broad
leaf wrapped around it, carved from a brown stone so dark that it looked almost
black except in direct sunlight, but this morning the carving distracted him.
He found the proper control points at last, launched the program that displayed
his schedule on the far wall below the chronometer's numbers. The ninth hour
was given over to the weekly breakfast meeting with his siblings.
He swore again, checked the time --
less than a quarter hour, barely enough time to shower and shave and dress,
much less find a wake-up pill -- and forced himself out of bed. Neither the
shower nor the pill Cella had kindly left for him helped much, but he managed
to dress with reasonable care, and made his way to join the others. He was not
the last to arrive, and Chrestillio -- Altagracian Chrestil-Brisch, the family
pensionary and titular head of the family by virtue of being firstborn --
nodded at him from his place at the head of the long table. Bettisa
Chrestil-Brisch, known as Bettis Chrestil, the family's representative to the
Five Points Bank, did not look up from the workboard where the night's
downloaded trade figures were playing.
"Good morning," Damian
Chrestil said, keeping his voice suitably subdued, and crossed to the sideboard
to pour himself a cup of coffee from the intricate silver brewer. The coffee
was cut half-and-half with milk from the Homestead Island farms -- even the
Chrestil-Brisch couldn't afford to import coffee in bulk -- and he added a
toffee-colored crystal the size of his little fingernail from the sugar bowl.
Sugar was expensive, too -- most of the sugarwort crop went to the distilleries
-- but there was no point in being stingy this morning. He collected breakfast
as well, a wedge of soft, mild cheese, a few thin, chewy slabs of docker's
bread, and a spoonful of sour preserved fruit. There was fish sausage as well,
and a bowl filled with half a dozen hard-boiled eggs, their shells painted with
swirls of dye, but he ignored them both, and seated himself opposite Bettis
Chrestil. The sunlight, mercifully, was behind him; it streamed into the room,
casting shadows across the polished and inlaid tabletop and onto the
olive-and-gold paneling. The carnival scenes that filled the central medallion
of each panel looked bleached in the strong light.
"Has anyone seen the
weather?" Damian asked.
Bettis looked up from her board.
"About what you'd expect, this time of year. There's a depression to the
southeast, but there's no saying if it'll strengthen, or come this way."
Chrestillio said, "The street
bookmakers are saying it's at forty-to-one to hit at all, at any strength, but
I hear that's dropping."
_And the street bookies would know_,
Damian thought. _They know as much and more than the weathermen, but then, they
have more to lose_. The canalli bet on the weather with the same passion that
he himself played politics.
"I'm sorry I'm late," a new
voice said, and Damian looked up to see the last of his siblings standing in
the doorway. She came fully into the room, a broad-shouldered, broad-hipped
woman in the grey-green coveralls that anyone wore to visit the distillery, and
a whiff of the mash came with her, a sour odor almost thick enough to taste.
Damian winced, and Calligenia Chrestil-Brisch finished stripping out of the
heavy coveralls and dropped them in the hallway outside the door. She closed
the door behind her, leaving the clothes for a household cleaner, said, "I
got caught up in some stuff at the plant."
"Problems?" Chrestillio said,
and Calligan Brisch shook her head.
"Not really. We were doing
preliminary slow-down for Storm, and there was a minor hassle with one of the
big vats. About what you'd expect, this time of year."
Chrestillio nodded, satisfied, and
Damian took a cautious sip of his coffee, trying to drown the last of the
smell.
"Did you get that shipment in, Damiano?" Calligan went
on, and turned to the sideboard. She filled a plate -- a little of everything,
cheese, sausage, bread, a couple of the eggs, a healthy spoonful of the
preserved fruits -- and came to take the final place at the table. Looking at
her, at all of them, Damian was struck again by the resemblances between them.
Not that they precisely looked alike, beyond a general similarity of coloring
-- Chrestillio and Calligan Brisch had both gotten their mother's build, big,
broad-shouldered people, while he and Bettis Chrestil took more after their
slimmer, fine-boned father -- but there was a certain something, the shape of
the long nose and the quirk of the wide mouth, that marked them unmistakably as
siblings. He shook himself out of the reverie, and made himself answer her
question.
"Yes. There was some minor
spoilage in one of the batches of red-carpet -- TMN again."
"I think we ought to cut ties with
them," Calligan Brisch said, and reached for a saltcellar. Bettis Chrestil
slid one across to her, still not taking her eyes from the workboard.
"We probably should," Damian
agreed. "Unless they give us a real break on the next few batches."
_And anyway_, he added silently, _they've served their purpose. I've got enough
information on their codes to fake a shipment from them, and that will help the
lachesi get through_.
"What I'd like to know,"
Chrestillio said, "is why the Republicans have been sniffing around our
warehouses again."
"Not here, surely," Bettis said.
"No," Chrestillio said.
"On Demeter, right?" Damian
said, with all the innocence he could muster. "I think it was TMN they
were after -- another reason to drop them, I guess."
"You heard about it, then?"
Chrestillio asked.
"I got your message
yesterday," Damian said. "I'm sorry I didn't get back to you, but I
did have time to look into the matter, and from what our factor tells me, they
were looking for something in the TMN shipment that came through
yesterday." _Was it only yesterday? It feels as if it were years ago_. He
shook the thought away. Republican Customs-and-Intelligence had certainly been
tipped off to the lachesi that had traveled with the red-carpet; the only real
question was, by whom, and the factor would deal with that. But C-and-I had no
proof; it would be safe enough to begin the next stage of the transfer. In
fact, the sooner the better.
"As you say," Bettis
murmured, "another good reason to sever ties with TMN. I've never
understood why you dealt with them in the first place, Damiano. They've got a
reputation for shady dealing, buying smuggled goods and the like."
_That was why I started dealing with
them_. Damian curbed his tongue, said mildly, "They were cheap, and
they're brokers for a growers' union that -- until last year, anyway -- was
reliable, gave us a quality product. I agree, I think they've outlived their
usefulness."
Chrestillio said, "I'm still
concerned that C-and-I was down on one of our houses, Damiano."
"It wasn't us they were after, but
I agree," Damian said. "I'll make sure it doesn't happen again."
Chrestillio shook his head. "Not
good enough. Are you running shadow cargoes, Damiano?"
Damian hesitated, not sure how he
wanted to answer this -- _of course I am, but I'm not sure you want to hear
that_ -- and Chrestillio went on, "We do a lot of business with the
Republic. I don't want to screw up our good relations there."
"We do a lot of business in Hsaioi-An,
too," Damian said, sure of his ground in this well-worn argument. "We
need to keep on good terms with them, too."
"But I don't want to do it at the
expense of our Republican connections," Chrestillio said.
"They could make it pretty
difficult to get the red-carpet if they wanted to," Calligan Brisch said.
"We have stockpiles, of course, and they will get us through Storm, but
they won't last long after that. And the distillery will need a few weeks to
get back up to speed."
"To put it bluntly," Chrestillio said, "what do we
get out of this, in return for this risk?"
"What risk?" Damian asked,
and suddenly realized that his siblings knew, or guessed, more than he'd
intended. _Not that it should surprise me. But I didn't expect them to
challenge me quite so soon_. "What I'm hoping to get is permission to
trade directly with Highhopes and the human settlement on Nan-pianmar. I'm
doing a favor for certain persons, and those worlds lie within his sphere of
influence."
"It would be nice not to go through the Jericho
brokers," Bettis said, "but do you really think they'll allow
it?"
Damian grinned. "Frankly, I think
it's a long shot, but the -- the main person with whom I'm dealing has invested
status in the question, and it'll be worth his while to buy us off. And ours,
too. And he will be indebted to us."
"Well?" Chrestillio looked at
the others.
"As long as it doesn't screw up my
production schedules," Calligan Brisch said. "Otherwise, it sounds
like a chance worth taking."
Bettis nodded. "I agree. Our
investments in the Republic can stand a little scandal."
Chrestillio nodded. "All right.
But I don't want trouble on Demeter."
"There won't be," Damian
answered, and kept himself from crossing his fingers under the tabletop, as
though he were a child again. _And there shouldn't be any trouble, not if
ji-Imbaoa gets me the codes he's promised. With Ransome off the nets, or at
least busy with the Game, there's no one else on the hsai side who can spot
what's happening, and I know there aren't any traces on Demeter that will lead
to me. TMN can fend for itself. And if I win -- never mind the trading rights,
there will be people on both sides deep in debt to me_. He smiled to himself,
and reached for the dish of preserves.
--------
*Day 31*
_High Spring: Shadows, Face Road,_
_Dock
Road District Below the Old Dike_
Lioe settled herself at a console in
one of the club's workrooms, her fingers moving easily over the controls,
probing the club's extensive libraries for ideas for a new scenario. It would
be nice to pursue some of the ideas from Ixion's Wheel -- particularly
Avellar's bid for the throne, dependent as it was on the same psionics that had
been banned throughout the Imperium. Avellar, tied to his surviving
clone-siblings by a telepathic link, was potentially a fascinating character,
though she would have to find a player who could be relied on to avoid Gamer
angst. _Ambidexter could do it_, she thought, _if he was still playing_. She
shook that thought away. Ambidexter was no longer a player; there was no use
pining over what might have been. Avellar's bid for the throne would provide
the most interesting resolution to the unstable political and emotional balance
within the Game itself; his plot had ties to all the other versions and
variants of the Game, could pull it all together into one final, complete
scenario that would take years to run. She could see how it could be
structured, how to use Avellar to bring in each strand of the Game, all the
plots that had evolved and mutated from the original scenario -- they were
linked anyway, so intermingled that a schematic of the Game looked more like a
snarled web of string than a normal variant tree. But Avellar, or, more
precisely, Avellar's bid to take the throne, could untangle it all, and bring
the situation to a final resolution.
And that, of course, was the problem,
and the main reason she would never float that grand scenario. To follow that
line would mean coming dangerously close to the end of the Game. About the only
convention that was held sacrosanct by every Gamer was that no scenario could
be allowed to tip the balance between Rebellion and Imperium: to change that
would be to change the Game itself. _It wouldn't be the end, not really_, a
voice whispered, _just the start of a new Game_, but that was almost as
unacceptable. She had been told, years ago, when she was just starting out in
the Game, that she had too much of a taste for endings. She sighed, and touched
the key sequence that would load another file into her Gameboard -- Shadows had
given her unlimited copy privileges -- and got the double beep that warned her
that the datasphere was reaching capacity. She sighed again, released it from
the read/write slot, and fumbled in her carryall until she found the case of
disks she had bought that morning. She fitted a new one into place, touched
keys again, and saw the monitor screen shift to the familiar transmission
pattern.
She leaned back in her chair, watching
the patterns change, and wondered what she would do for another scenario.
Ixion's Wheel was fun, but neither last night's session nor any of the off-line
test sessions back on Callixte had been quite what she wanted. There was always
somebody who wouldn't play the templates the way they were written, or
something to throw off the balance she had imagined. Maybe a different set of
players would do better, or maybe a different scenario -- something in the
Court Life variant, say, secret rebels working at court -- would give her what
she was looking for, would give her the perfect session that no one would ever
want to rewrite.
She turned her thoughts away from that
impossibility -- the point of the Game was that everything could be rewritten,
that the main points of the evolving story could only be arrived at by
concensus, the acceptance of large numbers of one's peers -- and flipped a
secondary screen to the in-house narrowcast. One of the house notables was
running Ixion's Wheel already, and she paused for a moment, touched keys to
bring up the audio feed.
" -- but can you be trusted to
support the Rebellion, my lord?" a voice said, and she winced, and flipped
the screen away. She hadn't expected the players to be very good, playing in a
low-level session like this one, but that was the kind of Gamer dialogue that
she particularly disliked.
She called up another set of menus, but
let them sit untouched, staring at the complex symbol strings. Just at the
moment, none of them were terribly interesting. She sighed again, and touched
keys to move out of the Game systems and into the regular communications net.
It was probably past time to check her temporary mailbox; it would be just like
Kerestel to call to see how she was doing, and to worry if he received no
answer. She touched codes, frowned for a moment at the mailbox prompt, and then
searched her bag until she found the slip of foil with the account numbers
printed on it. She typed them in, followed it with her password, and the screen
went blank for an instant before obediently presenting her with a list of
messages. As expected, Kerestel had called -- twice -- but at least the second
message confirmed that they would be staying on Burning Bright for a full ten
days. She dispatched a quick acknowledgment -- _at least he'll know I'm all
right, and checking my mail_ -- and called up the third message. The sender's
code was unfamiliar. She wondered for an instant if Roscha had sent some kind
of note -- that sort of gesture didn't seem to be at all her style -- and then
the screen windowed again on the short printed message:
I ENJOYED YOUR SCENARIO, AND WOULD LIKE
TO TALK MORE ABOUT IT. WOULD YOU BE INTERESTED IN COMING TO A PARTY TONIGHT AT
THE HSAI AMBASSADOR'S WITH ME? I THINK YOU MIGHT FIND IT INSTRUCTIVE. RANSOME.
Lioe studied the note for a moment,
trying to work out the implications. It was flattering that Ransome/Ambidexter
had thought enough of the scenario to extend this invitation, and if sex was
intended, she wasn't entirely sure she'd say no -- _but I really don't think I
like the word "instructive." And why is the hsai ambassador inviting
him to parties, anyway?_ She left the message hanging on that screen, touched
her keyboard to move onto a general data net. A chime sounded and glyphs
flashed, warning her that any charges from this node were her personal
responsibility. She sighed, and hit the accept button, though she touched a
second series of keys to post a running total at the base of the screen. The
screen went dark for a moment, then presented her with another series of menus.
Burning Bright's datastore was indexed
according to an unfamiliar system. She wasted perhaps five minutes and ten
_real_ learning how to phrase her questions, but at last found the hsai
ambassador's public file. He was human -- _and I probably oughtn't be surprised
at that; the hsai do tend to staff their embassies with adopted members of the
local species_ -- but not jericho-human, not born inside the borders of
Hsaioi-An. What was unusual was that he had been born on Burning Bright, one of
the select few who had been coopted for adoption into the hsai kinship system.
Lioe stared at that information for a moment, wondering how it must feel to
come back to your homeworld after all this time -- over thirty years, if his
age was correct, and he had been coopted in his twenties, like most
_chaoi-mon_. She shook herself then, seeing the list of honors that followed
his name: membership in the imperial family, half a dozen different awards for
merit, including a personal letter from the Father-Emperor himself. Whatever he
had felt about cooption at the time, Tal Chauvelin had adapted, and flourished.
And there were reasons to accept cooption, after all. Lioe frowned slightly,
remembering the last big series of hsai cooption raids. She had just begun
piloting then, and the risk had been real enough, even on the fringes of the
Republic, that she had had to consider what she would do if she were faced with
that choice. The hsai wanted to join the entire galaxy in kinship, according to
their own phrase, and, however you felt about it personally, they did live up
to their side of that philosophy. _Chaoi-mon_ were, by law and custom, full
members of hsai society, fully part of the elaborate system. Given a choice
between that and death, or at best a few years in a holding pen while the
metagovernments squabbled over repatriation, becoming _chaoi-mon_ was not that
bad an option. And if you came from a poor world, either in the Free Zone or on
the fringes of the Republic, or even from a poor sector of a good world, it was
a definite step forward.
However, Chauvelin's background didn't
tell her why Ransome was invited to his party, or why Ransome would invite her.
She skimmed through the rest of the file, and found nothing useful. Ransome's
public file was short, and heavily edited: it made no mention of his Gaming
career, and concentrated on a list of the awards he had won for his story eggs
and other image installations. He had been born on Burning Bright, held Burning
Bright citizenship, but the only remotely personal piece of information in the
file was the note that his parents had been Syncretist Observants,
minister/administrators of Burning Bright's peculiar religion. She hesitated,
wondering if it was worth her while to try to hack the system -- there had to
be other records available somewhere -- but then smiled, slowly. There was, of
course, an even simpler way to answer her question: ask him directly.
She flipped herself out of the
datastore -- the charges read fifty _real_, and she made a face at the total --
and back onto the main communications net, transferring Ransome's mailcode from
the message that still waited on the secondary screen. There was another brief
pause, and then the communications screen lit and windowed.
"Na Lioe. I see you got my
message."
Lioe leaned back in her chair to look
at the face in the screen. Ransome was looking even paler than he had the night
before, and a hectic flush stained his high cheekbones. _But then, I probably
don't look so great myself, after last night_. She had not slept well on
Roscha's boat. She put that thought aside, said aloud, "I did. I was
wondering why."
There was a little pause, and Ransome
said, "Why what?"
"Why you invited me," Lioe
answered. _And why you were invited in the first place_.
Ransome grinned. "I told you, I
like your play, and I think you might find hsai politics amusing -- maybe even
useful. Are you committed to a session tonight?"
"No." Lioe hesitated, unsure
of the right move. _But I want to go, she realized abruptly. I've never seen
real hsai society, just the jericho-humans who broker for them. And most of
all, I want to find out more about Ransome_. "Yes," she said slowly.
"Yes, I'd like to come. How do I get there -- and how formal is this,
anyway?"
"Moderately," Ransome said.
"I'll meet you at the Governor's Point lift station at eighteen-thirty,
and we can ride together -- if that's agreeable to you."
"Thanks," Lioe said.
"I'll be there."
"Until tonight, then,"
Ransome said, and cut the connection.
Lioe stared at the empty screen for a
moment longer, then made herself begin closing down the systems. From what she
had seen of Burning Bright, "moderately formal" here should probably
be translated as "strictly formal" in Republican terms. Nothing in
her carryall -- nothing in the storage cells back on the ship, or indeed left
behind in her one-room flat on Callixte -- fit that description; she would have
to find the local shop district, and hope she could pick up something
appropriate. She hesitated then, her fingers poised for the final sequence. The
cab driver had said something about Warden Street, the street that ran along
the top of the Old Dike, being a center for fashion. Why not go there,
especially when she had money to spend? Less than she had before she'd gone
into the datastores, but still enough to afford a few more indulgences. She
smiled to herself, and finished closing down the system.
She paid her fee at the main desk in
the lobby, and found her way to the nearest waterbus stop. Roscha had tried to
explain the local transit system before she'd dropped Lioe off on the canalside
south of Shadows, and so far the hurried explanation seemed to make sense. She
bought a regular ticket -- she didn't want to indulge in express buses, not
when she was planning to buy clothing -- and when the bus arrived, seated
herself in the stern, under the faded brick-red awning. The bus was crowded,
and slow, stopping every two hundred meters or so to take on more passengers or
to drop someone off, and for once Lioe let herself enjoy the scenery.
The canal was filled with traffic, from
covered barges half again as long as the waterbus to the narrow, high-tailed
passenger boats that Roscha had called gondas, to one- and two-person skids.
Most of the people riding skids were young, standing barefoot on the platform,
skimming in and out of the traffic trailing a plume of spray. One bright-red
craft cut close enough to the bus to send water spraying across the open
passenger compartment, and Lioe joined in the general shout of anger. A woman
at the head of the bus pitched a piece of fruit after the skid's driver,
hitting him neatly in the back of the head, and the other passengers applauded.
The woman stood and bowed, like an actor, and Lioe saw the mask sitting on the
bench beside her, a grinning devil-face, the gold and black vivid against the
faded grey of the seats.
At the next stop, a gaggle of children
in school uniforms, black high-collared smocks open over a variety of shirts
and trousers, climbed aboard; they vanished one by one as the bus wound its way
up the canal toward the Crooked River. At last the bus turned onto a much
broader canal, this one paralleling the Old Dike, so that they moved between a
narrow embankment, and the houses shouldering each other for place beyond it,
and the immense bulk of the Dike itself. Even in the daylight, with the
sunlight to soften it, it was an impressive sight, towering over the traffic,
bicycles and three-wheeled carts and denki-bikes and the occasional heavy
carrier, that moved along the embankment at its foot. The stone of its face had
faded from its original near-black, and the salt stains had all but vanished,
replaced by the softer faded lavender and grey-green of rock-rust. Lioe leaned
back, trying to see Warden Street at the top of the wall, but she could only
hear it, the traffic moving in counterpoint to the noise of the street at its
base.
The canal widened perceptibly, and the
banks were crowded with low-slung barges, their open decks piled high with
crates and boxes. Shoppers, men and women alike in loose shirts and trousers,
many of them barefoot on the sun-warmed stones, moved along the banks with
string sacks balanced on each shoulder, calling to each other and to the
merchants on the barges. The barge tenders seemed to sell anything, Lioe saw
with amazement. There was one stocked with food, set up like any land-bound
store with neat aisles and display cases; tied to its stern was a much smaller
boat that seemed to be filled with rags. A couple of adolescents were pawing
through the piles. As Lioe watched, one of them straightened with a crow of
delight, and slung a salvaged cape around his thin shoulders, striking a
dramatic attitude. Farther on, a closed barge sold custom masks, a white,
unpainted face peering from each of the tiny portholes. It was an unsettling effect,
and Lioe looked away quickly.
The bus stopped three times in the
market basin -- Warden Mecomber's Market, the signs read, in Burning Bright's
old-fashioned, legible script -- and the passengers climbed out in droves,
calling to the driver as they went. As the bus pulled away from the final stop,
only Lioe and a trio of musicians, two towheaded young men who looked like
siblings and a stocky, flat-faced woman, remained. The musicians huddled
together, talking in low voices, their cased instruments tucked between their
feet. The woman, sketching phrasing and tempo in the air, had beautiful hands.
The bus moved more slowly now, and the
tone of its engine deepened, as though it were fighting a new current. Lioe
glanced over the side, curious, but the oily water slid past, apparently
unchanged. Then she heard a new rushing noise -- not so new, she realized; she
had been hearing it since the market, but the babble of voices had kept her
from realizing what it was. The bus slanted in toward the left-hand bank, the
embankment side, and the driver's voice crackled in the speakers.
"Crooked Underpass, people. End of
the line."
Lioe followed the musicians up onto the
bank, and stopped short, staring at the Dike. Directly ahead of her, the
embankment ended in a woven iron railing; beyond that, water spurted from a
hole in the Dike, a short, meter-long fall to the river below -- not a hole,
she realized instantly, but a tunnel. The Crooked River had to pass through the
Dike -- she had known that, but it hadn't quite sunk in to her consciousness --
and this was the mouth of the tunnel that carried it. _The tunnel probably has
hydro generators in it, too_, she thought, striving for some kind of
perspective. _Burning Brighters don't seem to waste power_. Beyond the railing,
the water roared, and a segment of the spectrum danced in the spray. She stared
for a moment longer, then made herself look away.
She rode the elevator up the face of
the Dike -- it was a closed car, and she wasn't entirely sure if she was glad
or sorry -- and passed through the elevator station and into a blaze of noise
and color. She blinked, startled, checked instinctively, and nearly ran into
someone. Warden Street was mobbed, people jostling shoulder to shoulder along
the walkways and spilling out into the street, so that the trolley sounded its
two-toned whistle almost continually, and still barely moved more than a few
meters at a time. A group of musicians -- not the trio from the bus -- were
playing on a wooden platform that looked temporary, the stinging sound of steel
strings ringing over the crowd, but the singer's words were lost in the general
uproar. Lioe blinked again, realized that she was becoming a traffic hazard,
and made herself start walking.
The crowds here were better dressed
than they had been on the streets below. Here most of the people, men and
women, wore either the full-skirted, nip-waisted coats or loose, unshaped wraps
of some silky fabric that seemed to float in the air around them, trailing
strange perfumes. Quite a few wore strands of bells, silver or gold or enameled
in many colors, slung from shoulder to hip, and Lioe found herself eyeing them
curiously, wondering if the style would suit her. The shop windows were enticing,
holograms revolving in the thick display glass, showing off clothes more
improbable even than the Republic's highest fashion, the prices flickering
discreetly just below the items. A few of the older buildings had real windows,
with real goods in the boxes behind them. Lioe slowed her step to stare, not
caring if that betrayed her as a foreigner -- the neat hat would do that
anyway, marked her as a pilot and a Republican on any human-settled world --
and realized that the prices in these windows were sandwiched in the glass
itself, faint opalescent numbers visible only from a certain angle. She
couldn't begin to guess how much such a display would cost, but she suspected
the shops made more than enough to cover their expenses. Still, one of them was
bound to have what she needed.
She found what she was looking for at
last, in a smaller store toward the center of the Dike, a place crammed with
racks of the full-skirted coats and the silky wraps, and a pile of skirts made
of reembroidered lace, each pattern in the lace itself redefined by an overlay
of colored shapes cut from sequensa shells. She fingered that fabric
cautiously, admiring its elaborate beauty, but knew better than to buy. She
wouldn't know how to wear a skirt, how to make herself look good in it, but
even so, she sighed for the lost possibility. She bought a coat instead, this
one straight-bodied, a rich gold-on-gold brocade embroidered at the neck and
shoulders with gold beads and leaf-shaped paillettes of gold-dyed sequensas. It
looked good, she had to admit as she looked at herself in the shop mirror, the
counterwoman hovering in the background, good enough to make her reckless. She
bought a shirt as well, a loose tunic of the floating silk dyed a darker
mustard color, and a thin scarf bordered with more sequensas and gold
embroidery. It took everything that was left of the voucher from Shadows to pay
for it all, but she shrugged away the thought that she was doing it to impress
Ransome. This was easy money, easy come and easy go, to be spent on indulgences
like this. _And if I want to impress somebody with it, well, I'll just call
Roscha. I might do that anyway_. She passed the last of the vouchers over the
countertop, watched the woman feed them one by one into the bank machine. _I think
I'll do just that -- and if I need money, there's always Republican C-and-I.
Kichi Desjourdy's station chief here, and she always paid well for information.
There's bound to be enough stuff going on here that would interest her_. She
watched the counterwoman wrap the clothes into a tidy bundle, accepted it with
thanks. Certainly there should be enough happening at this party of Ransome's.
She tucked the bundle under her arm, and stepped out of the shop to catch the
trolley back toward Governor's Point and her hostel in the Ghetto beyond.
--------
*Evening, Day 31*
_High Spring: The Hsai_
_Ambassador's
House, in the_
_Ghetto,
Landing Isle Above_
_Old
City North_
It was evening in Chauvelin's garden,
and Damian Chrestil stood with his back to the terrace wall, looking inward
toward the house. It was almost as large as a midsize palazze, the sort that
cousins of Five Points families built in the districts below the Five Points
cliffs. The white stone glowed in the twilight, very bright against the
purpling haze of the sky; the open windows were filled with golden light,
spilling a distant music into the cooling air. In the gap between the southern
wing and the main house, he could just see a blue-black expanse of ocean, reflecting
a rising moon in a scattering of light like foam. He looked away from that,
made uneasy by the sight of open water -- the sea should be viewed from the
security of the barrier hills, or from an open deck, not glimpsed like this
across a garden -- and found the lesser moon, just rising, riding low beneath a
bank of cloud. The larger moon was well up, and all but invisible, just a faint
glow of pewter light behind the thickening clouds. The street brokers were
saying it was thirty-to-one that the storm that was building to the south would
hit the city, but no one was taking odds on strength.
The distant rumble of an orbiter,
lifting from Newfields, caught his attention, drew his eyes west just in time
to see the spark of light dwindle into a pinpoint no brighter than a star, and
vanish in the twilight. The sky behind it was streaked with cloud and layered
with the orange and reds of the sunset, the distant housetops outlined against
it as though against a sheet of flame. The sound of the takeoff hung in the
air, undercutting the drifting music. It was nothing special, and he looked
away, back toward the crowd of people filling the terrace. One of them -- a
woman, tall, face thin and sculpturally beautiful, the lines of her bones drawn
hard and pure under skin like old honey -- had heard the orbiter too, was still
staring upward as though she could pick out the light of its passage from among
the scudding clouds. There was some expression behind that still face,
knowledge, perhaps, that was no longer hunger, and Damian caught his breath in
spite of himself, watching her watch the orbiter's flight. Then there was a
movement in the crowd beside her, and she turned away, her face breaking into
movement, the stone-hard beauty shattering into a sort of vivid ugliness.
Ransome smiled crookedly at her -- they were of a height -- and drew her away
with him toward the house. As she turned, Damian saw the hat slung over her
shoulder, dangling from a spangled scarf that from this distance looked as
though it had been woven from the sunset sky. A short grey plume flowed like a
cloud from the hat's crown. _So that's the pilot_, he thought. _She'll
certainly bear watching_.
"I see you've spotted her. That's
Lioe."
Damian looked down and down again, smiled
in spite of himself at Cella's delicate face turned up to him. She was a tiny
woman, barely tall enough to reach his shoulder; even her eight-centimeter
heels did not bring her chin above his armpit. She was beautifully dressed, as
always, this time in a sleeveless bodice the color of bitter chocolate that
hugged breasts and hips and gave way to a swirling skirt embroidered at the hem
with a band of pale copper apples. The almost-sheer fabric emphasized perfect
calves and elegant ankles. Her breasts swelled distractingly above the jerkin's
square neckline.
"Have you found out anything
more?" Damian asked.
Cella smiled. She had painted her lips
and cheeks and nails to match the new-copper apples on her skirt, a cool
metallic pink barely paler than her skin. "Not much. She's from Callixte
-- born there, apparently, not just works from there. She's a notable by
anyone's reckoning, and the people on the intersystems nets like her a lot. If
she's political, she's a Republican, but that's a big if. Between piloting and
the Game, I can't see that she's had much time for politics. She did know Kichi
Desjourdy when Desjourdy was on Falconsreach, but I can't trace anything more
than just knowing each other. Desjourdy's a Gamer, after all, and a class-four
arbiter."
Damian nodded thoughtfully. Kichi
Desjourdy was the new Customs-and-Intelligence representative to Burning
Bright, a clever woman, and therefore dangerous. And that made any connection
between her and this Lioe a dangerous one. "Do you think this -- this
whole thing, meeting with Ransome and all -- could be some kind of setup?"
Cella shook her head. "Not with
his consent, anyway. I'm quite certain they met at the club -- that that was
their first meeting, and that it wasn't staged in any way." She paused
then, and her smile took on a new edge. "I did find out one thing
interesting, though. She spent last night with one of yours, Damiano. A
john-boat girl called Roscha."
"Did she, now?" Damian said,
softly. _Trust Roscha to be more trouble_. "Why didn't I hear about
it?"
"No one knew you were
interested," Cella said. "I didn't know you were interested, until
last night."
"They're sleeping together?"
"I would say so." Cella
shrugged. "I would."
"Charming." Damian stared out into the crowd, did not
find the pilot, turned slowly so that he faced back toward the cliff and the
Old City spread out beyond the lower terrace. Most of the lights were on now,
the sky faded to a thick and dusty purple, and the pattern of the lights in the
lower garden echoed the play of light from the city below, disrupted only by
the figures moving along the silvered stones of the pathways. Neither Ransome
nor Lioe was anywhere to be seen.
"I could introduce you,"
Cella said. "I've met her."
Damian glanced down at her, surprised
less by the offer than by its timing, and she nodded to the window above them.
A woman stood silhouetted in the golden light, a newly familiar,
broad-shouldered shape with a hat slung across her back. She was looking in at
the party, standing quite still, and Damian hesitated, tempted. _It would be
interesting to speak to her directly, get some feel for what she was like_ --
He shook his head, not without regret. It was much safer to keep his distance,
just in case she did turn out to have some connection with C-and-I. "No,
not right now, I think. But keep an eye on her, Cella. I want to know exactly
what she's doing."
"All right," Cella said, and
sounded faintly surprised.
Damian looked away from her curiosity,
back toward the lower terrace, and his eyes were caught again by the
grey-and-silver stones that covered the paths. The more distant paths seemed to
glow in the last of the light, and the nearer ones, closer to the cool
standard-lamps, caught the blue-toned light and held it, odd shadows playing
over their surfaces. He frowned, curious now, and walked away, down the steps
to the graveled paths of the lower terrace. Cella followed a few steps behind,
but he ignored her, stooped to examine the stones. A dozen, a hundred tiny
faces looked back at him, all smiling slightly, as if they were amused by his
surprise. He caught his breath, controlled his instinctive revulsion -- _how
could anyone stand to walk here, if they saw those looking back at them?_ --
and said, "Ransome's work, I take it?" His voice sounded strange to
him, strained and taut, but Cella didn't seem to notice.
"I would say so."
"They are," Damian said, with
precision, "very strange men, he and Chauvelin." He paused, and shook
his head. "I suppose I had better pay my respects to the ambassador."
He did not wait for her response, but started back across the terraces toward
the ambassador's house.
Chauvelin greeted his guests in the
main hall. The long room was lit as though by a thousand candles, light like
melted butter, like curry, pouring from the edges of the ceiling across the
polished bronzewood floor, gilding everything it touched. It turned the ice
statue on the buffet -- a sleek needle-ship poised on the points of its
sailfields -- to topaz, set deeper red-gold lights dancing in its heart like
the glow of invisible reactors. Chauvelin smiled, seeing it, and made a mental
note to thank his staff. They had done well in other things, too: the heavy
bunches of red-streaked flowers that flamed against the ochre walls, the food,
the junior staff -- jericho-human, _chaoi-mon_ and hsai alike -- circulating
among the guests to diffuse tension and keep the conversation and the wine flowing
with equal ease. Je-Sou'tsian had the unenviable task of keeping an eye on
ji-Imbaoa, but she seemed to be handling it without undue strain. She had
chosen to wear her full honors, and the clusters of ribbon flowed from her
shoulders almost to the floor. Perhaps it was not the most tactful of gestures,
Chauvelin conceded -- _ji-Imbaoa has fewer hereditary honors than she_ -- but
he couldn't bring himself to reprove her. In any case, ji-Imbaoa seemed
unaccountably sober, and in control of himself. There should be no trouble
until later, if at all.
Satisfied that everything was at least
temporarily secure in that quarter, Chauvelin looked away, searching the crowd
for Ransome. He owed him thanks, as well as money, for the stones that paved
the garden paths, and he was more than a little surprised that the imagist
hadn't already collected. He found him at last, standing by the arched hallway
that led in from the garden, and lifted a hand to beckon him over. Ransome
raised a hand in answer, but glanced back over his shoulder, toward the tall
woman who followed at his heels. Chauvelin lifted an eyebrow -- he had thought
that he knew most of Ransome's friends and proteges -- but made no comment as
the two made their way across the crowded room. The woman was striking, not at
all in Ransome's usual line -- his taste in women, such as it was, ran to
flamboyant Amazons like LaChacalle -- and she wore her clothes, Burning
Brighter clothes, by the familiar cut and fabric, with the bravado born of
unfamiliarity. Then he saw the way Ransome was watching her -- she was even
with him now, moving shoulder to shoulder with him through the room -- and felt
the touch of an unfamiliar pain. That intensity of gaze should be for him, not
this stranger, and he resented the shift in Ransome's attention. He put that
thought aside, frowning slightly at himself, as Ransome approached.
"Sia Chauvelin."
The tone even more than the choice of
title was a warning that Ransome was in one of his more playful moods, capable
of almost any mischief. Chauvelin nodded warily, said, "Good evening,
I-Jay."
"I'd like to introduce someone to
you," Ransome went on, still in the light tone that Chauvelin had learned
to distrust, and motioned to the woman at his side, not quite touching her
shoulder. "This is Quinn Lioe, one of the better Gamers I've seen in
years. I'm enjoying my return to the Game much more than I'd expected."
"Na Lioe," Chauvelin
murmured, and the woman answered, "Ambassador Chauvelin." Her voice
was deep, soft and rather pleasant, the clipped Republican vowels adding a tang
to her words.
Ransome smiled, but it did not quite
match the expression in his eyes. _Anger?_ Chauvelin wondered. _Or triumph?_
"I'm very grateful to you, Sia," the imagist went on. _Look what I
found in the Game_, his expression implied.
Chauvelin made himself keep his
expression neutral, though his mouth wanted to twist as though he'd bitten
something sour. The woman Lioe -- _the pilot Lioe_, he realized abruptly,
seeing the hat hanging at her shoulder -- recognized that there was some
undertone of passion here; she was watchful, but uninvolved, her face set in a
serene and stony calm. _Whatever Ransome thinks he's doing_, Chauvelin thought,
_Lioe will have her own ideas_. The recognition steadied him; he said, "I
still owe you part of your fee."
Lioe lifted an eyebrow in mute
question, glancing from one to the other, and Chauvelin said, "I-Jay was
good enough to hurry a commission for me -- the stones on the paths in the
lower gardens." He took a petty pleasure in emphasizing Ransome's
subordinate position.
"Was that your work?" Lioe
said, and Ransome nodded, still grinning. Lioe nodded back, her expression
still serene. "Yes, I can see you don't like people to be
comfortable."
There was a little silence, and
Chauvelin wanted suddenly to cheer. Ransome said, "Why should they be? I'm
not." He paused again, and added, striving for the earlier lightness,
"Who have you been talking to, anyway?"
Lioe smiled slightly. "Other
Gamers."
"I should've expected that,"
Ransome murmured.
"I still owe you money,
I-Jay," Chauvelin said, riding over whatever else either one of them might
have said. "You must have had workshop fees."
Ransome nodded. "Oh, I've
submitted the bills, have no fear. But I think the result was worth it."
"It is spectacular,"
Chauvelin agreed, and, to his surprise, Lioe nodded.
"The faces are very
beautiful," she said. "It must have changed your garden completely,
Ambassador."
"It did," Chauvelin said.
"For the better, surely,"
Ransome said.
"I think so," Chauvelin said,
and smiled. "Certainly it was a change."
His eye was caught by a sudden
movement, a subtle gesture from across the room. He looked toward it, past
Ransome's shoulder, and saw je-Sou'tsian standing a little apart, one hand
lifted in mute appeal. Ransome saw his eyes move, controlled the impulse to
look, said instead, "I don't want to monopolize you, Sia."
"Not at all," Chauvelin said.
"But something seems to have come up." He nodded toward je-Sou'tsian,
and Ransome glanced over his shoulder.
"Ah, the Visiting Speaker's
arrived?"
"My honored guest the Speaker has
been here since the first arrivals," Chauvelin said, not without irony.
"Na Lioe, it was a pleasure to meet you. I hope I'll have the pleasure
again."
She murmured something inaudible in
response, but there was an amusement lurking in her gold-flecked eyes.
Chauvelin bowed over his clasped hands, hsai fashion, and moved away.
Je-Sou'tsian bowed slightly at his
approach, but her hands were still, suppressing whatever she was feeling.
"What is it, Iameis?"
Chauvelin said, and kept a smile on his face with an effort of will.
The steward's hands moved slightly,
shaping anger and apology. Her fingerclaws, gilded for the occasion, glowed in
the buttery light. "I'm sorry to have troubled you," she said, her
tradetalk even more precise than usual, "and indeed I wouldn't have if it
hadn't been Sia Ransome you were speaking with, but several members of the
Visiting Speaker's household have asked permission to use the intersystems
link. They've also asked that our technicians not oversee the linkage."
Chauvelin bit back his first response,
knowing he was on firm ground here. "I'm hurt that the Speaker's people
should imply distrust of my household, knowing as I do the Speaker's respect
and friendship. You may tell them that, word for word."
Je-Sou'tsian bowed again. "I will
do so, with pleasure."
She started to back away, but Chauvelin
said, "Iameis. Is there anything else?"
The steward hesitated for a heartbeat,
then gestured negation, the movement solid and decisive. "No, Sia. But I
thought that should be nipped in the bud."
Chauvelin nodded. "I agree. Keep
an eye on them, Iameis."
"Of course, Sia."
Je-Sou'tsian bowed again, and backed away.
Chauvelin stared after her, furious at
ji-Imbaoa for trying such an obvious and infantile trick. _What can he think
he'll gain from that? And why in all hells does he have to do it now, when I
can't do anything about it?_ The answer was too obvious to be considered, and
he made himself put it out of his mind, turning away to greet a stocky man who
served on the board of the Five Points Bank. He answered mechanically, his mind
on ji-Imbaoa, and on Ransome and his new friend, and was not sorry when the
banker excused himself, heading for the buffet. He stood alone for a moment,
found himself scanning the crowd for Ransome. The imagist was standing near one
of the windows that overlooked the garden, Lioe beside him, tall against the
glass. Her coat blended with the golden light caught in the mirrorlike panes,
drawing her into the reflections like a ghost; in contrast, Ransome was looking
pale and interesting. It was hard to tell, these days, if it was deliberate or
inevitable. Chauvelin suppressed the worry, reminding himself that he could
always query the medsystems records if he really wanted to know. But whatever
the cause, the look worked: Ransome had dressed with millimetrically calculated
disorder, plain-slashed jerkin hanging open over equally plain shirt and narrow
trousers, his unbrushed boots a well-planned disgrace. He made a perfect foil
for Lioe's severe elegance, and Chauvelin felt again a stab of jealousy. _Who
in all hells is she, that Ransome should behave like this?_
"Good evening, Chauvelin," a
familiar voice said, and Chauvelin turned without haste to bow to Burning
Bright's governor.
"A good evening to you,
Governor."
Kasiel Berengaria nodded back, the
gesture as much of a concession as she would ever make to hsai etiquette. She
was a stocky, broad-bodied woman, comfortable in a heavily embroidered coat and
trousers; a massive necklace of Homestead Island pearls made a collar around
her neck, and held a seabright pendant suspended just at the divide of her full
breasts. The skin exposed there was weathered, like her coarse, salt-and-pepper
hair, and the short hands with their broken nails. "I haven't seen the
Visiting Speaker tonight, Chauvelin."
Chauvelin picked his words carefully,
well aware of the amusement in her mismatched eyes. One was almost blue, the other
green-flecked brown: a disconcerting effect, and one he was certain she
enjoyed. "The Visiting Speaker has been holding court in the inner room,
Governor. I'm sure he'd be glad to see you."
Berengaria made a face. "I doubt
it. Or at best, no happier to see me than I am to see him."
Chauvelin smiled in spite of himself.
"Quite possibly."
"You have had an interesting time
of it, with him in your household."
"Interesting is a good word,"
Chauvelin said. He and Berengaria were old adversaries, almost friends by now;
she preferred the Republic to Hsaioi-An, but Burning Bright before both of
them. It was a position he understood perfectly, and he had always admired her
skill.
"One hears that the je Tsinra-an
are rising in favor at court," Berengaria went on.
"One of them made a decent profit
for the All-Father on Hazuhone," Chauvelin said. She would already know at
least that much; there was no point in denying it. He shrugged, carefully
casual. "I must say, I doubt it will last."
"One hopes not," Berengaria
said. "And not just for your sake."
She didn't have to say more, and
Chauvelin nodded in agreement. The je Tsinra-an, having been out of favor for
years, were attempting to rally other groups who had stood aloof from court
politics by advocating a return to the old, hard-line, imperialistic policies
of two generations ago. Unfortunately, now that Hsaioi-An and the Republic were
trading freely, or at least relatively freely, through the merchants on
entrepot worlds like Burning Bright, both sides would suffer from a change in
attitude. And Burning Bright and her fellow entrepots would suffer most of all.
"The All-Father knows perfectly
well where his bread is baked," Chauvelin said aloud, and hoped it was
true.
"I hope so," Berengaria said,
in unpleasant, unintended echo. "Whatever else happens, Chauvelin, I'd be
very sorry if you were a casualty."
"I don't intend to be,"
Chauvelin answered. His mouth was dry, and he smiled to hide the sudden fear.
"Good," Berengaria said. She
smiled back, but the expression did not touch the lines around her mismatched
eyes. "It would be very dull without you." She nodded, and turned
away into the crowd.
Chauvelin watched her go, turning her
words over in his mind. It was not a good sign that Berengaria had heard rumors
of power shifts between the factions in Hsaioi-An, and even less good that she
was expressing concern for his future. _And I wonder, did I hear a hint that she
might offer sanctuary, if things get bad?_ There would be a price, of course --
_and probably a high one_ -- but it was an option to keep in mind. At least
Ransome was, for once, doing what he was told: that might buy enough time to
deal with ji-Imbaoa. They said, on Burning Bright, that Storm brought a change
in luck -- he could remember, dimly, his mother buying lottery chances on the
first day of Storm, hoping to bring money into the household. _I have to hope
that's true_.
Ransome made his way through the maze
of smaller rooms off the main hall. Chauvelin's household had thrown them open
as well, knowing the space would be needed. Ji-Imbaoa was holding court in the
largest of these, and Ransome paused at the door for a brief moment, glancing in
past the crowding guests. He had lost Lioe some while back, to a conversation
with the novelist LaChacalle, and hoped to find her -- _though probably not
here_. The Visiting Speaker was popular with certain groups on Burning Bright,
most notably and most obviously the ones who traded heavily with Hsaioi-An, and
he was surrounded by their representatives, but Ransome hardly thought that a
Republican pilot would be likely to join them. The members of ji-Imbaoa's own
household stood watchfully at the Speaker's shoulder, and at the edges of the
room. Their ribbons, short strands of red that fell barely to their waists,
were vivid against the sea-green panels. It was an elegant display, and one
that deliberately overshadowed Chauvelin's less formal presence.
He had looked too long. Across the room, the Visiting Speaker
lifted his hand in acknowledgment, and beckoned for Ransome to approach. It was
not a request. Ransome hid a scowl, and started toward ji-Imbaoa. The crowd
made way for him, a few people murmuring his name. Overhead, false lightning
flickered through holographic clouds, and Ransome couldn't resist a quick look
to see how the installation was doing. He had made the image canopy for
Chauvelin a few years before; so far, he thought, it seemed to be holding up
well.
"_Tso-eh_, Ransome," the
Visiting Speaker said, granting the courtesy of a formal greeting. He continued
in tradetalk, however, lifting his voice a little to be sure that the fringes
of the group could hear. Conversations faded at that signal, and Ransome was
suddenly aware of all eyes intent on him. Ji-Imbaoa was making this a matter of
prestige, and for Chauvelin's sake -- _and my pride, too_ -- he could not
afford to make mistakes.
"I'm told you made this
display?" Ji-Imbaoa gestured to the image in the dome overhead, where
half-hawk, half-human figures now swirled through the gaps in the clouds,
riding the illusory lightning.
"That's right," Ransome
answered, and forced himself not to mimic the hissing accent, the heavy
emphasis on terminal sibilants.
"It's very striking,"
ji-Imbaoa said, without looking up. "But when will you come back to
Hsaioi-An and show your talents there?"
Ransome pretended to glance up at the
dome, not really seeing the roiling clouds, controlled his anger with an
effort. Ji-Imbaoa had threatened him with prosecution if he returned to
Hsaioi-An; this was a particularly clumsy maneuver. He looked back at the
Visiting Speaker, said politely enough, "Probably when such a generous
commission is offered me. Do you think your _t'ueanao_ would be interested, Na
Speaker?" He deliberately used the word that meant more than just family
or household unit, that carried connotations of political rank and power as
well, and saw from the sudden convulsive clenching of ji-Imbaoa's hand that the
implications had struck home. Chauvelin was still a member of the tzu line;
Ransome carried some of the same prestige by virtue of his patronage.
Ji-Imbaoa mastered his annoyance
instantly, though the fingers of his free hand were still crooked slightly, and
the red-painted fingerclaws rapped gently against his thigh. "Perhaps we
shall," he said. "I am sure such a -- thing -- would please my
dependents. You would come if we asked?"
Ransome bowed slightly, perfectly aware
of where this game could lead if not precisely judged. He could not let himself
be trapped into a commission, even if it meant seeming to back down. "If
the price were right, and the time were convenient, and I were committed to no
other business, yes, of course, Speaker." He paused, then added,
"And, of course, assuming that all issues of freedom could be resolved.
Some people take offense at images when none is intended; it seems -- safer --
to settle that ahead of time, than risk displeasing anyone."
Ji-Imbaoa showed teeth in an
approximation of a human smile. The expression was delicately close to the
bared teeth of insult, but not quite; Ransome admired his control even as he
bit back anger. "I'm sure we could work out appropriate
compensation," the Visiting Speaker said, and looked away, lifting a hand
to beckon another guest. The woman turned toward him at once, and ji-Imbaoa
took a few steps to meet her, bringing the group's attention with him. Ransome
hesitated for a moment longer, tempted to protest this dismissal, but made
himself turn away.
Lioe was standing just inside the
doorway. "Were you having fun?" she asked, and Ransome made a face.
"How much of that did you
hear?" He touched her shoulder lightly, easing her out into the more dimly
lit hallway. The walls here were painted a deep red, the rich color of wine
held up to a light. Golden vines coiled along the ceiling just below the hidden
lights.
"Most of it, I think. I gather he
doesn't like you."
"Not much," Ransome agreed.
Lioe kept looking at him, one thin eyebrow lifted in an expression that
reminded him suddenly of Chauvelin, and he touched her shoulder again, steering
her toward one of the side rooms. It was little more than an alcove, pillared
walls painted in a coppery brown, the pillars themselves painted with more
delicate vines, the lighting concealed in thick clusters of sea grapes that
dangled from the heads of the pillars. Bench-seats had been built into the side
walls, and the space between the central set of pillars on the rear wall had
been turned into a display recess. The shelves were filled with odd objects,
and Ransome was startled to recognize one of his own story eggs among them.
