Three: 3048 AD Operation Dragon, Blake City
Starport
The terminal’s sounds crowded benRabi. The smells and
swirling colors dazzled him. The nervousness started.
It always did at the mouth of the lion’s den. Or, this
time, the dragon’s lair. The briefing tapes had claimed that
starfish, seen in space, resembled dragons two hundred kilometers
long.
He shuffled forward with the line, finally reached the table.
One of the Seiner men asked a few questions. He replied numbly.
“Sign and thumbprint this please, Mr. benRabi. Give it to
the lady with the rest of your paperwork.”
Shaking, he completed his contract. The Seiner girl at
table’s end smiled as she shoved his papers into the maw of
her reducing machine. She said, “Just through that door and
take a seat, please. The shuttle will be ready shortly.”
He went, bemused. That pale Seiner girl, with her pale hair and
harsh cheekbones, reminded him of Alyce, his Academy love. That was
not good. More than a decade had passed, and still the pain could
penetrate his armor.
Was that why he had trouble with women? Every affair since had,
inevitably, fallen into emotional chaos. Each had become a duel
with swords of intentional hurt.
But there had been no prior affairs to stand comparison. Maybe
he was just consistent in picking unstable women.
He took a chair in the waiting room. Out came the tattered
notebook, a traveling companion of many years. This time, he swore,
he would finish Jerusalem.
The unbreakable fetters which bound down the Great Wolf Fenrir
had been cunningly forged by Loki from these: The footfall of a
cat, the roots of a rock, the beard of a woman, the breath of a
fish, the spittle of a bird.
—The Prose Edda
Yes, the more he thought about it, the more he was sure that was
the best possible opening quote. It had an indisputable
universality.
Every life had its Loki capable of binding it with chains as
tenuous but strong.
Those wormwood memories of Academy returned. They were
indestructible memorabilia of an affair with a fellow midshipman
who had been the daughter of the Vice Commandant and the
granddaughter of the Chief of Staff Navy.
He had been an idiot. A pig-iron, chocolate-plated fool. How had
he made it through? In the context of Alyce, he still thought his
survival a miracle.
And the cost? What if he had not, as ordered, dropped the
affair? What if he had persisted? She had demanded that he do so,
defying what to him had been terrifying concentrations of
authority.
To her those people had been family. Mother and grandfather. To
him they had appeared as behemoths of power.
And the night beast with guilt-fangs longer than any of his
other haunts: What of the child? Come on, he grumbled at himself. What is this? Let’s ditch
the memories and romantic nonsense. He was a grown man. He should
get back into Jerusalem; that would be a blow against the dread
empire of his soul.
One of his favorites, from Pope’s Dunciad:
Lo! thy dread empire, Chaos, is restored; Light dies before thy
uncreating word . . .
“Ladies and gentlemen.”
He looked up. What now? Ah. A last-chance-to-get-out
briefing.
It was conducted by an officer with a voice so infuriatingly
scratchy that it had to be technically augmented. “We
don’t want you on our ship. You’re not our kind of
people,” the officer said for openers.
“Why’re you here? What are your motives?” Good questions, benRabi thought.
“Two reasons. You’re either bemused by the Seiner
myth, which is a holonet fabrication, or you’re here spying.
I’ll let you in on the secret now. This isn’t going to
be any romantic adventure. And you’re not going to get at any
information. All we’re going to give you is a lot of hard
work inside a culture unlike any you’ve ever known.
We’re not going to ease you into our world. We’re not
going to coddle you. We don’t have the time.”
The man was deliberately trying to upset them. Moyshe wondered
why.
“We’ve assembled you for one reason. It’s the
only way we can meet next year’s harvest quotas.”
BenRabi had a sudden feeling. A premonition, he thought. The man
had more than harvests on his mind. Some worry, or fear, was
racketing around his brain. Something terrible and big had him half
spooked.
Admiral Beckhart liked using benRabi because he had these
intuitions.
Moyshe also sensed a ghost of disappointment in the speaker,
along with a taint of distaste for landsmen. He spoke as if tasting
the sour flavor of betrayal.
It was inarguable that these Seiners were desperate. They would
never have sought outside technicians otherwise.
BenRabi quelled a surge of compassion.
