Heaven Chronicles
Page 15
Betha became aware of Clewell's hand moving slowly, tenderly along her side. But the warm instinctive response of half a lifetime died in her. She buried her face against the pillow, smothering the words, “Oh, Clewell, I can't … I can't. Not yet. I'm so sorry.…”
His arms comforted her again. “No, Betha … it's all right. This is all I really need. Just to hold you.”
She felt Rusty stir and settle between their feet at the end of the bed. She moved deeper into Clewell's arms, closing him in her own, and fled from memory into sleep.
Lansing 04 (Lansing space)
+190 kiloseconds
The night stretched like silence beyond their searching eyes; they took comfort in its vast, star-flecked indifference. They were scavengers, picking the bones of worlds; the night gave them shelter because it made no judgments, and they were grateful for its amorality.
Shadow Jack watched the night, or its image on the screen … sometimes in the dim, close womb of the ship his mind blurred, and reality began to merge with image. He stretched his legs and scratched, brushed back the dirty hair that drifted forward into his eyes and was as black as the night before him on the screen. One eye was green and one was blue; both were bloodshot, and his head throbbed with his heartbeat. The carbon-dioxide level in the cabin was well over three percent; he had long ago stopped noticing the smells. He pulled himself back down into his seat, looking at one errant hole pricked in the darkness, the one star that was not a star—that was something infinitely more insignificant, and infinitely more precious.
“I think we're close enough to begin scan.”
He heard Bird Alyn's voice, barely audible as always, even in the quiet space between them. He swallowed twice, wetting his throat for words. “Right. Go ahead an' run it through.”
She reached forward with her right hand, her crippled left hand resting on air as she typed the order into the reconnaissance-unit computer that would begin one more analysis. Shadow Jack watched the long fingers with the broken, dirty nails move over the shining board. He looked away, for the ten thousandth time, at the cramped squalor of the cabin: still finding no miracle to transform the welded scrap-iron husk into a ship to match the technological beauty of the reconnaissance unit. Almost in apology, he smoothed fingerprints from the coolness of the panel with his frayed sleeve. The recon unit was a prize of salvage, a more precious thing than his own life, because it gave his entire world a chance for survival. Before the Civil War it had been a prospecting unit, programmed for laser and radar analysis of asteroidal metals, organics, volatiles. Now it scanned for the old instead of the new, searching the debris of death for artifacts to stretch the lives of the living. He looked back at the display with Bird Alyn, waiting, watched figures print out on the flat glossy screen—
“Nothin',” Bird Alyn said. “No metallic reflections, no radioactivity, no effluent across the surface … nothin', nothin', nothin'. Nobody ever lived there—”
“It's always nothin'!” He struck at the thick, darkened glass of the port, at a universe beyond his control.
“Maybe next time. Besides, maybe somebody else's found what they need. We're not the only ship …” She faded.
“I know that!” His voice battered his ears, he put up his hands. “I'm sorry. My head hurts.”
“So does mine.”
He glanced at her. It wasn't a reproach; her red-rimmed eyes were gentle, before they dropped away, fading against her face and the matted cotton of her hair, brown into brown into brown. Freckles splattered her nose, darker brown. “Do you think there's any water?”
“I'll see.” He unstrapped and drifted up out of his seat, one bare foot pushing off from the panel. He reached the wall behind them, read the gauge on the still. “Yeah, there's some in it now.” He heard Bird Alyn's sigh as he forced the nozzle through the seal on the drinking cup, waited while it filled. “Point four liters.” He sighed, too.
They drank, taking turns at the straw, savoring the water's warm flatness; Bird Alyn reached over to turn down the display on the screen. She hesitated, leaned forward. “This's strange … look, the display's changed. There must be something else out there; we're getting a backscatter analysis of somethin' further on. Metal … low radioactivity …” Her voice rose until he could hear her without trying.
Bubbles of water burst against his fingers and slimed his hand as he squeezed the cup too hard. “A derelict?”
She tapped the controls briefly, and displayed a picture from the Matkusov mirror on the hull. A sun-bright needle threaded stars on the blackness. “A ship,” she whispered.
