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A Bad Deal for the Whole Galaxy

Page 49

by Alex White


  The man considered the request. “You can call me Mark,” he said. His tell—a slight blink of his left eye—told Frank that he wasn’t really a Mark.

  “If we’re on first-name terms, Mark, why don’t you call me Frank?”

  “OK, Frank.” The man not called Mark closed the folder, opened it again, turned some pages. “So what are you in for, Frank?”

  “I’m assuming you’re not carrying that file in front of you because you’re short of reading matter. I know you know what’s in it. You know that I know. So while this is a pleasant change of scenery, I’m still going to ask you why you’re here.”

  Mark finally looked up, perhaps surprised by the directness aimed at him. “You know you’re going to die in here, right?” he said.

  “I’m eligible for parole in eighty-five years. What do you think, Mark?” Frank twitched the corner of his mouth. That was his smile these days. “Do you reckon I’ll make old bones?”

  “You’d be—” Pause. “—one hundred and thirty-six. So, no. I don’t think so.”

  “Well, dang. I was so looking forward to getting out.”

  “You killed a man.”

  “I know what I did. I know why I did it. But if you’re looking for contrition, maybe you should have asked for someone else.”

  Mark put both his hands on the file. His fingers were long, with buffed, tapered nails. They glowed as brightly as the brass furnishings on his briefcase. “I want to know what you think about the prospect of dying in jail, Frank.”

  After a moment’s reflection, Frank concluded: “I’m not a fan. But I factored the possibility in when I pulled the trigger, and now? I don’t see I have much of a choice.”

  Mark took one of his elegant fingers and circled it around the seven-pointed star on the cardboard file’s cover. “I might be able to help you,” he said. “I might be able to give you a choice.”

  “And how would you do that?” Frank raised his hands, and eased them down again, slowly enough for every link of the chain that bound him to the table to catch against the edge of the hole, then fall. “Why would you do that?”

  “A private company owns this prison, and runs it on behalf of the state.”

  “There’s a logo on everything I’m wearing. Few years back, the logo changed, but it was the same old prison walls. You’re telling me a lot of things I already know, Mark. I’m still waiting for you to tell me things I don’t.”

  “You don’t want to hear me out?” said Mark. “That’s OK. That’s your right. But what if it’s something you might be interested in?” He sat back in his chair, and examined his pampered hands.

  Frank put on his compliant face again. Inside, he was mildly irritated, but no more than that. “You asked for me, remember? Not the other way around. So, this company, this Panopticon? You work for them?”

  “Technically, no. But I’ve been authorized by their parent company to see if you’d be interested in an offer. And before I tell you what it is, I want to tell you what it isn’t.” He left a gap to see if Frank said anything, but that wasn’t Frank’s style. “This isn’t a pardon. You’ll remain guilty of second-degree murder. This isn’t commuting your sentence. You’ll serve the rest of your hundred and twenty years. This isn’t parole. You’ll be at all times under a prison regime. Neither will you get time off for good behavior.”

  Frank considered what he’d heard so far. “Go on,” he said. “You’re really selling it to me.”

  “We can’t give you any of those things because we’re not allowed to. The State of California—the law—wouldn’t permit us to cut such a deal with you. What we can offer you is a transfer.”

  “Panopticon have another jail somewhere else?”

  Mark pursed his lips. It was the first emotional response he’d really shown. Frank thought him, despite the expensive suit, the leather briefcase, and the manicured hands, or perhaps because of them, a cold fish. A dead fish, even. “In a manner of speaking.”

  “So why don’t you just transfer me? You don’t need my permission to do that.”

  “No, that’s true enough. We need your cooperation, though.”

  “Do you? I’m not really getting this whole thing, and you seem a straight-up kind of guy, so why not just lay it out?”

  Mark doodled with his finger on the cover of Frank’s file again. “Given everything I’ve said, are you still in?”

  “In for what? All you’ve told me is that I’m still going to die in jail. Does it really matter where the jail is?”

  “You weren’t just chosen at random, Frank. You have skills. A lot more than many—most—of the inmates incarcerated here. Skills that are going to waste. Would you like to use them again?”

  “You want me to build you the prison that I’m going to die in?”

  “In a manner of speaking,” Mark said again.

  Frank tried to sit more comfortably in his chair, but his chained hands wouldn’t let him. He frowned at the pristine Mark opposite him. “And this is to save you money?”

  “To save the parent company money,” Mark corrected him. “Yes, that’ll happen.”

  “Mark, I have to say I’m struggling to understand what’s in this for me.”

  “The benefits will be: better food, better accommodation, a small team to work with, a challenging, stimulating environment, an utterly unique project, and considerable personal autonomy. It won’t feel like jail. It certainly won’t feel like the regime you’re under now, that I can guarantee you.”

  “But I still wouldn’t be able to leave, would I?”

  “No. This would be a transaction where you’d have to remain on the site in order to help maintain it,” said Mark.

  “That doesn’t mean there wouldn’t be free time for you to, how do I put it, enjoy the surrounding countryside. You’d always have to return, though. It’s in a somewhat isolated position, and there’s literally nowhere else to go.”

