“Now.” He switched the holovid display to one in red light. “This is a holovid of the same weld from data bits mapped by an ultrasonic pulse reflective scan. Looks quite different, doesn’t it? Can anyone identify this discontinuity?” He zoomed in on a bright area.
Several sets of arms crossed again. Leo nodded toward another student, a striking boy with aquiline nose, brilliant black eyes, wiry muscles, and dark mahogany skin contrasting elegantly with his red T-shirt and shorts. “Yes, Pramod?”
“It’s an unbonded lamination.”
“Right!” Leo tapped his holovid controls. “But check down this scan âwhere have all our little bubbles gone? Anybody think they magically closed between tests? Thank you,” he said to their knowing grins, “I’m glad you don’t think that. Now let’s put both maps together.” Red and blue melded to purple at overlapping points as the computer integrated the two displays.
“And now we see the little bugger,” said Leo, zooming in again. “These two porosities, plus this lamination, all in the same plane. You can see the fatal crack starting to propagate already, on this rotationâ” The holovid turned, and Leo emphasized the crack with a bright pink light. “That, children, is a defect.”
They oohed in gratifying fascination. Leo grinned and plunged on. “Now, here’s the point. Both these test scans were valid picturesâas far as they went. But neither one was complete, neither alone sufficient. The maps were not the territories. You have to know that x-radiography is excellent for revealing voids and inclusions, but poor at finding cracks except at certain chance alignments, and ultrasound is optimum for just those laminar discontinuities x-rays are most likely to miss. Both maps, intelligently integrated, yielded a judgment.”
“Now.” Leo smiled a bit grimly, and replaced the gaudy image with another, monochrome green this time. “Look at this. What do you see?” He nodded at Tony again.
“A laser weld, sir.”
“So it would appear. Your identification is quite understandable âand quite wrong. I want you all to memorize this piece of work. Look well. Because it may be the most evil object you ever encounter.”
They looked wildly impressed, but totally bewildered. He commanded their absolute silence and utmost attention.
“That”âhe pointed for emphasis, his voice growing heavy with scornâ“is a falsified inspection record. Worse, it’s one of a series. A certain subcontractor of GalacTech supplying thruster propulsion chambers for jumpships found its profit margin endangered by a high volume of its work being rejectedâafter it had been placed in the systems. So instead of tearing the work apart and doing it over right, they chose to lean on the quality control inspectors. We will never know for certain if the chief inspector refused a bribe or not, because he wasn’t around to tell us. He was found accidentally very dead due to an apparent power suit malfunction, attributed to his own errors made when attempting to don it while drunk. The autopsy found a high percentage of alcohol in his bloodstream. It was only much later that it was pointed out that the percentage was so high, he oughtn’t to have been able to walk, let alone suit up.
“The assistant inspector did accept the bribe. The welds passed the computer certification all rightâbecause it was the same damn good weld, replicated over and over and inserted into the data bank in place of real inspections, which for the most part were never even made. Twenty propulsion chambers were put online. Twenty time bombs.
“It wasn’t until the second one blew up eighteen months later that the whole story was finally uncovered. This isn’t hearsay; I was on the probable-cause investigating team. It was I who found it, by the oldest test in the world, eye-and-brain inspection. When I sat there in that station chair, running those hundreds of holovid records through one by one, and first recognized the piece when I saw it againâand againâand againâfor the computer only recognized that the series was free of defectsâand I realized what those bastards had done …” His hands were shaking, as they always did at this point of the lecture, as the old memories flickered back. Leo clenched them by his sides.
“The judgment of the map was falsified in these electronic dream images. But the universal laws of physics yielded a judgment of blood that was absolutely real. Eighty-six people died altogether. That”âLeo pointed againâ“was not merely fraud, it was coldest, cruelest murder.”
He gathered his breath. “This is the most important thing I will ever say to you. The human mind is the ultimate testing device. You can take all the notes you want on the technical data, anything you forget you can look up again, but this must be engraved on your hearts in letters of fire.
