Exile-and Glory

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Exile-and Glory Page 20

by Jerry Pournelle


  "How did I do what, Mr. Coleman?" she asked.

  "Turn MacKenzie against the President! Fifteen years he was with the Chief. Fifteen years with the People's Alliance. Now you've got him telling tales about the Chief to your peasant friend there—"

  "Miguel is not a peasant."

  "Ah, Doña Laura, but I am. Go on, Señor. Tell us of this strange thing you do not understand." There was amusement in the old vaquero's eyes.

  "Skip it. It just doesn't make sense, that's all."

  "Perhaps my patrona bribed Don Aeneas," Miguel said.

  "That will do," Laurie Jo said. Miguel nodded and was silent.

  "Bullshit," Coleman said. "Nobody ever got to MacKenzie. Nobody has his price. Not in money, anyway." He looked at Laurie Jo in disbelief. He didn't think her unattractive, but he couldn't believe she was enough woman to drive a man insane.

  "You're rather young to know Aeneas that well," Laurie Jo said.

  "I joined the People's Alliance before the campaign." There was pride in the agent's voice. "Stood guard watches over the Chief. Helped in the office. MacKenzie was with us every day. He's not hard to know, not like some party types."

  "INFORMATION," Laurie Jo thought. "COLEMAN FIRST NAME UNKNOWN, SECRET SERVICE AGENT. RECENTLY APPOINTED. SUMMARY."

  "COLEMAN, THEODORE RAYMOND. AGE 25. PAID STAFF, PEOPLE'S ALLIANCE UNTIL INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT GREGORY TOLLAND. APPOINTED TO SECRET SERVICE BY ORDERS OF PRESIDENT TO TAKE EFFECT INAUGURAL DAY. EDUCATION—"

  "SUFFICIENT." Laurie Jo nodded to herself. Coleman hadn't been like the career Secret Service men. There were a lot of young people like Coleman in the undercover services lately, party loyalists who had known Greg before the election.

  Personally loyal bodyguards have been the mark of tyrants for three thousand years, she thought. But some of the really great leaders have had them as well. Can any President do without them? Can I?

  Not here. But I won't need guards on the Moon. I won't—

  "DING."

  "WHAT NOW?"

  "THERE IS A GENERAL STRIKE PLANNED IN BOLIVIA. TWO HANSEN AGENTS HAVE INFILTRATED THE UNION. THEY HAVE FOUND OUT THE DATE OF THE STRIKE, AND WERE DISCOVERED WHEN TRANSMITTING THEIR INFORMATION. SUPERINTENDENT HARLOW WISHES TO TAKE IMMEDIATE ACTION TO RESCUE THEM. WILL YOU APPROVE?"

  "GIVE HARLOW FULL AUTHORIZATION TO TAKE WHATEVER ACTION HE THINKS REQUIRED. REPORT WHEN HIS PLANS ARE COMPLETE BUT BEFORE EXECUTION."

  "ACKNOWLEDGED."

  Another damned problem, she thought. Harlow was a good man, but he thought in pretty drastic terms. What will that do to our other holdings in Bolivia? One thing, it will hurt my partner worse than it will hurt me. I'll have to think about this. Later, now I've got something more important.

  The door opened to admit another Secret Service man. "Chiefs on the way," he said.

  "DO NOT CALL ME FOR ANY PURPOSE," she thought.

  "ACKNOWLEDGED."

  It was almost comical. The Secret Service men wouldn't leave until Miguel had gone, and Miguel wouldn't leave his patrona alone with the Secret Service men. Finally they all backed out together, and Laurie Jo was alone for a moment. Then President Greg Tolland came in.

  He's still President, she thought. No matter that I've known him twenty years and fought him for half that time. There's an aura that goes with the office, and Greg wears it well. "Good afternoon, Mr. President."

  "Senator Hayden says I should talk to you," Tolland said.

  "Aren't you even going to say hello?" She thought he looked very old; yet she knew he was only a few years older than herself, one of the youngest men ever to be elected to the office.

  "What should I say, Laurie Jo? That I wish you well? I do, but you wouldn't believe that. That I'd like to be friends? Would you believe me if I said that? I do wish we could be friends, but I hate everything you stand for."

  "Well said, sir!" She applauded. "But there's no audience here." And you only hate that the fortune I inherited wasn't used to help your political ambitions, not that I have it. You always were more comfortable with wealthy people than Aeneas was.

  He grinned wryly. It was a famous grin, and Laurie Jo could remember when Congressman Tolland had practiced it with Aeneas and herself as his only audience. It seemed so very long ago, back in the days when her life was simple and she hadn't known who her father was, or that one day she would inherit his wealth.

  "Mind if I sit down?"

  She shrugged. "Why ask? But please do."

  He took one of the expensively covered lounge chairs and waited until she'd done the same. "I ask because this is your place."

  True enough. I own the airline. But it's hardly my home and this is hardly a social visit. "Can I get you anything? Your agents have sampled everything at the bar—"

  "I'll have a bourbon, then. They shouldn't have done that. Here, I'll get—"

  "It's all right. I know where everything is." She poured drinks for both of them. "Your young men don't trust me. One of them even accused me of seducing Aeneas away from you."

