by David Weber
He forced that thought away. And, with his capacity for concentration, succeeded within seconds. But he retained a small glow in his heart. He hadn’t felt that kind of rush since his wife died. There was something pure about it, like an emotional cleanser.
Cathy came to an abrupt halt, spun around to face him, and planted her hands on her hips. Extremely slim, those hips. Anton suspected that they had been a lifelong despair for her. “Snake hips,” she’d probably muttered, staring at herself in a mirror. He thought, on the other hand—
Down!
“Shit!” exclaimed the countess. “No Peep I know would come within a mile of either a Mesan or a Scrag”—yes! She knew the pejorative nickname—“unless it was to blow their fucking head off. As much as they hate us Manticoran ‘elitists,’ we’re just Beelzebub in their demonology. The Great Satan himself is called Manpower Inc. and Hell is on a planet named Mesa.”
“Exactly,” said Anton. “However dictatorial and brutal they are, the Peeps are also ferocious egalitarians. You can get executed in Haven for arguing too hard in favor of individual merit promotion.” Again, he quoted from the classics: “ ‘All animals are equal even if some animals are more equal than others.’ There’s no room in there for hereditary castes—especially slave castes!—or for genetic self-proclaimed supermen.”
He sighed heavily. “And, in all honesty, I have to say that in this, if nothing else, the Peeps have a pretty good track record.” Another sigh, even heavier. “Oh, hell, let’s be honest. They have an excellent track record. Manpower doesn’t go anywhere near Havenite territory. That was true even before the Revolution. Unlike—”
“Unlike Manticoran space!” interjected the countess angrily. “Where they don’t hesitate for a minute. Damn the laws. The stinking scum know just where to find Manticoran customers.”
Anton scowled. “Cathy, that’s not fair either. The Navy—”
She waved her arms. “Don’t say it, Anton! I know the Navy officially suppresses the slave trade. Even does so in real life, now and again. Though not once since the war started. They’re too preoccupied, they say.”
Anton scowled even more deeply. Cathy waved her arms again. “All right, all right,” she growled, “they are preoccupied with fighting the Peeps. But even before the war started, the only instance where the Navy ever hit the Mesan slave trade with a real hammer is when—”
Both of them broke into wide grins, now. The news of the incredible mass escape from the Peep prison planet of Hell was still fresh in everyone’s mind.
“—when Harrington smashed up the depot on Casimir,” she concluded. The countess snorted. “What was she, then? A measly lieutenant commander? God, I love impetuous youth!”
Anton nodded. “Yeah. Almost derailed her career before it even got started. Probably would have, if Courvoisier hadn’t twisted some Conservative admirals’ arms out of their sockets. And if—”
He gazed at her steadily. “—a certain young and impetuous left-wing countess hadn’t given a blistering speech on the floor of the House of Lords, demanding to know why the first time a naval officer fully enforced the laws against the slave trade she wasn’t getting a medal for it instead of carping criticism.”
Cathy smiled. “It was a good speech, if I say so myself. Almost as good as the one that got me pitched out of the House of Lords entirely.”
Anton snorted. Although membership in the Manticoran House of Lords was hereditary, not elective, the Lords did have the right under law to officially exclude one of its own members. But given the natural tendency of aristocrats to give full weight to lineage, it was very rarely done. To the best of Anton’s knowledge, at the present moment there were no more than three nobles who had had their membership in the Lords revoked. One of them, the Earl of Seaview, had been expelled only after he was convicted in a court of law of gross personal crimes—which all the members of the Lords had long known were his vices, but had chosen to look the other way over. The other two were Honor Harrington and Catherine Montaigne, for having, each in her own way, deeply offended the precious sensibilities of Manticore’s aristocracy.
Anton cleared his throat. “Actually, Cathy, that speech is why I’m here.”
She paused in her jerky pacing and cocked her head. “Since when does a Crown Loyalist study the old speeches of someone who even aggravates Liberals and Progressives?”
