Episode Sixty-Six, in which Ship rides a wave and Bean spills a little more…beans

Bael looked up, her eyes strangely empty. I could see that she had grabbed the image and was watching it, apparently over and over. Elibel looked up as well, her conversation with Kli forgotten, curious about this new cousin.

“My mother?” Bael said, finally.

“No,” O’Flaherty said. “Your father. And our friend Melissa Bean here. She’s Yattea’s mother, if that’s what you can call it. Fortunately she hasn’t had too much of a role in the girl’s upbringing. Our dear Melissa abandoned her fascination with manipulating young girls some time ago, going more into power plays and adventures in alien archaeology. But it seems that Melissa still has a yearning for the girl, from somewhere in that twisted little head.”

Bael stood, walked to the bar, and poured two glasses of Berestian brandy. She handed me one and perched herself on the edge of the couch, sipping the soft golden fluid.

“I’m a little confused,” she said finally. “There are a lot of loose threads in this fabric, and I would love to have someone maybe tie them up a little. I have so many questions running around in my head. Is Taes my father? Is Taes a ghost? Is the Duke Bresslaft? Are my father, um, the Duke, and Melissa Bean lovers? Did the Duke go into some other dimension or time-line or universe or whatever you want to call it? What’s Johnny’s role in all this? Is he going to destabilize Forest and the consortium? How does the fudge trade play into all that? And what about that damned monkey? And my aunt Linda? Too many questions.”

“I can…,” Kli said.

“I suppose I should say something,” Melissa Bean said. Then she paused. We all looked over at her. She was seated in the big, ancient, overstuffed chair that Ship and I had salvaged from a deserted farmstead on Korill’s Paradise a long time ago. The chair swallowed her, but with its size and age it also gave her a bit of authority, like a queen on a massive throne from an old pre-encounter romance. She moved with a slow, regal grace, despite the restrictions of her constraints, or maybe because of them.

“You all are fools,” she said, finally. “Events have been set in place now that none of us can control. From what I’ve seen, you are doing nothing but nibbling around the edges. If I were to die tomorrow, that would not affect what has begun to happen. What has begun to happen is irreversible.” She glanced at Johnny. “As for this fellow, he was useful, but he is inconsequential. As is that walking stick you call, most inaccurately, a monkey.”

“Melissa,…” the Captain said.

“You never could mind,” Bean said. “It was best that you left. If I am to tell this story, you need to let me do so. We do not have much time. This ship will be destroyed when the invasion wave hits.”

“What invasion wave?” I said.

“Ship? Kli?”

“We’re looking.” Ship said.

“Look for anything, anything irregular.”

“I assume you are communicating among yourselves,” Bean said. “It does not matter. That’s a futile gesture. You cannot stop what is about to happen.”

“Well,” I said, “I suppose you’d better tell us what you’re going to tell us.”

“I would like to have these constraints….”

“Unfortunately not, Melissa,” the Captain said. “You’d better just continue.”

“Taes was an experiment, nothing more. He has ceased to exist, at least to the extent that he ever existed in the first place. He was not your father,” she said to Bael. “But neither was the Duke, strictly speaking. You and my Yattea are the first in a series of experiments, the first successful products. You are first of a new generation.”

“What are you saying?” Bael said. She stood, her huge eyes focused on Bean. Bael had become restless, not nervous, just coiled and tense, like a cat ready to pounce.  I’d seen her like that before. She moved to the bar and leaned on one of the stools.

“You know about the gates, I’m guessing,” Bean said. “The power of the gates is unimaginable. But it’s what’s on the other side that makes them so valuable, and so dangerous.”

She paused. Bael moved in a little closer, hand on the back of the chair where Nancy had fallen asleep.

“Well?” I said.

“I’ve begun to rethink,” Bean replied, “whether or not you should hear this. I think that….”

“Yattea…,” the Captain said. She was watching Bean closely, and given the evident sophistication of her plant, she was probably watching her in ways I could only imagine. She ran her hand back across her elegant shaved skull.

“I’ve been thinking about that, Mani,” Bean said. “You yourself said that your three old witches won’t let you hurt her. I’ve been thinking that maybe it’s time to cut her free. She needs new things in her life. I’ll miss her of course, but I have ways. Maybe I can find her, when the time is right. So it looks as though your bit of leverage is gone. It’s your move.”

“You underestimate me,” O’Flaherty said. “That’s a dangerous thing to do. She crossed the room and stood facing Bean. “I said that….”

“Hare, Bael, I see it,” Kli said.

“An ‘invasion wave?’”

“A neutralization wave. Just appeared from nowhere and is heading this way. It will hit Forest in seventeen minutes, give or take a few sec….”

“That’s impossible. Neutralization waves don’t just come out of nowhere. The amount of energy required….”

“Hare,” Bael said.

“Oh yea. Ship, can we outrun…?”

“Maybe, if I can jump at least thirty seconds before the wave hits. But we can’t stay here, no shelter. I’m lifting now.”

“Captain,” I said. I brought her onto the channel and explained the situation.

Bean had been watching us. “The wave is coming,” she said. “You won’t outrun it, you know.”

“Muzzle her,” I said. “And Johnny.”

“Looks like a lot of folks are trying to get away,” Ship said, finally. She brought up a view of the surrounding sky, and the air was filled with ships of all sizes and shapes, from interstellar freighters to tiny flyers for hire.

“What will happen to them all?” It was Nancy, awake now, and standing next to me. “It’s a neutrali…?”

“Yea,” I said. “Those who can jump well ahead of the wave will be all right. Anybody in those little flyers is lost. They’d have been safer if they’d stayed on the ground. If you can find strong shelter, you have a fair chance of weathering the wave. Forest’s infrastructure won’t be destroyed. But it will be heavily damaged, and many who can’t—or don’t—find shelter will die.”

“Why?”

“Why will they die?”

“Why? Who’s doing this?”

“I’m not sure, but she knows,” I said, gesturing to a smiling Bean. “Forest will lose its place as the center of the consortium, and that’s bound to cause huge ripples across a thousand worlds. I think that’s what they’re after, more instability, more opportunities. Ship? How close are we to a valid jump point?”

“Three minutes twenty-four seconds.”

“And the wave, Kli?”

“Two minutes, forty-five.”

“Close,” the Captain said, calmly.

I felt an arm in mine, and looked into Bael’s eyes. I grinned, and she gently touched my face.

“Thirty-seven seconds,” Kli said. “Then we’ll begin feeling the front of the wave.”

“Jumping,” Ship said, betraying little if any excitement, as though she did this every day. Largo’s fields masked the effects of the jump, but even then, I could feel that this was no ordinary jump. Something was being stretched.

It was late, deep into Largo’s night and Ship’s refresh cycle. We’d adapted a pair of small chambers off Largo’s cargo hold into cells. They’d been used that way before, and they were being used that way again, with Johnny and Melissa in one each. Ship had poured a good amount of power into erecting and reinforcing the blocking screens around each cell; I hoped they would hold.

The rest of us had all sat down to a big meal; I’d contributed my chocolate soup, and everyone ate well and seemed glad to be off Forest. All of Largo’s sleeping rooms had been filled; I figured I would just sleep in the salon. Kral was back in hibernation, and Kli was off in a corner, trying to establish a link with a network that could connect him with his family on Ginga.

Now I sat at the bar, wondering if she’d come. She’d gone off after dinner, and I figured she was sleeping. So I sat there, thinking about everything. I was just about to go into the little library, to maybe doze off in a big chair in front of a fire, when I heard her enter the salon. I stood, and she flew into my arms. We stood that way for a long time.

“I keep thinking of everyone on Forest,” she said quietly. “How many died? And Linda? Where is she? And who, or what, am I?”

“A lot of people would have known to find shelter, and that would have improved their odds greatly. A wave like that is powerful, but spread so far, it’s diffuse; it’s not unbeatable. As for Linda, she’s a survivor. We’ll see her again, I think.”

“Should we go back and help?”

“No. Forest of all places will have the resources for this. And we have things to do.”

“I tried to sleep, and finally I ended up watching something from Ship’s flat screen collection. It was about a man who owns a bar during a war on old Earth. It’s a big, colorful place, full of people fleeing the war. A woman appears with her man. They’re both fleeing the villains. The bar owner hates the woman, because she’d left him long before, but she needs his help in getting away from the villains.”

“Was it good?”

“Yes. But the ending seemed odd. The three of them are at an airfield, in a fog, and the flyer is about to leave, and the bar owner gives a speech about a hill of beans, and it seems like the woman is about to leave with her man. But then she doesn’t, and the man flies off by himself.”

“Bael!” It was Ship.

“Honey, I don’t normally listen in on you two—really I do not. But I was worried about you. That’s not that way that movie ends. Someone has altered my copy, and I think I know why. I think there’s a message hidden in there, somewhere. And if I had to guess, I’d guess it’s from your father.”

End of Part Four

To Be Continued in Part Five, “Into the Heat of Banyan’s Hell.” The series will resume in a couple of weeks. Do come back.

Published in: on March 10, 2011 at 6:47 am  Comments Off  

Episode Sixty-Five, in which Hare asks a few questions and the Captain plays her trump card

“Nancy?” Ship said. “It can’t be Nancy. We saw her die.”

“You’re dead,” I said.

“Apparently not.”

“But we watched you…I checked your body. You were gone.”

“It’s a long story,” she said. She stetched out her leg, broke a couple of seals, and pulled up a trouser leg. At first glance, the skin looked normal enough. But I’d seen this before. Her leg was a very good replacement.

“How much?”

“About seventy percent. Both legs, half my side. Not my head, though, thankfully.”

Her face hadn’t changed, not much at least. Heart shaped and light brown, with a thin nose, lively blue eyes, and a frame of short blonde hair.

“Who…?”

“You said we need to move,” she said. “We can discuss this later.”

I hesitated, then I said, “All right. Leave your weapon. And we’ll be blocking your plant.”

She stood, touched each of her companions softly, slung a small bag on her shoulder, and nodded, ready to go.

