Book Read Free

Analog Science Fiction and Fact 04/01/11

Page 16

by Dell Magazines


  My eyes fly open.

  I’m not sure where, or even who, I am. I’m dead, surely. But faster than I can marvel—there is a heaven—the fog begins to lift.

  I can see—sort of. And hear—sort of. And I know who I am. What I am.

  Not Malcolm Jenkins.

  And yet a trace of Malcolm persists: a ghost in the machine. Enough to be horrified by the giddy digitalized persona of—among how many others?—one Elizabeth Tyler Andrews.

  Who is excitedly queuing up the madly popular feelie for another playback. . . .

  Copyright © 2011 Edward M. Lerner

  Previous Article Next Article

  Previous Article Next Article

  SHORT STORIES

  Remembering Rachel

  Dave Creek

  Dacia’s comm buzzed, awakening her from a deep sleep. Her hand reached from beneath her covers to accept the call, audio only. “Yes?” she muttered.

  “It’s Detective Nafasi, Constable Stark. Sorry to bother you on a Saturday morning.”

  Dacia sat up in bed. “What’s happened? Something to do with those Earth Alliance bastards?”

  “No, ma’am, thank goodness for that. But it’s bad enough. Level 15, Apartment 24. A woman named Rachel Cantara. Materials researcher at LunaLab.”

  “I take it she’s dead.”

  “That’s what sensors tell us. Sort of.”

  Dacia planted her feet on the floor and stood, slowly in the Lunar grav. “What’s ‘sort of’ mean?” she asked as she began to dress.

  “It means she’s been missing for hours and traces of her don’t register anywhere in the city except in her room. But that’s only residue.”

  “Residue? As if she’s been disintegrated or something?”

  “Exactly that, ma’am.”

  “So you haven’t forced the door.”

  “We haven’t,” Detective Nafasi said.

  “Do so, on my authority. If her body is there, examine it, and if she’s alive get her to the hospital.”

  “And if she’s not?”

  “Don’t touch a thing.”

  “Yes, ma’am. But . . . something you ought to know.”

  “Yes?”

  “The dead woman is Secretary Grayson Whitford’s fiancé.”

  Oh, shit , was Dacia’s first thought. The only man who might be able to force the “peacekeepers” off-world. And, almost inevitably, the prime suspect. “I’ll be right there,” she said.

  Dacia finished dressing and soon was pedaling about one hundred kilometers per hour down emergency lanes that let her bypass both wheeled and foot traffic. As she pedaled through the Earthlike landscape of Armstrong Park, she passed other bicyclists gliding along paved byways and families walking across gentle grass-covered slopes. Overhead, sport fliers spread their artificial wings and soared, many launching from the wide ledge at the apex of the vast concrete dome covering the city.

  Each time she approached Earth Alliance peacekeepers at the inevitable checkpoints, she flashed the constable’s shield that hung around her neck. To her relief, even as they waylaid innocent families who would never dream of violence against the Alliance, they waved her on each time. These troops were the last lingering insult from the home world, and their presence was the subject of continued intense negotiations between Brussels and Tranquility City.

  Negotiations that Grayson Whitford headed up on the Lunar side.

  As she skirted downtown, though, she saw the lingering evidence of those who advocated a violent overthrow of Alliance rule—stores with windows under repair and walls that still bore the scars of recent fires.

  And she remembered her anger at having to take people into custody whom she agreed with politically.

  Within ten minutes Dacia reached Level 15, stashed her bike in a small storage room at the end of a hallway, and walked out onto the main residential area.

  Level 15 was a typical row of living quarters overlooking Armstrong Park. Outside number 24, Rachel Cantara’s apartment, stood Detective Nafasi, along with a crime scene tech and two deputies. They’d opened the apartment door, but still stood outside. Which means she’s dead , Dacia thought. One hope shattered.

  To her distaste, an Alliance peacekeeper, armored and with a pulse rifle shouldered, stood several doorways down. He was just far enough away not to be intruding upon the scene, but close enough to see what was going on.