"All right," Lioe said,
"why doesn't this Visiting Speaker like you?"
Ransome hesitated again, then grimaced.
"I'm not trying to put you off, I just don't know where to begin."
Lioe laughed. "You make friends
easily, I see."
Ransome smiled back. "All right.
For one thing, he and Chauvelin are from opposite factions, and Chauvelin has
been my patron for years. For another -- " He stopped, took a breath.
"When I was younger, I worked for a local company, worked in Hsaioi-An, on
Jericho, and I got into trouble there. I offended some people as well as
breaking a few laws, but because I was only _houta_ then they couldn't do
anything about it -- the insults, I mean. They enforced the laws. Now that I'm
_min-hao_, though, they can take notice of those insults, and ji-Imbaoa --
aside from being personally stupid and therefore an irresistible target -- is
closely related to someone with a serious grudge against me."
"That does explain a lot,"
Lioe said, after a moment. She cocked her head to one side, clearly reviewing
his conversation with the Visiting Speaker. "Given all that, though, was
it wise to antagonize him?"
"Probably not," Ransome
admitted. "But he really is irresistible."
Lioe shook her head, but she was
smiling. "I hope you and your patron get along."
Ransome winced, remembering their
earlier conversation. "I'm sorry about earlier," he said. _It was
because Chauvelin's been pushing me, pushing me back into the Game when that's
the last thing I want to waste my time with_ -- But that was not something he
could say aloud. "Do you do your own backgrounds, for the Game?"
Lioe nodded, obviously glad to accept
the change of subject. "Yes. I carry a recorder when I go planetside. A
lot of times I stumble into places that I can use later. When I can get time on
the club machines, I do some manipulations, of course, but most of the time I
can't afford it. That's the good part about this deal with Shadows. I've got
all the time I want, and the run of their libraries."
"For ten days," Ransome said.
That wasn't nearly enough time, not for any real work.
Lioe shrugged. "I have a contract
with Kerestel."
Ransome stared at her with a certain
frustration, wondering how she could stand to work part-time, only when there
was time available on club machines, only when she wasn't piloting -- how she
could stand to stay confined, stuck inside the boundaries of the Game, where
the ultimate rule was, _never change anything?_ He opened his mouth, searching
for the right words, and saw her pick up the story egg, hold its lens to her
eye. He remembered that one well -- an early work, filled with flames and a
figure made of flame that shifted from male to female and back again with the
fire's dance -- and closed his mouth again, wondering what she would say.
"Is this yours?" Lioe asked,
after a moment. She set the egg carefully aside, as though she thought the
mechanism was something delicate. Her voice was without emotion, without
inflection, polite and unreadable.
"Yes," Ransome said,
"it's one of mine."
"How do you do that?"
Abruptly, Lioe's voice thawed into enthusiasm. "How do you pull it all
together?"
"Do you mean mechanically, or how
I structure the images?" Ransome asked.
"Yes -- both, I mean." Lioe
grinned again, looked slightly embarrassed. "Sorry, I don't mean to hassle
you."
"No!" Ransome had spoken more
sharply than he had intended, shook his head to erase the word. "No,
you're not hassling me. I like to talk about my work." _And anything to
get her away from the Game_. "It's a lot like finding settings for Game
sessions," he said, and heard himself painfully casual. "I spend a
lot of time on the nets. I've got a pretty complete tie-in in my loft, and a good
display structure. I pull clips off the nets, break down the images, then
rebuild them into the loops for the eggs."
"That must take a lot of
storage," Lioe said.
"But only linear, that's cheap
enough," Ransome answered. "Look, it's easier to show you what I do
than it is to talk about it. Would you like to go back to my loft, look at the
system? I've got some things in progress, you could see how everything fits
together -- you could even play with the machines, if you'd like."
Lioe gave him a measuring look, and
Ransome felt himself flush. "No strings attached. This is not an unsubtle
way of getting you into bed."
Lioe smiled. "I wasn't really
worried about it." She laid the lightest of stresses on
"worried."
"Will you do it, then?"
Ransome asked, and did his best to hide his sudden elation at her nod. Maybe,
just maybe he could show her what was so wrong with the Game, why it was a
waste of any decent talent -- she was good at the Game, good enough that she
should have a try at something else, something that would last beyond the
ephemeral quasi-memory of the Game nets. He shook those thoughts away. Time
enough for that if she was interested, if she cared about anything beyond the
Game. "I was wondering," he said aloud, and Lioe glanced curiously at
him. "You've got a great reputation on the Game nets. Why haven't you gone
into it full-time, become a club notable? You could make a living at it,
easily."
Lioe looked at him for a long moment,
obviously choosing her words with care, and Ransome found himself,
irrationally, holding his breath. "Two reasons," she said at last.
"One, piloting's a better living. Two -- the second reason is, I can't see
making it my life." She shrugged and looked away, embarrassed. "It's
a game. It's only as good as all its players."
_Yes, and that's most of what's wrong
with it_, Ransome thought. _But there's so much else out there, besides the
Game. What the hell were your parents thinking of, to send you into piloting?_
There was no answer to that, and he curbed his enthusiasm sharply. "Let me
show you my setup," he said, and started out of the room.
The second moon was setting over
Chauvelin's garden, throwing long shadows. Beyond the garden, fireworks flared
in silent splendor over the Inland Water, great sprays of colored light that
rivaled the moon. Damian Chrestil stood in a darkened embrasure, one of the
archways that looked out onto the upper terrace, idly tugging the curtain aside
to watch the departing guests, filing by ones and twos along the path that led
to the street. His eye was caught by a familiar figure: Ransome, and the pilot
was with him. That was a good sign -- Ransome should stay preoccupied with the
nets, with the Game, with Lioe to distract him -- and he smiled briefly.
"So you see it's going well."
Ji-Imbaoa slipped into the embrasure beside him, gestured to one of his
household, who bowed and backed away.
Damian let the heavy curtain fall back
into place, effectively cutting off any view from the garden. He was blind in
the sudden darkness, heard ji-Imbaoa's claws chime against a crystal glass, a
faint, unnerving music. "So far," he said.
"Chauvelin has accepted that it is
important, and Ransome will do what he tells him," the Visiting Speaker
went on. "I should think that conditions would be ideal."
Damian's eyes were beginning to adjust
to the dimness. He could see ji-Imbaoa outlined against the faint light from
the hallway; he shifted slightly, his shoulder brushing the curtains, and a
thin beam of moonlight cut across the space, drawing faint grey lights from the
Visiting Speaker's skin. "Conditions will be ideal," Damian said,
"once I have the codes."
Ji-Imbaoa gestured unreadably, only the
fact of the movement visible in shadow behind the moonlight. "It takes
time to get those, time and a certain amount of privacy. I will have them for
you tomorrow, I am certain of that."
_I was expecting them tonight. Ransome
won't be distracted forever, and C-and-I is sniffing around on Demeter. I don't
have time to waste on this, I need to move the cargo now_.... Damian bit back
his irritation, said, "I hope so, Na Speaker. The longer I have to wait
for them, the more risk to all of us."
"Tomorrow," ji-Imbaoa said
again, and there was a note in his voice that warned Damian not to push
further.
"All right," he said, but
couldn't resist adding, "Tonight was such a good chance. I'm just sorry we
missed it."
Ji-Imbaoa made a hissing sound, but
said nothing.
"Until tomorrow, then,"
Damian said, cheerfully, and slipped out of the embrasure before the Visiting
Speaker could think to stop him.
--------
*Part Four*
*Day 1*
_Storm:
Ransome's Loft, Old Coast Road,_
_Newfields,
Above Junction Pool_
Lioe woke slowly, blinking in the light
that seeped in through the filtered windows. She lay still for a moment,
remembering where she was, then cautiously pushed herself upright. The door to
Ransome's bedroom was still closed, but the light was on in the little kitchen,
and she could hear the last gasps as an automatic coffee maker completed its
cycle. She glanced sideways, checking the time, and made a face as the numbers
flashed red against the stark white wall. Almost noon, and she was committed to
a midafternoon meeting at Shadows, reviewing her scenario for a group of club
session leaders.
She reached for her shirt and trousers,
the loose silky tunic incongruous at this hour of the morning, and dressed quickly,
then went into the kitchen alcove. The coffee maker was obviously on a standard
program: the tiny pot held barely enough for a single mug. She hesitated for an
instant, but poured herself some anyway. That emptied the pot, and she searched
cabinets, the little room as compulsively ordered as a ship's galley, until she
found the box of makings and set another pot on to brew. She folded up the bed
as well, but could not remember where Ransome had kept it; she left it sitting
against the wall, and went back to the computer setup that dominated the
working space. She touched one of the secondary keyboards lightly, but did not
bring up the system, remembering instead what she had done the night before. It
had been like the best parts of the Game, the preparation, hunting through the
nets and libraries and her own collection of filmed scenes until she found just
the right image -- _or the image that can be adjusted, manipulated, until it
has exactly the impact you wanted, that will conjure upjust the right responses
from your players, and they can take that knowledge and run with it_....
Except, of course, that Ransome's work stopped there, before the others, any
others, entered the picture. He set up the image, calculated the effect, but
didn't stay to finish the job. Or else he assumed he had finished his job, that
the effect would be what he intended. She shook her head, not sure if she even
really believed in that sort of confidence -- _or is it arrogance?_ -- and
turned away from the computers, touched the window controls to clear the
treated glass.
The city stretched out below her, a
breathtaking view over the housetops toward the Inland Water. The sky above the
city was milky white, sunlight filtered by clouds, but light still glinted from
the solar panels and on the murky water of the Junction Pool at her feet. It
was busy, barges and lighters of all sizes snugged up to the multiple docking
points that lined the Pool's edges. One of the largest ships, broad-beamed, its
deck piled high with the familiar scarred-silver shapes of drop capsules, was
moored at the foot of a cargo elevator. As she watched, fascinated -- pilots
rarely got to see where their cargoes ended up -- a crane swooped down,
delicately picked up two of the capsules, and added them to the neat pile
growing in the elevator's open car.
She finished the coffee before the
crane operator finished loading the elevator, and looked sideways again,
checking the time. Past noon, and it would take almost an hour to reach Shadows
-- more, if she understood right, and the Storm celebrations had already begun.
She looked again toward Ransome's door, blinking away the chronometer's
numbers, wondering what she should do. It seemed rude just to leave, but it
might well be worse to wake him. Of course, she could always leave a note. She
looked around, searching for a notepad/printer or pen and paper, and the door
to the bedroom opened.
"Good morning," Ransome said.
_He looked tired_, Lioe thought, _more tired than she would have expected_.
"I see you found the coffee."
"Yes, thanks," Lioe answered.
"I made a second pot."
"Thank you," Ransome said,
and stepped into the kitchen. "I'm glad you found the makings, most people
I know drink tea." He came back out into the loft's main room, mug of
coffee in one hand, a polished spherical remote in the other. His hand moved
easily over the steel-bright surface, and the display space in the center of
the room flashed into life. Lioe looked away, vaguely embarrassed, from the
loop she had compiled the night before.
"That's really quite good,"
Ransome said.
"Beginner's work," Lioe said,
more roughly than she had intended. In the display space, a metal-skinned woman
transformed herself into a bird, the fingers elongating into feathers, hair
into the crest of a hawk, body melting and shrinking into a compact and vicious
form, rose and turned and swooped on something invisible, then landed, body
beginning to turn again into a woman's even as she fell the last few meters, until
the silverskinned woman sat again on a bench in the sun, inspecting her long,
bony feet. Even in the light from the window, the forms were clear and vivid.
"Certainly," Ransome said.
"Everybody starts off with this kind of thing. But it's got promise. You
could do something with it."
Lioe looked suspiciously at him, but he
was staring at the images, watching the loop run its course one more time. It
wasn't often one heard judgment and praise so neatly balanced; there was
something in his tone that let her believe his words. "Thanks," she
said. She sounded stilted, even to herself, and added, "And thanks for
letting me play with your equipment. I really enjoyed it."
Ransome touched the remote again, and
glyphs flashed in the air around him. From where she stood, Lioe could only see
enough to recognize the drop-to-storage sequence. "You should try it
again. I'm serious, you have a knack."
"Thanks." Lioe looked at the
chair, the wire gloves discarded on the stand beside it, but made herself look
away. "I've got to be at Shadows, though. I'm committed to a training
group for their session leaders."
"For Ixion's Wheel?" Ransome
asked, and Lioe nodded.
"They're paying me," she
said, and didn't know quite why she felt so defensive.
Ransome grinned. "Well, that's a
good reason, there. But don't you ever get sick of the Game?"
"No," Lioe said,
automatically, and then, because Ransome had been honest with her, added,
"It's not like I do it for a living."
"You could," Ransome
murmured.
Lioe made a face. "I suppose. But
I like piloting, which is a steady income, unlike Gaming, and -- " She
stopped abruptly, acknowledging what he had said. "And, yes, I think I'd
be bored -- well, not bored, exactly, but the Game, the scenarios never seem to
resolve anything."
Ransome nodded. "Ixion's Wheel
comes pretty close, from what I saw."
Lioe smiled, and didn't bother to deny
it. "It could be the start of something. I think Avellar could pull the
whole Game together into one really big scenario, but I know damn well no one's
going to want to play that."
She stopped then, knowing how she
sounded, but Ransome nodded again, more slowly, his expression remote. "A
scenario that concentrated on Avellar's bid for the throne -- you're right,
that would pull everything in, wouldn't it? Rebellion, Psionics, Court Life ...
it would be worth playing. And Ixion's Wheel really sets it up. Have you
started work on it?"
"No one wants to change the
Game," Lioe repeated. "Not that drastically, anyway."
Ransome sighed. "You're probably
right, which is why I stopped playing. It's a pity, though."
_It's the nature of the Game_. Lioe
said instead, "I suppose. But, listen, I do have to leave, if I'm going to
make this meeting on time. Thanks again."
"My pleasure," Ransome said,
automatically. "You know where the helipad is?"
"I know where the tourist-trolley
stops," Lioe answered. "I can't afford helicabs."
"All right," Ransome said.
"Are you running any sessions yourself today?"
"Tonight," Lioe answered. She
looked back, her hand on the main latch. "Why?"
"I thought -- " Ransome
paused, then gave a wry smile. "I thought I might see if there were any
places left. Like I said the other night, it's been a long time since I've seen
a scenario that made me want to play."
"Shall I hold Harmsway for
you?" Lioe asked.
"Why not?" Ransome's smile
changed, became openly mischievous. "I don't think that part was played to
its potential."
Lioe smiled back, flattered and
apprehensive at the same time. Ambidexter in the scenario, playing his own
template: it was a thought to conjure with, and to strike terror into the souls
of lesser players. It was also a challenge, and she did not turn down a
challenge. "I'll do that. And thank you again for a fascinating
evening." She let herself out into the hallway, not quite hearing his
murmured reply.
Left to himself, Ransome went back into
the narrow kitchen, rummaged in the cold storage until he found a package that
promised to cook in three minutes. He fitted it into the wall-mounted cooker,
and made himself open the container once the timer sounded. The spicy pastry
smelled good, but his appetite did not return; he forced himself to finish it
anyway, standing at the counter, and turned his attention back to the main room
and the empty display space. Lioe's hat was sitting on the folded bed,
forgotten in her hurry. He sighed, and hoped he would remember to return it
that night.
The hawk-woman had been a good image,
for someone who'd never worked with more than the Game's more limited editors,
and Lioe had been quick to sense the difference in form between the Game images
and the image loops that filled a story egg. It was just too bad she was so
caught up in the Game ... He crossed to the windows, staring down on the city.
It would be Carnival already in the Wet Districts, the streets and canals busy
with costumed figures. It would be Carnival on the nets as well, and that might
be the best time to look into just why Damian Chrestil wanted him back in the
Game.
He turned back to the display space,
spun his chair into place at its center, but hesitated, slipping on the
wire-bound gloves. It would be Carnival, all right, but that didn't mean that
his usual net projection wouldn't be recognized. He crossed to the shelves
where he kept the shells of the unfinished eggs, searched among the clutter
until he found the mask he had bought two years before, for a party he could no
longer clearly remember. It was a plain white mask, of the three-quarters size
that left only mouth and chin free, a standard form, eyebrows and cheekbones
and nose all coarsely modeled from the dead white plastic. He contemplated it
for a moment -- it had always been an affectation of his not to mask, to walk
the streets and nets at Carnival as himself -- but this was not the time for
that. He set the mask carefully on one of the imaging tables, and switched on the
cameras. Lights flared, crisscrossed, catching the mask in a web of stark white
beams. He turned back to the display space, and saw the mask's image floating
in the air above his chair, waiting to be remade.
He fingered the remote to dim the windows,
and the image grew correspondingly stronger as the competing daylight faded. He
set the remote aside, pulled on the remaining glove, and settled himself in his
chair. The servos whirred softly, tilting it and him to the most comfortable
position; the image moved with him, floating in the air within easy reach. He
studied it for a moment longer, then reached tentatively into another image
bank to pull out a series of other faces. He found one with a mouth he liked,
bleached that image to match the mask's absolute lack of color, then patched
the two together, bringing the mouth and chin from the new image to cover the
missing parts of the original mask. He studied the result for a moment, then
ran his hand over the compound image, deepening the modeling of mouth and chin
so that it matched the mask. He cocked his head to one side, then drew the
corners of the mouth down into a parody of tragedy's mask. He tilted the eyes
down as well, filled the empty holes with absolute black, and dumped the
resulting image to main memory. It was not at all his usual style: no one on
the nets should recognize it as him.
He reached into control space to change
modes, rewriting his usual identification-and-projection package to display the
newly created mask, and flipped the whole system to Carnival mode. Now all
identification inquiries would automatically be ignored -- this was the only
time of year when that routine would not get one dumped from the nets in short
order -- and a secondary program would deflect any attempt to trace the point
of origin. He smiled then -- he was going to enjoy this after all -- and
flipped himself out onto the nets.
The nets were crowded with ghostly
shapes, a cheerful anarchy overriding the narrowcast lines and filling the unreal
echo of the city with light and sound and sheets of brilliant color. Scenes
like the loops of a story egg filled a number of nodes: rather than simply
projecting an image, many of the maskers had chosen to create a brief repeating
scene, and let that represent them to the world. Ransome let himself drift for
a while, slipping from one system to the next with the ebb and flow of the
crowds. A few groups and systems still tried to keep to business-as-usual, pale
geometrics and strings of symbols competing with the gaudy loop-displays of the
revelers, but they were easily overwhelmed. Some of the Carnival displays were
elaborate, a sphere of scenery enclosing a character or two -- often Grand
Types from the Game -- so that Ransome had either to bypass that particular
node or move through the ongoing scenario. Near the Game nets, it was easier to
go through than to try to find a way around the miniature worlds; he let
himself slide through like a ghost, ignoring the spray of words and images that
greeted any stranger, idly tracking the Grand Types that appeared. There were
quite a few Avellars, as well as the inevitable Barons and Ladies: _Lioe should
be pleased_, he thought, and turned his attention toward the port systems.
If Damian Chrestil wanted him back in
the Game, it was all but certain that the Game was not really important, was
only a blind -- and certainly he'd found nothing during his time on the Game
nets to indicate otherwise -- which made it well worth his time to see what was
happening on the various nets that served the port and the traders who depended
on the port for their living. He dimmed his own image further, so that he saw
his mask floating ghostly through a Bower of Love that currently filled a
transfer node. It was a striking image, the death-white mask drifting
expressionless, incurious, through the flower-draped temple where an improbably
well-endowed man and woman were locked in vigorous and detailed sex, and he
touched the capture sequence to record the moment. It would make an interesting
story egg, someday, but he made himself turn away once the capture was complete
and follow the multiple channels into the port systems.
There were fewer Carnival images here:
more off-worlders used the port nets, and there weren't many Burning Brighters
who dealt with them who could afford to give up a day's trade. Still, an
Avellar walked through a segment of corridor, striding hard as though it was
work to keep up with the moving tiles; another Grand Type, the Viverina,
braided tiny human skulls into her long hair. Ransome frowned, trying to
remember the scenario that had spawned the image, but couldn't place it. The
Judge Directing presided over a node that gave entrance to a merchant bank. The
serene face was semitransparent, and Ransome recognized familiar features
behind the cloaking Carnival image. He adjusted his own projection, allowing
his familiar on-line presence to show behind the floating mask, and slipped
into the node.
The Judge Directing turned to face him,
the ster serenity melting to a more familiar grin, and codes flashed through
the display space, weaving a private link-in-realtime. "Ransome. I didn't
expect to see you masking."
"Neither did I," Ransome
answered, truthfully. Guyonet Merede was a Gamer as well as a banker, and a
former patron who owned several of his earlier story eggs. "But it seems
to have worked out well."
"It's a nice image," Merede
said. He was older than he looked behind the Judge's face: the projection's
stony beauty reminded Ransome for an instant of Lioe's face in repose.
"Thanks," he said. "I
wonder if you could do me a favor, Guy. I need access to the raw feed from the
port computers -- the unsorted line, the one that carries the general
traffic." If Damian Chrestil wanted him on the Game nets, it could only be
to keep him away from some other part of the greater system. C/B Cie. was an
import/export firm, and that most likely meant smuggling. And the best way to
track that down was to sift the day-to-day chatter and hope that, despite the
sheer volume, he could find some hint of an irregular shipment, something that
didn't match the more public records. _And if I can't find it, well, there are
other places to look, political games he could be playing, and I won't have
wasted much time. But I'm betting it's a doctored cargo_.
Merede was silent for an instant, his
face gone very still, and then he said, cautiously, "You know I can't do
that, I-Jay."
_You've done it before_. Ransome said
aloud, "I just need to pull some numbers for a piece I'm working on. It's
a commission for the MIS, and I need some strings for background. I thought I'd
tie part of the loop to the trade balance."
It was an easy lie, and plausible, but
to his surprise Merede shook his head. "I'm sorry, I-Jay. If it weren't
Carnival -- but we've had some complaints recently, people saying stuffs been
pulled out of the raw feed that should've stayed confidential. I just can't do
it."
Ransome nodded. "I can see that. I
guess I can rig what I need some other way." He did his best to look
thoughtful, glad of the mask that screened his features. "Who's been
complaining, anyway?"
Merede glanced down at something out of
camera range. "The Five Points Bank's merchant division -- you know, the
exchange-rate people? -- and a couple of importers, Ionel Factor and C/B Cie.,
and one of the private captains."
_Who I just bet is connected to the
Chrestil-Brisch, too_. Ionel Factor was closely tied to the Chrestil-Brisch --
Ionel dealt in off-world spirits, and therefore, inevitably, was tied to the
Chrestil-Brisch distillery and their various wholesalers -- and Bettis Chrestil
was head of the merchant division's steering group. "You think there's
anything in it?" he said aloud, and Merede shrugged.
"We haven't seen anything on our
screens, and we tap pretty carefully. I suppose it could be a very directed
probe, but -- between you and me only, Ransome -- I think they're
overreacting."
"I'll keep it quiet," Ransome
said. "Thanks anyway." He touched the key sequence that released the
private linkage, and let himself drift deeper into the port nets. He adjusted
his presence, making the mask opaque again, so that his identity was completely
hidden except to the most determined probe, and shifted the scale slightly. To
a cursory scan, he should look like a bounce-echo from the chaos on the public
nets, a common enough phenomenon at this time of year. Satisfied, he let
himself slide further into the system, looking for an interface of commercial
and customs data.
It took him over an hour to find that
node -- it shifted, as did the codes that guarded it -- and another hour to
prove to himself that it was unusually well guarded. None of the usual sources
would provide a key, and that left Selasa Arduinidi, who was one of the better
security consultants in the business and, on the shadow nets, a reliable data
fence. She had a name as a netwalker, too, prided herself on knowing how to
access any part of the net, but when he finally tracked her down, she shook her
head in disgust.
"I've been fighting with that one
for two days now, I-Jay. I haven't cracked it yet. You'll have to get legit
codes for that one, I'm afraid."
"Nobody's telling -- or selling,"
Ransome answered. He stared at her icon floating in the air in front of him, a
huge-eyed owl perched in a glowing tree branch that seemed to grow directly out
of the lines of the net itself. "What's going on, Selasa?"
"I don't know," Arduinidi
answered, but there was something in her voice, a subtle admiration that belied
her words. "Somebody's up to something, that's for sure." She broke
the connection before he could ask anything more.
_Somebody like Damian Chrestil_,
Ransome thought, sourly. The deeper he tried to probe, the more likely it
seemed that the Game was just a blind, and that Damian Chrestil was hiding
something. From the way his own probes were being blocked, it seemed to have
something to do with run cargoes. _But if that's all, why is ji-Imbaoa
involved?_ Politics and smuggling: the two did not often overlap, but when they
did, it was a particularly volatile mix. _Which is what I will tell Chauvelin
myself_, he thought, and began to extricate himself from the maze of the port's
multinet. It would be easy enough simply to shut down his system, but then the
automatics would take over the shutdown procedures and leave a clear trail back
to his loft. Better to do things slowly, and make sure he wasn't followed.
--------
*Day 1*
_Storm: The Hsai Ambassador's House,_
_in the
Ghetto, Landing Isle Above_
_Old
City North_
Chauvelin sat in his office at the top
of the ambassador's residence, staring into the desktop displays without really
seeing the multiple screens. The hazy sunlight poured in through the slightly
curved windows, dulling the displays; he hit the key that brought the glyphs
and numbers and the harsh strokes of hsai demiscript to their greatest
brightness, but did not dim the window glass. He could see the first signs of
the approaching storm on the horizon beyond Plug Island, a thicker bank of
clouds like fog or a distant landfall. The weather service still said that bank
was only an outrider, and the real storm behind it would not arrive for days,
but Chauvelin could feel it waiting, a brooding, distant presence. The street
brokers had it at twenty-to-one to hit within the next five days, though the
pessimists were hedging their bets by excluding lower-category storms.
Chauvelin sighed, and leaned back in his chair. If nothing else, the storm was
already starting to interfere with the connection to the jump transmitter
orbiting the planet, the one that carried the communications link with
Hsaioi-An. On the one hand, the erratic reception was a good excuse to keep
ji-Imbaoa from using the house transmitters without one of Chauvelin's own
household present, ostensibly to monitor the machinery. On the other, he was
under no illusion that this would keep ji-Imbaoa from finding some way to contact
his patrons in Hsaioi-An, nor would it prevent the Visiting Speaker from
dealing with someone on planet. And it annoyed the Visiting Speaker. Chauvelin
allowed himself a quick, private smile. That also had disadvantages, but it did
give him a certain sense of satisfaction.
A chime sounded in his desktop, a
discreet, two-toned noise, and Chauvelin glanced down in some surprise. He had
left instructions that he was not to be disturbed, and je-Sou'tsian was usually
scrupulous about obeying him. He touched the icon, and the tiny projector
hidden in a disk of carved and lacquered iaon wood lit, forming a cylindrical
image. JeSou'tsian bowed to him from the center of that column of light.
"I'm very sorry to interrupt you,
Sia, but Na Ransome is here, and says he needs urgently to speak with
you."
Chauvelin lifted his eyebrows, but
nodded. "All right, show him into -- no, bring him up here. Without any of
the Visiting Speaker's people seeing him, if you can." If Ransome had come
in person, and not on the nets, it was bound to be something important.
"Yes, Sia," je-Sou'tsian
said. "I'm sorry, but I'm not sure that some of the Speaker's household
didn't meet him as he came in." Her voice trailed off, and she gestured
apology.
"That's all right, it can't be helped," Chauvelin said.
"But bring him up here."
"At once, Sia," je-Sou'tsian
said, and her image vanished from the cylinder. The empty rod of light
retreated into its base, and a string of lights played across a secondary
screen: the steward and Ransome were on their way. Chauvelin ran his hands
across the shadowscreen, closing down some programs and putting others to
sleep, watched as the multiple screens beneath the desktop copied his
movements. A few moments later, the door slid open, and je-Sou'tsian appeared
in the arched opening.
"Sia, Na Ransome is here."
"Thanks," Chauvelin said, and
gestured for the other man to come in. Ransome did as he was told, settled
himself comfortably on the corner of the desk. Chauvelin smiled slightly, but
said nothing: the seat would prove its own punishment.
"What is it?" he asked, and
Ransome smiled back at him.
"You've been suckered," he
said bluntly -- _and with entirely too much enjoyment_, Chauvelin thought. But
that was his own fear speaking, not his intellect.
"How so?"
"I did exactly what you
wanted," Ransome said. "I've gone back into the Game, I've trawled
the Game nets, every one of them at least twice, and there's nothing going on
-- except Lioe's scenario, of course. But nothing, absolutely nothing, that
involves Damian Chrestil. But when I went onto the port nets, into the
commercial systems, I found a lot of blocks that didn't used to be there."
"Such as?" Chauvelin kept his
tone strictly neutral, buying time. He had been half expecting something like
this, some new revelation of wheels within wheels, but not from the port
district. He frowned slightly, readjusting his thoughts to add money and
shipping to the already volatile political mix. It didn't make sense, not yet
-- the Chrestil-Brisch were supposed to favor the Republic, not Hsaioi-An --
but if Ransome was being shut out of the port computers, then there had to be
an economic motive.
"For one thing -- " Ransome
paused, laughed shortly. "This is at best unethical, by the way, if not
actively illegal."
"I'm not surprised,"
Chauvelin murmured.
Ransome nodded again, conceding the
point. "It's not usually very hard to get someone to give you an address
and an access code for the raw datafeed from the port computers -- you know,
the ones that control the warehouse records for individual firms, scheduling,
all that sort of thing." He shrugged. "Too many people know about it,
and there are always plausible reasons to want access. And of course, a lot of
people owe me favors."
"Of course."
"But today, when I tried to get
those codes, first of all no one was selling them -- and I've never seen that
happen, somebody's put the fear of Retribution into the shadow-walkers like
I've never seen -- and then no one I know would give me anything. Now, that's
happened before, especially after someone's scored a coup, but no one has, that
I've heard, and I hear these things." Ransome paused, all the humor gone
from his voice. "What I did find out was that some companies complained
that information had been copied from those feeds, and used against them. And
when I got names, they were all tied to Damian Chrestil."
"Who were they?" Chauvelin
asked.
"C/B Cie. itself, Ionel Factor --
they import wines and spirits, and they've got ties to the Chrestil-Brisch
distillery business -- and one of the FPB's steering groups."
"Let me guess," Chauvelin
said. "The merchant division, the one that Bettis Chrestil heads?"
"Got it in one." Ransome
smiled sourly. "But what exactly it all means is beyond me."
_And me_, Chauvelin thought. _At least
for the moment_. He looked down at the empty screens under the surface of the
desktop, debating whom to query -- _Eriki Haas, certainly, once we're in phase
and if the transmitter is reliable enough, just to see what connections
ji-Imbaoa has with Damian Chrestil or C/B Cie_. The chime sounded again beneath
the desktop. He frowned, more deeply this time, and touched the icon flashing
in the shadowscreen. The projector lit, and je-Sou'tsian bowed from within the
cylinder of light.
"I apologize again for disturbing
you, Sia, but the Visiting Speaker is on his way to your office."
_That's all I need_. Chauvelin said,
"All right, Iameis, thank you."
"Wonderful," Ransome
murmured, a crooked smile on his face.
"Quite." Chauvelin leaned
back in his chair, deliberately closed the last of the sleeping files. There
was nothing he could do to stop ji-Imbaoa -- the Visiting Speaker was
technically head of the ambassadorial household during his visit, and no doors
could be shut to him -- but he did not have to welcome him. The shutdown codes
were still flickering across the screens when the door slid back and ji-Imbaoa
strode into the room.
"So, Chauvelin," he said,
"your agent's here. I want to talk to him."
"As you wish," Chauvelin
said, spread his hands in a deliberate gesture of innocence. "I didn't
want to trouble you until I was sure it was worth your time."
Ji-Imbaoa's fingers twitched --
_annoyance?_ Chauvelin thought, _or fear?_ He did not move, but felt himself
suddenly, painfully tense, waiting for the Visiting Speaker's next move.
"What have you found? Have you
gone back to the Game?"
Ransome hesitated, visibly choosing his
words with care, and Chauvelin wondered for a moment if the other might have
learned discretion. He need not have worried, however. Ransome said, "Yes,
Na Speaker, I've been back to the Game, and found very little of
interest."
"Then surely you haven't looked
very hard, or very long," ji-Imbaoa snapped. "Particularly since you
have only been looking for two days."
"I don't need any more than that
to tell you there's nothing there," Ransome said.
Chauvelin said, "If Na Ransome
says he's found nothing in the Game, then there's nothing to be found."
Ji-Imbaoa glanced back at him, fingers
still twitching with unreadable emotion. "Then why should Damian Chrestil
go to so much trouble to get him back into those nets? It must have to do with
the Game."
"Na Ransome thinks it's a
distraction," Chauvelin said. "That Damian Chrestil's real interests
lie elsewhere."
"Don't you think you're being overelaborate?" ji-Imbaoa
interrupted rudely.
"Perhaps the Visiting Speaker is
being underelaborate," Ransome murmured. "After all, he isn't used to
the complex dishonesties of our local politics."
He had used the hsai word that linked
dishonesty and foreignness, so that the statement hovered delicately between
compliment and insult. Chauvelin said, "I think Na Ransome's assessment is
plausible, Sia."
"And I tell you it is
unlikely," ji-Imbaoa said. "I tell you, on my name and my fathers',
this must be pursued, and pursued through the Game."
Chauvelin kept his face impassive with
an effort, torn between anger and elation. Ji-Imbaoa had made it a direct
order, one that Chauvelin could not directly disobey, but at the same time he'd
made it equally clear that there was something important at stake. "Very
well, Sia," he said aloud. "Na Ransome will remain with the Game a
little while longer."
"Until he finds what Damian
Chrestil wants," ji-Imbaoa said.
"So be it," Chauvelin said.
Behind ji-Imbaoa's shoulder, Ransome rolled his eyes.
"You must do more," ji-Imbaoa
said, and turned to face the imagist.
"I do my poor best," Ransome
murmured, and bowed, too deeply for sincerity.
Ji-Imbaoa ignored that, and glanced
back at Chauvelin. "I expect to be kept informed."
"As you wish," Chauvelin
said, and the Visiting Speaker lifted a clawed hand to signal the door. It slid
open obediently, and ji-Imbaoa stalked out, his ribbons flurrying behind him.
Ransome said, even before the door had
fully closed again, "Pity everything else isn't so docile."
"You'd better have meant the
door," Chauvelin said, without heat.
"What else?" Ransome darted
him a suddenly mischievous glance, said, "Am I to keep on with the Game,
then? Or would you rather know about the larger nets?"
"Both," Chauvelin said.
"You heard him. I need you to be visible on the Game nets, to be sure he
knows you're doing what he ordered."
"That won't be too
difficult," Ransome said.
"You've changed your tune."
In spite of himself, Chauvelin felt a stab of jealousy, remembering the way the
other had looked at the pilot, Lioe, the night before.
Ransome gave him a rueful smile.
"She's good," he said. "And she's wasted in the Game."
Chauvelin said, more abruptly than he'd
intended, "Whatever. But I do need you to be seen in the Game."
"I've said I would," Ransome
said. He pushed himself off the corner of the desk. "But, damn it, Damian
Chrestil is up to something that has nothing at all to do with the Game."
"I believe you," Chauvelin
said. "I'm doing what I can to find out what."
"That would make sense,"
Ransome said. He lifted his hand to open the door, paused with the gesture half
completed. "Do you want me to keep on the port nets?"
Chauvelin nodded. "If you can,
yes, but the main thing's the Game. I think you're right, but ji-Imbaoa's
forced my hand."
Ransome nodded abruptly. "I know,
I'm sorry. I'll do what I can." He finished his gesture, and the door slid
open.
Chauvelin watched him leave, watched
the door slide shut again behind him. _As long as you stay on the Game nets, as
long as you're conspicuously doing what ji-Imbaoa wants, then I've got a little
time_. He reached for the shadowscreen, recalling one of the chronometers, and
checked the transmission pattern between Burning Bright and maiHu'an. He had
just missed a window: the two planets would not be in phase for another twenty
hours. _Not until tomorrow, then_, he thought, _and tomorrow afternoon at
that_. For a moment, he considered using the more complicated -- and expensive
-- emergency channels, but rejected the thought almost at once. The Remembrancer-Duke
would never sanction the expense. But tomorrow he would send a message to Eriki
Haas, and find out if, and how, the je Tsinra-an were connected to the
Chrestil-Brisch. He leaned back in his chair, staring at the ocean and the
distant cloud bank without really seeing them. There were too many possible
connections right now, but with any luck Haas would be able to narrow them
down, and then ... He smiled slowly. Then ji-Imbaoa would have to regret the
way he had behaved. _Maybe_, he thought, _maybe the old superstitions are
right, and my luck will change with Storm_. He glanced down at the shadowscreen
again, and touched icons to shift to another mode. It was time to start asking
questions of his own.
--------
*Day 1*
_Storm: Shadows, Face Road, Dock
Road_
_District
Below the Old Dike_
Lioe blinked even in the filtered
sunlight that filled the inner courtyard, set her workboard down beside an
unoccupied datanode, and turned her attention toward the food bars in the corner.
She fed one the last of her free cash, and chose a box of thick rice and
seacake from the cheaper half of the menu. She chose a bottle of medium-priced
water as well, and carried the food back to her table. It had been a long
session, and a rewarding one; the session leaders had been excited by the
scenario, eager to follow her suggestions, and genuinely interested in
preserving her intentions for the session. It was a new experience, being taken
that seriously: _on the whole_, she thought, _I think I like it_.
She triggered the self-heating unit,
waited the required thirty seconds while the little charge cycled, and opened
the box. The steam that rose from the mix of rice and onions and chunks of
palmweed and the flower-shaped seacakes was thick and appetizing, smelling of
salt broth and the smoky oil that preserved the fish. There was a tiny dish of
sweet mustard as well, but she had learned that it was far more mustard than
sweet and should be approached with caution. She spread a pinpoint of the
condiment over the first of the seacakes, and tasted warily. It was spicy,
cutting the oil, but not so hot that it brought tears to her eyes. She hadn't
realized quite how hungry she had become, caught up in the intricacies of the
Game, and she ate with relish, pursuing the last grains of rice around the
bottom of the box. Both rice and seacakes were ubiquitous on Burning Bright,
the staple of everyone's diet -- the rice grown in the tidal shallows, the
seacakes processed at sea from the bits and pieces left over after the more
expensive fillets and chunks were set aside -- but she had not been on planet
long enough to get tired of the salt-and-smoke flavors.
She reached for the datacord then,
plugged her workboard into the unoccupied node, touched keys to activate the
unit and call up the night's schedule. Somewhat to her surprise, the session
hadn't filled yet, but then she remembered that it was the first night of
Storm, the first night of the Carnival. It wasn't that surprising, after all, but
it was a shame that she wouldn't be making as much money from the session fees
as she had hoped. Unless, of course, she could fill the session herself ... She
tilted her head to one side, considering. She had reserved Harmsway for
Ransome, as he'd asked, and Savian and Beledin had signed up to play Lord Faro
and Belfortune again -- _I'd like a second chance at him_, Beledin had said,
when she had met him in the hall on her way to the session leaders' meeting --
and a couple of unfamiliar names filled other slots, but no one had signed up
for Jack Blue, or Mijja Lyall, or Avellar. Lioe frowned, seeing that. She had
expected the unfamiliar names to fill last -- and neither Jack Blue nor Lyall
was a well-known template -- but she would have assumed that Avellar would go
quickly. An inexpert Avellar would throw off the balance of the entire
scenario; she needed someone good in that spot, if the session was to work at
all.
"Quinn. I've been looking for
you."
The voice was familiar, but Lioe couldn't
quite place it. She looked up, still frowning, and felt the frown dissolve as
she looked up at Roscha. "I've been around," she said. "Are you
playing tonight?"
Roscha's wide mouth widened further in
a grin that showed perfect teeth and heightened the impossible cheekbones.
"I hope so. I just got off work, and they told me there were still places
left for tonight's session."
Lioe looked down at the little screen,
juggling choices. Roscha was good, all right, but volatile; there had been
moments in the first session when she'd amply justified Gueremei's description
of her as "difficult." On the other hand, that volatility might make
for a very interesting key character. "How would you feel about playing
Avellar?" she said slowly. "The other real option is Jack Blue --
Lyall's open, too, but that doesn't strike me as your style."
"Avellar." Roscha's voice
caressed the name. "Hell, yes, I'd like to play him -- or her, if you'll
let me play the she-clone."
Avellar, by Game convention, was
actually a four-person clone, the survivors of a larger clone that had been
partially destroyed some years before, in the clone's childhood. It provided an
explanation for the character's limited telepathy; it also gave players who
didn't like crossing gender lines further options. Lioe shrugged. It made no
difference in the context of the scenario; she was just a little surprised that
Roscha, of all people, would choose not to cross gender. "If you want,
sure," she said. "I don't have any problem with that." She
touched keys, and watched the program add Roscha's name to the list of players.
"Great." Roscha ran a hand
through her hair, dislodging the strip of indigo silk that confined it, and
impatiently rewrapped it, tossing the red curls out of her eyes. "I was
wondering. I see you've eaten, but you've got some time before the session
starts. Would you like to go down to the Water, and see the Beauties and
Beasts?"
Lioe frowned, knowing she'd heard the
term before, and Roscha said, "The Syndics' parade, I mean. It's well
worth seeing."
Lioe looked back down at the screen, at
the two slots that remained. Both of them were important -- she prided herself
on never having written a scenario that included unnecessary characters -- and
she hated to think she would have to run them from a distance. On Callixte, of
course, she had a list of people she could call at short notice, fellow players
and session leaders who were glad to fill in in exchange for a rebate on
session fees, but here she would have to rely on the club's resources. She
hesitated then, and touched keys on the workboard to find an outgoing
communications channel. "I'd like that," she said, "but there's
one thing I have to do first."
"Sure," Roscha said easily,
and seated herself in the chair opposite, where the unfolded screen blocked her
view of the other woman's hands on the keys and controls.
Lioe nodded her thanks, her attention
already back on the Game. When Kichi Desjourdy had been Customs-and-Intelligence's
representative on Falconsreach, she'd been known to sit in on Game sessions on
a fairly regular basis. Lioe herself had relied on her as a player as well as
an arbiter. _Maybe, just maybe_, Lioe thought, _she could help me out now_.
Desjourdy was good; she'd be an excellent choice either for Jack Blue or Lyall.
She touched the final sequence, one of Desjourdy's private codestrings, letting
her know it wasn't business, and dispatched the package into the communications
system.
Carnival had not taken over ordinary
communications yet. A few thin images, a masked face, a dancing, six-armed
figure, drifted across her screen, while the connect codes blinked behind them,
and then the screen lit fully, driving out the last of the Carnival ghosts.
Kichi Desjourdy looked out of the little screen, the office wall behind her
distorted by its limited projection. _Desjourdy herself looked normal enough_,
Lioe thought, _but with Desjourdy it was sometimes hard to tell_. The
Customs-and-Intelligence representative had a round, rather ordinary face, with
only the silvery disks of two triple datasockets set into the bone at the
corner of each eye to set her apart from most net workers. At the moment, none
of the sockets were in use, and Lioe, who had seen Desjourdy bristling with
cords, was oddly grateful.
"Quinn," Desjourdy said.
"It's good to see you. I've been hearing a lot of talk about you on the
Game nets." Her voice was clear and true, an elegant soprano, and Lioe was
struck again by the mismatch of voice and face.
"Thanks," she said.
"That was sort of what I was calling you about."
"Oh, yes?"
"I've got a session going
tonight," Lioe said, "and I'm short. I need a player I can rely on.
Are you free?"
Desjourdy laughed. "I never know
whether I should be flattered or not when somebody asks me like this. Is this
for Ixion's Wheel?"
"Yes."
Desjourdy's smile widened. "Well,
that one I can't turn down. Who is it, anyway?"
"There are two slots still
open," Lioe answered. "Jack Blue, the telekinetic, leader of the
prison population, and Mijja Lyall, who's a secret telepath and a member of the
research staff at the prison."
"Put me down for Jack Blue,"
Desjourdy answered promptly. "He -- is it he? -- sounds interesting. Can
you flip me a copy of the template?"
"Sure." Lioe touched keys to
call the file from storage and duplicate it for transmission. "Are you
ready?"
"Line's open and ready."
"Sending," Lioe said, and waited
while icons formed and shifted at the bottom of the screen.
"All set," Desjourdy said,
and in the same instant the icons vanished. "What time does the session
start?"
Lioe glanced at her reminders list.
"At twenty hours."
"I'll be there," Desjourdy
said. "And thanks, Quinn. I owe you for this."
"I think I owe you," Lioe
answered and closed down the connection.
"Who was that?" Roscha asked.
Lioe glanced at her warily, wondering
if she had heard a possessive note in the other woman's voice, but Roscha's
expression was merely curious. "A woman I know from Falconsreach, a Gamer.
I told you I was short a couple of people." _And I'm still short one
player, for Lyall_. She touched keys again to call up the list, to add
Desjourdy's name, and was startled to see that someone had already signed up
for Lyall. It was not a name she knew, but at least it solved the problem. She
added Desjourdy's name to the list, and closed down the system.
"Are you still interested in going
down to the Water?" Roscha asked, and Lioe shrugged.
"Why not?" She knew she
sounded less than enthusiastic, and added, "I would like to see the
procession."
"Leave your board," Roscha
said, pushing herself back from the little table. Lioe glanced at her
curiously, and Roscha made an embarrassed face. "If there's going to be
any trouble, it'll be tonight, kids steaming -- you know, a gang of them runs
through the crowd, grabs at whatever people're carrying? That doesn't often
happen down here, it's more something they do up in Dry Cut, or over on
Homestead, but you don't want to take chances."
"Right," Lioe said, allowing
the skepticism to color her voice, but she left her Gameboard and most of her
credit and cash with Gueremei.
The streets were already crowded, the
sun low on the horizon, so that the buildings cast long shadows and only the
open plazas were still bathed in amber light. Nearly everyone was masked, faces
obscured by strips or full stiffened ovals of beaded lace, or completely hidden
by fantastic, beak-nosed half-masks painted in every color of the rainbow. A
few, men and women in seemingly equal numbers, simply painted their faces, the
aged-ivory complexion that was common on Burning Bright making a perfect
backdrop for the delicate sprays of color. Gold flowers climbed one woman's
neck and cheek, appeared again at her bare shoulder, a golden vine winding
languidly down to her wrist and a hand that bloomed like a bouquet, each
knuckle sprouting a tiny, perfect rose. Her clothes were otherwise ordinary, a
sleeveless vest and docker's trousers, and Lioe caught herself staring at the
brilliant contrast, wishing she had her recorder with her. In one of the
plazas, a trio of drummers in black, shapeless robes and grotesque masks like
the skulls of birds beat a complex almost-tune, the high-pitched hand drum
weaving a stuttering, offbeat counterpoint to the steadier, full-toned notes of
the larger drums. A slim man in black -- _in Avellar's black and gold_, Lioe
realized, and felt a thrill of absolute delight run up her spine, _Avellar's
black and gold and Avellar's face for a mask_ -- paused to listen, and then
pushed the mask back on his head, reaching for something inside his jacket. He
pulled out a slim silvered pipe, began improvising against the beat of the
drum. The hand-drummer nodded to him, beckoned him with a movement of head and
chin, and the group -- a quartet now, for as long as the spirit seized them --
played on. A pair of women, their blank silver masks topped with fantastic
turbans, flowers and leaves dripping from braided coils of iridescent fabric,
danced with them for a moment, then darted away, the metal and glass that
weighted the hems of their enormous skirts flashing in the last of the
sunlight.
"You should mask," Roscha
said. "I want to mask."
Lioe hesitated, uncertain, and Roscha
caught her arm.
"Come on, Gelsomina was tied up in
the public cut not more than an hour ago. If we hurry, she might still be
there."
"I don't know," Lioe said,
but let herself be towed through the busy streets. Roscha paused at the first
canal bridge, looking right and left as though searching for a scent, then
started left along the bank. This was a narrow waterway, barely wide enough for
two gondas to ride side by side, and the embankment was equally narrow, so that
she had to step carefully to keep up with Roscha. She dodged another Avellar --
a woman this time, but with the same familiar features shaping the hard-faced
mask, the corners of this one's mouth drawn down in a frown that was almost
tragedy -- and nearly ran into a street vendor, his cart folded to its minimum
width. She murmured an apology, and saw Roscha beckoning from the bend in the
bank ahead of them.