Ship’s lift was a loose soft tube that hung down from Largo’s belly. We went up, one by one, with Kral last, holding Johnny and Meissa above. When we were all aboard, Bael and I ushered everyone into the salon. Nancy moved with an odd gait, but there was nothing to show that she was mostly replacements. I noticed Basto. I increasingly saw him more as Basto with enhancements than an amalgamation of two AIs, but that may have been because I was seeing Basto’s body, not Buttercup’s frame. Basto looked the most confused. Rosalind held his hand as they came into the salon; it was impossible to tell what that meant to Basto. Nancy dropped to one of the couches, and looked as though she was about to sleep. The Captain stood near the hatch, taking it all in with a practiced eye. I brought in some refreshments, including the last of Largo’s bug juice for Kli.

“How soon to the far coast, Ship?”

“Obfuscating the best I can and taking a few detours, maybe twenty minutes.”

“Thanks. Let Bael, Kral, and me know when you’re close.”

The whole crew was mostly seated, or in the case of Johnny and Melissa, slouched, around the salon. Elibel and Kli were talking. He was showing her something on a data projection; what, I didn’t know. Kral stood off to the side, next to the billiard table.

“I think it’s time to revive Johnny and Melissa,” I said. “Kral, I’ll ask you to do that, but please keep them muzzled and secured. And keep them blinded.”

The two captives began to stir. The captain moved closer, but not too close, perched on the arm of a chair.

“Welcome back,” I said. “If you’re sufficiently revived to understand what I’m saying, please nod.”

After a moment’s hesitation, both nodded. Their plants should have been blocked, but I’ve never trusted that tech. I just hoped it was true. In any event, a residual sedative would keep them both a little slow and disoriented.

“Do you understand that you are in danger? And that there will be no opportunity to escape again?”

Both dutifully nodded.

“Excellent. I have a few questions.”

I paused. “At this point,” I said to Ship, Bael, and Kral, “they have no idea whether or not they’re alone or together. Let’s see if I can make any use of that, at least as long as they’re in the dark.”

I walked over to the captives and put a hand on each shoulder. “I want to get a little background,” I said. “And I want to know the truth. Lying will not help you. Do you know where Bresslaft is?”

Both shook their heads.

“You are certain? As I said, I do not appreciate lies.” They shook their heads again. I pressed my hands down on their shoulders, hard. Not enough to hurt much, but enough to emphasize the vulnerability of their position.

“Do you know who Bresslaft is?”

Both nodded.

“Are you working with Bresslaft?”

Both hesitated, then shook their heads.

“He appears to be telling the truth,” Bael said. “From her vitals and her reflex patterns, I can say that she isn’t.”

“I told you I don’t like lies,” I said. “Whatever happens, I’ll tell you now that you both are finished, at least in the consortium, and probably elsewhere. So let’s make this as easy as possible. Are you working with Bresslaft?”

He shook his head again, and spat. This time Melissa nodded, but there was something else in the motion. What, I couldn’t tell.

“Is Bresslaft part of the fudge trade?”

Johnny didn’t move, while Melissa slowly nodded.

“Is there a plot in the works to destabilize Forest?”

Neither moved.

“Come on. I know there is. I just want your confirmation.”

“Hare, I know what you’re trying to do, but for all the things you are, you’re not an interrogator. Your way, this will take forever.” It was the Captain.

“O’Flaherty….”

“Trust me, Trieste. I’ll get us what both of us need.”

She was already close to Johnny. She moved over to him quickly, forcefully. She cut Melissa’a audio, then she paused. She stood there for a moment, idly stroking the little ridge that ran across her forehead. Then she quickly pulled back his hood, cleared his blinder and his muzzle. She slapped him, once, and again, and then a third time.

“Hello, Johnny,” she said, and slapped him again. “Or is it Billy? That’s always been your favorite name, Billy, I think. Billy, I have to tell you: you’re stuck in a slimy, ice-cold load of giant crin-worm secretions.”

Johnny put his head back and shouted, “You are in so much trouble. You have no idea. I’m going….”

“You’ll do nothing, Billy,” she said, and slapped him again. “We’re only in trouble if your people find us, and this time nobody’s going to find us. Not until we’re ready to be found.”

“I won’t tell you anything.”

She bent over him, bunched up his collar in her hand, and looked him in the eye. “Of course you’re not. What you say now has nothing to do with me. You’re coming on a little voyage, and then we’ll see what you say and what you don’t. But before that, Melissa here will tell these good people what they need to know. You’ll just sit and listen.”

He was quiet. The Captain stepped over to Melissa and contemplated her captive.

“We’re almost ready to put down, Hare.”

“Where?”

“We’ll be hiding in plain sight.”

I hooked into Largo’s forward visuals. Below us was desert; the sea was about 40 kilometers away. Spreading out ahead across the desert floor was a city of derelict spaceships, tenders, cargo flyers, ancient pleasure craft, a few water vessels, and a number of hulks the point of which I couldn’t tell. It was a city of technological ghosts. Off to the left was a small town, a few trees, a few houses. A ridge of gray rock rose behind the town. Ship had maneuvered us to a spot above a row of Manta Rays and was deftly settling Largo between two of them.

“Now if only I can find that dead-ship transponder,” she said. “Ah, there it is. Sometimes it pays to be a collector.”

“Packrat,” Bael said.

“That too.”

Finally O’Flaherty snapped out of her reverie and pulled back Melissa’s hood.

“Welcome back to the land of the living, Mizz Bean.”

“The way you said that….”

“Yea, Mizz Bean, it’s me, little Mani. Too many well-placed families sent their daughters off to your school, and mine was unfortunately one of them. At least until I told them a few things. You remember how I disappeared that winter, don’t you. Damn, how I hated you and your school.”

“I….”

“But enough of old times. I will cut to the chase, as my third grandmother used to say. I have Yattea.”

“What…?”

“Oh not here, of course. But safe, in a good place. I can assure you, by my honor, that she is not being hurt and will never be hurt. She is being cared for by three sweet, tough old witches who wouldn’t let me harm her even if I wanted to. I understand that she is having fun, and thinks that you’ve been called away on business. That’s a pretty familiar scenario, is it not, you being away on business?”

“What…?”

“Of course, there’s a good possibility that you’ll never see her again, but we’ll have to work on that.”

“What…?”

“You’re getting a little repetitious, aren’t you? I’d guess that you want to know what I want out of you. Or maybe you want to know what proof I have that I have Yattea. Or maybe both. Well, look at this.”

An image appeared before us, a girl running in a field. She was an adolescent, athough it was hard to tell her actual age. She ran toward us, laughing. She was tall, lovely, coltish, and evidently very happy. Then I could see it. Her hair was longer, and more brown than jet black. And her skin, while tanned, was definitely lighter. But her face was so similar, down to the huge green eyes….

“Bael,” the Captain said, “from what I’ve seen, you’re probably a little tired of discovering unknown relatives. But I have one more for you. This is Yattea. She’s your sister.”

To Be Continued

Published in: on February 17, 2011 at 5:48 am  Comments Off  

Episode Sixty Four, in which Taes becomes a ghost and an old friend comes calling

“Wait,” Bael said. ” My dolls. Maybe they’ve been going after Largo because they’ve been looking for my dolls.”

“What dolls? Like these?”

“No, not like these at all. Mine are much more beautiful, perfectly crafted. With little dresses. But I have a set of ten of them. My father brought them back from one of his trips. Maybe he was coming from Banyan’s. I was way too old to play with dolls the way a child would, but I loved them. They were so beautiful. He told me that they were very valuable, and that I should keep them forever, and never break up the set.”

“Only ten,” I said. “So if they follow the same pattern, number eleven is out there somewhere. Ship, are you getting this?”

“Yea, Hare. I’m thinking at it would be prudent to move Largo as soon as I get rid of these barnacles. I’m almost finished with that.”

“Think about bringing her out of orbit. We will look for a place to hide her down here. Let me know when the barnacles are gone. Kli, you said that Taes might not exist. What do you mean?”

Kli was sprawled on of the couches. He paused, probably disengaging from whatever nets, webs, and data mazes he was running in. He shook his head, and the gem-encrusted weights that hung from his ears swung back and forth. He looked up at us, then sent forth a deep, melodious sigh.

“I’ve been thinking about patterns,” he said, “ranging through available data, not really looking for anything in particular. I was looking at travel records, comings and goings from Banyan’s Hell. This place is awash with loose data.” He paused again.

“And?”

“The Duke traveled a lot. But he made a large number of trips to Banyan’s, over many years. Johnny was only there when Rosalind said he was, the same time when Ship and Hare were. But the Duke was there a lot. And can you guess who was there at the same times?”

“Kli….” I said.

“Oh, all right. It was Melissa Bean. I figured at first that they were having trysts. And the Duke did keep a little house in one of the better neighborhoods in the main settlement on Banyan’s.”

I looked at Bael. She has gone stony-faced again. She was watching Kli. I touched her hand, but she pulled it back.

“But Banyan’s Hell wasn’t the sort of place I would choose for sweet coupling, and I doubt humans would either. So I thought maybe something else was going on. I looked a little deeper and remembered that before she was a power broker on Nova, Bean was a teacher.”

“We know,” I said. “Both Bael and Melissa….”

“But before that,” he continued, “did you know that she was a scholar of history? And did you know that Nova has the most extensive collection of old-culture artifacts and data in human space?”

“Go on.”

“Bean did her main research work on Banyan’s Hell. I think she knows what those dolls are.”

“But what about Taes?”

“I’m coming to that. There are records—they’re disparate, scattered across worlds and times—that suggest the possibility of shadow creatures. They’re not clones, they’re more like, what do you call them, ghosts. But they’re ghosts of living creatures.”

“You mean that I’m the daughter of a ghost?” Bael said.

“That’s where I’m confused. If Taes is what I think he is, he could never have fathered you.”

“Our only source for the Taes-as-father story is Linda,” I said. “I wonder what from her can be believed at this point. But why do you think that Taes is one of the ghosts?”

“I cross-checked the living-ghost sitings with the presence of old-culture ruins, specifically ruins with the same traits as those those found on Banyan’s Hell. Of the 23 sitings I could find, 19 were on worlds that held those ruins. The ghosts have to be connected to that culture. But then I found a rare account—it had been a scribed pape document, one that apparently is still stored in a small vault in the Cremena at Roquelle. A few copies of those have been made, and one of those is in a little database on Bur….”

“Kli, what did it say?”

“Look at this. Here is the Duke. You can see his vital rhythms, and you can clock his movements in this motion sequence here. Now here is a bit of a similar Taes sequence.

“That’s….” Bael said slowly.