  “Where is this, then? The desert?”

  “Initially, yes. You’ll need to undergo some specialist training at a privately owned facility. Medical tests, too. If you refuse to co-operate in or fail to complete any of the tasks the company set, you’ll be bounced straight back here. No appeal. No hesitation, either. Likewise, if you fail on medical grounds.” Mark put his hands back flat on the folder. “Are you still interested?”

  “Without committing myself, yes, sure. I’m still waiting for the sucker punch, though. Tell me there’s a sucker punch.”

  “If you accept the conditions I’ve already stipulated, then I’ll outline the project more explicitly.”

  “You’re starting to sound like a lawyer.”

  Mark gave his tell again, and said nothing other than: “Do you accept the conditions?”

  “OK.”

  “Yes?” He was playing games with the language, and it seemed Frank had to play along too. This was legal boilerplate, and it had suddenly become obvious that this whole conversation was being recorded.

  “Yes. I accept the conditions,” he intoned.

  Mark took a deeper breath, and Frank felt like he’d crossed some sort of threshold, an invisible line in his life. A faint wash of sweat broke out across his face, and his hands grew slick.

  “Your training will take almost a year. There’s a specific deadline we can’t go beyond, and either you’re ready, or you’re not. The training facility is, yes, in the desert. There’s some very specialized equipment you’ll need to be totally familiar with, and your background in construction and project management will hopefully mean you won’t have a problem with that. You’ll be introduced to the rest of your team, and you’ll learn to work together, learn to trust each other, learn to rely on each other.”

  “How many?”

  “Eight altogether.”

  “And are they in the same position I am?”

  “Seven of them, yes. One company employee will be on site to oversee the project.”

  “Will the others be ex-prisoners too?”

 
“Serving prisoners.”

  “And they have to stick around after we’ve finished this building work, too?”

  “Yes.”

  Frank looked over to the bright window, then back. “I’d better like them, then.”

  “That’s not the company’s concern. Merely whether you can work with them.”

  “So where is this place, that you want to send seven cons to, to build you a prison and then stay there for the rest of their lives?”

  “Mars.”

  Frank turned to the window again, and stared at the blurred parallel lines of the bars that divided the outside from the inside. There were seven of them, maybe six inches apart. They’d be iron, swollen with rust, peeling and flaking paint pushing off their surfaces like sloughing skin. “You did say Mars, right? As in the planet?”

  “Yes. The planet Mars.”

  Frank thought about it a little longer. “You have got to be fucking kidding me.”

  “I assure you the offer is most genuine.”

  “You want a bunch of cons to go to Mars? And build a prison? And then stay there?”

  Mark wiped his hands on his suit trousers, a luxury that Frank didn’t have. “It’s not designated as a prison, but as a federal scientific facility. Let me explain, in order. A convict crew will be sent to Mars. Once there, they will construct a base from prefabricated parts and make it habitable. When the facility is finished, the crew will continue to live on Mars and serve out the rest of their sentences, helping to maintain the facility, expanding it as and when required, and assisting visiting civilian scientists in their work. That the facility will also be your prison is, I suppose, a somewhat technical detail. But as I’ve already explained, there’ll be nowhere to escape to.”

  Frank nodded slowly to himself as he digested the information.

  “You haven’t rejected the idea out of hand,” said Mark.

  “Just give me a minute. I’m thinking.”

  Once the insanity had been stripped away, it was actually a straightforward offer: die in prison or live on Mars. He was never getting out of this penitentiary alive: he’d been sentenced to a hundred and twenty years for shooting a man in the face, in broad daylight, in front of a crowd of witnesses. Only the fact that he could prove that the dead man was his son’s dealer saved him from going down for murder in the first, and onto death row.

  He hadn’t contested the charges. He hadn’t spoken in his own defense. He’d taken what was coming, and he was still taking it. By mutual consent, his wife and his son had disappeared after the trial, and they’d both moved a very long way away. Bad people, like the associates of the man he’d killed, had long memories, and longer reaches. No one had ever contacted him subsequently, and he’d never tried to contact anyone either. No, tell a lie: he’d had one message, maybe a year into his sentence. Divorce papers, served out of a New Hampshire attorney’s office. He’d signed them without hesitation and handed them back to the notary.

  There was literally nothing for him here on Earth but to die, unremembered and unremarked on.

  But Mars?

  He’d heard the news about the plans for a permanent Mars base, back when he was a free man, but he couldn’t honestly say he’d paid much attention to it: he’d been in the middle of hell by then, trying to do the best thing for his family, and failing. And afterwards? Well, it hadn’t really mattered, had it? Someone was putting a base on Mars. Good for them.

  He hadn’t thought for the smallest fraction of a moment of a second that it might include him.

  Now, that would be a legacy worth leaving. Somewhere, his son was grown up, hopefully living his life, hopefully doing whatever he was doing well. He’d been given a second chance by Frank, who had loved him more than life itself, even if he’d had a strange way of showing it.

  Did the boy think about his father? At all? What would it be like for him to suddenly discover that his old man was an astronaut, and not a jailbird? “This is the big Mars base, right?” Frank asked. “The one they announced a few years back?”