The streetlights were starting to come
on -- the sun must be down by now, Lioe realized, though it hardly seemed to
make much difference in the shadowed streets -- and their light fell into the
canal's dark water. A boat, a small barge with its mast unstepped and laid from
bow to stern, lay at the center of one pool of light, and a woman looked up at
them from the boat's low deck. She was dressed as the Viverina, rich purple
robe embroidered with dragons, sleek black wig that fell almost to her knees,
skulls with bright red eyes braided into that mass, and she was laughing at
them from behind the painted mask. Dozens, a hundred masks and piled cloth that
must be costumes filled every available centimeter of the deck; masks hung from
the horizontal mast, crowded cheek to cheek along its length, and still others
dangled from the crossbar of the Viverina's spear.
"Gelsomina," Roscha said.
"Are you still selling?"
"Since you're here, I suppose
so," the Viverina answered. She was older than Lioe had guessed at first,
about sixty, but straight as the spear she carried. "What will it be,
something from the Game?"
"Yes, if you have it," Roscha
answered, and the woman beckoned to her.
"Well, come aboard, then."
She looked up at Lioe, tilting her head inside the painted mask. "And you
too. Are you here for a mask?"
"I don't know," Lioe began,
and Roscha answered for her.
"Yes, probably." She dropped
down onto the deck -- not a long drop, not much more than a meter -- and the
boat rocked under her. Gelsomina kept her balance effortlessly, and beckoned
for Lioe to follow. Lioe hesitated, but lowered herself more carefully onto the
unsteady planks. The boat rocked anyway, and she steadied herself against the
mast. It shifted under her hand, and the faces danced, seeming almost alive in
the streetlight's glow.
"These are beautiful," she
said, and didn't quite realize she'd spoken aloud until Gelsomina bowed to her.
"Thank you. But then, I enjoy my
work."
"Do you have any Avellars left, Na
Mina?" Roscha asked, and Gelsomina shook her head.
"No, child, not a one. There's
some off-worlder doing a scenario with him at the heart of it; I sold my last
one before noon."
"Damn," Roscha said, and then,
belatedly remembering her manners, "Na Mina, this is a friend of mine,
Quinn Lioe. She's the one who wrote that scenario."
"I've heard a lot about you,"
Gelsomina said. She tilted her head to one side, studying Lioe from behind the
mask. "What were you looking for, do you know?"
"Thanks," Lioe said, and
heard her own uncertainty in her voice. "I didn't really have anything in
mind. I've never been on Burning Bright during Storm." She scanned the
rows of masks in the hopes of finding something, and, to her surprise, one face
seemed to leap out at her from the row crowded on the mast. It was a full mask,
with a heavy, elaborately braided wig covering the back of the head. One half
of the face was plain, smooth, a bland collection of planes and angles,
pleasing enough, but nothing out of the ordinary; the other was deformed and
distorted like the carvings on a ritual mask, the cheek eaten to the bone, the
mouth drawn down by a scar like a sneer, the eye hidden by a painted patch. And
the rest of the scars were decorated, too, layered with color so that they
became almost an abstract painting of a face. Lioe reached out to touch it,
drawn and repelled at the same time, and Gelsomina nodded.
"That's from one of LaChacalle's
novels -- Helike, from _The Witch-Vizier_. Do you know it?"
"I'm afraid I don't," Lioe
answered, and didn't know if she was glad or sorry. The new name, the last name
on the session list, had been LaChacalle. "Is LaChacalle a Gamer?"
Gelsomina shrugged one shoulder.
"She used to be. I haven't seen her much lately -- she quit about when
Ambidexter did. They were old friends."
"She's playing tonight, I
think," Lioe said. "Or someone with that name is, anyway."
"There's only one of her,"
Gelsomina said.
"What about Hazard?" Roscha
asked, and Gelsomina shook her head.
"No, but I do have Cor-Clar
Sensmerce. I remember you used to play her."
"Thanks," Roscha said, and
Gelsomina turned to the lines of masks, running her staff idly along the rows
until she found the one she wanted.
"There you are. It's twenty
_real_. Or we can make a trade."
Roscha stopped, her hand on the purse
inside her belt. "What trade?"
"You needn't sound so
suspicious," Gelsomina said. "Are you going to watch the
parade?"
"We were, yes," Roscha
answered, and despite Gelsomina's words still sounded wary. Lioe grinned, and
then wondered if she should be more cautious.
"I'd rather watch it from the
Water, myself, with all the stock aboard," Gelsomina went on, "and I
wouldn't mind having some younger bodies to help me get this cow down to the
canal mouth. I'll trade you each a mask, and bring you back to your club -- is
it Shadows you're playing at? as close as I can get, then -- before the session
starts."
Roscha relaxed visibly. "That
would make life easier."
Lioe shrugged. "Can we get back in
time?"
"When is the session?"
Gelsomina asked.
"Twentieth hour," Roscha
said, and looked at Lioe. "It shouldn't be a problem. The parade starts at
dark -- seventeenth hour."
Lioe glanced sideways, checking the
time, and shrugged again, willing to let herself be overruled. "If you're
sure, why not? It should be worth seeing."
"It always is," Gelsomina
answered. "There's nothing quite like our Carnival, not anywhere in human
space."
_Or anywhere at all_, Lioe thought.
Under Gelsomina's instructions, she and Roscha stowed most of the masks and
costumes that cluttered the decking in the storage cells that ran along the
gunwales, but left the ones that lined the mast. Then Roscha freed the mooring
lines while Gelsomina took her place in the steering well. Lioe, knowing
nothing of boats, crouched beside the mast and waited to be told what to do.
The motor coughed and caught, settled almost instantly to a steady purr. Roscha
shoved them free of the embankment, and the barge swung out into the channel,
heading toward the Inland Water.
The people on the banks were moving
toward the Water, too, knots and groups of them in bright matching costumes, a
few who walked alone, families with strings of children going hand in hand
under an elder's watchful eye. There were more boats on the canal, too, some
smaller than Lioe had seen before, little more than a shell with a racketing
motor slung over the stern, and, of course, the inevitable mob of gondas. A
Lockwardens' patrol boat moved silently through the crowd, its flashing light
sending blue shadows across the water and along its own black hull. The
civilian craft all carried bright lights at stern and bow -- the littlest
shells had handlights rigged to the motors -- and even as Lioe noticed that,
lights blossomed along the sides of Gelsomina's barge. They were directed
outward, shielded from the boat's occupants, but Lioe could see their
brilliance reflected in the water. It was a beautiful effect, the shape of the
barge outlined in light, but she guessed it was as much precaution as
decoration. There would be a lot of traffic on the canals tonight: it was a
good time to be visible.
Horns sounded as they came up on the
wide feeder channel that carried local traffic down to the Water, and Lioe
jumped as Gelsomina sounded their own horn in answer. The barge swung over,
stately, Roscha standing ready in the bow, boatpole in hand to fend off any
unwary craft, and then Gelsomina had tucked them neatly into the line of
traffic. The canal was jammed with barges and gondas, and here and there a
bigger commercial boat -- heavy barges and seiners in about equal numbers --
loomed above the crowd, their sides dripping with strings of chaser lights. A
heavy barge swayed past, set Gelsomina's boat rocking in its wake, the strings
of lights dipping into the water as it heeled over slightly to avoid a passing
gonda. Its open deck was crowded with people of all ages, from babies in
flotation suits to old men and women in support chairs. _Families of the
regular crews?_ Lioe wondered, but it was too noisy to ask.
Blatting one-note trumpets sounded from
the walkways that lined the shore -- children, mostly, carrying the brightly
colored horns that were a full meter long, taller than some of the children who
sounded them -- and were answered by another clutch of children on the heavy
barge's deck. Other boats took up the sound, and Lioe covered her ears,
wincing, until the boats had passed and the shore children had admitted defeat.
People called to each other, their words drowned in the general din, and a man
dressed all in bells danced on a bollard, the clanging all but inaudible as
Gelsomina's barge slipped past only a few meters from the wall. A disk of light
swept across the crowd, and Lioe looked up to see the familiar shape of a
hovering security drone scanning the crowd. The Lockwardens' insignia was
picked out in lights on its stubby wings. A cheer, ironic but not hostile, rose
from the crowd as the light touched them.
Farther up the canal, there were
whoops, and then a splash, the sound distinct and chilling even in the uproar.
Lioe turned her head sharply, even though it had been too loud to have been a
child, saw Roscha's body a tense shadow against the shore lights. Then, as
suddenly, she saw her relax as two drones flung their lights onto the source of
the sound. Caught in that double disk of light, a dripping boy hauled himself
back onto a fingerling dock, shaking water from the ruined feathers that
decorated his mask. He shook his fist at another boy, but a third grabbed his
shoulders, and hustled him away. One of the drones followed the group for a
moment longer, then turned away, taking the light with it. As the bright circle
swung briefly aimless along the buildings that fronted the canal, it hit a
doorway where a man and a woman were locked in blind embrace, her skirt rucked
up to her waist, and flashed away again. Lioe blinked, not sure if she'd seen
the woman reaching not for her partner but for his wallet, but there was
nothing she could do about it if she had.
The feeder widened suddenly as it
opened onto the Water. Gondas were clustered in flotillas along either bank,
filled and overfilled with masked and costumed figures, standing shapes
balanced precariously against the chop where the two currents met. The Water
itself was black and empty, except for a few speeders that carried the blue
lights of the Lockwardens; another Lockwardens' speeder, throttled back so far
that it barely made headway against the chop, moved along the line of gondas, a
tall man calling instructions from the pilot's well.
"Which way?" Gelsomina called
from her place in the stern, and Lioe saw Roscha look right and left before she
answered.
"It looks clearer down toward the
Warden's Channel."
"Right." The boat swung left
as Gelsomina answered, pulling out around the mob of smaller boats, and Lioe
felt rather than heard the beat of the engine strengthen as they picked up
speed.
"Do you see a buoy?"
Gelsomina called.
"No, not yet -- wait." Roscha
leaned precariously out over the bow, one hand clinging tight to the mast.
"Wait, yes, past that seiner there's a free point."
Gelsomina did not answer, but Lioe felt
the boat surge again, as though she'd opened a throttle. The barge passed two
more ships -- another barge filled with people costumed from the Game, several
Avellars among them, and then a seiner, its nets spread to let a horde of
children climb to a better view -- and then started to slow. They were almost
on top of it before Lioe saw the mooring point. Roscha had had it in view long
before, however, and caught it easily with the boatpole's hooked end. Gelsomina
saw the movement, the swoop and jerk of the pole against the shore lights, and
reversed the engines. The barge slid neatly up to the orange-painted buoy,
coming to an almost perfect stop against its scarred sides. Roscha looped a
cable into place, tugged twice to snug it home. Flares blossomed in the
distance, toward the entrance to the channel.
"They're coming," Roscha
called, and Gelsomina pulled herself up out of the steering well, came to sit
on the unstepped mast. Lioe seated herself beside the older woman, careful of
the masks and the barge's unpredictable roll, and Roscha joined them a moment
later, tucking the boatpole neatly under their feet. A larger Lockwardens' boat,
a slim needle of a ship twice as long as a gonda, slid past down the center of
the channel, a tail of spray gleaming behind it.
"In that compartment there,"
Gelsomina said, "you'll find a bottle of raki."
Roscha grinned, and rummaged in the
shallow space until she had found the bottle and three small, unmatching cups.
She poured a cup for each of them, and came back to sit beside Lioe.
"Health," she said, and the three touched cups.
They did not have to wait long for the
parade to appear. Lioe sipped cautiously at the bitter drink -- it tasted of
anise, a flavor she didn't like -- and looked south again just as another flare
blossomed in the darkness over the Warden's Channel. A trio of speeders, all
with Lockwardens' lights and markings, swept into view, and another group of
three followed more slowly, peeling off to take up stations just inside the
line of spectators.
"Soon now," Gelsomina said,
and Roscha said, "Mommy..." She caught a five-year-old's whine so
perfectly that Lioe laughed aloud.
"Five more minutes,"
Gelsomina said.
Lioe looked south again, still smiling,
toward the light at the point of Mainwarden Island, and saw a dark shape
eclipse the light. _The parade?_ she thought, and Roscha whooped beside her.
"There they are!"
Gelsomina fumbled in the folds of her
costume, and produced a slim set of night glasses. She laid her staff aside and
used both hands to work the focusing buttons. Lioe narrowed her eyes at the
dark platform, wondering how anyone would be able to see anything on that
distant deck. And then a giant figure unfolded itself from the barge, a woman
in a full skirt and low-cut bodice, a giantess with a crown of blue-white
stars, and more stars draped and scattered across her dress. She stood for a
moment, a sketch in light and shadows, and then spotlights came on, revealing
her full glories. There was a gasp from the crowds on the banks and on the
boats to either side, and then shrill applause. It had to be some kind of puppet,
Lioe knew, an enormous automaton that swept into an astonishingly graceful
curtsy as the sound of the cheers reached it, but the illusion was nearly
perfect. The face was serenely beautiful, elegantly proportioned; as Lioe
watched, the features shifted, rearranging themselves into a gentle smile.
"Oh, they're not going to like
that," Gelsomina said. "Half the crowd will miss the lighting."
"No, look," Roscha answered,
pointing as the spotlights faded again, leaving the giantess wreathed in her
own lights. "Oh, very nice."
Gelsomina nodded, fumbling again with
her glasses.
"It must be, what, ten meters
tall," Lioe said, and Roscha nodded.
"Between ten and twelve. Whose is
it, Na Mina?"
"Who pays for them all?" Lioe
asked.
"Civic groups," Gelsomina
answered, not taking her glasses from her eyes. "That's Estens there --
one of the Five Points Families, Na Lioe. They, the Five Points Families, I
mean, and the Merchant Investors Syndicate, the Five Points Bank, cartels like
Yardmasters and Fishers Co-op, and the Lockwardens, of course, each one
sponsors a barge. Once a group's bought the framework, it's just a matter of
dressing it each year."
"It's a way of proving your
importance," Roscha said.
Gelsomina went on as though she hadn't
spoken, lowering the glasses into her lap. "I used to dress for
Yardmasters, a long time ago, and then for the MIS. Before it got so
political."
Lioe nodded, not really understanding,
and a second barge swept into view. This one carried a massively muscled male
shape, naked except for a blue-and-gold loincloth and heavy golden bracelets
running from its wrists almost to its elbows. Its head was the head of a bull,
the horns tipped with gold as well, and its body glittered in the spotlight, as
though its skin were sheathed in some kind of faintly mottled coating, a gold
iridescence like tiny scales. It threw back its head as the crowd's noise
reached it, massive mouth opening in a silent roar, and beat the air with its
fists.
"Five Points Bank?" Roscha
said, and Gelsomina nodded.
"More money than sense. But that's
always been their problem."
"It looks," Roscha said
slowly, frowning, "you know, it looks almost hsaia, with that skin. I
wonder if they meant it?"
"I doubt it," Gelsomina said.
"I heard talk about this. They hired Marrin Artisans to come up with a new
way to make the sheathing, out of sequensas -- rejects and scrap, mind you, but
still. You can imagine what that cost." She stared at the figure for a
long moment, and added, grudgingly, "Still, it does look pretty good from
here."
"It still looks hsaia to me,"
Roscha said. "And the FPB does a lot of business with Hsaioi-An."
"And that," Gelsomina said,
"is what's wrong with the parade these days. Remember the year the Five
Points Families each did one of the Four Judges? That started it, once their
candidate got elected that year. Everything's got a political angle, some kind
of message -- even when you don't mean it to, somebody's going to see it. The
old days were a lot better."
Roscha looked away, her expression at
once embarrassed and mulish in the dim light, and Lioe said hastily,
"Who's that coming?"
Gelsomina adjusted her glasses again,
focusing on the third barge that was just coming into view its deck still empty
of its puppet. "MIS."
_Merchant Investors' Syndicate_, Lioe
translated, and leaned forward a little. On the distant deck, a dark figure
lifted its head, rose forward as though to its knees, and hung there for a
moment, an indistinct shadow against the thin bank of light that was the far
bank of the Water. Lioe caught her breath, heard a shocked murmur from the
people filling the seiner to her right, and the same questioning noises from
the crowd on the bank behind her. Gelsomina smiled faintly, said nothing. Then
the figure straightened fully, and the lights came on, revealing a shape in a
nipwaisted coat and the blood-red shoulder-cape-and-hood of Captain Rider. She
was a familiar template in the Game, one of the heroic almost-pirates who
defended the Scattered Worlds against the Imperium, and Lioe waited eagerly for
her to lower her hood. The puppet lifted both hands -- light glinted from the
ring, Captain Rider's seal, worn on its right forefinger, and Lioe smiled at
the careful detail -- and slipped the hood back. There was something not quite
right about the face, though, something unfamiliar, added or taken away from
the template. Lioe frowned, puzzled, and realized that the puppet's eyes didn't
match, one blue, one brown. Behind her, the crowd cheered.
"Holy shit," Roscha said,
"that's Berengaria."
"More politics," Gelsomina
said, but did not sound particularly displeased this time.
"The governor?" Lioe said.
Roscha nodded, grinning, and raised her
voice to carry over the cheers and shrill whistles from the crowd. "She's
one of theirs, the MIS's, I mean. And they're proud of her."
"She's favored them enough, you
mean," Gelsomina said.
_For all she hates politics_, Lioe
thought, _she knows a lot about what's going on_. Still, it was a clever move,
associating Governor Berengaria -- who from all accounts supported Burning
Bright's freedom from both the metagovernments, and leaned to the Republic, her
friends said, only because they were less of a threat than the Hsaioi-An --
with Captain Rider, protector of the Scattered Worlds. _Not subtle, admittedly,
but clever_.
"And Rider's not what you'd call a
Beauty," Gelsomina went on, her voice rising, querulous.
"She's surely not a Beast,"
Roscha answered, and Lioe intervened again.
"What is the rule?"
"There isn't really a rule,"
Gelsomina said, grudgingly. "Not written down, anyway. But the tradition
is to alternate the pageant barges, a Beauty and a Beast, and the figures are
usually taken from mythology. Not from the Game."
"The Game's a kind of
mythology," Lioe said mildly, overriding something Roscha started to say,
and after a moment the john-boat pilot subsided.
"Oh, I know," Gelsomina
answered. "It's just -- oh, very God, I hate getting old. You always end
up sounding like your own mother."
Lioe grinned and saw Roscha relax even
further. "Who designs the puppets?" she asked at random, hoping to
turn the conversation even further, and saw a fourth barge pull into view.
"Who's that?" Roscha
demanded.
Gelsomina worked her glasses, shook her
head. "Can't tell yet."
On the distant deck, a figure unfolded,
barely rising out of a crouch before the spotlights struck it. A dancing satyr
leered back at the crowd, goat-legged, rude horns jutting from its forehead and
implied beneath its gilded fig leaf; it was crowned with oak and ivy, golden
acorns -- _they must be the size of melons_, Lioe realized, _too big to span in
my cupped hands_ -- and carried a double flute. The cheers were less than
enthusiastic, to her surprise, and she looked at Roscha.
"It's been done before,"
Roscha said, and Gelsomina shook her head.
"It's Soresin, too. I expected
better, after what I heard they spent this year."
Then, quite suddenly, the satyr began
to move. As though it had heard the comments, it thumbed its nose to each bank
in turn, still grinning, then lifted its flute to its thick lips. It began to
play, and, seconds later, the sound reached the watching crowd, a thin,
seductive melody that carried the urge to dance and weep in the same quick,
minor-keyed strain. A moment later, the puppet began to dance to its own
piping, the movements timed so perfectly that for a long moment Lioe forgot the
barge, forgot that it was a puppet, and saw only the ghost of an abandoned god
dancing against the horizon.
"Now that's more like it,"
Gelsomina said, and her words were nearly drowned by the cheering from the
shore. On the seiner next to them, some of the people were dancing, sketching
the same quick steps to the satyr's music. Lioe glanced toward them, saw a
young man clasp a woman's hands and swing her in a sweeping circle. She leaned
back, eyes closed, bright skirt flying, her long hair tumbling loose from a
Carnival crown of braids, brushing the decks. She came upright laughing, and
Lioe looked away from the wild abandon in her face.
"If that doesn't take all the
awards," Roscha began, and her voice trailed off into nothing.
Gelsomina nodded, but her expression
was less certain. "Everything for puppetry, certainly."
The barge that followed Soresin's
dancing satyr carried another female puppet, this one tall and very slim,
dressed in a short, one-shouldered tunic and carrying a spear nearly as tall as
the puppet itself. Light flared from the fingers of her free hand; she touched
the spear's point, and fire ran up and down the shaft. It was impressive, but
after the dancing satyr anything would have been an anticlimax.
The next barge carried a stooped and
cloaked figure, red lights glowing like eyes from the shadows within its hood
-- "Imbriac," Gelsomina said, "one of the Five Points
Families" -- that received no more than polite applause, and the next was
a crowned man, very handsome, sponsored by a fishing cooperative called
Tcheirin Sibs. The next barge slid into view, its puppet already outlined
against the lights of the distant shore, a stooped and crooked figure, one
shoulder higher than the rest. The lights came on, revealing the twisted body,
the sneering scowl of one of the Game's grand villains, the Baron's henchman
Ettanin Hasse. The puppet stood for a long moment, only its head moving as it
looked from side to side, mouth still twisted in contemptuous amusement, and
then, quite slowly, it lifted a mask to its face. The mask was perfect,
ordinary, a man's face without deformity; the puppet set it into place, and
straightened fully, the crooked shoulder and twisted body easing away. There
was a murmur, approving and uneasy all at once, before the applause. The puppet
lowered the mask again, and sank back into its first character.
"That," Gelsomina said,
"was Chrestil-Brisch."
"That takes guts," Roscha
said. "Considering that's what most people think of them anyway."
Lioe glanced at her, and Roscha
shrugged. "They've got a reputation for being, well, chancy. You're never
really sure where you stand with them -- or so they say."
Lioe looked back toward the line of
barges to watch the next group of puppets mime their reactions against the
starless sky. There were only three more -- a female shape with a fan, from a
popular video series; something with the head and shoulders of a dragon,
beautiful but incomprehensible; and, last and best, neither Beauty nor Beast, a
shape that seemed to be made of glass and mirrors, each curve of its body
turned to facets and angles. It barely moved -- "too fragile to move
much," Gelsomina said -- but it threw back the spotlights in a storm of
white fire. It was all too much, and Lioe found herself strangely glad when the
last of them slid past. Gelsomina sighed, and motioned for Roscha to release the
mooring.
They made their way back to Shadows by
the quickest route, up the Crooked River to the turnoff below the Old Dike,
then back through the maze of canals to the Liander canal just south of
Shadows. The streets were quieter here -- most people were still on the Water,
or in the streets and plazas along its banks -- and Lioe was not sure if she
was relieved or worried to see a security drone sail past overhead.
"I appreciate your help,"
Gelsomina said. "It's nice to see the parade from a decent
viewpoint." She had pushed the Viverina's mask back onto her forehead to
see while she steered, but the wig was still in place, the skulls clattering
against each other.
"Thank you," Lioe said.
"I didn't -- I don't know what I was expecting, but that was just
incredible."
Gelsomina smiled. "And I owe you
masks, too. Roscha, do you want Cor-Clar?"
"Yes, and thank you," Roscha
answered, and reached with unerring speed for the rich brown-skinned mask.
"And you, Na Lioe?" Gelsomina
asked.
Lioe shook her head. "I can't
decide. They're all gorgeous, and I don't know who I want to be."
"Well, you're not leaving
empty-handed," Gelsomina declared. "We had a bargain." She
turned slowly, leaning on the Viverina's stick, running her gaze along the
masks still hanging from the unstepped mast. They looked back at her, their
colors mellowed in the amber light from the embankment. She smiled then, and
reached out with her staff. "Take that one."
"If you're sure, Na
Gelsomina," Lioe began, and the woman nodded.
"Take it. I insist."
"Thank you," Lioe said,
helplessly, and loosened the mask from the clips that held it. It was made of
stiffened lace, roughly formed to the shape of a human face, with a single
six-millimeter stone of clear faceted glass set above the mouth like a beauty
mark. The web of lace, black and faintly metallic, looked almost transparent in
the light. "Thanks," she said again, and let Roscha pull her up onto
the embankment. She looked back once, to see Gelsomina -- the Viverina again,
her mask pulled down into place and staff in hand -- standing beside the row of
masks that looked almost alive in the amber light.
"We've got some time," Roscha
said. "Do you want to stop for coffee, or something?"
Lioe looked sideways, found a patch of
grey stone that would let her see the chronometer's numbers. In a little more
than an hour she would have to start the night's session, and she shook her
head decisively. "No. I want to get back to Shadows." She was aware
suddenly that Roscha was frowning, added a belated, "Thanks anyway."
Roscha shrugged one shoulder.
"Suit yourself."
"Some other time," Lioe said,
and got no answer. They kept walking through the patches of light and shadow
that filled the streets, pools of light puddling in the intersections, shadow
creeping back at the middle of the blocks, where the streetlights did not
overlap. Distant music wound through the darkness, fits and snatches that she
could almost weave into a tune. She tilted her head to one side to listen --
she didn't even quite recognize the instruments, except for the heavy bass and
the thin whine of metal strings from a violo -- and started when Roscha's hand
brushed her own.
"Hey, I'm sorry," Roscha
said, in an affronted voice and Lioe shook her head.
"I'm sorry, you just startled me.
That's all."
There was a moment of silence, and then
Roscha looked away. "I'm sorry," she said again, in an entirely
different tone.
"It's all right," Lioe said,
and did not move away when Roscha reached for her hand again. They walked on
hand in hand, their footsteps echoing on the paving, and then Roscha pulled
away again. Lioe bit back annoyance -- she didn't need this, not before a
session -- but said nothing. _Whatever's wrong with her, she'll have to get
over it on her own; I don't have the time to nursemaid her_. Then, in spite of
herself, she gave a rueful smile. _Why are my one-night stands always more
complicated than they should be?_
--------
*Evening, Day 1*
_Storm: The Chrestil-Brisch_
_Palazze,
Five Points_
Damian Chrestil stood on the wide
balcony that ran along the base of the palazze's roof, watching the fireworks
that bloomed over the Wet Districts and the Inland Water. Each burst drew a
murmur of appreciation from the other guests, watching from the open doorways
farther down the roof, but he enjoyed the annual display too much to share it.
The bursts of red and gold flared like flowers, drowning the stars and the
starlike lights of the distant buildings. He would rather have been watching
from the Water itself, where the sky rained golden fire with each explosion,
but Chrestillio had asked -- _and we all agreed, in some perverse fit of
compliance_ -- that they all attend the family's party as a show of solidarity.
Customs-and-Intelligence was still asking questions about the Demeter shipment,
and it was important that they look as though they trusted each other, and
weren't worrying about anything. The fireworks slackened, the breathing space
before the finale, and Damian glanced over his shoulder toward the guests who
lined the balcony. About half of them were masked, all from the Five Points
Families: the Old City did not mask, preferred more refined pastimes, but the
real power had never needed refinement. Damian smiled at the thought, nodded to
a thin woman -- _she was something in the bank_, he thought -- who lifted her
glass to him, and looked away.
The finale caught them all by surprise,
and there was a collective gasp as the first burst flowered into an enormous
spray of red that turned to gold and then fell in streamers of light toward the
distant Water. Another shell burst into a flare of purple brightening to pink,
and then another, and another, so that the balls of light hung for a moment on
a trail of gold fire like flowers on a stem. Even as they fell, dissolving into
a shower of sparks, four more shells flew up, trailing thin lines of flame,
exploded into flat sheets of light. From the Water, Damian knew, it would be as
though the world were frozen for an instant by that crack of light, and he
sighed for what he was missing.
In his pocket, the house remote buzzed
softly, a tingling vibration against his thigh. He swore under his breath, and
reached for it, cupping his fingers over the control points. The message
vibrated against his hand: _urgent message, come at once_. He swore again, but
the code was his highest priority. He glanced over his shoulder again, saw no
one watching, and turned the remote to touch the control combination that
released the gate to the outside stair. It was in shadow, and everyone's
attention would be on the finale for at least half an hour. He looked again
toward the Water -- red and green halos flared around a golden center -- and
made himself turn away.
The staircase spiraled down the outside
of the palazze, with only a single entrance before the ground level. He twisted
the remote again to release that lock, and let himself in past impassive human
security to the third floor's secondary hall. The corridor connected with his
own rooms; he made his way there, the lights growing brighter at his approach,
dimming as he moved away, let himself into the suite. Lights were blinking on
the communications console, but he paused long enough to clear the windows
completely before he crossed to the control board and entered the security
codes. The little screen sprang to life, but Damian ignored it, tilted the boxy
display so that he could see at least some of the fireworks through the window
beyond it.
In the screen, ji-Imbaoa glared at him,
claws tapping somewhere out of sight. "Your plans are starting to
unravel," he said, without preamble.
Damian Chrestil lifted an eyebrow at
him -- _how did I come to join forces with him?_ -- said aloud, "Weren't
you able to get the codes?"
Ji-Imbaoa waved away that question.
"They are coming. There has been some trouble with the transmitter; I've
had to go through the commercial links. But that is not the issue."
"Forgive me, Na Speaker, but I
thought precisely that was the cause of this delay," Damian said.
"The codes are on their way,"
ji-Imbaoa said again. "Do you doubt me?"
Damian bit back his anger, waved a hand
in apology. "No. I don't doubt they'll get here." _Eventually_.
"I accept the apology."
It was only a formal phrase,
effectively meaningless, but Damian felt his hackles rise. He controlled his
temper with an effort, and said, "Then, Na Speaker, what's happened to
upset you?"
"Ransome," ji-Imbaoa said.
"He has concluded that the Game is a blind, and he is encouraging
Chauvelin to look elsewhere."
Damian frowned at the screen, a cold
knot forming in the pit of his stomach. If that was true, if Ransome was back
on the port nets, and with Customs-and-Intelligence still asking questions
about the shipment from Demeter, it would be only too easy to track down what
was really going on. _Easy for Ransome, anyway_. He took a deep breath, trying
to banish fear, and ji-Imbaoa went on.
"I have taken steps to forestall
him, but I don't know how long it will last."
"Good," Damian said, and then
considered. "What did you do?"
"The only thing I could do,"
ji-Imbaoa answered. "I have made it a matter of honor and prestige that
Ransome continue with the Game -- I have wagered my name and my fathers' that
there will be something there for him to find. I trust that it's so."
_Do I care about your fathers' names?_
Damian ran his hand through his hair, tried to consider things calmly.
"There are things for him to worry about, yes," he said, "and I
can arrange for him to find some more political material." _I think. If
Cella can get time_. "But under these circumstances, Na Speaker -- let me
put it plainly, if you don't get me those codes, tonight or tomorrow, this deal
will fall through. At a high cost to both of us, money and prestige
alike."
"Let me remind you,"
ji-Imbaoa said, his hands suddenly as still as Damian had ever seen them,
"that you have significantly more to lose than I."
"I've done all that I
promised," Damian answered, and left the rest unsaid.
"I'll get you the codes,"
ji-Imbaoa said. "But you will have to keep Ransome busier." He cut
the connection before Damian could reply.
Damian swore at the blank screen,
slapped the controls with more force than was really necessary. But ji-Imbaoa
was lord and master of Highhopes, and if the jericho-human colony there was
going to trade with Burning Bright without the interference of the brokers
backed by the tzu Tsinra-an, they had to work through ji-Imbaoa. And ji-Imbaoa
had to get his share of the profits. The system shut itself off, and he stood
for a moment staring at the sky beyond the long windows. The last shells made a
curtain of fire, sheets of gold and red that frayed to long streamers against
the invisible stars, but he barely saw it, lost in calculations. If Ransome
wasn't distracted by the Game, his own security was probably inadequate: he
paid well, employed the best experts, but Ransome was a superb netwalker in his
own right, and he knew too many people within the systems. If he couldn't crack
the security wall himself, he would know someone who could give or sell him the
keys. Damian tapped his fingers against the case, winced at the echo of
ji-Imbaoa's gesture. He'd increase security -- _it's a good thing I thought to
organize a blockade of the port feed already, but I'll have to do something
more. And I can't transfer the lachesi to the transshipment group without those
codes_. Still, it would be better if Ransome stayed in the Game.
The door chime sounded then, and the
remote buzzed gently against his thigh. He frowned -- _no one should know I'm here_
-- and touched the code that threw the security feed onto the small display.
Cella was waiting in the hall, demure in a sheer overdress. Damian's frown
deepened, and he touched the controls that released the lock.
"They're starting to wonder where
you are," Cella said, without preamble.
"Damn them," Damian said, and
then, "Which them, anyway?"
"Your siblings, mostly,"
Cella answered, and Damian made a face.
"I'd better go up, then."
"I do need to talk to you," Cella
said.
Damian Chrestil looked at her. "I
hope it's good news. I've not been having a pleasant evening."
Cella smiled wryly. "I'm afraid
not."
Damian sighed. "Well?"
"I suppose it's good and bad, at
that. I stopped in at Shadows before I came here. Lioe -- Ransome's pilot -- is
running a session tonight, and I wanted to look over the play list. The good
news is that Ambidexter himself is back in the Game -- he's even playing
Harmsway -- but the bad news is that Kichi Desjourdy's also part of the
session. And as best I can discover, it was Lioe herself who asked her to
play."
Damian's hand closed convulsively on
the pocket remote, and there was a squeal of protest from the mechanism. He
released it hastily, and Cella went on.
"Desjourdy is known as a Gamer,
but I thought you ought to know."
"Damn," Damian said softly,
as much to himself as to Cella, and he stared into space for a long moment,
trying to order his thoughts. The sky beyond the windows was very black, the
fireworks over: _no inspiration there_, he thought, and turned his eyes away.
"This Lioe," he began, "is she still seeing Roscha, or was it a
one-night affair?"
Cella shrugged. "I don't know.
Roscha was slated to play Avellar, but Lioe seems very taken with Ransome. And
he with her, for that matter."
"So." Damian shoved his hands
into his pockets again, running his fingers over the remote's smoothly indented
surface as though it were a talisman. _If I can get Roscha to watch Lioe --
Roscha's done that kind of job before, she can certainly handle it -- then I
can be sure to find out if she contacts Desjourdy again_. He touched the
remote's control points again, and the image in the display screens shifted,
became a memo board. He leaned over the keyboard, typed a quick message into
the wharfingers' computers -- CONTACT JAFIERA ROSCHA 2 STORM AM, SEND HER TO MY
OFFICE AS SOON AS SHE ARRIVES -- and set it loose on the main systems. _And if
all else fails, she can deal with Lioe, and I can get Ransome out of the way_.
"Can you get a transcript of this session for me?"
Cella blinked, startled. "Yes, of
course. It'll be on all the Game nets by three this morning if not before.
Why?"
"I just want to see how they
behave," Damian said vaguely. _I want to see if Roscha thinks she's
competing with Ransome, and I want to see how good she is at it. Because if she
has any grudge against him, I can make good use of it_. "Dump it to my
private system as soon as you can get a copy, please."
"I'll do that," Cella said.
Damian Chrestil smiled crookedly.
"Then let's rejoin the party."
--------
*Interlude*
_Game/varRebel.2.04/_
_subPsi.
1.22/ver22.1/ses4.24_
They crouched in the uncertain shelter
of the cargo bay, hearing the clatter of boots recede along the walkways to
either side. The overhanging shelves, piled high with crates, gave some cover,
but they all knew that if the baron's guards came back out onto the center
catwalk it would take a miracle to keep from being seen. Galan Africa/ALEMO
TOMSEY frowned over the power pack of their only heavy laser, working
methodically to mate a salvaged blaster cell into the nonstandard housing. Jack
Blue/KICHI DESJOURDY sprawled gasping against the nearest stack of crates, hand
against his chest as though it pained him. Mijja Lyall/LACHACALLE crouched at
his side, one hand on his wrist, as though somehow knowing his pulse rate could
help. Blue's great bulk had displaced the lower crates slightly, and Gallio
Hazard/HALLY VENTURA edged out of its line of fall, his pistol drawn and ready.
He knelt cautiously in the shelter of a second stack of crates, laid a fresh
clip on the floor beside him, and settled to wait. Lord Faro/PETER SAVIAN and
Ibelin Belfortune/KAZIO BELEDIN crouched as always a little apart from the
rest, Faro a little ahead of the wild-eyed Belfortune, as though he could
protect him.
"We're still waiting for this
contact," Desir of Harmsway/AMBIDEXTER said. "Well, Avellar? What happened
this time?"
"How can I know?"
Avellar/JAFIERA ROSCHA answered. "Something's gone wrong, obviously."
She smiled suddenly. "I say we press on, Desir, unless you want to go
back."
Harmsway looked away, made a face of
disgust. Avellar's grin faded, and she went to kneel on the warped flooring
beside Jack Blue. "How is it?"
"Not so good." Blue's voice
was thin and wheezing, and, behind his back, Lyall shook her head. She reached
into her much-depleted kit, came out with a slim injector, but hesitated, and
did not lay it against the telekinetic's arm.
"If you weren't so damn fat, you
wouldn't be in this bad shape," Harmsway snapped. "Christ, what a
waste."
Blue frowned, his eyes losing their
focus for a moment. A cracked piece of the floor tiling snapped loose and flung
itself at Harmsway's face. He ducked away from it, but too late, and the tile's
sharp edge drew a thin line of blood along one cheekbone. Avellar snatched the
tile out of the air before it could strike anything else.
"A waste to bring me," Blue
said, mimicking Harmsway's precise voice. "You didn't bring me, little man
-- "
"Shut up," Avellar said, and
was obeyed. "Save your strength," she added, and looked at Harmsway.
"The ship's right there, Desir, just waiting for us. Go right ahead."
Harmsway looked longingly at the cargo
door, only forty meters away across the width of the warehouse. It was even
open, the ship's hatch gleaming in the loading lights, and he could feel that
the last barrier was sealed only with a palm lock, the kind of thing he could
open in his sleep ... if he could reach it. His lips thinned, and he looked
away.
"Avellar." Lyall's voice was
suddenly sharp with fear, and Avellar swung to face her.
"I think -- " Lyall began, then shook her head.
"No, I'm sure. They've brought in one of the hunters."
Harmsway swore, and Hazard looked back
over his shoulder at them all.
Africa did not look up from his work,
his hands still busy with the laser. "Hunter?"
"Another telepath," Blue
said. "The kind that specializes in hunting down his own kind."
"How close?" Harmsway
demanded, and Lyall shook her head again.
"I can't tell. He-she-it's
shielded."
"All right," Avellar said.
"No one use anything, telekinesis, telepathy, electrokinesis, anything at
all, unless there's no other choice." There were murmurs of agreement from
the others, and she looked at Africa. "Galan?"
The technician shrugged, his hands never
slowing on the balky connection. "I don't know. Even if I get it hooked
up, I can't make any guarantees."
Avellar grimaced, and for the first
time looked at Belfortune. "Bel."
Faro shifted his position slightly,
putting himself between Avellar and Belfortune. "Let him be."
"Bel," Avellar said again.
"I can't do it," Belfortune
said flatly, without lifting his eyes from the floor.
"Oh, that's a lie," Harmsway
said, soft and deadly, "a lie and you know it, Belfortune. That's what
bought the Baron's favor, bought you a lover and almost anything you wanted,
just as long as you learned to use your power. Tell me, is it true the Baron
liked to watch while you killed them?"
"Jesus, Desir," Hazard said,
and was ignored.
Belfortune looked up slowly, met
Harmsway's glare for the first time unflinching. "Yes. It's true."
"Then you can stop the
hunter," Avellar said.
"It won't do any good,"
Belfortune said. "Where else could we be, but in one of the cargo bays?
All it'll do is buy you time."
"That'll be enough," Avellar
said.
"But if it isn't -- " Lyall
began, and closed her mouth over what she would have said.
Avellar answered her anyway. "If
it's not enough, then we fight."
"Brilliant," Harmsway jeered.
"How clever of you, Royal."
"Shut up, Desir," Hazard
said. "Avellar. Belfortune's right, much as I hate to admit it."
Avellar nodded. "We need a
diversion, I agree. But to make it work, we have to get rid of the
hunter." She looked back at Belfortune. "Well? Will you do it?"
Belfortune closed his eyes for a
moment, pain etched deep in his face, then nodded. "Oh, yes. What's one
more?" Lord Faro reached out to touch his shoulder.
"Then we'll need to distract the
rest of the searchers," Avellar said.
"No, really?" Harmsway
murmured.
"Yes, and you're just the man to
do it," Avellar answered. She smiled briefly, daring him. "This bay
is right next to the main computer nexus, Desir. Think what you can do with
that."
Harmsway said, "But why should I,
Royal? Give me one reason, after everything you tried to do."
There was a little silence, and then
Avellar looked at him, her face absolutely without emotion. "I told you
then. I'm telling you now. I need you, need your talent, to make up for what I
lost when my sibs -- my twins, the rest of the clone, the rest of me -- were
killed. I can't take the throne without you."
"To hell with you," Harmsway
said, and there was an odd, gloating note in his voice.
"I need you," Avellar said
again. "I came here for you, didn't I? I did what you couldn't do, I broke
you out of the Baron's prison because I need you. Isn't that enough?"
"Maybe if you went down on your
knees," Harmsway said, "but not before."
"For God's sake," Hazard
said. He pushed himself to his feet, grabbed Harmsway roughly by the shoulder,
and swung him to face the others. "If you don't do it, Desir, we're going
to die."
Harmsway lifted an eyebrow at him.
"I'm surprised at you -- "
"I want out of here," Hazard
said. "We can sort out the rest of it once we're free, but right now,
getting off planet is a hell of a lot more important than Avellar or the
goddamn throne."
"I won't work with her
again," Harmsway said.
"So what?" That was Jack
Blue, hoisting himself to his feet. "It won't be as good, Avellar, but
maybe I can do something if this shit won't."
Avellar nodded her thanks, still
watching Harmsway, who smiled bitterly.
"All right. I'll do it -- if only
to spare your talents, Jack."
"Too kind," Blue said, and
achieved a passable imitation of Harmsway's sneer.
"There's only one thing,"
Faro said. "How close do you need to be to a -- a subject, Bel?"
"I don't really know,"
Belfortune said. "A few meters, probably closer." He looked at Lyall.
"Any ideas, Doctor?"
Lyall shook her head. "I wasn't
involved in that part of the project. I would think within two meters."
Belfortune laughed softly to himself.
"Do you know who it is? Which hunter?"
"No," Lyall answered. "I
told you, it's shielded."
"You'll need support,"
Avellar said.
Belfortune shook his head, and Faro
said, "I'll go with him. One's enough."
Avellar nodded. "Good luck, then,
both of you."
Lyall said, "The hunter's coming
closer. Moving along the east wall, toward the entrance there."
"Careful," Africa said.
"You don't want to tip him off."
Lyall shook her head, and Blue said impatiently, "She's
not strong enough. Nobody can hear her, not unless they're right on top of
her."
"Let's go, Bel," Faro said
gently, and Belfortune nodded. Faro reached down and pulled the other man to
his feet.
"Take an extra power pack,"
Hazard said, and handed his last spare to Faro.
"Thanks," Faro said, and he
and Belfortune stepped out into the corridor. They turned left at the first
cross corridor, heading east, toward the entrance and the searching hunter.
Avellar looked at the others. "Dr.
Lyall, tell me when the hunter's dead."
Lyall winced, but nodded.
"And the rest of us?"
Harmsway demanded.
"We wait," Avellar answered,
grimly. "Be ready to act when Lyall gives the word."
--------
*Game/varRebel.2.04/subPsi.1.22/ver22.1/ses4.25*
Faro and Belfortune moved warily
through the corridors, ready to duck under the shelter of the cargo racks at
the first sign of patrolling guards. To their surprise, however, the racks and
catwalks were empty, and they reached the eastern wall without incident.
"What now, Bel?" Faro began,
stopped abruptly at the look on Belfortune's face.
Belfortune was staring into the middle
distance, pale eyes vague, unfixed, pupils dilating. He ran a hand delicately
along the bare metal skin of the cargo bay's exterior wall, a gesture
unnervingly like a caress, and began to walk, slowly, a faint smile curving his
lips. Faro, who had seen this before, this stalking hunger, shivered
convulsively, but kept his place at Belfortune's shoulder, gun drawn and ready,
the spare power pack ready to hand.
"Come to me," Belfortune
whispered. "Come here, you, I feel you walking there, come to me
now...." The words trailed off into a hissing murmur, rising and falling
with his slow breath. He could feel the hunter's presence, a vague warmth
beyond the cold wall, allowed his own hunger to rise to match that warmth,
played out his desire as a fisherman plays a line, a thread of appetite
disguised as curiosity. He could feel the hunter's presence more clearly now,
and recognized the man, had considered him a friend, but his unleashed hunger
accepted that knowledge only as a way to make the bait more attractive. He leaned
against the thin metal of the wall, flattening himself against the cool surface
as though he could feel the hunter's body against his own, and let the tendril
of thought unfold. He felt the hunter take the bait, felt him turn his
attention toward the faint, stray presence, the oddity that must be
investigated, and kept tight control of his own power, letting the hunter's own
curiosity draw him nearer. Belfortune could almost see the slight frown, the
familiar lines of his face; he pressed himself harder against the wall, willing
the hunter closer. And then, at last, he was close enough. Belfortune smiled,
let himself go at last, and felt the hunter's whole body jerk convulsively as
he realized he was no longer free. Belfortune felt him struggle and tightened
his grip, felt the sudden terrified release as the hunter's shields failed, and
tasted the hunter's power, his strength and his cunning and the delicate flavor
of his mind. He drained him, not bothering to savor it -- there was no time for
such niceties, and it had been too long since the last one, anyway -- and
saw/felt, in the last moment of double vision, the hunter's body slumping to
the ground just on the other side of the wall. He slid down the wall with it,
sucking the last dregs of life, and crouched there for a moment, breathing
hard.
Faro looked away, swallowing bile,
unwilling to watch the sated hunger turn to disgust in Belfortune's eyes.
"Tell them it's done," he said, and a whispering voice said, from the
end of the corridor, "Tell who what, Faro?"
Faro spun, gun leveled, even as he knew
it was useless, and felt as much as heard the snap of a laser bolt. He ducked
instinctively, but the shot had been meant as a warning only.
"Hold your fire," the voice
said. It came from the closed cabin of an airsled that blocked the corridor
behind them. Soldiers -- soldiers in the black uniforms of Baron Vortex's elite
troops -- flanked it, their lasers lowered and ready. Belfortune shook his
head, trying to drive away the cloying satisfaction, made a small, pained noise
of despair. The voice went on, as though no one had spoken. "Faro, you're
not a fool. I think we can come to some agreement."
Faro hesitated, the muzzle of his gun
wavering slightly -- to fire was suicide, his and Belfortune's, but the speaker
was Baron Vortex, and the Baron could never be trusted.
"I find you useful," the
voice went on, "just useful enough to salvage from this mess. Put down
your gun, and I'll let you live."
Faro dredged a laugh from somewhere.
"To what end?"
"I told you, I find you
useful," the voice said. "You can return to your previous
employment."
"Not much better off than the
prisoners," Faro muttered, said more loudly, "What about Bel?"
"Ah." There was a note like
amusement in the Baron's voice. "For him, there is a price."
"Well?" Faro said.
"I asked you before, tell who
what," the voice said. "But I think I know that. Where are they,
Faro? Where are Avellar and the rest?"
"Faro," Belfortune said, and the word was ambiguous
appeal.
Faro glanced down at him, at the
renewed sanity in the pale eyes, saw him start to pull himself to his feet,
clinging to the wall of the cargo bay, looked back at the Baron's airsled and the
flanking soldiers. He let the gun fall to his side.
"Your lands and your lover,"
the voice whispered. "You can still have them both. Is Avellar's rebellion
worth that much to you?"
"I don't know for sure," Faro
said. "She -- they were back toward the middle of the bay, heading for a
ship."
He paused, hoping that would be enough,
a large enough betrayal, saw the nearest soldier raise his laser, and waited
for the Baron to pronounce the sentence.
"Put down your gun, Faro," the
Baron said at last, and Faro laid the pistol on the floor tiles, kicked it
toward the line of soldiers. Two of them came forward, slinging their rifles,
and Faro let them drag him forward, stood quite still as they ran their hands
roughly over his body, then locked his wrists together behind his back. Another
pair dragged Belfortune to his feet, and did the same to him.
Flame flared overhead, bursting from
the shattering light fixtures, and raw electricity leaped like lightning from
the power nodes. One of the soldiers fired reflexively at the snapping
currents, and screamed as the laser's power pack exploded in a sheet of flame.
"Harmsway," Belfortune said,
and the pale eyes were suddenly alive again.
"Get them out of here," the Baron
ordered. "The rest of you, come with me."
--------
*Game/varRebel.2.O4/subPsi.1.22/ver22.1/ses4.26*
"The hunter's dead," Lyall
said, and in spite of her best efforts the disgust showed in her voice.
Avellar nodded, hiding the same
repulsion. "Then let's get on with it." She looked at Harmsway.
"It's your show now, Desir."
Harmsway nodded, allowed himself a
smile of pure pleasure. "So we need a diversion," he said aloud.
