The Terrorists of Irustan

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The Terrorists of Irustan Page 3

by Louise Marley


  The girl was thin as a reed, her narrow hipbones jutting sharply on either side of her concave stomach. An ugly bruise, with abrasions in the center, spread across her left side, and the abdomen was rigid to the touch. Carefully, Zahra palpated, finding tenderness in the left upper quadrant, and when she moved her fingers, more pain around the side and into the back.

  “What happened?” Zahra repeated, at the same time reaching for the scanner that extended out of the medicator to hang over the examination bed. She swiveled it into position and flicked it on. Its busy hum almost covered Maya’s answer.

  “I—I went out,” Maya groaned. Zahra’s fingers passed over her ribs. “I shouldn’t have gone out.”

  “All right,” Zahra muttered, her eyes on the wall monitor. There it was. She could see exactly what she would have to do. This would be a long and difficult night, and it would certainly have been too much for Aila Adama. She said again, “All right, sister. I’m your medicant, you’re safe here.”

  Maya’s eyes, round with fear, slid to the screen that hid Asa. Zahra nodded understanding as she pulled a warm blanket from its shelf beneath the bed.

  “Asa?” she called. “Tell the husband to go home. His wife will be staying here for a while. Then you can go back to bed.”

  Asa hobbled to the door of the dispensary, his cane clicking softly against the tiled floor. As Zahra smoothed the blanket over Maya she heard Asa speak, and the husband respond angrily. Their voices carried sharply into the surgery. Maya whimpered and closed her eyes. In a moment, Asa limped back into the surgery, keeping his eyes averted from the bed.

  “He won’t go, Medicant,” he told the floor. “He says this woman’s place is in her home.”

  Zahra gritted her teeth. She said brusquely, “Fine. Lock the door then, Asa. He can stay out there all night if he wants to. But you go on to bed.”

  “Are you sure, Medicant? You won’t need me?”

  “I’m sure. Thanks, Asa. Go now.”

  Asa closed the door to the dispensary and turned the lock, then went through the smaller surgery and into the house.

  “Now, Maya,” Zahra said. “It’s just you and me.”

  Maya’s pupils still flared, but her tight muscles had begun to loosen. She breathed out one long, rasping sigh.

  She could not have been more than eighteen years old. The scan showed she had had a child, and it also showed quite clearly her broken eleventh rib, and the resulting rupture of her spleen. The abrasions on her rib cage had all the marks of a boot, the hard-soled ones that men wore in the street.

  This one, Zahra thought bitterly, hadn’t even changed his shoes.

  “I—I had to go out,” Maya whispered. Her eyelids fluttered, and she mumbled. “I shouldn’t have.”

  “No. Don’t worry about it now. Rest.” Zahra’s hands were busy, reaching for the surgical dome, pulling it close to the bed.

  “There’s no man in my house—except my husband. There’s only me and my daughter.”

  Zahra leaned on one hand, bending over her patient and putting her hand on her cheek. The girl was pale as night fog, and as chilly to the touch. She couldn’t help asking, “Didn’t you know he would punish you, Maya?” The girl’s eyes flew wide again. “He was going to anyway,” she whispered. “No coffee—with his friend, this morning, they drank so much, drank it all! If I didn’t get some—when he came home, he looked in the pantry and saw there was coffee, and started screaming at me. He knew, you see—he knew! He drank all the coffee, and he knew I was home alone with my baby—” “Shush, now, Maya. Rest, please.”

  The girl’s whispers grew softer and softer. “Medicant, what could I do? If there was no coffee in the morning, he would be angry, and if I went for the coffee alone, he would be angry.” She twisted her head on the pillow, back and forth, her eyes tight shut.

  “All right,” Zahra told her. “I’m going to sedate you, now, because I have work to do. You’re badly hurt, Maya.”

  “My daughter . . .”

  “Is anyone with her?”

  “He—my husband took her to my neighbor’s.”

