by David Weber
The real problem was the classic quandary of all tunnel escapes: where do you put the dirt?
Regretfully, because it would be so time-consuming, she came to the conclusion that she would have to mix the fresh fill with the old dirt and dust covering the cell. Carefully blending them, so that the color contrast would not be too noticeable. Over time, of course, the color would start to change and the level of the floor would slowly rise. But she hoped that the process would be too imperceptible for her captors to notice.
All that, of course, presupposed that she had weeks ahead of her. She had no idea if that presumption was accurate. It probably wasn’t. For all Helen knew, her captors intended to kill her in the next hour. But she had no other option, other than to sit and wait. Like a sheep.
Damn that! The memory of her mother kept her strong; Master Tye’s training kept her steady. And she knew that her father would be coming for her. Not soon, perhaps, but surely. Her father was like that. If he had none of the romance which surrounded her mother’s memory, he was as certain as the sunrise and the tides.
She went back to work. Scrape, scrape.
Anton
After he finished studying the police forensics report, Anton rose from the console and moved over to the window overlooking the city. He was oblivious to the view, however. Which was probably just as well, since the “picture window” in his relatively inexpensive apartment simply had a view of another enormous residential complex across the boulevard. If he craned his neck, he might catch a glimpse of the busy street far below.
But his eyes were not focused on the sight. His mind was turned completely inward.
“Jesus Christ,” he murmured. “I knew this wasn’t a Peep operation, but I wasn’t expecting this.”
From behind, he heard Robert Tye’s voice. “You know the identity of the culprits?”
Zilwicki nodded. “The Sacred Band,” he growled. “The ‘Scrags,’ as they’re sometimes called. The genetic markers are unmistakable.” He turned away from the window and stared down at the martial artist. “You’ve heard of them?”
“They’re supposed to be a fable, you know,” replied Tye. “An urban legend. All the experts say so.”
Zilwicki said nothing. After a moment, Tye chuckled dryly. “As it happens, however, I once had one of them as a student. Briefly. It didn’t take me long to figure out who he was—or what he was, I should say—since the fellow couldn’t resist demonstrating his natural physical prowess.”
“That would be typical,” murmured Zilwicki. “Arrogant to the last. What happened then?”
Tye shrugged. “Nothing. Once his identity became clear, I told him his company was no longer desired. I was rather emphatic. Fortunately, he was not quite arrogant enough to argue with me. So he went on his way and I never saw him again.”
“One of them works in this building,” said Zilwicki abruptly. “His profile leaps right out from the rest of the employee files. The bastard didn’t even bother with plastic surgery. The bone structure’s obvious, once you know what to look for, even leaving aside the results of his medical exams. ‘In perfect health,’ his doctors say, which I’m sure he is. The man’s name is Kennesaw and he’s the maintenance supervisor. Which explains, of course, how he was able to circumvent the apartment’s security.”
His eyes moved back to the window, and again grew unfocused. “And it also explains why the Scrags selected Helen as their victim. Opportunity, pure and simple. Almost a random choice, given that they must have wanted someone connected to the Manticoran embassy.”
“And why that?” asked Tye. “What does the Sacred Band want with your people?”
Zilwicki shrugged. “That’s still a mystery. But if I had to guess, I’d say that they’re working for Manpower Inc.”
Tye’s eyes widened a bit. “The Mesan slave-breeders? I didn’t realize there was a connection.”
“It’s not something Manpower advertises,” chuckled Anton harshly. “As much effort as those scum put into their respectable appearance, you can understand why they wouldn’t want to be associated in the public mind with monsters out of Terran history. Half-legendary creatures with a reputation as bad as werewolves or vampires.”
“Worse,” grunted Tye. “Nobody really believes werewolves or vampires ever existed. The Final War was all too real.”
Zilwicki nodded. “As for the Sacred Band itself, the attachment to Manpower is natural enough. For all that they make a cult of their own superhuman nature, the Scrags are nothing more today than a tiny group. Manticoran intelligence has never bothered to investigate them very thoroughly. But we’re pretty sure they don’t number more than a few dozen, here in Chicago—and fewer still, anywhere else. They’re vicious bastards, of course, and dangerous enough to anyone who crosses them in the slums of the city. But powerless in any meaningful sense of the term.”
