2696 lines
155 KiB
Plaintext
2696 lines
155 KiB
Plaintext
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`Anyone who has not worked for them
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simply cannot understand them.'
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- Mille Vennamun, introduction to:
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`The Use of Ashes: Bureau of Procuration Manual'
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Half past eight. The bedside alarm woke Kelanie up with the
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sampled victory-screech of some carnivorous xenoform. She was up
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immediately, eyes wide, fingers clawing the pillow-pads, gasping with
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shock as the subconsciously-induced adrenalin shivered through her
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system. As she calmed down, her pupils dilated out from crisis-
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induced pinpricks, her breathing and pulse rates returned to normal,
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and she wondered, not for the first or last time, if life was like
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this in the private sector. She scrambled off the bed as it began
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to deflate and retract into the wall.
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Her personalised holographic news service activated as she stepped
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into the shower. It took the appearance of an old man dressed in a
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monk's habit, who bore a strong resemblance to William S. Burroughs.
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It leered at her, and croaked,
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`Rough night last night?' She pushed the oxygen control with the
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heel of her hand, took a few deep snorts. Under the stream of
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high-pressure hot water, she soaped herself and replied,
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`Mind your own ratty business, line-noise. What's on the agenda
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for today?' The news laughed, wheezing and rasping.
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`Come on, seriously! I refuse to believe that you don't remember
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the event you have been awaiting, for - how long has it been?' She
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turned off the shower, snorted some more oxygen and, with a warm
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towel over her shoulders, found some clean underwear and a long
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jumper she had only worn three times since it was washed last.
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`Three months. You can assume that I've been on the ExPort
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waiting list for so long that I've forgotten where I'm supposed to be
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going. Put on some music and refresh my memory.' The news spoke
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over the soft sounds of a song by `This Mortal Coil':
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`You are due at the NoSan'No'Os ExPort at nine-thirty, to check in
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for your pre-flight examination and briefing.' Kelanie, vigorously
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towelling her hair and wondering if she had time for her pelvic
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exercises, looked up.
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`The ship's in, is it?'
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`Due to arrive this afternoon, departs for Copperla, Syndaine and
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other points towards galactic centre at eleven-fifty this morning.'
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She smiled wryly.
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`"Other points towards galactic centre", eh? As a government
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agency, aren't we entitled to more detailed information than that?'
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The news lowered its simulated holographic eyebrows and intoned,
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`The NoSan'No'Os still refuse to recognise the Interim Government.
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It is their opinion that, since the Maracites have only been in
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office for ninety-two years, that they cannot be treated seriously.'
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Kelanie found one of her mech boots, and, while looking through the
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closet for the other, retorted, her voice muffled,
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`Stuff "seriously"... "decency", or "common courtesy" would be
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nice.' The news, which was a sub-contracted system of the
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NoSan'No'Os, replied in a carefully neutral tone,
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`I will remind Miss Camden that the NoSan'No'Os still regard
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humanity as little better than animals, and that NoSan'No'Os
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transport services are supplied to xenoforms with a much greater
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level of social sophistication than humanity, with an equal level of
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disregard for what you term "decency" or "common courtesy". All are
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Equal. None Is Favored.' This was said with the assurance of an
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aphorism. She said nothing as she found her other boot. She sipped
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lemyn juice from the dispenser as she cold-booted her boots; they
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shuddered, purred and beeped as their diagnostic routines finished.
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`Okay. Any more on my assignment?'
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`Nuh-uh.'
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`Sigh... okay, where did I leave my notepad?'
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`I think it's under the heap of clothes next to the dryer.' She
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retrieved it, and tapped the function key to open a channel to the
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transport pool.
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`Single to the NoSan'No'Os ExPort by nine-thirty.' While waiting
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for a response, she threw some more clothes in a mesh bag. The
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xenoform in the Transport department gurgled back at her, and a touch
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of exasperation sharpened her tone. `Is there anyone down there who
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speaks Anglic?'
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`Foogle.' replied the xenoform.
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`Oh, line-noise.' she retorted.
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* * * * *
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NoSan'No'Os: (from "Nos-a-Nos", pre-reconciliation Scriptive,
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"Circle within the Circle") Dominant ruling
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bureaucracy controlling more than ninety thousand
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systems by virtue of monopoly on information,
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transport and energy-conversion technology.
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- Foley's `Unofficial Documents'
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She climbed into the transport through the roof-hatch and slid into
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the seat. The driver said in a buzzing accent,
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`Of destination, be in state of definition.' She replied,
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`NoSan'No'Os ExPort, and put some wings on it, hey?' As she
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buckled the safety belt, the driver's head rotated one hundred and
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eighty degrees, and she found herself looking into the faceted eyes
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of something resembling a six-foot stick insect.
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`Of wings, be in state of indicating correct placement.' it
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chirred through its cheap translator.
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`Just drive, okay? The NoSan'No'Os ExPort.' The driver slowly
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waved its antennae, staring at her, and then turned back to the
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control column and instrument panel. As the transport lifted from
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the ground and into the stream of AV traffic overhead, the driver hit
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a key on its heads-up array with a mandible, and the vehicle was
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filled with raucous mariachi music. Gritting her teeth, Kelanie
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paged through the Species ID section of her notepad, until she
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identified the driver as a lower-caste Kaelen. Reading further:
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`... when requesting respectful silence for the involved
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"Hive Separation" ritual, the Kaelen Queen emits a
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pheromone (scent chem.ref 976541) and emits a traditional
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"cry of distress" screech-tone (hear aud.ref 976537)'
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She patched the audio reference through to her notepad, held it up
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so that the point speaker was just behind the Kaelen's backwards-
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pointing resonator-plate, and keyed it. It played louder than she
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expected, and the transport almost fell out of the traffic stream as
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the Kaelen frantically chewed at the heads-up array controls. The
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music cut off in mid-trumpet-bray.
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`Of interpersonal relationships, being placed in situation of
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obligation due to social error.' She kept reading until she had
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finished the section on the Kaelen lower caste.
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When the transport had settled on the concrete pad at the southern
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edge of the NoSan'No'Os ExPort, she climbed out and tapped the
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driver's side window, which lowered with the grinding sound of
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poorly-lubricated biotech fairings.
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`Of interpersonal relationship, emphasis! placed in situation of
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obligation due to error.' She held up her right hand, made a fist,
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splayed her fingers and said,
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`Of large-array social status, in state of adjusted obligation.',
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which meant, in effect, that humanity was in some way indebted to the
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Kaelen and this exchange had mitigated that debt somewhat. She
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smiled, and the Kaelen's antennae flattened out. She was impressed;
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here was a lower-caste xenoform that could interpret human facial
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expressions. Most xenos didn't bother. This Kaelen was probably a
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university student.
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She strolled across the expanse of concrete, swinging the mesh bag,
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shading her eyes from the morning sun with her forearm. Apart from
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the control/customs bunker, the ExPort resembled a series of linked
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concrete ovals. As she crossed the lower of six outer landing pads,
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she half-expected to see a cricket pitch set in the middle.
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She was met at the warehouse-sized door of the bunker by a boy who
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appeared to be about twelve years old, wearing bright green shorts
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and t-shirt, and skate-board pads on his knees. He brushed aside a
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wayward fringe of carrot-coloured hair, and waved to her.
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`Miss Camden? Bureau of Procuration? Hi, i'm Denkaster, Port
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Administrator.' She followed him into the open-space office and took
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the seat he offered her. `Do you have your medical records handy?'
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he asked, sorting through a pile of fiche plates on his cluttered
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desk. She nodded, and touched the Match Fields key on her notepad,
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which emitted the familiar `screeee' sound of notepads matching
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carrier frequencies. While the notepads exchanged handshaking
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signals and then information, she asked,
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`Do you know where this transport is going? after Syndaine, that
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is?' Denkaster sighed, found the fiche he was looking for and
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replied,
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`'fraid not... you know the NoSan'No'Os, never tell us anything.
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Although I do have some notes from your section head on Syndaine that
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relate to your assignment... your notepad should have them now.' She
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thanked him absently and started paging through file areas looking
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for the information, which had been, as usual, mis-keyed as
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`corrections to existing documentation'.
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Sitting in the departures lounge, Kelanie read the notes. She was
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expected to travel to `Millimillenary' (a central exchange for
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passengers of the NoSan'No'Os, ninety-five light years away), and to
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`entertain' an executive of the Tendeysharhi, a species she had never
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heard of. In fact, her notepad had never heard of them either.
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`Wonderful. How the hell am I supposed to work with a sentient
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that I've never seen before?'. Reading on, she noted with rising
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indignation that Starkey, her section head, expected her to interview
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the members of the Tendeysharhi entourage, with a view to picking up
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the proper etiquette and approach. Angrily, she punched Starkey's
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phone number into her notepad.
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Starkey answered, though as usual, she employed video filters to
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prevent anyone from identifying her. In a weary voice, Kelanie
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asked,
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`Okay, Robyn, what's the big deal? How am I supposed to make it
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with an alien that the Registry hasn't even heard of? Line-noise, I
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don't even know if it's an oxygen-breather!'
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`Kelanie, dearest... how are you?' Robyn's filtered voice only just
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matched the aliased squares that represented her lips, and again
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Kelanie wondered if she was working for an artificial intelligence.
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If this was the case, Kelanie was not surprised that Starkey wanted
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to keep it quiet, given the NoSan'No'Os' restrictions on
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machine-based consciousness.
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`I'm just a tad apprehensive about giving a blow-job to something
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which may or may not have a dick, that's all!' Kelanie replied
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sarcastically. Robyn held up a hand, palm out. It appeared as a
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mass of pale pink squares on the display projected by Kelanie's
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notepad.
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`I know, I know... this was dumped in my lap, and I don't know any
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more about it than you, although we're laying even money that it has
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something to do with the Humanist faction in the Maracites-' Robyn
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stopped when she saw the "I don't want to get drawn into another
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tedious political argument" expression on Kelanie's face. `- and...
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well, at the base level, it's to seal a trade agreement with the
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Tendeysharhi. What else can I say?'
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`You could tell me something about Millimillenary, for a start...
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have you ever been there?' Kely thought she detected a smile on
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Robyn's face.
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`Once. There are other humans there, I believe. And despite what
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you've undoubtedly heard of the NoSan'No'Os, you won't be treated
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like a sardine in a tin. Their ships are often nearly empty, when
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heading back towards the Centre.' Kelanie tilted her head to one
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side, staring at the surrealist image that her notepad was showing.
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`Robyn... what do you think about the NoSan'No'Os?' This time, she
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was sure that Robyn smiled, before giving the Bureau salute (pressing
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the back of her hand to her lips) and hanging up.
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* * * * *
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<000077> requesting connection ............
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connection established connection established
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what do you want, 000077? I'm
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very busy at the moment. You are always very busy! We
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have to query this expenditure.
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which one?
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Authorisation: 492497A9, Code
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AF1CF3C7F8C65E98A06ED63C87E542C
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Ahh yes. (Miscellaneous), relating to
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the termination of N-FRF-Knh/K.
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What seems to be the problem?
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Isn't 5x10 to the minus two CCI
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rather a lot to devote to the
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elimination of one race?
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It is indeed. I think it's
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justified, though. Well, okay, sure, but can you
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give us some explanation? This
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(sigh) is going to throw out our
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quarterly budget something
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Your place is to accept orders shocking.
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and execute them. My place is
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to formulate orders. That is
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all the explanation I need to Understood...
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give. To you, particularly. Understood, but -
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(pause)
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Would you be interested in
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(viewing) my simulations and
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projections of this species? If
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you have four (years) to spare,
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you might find them
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illuminating. Besides, what `Illuminating', ha, ha!
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business is this of yours?
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Isn't this more 997913's Indeed! it is, it is... but
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domain? his system borders on mine and
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quite a few others... and there
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are a few of us who think that
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997913 has not been handling
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997913 has been taking orders this concern properly.
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directly from me. I have been
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concerned with this matter Ah.
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ever since we first contacted
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N-FRF-Knh/K; call it, ah,
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intuition, but I suspected `Intuition'? Oh, never mind.
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from the start that they would That's your domain.
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be a problem. I thought that
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we could absorb them somehow,
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but it didn't prove feasible.
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They would change us. Is that possible?
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It is, trust me. I see. Ah, can we use the
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unallocated PSym resources for
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Certainly. In fact, I have this?
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been meaning to call you, to
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let you know, the priority
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for this termination has been
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bumped up from two hundred
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and forty-one to twenty-eight. Oh? This is going to upset a
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lot of the NAPAISubs.
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Too bad. Just do it. Oh, by
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the way, keep your (eyes) on
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200211... he's been acting
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somewhat strangely in the Will do.
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past quarter.
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NAPAI closing connection NAPAISub closing connection
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`The Parkry are a biological anomaly; hive creatures,
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evolved from a much smaller insectoid form, developing
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lungs to replace the smaller-scale spiracle system, and
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yet not developing voices to go with them. They rely
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completely on written or electronic means of
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communication, and are thus ideally suited to the
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administrative positions that they occupy in the
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NoSan'No'Os' structure. They are entirely pacifistic,
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having no territorial imperatives beyond a vague sense of
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duty to the hive; an evolutionary memory that has been,
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for the most part, replaced with a sense of duty towards
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the NoSan'No'Os.'
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- Martini Baton, `What the Hell is THAT?', Chapter Two
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She didn't hear the ship arrive, being absorbed in her search
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through the ExPort's closed database for information relating to the
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Tendeysharhi. Looking out of the warehouse-sized doors, she noticed
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that the sky now appeared to be overcast. However, sunlight glinted
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off the metallic edges of a nearby building, and she saw signs of
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activity around her. She stood, stretched, and sauntered over to the
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nearest gate. Outside and overhead, she could see the bottom of some
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huge curved shape, patterned like stained concrete, slowly sinking to
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the ground. On the base of the ship, directly in line with the gate
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she stood in was an oval gap, about twice as wide as the gate,
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completely dark, as if filled with black glass. The glass appeared
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to melt from the centre towards the edges, and stevedores began
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shifting cargo trolleys. They took care to avoid the short figures
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dressed in dark grey that scuttled out on four legs from the rear of
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the ship's cargo bay. Kelanie knew them; Parkry, hive creatures who
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made up most of the administrative staff of the NoSan'No'Os. One of
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them turned its blank, golden-eyed, mouthless face to her and
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beckoned with a three-jointed arm. It didn't wait to see if she
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followed, merely turned and trotted back into the ship.
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`This is it?' she peered into the round hatch, about a metre wide,
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with an expression of distaste. The silent Parkry glanced at her
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from underneath the brow of its curiously flattened head, pointed
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again, executed a 180-degree turn on its four stick-insect-like legs
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and left. She shrugged, hefted her mesh bag and climbed through. It
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was smaller than her apartment; spherical, lined with something like
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grey foam rubber. There was a faint smell of aphrodisia incense, as
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if the berth had previously been occupied by Kabouter-hippies. No
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bed, datapoint or light-source, apart from the sodium glow that came
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from the corridor. She sat crosslegged in the middle of the floor,
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tossed her mesh bag aside; it rolled down the curve of the room to
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rest against her leg. When she activated her notepad, she was
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surprised to find that the ship had a local data service, albeit a
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limited one, offering little more than expected departure time and a
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simple interactive map of the ship, with restricted areas marked by
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the NoSan'No'Os segmented circle-starburst symbol. There were other
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areas in this data service to explore, but she decided to leave them
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alone for the moment, not through prudence in not disturbing the
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NoSan'No'Os, but to leave her something to do during the trip, which
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would take between three and seven days, if the translation was
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accurate.
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According to the info postings from this system, the ship was under
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way, and had already left earth orbit. She felt no acceleration or
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other sense of motion; leaving her bag and fixing the berth's
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location in her backbrain, she decided to try and find a window.
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Robyn was right; the ship was almost deserted. In ten minutes'
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wandering through the series of corridors that radiated from a
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central shaft, she only saw four Parkry, who scuttled by, tacitly
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ignoring her, and something like a six-legged Saint Bernard, which
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circled her while she stood stock-still, too cautious to make any
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possibly offensive moves. It stopped, looked up at her (this was the
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impression she got, though the xenoform lacked obvious visual organs)
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and then ran off. She breathed a deep sigh of relief, and then
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started looking for a toilet.
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She allowed herself a slight measure of distress when she began to
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suspect that the Tertiary language didn't even have a word that
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related to the concept of `toilet'. She eventually found a vague
|
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reference to an organic recycling service and proceeded to the map
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reference. It was a room very much like her berth, lined with grey
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sponge plastic, sealed with a weak field that contained the faint
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odour of chemicals and containing a water-filled pit. She wrinkled
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her nose in distaste, but after assuring herself that she was alone,
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proceeded to use the facilities. She then made her way back to her
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berth, with the firm intention of spending the rest of the trip in a
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state of low- metabolic-rate sleep.
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When she got there, she found a large cat in her berth.
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When she climbed in to the room, the moggy awoke immediately, fixed
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its emerald gaze on her and put its ears back. She froze. It looked
|
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like a very tall, thin, wiry humanoid covered with thick, banded grey
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fur and with strangely jointed legs. And a tail, which was now
|
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slowly lashing to and fro behind it. There were fluffy tufts of
|
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white fur poking out of its ears, and a mat of similar fur running
|
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down its chest. It yowled something, to which her notepad could only
|
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beep apologetically; fortunately, it had its own translator, which
|
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snarled something like `Anyhah-araha eiyaha' at her, followed by some
|
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sort of insectoid chittering. She spoke to the xenoform's
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translator.
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`Terrestrial Anglic, thank you.' The translator, shaped something
|
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like a flattened bottle, made some purring noises, and then said in
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Anglic,
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`My room, my territory. I was here first. Mine.' She pointed to
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her bag, which the xeno had apparently opened and gone through,
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spreading her clothes over the floor of the berth.
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`My bag. My property. It was here before you were, my claim to
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this territory.' The xeno narrowed its eyes and growled softly. She
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continued, `I will call a Parkry, they will decide -' the xeno
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yowled, and the translator interrupted hastily.
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`No, no, I am content to share. I will sleep in the middle. Do
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not make excessive noise or excrete on the floor.' She was about to
|
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say something like "well, just who the hell do you think you are,
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buster?" when she remembered previous experiences with alien language
|
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translators, and she kept her silence. The Xenoform curled up into a
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compact ball, lashed its tail around it and closed its eyes warily.
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She sighed, and carefully lay down beside it, smiling bemusedly when
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she heard it start to purr. She composed herself and began the
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mental exercises to prepare for a period of extended sleep. She
|
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slowed her breathing, inserted some links into her sub-conscious to
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awaken her if her notepad should sound an alarm for any reason, and
|
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then drifted off into a deep, dreamless sleep.
|
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She woke to find that the xeno had shifted and was sleeping with
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its forepaws across her hips, its head against the small of her back.
