Her little computer held only its software. Nothing stored in files with mysterious names and nothing new in the files she"d initiated. No mysterious lumps in her clothing, nothing tucked into a pocket of her dufiel. Even the clutter was still there. She wondered why no one had tossed out the copy of the program from Bitter Destinies or the baggage claim receipt from Diplo or the ragged sc.r.a.p on which she"d jotted the room number on Liaka where the medical team would a.s.semble. An advertising card from a dress shop she"d never had time to visit. She couldn"t even remember if that was from before Ireta or after. Another torn sc.r.a.p of paper with the numbers of the cases that needed to be re-entered on cubes, the ones Bias had thrown that fit about. But nothing resembling Zebara"s promised evidence. Finally, frustrated, she threw herself into the softly padded chair and glared at the door. With suspicious quickness, it opened.
She did not recognize the old man who stood there. He clearly knew her, but waited, at ease, until she acknowledged him with a nod.
"May I come in?" he asked then.
As if I could stop you, she thought, but tried for a gracious smile and said, "Of course. Do come in."
Her voice carried more edge than she intended, but ft didn"t bother him. He shut the door carefully behind him as she tried to figure out who, or what, he was.
Although he wore no uniform, she felt a uniform would look more natural on him. With that bearing, he would be an officer. At that age, for his silvery hair and fined brow put him into his sixties at least, he should have stars. Tall, much taller than average, piercing blue eyes. If his hair had been yellow or black or brown... a warm honey-brown...
It was always a shock, and it was going to stay a shock, as it had with Zebara. At least this man was healthy, his white hair a sign of age, but not decay.
"Admiral Coromell," she murmured softly. He smiled, the same charming smile she remembered on a much younger face. Not in his sixties, but upper eighties, at feast. "Your father?" He must be dead, but...
"He^ died about two decades ago, painlessly in his sleep," Coromell said. "And you have survived another long sleep! Remarkable."
Not remarkable, Lunzie thought, but disgusting. "I"m beginning to think myself that those superst.i.tious sail-Ore were right! I"m a Jonah."
He snorted, a curiously youthful snort. "Ireta"s a planet. It doesn"t count. My dear, much as I"d like to ^Chat with you and play verbal games, I can"t allow either of us the luxury. We have a problem."
Lunzie contented herself with a raised eyebrow. As jfcr as she was concerned they had many more than one problem. He could say what he would. ;t "It"s your descendant."
She had not expected that. "Descendant?" Fiona must Jdead by now. Who could he mean? But of course! ak?" He nodded. She felt a surge of fear. "What"s led to her? Where is she?"
"That"s what we don"t know. She was here. I mean, on FedCentral, while I was on leave over on Six, hunting. Unfortunately. Now she"s gone. Disappeared. She and an Iretan native, by the name of Aygar..."
"Aygar!"
Lunzie felt foolish, repeating it, but could think of nothing else to say. Why was Sa.s.sinak going anywhere with Aygar? Unless she... but Lunzie did not believe that for a moment. Sa.s.sinak had never, for one moment, thought of anything but her ship first and Fleet second. She would not take off on a recreational jaunt with Aygar when Tanegli"s trial was coming up.
"According to the ranking officer aboard the Zaid-Dayan, Arly..." He paused to see if she knew the name. She nodded. "Commander Sa.s.sinak sent you to Diplo to some source you knew about, to get information on Diplo"s connection to the Iretan mess. Is that right?"
"Yes, it is."
Quickly, Lunzie outlined Sa.s.sinak"s thoughts, and her decision to offer to go to Diplo.
"I was best suited, in many ways..."
"I wouldn"t have thought so, not after your experience with the heavyworlders on Ireta," said Coromell. "The last person who should have had to go..
"But I"m glad I did."
She stopped, wondering if she should tell him everything, and filled in with a brief account of her retraining on Liaka and the early part of the expedition.
"I presume, then, that you do have the information you sought?" When she didn"t answer at once, he c.o.c.ked his head and grinned, "Or did they catch you snooping and send you home in a coldsleep pod just to frustrate us?"
"I... I"m not sure."
