Ambassador 1: Seeing Red (Ambassador: Space Opera Thriller)

Home > Science > Ambassador 1: Seeing Red (Ambassador: Space Opera Thriller) > Page 18
Ambassador 1: Seeing Red (Ambassador: Space Opera Thriller) Page 18

by Patty Jansen


  “It’s very direct—for something coming from gamra.”

  Yes, I knew the pronouns were too direct. But gamra was the only place where such archaic forms of Coldi were used. “This won’t be sent through gamra. Not officially anyway.”

  “You want to send this—to whom?”

  “Anyone I can think of. Marin Federza and the Trader Guild and the Ledger, but also the Damarcian master builders, and local businesses in Barresh.” If Amoro Renkati was such a rich man and wanted to keep close watch on me, he might bite; I was sure that if I were in his position, I would bite. “Do you think anyone will be upset?”

  “I don’t know.”

  I spread my hands, frustration welling up in me. “What do you do when you’re stuck for a job?”

  Her look was blank.

  Of course. That didn’t happen in Asto. When Coldi children were thirteen, they went into schooling and moved up through the ranks by completing tasks and exams until they reached a level they couldn’t attain. At that stage, authorities matched their abilities with a position, where they remained for life. It was easy to plan for a government which operated on strict population control.

  “Well, I’m going to send it, whether it’s polite or not.”

  ‎

  Chapter 13

  * * *

  “DELEGATE, THE MEDICO has arrived.” Eirani stood at the door, a washing basket on her hip.

  I stopped my transcript mid-sentence, thoughts of flowing sentences fleeing my brain. For a while, I had almost forgotten the throbbing pain in my hands, since it had become less after the popping feeling, but now, with treatment in sight, it returned in full force. I did not like doctors and hospitals.

  Thayu gave me a small nod. “Go. I’ll keep working on this.”

  I rose, reluctantly.

  A woman waited in the hall. She towered almost a head over me, yet held her back straight. Wide but bony shoulders made me think of an athlete thirty years after Olympic glory. An orange robe hung from her thin and knobbly shoulders, leaving bare thin arms with skin wrinkled as an elephant’s hide.

  Dark eyes met mine from a face with a sharp nose and high cheekbones. She wore her greying hair in a tight bun.

  She nodded a greeting. “Delegate.”

  Eirani returned a tiny bow. “There are benches and a clean table in the bathroom.”

  The woman gave a short reply in a language I didn’t recognise but presumed was keihu, after which Eirani bowed again and shepherded us to the bathroom.

  The medico woman followed me into the cavernous room. Without looking at me, she gestured at one of the couches that lined the wall. “Sit there.” Right. Someone who didn’t adhere to the gamra formality.

  She plonked a metal case on the table next to the couch, and dragged the table until it stood between me and her. She flipped open the lid. From within the depths of the case, two telescope arms extended, and lights flicked on at their ends. Then the front and back of the case clicked open and panels unfolded into a working table, while a fine mist sprayed from nozzles hidden in the remaining side walls of the case.

  I stared. I had never seen anything like this.

  “Put your hands here.” She pointed at the pool of light on the treatment table.

  I did so. In the brightness, the bandage looked positively disgusting.

  “This is not good. Why not come earlier?” She met my eyes with deep black ones.

  I shrugged, feeling both hot and cold at the same time; I had left this far too long and I knew it, but I didn’t need this abrupt woman to tell me that.

  From the sides of the medicine case, she unfolded another panel which held a neat row of metal instruments, many with pincer-sharp points that would put a dentist’s pick to shame.

  Squinting, she selected a tweezer-like gadget with knife-sharp points.

  I focused on the languid steam rising off the water in the bath past the woman’s back. I didn’t want to know what she was doing but, at the same time, I felt a morbid fascination. Just what had made that popping sound under the bandage?

  She used the implement to alternately pull and cut the bandage away from my palm.

  Like Nicha’s, her skin carried not even the faintest fuzz of hair. Yet she wasn’t Coldi.

  Aghyrian.

  She had all the aristocratic features. The height, the wide shoulders, the straight nose, the high cheekbones, the long fingers.

  It was the first time I had heard an Aghyrian speak with an accent, staccato, snappy, as if she really hated Coldi.

  By now, she had removed most of the bandage. The skin of my left palm, red and shiny, strained against strips of tape which the doctors in Rotterdam had applied to keep both sides of the cuts together. One had come loose, leaving a raw and gaping wound, red rimmed and oozing pus. The faintest breeze of air stung like acid.

  A drop of sweat rolled down my stomach.

  “Hold still.” She put one hand across both my wrists and with the other picked up an instrument, with what looked like a small light bulb at the end. Something, a spark or a light, flew from the glass bulb. It hit my palms with a sharp stab of pain. It crackled along my fingers . . . and then . . . nothing.

  The pain was gone.

  “What . . .” I stared.

  She gave me a withering look, while putting the instrument away, nothing more than a metal rod with a little piece of glass at the end, a simple thing, a . . . conductor.