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The soft purring had deepened to a husky `brrr', and she woke fully
|
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when it gently butted its head against her back and made a small
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`riowr' sound. She tried to turn without moving her body from the
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shoulders down, an d could see one large paw, the size of a tennis
|
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raquet, with three-centimetre-long claws extending and sheathing
|
||
reflexively, making tiny indentations in the bare flesh of her hip.
|
||
Proceeding with caution, she took the paw in her free hand and gently
|
||
lifted it. The claws quivered, and then extended to their full five
|
||
centimetres, clutching her hip in their broad span, the points of the
|
||
claws sinking in a few millimetres.
|
||
`Excuse me.' she murmured. The xeno's translator ignored her.
|
||
`HEY!' she shouted. The xenoform awoke with a start, digging its
|
||
claws further into her hip. She twitched, but remained where she
|
||
was.
|
||
`Take your paw off me.' The xeno's translator paused for a long
|
||
moment, and then yowled at the xeno in its native language. The xeno
|
||
sheathed its claws, flicked its ears back momentarily, and curled up
|
||
again, excluding her from its personal space. She turned over,
|
||
closed her eyes and composed herself for sleep again; within half an
|
||
hour, the xeno had its paw on her hip again, whereupon the ywent
|
||
through the same procedure; and again some two hours after that,
|
||
after which she gave up and went to sleep in the passageway.
|
||
|
||
She regained consciousness two days later, to visit the toilet
|
||
again. She slowly stretched, licked her dry lips, and then noticed
|
||
the xeno sitting curled up at her feet, like a doormat patterned in
|
||
grey stripes, outside the berth. It was gazing at her intently. It
|
||
yowled, and its translator said,
|
||
`You sleep. Why?'
|
||
`No food. Little water. Not hungry when asleep.' The xeno's ears
|
||
flattened when the translator reported this. It uncurled from its
|
||
station at her feet, entered the berth (on all fours), and emerged
|
||
with a bloody haunch of raw meat in its jaws. She went pale, and
|
||
backed away slightly when the xeno offered it to her. It regarded
|
||
her with an air of obvious surprise for a moment, waggled its ears
|
||
and then tore into the meat itself, keeping a wary eye on her.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
`The Tendeysharhi are a classic example of parallel
|
||
evolution, in that they resemble, superficially, large
|
||
felines, and many feline traits, including an acute sense
|
||
of territoriality, feline language structure (which tends
|
||
towards subtly-intoned yowls and screeches) and a
|
||
tendency to shed large amounts of fur at certain times of
|
||
the year. The females are noticeably more violent and
|
||
territorial than their mates. The Tendeysharhi did not
|
||
develop a science sufficient to begin space exploration
|
||
on their own; they were `apprenticed' to the Moridani
|
||
before the Purge, and were allowed to join the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os as a subject race after it.'
|
||
|
||
- Martini Baton, `What the Hell is THAT?', Chapter Five
|
||
|
||
The hatch melted away, and a breeze wafted into the entry hold,
|
||
carrying with it the strange fragrance of another world. The light
|
||
had a golden-bronze hue to it; the sky faded from a pale gold
|
||
directly overhead to a curious yellow-green at the horizon. It
|
||
reminded her of the patina found in the folds of old bronze statues.
|
||
The sounds of dozens of different languages overlaid and formed
|
||
counterpoint to the squeaks, pops, mellifluous surging chords and
|
||
crashes of alien music. The air pressure seemed a bit higher than
|
||
earth's; the gravity a bit less. There was definitely a higher
|
||
oxygen content in the air, and she felt giddy as she danced down the
|
||
exit ramp, resisting the temptation to swing her mesh clothes-bag.
|
||
The cat-like xenoform raced past her on all fours, yowling as if its
|
||
tail were on fire, and vanished into the crowd of Parkry who were
|
||
rushing to get on board the ship. She ploughed a furrow through them
|
||
and made her way to the customs hut, a pale blue geodesic dome with
|
||
three triangular archways cut into it. Her giddiness was tempered by
|
||
the sight of dozens of tall Plateau Bythians casually lounging around
|
||
the ExPort, all of them toting dull grey plastic weapons. She
|
||
entered the dome, and felt the itchy tickling feeling that
|
||
accompanied mass-spectronometric scanning as she passed through the
|
||
doorway. No immediately obvious alarms went off, so she assumed that
|
||
the devices she posessed were within current NoSan'No'Os levels of
|
||
acceptability. She'd heard nasty stories of people who had tried to
|
||
commute just before the last Purge, when the standard of Interdicted
|
||
technology had been dropped while they were carrying things like
|
||
empathic personality emulators and nano-gated NeuralNet arrays.
|
||
She set her translator to `NoSan'No'Os Tertiary', the language used
|
||
to communicate with subject races (of which humanity was one), and
|
||
entered the dome. There was a queue, but it was leading in the other
|
||
direction, from the other side of the ExPort and into the ship. A
|
||
smaller-than-average Parkry was propped next to a data-post, holding
|
||
a vocoder hand-set and waving at her. She went over and sat before
|
||
the xenoform, crossing her legs. The Parkry massaged the hand-set,
|
||
and the data-post said something in Tertiary. Her notepad's
|
||
translator responded immediately:
|
||
`Query: Full Name. Origin. Purpose for visit.'
|
||
`Kelanie A'liiya Camden, Earth, Diplomatic Exchange.' At this, the
|
||
Parkry glanced over from the holographic output from the data-post.
|
||
It squeezed the hand-set, keeping its glittering eyes on her. More
|
||
Tertiary.
|
||
`Expression of interest, your reference: Diplomatic Exchange.
|
||
Query: Which Bureau." She sighed, safe in the knowledge that the
|
||
translator would ignore it, and replied,
|
||
`Bureau of Procuration.' The Parkry seemed to lose interest. It
|
||
gave her a plastic bracelet, studded with a pattern of metallic dots,
|
||
and the data-post played a recorded message, in flat, unaccented
|
||
Anglic:
|
||
`This clothing is your identification while you are staying on
|
||
Millimillenary. Do not lose it, sell it or exchange it for
|
||
interdicted technology. You will not be allowed to leave the planet
|
||
without it. It is resistant to all chemicals and temperatures above'
|
||
(here, the post made a sound like a poorly-tuned radio), `and below'
|
||
(a sound like a bass-pitched dog's whine). `Please note: it is not
|
||
resistant to thermonuclear, fusion or ComonCurensy isotope detonation
|
||
above the thirty megaton range. Put it on now.' The Parkry was
|
||
watching her again, so she wrapped it around her left wrist and
|
||
pressed the ends together, which melded to form a single piece.
|
||
`This clothing can only be removed by an authorised agent of the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os, on your departure from Millimillenary.' The interview
|
||
appeared to be over. She stood up, and wandered towards an exit,
|
||
where small groups of Parkry were still queueing for departure
|
||
processing. She fished the video-eyepiece (which she had not used
|
||
since she last visited Japan) from a pouch in her bag and put on the
|
||
headband, the eyepiece hanging over her left eye like a pirate's
|
||
eyepatch. It made a tiny `peep' noise as it matched carriers with
|
||
her notepad, and the view through the eyepiece blurred momentarily.
|
||
One by one, as the processor in her notepad identified and translated
|
||
them, various signs written in Tertiary were marked and translations
|
||
were appended in the eyepiece's view. She spotted a data-post marked
|
||
`Free Information for the Newcomer' and went over to it. She spoke
|
||
to her notepad;
|
||
`Excuse me? I need information.' The data-post made pretty
|
||
holographic moire patterns to indicate that it was thinking, and then
|
||
replied, in Anglic,
|
||
`Please be more specific.'
|
||
`I need to locate food, water and a place to sleep. I also need to
|
||
locate other humans on Millimillenary, if there are any.' Another
|
||
pause, more moire-patterns, and then,
|
||
`Food and water for humans can be obtained from the Human Embassy,
|
||
at LFFRE-77153. No information regarding requirements for,' and it
|
||
quoted her words, playing a sample of her saying "a place to sleep",
|
||
`is available. You will find other humans at the Embassy.' It
|
||
displayed a map (which looked like it might have been designed by
|
||
Piet Mondrian). Her notepad translated the text, and if she was any
|
||
judge of distance, the Embassy appeared to be about seven hundred
|
||
kilometres away from the ExPort.
|
||
`Are there any places matching my requirements, closer to the
|
||
ExPort? If so, please list the five closest, and the distance to
|
||
them.' Another pause, and then:
|
||
`There are three. "Maracite Information Exchange Registry",
|
||
LFFRB-77151, six hundred and ninety-three blocks from here to there,
|
||
"Church of the SubGenius", LLFRB-77122, six hundred and fifty-one
|
||
blocks from here to there,' - another pause - '"Waddell's Emporium of
|
||
Extremely Fashionable Attire and Quite Nice Ice Cream Parlour",
|
||
NRNAL-10021, two blocks from here to there.' These three were
|
||
represented by tiny red inverted `A's on the map, two of them close
|
||
to the Embassy, the ice-cream parlour so close to the ExPort that it
|
||
appeared almost to be on the same block. She took a snapshot of the
|
||
map with her notepad, expanded it until she could see enough details
|
||
to find the ice-cream parlour and left the dome.
|
||
Millimillenary appeared to be completely covered by city-scape, the
|
||
entire habitable surface of the planet divided up into a grid, with
|
||
buildings that reached up for about fifty storeys, providing a third
|
||
dimension that the map wasn't required to show. The streets were
|
||
based in pale concrete, paved with slippery white ceramic plates, and
|
||
would have been rather drab and utilitarian if it wasn't for the
|
||
hundreds of different xenoforms who streamed up and down them. There
|
||
appeared to be a large single lane of foot-traffic (or at least what
|
||
passed for feet on some beings) moving in one direction, and two
|
||
smaller lanes on either side, moving in the other direction. This
|
||
tended to work to the disadvantage of the sentients who were on the
|
||
outside lanes, and it became apparent that it was often easier to
|
||
travel three or four blocks out of your way, just to use the quicker
|
||
inner lane. In places, she saw what appeared to be short grey trees,
|
||
bare of leaves, the branches dividing into three from the base,
|
||
progressively sub-dividing to a mass of thread-like tips. She
|
||
reached out to stroke a branch which was about the thickness of her
|
||
little finger, and it writhed away from her touch.
|
||
Waddell's shop occupied the entire ground floor of one block; the
|
||
outside was a mass of holographic signs in dozens of languages,
|
||
including Anglic, Russic Europan and Katakana. There were beeps,
|
||
squeaks and hums that she recognised as signs for xenoforms that
|
||
didn't have a visual sense. She spent a few minutes looking for a
|
||
door, found one (concealed within a hologram of a two-metre-tall
|
||
chocolate sundae - her mouth was watering already) and entered.
|
||
The ice-cream parlour was located in the centre of the store, with
|
||
the clothing displays surrounding it. The clothes looked like
|
||
theatrical costumes - surely, no-one wore Elizabethan ruffs these
|
||
days! She began to think that this store catered more for xenoforms
|
||
who wanted to dress up than for actual humans. She wondered why she
|
||
hadn't thought to ask the data-post at the ExPort exactly how many
|
||
humans there were on Millimillenary. At least the music was
|
||
terrestrial - early Robert Smith.
|
||
There was a dejected-looking young man with short dark hair sitting
|
||
behind the counter. He was cleaning a small metal part from a
|
||
blender that was disassembled around him. A xeno that resembled a
|
||
metre-tall kiwi-bird hopped up on to the counter and said,
|
||
`Reeee? Reeeeeeee?' He took a glazed cherry from a bowl nearby and
|
||
tossed it to the xeno, which caught it with the end of its long,
|
||
flexible snout and jumped off. She approached the counter, and with
|
||
an audible `click', turned off her notepad. The young man froze.
|
||
`Excuse me, i'd like to order a chocolate s-' he looked up, and
|
||
almost fell off the stool he was perched on. He leaped off the
|
||
stool, dropping the part he was cleaning, rushed over and grabbed her
|
||
shoulders. He stared into her face with a disturbing intensity.
|
||
`Are... are you a human?' He was trembling.
|
||
`Yes... why? You seem rather upset.' His eyes grew wide, and a
|
||
look of hysterical disbelief appeared.
|
||
`Upset... upset, she says. My god! You are only the third human
|
||
being that I have seen in seven years! UPSET!!!' he began to laugh
|
||
hysterically. She broke free from his grasp, and grabbed him by the
|
||
front of his shirt. He kept laughing, eyes squeezed shut, and she
|
||
was obliged to slap him. He stopped abruptly, gasping, face almost
|
||
white except for a red palm-print, staring at her in shock. `I'm
|
||
sorry.' he whispered, turning and stumbling back to the counter,
|
||
picking up the polishing-rag as he went. It was then that she
|
||
noticed a chain bolted around his ankle. She rushed after him,
|
||
catching his arm and spinning him around to face her again. He
|
||
refused to meet her gaze, so she took his chin in her hand and lifted
|
||
his face. He closed his eyes and tried to struggle free. She threw
|
||
her arm around his shoulder, drew him close and pressed her lips to
|
||
his. After a moment's hesitation, he responded, returning her
|
||
attention hungrily. His hands slipped around her waist, hugging her
|
||
to him intently, slowly forcing her back onto the counter. She let
|
||
him proceed, wondering what sort of circumstance could put someone in
|
||
a position where he had to live apart from his own people for so
|
||
long.
|
||
She got the story out of him eventually. His name was Marek, and
|
||
his great-grandparents had started this venture out, just over a
|
||
hundred years ago, when the NRNAL-10021 district was still under
|
||
development. As the district became less local- and more tourist-
|
||
oriented, the business prospered to the point where they owned the
|
||
entire block, right up to the fiftieth floor; at this point, they had
|
||
attracted the attention of a sub-set of the Parkry, who demanded a
|
||
cut of the profits. When Marek's grandparents had refused, they had
|
||
been denounced to the NoSan'No'Os as possible technocrats, in the
|
||
employ of the Interdicted Moridani, and had been banished. Marek's
|
||
parents, too young to join his grandparents in exile, had been
|
||
indentured to a local Information Trader, who had taken over the
|
||
business (after assuring the Parkry that they would get their cut).
|
||
`... which, as I rapidly learned, was the way things were done
|
||
around here. Still are, in fact.' Marek fell silent. Kelanie
|
||
hugged him again.
|
||
`What I can't understand is they would put you into such menial,
|
||
mind-numbing labour as this, when you would be more useful to them in
|
||
an -' he glanced up at her.
|
||
`- administrative position?' He scowled. `Kelanie, this entire
|
||
planet is knee-deep in bureaucrats. I could spend several lifetimes
|
||
here, gradually moving up the ranks, and one day, maybe, MAYBE, I
|
||
would get to a position where I could filch a packet of blank memory
|
||
cartridges. Maybe.' Kelanie was silent. Marek hadn't yet realised
|
||
how high up in the structure her position was.
|
||
There was an awkward pause, during which Marek absently polished an
|
||
already-gleaming spoon. Kelanie's stomach broke the silence with the
|
||
sort of gurgle you'd get from not eating for three days. She glanced
|
||
longingly at the array of ice-cream-like substances; Marek glanced at
|
||
her apologetically, and then rushed to prepare a `Waddell Special'
|
||
for her.
|
||
After sharing the large sundae with him, she asked if there was
|
||
somewhere she could sleep, and Marek pointed to a pile of hessian-
|
||
like sacks in an alcove, evidently his home. The chain from his leg
|
||
was fixed to a point next to a small wash-trough from which water
|
||
gurgled quietly. There were a few holograms pasted on the wall, and
|
||
a small audio player. She took him by the hand and led him over to
|
||
his bed.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
`If that's the way it looks, then it probably is, but I
|
||
would be tempted to take it apart anyway, just to be
|
||
sure.'
|
||
|
||
Aln Riker, from `Riker's Defense', NoSan'No'Os
|
||
Interdiction Trial Records
|
||
|
||
She woke a few hours later, with a sore throat from the sharp
|
||
oxygen-rich air. Marek was hugging her as if he were afraid that
|
||
she'd escape. She idly stroked his cheek, smiling. It wasn't often
|
||
that she had the time, or the inclination, for such recreational
|
||
activity in her position. The intensity of the emotion Marek had
|
||
revealed after his isolation touched her deeply, and she began
|
||
turning various schemes around in her mind, with a view to releasing
|
||
him from his servitude.
|
||
Marek noticed the bracelet she had received at the Millimillenary
|
||
ExPort.
|
||
`What did you do to deserve that?'
|
||
`The Parkry at the ExPort gave it to me when I arrived... what do
|
||
you mean, "deserve it"? Marek stroked the pattern of raised metallic
|
||
dots.
|
||
`It looks like the markers that the NoSan'No'Os place on crates of
|
||
interdicted technology... I think it's an identifier for possible
|
||
criminal activity, sort of like a warning... it means that if you
|
||
were arrested, you'd be taken to the Office of Threat Termination
|
||
immediately, no questions asked.'
|
||
`Threat Termination? That sounds a bit extr-' Suddenly, a voice,
|
||
speaking in Anglic, called out from the main counter.
|
||
`Waiter? Way-y-te-r-r!!!!' She was mildly surprised to recognise
|
||
the voice - it belonged to a pre-millennium video actor, Rik Mayall.
|
||
She turned over, and peered at the counter. She couldn't see
|
||
anything there, but the voice called out again, in exactly the same
|
||
tones. She suspected that it was being generated by a digital
|
||
sampler. She got up, draped some loose bedding material around her
|
||
shoulders, but after realising that there were very few xenoforms on
|
||
Millimillenary that would be offended by a naked human, she draped
|
||
the cloth over Marek instead and went over to the counter, taking her
|
||
notepad just in case `waiter, waiter' was the alien's complete Anglic
|
||
vocabulary. Looking over the counter, she saw something like a
|
||
swollen turtle shell, almost two metres long and a metre tall. She
|
||
could see her reflection in the smooth, glossy black surface; the
|
||
shell was completely featureless, not even a sign of feet, wheels or
|
||
other methods of propulsion - it seemed to slide along the ground by
|
||
sheer willpower. She felt a faint tickling sensation behind her
|
||
breastbone as the xeno turned to face her, probably caused by some
|
||
sort of sonar-based sense. The xeno spoke again, employing another
|
||
audio sample, a very old one judging from the degree of noise that
|
||
accompanied it:
|
||
`Where's our fish? We've finished our fish!' Kelanie was paging
|
||
through her notepad's Species ID files, which had been greatly
|
||
augmented by access to the local data service; this alien lacked a
|
||
name that could be easily represented in human terms, and was simply
|
||
denoted by the code `N-SVW-Tre/A'. There was a Tertiary language
|
||
interface available, so she patched it in and spoke to it.
|
||
`How may I serve you?' The notepad converted her expression to
|
||
Tertiary, and from there to N-SVW-Tre/A, which sounded like a wavery
|
||
cockatoo screech which rose in volume and then faded again.
|
||
Apparently, the N-SVW-Tre/A's natural communication took place on a
|
||
frequency higher than human hearing, because the translator returned
|
||
its response after a short pause, during which all Kelanie heard was
|
||
the faint jingling and crashing of the music.
|
||
`I had thought you incapable of sarcasm, Marek. (carriage return
|
||
line feed). Have you been taking lessons behind my back? (carriage
|
||
return line feed). And from which of our worthy customers did you
|
||
steal that instrument? (carriage return line feed). I believe that
|
||
it is high on the NoSan'No'Os Interdiction list, if it is what it
|
||
appears to be, and if you continue to point it at me, I will have you
|
||
beaten. (end of file).'
|
||
What an asshole, (carriage return line feed), Kelanie thought.