The speaker’s home was a harvestship somewhere out in the
Big Dark. To survive it needed a massive input of competent
technicians. The man was sour because of all of
Confederation’s billions, only two hundred people had come
forward. And most of those could be considered suspect.
The Seiner fumbled in the pockets of his antiquated tweed
jacket. BenRabi wondered if the man was an Archaicist. His
preconceptions of the Seiners did not include the possibility that
they were faddists too.
The man produced a curious little instrument. He thrust it
between his teeth. He gripped it with his right thumb and
forefinger, puffing while he held a small flame over its bowl. Only
after he had begun expelling noxious clouds did benRabi realize
what was happening.
“A pipe!” he muttered. “What the hell?”
Tobacco stench assailed his nostrils. “I can’t believe
this much bad taste.” He shuddered.
His reaction was not unique. His companions buzzed. A woman rose
and started to leave, then gagged and returned to her seat. Even
Mouse looked appalled.
How many of these crude horrors lay in ambush ahead? This was
carrying Archaicism to the point of boorishness.
Much as the pipe disgusted him, benRabi applauded the psychology
behind its appearance. The man was easing them in after all. The
impact of later cultural shocks would be blunted a little.
“As I said,” the Seiner continued, once his pause
had his audience squirming, “there’re spies here. Spy
is a nasty word, I know. And spying is a nasty business. But a
realist recognizes the existence of espionage, and we’re all
realists here. Aren’t we? Espionage is all around us today.
We’re drenched in it. Up to our heinies in it. Because almost
anybody with any power at all will do almost anything to get
control of a starfish herd.”
He assayed a little smile. It mocked them all. He was doing a
show, putting on the pompous ass to prod somebody into reacting.
BenRabi sensed a quiet, self-assured competence behind the
showmanship. In fact, there was something about the man that
screamed Security Officer.
“You spies won’t learn a thing. Till your contracts
terminate you’ll see nothing but the guts of a ship. Even
then you’ll see only what we want you to see, when we want
you to see it. Everybody. Hear this. Security rules will be
observed at all times. That’s the Eleventh Commandment.
Engrave it on your souls—if you have any. Even a slight
irregularity might spook us into hasty reaction. Since we’re
not sure what information the spy-masters would consider valuable,
we’re going to do our damnedest not to give away anything at
all.”
BenRabi grimaced. Was the fool trying to impress them with
Seiner paranoia and xenophobia? He could rave for a week and not
intimidate the professionals.
“I reiterate: outside agents simply won’t be given a
chance to contact anybody who might possess critical information.
There’ll be penalties for trying to reach such people. Am I
making myself clear?”
Someone made a snide remark.
The speaker responded, “You’ve got to realize that
we consider ourselves a nation unto ourselves. We’re not
Confederation. We don’t want to be Confederation. We
don’t give a damn about Confederation. All we ever asked from
it was to be left alone. Which is what we ask of any gang of
strongmen. Archaicism is our way of life, not just a crackpot
hobby. Just for example, we still execute people once in a
while.”
That blockbuster fell into an ocean of silence.
BenRabi wondered how many times Confederation had tried coaxing
these strange, fiercely independent people into the government
fold. Dozens, at least. Luna Command was persistent. It was a
long-toothed hound that did not turn loose of a bone.
And for a century and a half the Starfishers had managed to
evade Luna Command’s “protection,” mostly by
remaining so damned hard to find, but also by making it clear they
were willing to fight.
Luna Command had never given up. It never would. Even these
people had to recognize that, benRabi thought. They had to
recognize the government’s stake.
Nervousness pervaded the waiting room, fogging in like some
unexpectedly conjured demon. The briefing officer met pairs of eyes
one by one. The romantic flinched before his stare. They were
finding their legend had teeth and claws.
No one executed people anymore. Even the barbarians beyond
Confederation’s pale recycled their human garbage, if only
through cyborg computation systems.
The civilians were learning what people in benRabi’s trade
learned early. Adventures were more fun when it was somebody else
getting the excelsior ripped out of his crate.
“In view of what I’ve said, and knowing that your
futures may not be exactly what you anticipated when you
applied,” the man said, “anybody who wants to do so can
opt out now. We’ll cover expenses as advertised.”
BenRabi smiled at his lap. “Thought that’s where you
were headed,” he whispered. “Trying to spook the
weaklings, eh?”
There was a stir in response, but no one volunteered to go home.