He waited, quiet but curious, in just the att.i.tude of the experienced interrogator who knows the suspect will incriminate herself, given enough rope. She did not want to explain Zebara to a Fleet admiral, especially not this Fleet admiral, but there was no other way. How best to do it? She remembered Sa.s.sinak, chewing out one of the junior officers who had tried to conceal a mistake... "When all else fails, Mister, tell Ae truth." She didn"t think she"d made that big a mistake, but she"d still better tell the truth, and all of tt- It took longer than she expected. Although Coromell didn"t ask questions until she finished, she could tell by his expression when she"d lost him and needed to back-back and explain. And her leftover indignation at Bias, plus a natural reluctance to go into her emotional ties to Zebara, kept her ranting at the team leader"s prudery far too long. At last she came to an end, trailing off with, "... and then I felt terribly sleepy in that stuffy car and, when I woke up, I was here."
A long pause, during which Lunzie endured the gaze of his brilliant blue eyes. Age had not fogged them at all. She felt they were seeing things she had not said. She had not said anything about the opera Bitter Destinies except that Zebara had taken her to an opera. He sighed, at last, the first thing he"d done that sounded old.
"So. And did Zebara give you the information he promised? Or will you go to Tanegli"s trial with your testimony alone?"
"He hadn"t when I left his home," Lunzie said. "He said I was to get it by messenger. And then... it was over."
"But he had you put in coldsleep, and safely aboard a transport that brought you here in a cargo of muskie wool carpets. And I hear that was quite a scene, when Customs found a metallic return on the scan and un-rolled the whole mess of them. Your little pod came rolling out like... Who was that Old Earth queen? Guinevere or Catherine or Cleopatra... someone like that. Rolled in a carpet to present herself. Anyway. So you don"t know, you, whether he pa.s.sed that information with you.
Lunzie shook her head. "I"ve looked and found nothing. Surely your people looked.
"I"m afraid they did." His lips pursed. "We found nothing we recognized. We thought perhaps when you woke, you would know what to look for. You don"t?"
"No. If he included it, I don"t recognize it."
"He gave you nothing at ail?" Coromell"s voice had a querulous edge now, age roughening it with impatience. He gave me a very good time, Lunzie thought to herself, and a lot of worries.
"Nothing." Then she frowned. He started to speak but she waved him to silence. "No, I think he did after all."
Quickly, she went to the locker and pulled out the duffel, pawing through it. She had not kept her copy of the Bitter Destinies program. She had not felt she needed it to remember that powerful work and she had not wanted to chance being teased by the team members if they saw her with it. She had not even been sure that Diplo customs would let her take it out. So Zebara must have put that program among her things. She found it, and brought it to Coromell.
"This isn"t mine. I threw mine away. And this is signed. Look! All the singers autographed it."
Thick dark ink, in many different calligraphies, most of them extravagantly individual. Coromell took it gingerly from her hand.
"Ah! Perfect for a rather old-fashioned technology. It would take a dot only this size," and he pointed to one of the ellipsis dots between a performer"s name and role, "to hold a great deal of information. We"ll have to see He stood, then shook his head at her. "I"m sorry, dear Lunzie, but you must stay here, unknown, awhile longer. Without Sa.s.sinak, we must not lose your testimony, no matter what this gives us."
"But I..."
He had moved even as he spoke, more swiftly and fluidly than she would have supposed possible, and abruptly she faced a closed door again.
"Blast you!" she said, to that impa.s.sive surface, "I am not a stupid child, even if you are an arrogant old goat."
That got the response it deserved! Nothing. But she felt better. She felt considerably better when Coromell returned very shortly to report that the program had none of the expected microdots.
"I find myself annoyed with your Zebara," he said, dapping the program down on the table between them...If there"s a message in this thing, no one"s found it yet. Do you have any idea how many little specks there are in an opera program? Every single person credited with anything in the production has a row of them, and we had to check every one." "But it has to be this," said Lunzie. She picked up the program, and flipped through it. She still thought the cover design looked pretentious. Even with heavy worlder pride at full blast on this thing, she noticed that the opera had needed corporate sponsorship. The ads covered the inside front and back pages. Then came photographs of the lead singers, then scenes from the opera itself, then the outline of the libretto, and the east list. More photographs, an interview with the conductor. She realized she was reading the Diplo dialect much better than she ever had. It almost seemed natural. She found herself humming the aria of the suicide who refused to eat even re-synthesized meat. Coromell looked at her oddly.