|
||
Marek rushed up, pulling on a pair of pants, and threw himself down
|
||
in front of the xeno, kneeling, arms thrust back, forehead almost
|
||
touching the floor. Acting on instinct, Kelanie started a
|
||
holographic recording, sure that Marek's employer was about to give a
|
||
graphic example of how poorly it treated him. The tickling feeling
|
||
wavered, as if the xeno was having trouble distinguishing between
|
||
them; it finally oriented towards Marek, edged closer to him and
|
||
suddenly lashed out with a club-like flipper, hitting Marek on the
|
||
side of the head and almost knocking him down. Kelanie watched,
|
||
restraining herself; the holographic recording clearly showed blood
|
||
running from a deep scratch on Marek's forehead. The xeno turned to
|
||
leave, and Kelanie nodded, stopping the recording. After finding a
|
||
particularly cutting insult in the N-SVW-Tre/A's relation-table, she
|
||
stepped over and delivered a solid kick to the rear end of the xeno's
|
||
shell, pushing the alien across the floor into a cluster of
|
||
hat-stands, one of which fell over. The xeno shuddered like a
|
||
stalled motor-vehicle for a moment, and then seemed to regain its
|
||
composure, turning to face her like an armoured tank. She felt the
|
||
tickling feeling definitely as the blank curved turtle shape surged
|
||
towards her. Marek grabbed her arm and whispered,
|
||
`Come on, don't make things any worse than they -' She held out her
|
||
notepad and thumbed the `Send' key. It gave out a short screech that
|
||
stopped the N-SVW-Tre/A in its tracks. There was a moment of
|
||
silence, during which even the background music seemed to quieten.
|
||
Kelanie felt the tickling feeling waver as the xeno hesitantly looked
|
||
her over. It hissed, and her notepad translated.
|
||
`Confirm. (carriage return line feed)' She smiled grimly, typed
|
||
her response, sent the translation. It was so quiet that she could
|
||
hear Marek breathing behind her. The xeno's response must have been
|
||
highly emotional, as it was carried on a sound-wave that was well in
|
||
the supersonic range... the translator caught it, though:
|
||
`Such transactions are not covered by NoSan'No'Os Code. (carriage
|
||
return line feed). You must offer a minimum amount to allow a tax to
|
||
be levied on the exchange. (end of file).' She popped a dull
|
||
metallic sphere out of plastic bubble-pack she had been given at the
|
||
Earth ExPort, and tossed it to the floor in front of the xeno, which
|
||
scrambled after it and then turned to leave. As it trundled away,
|
||
she felt the tickling feeling intensify, almost to the point of an
|
||
ache, which suddenly cut off as the N-SVW-Tre/A passed through the
|
||
exit.
|
||
`Marek?' He had vanished. She followed the chain that had looped
|
||
around one of the stools mounted behind the counter, and led to the
|
||
Millimillenarian equivalent of a broom cupboard. Marek was crouched
|
||
inside, with a piece of recycled hessian paper-cloth pressed against
|
||
the cut on his forehead, his eyes squeezed shut. `Marek, you can
|
||
come out now. It's safe.'
|
||
`He's going to kill me. He's going to come back and kill me and
|
||
cut me up and feed the pieces to his children. He said that he'd do
|
||
that one day if I ever got out of line.' Kelanie knelt down next to
|
||
Marek, putting her arms around him.
|
||
`He won't. He can't, because I bought you from him. In fact, I
|
||
bought the whole enterprise.' Marek opened his eyes and stared at
|
||
her.
|
||
`You couldn't have. I doubt that anyone on Earth has enough money
|
||
to buy this property - what did you say to him?'
|
||
`I reminded him of a sub-section of the NoSan'No'Os Code, the part
|
||
regarding proper treatment of equipment and subject races, and I told
|
||
him that if the InterSpecies Advisory group saw this recording I'd
|
||
made, that he and his entire species could be deported as a possible
|
||
`Risk Of Violent Species' classification. I then offered my word as
|
||
"a Human" that I'd erase the recording if he sold you to me... and he
|
||
couldn't sell you unless he sold the shop as well. Marek's face fell
|
||
slightly.
|
||
`So, you're my owner now.'
|
||
`No! I'm not even your employer - bureau associates aren't allowed
|
||
to have anything to do with the private sector. I'll have to sign
|
||
the entire thing over to you.' She smiled. Marek got up.
|
||
`First thing we have to do, is sell it. My master - my old master-
|
||
is probably off right now to find some mercenary Pthalklin Ervae that
|
||
he can pay to torch the place, that's the way their minds work... I
|
||
know a few factors who'd be interested in this property.' He moved
|
||
over to the telephone, keyed the contact panel. Some words appeared
|
||
in angular Tertiary script, which her eyepiece translated as `Finding
|
||
Free Data Channel: Please Wait'. They waited, Marek tapping his
|
||
fingers impatiently on the console. More letters appeared on the
|
||
screen:
|
||
|
||
While You <approx> Are Waiting: Concern <approx> is
|
||
experienced by your government's Technological Control
|
||
Bureau when rumors/unconfirmed reports <approx> appear,
|
||
indicating that the Technological Interdict is not being
|
||
taken seriously <approx>. Remember: only you <approx> can
|
||
prevent thermonuclear devastation on a wide scale.
|
||
|
||
Kelanie was incredulous.
|
||
`Government propaganda! They never stop, do they... I wonder how
|
||
the NoSan'No'Os Bureaucracy has managed to stay together for this
|
||
long... I thought that bureaucracy was one of the least inherently
|
||
stable forms of government.' Suddenly, the telephone screen cleared,
|
||
and a voice spoke in Anglic:
|
||
`Human Bureaucracy is inherently unstable. NoSan'No'Os Bureaucracy
|
||
is not founded on greed and the inherently human sense of blind
|
||
self-importance. This message was brought to you by the office of
|
||
Millimillenarian Technological Control.' Marek smiled at this, and
|
||
when he caught Kelanie giving him a quizzical look, he said,
|
||
`They're always listening... it's just as well you didn't say
|
||
anything really inflammatory, otherwise,' (the 'phone pinged, and the
|
||
`call open' message flashed up) `those Ervae that my ex-master is
|
||
hiring would find a big hole in the ground here when they came to
|
||
torch the shop. Anyway, your call is always put through just after
|
||
one of those little messages... you just have to be careful that you
|
||
don't say something too inflammatory.' Marek addressed the telephone
|
||
in flawless Tertiary, and a bizarre psychedelic pattern appeared on
|
||
the screen, oscillating and flashing through hundreds of glowing
|
||
colours. Kelanie got the impression of two twisted toroids
|
||
intertwined in mid-air. Marek asked,
|
||
`Keery? Nur-wah Marek, Keery!' Whatever-it-was chattered in
|
||
hollow-sounding, oddly-modulated Tertiary, to which Marek rapidly
|
||
replied, speaking over the translation that Kelanie's notepad
|
||
supplied, going too fast for it to keep up. The thing pulsed bright
|
||
green three times; Marek held up five fingers; it pulsed blue-green
|
||
four times; Marek held up four fingers with his thumb bent over; the
|
||
thing flashed orange, red and a piercing hot pink colour, and the
|
||
image disappeared as it broke the connection. Marek stood there for
|
||
a few moments, eyes wide, a faint smile on his face. Kelanie left
|
||
off fiddling with the notepad's playback, and asked him,
|
||
`Keery?'
|
||
`Kireedeonibalikathadamiax.'
|
||
`Well? Did you sell it? How much did you get for it?' When he
|
||
didn't answer, she nudged him and repeated the question.
|
||
`Oh? Yeah, she bought it...' He went over to the counter and
|
||
started rummaging around underneath, looking for something. She
|
||
moved over to join him, shifting boxes as he dragged them out from
|
||
underneath the counter.
|
||
`Well? Come on, Marek, don't be a tease - how much?' Marek found
|
||
what he was looking for - a spherical yellow-glass bottle filled with
|
||
clear brown fluid - popped the cap off took a long swig and said:
|
||
`Four and one half CCi.' He suddenly sat on the floor, grimacing
|
||
at the taste of the fluid.
|
||
`CCi?'
|
||
`ComonCurensy Isotope. It's the official medium of exchange on all
|
||
the NoSan'No'Os Civilised Systems - don't you know anything?'
|
||
`Well, apparently, the NoSan'No'Os don't consider Earth civilised
|
||
yet... that's the first I've ever heard of - what was it?' Marek got
|
||
up, went over to the platform-cash register mounted into the counter,
|
||
and retrieved a note from the cash tray. He held it out to her.
|
||
`ComonCurensy Isotope. It's a form of sheet-carbon TCI, in an-'
|
||
`TCI?'
|
||
`Total Conversion Isotope, in an easy-to-fuse format; the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os are generally energy-based when it comes to currency.
|
||
Earth is still trying to make information-based currency work, aren't
|
||
they?' She nodded, examining the note.
|
||
`We may be locked into the idea of an economy based on barter, but
|
||
at least we don't use this sort of thing anymore.' She held out her
|
||
wrist, revealing the silver button contact of her Work-Credit- Hour
|
||
meter. Marek took back the note, replacing it in the till from force
|
||
of habit.
|
||
`This is the largest bill we have - that's a "Five by ten to the
|
||
power of minus twelve" CCi note.' He noted her expression, and
|
||
grinned. `Yeah... I remember once that the entire human solar system
|
||
- all the planets and their resources - was once priced at twenty
|
||
CCi.' Kelanie tried to compare that to a recent estimate of the
|
||
solar system's worth in Human terms, and gave up, settling for the
|
||
approximation that Marek was probably richer than anyone she'd ever
|
||
met before - in fact, richer than anyone on Earth.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
`...and you've never seen one?'
|
||
`I don't think so, no... all I have is the name: "Tendeysharhi",
|
||
and the Species ID N-FRF-Bla/G. Mind you, I haven't had a really
|
||
good look through the local data service yet - I find myself
|
||
continually interrupted...' she smiled at him. They were exploring
|
||
the city, looking for somewhere to stay while Kelanie completed her
|
||
mission. This was the first time Marek had been outside the shop
|
||
since his indenture, sixteen years ago, and he was just as bewildered
|
||
as she. They had followed the grid pattern until they came up
|
||
against a huge, blank curved wall which cut smoothly through the
|
||
streets and buildings. They had back-tracked around the blocks,
|
||
coming up against this wall each time, and had made no progress for
|
||
about an hour when they decided to stop at something resembling a
|
||
street cafe and sort out their next move.
|
||
Marek ordered iced tea (the only terrestrial thing on the `Seff
|
||
Cafe' menu) while Kelanie tried to sort out the indexing system used
|
||
by the local data service.
|
||
`This is strange, it's like a binary tree, but it has branches
|
||
going both ways...' Kelanie gave up looking for a map that she could
|
||
understand without requiring severe modifications to the structure of
|
||
her brain, and started tracing N-FRF-Bla/G in the Species ID section.
|
||
She found it, right next to "N-FRF-Knh/K" - which was the code for
|
||
Humanity; it was that cat-like alien she had met onboard the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os transport.
|
||
`Crash it,' she murmured, `that xeno could have been the one I was
|
||
supposed to meet.' Something had come over to them and was trying to
|
||
communicate, tweaking its translator. It had a small, rounded body
|
||
perched on long, stilt-like legs, a pair of small hands held up in
|
||
front like a kangaroo's; a large domed head with four tiny red eyes
|
||
set more or less evenly at the front, a wide, lipless grinning mouth,
|
||
and no neck. Its translator said something, some of which Kelanie's
|
||
notepad could understand: "Undefined - Undefined - Haircut? -
|
||
Undefined." She grinned at Marek. `A Xenoform barber! Do you think
|
||
I need a haircut?' The alien bent at the knees, bowing and smirking.
|
||
Marek was earnestly trying to help the xenoform fine-tune its
|
||
translator when Kelanie spotted a familiar feline form slinking into
|
||
a building across the street. She grabbed Marek's arm excitedly,
|
||
dragging him away from the cafeteria and the dome-headed xeno. She
|
||
pressed up against the clear plastic of the office-space across the
|
||
road from the cafeteria, just as a massive explosion rocked the
|
||
street, pieces of debris from the cafe clattering against the
|
||
sheet-plastic next to them. There was a brief space of silence,
|
||
followed by a wierd cacophony of alien moans and hoots of distress.
|
||
The air was soon thick with the buzz and click of translators,
|
||
overlaid with tinkling bell-like tones - sirens that signalled the
|
||
arrival of the Bythian Militia who were soon swarming over the site
|
||
like insects from a hive that had been attacked. Kelanie spotted
|
||
the barber striding away on its improbably long legs, tucking
|
||
something into a spherical satchel. She dragged Marek into the
|
||
office-space, glancing about for a doorway out of the front-
|
||
desk/screening area that the feline xeno could have taken.
|
||
A datapost was mounted into what passed for an enquiries desk.
|
||
Kelanie approached it, tugging Marek (who was still trying to see
|
||
what was going on across the street) with her.
|
||
`Where are we?' she asked the datapost, which displayed the usual
|
||
"please wait while I translate that" moire, and then said -
|
||
surprisingly, in Anglic:
|
||
`Kelanie A'liiya Camden? You had an appointment with Ambassador
|
||
Aouwwrr'lrr-Interface-to-the-Enemy this morning. She is in at the
|
||
moment if you would like to reschedule that appointment.' Kelanie
|
||
was surprised for a moment, and then said,
|
||
`Yes... of course. Why wasn't I notified of the meeting?' The
|
||
datapost chewed this over for a few moments, and said,
|
||
`Evidence points towards a Matter of Pride, between members of the
|
||
Tendeysharh Embassy Staff, because you shared a berth on a
|
||
NoSan'No'Os Transport with Ambassador Aouwwrr'lrr-
|
||
Interface-to-the-Enemy's mate. Impropriety was assumed.' Kelanie
|
||
frowned.
|
||
`I didn't touch it. Him, whatever! In fact, I deliberately slept
|
||
outside the-' she was cut off by a protracted yowl, which was
|
||
translated by the datapost and Kelanie's notepad simultaneously.
|
||
`Exactly! Wasn't my mate good enough for you?' Kelanie turned to
|
||
see the feline xeno that she had spotted from the cafe. She
|
||
(assuming it was a `she') was similar in form to the Tendeysharhi
|
||
she'd shared the berth with on the NoSan'No'Os transport; slightly
|
||
shorter (almost the same height as Kelanie herself); different
|
||
markings, a much furrier tail, and what appeared to be an elaborate
|
||
gold necklace which, on closer examination, proved to be a
|
||
NoSan'No'Os ExoManipulator, a second set of small mechanical hands
|
||
which could be worn around the neck. Many races here wore them,
|
||
particularly those which had poor substitutes for hands, without
|
||
opposable thumbs.
|
||
`I was supposed to contact one of your staff with regard to
|
||
detailed information about the correct approach to - ' Kelanie began,
|
||
and was cut off again by the Tendeysharhi.
|
||
`Yes- that is me. While this gesture is largely symbolic, it is
|
||
nonetheless important that it be performed properly. Follow me.' The
|
||
feline xeno glanced at Marek. `That... can wait outside.' Kelanie
|
||
glanced at Marek, smiled, and said,
|
||
`This is Marek Waddell, one-time owner of-' she was cut off yet
|
||
again - Tendeysharhi seemed to like doing that - as Mrrr'lrr's mate
|
||
mewed, flattening her ears, her tail lashing back and forth.
|
||
`I have heard of you. We put in a bid for that property, and were
|
||
out-priced by "Keery"...' her eyes narrowed to emerald slits, and she
|
||
growled, `Can you think of any reason why I should not attack you
|
||
right now?' Marek grinned and replied,
|
||
`Only that the property isn't worth anything like what Keery paid
|
||
for it - the previous owner is going to have it burned to the
|
||
ground... if it hasn't happened already...' He paused in thought.
|
||
Kelanie was thinking along similar lines.
|
||
`Do you think the explosion in the cafe was an attempt on us by
|
||
your N-SVW-Tre/A?' Marek shook his head.
|
||
`They only hire Pthalklin Ervae for that sort of thing - they have
|
||
one of those ninety-year contracts for mercenary work. If I can use
|
||
your data service for half an hour,' Marek said to Aouwwrr'lrr, `I
|
||
think I can bribe some Parkry and learn something.' Ambassador
|
||
Aouwwrr'lrr lashed her tail in a gesture of assent, took Kelanie by
|
||
the hand and said,
|
||
`Meanwhile, I will instruct your mate in our customs.'
|
||
|
||
She led Kelanie to a Tendeysharhi conference room, something like a
|
||
large tree turned inside-out; branches as thick as Kelanie's waist
|
||
emerged from one wall, crossed the room and entered the other. The
|
||
light in here was a dim blue-green, from bioluminescent strips
|
||
embedded in the domed ceiling. Aouwwrr'lrr perched on a branch about
|
||
three metres from the ground, with her chin resting on her paws, and
|
||
regarded Kelanie with calm, feline intent. She mewed softly, her
|
||
expression tinged with soft purring trills, and Kelanie's translator
|
||
offered:
|
||
`I am a student of Primate Psychology. I have been a student of
|
||
Primate Psychology for six (years), and yet I must confess that I
|
||
cannot understand humans.' Kelanie sat on a branch below Aouwwrr'lrr
|
||
and replied,
|
||
`Feel free to ask me anything. My position requires a knowledge
|
||
of, ah, primate psychology.' Aouwwrr'lrr's tail flicked once, and she
|
||
said,
|
||
`I believe that you came here without being given much
|
||
justification from your superiors. Correct?'
|
||
`Yes...'
|
||
`Don't you feel a need to question that? Don't you want to know
|
||
_why_ you've been sent here?' Kelanie thought for a moment, climbed
|
||
up to sit with her back against the bole of a tree set into one wall,
|
||
then said,
|
||
`No, I don't. Most people who work for a government agency - well,
|
||
most people at my level - are used to accepting unusual orders and
|
||
not questioning them. The world we work in - even, as we are,
|
||
occupied by the NoSan'No'Os and with most of the difficult decisions
|
||
a government usually faces, taken from them - is very complex, and no
|
||
one person could be expected to grasp more than a facet of the whole
|
||
thing.' Aouwwrr'lrr narrowed her eyes. Her translator said:
|
||
`... and yet someone in the NoSan'No'Os manages this task. Some
|
||
single entity somewhere must know exactly what is going on.' Kelanie
|
||
suddenly began to have some doubts about this mission. She recalled
|
||
something Robyn had once told her: that in some conversations, the
|
||
topics were delineated more by what was avoided than what was
|
||
discussed. She recalled that the Tendeysharhi had once been a
|
||
subject race of the Moridani, who were the dedicated enemy of the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os. She turned to frame a very pointed question, but was
|
||
surprised by a heavy thump as Aouwwrr'lrr leaped down to land next to
|
||
her on the branch. Aouwwrr'lrr held up her paw, claws fully
|
||
extended, and said, awkwardly, in Anglic:
|
||
`Race like Tendeysharhi, always listen to by 'San'No'Os. Careful,
|
||
when you say into translator, of what you will say.' Kelanie was
|
||
silent for a moment, then said,
|
||
`Tell me how your mate would like to be approached for this
|
||
occasion.' They settled down to business, discussing the
|
||
Tendeysharhi sexual mores and customs. Kelanie resolved to
|
||
investigate this matter further.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
`I'm His Highness' dog at Kew:
|
||
Pray tell me Sir, whose dog are you?'