“Yea, I had to go into your data store on Largo. Sorry.”

Bael looked at him. Her muscles were tense, like those of a braennta ready to pounce.”

“Kli,” I said.

“Listen to me, my human friends—no offense meant, Bael—we have things to do. And you want to get all this sorted out. So data are meant to be free. You humans can never really understand that. At least most of you. Do you want to figure out what’s going on?”

“Bael?”

“It’s all right.”

I nodded to Kli.

“The vital rythms are nearly identical, which is expectable in a clone, at least in most cases. But the two motion sequences show a pattern, a footprint if you will, with a deviation predicted by the Roquelle pape. The pape was written a long time ago by a monk who apparently was fascinated by the living ghosts. She figured out this deviation as a way of detecting them. Taes is not a clone; Taes is a ghost.”

“So what does that tell us?”

“Scentsapproachinginalley,” Kral said. “TheysmelllikeLinda’speople.”

We would have gone into some kind of defense mode, but their sensors had most likely already registered us. So we all stayed where we were. It seemed best to let them catch us apparently unawares.

I could soon see that catching us was the furthest thing from their minds. Three men and a woman stumbled through the hole in the back wall. They all looked like they’d been through battle. Their faces were scarred and smudged. Their clothes were filthy, and the parts that weren’t armored had been were torn away. They all carried obvious weapons, but when they saw us, they discarded the weapons and collapsed on couches.

We said nothing, just stood there watching the newcomers. Finally, one of them spoke. He was a giant, well over two meters high, a huge bundle of bruised sinew. He raised a big, curly head and said. “We need water, and something stronger.”

Bael brought them a big flask of water, then motioned toward the bar.

“Who are you?” I asked.

“I know who they are.” It was Basto’s frame, though from the tone, I figured that it was some vestige of Buttercup talking. The AI struggled to stand erect. “They’re killers. They were at Magda Singha.”

“We’re not killers,” the giant said wearily. “We were at Magda Singha, but….”

“That’s not what….”

“Seventy-Four,” I said, “can you hold off on this for a while?” I turned to the giant. “Again. Who are you? And what are you doing here?”

“When Linda was here before, we were the back-up. We stayed outside. When Bresslaft’s people came and took Linda and the chimp frames, we obfuscated the best we could and hid in the alley. When they left, we gave chase.”

“Bresslaft? He was behind this?”

“Isn’t it obvious?” He stood. I could feel Bael and the Captain tense. But he only walked to the bar. He picked up a bottle of Kindness’s vintage Treg, scooped up a handful of glasses, and took both back to the couch. He poured out drinks for his companions, downed his, and poured another.

“You know,” he said, “you all probably shouldn’t be here. I can see that you’ve broken the probes that the Bresslaft crew left behind, but they’re still looking for Johnny and Melissa, and they’ll think to check back here soon.”

“Ship, what’s your progress?”

“Barnacles eliminated, heading your way. I’m thinking that I pick you all up and we swing out to one of the small coastal towns on the other side of this continent. I think we can hide Largo there. Agreed?”

I looked at Bael. She nodded.

“Yea, Ship. We’ll be ready.”

“I take it that your chase didn’t prove fruitful,” I said.

“Yea,” the giant said. “We got into a streetfight, but then they brought in flyers and were gone.”

I asked the giant about Bresslaft. They knew nothing, except that the invasion had had the hallmarks of a Bresslaft operation. They didn’t have any idea where the crew had gone.

“I have a lift at the break in Kindness’s wall,” Ship said, “I don’t want to stay here too long.”

“We’re clearing out,” I said. “You all had better move as well.”

“Johnny…?”

“Johnny’s coming with us.”

“So am I, Hare.”

It was the woman.

“Can’t you tell who I am?”

Suddenly, through all the grime, I saw her, as if for the first time. “Nancy?”

“Yea, no thanks to you.”

To Be Continued

Published in: on February 3, 2011 at 8:02 am  Comments Off  

Episode Sixty-Three, in which Basto and Buttercup come to terms with themself and Kindness goes off with the skaetto

Ship was playing a pattern I’d not heard before. We had Basto’s frame stretched out on the couch. I manipulated the BAS receptor as Bael made a few final shifts with her virtual control. Finally we all stopped and waited.

Basto opened his eyes and lay there, very still. Then he screamed. “What have you done to me?”

Bael make a quick move with her virtual control. Basto, or Buttercup, I suppose, froze.

“I’m bringing you in on this, Hare. If you see anything that needs to be done,…you were closer to Buttercup, in the end.”

“Understood.”

“Seventy-four, can you hear me?”

“Why do you call me seventy-four? My name is…. My name is….”

“That’s the style number of your frame. You don’t have a name now, seventy-four. You will need to choose one. You were two AIs, named Basto and Buttercup. You identity has been blended. What do you remember?”

“I remember…asking this idiot to reconstitute me. This wasn’t what I had in mind. Wait, I never asked….”

“Seventy-four, I strongly suggest that you relax your body. I have prevented you from making major movements, but you can still relax all of your muscles and relax your reactions. You will have a lot of memories. Many of them will seem new to you. You will also have thoughts that you, or at least part of you, would never have considered having. You will need to relearn a lot of things. Much of what you feel and sense will seem at the same time familiar and completely new.”

“What the…?”

“The main thing that I want to you to do is to focus on the future, what you need to become. You will have a lot of work to do, and right now, we don’t have a lot of time. Both of your components knew very much about discipline, and I want you to bring that ability into play here. For right now, I want you to go beyond your confusion and your discomfort. Don’t concentrate on your memories; you will have plenty of time for that later. Right now, we are in danger. We will need to move soon, and I need for you be ready for what’s next. You both know the Fremantle routine. You need to focus on that now.”

The AI was silent.

“I think he’ll be all right, Hare. He hasn’t shut down, and that’s a good sign.”

“This is strange,” the AI said. “Everything seems so much more…complicated…than it did before. I feel smarter, and yet not. I feel a whole range of sensations that are new and yet not new. I need some time.”

“Time is what we don’t have,” Bael said. “I can promise you, when we’re safe and we’ve resolved some of this, you’ll have time. But for now….”

I looked at Rosalind. She was watching for the Basto she knew. It was hard to tell what she was finding.

“I’ve found Kindness, Hare,” the Captain said. “You’d better come. Follow this signal, if you can.”

I told Bael where I was going and headed for the front of the house. The blast damage had been limited, and the front was just quietly deserted. The signal grew stronger, then died when I got to a large doorway. I opened the big, heavy door to find a broad savannah. To my left I saw a rocky cliff that led down to small waterfall and a fast-moving creek. Wide-leafed plants of black and purple lined the creek. In front of me, Kindness was naked, sitting on the edge of the cliff, staring down at the creek. His gray hair was wild, flying off in all directions. The receptor on his temple was gone, leaving a tiny purple gash. Those huge eyes looked far away. O’Flaherty was crouched next to him. Somewhere she’d found a pair of trousers. Her feet were bare, with her light dress jammed into the trouser waist.

“I can’t,” the old man was saying. “I can’t come back. Death follows me, and I’m thinking I should follow it as well. Death is an old friend, you know. She is quite a subtle companion.”

“I’m going to get Bael,” I said. It only took me a moment to figure out how to leave the simulation. I ran to the back to see seventy-four sitting up, with Bael standing next to him, and Rosalind holding his hand.

“Bael, I need you. Basto Buttercup seventy-four, you just sit here for a moment. We’ll be right back.” The AI remained motionless. I looked at Kral. The shroll nodded and moved back a little to keep the whole room in view. I caught a slight whiff of cut grass, violets, and tellafin musk.

I took Bael’s hand and we moved back through the house. “Kindness wants to die,” I said. We entered the simulation. One of the blue, spike-necked animals had come up and was nuzzling Kindness’s shoulder, cooing softly. A pack of what looked like meter-long black sausages was standing in the grass watching us, moving back and forth on flat golden pads. They made no noise, and I couldn’t see any eyes, but it was obvious that we—or Kindness—were the focus of their attention.

Bael moved softly over to Kindness and put her arm around his shoulder. I could see tears in her eyes. She said something, then there was silence. He continued to look down toward the creek. O’Flaherty stood and waited next to me, casually watching the black sausages. Finally, Kindness raised his head, put his hand on hers, and quietly said something to her. She tightened her hand around his and held it for a moment. Then he stood. I’d never seen a naked Trinn before. His body was essentially human, except for what seemed to be a second navel above the first, a couple of extra toes and fingers, and…a very odd stance. His frame was compact, lined with muscle and taut skin that showed the marks and scars of his years. What caught my eye was the odd structure of his musculature, in his legs especially. It was human, but human redesigned.

“Do not worry, my little Baelyae,” he said, taking both her hands. “It is time.” He touched her face. “I see your mother in you. Very much. She is alive in you, as I will be alive in my Frettalo. Your mother was…. When you find your father, give him three words for me.”

“Oh, Kindness….”

“The words are profile, burning, rivertree. He will know what they mean. And now, my graestaa, I must go.”

He put his arms around her and the two held each other in a long, deep embrace. Then he released her. Seemingly oblivious to the Captain and me, he turned and moved off silently, gracefully stepping through the grass. He went up to the sausages. They swarmed around him, making soft, high-pitched squeals. Followed by his swarm, he moved off toward a stand of trees.

“He taught me to swim, when I was little,” Bael said, watching him go. Her voice was husky and soft. “It was hard, because Trinn swim in their own way. All the others picked it up, but a Trinn-human body is different enough, and I couldn’t quite adapt. I was heartbroken. He showed me how.”

“What is going to happen to him?”

“Kindness has made the decision to die. He is resolute. On Trinn, if someone makes that decision, it usually does not change. The little skaetto will take care of him.”

“Take care of him?”

“Skaetto are the best way to die, even simulated skaetto.” She brushed a tear away from her eye. “Maybe I will see him again. I hope so. Come. We have much to do.”

We found our companions much as we had left them, except that Seventy-Four was standing, and Rosalind was kneading his shoulders.

“Do you see how good this feels?” he said to no one in particular, but I guessed that what was once Basto was talking with what was once Buttercup. I could imagine what fascinating conversations were going on inside that head.

“Hare,” Kli said, “I have something.”

“Tell me.”

“Well, I think I’ve found Bresslaft, twice.

“Twice?”