“There is nothing, nothing, nothing more important to me in the men and women I train than their absolute personal integrity. Whether you function as welders or inspectors, the laws of physics are implacable lie detectors. You may fool men. You will never fool the metal. That’s all.”
He let his breath out, and regained his good humor, looking around. The quaddie students were taking it with proper seriousness, good, no class cut-ups making sick jokes in the back row. In fact, they were looking rather shocked, staring at him with terrified awe.
“So”âhe clapped his hands together and rubbed them cheerfully, to break the spellâ “now let’s go over to the shop and take a beam welder apart, and see if we can find everything that can possibly go wrong with it… .”
They filed out obediently ahead of him, chattering among themselves again. Yei was waiting by the door aperture as Leo followed his class. She gave him a brief smile.
“An impressive presentation, Mr. Graf. You become quite articulate when you talk about your work. Yesterday I thought you must be the strong silent type.”
Leo flushed faintly and shrugged. “It’s not so hard, when you have something interesting to talk about.”
“I would not have guessed welding engineering to be so entertaining a subject. You are a gifted enthusiast.”
“I hope your quaddies were equally impressed. It’s a great thing, when I can get somebody fired up. It’s the greatest work in the world.”
“I begin to think so. Your story …” She hesitated. “Your fraud story had great impact. They’ve never heard anything like it. Indeed, I never heard about that one.”
“It was years ago.”
“Really quite disturbing, all the same.” Her face bore a look of introspection. “I hope not overly so.”
“Well, I hope it’s very disturbing. It’s a true story. I was there.” He eyed her. “Someday, they may be there. Criminally negligent, if I fail to prepare them.”
“Ah.” She smiled shortly.
The last of his students had vanished up the corridor. “Well, I better catch up with them. Will you be sitting in on my whole course? Come on along, I’ll make a welder of you yet.”
She shook her head ruefully. “You actually make it sound attractive. But I’m afraid I have a full-time job. I have to turn you loose.” She gave him a short nod. “You’ll do all right, Mr. Graf.”
Chapter Three
Andy stuck out his tongue, extruding the blob of creamed rice Claire had just spooned into his mouth. “Beh,” he remarked. The blob, spurned as food, apparently exerted new fascination as a plaything, for he caught it between his upper right and lower left hands as it slowly rotated off. “Eh!” he protested as his new satellite was reduced to a mere smear.
“Oh, Andy,” Claire muttered in frustration, and removed the smear from his hands with a vigorous swipe from a rather soiled high-capillarity towel. “Come on, baby, you’ve got to try this. Dr. Yei says it’s good for you!”
“Maybe he’s full,” Tony offered helpfully.
The nutritional experiment was taking place in Claire’s private quarters, awarded her upon the birth of Andy and shared with the baby. She often missed her old dormitory mates, but reflected ruefully that the company had been right; her popularity and Andy’s fascination would probably not have survived too many ni
ght feedings, diaper changes, gas attacks, mysterious diarrheas and fevers, or other infant nocturnal miseries.
Of late she’d missed Tony, too. In the last six weeks she’d hardly seen him, his new welding instructor was keeping him so busy. The pace of life seemed to be picking up all over the Habitat. There were days when there scarcely seemed to be time to draw breath.
“Maybe he doesn’t like it,” suggested Tony. “Have you tried mixing it with that other goo?”
“Everybody’s an expert,” sighed Claire. “Except me … He ate some yesterday, anyway.”
“How does it taste?”
“I don’t know, I never tried it.”
“Hm.” Tony plucked the spoon from her hand and twirled it in the opened seal-a-cup, picked up a blob, and popped it in his mouth.
“Heyâ!” began Claire indignantly.
“Beh!” Tony choked. “Give me that towel.” He rid himself of his sample. “No wonder he spits it out. It’s Gag Station.”
Claire grabbed the spoon back, muttered “Huh!”, and floated over to her kitchenette to push it through the handholes to the water dispenser and give it a steaming rinse. “Germs!” she snapped accusingly at Tony.
“You try it!”