He smiled. “Believe it or not, Cathy, that speech made quite a hit in the highlands. As it happens, one of our Gryphon yeomen was on trial at the time. Shot the local baron—eight times—for molesting his daughter. The prosecutor argued that a murderer is a murderer. The defense countered by quoting your speech.”
“The part about ‘one person’s terrorist being another’s freedom fighter,’ I should imagine.”
Anton nodded. But there was no humor at all in the face. Finally, Cathy understood his purpose in coming to see her. Her hand flew to her throat again, and this time she did gasp.
“Oh, my God!”
Anton’s eyes were like coal, beginning to burn. “Yeah, that’s it. I didn’t come here to discuss the ins and outs of the political complexities which might or might not be involved with my daughter’s kidnapping. Frankly, Cathy, I don’t give a good God-damn. The ambassador and the admiral can order me to treat this like a political maneuver, but they’re—”
He clenched his jaws. “Never mind what they are. What I am is a man of Gryphon’s highlands. I was that long before”—he plucked the sleeve of his uniform—“I became an officer in Her Majesty’s Navy.”
The eyes were burning hot, now. “I can’t use my normal channels, because the ambassador and the admiral would shut me down in a heartbeat. So I’ve got to find an alternative.” He glanced at the little man still squatting on the floor. “Master Tye agreed to help—insisted, in fact—but I need more than that.”
Once again, he lifted the little package which contained the forensic data. “The Scrags who kidnapped my daughter live—or operate—somewhere in Chicago’s Old Quarter. You know what that maze is like. Only someone who knows it like the back of his hand could have a chance of finding Helen in there.”
Cathy made an attempt to head him off. “I know several people who live in the Loop. Lots of them, in fact. I’m sure one of them—”
Anton shot to his feet. “From the highlands, woman!”His Gryphon accent was now so thick you could cut it with a knife. And the black rage of the Star Kingdom’s most notorious feudists had shattered the outer shell of control.
“You are—have been for years—one of the central leaders of the Anti-Slavery League. And by far the most radical. That’s why you’ve been here for years, in what amounts to exile.” Anton’s words, for all the Gryphon slurring, came out like plates from a stamping mill. “So don’t tell me you don’t know him.”
“Never been proved!” she exclaimed. But the protest was more in the nature of a squeak.
Anton grinned. Like a wolf, admiring the grace of a fox. “True, true. Consorting with a known member of the Audubon Ballroom—any member, much less him—is a felonious offense. In the Star Kingdom as well as anywhere in Solarian territory. You’ve been charged with it on four occasions. Each time, the charges were dropped for lack of evidence.”
A very angry wolf, and a rather frightened fox. “Cut the crap, Cathy! You know him and I know you do and so does the whole damn universe. This isn’t a court of law. I need his help, and I intend to get it. But I don’t know how to contact him. You do.”
“Oh God, Anton,” she whispered.
He shook his head. “What did they think, Cathy? That I would obey them?” The next words came through clenched teeth. “From the highlands.When they gave me that command, they broke faith with me. Damn them and damn all aristocracy! I’ll do as I must, and answer only to the Queen. If she—she, not they!—chooses to call that treason, so be it. I’ll have my daughter back, and I’ll piss on the ashes of those who took her from me.”
He reached into another po
cket and drew out another package. Identical, to all appearances.
“You can tell him I’ll give him this, in exchange for his help. I’ve spent the past two days hacking into the embassy’s intelligence files to get it.”
Anton’s grin was now purely feral. There was no more humor in it than a shark’s gape. “When I broke into the personal records of Young and Hendricks I hit the gold mine. I didn’t expect either one of them to be stupid enough to have direct financial dealings with Manpower, and they don’t. Technically, under Manticoran anti-slavery laws, that would lay them open to the death penalty.”
Cathy’s left hand was still clutching her throat. With her other hand, she made a waving gesture. “That’s not the form it takes, in the Star Kingdom. Slavery’s an inefficient form of labor, even with Manpower’s genetic razzle-dazzle. No rich Manticoran really has much incentive to dabble in slave labor unless they’re grotesquely avaricious. And willing to take the risks of investing in the Silesian Confederacy or the Sollie protectorates. Our own society’s got too high a tech base for slavery to be very attractive.”