"And the computer center is right behind these walls." He turned in a
full circle, scanning the racks until he found a power node, and went to crouch
beside it, laying one long-fingered hand gently over the input jack. There was
a faint crackling, and then he had matched the current precisely. He closed his
eyes, and let his consciousness wander out into the bay's power grid. There was
a faint humming, and a haze of blue light, all but invisible, formed around his
hand. He could feel the pattern of the electrical systems, and of the computers
and other instruments that fed off it, could almost see their regularity like
lines against his eyes. He felt his way into the grid, merging himself with the
flow of power until he was all but invisible, a faint surge of current that was
still within the tolerances of the port computers. He found the access port,
and teased it open, then slipped cautiously into the alien space within the
network.
He had the electron's view, current
flashing on or off, and he hung for a moment, disoriented, trying to match that
image with what he knew must be hidden in the computers. The lights blinked on
and off, too fast to follow even in his heightened state, tuned perfectly to
the flow of the currents; he stared a little longer, still trying to analyze
the workings, and heard, very distant, Lyall's cry.
"My God, it's the Baron. He's
found them."
At the same moment, someone touched his
shoulder, and he opened his eyes to see Hazard bending over him.
"Desir. Blow the system, we've got
trouble."
Harmsway was already moving within the
distant system, calling power from various nodes. Throughout the building,
terminals flickered and died; across the complex, screens wavered, the sudden
drain triggering backup power supplies. Harmsway kept pulling, drawing power to
himself, letting the minuscule energies collect and build, feeding on
themselves.
"Hurry, Desir," a voice said
-- Avellar's voice, he thought, but he could not be sure.
The process could not be hurried, not
if he was to do it right. He blocked all thoughts of the Baron, all fear,
concentrating on the energy around him, tracing an escape route in his mind. He
felt it cross the threshold at last, and released it, let the surge blast
through every circuit in the system, and let the same wave of power carry him
back into the grid that fed the cargo bay. He felt overloaded systems crash,
felt the surging power flare at every node, and in a heartbeat redirected that
power, away from the local nodes into everything electrical near the eastern
entrance. He opened his eyes, and heard the flat, hard crack of explosions from
the far side of the bay.
"The port computers are
down," he said. "They shouldn't be able to stop lift-off."
"And it should give them something
else to worry about," Avellar said. Fire sirens whooped in the next
building, underscoring her words. "Let's go."
They made their way quickly through the
last corridors, dodging between the half-full cargo racks. At each exposed
power node, Harmsway paused to send another wave of power through the
building's systems. He could feel the network overloading under his
manipulations, knew that he was literally burning out their defenses as he used
them, but the explosions behind them seemed to mean that it was working.
There were still two guards at the door
that gave access to the ship's hatch, both staring nervously toward the sounds
of Harmsway's attack. They were sheltered by the hatchway, not an easy shot at
all, and Avellar paused in the shelter of the final stacks of crates,
considering them cautiously. After a moment, she beckoned to Hazard. He
frowned, but slipped forward to join her.
"You're our best shot,"
Avellar said, her voice an almost soundless whisper. "Can you do it?"
Hazard shook his head. "They're
too well covered. Why the hell didn't they run for the fighting?"
"Be glad they didn't just close
the access door," Avellar said with a grin, and eased back into the
shelter of the crates.
"You're going to have to do
something quick," Harmsway said. He was sweating, breathing hard, as
though he'd been lifting heavy weights. "I'm draining the grid, and the
wiring isn't going to take this abuse much longer."
"The Baron's still back by the
door," Lyall said. Her eyes were closed, and Jack Blue steadied her,
guiding her with a hand on her shoulder. "But you've only delayed
him."
"I can draw the guards out,"
Blue said. "Leave it to me."
Avellar considered him for a moment --
a fat man, still wheezing a little, but no longer leaning on the others -- and
nodded. "If you can get them out into gunshot, we can take them."
Hazard nodded, snapped the power pack
out of his pistol, checked the power remaining, and snapped it in again.
"I've got about a dozen shots left. That should be enough."
"It ought to be," Harmsway
said, and managed a grin.
"It'll have to be," Avellar
said. She looked at Blue. "Do it."
Blue closed his eyes, frowning
slightly, and a moment later they all heard something stir in the corridor to
their right. It was a faint noise, as though someone trying to be careful had
brushed against an imperfectly balanced crate, but one of the guards heard it
and looked up warily. Blue's frown deepened, and there was a quick patter of
footsteps, as though someone had darted across a corridor into cover. The guard
peered out of the doorway, put up his faceplate to listen more closely.
"They're buying it," Africa
said, and leveled his pistol.
Hazard laid a restraining hand on his
arm. "Wait for the other one."
Africa nodded, lowered the pistol
again.
Blue was sweating lightly now, his
forehead furrowed in concentration. In the corridor, there was another
stirring, and then the distinctive click of a power pack snapping home into a
pistol butt. The guard cocked his head to one side, listening, then pulled his
faceplate slowly down again. Avellar held her breath, her own pistol ready at
her side. There were no more noises from the corridor, a silence that seemed
somehow ominous, more dangerous than the sounds had been. The guard held up his
hand, and beckoned to his partner. The second guard came up to the edge of the
hatch, but stopped just inside the heavy frame. Africa swore under his breath:
the hatchway still blocked his shot.
"Come on," Hazard muttered.
"Come on, now."
The guards stood still for a moment
longer, obviously conferring via the helmet links. Then the first guard started
toward the sound of the footsteps, and the second man moved out of the hatchway
to cover him.
"Now!" Avellar said.
The others fired almost as she spoke.
The first guard fell without a sound, sprawling on the warped floor tiles, but
the second guard fired back blindly, dodged back toward the access door. Africa
and Hazard fired at the same moment, and the guard went down.
"Did he get out a warning?"
Hazard demanded, looking at Lyall.
"It doesn't matter," Avellar
said, impatiently. "Let's go." She started across the open space
without looking back.
Hazard glanced over his shoulder, saw
Harmsway reaching across to steady Jack Blue, and smiled in spite of himself.
They crowded into the narrow space between the doorway and the ship's hatch,
and Africa fiddled with the controls to bring the door down behind them.
Avellar nodded her approval, and laid her hand against the sensor panel that
controlled access to the freighter's cargo lock. There was a soft click, and
then a high-pitched tone.
"Royal Avellar," she said,
and waited. A heartbeat later, the cargo lock creaked open. Familiar people,
familiar faces, were waiting inside the lock, and Avellar relaxed for the first
time since they had left the prison complex.
"Thank God you made it," a
well-remembered voice said, and Avellar sighed.
"Danile." She smiled then,
careful not to look back at the others, particularly Harmsway. She had risked
everything to get him back, and she had at least freed him from the Baron's
prison. The rest -- his return to her rebellion, his proper place at her side
-- would come, in time. He owed her that, and he would eventually pay.
"We have to hurry," Danile
went on, "so everybody, get inboard now." The hatch sealed itself as
he spoke, closing off their view of the cargo bay. "It's chaos back there,
there's nothing they can do to stop us. But we have to go now."
There was a ragged murmur of agreement,
and the group began to move farther into the ship, following Danile and
Avellar. Underfoot, the ship's main power plant trembled, building toward
blast-off and freedom from Ixion's Wheel.
--------
*Part Five*
*Day 2*
_Storm:
Roscha's boat, Public Canal #419,_
_Dock
Road District_
Lioe woke to the noise of distant
traffic and the easy motion of the boat against the sluggish current. She
turned her head away from the bars of sunlight that crept in through the gaps
in the shutters, lay still for a moment, remembering where she was. She was
meanly glad that Roscha was nowhere in sight. Not that it hadn't been fun --
and after Roscha's performance in the session, especially; it was one of the
best character readings Lioe had seen -- but in the cold light of morning, she
found herself wondering exactly why she'd done it. She shook the thought away
-- it was a little late for regrets, and anyway, it _had_ been fun -- and
crawled out of the low bunk. The bathroom was tiny, and smelled of aggressive
cleaning; she washed quickly, the water tasting flatly of chemicals, and found
her clothes hanging on the bulkhead beside the low stairs that led up onto the
deck. She pulled on shirt and trousers and the loose vest, slung the mask that
Gelsomina had given her around her neck, and pushed open the double doors. She
had left her hat somewhere, she realized, either at Shadows or at Ransome's
loft, and she made a mental note to look for it later.
The sunlight on the deck had an odd
cast to it, a sickly, uncertain tone, and Lioe glanced toward the sky. It was
almost white, hazed with clouds as it had been for the past two days, but when
she looked south, toward the mouth of the Inland Water, darker clouds showed
between the housetops. An erratic little wind was blowing fitfully, sending
bits of trash skittering along the embankment above the boat, and Lioe felt the
hairs rising on the back of her neck.
"Oh, there you are," Roscha
said. She made her way forward, stepping easily over the solar panels set into
the decking. "I was just coming to wake you. It looks like that storm's
going to hit us after all, and I've got a call from the wharfinger to report at
once to the main dock."
"That's too bad," Lioe said.
"I don't see why I couldn't make
it to Roche'Ambroise for the puppet shows," Roscha went on. "That is,
if you still want to go."
One of the local artists' cooperatives
was giving its annual free show that afternoon. It was supposed to be a
spectacular event, a combination of athletics, mime, and robotics, and Lioe had
said she would like to see it. "I don't want you to go to any
trouble," she began, and Roscha frowned.
"Look, if you don't want to go, no
problem." Her tone implied the opposite.
"It's not that," Lioe said,
impatiently. "Yes, I want to see the show, but you've got this call --
"
"It shouldn't be anything
serious," Roscha said, and gave a fleeting grin. "I haven't done
anything. They probably just need help securing the barges. I should be able to
make the show."
"Fine," Lioe said. _If you
don't, I can enjoy it by myself_. "Where do you want to meet?"
"They do the show in Betani
Square, right off the Hartzer Canal," Roscha answered. "Why don't we
just meet there, midafternoon? By the fountain."
"Fine," Lioe said again. The
sunlight faded, and she glanced up, to see a thicker strand of cloud turning
the sun to a disk of bronze. "How bad is this storm going to be?"
Roscha shrugged. "Not bad, I'd
say. The street brokers are saying a category two at most. That's not anything
to worry about."
_By whose standards?_ Lioe wondered, squinting again at the sky.
The sun was back, but the clouds looked darker than before. Still, Roscha was
the native; if she said it wasn't that bad, it shouldn't be. "I'll see you
at the fountain in Betani Square at fifteenth hour," she said aloud, and
reached for the rope ladder that led up to the embankment.
Roscha nodded. "Will you help me
cast off?"
"Sure." Lioe climbed easily
up onto the broad stones, unhooked the ladder, and let it drop. Roscha caught
it as it fell, folded it neatly into a well on the deck.
"Ready for the cables?" Lioe
asked, and Roscha nodded again.
"I've already switched over."
Lioe unhooked the double-headed cables
from the power nodes at the base of the bollard. Roscha caught those as well,
guiding them back into their housings, and took her place in the steering well.
Lioe released the bow and stern lines, tossed them onto the deck, and stood
watching while Roscha shoved the boat away from the embankment, and fed power
to the engine. She was out of earshot before Lioe realized she hadn't asked how
to get to Roche'Ambroise. She laughed, and started back toward Shadows, where
food and her mail would be waiting.
The streets were still busy with costumed
figures, despite the impending storm. A cloaked trio was visible in the window
of a restaurant, masks set aside to let them eat; a bedraggled pair -- male and
female? no, two women -- were obviously on their way home after a long night of
revelry, the skirts of their straight gowns hiked up to make walking easier,
their feathers drooping. Yet another indistinct shape wrapped in a cloak lay
sound asleep under a bench in one of the little parks, mask tucked under its
head for a pillow. Others were just starting the day -- another Avellar, a
striding Baron Vortex, an odd shape like an egg with trousers that everyone
else seemed to recognize -- and Lioe was suddenly glad of Gelsomina's mask. It
made her feel less alien, among the bright maskers, more as though she belonged
on Burning Bright. _And I want to belong here_, she realized suddenly. _I'd
like to be a part of this_. She shook the thought away as impractical, left her
mask hanging around her neck where it couldn't tempt her, and kept walking.
As she came up on the Underface
helipad, she saw the lights flashing to warn of an incoming flight, and then
recognized the figure sitting on the bench at the edge of the pad. _At least I
can ask him about my hat_. "Good morning, Ransome," she called, and the
man on the bench lifted a hand in answer. He did not speak, and Lioe wondered
if she'd offended him. He looked up as she approached, met her eyes fully, and
she was shocked by his pale face and the brown shadows like ugly bruises under
his eyes.
"Jesus, you look awful," she said, and bit her tongue
as he managed a wry grin.
"Tactful."
There was something wrong with
Ransome's voice; even the one word came thin and breathless, as though he had
been running. "Are you all right?" she began, and realized in the
same instant what it had to be. White-sickness was most common in Hsaioi-An,
among jericho-humans, but it was not unknown in the nonaligned worlds, or in
the Republic. And this was white-sickness, no question about it: like all pilots,
she'd had enough basic medical training to recognize the symptoms.
Ransome read that recognition in her
face, and his grin skewed even more. "I have what I need at home," he
said, and Lioe had to lean closer to catch the strangled words. "The
doctors changed the medication; I'm not as stable as I used to be. So I got
caught short again."
Lioe nodded, wordlessly, hearing the
voice of the school's medical trainer droning in her mind. _White-sickness --
pneumatic histopathy, also known as lung-rot or_ uhanjao, _drown-yourself, in
Hsaioi-An -- is classified as a dangerous condition less because it is fatal,
which it is, than because it is contagious until treated. Once proper treatment
is begun, the danger of infection is over, but the damage to the victim is
irreversible. Most planets require a certificate of treatment before customs
will admit an infected person; pilots are advised to adopt the same
precaution_. There had been more -- details of how death occurred, how and why
simple organ transplants inevitably failed, the mechanisms by which the disease
altered the lung tissue, slowly dissolving it into a thick white mucus, so that
the patient drowned in body fluids even as the lungs themselves stopped working
-- but she did her best to push that aside. "Do you want me to come with
you?" she said cautiously, and did her best to keep her voice normal.
Ransome looked for a moment as though
he would refuse, but then made a face. "Yes," he said, and then, with
an effort, "Thank you."
"No problem," Lioe said, and
seated herself on the bench beside him. But it was a problem, it was a hell of
a problem, and she found herself filled with an irrational fury. _How could he
be sick -- how dare he? -- just when she'd found_ -- She stopped abruptly,
closed off that line of thought. _Found what? You barely know him, except
through the Game. Just because he showed you the imaging system he uses doesn't
mean that he'd want to teach you -- or that you could learn, or even that you
want to_.
The sound of rotors overhead was a
welcome relief, and she squinted up into the hazy clouds. The helicab dropped
easily toward the pad, balancing the weight of the machine against the lift of
the rotors and the gas in the envelope. The two pods were fully inflated, one
to each side of the passenger compartment, so that the cab looked rather like a
rodent, both cheeks filled with scavenged food. The unseen pilot brought it
down carefully, setting it precisely in the center of the bright-blue guidelines,
and the passenger door opened. Lioe stood, uncertain whether to offer her hand,
and Ransome pushed himself to his feet. He climbed into the cab, and Lioe
followed him, pulling the door closed behind them.
"You're going to Warehouse?"
the pilot said, and Ransome nodded.
"That's right," Lioe said
aloud, and wasn't sure she'd done the right thing until she saw Ransome's
fleeting smile.
The helicab rose slowly, rotors
whining, and the whole machine shivered suddenly in a gust of wind. The pilot
corrected it instantly, adjusting power and lift, glanced apologetically over
his shoulder.
"Sorry, people. It's going to be a
rough ride."
"'S all right," Ransome
murmured.
"The storm?" Lioe asked, as
much to distract the pilot as anything, and was not surprised when he nodded.
The braided wires that connected him to the cab bobbed against his neck.
"Yeah. The dispatcher's saying
we'll probably have to shut down this afternoon."
Lioe leaned back in her seat. Through
the transparent door panel she could see the Dock Road District spread out
beneath her, buildings clustered around tiny spots of green that were the open
plazas, and crowding shoulder to shoulder along the banks of the myriad canals.
"I think this is the first time I've seen this in daylight," she
said, in some surprise, and saw Ransome smile again.
As they rose above the cliff edge,
approaching Newfields and the Warehouse helipad, the wind caught them, jolting
the cab sideways before the pilot caught it. Lioe braced herself against the
safety webbing, watching the muscles of the pilot's arms tense and relax as his
hands moved inside the sheaths of the on-line controls. His lips were moving,
too, and she guessed he was talking to his dispatcher, warning other pilots
about the winds. He took the approach to Warehouse very carefully, and Lioe was
grateful for it: the helicab shuddered and bounced, but finally dropped the
last meter or so onto the hard paving. The credit reader unfolded from the cab
wall, beeping for payment.
Ransome reached for his card, but Lioe
got there first. "Pay me back," she said, and ran her own card
through the slot. She managed not to wince at the total -- about twice what she
had expected -- and hit the key that confirmed the payment. The pilot opened
the passenger door, and they climbed out onto the pad. The helicab started to
lift as they crossed the low barrier, and Lioe flinched as grit stung her face
and bare arms. Ransome turned away from it, one hand cupped over his mouth and
nose, did not move until the cab had lifted out of range.
"Do you want a velocab?" Lioe
asked, tentatively, more to make sure he was all right than to get an answer to
her question, and was relieved when he shook his head.
"No. It's not far to the
loft." He sounded a little better, and Lioe let herself relax.
The streets were all but empty of
pedestrians here, and only a few heavy carriers rumbled past, stirring the
drifted dirt and sand. A fickle wind was blowing, a warm wind that carried an
occasional hint of a chill at its heart. Lioe shivered at its touch, glanced
again to the sky, but saw only the same hazy clouds, the sun a hot white disk
behind them. It felt like the afternoon winds on Callixte, the summer wind that
brought the big storms down onto the plains, and she found herself walking
warily, as though too quick a movement would trigger lurking thunder. Ransome
glanced curiously at her, then looked away.
They turned the last corner onto a street
shadowed by the buildings to either side, and Ransome led her past a tangle of
denki-bikes, their security fields humming at an annoying pitch, to the access
stair that ran along the side of the building.
"Isn't there a lift?" Lioe
asked involuntarily, but Ransome didn't seem offended.
"There is, but it's in use."
He nodded to the main doorway, where a red flag drooped, moving only sluggishly
in the breeze.
"Oh." Lioe followed him up
the stairway, past the Carnival debris, broken bottles, a cluster of stained
and ragged ribbons at the base of the stairs, another bottle on the landing;
the crumpled papers and stained foils from a packet of Oblivion lay on the
landing outside Ransome's door. He stepped over them without looking, and Lioe
did her best to follow his example.
The loft was pretty much as it had been
when she'd left it, nothing changed except the pile of clothes on the floor
outside the bedroom door. Her hat was sitting on the folded bed. _Was it only
yesterday that I left it?_ she thought, said aloud, "Can I get you
anything?"
Ransome was already heading for the
tiny bedroom, said over his shoulder, "Coffee?"
"Right." Lioe went into the
kitchen. She filled the machine and set it running, came back out into the main
room just as Ransome emerged from the bedroom. His eyes looked slightly
unfocused, and there were two spots of red on his cheeks that spread as she
watched, as though he were blushing deeply.
"I appreciate your coming back
with me," Ransome said. His voice already sounded better, less choked.
"I wasn't sure I'd be able to talk the pilot out of taking me to a
clinic."
"Should you have gone to a
clinic?" Lioe asked. "Should you go to a clinic?"
Ransome grinned. "No, I told you,
I had what I needed here. They couldn't've given me anything different."
Lioe nodded, watching him. "Are
you all right?" she said slowly, and Ransome looked away.
"For the moment." He sighed,
turned back to face her. "As you probably already figured out, I have
white-sickness -- it's under treatment, so you don't need to worry -- but I've
had it for a while, and the system's slipping out of equilibrium."
_Which translates as, you're starting
to die_. Lioe said, "I'm sorry," and cringed at the inadequacy of the
words.
Ransome went on as if he hadn't heard,
his tone so matter-of-fact that she winced at the unvoiced pain. "I have
five to seven years, or so they tell me, so it's not an emergency."
_Except that you can't be much more
than forty, and you ought to live another forty years_. Lioe said again,
"I'm sorry."
"So am I." There was a little
pause, and then Ransome achieved a kind of smile. "Do you want some
coffee?"
"Sure, thanks," Lioe said,
glad of the change of subject, and Ransome disappeared into the kitchen. He
returned a moment later with two steaming mugs. Lioe took hers with a murmur of
thanks, sipped cautiously at the bitter liquid.
"There's something I've been
wanting to ask you," Ransome said, and his voice was carefully casual, so
that Lioe glanced back at him warily. "Especially since last night's
session."
"Oh?" Lioe paused, and then
shrugged. "Go ahead, I guess."
"What the hell were your parents
thinking of, to let you become a pilot?"
Lioe blinked, completely taken aback by
the question. It was not at all what she'd been expecting -- _though what I was
expecting I don't know -- _and she didn't quite know how to answer. She opened
her mouth, stopped, closed it again. "I was good at it," she said at
last, and heard the annoyance in her voice.
Ransome spread his hands, almost
spilling his coffee. "I didn't mean to pry. It's just that you've got an
artistic sense, a talent for the Game, and for imaging. I'm surprised you
didn't get a chance to pursue it -- I'm surprised nobody picked up on it."
"No, it's all right," Lioe
said. _And after what you've told me, I'm not sure I have the right not to
answer_. She ordered her thoughts with an effort. "I was raised by Foster
Services, on Callixte. They steered me toward the union certificate program,
and when I won one of the scholarships -- well, you know how hard they are to
get. I wanted to take it, at least to prove I was as smart as the docents had
always said."
Ransome nodded. "Your parents
died?"
Lioe shrugged. "I don't know. I
don't remember much about it -- I pretty much don't remember anything before
the Service creche -- but what they told me was, a couple of people found me in
an abandoned house near the port district, Mont'eranza, it's called. I was
undernourished, but otherwise unhurt, and about six years old, as best the
medical people could tell. So I ended up with Foster Services."
"And the Game," Ransome said.
"Your scenario's good, near brilliant, in fact."
"Thanks." Lioe grinned.
"I'd still like to take this situation a little further, though, pull it
all together. Can you imagine what that would do to the Game?"
Ransome nodded, his tone quite serious.
"It would be enormous fun while it lasted, though, wouldn't it?"
"I'm not eager to be lynched
afterwards," Lioe said. "Besides, I'd have to set it up now, change
this scenario a little."
"Do it," Ransome said. Lioe
looked at him, startled, and he said again, "Do it. And let me play
Avellar."
"Not Harmsway?"
Ransome shook his head.
"Avellar."
_God_, Lioe thought, _that would be a
brilliant bit of casting, and if anybody could pull it off, give me the setup I
need for Avellar's Rebellion_ -- She smiled, realizing that she had already
given the scenario a title. "When I run it again," she said, slowly,
"you can have Avellar, if you want him. But I'm not sure about making the
changes."
"If you won't," Ransome said,
"I will."
She lifted an eyebrow at him, not sure
she believed him, and his smile widened. "I'll do it, you know," he
said.
"I believe you," Lioe
answered.
"You needn't sound quite so
worried," Ransome said. He paused, looked back toward the windows. The
clouds had thickened a little since they had come in, turning the sky the color
of milk, and the shadows had vanished. Lioe moved to join him, staring down
into the Junction Pool. It was even more crowded than it had been, seemingly
hundreds of barges tied up two deep at the piers, and smaller craft darted like
beetles among them. She wondered briefly if Roscha were somewhere among them.
"There was something else I wanted
to ask you," Ransome said. "How did you happen to pick Harmsway for
the scenario? Did Cella Minter -- or anyone -- mention him to you?"
Lioe blinked again, startled, and shook
her head. "No. I'd worked up the scenario before I got here. We didn't
expect to spend any time on planet; we lost calibration in one of the sail
projectors en route from Demeter, and had to lay over to reset it. I'd kind of
forgotten that they were local Types when I showed the scenario." Ransome
nodded, still looking out the window, and Lioe frowned. _My turn to ask
questions, I think_. "Why? Who's -- Cella, did you say?"
"Cella Minter." Ransome
paused. "You may have seen her at Chauvelin's party the other night, a
tiny woman, absolutely a perfect beauty. She's Damian Chrestil's mistress, when
he isn't chasing something else."
Lioe paused, trying to remember, could
vaguely recall a tiny woman with copper-colored braids woven into sleek,
jet-black hair. She had been startlingly beautiful, seen from across the room,
and more than a little intimidating. "So who's Damian Chrestil? Any
connection to C/B Cie.?"
There was a little silence, and Ransome
looked at her. "He _is_ C/B Cie. Decidamio Chrestil-Brisch is his full
name, he's head of C/B Cie. Did you, your ship, bring in a cargo for him?"
"It was a C/B Cie. cargo, yes," Lioe said.
"Why?"
"Because Damian Chrestil has been
trying to keep me out of the port nets for two days now," Ransome said,
anger and glee mixed in equal measures in his voice. "And maybe, just
maybe, you can help me figure out why."
"I don't quite see the
connection," Lioe began, and Ransome cut in.
"What were you carrying?"
"I don't want to be overly
delicate about this," Lioe said, "but why do you want to know? We're
supposed to keep our mouths shut about what we carry. General union
rules."
Ransome nodded. "Sorry." He
took a deep breath, gestured, spilling coffee, and set the mug aside, scowling.
"Look, it's like this. Chauvelin's my patron. We've known each other for
years -- "
"I remember," Lioe said. She
could still see the little room in Chauvelin's monumental residence, light
gleaming off the story egg, the first one she'd seen. _Chauvelin is your
patron, and Chauvelin's rival the Visiting Speaker hates you, quite personally_.
"I've done various kinds of work
for him," Ransome went on, and there was a distinct note of pride in his
voice. "I'm good on the nets, very good, and I occasionally do some
research for him."
"The charge is usually common
netwalking," Lioe murmured, and remembered, too late, that Ransome had
been in jail. To her surprise, he laughed.
"True. Anyway, I've been --
walking the nets for him lately, because the damn Visiting Speaker got it into
his head that Damian Chrestil was up to something in the Game. When I checked
it out, sure, he wanted me back in the Game, back involved, but there wasn't
anything really happening. It was all just a blind. So I started wondering what
Damian Chrestil really wanted, and I haven't been able to get into the port
nets at all. So you see why I'd really like to know what you were
carrying."
Lioe shrugged. "Red-carpet,
according to the manifest. En route to a distillery here. We had a couple of
bungee-gars on board."
"Is that normal?"
"Depends," Lioe said. "I
wouldn't think red-carpet was quite that valuable, but it's close enough, I
guess."
"Who was the shipper?"
Lioe frowned, pulling names from her
mental files. "A company called TMN, I think. They weren't much."
"I bet it's smuggling,"
Ransome muttered, as much to himself as to her. "There's no other reason
to keep me out of the port nets, except that he hasn't rechristened the cargo
yet. Damn it, if I could just get in!"
Lioe eyed him warily. It seemed
overelaborate to her, a lot more complicated than simple smuggling would need
to be -- _and I've seen enough smuggling combines at work to know that simple's
the way to go_. "So why should the Visiting Speaker be worried about it?"
she asked aloud.
"I wish I knew," Ransome
answered. He stopped suddenly, eyes wild. "But I do know, I just had it
backward. Ji-Imbaoa doesn't want to know what Damian Chrestil's up to, he
already knows that because he's involved in it. What he wants is me out of the
way, me and Chauvelin, so that he can gain favor with whatever it is they're
smuggling."
"That sounds a little
complicated," Lioe said when it became clear that some answer was expected
of her.
"But that's it," Ransome
said. "I'm sure of it. Ji-Imbaoa's a je Tsinraan, and they need to
consolidate their position with the All-Father. Chauvelin's a tzu Tsinra-an,
he'd stop him on principle, regardless of what the cargo is. And Damian
Chrestil's an ambitious little bastard; he's got lots of friends in the
Republic, but not many in Hsaioi-An. But if the je Tsinra-an owed him a favor,
that would give him some substance over the border, and that kind of connection
there translates to power here, on Burning Bright. It makes good sense."
"If you say so," Lioe said, and didn't bother to hide
her own uncertainty.
"Trust me," Ransome said.
"Look, this has to be what's going on -- Christ, won't Chauvelin be
pleased, it's the perfect excuse to get rid of ji-Imbaoa -- but I have to talk
to some people."
"Netwalking?"
Ransome shook his head. "I've
tried that already. But there are some people up at the port who still owe me
favors, and I think it's time I called them in."
"How are you feeling?" Lioe
asked, pointedly. Ransome looked blank for a moment, then laughed.
"Fine. Look, I need to do this
now, before it's too late, but I wanted to know, were you serious about this
scenario?"
Lioe hesitated for an instant -- it
would mean the end of the Game as she knew it -- but then nodded firmly.
"I'd like to work it out."
"Do you want to use my
systems?" Ransome asked. "It's a little more private than Shadows
would be, and I've got most of the library disks you'd need. We could talk
about it when I got back, you could show me what you need to have happen to set
up the new scenario."
Lioe thought for a moment. It would be
easier, working here -- more privacy, fewer interruptions from players and
would-be session leaders who had questions about Ixion's Wheel -- but she'd
already made plans for the day. "I'm supposed to meet Roscha. We're going
to see a puppet show in Betani Square."
"So work here anyway; if I'm not
back by the time you have to leave, come back when you've finished. I can give
you a key, just in case I'm not back by then -- though God knows I should be --
but if I'm not, let yourself in and make free with the systems." Ransome
grinned. "You should know where things are by now."
"All right," Lioe said.
"We'll do this."
"Great." Ransome rummaged in
a drawer without result, then stood scanning his shelves before he came up with
a flat black rectangle about the size of a dice box. He handed it to her, and
Lioe took it cautiously, feeling for the almost invisible indentations.
"Upper left is for the
stairs," Ransome said, "upper right is the main entrance, center is
the loft door, lower right calls the lift -- when it's free."
Lioe nodded.
"Then I'm off," Ransome said.
"I probably won't be back before you have to leave, but I'll see you after
the show, all right?"
"I'll be here," Lioe said,
and shook her head slowly as the main door slapped shut behind him. _How do I
get into these situations?_ she wondered, then grinned. Maybe Burning Bright
was the home of the Game precisely because its own politics were as baroque as
those of the imaginary Imperium. _Let's see if I can come up with something as
complex for Avellar_. She found the room remote, and touched its gleaming
surface, darkening the windows and bringing up the display space. She pulled on
the wire-bound gloves and settled herself in the massive chair, wriggling a
little as the cushions shifted beneath her, accommodating her weight. She
reached into control space, touching virtual icons, and found a copy of her
scenario waiting in storage. She defined a space, called it into those new
confines, and sat for a moment, staring at the tree of symbols. Then she
touched the first icon, and began to work.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: C/B Cie. Offices, Isard's
Wharf,_
_Channel
9, Junction Pool 4_
Damian Chrestil stood at the back of
the plotting shed at the end of Isard's Wharf, watching the display table. A
model of Burning Bright's oceans, spread to scale on a virtual globe, floated
above the tabletop; the shapes that represented C/B Cie.'s various ships
ghosted through the mirrorlike surface, the codes that represented their
cargoes and destinations flickering to life at a gesture from some one of the
attendants. The coiled shapes of the blossoming storms, a grand procession of
them sweeping up the trade winds from the shallows below the equator, marched
over the surface, interdicting great sweeps of sea. Most of the company's ships
were already in port, or within a day's journey, but a few were still well out
to sea, and the wharfingers studied them carefully, murmuring to each other.
They and their assistants each carried a smaller plotting tablet and a
delicate, gold-tipped wand. As they gestured at the model, circling it like
acolytes to adjust symbols and times and weather forecasts in search of the
most economical arrangement, they reminded Damian of some mysterious and
primitive cult. Behind him, the windows rattled in the rising wind, and one of
the assistants glanced nervously toward the cloud-white sky. On the model, a
tight spiral of cloud was poised south and east of the entrance to the Inland
Water.
"Have they made any guesses as to
when the storm barriers will go up?" Damian asked, and the senior
wharfinger, Rosaurin, shook her head.
"They're hedging."
"So what else is new?" Damian
murmured. He glared at the model as though it could provide answers on its own,
then shook his head. "I think we're cutting it too close with the
short-haul boats. Have them ride it out south of the storm track." He
gestured with his own control wand, highlighted a grid mark on the model.
Rosaurin nodded slowly. "I'd
rather get them home, but you're right, we can't risk it. Not when they can't
give me an estimate of when they'll raise the barriers."
Damian nodded back. The triple line of
barriers lay at the bottom of the channel, were raised as the storm approached.
They would hold back the worst of the storm surge, and protect the city, but
once they were in place, no ships could enter the channel. They had all agreed,
himself, the wharfingers, and the short-haul captains, that it was worth taking
one more trip to the seining grounds before Storm set in. Now the captains, at
least, would have to live with the consequences. Still, they were experienced
people, with good crews, and the boats were solid, well equipped. _They should
be all right_, he thought, and turned his mind away.
"Na Damian?"
He turned, to find one of the younger
dockers in the doorway, a thin young man with close-cut blond hair that almost
disappeared against his scalp. "Well?"
"You wanted to be told," the
docker said warily. "Roscha's called in. She'll be in the channel in about
ten minutes."
"Right," Damian said, and
couldn't keep the satisfaction from his voice. "Can you take care of the
rest of this, Rosaurin?"
The wharfinger nodded. "I'll put
together a final plot for your approval."
"Do that," Damian said, and
left the shed.
Because of the approaching storm, there
were perhaps twice as many ships tied up to the mooring points as usual, and
the dock was littered with lines and spare gear. Damian stepped carefully
through the clutter, and let himself into the outer office. The secretary
pillar was, for once, clear of messages. He smiled rather bitterly -- _this
once, I would have liked to have something waiting, preferably from ji-Imbaoa_
-- and went on into the inner room, seated himself behind his desk. The workscreen
lit obediently, sensing his presence, but he ignored the flickering prompts,
debating whether or not he should call the Visiting Speaker himself. _Not just
now_, he thought, and touched keys to call up his security files. The check
files were all in place -- _or not quite all_. He frowned, studying the
origination codes that the security programs had preserved for him: _Ransome,
almost certainly, and that means I'll have to do something about him. Or about
ji-Imbaoa_. He put that thought aside with regret -- he'd gone too far to back
out now -- and the secretary chimed discreetly.
"Na Damian, Roscha is here."
Damian touched the shadowscreen to hide
the security programs. "Send her in."
Roscha appeared in the doorway almost at
once, her perfect figure obscured by a loose jacket knotted at her waist.
"You wanted to see me, Na Damian?"
"Yes." Damian paused for an
instant, assessing how best to approach the question. "I hear you've been
sleeping with this new notable, Lioe."
Roscha blinked -- whatever else she had
on her conscience, she hadn't expected this -- and said, cautiously,
"We've seen each other a couple of times, and I played in a couple of her
sessions. I only met her three days ago."
"You played a session with her
last night," Damian went on.
Roscha nodded.
"The C-and-I rep was part of that
Game, too, am I right?"
"Yes," Roscha said again, and
waited.
"I gather they knew each other,
Lioe and Desjourdy?"
"Yes." Roscha drew the word
out to two syllables, frowning now. "Look, Na Damian -- "
"Are they just old friends, fellow
Gamers, what?" Damian interrupted her. "Or has Lioe worked for
her?"
"Jesus." For the first time,
Roscha looked worried. "I don't think so, Na Damian. I was there when she
-- when Quinn invited Na Desjourdy to play this session. Quinn said she was
short a player, and all they talked about was the Game. Desjourdy's on the Game
nets a lot, she's a rated arbiter."
"And she works for
Customs-and-Intelligence," Damian said, but more gently. He paused,
studied her from under his lashes. "I'm a little worried, Roscha. This
Lioe's been hanging around with Ransome, too, and Ransome's no friend of
mine." He saw from the quick, involuntary grimace that Roscha had noticed
that attraction, too, and was less than comfortable with it. "Lioe and
Desjourdy, Lioe and Ransome -- it just doesn't add up well."
"I guess not," Roscha said,
slowly.
Damian hid his sudden pleasure. _It's
working, she's starting to think just the way I want her to, to think that
maybe Lioe is a C-and-I agent_. "So what I'm asking is, did you notice
anything after the session? Any conversations, anything that might mean she was
passing information to Desjourdy?"
Roscha shook her head. "No. They
just talked about the session afterwards, and then -- then Lioe came back to
the boat with me. I dropped her off this morning when I got your message."
She stopped suddenly. "Boss, I ran into Tamia Nikolind on the docks coming
in. She said she saw Lioe going off with Ransome this morning, taking a helicab
out of Underface."
"Damn." Damian scowled,
realizing he'd spoken aloud. That was the last unfortunate coincidence -- in
fact, it was too perfect to be a coincidence. One way or another, the two of
them, Lioe and Ransome, had too many pieces of the puzzle to be allowed to go
to either Chauvelin or Desjourdy. _In fact, that's probably the only thing I've
got going for me right now: they'll have to decide which one to alert first_.
He touched the shadowscreen to distract himself, making meaningless patterns on
its surface. _I'll have to get them out of circulation, one way or another, and
it's too late for niceties. Lioe's not important enough; security can find me
plenty of "friends" who can dump her in a canal, and no one will
think twice about it, but Ransome ... Ransome's another matter. But I can deal
with that later_. "Were you planning to see Lioe again?" he asked.
"Yes. We were going to the puppet
shows, over on Roche'Ambroise. I was planning to meet her there."
Damian took a deep breath, put on his
most sincere face. "I need you to do something for me," he said.
"I need -- I want you to break your date. I know I've no right to ask you
to do it, but I need to keep an eye on her. And I don't want to get you into
any trouble." That was true enough, even if the trouble was bigger than
Roscha would think. "But I want some people of mine to watch her, and the
puppet show is a good place for them to find her. Can you -- will you do
this?"
"Ransome and Desjourdy,"
Roscha said. She smiled, without humor. "Hells, I told her I might not be
able to make it. All right, Na Damian. I told her we'd meet by the fountain,
there in Betani Square. She's been wearing one of Gelsomina's lace masks. I
thought you should know."
"Thanks, Roscha," Damian
said. _Thank you more than I ever intend to tell you_. Instinct kept him from
offering to pay her fines after all. "I want you to stay here, at the
docks -- there's enough work, God knows -- but I want you visible the rest of
the day. I don't want you out of call until" -- he paused, calculating --
"until after midnight."
Roscha frowned, hesitating over her
next question. "You're not -- she won't be hurt?"
Damian managed a tolerant smile.
"This isn't the Game, Roscha. No, I just don't want you to be vulnerable
if she -- or Desjourdy, really -- gets pissy about my keeping an eye on her.
Because my security is going to be pretty obtrusive this time. You don't need
any extra hassle."
"Thanks, Na Damian," Roscha
said, low-voiced, and Damian nodded.
"Get on back out there, and try to
stay visible for the next eight or nine hours."
Roscha nodded, visibly reassured, and
backed out of the little office. Left to himself, Damian stared for few moments
longer at the empty screens glowing in the desktop, then touched keys to summon
his security files. _Lioe and Ransome_... On balance, it wasn't very likely
that Lioe was actually an agent for Republican Customs-and-Intelligence; she
was too active a Gamer, and too busy a pilot, too, according to the records
he'd obtained from the Pilots' Union, to be employed by C-and-I as well. But
she did know Desjourdy rather well, by everyone's reckoning, and she had gone
home this morning with Ransome. It wasn't a risk he could afford to take.
He had more options in dealing with her
than with Ransome. The imagist would have to be handled with care, because he
himself couldn't afford to antagonize Chauvelin -- _not yet, anyway, but if
ji-Imbaoa does even half of what he's promised_... He made himself concentrate
on the immediate problem. Ransome would have to be taken out of circulation
temporarily, but couldn't be killed, or even too badly damaged: that meant
kidnapping, and then the question of where to keep him. Damian ran his fingers
over the shadowscreen, slaving it temporarily to the household systems in Five
Points. The palazze was closing down for the storm, topping up the batteries,
workmen ordered to bring the shutters in over the massive windows; the summer
house, out in the Barrier Hills behind the Five Points, was shut down
completely, all systems on standby, doors and windows sealed against the storm.
Damian considered it for a moment, then nodded. The house was reasonably well
sheltered, tucked into the side of a hill well above the water, and clear of
the stand of trees that topped the ridge. It had stood through worse storms:
_an ideal place to keep Ransome_, he thought. _And Lioe, too, I suppose. If
nothing else, once the storm starts, they'll be stuck there until it passes_.
He nodded to himself, and touched the shadowscreen, detaching himself from the
house systems and recalling his security programs. He culled a picture of
Ransome -- a publicity photo, a recent one, that showed all the lines in the
imagist's thin face -- from the main systems, and then used his C/B Cie. ID
numbers to gain access to the union files. It was a little galling to think
that Ransome could probably get the same information without codes, either
netwalking or through one of his friends, but at least he could get Lioe's
photo. He dumped both of the images into a minidisk, the kind that would fit
either a pocket system or an implanted reader, and after a moment's thought
added the security codes that would unlock the summer house. He tucked them
into his pocket, and went looking for Almarin Ivie.
He found the security chief in his
office, a big man who dwarfed his desk and the constantly changing displays on
the walls behind him. The tiny space was dark, lit mainly by the blue-toned
flicker of the displays, but Ivie touched controls as the door opened, focusing
a faint halo of warmer light on the space before the door.
"Na Damian," he said, and
rose hastily to his feet. "What's up?"
Damian waved for him to be seated
again, found the guest's chair, and spun it into position opposite the desk.
"I need you to do something for me."
"Whatever," Ivie said, with a
sincerity that Damian always found slightly unsettling. He killed that
uncertainty -- this was the time to appreciate his subordinates' fervor -- put
the thought aside and slid the minidisk across the desk. Ivie caught it easily,
the button of plastic disappearing in his thick fingers, and said, "For
me?"
Damian nodded, and waited while Ivie
slipped the disk into the reader tucked at the base of his left wrist spur.
"I need these people taken out of circulation for a while," he said.
"The woman -- her name's Lioe, Quinn Lioe -- I don't really care how you
do it as long as we're not connected with it in any way. Ransome has to be
handled with care: I don't want him killed, or damaged too badly, but I want
him out of circulation for at least the next half-week. The summer house is
empty, and I've given you the system codes. Can you do it?"
Ivie looked almost offended for an
instant, but the expression passed across his flat face almost as fast as it
had appeared. His heavy hands moved over a shadowscreen with surprising
delicacy, and he said, "It looks as though Ransome is up in Newfields now,
talking to people. I don't find the woman. At least not at first look."
His fingers danced over another set of controls, and he went on, "I've got
a trace going through the Game nets -- she's the Gamer, right?"
_Does everyone know her reputation?_
Damian wondered, irritably. "That's right."
"I've got some people in Newfields
now, and I'll put them on him," Ivie went on, fingers still working.
"I'll send them to the summer house once they've secured him." He
stopped then, looked impassively at Damian. "I'd like a little more
guidance with Lioe, Na Damian."
Damian sighed. He had been hoping to
avoid this decision, had hoped, even knowing better, that Ivie would make it
for him. "If you can secure her without killing her, I'd prefer it.
Murder's messy, even at Carnival. But if you can't get her to come quietly, I'd
rather have her dead."
Ivie nodded calmly. "All
right."
"There's one other thing that may
help you," Damian said. "One of my people was supposed to meet Lioe
at the puppet show in Betani Square, over on Roche'Ambroise. They were to meet
at the fountain, half an hour before the show."
Ivie nodded again. "Good. That is
a help. If we don't get her before that, we'll get her there."
"I leave it in your capable
hands," Damian Chrestil said.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: The Hsai Ambassador's House,_
_in the
Ghetto, Landing Isle Above_
_Old
City North_
Chauvelin waited in the transmission
room, leaning over the technician's shoulder to study the hissing screens. The
technician, jericho-human, small and square-built, looked back at him
reproachfully.
"I'm doing the best I can,
Sia."
Chauvelin nodded, gestured an apology.
"I'll leave you to it, then." He stepped backward, but couldn't bring
himself to leave the little room, stood instead still staring at the static
that coursed across the screens. It was awkward enough at the best of times,
contacting the Remembrancer-Duke's household on maiHu'an, given the time
corrections between the two planets; during Storm, when the first link of the
long connection, the transmission between the planet and the relay satellite, was
notoriously unreliable, it was all but impossible. _But I really don't have
much choice. Whatever ji-Imbaoa is up to, it has roots in Hsaioi-An_.
"Got it," the technician
said, and hastily corrected himself. "Sia, I've established the link. The
Speaker Haas will be on-line directly."
"How stable is the
connection?" Chauvelin asked.
The technician shrugged. "About
what you'd expect this time of year, Sia. But I can patch it through to the
reception room. That won't make any difference."
Chauvelin nodded. "Do that, then.
And thank you."
The technician ducked his head in
acknowledgment, not moving from his position in front of the multiple control
boards. Chauvelin nodded back, and went on past him into the reception room.
There had not been time to make the formal preparations, but then, this was not
a formal call. Nonetheless, he laid the thin cushions, black-on-black
embroidery, the geometric patterns dictated by a thousand years of tradition,
in front of the low table, and poured two cups of the harsh snow-wine. The
warning chime sounded as he set the cups on the table, and he knelt on the
cushions, settling himself so that he faced the massive screen. The grey static
faded as the last of the check characters crossed its surface, and Eriki Haas
tzu Tsinra-an looked out at him. She knelt on identical cushions in front of an
identical table; only the cups that held the wine were different, marked with
the _n-jao_ characters of her name. The fan that marked her rank was folded in
her hand, and Chauvelin wished for a brief instant that he had changed into
hsai dress for this meeting. But it was too late for those regrets, and he
bowed his head politely.
"Tal je-Chauvelin," Haas
said, acknowledging his presence, and Chauvelin looked up.
"Sia Speaker. It's good of you to
speak with me on such short notice."
Haas gestured quickly, the fluttering
of the fingers that meant a hsaii wished to be informal. "I accept that
things have gotten complicated. Let's dispense with ceremony."
Chauvelin allowed himself a soundless
sigh of relief, and went on in tradetalk. "Complicated is a good word. I
need your help, Sia -- I need information."
"If I can get it, of course,"
Haas said. "What can I do?"
"I want to know what kind of connections there are
between ji-Imbaoa and Damian Chrestil -- Decidamio Chresti-Brisch, head of the
import/export company C/B Cie.," Chauvelin said bluntly. "Or any connections
between the je Tsinra-an and C/B Cie., particularly if any of C/B Cie.'s
clients are also _houta_ dependents of the je Tsinra-an."
Haas paused, one hand busy with the
notepad fastened to her belt, out of sight beneath the loose, semiformal coat.
"This could be difficult to do discreetly, Tal. What does it matter?"
"I don't care about
discretion," Chauvelin began, and bit back the rest of his words. He said,
more carefully, "There isn't time for discretion. I have reason to think
that the Visiting Speaker and Damian Chrestil are working together here on
Burning Bright, not as enemies, and I think that their real connection is
something in Hsaioi-An. The last thing my lord would want is to see Damian
Chrestil elected governor of Burning Bright."
"Do you think that's likely?"
Haas asked, but her hand was busy again, transferring notes to the household
computers.
"I wouldn't bother you if I
didn't," Chauvelin said, and Haas waved her free hand in apology.
"I'm sorry, Tal. It's just -- the
je Tsinra-an have been making real inroads at court in the last week, and my
lord is eager not to antagonize them."
"My lord's existence annoys
them," Chauvelin said dryly. "I don't think he would care to do much
about it."
Haas grinned in spite of herself.
"I know." She looked down at the tabletop, and Chauvelin guessed that
there was a screen concealed in its surface. "I'll see what I can find out
for you. C/B Cie. does a lot of business on the jericho-human worlds, and on
Jericho itself, for that matter."
"Which worlds?" Chauvelin
asked.
"I know," Haas said, with a
touch of impatience, "over half of them are client-bound to the je
Tsinra-an. I'll find out." She looked down again, ran her hand over a
control bar hidden in the table's carved edge. "I'm glad you called me,
Tal. This could be something important."
_Certainly it's important to me_,
Chauvelin thought. He said, "I'd appreciate an answer as soon as
possible."
"I'll do what I can," Haas
answered. "Between your weather and my ignorant staff -- well, I'll do my
best."
_No one of lesser rank than yours is
allowed to blame her staff for failures_. Chauvelin bowed again, more deeply.
"Thank you for your help, Sia Speaker."
"Thanks for the information,
Tal," Haas answered, and signaled for her system to break contact.