  On second thoughts, I had heard of this. It had something to do with the ability to store energy in the body, like static electricity. All three races native to Barresh had this to some extent. It had a name—which I had forgotten. I had read a report written by someone, a Coldi author I seemed to remember, who was quite scared of the ability, calling it a regrettable abomination.

  I wriggled my fingers. “Could you show me how you do that?”

  “Is not for fun.”

  Talk about grumpy. “You are Aghyrian, aren’t you?”

  She gave me a piercing look, but didn’t disagree. “Aghyrians are locals, aren’t they?”

  “Not by choice, we’re not.”

  Heh, my probing had struck a raw nerve. All those years ago, a meteorite strike had made Asto, the Aghyrian home word, uninhabitable for them. Through the ages, the once-brilliant Aghyrian race had clung onto survival, but only in the last hundred years or so had their numbers increased substantially. There were rumours of a hard core within that group, who believed it was time for the Coldi race, their temporary place holders, a people created by them, to relinquish control of gamra, and of their home planet.

  Never mind that these days Asto was too hot for any species except the Coldi.

  “Do Aghyrians all live in Barresh or are there concentrations somewhere else?”

  Another sharp look. “You have a lot of questions, young man.”

  “It interests me.” I could hardly say that I was hoping to pave the way for a question about Amoro Renkati.

  But I was not to be so lucky.

  She picked up the tweezers and proceeded to peel off the strips of tape, releasing a foul scent. My palms started bleeding again, but I still felt nothing.

  After another spray from the nozzles, she took an implement like flat-tipped tweezers with incurved gripping edges, and pushed together the sides of the cuts, while with the other hand, she took a pen-like device made of metal, which she ran over the jagged cuts. I could have sworn the metal glowed with a faint greenish aura. Steam rose where it touched my skin, but I felt no pain.

  Slowly, with a sure hand, she worked over all the cuts. The metal pen appeared to seal my skin and left it shiny but less red.

  She treated both my hands this way, th
en put down the implements. “Move your hands.”

  I did. The cuts had indeed sealed together, almost as if new skin had formed.

  “Hurt?”

  “No, not at all.” I clenched my fist and let it relax again, staring at my palm. It was sensitive, not entirely healed but much better. “Is there anything I should do? Keep my hands dry? Can I bathe?”

  She met my eyes squarely. “Hands gone bad like this because you never take bath. Must keep clean.”

  Was there a more blunt way of saying I stank? “I will do that. Thank you.”

  I stared after her back, realising that during the entire conversation I had not thought about pronouns.

  * * *

  In the afternoon, I received a terse statement from Danziger’s secretary about the military blockade of the Exchange, mentioning that I was one of the individuals sanctioned to enter, from which I deduced that Danziger wanted me to come back.

  To my question clarifying if this was indeed so, I received no reply, so I wrote that if Danziger did want me to come back, I would need some funds first.

  To which there was also no reply.

  Communication failure? I didn’t believe it. Not for this long. I knew Nations of Earth couldn’t communicate with me without gamra listening in, and this probably meant, or rather I feared, that Nations of Earth were being deliberately obtuse because they had found something significant.

  The news services only reported that Danziger would make a general statement immediately following Sirkonen’s funeral.

  I concluded that was going to be it.

  Unfortunately, the timing of the statement fell just after my speech.

  What if Danziger had found evidence of Asto’s involvement?

  There was no reason for them to be involved. If Asto interests had killed Sirkonen, Asto would lose much more than control over two hundred thousand of its citizens. They would lose their standing as a non-aggressive entity within gamra. A lot of entities would no longer be happy to vote with them.

  Meanwhile, the bullying Asto delegation held a deadline over my head, almost like one of their damn writs. Respond satisfactorily or else. And no one was cooperating.

  I submitted an application to gamra administration to meet Delegate Akhtari and to my surprise, was granted a short audience. Maybe the reason I’d given for wanting the meeting, to avoid a humanitarian catastrophe, had something to do with it. Maybe not. Gamra entities could learn a thing or two from Earth about humanitarian aid in major crises.

  And so I put on my new uniform, submitted my cheeks to another round of torture, never mind what had happened to that elusive shaver. By now I was starting to fear I’d forgotten to pack it, and I wondered how that poor abused razor was going to hold out for six months.

  Delegate Akhtari met me in her office, seated behind a gleaming, kidney-shaped desk, and listened to my plea. When I had finished, she clasped her hands before her, and said, “Delegate, the situation is stable. Without gamra and the Exchange, Nations of Earth forces are not going to harm any other entities, are they?”

  Isolationist policies, at which gamra excelled. Got a problem? Isolate it and ignore it. I bit down on my frustration. “Delegate, the situation is sliding into war. There is a large population of Coldi trapped on Earth. Asto is readying military to free them.”

  “They won’t be used. The Asto delegation assures that.”

  “That was not the impression they gave me.” Pronouns, Delegate, pronouns! Not such a good idea to use the offended-me in this case. “Delegate, I think the establishment needs to move with some urgency to allay suspicion that gamra had a hand in the attack on the president, and is willing to help solve this crime. When that statement is forthcoming, I can negotiate the withdrawal of Nations of Earth military forces so that normal Exchange traffic can resume.”

