Whipping Star

Chapter 26

"Precisely."

"Oh, my G.o.d," he whispered. "When did you scan that?"

"It is your beloved, you"re sure?" Abnethe asked.

"It"s . . . it"s our honeymoon," he whispered. "I even know the day. Friends took me to visit the seadome, but she didn"t enjoy swimming and stayed behind."

"How do you know the actual day?"



"The flambok tree at the edge of the clearing: It bloomed that day, and I missed it. See the umbrella flower?"

"Oh, yes. Then you"ve no doubt about the authenticity of this scene?"

"So you had your snoopers staring at us even then?" he rasped.

"Not snoopers. We are the snoopers. This is now.

"It can"t be! That was almost forty years ago!"

"Keep your voice down, or she"ll hear you."

"How can she hear me? She"s been dead for . . ."

"This is now, I tell you! f.a.n.n.y Mae?"

"In person of Furuneo, concept of now contains relative connectives," the Caleban said. "Nowness of scene true."

Furuneo shook his head from side to side.

"We can pluck her from that yacht and take both of you to a place the Bureau will never find," Abnethe said. "What do you think of that, Furuneo?"

Furuneo wiped tears from his cheeks. He was aware of the sea"s ozone smell, the pungency of the flambok blossom. It had to be a recording, though. Had to be.

"If it"s now, why hasn"t she seen us?" he asked.

"At my direction f.a.n.n.y Mae masks us from her sight. Sound, however, will carry. Keep your voice down."

"You"re lying!" he hissed.

As though at a signal, the young woman rolled over, stood up, and admired the flambok. She began humming a song familiar to Furuneo.

"I think you know I"m not lying," Abnethe said. "This is our secret, Furuneo. This is our discovery about the Calebans."

"But . . . how can . . ."

"Given the proper connectives, whatever they are, even the past is open to us. Only f.a.n.n.y Mae of all the Calebans remains to link us with this past. No Taprisiot, no Bureau, nothing can reach us there. We can go there and free ourselves forever."

"This is a trick!" he said.

"You can see it isn"t. Smell that flower, the sea."

"But why . . . what do you want?"

"Your a.s.sistance in a small matter, Furuneo. "

"How?"

"We fear someone will stumble on our secret before we"re ready. If, however, someone the Bureau trusts is here to watch and report -- giving a false report . . ."

"What false report?"

"That there"ve been no more floggings, that f.a.n.n.y Mae is happy, that . . ."

"Why should I do that?"

"When f.a.n.n.y Mae reaches her . . . ultimate discontinuity, we can be far away and safe -- you with your beloved. Correct, f.a.n.n.y Mae?"

"Truthful essence in statement," the Caleban said.

Furuneo stared through the jumpdoor. Mada! She was right there. She had stopped humming and was coating her body with a skin-protective. If the Caleban moved the door a little closer, he knew he"d be able to reach out and touch his beloved.

Pain in Furuneo"s chest made him aware of a constriction there. The past!

"Am . . . I down there somewhere?" he asked.

"Yes," Abnethe said.

"And I"ll come back to the yacht?"

"If that"s what you did originally."

"What would I find, though?"

"Your bride gone, disappeared."

"But . . ."

"It would be thought that some creature of the sea or the jungle killed her. Perhaps she went swimming and . . ."

"She lived thirty-one years after that," he whispered.

"And you can have those thirty-one years all over again," Abnethe said.

"I . . . I wouldn"t be the same. She"d . . ."

"She"d know you."

Would she really? he wondered. Perhaps -- yes. Yes, she"d know him. She might even come to understand the need behind such a decision. But he saw quite clearly that she"d never forgive him. Not Mada.

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