  "Didn't you."

  She handed him the drink. "Oh good God, Greg. You don't have to be careful what you say to me. Nothing I could tape could make things worse than I can make them right now. And I give you my word, nobody's listening."

  His eyes narrowed. For a moment he resembled a trapped animal.

  "Believe that, Greg. There's no way out," she said. "With what I already had and what Aeneas knows—"

  "I'll never know how I put up with that fanatic S.O.B. for so long."

  "That's beneath you, Greg. You wouldn't be President if Aeneas hadn't helped you."

  "Not true."

  It is true, but why go on? And yet—"Why have you turned so hard against him? Because he wouldn't sell out and you did?"

  "Maybe I had no choice, Laurie Jo. Maybe I'd got so far out on so many limbs that I couldn't retreat, and when I came crashing down the Alliance would come down with me. Maybe I thought it was better that we win however we had to than go on leading a noble lost cause. This isn't what we came here to talk about. Senator Hayden says you've got a proposition for me."

  "Yes." And how Barry Hayden hates all of this. Another victim of patriotism. Another? Am I including Greg Tolland in that category? And what difference does it make? "It's simple enough, Greg. I can see that you'll be allowed to finish your term without any problems from me. Or from Aeneas. I can have the Hansen papers and network stop their campaigns against you. I won't switch to your support."

  "Wouldn't want it. That would look too fishy. What's your price for all this?"

  "You weren't always this direct."

  "What the hell do you want, Laurie Jo? You've got the President of the United States asking your favor. You want me to crawl too?"

  "No. All right, the first price is your total retirement from politics when your term is over. You don't make that promise to me. You'll give it to Barry Hayden."

  "Maybe. I'll think about it. What do you want for yourself?"

  "I want a big payload delivered to Heimdall."

  "What the hell?"

  "You've got those big military aerospace planes. I want something carried to orbit."

  "I'll think about it."

  "You'll do it."

  "I don't know." He stared into his glass. "If it means this much to you, it's important. I'd guess it's tied in with that lunar survey party, right? Your Moon colony plans?"

  She didn't answer.

  "That's got to be it." He drained the cocktail and began laughing. "You can't throw me out because you'd never get anyone else to agree to this! It's pretty funny, Laurie Jo. You and Mr. Clean. You need me! More than just this once, too, I expect—What is it you want delivered?"

  "Just a big payload."

  Tolland laughed again. "I can find out, you know. I've still got a few people inside your operation."

  "I suppose you do. All right, I've got a working NERVA engine for Valkyrie. It's too big for the laser launching system. We could send it up in
pieces, but it would take a long time to get it assembled and checked out." And I don't have a long time. I'm running out of time . . . .

  "So you want me to hand over the Moon to a private company. That's what it amounts to, isn't it? The People's Alliance was formed to break up irresponsible power like yours, and you want me to hand you the Moon."

  "That's my price, Greg. You won't like the alternative."

  "Yeah. It's still pretty funny. A couple more years and you won't have a goddam monopoly on manned space stations. So you want me to help you get away."

  "Something like that. We see things differently."

  "You know you're doomed, don't you? Laurie Jo, it's over. You sit there in your big office and decide things for the whole world. Who asked you to? It's time the people had a say over their lives. You think I'm ambitious. Maybe. But for all of it, everything I've done has been in the right direction. At least I'm not building up a personal empire that's as anachronistic as a dinosaur!"

  "Spare me the political speeches, Greg." God, he means it. Or he thinks he does. He can justify anything he does because he's the agent for the people, but what does it mean in the real world? Just how much comfort is it to know it's all for the good of the people when you're caught in the machinery? "I won't argue with you. I've got something you need, and I'm willing to sell."

  "And you get the Moon as a private fief."

  "If you want to think of it that way, go ahead. But if you want to be President three months from now, you'll do as I ask."

  "And why should I think you'll keep your bargain?"

  "When have I ever broken my promises?" Laurie Jo asked.

  "Don't know. Tell you what, get MacKenzie to promise. That way I'll be sure you mean it."

  "I'll do better than that. Aeneas and I are both going to the Moon. We can hardly interfere with you from there."

  "You are crazy, aren't you?" Tolland's face showed wonder but not doubt. "You know you're going to lose a lot. You can't manage your empire from the Moon."

  "I know." And how long could I hold out to begin with? And for what? "Greg, you just don't understand that power's no use, money's no use, unless it's for something that counts."

  "And getting to the Moon is that big?" He shook his head in disbelief. "You're crazy."

  "So are a lot of us, then. I've got ten volunteers for every opening. Pretty good people, too—as you should know."

  "Yeah. I know." Tolland got up and wandered around the big room until he came to the bar. He filled his glass with ice cubes and water, then added a tiny splash of whiskey. "You've got some of my best people away from me. You can pay them more—"

  "I can, but I don't have to. You still don't understand, do you? It's not my money, and it's not my control over the Moon colony that counts. What's important is this will be one place that you don't control."