  Set that aside for now , Dacia thought, and went up to Nafasi and shook his hand, giving the other personnel on the scene a quick nod. “What do we have?”

  Nafasi indicated the interior of the apartment. It was typical of living quarters here in Tranquility; a primary living area featured just room enough for a sofa bed, a couple of chairs, and a desk. Beyond were a small kitchen and a bathroom.

  No one was inside.

  Nafasi said, “Sensor readings show residual genetic material of the victim.”

  “Of Rachel Cantara.”

  “Yes. We also detected readings of what we presume was the murder weapon, apparently set to overload and destroy itself.”

  Dacia asked, “So we don’t know the exact make of the weapon itself?”

  “We don’t.”

  “Any signs that anyone else has been here recently?”

  “Grayson Whitford. But as the fiancé—”

  “That’s not unexpected. I understand. Any time frame on when he was last here?”

  Nafasi shook his head. “Given the destruction of the body, and of the weapon itself within such a small space, time-frame readings aren’t reliable.”

  “What about Whitford himself?”

  “I haven’t notified him.”

  So the honor falls to me , Dacia thought. Great.

  “Another thing,” Nafasi said. “The door wasn’t forced.”

  “So whoever killed her is probably someone she knew and let in.”

  “Seems that way,” Nafasi said.

  “What about surveillance records?”

  “Security holos verify she left work at LunaLab at her usual time yesterday afternoon. But cameras haven’t been installed yet at the entrances to this living level.”

  “Anything from someone who actually saw her?”

  “Still working on that. Her mother reported the first concerns about her this morning. She hasn’t been notified yet.”

  Dacia asked, “Do you have your interrogation kit?”

  Detective Nafasi patted a small pouch at his side. “Right here.”

  “Then let’s go see Whitford.”

  Dacia and Nafasi retrieved their bikes. Using her law enforcement privacy override, Dacia punched in a request for Whitford’s location. I should’ve realized , she thought as the display came back. Not at home . At the embassy.

  Another quick bike ride, as Dacia and Nafasi skirted Armstrong Park and headed directly for Cernan Plaza. Along the way, Dacia arranged for an officer and a chaplain to visit Cantara’s mother, who lived on the other side of Tranquility City, and give her the tragic news.

  Once at the plaza, Dacia and Nafasi placed their bikes in a public rack, moon-hopped up the wide stairs that led to the building that housed Embassy Row, and stopped cold at the top. To one side of the main entrance stood a pair of Alliance peacekeepers with shouldered rifles. To the other stood two Lunar Authority security guards. They wore no armor, and their only weapons were holstered pulse pistols.

  Even as Dacia pulled out her constable’s shield, she knew it would have no magical powers to get her inside. One of the Lunar security guards spoke up: “These are important negotiations going on inside—” He took a close look at the shield. “—Constable Stark. Not to be disturbed.”

  Dacia took a deep breath and told the guard, “I have an urgent and personal message for Secretary Whitford.”

  “He in particular is not to be disturbed.”

  “I’m investigating a homicide.” That was usually the trump card in most conversations, but it elicited only a raised eyebrow from the guard, who said, “I’
ll take your concern inside.” He looked toward the Alliance peacekeepers. “If that’s acceptable.”

  One of the peacekeepers turned his head toward them and made a single slow nod. Dacia suppressed a sigh as the Lunar guard entered the building.

  Nafasi asked, “So, what do you think the odds are?”

  “That we’ll get in?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Pretty good. That you’ll get to use your interrogation kit? Slim.”

  From behind her: “Constable Stark.” She turned, and the Lunar guard waved them inside.

  As Dacia and Detective Nafasi were shown into Grayson Whitford’s office, Dacia’s first impression of him was of a man in complete control of himself. He awaited their arrival, seemingly relaxed and open, before his uncluttered desk. He offered a hand to shake quickly enough, while flashing the professional smile of a diplomat. But Dacia saw the lines around his mouth and eyes that came from maintaining his polite, I’m-just-a-regular-guy façade, saw the overlay of practiced emotion that guarded while pretending to reveal. “So, Constable Stark and Detective Nafasi, is it?” he asked. “I’m told you have a message of some importance.”

