The Genius Asylum: Sic Transit Terra Book 1

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by Arlene F. Marks




  The Genius Asylum

  by Arlene F. Marks

  Copyright © 2016 by Arlene F. Marks

  e-Book Edition

  Published by

  EDGE-Lite

  An Imprint of

  HADES PUBLICATIONS, INC.

  CALGARY

  Notice

  This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. It may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each reader. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of the author.

  * * * * *

  THE GENIUS ASYLUM

  Sic Transit Terra Book 1

  By

  Arlene F. Marks

  ***BONUS***

  To receive your free copy of Lydia’s Royal Ace (a Sic Transit Terra novella), and for information about upcoming releases, sign-up for our newsletter:

  www.edgewebsite.com/books/geniusasylum/bonus.html

  The Sic Transit Terra Universe:

  Lydia’s Royal Ace (a Sic Transit Terra novella)

  The Genius Asylum

  The Otherness Factor (Fall 2016)

  The Relativity Bomb (coming soon from EDGE-Lite)

  More titles forthcoming…

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Building any universe is a complicated endeavor. Sic Transit Terra has taken shape over a very long time, during which I have been fortunate to have access to the encouragement and expertise of many good friends. Among them:

  My husband David and sons Robert and Chris Marks, who always knew the ugly duckling “plague universe” would grow into a swan.

  My mother, Mollie Lerman, who still has the first story I ever wrote (at the age of 6) and always knew that I would grow into a swan.

  Bette Walker, my soul sister and partner in crime, and her husband Adde, who lets me pick his scientific brain.

  Beta readers David Penney and Jody Schaefer, who laughed in all the right places and pronounced The Genius Asylum ready to meet the public.

  James Alan Gardner, Julie E. Czerneda, Ed Greenwood, Suzanne Church, and Jane Ann McLachlan, whose generosity of spirit has nourished my own.

  To all of you, I’m deeply grateful.

  Contents

  The Genius Asylum

  THE GENIUS ASYLUM

  ***BONUS***

  The Sic Transit Terra Universe:

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Read ahead for a preview of the second book in the Sic Transit Terra universe.

  THE OTHERNESS FACTOR

  Author Bio

  More titles from EDGE-Lite:

  The Rosetta Man

  The Triforium:

  Award winning fiction from EDGE Science Fiction and Fantasy Publishing:

  The Milkman:

  Details

  The Space Installation Authority (SIA) was first established in 2153 C.E. to provide civilian oversight of Earth’s then-nascent colonization program. Its purview was expanded in 2190 C.E. to include the establishment and governing of Ares, the newly constructed settlement on Mars. To provide law enforcement on Ares, the High Council then created the Space Installation Security Agency (SIS), a fully-empowered police organization commanding a corps of officers who came to be informally referred to as the Rangers. These off-world officers were charged with keeping the peace, investigating criminal activity, and making arrests. In densely populated sectors of Earth space, Rangers were posted directly to colonies or space stations (known as hubs). In sectors where the Human population was sparse, Ranger detachments were headquartered in orbiting observation platforms. In 2308 C.E., following the bombing of a conference on Asimov Hub that claimed the lives of three representatives of the League of African Nations, the High Council approved the establishment of an off-world intelligence agency, called Space Installation Security Covert Operations (SISCO). Although they sometimes cooperated with one another, the SIA, the SIS and SISCO were separate and equal organizations, reporting directly and only to the Earth High Council.

  — Sic Transit Terra, An Unauthorized Planetary History (2673 C.E.)

  Chapter 1

  The video clip came in from Surveillance shortly after 8:00 a.m. Drew Townsend had just arrived at his desk and was shrugging out of his jacket, already feeling weary at the thought of another day spent spinning his wheels. He could have shortened it by arriving an hour or two late, like the other Eligibles in the precinct, but he’d been a field investigator for too many years to feel comfortable about trimming his shift.

  “We’ve got a body!” bawled Captain Romero, leaning out the door of his office. “Our friends in the Zone have apparently been at it again. Adult male, Emerson and Fifth. Lupo and Truman, get over there. And be careful. It may just be a body dump, but that’s Warrior Kings territory.”

  The Kings? Romero had to let him take this one.

  “Captain, if this is gang-related, two men may not be enough—”

  “You’re right, Townsend. Dinally and Gluckstein, you’ll go as backup.”

  Dinally looked pained and Gluckstein threw Townsend a helpless shrug as they headed out the ward room door together.

  “That wasn’t what I meant,” Drew protested.

  “I know what you meant, and the answer is no. You’re an Eligible now, which means I’m forbidden to put you in even potentially dangerous situations.”

  “We both know that a body dump is one of the safest places for an investigator to be,” Townsend argued. “And I have a history with the Kings—”

  “You used to be a Warrior King. There’s a difference. In any case, you can stop wasting your breath, because I’m not sending you into the Zone.”

