"I will."
After Chang ended the call, Leila said, "That woman in the holo-she"s not some escaped nutcase, is
she? This is something about your work and that jet."
Thomas knew she would see through any smoke screen he put up. He couldn"t give her secured information, so he said only, "It"s complicated."
Leila spoke to Jamie. "Moppet, could you get Grandpa"s aspirin out of the bathroom?"
Jamie"s eyes widened. "Grampy? Are you sick?"
Leave it to Leila to realize he had forgotten his aspirin. His daughter knew him too well. He was usually
organized about his medicines, but his routine had fallen apart these past weeks.
He kissed Jamie"s forehead. "I"m fine. Your mother worries about people she loves, like you and me. It"s part of being a mom."
"I can help." Jamie ran off, earnest with the errand.
When she had gone, Thomas regarded Leila. "What didn"t you want her to hear?"
"Doctor Enberg said you"ve had two heart attacks in the past week." Her voice had a ragged edge. "He
thinks you almost died."
"I"ll be all right." Thomas wished he could talk about it with her. With anyone. But he couldn"t, unless he counted the shrink he would probably have to see after Chang finished going over the text of his debriefing.
"Leila and I are just a few miles away," Karl said. "If you need anything, we can be here in minutes."
"Thanks." Thomas tilted his head toward the sec-tech posted discreetly by the stairway near the entrance foyer. "I have Hernandez, here, and Spaulding out front, too."
Leila tried to look stern, but a smile played around her lips. "And quit the s.e.x symbol stuff, okay?"
Thomas laughed softly. "Didn"t know your old man had it in him eh?" Neither had he, actually.
Jamie came trotting into the living room with a bottle of aspirin and a gla.s.s of water. Belatedly, it
occurred to Thomas that she had never seen the bottle before. To find the aspirin, she had to have read the label.
"Here, Grampy." She gave him the bottle.
"Thank you," he said. With Jamie watching, her gaze solemn, he took two aspirins.
"All better?" she asked.
"Just great, Moppet."
"Well." Leila tried to look bright. "Shall we eat lunch?"
As they went to the dining room, Thomas thought of what Alpha had told him about Charon"s EI. Could she have meant the Alley? He sincerely hoped not, because if Sunrise Alley was backing Charon, he doubted anything could stop them.
After his family left, the house felt empty to Thomas. Except for his guards. He appreciated their protection, but they didn"t say much. The guards Alpha had knocked out had recovered, and the investigation cleared them of wrongdoing, but they were no longer a.s.signed to Thomas. He had a total of four new ones, and they guarded him in shifts of two. Hernandez and Spaulding were large, muscular, and quiet, Hernandez with dark hair and Spaulding with yellow. They carried stasers on their belts and rifles over their shoulders. They were so discreet he could almost forget they were there. Almost.
He sat at his console and read the Banshee article. It didn"t say much, just that low fuel had forced him to land at BWI. An Air Force spokesman had given out the story that an F-42 pilot had diverted due to the weather. Precedent existed for a general taking up a jet even three decades ago, when the Air Force Chief of Staff, General John P. Jumper, qualified in the F-22 Raptor. The article referred to Alpha as Thomas"s backseater. Although few women had been fighter pilots in his youth, it happened enough now that she didn"t raise too many questions. The rest of the article described how security cleared out the reporters and confiscated their cameras. Apparently the fellow who took this holo transmitted it to his girlfriend"s glove before he lost his equipment. Nothing in the article, however, explained why a director from the NIA was up in an armed fighter at three in the morning.
Thomas moved his fingers through the holo. In it, he looked younger, brash, and full of life. That wasn"t
a tired, lonely old man. It wasn"t him, either-but it could have been if he had accepted Alpha"s offer.
He had done what he had to do. But part of him would always wonder what he had given up for the sake of his conscience.
XVI: The Spectral Code
On Thomas"s first day home from the hospital, he visited with his family and slept. During his second day, he slept, called C.J., and did what work he could manage from home. The publicity died down quickly and Chang decided to let him stay in his house, with the understanding that his guards would remain with him at all times and he wouldn"t even go for a walk unless he cleared it with security.
On the third day, Chang sent Major O"Reilly to see him. Thomas and the major sat in the family room, Thomas in an armchair and O"Reilly on the sofa. Acutely self-conscious, Thomas was tempted to make a dumb joke, asking O"Reilly if they should switch seats, given that O"Reilly was on the couch instead of Thomas. He managed to restrain himself.
O"Reilly was also the psychiatrist a.s.signed to Turner Pascal"s case. On the basis of his reports and Thomas"s recommendations, the Air Force had released Pascal into Sam Bryton"s custody. Neither Sam nor Pascal had wanted to see O"Reilly, and now Thomas understood how they felt. He didn"t want to discuss his private life, either. Unfortunately, he had to go through with this.
"You"ve had quite a ride," O"Reilly said.
That remark had far too many double meanings. Thomas said only, "Apparently so."
O"Reilly smiled slightly. "This is where I say, "Do you want to talk about it?" Then you portray yourself
in the best possible light, while wishing you were anywhere but here."
Thomas wondered if mind reading was included these days in medical degrees. "I"m ready to cooperate, Doctor."
O"Reilly settled back, his face friendly, his posture attentive but not tense. "Relax. You"re not under
investigation."
Thomas raised his eyebrows. "Sure I am. Alpha wants a status that requires we decide whether she is a
person or a construct. I"ve recommended we grant it to her, that to do otherwise would amount to slavery. Obviously, my mental state in making that determination will come into question."
"Well, she did kidnap and nearly kill you."
"Yes."
"And slept with you," O"Reilly added.
At least he didn"t beat around the bush. "Yeah," Thomas said. "And slept with me."
"Do you think we have reason to question your judgment?"
"Yes."
Surprise flickered on O"Reilly"s face. He had probably expected Thomas to build his case for why his
sleeping with Alpha didn"t negate his judgment. Thomas knew he should do exactly that, but he couldn"t make himself discuss something so private.
After a moment, O"Reilly said, "Why should we question it?"
Thomas had asked himself the same question many times since his return home. "First she was going to kill me. Then love me. Then kill me. Then love me. That would wreak havoc with anyone"s mind.
Erratic positive reinforcement is one of the most powerful coercive tools known."
"Do you feel coerced?"
"No."
"Why not?"
"She gave me a choice," Thomas said.
"It was a h.e.l.l of a choice."
He let out a long breath. "Yes."
O"Reilly rubbed his chin. "Were you hoping, if you slept with her, that she would slip up in guarding you
or give you information about Charon?"
"I"m not sure," Thomas admitted. "Maybe." He wanted to leave it at that, but he made himself go on.
"The first time it just happened. After that, she wanted to convince me to go with her."
"Did you consider her offer?"
"h.e.l.l, yes."
"But you didn"t go."
Thomas shrugged. "I have to live with myself."
"Did you try to get information out of her?"