Heaven Chronicles
Page 18
“But the Demarchy's worse. They've got a higher technology.”
“How much higher? You don't really know. And they aren't looking for us, either. With your ship to ferry us in, we can slip in and out of a distillery before they even think about it. But what do we trade for hydrogen?” She repeated the inventory again in her mind, struggling with the knowledge that only Eric would know what was right, what to offer, what to say. Only Eric had been trained to know.… Oh, Eric—
Shadow Jack frowned, pulling at his toes. Bird Alyn caught Rusty, set her spinning slowly head over paws in the air. Rusty caught her own tail and began to wash it. Bird Alyn laughed, inaudible.
“The cat,” Shadow Jack said. “We could give them the cat!”
“What?” Clewell straightened indignantly.
“Sure. Nobody's got a cat anymore. But nobody in the Demarchy could know we didn't; Lansing had a lot of animals, once. And it's just what the Demarchists go for: somethin' really rare. The owner of a distillery, he'd probably give you half his stock to own Rusty.”
“That's ridiculous,” Clewell said.
“No … maybe it's not. Pappy.” Betha spread her hands, and Rusty pushed off toward her. “I think he's got a point. Rusty, would you like to live like a queen?” She gathered Rusty into her arms, gathered in the precious memories of her children's faces, as they handed her the gifts of love. She felt her throat tighten against more words, wondering what payment would be demanded next of them; knowing that whatever the emotional price was, they must pay it, if it would buy this ship's passage home to Morningside. She saw sharp sorrow on Bird Alyn's face; saw Bird Alyn struggle to hide it, as she hid her own. “Besides … we haven't been able to think of anything else that wouldn't give us away. Any equipment we tried to trade would be obvious as coming from outside the system. We'll be taking enough of a risk as it is.”
“I know.” Clewell looked down. “You're the captain.”
“Yes, I am.” Betha pulled herself down to the control panel, tired of arguing, tired of postponing the inevitable. There was no choice, there was only one thing that mattered—saving this ship—and she must never forget it.… She watched the latest surveillance readouts, not seeing them. The Ranger was well within Demarchy space now. They had detected dozens of asteroids and heavy radio traffic. They had identified Mecca, the largest distillery, eight million kilometers away, with a closing velocity of ten kilometers per second—only hours of flight time for the Ranger. But it would take the Lansing 04 two weeks, decelerating every meter of the way, to close the distance-and-velocity gap between them and Mecca. Her stomach tightened at the prospect; the extra shielding they had put on board the Lansing ship cut the radiation levels to one-sixth of what they had been, but the readings were still too high. And yet if the Ranger came any closer to an inhabited area, the risk of detection would be too great.
The road to Morning
Is cut from mourning,
And paved with broken dreams.…
“I'm going to Mecca, Pappy,” she said at last. “I'm going to get us our ticket home.”
Clewell sat firmly in his seat as Bird Alyn floated free above his head. They watched together while the Lansing 04, a battered tin can with a reactor tied to its tail, fell away into the bottomless night. He looked back from the darkness to Bird Alyn's face, her own dark eyes still fixed on the screen. “I'm glad you're here. There's too much—emptiness on this ship, alone.”
She blinked self-consciously, her arms moving like bird wings as she turned toward him in the air. Her eyes rarely met his, or anyone's; as if she was afraid of seeing her own image reflected there. “I wish—I wish she hadn't taken Rusty.”
He had to strain to hear her, wondered again if he was getting a little deaf. “So do I. She did what she thought was best.… And you wish she hadn't taken Shadow Jack.”
She still looked down; her head twitched slightly. “She did what she thought was best.” He thought of Eric, who had been trained to know what was best; remembered Betha's anguished doubt, in the private darkness of their room. “She means everything to me, too.”
Bird Alyn looked up at him at last. “Are—are you Betha's father?”
He laughed. “No, child; I'm her husband. One of her husbands.”
“Her—husband?” He almost thought he could see her blush. “One of her husbands? How many does she have?”