  “All right, then, she’ll be cared for. You’re going to sleep now.” Zahra spoke to the medicator one more time. She tucked the blanket around the girl, leaving only the abdomen bare. She sponged the area carefully before clasping the surgical dome over it and checking to see that the approximation of skin and suction strip was perfect. She inserted her hands into the grips, fitting each finger firmly into the thin gauntlets.Maya rose for a brief moment from the sleep that was overtaking her. “If anything happens to me—will you call my mother?” Zahra could barely hear the last words. “For my baby. If it wasn’t for my baby ... he won’t . . .” Her voice trailed off, and she slept.

  Zahra looked down at the instruments under the surgical dome, each sterile and shining, manufactured on Earth and shipped by the ESC at incredible expense. With her gauntleted fingers she reached for the sonic scalpel. Next to it a laser cutter glittered invitingly under its clamp. Her jaw clenched again. She saw herself taking the cutter in her bare hand, bursting out into the reception room, unveiled, angry, dangerous. Armed. It was a fantasy, and not the first time she had entertained it.

  She released her breath in a furious spurt, and drew one that was calmer. She glanced at the monitor, and then bent over the surgical dome. She would get very little sleep this night, but there was satisfaction in the thought that Maya’s husband would be as tired as she when the harsh Irustani star rose over the city.

  three

  * * *

  Interference in native affairs is forbidden to all Offworld Port Force employees. This includes, but is not limited to, dispensing unauthorized Earth materiel, interfering with native culture, engaging in violence against native citizens, and fraternization with native citizens.

  —Offworld Port Force Terms of Employment

  The shuttle waited at the end of the long runway, its arching support struts extended like the legs of a glittering insect, its gut laid open to reveal its payload. It loomed above the gray-black bitumen of the landing field, great aft engines casting long shadows. The sky above burned palest blue. Gray chimeras of heat danced away across the landing field to fade to nothing against the russet of the burnt hills.

  Jin-Li Chung drove up to the landing field with one finger in the steering wheel, left hand out, palm cupped to catch the breeze. The empty cart whined, racing with the others, dull gray vehicles spined with shelving and storage cubicles behind the driver’s compartment. No cart allowed another more than the narrowest of margins as they sped through the security gate.

  Jin-Li’s cart whipped around the tail of the shuttle and slid under the delta wing, flashing quickly from the hot daylight into the coolness of the ship’s shadow. The spacecraft towered above, a flying warehouse. The tiny cockpit stuck to its nose like a randomly blown bubble, particle shields reflecting the harsh light in blinding flashes. A ramp extended from the aft hull, the conveyor already rotating. Rocky, the foreman, was in the cargo bay, double-checking the secured stacks of materiel as the remote arms unfolded themselves and swiveled into position.

  The carts swerved to an abrupt halt near the ramp with a hissing of wide soft tires. The longshoremen parked in an untidy line and jumped out, calling to each other. They were muscular, fit, vigorous. They laughed and joked, the air hot and clean in their lungs, the star burning down on their heads. Jin-Li seized the spot closest to the ramp, just beneath the remote arm.

  Longshoremen, like all Port Forcemen who moved off port grounds, were uniformed. They wore billed caps, short-sleeved shirts, and shorts, all in beige syncel. They wore wide dark glasses issued to them the moment they arrived on Irustan. Without the filter of the glasses the brilliance of the star made everything a featureless blur of light and shadow, depthless and dazzling. Only the eyes of the native-born could cope with the full force of it, and many of them wore glasses, too. The inconvenience was offset for most of Port Force by the pleasure of working
with arms and legs bare, the slightest breeze tickling sweat-damp skin. At home, it was insanity to go uncovered under the sun. Here, under an intact atmosphere, Jin-Li and the others were tanned, the rounded muscles of their profession gleaming darkly against their pale uniforms. Everything, uniforms, caps, carts, bore the circled star logo of the ExtraSolar Corporation.

  “Here, Johnnie!” Rocky was a massive man, with legs like the struts that steadied the shuttle. He leaned out of the open cargo bay as Jin-Li, pulling on thermal gloves, approached. “Medicines—that’s you!” Rocky had opened the controlled atmosphere compartment, a thickly lined cubicle near the front bulkhead. He directed the robot arm to lift a small vacuum barrel and bring it to the edge of the cargo bay.