“You might be surprised, Cathy—you will be surprised—at how many Manticorans are that stupid. Don’t forget that the profit margin in Silesian mines and plantations can be as high as the risk.” Anton shrugged. “But you’re basically right. Most of the Star Kingdom’s citizens who deal with Manpower do so from personal vice, not from greed.”
Cathy’s face was stiff, angry. “ ‘Personal vice!’ That’s a delicate way of putting what happens on those so-called pleasure resorts.” She stared at the package in Anton’s hands. Her next words were almost whispered. “Are you telling me—”
Anton’s shark grin seemed fixed in place. “Oh, yeah. I was pretty sure I’d find it. That whole Young clan is notorious for their personal habits, and I’d seen enough of the admiral to know he was no exception.” He held up the package. “Both he and the ambassador have availed themselves of Manpower’s so-called ‘personal services.’ Both of them have invested in those ‘pleasure resorts,’ too, using Solarian conduits. Along with lots of others, for whom they acted as brokers.”
“They kept records?” she gasped. “Are they that stupid?”
Anton nodded. “That arrogant, anyway.” He looked down at the package in his hand. “So there it is, Cathy. I thought of using this information to blackmail them into rescinding my orders, but that would take too long. I’ve got to find my daughter quickly, before this whole crazy scheme—whatever it is—starts coming unglued. Which it will, as sure as the sunrise. And when it does, the first thing that’ll happen is that Helen will be murdered.”
Her hand was still clutching her throat. “My God, Anton! Don’t you understand what he’ll do if—”
“What do I care, Cathy?” No shark’s grin ever held such sheer fury. “You’ll find no Gryphon highlanders on this list, I can tell you that. Nobles aplenty, o’ course”—the word nobles practically dripped vitriol—“but not a one of my folk.”
Finally, the fury began to ebb. “I’m sorry, Cathy. But this is the way it must be. My daughter”—he waved the package—“weighed against these?”
Cathy
Cathy lowered her hand and sighed. Then, shrugged. It was not as if she disagreed with his moral assessment, after all. Though she still found it difficult to match the man’s ruthlessness with what she sensed of the man himself. But then, Cathy had no children of her own. So, for a moment, she tried to imagine the rage that must be filling Anton. Raising a daughter from the age of four as a widower, and coming from that unyielding highland clansmen background—
She glimpsed, for an instant, that seething void—like the event horizon of a black hole—and her mind skittered away.
“I’m sorry,” Anton repeated, very softly. “I must do what I must.” He managed a harsh chuckle. “In this area, you know, tradition rules. There’s a term for what I need. Goes back centuries—millennia. It’s called wet work.”
Cathy grimaced. “How crude!” Again, a sigh. “But appropriate, I suppose. I’m sure Jeremy would agree.”
She sighed again. “All right, I’ll serve as your conduit to him. But I warn you in advance, Anton, he’s got a peculiar sense of humor.”
Anton held up the package anew. “Then I imagine this will tickle his fancy.”
Cathy stared at the object in Anton’s hand. Innocuous-looking thing, really. But she knew full well what would happen once Jeremy got his hands on it. Jeremy had come into the universe in one of Manpower Inc.’s breeding chambers on Mesa. K-86b/273-1/5, they had called him. The “K” referred to the basic genetic type—in Jeremy’s case, someone bred to be a personal servant, just as Isaac’s “V” denoted one of the technical combat breeds. The “-86b” referred to one of the multitude of slight variants within the general archetype. In Jeremy’s case, the variant designed to provide clients with acrobatic entertainment—jugglers and the like. Court clowns, in essence. The number 273 referred to the “batch,” and the 1/5 meant that Jeremy was the first of the quintuplets in that batch to be extracted from the breeding chamber.