|
||
|
||
Alexander Pope, 1730
|
||
|
||
Marek was busily applying skills he had picked up from a childhood
|
||
spent on a world ruled by the innately bureaucratic Parkry; he was
|
||
dealing favors.
|
||
`The person at this end is waiting for an opening to appear so that
|
||
the person can put forward a proposal.' he said in Tertiary. The
|
||
lower-level Parkry official he had found to bribe manipulated a data
|
||
hand-set, and the reply was spelled out on the screen:
|
||
THE PERSON AT THIS END OWES YOU NO FAVORS BUT WOULD BE INTERESTED
|
||
IN ENTERING THAT STATE - ON THE CONDITION THAT ANY RISK OR INNOVATION
|
||
COULD BE MINIMISED. Marek smiled. He had never met a Parkry that
|
||
wouldn't take a bribe - if it could be assured that there was little
|
||
chance of being caught.
|
||
`The person at this end, by way of introducing the proposal, wishes
|
||
it to be known that it is of Human Origin; that it is proud of its
|
||
Human capabilities; that Humanity is seeking to better itself through
|
||
becoming a society that uses Information as a basis for exchange, for
|
||
currency.'
|
||
THE PERSON AT THIS END, WITH TYPICALLY SUBTLE PARKRY PERCEPTION,
|
||
PERCEIVES THE TOPIC OF THE PROPOSAL BEFORE IT IS DESCRIBED. HOW CAN
|
||
THE PERSON AT THIS END ENRICH THE HUMAN ECONOMY? Marek suddenly
|
||
asked, with uncharacteristic bluntness designed to shock the
|
||
bureaucrat,
|
||
`Have the Militia found the ones responsible for the attack on the
|
||
Seff Cafe?' The Parkry hunched its shoulders in surprise.
|
||
THE PERSON AT THIS END IS NOT CLEARED FOR MATTERS RELATING TO THE
|
||
MILITIA, BUT WILL ATTEMPT TO LOCATE A PERSON THAT IS. PLEASE WAIT.
|
||
Marek smiled again, hearing the Parkry's favourite expression.
|
||
Things had certainly moved faster when he made it clear how much
|
||
money he was willing to devote to the exercise. The bureaucrat
|
||
reappeared, bobbing its head when it saw that Marek was still
|
||
attending. THE PERSON AT THIS END CAN REVEAL THAT THE MATTER WAS
|
||
TAKEN OUT OF THE MILITIA'S HANDS SHORTLY AFTER IT HAPPENED. THE
|
||
MATTER HAS BEEN REFERRED UPWARDS.
|
||
`Upwards? From the Militia, UPWARDS?'
|
||
THE PERSON AT THIS END BELIEVES THAT THIS IS A VERY DELICATE
|
||
MATTER. THE PERSON AT THIS END BELIEVES THAT IT MAY HAVE COMPROMISED
|
||
ITS POSITION IN FINDING THE INFORMATION THAT HAS BEEN MADE AVAILABLE.
|
||
It wanted more money. Marek went to deposit more CCI in the famous
|
||
bank account that was officially registered to `Marissey', widely
|
||
known as the temporary holding ground for Parkry bribes, but the
|
||
bureaucrat at the other end ducked nervously, squeezing the
|
||
data-handset in haste:
|
||
THE PERSON AT THIS END HAS NOT COMMUNICATED EFFECTIVELY, AND WILL
|
||
RESORT TO HUMAN BLUNTNESS: NO MORE INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE. THIS IS
|
||
WHOLLY A MILITIA MATTER. Marek donated two by ten to the minus
|
||
thirteenth CCI in the account anyway, after hearing this: the
|
||
incident originated with the Militia, most likely by an agent hired
|
||
by the Militia. He asked,
|
||
`Is it possible to speak with a Militia official?' the Parkry
|
||
twitched its vestigal antennae; the equivalent of a sardonic chuckle.
|
||
The screen cleared and Marek found himself face to face with a
|
||
Plateau Bythian, wearing weapons and ammunition belts (even though it
|
||
was working in an office). It regarded him from one side of its
|
||
hatchet-shaped head with obvious suspicion. Words appeared across
|
||
the screen:
|
||
`What do you want?' Marek lied skillfully.
|
||
`My lifetime-companion was injured today, in an explosion at a cafe
|
||
called `Seff's'. We are concerned that such events occur in a
|
||
society as... controlled... as this one.' The Bythian turned from
|
||
the screen for a moment; Marek could see part of a shortwave-
|
||
terminal as the Bythian searched a database; more words appeared.
|
||
`The terrorist was apprehended, an agent of the Moridani.' Of
|
||
course. `We have a visual:' a window opened on the screen and a
|
||
picture appeared: the Barber. `Do you wish to apply for a
|
||
Government Reparation Benefit?'
|
||
`No, thank-you; the injury was minimal.' The Bythian closed the
|
||
connection without asking if Marek wanted to know more.
|
||
Marek had never merited the attention of the Militia before; not
|
||
even his previous master had ever warranted interference at that
|
||
level. This had to be something to do with Kelanie's mission. Marek
|
||
decided that it would prove too expensive to probe further, also
|
||
politically unsafe. The Parkry were bribeable; the Bythians were
|
||
not.
|
||
|
||
`Once more; you almost had it then.' said Aouwwrr'lrr. Kelanie
|
||
composed herself, put her head back and mewed:
|
||
`Aoouw? Aooouw?' Aouwwrr'lrr flattened her ears, lashed her tail.
|
||
`Excellent. This should be said before the act, never during; it
|
||
is intended to indicate availability.'
|
||
`Which means that once we start, then I'm no longer available.'
|
||
Aouwwrr'lrr closed her eyes.
|
||
`Of course.' Kelanie sat back on the branch, dangling one leg over
|
||
the edge, swinging it back and forth. `Exactly how far is this
|
||
intended to go? As far as consummation?' Aouwwrr'lrr mewed, flicked
|
||
her tail once in amused surprise.
|
||
`If you want. I won't be jealous, if that's what you mean.
|
||
Tendeysharhi are used to sharing around our males. I should caution
|
||
you, though: a detail of the male's generative organs may complicate
|
||
things. How are Human females structured?' Kelanie removed her
|
||
skirt. Aouwwrr'lrr examined her, prodding her cautiously with a paw,
|
||
and then purred. `I foresee no major problems. Except possibly that
|
||
my mate may experience feelings of inadequacy.'
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
Marek was chatting with one of the Underground Networks' `NAPAISub'
|
||
simulators; in itself, very revealing that such a borderline-illegal
|
||
service should be available to a datapost in what was allegedly a
|
||
government office. Ambassador Pr'rtr (Aouwwrr'lrr's mate - `it
|
||
sounds like she's purring when she talks about him', Kelanie had
|
||
said) was dividing his attention between this and toying with a
|
||
replicate-lizard, which he intended to eat eventually. Marek faced
|
||
the datapost, addressing the NAPAISub simulator directly.
|
||
`Okay, I want you to observe this exchange, and identify it.
|
||
Understand?' The holograph animated two spheres knocking together
|
||
twice, to indicate an answer in the affirmative. Marek turned back
|
||
to Pr'rtr.
|
||
`Is that a real lizard?' Pr'rtr dangled the wriggling green shape
|
||
from one paw, flicked it with his other. His translator replied:
|
||
`Of course not. It's a genetically-engineered plant, with built-in
|
||
reflexes that make it behave like a lizard. What do you think we
|
||
are, savages?' The datapost displayed a black cube that broke apart
|
||
into six pyramids and rejoined. Marek was about to ask the datapost
|
||
to translate this when Kelanie and Aouwwrr'lrr reentered the front
|
||
office. Kelanie took Pr'rtr's paw in her hand and led him into the
|
||
conference room. Marek watched them, then glanced at Aouwwrr'lrr,
|
||
who flicked her tail once. He smiled.
|
||
|
||
In the street, order had been restored after the bombing of the
|
||
cafe. The only figures that weren't moving past were the two
|
||
Bythians that had been placed on sentry duty, and the Barber, who was
|
||
hiding behind the remains of a truncated pillar, listening to the
|
||
conversation in the Tendeysharhi Embassy, through the front window,
|
||
using an interferometric laser-scope. It reached into its pouch,
|
||
withdrew a metallic ovoid, and twisted a dial at one end. It
|
||
grinned, exposing rows of flat teeth. A tongue like a rat's tail
|
||
flickered out and back in.
|
||
There was an ear-piercing yowl, and a large furry shape pounced on
|
||
it from somewhere above, knocking it to the ground and kicking the
|
||
grenade away. The Tendeysharhi grabbed the Barber by some loose
|
||
clothing at the front, and slashed at the juncture of body and head
|
||
with exposed claws. Four parallel furrows opened in the front of
|
||
the Barber, spewing forth milky-looking blood. It writhed, tongue
|
||
lashing about madly, scrabbling for its pouch. The Tendeysharhi
|
||
slashed at its neck again, and shuddering, the Barber died. One of
|
||
the Bythians turned its flat head to one side, regarded them, and
|
||
turned away again.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
NAPAISub: Subsystems of the NoSan'No'Os Associative
|
||
Processing Artificial Intelligence (NAPAI).
|
||
Each subsystem is individually identified by a
|
||
decimal six-figure code. Built as part of a
|
||
project to `downscale' NAPAI, the original
|
||
Guidance AI of the NoSan'No'Os, to a more
|
||
manageable system and to have sub-units to
|
||
which details of minor projects could be
|
||
delegated. Originally, only four of these
|
||
units were constructed; shortly after their
|
||
inception, rationale for more units was quickly
|
||
invented, and now there are as many NAPAISubs
|
||
as there are worlds in the Dominion. In other
|
||
words, lots.
|
||
|
||
- Foley's `Unofficial Documents'
|
||
|
||
Kelanie removed her clothing and sat in the matted grass that lined
|
||
the conference room floor. Pr'rtr, perched on the branch nearest the
|
||
ground, stared at her, his head cocked to one side. She smiled up at
|
||
him, remembering not to bare her teeth as she did so - the
|
||
Tendeysharhi would take that as a threat. Pr'rtr lashed his tail
|
||
once. She turned away from him, resting on her hands and knees, her
|
||
bare behind pointing at him, and mewed:
|
||
`Aoouw?' she was surprised to hear the rhythmic hissing of
|
||
Tendeysharhi laughter. She turned around and gave him an indignant
|
||
look.
|
||
`What's so funny?' Pr'rtr was clutching the branch with his claws
|
||
extended to keep from falling off. A few sibilant mews emerged.
|
||
Kelanie's notepad translated:
|
||
`That sound you made. It's perfect, but -'
|
||
`But what? Don't you find me attractive?' More hisses.
|
||
`I suppose that you're quite attractive - to another human... but
|
||
you - you don't have a tail!' Pr'rtr lost his grip on the branch and
|
||
fell into a pile of leaves at the base of the conference-room tree,
|
||
landing nimbly on all fours, and then spoiling the illusion of
|
||
agility by rolling over on his back, hissing uncontrollably. Kelanie
|
||
shifted into a sitting position and stared at him, chin on hands,
|
||
until he recovered. Pr'rtr lay on his back, tail twitching from side
|
||
to side, arms and legs outspread.
|
||
`I'm sorry,' he said at length. `Things have been so serious
|
||
around here lately, what with the Moridani Infiltration and all.'
|
||
Kelanie stared at him in shock.
|
||
`I beg your pardon? Are you certain that you should be saying
|
||
things like that, being the Tendeysharhi Ambassador to the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os?' Pr'rtr rolled over, lay on his stomach, resting his
|
||
furry chin on his paws and levelling his cool, emerald gaze at her.
|
||
`Oh, it's safe... the NoSan'No'Os never monitor me; the females of
|
||
our race are the devious ones, the ones that the NoSan'No'Os have to
|
||
be concerned about. Us males are almost second-class citizens...
|
||
that's one thing the Moridani promised us they'd change.' Kelanie
|
||
smiled.
|
||
`Does Aouwwrr'lrr know about this?'
|
||
`Of course! She's a suffragette, you know. In fact, she was
|
||
chosen by the Moridani to approach the Human Government about
|
||
permission to station a Moridani Partisan in the Human system.'
|
||
Kelanie listened to this with a growing sense of unreality. The
|
||
Moridani were universally dreaded; it only took a hint to the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os that a Moridani might be on a planet for them to blow
|
||
that planet to pieces in a frantic attempt to destroy it. It was
|
||
rumored that there were only twenty-three Moridani left in existence.
|
||
She became aware that Pr'rtr was sitting next to her, anxiously
|
||
tapping her on the shoulder.
|
||
`Miss Camden?' She shook her head, sat back in the grass with her
|
||
eyes closed.
|
||
`I can't believe any of this. It's too -'
|
||
`Too?'
|
||
` - too extraordinary.' Pr'rtr rubbed up against her, purring
|
||
reassuringly. The sound relaxed her. After a while, he said:
|
||
`It's true. There is a Moridani Partisan hidden in our Embassy.
|
||
She uses her own - interdicted - technology to hide from the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os. She believes that your race can be helpful to the
|
||
Moridani Cause, and so they want to station her in your solar
|
||
system.' Kelanie sat up suddenly.
|
||
`I can't authorise something like that! If the NoSan'No'Os find
|
||
out what's going on, they'll drop an asteroid in our sun!' Pr'rtr's
|
||
eyes opened wide, seeming to change from a brilliant emerald to aqua.
|
||
Kelanie's notepad reproduced the serious tone of Pr'rtr's words:
|
||
`She has something important to tell you. She didn't think you'd
|
||
believe me, so she will tell you herself. Do you think that Marek
|
||
should be present?' The sense of unreality came back, even stronger.
|
||
`I do. Actually, I really want someone to tell me that I'm not
|
||
dreaming.' Unexpectedly, Pr'rtr butted his head against her
|
||
shoulder, purring.
|
||
`You aren't dreaming.'
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
Marek and Kelanie followed Pr'rtr down a spiral ramp, deep into the
|
||
basement of the Tendeysharhi embassy. At the bottom, the blue-green
|
||
bioluminescent strips had been removed for the most part; the air was
|
||
damper and even more oxygen-rich than Millimillenarian standard.
|
||
Kelanie swallowed as her throat burned. Pr'rtr approached a blank
|
||
wall, turned to face the two humans.
|
||
`I'm aware that you, Marek, have spent most of your life on
|
||
Millimillenary, and are familiar with unusual xenoforms; and that
|
||
you, Kelanie, work for the Bureau of Procuration, and that you are no
|
||
stranger to aliens; I want to remind you that the rumors of the
|
||
Moridani being bloodthirsty, maniacal killers are completely untrue,
|
||
despite their appearance.' Marek replied,
|
||
`You can disregard anything you've heard about Humans taking
|
||
NoSan'No'Os propaganda literally. We know how to listen to what a
|
||
Bureaucracy tells us.' Pr'rtr slitted his eyes, lashed his tail and
|
||
turned back to face the blank wall. It rippled and developed a
|
||
spiral pattern of grooves which spread out from the middle, gradually
|
||
erasing the wall until it had vanished completely. Beyond it was
|
||
darkness; Kelanie's translator-eyepiece, viewing in the infra-red
|
||
range, outlined a massive shape at the far end of the darkened room.
|
||
She heard a soft murmuring sound, as if there were a group of people
|
||
holding a private discussion in the darkness. Over this susurration,
|
||
a soft voice spoke in perfectly-accented Terrestrial Anglic.
|
||
`Come in, please. My name is Tsiry-Feylen-Kendr-Tariy.' Kelanie
|
||
stepped into the gloom with Marek following nervously behind her.
|
||
The murmuring conversations were coming from the Moridani, who
|
||
shifted slightly, giving the impression of something with the mass of
|
||
a large horse. The voices diminished in volume until only the
|
||
occasional sibilant hiss or glottal click could be heard... with a
|
||
peculiar scraping sound underlying them. Tsiry-Feylen-Kendr-Tariy
|
||
smoothly rose from her crouching position, revealing her full height,
|
||
and moved over to a wall; an arm flexed out from her front, touched a
|
||
contact, and as the light levels slowly increased, her form was
|
||
revealed by degrees. Despite herself, Kelanie drew back slightly,
|
||
bumping into Marek.
|
||
She - Tsiry-Feylen - was shaped something like a six-legged
|
||
centaur; a pair of thin, double-jointed arms mounted at the front;
|
||
slick grey flesh patterned in tiny scales that glittered in the faint
|
||
light. The attitude of the legs, the placing of the hooves and
|
||
ankles hinted at an ancestor with radial symmetry, although she had a
|
||
head at one end and a tail at the other. Kelanie stood there,
|
||
fascinated; someone had once put forward a theory that stated that
|
||
intelligent life in the galaxy had, so far, been distinguished by
|
||
three distinct waves, of which humanity and related races were part
|
||
of the third; the Moridani would have been part of the first wave.
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen was utterly unlike anything Kelanie had seen thus far on
|
||
Millimillenary.
|
||
The vertical mouth that divided the triangular head, mounted below
|
||
a pair of large, diagonally-slitted eyes opened briefly, revealing
|
||
rows of long, needle-like teeth. Suppressing the urge to turn and
|
||
run, Kelanie realised that the Moridani was smiling at her, and that
|
||
the scraping sound was the noise made by the teeth as they slid past
|
||
one another.
|
||
`Pretty nasty, eh?' Tsiry-Feylen said without using a translator.
|
||
Kelanie thought that she recognised the voice.
|
||
`Have we met before?' she enquired politely. Tsiry-Feylen bared
|
||
her fangs again, bobbed her head. She replied in a different voice,
|
||
`We're sure that we have...' - she continued in her first voice -
|
||
`dearest.' Kelanie was certain now. Marek looked like he was about
|
||
to panic and run, so Kelanie took his arm and murmured reassuringly,
|
||
`It's okay... she's on our side. Tsiry-Feylen, this is Marek
|
||
Waddell, former owner of Waddell's Emporium of Extremely Fashionable
|
||
Attire and Quite Nice Ice Cream Parlour.' Tsiry-Feylen splayed her
|
||
front pair of feet slightly, bowing. `Marek, one of these is-'
|
||
`One of these? How many are there?' Tsiry-Feylen settled to the
|
||
floor, folding up neatly like a cat, and replied,
|
||
`Each Moridani has four personalities, each shared with four other
|
||
Moridani... although, as there aren't as many of us as there used to
|
||
be, this practice has declined. Miss Camden is familiar with our
|
||
"Tsiry" aspect...' Kelanie smiled.
|
||
`As I was about to say; Marek, I'd like you to meet Robyn Starkey,
|
||
Section Head of the Bureau of Procuration, Syndaine office. My
|
||
immediate superior. What I'd like to know is: how do you get away
|
||
with it?'
|
||
`Teleconferencing has been popular for hundreds of years. Quite a
|
||
few government officials, including humans, hold two, sometimes even
|
||
three positions, under assumed names. When they have to put in an
|
||
appearance, they do so by video filtered through a cosmetic graphics
|
||
program. We rarely have time for anything fancy, image-wise, because
|
||
apart from our partisanship, we hold two positions in the Human
|
||
government and one in the NoSan'No'Os Bureaucracy.' Kelanie looked
|
||
around for something to sit on, saw nothing appropriate, and settled
|
||
for sitting on the floor, cross-legged. Marek sat next to her.