The weaklings seemed scared that they would look foolish. The
Starfisher shrugged, collected his notes, and said, “All
right. I’ll see you all upstairs.” He left the
room.
Time to sit, to wait for the shuttle; benRabi returned to his
notebook and Jerusalem.
He was having trouble with the story. His mind seemed to be too
ordered and mundane to produce the chaotic, nonobjective symbolism
of a McGuhan or Potty Welkin. His maliciously intentional
obscurantisms refused to remain obscure. That could have been
because he knew what he wanted to say.
Maybe he should do the story as straight narrative, Moyshe
thought. He could strive for what the Archaicist reviewers called
“a refreshingly anachronistic flavor.” It might then
survive the Archaicist marketplace, where the unsophisticated arts
of the past still had appeal.
Jkadabar Station is six months long and two years wide, fifteen
minutes high and a quarter of nine forever; there are songs in its
skies and trumpets in its walls. The Roads have neared their
ends . . .
Was he wrong? Was he alone in his feeling that all people were
exiles in time? No matter. What could he do about it? Not a damned
thing. That was the passion that should drive the story. Raging
impotence.
People began moving excitedly. The volume of conversation picked
up. BenRabi dragged himself back to reality. He muttered,
“Shuttle must be ready.”
Yes. His companions had begun filing onto the field already.
These Seiners were frugal. They had not bothered to lease an
attached landing bay.
The air outside was cool and on the move. A raindrop touched his
cheek, trickled like a tear. A ragged guerilla band of clouds
hurried over, firing off a few scattered water-bullets that made
little mud balls in the dust lying thick on the tarmac. An omen?
Rainy weather at Blake City was almost a nevertime thing. Water was
too scarce in this part of Carson’s.
He laughed nervously. Omens! What was the matter with him?
“Into the shuttle, caveman,” he mumbled.
The ship had been an antique when his grandfather was wetting
diapers. It was no commercial lighter, and never had been.
Broomstick, from Century One, it was a go-powered coffin with no
comforts from strictly-for-gun-power days. He saw nothing but stark
functionalism and metal painted black or grey. It appeared to be
Navy surplus, probably from the Ulantonid War.
The part of him that was still line officer noted that she was
well maintained. Not a spot of dirt or corrosion showed anywhere.
The ship had that used but kept-up look sometimes seen in rare
antiques. These Seiners were lovingly careful of their
equipment.
The passenger compartment was the antithesis of luxury. BenRabi
had to suspend disbelief to credit it as suitable for human use.
Yet the converted cargo bay did have ranks of new acceleration
couches, and soothing music came from hidden speakers. It was old
stuff, quiet, perhaps something by Brahms. It put a comforting
gloss over the unsteady whine of the idling drives.
They would lift blind, he saw. Weedlike clumps of color-coded
wiring hung where view-screens had been removed. They were taking
no chances.
This seemed to be taking security a bit far. What the hell could
the screens show if the Seiners kept them switched off? For that
matter, what could they betray if turned on? He knew where
he was. He knew where he was going, at least for the short run.
Was it some subtle psychological trick? A maneuver to accustom
them to flying blind?
He dithered over a choice of couches.
The knot behind his ear, containing the non-dispersible parts of
the instel-tracer, seized him with iron, spiked fingers. He had
been switched on by the Bureau.
Why now? he wondered, staggering with the pain. They were
supposed to wait till the lighter made orbit.
The thin, pale girl who had done the form reductions rushed
toward him. “Are you sick?”
Her expression was one of genuine concern. He was more shaken by
that than by this Bureau treachery. He had lived under the gun for
years now. He was unaccustomed to strangers caring.
Her concern was not the bland, commercially dispensed pablum of
a professional hostess, either. She wanted to help. I want fired across his mind.
“Yes. A migraine attack. And my medicine is
packed.”
She steadied him. “Sit down here. I’ll get you
something.”
He dropped onto the couch. A devil kicked the back of his skull
with a steel-toed boot. It was a vicious little critter. It kept
hammering away. He could not restrain a groan.
The headache became a bass drumbeat overshadowing his other
pains. He looked up into the girl’s pale blue eyes. They were
perfectly suited to her pale complexion and colorless hair. He
tried a smile of gratitude.
“Be back in a minute,” she told him. “Hang
en.” Off she hurried, her hips moving in a languorous way
that belied her haste. BenRabi’s head left him no time to
appreciate the nicety.