  "Hah. I hadn't thought I was that unpopular with the engineers."

  "I don't mean you personally," Laurie Jo said. "Your image control people have done well. But, Greg, can't you understand that some of us want out of your system?"

  "Aeneas too?"

  "Yes." More than any of us, because he knows better than any of us what it's going to be like—

  "I should have known he'd go to you after I threw him out."

  "There wasn't anywhere else he could go. Mr. President, this isn't getting us anywhere. You'll never understand us, so why try? Just send up that payload and you'll be rid of us. You may even be lucky. We'll lose people in the lunar colony. Maybe we'll all be killed."

  "And you're willing to chance that—"

  "I told you, you won't understand us. Don't try. Just send up my payload."

  "I'll think about it," Tolland said. "But your other conditions are off. No promises. No political deals." The President stood and went to the door. He turned defiantly. "You get the Moon. That ought to be enough."

  He felt dizzy and it was hard to breathe in the high gravity of Earth. When he poured a drink, he almost spilled it, because he was unconsciously allowing for the displacement usual in Heimdall's centrifugal gravity. Now he sat weakly in the large chair.

  The Atlantic Ocean lay outside his window, and he watched the moving lights of ships. The room lights came on suddenly, startling him.

  "What—Miguel!" Laurie Jo shouted. Then she laughed foolishly. "No esta nada. Deseo solamente estar, por favor." She came into the room as Miguel closed the door behind her. "Hello, Aeneas. I might have known. No one else could get in here without someone telling me—"

  He stood with an effort. "Didn't mean to startle you." He stood uncomfortably, wishing for her, cursing himself for not telling her he was coming. But I wanted to shock you, he thought.

  "You didn't really. I think Greg has called off his dogs. I'm safe enough. But—you're not!"

  "I'll take my chances."

  "Why are we standing here like this?" she asked. She moved toward him. He stood rigidly for a moment, but then stepped across the tiny space that separated them, and they were together again.

  For how long? he thought. How long do we have this time? But then it didn't matter any more.

  "Laurie Jo—"

  "Not yet." She poured coffee for both of them and yawned. Her outstretched arms waved toward the blue waters far below their terrace. "Let's have a few minutes more."

  They sat in silence. She tried to watch the Atlantic, but the silence stretched on. "All right, darling. What is it?"

  "There's been nothing on the newscasts about Greg. And then I got a signal. Prepare Valkyrie at once. The engines will be up, intact."

  "And you wondered if there was a connection?" she asked.

  "I knew there was a connection." There was no emotion in his voice, and that frightened her.

  "I've bought us the stars, Aeneas. The engines will go up in a week. Tested, ready for installation. And you've done the rest, you and Kit. We can go to the Moon, with all the equipment for the colony—"

  "Yes. And Greg Tolland stays on."

  She wanted to shout. What is that to you? she wanted to say. But she couldn't. "It was his price. The only one he'd take."

  "It's too high."

  She drew the thin silk robe around herself. Despite the bright sun she felt suddenly cold. "I've already agreed. I've given Greg my word."

  "But I haven't. And you didn't tell me you were doing this."

  "How could I? You wouldn't have agreed!"

  "Precisely—"

  "I can't lie to you, Aeneas." And now what do I lose? You? Everything I've worked for? Both? "The deal hasn't been made. Greg wants your word too."

  "And if I don't give it?"

  "Then he won't send up the engines. You're close enough to know what happens then. I'm at the edge of losing control of Heimdall to my partners. This is my only chance."

  But it didn't have to be, he thought. You're in trouble because you insisted on speeding up the schedule, no matter what that cost, and it cost a lot. Technicians pulled off production work for Valkyrie. The Lunatic expedition. "You've put me in a hell of a fix, Laurie Jo."

  "Damn you! Aeneas MacKenzie, damn you anyway!" He tried to speak, but the rush of words stopped him as she shouted in anger. "Who appointed you guardian of the people? You and your damned honor! You're ready to throw away everything, and for what? For revenge on Greg Tolland!"

  "But that's not true! I don't want revenge."

  "Then what do you want, Aeneas?"

  "I wanted out, Laurie Jo. It was you who insisted that I direct your agents in the investigation. I was finished with all that. I was willing to leave well enough alone, until we found—" Until it was clear that Greg Tolland had known everything. Until it was clear that he wasn't an honest man betrayed, that he was corrupt to the core, and had been for years. Until I couldn't help knowing that I'd spent most of my life electing—"You intended this all along, didn't you?" His voice was gentle and very sad.

  Her anger was gone. It was impossible to keep it when he failed to respond. "Yes," sh
e said. "It was the only way."

  "The only way—"

  "For us." She wouldn't meet his eyes. "What was I supposed to do, Aeneas? What kind of life do we have here? It takes every minute I have to keep Hansen Enterprises. Greg Tolland has already tried to have you killed. You were safe enough in Heimdall, but what good was that? With you there and me here? And I couldn't keep the station if I lived there." And we've got so little time. We lost so many years, and there are so few left.

 

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