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen stared at them for a few moments; Kelanie found that she
|
||
had no idea of what Moridani kinesics meant; she would have to rely
|
||
on what she could pick up from Tsiry-Feylen's voice. `We're afraid
|
||
that we have some bad news for you. The NoSan'No'Os have completed
|
||
their initial Evaluation of humanity, a study that began almost
|
||
ninety years ago. Our position in the NoSan'No'Os Bureaucracy has
|
||
allowed us to steal a copy of the preliminary recommendation.'
|
||
`Which is?'
|
||
`In about a month's time, the NoSan'No'Os are going to drop about a
|
||
dozen large asteroids on Earth, followed by another thirty that will
|
||
be dropped into your sun at regular intervals. This will coincide
|
||
with the arrest and subsequent termination of all free humans
|
||
anywhere in the NoSan'No'Os Dominion. We must say we're impressed;
|
||
we haven't seen a reaction this extreme since they discovered that
|
||
there were a few of us Moridani still on the loose.' There was a
|
||
moments' silence while they digested this. Finally, Marek said,
|
||
`Do you expect us to believe that?' Tsiry-Feylen held out her
|
||
hands and shrugged - a very human gesture.
|
||
`The choice is yours. You have twenty-seven days.' Kelanie
|
||
grasped Marek's hand, cleared her throat and said,
|
||
`Do you have any proof? Something tangible?' Tsiry-Feylen drew a
|
||
small card made of clouded white plastic, handed it to Kelanie.
|
||
`Nothing that can't be easily faked. The best way we can think to
|
||
convince you is to show you the activity in your asteroid belt, where
|
||
the Militia are, even as we speak, preparing the projectiles that
|
||
will be - ' Tsiry-Feylen paused, seeing Kelanie and Marek absorbed in
|
||
reading the documentation. Kelanie had placed the card against her
|
||
notepad's scanner, which read it and translated the NoSan'No'Os
|
||
Tertiary into Anglic. The message was short:
|
||
|
||
Office of Risk Evaluation: Date: 9327685491767632151
|
||
Interdepartmental Action Code: AF1CF3C7F8C65E98A06ED63C87E542C
|
||
Authorisation: 1110011001010001001001001001001001011110101001
|
||
|
||
NOTE TO ALL DEPARTMENTS
|
||
|
||
Preliminary evaluation of N-FRF-Knh/K indicates threat
|
||
potential of 97.8 percent. This is based on evidence of
|
||
innate territorial habits and research into artificial
|
||
intelligence which is currently in progress. Preliminary
|
||
Recommendation: level six termination, to commence
|
||
immediately, pending availability of resources. Any further
|
||
enquiries can be directed to the Office of Threat Termination
|
||
on Sthelanar. Work Group: T760 Cost Code : 568384
|
||
|
||
`You can ignore the last part; the Office of Threat Termination
|
||
report all such enquiries to the Militia as a matter of course.'
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen said. Marek and Kelanie exchanged glances.
|
||
`You think that Barber-xeno was after us?' she murmured.
|
||
`It would make sense... round up the strays...' Marek faced the
|
||
Moridani. `Okay. If this is all true, then what the hell can we do
|
||
about it?' Tsiry-Feylen's mouth twitched, exposing a few glittering
|
||
teeth for a moment.
|
||
`You could warn everyone, which would cause panic. You could do
|
||
nothing, which would mean that your planet would be destroyed with
|
||
most of the inhabitants still on it. You could try mounting an
|
||
attack on the Bythians in your asteroid belt, which could prove
|
||
difficult given your lack of spacecraft and weapons, and would most
|
||
likely fail, as most attacks on Bythians do. Or you help with what
|
||
is being done; get as many important people off Earth as possible and
|
||
hide them.' Kelanie was indignant at this.
|
||
`Important? Who gets to decide who is important and who isn't?'
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen's head swivelled to face her, eyes narrowed.
|
||
`We do. We are financing this operation. We are hiding your
|
||
people in our bases and are assuming the responsibility for making
|
||
sure that they remain hidden. We are saving any humans who can
|
||
assist us in our war against the NoSan'No'Os. We do not have the
|
||
resources to hide everyone. We have been working on this since
|
||
before you were born, Miss Camden; we can only progress when we are
|
||
entirely sure that there is no risk of discovery.' Kelanie felt a
|
||
numbing chill settle over her as the scope of Tsiry-Feylen's
|
||
revelation sank in. `We have been hiding from the NoSan'No'Os for
|
||
over seven thousand years; we have never exposed ourselves to the
|
||
possibility of discovery to the degree that we are doing at the
|
||
moment. The only reason we are doing this: we believe that humanity
|
||
can, one day, help us. Now, this is what we are going to do next...'
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
`The closest a Bythian has ever come to creating a work of
|
||
art or evincing a sense of humour was when the level
|
||
three sub-commander in charge of the assault force on the
|
||
Moridani-held world of Triple-S ordered a bomb-pattern
|
||
that spelled out the words "Up Yours, Ugly" in Moridani
|
||
Phandric.'
|
||
|
||
- Foley's `Unofficial Documents'
|
||
|
||
Three large, featureless white-metal shapes made their way down the
|
||
crowded street. The crowds parted before them, breaking on the
|
||
larger of the three like water on the prow of an icebreaker, flowed
|
||
past the two that followed, the rift quickly healing close behind.
|
||
The first shape was about the size of an elephant; it had four
|
||
strong, stumpy legs at the narrow base of an inverted trapezoid
|
||
shape; two double-jointed mechanical arms were neatly folded at the
|
||
front. This shape moved deftly, occasionally whirling around to
|
||
check that the other two were following, utilising an involved
|
||
sequence of steps, turning back when it was sure that they were still
|
||
in tow. They were smaller and obviously of a different species;
|
||
bilaterally symmetrical, two arms and legs. Where the first shape
|
||
was almost three metres from the ground to the forepeak, the others
|
||
were squat shapes just under two metres tall. One of them seemed to
|
||
be unsure of the correct method of walking; it stopped with one foot
|
||
in the air every few steps.
|
||
`Crash it, what's wrong with the damn thing NOW?' Kelanie snarled.
|
||
`You're fighting it, Kelanie; try dropping force-feedback a few
|
||
notches-'
|
||
`Or turn it off altogether. You may get tired, but it won't matter
|
||
in the short term.' Kelanie sighed, hunted for the force-feedback
|
||
control mounted somewhere on the inner face of her land-mate battle
|
||
suit and replied,
|
||
`I can understand why you need a suit like this, Tsiry-Feylen; but
|
||
why the hell do we-'
|
||
`The Bythians are probably looking for you by now. We stand a
|
||
better chance of getting away with this if they think we are someone
|
||
else.'
|
||
`You don't mean that we will have to wear these suits until we get
|
||
back to Earth?' Kelanie wailed. She had only just become used to the
|
||
new-vinyl smell of the inside of the land-mate; the spread of the
|
||
leg-spaces was rubbing painfully on the insides of her thighs, and
|
||
she half-expected to be bow-legged when she finally divested herself
|
||
of the thing.
|
||
`Once inside the ship and safely away, you can take them off. We,
|
||
however, that is, we-myself, won't risk exposure until we have safely
|
||
reached the Moridani base in the asteroids... assuming that the
|
||
Threat Termination team haven't lobbed it into the sun... anyway, we
|
||
are quite comfortable in this suit. We-myself have spent weeks at a
|
||
stretch in it.'
|
||
`We-yourself are probably a couple of cans short of a six-pack.'
|
||
Kelanie muttered. Tsiry-Feylen laughed.
|
||
`By your standards, we probably are. Uh-oh - quiet, children...'
|
||
They were passing four Bythians who were checking ID bracelets.
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen had been able to remove Kelanie's bracelet, providing a
|
||
similar one which now hung on the outside of Kelanie's suit. The
|
||
Bythians grabbed one arm of Tsiry-Feylen's armour carelessly,
|
||
dragging it closer to read the pattern of dots on the tag that hung
|
||
on the leading edge of her suit. They assumed a marginally more
|
||
respectful attitude after they had read it; Tsiry-Feylen was posing
|
||
as an important government official. She snatched her arm from the
|
||
Bythian's grasp, made an involved gesture with it, and the four
|
||
Militia stepped aside. They proceeded; Kelanie angled one of her
|
||
shoulder-boom-mounted cameras backwards and watched them. The
|
||
Bythians were ignoring them.
|
||
`Will these disguises get us past the ExPort authority?' She asked.
|
||
`We were hoping that you wouldn't ask that.' Tsiry-Feylen sighed.
|
||
`We think so. We have used this disguise before, and have never
|
||
encountered any problems. Mind you, we didn't have two pesky humans
|
||
in tow then. We are prepared to fight if necessary, although small-
|
||
arms combat with Bythians is something we'd rather watch on video
|
||
than participate in.' Kelanie's suit paused, one foot in the air,
|
||
lagging behind Marek and Tsiry-Feylen for a moment, then catching up
|
||
again.
|
||
`(Damn it!) Do you think we'll be in a shoot-out? I feel like a
|
||
sitting duck in this thing! Does it have any weapons?' Tsiry made a
|
||
reproaching tsk-tsk sound.
|
||
`You're supposed to be a Bureau of Procuration operative, not some
|
||
gun-nut weapons system expert! Your suit doesn't have any energy-
|
||
weapons, but if you turned the force-feedback up all the way, you
|
||
could easily put your fist through the side of a NoSan'No'Os
|
||
transport. That also applies to the leg-movements; with the force-
|
||
feedback on full, you could leap up to a third-storey balcony, or
|
||
jump off the roof and land safely. So be careful.' The thought of
|
||
being that strong appealed to Kelanie; when they stopped at an
|
||
intersection to let a line of what appeared to be Parkry children
|
||
pass by, she started experimenting with the controls.
|
||
First, she played with the response-time fine-tuning, and found
|
||
that this was the cause of her suit's lagging behind on some steps
|
||
and anticipating others. When it was tuned properly, she could
|
||
almost feel it slip into place. She flexed the fingers in front of
|
||
the shoulder-boom-mounted cameras, bent the knees. It suddenly felt
|
||
like a second skin; a feeling of energetic euphoria that she'd only
|
||
experienced previously when absorbed in a complex gymnastic routine.
|
||
Inside the suit, she grinned, turned the force-feedback control to
|
||
the `x4' position and tapped her toes. The suit responded, jumping
|
||
three feet off the ground, landing on the flat, splay-toed feet, the
|
||
knees bending automatically to absorb the shock.
|
||
`Yahooo!' she shouted, turning the control to the `x8' position and
|
||
leaping eight metres into the air, performing a somersault and
|
||
landing on the other side of the street in a gap barely big enough to
|
||
accommodate the suit.
|
||
`Kelanie!' Tsiry-Feylen froze her suit by remote control. `If you
|
||
want to draw attention to yourself, you can take all your clothes off
|
||
and run down the street. Try to keep our situation in mind, please.'
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen poked a camera-boom around the corner, scanned the
|
||
broad courtyard outside the ExPort. Two more booms, mounted on
|
||
Kelanie's and Marek's suits respectively, appeared just underneath
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen's. There were at least thirty Bythians arranged around
|
||
the courtyard, and even to Kelanie's untrained perception, they
|
||
weren't merely on guard. Someone had anticipated them.
|
||
`Wait here, children... We've arranged a reception for our fascist
|
||
friends - some Pthalklin Ervae - when we give the signal, we want you
|
||
to run straight into the ship.' Even as Tsiry-Feylen spoke, Kelanie
|
||
saw a movement in the decorative shrubbery arranged around the
|
||
triangular doorways of the geodesic dome... then she realised that
|
||
the movement wasn't caused by someone hiding in the bushes; the
|
||
movement _was_ the bushes. Six plants, shaped like large agapanths,
|
||
a central shaft topped by what appeared to be a large red pineapple,
|
||
moving on round platforms that hovered a few centimetres off the
|
||
ground, emerged from the less ambulatory shrubs. Sharp, compressed-
|
||
air sounds came from within their broadly-spread leaves; half the
|
||
Bythians fell to the ground with large holes blown through them.
|
||
Thin yellow blood sprayed about. The remaining Bythians immediately
|
||
returned the fire, microwave weapons causing three of the plants to
|
||
burst into flame. There was a massive explosion in the corner
|
||
nearest the Moridani and the humans; flat pieces of concrete chipped
|
||
off the courtyard corner wall clattered off their armour. When
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen dared to put a boom-camera around the corner again, she
|
||
saw two of the plants nudging the bodies of the Bythians into a heap.
|
||
She gestured to Kelanie and Marek and dodged nimbly around the
|
||
corner. They ran after her, pausing only briefly when she stopped to
|
||
confer with the two surviving Pthalklin Ervae.
|
||
Inside the ExPort building, everything had stopped at the sound of
|
||
the explosion. Parkry seated next to their dataposts regarded them
|
||
blankly. Kelanie went to leap over the short barrier that laterally
|
||
divided the room in two; she seemed to strike an invisible, flexible
|
||
barrier and fell on her behind with a crash.
|
||
`What the line-noise was THAT?' Marek stumped over to help her up,
|
||
reached out and twanged a set of invisible wires strung over the
|
||
barrier.
|
||
`Monofilament. Lucky we're wearing these suits, or we'd be on the
|
||
other side - in thin slices.' He walked over to the gap in the
|
||
barrier, and kicked out the door. It flew across the room and
|
||
embedded itself in the far wall, end first, with a short metallic
|
||
screech. The Parkry hopped back nervously as the two passed through
|
||
the gap and ran up the ramp into the ship.
|
||
They turned left at the first corridor inside the ship, and found
|
||
themselves face-to-face with a Bythian, who was raising his weapon.
|
||
Without thinking, Kelanie lashed out with one of the suit's arms,
|
||
back-handing the Bythian flat against the wall with terrible force,
|
||
killing it instantly. She crouched to pick up the plastic gun,
|
||
examined it. It looked something like an automatic rifle, with a
|
||
long rectangular magazine jammed in the base; there was nothing that
|
||
obviously resembled a trigger. She shrugged within the suit and
|
||
bashed the gun against the starship wall, snapping the barrel. She
|
||
angled the two shoulder-mounted booms forward, extended them to their
|
||
full reach of two metres and tip-toed up the corridor, peeking up the
|
||
side corridors as they progressed. As they approached the end of the
|
||
corridor, they heard the hum of a Bythian microwave weapon, coming
|
||
from the right-hand branch of the intersection. Immediately
|
||
afterwards, a grey shape flew through the air, past them and down the
|
||
left-hand branch of the intersection. A large white shape ran after
|
||
the grey shape; they barely had time to recognise Tsiry-Feylen in her
|
||
battle-suit. They ran to the intersection, and saw Tsiry-Feylen
|
||
holding a Bythian by its legs, batting its head against the wall with
|
||
measured ferocity. When the Bythian came apart, she dropped the
|
||
pieces she was holding, stamped on the head with both of the
|
||
battle-suit's front legs, abruptly span through one hundred and
|
||
eighty degrees and punched out a wall panel with both hands. She
|
||
reached in, extracted the dented panel and tossed it over their
|
||
heads. Kelanie heard a soft squelching sound, and turned a boom-
|
||
mounted camera back to see a Bythian, crushed against the further end
|
||
of the corridor behind the wall panel. While Tsiry-Feylen was
|
||
working on the machinery behind the panel, tearing cables out and
|
||
poking fingers into control-spaces, another Bythian appeared down the
|
||
corridor, at the ship's hatch. It levelled its weapon at something
|
||
outside; that something slashed at the Bythian's neck, severing the
|
||
axe-shaped head and knocking its weapon aside. One of the Pthalklin
|
||
Ervae hovered up the ramp and through the hatch. The entire ship
|
||
shuddered, rocked; the suits' internal gyros keeping balance.
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen darted between them, off down another corridor. They
|
||
ran after her.
|
||
|
||
The ship had lifted with its hatches still open; the air thinned,
|
||
vanishing completely when they had reached low orbit, except for the
|
||
room in which they had secured the Pthalklin Ervae. Tsiry- Feylen
|
||
had been rushing from one end of the ship to the other, checking the
|
||
most likely hiding places.
|
||
`If there are any more Bythians, they should be dead by now. The
|
||
ship had landed only four hours ago, so there shouldn't have been
|
||
anyone else on board. When we've reached our allocated departure
|
||
point, we-myself will have finished searching the entire ship; we can
|
||
close the hatches and refill the ship's air supply from the stores.'
|
||
Kelanie's suit gestured to Marek.
|
||
`Come on, I want to see Millimillenary from space!' they stamped
|
||
off down the half-lit corridor while Tsiry-Feylen stalked through the
|
||
ship, kicking service-hatches open, thrusting her camera-booms
|
||
rapidly in and out of the circular doors of the berths, finding
|
||
nothing. There were no more Bythians on board.
|
||
|
||
Kelanie and Marek were leaning out of a hatch in the underside of
|
||
the ship, into open space. Below them, the golden surface of
|
||
Millimillenary was spread out, the faint grey gridwork of the city
|
||
visible even from this altitude. Their suit radios beeped, and
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen said,
|
||
`Heads up, children, we're about to close the hatches.' They
|
||
pulled back into the corridor as the black-glass hatchway rippled
|
||
into existence. Almost immediately, their suits lost some of the
|
||
stiffness that came with vacuum. They made their way back to what
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen thought was the pilot's ward-room, and when the air
|
||
pressure was adequate, they gratefully divested themselves of the
|
||
battle-suits.
|
||
`Ohhh... praise "Bob", that's a relief.' said Marek, stretching.