  “Mars Base One. Yes.”

  “That’s … interesting. But why would you pick cons? Why wouldn’t you pick the brightest and the best and let them be the goddamn heroes? Or did you already throw this open to the outside world, and there weren’t enough young, fit, intelligent people with college educations and no rap sheet beating down your doors for an opportunity like this. Is that it? You’re desperate?”

  Mark stroked his top lip. “It’s because, while the company wants to minimize the risks involved, it can’t completely eliminate them. And when a young, fit, intelligent person with a college degree dies, the publicity is terrible. Which is why they’ve offered you this opportunity instead. There’s also the need to prove that this isn’t just for the very brightest. Antarctic bases need plumbers and electricians and cooks. Mars bases will too.

  The company wants to show the world that, with the right training, anyone can go.”

  Frank hunched forward. “But couldn’t you just hire the right people?”

  “Frank, I’m going to level with you. Arranging a big spaceship, that costs a lot of money and time to build, which will take people out there, and will also bring them home? That isn’t a priority right now. As it stands, the company get something out of this, and you get something out of this. They get their base built, quickly and yes, cheaply. You get to spend the rest of your life doing something worthwhile that’ll benefit the whole human race, rather than rotting to death in here. Quid pro quo. A fair exchange.”

  Frank nodded again. It made some sort of sense. “OK, I get that you don’t want the pretty people dying up there, but just how dangerous is this going to be?”

  “Space is a dangerous place,” said Mark. “People have died in the past. People will die in the future. Accidents happen. Space can, so I’m told, kill you in a very great number of different ways. We don’t know what your life expectancy on Mars will be. We’ve no data. It may well be attenuated by a combination of environmental factors, which you’ll learn about in your training. But you’ll be able to minimize the risks and increase your chances of survival greatly by following some fairly straightforward rules. Whereas the average life expectancy behind bars is fifty-eight. You’re currently fifty-one. You can do the math.”

  “Mars.”

  “Yes, Mars.”

  Frank poised the tip of his tongue between his teeth, and bit lightly. He could feel himself on the threshold of pain, and that was the closest he ever got these days to feeling anything.

  But to feel pride again? Achievement? To think that his son would be able to look up into the night sky and say, “There he is. That’s where my father is.”

  Were those good enough reasons? He wouldn’t be coming back: then again, he wasn’t really here either. It’d be a second chance for him, too.

  “Where do I sign?”

  By Alex White

  THE SALVAGERS

  A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe

  A Bad Deal for the Whole Galaxy

  The Worst of All Possible Worlds

  Every Mountain Made Low

  Alien: The Cold Forge

  Praise for the Salvagers series

  A BIG SHIP AT THE EDGE OF THE UNIVERSE

  “A clever fusion of magic and sci-fi makes this book a total blast. I was hooked from page one.”

  —V. E. Schwab, author of the Shades of Magic series

  “A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe is perfectly paced, full of intense, inventive action, and refreshingly honest characters. It’s the seamless hybrid of fantasy and sci-fi that you didn’t know you always needed. Do you miss Firefly? Do you want it back? Well, sorry, not gonna happen. But this book is damn close.”

  —Nicholas Eames, author of Kings of the Wyld

  “A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe is a raucous genre-buster that careens through a series of heart-stopping curves and roars to a podium finish. Bratty, brilliant racer Nilah and hard-boiled cynic Boots are as winnin
g a pair of strong female characters as I’ve met in years. A pacy plot, a diverse supporting cast, and a vivid set of worlds round out this highly entertaining series opener. Alex White is going to be leading the pack for years to come.”

  —Claire Humphrey, author of Spells of Blood and Kin

  “A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe starts in high gear and never lets up. Boasting action, intrigue, and deadly fusions of technology and magic, you have to remember to put the book down now and then to take a breath!”

  —Mike Brooks, author of Dark Run

  “An exciting, fast-paced, magic-fueled treasure hunt across the galaxy.”

  —Corey J. White, author of the Voidwitch series

  “A crazy blend of SF and fantasy concepts, with exciting characters and a brilliant universe—highly recommend!”

  —Jamie Sawyer, author of the Lazarus War series

  “Racing! Treasure and smuggling! A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe is a gripping quest for justice among salvage and magic—I really loved it.”

  —Mur Lafferty, author of Six Wakes

  “This universe’s thrilling combination of technology and magic traps two tough women in a fight for their lives, and although Nilah has a better life to fight for, Boots is marvelously stubborn. Guaranteed to make you wonder what kind of sigil you’d draw in their world.”

  —R. E. Stearns, author of Barbary Station

  “To call this book fast-paced or action-packed is underselling it. Buckle up, readers: this is a ride you won’t want to get off until the end.”

  —B&N Sci-Fi & Fantasy Blog

  “White’s assured debut is an entertaining throwback with some fun worldbuilding and two great lead characters.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe is a rollicking fun ride. I enjoyed it a lot, and I’m looking forward to the sequel.”

  —Locus

  “This ambitious start … combines magic and space opera to create a fast-paced adventure with charismatic characters and formidable enemies in a realized universe of greed and power.”

 

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