He shrugged. “So, like many other defeated groups in history, they transferred their allegiance to a new master and a new cause. Close enough to their old one to maintain ideological continuity, but with real influence in the modern universe. Which the Mesans certainly have. And, although Manpower Inc. claims to be a pure and simple business, you don’t have to be a genius to figure out the implicit political logic of their enterprise. What the old Terrans would have called ‘fascism.’ If some people can be bred for slavery, after all, others can be bred for mastery.”
“But—” Tye squeezed his eyes shut for a moment. “Oh, for the simple problems of the dojo,” he muttered. Then: “I stilldon’t understand. Why is Manpower doing this? Do they have some personal animus against you?”
“Not that I can think of. Not really. It’s true that Helen—my wife—belonged to the Anti-Slavery League. But she was never actually active in the organization. And although not many officers go so far as to join the ASL, anti-Mesan attitudes are so widespread in the Navy that she didn’t really stand out in any way. Besides, that was years ago.”
Slowly, his mind ranging, Anton shook his head. “No, Robert. This isn’t personal. The truth is, I don’t even think Manpower is at the bottom of it. I wasn’t kidding when I said they bend over backward to appear as respectable as possible. There’s no way the Mesans would have gotten involved in something like this unless someone offered them a very powerful inducement. Either in the nature of a threat or a reward.”
He clasped both hands behind his neck and spread his elbows. The gesture, which was simply a means of inducing relaxation, also highlighted the captain’s immensely thick and muscular form.
After a moment, realizing what he was doing, Zilwicki smiled slightly and lowered his arms. The smile bore a trace of sadness underneath. His dead wife, Helen, had often teased him about the mannerism. “The Zilwicki maneuver,” she’d called it, claiming it was a subconscious attempt at intimidation.
Yet, if he relinquished that form of projecting power, the cold grin which came to Anton’s face probably served the purpose even better. “But now that the Scrags and Manpower have entered the picture, I think I’ve found the angle I need to get around Young and Hendricks. And, if I’m right, it’ll be pure poetic justice.”
Once again, Zilwicki sat down before the console. “This will probably take a couple of days, Robert. Unless those two are even dumber than I think they are, their security codes are going to take some effort to crack.”
“Can you do it at all?” asked Tye.
Zilwicki chuckled humorlessly, as his thick fingers manipulated the keyboard with ease. “One of the advantages to looking the way I do, Robert—especially when people know I used to be a ‘yard dog’—is that they always assume I must be some kind of mechanical engineer. As it happens, my specialty is software. Especially security systems.”
Tye’s face crinkled. “I myself shared that assumption. I’ve always had this splendid image of you, covered with grease and wielding a gigantic wrench. How distressing to discover it was all an illusion.”
Anton smiled, but said nothing in reply. Already,
he was deeply engrossed in his work.
By late afternoon, he leaned back in his chair and sighed. “That’s as much as I can do for the moment. The next stage is pure numbers-crunching, which will take at least twenty-four hours. Probably longer. So we’ve got some time to pay a visit on Kennesaw. But first—”
The look which now came over Zilwicki’s face made Tye think of someone who’d just seen a ghost. The intelligence captain’s expression was almost haggard, and he seemed a little pale.
“What’s wrong?”
Anton shook his head. “Just something I can’t postpone any longer. I’ve been able to block it out of my mind so far, but now—”
Again, his fingers began working at the keyboard. Tye rose to his feet and padded over. Some sort of schematic diagram was filling the screen. None of it meant anything to the martial artist.
“What are you doing?”
Zilwicki’s face was as gaunt as a square face could get, but his fingers never faltered in their work. “One of the standard techniques in kidnapping, Robert, is to simply kill the victim immediately. That eliminates the trouble of guarding the person, and it removes any witnesses.”
He grunted. “But it’s something which is done either by pure amateurs or complete professionals. The amateurs because they don’t realize just how hard it is to dispose of a body quickly without leaving any evidence, and the pros because they know how to do it. What I’m hoping is that the people who took Helen know enough, but not too much.”