"I don"t know..." she said. She didn"t want to speak Standard! She wanted to sing! Sing? Something fluttered in her mind like great feathered wings and the slang meaning of "sing" popped up, along with the anagram "sign." Suddenly she knew. "Sing a song of sixpence... sing a sign... good heavens, that is so devious a corkscrew would get lost in him."
"What!" Coromell fairly barked at her, his patience looking now very like his boisterously bossy father. "It"s here, but it"s... it"s in my head. It"s a key... implant, keyed to this program. I think... Just be patient!"
She looked a bit longer, let her mind drift with the forces. Zebara had known she was a Disciple. had eased his pain, she had touched his mind just a and his heart somewhat more. She looked on the program, not knowing exactly what she was to find, but knowing she would find it. On the final page, the star"s sprawling signature half covered her face, her broad bosom, the necklace... the necklace Zebara had... had not given her. So he said. The necklace... nearly priceless, he"d said. She"d said. A gift of the former lieutenant governor"s son... no... that was not the link.
The necklace Zebara had not given her... her! He had not given her a necklace, and the necklace he had not given her lay innocently among her things. Cheap but a good design, she"d bought it... she"d bought it before the Ireta voyage, hadn"t she? She couldn"t remember, now. Did it matter? It did.
She snapped out of that near-trance and without a word to Coromell dove back into her duffel, coming up with the necklace. An innocent enough accessory, itemized among her effects on her way into Diplo. She remembered filling out the form. Not expensive enough to require duty on any world, but handy for formal occasions, a pattern of linked leaves in coppertoned metal, with streaks of enamel in blues and greens.
She laid it on the table, and pushed Coromell"s hand back when he reached for it. She gave it her whole attention. Did it have the same number of links? She wasn"t sure. Was it the same clasp? She wasn"t sure. She prodded it with a finger, hoping for inspiration. She had worn it that last day. It had caught on something in Zebara"s house. That fluffy pillow? He had unsnagged it for her, unhooking the clasp and refasten-ing it later. She remembered being afraid of his hands so near her neck, and hating herself for that fear. The clasp it had now screwed together, making a little cylinder. Before, it had had an elegant hook, shaped like a tendril of the vine those leaves were taken from.
"The clasp," she said, quietly, without looking up at Coromell. "It"s the clasp. It"s not the same."
"Shall I?" he asked, reaching.
She shook her head. "No. I want to see." Carefully, as if it might explode for she felt a trickle of icy fear, she took it up and worked at the tiny clasp. Most such things unscrewed easily, two or three turns. This one was stuck, cross-threaded or not threaded at all. She heard Coromell shift restlessly in his chair. "Patience," she said.
Discipline fbcussed her attention. The real join was not in the middle, where a groove suggested it, but at the end. It required not a twist, but a pull-a straight pull, pinching the last link hard-and out came a delicate pin with its tip caught in a lump of something dark. She pulled the pin free and held on her hand that tiny, waxy cylinder.
"This has to be it. Whatever it is."
What it was, she heard later, was a complete record of Diplo"s dealings with the Paradens and the Seti for the past century: names, dates, codes, the whole thing. Everything that Zebara had promised, and more.
"Enough," Coromell said, "to bring their government down... even revoke their charter."
"No." Lunzie shook her head. "It"s not just the heavy-worlders. They were the victims first. We can"t take vengeance on the innocent, the ones who aren"t part of it"
"You know something I don"t?" He was giving her a look that had no doubt quelled generations of junior officers. Lunzie felt what he intended her to feel, but fought against it.
"I do," she said firmly, against the pressure of the stars on his uniform and his age. "I"ve been there myself. I"ve been to their opera!"
"Opera!" That came out as a bark of amus.e.m.e.nt.
Lunzie glared and he choked it back. "Their very, very beautiful opera, Admiral Coromell. With singers better than I"ve heard in most systems. Composed by heavyworlders to dramatize poems written by heavyworlders, and for all its political bias, we don"t come off very well. Tell me! What do you know about the early settlement of Diplo?"
He shrugged, clearly baffled at the intent of the question. "Not much. Heavyworlders settled it because ft was too dense for the rest of us without protective It"s cold, isn"t it? And it was one of the first pure heavyworlder colony worlds. It still is the richest." The lift of his eyebrows said so what?