Chauvelin touched his own remote to
close down his end of the transmission, leaned back on his heels to watch the
characters cascade across the screen. If there was a connection between the je
Tsinra-an and the Chrestil-Brisch -- more specifically, between ji-Imbaoa and
Damian Chrestil -- and if he could prove it, then it should be possible to
parry ji-Imbaoa's threats. And if the connection went deep enough, it might be
sufficient to discredit the entire je Tsinra-an. That was probably too much to
hope for, he knew, and he sighed as he pushed himself up off the low cushions.
_A nice thought, but not to be counted on_.
A chime sounded gently from the speaker
set into the wall beside the door, the red pinlight flicking on as well, and
Chauvelin touched the remote again to establish the connection.
"Yes?"
"I beg your pardon, Sia,"
je-Sou'tsian said, "but there's something that needs your urgent
attention."
Chauvelin lifted his eyebrows at the
blank space, but answered the tone as much as the words. "I'll be in the
breakfast room in three minutes."
"Thank you, Sia,"
je-Sou'tsian answered, and the pinlight faded. Chauvelin sighed -- _I wonder
what new disaster I'll have to deal with_ -- and let himself out of the
reception room.
Je-Sou'tsian was ahead of him in the
breakfast room, the curtains half-drawn across the long windows. Beyond them,
beyond her shoulder, Chauvelin could see the distant wall of cloud, a little higher
on the horizon now, dark against the milk-white sky. The garden looked subdued
in the dimmed light, only the stone faces in the paths still reflecting the
minimal sunlight.
"Your pardon, Sia,"
je-Sou'tsian said again, and Chauvelin dragged his eyes away from the
approaching storm.
"It's all right," he said.
"What's happened?"
"The Visiting Speaker has not come
home today." There was a tension in the set of je-Sou'tsian's hands and
arms that made Chauvelin frown even more deeply.
"It's later than he usually stays
away, certainly, but is it important?"
"Sia, I don't think his household
knows for certain where he's gone. At least none of the ones left here. And
they are worried, if only because they don't know what's happening."
_Have I left things too late?_
Chauvelin suppressed the stabbing fear, said, "So what happened, do you
know?"
Je-Sou'tsian made a quick gesture,
one-handed, the equivalent of a shrug. "As best I can tell -- and I'm
reading between the lines for much of this, Sia -- the Visiting Speaker left
the house last night just after dark, saying he wanted to experience the
Carnival. His household expected him back sometime this morning, but he hasn't
arrived, and they haven't had word from him. By midday, his chief of household
was worried enough to ask me if I had heard anything."
"Who does he have with him?"
Chauvelin asked.
"That's what worries me,"
je-Sou'tsian answered. "Only two people, ji-Mao'ana and that jericho-human,
Magill."
_The Speaker's secretary and his
head-of-security_. Chauvelin sighed. "And that's all you know?" It
was unfair, he knew, and je-Sou'tsian gave him a brief, reproachful glance.
"Sia, I've only just found this
out. The chief of household only just spoke to me. And naturally I was
reluctant to pursue things any further without knowing what you wanted me to
do."
Chauvelin gestured an apology.
"I'm sorry, Iameis, you were right." He paused for a moment, fingers
tapping nervously against his thigh. "Still, it's Carnival. Things happen
during Carnival. I think you should make discreet inquiries, Iameis, just to
make sure nothing's happened to him. Check his usual haunts, and the
Lockwardens. No need to inquire at the clinics and hospitals yet, they'd've
notified me if a stray hsaia was brought in."
"The Lockwardens?"
je-Sou'tsian said.
Chauvelin nodded. "Ask -- with
discretion, mind you -- if there have been any complaints or queries. I just
want them to be aware that we are looking for him." _And that way, if I've
miscalculated, if he's not working with Damian Chrestil, I'll have been seen to
do my duty in protecting him_.
"Very well, Sia, I'll get on it at
once." Je-Sou'tsian bowed again, and backed toward the door.
"Thank you, Iameis,"
Chauvelin said. "You've done well." There was no formal way to
respond, but he saw from the sudden movement of her hands, quickly suppressed,
that she had heard, and was pleased.
Chauvelin made his way back through the
corridors and coiling stairs to his office at the top of the house. The light
that streamed in through the curved windows was as milky as the clouds, heavy
with the promise of the coming storm. He ignored it, locking the door behind
him, touched the shadowscreen to bring up his communications system even before
he'd seated himself at the desk, resolutely turning his back on the clouds to
the south. A screen lit beneath the desktop; he touched the shadowscreen again,
calling the codes that would connect him with Ransome's loft, and waited for
the screen to clear. If anyone could track ji-Imbaoa, it would be Ransome.
The screen stayed blank, the call codes
scrolling repeatedly across the base of the screen. Chauvelin let them cycle,
waiting, long after he was sure Ransome would not answer. _Of all the times for
Ransome to be away from his loft_... Chauvelin killed that thought, burying his
fear with it, and tied his system into the Game nets. Half a dozen Harmsways
were playing, but none of them was Ransome. Chauvelin swore again, freed
himself from the Game, and touched keys to set up a new program. The
communications system would access Ransome's loft every half hour -- he
hesitated, then changed the numbers, making it every quarter hour -- until
someone answered. _And that is all I can do. I've done everything; now I have
to wait_. It was not a pleasant thought, and, after a moment, he flipped part
of his system back to the Game nets. If nothing else, he could distract himself
in their baroque conventions.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: Old Field Administration
Building,_
_Newfields,
on the Landing Isle by Dry Cut_
Ransome waited in the narrow reception
room, lit by the long windows that ran like stripes from floor to ceiling and
by the thin blue glow of the secretary system. Beyond the windows he could see
the cliff face, and the cold grey-green sea beneath it, the strands of foam
bright against its choppy surface; he shivered once, and turned his back on the
hypnotic waters. The office was on the north side of the building, away from
the approaching storm; as he'd come in, a horde of workers had been drawing
shutters across the southern windows. It was not like Arduinidi to make him
wait. _It just proves how hot I am -- if I weren't, Selasa wouldn't make me
wait here like this, while she decides if she can afford to see me. Or_, he
realized suddenly, _while she finds out if I've been seen, coming here_. That
was not a pleasant thought, and he reached into his pocket to touch the
datablock that nestled there. It was not a good habit to get into and he took
his hand away, fingers tingling. _Maybe, just maybe I should've quit after I
talked to the factors at Bonduri Warehouse, they told me enough to be able to
tell Chauvelin what's going on_ -- He put the thought aside as unprofitable. He
was here; it was too late to turn back.
The secretary chirped discreetly on its
pedestal, the blue light strengthening slightly. The affected mechanical voice
said, "N'Arduinidi will see you now."
In the same instant the inner door slid
open, a soft chime drawing his attention. Ransome rose to his feet, and stepped
through the doorway into Arduinidi's office. It was as if he had stepped from
Storm into High Summer, and he stood blinking for a moment, disoriented. Light,
the hot sunlight of full summer, poured through the windows, falling from a
clear and brassy sky; a faint breeze stirred, bringing with it the smell of the
summerweed that choked the cliffs in warm weather and the acrid undertone of
the port. Very distantly, he could hear the slow slap of the waves against the
cliff face and the screech of metal from the port. It was an illusion, of
course -- holoimages inside the false frames of the windows, carefully controlled
ventilation and a scent mixer, subtle sound effects -- but even knowing that,
Ransome found himself relaxing in the summer warmth.
"It's very good," he said,
and Arduinidi smiled at him from behind her desk. She was a big woman, tall and
broad-shouldered, short hair further restrained by a band of metal disks. A
single wire fell from it, running down her forehead to the socket at the corner
of her left eye; her earrings were in the shape of an owl, her on-line icon.
"Thanks," she answered, but
her tone was less than enthusiastic. "You're a very chancy item right now,
did you know that?"
Ransome managed a smile, did his best
to hide the sudden chill that ran up his spine. "I'd kind of gathered
that, yes."
Arduinidi glanced down at her desktop.
"You were followed here, and there's talk just coming in about a
disturbance at the Bonduri Warehouse -- somebody beat up a factor, it looks
like. That wasn't you, was it?"
Ransome shook his head. "Not my
style." _Not my style at all. It sounds like someone's getting desperate_.
"But I'll bet it had something to
do with you," Arduinidi said.
Ransome hesitated, but there was little
point in lying to her. Arduinidi was not only one of the better network
security consultants on planet, she was also one of the more reliable data
fences, and a superb netwalker in her own right. Nothing happened on the nets
that she didn't know about. "Something," he said aloud. "More to
do with Damian Chrestil."
"I told you before,"
Arduinidi said. "I don't know anything about it."
_Meaning he's put the fear of
Retribution into all of you_, Ransome thought. "Selasa," he said, and
managed to make his tone faintly teasing. Arduinidi lifted an eyebrow, but said
nothing. "I know you," Ransome went on. "You're worse than I am
about a blocked access. It wouldn't be like you not to get into the port feeds,
especially after someone warned you off. I want that data."
Arduinidi looked at him. "I'm not
that stupid," she said. "You may do this for fun, I-Jay, but half my
business comes from my reputation. Even if I had the information -- if -- I
wouldn't sell it. And doubly not to you."
"I know what it is," Ransome
said, "what it has to be. If I tell you what you found, will you give me a
yes or no?"
Arduinidi shook her head. "No
dice. How would you know whether to believe me, anyway?"
"Because, as you say, your
reputation is your business." Ransome looked at her, weighing his next
words. His only choices were money or a threat, and he would never have enough
money to make it worth her while. "I'm prepared to make sure that your
legitimate clients find out about your second job, Selasa. If it comes to
that."
"You're fucking crazy,"
Arduinidi said.
Ransome shook his head. "I want
that data."
"You push it, and I won't deal
with you," Arduinidi said flatly. "I'll make damn sure you don't walk
my nets again, make sure no one buys from you, make sure no one deals with you
at all. Do you really want to risk it?"
_Stalemate_, Ransome thought, _because
she can do it_. He hid his despair, said, "Can you afford to risk word
getting out that you're the best data fence on planet?"
Arduinidi sat silent, nothing moving on
a face gone suddenly like stone.
"I'm willing to settle for a yes
or no," Ransome said again. "That's all I need, Selasa. That's all
Chauvelin needs."
"Hah." Arduinidi's mouth
twisted, as though she'd tasted something sour. "I should've guessed he'd be
behind this." She sighed. "All right. What is it you think you
know?"
Ransome took a deep breath, felt
congestion drag at the bottom of his lungs. _Not now_, he thought, and knew he
should have expected it. He put that fear aside, knowing he could wait a little
longer to breathe the Mist, said, "Damian Chrestil is smuggling something
-- Oblivion, I think -- into Hsaioi-An, to receivers on Jericho and Highhopes,
and he's doing it for ji-Imbaoa and the rest of the je Tsinra-an, who have the receivers
for clients."
Arduinidi paused for a moment, then,
reluctantly, nodded. "Yes. So far as the smuggling goes, that is. I don't
deal in hsai politics." She gave a short, humorless bark of laughter.
"And it's lachesi, not Oblivion."
"What's the difference?"
Ransome said.
Arduinidi shook her head. "Lachesi
is -- mostly -- legal, it's just the spite laws that keep the Republic from
exporting it to Hsaioi-An. Oblivion is restricted. So Damian Chrestil stays on
the good side of general opinion, if not the law." There was a sneaking
note of admiration in her voice.
"I see," Ransome said, and
heard the same note in his own voice. _And it would work, too: a lot of the
Republican merchants have been lobbying for years to dissolve the spite laws,
and wouldn't feel too bad seeing them broken_. "Thanks," he said, and
heard the congestion tightening his voice. "There's just one more thing --
" He pointed to the datanode, eyebrows lifted in question, and was not
surprised when Arduinidi shook her head.
"Not from my nodes. I've done a
lot more than I like, I-Jay, don't push it."
Ransome nodded, gave her a rueful
smile. "It was worth a try."
"I hope you think so
tomorrow," Arduinidi said. Ransome looked sharply at her, and she gave him
her sweetest smile. "I'm pissed at you, Ransome. Remember that."
"I expect I'll be in no danger of
forgetting," Ransome said, and Arduinidi nodded.
"I'd be careful, if I were
you."
"Thanks a lot," Ransome said.
Behind him, the door slid open; he turned and left the office, aware of her
eyes on his back the whole while. He paused for a second in the outer office,
glancing wistfully at the secretary pillar, but red lights glowed all around
the base of the data drives, warning him from trying to make contact. He made a
face, even though he'd expected it, and the outer door swung open, ushering him
out of the office.
He made his way back through the
hallways toward the main stairs -- not the elevator today, not if Damian
Chrestil's people were feeling desperate enough to risk attacking a warehouse
factor in broad daylight; there was too much chance of being caught in a closed
space, with no room left to run. _Which really brings up the next question_, he
thought. _What do I do now?_ The main thing now was to get the information, his
own reconstruction of Damian Chrestil's plan, to Chauvelin; once that was done,
Chauvelin could be counted on to deal with Damian Chrestil. It sounded simple
enough, and he paused in a corner to chord the last bit of information,
Arduinidi's confirmation, into his datablock. The little machine chirped
softly, confirming the record, and he smiled wryly. However, contacting
Chauvelin could prove difficult.
He took the side stairs down to the
second floor, paused on the balcony to look down into the building's open
lobby. As he'd feared, a pair of men in docker's clothes were standing by the
main entrance; a woman whom he recognized as belonging to C/B Cie. warehouse
security was standing beside the main information kiosk, one hand cupped
loosely over the controls. He frowned, narrowed his eyes, but couldn't see if
she was using a tap. _All the more reason to hurry_, he thought, and turned
left, walking along the short end of the building, staying close to the wall
where he was less likely to be seen from the lobby floor. There were no public
terminals here, and a quick scan of the directories showed no names he knew.
That left the general mail system, with its kiosks on every floor at each
corner of the building. He lengthened his stride, found the nearest kiosk,
luckily unoccupied. It was set into a small alcove, partly screened by a
sculpture of panels of sequensa-covered fabric, and he began to hope that he
might have time to contact Chauvelin after all.
He glanced over his shoulder, saw no
one except a secretary at the far end of the corridor, and quickly fed cash
slips into the system. This was no time to use his money cards: it would be
like shouting his presence to everyone who might be watching. He had just
enough; the system lit and windowed, and he slid the datablock out of his
pocket. The jacks and cords were standard, and he plugged the thin wire into
the mail system's receivers. It wasn't perfect -- for one thing, he had far
less control over who would ultimately receive the information than he would if
he were able to use the regular networks -- but it would have to do. He touched
the codes that would connect him with the ambassador's house, and the system
flashed back at him: CONNECTION NOT POSSIBLE, PLEASE TRY AGAIN.
"Fuck it." Ransome stared for
a fraction of a second at the little screen, hit the codes again. The screen
went blank, and then the same message flickered into view. He'd been suckered:
the woman at the main kiosk wasn't bothering to tap the mail system; instead,
she was interrupting it, blocking any transmission that he tried to make, and
she was bound to be tracing his location at the same time. He stared at the
screen, feeling the seconds slip away. It was too late to get away, his own
mistake had seen to that; the only thing he could hope for was to dump the
information somewhere where Chauvelin could find it. Maybe his home systems, if
he couldn't reach Chauvelin himself in time. He killed that sense of panic,
forcing himself to think clearly, dredged the emergency codes out of his
memory. He had bartered for them almost two weeks ago, eons on the nets, but
they were Lockwardens' codes, and the Lockwardens were notoriously
conservative. He typed them in, making himself work carefully: he would only
get one chance, if that. The screen went blank again, then lit, presented him
with an open channel. He suppressed a cheer, and hit the codes that would dump
the entire contents of the datablock to a holding node, one of a thousand
secure datastores that laced the nets. The block whined softly to itself, the
seconds ticking past, and then the screen cleared. He started to type a
mailcode, allowing the datastore itself to transfer the information to Chauvelin,
but heard footsteps on the stone floor behind him. _Too late_. He touched a
second series of illegal codes, saw the screen fill with trash, effectively
destroying his trail. Lights flickered across the datablock, warning him that
its contents had been permanently erased. He sighed, and heard a woman's voice
behind him.
"Na Ransome."
He turned slowly, not wanting to
provoke anything, and found himself facing a wiry woman -- not the one who had
been working at the kiosk in the lobby. She had a palmgun out and ready, half
hidden by her hand and body, invisible to anyone working in the offices along
the corridor. A much bigger man stood just behind and to her left, screening
her still further from the offices. He wore a bulky coat that could hide a
dozen weapons. Ransome looked to his own left in spite of himself, in spite of
knowing better, and saw another pair -- dockers, this time -- moving toward him
along the cross corridor.
"Someone wants to talk to
you," the woman went on, her voice low and even.
"Someone like Damian
Chrestil?" Ransome asked, but she didn't flinch.
"Someone." She beckoned to
him with her free hand, the palmgun still leveled. "Someone who prefers to
keep this tidy. If you'll step this way."
Ransome hesitated, but there was no real choice. _I'm too old --
and not sick enough yet -- for a suicide leap, and I was never good at
fighting_. He spread his hands, showing empty palms, and stepped carefully away
from the mail kiosk.
"Search him," the woman said
to one of the dockers, and Ransome submitted to the rough and efficient search.
She stepped past him then, unplugged the datablock, and stood studying the
kiosk screen for a moment. Ransome saw her frown over the hash of random characters
and touch a few keycodes before she shook her head and pocketed the datablock.
_At least she wasn't able to trace the destination codes_, he thought, and felt
a flicker of hope revive.
"Nothing here," the docker
said, and she nodded.
"I hope you'll come quietly, Na
Ransome."
"I'm not stupid," Ransome
answered. _This is how the game is played; you cut your losses and hope for
your connections to save you. Please God, Chauvelin will try to contact me,
will sort through the net stores when he can't_ -- He pushed that thought
aside, pushing away panic with it. But this had happened before; he'd done his
best, and sacrificed himself, and ended up abandoned. _That was Bettis
Chrestil, twenty years ago. Chauvelin is different. I can rely on him. I have
to rely on him_. The fear was a taste of metal in his throat.
"Walk with him," the woman
said to the big man, who nodded unsmiling and took Ransome's arm. Ransome felt
the muzzle of a palmgun touch his side briefly, felt the plastic warm against
the inside of his elbow. The big man had a grip like iron; there was no hope of
pulling free. _All I can do now is wait_, Ransome thought, and let them walk
him slowly down the stairs and across the lobby. No one looked twice at them,
and a part of Ransome's mind had to admire their efficiency.
"I hope Damian Chrestil pays you
what you're worth," he said, experimentally, and the big man's hand closed
painfully on his arm, grinding the palmgun into his elbow.
"Do stay quiet," the woman
said, conversationally, and turned her head to murmur something into a
hand-held com-unit. As they passed through the main doors, a heavy passenger
carrier, its rear pod sealed tight, windows darkened, pulled up in front of
them. The door of the sealed compartment sighed open, and the woman said,
"In there, please."
There was no point in a struggle, and
no chance even if he'd wanted to. The big man leaned into him, putting him off
balance, and as Ransome stumbled, the woman tripped him neatly, so that he
practically fell into the darkened pod. He righted himself instantly, steadying
himself with both hands against the padded seats, but the big man pushed in
after him, palmgun now displayed, forcing him back against the pod's wall. The
door closed behind the big man almost as soon as he'd cleared the frame, and
the carrier slid away from the curb.
Ransome leaned back against the
cushions, knowing better than to move too quickly. The big man settled himself
opposite him, moving with the rocking of the carrier, sat comfortably, with the
palmgun resting on his knee. Ransome eyed it for a moment, but knew better than
to think of attack. He could hear the rasp of his breathing even over the purr
of the carrier's motor, felt the familiar pain tugging at his lungs.
"Hey," he said, and his voice cracked even on the single word. He
made a face, hating the weakness, hating to have to ask, said again, "Hey.
I need to take some medicine. It's in my pocket."
The big man looked at him for a long
moment, his face utterly without expression. "All right," he said at
last. "Which pocket?"
"Jacket. Left-hand side."
"Go ahead."
Ransome reached for the cylinder of
Mist, making himself move at half the speed he wanted, slid the squat cylinder
from his pocket, and started to hold it up even with the big man's eyes. The
man leaned forward instantly, caught Ransome's wrist before he could finish the
movement.
"Don't make trouble."
Ransome shook his head, did his best to
suppress the cough that threatened to choke him. The big man eyed him warily,
then released him, leaned back against his cushion. Ransome unfolded the mask,
set it against his mouth and nose, and touched the trigger. The cold mist
enfolded him, drove away even the fear for a brief second; he leaned back, eyes
closed, and let the drug fill his lungs. He'd betrayed another weakness, he
knew, something that they could use against him, and for a moment the fear rose
with the thick mucus to choke him. He made himself breathe slowly, until the
worst of the fear passed and he was left with the lethargy of the drug. He let
himself fall into it, repeating his thoughts like a mantra. He would wait:
there was nothing else he could do, and the situation might change. And in the
meantime, he would wait.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: Betani Square,
Roche'Ambroise_
Lioe made her way through the fringes
of the crowd that filled one end of Betani Square, pressed as close as possible
to the stage where the puppeteers would be performing. It was less crowded by
the fountain, but not by much; a dozen or more children in varying degrees of
costume were playing on the edges of the three-lobed basin, and several more
were splashing in the shallow water, parents -- or at least parental-looking
figures -- watching from the sidelines. There was no sign of Roscha. Lioe
scowled -- _I knew she wouldn't be able to get away_ -- but walked around the
fountain's edge until she was certain the other woman had not arrived. She
looked sideways, poising the chronometer's numbers against one of the bands of
darker stone that crisscrossed the square's paving, dividing it into diamonds.
There were still a few minutes until the show was supposed to start. She
sighed, and resigned herself to wait.
A line of bollards marked the square's
legal limits, twenty or thirty of the low mushroom shapes running along a line
of dark paving that seemed to mark the top of the short flight of stairs that
led down to the canal. A handful of people were sitting there, mostly in ones
and twos, some staring toward the distant stage, more looking out toward the
water or toward the smaller canal that formed part of the square's southern
edge. Lioe glanced around again, and seated herself on the bollard nearest the
fountain. She could see well enough, could see all the likely approaches, from
the waterbus stops on the canals or from the nearest helipad, and at least she
could be relatively comfortable. _Besides, I don't think she's coming_.
Lioe tugged her jacket closed against the wind. It wasn't cold, but it
had picked up even in the half hour since she'd left Ransome's loft, was
blowing steadily now, from the south and east. The air smelled odd, of salt and
thunder, and the children's shouts fell flat in the heavy air. She glanced over
her shoulder toward the mouth of the Inland Water, saw only the housetops on
the far side of the canal. The last forecast she had seen had predicted the
storm would strike around midnight, and she looked around again for a street
broker. To her surprise -- the brokers had seemed to be everywhere for a while
-- there were none of the bright red-and-white umbrellas in sight.
Music sounded from under the stage,
distorted by distance and wind and the thick air. Lioe rose to her feet with
the others, and saw the first of the puppets move out onto the platform. It was
a massive construct, maybe two and a half meters tall, and nearly as broad;
fans unfurled from what should have been the shoulders, and a crest of bronze
feathers rose from the stylized head. More of the feathers appeared below the
fans, and wings parted to reveal several small, white-painted faces. They were
set slightly askew, Lioe saw, and jagged cracks ran down their centers,
detouring around the long noses. As she watched, the first of them split open,
revealing an animal shape too small to recognize. Intrigued, Lioe moved toward
the platform, circling south toward the smaller canal, where the crowd was
thinner, to try to get a better view. It was a bird, or something with
delicate, arching wings and a glittering, peacock-blue body. She edged farther
into the crowd as the second face split, revealing what seemed to be a model of
the local solar system, and the entire assemblage leaned sideways, elevating
the fans and turning the feathered crest into an almost architectural arch.
There was a person inside that structure, Lioe realized suddenly, a single
human being at the center of the spines and wings and the delicately made
creatures; each precisely controlled movement set changes flowing through the
puppet's outer layers. But what did it mean? It was not like any puppet she'd
ever seen, or even imagined, and she stood staring, trying to puzzle out a
story, some purpose, from the complex metamorphosis.
"Na Lioe?"
The voice was unfamiliar, but polite.
She turned to face a thin, plainly dressed man with a plain, unmemorable face.
"It is Na Lioe, isn't it?"
Lioe nodded. "Yes." She kept
her voice and face discouraging, but the man nodded anyway.
"I thought it must be you. Roscha
said you'd be here. She asked me to tell you, she's running late." He
gestured toward the street that led away from the square, running along the
edge of the smaller canal. "She said she'd meet you at the Mad Monkey,
instead of here."
Lioe glanced down the street -- the
sign was there, all right, a grinning, contorted holoimage dancing above a
doorway at the far end of the street, where the canal turned left, away from
the street itself -- and looked back at the stranger. He was dressed like a
docker, all right -- dressed much like Roscha herself, for that matter,
dockers' trousers and a plain vest under a loose, unbelted jacket.
"When?"
The man shrugged, looked sideways as
though to call up his chronometer. "She said she'd be there at
fifteen-thirty -- by the sixteenth hour at the latest."
Lioe glanced sideways herself, saw the
numbers flash into existence against the dark paving: _almost sixteen hundred
already_. "Thanks a lot," she said, and the man nodded.
"No problem." He turned away,
already looking for a better vantage point among the crowd.
Lioe watched him go, wondering just who
he was. He looked vaguely familiar -- _maybe someone from Shadows_, she
thought, and looked back at the stage. The puppet seemed to be melting into the
platform, dozens of indistinguishable little mechanisms churning frantically
around its edges. The operator was doing the splits within the confining
mechanism. The crowd murmured, sounding both awed and approving. _I must have
missed something_, Lioe thought. _I don't understand at all_. She looked again
toward the Mad Monkey, wondering if Roscha was there yet, and if she could get
food and/or drink. The sign looked like a bar's, the monkey dancing in the air,
very bright in the shadowed street. _And even if it isn't, it might be more fun
than watching the puppets. Mechanical perfection palls after a few minutes, in
my opinion_. She eased her way out of the crowd, and started down the narrow
street.
She had not traveled more than a dozen
meters before she realized that she was being followed by a nondescript man who
looked like another docker. She glanced back, wondering if she could turn back
toward the square, slip between the back of the stage platform and the
storefronts that defined the square, and saw a second person detach himself
from the knot of people beside the curtain that screened the back of the stage,
effectively cutting off her escape. She swore under her breath, wishing that
she were armed -- wishing that she'd carried even a pilot's tool-knife -- and
with an effort kept herself from looking around wildly. They were between her
and the fringes of the crowd; she could shout, but none of the people watching
the puppet show could reach her before the two men did. _I'll pretend I haven't
seen them_, she decided, _keep walking and hope I can get to the Monkey before
them -- if that's safe. The man who said he was from Roscha, he must've been
one of them, set this up_... She shoved her hand into her pocket, closed her
fist over thin air so that it made what she hoped would look like a dangerous
bulge, and kept walking. _I'll try the Mad Monkey, and then the cross street,
and if it comes to it, I'm not carrying much cash and it's not a good place for
rape_ --
A third man stepped out of a doorway
ahead of her, hands deep in the pockets of his jacket. Lioe stopped, took an
instinctive step sideways and back, toward the edge of the canal.
"Na Lioe," the third man
said. "There's someone who wants to see you."
"Like hell," Lioe answered.
She drew breath to scream, and the man freed his hand from his jacket,
displayed a palmgun.
"Yell and I'll shoot."
Lioe released her breath cautiously,
glanced back toward the square. Sure enough, the two strangers -- and a third,
the man who had spoken to her about Roscha -- were coming toward her, blocking
her escape in that direction. She took another step toward the canal, turning so
that she could see all of them. "What do you want?"
"There's someone who wants to talk
to you," the leader said again. "If you come quietly, no one will get
hurt."
Lioe took another slow step backward,
toward the canal edge, so that she stood barely half a meter from the bank. She
could swim, that had been bullied into her in Foster Services, but the current
was fast, and the far bank was not distant enough to offer an escape. "Not
likely," she said aloud, fighting for time. "Come any closer, and
I'll scream -- and if you shoot me, nobody's going to be talking to me."
There was a little silence, and a quick
exchange of glances, and then the leader raised his palmgun. "Last chance.
Come quietly, or I will shoot."
_Shit_. Lioe froze for a second,
frantically weighing her options. If she screamed, the leader would shoot --
she had no doubt about it, and at this distance, he could hardly miss. He was
too far away to try to jump him, get the gun away from him, and even if he weren't,
there were the others to consider -- probably armed, too. That left the canal,
her only -- and not very good -- choice. _Unless I want to go with them_. She
rejected that thought even before it was fully formed. _I don't even know why
they want me, who this mysterious someone could be -- unless this is Ransome's
doing, his weird intrigue rebounding on me?_ She pushed that thought aside as
irrelevant, said carefully, "Wait a minute, now."
The leader relaxed slightly, the
palmgun's muzzle wavering just a little. It was all the chance she was going to
get. Lioe flung herself blindly backward, into the canal's murky water.
Fleetingly she heard one of the men shout, and she hit the water hard, shoulder
and hip, throwing a great plume of spray. She righted herself under the cold
surface, risked opening her eyes for just an instant. The water, salt and oil
and chemicals, stung miserably, but she saw light above her, and oriented
herself against it. The current was strong, as she'd hoped and feared, and she
let it take her, sweeping her down toward the junction where the canal turned
south, away from the street. Already her lungs hurt her; she let out a little
of her air, exerting herself only to keep herself parallel with the surface,
and risked another glance into the dirty water. The surface glimmered just
above her, tempting her with air and light, but she made herself stay down,
trying to put a meter or so of water between her and the palmgun's projectiles.
She let out a little more air, darkness gathering at the edge of her vision,
and could hold her breath no longer. Gasping, she broke the surface, flinging
her hair out of her eyes, and heard the flat crack of the palmgun from the
nearer bank. Someone shouted, but she dove again, striking out strongly across
the canal. The current clutched at her, rolling her sideways and down, then
back in toward the canal bank. She floundered in momentary panic, eyes opening
in spite of the pain, and clawed her way back to the surface. She was at the
corner, where the canal narrowed and the water ran the fastest, rolling and
folding over itself. She forgot about the gunmen in her struggle to free
herself from the current's pull. For a terrified moment she thought she'd
failed, that she would be pulled under and drowned, and then the water flung
her with bruising force against the first of a set of pilings. She cried out in
spite of herself, choked on a mouthful of the salty water, and struck the
pilings again. This time, she grabbed for them, her hands sliding in the slimy
mess of waterweeds, and then she worked her fingers into the dripping mat and
clung, head above water, the current still dragging at her clothes and body.
Her face burned where she had struck the piling, pain like long lines of fire
running from cheek to jaw, and the corner of her mouth stung painfully. Her
shoulder hurt, too -- _it was the same shoulder each time_, she thought, with a
crazy feeling of injustice. She'd fallen hard on her left shoulder when she
went into the canal, and now it was her left shoulder that had hit the piling.
She caught her breath, flailed her feet against the piling until she found
something -- it felt like a metal band, or an old mooring ring -- and braced
herself against it. It had all happened so fast, she hadn't had time to kick
off her shoes.
She looked back down the canalside, saw
the four men huddled together, staring along the canal in her direction. She
froze for a second, new fear shooting through her, and realized that they
couldn't see her after all. The bend in the bank protected her, at least a
little bit, and at this distance she would be no more than a dark dot against
the dark water. That was reassuring; she tightened her grip on the piling, and
began to look for a way out of the water. This was a one-bank canal, with a
single pedestrian embankment on the opposite side. Above her stretched blank
formestone walls, banded with darker blocks of stone; the nearest window was a
good ten meters above her head. The current swept past her, tugging her body away
from the piling: _not a place to try and swim_, she thought, and turned her
attention to the wall. The pilings stretched the length of the house row, and
there seemed to be a break in the walls beyond that. _Maybe if I can work my
way down to that break, I can just climb out_, Lioe thought, _or even just get
out of the worst of the current, and swim to the embankment. If it weren't for
the current, I could do it, no problem_.
She looked back down the canal, ready
to duck out of sight if the would-be kidnappers were looking in her direction,
but they were standing close together, one of them with his hand cupped to his
head as though he held a portable com-unit. They seemed to be distracted, or as
distracted as they were likely to get, looking back toward the stage. Lioe
leaned out cautiously into the current, reached for the coat of waterweed that
fringed the next piling. There wasn't much above the water, and she leaned out
a little farther, reaching beneath the surface to grope for the matted weeds.
She found them, dug her hand into the slimy surface, the individual strands
slipping slack between her fingers. They were covered with a gelatinous coating
that made her shiver even as she tightened her grip, pulling back as hard as
she could. The weeds stayed fast to the piling. She took a deep breath and
released her grip on the first piling, reaching for the second, letting the
current toss her against it. She tightened her hold, breathing hard, ignored
the new pain where her knee had scraped the formestone wall, and reached for
the next piling to try again.
She inched her way down the canal wall,
groping from piling to piling, her hands slimed and green from clutching the
weeds. Their air sacs burst and oozed a sticky ichor, staining her hands
despite the running water; her face burned where the salt hit the cuts, and her
waterlogged clothes dragged heavy on her limbs. She hesitated for a moment,
wondering if she should finally get rid of her shoes, but she would have to
walk once she made the bank, and she was getting close to the open space
between the buildings. She started to smile, but winced as the expression
jarred her scraped face, and reached for the next piling. She grasped the ring
of waterweed -- it seemed thinner than the others, but solidly attached -- and
let go. The waterweed came away in her hand as the current caught her, whirling
her away from the bank. She flailed for a moment in panic, then got herself
under control. The current was not as strong here on the straight of the canal.
She brought herself abreast of it, angled in slowly toward the bank.
The space she had been aiming for
turned out to be one of the tiny canalside parks, neatly paved, with low
umbrella-shaped trees growing in tubs and a wide strip of open ground filled
with extravagant white flowers. There was a gonda landing as well, three steps
leading up out of the water, and a mooring ring on the wall, and Lioe clung to
that for a moment, grateful to feel solid land under her feet, before she
dragged herself up onto the bank.
A woman was sitting under the nearest
umbrella-tree, on the edge of the tub, a paper parcel open beside her, the
remains of a meat pie strewn on the ground for the local cats. Her head came up
sharply as Lioe staggered up onto the bank, and Lioe hastily lifted her hands
to show them empty of weapons.
"It's all right, I'm not going to
hurt you. Somebody tried to mug me."
The woman swallowed whatever she was
going to say, swept the last crumbs off her lap. She was a big woman, tall and
heavy-set, dressed in the dark robe that belonged to the Four Judges. Lioe saw
the tall headdress and mask of the Prospering Judge set aside on the tub's edge
beside her. "Are you hurt?" the woman asked, and came forward briskly.
Lioe shook her head, was suddenly grateful for the other's
steadying arm. "Not really, just cuts and bruises." She looked down,
saw her knee raw and scraped through the ripped trousers. "I went into the
canal, back toward Betani Square."
"Jesus," the woman said.
"The current's murder there. You were lucky." She shifted her grip,
taking more of Lioe's weight, said firmly, "Come on. You'll want to talk
to the Lockwardens."
"Lockwardens?" Lioe echoed,
and then remembered. They were the local police, responsible for the locks and
storm barriers as well as the usual laws.
"Our police," the woman
answered. "You're an off-worlder, then?"
Lioe nodded.
"The bastards will pick on
strangers," the woman said, with a kind of dour satisfaction. "Come
on, it's not far."
Lioe let the stranger half lead, half
carry her across the courtyard, suddenly too tired, too drained to care if she
were part of the group. The woman paused by her tree, stooped with surprising
grace to collect her mask, and Lioe realized with a sudden pang that she had
lost the mask Gelsomina had given her. It was a strange thing to bother her,
but her eyes filled with tears, and she stood shivering for a moment, mouth
trembling painfully.
"Easy now," the big woman
said. "Not far."
The nearest Lockwardens' station wasn't
far, barely forty meters along a narrow side street. It occupied the corner of
one of the larger buildings, and all its windows blazed with light. The door
stood open, men and women in uniforms that Lioe didn't recognize hurrying in
and out, clutching workboards and datablocks and even sheafs of paper. Someone
exclaimed, seeing their approach, but Lioe was too tired and too cold to care.
She let herself be led into the station, and then into a side room, unable to
focus on the questioning voices that surrounded her. Someone eased her into a
chair -- a warm, well-padded chair -- and then wrapped her hands around
something warm, held it to her lips. She sipped obediently, and recognized the
flat, bitter taste of antishock drugs beneath the sweet tea. In the distance,
she heard the soft chirping of a medical scanner, and looked up in confusion.
"Finish the tea," a new voice
said, and she did as she was told. Someone else -- she was aware of him only as
a pair of long-fingered, rather beautiful hands -- wrapped the edges of a
heated cocoon blanket closed around her. She had been sitting in it, she
realized, and she huddled into its stiff embrace, letting its creeping warmth seep
into her, drying her clothes. The tea was starting to work; she looked up,
feeling more alert than she had before, and saw a spare, grey-haired woman
sitting on the edge of a table opposite her. She herself was sitting in the
only chair.
Even as she realized that, a male voice
said, "Let me take a look at your face."
She turned her head obediently, winced
as the long fingers probed the cuts on her cheek and jaw. The man -- he wore a
medic's snake-and-staff earring -- winced in sympathy, and reached for the
supply box that lay open at his feet.
"Close your eyes," he said,
and laid a delicate mist of disinfectant over the entire side of her face. The
stuff stung for a moment, and then a sensation of coolness seemed to spread
across her jaw. She felt an applicator dab quickly at each of the cuts -- it
hurt, but remotely, the pain reaching her from a distance -- and then the medic
said, "All right, you can look now."
Lioe opened her eyes, to see that the
woman was still staring at her. Lioe's identification disks and the contents of
her belt purse were spread out on the tabletop beside her.
"So, can you tell me what
happened, Na Lioe?" The hard-boned face was not unfriendly, but Lioe found
herself choosing her words with care.
"A bunch of guys tried to kidnap
me, pulled a gun on me -- this was on the little street that runs away from
Betani Square, where the Mad Monkey is. I ended up jumping into the canal to
escape, and I got kind of banged up."
"Kidnap?" The woman's voice
sharpened. "The woman who brought you in said you'd been mugged. Why would
someone want to kidnap you?"
"Because -- " Lioe stopped
abruptly. _I'm not fully sure why, but it's bound to have something to do with
Ransome, and Damian Chrestil and the cargo that I helped bring in, and the
hsai, or at least hsai politics. And even if I did know what was going on, I
don't know how much I can afford to tell you: Ransome's in this up to his neck,
and he's a Burning Brighter working for the hsai_. She shrugged, feeling more
bruises on her arm and shoulder. "I don't know. It was what they said --
"
"Why don't you tell me about this
from the beginning?" the woman said, not ungently. "My name's
Telanin. I'm the chief of the station." She looked at the medic, who
nodded.
"Let me just get you another cup
of tea," he said. "And then I want to look at your knee."
"Thanks," Lioe said. Her
clothes were drying nicely in the cocoon's steady warmth; only her shoes stayed
cold, squishing slightly when she moved her toes, and she loosened the cocoon's
lower edges to kick them off. She took the mug the medic held out to her,
sipped cautiously, and wasn't surprised to taste more of the bitter
restoratives beneath the minty tea. It wasn't as sweet as the first mug. The
medic set her shoes aside to dry under the orange-red glow of a drying rack,
and pulled the cocoon aside to begin working on her leg.
"About what happened?"
Telanin said, and Lioe dragged her attention back to the other woman.
"Sorry." She pulled the
cocoon closer around her body, buying time. "I was supposed to meet
someone in Betani Square to watch the puppet show, but she didn't show up. She
had to work this morning; I had a feeling she wouldn't be able to make it. So I
stayed to watch the show anyway, and this man came up to me, said he had a
message from Roscha -- that's the woman I was supposed to meet. He said she
wanted to meet me at the place called the Mad Monkey, and went off. I waited a
little bit, but I was getting bored with the show, so I decided to see if she
was there, at the Monkey, I mean. A couple of guys followed me away from the
square, and there was a third man waiting in the street -- he was the one with
a gun." _And he said "someone" wanted to talk to me. But if I
mention that, she'll want to know why this mysterious someone would go to this
much trouble over me_.
"Did any of them say anything, say
what they wanted?" Telanin asked. Her hand was resting on the control pad
of an ordinary-looking noteblock, Lioe saw, and she chose her words very
carefully.
"Something about coming quietly, I
think. It happened pretty quickly."
Telanin's fingers shifted almost
imperceptibly, recording the answer. "So they didn't say anything else,
nothing about kidnapping?"
Lioe shook her head, contrived to look
sheepish. "I guess I overstated it."
Telanin nodded. "What about this
woman you were meeting, this Roscha? Did you see her?"
Lioe shook her head again.
"How well do you know her --
what's her full name?"
"Jafiera Roscha." Lioe
paused. "We met at one of the Game clubs, Shadows, a couple of days ago.
I'm only on planet for few days while my ship is in for repairs, but I'm a
Gamer, and I've been spending my time in the clubs."
"So you don't know her well?"
Telanin persisted.
"She's a Gamer," Lioe said
again, and was suddenly aware of how ridiculous she must sound. _We've played
together, I've seen her play my characters -- yes, I know her very well, and
not at all. About like I know Ransome_. She shrugged, helplessly, and the other
woman nodded.
"Jafiera Roscha's known to us,
though she's never been involved in the bash-and-grab gangs. But it's worth
checking out, see if she set you up. She hasn't been asking you about your
movements, whether you carry cash, anything like that, has she?"
Lioe shook her head.
Telanin nodded again. "We'll check
her out, though. It seems odd they'd use her name, otherwise. How many people
knew you were meeting Roscha today?"
"I don't know," Lioe said.
"We talked about it in the club last night. We weren't making any secret
of it, so probably a lot of people heard."
"Probably." Telanin gave a
rather sour smile. "Look, I have to say I don't think this was a kidnap
attempt. I hate to admit it, but this kind of bash-and-grab isn't uncommon
during Carnival, especially when off-worlders are involved. A couple of canalli
manage to lure a stranger into a dark alley, demand money and movables at
gunpoint, and run. We'll check it out, see if Roscha's involved, and I'll ask
you to look at our files, see if you can pick anyone out of the visual database
-- " She smiled again, more genuinely this time. "It's set up a lot
like the _Face/Body_ books. You shouldn't have any trouble finding them if
they're in there. But I don't know how much chance we have of finding them. You
were lucky."
There was a little murmur of agreement
from the medic, who had finished spreading a film of selfheal over the cuts on
her knee. "Lucky twice," he said aloud. "The current's dangerous
at that corner."
Telanin nodded in agreement.
"We'll do what we can," she said again, "but with this storm
coming in, frankly, we've got to concentrate on that. Our investigation won't
get started properly until it's past, and by then, the trails will be pretty
cold."
"I understand," Lioe said.
"Hell, I wouldn't mind seeing these guys in jail, but, as you say, I was
lucky. They didn't get anything, and I'm not hurt." She managed a quick
grin. "I don't want to push my luck."
Telanin smiled back, and Lioe thought
she looked faintly relieved. "I'll have you look through our database,
then, and sign a complaint, and then I'll have one of my people fly you back to
your hostel. Are you up in the Ghetto?"
"Yes," Lioe said, "but
that's not necessary -- "
Telanin held up a hand, cutting off any
further protest. "Just in case I'm wrong, and your first feeling was
right," she said. "Besides, a lot of the helicab companies are going
to be shutting down soon, and you don't want to be taking the buses. Not the
way you're going to be feeling."
"I'm all right," Lioe said,
but it was only a token protest. She freed herself from the cocoon. Her clothes
were all but dry, only a few damp spots remaining, but she was faintly sorry to
give up the warm embrace. She followed Telanin out of the little room, the
medic close on her heels. The public parts of the station were crowded and noisy,
half a dozen men and women leaning over a single console and its harried
operator, another group clustered around a display table. Lioe couldn't see all
of the image that floated above the polished surface, but she could see enough
to guess that it was a model of the neighborhood. Telanin touched her arm,
turning her over to another woman, this one darkly elegant even in the
Lockwardens' bulky uniform, and Lioe let herself be led away to the database.
She looked through the files under the
dark woman's tutelage, and, as she had expected, found nothing. About halfway
through, a young man appeared with the complaint form. Lioe skimmed through it
-- she was mildly surprised to see that it was real paper, not a noteboard and
disk -- and signed her name in the necessary places. When she had finished, she
followed the dark woman back again through the chaos of the main rooms and out
onto the helipad, where a helicab stood waiting, the Lockwardens' markings
muted. She looked back once, from the doorway, to see Telanin staring down at
the tabletop display. By chance, one of the Lockwardens stepped aside, so that
for a brief moment Lioe saw the full display. As she'd guessed, it was a model
of the area around the station, but that neighborhood transformed by water and
fire. Then another Lockwarden moved in front of her, blocking her view. Lioe
shivered -- _if that's what could happen, I'll be glad to be on high ground_ --
and climbed meekly into the helicab. The pilot nodded a sympathetic greeting,
and the cab rose easily into the unsettled air.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: C/B Cie. Offices, Isard's
Wharf,_
_Channel
9, Junction Pool 4_
Damian Chrestil sat in the serene
gold-tinged light of his office, the plans for a new long-haul carrier floating
in the desktop screens in front of him. It was an elegant design, with ample
cargo space, but surprisingly narrow-beamed, so that it would be half again as
efficient as the larger long-haul craft in the current fleet. Even so, he had
trouble forcing himself to concentrate, to keep his mind on the minutely
detailed calculations sketched in the margins. Ivie -- or at least his people
-- were somewhere out there, searching for Ransome and Lioe. _I should be
hearing something soon_, he thought, and made himself look down again at the
model that hung in the illusory space within the desktop, rotating slowly in
response to a command he did not remember giving. He touched another key to
stop it, called up the specifications for the power plant, and stared at the
numbers for a long moment without really seeing them. Something -- sand or
gravel, it sounded like -- rattled against the wall of the office, carried by
the rising wind.
_Enough of this_, he thought, and
touched keys to banish the gleaming images. They disappeared in a flurry of
shutdown codes. He pushed himself away from the desk, and walked past the twin
secretaries into the darkened warehouse. The large doors were shut, of course,
but the side door was wedged open, letting in the rush and the smell of the
wind. The door itself vibrated against its clips, jumping a little as each gust
hit it. _Another two or three hours_, Damian thought, and stepped out onto the
wharf.
The activity was less frantic than it
had been earlier: the barges and john-boats lay close to the docks, their
heaviest fenders in place and double lines securing them to the piers. Damian
nodded his approval, glanced up to see the power line that ran from the
warehouse to the plotting shed swinging wildly in the wind. _Better see to that
before it comes down on its own_, he thought, and looked around for the nearest
docker. A blocky woman was crouched between bollards on the deck of the closest
barge, tapline attached to a test node, workboard on her lap, and Damian lifted
his hand to get her attention.
"Where's Rosaurin?" he
shouted, raising his voice to be heard over the wind.
"I don't know, Na Damian,"
the woman called back. "In the shed, maybe?"
Damian waved in answer, turned away.
"Na Damian!" That was Rosaurin's voice, coming from the
head of the dock, beyond the plotting shed. Damian waved to get her attention.
"Over here!"
Rosaurin came to join him, the wind
whipping her short hair and flinging the skirts of her coat wildly so that they
seemed in danger of tripping her. A smaller figure was visible behind her, a
tiny woman in loose trousers and a fitted coat, posed so unobtrusively that for
a moment he didn't recognize her. "It's that hsaia, Na Damian -- I'm sorry,
the Visiting Speaker. He's here, and he insists you promised him a tour of the
facilities."
_Ji-Imbaoa. What would he be doing
here, except to bring me the codes? And Cella, too_. Damian Chrestil suppressed
his excitement and said, with what he hoped was convincing asperity, "And
at a time like this. Tell him -- I'll see him in my office, you can bring him
in there." Rosaurin looked warily at him, and Damian smiled. "Don't
worry, there won't be any tours. I'll deal with him. And secure that cable,
will you?"
"Right, Na Damian. I'll bring him
to your office."
Rosaurin turned away, balancing herself
against the unsteady wind, made her way back down the wharf. Damian followed
her, more slowly, doing his best to hide his elation. There was no other reason
for ji-Imbaoa to visit the Junction Pool docks, no reason except that he'd
finally gotten the codes, and if he had, and Ransome was off-line, held in the
summer house, there would be no one who could stop the transfer. Except --
maybe -- Lioe, and she was being dealt with, too. He smiled then, unable to
stop himself, and Cella smiled back at him.
"He came to the palazze," she
said. "He said it was important, so I brought him here. Your sibs don't
know he was there." She paused then, still smiling. "Do you want me
to wait with him?"
Damian nodded, knowing he did not need
to wait for an answer. He ducked through the clamped-open door into the shadows
of the warehouse, and stepped back into his office. He glanced quickly at his
reflection -- his hair was a mess, blown out of its ties by even that short an
exposure to the wind, and he tidied it hurriedly -- and then settled himself
behind the desk. He lit the screens, calling up the plans he had been studying,
and leaned back in his chair to wait, struggling to keep himself from grinning
like a fool.