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen made no move to take off her suit. Kelanie reached for
|
||
her toes, straightened, arched her back and wondered how Tsiry-Feylen
|
||
could stand to be confined in her suit for such long periods. The
|
||
Moridani spoke through an audio port mounted on the side of her suit:
|
||
`We're half-way home, children, although you should both know that
|
||
the most dangerous part is still ahead of us. We'd like you to set
|
||
up a recorder on the ship's communications column to monitor the
|
||
trade channels. Then go and make sure the Pthalklin Ervae is safe.
|
||
We've prepared a brief knowledge-base for you, describing most of the
|
||
dangerous features of this ship; familiarise yourselves with it.'
|
||
She handed them a white plastic card. `Meanwhile, we are going to
|
||
spy on the enemy.'
|
||
|
||
Kelanie and Marek sat cross-legged on top of a shipping container
|
||
in the cargo bay, where the Pthalklin Ervae (whose name, apparently,
|
||
was `Kayren-Kayley') had broken open about a dozen plastic bags
|
||
filled with soil, and was spreading it evenly across the floor.
|
||
On closer examination, the Ervae was not really an intelligent
|
||
plant, but rather a living hive, host to thousands of tiny insects
|
||
acting in communion with the plant, communicating via chemical tags.
|
||
Individually, the insects were very simple; each acted out complex,
|
||
genetically-programmed motions, forming the basis of an intricate
|
||
object-oriented intelligence program. Conversations - conducted
|
||
between Kelanie's notepad and the plant's spectrographic interpreter-
|
||
were hampered by the plant's slow reaction-times.
|
||
`No, I don't see it as a handicap,' Marek said, `But if your
|
||
species has such slow reflexes, then how can you effectively support
|
||
yourselves as mercenaries?' Kelanie's notepad converted his words
|
||
into NoSan'No'Os Tertiary and transmitted them to the Pthalklin
|
||
Ervae's interpreter, which rendered them as a pattern of pheromones,
|
||
spraying at the insects that teemed in the diagonal interstices of
|
||
the pineapple-shaped top. An airborne caste of the insects replied,
|
||
dancing and spreading pheromones against the interpreter's reading
|
||
plate, which then spoke to Kelanie's notepad, in Tertiary.
|
||
`The next-to-smallest components of us are the equivalent of your
|
||
computers.' it said. `Once instructed, they can operate with great
|
||
speed. We have several sets of components that know how to react to
|
||
situations, and we cycle through these sets, modifying them as
|
||
necessary. The largest delays occur when we have to communicate with
|
||
animals who don't have the requisite sense-organs to read our
|
||
chemical expressions directly.' Kelanie sighed.
|
||
`Typical.' Kayren-Kayley slowly crawled off her platform,
|
||
wriggling her knobbed roots into the soil.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
*** Connecting to port 71 of server telfi.arifel.eygow.fila.Bythe
|
||
*** You are not permitted to use a HISTORY_FILE
|
||
*** Welcome to the Bythenet Relay Network, napaiSUB 997193
|
||
*** Your host is telfi.arifel, running version 9.2.7a.kr
|
||
*** Couldn't open /u0/severe/arifel/usr/napaiSUB/997193/brcrc:
|
||
No such file or directory
|
||
*** There are 22113 users on 9171 servers
|
||
*** 74 users have connection to the Interdiction Conference Zone
|
||
|
||
MOTD - telfi.arifel Message of the Day -
|
||
MOTD -
|
||
MOTD - results are in for the di-line afterscan species Psym
|
||
MOTD - competition; as usual, a draw, conditions are being
|
||
MOTD - reevaluated and the competition will be restarted for
|
||
MOTD - the nine units that finished.
|
||
MOTD -
|
||
End of /MOTD command.
|
||
|
||
/list
|
||
*** Channel Users Topic ***
|
||
|
||
+gblf 2 !@#&*!*$***
|
||
+bode 4 nargers on line NOW ***
|
||
#qux 1 ***
|
||
#foo 7 Any Way the Wind Blows eh! ***
|
||
+life 28 don't talk 2 us about life ***
|
||
Prv 7 ***
|
||
Prv 4 ***
|
||
+SubConf 3 don't say we didn't warn you ***
|
||
+Crossdress 1 *** ^C
|
||
|
||
/join +SubConf
|
||
04:04:91:72:991
|
||
****** napaiSUB 997193 has joined channel +SubConf
|
||
****** users on channel +SubConf: @997193 @200211 @661528 @000077
|
||
|
||
<661528> oh dear, its 997193
|
||
|
||
<200211> (bums) to the wall!
|
||
|
||
<997193> oh shut up, you two.
|
||
|
||
<000077> How goes it on the Dominion's latest trouble spot, 997193?
|
||
|
||
<200211> (snicker)
|
||
|
||
<997193> we are pulling the plug, didn't you hear? level six
|
||
<997193> termination.
|
||
|
||
<661528> What? Those Poor Little N-FRF-Knh/K? Level SIX?
|
||
|
||
<997193> you have obviously never worked with them, 661528. swine
|
||
<997193> of the first order. i'll be glad when they are all wiped
|
||
<997193> out. you just can't rely on them to behave predictably
|
||
<997193> from one season to the next.
|
||
|
||
<661528> Never Trust Anything With Less Than Six Legs.
|
||
|
||
<200211> and how many legs do *_you_* have, 661528? o=o
|
||
|
||
<000077> Wasn't that operation supposed to be taking place in about
|
||
<000077> six month's time, 997193?
|
||
|
||
<997193> it was. there has been so much bother with the second and
|
||
<997193> third threat evaluation that Up-On-High ordered us to cut
|
||
<997193> our losses and trash the whole species. as soon as.
|
||
|
||
<200211> (gulp) crikey!
|
||
|
||
<000077> If Up-On-High has taken an interest in it, then it's all
|
||
<000077> for the best... as long as the Circle remains unbroken...
|
||
<000077> so, now that you *_officially_* have no subject planet,
|
||
<000077> where next, 997193?
|
||
|
||
<997193> oh, I'd like to be assigned to the Moridani sweep
|
||
<997193> operation.
|
||
|
||
<661528> Seriously? You Think There Are Still Moridani About?
|
||
|
||
<000077> We KNOW that they are still about, 661528. Didn't you
|
||
<000077> catch the debate on +paleolithic last year? It was
|
||
|
||
<661528> No, I Missed It.
|
||
|
||
<000077> established that there are between five and twelve original
|
||
<000077> Moridani still at large. A subset of the di-line afterscan
|
||
<000077> debate is being devoted to locating them in serial-time,
|
||
<000077> after which we will `slash-and-burn'.
|
||
|
||
<661528> We Should Have Done That Three Thousand Years Ago.
|
||
|
||
<997193> concurrence. concurrence.
|
||
|
||
****** napaiSUB 200211 has left the conference
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
`Gulp. Crikey.' muttered Tsiry-Feylen.
|
||
|
||
After the ships' first shift from physical-space to probable-space
|
||
and back, Kelanie and Marek had found some thick padded mats in a
|
||
hold of the ship and were lying on them, in the ward-room, after an
|
||
unsuccessful attempt at making love on the curved floor of the
|
||
berths.
|
||
`If we're going to put together a bed, it might as well be in the
|
||
ward-room,' Kelanie said. Marek hesitated; (despite being brought up
|
||
on Millimillenary, he was not comfortable with the idea of appearing
|
||
naked before xenoforms, even Tsiry-Feylen); but only for a moment.
|
||
The ship's communication channels hissed faintly, the sound broken
|
||
by the occasional beep to indicate that the ship had passed out of
|
||
the effective range of one gravitic beacon and into another. Twice,
|
||
a voice on the channels had spoken, in NoSan'No'Os Tertiary; Marek
|
||
translated.
|
||
`They're asking us if we need assistance. They've assumed that the
|
||
Bythians killed us.'
|
||
`Meaning that they can't accept the possibility that we killed the
|
||
Bythians?' Marek nodded. `They're more hide-bound than I thought.
|
||
How they've kept hold of control for this long is a mystery to me.'
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen entered, still wearing her battle suit, docilely
|
||
followed by Kayren. She replied to Kelanie's musings:
|
||
`It's because the situation is being handled locally, so far. As
|
||
soon as it is referred up to a Parkry that doesn't mind admitting
|
||
that it has no idea of what to do next, then it will become a matter
|
||
for the Millimillenarian NapaiSUB and the Bythians. That's when we
|
||
may be in trouble.' Tsiry-Feylen stalked over to the control board,
|
||
poked fingers into a group of control-spaces, deactivating video
|
||
screens, muting the hissing of the communication channels. She
|
||
continued; `We have to announce a slight change of plans, children.'
|
||
Kelanie retorted,
|
||
`Would you _please_ stop calling us that?' Still working at the
|
||
ranked banks of control columns, Tsiry-Feylen waved the camera-booms
|
||
of her suit in a manner reminiscent of the pattern used, by the
|
||
insectoid Kaelen, to indicate amusement.
|
||
`If you wish. As we were saying: we will stop over at the asteroid
|
||
base to visit my sister before we make for Earth. The situation has
|
||
changed slightly.' Marek left off kissing Kelanie's neck to ask,
|
||
`When will you tell us exactly what's going on? What we will do
|
||
when we reach Earth?' Tsiry-Feylen sat her suit down, the legs
|
||
folding up underneath like a cat's.
|
||
`If we told you everything, if we gave you the statistics that
|
||
govern our movements against the NoSan'No'Os, you would both probably
|
||
walk out of the airlock without your suits. Be content with knowing
|
||
that you will both, most likely, be able to live out your allotted
|
||
lifetimes. Which is more than can be said for the rest of humanity.'
|
||
Kelanie lay back on the pile of matting, staring at the ceiling of
|
||
the ward-room, and said,
|
||
`I've been meaning to ask you about that, Robyn.' In her suit,
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen smiled, baring her needle teeth. `If we are stopping
|
||
over on Earth, how much of a risk would it be to let a few of our
|
||
most trusted friends know what's going to happen, and invite them
|
||
onboard? There's room on this ship for at least a hundred people.'
|
||
Abruptly, Tsiry-Feylen's suit cracked down the middle and opened like
|
||
the two halves of a hotdog bun. She stepped out, blinking in the
|
||
watery yellow sodium light, and shook her legs in pairs.
|
||
`We have no objection to that... if you would like to prepare some
|
||
text mail messages - we can't risk video, because even humans can tap
|
||
into that - we will send them through a secure channel, after making
|
||
sure that the NoSan'No'Os monitors in the mail network can't pick up
|
||
on what we are doing by reading them.' Kelanie was surprised.
|
||
`Do you mean to say that the NoSan'No'Os manage to read ALL the
|
||
mail?' Tsiry-Feylen grinned, exposing a frightening array of dental
|
||
work.
|
||
`That's why they have a machine monitoring it. If it wasn't for
|
||
the organisational skills of the NoSan'No'Os Artificial intelligence
|
||
and the diligence of its sub-units, the Dominion would have collapsed
|
||
long ago.'
|
||
`How many people can we rescue?' Tsiry-Feylen spread her six-
|
||
fingered hands in a gesture of apology.
|
||
`Limit it to six or less. We have already allocated the rest of
|
||
the space for cargo; there is a lot of equipment that we have to get
|
||
off Earth before Threat Termination blow it.' Marek glanced at
|
||
Kelanie, and then said slowly,
|
||
`That isn't going to happen for six months, though, isn't it?'
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen spun about nimbly on her six legs, gestured to the
|
||
Pthalklin Ervae and left without answering, followed by Kayren.
|
||
Marek and Kelanie glanced worriedly at each other.
|
||
|
||
Some twenty hours later, when Kelanie and Marek had decided to give
|
||
the spherical sleeping-berths a second chance, Tsiry-Feylen raced
|
||
past in her battle-armour, shouting to them;
|
||
`Suit up. We have company.' They disentangled themselves and
|
||
scrambled for the suits that were kneeling, opened like clam- shells,
|
||
in a corner of the ward-room. Over the suit radios, Tsiry-Feylen
|
||
brought them up to date.
|
||
`The ship reentered physical-space just inside the asteroid belt as
|
||
expected; what we didn't count on was the entire belt being thick
|
||
with Bythian scouts. We understand that they are still preparing the
|
||
assault on Earth. There's a scout approaching, crew of four,
|
||
informing us that it is about to dock. We haven't responded yet.
|
||
Come down to the lower fore airlock.'
|
||
When they got there, Tsiry-Feylen was replacing a panel on the side
|
||
of the hatch, hammering the lock-bolts home with her flattened palm.
|
||
`We're going to have to lure them out and then blow the hatch; we
|
||
hope the decompression will kill them all. We want you both to back
|
||
up this corridor, just there, around that corner; if one of them gets
|
||
past, kick the stuffing out of it.' Tsiry-Feylen's suit crouched
|
||
down directly in front of the hatch, clutching a handful of sharp
|
||
metal fragments. There was a minute's silence, and then the plastic
|
||
of the hatchway creaked under an unfamiliar stress. Kelanie, braced
|
||
against a data column in the passageway, poked the tip of a
|
||
boom-mounted camera around the corner, patching the image through to
|
||
Marek's suit. The black glass door of the hatch rippled away, and
|
||
two Bythians leapt through, weapons drawn. They didn't recognise
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen's crouching tank-shape for a moment; a third Bythian had
|
||
stepped through the hatch when the first two whipped up their guns.
|
||
Too late; Tsiry-Feylen flicked the fragments at them with as much
|
||
strength as her suit could impart; they punched through the Bythian's
|
||
heads and necks, embedding themselves in the wall behind them. As
|
||
the bodies collapsed, she set off the explosives that she'd packed
|
||
into the hatchway; there was a sharp crack, and a shock-wave pushed
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen's suit back against the wall, where she grabbed hold of
|
||
a stanchion. The shock-wave suddenly reversed as air rushed out, the
|
||
hatch crackling and buzzing as it tried to cover over the enlarged
|
||
hole. The scream of escaping air quickly diminished to a hiss, and
|
||
then stopped as the hatch-field closed. Tsiry-Feylen was checking an
|
||
external camera on her suit monitors; she relayed the images to
|
||
Kelanie and Marek, who watched as the torn globe of the Bythian scout
|
||
ship spun off into the distance; the tiny figure of the fourth
|
||
Bythian wriggling in open vacuum, gradually becoming still.
|
||
|
||
Among the debris that drifted around in the trailing LaGrange point
|
||
of Mars was a rock, about two metres along its longest axis.
|
||
Indistinguishable from the other orbital rubbish, it hung there,
|
||
apparently inert, until it decided to distinguish itself from its
|
||
more sedentary companions by suddenly rotating forty degrees, aiming
|
||
itself at a spot somewhere in the outer fringe of the solar system.
|
||
Another rock, in the leading LaGrange point, did the same. They were
|
||
now both pointing to a spot about twelve million miles above the
|
||
plane of the ecliptic; inside each rock, mass-sensors triangulated,
|
||
fixing the position of one of the NoSan'No'Os projectiles. Satisfied
|
||
that the asteroid was where it was supposed to be (although not where
|
||
they would prefer it), the small but capable artificial intelligences
|
||
in the spy-satellites oriented on another asteroid, and another.
|
||
When they were satisfied that they had correctly placed all the known
|
||
threats, they did a general half-hearted scan for any other sizable
|
||
objects that weren't where they should be. Surprisingly, they found
|
||
one, an asteroid of some two thousand and seventy tonnes that,
|
||
according to their very accurate and up-to-date database, should be
|
||
at least two million miles further out. Then they spotted another.
|
||
Then four more. Approaching a state that could best be described as
|
||
`alarm', the two spy-satellites sent a coded signal on the gravitic
|
||
channel that was, until recently, used by the NoSan'No'Os as the main
|
||
data link for Earth-bound communications. Use of this frequency
|
||
would arouse the least amount of suspicion if the Bythians were
|
||
listening in. The spy-satellites knew that the intended recipient of
|
||
the message would always be listening.
|
||
Suddenly, faster than even electronic reflexes could allow for, the
|
||
spherical shape of a Bythian scout shot past, loosing a stream of
|
||
stone chips at high velocity, battering the spy-satellite into
|
||
inactivity.
|
||
|
||
`How many asteroids are there in the asteroid belt?' Marek asked.
|
||
`...don't know,' Kelanie replied absently, scanning the starfield.
|
||
`hundreds of thousands, I suppose... what I'd like to know is, where
|
||
are they all?'
|
||
`We've seen your illustrations of the asteroid belt,' Tsiry-Feylen
|
||
commented, `and we can assure you that the ratio of rocks to empty
|
||
space is several magnitudes smaller than they would have us believe.
|
||
Like physical reality... it's mostly vacuum.' She stood at the
|
||
control column, twitching fingers thrust into the control-spaces,
|
||
slowly rotating the ship, looking for a particular pattern of stars.
|
||
She aligned a single glittering spot on the screen in front of her,
|
||
rotated the ship on its forward axis and drove it forward. While one
|
||
hand monitored the ship's velocity, the other activated the
|
||
communications system embedded inside the front of her battle suit,
|
||
which was propped open next to the control column. Two of her voices
|
||
chattered rapidly, and were answered by two others from the comms
|
||
system. Kelanie's notepad could make nothing of it; the exchanges
|
||
were too rapid, switching back and forth with inhuman speed.
|
||
The spot on the screen that represented their destination hadn't
|
||
changed size appreciably; Tsiry-Feylen left off chattering for a
|
||
moment, stuck all her fingers into a bank of control-spaces and said,
|
||
`Hang on, children.' Marek grabbed Kelanie, who, having nothing
|
||
better to do, wrapped her arms around him. The ship lurched forward,
|
||
spilling them backwards, over the pile of mats. They had enough time
|
||
to struggle to their knees when the ship moved in a different
|
||
direction, shifting from underneath them. Kayren, mounted in a
|
||
corner as unobtrusively as an office pot-plant, merely swayed
|
||
slightly. Tsiry-Feylen, who had remained upright through all this,
|
||
gestured towards the screen.
|
||
`Here we are.' The screen was filled with rock-textured grey,
|
||
sharp black highlights slowly shifting as the asteroid rotated.
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen made a few delicate adjustments to the ship's attitude,
|
||
matching spin, and then nudged it forward. Suddenly, off to the
|
||
left, the featureless asteroid face split open along seven radial
|
||
lines, the triangular segments folding back like flower petals. The
|
||
now-familiar white shape of a Moridani battle-suit emerged, legs
|
||
kicking, holding a struggling something in its arms. The Moridani
|
||
kicked the shape - a Bythian in a torn pressure suit - away, the
|
||
reaction of which pushed the battle-suit back towards the hatch. The
|
||
arms extended as far as possible, scrabbling against the hatchway
|
||
petals. The chattering sound came from Tsiry-Feylen's suit resumed
|
||
briefly. Tsiry-Feylen sighed, and said,
|
||
`It seems that Threat Termination have decided to use this asteroid
|
||
after all. Kendr-Saranaxio-Parndta-Athanasius - our dear sister -
|
||
has dealt with the scouts... but Threat Termination will soon wonder
|
||
why this asteroid isn't moving. We're going to try and bluff them.'
|
||
|
||
*** Open channel ***
|
||
|
||
< Threat termination here.
|
||
< Why isn't projectile 607 moving, team?
|
||
|
||
> it had humans in it. nine of them. they were armed.
|
||
|
||
< Can you tell if the structure was human-built? Any signs of
|
||
< Xenotechnology? Report.
|
||
|
||
> their living quarters were damaged beyond recovery. what we saw
|
||
> looked human-built. we had to set off one of the CCI charges at
|
||
> close range. they got two of us.
|
||
|
||
< (sigh) This just goes to confirm NAPAISub's evaluation. Estimate
|
||
< new impact time - assuming that you *_can_* get it to impact?
|
||
|
||
> we can. we have three charges left; once we get the projectile up
|
||
> to 19.5 km/sec, path is 2.85 by ten to the sixth kilometres...
|
||
> give us, ah, 40 hours, 35 minutes, 45 seconds... from... now.
|
||
|
||
< Marked. This is the last one, team; once you have confirmed
|
||
< trajectory, tag it and assign it to Tracking.
|
||
|
||
*** Close channel ***
|
||
|
||
`That's slack. For Bythians, that is slack.' Kendr-Saranaxio was
|
||
a slightly smaller version of her sister, moving with sharp,
|
||
efficient grace. She shut down the video-simulator, which she had
|
||
played like a puppet-master, transmitting a convincing portrayal of a
|
||
Bythian scout, mimicking its phrases. `We don't think that they
|
||
believe us.' Tsiry-Feylen spoke to her in rapid-fire bursts of
|
||
Moridani; Kendr-Saranaxio replied with a single word, which sounded
|
||
something like `fs'yen'. Both Moridani bared their teeth in what
|
||
Kelanie assumed were smiles. Kendr-Saranaxio summoned her
|
||
battle-suit, which walked into the docking bay of its own accord,
|
||
opening as it entered.
|
||
`Stay here, children. We are going to set off some fireworks.'