  Jin-Li assisted the remote as it descended, flexing its triple joints to transfer the barrel to the cart. One of these little barrels had slipped and cracked once, spoiling heinously expensive supplies, valuable drugs manufactured on Earth and made even more costly by the space they had required on the transport and the shuttle. This one was light, but its grooved metal sides were cold and slippery in the metal fingers of the robotic arm. Jin-Li popped hinged handles out of their niches to secure them with corresponding latches in the CA compartment of the cart.

  Tony, a dark man with black curls showing under his cap, was new to Irustan. His cart was pulled up next to Jin-Li s, and another of the remotes was piling it with softpacks stretched taut with Earth materials the colony couldn’t manufacture. Tony grunted as he arranged the containers to fit into his cart. He looked over at Jin-Li, dark glasses gleaming. “Hey,” he said. “He gets all the light ones? Because he’s smaller, or what?”

  Rocky laughed, reaching to adjust a remote as it swung the barrels, canisters, and cartons full of spaceborne cargo. He answered Tony as he ran the wand of his portable over a label, checking and cross-referencing every container. “His name is on ’em because we have to deliver ’em to the Medah. No Irustani’ll touch ’em. And Johnnie handles the medical stuff.”

  “What’s the problem with medical stuff?” Tony asked. “The Irustani afraid of medicines?”

  “More or less,” Jin-Li said. The cart was filling now, vacuum barrels locked into the CA compartment, smaller canisters and dry cartons strapped into the slatted shelves. The conveyor was kept full of containers for the other carts, and a steady stream of longshoremen came to meet it.

  “Why him?” Tony persisted. “Don’t we go down to the Medah?”

  “Yeah,” Rocky answered. “But Johnnie knows how to talk to ’em, how to deal with those medicants. It’s risky business.”

  “Risky for him?” Tony asked.

  “Probably not,” Rocky said. He stood still for a moment, leaning against the outer hull, portable dangling from his thick fingers. “But you can get some poor woman in big trouble if you do it wrong, Men here aren’t too forgiving about their women.”

  Tony lifted his eyebrows above his glasses. “So, Johnnie—you get to meet Irustani women—lucky. Must be an expert.”

  Jin-Li chuckled. “Hardly.”

  “Fascinating,” Tony said. “The women, I mean. Veils, all that. But the way they live! God.”

  Jin-Li nodded. “Just like they lived on Earth. But”—another carton— “we’re just as strange to them.”

  “Here, Johnnie, one more,” Rocky said. He placed a softpack on the conveyor. Jin-Li caught it at the bottom of the ramp.

  “That’s all, Rocky?”

  “That’s it. You’re done.”

  Tony waved his arm at the stacks of containers stretching off into the bay. “With all that still to go?”

  “Saved it for you.” Jin-Li spread a quilted sheet of gray photoresistant plastic over the cargo, then waved one hand in the air as the little motor of the cart sputtered to life. “Have fun!” Jin-Li spun away with one finger on the wheel. The men still laboring jeered good-naturedly. Jin-Li drove the cart through the cool darkness beneath the ship and back out into the glare, moving slowly. Down the length of the shuttle, around the tail and beneath the thrust engines, then across the field to the gate, the little electric motor growling with its load.The guard at the gate gave a mock salute. “More careful now, I see, Johnnie.”

  “Right. See you!”

  The cart moved around the port terminal and out into the road leading away from the port. The port director, an Irustani, handled the distribution manifests for medical supplies. Jin-Li turned left, up a wide, smooth road to a sprawling two-story sandrite building.

  The building was tiled and cool, bringing gooseflesh to Jin-Li’s sunwarmed skin. The entry and lobby were open to the roof, soaring to a ceiling of thick tinted glass. Jin-Li took off the dark glasses and slipped them into a breast pocket, pulling out a tiny reader with the notated list of supplies. A clerk at a desk in the entryway stood up, touching his heart with his right hand.

  “Kir Chung,” he said, smiling. “I thought you’d be here today. I heard the shuttle come in.”

  Jin-Li mirrored the gesture, hand to heart, and smiled back. “Kir Dinos, good to see you again. Can you take this list up to the director’s office and ask if there’s a manifest for me?”

  “Right away.” Dinos signaled to an assistant to come and man the desk while he trotted across the lobby to the stairs.