"Na Damian," the secretary
said, after what seemed to be an interminable wait. "You have a visitor.
The Visiting Speaker Kuguee ji-Imbaoa. And Na Cella." The expensive voice
module did a fairly good job with the alien name.
"Show them in," Damian said,
and this time couldn't keep the satisfaction out of his voice.
He rose to his feet as the Visiting
Speaker entered, gesturing for him to take the guest's chair beneath the
painted triptych. "Welcome, Na Speaker, it's good to see you again."
Ji-Imbaoa waved a hand, waving away the
need for formality, and Damian did his best to swallow his excitement.
"Your woman was good enough to
bring me here. Time is of the essence now," the Visiting Speaker said.
"We can neither of us afford to waste any more time."
In the background, Cella lifted one
precise eyebrow, and said nothing.
"I've not been wasting time,"
Damian said.
Ji-Imbaoa waved away the comment.
"No matter."
"No," Damian Chrestil said.
"It does matter." It was a risk, pushing him at this point, but he
could not afford to let ji-Imbaoa treat him like an employee. "I have been
ready to fulfill my part of the bargain. The delays come from your end."
There was a little silence, ji-Imbaoa's
hands closing slowly on the arms of his chair. Damian waited, and, as slowly,
the hsaia's hands relaxed.
"It is so," ji-Imbaoa said.
"However, that delay has ended. I have the codes."
_It's as much of an apology as I'm
likely to get_. "Excellent," Damian Chrestil said, and held out his
hand.
Ji-Imbaoa ignored it. "I have gone
to a great deal of trouble to get this information. I had to contact my friends
through commercial linkages -- at great expense -- because Chauvelin refused to
allow me the use of the ambassadorial channels. I think I should have some
recompense for this."
Damian swallowed his first response,
said, with careful moderation, "Na Speaker, surely that's one of the
ordinary risks of doing business."
"I am not a business person,"
ji-Imbaoa said.
_That's for certain_. Damian said
aloud, "You expect me to pay for your connect time to Hsaioi-An."
The fingers of ji-Imbaoa's hands curled
slightly, a movement Damian had learned to interpret as embarrassment, but the
Visiting Speaker nodded. "I think it would be fair."
Damian hesitated, looked down at his
screens to cover his uncertainty. This was part of the hsai power games, one
more attempt to jostle for status; he himself couldn't afford to lose, and so
drop lower than ji-Imbaoa, but he wasn't sure he was good enough to win. The
secretary chimed softly, signaling an incoming message, and he seized gratefully
on the excuse. "I'm sorry, Na Speaker, I need to take that."
"Shall I go?" Cella asked
softly, and Damian shook his head before the hsaia could take offense.
Ji-Imbaoa gestured acceptance, and
Damian leaned back in his chair, touched the string of codes that activated the
security filter, translating spoken words to a stream of letters across the
bottom of the screen. A second set of codes flared, and he touched a second key
to cut in the family's decryption routines. The screen lit at last, and Ivie's
face looked up at him.
NA DAMIAN.
It was disorienting, watching Ivie's
lips move without sound, while the words scrolled past on the bottom of the
screen. Damian nodded. "I hope things went well? I'm with a visitor, so
you'll have to make it fast."
Ivie nodded, in comprehension as well
as agreement. I'M AT THE SUMMER HOUSE NOW, he said. THE FIRST GUEST IS WITH ME.
WE'VE HAD A LITTLE TROUBLE WITH THE SECOND, BUT I HAVE HOPES THAT WE'LL BE ABLE
TO FIND HER AGAIN SOON.
_So he's got Ransome, but not Lioe_. Damian said, "It's a
start, anyway." He looked back at ji-Imbaoa, the germ of an idea forming
in his mind. "I'm coming to join you myself, and I may be bringing a guest
of my own -- a colleague, rather. How's the weather?"
Ivie shrugged. DETERIORATING. IF YOU'RE
GOING TO BE MORE THAN AN HOUR OR TWO, I WOULDN'T FLY, BUT THEY TELL ME THE
ROADS SHOULD STAY OPEN UNTIL DARK.
"Good enough," Damian said.
"I'll be there directly." He touched the sign-off key, and watched
the picture dissolve, then looked back at ji-Imbaoa. "I've had to do some
improvisations of my own," he said bluntly, "thanks to your delays.
And suffer some inconveniences. Illario Ransome is off the nets right now, but
only because I am holding him in my family's summer house. I think that is
equal to your expenses in getting the codes."
Ji-Imbaoa nodded slowly. "Ransome
is your prisoner."
"To put it bluntly, yes."
Damian watched him, aware that something had changed, but not certain what it
was. It was as though the rules had changed, or even the game itself. Cella was
watching him with renewed intensity, as though she'd sensed the change, too.
"I would like to speak with
him," ji-Imbaoa said. "I will give you the codes there, once we are
at this house of yours."
Damian shrugged. There was no reason
not to do it, as far as he could see; the nets were too well shielded for work
to be interrupted by any but the worst storms, and he could access them from
the summer house as well as anywhere. "All right," he said.
"I'll call my flyer. I assume you have staff with you?"
Ji-Imbaoa gestured agreement. "My
secretary, and one guard."
Damian looked at Cella, who was still
watching him with that same unnerving fixity of purpose. "Do you want to
come, too?" From the look in her eyes, it was a pointless question.
"Yes," she answered, gently.
"If you don't mind."
"Fine." Damian Chrestil
opened a working channel, typed in a quick series of commands, and waited half
a second for the confirmation. "The flyer will be waiting for us at
Commercial Street in ten minutes."
The wind had eased a bit by the time
they reached the Commercial Street helipad, but the first fringes of rain had
overspread the city. It fell in huge drops that left wet irregular circles the
size of a man's hand on the dusty pavement. Damian ignored it as he shepherded
the others into the heavy flyer, but ji-Imbaoa hissed irritably to himself, and
the other hsaia, ji-Imbaoa's secretary, huddled himself into an incongruous
plastic overcoat. The jericho-human Magill, who handled security, flipped up
the hood of his coat, but made no comment. Cella followed demurely, moving
through the rain as though she didn't feel it. The passenger compartment would
seat only four in comfort, and Damian seized the excuse with some relief.
"I'll ride with the pilot,"
he said, raising his voice over the noise of the engines, and let the
compartment's door fall closed without waiting for an answer.
The pilot didn't look up as he climbed
into the control pod, already deep in her rapport with the machine, hands and
feet encased by the controls, but one of Ivie's men was riding in the copilot's
space. He scrambled to his feet as Damian opened the hatch, moved back to the
jumpseat that folded down from the compartment wall.
"Thanks, Loreo," Damian said,
and took his place beside the pilot. "How's it look, Cossi?"
The pilot shrugged one shoulder, her
attention still on the displays that filled the air in front of her, visible
only through her links. "Not too bad. The rain's fading, and on the
screens it looks like we'll have some better air for the next forty minutes or
so." She looked down at her controls again, and Damian hastily fastened
himself into the safety webbing. "I have clearance from the tower,"
Cossi went on, "so I can lift whenever you're ready, Na Damian."
Damian touched the intercom button,
opening the channel to the passenger compartment. "We're ready to lift, Na
Speaker. Please be sure you're strapped in, this could be a rough ride."
He took his hand off the button without waiting for an answer, looked at Cossi.
"Ready when you are."
The flyer lifted easily, jets whining
as it rose past the warehouse fronts and through the lower levels of sky
traffic. As Cossi had predicted, the winds did not seem to be as strong as they
had been, though the flyer dipped and shuddered. Damian clung to the edge of
the hatchway, peered out the tiny window toward the Old Dike and the cliffs
that marked the edge of Barrier Island. Even in the grey light, it was easy to
make out the five projecting bits of cliff face that were the Five Points; he
could even see the sparkle of lights behind the rows of windows. The Soresins'
palazze looked busy, a swarm of servants and robohaulers clustered around an
ungainly-looking cargo flyer, unloading supplies for the family's annual
first-big-storm party. Behind him, Loreo laughed softly.
"Looks like the party's on."
Damian nodded. "Pity we can't make it."
The flyer lifted further, looking for a
clearer path through the updrafts off the Barrier Hills, and for the first time
Damian had a clear view of the sky to the south. Wedges of grey clouds piled
over and on top of each other, steel-colored overhead, shading to purple at the
horizon; their edges met and meshed, deforming under the pressure of the wind.
The light that came in through the flyer's forward screen and windows was dull,
lifeless, dim as twilight. The flyer banked sharply, heading south past the
last of the hills, and Damian caught a quick glimpse of the mouth of the Inland
Water. The storm barriers were up at last, three ranks of dark, wet metal
closing off the channel, and the waves were starting to break against them,
grey-green walls of water streaked with skeins of foam that were startlingly
white in the dim light. Damian shivered, thinking of a childhood visit to
Observation Point just before a storm. The low, hemispherical building, set on
the southernmost point of Barrier Island, on a spur of land that curved out
into the sea, had obviously been built to withstand the worst hurricanes, but
he had never forgotten the sight of the surf pounding at the base of the
cliffs, throwing spray and stones ten meters high. At the height of a bad
storm, the man in charge had said, boasting a little but also stating simple
fact, the waves broke completely over the station for hours at a time.
"We're going to have to land from
the southeast," Cossi said, breaking into his train of thought.
"Otherwise we'll be crosswise to the wind."
"Go ahead."
Damian braced himself as the flyer
bucked, dropped several meters, but then Cossi had made the turn, and the flyer
steadied slightly, riding with the wind instead of against it. They dropped
lower, and Damian saw the scrubby trees bent even farther into the hillside by
the wind. The family's landing strip gleamed ahead of them, the rain-darkened
pavement outlined by double rows of tiny blue lights. The flyer fell the last
few meters with a roar of jets, and then they were down, Cossi converting the
drop smoothly to forward momentum. The braking fans rose to a scream, and died
away as the flyer came to a stop, directly on the markers.
"Nicely done," Damian said,
and meant it.
Cossi smiled, in genuine pleasure, then
turned her attention to the difficult task of prying herself out of the control
links. "Do you want me to wait for you, or do I head back to the
city?" she asked, still working herself free of the controls.
"There's no point in your flying
back," Damian said. "Put the flyer under cover -- the hangar's rated
to stand a class three -- and then you can either wait it out here or take a
groundcar."
"I'll wait," Cossi said.
Damian nodded, and swung himself out of
the pilot's compartment. The others were already standing on the rain-spattered
pavement, ji-Imbaoa still hissing to himself, his household clustered miserably
at his back. Cella was standing a little apart, a little behind them, her eyes
downcast, hiding that unnerving smile. Damian managed a smile in return,
wondering what she was up to, and waved them on toward the house itself. He
could see Ivie waiting in the doorway, light blazing behind him. Shutters
covered the windows; he glanced hastily over his shoulder and saw Loreo by the
door of the domed hangar, guiding Cossi and the flyer inside.
"No word yet on the second
guest," Ivie said softly as Damian approached, and stood aside from the
door.
"You can give me the details
later," Damian answered, and went past him into the house. He could feel
the floor trembling under his feet, and knew that the household generators were
already at speed, ready to cut in when the power grid went down.
The others were waiting in the main
room, the glass that formed the viewing wall now covered by heavy wood and
steel shutters. Damian paused at the top of the short stairs, blinking in the
unexpectedly warm light of a dozen hastily placed standing lamps. He had never
been in the house during Storm, had never seen the shutters from the inside,
the almost-black panels cutting off the view. It was an alien, disorienting
sight. One of Ivie's people had set up a pair of service trays and activated a
mobile bar, and most of the group, four men and a pair of women, were clustered
either by the food or in front of the communications console. The largest of
the screens was tuned to the weather station, and Damian caught a quick glimpse
of a redscreen report before one of the women moved, cutting off his view.
Ransome sat a little apart from the others in one of the large armchairs,
leaning back, a glass of deep amber wine on the table beside him. He seemed
very much at his ease, despite the third woman who stood against the far wall,
palmgun in hand, and Damian hid a frown. Then he saw the slight, nervous
movement of Ransome's hand, one finger slowly tracing the lines of the
carved-crystal glass, and the way his eyes roved from point to point when he thought
no one was looking.
"So," ji-Imbaoa said, too
loudly. "Ransome is here. And your prisoner?"
Ransome smiled, and lifted the glass of
wine in ironic salute. "Not a guest, Na Damian?"
Damian came down the last two stairs,
ignoring both of them, snapped his fingers to summon the bar. It rolled over to
him, wheels digging into the carpet, and he poured himself a glass of raki.
"Help yourself, Na Speaker, we're informal here. Will you see to him and
his household, Cella?" He looked at Ransome, barely aware of Cella's
politely murmured answer. "You were becoming an inconvenience, you know.
This seemed a -- reasonable -- way to handle the situation."
Ransome's smile widened, became briefly
and genuinely amused. "I suppose I should tell you that you won't get away
with this."
"I don't see why not," Damian
said, deliberately brutal. "This isn't the Game." He had the
satisfaction of seeing Ransome flinch.
"Na Damian." Ji-Imbaoa turned
away from the mobile bar, a tall cylinder in one hand. "I have the codes
for you, but there is a favor you could do me in return."
_A favor?_ Damian barely managed to
keep himself from raising his eyebrows in sheer disbelief. _That is a change of
tune, from the hsaia who was trying to bully me into a subordinate position not
an hour ago. You only ask favors from your superiors_. "If I may," he
said, carefully casual, and gestured toward the door behind him. Shall we talk
in private?"
"That might be well,"
ji-Imbaoa said.
Damian led the way into the side room,
fingering his remote to switch on the lights. Shutters covered the single
window, but he could hear the sudden drumming of rain against the walls. He
gestured toward the nearest chair -- the room was set up as a communications
space, with heavy, comfortable chairs and complex machinery lining the walls --
and said, "What is this favor?"
Ji-Imbaoa suppressed a gesture, seated
himself with a kind of heavy dignity. "Ransome, I would imagine, becomes a
liability to you once this is over."
Damian shook his head. "Not
necessarily. He's a known netwalker, I can prove he's been stealing
information. If he tries to go to the Lockwardens, I can bring an equally
strong complaint against him."
"Still, Chauvelin will know,"
ji-Imbaoa said.
"Chauvelin doesn't like me
anyway," Damian Chrestil said. _I wish you'd come to the point_.
Ji-Imbaoa looked away, said, as though
to empty air, "I might be able to help with the situation."
_I don't need your help, thank you_,
Damian thought. He bit his tongue, and waited.
"And it would be doing me a
favor." Ji-Imbaoa said the words reluctantly, almost as though they were
being pulled out of him. "There is a matter of face between my family and
this Ransome, the matter of an insult which could not be acknowledged then, but
is lesser treason now. If you will give him into my custody, we -- my kin and I
-- will be able to settle this. And I, and they, will be in your debt."
Damian made himself look down at his
hands to hide his sudden elation. _To have ji-Imbaoa, and, more than that, his
entire family, indebted to me -- in exchange for Ransome. Not much of a trade,
an arrogant netwalking imagist -- or should that be an image-making netwalker?
-- for the friendship of an equally arrogant fool. But ji-Imbaoa has powerful
relations, they could be very useful to me. I've no illusions, Ransome's no
friend of mine, but can I afford to do it? He's Chauvelin's client, after all
... But if it means connections in Hsaioi-An, a deep connection to the je
Tsinra-an, can I afford not to?_ He said, slowly, "I can't give you an
answer now. There are practical considerations involved -- "
"Chauvelin will not be ambassador
much longer," ji-Imbaoa said. "There is already pressure on the
All-Father to remove him from this post."
And that would make an enormous
difference, Damian thought, if it's true. If Chauvelin were no longer a factor,
there'd be no reason not to do it. He had a sudden image of Ransome at
Chauvelin's eve-of-Storm party, sitting on the wall of the garden he had
designed, the paths paved with thousands of delicate faces spread out at his
feet, a mocking half-smile playing on his lips as he watched the other guests
recognize what they were walking on. Not a lovable man, certainly. _Brave
enough -- and I do respect that -- but this is a risk you take when you play
politics_. He nodded slowly, looked back at ji-Imbaoa. "If I can do you
this favor," he said, "I will."
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: Transient Hostel #31, The
Ghetto,_
_Landing
Isle at the Old City Lift_
The Lockwarden pilot set the cab down
on the helipad just beyond the lift complex that ran down the cliff face into
the Old City, balancing the light machine against the gusting winds. He was
obviously skilled, but the ride was rough, and Lioe was glad to be on the
ground. The pilot insisted on escorting her to the door of the hostel. Lioe
made only a token protest, grateful for his support, and did her best to ignore
the concierge's smirk at her arrival, clothes torn and under Lockwarden escort.
The smile turned to a frown of concern when he saw the white patches of
selfheal on her face, and he came out from behind the counter to meet her.
"Na Lioe? Are you all right?"
"Na Lioe got mugged," the
Lockwarden said, politely enough, but Lioe found herself wincing a little at
the suggestion.
"I'm all right," she said.
"I just need to change clothes."
"You look like death," the
concierge -- Laness, his name was -- said, and shook his head. "You go on
up to your room, and I'll send a supply cart. Do you need anything in
particular?"
"Something to eat," Lioe
said, and was surprised by the intensity of her hunger. She turned to the
Lockwarden. "Thanks for getting me here."
"No problem," the pilot said
easily, and let himself out.
"You go on up," Laness said
again, "and I'll send a cart."
"I'd appreciate it," Lioe
said. She rode the narrow lift up to the third floor -- the first time she'd
been back to her rented room in three days; most of her spare clothes were at
Shadows -- and let herself into the narrow room. It was small, but comfortable,
and it had its own temperature controls. She turned up the heat to drive away
the lingering damp of the canal, and stripped off her crumpled clothing. _I
need to call Ransome, find out what's going on_, she thought, _but I want to be
in shape to cope with him_. She showered, not too quickly, letting the hot
water wash away the fear and stiffness and the last faint green stains from the
waterweed. The supply cart was waiting for her when she had finished, one of
the covers pushed back slightly to release the steam. She dressed quickly,
scrambling into her last spare pair of trousers and a loose, Reannan-knit
pullover, and pushed back the lid of the cart. The food was good, standard
local fare, fish cakes and rice and a quick-fry of vegetables, and Laness had
included a bottle of the resinous local wine. She poured herself a glass, and
wolfed a couple of the fish cakes straight from the cart, then turned her
attention to the communications table. She seated herself in front of it,
dragged the supply cart into easy reach. There were three messages from Kerestel
waiting in storage. She hesitated, feeling guilty, but none of them were marked
urgent. She ignored them, and called up the cheapest of the local
communications nets. Its prompt flickered into view, and she punched in
Ransome's mailcode. There was a fractional hesitation, and then the familiar
message: TERMINAL IN USE, PLEASE TRY LATER.
She smiled and reached for the cart
again, one unacknowledged worry assuaged. At least Ransome was all right, and
could probably explain what was going on, who had tried to kidnap her and why.
_And in the meantime_, she thought, _I think I'll start carrying my work knife
again_. She pushed herself away from the terminal, went to rummage in her bag
for the knife. It was meant to be used as a survival tool, and was classified
as such when it passed through customs, but the longer of the two blades made
an effective weapon. She slipped it into her pocket, turned back to the
terminal. There was a repeat function; she found it after a moment's search,
and hit the codes. This time, the screen stayed dark, codes flickering across
its base; after half a minute, a new message appeared: INTENDED RECEIVER NOT
RESPONDING, CANCEL YES/NO. Lioe made a face, but hit YES. The screen flickered,
and a moment later presented her with the list of charges. She ignored it,
staring past the numbers. _Someone was on the circuit only a few minutes ago_,
she thought, _so where the hell did he go? Unless it was someone calling him?_
She hesitated, then tried again. There was no answer except the cancellation
prompt.
She closed the system, wondering if she
should wait and try again, or if she should go back to Ransome's loft and see
if there were any messages waiting there. That made the most sense, especially
since she had Ransome's key, but she had to admit that going back out on the
streets didn't particularly appeal to her. _Which is silly. There's no reason
to think that these people -- whoever they are -- will try anything in the port
district; more to the point, and more likely, there's no reason to think the
hostel is all that safe_. She stood frowning for a moment, and the
communications table buzzed, the screen displaying the intercom symbol. Her
frown deepened, but she reached across to touch the flashing icon.
"Yes?"
"Na Lioe." Laness sounded oddly hesitant.
"There's a woman to see you. She says her name is Roscha. Shall I send her
up?"
_Roscha? What the hell is she doing
here?_ "Is she alone?" Lioe asked. _And if she isn't_, she wondered
suddenly, _are you in a position to warn me?_
"Yes, Na Lioe."
"I'll come down," Lioe said,
and cut the connection before anyone could protest. She made her way down the
side stairs rather than the lift, and paused just inside the doorway to scan
the lobby. Roscha was standing by the concierge's counter, her beautiful face
looking oddly forlorn as she watched the lift entrance. There was no one else
in sight. Feeling rather foolish, Lioe took her hand off the button of the work
knife, and stepped out into the lobby.
"Quinn!" Roscha turned at the
sound of the other woman's footsteps, her eyes going instantly to the patches
of selfheal. "Are you all right?"
"Yes, fine," Lioe said,
irritably, and made herself stop. "It's just cuts and bruises," she
said. "Listen, did you send someone to tell me you were at someplace
called the Mad Monkey?"
"No." Roscha shook her head,
sending the red hair flying. "No, I didn't, and the Lockwardens have been
talking to me already. What happened?"
Lioe looked over her shoulder, saw
Laness leaning against his counter, listening shamelessly. "Over
here," she said, and drew Roscha away into the shelter of the pillars that
defined the common entertainment center. No one was there, the VDIRT consoles
empty, and she turned back to face Roscha. "Maybe you can tell me,"
she said. "This man came up to me, called me by name, and said you'd given
him a message to be passed on, to meet you at this place called the Mad
Monkey."
"I know it," Roscha muttered,
and waved a hand in apology. "I'm sorry, go on."
"When I tried to go there,"
Lioe said, and heard her voice tight and angry, "I was followed, and
someone stepped out of a doorway carrying a gun. He said somebody wanted to
talk to me, and I was to come quietly. Do you have any idea who that somebody
might be?"
"No." Roscha shook her head,
stopped abruptly. "Do you work for C-and-I?"
"What?" Lioe blinked,
irrationally offended by the question. "No, I'm a pilot. And I'm a Gamer.
I don't need to work for Customs."
"Na Damian -- Damian Chrestil
thinks you do," Roscha said, slowly. "And you've been hanging out
with Ransome, who's not exactly clean when it comes to politics." There
was a fleeting note of malice in her voice that vanished almost as soon as Lioe
recognized it. "And Na Damian went out of his way to make sure I had an
alibi for this afternoon."
"So you think Damian Chrestil is
behind this?" Lioe asked.
"You don't sound that
surprised," Roscha answered, bitterly.
"I'm not, exactly. Ransome --
" Lioe stopped abruptly. _How the hell do I know who to trust, if I can
trust you, or anyone? You work for C/B Cie., which is the same thing as working
for Damian Chrestil, and Ransome isn't answering his calls. What the hell am I
supposed to do now?_ "Why should I tell you?"
Roscha made an angry sound that was
almost laughter. "Because I don't like being jerked around. Because I
don't like being used to set somebody up -- especially you, somebody I've been
sleeping with, somebody I like. Somebody as good as you are in the Game."
Her voice cracked then, and she looked away, scowling. "Na Damian lied to
me, and he used me, and he maybe would've murdered you, and it could've been my
fault. I'll be damned if I'll let him do that to me."
There was something in her voice, the
street kid's -- _the canalli's_ -- ancient, bitter grievance that made Lioe nod
in spite of herself. "All right," she said slowly, "I believe
you."
Roscha nodded, silent, still scowling.
"I need your help," Lioe went
on, more slowly still, a voice screaming reproaches inside her head. _Are you
crazy? She still works for C/B Cie. Even someone as Game-addicted as Roscha is
isn't going to give up a good job for a total stranger. She could be setting
you up again_. She shook the thoughts away. _I have to have help, and the only
other person I can trust is Ransome. And he's not answering. I have to take a
chance, and Roscha's my best shot. She's a good actor, but I don't think
anyone's that good. I think she meant exactly what she said I hope_. "I
need to find Ransome, he's the one who really knows what's going on. Can you
get me back to his loft? It's back at Newfields, where the cliffs overlook the
Junction Pools."
"I know where it is," Roscha
said. She nodded, her face grim. "Na Damian's going to be looking for both
of us now -- I was supposed to stay on the docks until midnight. I guess I
don't need an alibi now." She smiled wryly, but shrugged the thought away.
"I borrowed a denki-bike, we can take that."
"In this weather?" Lioe said.
The thought of riding one of the unstable little two-wheeled vehicles in the
same winds that had tossed the Lockwardens' helicab across the sky was not
appealing.
Roscha glanced toward the window beside
the door, shrugged slightly. "It's not raining yet."
"Right," Lioe said. She
looked toward the concierge's counter, where Laness was pretending to be
absorbed in the tourist display-tapes. _No harm in providing a little
insurance_, she thought, and walked over to join him. "Laness," she
said, and the man looked up in an unconvincing flurry of surprise.
"What can I do for you, Na Lioe?
Is everything all right?"
"Yes," Lioe answered. _So
far_. "I need you to do me a favor," she went on. "I have to go
out, but after what happened earlier, would you -- if I'm not back here
tonight, or if I don't call you, would you give the Lockwardens a call?"
"Of course, Na Lioe," Laness
said. His eyes widened slightly, his whole being torn between enjoyment of the
Game-like intrigue and concern for a guest. "But, Na Lioe, if there's any
chance -- what I mean is, with the storm predicted for tonight, if anything
happens to you, the Lockwardens are going to have enough to do."
"That's all right," Lioe
said. _Or at least it can't be helped_. "I'm not really worried, not
really expecting anything. But if I'm not back, and you don't hear from me, I
want you to call them."
Laness nodded. "I'll do that,"
he said, and added, awkwardly, "Good luck."
Roscha's denki-bike was parked outside,
under the shelter of a news kiosk's awning instead of in the racks outside the
hostel's door. The wind -- a warm wind, unpleasantly warm -- sent dust and a
few errant pieces of trash whipping along the pavement; across the road, a pair
of women struggled with a storefront banner, fighting to fold the heavy cloth.
Up and down the street, wooden shutters had been clamped into place across the
larger windows, and there was a line out the door of the single grocer's shop.
"It looks bad," Lioe said, involuntarily, and Roscha shrugged.
"It's always like this when a
storm's coming. They say it's only going to be a class two." She reached
into the bike's security field, expertly touching the release codes.
"Let's get going before the rain starts."
The streets were all but empty in the
port district, most of the workers already heading home to secure their own
property. Shutters covered most of the upper-floor windows, and there were
storm bars across the warehouse doors. Lioe leaned close against Roscha's back,
felt the denki-bike shudder each time they turned a corner. A few drops of rain
were falling as they turned the last corner and pulled into the alley beside
Ransome's loft. Lioe winced as the first huge drops hit her face, looked toward
the building's entrance. The red flag was still out, whipping frantically
against its stays, and she wondered if its owner had just forgotten to take it
in. Still, the stairs weren't difficult, and at least she knew where they were.
She reached into her pocket for the lockbox, and closed her fingers gratefully
over its smoothly dented surface. _At least I didn't lose it in the canal_. She
started toward the stairwell, motioning for Roscha to follow. The other woman
straightened from hooking her bike to the recharging bollard, gave the
connector a last tug, and came to join her.
"Where away?"
"Upstairs," Lioe answered,
and laid the lockbox against the stairway door. It clicked open, and she
stepped into the sudden darkness. It smelled odd, sour and rather yeasty, and
Roscha made a small noise of disgust.
"Better watch your step."
"What is it, anyway?" Lioe
turned to secure the door behind them. A tiny light came on as she refastened
the latch, casting a sickly glow over the landing.
"Someone's been chewing
strawn," Roscha answered. "There'll be a cud around here
somewhere."
"What's strawn?" Lioe started
up the stairs, avoiding the shadows.
"It comes out of hsai space, makes
you feel very calm," Roscha answered. Lioe could hear the sudden smile in
her voice as she added, "Not something I indulge in much."
"I guess not." Lioe paused
outside Ransome's door, fumbling with the lockbox until she found the
depressions that released the lock. The lights were out, just as she'd left it,
the big window open to the city view. Dark clouds, almost purple, filled the
left side of the window; the sky to the right was still only grey.
"Ransome?"
There was no answer, and she hadn't
really expected one, but she called his name once more before crossing to the
display space. Lights flashed along the base of the main console, signaling at
least a dozen messages waiting. She frowned, puzzled now as well as worried,
and touched keys to retrieve the latest. A secondary screen lit, displayed a
string of hsai _n-jao_ characters. _Chauvelin?_ she wondered, and touched keys
again to scroll back to the first message.
"He hasn't even gotten the
shutters down," Roscha said, and Lioe looked back at her. "If you
were looking for Ransome," Roscha went on, "he hasn't been here.
He'd've put storm shutters up, the way that sky is looking."
"Damn." Lioe looked around,
saw nothing that looked as though it could cover the enormous window. Her hat
was still sitting on the folded bed, and she realized that she had left it
behind that morning as well. "Can you take care of it, please?"
"Sure," Roscha said, sounding
slightly surprised, and crossed to the window. She ran her hand along the
left-hand side of the frame until she found an all-but-invisible panel. She
popped that open, studied the controls for a moment, then turned a dial. There
was a shriek from outside the window, unoiled metal reluctant to move, and then
the shutters began to lower themselves into place, creaking and groaning along
their track.
Lioe reached for the room remote,
touched keys to bring up the lights, and then turned her attention back to the
messages. The first message in the queue was flashing on the screen: _more
n'jao characters_, she thought, but these looked different from the first ones
she'd seen. Frowning now, she split the screen, recalled the last message. Sure
enough, the characters were different, forming an entirely different pattern.
She knew only a few _n'jao_ glyphs, mostly trade-related -- like most
Republicans, her dealings with the hsai were generally done through a
jericho-human broker, and none of these were familiar.
"Do you know any _n'jao?_"
she asked, and Roscha came to look over her shoulder at the screen.
"A little. I can't read that,
though."
Lioe glanced back at her, saw the
delicate eyebrows draw down into a thoughtful frown.
"Wait a minute, though."
Roscha reached out to touch one tripart character in the first message. "I
think that's the ambassador's name-sign. And I think these are repeats --
message repeats." She indicated another set of symbols.
"Chauvelin?" Lioe asked.
"I saw it on a crate once, when we handled some diplomatic
shipping out," Roscha answered. "I'm sure that's what it is."
"I'm not surprised," Lioe
muttered. She touched more keys, searching for a main directory, and wished she
had had more time to learn Ransome's idiosyncratic systems.
"Why not?" Roscha asked.
"Look, what's going on?"
"I wish I knew," Lioe
answered. She took a deep breath, made herself look away from the screens
crowded with useless information. "What I think is happening -- what
Ransome said was happening -- is that Damian Chrestil and the hsaia Visiting
Speaker are probably smuggling something, mainly to get Damian Chrestil some
political advantage in Hsaioi-An, which he could use here."
Roscha nodded. "That makes sense.
He wants to be governor."
"Chauvelin and the Visiting
Speaker are enemies," Lioe continued, "members of rival factions --
and the Visiting Speaker doesn't much like Ransome, either -- so there's a hsai
dimension to this, too."
"_Sha-mai_." Roscha shook her head. "It's a
mess, but it does make sense."
"I'm glad it makes sense to
someone," Lioe said. She fiddled with the shadowscreen again, found the
main directory at last, and ran through it hastily, searching for translation
programs. There was only one, and it was really only for transliteration.
_Ransome certainly speaks tradetalk, and probably a couple of modes of hsai_,
she thought, but copied the two screens to its working memory anyway. The
prompt blinked for a few seconds, and spat strings of letters. She recognized
Chauvelin's name, and, in the second message, a string of numbers that looked
like routing codes. She studied those numbers, cocking her head to one side.
They were certainly routing codes; in fact, they looked like the kind of codes
that gave access to commercial data storage. _I wonder what Ransome keeps in
that kind of safe space_, she thought, and copied the codes to a separate
working board.
"I think," Roscha said
slowly, "I think that means that Chauvelin's been looking for him."
She pointed to the first message, her fingertip hovering just above the screen.
"And it looks like it's been repeated -- what's the time check,
anyway?"
Lioe touched keys. "That message
has been repeated every quarter hour for four hours. The last one arrived about
forty minutes ago." _Does that mean he got the message and is with
Chauvelin?_ she wondered. _Or did Chauvelin just give up?_
"Do you think he got the
message?" Roscha said.
Lioe shook her head. "There's only
one way to find out." Roscha looked at her, and she smiled wryly.
"Call Chauvelin and ask."
"Yeah, but do you think he'd
answer?"
Lioe shrugged. "I've no
idea." She reached for the workboard, typed in a string of codes, an
inquiry first, to Ransome's own directories, and then into his storage. To her
surprise, the codes to contact the hsai ambassador were held in open storage;
she copied them to the communications system, but hesitated, wondering if she
should send them. _What do I say, anyway? "I'm so sorry to bother you,
Ambassador, but is Ransome with you?" How do I explain why I'm calling, if
he's there, without getting him into trouble? More important, what do I say if
he's not?_ She touched the final key before she could change her mind. _I can
always just say he told me he might be there. I don't have to tell a
jericho-human -- no, not even a jericho-human, a conscript,_ chaoi-mon --
_anything of what's going on_. The handset chimed softly, from beside the
working chair, and at the same time the secondary screen displayed connect
symbols.
"What the hell?" Roscha said.
"I'm calling the ambassador,"
Lioe answered, and crossed to pick up the handset. The green telltale was lit
at the base of the set, indicating a machine on the other end of the
connection. "I want to know if Ransome's there." She touched the
connect button before Roscha could say anything, heard a delicate mechanical
voice in her ear.
"Hsaie house. May I help
you?" A moment later, the voice repeated the same message in tradetalk.
"I'm trying to contact Illario
Ransome," Lioe said.
"Who may I say is calling?"
_So he is there_. Lioe felt a sudden
surge of relief, a kind of deflation, and said, "Quinn Lioe." She
heard her voice flat and irritable in the handset's reflection.
"One moment, please."
"He's there?" Roscha
demanded, and Lioe shrugged.
"He seems to be -- " She
broke off as the handset clicked, flipping over to the new connection.
"Chauvelin."
The voice was familiar from the
ambassador's party, low and crisp, with only a hint of the hsai accent. Lioe
froze, not knowing what to say, what she should do, and Chauvelin said,
"Na Lioe?"
"I'm sorry to have bothered you,
Ambassador," she said. "I -- I was looking for Ransome, he said he
might be with you." _Maybe that wasn't the best phrasing_, she thought,
_but it's the best I could do on short notice. Things must be bad, if Chauvelin
himself is talking to me_.
"I've been looking for Ransome
myself," Chauvelin said. "Are you at his loft?"
There was a certainty in his voice that
made Lioe think the call had been traced. "Yes." _No point in lying:
even if he hasn't traced it yet, he will_.
"Has he been there, do you
know?"
"I don't know," Lioe said. It
was a safe answer; better still, it was the truth. "Is there anything
wrong?"
There was a little pause, just enough
to make her sure he was lying. "No, not at all. But I would like to talk
to him as soon as he returns."
"I'll tell him that," Lioe
said, and waited.
"It's important," Chauvelin
said. There was another pause, barely more than a hesitation, and then the
ambassador went on, "I was expecting a message from him. Did he leave
anything for me?"
Lioe shook her head, then remembered it
was a voice-only line. "Not that I've seen." She glanced quickly at
the console, double-checking the messages displayed on the screen. "No,
nothing." She hesitated herself, wondering how much she could say, then
said, "I was expecting to find him here. I'm a little -- concerned."
"So am I." She could almost
hear a kind of wry smile in Chauvelin's voice. "If you hear from him,
please tell him to contact me."
"I'll do that," Lioe said,
and broke the connection.
"So what happened?" Roscha
asked.
Lioe shrugged, looked back at the
massive console, at the symbols and code-strings filling the screens.
"Ransome isn't there, as you heard, and Chauvelin badly wants to talk to
him."
"That doesn't sound good,"
Roscha said. "What about hospitals, or the Lockwardens?"
"I bet Chauvelin's already done
that," Lioe said, "but it couldn't hurt to check again." _Or
could it? What if he wants to keep this quiet?_ She shoved the thought away.
"How are you on the nets?"
Roscha shrugged. "Good enough to
find that out, anyway."
In spite of everything, Lioe grinned.
"Can you take care of it? There's something I want to check."
Roscha reached for the handset.
"All right."
One screen winked out, slaved to the
handset; Lioe ignored its absence, stared at the routing codes displayed on her
workboard. She was still learning her way around Burning Bright's nets, but this
sequence looked straightforward enough. The header codes indicated a secure
node, but the numbers following should be the owner's own codes. She ran her
hands over the shadowscreen, recalling the main directory, and set the system
scanning for a node that matched the header codes. She could hear Roscha's
voice in the background, rising in inquiry, flattening out with each inaudible
answer, but she ignored it, her eyes fixed on the screen. If this didn't work,
she would have to try netwalking, personally checking the likely nodes. Then
the screen lit, displaying a gaudy logo, a shield banded in blue and gold, with
a scarlet dragon coiling over it, and presented her with a list of options:
ADD, SUBTRACT, RETRIEVE, NEW FILE, CHARGES. She hit RETRIEVE, and her screen
filled with symbols, scrolling past too fast for her to read. She touched the
shadowscreen to dump the information to Ransome's local system -- somewhat to
her surprise, there was no request for a further password -- and waited until
the key bar flickered green again. She banished the connection, and turned her
attention to the workscreen, scrolling back to the beginning of the file.
"Nothing at any of the
hospitals," Roscha said, and came to peer over her shoulder. "But a
friend of mine at C/B Cie. says Na Damian's gone off with a hsaia -- it was
somebody important, he said, so it could be the Visiting Speaker -- and Almarin
Ivie, he's head of security, has been sent off to look at something at the
family's summer house."
"Look at this," Lioe said.
She gestured to the screen, heard the repressed excitement in her own voice.
"Damn it, how did he get all of this?" The outline was complete --
_maybe a little iffy in courtroom eyes, especially when so much of it was gathered
netwalking, but certainly enough to use. Enough to blackmail Damian Chrestil
with, and enough to make Damian Chrestil willing to do -- what? Kill him?_ She
pushed the thought away. _That seemed the least likely result, if only because
a well-known body would be hard to explain, and Chauvelin would be likely to
ask awkward questions. But certainly to keep him out of action for a few days.
Especially since Damian seemed to be ready to transfer the lachesi to its new
"owners."_
"So Na Damian was smuggling
lachesi for clients of ji-Imbaoa's," Roscha said, slowly. "I think I
worked that pickup."
"I brought it in," Lioe said.
"Damn, that's why we had bungee-gars on board. I didn't think red-carpet
was worth that much trouble."
Roscha laughed softly. "What a
fucking mess. Na Damian is going to be really pissed when he realizes we know
what's going on."
"I think he already is," Lioe
said, and touched the patches of selfheal starring her face. "That has to
be what this was all about." _He was willing to kill me, too -- not eager,
so I suppose I should be grateful, but willing_. She shivered, looked over her
shoulder in spite of herself toward the shuttered window and the locked door.
_Which means we need some kind of a defense, and not just physical_. "You
said Damian Chrestil went off with the Visiting Speaker?"
"It looks like it," Roscha
said. "And if N'Ivie's at the family summer house, then I bet that's where
Ransome is. It's remote enough to keep somebody out of circulation for a while.
Especially with the storm."
Lioe nodded, aware for the first time
of the steady slap of rain against the shutters. Every so often, a stronger
gust smacked against them, a sharp sound like a handful of nails thrown against
the metal plates. "All right," she said. "How safe are we
here?"
Roscha shrugged. "Na Damian has
plenty of people in the port," she said. "If he wants -- well, if he
doesn't care about publicity, we're not safe at all."
"How much do you think he cares
about publicity?"
"I don't know." Roscha looked
back at the screen, at the careful outline. "If that's what's been going
on, it could mean the governorship. I wouldn't care a whole lot, in his
shoes."
Lioe nodded at the answer she had
expected. "Do me a favor, make sure everything's locked, as secure as you
can make it. And see if Ransome owns any weaponry."
"All right," Roscha said, and
sounded faintly dubious. "But -- "
Lioe looked back at the chair,
Ransome's working space inert, invisible around it. "I've got an
idea," she said. "And if it works, we shouldn't need guns."
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: The Chrestil-Brisch Summer
House,_
_the
Barrier Hills_
Ransome waited in the sunken main room,
staring at the glass of wine that stood untouched on the table beside him. His
back ached with the effort of holding himself relaxed and easy against the
chair's thick cushions; he was aware, painfully aware, of the rising noise of
the rain and the murmuring conversations among the Chrestil-Brisch thugs
standing by the display console. He was equally aware of the woman who held her
palmgun with the comfortable stance of the expert, but kept his eyes away from
her. The wind howled outside the shutters, and he wondered when the storm would
hit its peak. Not that the storm was much of an advantage, but at least it
limited their actions as much as his. _And I bet I know what favor ji-Imbaoa
wants. Chauvelin warned me I shouldn't push him. The only question is, will
Damian Chrestil sell me out?_ Ransome smiled then, put the glass to his lips to
cover the expression. _And why shouldn't he? If he wins -- and he's winning so
far -- he has nothing to lose_.
"Na Ransome."
It was Damian Chrestil's voice: the
younger man moved so quietly that Ransome hadn't heard him approach. He turned,
setting the glass aside, contents untasted, forced a calm smile of greeting.
"Na Damian."
Damian Chrestil snapped his fingers,
and one of the heavy chairs trundled over to join them. At another gesture, the
woman with the palmgun withdrew a little, resting her back against the shutters
that covered the enormous window. Ji-Imbaoa made a slight, impatient movement
of his fingers, but moved away toward the display console and the twin serving
carts. Ransome, watching with what he hoped was a convincing show of incurious
distaste, saw the other hsaia, ji-Imbaoa's secretary, present a plate of food.
Cella said something to him, turned him away toward the shuttered windows. She
glanced over her shoulder, and met Ransome's look with a quick, triumphant
smile. It was gone almost as soon as he'd seen it, but Ransome felt the chill
of it down his spine.
"There are a couple of things we
need to get settled," Damian Chrestil said, and Ransome looked back at him
a little too quickly.
"If you let me go, give me a ride
back to the city and an apology," Ransome said, trying to cover his
nervousness, "I suppose I'd be willing to ignore all of this." He
gestured with all the grace he could muster to the woman with the gun.
Damian smiled. "That really wasn't
what I had in mind."
_Somehow I didn't think so_. Ransome
smiled back, the muscles of his face stiff and unresponsive, felt congestion
tugging at his lungs again. He ignored that -- _maybe it will go away, ease off
on its own the way it sometimes does_ -- and said aloud, "It's a generous
offer."
"So's mine," Damian answered,
and the smile vanished abruptly. "I understand from my people that you
dumped the contents of a datablock into the nets, into storage somewhere. I
want that material."
Ransome spread his hands. "I don't
hear an offer."
"Ji-Imbaoa tells me there are
still some charges pending in Hsaioi-An," Damian Chrestil said. "He
wants you back, to face them. I don't care either way, but I want that
data."
Ransome froze, felt himself go rigid,
as though he'd been turned to stone. He remembered the hsai courts, the hsaia
judge -- "_insults from_ houta _are as the barking of dogs; it's fortunate
you are of no status_" -- most of all the dreary grey padding, walls and
floors and ceiling, that was the hsai prison, months and months of grey cells
and grey clothes and grey men, and finally the numbing grey fog of the first
bout of white-sickness. _That's twice the Chrestil-Brisch have done this to
me_, he thought, and could see the same fine shape, Bettis Chrestil's face
imposed for an instant on her brother's features. _I can't go back. I don't
want to die there, in that grey place_.... "If I give you the data,"
he said slowly, despising himself for the concession, "you won't turn me
over to ji-Imbaoa."
Damian nodded.
"What, then? You'll just let me
go?" Ransome let his disbelief fill his voice, and caught his breath
sharply, just averting a coughing fit. He tasted metal, the tang of it at the
back of his throat, and swallowed hard, willing the sickness away.
"Why not?" Damian shrugged
with deliberate contempt. "Once the -- product -- is transferred, there's
nothing you can do."
"The lachesi, you mean,"
Ransome said, and, after a moment, Damian nodded.
"That's right."
"Chauvelin won't be pleased,"
Ransome said, and Damian shrugged again.
"Chauvelin won't be in a position
to do anything about his displeasure for very much longer. The tzu Tsinra-an
are losing face by the day, they won't be in power much longer. And then
Chauvelin won't be able to do a damn thing to help you."
Ransome sat very still, kept his face
expressionless with an effort. It was true; if the tzu Tsinra-an lost their
dominant position at the court on Hsiamai, then Chauvelin would go down -- _and
I'll go with him. I can't go back to Hsaioi-An. I don't want to die there, I
know what that would be like, I saw it happen_. He controlled his fear with an
effort, made himself reach for the wine. He sipped carefully, but did not
really taste the faint sweetness. "So if I tell you where the data is, you
won't turn me over to him." He nodded to the Visiting Speaker, still
standing by the food carts. "What guarantee do I have that you won't get
the data and still hand me over?"
"You don't. But you don't have
another choice," Damian Chrestil answered. "I tell you -- I'll give
you my word -- that if you give me the data, you can go free."
"Your word," Ransome said, in
spite of himself, remembering Bettis Chrestil. She had given her word, too, and
it had been less than useless. Damian Chrestil gave his sister's humorless
smile.
"I don't care if you believe me or
not," he said. "This is the only deal you've got. Tell me where you
stashed the data, or I'll give you to ji-Imbaoa, now."
_It is the only deal, and worse than no
choice at all_. Ransome stared at him for a long moment, unable to come up with
any alternatives. _Whatever I do, I lose, because I don't believe him for a
second when he says he'll let me go. I'm only prolonging it, and losing any
bargaining power I might have -- but I can't give up without some fight_.
"All right," he said slowly. "I'll retrieve it for you." He
hadn't expected that attempt to work, and was not surprised when Damian shook
his head, refusing the gambit.
"Tell me the codes."
"They're in my loft, in the mail
systems there," Ransome said. "You'll find a message in _n'jao_
there, a string of codes. That accesses the secure storage." Damian
frowned, started to say something, and Ransome held up his hand. "The
program I used, I don't know the access numbers myself, or even where the data
ended up. It's a random dump, to whoever had space open at the time. But the
retrieval codes are in my mailbox."
Damian nodded then, beckoned to one of
his people, a thin woman with a pilot's calluses on her wrists. "Cossi,
you've done this before. I need to get some information out of his
mailbox."
Cossi shrugged. "Can you give me a
key?"
"Well?" Damian said.
Ransome hesitated, then reeled off the
string of numbers.
"Right, Na Damian," Cossi
said, and turned away. Ransome watched her walk to the nearest netlink and
settle herself at the workstation. For a crazy moment, he hoped that she didn't
know what she was doing -- she was a pilot, after all -- but then he saw the
way her hands moved across the shadowscreens, and that hope died.
He looked away, not wanting to watch,
but could still hear the steady click of the machines as Cossi worked her way
onto the nets. This was it: there was no hope left, and he could expect to
choke to death in a hsai prison.... He heard his breath whistling in his lungs,
and this time reached for the cylinder of Mist. There was no point in
pretending anymore, no point in trying to hide his weakness. He'd played his
best hand, and he'd lost. He laid the mask against his face, inhaled the cool
vapor. Damian Chrestil watched him, his thin face expressionless. Ransome
refolded the mask with deliberate care, and slipped the cylinder back into his
pocket.
"Na Damian," Cossi said.
"I'm being blocked."
"What?" Damian looked up
sharply, frowning.
"I'm being blocked," Cossi said again.
"Somebody's pulled that system off-line. There's no way I can access
it."
Damian looked back at Ransome, his thin
eyebrows drawn into a scowl. "Well? I thought we had a bargain."
Ransome spread his hands, did his best
to hide his sudden elation. Someone was in the loft, Chauvelin, maybe, or --
better still and most likely -- Quinn Lioe. And if Lioe was there, and had
changed the system settings, then maybe he had a second chance.
"Everything was on-line when I left it. Maybe the storm's knocked it
off."
Cossi's hands danced across the
multileveled controls. "Nothing else is off, Na Damian. I think someone's
reset."
"Lioe," Damian Chrestil said,
and Ransome felt the last hope die. "It's Lioe, isn't it? You gave her a
key to your loft, and told her what was going on."