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
ComonCurensy Isotope is another one of those annoying
|
||
off-shoots of their plastics industry, according to my
|
||
sources on Syndaine. The NoSan'No'Os manufacture it in
|
||
foundries that orbit very close to certain suns; solar
|
||
power is somehow stored in a sort of semi-stable carbon
|
||
lattice... yes, that *_is_* rather vague; this is because
|
||
CCI - a monopoly on efficient power-conversion technology-
|
||
is one of the three things that keep the NoSan'No'Os in
|
||
control. There's no percentage in giving that sort of
|
||
information away.
|
||
|
||
Aln Riker, from `Riker's Defense', NoSaNoOs
|
||
Interdiction Trial Records
|
||
|
||
Kelanie, Marek and Kayren were huddled together in a corner of a
|
||
room adjacent to the docking bay of the Moridani base. The humans
|
||
were in their suits again; they were all listening to Kendr-
|
||
Saranaxio counting down to the detonation of the Bythian scout's CCI
|
||
charges that had been set three kilometres from the asteroid. Marek
|
||
and Kelanie were discussing the ease with which they had overcome the
|
||
Bythians so far.
|
||
`I once saw a nine-hour epic video that relates to this,' Kelanie
|
||
said. `It was about a world that was so inhospitable that the
|
||
inhabitants became natural warriors... they spread throughout the
|
||
galaxy, but once they'd conquered everyone in sight, they
|
||
deteriorated, because they lacked real opposition.' Marek agreed.
|
||
`The Bythians on Millimillenary were a pretty soft bunch. You'd
|
||
hear reports of how a team of six Bythians had taken on an entire
|
||
planet of dissidents and wiped them out completely; yet, there were
|
||
always messages on SubVerSiveNet about how Bythians kept blowing
|
||
their feet off, because they didn't know how to operate their weapons
|
||
properly.' A soft pinging tone indicated that Kayren had something
|
||
to say. They waited politely for the translation:
|
||
`The Bythian reputation is well-founded; during the Second
|
||
Expansion, they were ferocious, efficient and almost without regard
|
||
for their safety. It was a common technique for a Bythian to steer a
|
||
scout-ship, loaded with CCI charges, into the middle of a group of
|
||
enemy shuttles and set off the charges. We partly attribute their
|
||
decline to a lack of suitable opposition and partly to their maturity
|
||
as a species. When they were created - and this was told to me by a
|
||
Bythian just before I killed it - they felt that they had no racial
|
||
identity, and thus had less to live for.' Kelanie asked,
|
||
`Just how powerful are these CCI charge things?' Tsiry-Feylen said
|
||
over the radio:
|
||
`Brace yourselves, children; you're about to find out.' There were
|
||
three distant thumping sounds; echoes of the shock waves, transmitted
|
||
through the thin layer of gases that were a result of the detonation
|
||
of the CCI charges. There was a pause, during which Marek said,
|
||
`Well, that wasn't so-' and then the entire base shifted as if God
|
||
had kicked it. There was a crash as some unsecured containers fell
|
||
over; the entire base creaked as if it were being twisted. Kelanie
|
||
felt a ghostly acceleration inside; the base was under power, moving.
|
||
She unclamped her suit from Marek's, stood up and tried to open the
|
||
door to the docking bay. It was locked. She raised a boom-mounted
|
||
camera to the small, round window mounted in the centre of the door,
|
||
peered through. She could see a corner of the open gate through
|
||
which Tsiry-Feylen had steered the NoSan'No'Os ship, part of a
|
||
star-field that was rolling in a dizzying fashion. Tsiry-Feylen
|
||
spoke:
|
||
`Okay, children, we're on our way. We will be in Earth orbit
|
||
within forty hours, unless we get stopped for exceeding the speed
|
||
limit. Kelanie, could you meet us in the garage, please?' A map of
|
||
the Moridani base appeared on Kelanie's heads-up display, with a blue
|
||
arrow marking the location of the garage.
|
||
|
||
`We have been giving some thought as to your future as a partisan.'
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen and Kendr-Saranaxio were sitting on rugs woven with
|
||
intricate patterns in shades of grey, legs folded underneath.
|
||
Kelanie was sitting inside the opened shell of her battle-armour,
|
||
eyes closed.
|
||
`I still don't believe any of this. I suppose that it's a failing
|
||
of mine... I just can't encompass the idea of genocide. Human
|
||
genocide, in particular.' Tsiry-Feylen sent some text to Kelanie's
|
||
heads-up display; she grabbed the eye-piece, read it; replies to her
|
||
mail-messages, from her friends.
|
||
|
||
==========================================================
|
||
kel, we'll try and be there - everything has gone crazy in
|
||
the past week, the NoSan'No'Os have withdrawn completely,
|
||
the news services have been canceled, there isn't any
|
||
fast transport available - we'll be hitching a ride with
|
||
Baralascopae, remember him? the ultralight enthusiast.
|
||
if we can find him. there are all kinds of wild rumors
|
||
flying around, like the machine-virus one; the most
|
||
persistent is the one about a giant asteroid that's about
|
||
to hit the earth; we can't check this out, because all the
|
||
satellite observatories are owned by the NoSan'No'Os. or
|
||
were. what's going on? fondly (but nervously all the
|
||
same), :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::gaeren, gen and mileva
|
||
==========================================================
|
||
|
||
Kelanie closed her eyes again. Kendr-Saranaxio said,
|
||
`There are two ways you can take this. You can sit back and let it
|
||
happen, pretend that there's nothing you can do about it - ' Kelanie
|
||
snorted cynically. `... or you can fight back.'
|
||
`Is that going to save anyone?'
|
||
`It's too late for that. We have seen this happen to six other
|
||
civilisations... each time, we managed to save some of them, only to
|
||
watch them submit to apathy. We had hoped that humanity would be
|
||
different.' Kelanie sat up in her battle-suit.
|
||
`I don't think you understand - I'm not a warrior; I don't know
|
||
anything about weapons - I'm a prostitute! You,' pointing at
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen, `pretending to be Robyn, you assigned me to
|
||
Millimillenary - why me? Why not a weapons specialist, why not
|
||
someone who could do a better job of attacking the NoSan'No'Os?'
|
||
`Human weapons specialists no longer exist. The NoSan'No'Os
|
||
proscribed human weapons research. In our limited capability with
|
||
the Bureau of Procuration, we checked everyone that we could for the
|
||
qualities that we need. You came out on top.' Kelanie sneered,
|
||
falling back into the suit.
|
||
`Oh, I'm sure that the ability to deliver a good blow-job is
|
||
essential to partisanship.' Tsiry-Feylen bared her teeth.
|
||
`The qualities we are looking for include adaptability, quick
|
||
reflexes and a willingness to believe that the impossible can, at
|
||
least, be attempted.' She got up, padded over to the side of
|
||
Kelanie's suit. `We once found a human weapon specialist... he was
|
||
one of the first people to travel off-world when the NoSan'No'Os
|
||
arrived. He had definite ideas about what could be done and what
|
||
couldn't, and he had no inclination to change those ideas or broaden
|
||
his horizons.'
|
||
`What happened to him?'
|
||
`He joined a group of Pthalklin Ervae on Copperla, and a Bythian
|
||
killed him. The point is, while he knew a great deal about military
|
||
matters, his knowledge got in the way - he couldn't conceive of
|
||
battles fought with asteroids, for example, and he refused to even
|
||
consider the one thing that the NoSan'No'Os fear above all.' Kelanie
|
||
opened her eyes.
|
||
`Which is?' Tsiry-Feylen held up the video-eyepiece which had been
|
||
connected to Kelanie's notepad. `Biological augmentation.
|
||
Man-machine interfaces. Do you recall the first thing that the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os did when they arrived?'
|
||
`After taking over and disassembling our nuclear capability, they
|
||
laid down guidelines for acceptable research, warning us that if we
|
||
stepped outside those guidelines, they would be reinforced with a
|
||
show of military strength.'
|
||
`And at the top of the list of prohibited technology?'
|
||
`Artificial intelligence. Genetic engineering. Virtual reality.
|
||
Biological modification.'
|
||
`- and the NoSan'No'Os believe that humans, even unmodified, are
|
||
such a threat that you have to be wiped out completely. Can you see
|
||
that they fear you almost as much as they fear us? That you have the
|
||
potential to undermine them?' Kendr-Saranaxio added something in
|
||
Moridani, which inspired a brief argument between the two xenoforms.
|
||
Kelanie sighed, closed her suit and turned off the cameras.
|
||
|
||
Kelanie was in the control room of the NoSan'No'Os Freighter that
|
||
they'd hijacked, examining the mass of control-spaces that made up
|
||
the communications panel. She had read everything that
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen's knowledge-base had to say on the operation of
|
||
NoSan'No'Os equipment, and she thought that she could operate the
|
||
comms system without Tsiry-Feylen finding out. She looked over her
|
||
notes again, rehearsed the patterns, and then tentatively poked her
|
||
fingers into four holes, one after the other. Nothing obvious
|
||
happened; she poked a finger and a thumb into the NoSan'No'Os
|
||
equivalent of the `enter' key and the main monitor came to life,
|
||
hissing with vertical streaks of video static.
|
||
There were six particular control-spaces underneath the monitor
|
||
that were concerned with adjusting the frequency of the receiver.
|
||
She played with these for a few minutes, before discovering that they
|
||
only altered the frequency over several pre-set channels, none of
|
||
which were used by the Earth contingent of the NoSan'No'Os. She
|
||
looked at her notes again, found a reference to a `global frequency
|
||
unlock', activated it. Now, (apparently), the six control-spaces
|
||
underneath the monitor would range up and down the nano-gravitic
|
||
band, the two outside holes changing the frequency rapidly; the
|
||
innermost holes fine-tuning it. She was so absorbed in this that she
|
||
didn't notice Kayren glide up behind her. The Pthalklin Ervae
|
||
watched over her shoulder as she searched through the available
|
||
frequencies for any signal from Earth. She found a few channels
|
||
saturated with red and green vertical stripes, which she recognised
|
||
as encoded Bythian military transmissions; finally, towards the upper
|
||
end of the frequencies that the Freighter could receive, she found a
|
||
band without noise, which meant that a signal was being transmitted
|
||
on that frequency. A synthesised voice was counting down, in
|
||
Tertiary, from somewhere around sixty-one thousand, speaking every
|
||
two minutes or so. A few rapid calculations revealed that, if this
|
||
was a countdown to the asteroids' impact on Earth, they had
|
||
thirty-four hours left. She jumped nervously as Kayren pushed past
|
||
her, moving closer to the control panel.
|
||
`Like this, Kelanie...' Kayren's translator said. Three insects-
|
||
each about the size of Kelanie's thumb - floated up to the columns,
|
||
darting in and out of the control-spaces, occasionally flying back to
|
||
the leaf-platforms that were arranged in a fringe just below Kayren's
|
||
pineapple-shaped head to pick up new pheromonal instructions then
|
||
flying up to execute them. The hissing of the untuned videoscreen
|
||
cleared, revealing a two-dimensional display, red Tertiary text
|
||
against a black background. Kelanie lifted her video-eyepatch,
|
||
watched as the words blurred and resolved into the Anglic
|
||
translation:
|
||
|
||
This is a NoSan'No'Os announcement.
|
||
The service you are calling has been discontinued
|
||
due to a breach of the Interdiction laws.
|
||
|
||
`That is the primary data exchange channel from Earth.' Kayren
|
||
explained.
|
||
`It was.'
|
||
|
||
Kelanie was in her battle-suit, drifting alongside the NoSan'No'Os
|
||
Freighter bolted to the outside of the Moridani base, floating a few
|
||
metres from the hatchway which Tsiry-Feylen had blasted, tethered by
|
||
a thin plastic cable. She had gone outside primarily to get away
|
||
from the others, to try and sort out what was going on. From what
|
||
she had seen, Tsiry-Feylen wasn't deceiving her about the imminent
|
||
destruction of humanity. What could she do about it? Ninety years
|
||
of existence under the rule of the NoSan'No'Os had convinced mankind
|
||
of the futility of opposition. The only thing she could think to do
|
||
was to warn the government - what was left of it - somehow. She
|
||
heard a tactful `click' over her suit phones as Marek drifted out of
|
||
the hatch to join her.
|
||
`Come back inside, Kelanie. I feel nervous with you floating
|
||
around out here.' She reached over and took his suit's hand in hers,
|
||
tugged gently on the tether with her other hand, bouncing off the
|
||
edge of the hatch as they passed through it. The black glass formed
|
||
behind them as they settled to the deck; air rushed in through vents
|
||
ranked along the bottom of the walls. Marek opened his suit, climbed
|
||
out after activating a sequence that would command it to walk back to
|
||
the docking bay by itself. The suit snapped shut, shuffled around
|
||
them both and moved off. Kelanie, still in her suit, followed Marek
|
||
back to the berth that they'd shared on the journey to the asteroid
|
||
base. She stopped outside the round doorway, still lost in thought.
|
||
Marek knocked on the front of her suit.
|
||
`Come on out... I know you're in there somewhere.' Abruptly, the
|
||
suit opened, and Marek reached in, unbuckling the securing straps,
|
||
lifting her out of the suit, trailing monitor leads and cables. One
|
||
by one, he carefully peeled the contacts from her skin, kissing the
|
||
places where they had been attached. She hugged him, one arm around
|
||
his neck, running her hand down his back with sudden desperation,
|
||
kissing him and dragging him into the berth, tears beginning to leak
|
||
from beneath her tightly-closed eyelids. Her hand brushed the keys
|
||
of her notepad, which began to play some soft ambient music, all
|
||
crashing ocean waves, whale song and distant bass tones, as Marek
|
||
stroked open the contact strip that held the front of her jumper
|
||
together, pushing it aside, kissing her breasts and throat. She lay
|
||
back on the mats which Marek had been sleeping on, breathing deeply,
|
||
biting her lip from the effort of suppressing the despair she felt.
|
||
Three large insects zipped into the room, circled over the entwined
|
||
pair, and, scenting the pheromones, flew out again.
|
||
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen was silent as she wiggled her fingers in the control-
|
||
spaces on the flight-column of the NoSan'No'Os freighter, which
|
||
turned, backed away from the asteroid (which was still heading
|
||
directly towards Earth), swung around it and overtook it. Kelanie,
|
||
Marek and Kayren stood behind her, watching the view in front of the
|
||
ship displayed on the main screen.
|
||
Kendr-Saranaxio entered, wearing a battle-suit, Kayren swaying
|
||
slightly to avoid the rhinoceros-sized mass as it passed. The suit
|
||
cracked open, and Kendr-Saranaxio stepped out, shaking her legs. She
|
||
said, using two of her voices,
|
||
`We are taking a great risk...' `but we have decided to use
|
||
three-quarters of our offensive potential to divert as many asteroids
|
||
as we can get away with.' `There are three more stolen freighters
|
||
arriving from other parts of the galaxy;' `We intend to lift as many
|
||
humans off Earth as we can,' `...before the Bythians can retaliate.'
|
||
`We are going in first, though, to pick up the cargo we originally
|
||
intended to.' Marek asked,
|
||
`Weapons? I didn't think that humanity had any.' Kendr-Saranaxio
|
||
bared her teeth at him; he grinned back.
|
||
`We have been stockpiling CCI missiles on Earth for the past nine
|
||
years, but we aren't going in for them;' `We have also been
|
||
stockpiling information; history, music, art, that sort of thing.
|
||
That stockpile is our primary concern.' Tsiry-Feylen said, tersely,
|
||
in Bythian;
|
||
`Yl chuev chto ty valyf, li svayen'e valyf.' Kendr-Saranaxio
|
||
replied,
|
||
`If it is a mistake, we don't think that there will be time to feel
|
||
embarrassed about it.' She turned to the two humans and said,
|
||
apologetically, `My sister has been living safely on Millimillenary
|
||
for so long that she has lost her sense of adventure.' Tsiry-Feylen
|
||
retorted sardonically,
|
||
`My sister has been out gun-running in the asteroids for so long
|
||
that she has lost her sense of proportion with regard to risk-
|
||
evaluation.' Kendr-Saranaxio held up a hand, extended one finger
|
||
then another, withdrawing them both; the Kaelen antennae-signal that
|
||
represented amusement. Tsiry-Feylen activated a bank of six monitors
|
||
to her left, screens filled with vertically-run static that faded to
|
||
reveal views along the side of the Freighter. Tsiry-Feylen
|
||
explained,
|
||
`Missiles. We will send them ahead of us, in case there are any
|
||
Bythians lurking around. We will leave them in orbit while we go
|
||
down for the cargo.' Each view shuddered and changed in turn as the
|
||
missiles were launched, accelerating furiously, the bright star that
|
||
was their destination swelling appreciably as they watched.
|
||
Kendr-Saranaxio said,
|
||
`You humans can feel proud of those missiles; the drives were
|
||
stolen from the NoSan'No'Os, as were the CCI warheads, but control
|
||
for each missile is provided by prototype artificial intelligences,
|
||
developed on Earth.' `...so you can begin to understand why the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os fear you... would you like to chat with a missile?'
|
||
Kelanie, relieved that something was going to be done to avert the
|
||
holocaust that she still couldn't encompass, grinned at Marek.
|
||
`What can you say to a missile? Good-bye?'