“Oh, reality, look at that.…”
“I never saw a ship like that.…”
“There's never been one.”
“Not since the War. It's got to be—”
“It's got to be—salvage.” Shadow Jack leaned forward, touched the ship with a wet fingertip. “I claim you, ship! With a ship like that … we could do anything with a ship like that.”
“It's driftin', no propulsion. That doesn't mean it's dead.…To find that, here, so close to Lansing—”
“It is dead, it must be more'n two gigasecs old. What's our relative velocity? Can we intercept?”
Her long fingers asked the questions, the board answered. “Yes!” She looked up. “If we push, in four or five kilosecs.”
“Okay.” He nodded. “We push.”
They waited, caught inside webs of private dream, as the needle of light grew into an impossible golden insect: triple antennae bristling ahead, spokes on an invisible wheel, its body stretching behind, filament-fine, and broadening into a bulbous, pearlike tail. A miracle.… The word shone in his mind, and knowing there were no miracles, he believed, defiantly. A ship that could get them water to fill the marshes, to bring back life to the parched grasses and dying trees … to the dying people of Lansing.
His mind's eye looked back into the past, down across Lansing's fields from the limits of the sky, where he had worked suspended cloudlike fifty meters up, spinning the sticky patches to mend the plastic membrane of the world-shroud. Somewhere below him through the fragile canopy of trees. Bird Alyn had worked in the gardens.… Like a vision of Old Earth, he remembered her crossing the yellowed fields at dusk to meet him, her footsteps lifting her like a bird. When they brought back that ship everything would be made right … everything.
He looked over at Bird Alyn, at her hand—three crooked, nerveless fingers and a thumb; felt her catch him looking. Not everything. He frowned with helpless self-disgust; she turned her face away as though the frown were meant for her. He looked out at the night, cracking his knuckles as he remembered why it would never be all right. He remembered the broken sound of his father's reassurance, a third of a lifetime before—as he left his only son sitting in the grass, abandoned to the fatal light, and went back into the sheltering depths of rock alone.…
Ranger (Lansing space)
+195 kiloseconds
Betha heard the intruders banging faintly against the Ranger's hull as they moved toward the main lock. “At least they didn't actually decide to cut their way in through the dayroom.”
“Their manners don't impress me. You're just going to let them come aboard?” Clewell rebounded lightly from the wall as he pushed a covered cup into a cubby beneath the panel.
She nodded. “Pappy, we've been tracking that tin can of theirs for nearly two hours; it's hardly a warship. They must be in trouble—their drive is leaking radiation. Besides, we need information, and we haven't gotten much trying to monitor Lansing's radio traffic. Letting them come aboard is the safest, fastest way I can think of for getting some facts.” She rubbed her eyes, until brightness drove back the vision of all her loves and one love, and the vision of a pursuing ship consumed by invisible fire. Besides, there's been enough death.
“And what happens if they happen to be crazy, like the others?”
“You said yourself they can't all be like that.” Her hand closed over the bowl of her pipe. “But
even if they are, they won't take the ship.” She let the pipe drift as she rechecked the override program, a mosaic of lighted buttons on the control board. “Just keep your feet near the floor.”
Someone had entered the lock. She felt more than heard them through the wall, felt her body tense as the lights changed above the lock entrance. The door hissed open. Two tall figures, amorphous in suits with shielded helmets, drifted into the room. And stopped short, catching at the handrail set into the wall. A muffled, accusing voice said, “What are you doin' here?”
Betha's mouth quivered; helpless with disbelief, she began to laugh. “W-what are we doing here?”
Clewell grunted. “We could ask you the same question; and it wouldn't be nearly as funny. You're lucky you're here at all.”
“We thought the ship was dead; we didn't even know you had power till your lock cycled.” The taller suit shrugged. “You've got a hole in you, and—you mean, you run this thing, you already claimed it?”
“We didn't ‘claim’ it, we own it.” Betha caught her shoe under a restraining bar and twisted to face them. “I'm Captain Torgussen. This is my navigator. We let you come aboard because I thought you were in trouble. Your craft's power unit is leaking radiation; you're barely mobile. Is that why you intercepted us?”