  “Quite tragic news, I’m afraid. Your fiancé, Rachel Cantara, has died.”

  Whitford’s smile faded, but the eyes didn’t react at first. “What? How?”

  Nafasi said, “We believe she was murdered sometime after arriving home last night. Disintegrated, with a weapon that then destroyed itself.”

  Whitford’s eyes squeezed shut, and he stumbled backward against his desk, bracing himself with his hands. “Who did this?”

  Dacia said, “That’s what I’m investigating.”

  Whitford regained some of his composure and looked at Dacia. “I’m a prime suspect, of course. Being the fiancé.”

  “I’d be insulting you if I told you differently.”

  “Then let’s get your investigation of me out of the way, so you can find Rachel’s real killer.”

  “What about your negotiations?”

  “I’ll have to suspend them, at least for awhile. To get these charges behind me.”

  “I’ve filed no charges.”

  Whitford managed a grim smile. “‘Yet,’ was the unspoken word there. Besides, Constable Stark, I think a day or so to begin to come to terms with my loss isn’t unreasonable.” His voice faltered and he covered his face with his hand.

  “Of course,” Dacia said. She wasn’t about to give Whitford a respite. If I’m making a false assumption, I can bring out my most sincere apologies , she thought. But I don’t think I am. She gestured toward Nafasi and he took out his interrogation kit. To Whitford, she said, “You’re entitled to a lawyer, of course.”

  “I am a lawyer.” His hand sketched a chopping gesture. “And I won’t hear anything about having a fool for a client. I have nothing to hide.”

  “Then you won’t mind if Detective Nafasi uses this device.”

  “Of course not.”

  Dacia nodded to Nafasi, who activated the interrogation kit. Its sensors, without touching Whitford, would monitor and record reactions ranging from pulse and respiration to brain-wave responses, as well as audio and video of him answering her questions. “Let’s get some base reactions,” Dacia told Whitford. “Name?”

  “Lawrence Grayson Whitford.”

  “Occupation?”

  “Chief Negotiator, Lunar Government.”

  “Lie to me. Where were you born?”

  “Uh—San Francisco.”

  Dacia turned to Nafasi, who nodded for her to go ahead with the real questioning. “Let’s get right to it. You understand you don’t have to speak to us and can end this questioning right now without prejudice?”

  “I understand, Constable. You can dispense with all these legal niceties, and with your standard interrogation techniques. I’m already in a comfortable environment, and I know you’re not here to provide sympathy or empathy, or to be impartial.”

  “Very well, then. Did you kill your fiancé Rachel Cantara, or arrange for her to be killed?”

  “No.”

  “Did you see her or speak with her last night?”

  “No.”

  “Why not? Most men would be eager to see their fiancé any chance they get.”

  “It’s the press of negotiations,” Whitford said. “She understands . . . understood . . . that.”

  “Were you taking part in negotiations last night?”

  “No. They concluded late yesterday afternoon.”

  “Yet you still didn’t go see Miss Cantara, or even speak with her.”

  “I’m negotiating the future of the Lunar government. Violent reactions from either side are still a possibility. Even when I’m not actually taking part in talks, I have to prepare for them.”

  Dacia asked, “So you were in preparation for today’s talks last night?”

  “Yes.”

  “Was anyone else helping you?”

  “No.”

  “Did you do anything we might be able to obtain a record of? Call anyone on the comm or order in a meal, for example?”

  “I didn’t.”

  Dacia glanced at Nafasi, who gave a slight head tilt that she knew meant Whitford was being truthful. But an equally slight raised eyebrow meant something else. Returning her attention to Whitford, she said, “I suppose those are all my questions for now. Given your situation, I’m sure I don’t have to tell you to stay in town.”

  “I’m not going anywhere, Constable. May I ask if you have any other leads in this case?”