"It"s cold, yes." Lunzie shivered, remembering that cold, and what it had meant. "And in the first winter, the colonists had heavy losses."
He shrugged again. "Colonies always have heavy casualties at first."
She was furious. Zebara had reason for his bitterness, his anger, his near despair! Coromell had no reason for this complacency but ignorance.
"Forty thousand casualties, Admiral, out of ninety thousand."
"What?" That had his attention. He stared at her.
"Forty thousand men, who died of starvation and cold because their death was the only hope for the women and children to survive. And even so, not all of them did. Because no one bothered to warn the colonists about the periodic long winter cycles, or provide food for them."
"Are you... are you sure? Didn"t they complain to FSP?".
"To the best of my knowledge, it happened, and what I was told, what I believe is also on that chip along with Paraden and Seti conspiracy, is why the FSP never heard about it officially. Major commercial consortia, Admiral, found it inexpedient to bother about Diplo. And then, because the colonists had turned in desperation to eating indigenous animals, these same consortia threatened to have Fleet down on them. Blackmailed them, to put it simply. The whole long conspiracy, the conscription of heavyworlders into private military forces by Paraden and Parchandri families... all that results from the original betrayal."
"But why didn"t anyone ever tell us? It"s been decades... centuries... no one can keep a secret that longl"
"They can if they"re frightened enough. Once begun, it suited the power-hungry on both sides to keep Diplo"s population convinced that the FSP would be nothing but trouble. Think of it. Those the consortia dealt with had power. Had that power as long as those they ruled believed no one else could intervene, or would intervene, to bring justice. These chose others, equally ambitious and unscrupulous, to follow them. It was to no one"s advantage in the Diplo government or the guilty families to have Diplo citizens confiding in the FSP.
No one could come out of the Diplo educational system believing FSP would do anything but interdict the planet for meat-eating and lack of population control." She paused, watching Coromell"s foce change as he thought about it. "Of course, they do eat meat, and they don"t control their population." His eyes widened again. "You don"t mean? You"re serious! But that means..." "It means they remember that only meat-eating saved them, and that they"d promised the men who died to carry on their names. They are as serious, as devout, I suppose you"d say, as any upright citizen of FSP who gags at the thought of eating a sentient being. They"ve broken the law, and they expect all of us to despise them. But they see the law as a weapon which nearly killed them all-for some died rather than eat the muskie and which we use merely to keep them down." "But not all the heavyworlder troublemakers are from Diplo."
"No, that"s true. Though I have no direct evidence, I would imagine that the one place the secret did get out was to other heavyworlders in the form of a warning. Some would believe it, and some wouldn"t, And so you have Separationists, Integrationists, the whole mess that we have here."
"I think I see." He stared past her for a long moment. "If you"re right, Lunzie-and I must say you isent a compelling case-then we are dealing not with today"s conspirators, but with long-developed out of the past. If only Sa.s.sinak hadn"t disappeared!" "And you still haven"t told me how that happened." Because we don"t know." Coromell smacked his fist Uto his other hand. "I wasn"t here and no one admits to anything about it. She told her Weapons Offi-that she had an appointment with me, that she was ig Aygar along, and, in essence, not to wait up for her. No one on my staff knows of any such appointment. She had been informed that I was on leave and was not due back for three more days. The last anyone saw-anyone whose accounts I trust-she and Aygar walked off the down shuttle and into the usual crowd at the shuttleport Pa.s.sed customs, their prints are on file, and then nothing."
Chapter Thirteen.
FSP Cruiser Zaid-Dayan, FedCentral Sa.s.sinak frowned at the carefully worded communication. She did not need to consult the codebook to figure out what it meant. It was in the common senior officers" slang that made its origin very definitely Fleet. Almost impossible to fake slang and the topical references. She had used something like this herself, though rarely. Not something a junior would send to a senior but a senior"s discrete way of hinting to the more alert junior.
If she could believe a senior admiral would want a clandestine meeting, would return from leave early, this would be a likely way to signal the officer he wanted to meet. Padalyan reefed her sails, indeed! The reference to the ship she"d served on before the Zaid-Dayan almost removed her doubts. But it meant leaving the Zaid-Dayan again, and she had not expected to go back onplanet until Coromell returned just before tf"e trial. There was nothing illegal about it, with her ship secured in the FedCentral Docking Station. She still didn"t like it.