  “But if the vic is a King I may be able to ID him.”

  “Great. I’ll have Lupo transmit a snap of the body to your desk screen.”

  Frustration hardened Townsend’s voice. “Dammit, Captain, I’m one of your top field investigators!”

  “Yes, and I was very sorry to lose you. But the moment the Relocation Authority took
you back into the fold, you leaped to a higher plane of existence. Now you have to mark time, and I have to like it. And if you get so much as a boo-boo on my watch, they will come down on me and mine like a ton of high explosives. So it’s desk duty for you, pal. Desk duty and java runs,” Romero said, returning to his office and closing the door.

  Drew Townsend was very good at a lot of things, but sitting around waiting for others to make things happen had never been one of them. He’d heard stories about Eligibles marking time measured in months or even years before being posted off-world. For Drew, the last three weeks had felt like an eternity, and he wasn’t sure he could take much more.

  So, he let the moment settle, then counted to fifty and punched the intercomm on his desk. “Hey, Cap,” he said in his best casual voice, “I could use some java. You?”

  After a beat, Romero replied, “No, thanks, Townsend.” There was a smile in his voice. It figured. The captain was too smart to fall for a con this transparent, but smart enough to recognize deniability when it was offered to him on a platter, so Townsend forged ahead.

  “In fact, since things are so slow at the precinct right now, I think I’ll drink it at the cafe.”

  “If you put yourself in danger, you risk losing your Eligibility again, you know that.”

  The warning was pro forma. Drew knew that Romero would love to put him back to work in the field.

  Don’t wait up for me, Dad.

  ***

  Romero had called ahead. As Drew steered his PV carefully along the cracked and rubble-strewn pavement of Emerson Boulevard, he saw Truman standing on the road a good block away from the scene, waving to him to pull over. Obediently Drew parked and waited for his former partner to stroll to the driver’s side window.

  “Captain warned me you might get lost on your way back from the cafe,” said Truman with a grin, then laughed out loud as Townsend handed him a steaming cup. “Mm-hmm,” he said after savoring a sip. “Black and extra sweet, just like my lady.”

  “I got one for Lupo, too. I wasn’t sure which one of you would be heading me off.”

  “Lupo hates cold java, so we’ll make this quick. The vic is light brown, mid-fifties, about five foot ten and medium build. No ID on him, but he’s wearing a business suit and expensive shoes, and diamond ear studs, two per lobe. Whoever this guy is, he’s not a ganger. And he still has his diamonds, so I’m pretty sure the Kings had nothing to do with this.”

  The mention of ear studs had set off alarms at the back of Townsend’s brain. “Show me his face.”

  “It’s been mutilated, Drew. We’ve transmitted the snaps to the precinct—”

  “You can either show me his face here or back off so the PV door doesn’t hit you when I get out to take a personal look,” Townsend told him in the calmly authoritative voice he normally reserved for the suspect interrogation room. “Your choice.”

  Truman knew better than to argue. Wordlessly, he reached into his pocket and handed over his compupad. “You think you might know this guy?” he inquired softly.

  Drew called up the image file and stared at the screen, feeling his jaw muscles work as his stomach slowly twisted itself into a knot. For a long moment he studied the snap, letting each grisly detail burn itself into his memory. Then, forcing himself to breathe normally, he closed the file. “I knew him. He was my friend. His name is Bruni Patel.”

  Truman had the grace to look uncomfortable while delivering the formula speech. “Drew, I’m really sorry for your loss.”

  “Yeah. I’ll see you back at the precinct.” He thrust the compupad and Lupo’s java cup into Truman’s fumbling hands and drove away before the rage beginning to boil up inside him could find its way to his mouth.

  Townsend reached the urbanway in record time and joined the grid, programming his on-board computer to take him back to the 33rd Precinct. And, as Auto Traffic Control merged his vehicle seamlessly into the southbound stream, he came to a decision.

  Bruni Patel had been much more than a friend to him. Bruni had bossed the wing of the detention center where Drew had been sent eighteen years earlier for possession of stolen property. Bruni’s steady guidance during the next five years was the sole reason that Drew was able to complete his education while detained and have a decent life waiting for him upon his release. The job with Security had been a challenge Bruni threw at him. A slammer rat in Security was practically unheard of, but that only made Drew more determined to qualify. The day he was hired, Bruni brought a printout of the employment contract to his cell along with a bottle of wine and two juice glasses, and they toasted Drew’s victory over adversity.

  Approached years later by the Earth Intelligence Service, Townsend discovered by chance that Bruni had also been recruited. Bruni did a lot of traveling, but they’d managed to stay in touch off and on for nearly eight years. And now Bruni was lying dead in the Zone with empty eye sockets, deep gashes around his ears, and letters carved into his forehead.