  “You may ask, Mr. Whitford. But I don’t have any answers I can give you right now.”

  “I understand. Ongoing investigation and all that. If you’ll excuse me, I need to call Rachel’s mother. She’ll be heartsick over this. They were very close.”

  “I’m sorry for your loss. I hope you can continue negotiations soon. All of us are counting on you.”

  Dacia waited until they’d left the Embassy Row building and made their way back down those wide steps before telling Detective Nafasi, “I saw that raised eyebrow. So if Whitford’s telling the truth, what was wrong back there?”

  “He didn’t say anything that was a lie—at least as far as he remembers.”

  “What does that mean, ‘as far as he remembers?’”

  “It means,” Nafasi said, “that he’s had a memory snip.”

  Dacia worried that her hand comp wasn’t secure given possible Earth Alliance surveillance, so her and Nafasi’s next bike trip was to her office. She accessed her main comp there to get the names and locations of Tranquility City’s emotion shapers and memory snippers along with background on their employees—especially any legal difficulties they might have had.

  “Look here,” she told Nafasi. “Just three such businesses in a population of four thousand.”

  “We don’t have need of such things up here,” Nafasi said. “That’s mostly for Earthers with too much time and too much guilt.”

  “Now, now—be kind. Although guilt is exactly what Whitford is hoping the snip will prevent us from seeing. Essentially, he can lie to us and be completely believable.”

  “There’s an interesting fellow,” Nafasi said, pointing to the holo-record before them. “Haywood McCutcheon—left Tranquility City for Earth two days ago, apparently for good. Paid off all his creditors, shut down his store, and was on the next shuttle out. Quite a trick, given the political situation.”

  “Makes it all the tougher to try to prosecute Whitford, if he really doesn’t remember the crime. He’ll come across to a jury as an innocent man being victimized by authority, especially since our physical evidence is lacking.”

  Nafasi said, “We like our freedoms here on the Moon. We like government not interfering with business or violating our privacy. But we didn’t come here to make murder easier.”

  “Maybe we can get some diplomatic help,” Dacia said. “I’ve got some back-channel contacts over there at Embassy Row. I think they’re about to come in handy.�
��

  Dacia met with Earth Ambassador Kasinda Obote on the Moon’s most hallowed ground. Tranquility Base stood untouched by human footsteps other than those Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin made during their two and a half hours walking on the lunar surface on July 20, 1969. A high wall of laminated glass surrounded the entire area to ensure it remained undisturbed.

  Dacia was all too aware of her own breathing inside her spacesuit and the fact that only several layers of polymers, metals, and cloth kept her from her imagined fate of rupturing lungs and vaporizing blood. I guess I’m just not made for the outdoors , she thought.

  “This site still inspires me,” Dacia said.

  The descent stage of the spiderlike lunar module still sat upon the landscape Aldrin had described as “magnificent desolation.” He and Armstrong had left over one hundred items behind here, from a laser experiment measuring the distance between the Moon and the Earth to boots, a TV camera, a hammer, and bags filled with human waste. All of it remained as it had for 107 years, even the American flag that fell over as the lunar module’s ascent module’s lifted off. Whether it was more respectful to right it or leave it on the ground was an ongoing controversy.

  Ambassador Obote said, “It’s good to see it before it becomes a tourist attraction.”

  “I thought that was an Earth company wanting to do that?”

  “It is. Now it’s negotiating to sell its rights to a Lunar company—depending, of course, on the outcome of the current political situation.”

  “I hate to see that, either way.”

  “Constable, I assume you’ve brought us to what might be considered neutral ground to talk about the possible charges against Secretary Whitford.”

  It took a moment for Dacia to find her voice. She became aware of the drone of her spacesuit’s life-support systems and its constant circulation of air across her face. “How do you know about that?”

  “Your Secretary Whitford is quite a skilled opponent, more skilled than I in rhetoric and playing to the masses. My only advantage is staying better informed. So get to your point, Constable.”

 

‹ Prev