His frayed nerves jumped. They had migraine tablets on hand?
That was strange. And her curiosity. Why was she interested in his
health? She had become intrigued and apprehensive the instant he
had mentioned migraine.
He had stretched the truth this time, but he had had headache
trouble all his life. He had gobbled kilos of painkillers in his
time.
Still, he had not been bothered recently. The susceptibility was
noted in his medical file as a cover for the pain his tracer would
cause . . .
Why the hell switch him on now?
His headaches were a mental thing, Psych had declared. They were
caused by unresolved conflicts between his Old Earth origins and
the demands of the culture into which he had climbed.
He did not believe it. He had never met a Psych he trusted
heaving distance. Anyway, he had had headaches even before he had
begun to consider enlisting.
For at least the hundredth time he asked himself why the Bureau
had implanted an imperfect device. He answered himself, as always,
with the observation that the tracer was the only way they had to
follow a Seiner ship to a starfish herd.
Completely nonmetal, the tracer was the only device that could
be smuggled aboard without being detected.
There was no satisfaction in knowing the answers. Not when they
were so damned unpleasant. He wished to hell that he could take a
vacation. A real vacation, away from anything that would remind him
of who and what he was. He needed time to go home and get involved
in something with known, realizable, and comfortable challenges. He
longed for the private universe of his stamp collection.
The Seiner girl returned with another of those big, warm smiles.
She carried a water bottle in one hand, a paper pillbox in the
other. “This should put that right,” she said. That
damned smile tried to eat him up. “I brought you a dozen.
That should last the whole trip.”
He frowned. How long would they be aboard this piece of flying
junk?
“I asked if I could stay with you till we make orbit. Jarl
turned me down. Too much else for me to do.” She smiled, felt
his forehead.
He had had a feeling she would report him to somebody. It was
the way she had reacted to his mention of migraine.
What was so remarkable about a headache? Even a migraine?
Something was wobbling on its axis and he could not get a grip. The
pain just would not let him think.
Hell. He was probably just feeling the first ground tremors of
culture shock. Fly with it, Moyshe, he told himself. You’ve
raced a sunjammer in the starwinds of the
Crab . . . What could the lady do that was less
predictable, or more terrifying?
She was leaving. He did not want her to go. “Wait.”
She turned. His heart did a teenager’s flop. “Thank
you. My name’s benRabi. Moyshe benRabi.” Now
wasn’t that a gimp way of feeling for an opening? But she
responded with a quick little smile.
“I know, Moyshe. I remember from your papers. Mine’s
Coleridge. Amaranthina Amaryllis Isolte Galadriel de Coleridge y
Gutierez.” She yielded a half-laugh because of his rising
eyebrows. “Mother was a reader. Amy’s good for
everyday.”
There was a long, unsure moment. It was that period of
uncertainty preluding potential relationship where he did not know
if he dared open up a little more. She said, “I’m in
Liquids Systems too.”
He nodded. She had left the door open a crack. It was plain that
it was up to him to use or ignore it.
Some words finally came, but too late. She was walking away.
Maybe later, then. I want returned to his mind, stimulated by the girl’s
invitation. Could a woman be his need? No. Not all of it, though
having one around might be oil on the seas of his mind.
He had been hunting his Grail for a long time. Though he
believed himself a cripple when dealing with them, the occasional
woman had fallen his way. None of them had been panaceas.
Alyce’s ghost usually got in the way.
The Bureau supported his quest, knowing he was searching. Psych
did not miss much. They might even know what he needed. Whatever,
his masters were certain they would show a return on their
investment.
Few of the Bureau’s agents were sane in the accepted
sense. It recruited obsessives intentionally. BenRabi did not think
that sane men would make good operatives.
It took a madman to want into Intelligence in the first
place.
He smiled, mocking himself.
The lighter shuddered, rocked, shoved against his back. He was
on his way to the orbiting Starfisher.
He watched Mouse, who was three rows ahead of him. The small man
trembled as if suffering from a palsy. The getting off the ground
part of space travel seemed to be the only terror his universe
held. His reactions to everything else seemed as intense as those
of a stone.
“So the Rat’s chicken.”
The Sangaree woman was on the other side of the aisle, smiling.
He had not seen her sit down. Did he have to take this and the pain
too?