  Eligible or not, authorized or not, Drew owed it to his friend to do everything possible to solve his murder and bring to justice whoever was responsible.

  ***

  The rest of the Eligibles had arrived and were sitting at their desks pretending to be busy when Townsend strode through the door of the ward room and immediately booted up his screen.

  “Looking for something?” came Romero’s voice from directly over his left shoulder.

  “E-F-T. Those letters were carved into Bruni’s—into the vic’s forehead. What the hell is that, Captain? Someone killed him because they thought he was an amphibian?”

  One of the Eligibles found that amusing. Drew silenced him with a look.

  “Earth for Terrans,” sighed Romero. “Just what we need right now, another bunch of crazies crawling out of the woodwork. This group began taking out ads on the InfoCommNet a couple of weeks ago, warning that Earth’s population has been infiltrated by alien spies. We’ve had no reason to take action against the EFT because up until now it’s been nothing but talk. However, if they’ve upshifted to committing murder to make their point—”

  “We need to haul in their leaders for questioning,” Drew decided.

  “I’m way ahead of you. And you need to step back from this and let us do our jobs. The M.E. is pushing this case to the top of her list. Gluckstein is combing databases to reconstruct the vic’s last 24 hours, and Truman and Lupo are interviewing persons of interest as we speak. They’re all good investigators, Townsend. They’ll get whoever killed your friend, I promise.”

  Drew pasted a grateful smile on his face and kept it there until Romero had returned to his office and shut the door. The other Eligibles, meanwhile, were studiously avoiding making eye contact, even with one another, for fear of triggering an explosion of rage across the room.

  Good, thought Drew as he reached into his desk drawer and palmed the device he’d concealed there. A small black tube ringed with ridges along half its length, it had been given to him by his Earth Intelligence handler. The encrypting comm was keyed to Drew’s DNA. As he wrapped his fingers around it and squeezed gently, he could feel a soft tingling in the skin of his palm. He released his grip, then squeezed again, three times more in quick succession — a standard request for a meeting. There was no emergency, not yet.

  The rest of the day went by with tortoise-like slowness and a suspicious lack of hard intel about the Patel murder crossing Drew’s desk. To help take his mind off the case, Romero assigned him to Surveillance Monitoring — Sensitive Areas. These were the high-crime-rate blocks surrounding the Zone. His eyes roving constantly over a bank of twenty flat screens, in a period of four hours Drew witnessed — and forwarded video coverage of — fifteen muggings, more assaults than he could count, and the beginnings of two weapons deals, which were aborted when the parties involved realized they were being watched by remote vidcam. At the end of his shift, fighting an eyestrain hea
dache that he was sure would have brought down a bull moose, Townsend found himself looking down the business end of a zapper as a ganger took careful aim at the surveillance drone that had followed him into an alleyway. Cursing, Drew punched the ‘evade’ button, a half-second too late. The screen went black.

  “Bull’s eye,” he muttered darkly. Good work, kid. One down and only about seven thousand to go.

  ***

  The EIS contact waiting for Townsend when he pulled into his half of the garage behind the octoplex on Lamont Street that evening was not Drew’s handler.

  “Where’s Gow?”

  The other man shrugged. “Otherwise occupied, so I’ll have to do. What’s on your mind, Townsend?” he asked, the patronizing tone of his voice suggesting that he already knew the answer.

  “Bruni Patel was murdered last night.”

  “An unfortunate loss for all of us. He was a good agent.”

  “Save it for his eulogy,” Drew snapped. “What’s the EIS going to do about this?”

  The man took a second to change expressions. Now he wore a superior, faintly feline smile on his face as he said in that same condescending voice, “Rest assured, Mr. Townsend, we are already doing it. We do not take lightly the murder of one of our operatives. An investigation has already been launched into the activities of the EFT.”

  “I want to be assigned to that investigation.”

  “Understandable — he was your friend.”

  “He was more than that. I owed him my life. And since I couldn’t repay him by saving his, I plan to do the next best thing, which is to see to it that whoever killed him pays full price.”

  “An admirable goal, I’m sure. However, not a practical one. You have been entrusted with a very important mission, one with a narrow window of opportunity, and you need to devote your time and all your energy to preparing for it. Meanwhile, we will ensure that Mr. Patel receives justice, never fear.”

  This was the second time that Drew had been figuratively patted on the head and told to stay out of the way. Fighting to keep his voice steady, he pointed out, “My mission doesn’t begin until I board a ship bound for Daisy Hub. Until then, be advised that I’m putting myself on this murder case. And you can tell the higher-ups not to worry about the mission — I’ll be ready when that ‘narrow window of opportunity’ opens up.”

 

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