“I’m pretty sure I know where Bresslaft is, and what he’s up to. And I think I know where he was. Back when you, Ship, Rosalind, and Johnny were on Banyan’s Hell, he was, too.”

“Rosalind?” I said.

She stopped her shoulder kneading. We locked eyes. “I never saw him. At least if he looked like your duke or his brother. But there were a lot of people on Banyan’s, and a lot of coming and going.”

“Where is he?” I asked Kli. How do you know he was on Banyan’s? He and Johnny?”

“Yea. Him and Johnny….Take a look at this.” Kli brought up a sequence. I recognized the background. It was definitely Banyan’s, one of the gambling shops that filled the narrow streets around the port. The streets were packed, but I could readily see two men standing outside. The younger was angry, getting increasingly enraged as the two talked. The older seemed unfazed, dismissive.

“Genuine?”

“Seems so.’

“So the Duke knew Johnny before Trinn. And Taes?”

“Hare, I’m beginning to wonder if Taes ever really existed.”

“Of course he existed,” Bael said quickly. “I knew him on Trinn. He was apparently my father. How could he not exist?”

“Just because he’s your father,” Kli responded, “doesn’t mean that he necessarily exists. From what I’ve been able to pull together, and the patterns I’ve created, I’m beginning to think that Rosalind’s boy Bobbie wasn’t the only human to go through one of those gates on Banyan’s Hell.”

“The Duke?” I asked.

To Be Continued

Published in: on January 20, 2011 at 6:57 am  Comments Off  

Episode Sixty-Two, in which Basto and Buttercup get melded and Rosalind tells of magic dolls

“What’s all the fuss,” Kli said. “He’s an AI.”

“You know as well as anybody,” I said. “He was built for sensory-feedback-based decision making. With a visceral understanding of that feedback. For his kind of AI, he couldn’t help growing a deeper consciousness. When we added the Rollot pattern and what came after, we just accelerated that process. And she seems to think he’s more than an AI.”

Rosalind was oblivious to us, deep in her tears, caressing Basto’s lifeless frame.

“Unlike Buttercup,” I continued, pulling the little cube from my pouch. “The Model 4 was designed to do just the opposite, to process input according to a fixed and complex set of rules, with little feeling if any for the results of its actions. Buttercup was beginning to break out of that, building a new awareness, and I can’t help but think that it was moving toward deep consciousness. But for Buttercup, that episode is over.”

“Ah,” Kli said. “I begin to see what you’re up to. Use the Model 4 to unlock Basto’s ID. But that means that the Model 4….”

“Buttercup will survive,” I said, “but is going to have, what’s that strange archaic phrase? A steep learning curve.”

“An AI mind-meld,” Ship said.

“What?”

“Nothing,” she said.

“Do we have time?” O’Flaherty said. “We can’t stay here.”

“Do it.” Bael had come up behind me. She still looked tired, but the emptiness had begun to lift from her eyes. “Both of these AIs deserve it. Despite what I thought, neither had allowed themselves to become a robot. That’s worth a lot to me. You can do it now; I’ll help. Ship, we’ll need the Rollot again, but modulated by the Beelagen, with a few modifications. Can you manage that?”

“It will take a few minutes,” Ship said. “Ah, locking in with you now.”

“I’m not needed here,” the Captain said. “I want to make sure that those two are more secure than last time.” She gestured toward the break. Kral had just brought in Johnny and Melissa and had dumped them both on the floor. “And I’m wondering what happened to Kindness. He’s not among the bodies, and I don’t detect him in the house. I think I’ll take a look around.”

“What’s left of your network?” I asked.

“Surprisingly intact.”

“Compromised?”

“No. Your problems with Linda, the monkeys, or the enforcers have nothing to do with my people. My network is disciplined and incorruptible. We all are working toward a goal. Our devotion to that goal probably goes beyond what you can understand.”

“Try me….”

“We need Johnny’s memories in order to discover completely the process with which he destabilized Chance. Who did what, and how? Who was fooled; who was trapped into betrayal? What started the cascading collapse that destroyed the court? Only then can we begin to reverse the tragedy and restore the Court. And ohen we can begin to save Chance.”

“Well, if your network is intact, can you see what they know of Louis’s whereabouts? I’m beginning to get a little bothered by his disappearances.”

“I’m nearly ready,” Ship said. “Bael, I like your thinking on the Beelagen pattern. Yes, that’s what needs to…I’m almost finished…there.”

I took Buttercup’s cube and was about to open the BAS receptor in his finger. Bael’s hand closed over mine. She was close, and brought her eyes up to mine. “You’re good, my Hare, but I’m better. This is my primary training.”

I smiled at her. “And staff fighting and timely rescues and confidence games and magic tricks and finding clogged hydroponics pumps and creating jump traces and….”

She laughed. “I told you, my father believed in a well-rounded education. Now give me the cube.”

She moved fast. She set up a small virtual control and did some things to the cube I’d never seen before.

“Just stabilizing the patterns,” she said, as if reading my mind. “That little AI is in there, somewhere, buried in the data. I just hope it reconstitutes in the correct sequences. Otherwise…it won’t be set to unlock Basto’s ID. Or maybe I should start calling it “him.” He’s about to experience gender for the first time, and won’t get much of a chance at practice.” She nodded at Rosalind, who had sunk into one of the couches, her head in her hands.

“I treated him so badly,” she was saying to herself. “So bad.”

“Kli, looks like Bael can handle this herself. What were you able to find, before you had to move?”

“Not much, Hare. You saw where Johnny was headed. As far as the enforcers go, they’re on the move all over Forest, but not much more than usual, with no apparent action pattern. And there’s nothing on Bresslaft, except for some standard historical gossip. I think you’ve seen that. But I did find out where the answers may lie.”

“Yea?”

“I’ve seen another of those dolls.”

“Hare,” Bael said. “I need your help. We need to get Basto sitting up. I need to run some tests on him, and I want to look at his functions.”

We pushed aside one of the bodies and lifted the AI’s frame onto a couch. Bael set to work on him.

“Where did you see the doll?”

“Not a doll, exactly, but an image of one.” The image appeared before my eye, a woman I didn’t recognize, holding one of the little figures. She was in a room surrounded by artifacts.

“It comes from one of the shadow cultures, from a long time ago. This one was found in the ruins on Banyan’s Hell.”

“What’s its symbol?”

“It looks like a cracked eggshell, a half-circle with a serrated edge.”

“What’s the story?”

“These dolls are more than simple artifacts,” he said. “They appear to be remnants of a technology that is so foreign to us as to be invisible. I have no idea what they do, but it appears that a certain number of them is required in order to do anything.”

“That’s what I was trying to tell you,” Rosalind said. “Our action gang found a trove of them in the ruins of the golden palace on Banyan’s. We used to have big parties out there whenever we finished an action. One of our guys was digging to bury some swag and began to find boxes. They were old, made from some kind of wood and covered with carvings. Each box held a little doll. We started pulling them out of the boxes, and when we got eleven of them out, they started to glow and get hot. A creature began to materialize in front of us.

“It was small, maybe a meter high, with a big translucent head and long orange tentacles. And then in a flash, it disappeared. We put the dolls back in their boxes, and they stopped glowing. We tested all of them; they were nothing more than baked clay with a few trace elements. We brought them out a bunch more times in the days that followed. We tried various combinations. Most times, nothing happened.”

“Most times?”

“We thought at first that the dolls together were some sort of recorder, showing pictures from another time. But the last time we brought out all eleven and put them together in the same placement as the first time. The little guy with the tentacles reappeared with two other tentacle characters. This time the images stayed longer. Then, before we could do anything, the first guy reached out and grabbed Bobbie with one of those orange tentacles. It was stronger than it looked. Then all of them disappeared. We never put the dolls together again after that.”

“A hole and space/time?”

“Yea, that’s what we thought. But the energy needed for a hole like that would be huge; it just wasn’t there.”

“Who was Bobbie?”

“Just one of the guys in the action gang. He and I used to sleep together, but I never knew him all that well. Then he was gone.”

“So what happened?”

“There were twelve of us left, and eleven boxes. That was all we could find. Each of us kept one, except for the woman who was with Johnny at the time. She died a little while later, killed in a gang battle. And the tutors, of course. They just sat in the background anyway, watching Johnny. Individually, the dolls were useless, and apparently even in numbers less than eleven. Although once, mine glowed briefly, but only for a few seconds, then it stopped. We decided to use them as badges, symbols of our membership in the gang. It was silly, really, but I think each of us has held onto theirs.”

“Johnny was there? And Louis?”

“Yea. They worked together well, back in those days.”

“Curiouser and curiouser. I’d have thought you would try to sell them. I wonder if Johnny’s been trying to collect them. Do you have yours?”

“Sort of. When I met Johnny again, decided that I needed to ensure my safety. Call it instinct, but nobody trusts Johnny. I made sure that it was in a safe and reliable spot, a place even I would have difficulty discovering, with standing orders that it be destroyed if I die, or don’t check in. Johnny knows that, and he’s so far left me alone. As for selling, we all could never agree on that. So we never did.”

“Hare, we’re almost ready,” Bael said. “I need your help again.”

Ship was playing a pattern I’d not heard before. We had Basto’s frame stretched out on the couch. I manipulated the BAS receptor as Bael made a few final shifts with her virtual control. Finally we all stopped and waited.

Basto opened his eyes and lay there, very still. Then he screamed. “What have you done to me?”

To Be Continued

Published in: on January 4, 2011 at 7:13 am  Comments Off  

Episode Sixty-One, in which the Captain goes into the drink and Basto goes dark

“Hare,” Ship said. “I know where Johnny and the others are going. They’re heading directly for the place where Louis took Bael, and they’re closing fast.”

“Elibel, Rosalind, you’re coming with me. Elibel, start dumping data into Kli’s table, and into mine. Basto, stay here with Kli and watch everyone. Keep a special eye on the pods, and on Linda. Sorry, Linda, you are correct; we are not family, and I do not trust you. Kli, you know what you need to do. Any questions?”

“I’d rather…,” Rosalind said.

“I know, but I need you with me. You know more about Johnny and Melissa Bean than anyone here, and don’t forget; you’re in this for the lucre. Get ready to go.”

“Hare,” Kli said, “Bael and Kral are on the move.”

“IgrabbedBael.Weareonthestreetonfoot.”

“How is she? And where is Louis?”