Three: 3048 AD Operation Dragon, Blake City
Starport
The terminal’s sounds crowded benRabi. The smells and
swirling colors dazzled him. The nervousness started.
It always did at the mouth of the lion’s den. Or, this
time, the dragon’s lair. The briefing tapes had claimed that
starfish, seen in space, resembled dragons two hundred kilometers
long.
He shuffled forward with the line, finally reached the table.
One of the Seiner men asked a few questions. He replied numbly.
“Sign and thumbprint this please, Mr. benRabi. Give it to
the lady with the rest of your paperwork.”
Shaking, he completed his contract. The Seiner girl at
table’s end smiled as she shoved his papers into the maw of
her reducing machine. She said, “Just through that door and
take a seat, please. The shuttle will be ready shortly.”
He went, bemused. That pale Seiner girl, with her pale hair and
harsh cheekbones, reminded him of Alyce, his Academy love. That was
not good. More than a decade had passed, and still the pain could
penetrate his armor.
Was that why he had trouble with women? Every affair since had,
inevitably, fallen into emotional chaos. Each had become a duel
with swords of intentional hurt.
But there had been no prior affairs to stand comparison. Maybe
he was just consistent in picking unstable women.
He took a chair in the waiting room. Out came the tattered
notebook, a traveling companion of many years. This time, he swore,
he would finish Jerusalem.
The unbreakable fetters which bound down the Great Wolf Fenrir
had been cunningly forged by Loki from these: The footfall of a
cat, the roots of a rock, the beard of a woman, the breath of a
fish, the spittle of a bird.
—The Prose Edda
Yes, the more he thought about it, the more he was sure that was
the best possible opening quote. It had an indisputable
universality.
Every life had its Loki capable of binding it with chains as
tenuous but strong.
Those wormwood memories of Academy returned. They were
indestructible memorabilia of an affair with a fellow midshipman
who had been the daughter of the Vice Commandant and the
granddaughter of the Chief of Staff Navy.
He had been an idiot. A pig-iron, chocolate-plated fool. How had
he made it through? In the context of Alyce, he still thought his
survival a miracle.
And the cost? What if he had not, as ordered, dropped the
affair? What if he had persisted? She had demanded that he do so,
defying what to him had been terrifying concentrations of
authority.
To her those people had been family. Mother and grandfather. To
him they had appeared as behemoths of power.
And the night beast with guilt-fangs longer than any of his
other haunts: What of the child? Come on, he grumbled at himself. What is this? Let’s ditch
the memories and romantic nonsense. He was a grown man. He should
get back into Jerusalem; that would be a blow against the dread
empire of his soul.
One of his favorites, from Pope’s Dunciad:
Lo! thy dread empire, Chaos, is restored; Light dies before thy
uncreating word . . .
“Ladies and gentlemen.”
He looked up. What now? Ah. A last-chance-to-get-out
briefing.
It was conducted by an officer with a voice so infuriatingly
scratchy that it had to be technically augmented. “We
don’t want you on our ship. You’re not our kind of
people,” the officer said for openers.
“Why’re you here? What are your motives?” Good questions, benRabi thought.
“Two reasons. You’re either bemused by the Seiner
myth, which is a holonet fabrication, or you’re here spying.
I’ll let you in on the secret now. This isn’t going to
be any romantic adventure. And you’re not going to get at any
information. All we’re going to give you is a lot of hard
work inside a culture unlike any you’ve ever known.
We’re not going to ease you into our world. We’re not
going to coddle you. We don’t have the time.”
The man was deliberately trying to upset them. Moyshe wondered
why.
“We’ve assembled you for one reason. It’s the
only way we can meet next year’s harvest quotas.”
BenRabi had a sudden feeling. A premonition, he thought. The man
had more than harvests on his mind. Some worry, or fear, was
racketing around his brain. Something terrible and big had him half
spooked.
Admiral Beckhart liked using benRabi because he had these
intuitions.
Moyshe also sensed a ghost of disappointment in the speaker,
along with a taint of distaste for landsmen. He spoke as if tasting
the sour flavor of betrayal.
It was inarguable that these Seiners were desperate. They would
never have sought outside technicians otherwise.
BenRabi quelled a surge of compassion.