  “The establishment has been assured by the highest Asto authority that there will be no action until after zhamata. The Asto delegation have given the assurance that the Delegate understands that also.”

  “That deadline is too early. The president is to make an important statement after zhamata sitting.”

  “The president cannot give the statement earlier?”

  Damn. “There are communication problems.”

  Her eyebrows rose.

  My argument was weak and I knew it. Hell, communication problems would well alert her to where the real difficulty was: that Danziger wasn’t talking to me. That I was failing in my job, that my network had broken down.

  “I’m asking that my appearance in zhamata be postponed to the following day until the president has made his statement.” The Asto delegation wouldn’t be happy with that, but they had said your authorities’ response at zhamata, which referred to my upcoming speech, but nothing about when that speech would be held.

  “The Delegate can plead for this at the sitting. It is not for me alone to decide. I am not the aggrieved party.” That was an offended-I as well.

  And that was the end of my hope. Shut up, Delegate, and talk your puny arse out of this. Ask before all the delegates in the very public zhamata meeting if Asto—the aggrieved party—would wait. I already knew their stance on the matter. Worse, Thayu sat next to me, listening to every word of my squirming. She had ties with Asto, she would probably report back to their delegation. Asto would draw the only right conclusion about my relationship with Danziger. Where the spider veins of imayu reached, they protected against conflict, but where there was a barrier . . .

  A barrier that started and ended with me. And that was the root of the problem.

  There was distrust between me and Danziger, between me and Nations of Earth. Not just now; it had always been this way, even back when Sirkonen first appointed me. I was appointed for a political reason: to shut up my father, to shut up Marius Sena, governor of Taurus, and other intelligent and well-spoken politicians of the New Colonist faction, who wanted a greater say in Nations of Earth policies.

  * * *

  When I returned to the apartment, the accounts assistant waited in the foyer.

  My heart jumped—good or bad news?

  I waited until Thayu had gone into the communication room and Evi and Telaris had shut the door before addressing the man. “Anything to report?” Let it be payment from Nations of Earth. Let the lack of communication be through technical problems. Although I no longer believed that.

  The man cleared his throat and by then I knew that the news wasn’t good. “The staff needs to pay some grocery bills, Delegate. The staff are happy doing this, but there are not many funds in the general account. Maybe the Delegate has another account he wishes to use to pay the bills?”

  Oh the innocence of him. “The account has enough to pay the bills?”

  “It does.”

  “Then pay them.”

  The man nodded and scurried off. I went into the communication room.

  I needed to do something, and quick. It was time to start playing tough with Danziger.

  * * *

  It was midday in Rotterdam and Melissa Hayworth was online, delighted to hear from me, she said. I imagined her crouched in a corner in some newsroom, reading her screen while all around her some other crisis was being played out.

  Oh boy, did I have a story for her.

  I’d like your help. I typed, knowing that what I said here would be on Flash within five minutes. I stood at the edge of a cliff and was about to jump, a point beyond which there would be no way back. Then again, how much lower could my relationship with Nations of Earth sink? I am in a difficult situation. Nations of Earth haven’t paid any of the agreed stipend as yet.

  Are you suggesting the president has abandoned you?

  Sure as hell I was suggestin
g that. I would appreciate if you would not put words into my mouth. I am saying only that Nations of Earth is late paying their agreed contribution. I’m giving an address to the assembly, and need information from Danziger. No one is getting back to me about either issue. I’m contacting you as a last resort.

  So you want me to publish this?

  Another deep breath. Knowing I was about to jump off an even higher cliff. Yes. If I can have a share of your payment. It hurt me to say that. In normal life, I found the selling of news stories morally repugnant, something Flash Newspoint did. Stories circulated about how people wilfully put themselves through newsworthy weird events so that they could sell their experiences. In one word: revolting. But hey, I happened to be talking to Flash Newspoint’s highest-profile journalist, and I’d run out of options.

  If I did nothing, I’d live in a palace and starve. If I did nothing, the Asto military would attack and I’d never see my family again—or get married.

  Melissa came back to me after a short pause. I will have to negotiate with the boss. Did I detect a slight hesitation? Time to pull out all the stops.

  Ms Hayworth, when this comes out, it will be anchor page news. I want it there. I know you are skilled enough to get it there. I need to continue this job so I can try to preserve the peace. I’m holding off a squadron of Asto fighters who are keen to free their kinsmen and retaliate for whatever has been done to them. You of all people should understand. Her Coldi stepfather would be under pressure, too. All the signs were that she had a good relationship with him.

  Another pause, and then she replied, Yes. I agree. I will get this onto the anchor page.

  Thank you. I have some other things. At the Exchange in Athens, find a four-year-old boy called Azisha Omi.

  Any reason?

  Ask him what happened to him. It will make a good story. Flash loved those kinds of stories. And I hoped it would get the boy looked after.

  Also, the credits for the movie on Kershaw mention a name, Amoro Renkati. Do you have any idea who this is?

 

‹ Prev