She sniffed the food cup in renewed doubt. “I’ll take your word for it.”
Andy in the meantime had captured his lower right hand with his uppers and was gnawing on it.
“You’re not supposed to have meat yet,” Claire sighed, straightening him back out. Andy inhaled, preparing for complaint, but let it go in a mere “Aah,” as the door slid open revealing a new object of interest.
“How’s it going, Claire?” asked Dr. Yei. Her thick useless downsider legs trailed relaxed from her hips as she pulled herself into the cabin.
Claire brightened. She liked Dr. Yei; things always seemed to calm down a bit when she was around. “Andy won’t eat the creamed rice. He liked the strained banana well enough.”
“Well, next feeding try introducing the oatmeal instead,” said Dr. Yei. She floated over to Andy, held out her hand; he captured it with his uppers. She peeled off his hands, held her hand down farther; he grasped at it with his lowers, and giggled. “His lower body coordination is coming along nicely. Bet it will nearly match the upper by his first birthday.”
“And that fourth tooth broke through day before yesterday,” said Claire, pointing it out.
“Nature’s way of telling you it’s time to eat creamed rice,” Dr. Yei lectured the baby with mock seriousness. He clamped to her arm, beady eyes intent upon her gold loop earrings, nutrition quite forgotten. “Don’t fret too much, Claire. There’s always this tendency to push things with the first child, just to reassure yourself it can all be done. It will be more relaxed with the second. I guarantee all babies master creamed rice before they’re twenty no matter what you do.”
Claire laughed, secretly relieved. “It’s just that Mr. Van Atta was asking about his progress.”
“Ah.” Dr. Yei’s lips twitched in a rather compressed smile. “I see.” She defended her earring from a determined assault by placing Andy in air just beyond reach. A frustrated paroxysm of swimming-motions gave him only an unwanted spin. He opened his mouth to howl protest; Dr. Yei surrendered instantly, but bought time by holding out just her fingertips.
Andy again headed earring-ward, hand over hand over hand. “Yeah, go for it, baby,” Tony cheered him on.
“Well.” Dr. Yei turned her attention to Claire. “I actually stopped by to pass on some good news. The company is so pleased with the way things have turned out with Andy, they’ve decided to move up the date for you to start your second pregnancy.”
Tony’s face split in a delighted grin, beyond Dr. Yei’s shoulder. His upper hands clasped in a gesture of victory. Claire made embarrassed-suppression motions at him, but couldn’t help grinning back.
“Wow,” said Claire, warm with pleasure. So, the company thought she was doing that well. There had been down days when she’d thought no one noticed how hard she’d been trying. “How much up?”
“Your monthly cycles are still being suppressed by the breast feeding, right? You have an appointment at the infirmary tomorrow morning. Dr. Minchenko will give you some medicine to start them up again. You can start trying on the second cycle.”
“Oh my goodness. That soon.” Claire paused, watching the wriggling Andy and remembering how the first pregnancy had drained her energy. “I guess I can handle it. But whatever happened to that two-and-a-quarter-year ideal spacing you were talking about?”
Dr. Yei bit her words off carefully. “There is a Project-wide push to increase productivity. In all areas.” Dr. Yei, always straightforward in Claire’s experience, smiled falsely. She glanced at Tony, hovering happily, and pursed her lips.
“I’m glad you’re here, Tony, because I have some good news for you, too. Your welding instructor Mr. Graf has rated you tops in his class. So you’ve been picked as gang foreman to go out on the first Cay Project contract GalacTech has landed. You and your co-workers will be shipping out in about a month to a place called Kline Station. It’s on the far end of the wormhole nexus, beyond Earth, and it’s a long ride, so Mr. Graf will be going along to complete your training en route, and double as engineering supervisor.”
Tony surged across the room in excitement. “At last! Real work! Butâ” He paused, stricken. Claire, one thought ahead of him, felt her face becoming mask-like. “But how’s Claire supposed to start a baby next month if I’m on my way to where?”