Cathy ran her hand down her face, as if wiping away filth. In truth, she knew, Manpower’s “scientific” terminology covered a genetic method which was almost as fraudulent as it was evil. It was the modern equivalent of the grotesque medical experiments which the ancient Nazis of fable were said to have practiced. Cathy was not a professional biologist, but in the course of her long struggle against genetic slavery she had come to be a lay expert on the subject. Genes were vastly more fluid things than most people understood. The specific way in which a genotype developed was as much a result of the environmental input at any given stage of development as it was on the inherent genetic “instructions.” Genes reacted differently depending on the external cue.
Manpower’s genetic engineers, of course, knew that perfectly well—despite the claims of their advertising that their “indentured servants” could be counted on to behave exactly as they were programmed. So they tried to provide the “proper environment” for the developing genotypes. On the rare occasions when a biologically-sophisticated prospective client pressed them on the subject, Manpower provided them with a learned and jargon-ridden explanation of what they called the “phenotype developmental process.”
Strip away the pseudoscientific claptrap and what it amounted to was: We breed the embryos in artificial wombs, making the best guess we can based on their DNA; and then we spend years torturing the children into proper alignment. Making the best guess we can.
And, within limits, it worked—usually. But not always, by any means. Certainly not in Jeremy’s case. Within less than a week after his sale, he had made his escape. Eventually, he arrived on Terra, through one of the routes maintained by the Anti-Slavery League. Within a day of his arrival, he had joined the Audubon Ballroom, probably the most radical and certainly the most violence-prone group within the general umbrella of the anti-slavery movement. Then, following the custom of that underground movement—whose membership was exclusively restricted to ex-slaves—had renamed himself Jeremy X. Within a short time, he had risen to leadership in the Ballroom. Today, he was considered one of the most dangerous terrorists in the galaxy. Or, to many—herself included, when all was said and done, despite her disapproval of his tactics—one of its greatest freedom fighters.
But if anyone could get Captain Anton Zilwicki’s daughter back alive, it would be Jeremy X. Certainly if she were held captive in the Loop. And if, in the months and years which followed, a number of Manticore’s most prominent families found themselves attending an unusually large number of funerals, Cathy could not honestly say the prospect caused her any anguish. Rich people who trafficked in slavery for the sole purpose of indulging their personal vices would get little in the way of mercy from her.
And they would get none at all from a man whose birth name was still marked on his tongue. Wet work, indeed.
As she ushered the captain and his companion to the door, Cathy r
emembered something.
“Oh, yes. Satisfy my curiosity, Anton. Earlier, you said there were three types of people in State Security. But you never got around to explaining the third sort. So who are they?”
“It’s obvious, isn’t it? What happens to a young idealist, as the years go by and he discovers his beloved Revolution is covered with warts?”
Cathy frowned. “They adapt, I imagine. Get with the program. Either that or turn against it and defect.”
Anton shook his head. “Many do adapt, yes. The majority of them, probably. And when they do they are often the most vicious—just to prove to their superiors, if nothing else, that they can be counted on. But almost none ever defect and there are a lot of them who just fade into the woodwork, trying to find a corner where they can still live. Don’t forget that, from their point of view, the alternative isn’t all that attractive.”
His lips twitched. “Even a Gryphon traditionalist like me isn’t all that fond of some aspects of Manticoran society. Try to imagine, Cathy, how a man from the Legislaturalist regime’s Dolist ranks is going to feel, at the prospect that he’d have to bow and scrape before the likes of Pavel Young, Earl of North Hollow.”
Cathy was startled. “Surely they don’t know—”
“Of course they do!” Anton’s mouth started to twitch again, but the twitch turned into a genuine smile. “The Peeps tend to be a little schizophrenic on the subject of Honor Harrington, you know. On the one hand, she’s their arch-nemesis. On the other, she’s often been their favorite example of the injustices of Manticoran elitist rule.
“Not any more, of course,” he chuckled. “From the news coverage, I’d say the Salamander’s days in exile and disgrace are finished. Doubt there’s more than three Conservative Lords who’ll still argue she’s unfit for their company.”