The speaker’s home was a harvestship somewhere out in the
Big Dark. To survive it needed a massive input of competent
technicians. The man was sour because of all of
Confederation’s billions, only two hundred people had come
forward. And most of those could be considered suspect.
The Seiner fumbled in the pockets of his antiquated tweed
jacket. BenRabi wondered if the man was an Archaicist. His
preconceptions of the Seiners did not include the possibility that
they were faddists too.
The man produced a curious little instrument. He thrust it
between his teeth. He gripped it with his right thumb and
forefinger, puffing while he held a small flame over its bowl. Only
after he had begun expelling noxious clouds did benRabi realize
what was happening.
“A pipe!” he muttered. “What the hell?”
Tobacco stench assailed his nostrils. “I can’t believe
this much bad taste.” He shuddered.
His reaction was not unique. His companions buzzed. A woman rose
and started to leave, then gagged and returned to her seat. Even
Mouse looked appalled.
How many of these crude horrors lay in ambush ahead? This was
carrying Archaicism to the point of boorishness.
Much as the pipe disgusted him, benRabi applauded the psychology
behind its appearance. The man was easing them in after all. The
impact of later cultural shocks would be blunted a little.
“As I said,” the Seiner continued, once his pause
had his audience squirming, “there’re spies here. Spy
is a nasty word, I know. And spying is a nasty business. But a
realist recognizes the existence of espionage, and we’re all
realists here. Aren’t we? Espionage is all around us today.
We’re drenched in it. Up to our heinies in it. Because almost
anybody with any power at all will do almost anything to get
control of a starfish herd.”
He assayed a little smile. It mocked them all. He was doing a
show, putting on the pompous ass to prod somebody into reacting.
BenRabi sensed a quiet, self-assured competence behind the
showmanship. In fact, there was something about the man that
screamed Security Officer.
“You spies won’t learn a thing. Till your contracts
terminate you’ll see nothing but the guts of a ship. Even
then you’ll see only what we want you to see, when we want
you to see it. Everybody. Hear this. Security rules will be
observed at all times. That’s the Eleventh Commandment.
Engrave it on your souls—if you have any. Even a slight
irregularity might spook us into hasty reaction. Since we’re
not sure what information the spy-masters would consider valuable,
we’re going to do our damnedest not to give away anything at
all.”
BenRabi grimaced. Was the fool trying to impress them with
Seiner paranoia and xenophobia? He could rave for a week and not
intimidate the professionals.
“I reiterate: outside agents simply won’t be given a
chance to contact anybody who might possess critical information.
There’ll be penalties for trying to reach such people. Am I
making myself clear?”
Someone made a snide remark.
The speaker responded, “You’ve got to realize that
we consider ourselves a nation unto ourselves. We’re not
Confederation. We don’t want to be Confederation. We
don’t give a damn about Confederation. All we ever asked from
it was to be left alone. Which is what we ask of any gang of
strongmen. Archaicism is our way of life, not just a crackpot
hobby. Just for example, we still execute people once in a
while.”
That blockbuster fell into an ocean of silence.
BenRabi wondered how many times Confederation had tried coaxing
these strange, fiercely independent people into the government
fold. Dozens, at least. Luna Command was persistent. It was a
long-toothed hound that did not turn loose of a bone.
And for a century and a half the Starfishers had managed to
evade Luna Command’s “protection,” mostly by
remaining so damned hard to find, but also by making it clear they
were willing to fight.
Luna Command had never given up. It never would. Even these
people had to recognize that, benRabi thought. They had to
recognize the government’s stake.
Nervousness pervaded the waiting room, fogging in like some
unexpectedly conjured demon. The briefing officer met pairs of eyes
one by one. The romantic flinched before his stare. They were
finding their legend had teeth and claws.
No one executed people anymore. Even the barbarians beyond
Confederation’s pale recycled their human garbage, if only
through cyborg computation systems.
The civilians were learning what people in benRabi’s trade
learned early. Adventures were more fun when it was somebody else
getting the excelsior ripped out of his crate.
“In view of what I’ve said, and knowing that your
futures may not be exactly what you anticipated when you
applied,” the man said, “anybody who wants to do so can
opt out now. We’ll cover expenses as advertised.”
BenRabi smiled at his lap. “Thought that’s where you
were headed,” he whispered. “Trying to spook the
weaklings, eh?”
There was a stir in response, but no one volunteered to go home.