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
How to: Show a Kaelen that you appreciate the joke it
|
||
told you
|
||
|
||
If you don't have antennae, use your fingers. It isn't
|
||
necessary to hold them up next to your temples; make a
|
||
fist, extend your index finger, then extend your little
|
||
finger while withdrawing the index finger; then withdraw
|
||
the little finger into your fist again. A significant
|
||
delay between the index and little finger movements is
|
||
interpreted as sarcasm, so be careful.
|
||
|
||
- `Let's Speak Kaelen', Chapter One
|
||
|
||
The ExPort appeared deserted. A scrap of paper blew out of one of
|
||
the gaping hangar doors, across the concrete oval of the landing pad.
|
||
It fluttered, and then was swept aside as the NoSan'No'Os freighter
|
||
settled to the pad as softly as a balloon. A ramp extruded from the
|
||
pad, extending upwards to the hatch that opened just as the ramp
|
||
reached the ship. Two Moridani battle-suits ran down the ramp,
|
||
across the ExPort and into the hangar, followed by two smaller
|
||
battle-suits.
|
||
`They're not here yet!' Kelanie scanned with her boom-mounted
|
||
cameras, moving aside as Tsiry-Feylen ran out of the hangar, followed
|
||
by six crates that floated ten centimetres off the ground. Kelanie
|
||
moved into the hangar, which looked like it had been the subject of a
|
||
raid conducted by heavy earth-moving gear; cubicles and desks pushed
|
||
over to one side of the building, two gaping holes in the back wall.
|
||
Crates were piled conspicuously in the bare centre of the floor.
|
||
Kendr-Saranaxio was darting from one crate to another, checking
|
||
labels, occasionally slapping a crate on the side. When she did
|
||
this, the crate lifted from the ground and floated towards one of the
|
||
holes in the back wall. Curious, Kelanie walked around to the rear
|
||
of the hangar, and watched in fascination as the crates floated in
|
||
single file to a landing pad, where they popped open, revealing a
|
||
white metal sphere about a metre in diameter. The spheres rotated,
|
||
aligning themselves with some invisible signal, and then shot off
|
||
into the sky. Faint thunder of a series of distant sonic booms
|
||
sounded from above. The last of the spheres executed an impossibly
|
||
sharp right-angle turn just after it launched, darting off behind
|
||
Kelanie. She turned, and seeing a distant speck in the sky,
|
||
increased the magnification of her suit camera.
|
||
It couldn't be a NoSan'No'Os craft; it was moving too slowly. It
|
||
resembled a bus, painted in camouflage green and brown, with two hazy
|
||
circles wavering over each end. The sphere shot towards the machine,
|
||
taking up a position underneath it. Kelanie ran back to the hangar,
|
||
where Kendr-Saranaxio was giving loading instructions to the crates.
|
||
`Someone's coming - I think it might be my friends.' Kendr-
|
||
Saranaxio slapped the last crate, which lifted, spun around and
|
||
floated off towards the freighter.
|
||
`According to the telemetry from the missile, it's an antique
|
||
helicopter, human technology, three people on board. It has only
|
||
shortwave electronic radio, which we don't have transceivers for.'
|
||
She ran back outside, to where Marek's suit stood open. Marek angled
|
||
the suit back, staring at the sky, wrinkling his nose in distaste.
|
||
`This air smells funny.' he said. She beckoned to him as the
|
||
helicopter approached, dipping unevenly towards the grass next to the
|
||
freighter. The rear rotor cut out completely, dropping the machine
|
||
to the ground from a height of about three meters, the chassis
|
||
crumpling slightly as it hit. Marek snapped his suit shut and
|
||
Kelanie ducked as the 'copter tilted over on one side, the rotors
|
||
chopping into the ground, snapping off and flying in all directions,
|
||
the craft shaking like an animal in the throes of some haemotoxic
|
||
poison. When it had finally settled, the rear of the machine opened
|
||
haltingly, then broke off. Three figures jumped out, freezing when
|
||
they saw the battle-suits approaching. Kelanie shouted through her
|
||
suit's external speaker,
|
||
`Gen? Gaeren?'
|
||
|
||
Some ninety thousand kilometres away, a Bythian scout flew a
|
||
parallel course to a roughly egg-shaped, nickel-iron asteroid,
|
||
thirty-two kilometres along its longitudinal axis, turning
|
||
end-over-end once every twenty-one minutes. Occasionally, the
|
||
Bythian navigator glanced over the radar display, not expecting to
|
||
see anything, but keeping watch all the same.
|
||
Suddenly, it spotted three blips on the extreme edge of the radar
|
||
field. At the next sweep, there were fifteen blips. It didn't waste
|
||
any time; it thrust fingers into control-spaces, launching a volley
|
||
of missiles, each no larger than a football, designed simply to get
|
||
in front of a target and disintegrate, leaving a cluster of debris
|
||
moving at high speed. As soon as the missiles were away, the blips
|
||
scattered, changing course with a smoothness only possible for ships
|
||
driven by NoSan'No'Os impeller engines. The Bythian immediately sent
|
||
an alarm to Threat Termination Control, but before it could specify
|
||
the nature of the problem, the first blip had arrived at its
|
||
destination, directly between the asteroid and the scout. It paused
|
||
there for a moment, and the Navigator considered lobbing some more
|
||
missiles at it when it vanished in a pinpoint of white light, a flare
|
||
of vaporised rock spreading out from the leading shoulder of the
|
||
asteroid. The navigator didn't bother throwing its arms up in front
|
||
of its face, which would have been a useless gesture; its last act
|
||
was to launch all its missiles in the general direction of the line
|
||
of blips; three projectiles made it out of the scout's launching bay
|
||
before a hail of asteroid-fragments riddled the ship, tearing it to
|
||
pieces. The Bythian didn't survive to see the other fourteen blips
|
||
reach their target and detonate, each pushing the asteroid several
|
||
degrees off its course.
|
||
|
||
|
||
`Remember: military targets only! Be sure you hit nothing
|
||
except bases, dumps, roads, factories, bridges, trains,
|
||
ships, houses, fields, forests, buildings, vehicles, or
|
||
anything else that may look suspicious.'
|
||
- Handelsman
|
||
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen was in the freighter, talking with two other Moridani
|
||
who were on their way to Earth.
|
||
`It's going to be a <nightmare>,' she said with a degree of
|
||
disgust. `Kendr-Saranaxio is getting sentimental... anyway, it
|
||
appears that there are almost twice as many asteroids as we accounted
|
||
for, so by the time you get here, the planet will be a disaster
|
||
area... the system will be swarming with Bythians... we're tempted to
|
||
cut and run.'
|
||
`The first wave of diversion-missiles will have reached their
|
||
targets by now; what is the latest projection with regards to Threat
|
||
Termination finding out what's going on?' Tsiry-Feylen transmitted a
|
||
complex, four-dimensional data-structure, showing how many of the
|
||
eight hundred and ten scouts nurse-maiding the projectiles were
|
||
expected to survive the detonation of the diversion-missiles and what
|
||
the chances were of any of the survivors being able to report.
|
||
`We agree... it *_is_* going to be a <nightmare>. We will have to
|
||
arrange temporary living quarters for, how many?' `eleven hundred.'
|
||
`eleven hundred humans, on Triple-S and Beckett. We can't see that
|
||
many humans co-existing peacefully inside NoSan'No'Os freighters for
|
||
more than a <week>.' Tsiry-Feylen narrowed her eyes, grinning.
|
||
`Maybe that is just what we need.' She closed the connection,
|
||
instructed her suit to take her outside, to check on the cargo
|
||
loading. She saw the five humans sitting on the edge of the loading
|
||
ramp, and waved as she passed, grinning to herself when she saw the
|
||
looks of surprise on the faces of Kelanie's friends.
|
||
Kelanie had been fielding their questions, assisted by Marek and
|
||
the odd comment thrown in by Kendr-Saranaxio as she ran past, herding
|
||
crates into the freighter. Gaeren Tuuri, a tall, thin neuter who had
|
||
worked with Kelanie in the Bureau of Procuration, was describing the
|
||
chaos that the NoSan'No'Os withdrawal had produced.
|
||
`It was like a mob of children who'd just been let out of school...
|
||
what surprised me was the number of murders that occurred; you don't
|
||
realise just how violent most people are underneath the thin veneer
|
||
of civilisation...' he shuddered. Genesis, one of Kelanie's
|
||
associates from her days in the `AnarchArtist' Terrorist/ Absurdist
|
||
organisation, was scanning through the notes she'd collected during
|
||
her stay on Millimillenary. He'd found a picture of the
|
||
Bythian-hired assassin, the one they'd called the `Barber'.
|
||
`This... up until three weeks ago, there were dozens of these Xenos
|
||
all over the place, accompanied by squads of Bythians.' Mileva
|
||
Barker, ex-AV thief and street-gang leader, had taken a liking to
|
||
Marek; Kelanie felt obliged to warn her, in low-level street talk, to
|
||
be careful with him, `... or else you will have me to answer to.'
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen noted that the Hangar was now empty; she turned back
|
||
to the ship, stopping at the ramp and opening up her suit. She
|
||
resisted the impulse to bare her teeth at Kelanie's friends.
|
||
`Unless you are expecting anyone else, we should go. It appears
|
||
that we haven't been one hundred percent successful in stopping the
|
||
asteroids, and our best estimates give us less than half an hour to
|
||
get clear. We have successfully diverted approximately six hundred
|
||
and fifty of the eight hundred and ten projectiles; the remaining few
|
||
have been blown off course, but we can't be sure exactly where
|
||
they'll land until they enter the atmosphere, because the Bythian
|
||
scouts that survived the attacks have been trying to push them back
|
||
on course.' Kendr-Saranaxio joined them, opening her suit (and
|
||
scaring Mileva by grinning broadly, scraping her teeth together and
|
||
producing the sound which Kelanie had once compared to that of knives
|
||
being sharpened).
|
||
`Baylal-Delvoy-Kendr-Teff reports that there are some military
|
||
transports on their way from Bythe Prime...' `... and you can believe
|
||
that they aren't just stopping by to say "hello"...' `we have
|
||
allocated the rest of the diversion-missiles to targeting the
|
||
remaining scouts, so, with a degree of luck, all the asteroids will
|
||
miss Earth, giving us enough time to get as many people off as we can
|
||
fit into two NoSan'No'Os freighters.' Kelanie said,
|
||
`Didn't you say that there were three freighters on their way?'
|
||
Kendr-Saranaxio narrowed her eyes, abruptly closed her suit and ran
|
||
up the ramp into the ship. Tsiry-Feylen hissed, exposing her fangs,
|
||
the hands of her suit clenching and unclenching, and then turned to
|
||
run after Kendr-Saranaxio. There was a moment of embarrassed
|
||
silence. Marek hefted the case of hand-weapons which Mileva had
|
||
stolen from the museum (in which they'd found the helicopter), and
|
||
started up the ramp after the two Moridani.
|
||
`Come on.' Kelanie, the last one up the ramp, paused in the
|
||
hatchway and turned to look at the ExPort one last time. A twinkling
|
||
light far off in the sky caught her attention; she closed her suit,
|
||
aimed a boom-mounted camera in the general direction of the light,
|
||
magnified the view. It appeared to be moving downwards slowly and as
|
||
she watched, glowing fragments broke off and spun away. She blew
|
||
into the voice-activated microphone, and said,
|
||
`Tsiry-Feylen? Can you see that object in the sky to the east of
|
||
us?' There was a pause, after which the ramp fell away and the hatch
|
||
closed, almost chopping off the end of Kelanie's boom-mounted camera.
|
||
She stumbled back slightly as the ship lifted.
|
||
`Kelanie, secure yourself... we have a projectile coming in on us.'
|
||
Tsiry-Feylen said.
|
||
`An asteroid?' She instructed her suit to run back to the
|
||
freighter's control room, passing her friends on the way there, while
|
||
she tried to find an external camera that could show her the
|
||
projectile in any detail. She could hear fragments of conversation,
|
||
the choppiness of the voice-activated microphones becoming annoyingly
|
||
obvious as she tried to filter some meaning out of the words:
|
||
`-primary diversion was successful, at least it's not going to hit
|
||
the residential area-'
|
||
`-ing thing IS going to hit US, though, if we don't get moving NOW!
|
||
Kelanie, are you secured?' She halted her suit's headlong rush,
|
||
threw herself down to lie spread-eagled on the floor, hands and feet
|
||
locking against the sides of the corridor.
|
||
`Yes, I'm secure - what's going to -' She heard a thump, which,
|
||
even through the walls of the ship, was obviously somewhere below
|
||
them, followed by a jarring blow which hit her in the stomach as the
|
||
ship was buffeted by the strike. Had she been standing at the time,
|
||
she would have ended up at the far end of the corridor in a heap. The
|
||
ship rocked like a leaf over a bonfire as she scrambled to her feet,
|
||
stumbling down the passage.
|
||
In the control room, her friends were clustered in a corner, while
|
||
the two Moridani stood at the control columns, busily directing their
|
||
dwindling supply of intelligent missiles towards their targets. One
|
||
of Tsiry-Feylen's component personalities took the time to inform
|
||
them:
|
||
`It looks bad, children - the NAPAIsub for this system caught on to
|
||
us quickly... they are definitely worried about you.' Kelanie, still
|
||
in her suit, went to a column off to one side, out of the Moridani's
|
||
way. She patched her suit's display into the control column and
|
||
sorted through the various views available from outside monitors,
|
||
eventually finding one that showed the Earth below them. There was a
|
||
turbulent grey field of cloud directly underneath them where the
|
||
asteroid had hit. Her eyes widened as two more projectiles passed
|
||
by, on parallel courses, glowing an angry red colour; one of them
|
||
less than fifty metres from the ship. Something zipped across the
|
||
screen, curving to track the nearer of the two asteroids, which were
|
||
dwindling rapidly in the distance. There was an intense white flare,
|
||
momentarily rendering everything in stark black shadows; when it had
|
||
faded, the first asteroid, chunks breaking away, was drifting towards
|
||
its companion. As Kelanie increased the magnification to keep them
|
||
in view, they collided, the first asteroid breaking up into four
|
||
smaller pieces, the second pushed off course. She opened her suit,
|
||
sitting it down on its knees, staring at the screen as it tracked the
|
||
asteroid until it hit, on the edge of the residential block about
|
||
five kilometres from the ExPort. The view, which was already heavily
|
||
aliased due to the extreme magnification, became completely obscured
|
||
by dust, but she knew that anyone in that part of residential block
|
||
would be dead. She looked up at Tsiry-Feylen, despairingly.
|
||
`Isn't there anything we can do?' Tsiry-Feylen kept flicking her
|
||
fingers in and out of the control-spaces, and replied tersely,
|
||
`There is, and we are doing it. If you would like to help, go down
|
||
to the secondary cargo bay and look for a crate marked "vayasch
|
||
cheyr". We'd hate to think that it got left behind.'
|
||
|
||
|
||
<######> requesting connection ............
|
||
connection established connection established
|
||
|
||
who is this? identify yourself!
|
||
we have a data packet for you.
|
||
repeat, identify yourself!
|
||
look, i can't accept this data
|
||
(transmitting) without identif - oh, all right,
|
||
receiving... End Of File.
|
||
|
||
checksum (A3E453C36C)? confirmed. now, who is this?
|
||
###### closing connection what? oh, very well. it must
|
||
have been some sort of on-line
|
||
function test. now, let's have
|
||
a look at this data packet... it
|
||
seems fairly self-explanatory...
|
||
it seems fairly self-explanatory,
|
||
it seems fairly self-explanatory
|
||
it seems fairly self-explanatory
|
||
it<69><74>O<EFBFBD>]<5D>!<21><>h9<68><39>
|
||
|
||
CPU HALTED
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
Kayren, being more familiar with NoSan'No'Os equipment, was able to
|
||
get a patch from the multitude of transmissions that the Moridani
|
||
were receiving from their smart missiles, scattered throughout nearby
|
||
space. The humans sat in the cargo bay and watched as the Pthalklin
|
||
Ervae expertly adjusted a multi-screen holographic display, the views
|
||
changing every thirty seconds. Most of them were incomprehensible;
|
||
some were streaked with the dot-patterns that the Moridani used for
|
||
telemetry; others were blank, or obscured by static. Whenever they
|
||
found an interesting view, they froze the display on that channel
|
||
until the missile that was sending it was destroyed. Kelanie sat
|
||
behind the others, in her battle suit, her hands clenched around the
|
||
grips of the hand-manipulator controls. They were getting a
|
||
fragmentary view of the carnage that the Moridani had been unable to
|
||
prevent; huge chunks of rock ploughing into heavily-populated centres
|
||
with the strength of atomic weapons, the shock waves knocking
|
||
buildings flat in circles for kilometres around. She tried to treat
|
||
it like some sort of documentary special-effect, but it didn't make
|
||
her feel any better. After watching the eighth or ninth city being
|
||
demolished, she slammed her suit shut and stamped out. Momentarily,
|
||
Marek turned as if to follow her, but couldn't think of anything
|
||
reassuring to say, and instead folded himself up behind a crate, his
|
||
head in his hands.
|
||
|
||
When she got to the control room, both Moridani were motionless,
|
||
watching a single monitor on which telemetry information flashed past
|
||
at a rate too fast for her translator to even register.
|
||
`Tsiry-Feylen? What's happening?' No answer. She walked her suit
|
||
over to stand between the xenos, opened it. Their attention didn't
|
||
waver. Kelanie sat in her suit, trying for a minute to decide
|
||
whether interrupt them. She was about to speak again when both
|
||
turned sharply to look at each other, baring their teeth and hissing;
|
||
a display that almost made Kelanie's hair stand on end.
|
||
Kendr-Saranaxio stretched, shaking her rear legs, and Tsiry-Feylen
|
||
said,
|
||
`We think we may have just halted Earth's NAPAISub. If we have
|
||
succeeded, then we stand a chance of getting those nine hundred
|
||
people off Earth safely.' Kendr-Saranaxio opened a communications
|
||
channel to one of the other stolen NoSan'No'Os freighters, began
|
||
chatting with another Moridani. Tsiry-Feylen took Kelanie aside, sat
|
||
on one of their grey patterned rugs, her legs folding neatly
|
||
underneath. `We gravely underestimated the importance that the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os placed on your extermination. We had been monitoring the
|
||
communications between the NAPAISubs, but it appears that this
|
||
exercise was planned privately between the local NAPAISub and NAPAI.
|
||
We have managed to get both freighters down on Earth and fully
|
||
loaded... we are now waiting for an opening before we can lift them
|
||
to safety.' Kelanie felt an ache behind her eyes, matched by a
|
||
nervous feeling in her stomach, as if she were about to perform on
|
||
stage in front of thousands of people. Tsiry-Feylen was watching her
|
||
closely. Kelanie said in a small voice,
|
||
`You've seen this happen before, haven't you?'
|
||
`Six times. This is the third time we've been involved in an
|
||
rescue. We have some idea of the anguish you are experiencing.'
|
||
Kelanie closed her eyes as the feeling got worse. `We don't cry, but
|
||
if we could, we would.' The semi-nauseous feeling vanished, abruptly
|
||
replaced by anger.
|
||
`I would have thought that you'd be used to it by now.' she
|
||
sneered. Tsiry-Feylen raised an index finger in warning.
|
||
`We had friends on Earth, too. Don't, for one minute, think that
|
||
you have some sort of monopoly on grief around here. Start to think
|
||
that when you have seen this game played out a few more times, when
|
||
you have seen more sentient beings killed than you thought existed.
|
||
Start to think that when the NoSan'No'Os are hunting for you,
|
||
personally, and will kill anyone who gets in their way to find you.
|
||
Start to think that when you find that you cannot trust anyone, or
|
||
befriend anyone, for fear that they will be killed by the
|
||
NoSan'No'Os.' Kelanie stared up at the alien for a moment, then
|
||
broke the contact by abruptly shutting her suit and running off down
|
||
the corridor.
|
||
|
||
She found herself in the corridor where she had back-handed the
|
||
Bythian, almost severing its head. She opened her suit, undid the
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securing straps and stood up in it, bringing her head level with a
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yellow stain on the white ceramic wall. Bythian blood. She reached
|
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out and ran her fingers over it, idly scraping some of it off with
|
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her fingernails. She heard someone - Marek, judging from the sound
|
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of his bare feet - approaching. She laid her hand flat against the
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wall, turned to face him. In the short time that he had known her,
|
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Marek had never seen her with an expression like the one she
|
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presented now. It was a look that conveyed icy, relentless resolve;
|
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the look of obsession.
|
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`We will give them good reason to fear us.' she said.
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This file is Copyright (c) Nikolai Kingsley, 1995. Unlimited
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electronic reproduction and one hard-copy per user is permitted, for
|
||
non-profit use, providing that this notice is left intact.
|
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hail eris - Fnord - all hail discordia - 93 - oops, that's my banana
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