The Omcri Matrix
Page 1
The Omcri Matrix
Deborah Chester
Copyright
Diversion Books
A Division of Diversion Publishing Corp.
443 Park Avenue South, Suite 1008
New York, NY 10016
www.DiversionBooks.com
Copyright © 1987 by Deborah Chester
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
For more information, email info@diversionbooks.com
First Diversion Books edition February 2015
ISBN: 978-1-62681-586-5
Also by Deborah Chester
Time Trap Series
Time Trap
Showdown
Pieces of Eight
Restoration
Turncoat
Termination
Ruby Throne Series
Reign of Shadows
Shadow War
Realm of Light
Anthi Series
The Children of Anthi
Requiem for Anthi
The Omcri Matrix
The Goda War
To Dad,
who’s the best
in this universe
or any other.
Chapter One
Surprisingly, Janal received her in the small, steel-lined cubicle which was his true working office, one where precarious stacks of disk cards coded in every category from classified on down to published ceep reports vied with each other for space on his granite slab desk. A waist-high shelf to one side supported four viewers shimmering with full screens of data; across from it on a similar shelf blinked a formidable communications bank. Disk racks hung from the rest of the available space, giving the room a closed, cluttered, strictly utilitarian atmosphere. Janal saved the displays of his art objects and valor medals for the spacious office of muyar wood and living carpet, where he received dignitaries and handed out commendations.
Costa, her heart thudding and her eyes aflame with eagerness, did not care where he received her. Dressed impeccably in her fawn honors uniform, boots shining and strifer snapped firmly out of sight beneath the holster flap, she entered the office and came precisely to attention before him.
“Sir.”
Looking harried, he glanced up and shut off the viewers with visible reluctance. Centuries of pure ancestral breeding on protected planets had marked him with high cheekbones and eyes of one color. Janal’s were gray, and they looked right through her with a stony bleakness that stopped her heart.
“The Directors have met, Lieutenant. I’m sorry. Your petition was denied.”
“Denied!” For a moment her intense hopes would not let her believe it. “But, Commander, it was so certain! I—” She swallowed hard, her eyes narrowing to a cool green. “I made a mistake in presentation perhaps. If I register an appeal—”
“No. The Directors meet only once a year for special petitions. You have no justification for bringing this before them again. They’ll only penalize you—”
“I don’t care! It is my right to—”
“Can that!” he snapped, dropping his momentary sympathy. “You signed the full-life contract. They have every right to hold you until you die.”
She nodded bitterly, unable to hold back the resentment that had been building for so many years. “Yes, and what other choice is there? Only full-lifes can advance to officer rank, and only officers can be granted contract releases. I’ve served, Commander! I’ve done my duty and more! I’ve given the Directors everything I have, and now they hold me back! Why? The last time I petitioned and was refused, I expected it. But this time should have been a routine agreement. Almost everyone is granted release on their second petition. Why not me? Why?”
“Costa.” Glancing impatiently at the chronometer, Janal shoved aside a pile of flagged disks labeled “Nogales” and leaned forward, resting his elbows on the desk. His eyes met hers firmly. “I have followed your career ever since I awarded you your first commendation. And I have approved of your desire to leave Playworld and enter the Fleet—”
“The Rangers,” she broke in passionately. “I’m good enough to meet their requirements. You have said so—”
“Yes, you’re very good. Too good.” He sighed at her quick frown. “You are the best squad leader in the patrol, planetwide. That happens to be a tremendous asset to us, one which the Directors are unwilling to release.”
Her frown deepened with her anger. “You mean—”
“I’m afraid so. You rocketed through the ranks to become an officer in record time. You’ll continue to be a squad leader until your ten years are up, at which time you’ll pass through standard promotion to a captaincy and to a position as a training instructor, with all the benefits—”
“Damn the benefits!”
“Lieutenant.”
Her eyes dropped at that quiet rebuke, but terrible rage engulfed her. She said bitterly, “This is all flin, sir. You’ve always been honest with me. What’s the real reason for refusal?”
“Your breeding, for a start,” he snapped, looking annoyed at being pinned down by her question.
Shocked, she met his gaze and could imagine the thoughts sweeping his mind: half-breed, savage, subhuman. She had never expected to find prejudice in Janal. “Sir, that is beyond unfair.”
“I thought you were above a petty persecution complex, Costa.”
“No, sir! Not when—”
“You had better discipline it.”
She shook her head, past caring if she were reprimanded. “I do not understand how the Directors can fear an adapt. They—”
“No one is afraid. The Directors implemented the adapt program for sound reasons. Frankly, Lieutenant, you are one of the best results that program has ever produced. Aside from the fact of your extreme usefulness here on Playworld, the Directors do not want you off-planet lest you prove to be an embarrassment.”
Costa’s mouth fell open. “How—”
“Oh, not that you would fail any duty assigned to you in the Fleet. But the Galactic Space Institute doesn’t look kindly upon the breeding of adapts which they have not authorized.”
“We are not under GSI’s jurisdiction.”
He gave her an unforgiving look for speaking the obvious. “No, but the Directors prefer not to attract GSI’s attention. You would blaze across the galaxy like a comet.”