“There are seven of us, three women and four men.” He smiled. “I take it that's not so common here.”
“No.” Almost a protest. “Are … the rest of them back on your—planet?”
“They were the crew of the Ranger.”
She jerked suddenly. “Then—they're all dead, now.”
“Yes, all.…” He stopped, forcing his mind away from the empty room on the next level below, where a gaping wound opened on the stars. Deliberately he looked back at Bird Alyn, saw her embarrassment. “It's possible to be in love with more than one person, you know.”
“I always thought that meant somebody had to be unhappy.”
He shook his head, smiling, wondering what strange beliefs must be a part of the Lansing culture. And he wondered how those beliefs could survive, when a people were struggling for their own survival.
On Morningside the first colonists had struggled to survive, expatriates and exiles fleeing an Earth where the political world had turned upside down. They had arrived in a Promised Land that they discovered, too late, was not the haven they were promised—discovering at last the lyrical irony in the name Morningside. Tidally locked with its red dwarf star, Morningside turned one face forever toward the bloody sun, held one side forever frozen into night. Between the subsolar desert and the darkside ice lay a bleak ring of marginally habitable land, the Wedding Band … until death did them part. The fear of death, the need to enlarge a small and suddenly vulnerable population, had broken down the rigid customs of their European and North American past. They were no longer the people they had once been, and now, looking back across two hundred years of multiple marriage and the freedom-in-security of extended family kinship, few Morningsiders saw reason in their own past, or any reason to change back again.
Bird Alyn folded her arms, hiding her misshapen hand. And Clewell realized that perhaps the people of Lansing had had no choice in their customs either. If the radiation levels were as high as those on the Lansing 04, even one percent as high, then the threat of genetic damage could force them into breeding customs that seemed strange or even suicidal anywhere else. The whole of Heaven Belt was a trap and a betrayal in a way the Morningside had never been: because Heaven had promised a life of ease and beauty in return for a high technology, but it damned human weakness without pity.
Clewell was silent with the realization that whatever Morningside lacked in comfort, it made up for in a grudging constancy, and that even beauty became meaningless without that.…
“How did you and Shadow Jack end up out here?”
She shrugged, a tiny waver of her weightless body. “I can work the computer; my parents programmed the recon unit. And Shadow Jack wanted to be a pilot and do something to help Lansing; he won a lottery.”
“Your parents let you go, instead of going themselves?” He saw Betha suddenly, in his mind: a gangly, earnest teenage girl, helping him take the measure of the immeasurable universe … saw his own children, waiting for him across that universal sea. He covered a sudden anger against whoever had sent their half-grown daughter out in a contaminated ship before they would go themselves.
Bird Alyn looked down at her crippled hand. “Well, you can only go if you work outside.…”
“Outside?”
“Lansing's a tent world … we have surface gardens, an' a plastic tent to keep in an atmosphere.” She ran her hand through her hair, her mouth twitching. “You work outside if you can't have children.” For a moment her eyes touched him, envious, almost accusing; she turned back to the viewscreen, looking out over isolation, withdrawing into herself. “I think I'll take
a shower.”
He laughed carefully. “If you take too many showers, girl, you'll wrinkle up for good.”
“Maybe it would help.” Not smiling, she pushed off from the panel.
He looked out at the barren night, where all their hopes lay, and where all the dreams of their separate worlds lay ruined. Pain caught in his chest, and made him afraid. Help me, God, I'm an old man. Don't let me be too old.… He pressed his hands against the pain, heard the sprayer go on and Bird Alyn's voice rise like warbling birdsong, beginning a Morningside lullaby:
“There's never joy but leads to sorrow,
Never sorrow without joy.
Yesterday becomes tomorrow;
I can't stop it, little boy.…”
Lansing 04 (Demarchy space)
+1.51 megaseconds
“There it is,” Shadow Jack said, with almost a sigh. “Mecca rock.”