Ransome shook his head. "I didn't
tell her anything," he lied. "She's a Gamer, and a Republican, at
that. She doesn't give a shit about politics."
"You brought her to Chauvelin's
party," Damian said, soft and deadly.
Ransome shook his head again.
"Yeah, I tried to get her interested in something outside the Game --
she's good, too good to be stuck in the Game all her life -- but she doesn't
care. All she wants to do is play the Game."
There was another little silence, and
then Damian Chrestil shook his head. "No. Nobody ignores politics like
that."
"Gamers do," Ransome said,
desperately.
"Not even Gamers." Damian
Chrestil beckoned to Ivie. "Get in touch with your people up at the port.
Send some over to Ransome's loft and see what they find." He looked back
at Ransome. "I suppose he has security in place, so be careful."
"Fuck you," Ransome said. If
Lioe was at the loft, if she had the sense to find the key that would let her
retrieve the data -- and she must have, if she'd blocked access to the mail
system -- then there was still a chance. _If Lioe can figure out what to do_.
He put that thought aside. There was still nothing he could do but wait, but
things were looking fractionally better than they had.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: The Hsai Ambassador's House,_
_in the
Ghetto, Landing Isle Above_
_Old
City North_
Chauvelin stood at the only unshuttered
window, watching the wind-driven rain sweep through his garden. The bellflower
trees bent until their branches dragged along the ground, stirring the
human-faced pebbles into new patterns, their flowers blown away in gusts with
the wind. A few early flowers were flattened, their petals frayed to nothing
against the ground. The clouds streamed in, dark overhead, darker still, almost
black, to the south, so that the light was dimmed, filled with an odd,
underwater quality. Ransome was not at his loft.
Chauvelin grimaced, annoyed with
himself, at his inability to concentrate on anything except that useless fact,
and turned away from the window to consider the double-screened workboard that
lay on the wide table. Both screens displayed the transcript of the last
transmission from Haas, the last that had come in before the transmitter went
down for the duration of the storm, a fragmentary, garbled mess that defied the
computers. He frowned again, and made himself pick up a stylus, fitting his fingers
into the pressure points to change the mode. It was obvious that Haas had found
at least some of what he had expected -- connections between the je Tsinra-an
and the Chrestil-Brisch, clients of the je Tsinra-an who did most of their
business through C/B Cie. -- but the overall sense of the message was so
mangled that there was little he could do. Even the standard phrases certifying
Haas's authority and authorizing him to act in her name for the
Remembrancer-Duke had come through poorly, though there, at least, they had the
Forms of Protocol to fill in the gaps. At least he could use that authority, if
he had to.
And maybe he could do more. Ransome was
missing; the inquiries he'd put out on the nets had brought no results, and
Lioe seemed -- said she knew nothing. Ji-Imbaoa certainly knew, certainly held
some of the keys to this situation. If the transmission could be edited
properly, he could force ji-Imbaoa's household to cooperate with him. He
highlighted one section of the message, deleted the intervening words and
nonsense, tilted his head to one side to study the result. The phrasing was a
little stilted, but no worse than in many official documents. He finished the
rest of it, editing carefully, and studied the result. The document now gave him
the temporary rank necessary to resume control of the ambassadorial household,
and therefore of ji-Imbaoa's household as well, on the grounds that ji-Imbaoa's
carefully unspecified actions had cast a shadow on the reputation of his
superiors. There was only one problem with using it: ji-Imbaoa would inevitably
query it to the Remembrancer-Duke himself, and not enough of the original
message survived for Chauvelin to be sure that his patron would back him in
such a drastic action. He set the stylus aside, ran his finger over the glowing
characters at the foot of the screen, tracing the stylized _n'jao_ characters
that symbolized Haas's authority. He could use this authority successfully, of
that he was quite certain, but possibly at the cost of his career. _Is Ransome
worth it?_
Chauvelin sighed, touched controls at
the base of the workscreen to produce a paper copy and transfer the original to
storage. _Is he? It's taken me most of my life -- nearly thirty years -- to
earn this rank, starting from nothing, as a conscript, less than nothing. Even
the strictest hsaia codes acknowledge that it isn't always possible to protect
one's proteges_. Flashes of memory broke through his guard: Ransome newly
paroled, all in grey still, the canalli brown of his skin faded to ivory;
Ransome in his bed, the unexpected, wiry strength of his thin body; Ransome
laughing at a party, a handful of birds, the centerpiece of a story egg,
dancing in his palm; Ransome sitting on the garden wall, holding out a handful
of carved stones. _And Ransome with Lioe, too, the way he watched her_. He
picked up the printed sheet, rolled it carefully in the prescribed fashion,
concentrating on the task so he wouldn't have to think. _If I use this, and I'm
wrong -- or even if I'm right and it's inexpedient -- I will lose the
ambassadorship. And probably my other ranks, too; there will be need to make an
example of me. I'm not ready, yet, to make that choice_.
He tucked the cylinder of paper, the
ends neatly folded over on themselves, into the pocket of his coat, and turned
back to the window. It was raining harder now, hard enough that the rain formed
a solid curtain, completely concealing the Old City in the distance below the
cliffs, veiling the paths of the lower terrace. A few yard lights glowed
through the rain, outlining the steps that led from one plateau to the next. He
grimaced, thinking of Ransome's sculptures, and looked away.
"Sia?" Je-Sou'tsian spoke
from the doorway, excitement in her voice, and Chauvelin turned sharply.
"Well, Iameis?"
"Sia, I think we've found the
Visiting Speaker, or at least traced where he went."
"Good." Chauvelin reached for
the cylinder of paper, touched it like a talisman. "Where?"
"He was with Damian Chrestil,"
je-Sou'tsian said. "He and his people, ji-Mao'ana and Magill, went to the
C/B Cie. docks, and they left with him in a flyer. They headed southeast, our
informant says, but I can't contact the Speaker at the Chrestil-Brisch
palazze." She paused, and made a formal gesture of apology. "I regret
we haven't located him more exactly, but I thought you would wish to
know."
"So," Chauvelin said softly,
and nodded. "Yes, I want to know." _This changes everything. He is
acting irresponsibly, and he's dealing with, maybe making a deal with, a_ houta
-- _Damian Chrestil is still not a person, in the law's view -- and this can be
construed as dishonoring his patron. That will give me just enough claim to the
honorable position that Haas and my lord can afford to protect me_. He slipped
the rolled paper from his pocket, touched it to lips and forehead in the ritual
gesture. "As you must know, I received a last transmission from maiHu'an
before we lost contact with the satellite. In it, I was granted this commission,
which I now execute."
Je-Sou'tsian bowed her head, crossed
her hands on her chest, spurs downward, claws turned inward to her own body in
ritual submission. "I will bear witness, Sia."
Chauvelin nodded. "In it, I am
authorized to act as head of household, lesser father, under the authority of
the Father-Emperor, father of all clans." The ritual phrases came
surprisingly easily to his tongue, for all that it had been years since he had
last used them. "This commission supersedes all earlier claims of rank and
privilege, and will do so until it is renounced or revoked."
"I hear, my father,"
je-Sou'tsian said, "and I witness. And I obey even to the price of my
life."
"So be it," Chauvelin said,
and laid the rolled paper ceremoniously on the table. "Now." He
paused, sorting out what needed to be done. "I want you to proclaim this
to the household. Take a couple of our security people with you, just in
case."
"I don't think the Visiting
Speaker's household will cause any trouble," je-Sou'tsian said. "Not
all of them are fond of him."
Chauvelin smiled. "I can't say I
blame them. All right, do what you think is best about security. But I want his
rooms searched, particularly for papers, disks, datablocks, anything that could
prove the link with Damian Chrestil -- also for anything that might tell us
where he is. Keep your people on that, as well, highest priority."
"Yes, Sia." Je-Sou'tsian
paused, seemed about to say something more, then turned and slipped away.
Chauvelin stared after her, suddenly aware of the roaring of the wind beyond
the window. If he could just find either Ransome or ji-Imbaoa -- _when I find
them_, he corrected silently, not daring to think of the consequences if he did
not -- he would have the tools he needed to act. But for now, all he could do
was wait.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: Ransome's Loft, Old Coast
Road,_
_Newfields,
Above Junction Pool_
Lioe walked the Game nets, calling
files from the libraries, moving from one familiar nonspace to the next. Images
flickered in the air in front of her, bright against the dark shutters; below
and to her right, where there was no danger of accidentally intruding into that
space, hung Ransome's outline of Damian Chrestil's plan. From time to time she
glanced at it, comparing its form to the Game scenario taking place in the
working volume in front of her. The basic shape looked good, and she reached
for images to complement it, trawling now through less familiar news nets and
more sober datafields. She found the images she wanted after some trouble --
Damian Chrestil's face, a news scan that covered the arrival of the Visiting
Speaker, an old still of Chauvelin, looking younger than he had at the party --
and dragged them one by one into space occupied by the _Face/Body_ program. The
program considered them and produced a string of numbers; Lioe dragged those
numbers into the working volume, and smiled at the result. The images attached
to the character templates were not -- quite -- the original faces, but they
were close enough to be recognized, and that was all that mattered. _In some
ways, it was almost a shame the scenario would never be played_, she thought,
studying the convolutions that formed a neat, red-branched tree in front of her
eyes. _Damian Chrestil's plot makes for a wonderful Game incident. Too bad it's
only made for blackmail_.
"No luck finding guns."
Roscha's voice seemed to come from a
distance, and Lioe shook her head, refocusing to look through and past the
crowding images. She reached into control space to switch off her vocal link,
said to Roscha, "Then there's nothing?"
"Not quite nothing," Roscha
said with a lop-sided grin, and slipped a hand into the pocket of her jacket.
She brought out a cheap plastic pistol, displayed it with a shrug. "This
is mine. On the other hand, it's only six shots, and it's not supposed to be
reloadable. I've had it modified, and I've got another magazine, but I don't
know how well it will work."
"Wonderful," Lioe said.
"What are you doing?" Roscha
asked. She was frowning at the control spaces, as though she was trying to make
sense of the carefully focused images.
"My -- our -- way out," Lioe
said. _I hope_. "I've pulled together a Game scenario,
merchant-adventurers variant, a _jeu a clef_. I've put this whole situation
into a Game -- and used their faces -- and I'm going to put it on the nets. If
Damian Chrestil doesn't back down, leave me alone and let Ransome go, I'm going
to let it run. The scenario will show up in four hours -- in fact, I think I'll
tell Lia Gueremei to expect it -- and it will be sent on the internets as well.
He'll never get rid of it, and he should have a hard time explaining why it
fits what's been going on so extremely closely."
"He will be pissed," Roscha
said.
She didn't sound entirely pleased, and
Lioe looked sharply at her. "I wasn't thinking," she said.
"Look, I don't want to get you into trouble. If you want, you can leave
now. I won't mention you."
Roscha looked momentarily embarrassed.
"No. I'm not leaving. Who'd watch the door? Anyway, the storm's pretty
bad."
"Not that bad," Lioe said,
reaching for the nearest weather station reports. Air traffic was not recommended,
but the roads were still open.
"I don't want to take the bike,
and I'm not leaving it," Roscha said. Face and tone were abruptly serious.
"I don't want to leave, Quinn. Don't worry about me."
Lioe stared at her for a moment longer,
then slowly nodded. "I'm trusting you," she said.
Roscha smiled, and turned away,
settling herself against the wall by the door. There was an intercom panel
there, Lioe noticed, and for the first time became aware of a rush of street
sounds -- rain and wind on pavement, once in a great while the slow whine of an
engine as a heavy carrier crawled along the street -- that formed a
counterpoint to the sounds from the net. "I've rigged the intercom,"
Roscha said. "At least that way we can hear them coming."
_If they come in the front door_, Lioe
thought. "Great," she said aloud, and turned her attention back to
the images that surrounded her. The scenario was complete, and again, she felt
the pang of regret that no one would ever play it. All that remained was to put
it on the nets, neatly packaged and ready to unfurl itself four hours from now.
She had done this kind of programming before, though only for frivolous
reasons, a birthday present, a joke; still, the basic technique remained the same,
and the routines she used had proved impervious to the best attempts to
corkscrew them open. _At least, they were impervious on Callixte_. She ignored
that thought, and reached into the control space for a new set of tools.
Ransome's gloves were warm against her hands, the wires tingling gently to
confirm each movement.
She set a nonsense algorithm to work,
let it spin its hash into the working space, then shaped the jumbled nonsense
into a solid plate, turned it back in on itself, so that the algorithm
constantly rebuilt, reinforced itself. It formed a virtual capsule that sealed
the scenario away from the rest of the nets. She prodded at it, testing the
system, and when she was satisfied with its solidity, began the trigger
mechanism. The timer was easy, a standard commercial program tied to the
algorithm; it would cancel the nonsense run in three hours and fifty-seven
minutes. Three minutes later, the last of the nonsense wall would disappear,
tidied away by the net's housekeeper routines. At last she finished, and spun
the entire structure in virtual space in front of her, shaping the external
presentation. The emerging image glittered as it turned, became a shape like a
golden dodecahedron, each hexagonal facet marked with her Gamer's mark. That
would get people's attention, if nothing else did. If Damian Chrestil didn't
capitulate, it, and her growing reputation, would ensure that Gamers would copy
the program to every corner of the nets. If he did give in, and she pulled the
scenario -- _not that hard, since I have the key algorithm; there won't be too
many copies to track down_ -- she would lose a little status, but that was a
small price to pay for survival. _And maybe not even that_, she thought
suddenly. _Suppose I do what Ransome suggested, float the scenario for
Avellar's Rebellion. No one could say I didn't live up to the advertising
then_...
But that was for later. She took a deep
breath, reached out with her gloved hand, copied the dodecahedron, and shoved
it into the place that was the entrance to the nets. It floated away from her,
picking up speed as it went, until it vanished in a flash of black. _One away_.
She copied the program and scenario again and pushed it out onto the nets, did
it again and again until there were at least a dozen copies loose on the nets.
Only then did she lean back a little, and reach into control space for the
communications system.
She opened a space, but did not drag
the connect codes into it, staring at the static-filled volume for a long moment.
Then, reluctantly, she reached into the directory, rifling its files for Damian
Chrestil, or the family's summer house. She found a code for the latter, and
dragged it into the communications space before she could change her mind.
There was a long pause, while codes streamed across the space -- unusually
long, nearly thirty seconds -- and then the codes vanished, to be replaced by a
man's head and shoulders. It was an unfamiliar, ugly face, white-skinned and
broad-featured, and for a crazy instant Lioe thought of giants in the story
tapes she'd viewed as a child.
"Can I help you?" the giant
asked, in a voice as heavy as his features, and Lioe dragged herself back to
the present.
"I want to talk to Damian
Chrestil," she said. "My name's Lioe."
The giant closed his mouth over
whatever he had started to say, and looked down at something out of the
camera's vision. "Just a minute, Na Lioe. I'll see if he's free."
"If you're trying to set up a
trace, don't bother," Lioe said. "I'll tell you where I am. I'm in
Ransome's loft, and I've found what he found. You can tell Damian Chrestil
that, too."
The giant's expression did not change.
"I'll do that, Na Lioe," he said, and his face vanished, to be
replaced by what was meant to be a soothing hold pattern.
"You heard that," Lioe said
over her shoulder, and Roscha answered quickly.
"Yeah. But I haven't heard anybody
in the entrance yet."
"If I take too long -- " Lioe
began, and stopped abruptly. _If he doesn't come to talk, decides to send his
people after us instead, what then? I suppose if he doesn't show up in a couple
of minutes, I can cut the connection, we can head back to the port, try again
from there_ --
The communications space cleared
abruptly, and she found herself looking at Damian Chrestil. She'd only seen him
once before, at Chauvelin's party, and was surprised again at how young he was.
_No older than me, if as old. Let's hope I can play this as well as he has_.
"Na Lioe," Damian said.
"I'm glad to finally get to talk to you."
"I didn't think talking was what
you had in mind."
Damian Chrestil shrugged. "If
you'd come quietly ... But that's old business. What can I do for you?"
"You're holding Ransome,"
Lioe said bluntly, and hoped she was right. "I want him back."
"You want him?" Damian's face
creased suddenly into an urchin's grin. "I didn't think he was yours,
too."
Lioe sighed, ostentatiously refraining
from an answer.
"I'm afraid that's not possible
right away," Damian went on. "I have business in train which I don't
intend to see interfered with. Na Ransome will stay with me until it's
finished."
"I don't think so," Lioe
said. "If he's not released -- and if you don't call off the goons you've
got chasing me -- I will spread this entire business deal onto the nets,
Republican as well as Burning Brighter, and into Hsaioi-An if I can manage
it."
There was a little silence, and Damian
Chrestil said slowly, "I know the nets. I can kill this before it
starts."
Lioe shook her head. "Not on the
Game nets. The Game nets run different protocols, different rules, they serve a
different clientele. I've put a new scenario in motion, Na Damian. It's a
merchant-adventurer's variant, primed for release in four hours, and it's based
on what you've been trying to do, from smuggling the lachesi to the high
politics." She reached into her working space, dragged another copy into
the communications space, peeled back the shell to reveal the tiny, perfect --
and perfectly recognizable -- characters contained in its center, held by the
red webbing of the scenario's outline. "All this has to do is come to
someone's attention in C-and-I, or, I would imagine, in the Lockwardens or the
governor's office, or even back in Hsaioi-An, and you're screwed. And there are
enough Gamers in all those places that it's bound to happen."
Damian Chrestil shook his head.
"Not necessarily. I admit, we may not be able to break that shell, but my
people can contain the scenario as soon as it's open. It won't get that far,
certainly not far enough to cause me trouble. So let's talk reasonably."
"Once the scenario's opened,
you'll never stop the spread," Lioe said. "You know how Gamers are,
we copy things. We share variants we like, sessions we've played, work by
people we admire. And my name means something in the Game. Once that shell
opens, half the Gamers on the nets will have made a copy for their own use --
once they realize it's a _jeu a clef_ even more of them will want it. How are
you going to stop that, Na Damian?"
There was a little silence, and in it
Lioe could hear a kind of choked laughter. _Ransome_, she realized, and hid her
delight.
"All right," Damian Chrestil
said. "I'm prepared to negotiate. You're not invulnerable, Na Lioe, you
crewed the ship that brought the lachesi, and that could be made to look bad
for you."
"Possibly," Lioe said.
"Easily enough done," Damian
Chrestil said. "But I'm willing to make a deal." He did something
with controls that were out of her line of sight; an instant later, the view
within the communications space widened, so that she was looking into a
comfortably furnished room. The wall behind him was black -- not a wall at all,
she realized abruptly, but the same kind of shutter that covered Ransome's
windows. Lioe tugged at the edges of her view, expanded it so that she could
see the details more clearly. Half a dozen men and women waited at a polite
distance, all in dockers' clothes, tough-looking people who looked like older,
less beautiful versions of Roscha. The Visiting Speaker stood a little apart
from them, feet planted wide apart, arms crossed on his chest, the fingers of
the one visible hand working restlessly. A tiny, pretty woman -- _Cella_, she
realized -- sat on the arm of a chair to the hsaia's right. Ransome was sitting
in a comfortable-looking chair, just outside the pool of amber light from an
overhead lamp, but as she watched, he pushed himself to his feet and came to
stand by Damian Chrestil. Damian looked over his shoulder, his fine eyebrows
drawing together in a frown, but he did not order the other man away.
"Yes, this concerns you, Ransome.
Join the party, why don't you?"
"Thanks," Ransome said, and
smiled.
Damian Chrestil looked back into the
display space. "Since you're not a political animal, Na Lioe, I would
assume you don't really care whether or not the lachesi gets through to my
buyers in Hsaioi-An."
"Or even about your chance of
being governor," Ransome said gently, his eyes fixed on Lioe as though he
wanted to convey a message.
Lioe nodded. "All I care about is
your goons off my back, a job to go back to, and Ransome's freedom. That's
pretty simple, Na Damian."
"I can perhaps do better,"
Damian Chrestil said. He paused, not looking back over his shoulder toward the
Visiting Speaker, but the hsaia straightened anyway, both hands now poised to
display claws and wrist spurs.
"We have an agreement, Damian
Chrestil," ji-Imbaoa said. "If you fail to honor it -- "
Damian turned on him. "You haven't
yet done what you and I agreed. I'll fulfill my contracts, all right -- this
time -- but you can go to hell." Behind him, the flat-faced giant made a
gesture, and the dockers shifted position suddenly, so that they encircled the
Visiting Speaker and his staff. Cella slipped easily from her place, out of the
armed ring. The jericho-human made an abortive grab for a weapon hidden under his
coat, and a thin woman leveled her palmgun at him.
"Enough, Magill," ji-Imbaoa
said, and looked at Damian. "Very well. I have no choice. But I will ruin
you for this. You and yours will never do business in Hsaioi-An again -- "
Ransome said something then, in hsai,
not tradetalk, and the Visiting Speaker was abruptly silent, hunching into
himself as though into feathers. Ransome looked back into the communications
space. "As I said to him, Chauvelin may be able to offer other connections,
Na Damian. You see, I'm willing to negotiate, too."
"But will Chauvelin?" Damian
Chrestil asked.
"Ask him," Ransome answered.
There was a little silence, and Lioe,
still held in the chair's gentle embrace, the nets wound around her like a
cocoon, held her breath. If this could work, if they could come up with a
bargain --
"Be my guest," Damian
Chrestil said, and gestured to the controls.
"Traitor," ji-Imbaoa said,
almost conversationally, and turned his back on them all.
Ransome grinned, and reached for the
control spaces. Static fuzzed a tiny circle at the edge of Lioe's viewing
volume. She winced, and looked away from it, but did not adjust her own
controls. An image formed, slowly at first, then flicked completely into
adjustment. Chauvelin looked out at them, one eyebrow raised in arrogant
question, and Lioe tugged at the image until it was as large as the other.
"Na Chauvelin," Damian
Chrestil said, with a fleeting and twisted smile.
"Na Damian," Chauvelin
acknowledged. "What interesting company you keep." He looked at
Ransome. "I've been looking for you, I-Jay. I trust you're well?"
Ransome nodded. "Well
enough."
Damian Chrestil cleared his throat.
"I think we've achieved stalemate," he said. "Each of us has
something the others want, and, thanks to you, Na Lioe, we have a time
constraint as well."
"How so?" Both of Chauvelin's
eyebrows rose.
"I've put a new Game scenario onto
the nets," Lioe said bluntly. "In four hours -- less than that, now
-- it'll be released, and every Gamer on the nets will want a copy. It's a _jeu
a clef_, Ambassador, based on Na Damian's deal with the Visiting Speaker. If
Damian Chrestil doesn't back off, guarantee my safety and let Ransome go, I'll
let it run." She paused, couldn't resist adding, "I do think it will
play."
Chauvelin was silent for a moment, his
face expressionless, then looked at Ransome. "Will it work?"
"It's fucking brilliant,"
Ransome answered, and the amusement in his voice had a slight note of hysteria.
"Oh, it'll work, all right, no question."
A faint expression of distaste
flickered across Chauvelin's face, vanished as he looked back at Lioe. "I
wish you had seen fit to trust me with this information, Na Lioe."
"Why the hell should I?" Lioe
retorted. "I'm a Republican, you're hsaia -- and I don't know you. Why
should I trust my neck to you?"
"If I may interrupt," Damian
Chrestil said. "I think I can offer us all a way out."
"Why not?" Lioe said, and
heard Ransome laugh.
Chauvelin said, "Go on."
"Na Lioe says she wants to be left
alone -- my goons off your back, you said, and your job to go to. And Ransome
back, which is what Na Chauvelin wants, too." Damian Chrestil looked
directly at Chauvelin, his voice gone suddenly deadly cold. "Am I right in
thinking you'd also like to see the Visiting Speaker's influence curbed a
little, N'Ambassador?"
Chauvelin nodded once.
"Then this is what I'm
offering," Damian Chrestil said. "You, N'Ambassador, will allow this
shipment to proceed. Neither you nor Na Ransome will interfere with it -- why
should you care what happens to my money and clients, so long as ji-Imbaoa, and
the je Tsinra-an, are taken down a few notches? In return, I won't act for the
Visiting Speaker, or ask any awkward questions about his disgrace. As for you,
Na Lioe, I want you to withdraw this scenario of yours, and to keep quiet about
all of this. And I'd like you to stay away from Republican C-and-I at least
until the statute of limitations runs out on any possible smuggling charges
from that direction."
_I'm a pilot. That's impossible_. Lioe
started to protest aloud, but Damian Chrestil held up his hand.
"In return, I'm willing to offer
you my sponsorship to remain on Burning Bright, as a citizen. I daresay you can
find work as a notable, in the Game clubs, but if you can't, or if you don't
want to -- if you want to follow Ransome's example -- I'll provide you with a
stipend, to continue until the statute runs out."
_To stay on Burning Bright. To live as
a notable, as a Gamer, my income guaranteed_... Lioe took a deep breath,
fighting for calm. This was the last thing she had expected, something outside
of all possibility, that she would play this game, and win, and be offered this
reward.
"That's very good, Damian,"
Chauvelin said, and there was real admiration in his voice.
"Thank you. I think it serves all
our needs," Damian Chrestil said.
_Maybe not mine_, Lioe thought,
indignant. _There's my piloting -- I like my work -- and, my God, there's
Kerestel. I can't just leave him without warning_. But there were plenty of
pilots in the replacement pool, good ones, too. It was not impossible, not
impossible at all. _Will he keep his word? Will I find his goons still on my
tail, or wake up dead some morning? Do I care? I could stay on Burning Bright,
stay in the Game; most of all, if Ransome will teach me -- and I think he will
-- I can see what else there is, beyond the Game. He and I can put an end to
the Game, and see what happens then_.
"I can agree to this,"
Chauvelin said.
Damian nodded. "Na Lioe?"
She nodded, slowly. "I agree. But
I want the money."
"Wise move," Ransome said. He
was smiling again, without amusement. "And I'll agree, because the rest of
you do. But you owe me something for it, Damian."
Damian Chrestil shook his head.
"No. You're getting something already. You're getting yourself an
apprentice, someone you can pass your skills to before you die. I think that's
reward enough for anyone."
There was another silence, and Lioe
held her breath, sure that Ransome would reject the offer, reject the reminder
that he was going to die -- _reject me_. Then, quite slowly, Ransome's smile
changed, became more real. "You are good, Damian," he said.
"I'm not Bettisa," Damian
Chrestil answered, and there was an odd regret in his voice, as well as
certainty. There was a little pause, and Ransome nodded.
"All right. I'll agree."
Lioe let out the breath she had been
holding, leaned back and let the chair tilt with her, the images moving around
her to hold their relative positions. It was done, it would work -- _and I will
stay on Burning Bright, and in the Game. And I'll have my chance, at last, to
do something no one will want to change_.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: The Chrestil-Brisch Summer
House,_
_the
Barrier Hills_
Damian Chrestil watched the net symbols
fade and then the flicker of lights and symbols as the communications console
shut itself down. It was the best he could do -- _not very good_, he
acknowledged silently, but at least he would be able to salvage something from
the mess. _And I won't have to deal with ji-Imbaoa anymore_. He turned away
from the machine, did his best to ignore Ransome, watching with his sly smile
from the sidelines, and beckoned to Ivie. The flat-faced man came over quickly,
his hands still curled in his pockets, caressing at least one weapon.
"Na Damian?"
Ivie was well trained, Damian thought
sourly, but no one was well trained enough to keep from sounding just a little
uncertain about this situation. "Escort the Visiting Speaker into the game
room," he said. "And take his people with him. Be sure you search the
jericho-human, though."
"A pleasure," Ivie answered,
and turned away. He sounded confident enough once he'd been given something
definite to do, Damian thought, and touched his remote to summon the drinks
cart. He busied himself with its contents, careful to keep it and himself out
of the way of Ivie's people, and saw without really looking that Cella and
Ransome were being equally cautious. Cella stood well apart from the rest, still
with a drink untasted in her hand, her expression remotely interested, as
though she were watching someone else's Game. Damian read disapproval in her
face, and looked away from it. On the far wall, the weather screen flickered
soundlessly, showing the storm from various perspectives. He could hear the
wind even through the heavy shutters, a numbing, constant wail that rose and
fell monotonously. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Ivie say something to
the Visiting Speaker, too soft and polite to be heard. Ji-Imbaoa tossed his
head angrily, turning away as though he would have preferred to ignore the
security specialist, and Damian Chrestil braced himself to intervene. Then,
abruptly, ji-Imbaoa's resistance vanished; he made a curt gesture of agreement,
and followed Ivie toward the door. Two of the guards followed, polite but
obtrusive in their armed presence. The rest stayed behind, the thin woman still
with her palmgun drawn and leveled at Magill. There was a little pause, and
then Magill shook his head, and lifted his hands, surrendering to a search. At
the woman's gesture, he and the hsaia secretary moved slowly toward the door.
"Neatly done," Ransome said.
He was still smiling, but the expression was less sly, more conscious of his
own failures.
Damian Chrestil ignored the irony,
said, "Thank you." He was very aware of Cella's lifted eyebrow, and
went on almost at random, "Make yourself comfortable."
"Consider myself a guest?"
Ransome asked.
"If you must."
"Chauvelin will be grateful."
Ransome pushed himself up off the arm of the chair, moved slowly across the
room to stare at the weather screen. "I don't suppose there's any chance
of getting back into the city."
"I wouldn't send my people out in
this," Damian answered with some asperity. "You'll have to wait it
out with the rest of us."
Ransome nodded, his attention still on
the screen. Cella set her drink aside very precisely, and came to stand between
Damian and the other man, so close that Damian could smell the faint sweetness
of her perfume.
"May we talk, Damiano?"
The very reasonableness of her tone was
a warning of sorts. "Of course," Damian said, and moved back into the
corner of the room, far enough away from the screen that an ordinary speaking
voice would not be overheard. He leaned against the side of one of the heavy
chairs, still not quite willing to turn his back on Ransome, and Cella leaned
close, her hip against his knee, one hand on the chair, just brushing against his
thigh. They would look intimate from a distance, Damian knew, and wished for a
fleeting instant that that was all she wanted.
"Are you going to go through with
this?" Cella asked. She kept her voice down, but the anger was perfectly
clear under the conversational surface.
Damian Chrestil eyed her for a moment,
biting back his answering anger -- _all the more unreasonable because I know
what you're really saying, that I backed down, that I let Chauvelin win_ -- and
said, "It's the best bet, Cella. Better odds than anything else."
"Changing horses is never a good
bet," Cella answered. "The Visiting Speaker's still got power, why
not stick with him? Why the hell go with Chauvelin?" She glanced over her
shoulder, a quick, betraying tilt of the head toward Ransome, still staring at
the screen. "And him?"
"For God's sake, Cella,"
Damian said. "Because ji-Imbaoa is unreliable, and because Chauvelin's
winning right now."
"The je Tsinra-an have the power
at court," Cella said. "I know that, I did the research for you.
They're going to win in the long term, not the tzu line. You should stick with
them."
"It's a little late for
that."
"I could persuade him," Cella
said. "I could tell him it was a bluff -- "
"_Sha-mai!_" Damian Chrestil pushed her away, pushed
himself up off the chair in a single motion, heedless of Ransome's frankly
curious stare. "Look, Cella, I've told you what I'm doing, which is more
than is really your business. You're very good at the Game, but this is
reality. This is what I am going to do -- this is the only thing I can do, the
only way I can keep even this much -- and I don't need your baroque variations
to complicate it." He took a deep breath, regained his composure with an
effort. "If you want to help out, yes, by all means, keep the Visiting
Speaker happy. But stay out of my politics."
Cella looked at him, her face stiff and
hard as a Carnival mask, her careful makeup bright as paint against a sudden
angry pallor. "I can -- keep him happy -- if that's what you want,
yes."
"I don't really give a fuck,"
Damian Chrestil answered, and turned away.
"Certainly, Na Damian," Cella
said, with the sweet subservience that never failed to infuriate him, and swept
away toward the door.
Ransome watched without seeming to do
so, all too aware of the tone if not all the words of the conversation. It was
the losers who watched and listened like this, prisoners, servants, _houta ...
Well, I've been all of those, and born canalli besides_. He fixed his attention
on the screen as Cella stalked past him and disappeared into the hallway. _I
can't say I'm sorry she's been taken down a peg or two_.
In the screen, waves rose and beat
against the wet black metal of the storm barriers, the image dimmed and
distorted by the blowing rain and the drops that ran down the camera's hooded
lens. It shivered now and then, as the wind shook the shielded emplacement. The
first line of barriers was almost engulfed, foam boiling against and over it;
the second and third, farther up the channel, were more visible, but a steady
swell still pounded against them. Ransome watched impassively, remembering what
conditions would be like on the Inland Water. Even with all the barriers up, the
water would be rough -- the Lockwardens would have to let some of the tides
through, or risk damage to the generators that powered the city and, if things
got bad enough, to the barriers themselves -- and the water level would be
rising along the smaller canals. He had grown up on a low-lying edge of the
Homestead Island District, could remember struggling with his parents to get
the valuables out to higher ground without any of the neighbors finding out
that they had anything worth stealing; remembered how they had piled what they
couldn't carry onto the shelves that ran below the ceilings, hoping that the
roof would stay intact and the water wouldn't rise too high. And hoping, too,
that the overworked Lockwardens from the local station would remember to keep
an eye on the block. He glanced at the controls, touched a key to superimpose
the chronometer reading on the screen: still almost an hour to actual sunset,
but the image in the screen was already as dark as early evening. The winds
were high, but steady for now: _all in all_, he thought, _not a bad time for
looting_. There would be a few bad boys in the Dry Cut and Homestead who would
be risking it.
"Where's that from, Warden's
East?" Damian Chrestil asked. He had come up so silently that the other
hadn't been aware of his presence until he spoke.
"I think so," Ransome
answered, and found himself glad of the distraction. He glanced sideways, saw
the younger man still scowling faintly, not all the marks of ill temper
smoothed away. _Still pissed at Cella_, he thought. _And I can't say I blame
him_.
Damian Chrestil slipped a hand into his
pocket, obviously reaching for a remote, and a moment later the image in the
screen vanished, to be replaced by a false-color overview of the storm itself.
Distinct bands of cloud curved across the city, outlined in dotted black lines
beneath the flaring reds and yellows of the storm; more bands were visible to
the south, but there was still no sign of the eye.
"Heading right for us," Damian
Chrestil said.
"We should be here some
hours," Ransome agreed, and had to raise his voice a little to be heard
over the noise of the rain. Something thudded heavily against the shutters, and
they both glanced toward the source of the sound, Damian Chrestil vividly alert
for a second before he'd identified and dismissed the noise.
"Not too many trees around here, I
hope," Ransome said, with delicate malice, and Damian's mouth twisted into
a wry smile.
"Let's take a look." He
worked the remote again, and the picture shifted -- tapping into the house
systems, Ransome realized. At least one camera was useless, its lens completely
obscured by the blowing rain, so that it showed only wavering streaks of grey.
Damian flicked through three more cameras, so quickly that Ransome barely had
time to recognize the images -- a rain-distorted view of the lawn, a camera
knocked out of alignment by the wind, so that it showed only the corner of the
house and a patch of wind-blown grass, more rain sweeping in heavy curtains
across a stone courtyard -- and stopped as abruptly as he'd begun.
"Ah."
The camera was looking away from the
wind, Ransome realized, looking inland toward the Barrier Hills and the
low-lying trees that grew along their wind-scoured shoulders. The nearest trees
were perhaps thirty meters away, up a gentle slope. They were bent away from
the house, into the hillside, their leaves tossing wildly, thick trunks bent
into a steady arc. Ransome winced, and even as he watched, one of the trees
fell forward, quite slowly, a tangle of roots pulling free of the wet ground.
The silent fall was disconcerting, eerie, and he looked away.
"What a lovely place to spend a
storm."
Damian Chrestil shrugged, smiling
slightly. "It's stood worse."
"It wasn't the house I was worried
about."
Damian shrugged again, and his smile
widened. "The odds look good to me."
_And you're such a judge of that_. The
comment was too double-edged, too easily turned against himself, and Ransome
kept silent, though he guessed that the other had read the thought in his eyes.
He turned away from the screen, went over to the drinks cart, and poured
himself another glass of the sweet amber wine. "Do you want
anything?"
Damian Chrestil looked momentarily
surprised, but then flipped the screen back to one of the city channels, and
came to join him. "Yes, thanks, you can pour me a glass of that."
Ransome filled another of the
long-stemmed glasses, handed it to Damian Chrestil, and they stood for a moment
in an almost companionable silence. Something else fell against the shutters, a
lighter thump and then a skittering, as though whatever it was had been dragged
across the rough surfaces. Damian Chrestil glanced quickly toward the noise,
and looked away again. He was a handsome man, Ransome thought, attractive in
the same fine-boned, long-nosed way that his sister Bettisa had been, with the
same quick response to the unexpected. And it was good to see a man who knew
better than to follow an unflattering fashion. _And sex is the last weapon of
the weak. Not that that's stopped me before_. He looked back at Damian
Chrestil, allowed himself a quick and calculated smile, and was not surprised
when the other's smile in return held a certain interest. _But I'm bored, and
he is -- less than fastidious, at least by reputation. Not very flattering, I
suppose. But it's better than doing nothing_.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: Ransome's Loft, Old Coast
Road,_
_Newfields,
Above Junction Pool_
Lioe lay on Ransome's neatly made bed,
one arm thrown over her eyes to block the light from the main room. The walls
trembled now and then in the gusts of wind; she could feel the vibration
through the mattress, through the heavy wood of the bed frame. The shutter that
protected the single narrow window had jammed before it quite closed off the
view, and she had left it there rather than risk damaging the mechanism. The
glass had seemed heavy enough, and on this side of the building, overlooking
the cliff edge, there had seemed little chance that anything would blow through
it. Now, feeling the building shake, she was not so sure, and looked sideways
under the crook of her elbow, at the hand-span gap between the shutter and the
bottom of the frame. She could see only the sky and the rain, the slate-colored
clouds periodically dimmed by sheets of water blown almost horizontally past
the window. She had never seen anything like this before, could not believe how
tired she felt, tired of the tension, the dull fear at the pit of her stomach.
Storms on Callixte were just as dangerous, maybe more so; but they swept in out
of the plains with a few minutes' warning, and were over almost as quickly.
There was none of the anticipation -- days of anticipation -- that preceded
Burning Bright's storms, and certainly nothing she'd ever been through had
prepared her for the steady, numbing fear. And the worst of it was that she had
nothing to do -- there was nothing she could do to face the storm, and nothing
in the Game seemed worthwhile compared to its massive force. Once she had
pulled the copies of the _jeu a clef_ off the nets, there was nothing to
distract her.
A noise from the street brought her
bolt upright, heart pounding, an enormous ripping sound and then a crash.
Roscha's voice came indistinctly from the main room. "What the hell --
?"
Lioe went to join her, found the other
woman standing by the main door, her head cocked to one side. The working space
was opened, and the air around Ransome's chair was filled with Game images.
"What was it, do you know?"
"Outside," Roscha answered.
She worked the locks. "Only one way to find out."
Lioe nodded. Roscha slid back the last
bolt, and eased back the heavy door. The wind caught them both by surprise, a
gust of cold, wet air snapping past them into the room.
"I didn't hear a window,"
Lioe began.
"_Sha-mai_," Roscha said.
"The stairway's gone."
"The stairway?" Lioe
repeated, foolishly, and Roscha edged back into the loft.
"See for yourself."
Lioe leaned past her, blinking a little
as the full force of the wind hit her. The short hall looked different, wrong
somehow, and then she realized that the stairs were indeed gone, ripped away
from the side of the building, the door hanging crooked by a single hinge. Even
as she watched, another gust of wind set the door swinging, and the groan of
the hinge pulling still farther out of the wall was loud even over the noise of
the storm.
"The wind must've caught it just right," Roscha
said.
"Is there anything we should
do?" Lioe asked. She looked up and down the hall as she spoke, wondering
if any of the other tenants were around, glanced back to see Roscha shrug.
"I don't know what. I don't see
any sheet-board, or anything like that, and I can't see that a little rain's
going to hurt this floor. There's probably a maintenance staff around
somewhere, anyway."
"Probably," Lioe agreed. She
was certainly right about the damage: the battered tiles had been peeling away
from the floor long before the storm started. She stepped back into the loft,
and Roscha pushed the door closed again. She had to work against the weight of
the wind, and Lioe leaned against it too, to help the bolts go home.
The Game shapes were still dancing in
the air around Ransome's chair. Lioe glanced idly at them, frowned, and looked
more closely. Damian Chrestil's face seemed to leap out at her from among the
busy images. "What's all this?" she asked, and turned to see Roscha
looking at her with a mix of defiance and embarrassment. There was a little
pause before the other woman spoke.
"I was trying to remake your
scenario, the one you threw together. It was too good to waste -- too good to
waste on blackmail."
Lioe ignored the deliberately
provocative word. "I made a deal," she said. "You could get all
three of us killed, you, me, and Ransome."
Roscha looked away. "I wasn't
going to run it as it stood, I was going to make a lot of changes. Enough to
make a difference, I think -- I know." She faced Lioe again, scowling now.
"You can't stop me."
Lioe looked at her for a long moment,
weighing her options. _No, I probably could stop you. I've got the influence on
the Game nets, and I'm probably better on the nets than you are -- and Ransome
will help me -- but that only works for a while. I'd have to watch you like a
hawk, and I don't have the time or the inclination to do that._ "Maybe
not," she said aloud, "but the scenario shouldn't run, regardless of
my deal. It doesn't belong in this Game."
Roscha's frown deepened, her expression
faintly interested as well as suspicious. "Why not?"
"Because this Game is over."
Roscha opened her mouth to protest, and
Lioe lifted an eyebrow at her, daring her to continue. The other woman said
nothing, and Lioe felt a thrill of excitement at the small victory, a small,
sweet pleasure at a good beginning. Was this what Chauvelin felt, this sure
power? She swept on, not wanting to lose her moment.
"Yes, this Game is ending. The
scenario I've been running is the start of it, a bigger scenario that's going
to tie everything together, all the bits and pieces, and bring this Game to a
solid conclusion, all the lines resolved in a single grand structure. And no
one, ever, is going to be able to play with it again without knowing that it's
ended." She had not realized, until then, how important that had become to
her, to write one thing, create one scenario, that could never be changed --
that no one would want to change. She went on more slowly, speaking now as much
to herself as to Roscha, and heard both certainty and seduction in her tone.
"It's gotten stale, it's too predictable right now. We've all felt it. So
it's time to start over, begin a new Game. And that's where this scenario --
" she nodded to the dancing images, to the faces of Chauvelin and Damian
Chrestil hanging in the air beside the working chair -- "it and lots of
others like it -- that's where they come in. We can remake the Game so that
it's something real, not just a distant reflection of reality, but something
that changes, comments on, reshapes what's really going on. That's the Game
your scenario belongs in, don't you see? Someplace where it will matter."
Roscha looked warily at her, the frown
gone, replaced by a look of uncertainty that made her look suddenly years
younger, almost a child again. "I don't play politics -- "
"You could. In this Game, you
could." Lioe smiled, suddenly, fiercely happy, the storm forgotten.
"We both can. It won't be _jeu a clef_ any more, that's too easy. We can
set it up so that it's an integral part of the Game, so that you can't escape
it -- so that no one who plays, and no one who sees the Game, hears about it,
can avoid what we're doing. That's what we need, to keep us honest. To make it
real."
"That's what you need,
maybe." Roscha shook her head. "I'm not that good."
"Then you'd better learn."
There was a little silence between
them, the wind a rough counterpoint, and then Roscha threw back her head and
laughed. "You're right, and I'll do it. _Sha-mai_, what a chance!"
_I knew you would_. Lioe hid that
certainty, looked again at the busy workspace. "Let's get on with it,
then." She reached for the nearest of Ransome's gloves, started to draw
them on.
Roscha nodded, and moved toward the
other controls. "One thing, though."
Lioe stopped, one hand half into the
thin mesh. "What?"
"A favor."
"If I can."
"I want to play the last
scenarios." Roscha's face was utterly serious. "The ones that wrap
this up, I mean. I want to be a part of that, too. It's -- I think someone in
the new Game should have been part of the old one, that's all."
_I was part of the old Game_. Lioe
stopped short, the moment of indignation fading. _But not like her. I was
looking for something else, something better, even when I didn't know it. I
never was wholly part of it, no matter how hard I tried_. She said aloud,
"I wouldn't have it any other way."
Roscha looked at her for a long moment,
then nodded, appeased. Lioe nodded back, and reached into the control space to
turn the images to herself. For a moment, she saw Roscha webbed in the Game
shapes, tangled with the visible templates, and then the images sharpened, and
she turned her attention to the double task of ending the old Game and creating
the new.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: The Chrestil-Brisch Summer
House,_
_the
Barrier Hills_
The room was dark and chill under the
eaves, the roof and walls trembling under the lash of the wind. Damian Chrestil
burrowed close to Ransome's warmth, dragging the found blanket up over his
shoulders, and wondered if it was time to leave. In the darkness Ransome's face
was little more than a pale blur, but he could guess at the expression, sleepy
and sated, and suspected that it matched his own. Something, not a solid
object, just the wind itself, slammed the side of the house with a noise like a
great drum. Damian winced, and felt Ransome shift against him, startled by the
sound.
"Perhaps a downstairs room would
have been wiser."
Damian shrugged, the coarse cloth of
the mattress cover rasping against his shoulders. "But not nearly as
private."
Even in the dark, he could see
Ransome's grin. "Since when did you care about discretion, Na
Damian?"
Damian Chrestil sighed. Clearly the
brief truce was over -- _if you could call it a truce, more like a whole
different episode, something out of the Game, completely unrelated to the
politics downstairs_. It had surprised him, how alike they were in bed. But
that was finished. He sat up, letting the blanket slide down to his hips, and
then made himself stand up, bracing himself for the other's acid comment.
Ransome was watching, but idly, the blanket drawn up over his shoulder. Damian
finished dressing -- _not too undignified, this time, no scrambling into
clothes_ -- and glanced back, curious. Ransome was sitting up now, hunched over
a little, one hand pressed against his chest. Even as Damian frowned and opened
his mouth to speak, the imagist began to cough. Damian winced at the sound,
harsh and painful even over the noise of the wind.
Ransome waved him away, got his
breathing under control with an effort that seemed even more painful than the
cough.
"Are you all right?" Damian
asked, and did his best to keep his tone neutral. _Of course he's not all
right. But that's the only thing I can ask_.
Ransome nodded, took a careful breath,
and when he spoke, his voice sounded almost normal. "I'll be fine. Your
thugs took my medicines, though."
"You left them," Damian said,
and after a moment Ransome nodded, conceding.
"Whatever."
"Shall I have someone bring them
to you?" Damian asked.
Ransome shook his head. "I'll be
all right." He still didn't move, and Damian watched him warily, until at
last the other man straightened. Damian Chrestil turned away, heading down the
darkened hall to the stairs.
The lights of the main room seemed very
bright after the darkened upper level, and he stood for a moment in the doorway
to let his eyes adjust. The Visiting Speaker was back, sitting in a chair by
the weather screen, a service cart drawn close beside him. Even as Damian saw
him, and frowned, ji-Imbaoa rose to his feet and went to peer into the screen,
the false-color image tinting his grey skin. Ivie said something to one of the
men, and came quickly to join his employer.
"I'm sorry, Na Damian, but it
seemed best to separate him from his security. And Na Cella's been keeping an
eye on him."
Damian nodded slowly, accepting the
logic of the statement. "Good enough. But watch him."
"He seems -- calmer -- now,"
Ivie said. "Na Cella's been talking to him."
Damian nodded again. Cella was sitting
a little apart from the Visiting Speaker, just outside the loose ring of Ivie's
security, but as he caught her eye, she rose to her feet and came to join them,
smiling gently. _I just hope she's over her snit_. "Thanks, Almarin. He
looks -- at least resigned."
Ivie nodded and turned away, accepting
his dismissal. Cella said, "He still thinks he has a hand to play."
"Pity he's in the wrong game,"
Damian said, and was pleased to see Cella's smile widen briefly.
"Maybe so. But I thought I should
tell you."
"Thanks." There was a sound
in the doorway behind him, and Damian turned to see Ransome making his
entrance, jerkin thrown loose over one shoulder. As he moved past into the
room, Damian could hear the faint rattle of his breathing. He smiled at Cella,
knowing, confident, but his eyes slid away instantly, looking for the
red-painted cylinder.
"Over there?" Cella said, and
pointed to a table against the wall just beyond the weather screen.
Ransome nodded, and started toward it,
brushing past the nearest of Ivie's people. He had to pass quite close to the
Visiting Speaker, who was still staring at something in the weather screen, and
as he did, ji-Imbaoa turned suddenly into him, uncovered wrist spur striking
for his throat. Damian saw the look of shocked surprise on Ransome's face as he
lifted one arm in an instinctive, futile counter, and then the spur sliced into
and past the imagist's wrist, hooking him like a fish through the cords of his
neck. Ji-Imbaoa struck again before the other could pull free, the second spur
and the clawed fingers slashing deep into Ransome's belly, and then he'd freed
both spurs and Ransome was falling, still with the look of surprise frozen on
his face.