She frowned in bewilderment, unused to being derided for doing her best. “But other adapts have been released.”
His gray eyes regarded her steadily. “So this is what it takes to make you whine.”
She flinched as though struck. The iron discipline of the service cracked down on the rawness in her soul, and she stiffened back to attention. She must leave, get out at once before her protests deteriorated into begging. Janal would do nothing further on her behalf lest his own neck get chopped. It was pointless to keep prodding him.
“Is that all, sir?”
Janal nodded, looking relieved. Damn him!
“You have your orders regarding the Kublai?”
“Yes.” Snarling in her heart, she forced her voice to be cool and professional. “His Supreme Glory lands at 0400. The arrangements have all been ordered and confirmed, except for the mustering of my squad. The harem will be settled into its quarters tonight in Beros under escort of the city patrol, and we’ll move out in the morning, standard time.”
“Basic security procedures. He’ll be bringing quite a contingent of his personal guard, and we don’t want
to get in their way.”
Costa nodded. “In short, I’m in charge of selecting a campsite, but otherwise to stay clear.”
“Yes. There are always assassination threats hanging over a Kublai, and lately the United Worlds of Drugh have been a touchy subject for the entire Commonwealth. If anything should happen to the Kublai, civil war would erupt among those planets, and the Commonwealth’s best shipping lanes would go right out of commission. Even though we aren’t a part of the Commonwealth, we would certainly find our heaviest passenger routes cut off. Visits would have to drop; prices would fall; our economy would suffer.” Janal sighed. “If he were coming here merely to hunt game it would be trouble enough, but this religious pilgrimage could be the start of something the Directors do not want on Playworld.”
“The Directors could have avoided this problem by refusing to allow the Kanta Archives to be built on the middle continent,” said Costa dryly.
“Perhaps. It is not our place to debate their wisdom in that matter. What we are concerned with, Lieutenant, is that all things go smoothly. The Ishuts have been causing more trouble than usual; Demos alone knows what those damnable Kanta priests have been telling them.”
“Ishuts!” said Costa in surprise. “They do not matter—”
“Every element on Playworld matters!” he retorted. “You forget, Lieutenant, that any disturbance planetwide is routed through this office. Now, the Directors want everything concerning the Kublai’s visit here to go well. That’s why you’ve been given oversight of the expedition.” Janal’s smile did not reach his eyes. “As always, you will do your duty.”
“Sir!”
Snapping out a salute, she spun on her heel and strode out, cursing the commander and the Directors in the five ways. In the outer reception area a tall, obese man with a scarlet cape held over one arm waited impatiently. Costa flicked him one swift, surprised glance as she swept past the reception drone which chimed a polite farewell after her. Wob Nogales, owner of all the amusement park licenses on the bleak north continent, coming here to see Janal like a normal citizen? As the doors opened for her, she dared look over her shoulder and caught Nogales winking at her. She shrugged and strode on.
Not for anything did she intend to leave headquarters by the usual route, where half her squad and various other friends lay in wait. The celebration for her offworlding was already planned, requiring only the go light from Janal today. Well, there would be no celebration, she thought savagely. She was trapped here just like everyone else born on this gilded dustball, a slave to the Directory for the rest of her life regardless of talent and ambition.
The best squad leader on the planet. Mercy of Moii! Did Janal think that dry bit of praise would soothe her? A muscle in her wrist twitched, close to the butt of her strifer.
She skirted the engineering section of the building, knowing her friend Arto had docked duty to wait for her in the main lobby, where a mobile of the galaxy hung suspended in the air against the backdrop of black walls and floor. A miniature replica of Playworld spun in the forefront, and tiny ships even came and went through the star systems in a dazzling-display of suspension technology. Arto had designed it; he would wait for her there because he knew she could never resist the chance to look at it. But today the sight of those twinkling little stars would make her long to smash the thing to bits.
Taking a janitor lift down, she cleared the security drone and strode out into the crisp, perfectly controlled air of the city. Only then did a ragged sigh escape her, and she dodged down a service alley to crouch out of sight behind the loading dock of a fashionable boutique that sold quesquet furs and Sihh tears. There at last she was free to press her forearm over her stinging eyes: one proud, much-decorated officer of the Planet Patrol sniveling in the dirt over the ashed remains of a lifetime’s hopes. She might as well go back to wearing a loincloth in the desert, living each day as it came without a single thought for the wealthy tourists who came here to play from all over the galaxy.
“Costa?”
She jerked up, slapping away the tears furiously. “Duval! How dare you follow me?”
He frowned at her. Stocky, with gray touching his hair, and his middle beginning to thicken from his favorite wife’s prized cooking, Duval wore his desert uniform with an air of competence and pride. They had served together in the Planet Patrol for years, and when she was promoted ahead of him he showed no resentment but instead remained steadfastly loyal, taking no advantage from being her elder brother. Unlike her, he was content with his rank and his life; he had no ambitions to see the rest of the galaxy.
“The Directors turned you down?”
She nodded mutely, still choked with disappointment. “After all I’ve done! I—”
“What did Janal say?” asked Duval angrily. “Did you just accept the denial? Didn’t you demand an explanation?”