If Ford had been here... but Ford was not only not he had not reported anything, anything at all. She should have heard from him by now. Another worry. It had seemed so neat, months ago, sending Ford to find out about the Paradens from a social contact, and Lunzie to Diplo, and dumping Dupaynil on the Sett Her mouth quirked. She would bet on Dupaynil to come through with something useful, even if be did figure out his orders were faked. He was too smart for his own good, but a challenge would be good for him.
She realized she was tapping her stylus on the console and made herself put it down. She could think of a dozen good reasons why neither Ford nor Lunzie had shown up yet. And two dozen bad ones. She flicked on one of the screens, calling up a view of the planet below. The fact was that she simply did not want to leave her ship. Here she felt safe, confident, in control. Down on a planet-any planet-she felt lost and alone, a potential victim.
Once recognized, the fear itself drove her to action. She wasn"t a frightened child any more. She was a Fleet commander who would finish with more than one star on her shoulders. Earned, not inherited. And she could not afford to be panicked by going downside. Admirals couldn"t spend all their time in s.p.a.ce. Besides, she had promised to share her memories of Abe with that remarkable designer woman.
Even after all these years, thinking of Abe made her feel safer. She shook her head at herself, then went to the bridge to give Arly her orders.
"I can t tell you more than what I know," she said, keeping her voice low. She trusted her crew, but no sense in their having to work to keep secrets. "Coro-mell wants a meeting out of his office. I"m taking Aygar along as being less obvious than one of the crew. Don"t know how long it will take, or when well surface, but stay alert. If you can, monitor their longscans. I have an uneasy feeling that something may be out there, "way out, and if that happens, you know what to do."
Arly looked unhappy. "I"m not breaking the Zaid-Dayan out of here without you, Captain."
" Don"t expect you"ll have to. But it won"t do me any good if someone slams the planet while I"m on it. I"ll carry a comunit, of course. Buzz me on the ship"s line if Ford or Lunzie show up."
"You"re wearing a link?"
"No! They"re too easy for someone else to track. I know the corn"s signal is hard to home on, but it"s better than advertising where the admiral is, since he wants the meeting secret."
"Are you sure?"
"Sure enough to risk my neck." Sa.s.sinak glanced around the bridge, and leaned closer. "To tell you the truth, somethings got my hackles up straight, but I can"t tell what. Ford"s overdue. Lunzie, too. I don"t know. Something. I hate to leave the ship, but I can"t ignore the message. Just be careful."
"And you." Arly snapped a salute. Sa.s.sinak went back to her quarters and changed into civilian clothes, as requested. Another worry; in civilian clothes, she had no excuse for the "ceremonial" weapons she could carry in uniform.
She was aware that her bearing would hint Fleet to any really good observer. Why not simply wear her uniform? But orders, a.s.suming these to be genuine, were orders. She stopped by her office and picked up the things she could carry in one of the pouches currently in style. Aygar should be waiting at the access port. He, at least, had sounded eager enough to go Back to the planet. Of course, he had spent only these few months in s.p.a.ce; he was a landsman at heart.
She was surprised to see Ensign Timran waiting with ;"Aygar when she came into the access bay. She nodded a answer to his swift salute. "Ensign." That should send him away quickly. To her Surprise, it did not. Her brows raised. "Captain.. ma"am..."
"Yes, Ensign?"
"Is there any chance that... uh... that Aygar and I could..." ^ Now what was this?
Spit it out, Ensign, and hurry. We have a shuttle to "Could go downside together? I mean, you"re going to be busy, and he really needs someone along who..." She saw in his face that her expression had changed. "And just how do you know that I will be "busy"?" He reddened and said nothing, but his eyes flicked to Aygar. Sa.s.sinak sighed.
"Ensign, if our guest has shared confidential information, you should have the wit to pretend he did not. You surely heard the announcement I made: no liberty, no leaves. Not my decision, but FedCentral regulations. They don"t trust Fleet here. And, if by some mischance you did end up on the surface, that very distrust could get you in serious trouble."