“Dr. Minchenko will freeze a couple of sperm samples before you go,” suggested Claire. “Won’t he … ?”
“Ahâhm,” said Dr. Yei. “Well, actually, that wasn’t in the plans. Your next baby is scheduled to be fathered by Rudy, in Microsystems Installation.”
“Oh, no!” gasped Claire.
Dr. Yei studied both their faces, and arranged her mouth in a severe frown. “Rudy is a very nice boy. He would be very hurt by that reaction, I’m sure. This can’t be a surprise, Claire, after all our talks.”
“Yes, butâI was hoping, since Tony and I did so well, they’d let usâI was going to ask Dr. Cay!”
“Who is no longer with us,” Dr. Yei sighed. “And so you’ve gone and let yourselves become pair-bonded. I warned you not to do that, didn’t I?”
Claire hung her head. Tony’s face was mask-like, now.
“Claire, Tony, I know this seems hard. But you in the first generations have a special burden. You are the first step in a very detailed long-range plan for GalacTech, spanning literally generations. Your actions have a multiplier effect all out of proportion âlook, this isn’t by any means the end of the world for you two. Claire has a long reproductive career scheduled. It’s quite probable you’ll be getting back together again someday. And you, Tonyâyou’re tops. GalacTech’s not going to waste you, either. There will be other girlsâ”
“I don’t want other girls,” said Tony stonily. “Only Claire.”
Dr. Yei paused, went on. “I shouldn’t be telling you this yet, but Sinda in Nutrition is next for you. I’ve always thought she was an extraordinarily pretty girl.”
“She has a laugh like a hacksaw.”
Dr. Yei blew out her breath impatiently. “We’ll discuss it later. At length. Right now I have to talk with Claire.” She thrust him firmly out the door and keyed it shut on his frown and muffled objections.
Dr. Yei turned back to Claire and fixed her with a stern gaze. “Claireâdid you and Tony continue to have sexual relations after you became pregnant?”
“Dr. Minchenko said it wouldn’t hurt the baby.”
“Dr. Minchenko knew?”
“I don’t know … I just asked him, like, in a general way.” Claire studied her hands guiltily. “Did you expect us to stop?”
“Well, yes!”
“You didn’t tell us to.”
“You didn’t ask. In fact, you were quite careful not to bring up the subject, now
that I think backâoh, how could I have been so blindsided?”
“But downsiders do it all the time,” Claire defended herself.
“How do you know what downsiders do?”
“Silver says Mr. Van Attaâ” Claire stopped abruptly.
Dr. Yei’s attention sharpened, knife-like and uncomfortable. “What do you know about Silver and Mr. Van Atta?”
“Wellâeverything, I guess. I mean, we all wanted to know how downsiders did it.” Claire paused. “Downsiders are strange,” she added.
After a paralyzed moment, Dr. Yei buried her face in her hands and sniggered helplessly. “And so Silver’s been supplying you with detailed information?”
“Well, yes.” Claire regarded the psychologist with wary fascination.
Dr. Yei stifled her chortles, a strange light growing in her eyes, part humor, part irritation. “I supposeâI suppose you’d better pass the word to Tony not to let on. I’m afraid Mr. Van Atta would become a little upset if he realized his personal activities had a second-hand audience.”
“All right,” Claire agreed doubtfully. “Butâyou always wanted to know all about me and Tony.”
“That’s different. We were trying to help you.”
“Well, we and Silver are trying to help each other.”
“You’re not supposed to help yourselves.” The sting of Dr. Yei’s criticism was blunted by her suppressed smile. “You’re supposed to wait until you’re served.” Yei paused. “Just how many of you are privy to this, ah, Silver-mine of information, anyway? Just you and Tony, I trust?”
“Well, and my dormitory mates. I take Andy over there in my off hours and we all play with him. I used to have my sleep restraints opposite Silver’s until I moved out. She’s my best friend. Silver’s soâso brave, I guessâshe’ll try things I’d never dare.” Claire sighed envy.
Falling Free (Vorkosigan Saga) Page 9