“Of course I did! He said I’m too good, and that the Directors are afraid the GSI would notice me and start snooping into Playworld’s adapt program.”
“That’s flin! The GSI knows all about the special breeding programs here. Why, they even sell the Directors access into specified gene pools. I remember our parents discussing it before you were born. No, Costa, the Directors just want talent like yours to stay on this dustball for Dhurrie wages. Can you appeal?”
“No.” She looked away, struggling to stay in control. “Can I never escape? I’ve spent my life trying to be the best, trying to utilize my abilities to the fullest, and my reward is to be called a freak. Moii! They made me this way, both more and less than human. They use me, but I will always be subclass, something shameful, something they will not—”
“Costa, don’t.” He crushed her shoulder with a sympathetic hand. “Don’t ever call yourself a freak. There’s nothing shameful about being able to hear a tawn-snake slither over the sand at fifty meters, or being able to follow a cold trail by its scent alone, or being able to see through gloom that would blind a regular patroller. Demos, it takes a major plague virus to even give you a sniffle. I wish we could all be like you.”
She smiled bleakly. “Thanks, Duval. But you’d better not say that in public. You’ll be branded an adapt lover.”
“I’ve been called worse things.”
She shrugged, grateful for his sympathy. For a moment she longed to rest her head on his shoulder as she had done in childhood, before taking on the pride and obligations of a warrior. “Cancel the party for me.”
He nodded. “Look, I’ve got leave for a few days. Why don’t you come home with me? Everyone would be delighted to see you.”
She thought about his sprawling, comfortable sieghr on Lilliput and shook her head regretfully. “Not this time. I’ve got to muster a squad.”
“Janal put you back on assignment? Where?”
“Jungle expedition. Large party. The Kublai of Drugh.”
Duval whistled. “Not a good time of year for the jungle. All right. I’ll call Aimlee and tell her I’m canceled. Then I’ll find Puce and—”
“No.” She held out a hand, trying to soften that sharp negative. “I…it’s just better if I take out a squad of strangers.”
“You need good people in the jungle, Costa.”
“I’ll get them. But…I don’t want sympathy on this assignment,” she said almost fiercely, wanting him to understand. “I need some time before I can face my friends. I bragged too much about the Rangers. Now I—” Her voice broke.
“Understood.” He held up his fourth finger to her. “Moii go with you, Lieutenant.”
She returned the gesture, and watched him walk away.
It was nearly 0400. She had better get a squad mustered and on the field before the Kublai and his party arrived. At this hour in the afternoon, the crowds were heavy as they dispersed from the shopping districts and queued for the lifts that would take them up to Stratum Four suspended overhead, where the luxurious villas, casinos, restaurants, and pleasure gardens were located. Costa made her way to a call booth, where she s
tood impatiently for the scanner to read the ID grid surgically implanted in the skin over her sternum. A light blinked on in readiness as the scanner switched off, and she rubbed her stinging chest through her tunic as she punched in her call. Seconds later she had a duty roster on the viewer, and she made her selections for muster quickly. Headquarters would contact them with their orders to report to the south landing field at 0400. She was free until then.
Leaving the call booth, she pushed her way through the gaily dressed crowds to board a crawler heading downward, incurring more than one curious glance at her dress uniform with the interlocked Ps on the right arm and the strifer on her hip. Normally it boosted her pride to stride through the tourists as a walking emblem of authority; now her skin crawled beneath her tunic and her muscles burned with the need to strike out at anyone or anything. Her pride was a useless, pathetic thing. She wanted no reminder of it.
To her relief, the crawler was relatively empty. She did not think she could stand being crammed into the midst of a crowd of civil servants on their way home. The crawler whined and jerked along its descent from Stratum Three to Two, where row after row of low-income housing alternated with enormous generator plants and small, grubby little shops humming with sonic bars across their entrances. This was the underside of the fabulous capital city which tourists never saw; this was what kept Beros going. Costa stayed on the crawler all the way to the ground, where the slums of Beros sprawled nearly out to the space port.
Here, the temperature was not controlled, and dust and heat fogged over her at once, sticking her tunic to her back and marring the shine of her boots. She unsnapped the flap over her strifer and held her wrist close to the butt as she stepped off the crawler into the crowded maze of the bazaar. The noise of hawkers, skin-sellers, and haggling women struck her at once. Interspersed through the babble came the smells of unwashed bodies and herendi dung. She threaded her way through grimly, trying not to listen to the dozens of conversations which her keen hearing sorted through automatically, uninterested in watching the street acrobats performing feats of agility while pickpockets ranged swiftly through the gawking onlookers. A city patrolman lounging sleepily in a shaded doorway lifted his fourth finger to her in casual greeting, and she returned the small salute. The sun blazed down on her head, heating the fine black strands of hair which she wore cropped strictly just below her earlobes. Snapping down an inner eyelid against the glare, she swallowed more dust, grimaced as she stepped around a bleating flock of herendi darting this way and that, and decided to seek out a wineshop instead of the traditional blessing of her duty amulet.