Betha watched it come into view at the port: a fifty-kilometer potato-shaped lump of stone, scarred by nature's hand and man's. Mecca's long axis pointed to the sun; the side nearest them lay in darkness, haloed by an eternal corona of sunglare. As they closed she began to see landing lights; and, between them, immense shining protrusions lit from below, throwing their shadows out to be lost in the shadow of the void. She identified them finally as storage tanks—enormous balloons of precious gases. At last … She stirred in the narrow, dimly lit space before the instruments, felt her numbed emotions stir and come alive. She filled her congested lungs with the dead, stale air, heard a fan go on somewhere behind her, clanking and ineffective; wondered whether she could ever revive a sense of smell mercifully long dead. It was small comfort to know that the claustrophobic misery of their journey would have been worse without the overhauling they had done on board the Ranger. Two strangers from Lansing could teach even Morningsiders something about toughness.… The Ranger came back into her mind, and with it the galling knowledge that they could have crossed Demarchy space to Mecca in one day instead of fifteen, in perfect comfort—if things had been different. “But we're here. Thank God. And thanks to you. Shadow Jack. That was a good job.” Her hand stroked his arm unthinkingly, in a gesture meant for someone else. He started out of his habitual glumness, looking embarrassed and then something more; reached to scan the radio frequencies. Static and voices broke across the cabin's clicking silence.
“Did—did you love one of them best?”
She sighed. “Yes … yes, I suppose I did. It's something you can't help feeling; I loved them all so much, but one…” Who isn't here, when I need him. She shook her head, her eyes blurred, and sharpened again as a piece of the real world moved across them. “Out there. Shadow Jack.” She leaned closer to the port, rubbed the fog of moisture from the glass. “A tanker coming in.”
He peered past her. They saw the ship, still lit by the sun: a ponderous metallic tick, its plastic belly bloated with precious gases and clutched inside three legs of steel, booms for the ship's nuclear-electric rockets. “Look at the size of that! It must be comin' in from the Rings. They wouldn't use that on local hauls.” He raised his head, following its downward arc. “Down there, that must be the docking field.”
She could see the field clearly now, an unnatural gleaming smoothness in the artificial light, cluttered with cranes and ringed by more mechanical parasites, gorged and empty. Smaller craft moved above them, fireflies showing red: sluggish tows in a profusion of makeshift incongruity. Another world … She listened, watching, matching fragments of one-sided radio conversations with the movements of the slow-motion dance below them: boredom and sharp attention, an outburst of anger, unintelligible humor about an unseen technicality. “Shouldn't they be receiving our signal?”
He nodded. “They are. I guess they'll call us down when they feel like it.”
Rusty stirred in the air above the control board, batted listlessly at the twined cord of his headset. “Poor Rusty,” Betha murmured, reaching out. “Your trip in this sauna is almost over.…” The rawness of her throat hurt her suddenly.
Shadow Jack twisted guiltily, stroked Rusty's rumpled fur. “Bird Alyn really let me have it for makin' you take Rusty away. She didn't want to lose her. She loves plants, makin' things grow—things that are alive.…” His mouth twitched, almost a smile, almost sorrow. “I guess Rusty was about the most wonderful thing of all, to Bird Alyn.”
“You miss her.”
“Yeah, I … I mean, well, she's the only one who can really use the computer.”
“Oh.”
He glanced back at her, knowing what she hadn't said. “We just work together.”
She nodded. “I thought maybe you—”
“No, we don't. We're not married.”
She felt her mouth curve up in scandalized amusement. “I admire your self-restraint.”
His blue and green eyes widened; she saw darkness settle across them again. “There's no point in wanting what we can't have. It's only keeping alive that matters—everybody keeping alive. If we can't get water for Lansing, then it's the end, and it's stupid to pretend it's not. There's no point in … in …” He looked down at the control panel. “Those daydreamers! Why don't they answer us? What do they need, a miracle?”
A voice broke from the speaker, “Unregistered ship—what the hell are you doing up there, running so dark?”
Shadow Jack turned back to her, speechless; she smiled. “Now try wishing for hydrogen.”