The weaklings seemed scared that they would look foolish. The
Starfisher shrugged, collected his notes, and said, “All
right. I’ll see you all upstairs.” He left the
room.
Time to sit, to wait for the shuttle; benRabi returned to his
notebook and Jerusalem.
He was having trouble with the story. His mind seemed to be too
ordered and mundane to produce the chaotic, nonobjective symbolism
of a McGuhan or Potty Welkin. His maliciously intentional
obscurantisms refused to remain obscure. That could have been
because he knew what he wanted to say.
Maybe he should do the story as straight narrative, Moyshe
thought. He could strive for what the Archaicist reviewers called
“a refreshingly anachronistic flavor.” It might then
survive the Archaicist marketplace, where the unsophisticated arts
of the past still had appeal.
Jkadabar Station is six months long and two years wide, fifteen
minutes high and a quarter of nine forever; there are songs in its
skies and trumpets in its walls. The Roads have neared their
ends . . .
Was he wrong? Was he alone in his feeling that all people were
exiles in time? No matter. What could he do about it? Not a damned
thing. That was the passion that should drive the story. Raging
impotence.
People began moving excitedly. The volume of conversation picked
up. BenRabi dragged himself back to reality. He muttered,
“Shuttle must be ready.”
Yes. His companions had begun filing onto the field already.
These Seiners were frugal. They had not bothered to lease an
attached landing bay.
The air outside was cool and on the move. A raindrop touched his
cheek, trickled like a tear. A ragged guerilla band of clouds
hurried over, firing off a few scattered water-bullets that made
little mud balls in the dust lying thick on the tarmac. An omen?
Rainy weather at Blake City was almost a nevertime thing. Water was
too scarce in this part of Carson’s.
He laughed nervously. Omens! What was the matter with him?
“Into the shuttle, caveman,” he mumbled.
The ship had been an antique when his grandfather was wetting
diapers. It was no commercial lighter, and never had been.
Broomstick, from Century One, it was a go-powered coffin with no
comforts from strictly-for-gun-power days. He saw nothing but stark
functionalism and metal painted black or grey. It appeared to be
Navy surplus, probably from the Ulantonid War.
The part of him that was still line officer noted that she was
well maintained. Not a spot of dirt or corrosion showed anywhere.
The ship had that used but kept-up look sometimes seen in rare
antiques. These Seiners were lovingly careful of their
equipment.
The passenger compartment was the antithesis of luxury. BenRabi
had to suspend disbelief to credit it as suitable for human use.
Yet the converted cargo bay did have ranks of new acceleration
couches, and soothing music came from hidden speakers. It was old
stuff, quiet, perhaps something by Brahms. It put a comforting
gloss over the unsteady whine of the idling drives.
They would lift blind, he saw. Weedlike clumps of color-coded
wiring hung where view-screens had been removed. They were taking
no chances.
This seemed to be taking security a bit far. What the hell could
the screens show if the Seiners kept them switched off? For that
matter, what could they betray if turned on? He knew where
he was. He knew where he was going, at least for the short run.
Was it some subtle psychological trick? A maneuver to accustom
them to flying blind?
He dithered over a choice of couches.
The knot behind his ear, containing the non-dispersible parts of
the instel-tracer, seized him with iron, spiked fingers. He had
been switched on by the Bureau.
Why now? he wondered, staggering with the pain. They were
supposed to wait till the lighter made orbit.
The thin, pale girl who had done the form reductions rushed
toward him. “Are you sick?”
Her expression was one of genuine concern. He was more shaken by
that than by this Bureau treachery. He had lived under the gun for
years now. He was unaccustomed to strangers caring.
Her concern was not the bland, commercially dispensed pablum of
a professional hostess, either. She wanted to help. I want fired across his mind.
“Yes. A migraine attack. And my medicine is
packed.”
She steadied him. “Sit down here. I’ll get you
something.”
He dropped onto the couch. A devil kicked the back of his skull
with a steel-toed boot. It was a vicious little critter. It kept
hammering away. He could not restrain a groan.
The headache became a bass drumbeat overshadowing his other
pains. He looked up into the girl’s pale blue eyes. They were
perfectly suited to her pale complexion and colorless hair. He
tried a smile of gratitude.
“Be back in a minute,” she told him. “Hang
en.” Off she hurried, her hips moving in a languorous way
that belied her haste. BenRabi’s head left him no time to
appreciate the nicety.