“Patchedmostly.NoideaaboutLouis.”

“Coming to get you.”

I motioned Elibel and Rosalind though the break in the wall. We ran out into the night and up the alley and made for the screens. I could see that the flyers were still there.

“The flyers, Kli?”

“No sign of any locks, tracks, traces, sims. That’s not to say that there are none. If they exist, they’re good.”

We climbed to the larger of the two craft. No sign of enforcers or anyone else. I brought the flyer out from its hiding place and made for the shore, skimming just above the buildings. Dawn was coming, and Forest’s star was beginning to climb from the sea. The heavy gray clouds were showing outlines of pink, and a dash of orange had formed just above the water. It was quiet. In these moments before dawn, the city was remarkably free of the teeming throngs and the near-constant flyer traffic.

“Elibel, what do you think the figurines are? Are they just tokens on membership? Linda says that’s what they are, but I’m not sure that….”

“I know what they are,” Rosalind said.

“Yea?” We could see the coast, where the lights of the city stopped in a rough line. We were getting closer.

“It goes back to when Johnny was traveling with his tutors. They spent a cycle among the refugees on Banyan’s Hell, not long before they headed to Trinn. The tutors wanted to expose Johnny to the action gangs there.”

“Louis was there; so were we.”

“So was I,” she said. “Though I don’t recall you. I lied back there. I told you that Melissa introduced me to Johnny. It’s the story I’ve been telling; I almost believe it myself.”

“But…?”

“I actually met Johnny when we were much younger, on Banyan’s, well after I left Melissa’s school. She doesn’t know.”

“You were in with the action gangs?”

“Of course. They were the only game in town. We were….”

“Hold that thought. We’re over Bael and Kral. Ship?”

“I have them too. Johnny and Melissa are close. It looks like they’ve connected with a flyer and are lifting off. Move quick, Hare.”

I brought the flyer down to street level. Enhancements were no longer needed to make out the details of the street; I could see Kral in a dark doorway, holding Bael as if she were an injured fawn. She seemed barely conscious.

“Quick. Get in.”

Kral almost dragged Bael into the flyer. I brought the lid down as we were lifting.

“She’sallrightIthink.

“ThehealerwasalmostfinishedwhenIpulledheroutofthere.”

Keeping half an eye on the streetscape unfolding before us, I made a quick check on Bael. Her breathing and heart were both strong; the seared skin had been replaced. But she was definitely weak.

“How are you?”

“I’m all right, Hare. Louis’s healer was excellent, and Kral’s a wonderful nurse-protector. I just want to rest.”

“I was completely scared when I saw you. I thought they’d….”

“They didn’t, love. I’m going to rest now.”

Love. I pointed the flyer out across the flats.

“Hare. Johnny apparently has a lock on you, and he’s close, very close.”

“I see him.” The other flyer was fast. It was sending out flash bursts, though they could have been fired by a child; they were wild and wide, going off in all directions. I needed to get back to grab Linda, Kli, and Basto. But maybe this would be another opportunity. I headed to the water.

“Something weird is happening on Johnny’s flyer,” Ship said. “My probes show that Johnny’s adrenalin is high; his heart is pumping. Melissa seems to be unconscious.” I brought a magnification of the other flyer up in front of my left eye. As I watched, the flyer’s side vaporized. It began to move erratically.

A voice came on the comm. “This is Captain O’Flaherty. I have taken control of this craft, such as it is. We will ditch in the sea in fifteen seconds. Assistance requested.”

“Captain, are you on this channel?”

“Yea, Trieste.”

“I’m on top of you. I’ll fish you out as soon as you’re down.”

“Johnny’s mine.”

“Until we get this all straightened out, no. But later, you can have him, as long as I get a say in what happens to him afterwards.”

“A say, and nothing more. Agreed.”

It was pretty simple. She brought the flyer down, then canted it on its intact side, so it would float, but barely. We fished them out of the foundering craft. Bean was indeed unconscious, while Johnny was trussed and listless, as though drunk. Thick red welts ran along the side of his head. They looked painful.

“What happened back there?” I asked the Captain. I brought the flyer up and we headed for the Trinn’s house. “How did they get away?”

“Simple. One of the monkey crowd was on fast forward, and during the initial chaos dashed over to cut the constraints, both the cords and the power constraints. When the moment was right, Johnny grabbed me and we were out through the break.”

“This could be a set-up….”

“It’s not. I also waited until the moment was right. They were careless, relaxed my freeze. As I said, my plant is second to none.”

“Hare,” Kli said, “we’re under attack. I’m out of here.”

“Kli? Basto?”

“Sorry, Hare. No warning,” Ship said. “Two flyers suddenly moved into position over the house and have flooded the break.”

“What are you seeing?”

“They’re removing the pods now, and a few of the fighters. They have Linda. The others…they’re just burning…no sign of Kindness. I think Kli got away.”

“I did. I’m on the street, looking for a place to hide.”

“We’re on our way and tracking you.”

“Not for long. I’m about to obfuscate. I’ve got you. I’ll let you know when you’re close.”

“Basto?”

Nothing.

“The flyers are pulling away, Hare,” Ship said. “The house looks empty. I detect no residual tracking.”

We found Kli readily enough, or more accurately, he found us. We checked and double checked the Kindness house and saw nothing, so I dropped the flyer to the break. I told everyone to stay put, and the Captain and I went inside. It wasn’t pretty.

The room was littered with bodies, mostly the Captain’s and Linda’s people. Some had been burned; others had been hit with precision cuts. All were dead. A couple were the monkey’s fighters, but most of those were gone. As were the three pods and Linda.

“Linda, I know this is one of your channels. Can you connect?”

Silence.

The Captain moved slowly through the room, looking incongruous in the rumpled tatters of her dress. She stopped, and her tall frame folded beside on of the bodies. It was man with the burner.

“Oh, Lieutenant Gora,” she said. “Oh, Bory.” Her voice quavered. She took a medallion from around the man’s neck, paused for a moment, and kissed his forehead. Then she stood.

“Where is your Basto?” she asked.

We scanned the room and finally found him, lying beneath one of the Captain’s fighters, or what remained of her. His frame was inert, but mostly intact. A precision cut had disabled his processor, but I figured that he could be reconstituted…until I saw how the cut had severed one of the core nodes. His identity was intact but locked. It was true that an AI could be reconstituted, in the right lab with an ID imprint. We had neither. And the Rollot pattern I’d used back in the shed had meant that any ID imprint we could find wouldn’t match anyway. The shutdown lock only complicated matters.

“Kli, come in. I’m going to need your help.”

Kli appeared in the gap, bowled over by Rosalind, who pretty much leaped over him. She saw us and ran across the room, screaming. She fell on Basto, sobbing as she cradled his head, her thick gray hair falling across his shoulders. She knew enough about AIs to understand the trouble he was in.

“I think I can save him,” I said.

To Be Continued

Published in: on December 27, 2010 at 8:32 am  Comments Off  

Episode Sixty, in which Kral makes scents and Johnny takes a powder

With a flash, one wall of the room dissolved, and a rush of cold, wet, night air filled the room. The break was filled with more black-clad fighters, followed by three huge gold monkeys. The fighters all had big flashguns, and as they leaped into the room, they began firing. I fell behind one of the couches, and as I did, I could see that a flash burst had seared Bael’s side.

I pulled her to the floor and behind the couch, though that would provide scant protection. I checked her wound. The flash burst had been narrow and would have gone deep, had it been a bit closer. But as it was, it had seared the skin along her waist. Linda’s people were shooting above us; I couldn’t see anyone else.

I knew that Bael was in pain; her plant would be creating blockers, and she was fading to unconsciousness. I pulled a heal-all from my pouch, drew back charred fabric from around the wound, and applied the heal-all. It morphed to take the shape of the burn and seemed to disappear in the burned skin.

Flash bursts were all around us. The couch to my front burst into flames. Then I smelled something. It wasn’t one smell, but a series of them, rapidly changing. Most of them were revolting, so powerfully affecting that I began to retch. My stomach felt as though it was about to come up my throat, and my eyes began to water. I didn’t have alternative air, so I blocked my reactions to the smells as well as I could. Even then, the nausea was overpowering. My whole face felt as though it was burning. I pulled Bael back from the burning couch, then peered around it.

The bursts had ceased. All of the fighters were in chaos, reeling from the nausea, their weapons forgotten. A few had some form of alternative air but hadn’t bothered to set it in place, and now they were having trouble activating it. Most stood doubled over, ready to vomit but unable to do so. The three giant monkeys stood in the middle, apparently unaffected by the onslaught, but not sure what to do. I saw Kral standing nearby, holding the lifeless Willi. Basto seemed unaffected; he’d grabbed one flashguns and was spinning around, looking for something to shoot. But there wasn’t anything.

“That’s you, Kral?”

“Yea.ButIcan’tgettherightmixforthemonkeys.”

“There may not be one. I think they’re organic simulations of some sort, shells for the walking sticks. Whatever the monkeys smell, the walking sticks are unaffected.”

“Here.”

The shroll tore a piece of fabric from Willi’s gown, wadded it and threw it to me.

“Holdthistoyourface.”

The cloth smelled heavily of old terrestrial flowers, lavendar at one moment, honeysuckle the next. It countered the other smells. I grabbed a flash from one of the Captain’s fighters. He was leaning on a wall, looking like he was about to collapse. Bael was as safe as she could be for the moment, and the burning couch had begun to extinguish itself. I sent a burst at the foot of one of the monkeys’ foot. The creature jumped, but remained standing. I kept sending out bursts as I moved closer, holding the cloth up to my face. The monkeys kept moving, seemingly dancing in a wild, leaping frolic, reflexively jumping with each burst.

As I got close, I pulled out my last sticky net. I’d used it on one monkey before; I hoped now that it would hold three. I threw the net and guided it down on their heads, and then contracted it around their necks. I had no idea whether or not monkey-form walking-stick surrogates actually had breathing tubes, or even lungs, though I figured that they did. All of Walking Stick’s monkey functions had apparently been operational. The net seemed to be slowing them down. I brought the flash to a narrow beam and proceeded to cut off their legs.