Shadow Jack took them in, cursing in the glare, to a moorage on Mecca's day side. “‘Not registered for main field.’ Those nosy bastards! How come we couldn't land in the dark, like the rest of those damn charmed tankers?” He stretched, leaning back, and cracked his knuckles.
“I suppose they don't want some tourist crashing into the distillery.” Betha relaxed at last, at the reassuring sound of magnetic cables attaching to the hull outside.
He pushed himself away from his seat. “That doesn't help us. If something goes wrong, we'll have a hell of a time gettin' out of here this way.” He moved toward the locker that held their spacesuits.
She sighed and nodded, reaching out to catch Rusty. “We'll just hope nothing goes wrong,” thinking that whoever had named him for shadows had named him well.
Betha clung momentarily to the edge of the open airlock, looking down, and away, to where the world ended too suddenly: the foreshortened horizon, like the edge of a gleaming, pitted knife blade against the blackness. And beyond it the stars, scarcely visible, impossibly distant across the lightless void. She saw five torn bodies, falling away into that void where no hand could stop their fall, where no voice could ever break the silence of an eternity alone …. She swayed, giddy. Shadow Jack touched her back.
“Go on, push off.” His voice crackled, distorted by his feeble speaker.
Behind his voice in her receiver she heard Rusty's fruitless scratching inside the pressurized carrying case; she saw figures coming toward them, moving along a mooring cable fastened amidships. She pushed herself out of the hatchway with too much force, drifted through a graceless arc to the ground. She began to rebound, caught at the mooring line and steadied herself. A mistake … And she couldn't afford to make another one. She was dealing with Belters, and she'd damn well better act like the Belters did. She felt tension burn away the fog of her exhaustion, as she watched Shadow Jack land easily on the bright, pockmarked field of rubble behind her. Above him she saw the sun Heaven, a spiny diamond in the crown of night, frigid and faraway—bizarre against the memory of her sun's bloody face in a dust-faded Morningside sky. As she turned away from the shadowed hull of the Lansing 04 she could see other ships moored; the stark light etched the crude patchwork of misshapen forms on her mind, overlaying her memory of the Ranger's ascetic perfection.
“You staying here long?”
She couldn't see the port man's face through the shielding mask of his helmet; she hoped her own faceplate hid her as well. “No longer than we have to.”
“Good; your exterior radiation level's med
ium-high. Not good for the plants.”
She looked down at the stained rubble, wondered if he was making a joke. She laughed, tentatively.
“You're the Lansing people?” Eight or ten more figures spilled out from behind him, with bulky instruments she realized were cameras.
“What are you here for?”
“Is it true that—”
“I thought everybody in the Main Belt was dead?”
She shifted Rusty's case, getting a better grip on the cable; their voices dinned inside her helmet. “We want to buy some hydrogen from your distillery.” She looked back at the port man. “I hope we don't have to walk to the other side?”
He laughed this time. “Nope. Not if you're paying customers.”
Betha noticed that he was armed.
“… heard you Main Belters mostly scrounge and steal,” the voices ran on. “Have you really got somethin' there to trade for snow?”
“How is it that a woman's in your position; are you sterile?”
“What's in the box?”
They surrounded her like wolves; she drew back, appalled. “I don't—”
“That's for us to know, junkers,” Shadow Jack said suddenly. “We're not here for handouts. We don't have to take crap from any of you.” He caught the guard's rigid sleeve. “Now, how do we get to the distillery?”
Betha's jaw tightened, but the guard raised his hands. “All right, you media boys, get off their backs. Take a picture of the ship; they didn't come from Lansing to pose for you. And be sure to mention Mecca Moorage Rentals.… No offense, buddy. Just follow the cable back to the shack; they're holdin' the car for you. Welcome to Mecca.”
“Say, is it true that—”
Shadow Jack drifted over the cable and pushed past them to the far side. Betha followed, her motion painfully nonchalant. “Thanks—buddy,” she said.
The guard nodded, or bowed, and so did Shadow Jack.