His frayed nerves jumped. They had migraine tablets on hand?
That was strange. And her curiosity. Why was she interested in his
health? She had become intrigued and apprehensive the instant he
had mentioned migraine.
He had stretched the truth this time, but he had had headache
trouble all his life. He had gobbled kilos of painkillers in his
time.
Still, he had not been bothered recently. The susceptibility was
noted in his medical file as a cover for the pain his tracer would
cause . . .
Why the hell switch him on now?
His headaches were a mental thing, Psych had declared. They were
caused by unresolved conflicts between his Old Earth origins and
the demands of the culture into which he had climbed.
He did not believe it. He had never met a Psych he trusted
heaving distance. Anyway, he had had headaches even before he had
begun to consider enlisting.
For at least the hundredth time he asked himself why the Bureau
had implanted an imperfect device. He answered himself, as always,
with the observation that the tracer was the only way they had to
follow a Seiner ship to a starfish herd.
Completely nonmetal, the tracer was the only device that could
be smuggled aboard without being detected.
There was no satisfaction in knowing the answers. Not when they
were so damned unpleasant. He wished to hell that he could take a
vacation. A real vacation, away from anything that would remind him
of who and what he was. He needed time to go home and get involved
in something with known, realizable, and comfortable challenges. He
longed for the private universe of his stamp collection.
The Seiner girl returned with another of those big, warm smiles.
She carried a water bottle in one hand, a paper pillbox in the
other. “This should put that right,” she said. That
damned smile tried to eat him up. “I brought you a dozen.
That should last the whole trip.”
He frowned. How long would they be aboard this piece of flying
junk?
“I asked if I could stay with you till we make orbit. Jarl
turned me down. Too much else for me to do.” She smiled, felt
his forehead.
He had had a feeling she would report him to somebody. It was
the way she had reacted to his mention of migraine.
What was so remarkable about a headache? Even a migraine?
Something was wobbling on its axis and he could not get a grip. The
pain just would not let him think.
Hell. He was probably just feeling the first ground tremors of
culture shock. Fly with it, Moyshe, he told himself. You’ve
raced a sunjammer in the starwinds of the
Crab . . . What could the lady do that was less
predictable, or more terrifying?
She was leaving. He did not want her to go. “Wait.”
She turned. His heart did a teenager’s flop. “Thank
you. My name’s benRabi. Moyshe benRabi.” Now
wasn’t that a gimp way of feeling for an opening? But she
responded with a quick little smile.
“I know, Moyshe. I remember from your papers. Mine’s
Coleridge. Amaranthina Amaryllis Isolte Galadriel de Coleridge y
Gutierez.” She yielded a half-laugh because of his rising
eyebrows. “Mother was a reader. Amy’s good for
everyday.”
There was a long, unsure moment. It was that period of
uncertainty preluding potential relationship where he did not know
if he dared open up a little more. She said, “I’m in
Liquids Systems too.”
He nodded. She had left the door open a crack. It was plain that
it was up to him to use or ignore it.
Some words finally came, but too late. She was walking away.
Maybe later, then. I want returned to his mind, stimulated by the girl’s
invitation. Could a woman be his need? No. Not all of it, though
having one around might be oil on the seas of his mind.
He had been hunting his Grail for a long time. Though he
believed himself a cripple when dealing with them, the occasional
woman had fallen his way. None of them had been panaceas.
Alyce’s ghost usually got in the way.
The Bureau supported his quest, knowing he was searching. Psych
did not miss much. They might even know what he needed. Whatever,
his masters were certain they would show a return on their
investment.
Few of the Bureau’s agents were sane in the accepted
sense. It recruited obsessives intentionally. BenRabi did not think
that sane men would make good operatives.
It took a madman to want into Intelligence in the first
place.
He smiled, mocking himself.
The lighter shuddered, rocked, shoved against his back. He was
on his way to the orbiting Starfisher.
He watched Mouse, who was three rows ahead of him. The small man
trembled as if suffering from a palsy. The getting off the ground
part of space travel seemed to be the only terror his universe
held. His reactions to everything else seemed as intense as those
of a stone.
“So the Rat’s chicken.”
The Sangaree woman was on the other side of the aisle, smiling.
He had not seen her sit down. Did he have to take this and the pain
too?