The silvered faceplates showed her nothing, only her own tiny, distorted face. The voice was tinnily indignant. “What do you mean, leaking? There's nothin' wrong with our drive. We been out a megasec this trip, already.”
Nothing wrong? Betha glanced at Clewell, saw his eyes widen. A megasecond—a million seconds—nearly two weeks. Whoever faced her, whatever insanity moved them, their lives were going to be short and sick spent in a ship like that.
The blind face went on, “We intercepted because we thought this ship was salvage, and we wanted it. I guess it's not.” A gloved hand rose from his side, threatening, holding something that glinted. “But we have to have it. So we're taking it anyhow. Get away from those controls.” The hand twitched.
“You'll regret it. The two of you can't possibly handle this ship.” Betha carefully let go of the bar, her feet centimeters above the rug, her eyes on the panel. When she touched one button this room would be under an abrupt one-gravity acceleration: one stranger would fall onto his head, the other one onto his back.… And break their necks? She hesitated. “If you think—”
A blob of mottled fur squeezed out of a plastic port in the wall; Rusty mrred pleasantly, circling the knees of the two strangers. Betha herd one of them gasp. He pulled back, bouncing off his companion. “Look out!” Rusty darted sideways eagerly, enjoying the game. “What is it?” Their voices rose. “Shadow Jack, get it off me!”
Betha jerked the computer remote from her belt and threw it. It struck the stranger's arm and his weapon flew out into the room. Clewell moved past her to pick it from the air; the hijackers pressed back against the wall, waiting.
“Rusty. Come here. Rusty,” Betha put out her hand, and brindle ears twitched. Slowly Rusty crossed the room to sidle along her waist, purring in satisfaction. Betha scratched under the ivory chin, stroked the brindle back, shaking her head. “Rusty, you make fools of us all.”
“Well, I'll be damned!” Clewell began to pry at the weapon; strange shapes bristled along its length. “This is a can opener! Corkscrew, fork … I don't know what this one is.…” He pulled himself down. “I've heard of ailurophobes, but I've never seen the likes of those.”
Betha caught hold of a chair back, unsmiling. “You two. Get out of the suits.” They stripped obediently, rising like moths from the cocoons of their spacesuits: a man and a woman … a boy and a girl, incredibly tall and thin, neither of them more than seventeen; barefoot, in drab, stained coveralls. She blinked as the smell of them reached her. “You've just committed an act of piracy. Now tell me why I shouldn't send you out the airlock for it, without your suits.” She wondered if the threat sounded as credible or as terrible as she wanted it to.
The boy glared back at her, across a muffled fit of coughing. The girl moved away from the wall. “It was a matter of life and death.” Her voice was strained in a dry throat.
“We offered you help. That's not good enough.”
“Not our lives.” She shook her head. “We need the ship for … for …” She broke off, her eyes darted away, searching the room.
“Bird Alyn, they know why we need the ship.” Betha saw a terrible, impersonal hatred settle on the boy's face as he turned back. “You know what we are. We're just junkers, we haven't done anything to you. Let us go.”
Betha laughed again in disbelief. “You ‘just’ tried to commandeer my ship. I ‘just’ asked you why I shouldn't space you for it. But you expect me to let you go? Is everyone in Heaven system crazy?” Her voice almost slipped out of control.
“It doesn't matter.” He let go of the handhold, shrinking in on himself. “We'll die anyway. Everybody's dying. You've still got it good, you Demarchists. It's nothing to you to let us go, or let us die.”
Betha found her pipe drifting, fumbled in a pocket of her jacket for matches. “We're not ‘Demarchists,’ whatever they are. We've come from another system to establish contact with the Heaven Belt; and since we've been here we've been attacked twice, with no provocation, near the rings of Discus and by you. Now, maybe you believe you had some sort of ‘right’ to do it, and maybe you can even make me believe it. Or maybe I'll take you to Lansing to be tried for piracy.” She saw surprise on their faces. “But first you're going to answer some questions …. To begin with: who are you, and where do you come from?”