As he had been speaking, several different diagrams and schematics had flashed across the screen. Now, as a new one came up, Zilwicki concentrated on it for some time. Then he grunted again. This time, however, the sound carried an undertone of satisfaction.
“Good. There are plenty of traces of organic disposal, of course, but not what a human body would show. If there had been, the alarms would have gone off. And the alarms themselves haven’t been tampered with. Unless it was done by a software maestro, which I’m willing to bet Kennesaw isn’t. Or any other member of the Sacred Band. Not, at least, when it comes to this kind of specialized stuff.”
The haggard look vanished. Zilwicki’s fingers began working again. “But I am a software maestro, if I say so myself, and while this is tricky it’s not impossible. If you know what you’re doing.”
Robert Tye cleared his throat. “Do you enjoy speaking gobbledygook, Anton?”
Zilwicki smiled crookedly. “Sorry. Occupational hazard for a cyberneticist. Modern technology makes disposing of a human body quite easy, Robert. Any garbage processing unit in a large apartment complex such as this one can manage it without even burping. In the Star Kingdom, we just live with that reality and the police do their best. But you Solarians are addicted to rules and regulations. So, without any big public fanfare having been made about it, almost all publicly available mechanisms which utilize enough energy to destroy a human body also have detectors built into them. If you don’t know about them, or don’t know how to get around the alarms, simply shoving a corpse into the disposal unit will have the police breathing down your neck in minutes.”
He tapped a final key and leaned back, exuding a certain cold satisfaction. “They may have killed Helen, but they didn’t do what I most feared—killed her right away and shoved her into the building’s disintegrator.”
There was silence for a moment. Then, speaking very softly, Tye said: “I take it you have—just now—circumvented the alarms.”
“Yeah, I did. For the next twenty-fours, nothing disintegrated in this building is going to alert the police. And after the alarms come back on, it will be far too late to reconstruct anything at all—even if you know what you’re looking for.”
The captain rose to his feet, glanced at his watch, and headed for the door. “Come on, Robert. Kennesaw works the day shift. He should be coming back to his apartment in about half an hour.”
Victor
“He did what?” demanded Usher. The Marine citizen colonel lost his air of casual relaxation and sat upright on the couch. The tendons on the back of his large hand, gripping the armrest, stood out like cables.
Knowing—all too well—what those hands were capable of, Victor almost flinched. He didshrink back slightly in his own chair. “I’m not positive about that, Kevin. Not that last bit, anyway, about the Zilwicki girl. I’m sure he sent the order to the Mesans he’s been talking to, but I may not have interpreted it correctly. It was—”
Usher wiped his face wearily. “You were right, Victor. We’ll have to make sure, of course. But I’ll bet on it.”
It was the first time Usher had called him by his name instead of one or another appellation. Oddly enough, Victor found that he was delighted. But perhaps it was not so odd. In the short time that he had spent in Usher’s secret apartment, Victor had decided that Usher was what he had always thought he would encounter in the field during his time at the SS Academy. Not simply an older, more experienced comrade serving as his mentor—but the spirit of comradeship itself.
Usher rose slowly to his feet and paced into the kitchen. When he came back, he was holding two bottles of that ancient Terran beverage called cola. Wordlessly, he handed one of them to Victor. Then, seeing the slight frown in the young SS officer’s face, Usher chuckled drily.
“Lesson number—what is it, now?—eight, I think. A reputation for being a drunk can keep you out of as much trouble as being one gets you into.” He padded to his couch and sunk into it. “I’ve got a high capacity for alcohol, but I don’t drink anywhere near as much as people think.”
Usher took a swig from his bottle. “No, this is exactly the kind of scheme Durkheim would dream up. Typical desk pilot idea—and Durkheim’s a good one. It’s a brilliantly conceived maneuver, sure enough. In one stroke, he gets both Parnell and Bergren assassinated, manages to keep the obvious culprits—us—from getting blamed, shifts the blame—or, at least, muddies the waters—by getting a Manty intelligence officer tied to the thing, and even, maybe, gets us a little bit of the first good media coverage since the Harrington news broke. Reminds the public that on the question of genetic slavery we’re still the best guys in town.”