They didn’t seem to be feeling pain. The legs fell away, and the monkeys tumbled to the floor. I picked up one of the legs; it seemed to be an inert energy foam, lifeless now without the connection to the rest of the monkey simulation. Whatever blood had been released, it was rapidly evaporating. I tightened the net further, pulled out a knife and began to cut away the monkey fur. Inside was a small hard pod; I suspected that it contained one of our stick-thin friends. I looked for Basto; he was kneeling over Rosalind, holding one of Kral’s scented rags up to her face.

“Basto! Watch these little pod guys, will you?”

“Ship, where are you?”

“I receded, Hare, when the flaming started. Sorry, but Willi’s not a good avatar for fighting. I’ve been breaking the barnacles’ hold on Largo.”

“That’s all right; it was a good decision. We need to get Bael to a healer. Can you send down a lighter?”

“No need, cousin. I’m on my way.”

“Louis! Where in the name of Tio Burnside have you been?”

“Taking care of business, cousin. You been busy, mon?”

“You’ve been following?”

“Yea. Looks like it’s getting a wee crowded in there.”

“How soon can you be here?”

“I’m dropping over your location now. Getting inside won’t be a problem, of course.”

A small flyer I hadn’t seen before hovered outside the break in the wall. The lid raised and a grinning Louis leaped out.

“I need to talk with you, Louis. I have a lot of questions.”

“In good time, cousin. Where is Bael?”

I was reluctant to send her off with him alone. I checked on her. The heal-all had done its work; her breathing and heart rate were strong and regular. She wasn’t in shock, and the damage seemed limited.

“Kral, can you go with Louis and Bael?”

“Yea.KnowthatI’mdepleted.Allthesesmellsarehardwork.

“Butit’sagoodidea.Youneedtoconstrainpeoplehere.”

“I’m doing that now.” I made the rounds, giving sopors to the guards as Kral carried Bael to the flyer. The three of them disappeared, and I continued around the room. I saw Elibel lying on the floor, breathing through one of Kral’s rags. When I got to Linda, she was sitting on the floor, holding her stomach and gagging. I gave her a rag and put livewire around her ankles and wrists.

“I’m sorry, Linda. I really am. I feel like we’re almost family.”

She took a deep breath through the rag. Her voice was raspy, and she coughed as she spoke. “You’re a little presumptuous, aren’t you? Do you really think she’ll settle in with you, a disenfranchised wanderer? Damn, son, you don’t even have home status. Anywhere. I checked. How is she?”

“I think she’ll be all right. But I’m getting her to a healer. Are you in league with the monkeys? Is Johnny?”

“No for me. From what I can see, they’re evil and stupid. Not my general cohort, son. For Johnny, I can’t say. But Melissa’s most likely up to her neck in monkey scat, and I know that she and Johnny have worked together…where are they?”

I stood and whirled around. The couch where Johnny and Melissa had been sprawled was empty. And the frozen statue of Captain Flaherty was gone as well. Basto was still across the room, focused on the walking sticks. Everyone else was either knocked out or getting over Kral’s onslaught.

“Ship, your probes?”

“I made sure that both Johnny and Melissa would be saturated. Even if they discover my little friends, they won’t find all of them.”

“What do you see?”

“They’re on the street with the Captain, heading toward the water. It’s hard to tell who’s in charge.”

“Keep watching. They may be more valuable to us this way.”

I went over to Elibel. “Do you have the figure?”

Kral’s smells had mostly dissipated, and Elibel was gulping in air. She smiled weakly and pulled the little sculpture from a pouch.

“They took the fake, as you thought they would.”

“Yea, but I hadn’t planned on having them leave so soon. Let me see it.”

She held up the figure. It was heavy for what it was, like the one I’d found in the snow on Ginga. Something I hadn’t noticed before was a small hole in the back of the head. I had no idea what it was for.

“What do you have there?” Linda asked. “Is that a…? Where did you get it?”

“It’s Johnny’s,” I said. “And if you are closer to him than you let on, don’t bother trying to use your plant; that’s blocked.”

Kli sat up from where he’d been lying on the floor. “Merigana! That shroll is potent, if nothing else. I felt like I’d fallen into a pit full of, well, you don’t want to know.”

“Time to get back to work, my friend,” I said. “Johnny’s on the move, and we need data. I need a dump of what you discovered about Johnny; everything. And: What are the enforcers up to? Where are they concentrating? Does anyone have a scan on the flyers behind the screens? Probabilities of Johnny’s destination. More background on the monkeys. Whether or not Johnny’s disappearance brought Breslaft into view. How the monkeys found us. And you need to access Elibel’s….”

“Whoa,” he said, shakily getting to his feet. “That’s enough for now. Can I get some bug juice?”

“Of course.” The voice was small and a little shaky, coming from behind some of the furniture. ” I have been a bad host,” the old Trinn said, steadying himself against the back of the couch. “I think we all need a bit of a tonic.” He looked around, surveying the flash cuts, the burnt couch, and the prone fighters scattered around the room. Then I could hear him making for the front of his house.

“Kral,” I said. “Report?”

“Louishastakenustoahealernearthewater.

“She’swithBaelnow.”

“Hare,” Ship said. “I know where Johnny and the others are going. They’re heading directly for the place where Louis took Bael, and they’re closing fast.”

To Be Continued

Published in: on December 9, 2010 at 8:16 am  Comments Off  

Episode Fifty-Nine, in which Linda shows her colors and Bael encounters yet another cousin

The room’s door opened with a bang. Two of the Captain’s men stumbled in, followed hard on their heels by a half-dozen heavily armed and armored fighters. These quickly spread into the room. One of them demanded that we surrender any weapons, and the rest prodded us with the tips of their flashguns. O’Flaherty’s group slowly dropped their weapons. The rest of us had none, at least, none that we could produce and drop on the floor.

A heavyset woman appeared at the door. It was Linda Aphrodite Jones.

She carried no weapon, but two of her black-clad fighters stood by her side.

“Hello, everyone,” she said. “Kindness, I apologize for coming into your home unbidden. I know what that means for a Trinn. But you may have forgotten, you gave me rights to your home a long time ago. What did you call it? Tandrydoon? Don’t worry; we won’t be here long.”

Kindness said nothing; he just sat there watching Linda. The old Trinn seemed bewildered by the successive invasions of his house. I guessed that he would have liked to be back in his simulation.

“And Empress. Or I guess I’d better call you Captain O’Flaherty, though I wonder if you’re really part of the Royal Court of Chance. So much lying these days.”

O’Flaherty also said nothing. I figured that she was having plant chatter with her crew; Linda did not seem to have blocked the plants. But to what effect, I could not tell.

“Dear Kli, please continue. I’m very interested in what you were about to say. Though I might have wished that you’d told me first. After all, I am paying you for this work. Come now, please go ahead.”

The fragen bared his teeth, moving his head back and forth so that his ear weights clicked as they hit each other. He looked around at all of us.

“Everywhere I turn,” he said finally, “I see new members to these families of yours. I had never thought you humans had a problem with losing your offspring, but you people certainly do. And Linda Aphrodite Jones, you certainly do have a problem. You should be glad you and your siblings don’t have more children, or pseudo-children. They certainly delight in trying to kill you.

“Elibel and Bael, meet your cousin. Or I guess maybe he’s your uncle. He’s resting right now, but when he awakes, I’m sure that he will be happy to meet you.”

“I knew it!” Linda cried. “I could see it in his face. He tried to kill me?”

“Not directly, but when your flyer went down in the waters off Government House, the thugs who got to you and sent you off in the flyer were Johnny’s people. His DNA was so close to yours, it let them figure out how to override the security ID and get him and his people inside. That’s how they got into your corner of Government House in the first place.”

“He’s a copy,” I said, “isn’t he?”

“Yea,” she said obviously excited, “though obviously he was modified. He doesn’t look like me at all.”

Everyone else was quiet. Both sets of guards, the Captain’s and Linda’s, were eyeing each other, watching for something coming from the other. Bael seemed bemused by her ever-growing family.

“How did you lose your copy?”

“She…,” Kli said.

“Go on, Kliostaff. You know more about this than I do.”

“She never knew for sure that Johnny existed. But she guessed that there might be a copy around; that was the only way anyone could figure that security had been breached at Government House. She didn’t tell me directly, but I soon figured out that she was looking for a copy.”

“How did you find out it’s it’s Johnny?”

“We could do a test now, if you like. But it’s not necessary. I traced him back to the time before he was Enrique Dermatt. Eventually I got to a research station on Olekin 4. That’s where he grew up. The station was run by a bio-for-hire outfit. That bunch still exists, by the way, and is controlled by Gregen Kappten. If you recall, Kappten is in thick with Melissa Bean.”

“So then…?”

“The records I’ve found show that Bean had a boy in that little school for girls she ran. Rosalind, do you remember him?”

“That was Johnny?” she exclaimed. “That kid was a silly little fool….”

“Sure, but he was your Johnny. Bean only had him for a little while. She tried to send him to Giorgio Sprocket—the Schoolmaster, you know him, I believe—but the Schoolmaster refused to take him. So he ended up with a group of traveling tutors in the employ of Gregen Kappten. Here is where it get’s interesting.”

“Why?”

“Johnny, Enrique—his name was Attempt 17 at that point—traveled across explored space for ten years. He was the tutors’ only pupil; Kappten put a lot of lucre into Johnny’s education. Some stays would be brief, a visit to some artifact, a historical marker, a famous building, a natural wonder. Other stays would be longer, maybe a whole cycle with a famous mathemagican. Once they spent a winter on Tyril, hunting tigers. Another time they had a long stay on Chis with the ant people. These were not the sort of tutors that you might find in the cloisters on University. They were tough, and mean, and smart. Johnny grew up tough and mean and smart. Then they went to Trinn, and all that changed.”

“Taes?”

“Not at first. Bael, you may remember Johnny as well. Your father took you to learn a bit from the well-dressed Master Smith, did he not?”

“Yea. But…you’re not talking about Foosta, the boy who worked for Smith? He was so quiet.”

“Quiet, yes, but focused on learning all that he could from Smith about the arts of persuasion and deception. He was doing just that; as I understand it, Bael, you were a just casual student, but Johnny was a fanatic. And then Taes learned about the boy. He dug around as I’ve been doing; fortunately, he left traces. Eventually he figured out that Johnny was being groomed to be not just one of Melissa’s minions, but an exceptional force in her array, and ultimately the assassin of Linda Aphrodite Jones. Taes knew Smith quite well, and worked to get closer to the boy. It was about that time that Johnny’s three tutors began to die.”