"Kill him," Damian Chrestil
said instinctively, and Cella cried, "No!" Her voice rode through
Damian's, checking security's immediate response. Ivie glanced back over his
shoulder, flat face blank in shock and confusion, and ji-Imbaoa stepped back
from Ransome's body, holding up his bloody spurs in an oddly fastidious
gesture.
"I am not under your jurisdiction.
He was _min-hao_. This was between my honor and him."
Damian hesitated, knowing that the moment for action had already
passed -- had maybe never happened, the Visiting Speaker had been so quick in
his attack. "Self-defense," he said anyway, and ji-Imbaoa shook his
head.
"Who would believe it? All the
witnesses are yours."
"Na Damian?" Ivie asked.
_Ransome was none of mine. I would have
sold him before. And I don't know what to do_. Damian said, "Cossi --
?" The pilot had some medical training, he remembered.
Cossi slid the useless blackjack -- her
only weapon, Damian guessed -- back into her pocket with a look almost of
embarrassment, and went to kneel beside Ransome's body. She turned him over
gently, long fingers probing at the wounds. Damian Chrestil winced and looked
away. The pilot shook her head.
"Not a chance. Not even at the
city hospitals."
_I didn't think there was_. Damian took
a deep breath, looked back at the Visiting Speaker. "No," he said
aloud, "it's not my jurisdiction. But it is Na Chauvelin's, and I expect
-- I'm certain -- he will handle this appropriately. In the meantime -- "
He looked at Ivie. "Find someplace small, secure, no windows. Lock him in
there, and keep him there until we hand him over to the ambassador."
Ivie nodded. "There's a storeroom
that will do." He gestured to his people, who moved warily toward the
Visiting Speaker, guns drawn.
Ji-Imbaoa looked at them, gestured
disdainfully with his bloody hands. "This has nothing to do with
you," he said, and one of Ivie's men hissed at the contempt in the hsaia's
voice. "I have no quarrel with you."
"Go with them, then," Damian
Chrestil said, well aware of the edge of fury still in his voice, and ji-Imbaoa
nodded with maddening calm.
"I will do so."
Ivie's people still circled the hsaia,
and Damian wished, fiercely, futilely, that he would try something, anything,
that would give Ivie an excuse to act.
"This way," Ivie said, and
gestured with the muzzle of his palmgun. Ji-Imbaoa nodded again, and followed
him from the room.
Damian looked back at Ransome's body,
sprawled now on its back in a pool of blood -- _not as much as I'd expected,
but then, I guess he died quick_ -- empty eyes staring up at the ceiling. Cossi
saw him looking, and reached across to close the imagist's eyes.
"What do you want me to do with
him, Na Damian?" she asked.
_I don't know. Very God, I have to tell
Chauvelin_. Damian Chrestil took a deep breath, still staring at Ransome's
body. _Not an hour ago we were in bed together -- not an hour ago he was
fucking me_. The room smelled of blood and shit. "Leave him for now,"
he began, and Cella spoke softly.
"What about one of the upstairs
rooms?"
Damian looked at her blankly for a
moment, then, in spite of himself, in spite of everything, smiled. "Well,
he would've appreciated the irony." He looked at Cossi. "Yes, take
him upstairs -- get one of Ivie's people to help you. And then get a
housekeeper running, get that cleaned up."
"Right, Na Damian," Cossi
said.
_And I will speak with Chauvelin_.
Damian took a deep breath, bracing himself. _Ransome dead isn't so bad, it's
how he died, and where -- that he died in my house when I'd made a deal with
Chauvelin to keep him safe. The question now is, can I persuade Chauvelin that
I didn't do it, that I didn't break our deal? And is there any way I can
persuade him to turn this death to his advantage?_ He shook his head, sighing.
_Anyone but Ransome, that might have worked, but not when it was Chauvelin's
lover. Very God, I haven't even thought of Lioe_. He pushed the thought away.
_One thing at a time_, he told himself, and turned to the communications
console.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: The Hsai Ambassador's House,_
_in the
Ghetto, Landing Isle Above_
_Old
City North_
Chauvelin had come away from the
windows when the wind got bad, waited now in one of the smaller rooms that
overlooked the gardens, his back to the shuttered windows and the storm. The
walls, dark red trimmed with gold, gleamed in the warm light; he could not feel
the household generators whirring on standby through the thick carpet, but a
glance at the monitor board told him they were ready should city power fail. He
glanced away, took a few restless steps toward the door and then back again to
the desk, looking down at the files glowing in the display surfaces. The first
draft of his formal letter to the Remembrancer-Duke waited in the main screen,
ready to be transcribed into _n-jao_ script, but he could not make himself
concentrate on its careful phrases. Damian Chrestil had given him the excuse he
had needed to break ji-Imbaoa's power. If he and the Remembrancer-Duke played
the game right, the incident could have effects as far away as Hsiamai and the
All-Father's court itself. At the very least, the je Tsinra-an would lose face
over this, a Speaker for the court embroiled in common commerce, tripped up by
a smuggling scheme: a more than acceptable outcome. And that didn't take into
account the effects on Burning Bright itself. Chauvelin smiled, savoring the
double victory. At the very least, Damian Chrestil would not become governor in
the next elections, nor the ones after that; at best, he would never be
governor, and the tzu Tsinra-an would not have to contend with an ally of the
je Tsinra-an in control of Burning Bright. _And I may still be able to keep
some hold over Damian Chrestil, even after all of this is over. That would be
the best of all_.
A chime sounded in the desktop, and he
reached to answer it, touching the flashing icons. "Yes?"
"I'm sorry to disturb you,
Sia," je-Sou'tsian said, "but it's Na Damian. He says it's
urgent."
"Put him through," Chauvelin
said, and felt the fear cold in his stomach. _Something's gone wrong_ -- The
picture took shape in the desktop, blotting out the open files, and Damian
Chrestil looked out at him, his face strained and white.
"N'Ambassador."
"What's happened?" Chauvelin
asked, suspecting already, dreading the answer. In the screen behind Damian
Chrestil, out-of-focus shapes bent over another shape crumpled on the floor.
"I'm sorry," Damian Chrestil
said. "Ransome's dead."
_I knew it_. Chauvelin bit back anger,
the instinct that would have had him calling out the garrisons on Iaryo, on
Hsiamai, to launch the missile strike that would obliterate the summer house
and everyone, everything, in it.... "How?"
"The Visiting Speaker,"
Damian said baldly. He was telling it badly, and he knew it. "He attacked
him. Ransome went past him, to get his medicine, and the Speaker attacked him.
He was killed almost instantly."
"Like hell," Chauvelin said.
"I-Jay wasn't that stupid, he would never have gone within reach -- "
_But he might have_, the cold voice of logic whispered at the back of his mind.
_Ransome never did fully appreciate just how much that clan line hated him. And
he always underestimated ji-Imbaoa_.
"It was none of my doing,"
Damian Chrestil said.
Chauvelin looked at him for a long
moment, recognizing the truth of his words in the shocked look on the younger
man's face. _I-Jay's dead_. "Where's ji-Imbaoa?"
"Locked in the cellar."
Damian Chrestil managed a strained, mirthless grin, gone almost as quickly as
it had appeared. "I'm sorry, Chauvelin. He claimed your
jurisdiction."
Chauvelin made a noise that might at
another time have been a bark of laughter. "What a fool." He paused
then, considering, the habit of cold calculation carrying him through in spite
of himself. There was nothing he could do for Ransome, and nothing more Ransome
could do for him, except that in his death he would bring down ji-Imbaoa and
most of the je Tsinra-an with him. Ji-Imbaoa had overstepped himself. Even
under the old codes that the je Tsinra-an professed to believe in, this
killing, this murder, cut across too many kinship lines, impinged on his,
Chauvelin's, rights as Ransome's patron and lover. "Fool," he said
again, not sure if he was thinking of ji-Imbaoa or Ransome or himself, and made
himself focus on Damian Chrestil, white-faced in the screen's projection.
"Hold him for me. He claims hsai law, he'll get it."
Damian Chrestil nodded. "I'm
sorry," he said again.
Chauvelin said, "I'll keep our
bargain, Damian. But it's because I want the Visiting Speaker."
Damian nodded again. "I accept
that." He looked away briefly, made himself look back at the screen.
"I've not yet spoken to Na Lioe, I don't know how she'll take it."
"I'll talk to her," Chauvelin
said.
"Are you sure?" Damian asked,
involuntarily.
"Our goals were the same,"
Chauvelin said. "I think our interests still run parallel."
Damian Chrestil flinched. "Very
well," he said, and reached for the cut-off button.
"One more thing," Chauvelin said, and the younger man stopped,
his hand on the key. "I want I-Jay's body. I'll send some of my household
for it when the storm lifts."
"Of course," Damian answered,
almost gently, and it was Chauvelin who cut the connection.
He stood for a long moment staring at
the desktop, at the letter that no longer had any significance because Ransome
was dead. _I knew I would outlive him. I didn't think it would be so soon. Even
bringing down the je Tsinra-an isn't worth this_. He turned away from the
desktop and went to the drinks cabinet, poured himself a glass of the harsh
local rum, not bothering with any of the mixers. He drank deeply, barely
tasting the alcohol, put the glass aside before he could be tempted to finish
the bottle. _Oh, God, I know I can live without him. It's just -- at the very
worst, I wish it had been at my choice_.
He moved slowly back to the desktop,
touched keys to connect himself to the main communications system. He called up
the familiar codes -- _Ransome's codes, the codes to Ransome's loft_ -- and
swore when the familiar message flickered across the screen: SYSTEMS ENGAGED,
PLEASE TRY AGAIN.
"Override," he said harshly,
and a few seconds later the screen cleared. Lioe's beautiful, strong-boned face
looked out at him.
"What the hell do you want?"
she began, and her frown deepened when she recognized the ambassador. "Na
Chauvelin?"
"I have bad news," Chauvelin
said, and knew he had not been able to hide the pain in his voice. "I-Jay
-- Ransome's dead."
"Oh, God." There was a long
silence, Lioe's face utterly beautiful in its blank shock, and then, quite
suddenly, the mask shattered into fury. "What the hell happened, did
Damian Chrestil kill him? I'll murder the son of a bitch myself -- "
"No." Chauvelin did not raise
his voice, but she stopped abruptly, the mask reasserting itself.
"So what did happen?" she
asked, after a moment.
Chauvelin swallowed hard, suddenly
unwilling to speak, as though to tell the story would make it truly real. That
was superstition, shock, stupidity, and he put the thought aside, went on,
steadily now, "Ji-Imbaoa -- the Visiting Speaker -- killed him. They were
old enemies, and Ransome got too close to him."
"The hsaia at your party,"
Lioe said.
"That's right."
Lioe closed her eyes for a moment, and
when she opened them again, Chauvelin could see the tears. "Ah, sa,"
she said, her voice breaking. "He wouldn't've been so careless."
"Wouldn't he?" Chauvelin
said, in spite of himself, heard the bitter laughter that was close to tears in
his own voice.
"Yes," Lioe said, after a
moment. "He would."
There was another, longer silence
between them, broken only by the howl of the wind. Chauvelin wished for an
instant that he could wail with it, but hsai training prevailed. He stared at
Lioe's face in the screen, wondering again just what Ransome had seen in her.
_Not sex, certainly, she's not his type for that. Surely not just the Game? He
meant it when he said the Game was a dead end, useless. He said she was too
good for the Game, wasted on it. I wonder if he's persuaded her of that? I
suppose that's one last thing I can do, give her the chance to do something more_.
"What now?" Lioe said,
softly. "I -- we had a deal, Ambassador, you and I and Damian
Chrestil."
"The deal holds," Chauvelin
said. "At least as far as I'm concerned. Ji-Imbaoa falls under hsai
jurisdiction, my jurisdiction. He asked for it, in fact."
There was a note of satisfaction in his
voice in spite of himself, and Lioe nodded.
"As for the rest of it,"
Chauvelin went on, "I'm I-Jay's next of kin, the rest of his family's
dead." He took a quick breath, spoke before the full pain of it could hit
him. "I'm willing to let you have the loft and its contents, tapes and
equipment. No one else has a claim on them. As part of the deal we made."
He made himself go on without emotion. "He would want that."
"Ah." Lioe's voice held a
note of pain that Chauvelin suddenly resented. He frowned, searching for the
necessary rebuke, and Lioe went on, her voice under tight control again.
"All right. I'll keep my end of
the bargain."
_Good_. "Agreed," Chauvelin
said, and cut the connection. He stood for a moment, staring at the desktop,
then touched icons to close the letter that still waited for transcription.
There would have to be another letter -- another letter that in some ways
carried better news to the Remembrancer-Duke, a bigger scandal, one that would
devastate the je Tsinra-an -- but he couldn't face that now. He turned away to
lean against the shuttered window, feeling the force of the wind even through
the spun shielding. _The price of this victory is very high_. He slammed his
hand flat against the shutter, already impatient with his own grief. _He was
dying anyway. This was quicker, maybe kinder -- but I will miss him_. That was
all the epitaph he could promise anyone, even Ransome. He made a face, and went
back to the drinks cabinet, reaching for the rum.
--------
*Day 2*
_Storm: The Chrestil-Brisch Summer
House,_
_the
Barrier Hills_
A weather screen was flickering
soundlessly in the corner, the display showing the bands of clouds curving now
from northeast to southwest. The winds had shifted too, and the clattering of
the rain against the house was softer, less insistent. Damian Chrestil sat
alone in the tiny office space, the desktop open in front of him, a small black
box lying on top of the displays. The lights beneath it, shining up through the
clear screen, made it look as though it was floating on a haze of blued light.
Damian stared at it, not touching it or the rolled tool kit that lay beside it,
too tired to do more than look for a long moment. Then, sighing, he reached for
the tool kit, unrolled it, and extracted a slim hook. He worked quickly, prying
open the case of the desktop's datanode -- not hooked up at the moment -- then
fanning the stacked chips until he found the delicate nest of wires. He
separated out the ones he wanted, the power feed, the direct-on-line lead, the
one that fed the data to an implanted data socket, spliced the black box into
them. It had been a long time since he'd done that kind of work, but it was
easy enough; the skills came back quickly, like running a john-boat along the
Inland Water. He eased everything, wires, box, the stacked chips, back into the
cavity, and fitted the cover carefully back into place. There was room and to
spare in the old-fashioned fitting.
Moving more slowly now, he rerolled the
tool kit, and slipped it back into his pocket. He glanced then at the
chronometer, its numbers discreetly displayed above the open file: almost
midnight, and the storm would be ending soon. Already, the winds had dropped
enough to allow the Lockwardens to send out the first of the emergency repair
crews, heavy-duty flyers headed for the lighter barriers west of Factory Island
and Roche'Ambroise, where the news services reported some minor damage, another
team headed for Plug Island to check the generators there. In another hour or
two, they could leave the summer house.
He flicked a switch, reconnecting the
datanode to the main system, but did not touch the waiting cord. Instead, he
ran his finger over icons on the desktop, tying in to the house systems, and
touched a private code. A few seconds later, a telltale lit in the monitor bar,
and he said, "Cella? I need to talk to you. I'm in my office."
There was no answer -- probably she
wasn't wearing the jewelry that concealed the transmitter -- but a moment later
the telltale winked out. Damian Chrestil sighed, and settled himself to wait.
At last, the door slid open almost
silently, and Cella peered around its edge. "You wanted me, Damiano?"
Damian nodded. "We need to
talk," he said again.
"Certainly."
Cella moved easily into the room,
seated herself at his gesture on the edge of the desktop. She was still wearing
the demure, plain shirt and loose trousers, the creamy blouse improbably neat
even after hours of wear. _And Ransome's death_. Damian looked down at the open
files, not really seeing the crowding symbols. "You set this up," he
said quietly.
Cella blinked once, her face utterly
still and remote. "Ransome's death? No."
Damian Chrestil leaned back in his
chair, too tired to feel much anger at the lie. "You've never had so much
to say to the Visiting Speaker -- to any hsaia -- in your life. And the
cylinders were moved, not by me, not by Ivie or any of his people. That leaves
you."
"Or Ransome himself," Cella
said gently. "Or the Visiting Speaker."
"The Visiting Speaker didn't have
the chance," Damian said. "Ivie was watching him too closely, keeping
him in that corner. And Ransome was looking for it elsewhere. You had to tell
him where it was. That still leaves you, Cella."
Cella met his eyes steadily, only the
note of scorn in her voice betraying any emotion. "Why would I kill
Illario Ransome? Do you think I care if you fuck him? What's that to me, any
more than any other of your minor conquests? We have a -- more complicated
arrangement. I thought you knew me better, Damiano."
"I think I do." Damian did
not move, still leaning back in his chair, his hands steepled across his chest.
"What annoys me, Cella, is your interfering in my business, screwing up a
deal I had a hard time salvaging. I told you before that this was the only
thing I could do to save the situation. I meant it, and I don't appreciate your
trying to force my hand. You're not good enough to play politics."
"Ransome's death is the best thing
that could happen," Cella said. "For you, for Chauvelin -- even for
the Visiting Speaker, if you wanted to play it that way; he'd be under
obligation to you if you let him go. Ransome's worth a lot more dead than alive
-- and don't try to tell me that Chauvelin loved him so much that he'd rather
get revenge than use him to bring down the je Tsinra-an. It's the best thing
that could happen, if you're serious about going over to the tzu line."
"It's not your place to make that
decision," Damian Chrestil said. He sighed, looked down at his files
again, then spun the first one so that it faced Cella. She looked down at it,
her expression first curious, then angry, before she'd gotten herself under
control again.
"Our arrangement is over,"
Damian Chrestil said. "That's my assessment of your property, a fair
settlement. You can take it or not, I don't really care. But I don't want to
see you again." He pushed himself up out of the chair, took a few steps
away from the desk.
"Very well," Cella said, her
voice still rigidly controlled. "But you won't object if I verify some of
this?"
"Help yourself," Damian said,
and heard the whisper of the interface cord drawn out of its housing in the
side of the datanode. He did not look back, bracing himself, and a moment later
heard the fat snap of the current as she plugged herself into the system. There
was no cry, no sound except the buzz of the overload box shorting out, and then
the sprawling thud as she fell. The room smelled of electricity, and then,
insidiously, of scorched hair and skin. Damian Chrestil turned then, without
haste, knowing what he would find.
Cella lay contorted by the corner of
the desk, limbs tumbled, her face pressed into the carpet. Her dark hair had
come out of its crown of braids, lay in disturbed coils over her neck and
across the floor, hiding the data socket at the base of her jaw. A thin tendril
of smoke was rising from it as the implant housing smoldered. He looked at her
for a moment, but did not touch her after all. The end of the data cord dangled
over the edge of the desk, inert: the automatics had cut the power instantly
after the massive current passed through. He left it there, and reached into
his pocket for his thin gloves. He drew them on, ignoring the smell -- burned
flesh, urine, burned implant plastic, and hot metal -- and used the tool kit to
pry off the cover of the datanode. The boards and wires had fused, a ragged
mess; he stepped over Cella's body to lean closer, carefully freed the black
box from the ruined node. _The military does good work_, he thought, and
gingerly stuffed the ruined components back into the node's casing, closing it
carefully behind him. By the door, where the carpet ended and the tiles began,
he stopped, dropped the black box on the hard surface. The casing shattered,
spilling fragments; he set his heel on them, methodically grinding them to gravel,
then swept them toward the nearest garbage slot. The baseboard hatch slid open,
and he swept the fragments into its waiting darkness, running his foot twice
over the tiles even after he was sure he had it all. He did not look back -- he
did not have to look back, would remember Cella's twisted body in absolute
clarity even without a second look -- but walked away, letting the door slide
closed behind him. _Power surges happen during big storms; you shouldn't go
direct-on-line when the weather's bad. Everyone knows that, and everyone does
it just the same. Poor Cella, what a shame it caught up with you. But you
shouldn't've tried to force my hand_. In an hour or two, if no one had found
her, he would send Ivie looking for her: _until then, let her lie_.
--------
*Epilogue*
*Day 6*
_Storm:
The Barge Gemini, Nazandin_
_Wharf,
the Inland Water by Governor's_
_Point
District_
Lioe stood on the midships deck, one
hand on the rail to balance herself against the motion of the barge. Even four
days after the storm had passed, the Water was still a little rough; it would
be easier out to sea, Roscha had said, where the currents were less constrained
by the complex channels. Overhead, the sky was very blue, utterly free of
clouds, and the ghost of one of the moons rode the housetops over
Roche'Ambroise. The sun was warm: Burning Bright was moving toward summer, Lioe
remembered, and she glanced forward, wondering if she should claim a place
under the thin canopy. It was crowded there, full of people in white under the
white canopy, and she decided not to join them yet. There were more people in
white crowding the docks, Gamers mostly, people from Shadows that she
recognized, others that she didn't know, from the nets and the other clubs. White
was the color of mourning on Burning Bright, and Ransome had been well
respected. She smoothed the front of her own coat self-consciously, the fabric
heavy over a white shirt and her most formal trousers, the breeze cool on her
neck and scalp. It felt odd, not to be wearing a hat, but she was no longer a
pilot, would have to get used to that. Kerestel had not been pleased, but there
were good pilots available through the pools. He would learn to live with it.
She glanced over her shoulder, saw Roscha coming toward her, red hair bright in
the sun, very vivid against the white coat. _Everyone on Burning Bright owns
one_, Roscha had said. _You never know when you'll need it_.
"It's quite a turnout,"
Roscha said, and leaned out over the railing to stare at the crowd on the dock.
Lioe looked with her, saw Medard-Yasine
standing with Aliar Gueremei, a handful of Shadows' staff clustering around
them. She had seen Peter Savian earlier, conspicuous in plain Republican shirt
and trousers, a white scarf his only concession to local custom; now he was
nowhere in sight, but instead, Kazio Beledin stood talking to a tall woman,
LaChacalle, and a slim man with a data socket high on his face that caught the
light like a diamond. He saw her looking, and lifted a hand in sober
acknowledgment. Lioe waved back, not knowing what else to do. LaChacalle had on
a white dress under the sheer white coat, and the others wore wide wraps,
Beledin's covering his head like a hood. "So many Gamers," she said, and
Roscha shrugged.
"Everyone knew Ambidexter. They
may not have liked him, but they'd kill to get in his games."
"Not a bad epitaph," Lioe
said. _And it's not just Gamers who feel that way_. She looked back toward the
group under the canopy, counting the political notables who'd come to Ransome's
funeral. Governor Berengaria, looking remarkably like her image from the
parade, stood talking quietly to a man Ransome had pointed out at Chauvelin's
party as the head of the Five Points Bank, while a detachment from the Merchant
Investors Syndicate waited for her attention. There were representatives from
all of the Five Points Families, Chauvelin had said, and two of the
Chrestil-Brisch. She scanned the crowd until she found them. The head of the
family, Altagracian -- _dit Chrestillio_, she remembered -- was a big man,
bigger and more leonine than Damian Chrestil, but the sister, Bettisa, had the
same sharp face and fine body. It was a little disconcerting, seeing her there,
thin white coat wrapped tight around her body, and Lioe looked away. Chauvelin
was nowhere in sight. _Probably with the ashes_, she thought, and still wasn't
sure how she felt about this ritual, the formal consigning of what was left of
Ransome's body to the seas. Death on Callixte was a private thing, and so were
funerals. There was a shout from forward, and the beat of the engines
strengthened through the deck. Very slowly, the barge began to pull away from
the dock.
"Quinn," Roscha said, just
loudly enough to be heard over the sudden rush of wind. "There's been some
talk."
Lioe glanced back at her, frowned at
the grim look on the other woman's face. "What about?"
"The fucking Visiting
Speaker," Roscha answered. "I've been hearing from people I know up
at the port -- and other places, pretty much all around -- that he's walking
around loose. I thought you said the ambassador was going to deal with
him."
"He was," Lioe answered.
"As far as I know, he is. Are your friends sure it's ji-Imbaoa?"
She knew it was a stupid question even
as she asked, and Roscha grinned. "Not all hsaia look alike. And he's
wearing all the honors. Perii lived on Jericho, she reads hsai ribbons pretty
fluently. Oh, it's him all right."
"Wonderful," Lioe said. _What
the hell is ji-Imbaoa doing free? Chauvelin should be keeping him under lock
and key until the next ship leaves for Hsaioi-An -- _
"It occurred to me," Roscha
said, "that maybe N'Ambassador wasn't all that sorry Ransome's dead."
_No_. Lioe shook her head, rejecting
the thought even before she had fully analyzed it. _Not that I'd put it past
Chauvelin to kill someone, but not Ransome. Not the way he sounded, looked,
when he told me_. "There's bound to be a reason," she said, "something
in hsai law, maybe."
"Maybe," Roscha said.
"But the thought also occurred to me, Quinn, that maybe something could be
done about it. Perii says the Visiting Speaker's been drinking pretty heavily,
drowning his sorrows, she says. It'd be a shame if he didn't make it home some
night -- which could be arranged, Quinn. If you think it's appropriate."
Lioe stood frozen for a moment,
suddenly very aware of the heat of the sun on her back, the movement of the
barge under her feet. This was a power she had never expected, a direct and
potent strength, the smoldering anger of the canalli channeled through Roscha,
ready to hand. _That's exaggerating, sure, I don't have all the canalli -- but
she's offering me a means of direct action that I never dreamed I'd be able to
tap. With this to back up the new Game, I've got more power than I'd ever
expected_. She curbed herself sternly, made herself focus on the issue at hand.
"I want to talk to Chauvelin." She pushed herself away from the rail
before Roscha could follow.
She found Chauvelin about where she'd
expected, toward the forward end of the canopy where a plain, raw-looking
pottery jar stood ready on a white-draped table. He was wearing a white wrap
coat, like everyone else, but had left it open, so that the wind blew it back
to reveal the knots and clusters of his honors draped about his shoulders.
Berengaria stood beside him, the wrinkles at the corners of her mismatched eyes
making her look as though she almost smiled. Lioe sighed, and resigned herself
to wait, but to her surprise, Chauvelin nodded to her, and said something to
the governor. This time Berengaria did smile, and Chauvelin made his way across
the last few meters to stand at Lioe's side.
"It's good to see you, Na Lioe.
I'm sorry we haven't had a chance to speak before this."
_At least not today_. Lioe said,
"I hear that the Visiting Speaker is back in all his old haunts,
Ambassador. How does that happen?"
There was a little silence, and then
Chauvelin said, "There isn't a ship to Hsiamai for another four days. He
gave his parole -- his word, his promise -- to give himself up when it
arrives."
"I know what parole means."
Lioe took a deep breath, fighting back her anger.
Chauvelin said, "It doesn't mean anything.
It's his right under the law, to have this time. He'll be on the ship to
Hsiamai, and the All-Father will deal with him. He miscalculated badly, it'll
take the je Tsinra-an years to recover from this."
"I can't say I find that terribly
satisfying," Lioe said.
"You surprise me." Chauvelin
looked at her, his lined face without emotion. "Ji-Imbaoa is ruined. Not
only that, he's ruined his entire clan. Let him have all the Oblivion he wants,
it's not going to change anything. I think that's very satisfying."
Lioe paused for a long moment,
considering the ambassador's words. Yes, it was satisfying to think that
ji-Imbaoa would have to live with whatever hsai law thought was the appropriate
punishment for murdering an ambassador's dependent, and with the fury of his
own relatives. Ransome, certainly, would have appreciated it.
"He's lost any hope of ever
gaining position at court," Chauvelin said, "or of regaining what
he's already lost. He'll be ostracized, completely."
"I see." Lioe looked away from him, toward the
railing and the Water beyond. Traffic was heavy, as always, but funeral barges
had priority, and the smaller boats gave way grudgingly, sliding to either side
of the broad channel. The air smelled of salt and oil. They were coming up on
Homestead Island and the end of the Water; she could just make out the
blockhouses that controlled the first of the storm barriers, the stubby grey
buildings conspicuous against the brighter brick behind them. According to the
datastore and to the obituaries, Ransome had been born somewhere in that
district, born poor, child of no one at all important. _And now his death is
bringing down a major faction within Hsaioi-An. Yes, he would appreciate that_.
"All right," she said, "I won't do anything."
Chauvelin lifted an eyebrow, looked
genuinely surprised for an instant. Then his eyes slid sideways, and he smiled
slightly. "I forgot Roscha. Careless of me. But this is a hsai matter, you
can leave it to me."
"All right," Lioe said, and
to her surprise, Chauvelin bowed to her.
"Thank you," he said, and
turned away.
Lioe looked over her shoulder, and saw,
as she'd expected, that Roscha had come up behind her, moving so silently that
she hadn't heard her approach.
"Well?" Roscha asked.
"What did he say?"
"We'll let it go," Lioe said.
"Ji-Imbaoa will be on the ship to Hsiamai, and he'll be appropriately
dealt with there."
"Do you believe that?" Roscha
asked.
"Yes," Lioe answered, and
managed a tight grin. "He'll get exactly what he deserves." Roscha
still looked uncertain, and Lioe went on, "It's what Ransome would've
wanted, I'm sure of that."
"If you say so."
"Look, this brings down an entire
government," Lioe said. "You've got to admit that's Ransome's --
Ambidexter's -- style."
Roscha laughed softly. "That's
true. _Sha-mai_, wouldn't it make a great Game session?"
_It would_, Lioe thought. _It would
make a brilliant one. And it's one I want to write -- maybe put it at the core
of the new Game, make it one of the givens, part of the background for
everything. That would be a nice memorial, something else he'd approve of. And
then no one could play without knowing something about him, remembering his
death_. She nodded slowly. "Thanks, Roscha," she said. "I'll do
just that."
--------
*Day 6*
_Storm: The Hsai Ambassador's House,_
_in the
Ghetto, Landing Isle Above_
_Old
City North_
It was midafternoon by the time Chauvelin
returned to his house, and his face stung from the combination of sun and salt
spray. Je-Sou'tsian was waiting in the main hall -- like all the household, she
wore white ribbons, sprays of them bound around each arm -- flanked by a pair
of understewards. Chauvelin frowned, surprised to see so formal a delegation,
and je-Sou'tsian bowed deeply.
"Your pardon, Sia, but there has
been a transmission from maiHu'an. His grace has been pleased to grant you an
award." She used the more formal word, the one that meant
"award-of-honor": she would have seen the message when it came in,
Chauvelin knew. She would have prepared the formal package. "It's waiting
in your office."
"My lord honors me beyond my
deserving," Chauvelin answered, conventionally. "Thanks, Iameis --
and thanks for that, too." He reached out, gently touched the knots of
white ribbon.
Je-Sou'tsian made the quick fluttering
gesture, quickly controlled, that meant embarrassment and pleasure. "We --
I didn't want to presume. But we regret your loss."
"Thank you," Chauvelin said
again, and went up the spiral stairs to his office.
The room was unchanged, the single pane
of glass that had cracked during the storm replaced days before. Chauvelin
settled himself at the desk, lifted the precisely folded message to his lips in
perfunctory acknowledgment, and broke the temporary seal. The message --
handwritten in _n-jao_ character and then copy-flashed; Haas's handwriting, not
the Duke's -- was clear enough, but he had to read it a second time before the
meaning sank in. Then, quite slowly, he began to laugh. He had done well, in
the Remembrancer-Duke's opinion: this was the reward every _chaoi-mon_ worked
for, dreamed of, but few ever achieved. There, set out in the formal, archaic
language of court records, were the certificates of posthumous co-optation for
his parents and their parents, the necessary two generations that would make
him no longer _chaoi-mon_, but a full hsaia, indistinguishable in the eyes of
the court and the law from any other hsai. He could not quite imagine his
mother's reaction, but suspected it would have been profane.
There was a second note folded up
inside the official announcement, also in Haas's hand, the neat familiar
alphabet used for tradetalk. He opened that, skimmed the spiky printing.
CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR PROMOTION, AND
MY SYMPATHIES FOR THE LOSS OF YOUR PROTEGE. MY LORD IS VERY PLEASED WITH THE
OUTCOME OF THIS BUSINESS, AND IS PLANNING TO TRAVEL TO HSIAMAI IN PERSON FOR
THE TRIALS. A MORE PERSONAL TOKEN OF HIS PLEASURE WILL FOLLOW.
Chauvelin smiled again, rather wryly
this time. _I don't think I should count on that_. The Remembrancer-Duke might
be less pleased after all, though on balance it shouldn't affect the ultimate
outcome of the trials. He glanced at the chronometer display, gauging the time
left until he would hear -- _not much longer now_ -- and set both messages
aside. One of Ransome's story eggs was sitting on the desk beside him, the case
a lacquer-red sphere that looked as though it had been powdered with gold dust.
He picked it up idly, turned it over until he could look through the lens into
its depths. Familiar shapes, Apollo and a satyr, shared images from his and
Ransome's shared culture, leaned together in a luminous forest, each with a
lyre in his hands. The loop of images showed a brief conversation, a smile --
_Ransome's familiar, knowing smile_ -- and then a brief interlude of music, the
sound sweetly distant, barely audible half a meter away. _Apollo and Marsyas_,
Chauvelin thought, _in the last good days before the contest_. He had never
noticed it before, but the Apollo had his own eyes, and his trick of the lifted
eyebrow. _Oh, very like you, I-Jay. But that's not how it was. I did everything
I could to save you. You died by your own misjudgment, not by mine_.
"Sia?" That was
je-Sou'tsian's voice, sharp and startled in the speakers. "Sia, I'm sorry
to disturb you, but there's been an accident."
"An accident?" Chauvelin
said.
"Yes, Sia."
Chauvelin did not light the screens,
allowed himself a smile, hearing the shock in the steward's voice.
"I'm sorry, Sia,"
je-Sou'tsian said again, "but it's the Visiting Speaker. There's been --
the Lockwardens say he fell into one of the canals, he was drunk on Oblivion,
and a barge hit him."
"Is he alive?" Chauvelin
demanded, and heard himself sharp and querulous.
"For now, Sia. But he's not
expected to live the night. They've taken him to the nearest hospital, Mercy
Underface, they said."
"So." Chauvelin could not
stop his smile from becoming a grin; it was an effort to keep his voice under
control. "Do they know what happened?"
"Not for certain, Sia. They think
he fell."
"Or did he kill himself?"
Chauvelin asked, and was pleased with the bitterness of his tone. _If they can
believe it's suicide, that's shameful enough on top of everything else that the
Remembrancer-Duke will still gain everything he would have gained through the
trial_. He heard je-Sou'tsian's sharp intake of breath, wished he dared light
the screen to watch her gestures.
"It -- the Lockwardens asked that
also, Sia. It seems possible."
"Such shame," Chauvelin said,
and knew that this time he did not sound sincere. "Send his house steward
to stand by him, and one of us to stay with her. Express my condolences."
"I'll go myself, if you want,
Sia," je-Sou'tsian said.
Chauvelin nodded, then remembered the
dark screen. "That would be a gracious gesture, Iameis. I'd be
grateful."
"Then I'll do it,"
je-Sou'tsian said.
"Keep me informed of his
condition," Chauvelin said, and closed the connection. It was good to have
friends on the canals. He leaned back in his chair, reached out to touch the
story egg again, but did not pick it up, ran his fingers instead over the warm
metal of the case. _I told the truth when I told Lioe I'd take care of the
Visiting Speaker. It's not my fault that she assumed I meant that I would let the
law take its course. That was something Ransome would've appreciated, that
double-edged conversation. And I think he would've appreciated my decision_. He
smiled again, and picked up the story egg, glanced again at the bright images.
The loop, triggered by the movement, showed god and satyr leaning shoulder to
shoulder, and then the faint clear strain of the music as the satyr played.
--------
*Interlude*
_Game/varRebel.2.04/_
_subPsi.
1.22/ver22. 1/ses 7.25_
They crouched in the uncertain shelter
of the cargo bay, hearing the clatter of boots recede along the walkways to
either side. The overhanging shelves, piled high with crates, gave some cover,
but they all knew that if the Baron's guards came out onto the center catwalk
it would take a miracle to keep from being seen. Galan Africa/VERE CAMINESI
winced as an incautious movement jarred his bandaged arm and shoulder, and
stopped trying to pry the power pack away from the nonstandard mounting.
"Hazard," he said, and Gallio
Hazard/PETER SAVIAN slipped his own pistol back into his belt and came to study
the housing. After a moment, he pried it loose with main force, handed the two
parts to Africa. The technician accepted them, prodded dubiously at the bent
plugs. Hazard shrugged an apology, and drew his pistol again, his attention
already turned outward toward the retreating footsteps of the guards.
Jack Blue/JAFIERA ROSCHA sprawled
gasping against the nearest stack of crates, his face drawn into a scowl of
pain and anger equally mixed. Mijja Lyall/FERNESA crouched at his side, digging
hurriedly through the much-depleted medical kit. She found the injector at
last, applied it to Blue's forearm. The telekinetic swore under his breath, but
a moment later, the pain began to ease from his forehead. Lord Faro/LACHACALLE
and Ibelin Belfortune/HALLY VENTURA exchanged glances, and edged a little bit
away from the others, where they could exchange whispers unheard.
"What about the contact?"
Desir of Harmsway/KAZIO BELEDIN said. "Where is it, Avellar?"
Avellar/AMBIDEXTER looked back at him
for a moment, gave a slow, crooked smile. "Something's gone wrong,
obviously. But unless you want to go back..." He let his voice trail off
in a mocking invitation, and Harmsway looked away, scowling. Avellar's smile
widened slightly, and he moved to stand beside Jack Blue. "How is
it?"
Blue shrugged, made a so-so gesture
with one hand. "I'll live." His voice sounded better, and Avellar
nodded.
"Maybe he's losing weight,"
Harmsway said, too sweetly.
Blue frowned, and a cracked piece of
the floor tiling tore itself loose and flung itself at Harmsway's face. Avellar
plucked it out of the air before it could hit anything, dropped it onto the
flooring at Blue's feet. There was blood on the tile, from where the sharp
edges had cut his hand, but Avellar ignored it.
"Try that again," he said,
almost conversationally, "and I'll leave you." He was looking at
Blue, but Harmsway stiffened.
"Not me, surely," he said,
his voice provocative. "If you leave me here, Royal, all this will have
been for nothing."
"All what?" Avellar said,
softly. "All this? Coming here, risking my life, planning this escape for
the lot of you? That's nothing compared to what I'm willing to do to have you
back at my side, Desir. But you need me just as much, if you're going to get
off this planet. Don't forget that, my friend."
In spite of himself, Harmsway glanced
toward the cargo door, only forty meters away across the width of the
warehouse. It was even open, and he could feel that the last barrier was sealed
only with a palm lock, the kind of thing he could open in his sleep ... if he
could reach it. And beyond that hatch were Avellar's people, loyal only to
Avellar. His lips thinned, and he looked away.
Avellar nodded. "The ship's
mine," he said. "Without me, none of you will get aboard. Hell,
without me, none of you would have gotten this far."
"Without you," Gallio Hazard
said, "some of us wouldn't be here at all."
"Touche," Avellar said.
"But you shouldn't've left my service, Gallio."
"Avellar." Lyall's voice was
suddenly sharp with fear, and Avellar turned to face her. "They've brought
in a hunter," Lyall said. "And the Baron's with him."
"How close?" Harmsway
demanded, and Lyall shook her head.
"I can't tell. There's -- he's
shielded."
"No one use any psi," Avellar
said. The others murmured agreement, and he looked at Africa. "Is it
finished, Galan?"
Africa shrugged his good shoulder.
"I've got the connection rigged, but there's no guarantee it'll
work."
Avellar nodded, and looked at
Belfortune. "That leaves you, Bel."
Faro said, "Let him be."
Avellar ignored him. "Bel --
"
"Avellar," Lyall said again,
real horror in her voice. "He's found us."
"What?" Harmsway's voice
scaled up in surprise. "Damn you, Royal -- "
"Shut up," Avellar said, and
was obeyed. "Belfortune. Can you stop the hunter?"
Belfortune shook his head. "I have to be close to him, I
can't just reach out and take his power. It's not that easy -- "
"All right," Avellar said,
his voice gentle but firm, and Belfortune was silent. Faro laid a hand on his
shoulder, then reached for his pistol.
"Well, Desir," Avellar said,
"it's up to you and me."
Harmsway shook his head sharply, and
Hazard said, "The last time, you nearly killed him."
Avellar ignored him. "If we don't
work together, we'll never get out of here. You and I will both die on this
wretched planet. Do you really want that, just to spite me? Or do you just
enjoy it too much?"
"Yes," Harmsway said, "I
can admit it. You're too strong for me, you and your crazy clone-sibs, and I
like it too much."
"Would you rather be dead?"
Avellar asked.
"Desir, don't," Hazard said.
Harmsway ignored him. "No, damn
you. All right. I'll do it."
Avellar held out his hands, carefully
not smiling, and Harmsway took them with only the slightest hesitation. There
was a little silence, and then a kind of darkness seemed to gather around them.
Shapes moved in the darkness, shapes that were Avellar, shapes that wore
Avellar's face and a woman's body. Avellar closed his eyes, felt his power
returning with Harmsway's presence, Harmsway's raw electrokinesis bridging the
holes left by the deaths of half the clone. He could sense the others'
presence, too: Quarta in her cell, gibbering in darkness; Secunda caught in
midstride, dragged away from herself by his insistent demands; Tertius ever
silent, great eyes staring at nothing. He pulled them to him, made their power
his own, built a ladder with it that carried him out of the prison of his body
and let him look down on the warehouse as if from a great height. He saw the
world in black and white, the figures of his party and of the Baron's men
clustered at the doorway pale as ghosts against the dark walls and shadows that
were the piled crates. The Baron's group had stopped, huddling together around
a grounded airsled. _The hunter smells something he doesn't recognize_, Avellar
thought, and laughed silently. _No, you wouldn't recognize me_. He spun again,
looking down from his illusory height for a solution, saw Harmsway on his
knees, head bowed with strain, still clinging to his hands. Harmsway was weaker
than he'd realized; Avellar allowed himself to look farther afield, saw Jack
Blue now standing at Lyall's side.
_Blue_, he said, and felt the word fall
for what seemed an eternity before it struck air and was heard. "Give me
your hand."
He forced his body to free one hand
from Harmsway's grip, held it out to Blue. The telekinetic took it,
reluctantly, and Avellar felt the other's power join his own. He let himself
rise back up the ladder, dragging Blue's talent with him, hung for a moment
beneath the rafters, looking at the piles of crates through the lens of Blue's
talent. Then, almost lazily, he reached out -- his hand, Blue's telekinesis,
moving as one, Harmsway still bridging the gaps that let him draw on his
clone-sibs, his other selves -- and tipped the first row of crates onto the
Baron's men. He heard screams -- close at hand, and more distant, the noise
reaching his physical body half a heartbeat later -- but he closed his mind,
searching for the right point. Blue's power was fading, stuttering like an
underfueled engine, but he ignored it, and toppled a second set of shelves,
blocking any advance. Then he let himself slide back down the ladder, feeling
it dissolve behind him as he fell, until he was back in his own body, on his
knees, Jack Blue's hand cold in his own. Harmsway was crumpled on the warped
tiles, breathing in harsh gasps, his forehead against the floor. Blue lay open
eyed, unmoving, his face red and mottled. Lyall crouched beside him, hand on
his wrist, and shook her head as Avellar looked at her.
"He's dead."
Belfortune laughed softly. "So
that's how the great Avellar's power works. You're no more than I am, nothing
more than a vampire. At least I don't use the power I take."
"You just dine on it," Hazard
said.
Faro said, "This is why I won't
support you, Avellar. No one who can do that should be emperor."
"But that's just it," Avellar
said. He reached down almost absently, lifted Harmsway so that the
electrokinetic's head rested on his lap. "This power is exactly why I
should be emperor. I'm psi, yes, but it's unlimited in type, because I can draw
on all of it. But only if you let me. I can't coerce, I can only take what's
given. Jack gave me what he had, he let me use him up, to save the rest of us.
He couldn't've done it alone, and I knew how to use what he gave me. If a psi
is going to be emperor -- and you know that's inevitable, there's no one left
who isn't psi -- then it should be me, because I can't do anything alone, and
without consent."
Hazard nodded slowly, came to crouch at
Harmsway's side, he touched the electrokinetic's face gently, and looked
relieved when Harmsway stirred. Hazard supported him, helped him sit upright.
Harmsway's face was drawn, lines of fatigue sharply etched.
Faro said, "The ship's
waiting."
Avellar nodded, pushed himself to his
feet, fighting back his own exhaustion. "Let's go."
Two guards were standing by the cargo
door, one with rifle leveled, staring toward the far door where the crates had
fallen, the other babbling into a hand-held com-unit. He didn't seem to be
getting any satisfactory answers, but Avellar shrank back into the shelter of
the nearest stack of crates. "Faro," he whispered. "Can you take
him?"
"I can take him," Faro said,
and nodded to the closer guard. "But that one will spread the alarm the
minute he goes down."
"Leave that to me," Harmsway
whispered.
"Don't be stupid," Hazard
began, and the electrokinetic shook his head, the ghost of a smile wreathing
his mouth.
"The com circuit has to go, or
we're all shot. Lucky you have me."
"Be ready when he takes out the
com," Avellar said to Faro, and the older man nodded, his eyes fixed over
the leveled gun. Africa dropped to his knees beside him, tucked the laser rifle
against his shoulder.
Harmsway closed his eyes, drawing on
what remained of his power. His whole body seemed for an instant to be
stretched to breaking, as though the psionic stress had translated itself to
every muscle in his body, and then the pain had passed. He reached along the
wires behind the distant wall, searching carefully to avoid anything that was
not part of the communications system, and teased his way into the handset. For
an instant, he considered the spectacular, blowing all the circuits in a shower
of gaudy sparks, but he no longer had the strength for that. He reached for a
fuse instead and quietly poured what was left of his power through it. The
cylinder melted, and he allowed himself to fall back into his body.
The guard stopped, shook his head and
then the handset, and stepped forward to join the other, holding out the
suddenly silent com-unit.
"Now!" Avellar said, and the
others fired almost as he spoke. The guards fell without a sound. "Nice
shooting. Let's go." He started across the narrow space without looking
back. The others followed, crowding into the narrow space between the outer
door and the ship's hatch, and Africa fiddled with the controls to close the
door behind them. Avellar nodded, and laid his hand against the sensor panel in
the center of the hatch. There was a soft click, and then a high-pitched tone.
"Royal Avellar," he said, and
waited. A heartbeat later, the cargo lock creaked open. Familiar people,
familiar faces, were waiting inside the lock, and Avellar smiled with open
pleasure.
"Danile," he said, and a man
-- greying, thin, a long, heavily embroidered coat thrown open over expensively
plain shirt and trousers -- looked back at him gravely.
"I'm back, Danile," Avellar
said again, and the greying man nodded.
"You're here."
"And I have Harmsway, and the
others," Avellar went on. "We had an agreement, Danile."
Danile nodded again, more slowly.
"Yes."
"You said," Avellar said, a
note of menace in his voice, "you said you would support me, support my
claim to the throne, if I brought Desir of Harmsway out of Ixion's Wheel. We're
here, Danile. Are you going to keep your part of the bargain?"
"I didn't think you could do
it," Danile said. "I thought -- I thought I'd be rid of you. But if
you can do this..." His voice trailed off, and he shook his head. "If
you can do this, yes, you're the best choice for the position. Yes, I'll
support you -- Majesty."
Avellar smiled with wolfish triumph,
and one of Danile's crew said urgently, "Sirs -- "
"She's right," Danile said.
"We have to hurry. We're cleared for departure; we'd better go while we
still can."
There was a ragged murmur of agreement,
and the group began to move farther into the ship, following Avellar and
Danile. The cargo door slid shut again behind them, closing off their last view
of Ixion's Wheel.
--------
*Day 16*
_Storm:
Ransome's Loft, Old Coast Road,_
_Newfields,
Above Junction Pool_
Lioe closed down the system for the
last time, running her hands over the secondary controls to disconnect the
monitors. She already had all the data she needed, stored in spheres until her
new space was up and running -- a newer building, down in the Dock Road
District, closer to the clubs. A haulage company would come for the machines
later, or at least for the ones she had decided to keep. It was a generous
legacy, maybe too generous, especially since she was still not sure if Ransome
would have wanted her to have it. She was better than he had ever been, at both
games, politics and the Game itself, and once the novelty had worn off, it might
have become awkward between them. But there was no point in might-have-beens.
She looked around a final time, making sure she hadn't forgotten anything.
There was nothing left, nothing that she wanted, and she let herself out into
the sun-warmed corridor. The elevator was in use, as always; she scrambled down
the new stairway, walled in storm-hardened glass, barely aware of the cityscape
spread out below the cliff edge beyond her. Roscha was waiting, with a borrowed
denki-bike, and the new Game began tonight. Lioe smiled, and hurried.
-----------------------
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