  Jin-Li greeted the assistant, then wandered away to make a lazy circle around the enormous abstract sculpture that rested on a whitewood platform in the center of the lobby. There was no enclosure, no impediment to the observer. The sculpture invited the hand to touch it, to caress its sandrite curves, to let the texture and shape of it guide the fingers. Jin-Li put one brown hand on an inner slope of the shape, following the path it made.

  “It’s beautiful, isn’t it?” came a deep voice.

  “Oh, hello, Director,” Jin-Li said, turning, smiling.

  Samir Hilel was dark-skinned, with thick brown hair. He touched his heart and then shook Jin-Lis hand with a firm, cool grip. “Kir Chung,” he said. “It gives me pleasure to know that an Earther can appreciate Irustani art.”

  Jin-Li shrugged and gave a deprecating chuckle. “Well, I try, Director. Your sculptors don’t make it easy.”

  Hilel put his hand to the flowing shape before them. Jin-Li saw the sensuous way he stroked it, following its path up, in and out, up again until his hand came away in the air. Hilel gave a slight sigh. In a moment he said over his shoulder, “What do you think it means, Kir Chung?”

  Jin-Li said carefully, “This is a test I’ll probably fail.”

  Samir Hilel chuckled. “1 wouldn’t test you! You know more of our customs than I do of yours, I’m sure. I’m only interested in how this piece strikes you.”

  Jin-Li looked up at the sculpture, following the folds, the rolling waves of stone. “The stone is lovely, of course, that silvery gray sandrite. But it seems to me—perhaps—that I see the artist guiding both hand and eye to the Maker, pulling them both irresistibly to heaven.”

  The port director inclined his head with a grave smile. “You honor the artist,” he said. “And I’ll tell him what you’ve said. He will be moved to know that his work spoke to you so clearly.”

  “Thanks, Director. Please do tell him for me.”

  Hilel regarded Jin-Li for a moment. They were almost the same height, though Jin-Li was narrower of shoulder and probably thirty years younger than Hilel. The director had an appealing grace, a poise earned through intelligence and experience.

  “Johnnie Chung,” Hilel said, as if trying out the name. “You’re different from your colleagues.”

  “It’s Jin-Li Chung, actually, Director. Port Forcers are fond of nicknames. And I suppose I am a bit different.”

  “Yes. From time to time 1 meet other longshoremen, other Port Forcemen. But you are more like us than any of them—you even look more like us.”

  “Do I?”

  “A little. But perhaps it’s just that you find us interesting, and that makes you interesting to us.”

  Jin-Li shr
ugged, smiling. “I don’t know, Director. But it’s true—your world appeals to me.”

  Hilel smiled again. “On behalf of Irustan,” he said with a light laugh, “I thank you!” He gestured with one hand to the stairs. “Now, I’ve a manifest for you, and a few special requests have come in from our medicants. If you don’t mind.”

  “Not a bit. Glad to be of service.”

  Jin-Li followed Hilel out of the lobby, looking back once at the great stone piece. It was an illustration, a material representation of the ecstasy of religious belief, and also of the inscrutable nature of Irustan. Jin-Li doubted Earth eyes could ever fully understand it.

  four

  * * *

  The Maker chose to make man larger, stronger, and wiser than woman. Husbands must be responsible for their wives, for their sustenance, their clothing, their shelter, their well-being, and their discipline, according to the guidance of the One.

  —Third Homily, The Book of the Second Prophet

  Zahra, not for the first time, slept on the spare bed in the large surgery, first sliding it close beside her patient. She wrapped herself in an extra blanket and drowsed through the small hours, alert to the mild buzz of the monitor. Once or twice she woke to address the medicator, and then toward dawn, certain that Maya was already mending, she fell into a heavy sleep.

  Lili came to wake her in the morning, bringing coffee on a tray. She touched Zahra’s shoulder, and Zahra woke immediately. Lili’s eyes flickered through her veil at the sight of Maya. The girl’s face was as white as the pillow, her cheeks so thin they seemed transparent.

  “Ruptured spleen,” Zahra grated, her voice thick with fatigue. She swung her long legs over the edge of the bed and reached for the steaming cup Lili held out. Her eyes swept the monitor before she took a grateful sip.

 

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