“Murdered? I asked.

“Of course.”

“So Taes became Johnny’s mentor?” Bael asked.

“By that point, no one was Johnny’s mentor. The boy was on his own. He and Taes became closer, though, more as allies in the belief that they were smarter than anyone else. You know about about the clone perspective problem?”

“Human copies tend toward madness,” the Captain said, a tinge of bored frustration in her voice, as though she were quoting from a datadump. “Even when they don’t know they’re copies, most of them exhibit a total lack of perspective as to who they are. They begin to get a sense that they are uniquely superior. They may be reared with a bend toward total humility, as with the koolas monks, but still that pervasive idea grows in their heads. Sometimes that sense of superiority can be controlled and contained as straightforward arrogance—not pleasant, but not especially harmful. But most times, they go mad.”

“Yea, thanks, and so….” Kli said.

“Why it happens, nobody’s been able to tell,” she continued. “Breeders have tried to get rid of the trait, but with no luck. For a while, it was theorized that gestation outside of the womb was the cause, but research on non-copy tank babies put that one to rest. Some theologians suggest that the copy babies are born without a spirit essence, what they call a soul. In the end, nobody knows. Is that correct?”

“Yea,” Kli said. “That’s why human copies are so rare. In Johnny’s case, his breeders had hoped to channel the problem into arrogance, which they thought they could control. But meeting Taes changed all that. And the problem with Johnny was that he is very smart, and his education has been superb.”

“We suspected that Johnny was a copy,” O’Flaherty said, taking a deep and deliberate sip of her brandy. “But we had no idea who the original was, and why. Kliostaff, have your investigations shown why Johnny’s people wanted to kill Linda?”

“No. They had already neutralized her in the skuffle with the Brec faction. A lot of people don’t like Linda, No offense, facilitator….”

“None taken. It’s certainly a fact. Go on.”

“There’s not too much more to say. Maybe they did it for sport.”

“Kli,” I said, “have you found out anything more about Taes, and what Breslaft has been up to, exactly? And Linda, I really need to know: Why did you burst in here, waving weapons?”

“Why do you think?” The voice came from behind me. It was Johnny. I sprang up, but one of Linda’s guards was already next to him. Johnny was still bound, spawled across a couch. He struggled to sit up.

“She wants my help, and unless I miss my guess, she’s willing to pay for it.”

“Help?”

“Our dear Facilitator wants to take back power on Forest. But she won’t be the Facilitator, she’ll create a new role for herself. I’ve heard it will be Provisional Coordinator for Consortium Stability, or something like that. But she’ll be in control, control like the consortium or any of the other entities have never seen. She’ll be willing to offer me a lot, and maybe she’ll even appeal to family loyalty. I know she’ll figure that she knows my weak points. She is a fool. Can somebody loosen these bonds a little? They are wicked tight.”

“Nobody touch him,” Linda said. “Well, Billy, or Enrique, or Rohit, or Johnny, or Barr of Picalle—you sure do love to change identities, don’t you, my little copy—I’d lost touch with you after Melissa brought you to me all those years ago. You were such a lovely little boy in those days, and our time together was too short. Yes, you are correct, I wanted to rescue him. But not to help me regain power. I want to help him.”

“Help me? That’s….”

“Yes, Johnny. I know a way to reverse what’s happening to you. I can….”

“Nothing’s happening to me. At least not if someone doesn’t loosen these damned bonds.”

The captain stood up, looked at Linda, then walked over to Johnny and tweaked the power levels on his constraints. Then she turned and raised her hand.

“Don’t try it,” Linda said, as O’Flaherty froze in mid-motion. “I know about that plant of yours. Johnny, you and I….”

With a flash, one wall of the room dissolved, and a rush of cold, wet, night air filled the room. The break was filled with more black-clad fighters, followed by three huge gold monkeys. The fighters all had big flashguns, and as they leapt into the room, they began firing. I fell behind one of the couches, and as I did, I could see that a flash burst had seared Bael’s side.

To Be Continued

Published in: on November 27, 2010 at 7:16 am  Comments Off  

Episode Fifty-Eight, in which Hare goes to Bael’s assistance and discovers that the Captain has untold secrets

“Hare, they’re gone,” Bael said. “There’s no one here.”

“The flyers?” I asked.

“They’re still here. But they’re empty. No sign of struggle; they’re just floating here, empty. The Willi frame is gone as well.”

“Kral? Kli?”

Nothing.

“Get back here, Bael, now. Ship, what did you see?”

Silence at first, then, “Sorry, Hare, I’m still pulling myself together. Both Willi and Johnny took a lot out of me. I can bring a spacecraft into jump without a second thought, but running Willi and doing witchcraft on Johnny….”

“Ship….”

“Oh, yea. Let me review the visuals. Here, I’ll attach you.”

I could see the flyers, suspended as they were in the dark void behind the big image screens. But just barely, and only because I knew they were there. Kli had been sending out obfuscations, and he was good at it. I could make out Bael and me leaving with the Captain and Elibel, climbing down the screen frames. Then, not much as ship speeded the display. Ship pulled back the view, and I could see two enforcer flyers coming up near the screens.

There was a flash, then the visuals went white. Kli or the enforcers had upped the obfuscation.

“Any other spectra, Ship?”

“No, Hare. I can’t read anything. Infrared, even neutrino trace. Nothing.”

“I don’t think that’s Kli’s work; he doesn’t have the generators.”

“I’m broadening my look at the neighborhood. Maybe I can see something.”

“Bael?” I asked.

“I’m in the alley, Hare. I’ll be there in a moment.”

“Hare! In the alley. I can use a little help. Now.”

“Coming,”

“Elibel, stay here and watch these two. Captain, come with me.”

We were out the back door to find the alley quiet and empty. I ran for the nearest large street. Then I heard it, coming from the blackness of a small courtyard that led off the alley.

“You’re an off-worlder, aren’t you? You look Benzal….”

“No, she doesn’t. You can tell she’s Trinn. But she doesn’t look….”

“Be quiet, you two!” came a third voice in a loud whisper. “I think she must have some lucre or some passes or some credit slips or something. Who wants to check her out?”

They had surrounded her, four of them. She stood tall in the center, relaxed but wary. I would have wagered a Tyrillian grinich on her ability to handle them, but each held a large flashgun pointed at her, and one, the fellow who had demanded quiet, held a very nasty looking audio burner.

“I’m going to see if I can talk us out,” I said. “But if not, watch for my signal.”

“Excuse me,” I said. “Excuse me. We seem to have lost our way. Can you tell us…oh.”

The audio burner guy turned and looked at us. He was the largest of the four, with a scar that cut into his lower lip and pushed his mouth into a snarl. He cocked an eyebrow, brought the burner around to face us, and came toward us, moving with a limping swagger. His left eye moved up and down as he took us in, seemingly independent of the other.

“And who do we have here?” he said. He brought up the burner’s fat cold tip, and held it under my chin.

“We’re….”

“Let’s cut to the chase, Trieste,” he said. “You probably have not noticed, but we have a friend on that rooftop over there, with a pinpoint covering us all.”

I could see the dark figure now, crouched on the roof’s edge behind him.

“I don’t want to stay out here too long. Your host’s obfuscators covering this alley are good, but you never know who will happen along for a close-up view.”

“Who…?”

“Enough time for that later. I didn’t want to have to invade the Trinn house; it’s too well defended. I knew you’d come out if your friend here were in trouble. And so you did. Now we’re all going in together.”

“Do as he says?” Bael asked.

“I suppose so. We’ll just have to see what develops.”

The pinpoint shooter dropped from the roof to join us, a young woman clad in light armor. The man with the burner motioned us down the alley. I unlocked Kindness’s back gate, and we went inside. Our captor’s companions sped around us to fan out into the house, and before we’d reached the top of the stair, they’d reappeared. One held Kindness by the arm. Kindness looked startled but calm. We all funneled into the guest suite. Weapons were everywhere.

“As you requested, Captain,” the fellow with the burner said. His demeanor had changed. The limp was gone, as was the snarl. His stance was more erect, and his eyes seemed coldly clear.

“Thank you, Lieutenant,” the Captain said. “You always come through. I will take over now. Please sit down.” She gestured to us.

The door to the suite opened and a man and woman with weapons came in, followed by Basto, Rosalind, Kli, and Kral. Kral was carrying Johnny and Melissa, and the Willi frame. Two more of O’Flaherty’s men followed. She gestured for the newcomers to sit on nearby couches, while the guards arrayed themselves behind. Basto looked at me blankly; Kral seemed somewhere far away. The room was getting crowded.

She crossed the room to look at Johnny and Melissa. Both were bound; both were still out but seemed on the verge of coming around. O’Flaherty stood tall over the two slouching figures, her flimsy dress now worn and a little tattered. She rubbed her hand back across her shaved pate, and then put her finger to her mouth, as if in deep thought. She reached down and cupped her hand around Dermatt’s chin.

“Oh, Enrique, you look so peaceful and so handsome. I wanted to wait, but these people have forced my hand. I guess that’s for the best.” She dropped his head with such vigor that it nearly bounced against the wall. Then she stroked Melissa’s chin. “And my dear Melissa. I’ve been waiting to give you what you deserve.” She cuffed the side of Melissa’s head so that it bounced against Johnny’s. Then she turned to us.

“I have nothing against you and your people, Trieste. But you were taking too damned long, running around Forest battling enforcers. It became apparent to me that you all were in over your heads, so I called in some of my people. The Court of Chance, what’s left of it, has a lot of good people on Forest.”

“Plans?” Bael asked.

“None at this point. Let’s hear what she has to say.”

“Hare!” It was Ship. “Barnacles are attaching themselves to Largo’s hull. They’re not trying to get in, but they’ll be laying down a blanket soon. I’m trying to….”

Just then, Willi groaned. Her eyes fluttered open. Kral, who’d been holding the lifeless figure, put her gently on the couch.

“I’m glad you’ve rejoined us, Ship,” O’Flaherty said. “Have no fear. The Court of Chance has no designs on your Largo. But we want her immobilized and isolated until this little adventure is over.”

“What little adventure is that, exactly, Captain?” Bael asked.

The Captain walked over to a cupboard and picked up a bottle of pear brandy and a few glasses. She brought them to the low table in front of us. I poured a glass for Bael and one for myself. The Captain poured one for herself. No one else touched the bottle. O’Flaherty folded herself into a big chair.