Usher was silent for a moment, as he resumed his seat on the couch. Then: “Parnell, you may remember, was the admiral who cleaned out that Manpower nest on Esterheim when the Legislaturist regime was using extirpation of the slave trade as their excuse for territorial expansion. Bergren, as the Secretary of Foreign Affairs, gave the official approval for it. So killing them could seem like Mesa’s overdue revenge.” He took another swig from the bottle and snorted savagely. “The idiot! Talk about your castles in the air.”
Seeing Victor’s gape, Usher chuckled. His quick sketch of Durkheim’s purpose had left young Cachat behind in a cloud of dust. Way behind. Victor’s account of Durkheim’s actions had included no mention of the purpose of those actions, for the good and simple reason that Victor was as mystified by Durkheim’s doings as he was outraged.
Usher leaned forward. “Think it through, Victor. Why elsewould the head of SS on Terra be having black liaisons with Manpower and their stooges? And why else would he do something as insane as have the daughter of a Manty officer kidnapped?”
Victor shook his head. The gesture was not one of negation, simply that of a man trying to clear his head of confusion. “I don’t get it. Parnell, sure—I can see why he’d want to have him killed, the moment he sets foot on Terra. But we had a discussion of that already—the entire officer staff—and it didn’t take us more than twenty minutes to decide unanimously—Durkheim too!—that we’d automatically get the blame for anything that happened to Parnell. Even if he tripped on the sidewalk or came down with a virus.” Victor winced. “Which would only make the propaganda damage that much worse.”
The wince turned into a lasting grimace. “Is it really true, Kevin?” he asked softly. “I mean—what they say Parnell’s going to say?” He was holding his breath without realizing it.
“Victor,” Kev
in replied, in a voice equally soft, “I made my decision to accept a commission in the Marines the day I heard Saint-Just had appointed Tresca as the new commander of the prison planet. That wasn’t handwriting on the wall, that was blazing comets in the sky. Every old timer in the underground knew Tresca, and knew what that appointment meant. It was Saint-Just’s way of telling us that the good old days of the comradeship were over.” He sighed, groping blindly for the bottle of cola sitting on the stand next to the couch. “Yeah,” he said, “it’s true. I don’t doubt it for a minute.”
Victor expelled his breath in a rush. The sorrow that came over his face in that moment belonged to a much older man.
Shakily, Victor tried to regain his composure. “Okay. But I still don’t see how that changes anything. We knew—Durkheim told us—that whether the charges were true or not—and he swore they were all lies from an old Legislaturalist elitist admiral—that almost everyone in the Solarian League was going to believe them. Just because Parnell and Harrington were still alive after all, and we had been nailed with our pants down on that score. Since we’d lied about that, sure enough, who’d believe us when we insisted that the tales they brought back from their supposed graves were all fabrications?”
For the first time, the young officer took a sip of his own drink. “So I still don’t see how anything’s changed.” His brow creased. “And you said Bergren too. Why him?”
Usher snorted. “The truth is, Victor, Bergren is the main target. I doubt if even Durkheim thinks the odds are better than fifty-fifty that we won’t get blamed for Parnell, even if he is killed by Scrags and even if there is a Manty officer tied into it. But he’s cut from the same cloth as Saint-Just. Durkheim cares a lot more about real power than anybody’s perception of it. Bergren’s the last remaining holdover from the Legislaturalist regime. The only reason he’s remained here as our ambassador, since the Revolution, is because he had the good luck—or the good sense—to bring his whole family with him. So Saint-Just didn’t have any real way of blackmailing him into returning, where he could be conveniently found guilty of something and shot. Or simply ‘disappeared.’ So they decided to just leave him here in place. If nothing else, Bergren’s existence was a way of showing that the new regime’s extermination of the Legislaturalists was because of their actual crimes rather than their simple status. ‘See? Didn’t we leave one of them—the only honest man in the den of thieves—as the head of our embassy on Terra?’”