“I'm Shadow Jack,” the boy said, “and this's Bird Alyn. We come from Lansing.” He waited.
“But that's where we're going—” Clewell began.
“Why?” the girl said, blinking.
“Because it's the government center for Heaven Belt.” Betha looked back at her sharply. “Your capital must have come on hard times.”
“You really are from Outside, aren't you?” Shadow Jack folded his legs like a buddha, somehow managing not to flip over backward. “There hasn't been any Heaven Belt for two and a half gigasecs.”
“What?”
He stared, silent; Clewell gestured threateningly at the cat.
“There was a war, the Civil War. Everything got blown up, all the industry. Nobody can keep anything going anymore, except the Demarchy and the Ringers. They're the only ones far enough out to have snow on some of their rocks. Lansing is capital of zero, nothin'; most everybody in the Main Belt's dead by now.”
“I don't understand,” Betha said, not wanting to understand. Oh, God, don't let our very reason for coming here have been pointless.… “We heard that Heaven Belt had the perfect environment, that it had a higher technology than any Earth colony, than even Old Earth.”
“But they couldn't keep it goin'.” Shadow Jack shook his head.
Betha saw suddenly the fatal flaw the original colonizers, already Belters, must never have considered. Without a world to hold an atmosphere, air and water—all the fundamentals of life—had to be processed or manufactured or they didn't exist. And without a technology capable of the processing and manufacturing, in a system without an Earthlike world to retreat to, any Dark Age would mean their extinction.
As if he had followed her thoughts. Shadow Jack said, “We'll all be dead, in the end, even the Demarchy.” He looked away, forcing out the words, “But our rock is out of water now. Everybody there'll die if we have to go around Heaven again without it. And we don't have a ship left that'll take us to the Ringers—to Discus—for hydrogen to make more. We've got to find enough salvage parts to put one together. That's why we were out here. It's a gigasec before we'll be close enough to Discus to make the trip again.”
“You trade with Discus for hydrogen?” Clewell broke her silence.
“Trade?” Shadow Jack looked blank. “What would we trade? We steal it.”
“What happens if the—Discans catch you in their space?” Clewell
reached under the panel for his covered drinking cup, pulled up on the straw.
Shadow Jack shrugged. “They try to kill us. Maybe that's why they attacked you: they thought you came from the Demarchy. Or maybe they wanted your ship; anybody'd want this ship. Can you run it all with only two people—?” His mismatched eyes wandered speculatively.
“Not two untrained people,” Betha said, “in case you still have any ideas. It's not even easy for us. There were five more people in our crew; the Discans killed them all.” And all for nothing.
He grimaced. “Oh.” Betha saw the girl flinch.
“One more question.” She took a deep breath. “Tell me what this ‘Demarchy’ is, that everyone seems to confuse with us.”
Shadow Jack glanced away, suddenly oblivious, as Clewell finished his drink. Bird Alyn licked her lips, rubbed her mouth with a misshapen hand.
Out of water.… A memory of her own children, too far away, too long ago, dimmed their hungry faces. She looked down at her own hands, at thin golden rings, four on the left hand, two on the right. “Well?”
Shadow Jack cleared his throat, his eyes daring her to offer water. “The Demarchy—it's in the trojan asteroids sixty degrees ahead of Discus. It's got the best technology left now. They made the nuclear battery that runs our electric rocket; they're the only ones who can make 'em anymore.”
“If they're so well off, why do they have to rob the Discans?”
“They don't have to. Usually they trade, metals for the processed snow, for water and gases and hydrocarbons. Sometimes things happen, though—incidents. They both want to come out on top. I guess they think someday they'll build up the Belt again. They're wrong, though. Even if they'd quit fightin' each other, it's too late. Anybody can see that.”
“Not exactly a cockeyed optimist, are you, boy?” Clewell said.
Shadow Jack frowned, scratching. “I'm not blind.”
“Well, Clewell.” Betha felt Rusty snuffling against her neck, settled the cat on her shoulder. Claws hooked cautiously into the weave of her denim jacket. “What do you think? Do you think it's the truth? Did we—come all the way to Heaven for nothing?”