“I could have killed this guy several times,” she said. “I’ve wondered if he half expected his Empress Emanuelle to try. But I wanted to wait. He and his people destroyed the Royal Court of Chance. For centuries, Chance had a mature, stable, and exciting culture. The whole planet was a garden filled with art, poetry, science, and the best technology. It was a wonderful place to be a part of, and to just be. Now the planet can barely feed its people, and chaos rules. The Court is scattered, its members in exile or dead.

“I know that Dermatt’s crowd has been destabilizing worlds across human space for some time now. But from what I can tell, they’ve been doing so for profit and power. On Chance, they did it for sport.

“So I could have killed this guy, but I didn’t. I needed to find out who he was working with. And I needed to find his relationship with Bresslaft. Yes, Bael, we know that your father is Bresslaft. But we’re still not sure about Bresslaft’s role in all this.

“But I want to know what you know about our Enrique. Tell me.” She sipped her brandy.

I gave her a summary of what the Schoolmaster and Linda had told us. I figured it couldn’t hurt.

“Do you know what he’s doing on Forest?”

“We think he has a hand in Melissa Bean’s fudge trade, but we also have word that he’s into something a lot bigger.”

“What?”

“We don’t know. Something dangerous and huge. That’s about it.”

“Hare,” Kli said, “there’s something I need to tell you about Johnny. I discovered it working for Linda. She’s been having me research her, but it turns out that I’ve been really researching Johnny. I….”

The room’s door opened with a bang. Two of the Captain’s men stumbled in, followed hard on their heels by a half-dozen heavily armed and armored fighters. These quickly spread into the room. One of them demanded that we surrender any weapons, and the rest prodded us with the tips of their flashguns. O’Flahery’s group slowly dropped their weapons. The rest of us had none, at least, none that we could produce and drop on the floor.

A large, heavyset woman appeared at the door. It was Linda Aphrodite Jones.

To Be Continued

Published in: on November 19, 2010 at 8:19 am  Comments Off  

Episode Fifty-Seven, in which help comes with kindness and a strange doll reappears

“Trouble,’ I said. “Five armed flyers….”

“Drop us and let me out, now!” Captain O’Flaherty shouted, opening the flyer lid as we dropped. “Stay where you are. I will take care of this.”

She disappeared around the edge of the cote. No sign of the flyers, yet.

“Basto, report?”

“Eluding pursuers, Hare. Kli’s been confusing them. We’ll head for number three when….”

“Hold, Basto. I’ll get back to you.”

We could see the flyers now, coming in fast but not bringing in any fire. Then without warning, they stopped, as if they had met an invisible wall. They hovered about half a klick toward the sea, as though waiting for something.

“I’ve been scanning channels, Hare,” Kli said, “and there’s no chatter about those flyers, unless it’s happening in places I’ve never seen. Jones gave me universal access.”

The Captain came around the corner. “I told you my implant’s good. The Royal Guards of Chance don’t like to leave much to…chance.”

“The flyers…?”

“Are immobile, without communication or weapons. They’ll stay like that until we release them.”

“I’ve seen something like that before,” I said. “Can you do the same thing to a group of craft? They’re pursuing….”

“Already done,” she said.

“Hare, we should move,” Bael said. “I still can’t raise Louis.”

“Basto, change of plan. Come here as fast as you can. I wish I had passthrough for these boats, but we don’t. When you’re close, we’ll move.”

“I can construct something like passthrough, Hare,” Kli said. “It will take a little work, essentially confusing every sensor that catches us, so that we become effectively undetectable.”

“How long?”

“A while. I’ll work on it.”

We waited in silence, Johnny and Melissa still out. Soon Basto’s craft showed up, hovering above. We lifted and headed toward the peak.

“I’m thinking we forget rendezvous three,” I said to Bael on our channel.

“So where?’”

“Down. Into the night markets. The storm has let up, and you can see, the streets have begun to fill. We’ll hide in plain sight.”

“Any suggestions as to a good landing spot?”

“We’re not landing. Go down by those big image screens and pull behind them.”

The screens loomed huge ahead of us. A pair of enhanced pigs, gigantic on the screen, were waltzing on a beach, waves breaking in the background, the sky pale yellow. Bael deftly swung around the endmost screen; Basto was right behind us. The screens stood out from a big wall that rose above one of the markets, and the space between was dark and empty. We hovered, tethered to the frame of one of the screens. Basto was behind us.

“Kral, can you carry Johnny and Melissa and climb down the screen?”

“Yea.Justiketakingmycubsintothepitoffire.”

I didn’t ask why one would take one’s cubs into a pit of fire.

“Kli, how’s that rough-made passthrough?”

“Not enough time, Hare. But as long as we keep the flyers back here, I can confuse any passing sensors. They’d have to fall over us before they knew we were here.”

“All right. Everyone, I admit that I don’t have much of a plan, but I’m thinking that our rendezvous spots are probably compromised. We don’t know where Louis is, and I don’t know if we can expect that he’ll be back. I’m wondering….”

“He’ll be back,” Elibel said. “I may hate him with every bit of my soul, but he’s an honorable guy. He’ll be back.”

“Maybe. We need to talk, Elibel.

“Anyway, my basic plan is to get out in the crowd below and find a place where we can set up a base so we can bring these two around and get on with this.”

“Can’t we just stay here?” Basto asked.

“The moment they wake, they’ll know we’re on the run, even if Kli jams their plants. We need a good, secluded spot. Bael and Elibel will come with me. We’ll be back soon. And for now, don’t use any comm, even your plants.”

Kral stood quietly in the open flyer, Johnny and Melissa flouncing like cloth dolls around them. Basto and Rosalind were in the other. Her hand was tight on his shoulder.

“I’d better come along.”

“Captain….”

“I have a few talents, Trieste. I think you may need them. I’m coming.”

“Suit yourself.”

The streets and squares below were packed, mostly with humans wandering across wet pavement, filtering through the narrow alleys between the market stalls. Lanterns at each stall created little islands of warmth in the dark damp night, with the stalls hustling everything from fraestian jewelry to the hairy snakes of Burgin’s Star.

We made our way through the crowds, moving quickly but seemingly without purpose. I’d pulled up some of the hotels in the neighborhood, but none met our needs.

“What?” Bael had stopped. She was staring at a small building. She began to walk toward it.

“Bael?”

“It’s Trinn. The sign above the door, it’s the crest one of the oldest families on Trinn. They’re my father’s cousins. I didn’t know any of them were here.”

“Should we be…?”

“Come on. I need to find out who this is.”

We mounted a steep stair, and Bael pressed the call panel.

“Yes?” A well-dressed holo figure, an older, self-assured man, appeared in front of the door.

“Hello, Kindness,” Bael said.

“Baelyae?”

“Yea, Kindness, it’s me. Can we come in?”

“Of course.”

Inside we found a lush green field of wildflowers, with a waterfall cascading over lichen-covered rocks into a small pond. Bright sunlight bathed the scene. A four-legged equine animal, a bit like a horse but with a mottled blue and red hide and a long spiked neck, drank from the pond. A Trinn male came from around the rocks. It was Kindness. He was smaller than his holo, and rather than the elaborate embroidered red jacket he’d had in the door holo, he wore an old white robe and a wide brown hat. A long staff completed his outfit. His face was darker than hers, but with similarly huge gold eyes. A small but obviously powerful receptor was affixed to his temple, just above his left ear, worn like a jewel.

He came over to us and enthusiastically hugged Bael. The two of them exchanged Trinn hand signals and each touched the other’s face. Bael explained our need for a refuge.

“Of course,” he said.  “I’ve just been having a stroll. I miss Trinn, and I like to spend as much time in this replica as I can. Come with me.”

He waved a hand and a door appeared before us. On the other side, a hallway led to a stair. Down the stair another passage led to a suite, with three sleeping rooms, a comfort room, and a washing room and a small kitchen.

“This should meet your needs, I hope.”

We agreed that it would.

“It is, of course, shielded and obfuscated in every way possible.” He showed us a back entrance that led to a small alley behind the house.

“Bring your companions in this way. It will be more discreet. And the alley is not monitored. I make sure of that.” Bael spoke with him for a moment. A sad look crossed his face, then he went up the stairs, with an assurance that we should let him know if we needed anything.

I took Bael aside. “He has no word of your father?”

“No,” she said. “Nothing at all.”

“Can you get the others?” I asked. “I want to keep the captain with me, and I think it’s time for me to talk with Elibel.”

“Yea. I won’t use the plant to talk unless absolutely necessary.”

“Understood. I’d guess that our channels are secure, but no use in taking chances.”

I cupped her cheek in my hand.

“Be careful,” I said. “We have no idea who knows what at this point, or how close the enforcers are.”

She took my face in her hand and kissed my cheek, and then she was gone.

“Elibel,” I said. “Let’s talk. What did you find?”

She had wearily sat in one of the big chairs. She’s been upping her adrenalin and pressing her reflexes, and it showed. She reached into her pouch and pulled out an old-fashioned book, Moby Dick. There were no notes, but words throughout were underlined, and many had numbers marked above them.

“I didn’t know what this was,” Elibel said, “but it looked important.”

“I don’t know, either. Maybe Kli….”

“It’s an ancient book code, a way of communicating secretly,” the Captain said. “Both people in the communication have the book, and one communicates the location of specific words to the other. A fast AI can break the code by analyzing the texts and editions of millions of books to find the right one, but that requires that a third party knows the code exists in the first place. That can be easily disguised. I’ll work with your Kli when he comes to see if we can figure this out.”

“What else, Elibel?’”

“I have a data dump that I can give you in a moment. There’s one other thing. When I was in Johnny’s back room, I found this.”

She pulled a small figure out of her bag. It was little doll, with drooping eyes and long ears. It was the same doll Enrique had been holding in his image. And it was exactly like the figure that Louis had put in the snow on Paradox, except that the chest featured a crescent, rather than a star. This was, Linda had said, a talisman of power among what she called the ringmasters. With all that had happened, I’d not found a chance to ask Louis what he was doing with one, or why he’d put it in the snow.

“Was there…?”

“Hare, they’re gone,” Bael said. “There’s no one here.”

To Be Continued

Published in: on November 8, 2010 at 6:19 am  Comments Off  
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