Man-Kzin Wars 9

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Man-Kzin Wars 9 Page 16

by Larry Niven


  After a while I got up and grabbed the tube back to my office. On the way, I thought about dossiers.

  C137PUDV—Allson, Joel K., ARM Captain. 33 standard years old. Born: Constantinople, Earth. Current assignment: Chief of Investigation—Tiamat Station, Alpha Centauri. Fingerprints, retina prints, gene scan. A holo of a man with a Flatlander face, Arab, African, Slav, Balt and Mongol—boringly nondescript on Earth, noticeably different on Wunderland. Date of birth, date of marriage, date of divorce. Medical history, educational records, details of promotion. Case reports from Bangkok, New Delhi and Berlin. Commendations for service and commendations for bravery. Date of transfer outsystem.

  A good record, I was proud of it. What’s the measure of a man? Nowadays it’s his data file. Dossiers are the tools of my trade. They give me a skeleton—my job is putting flesh on the bones.

  The best cops are just one step this side of the law—that’s how you get into a criminal’s mind. I was one of the best. In deep-cover work, the line gets blurry. You make so many sacrifices you start to feel entitled to fringe benefits your cover requires you to take anyway. The Brandywine case cost me my marriage. When it blew up, my position was—confused.

  The Conduct Review Board said, “Captain Allson’s actions were directly related to his assignment and he did not act with criminal intent.” They must have known more than I did. Prakit believed them because he believed in me but when the slot on Wunderland came up, he offered it, firmly. After Brandywine I’d never be safe undercover again, not on the Organization cases I’d made into my life. He never mentioned Holly, but it wasn’t my cover that worried him. I took the assignment. What else was I going to do?

  Wunderland—the name says it all. The colonists found a virgin paradise of mountains and forests, clear air and low gravity. They turned it into the jewel of Known Space, but the world they’d built was gone now. First the kzinti had invaded taking the land and turning the citizens into slaves—or dinner. Some fought, some fled, some tried to save what they could. Most just survived and carried on in a grimmer world.

  Forty years later, Earth attacked with lightspeed missiles, twelve thousand gigatonne impacts that punched to the planet’s core and blotted the suns from the sky. The UN wrecked the kzinti industrial base and much of Wunderland in the process. The survivors cheered anyway, and dreamed of liberation. And it came, faster than anyone could imagine, in an Earth armada with We Made It hyperdrives. The Provisional Government was formed and the Wunderlanders began to heal the scars of conquest. The rebels came out of the mountains and the pirates came in from the Swarm. The few kzinti left insystem adapted, disappeared into the forest, or died.

  But liberation didn’t end the war. Alpha Centauri became the UN advance base. The Provo Government was controlled by UN advisors and the Serpent Swarm made a UN territory outright. The economy went to full war production. The liberators quartered thousands of troops in Munchen in case the kzinti came back—and in case the Wunderlanders objected to the UN plan. Maybe the breakdown was inevitable. The kzinti were no harsher than the Provos and a lot less corrupt. A political party called the Isolationists emerged with a simple solution—Wunderland for Wunderlanders. The kzinti were gone, the Flatlanders could go too. By the time I arrived in Munchen, they were no longer a political party, they were a terrorist group. The Provisional Government’s anti-collaborator campaign had become a random witch hunt. The whole infrastructure was falling apart—transportation, medical support, civil services, even basic maintenance stripped to feed the UN war machine. The black market thrived on everything from pleasure drugs to biochips and a dozen crime webs warred over the spoils. Whole outland regions rejected the Provos and UN troops were used to impose control.

  I should have thrived in that environment—it was my kind of work, but the rot had spread to the ARM. Certain individuals, certain groups had immunity. Investigations that got too close were closed down. Critical evidence simply disappeared. I fought a losing battle to clean up the agency and made a lot of high-powered enemies. When they discovered they couldn’t shut me up, they kicked me upstairs, big time. I wound up with the top job on Tiamat, half a billion kilometers skyward.

  It was better on station. There was smuggling, theft, even murder—but no bombings, no assassinations, no gang wars. More importantly, the taint of corruption was gone. I needed that change most of all. It didn’t tempt me, but it disturbed too many sleeping ghosts for comfort.

  The tube stopped and I climbed out and hurried back to my office. I wanted to catch up to Hunter-of-Outlaws. One of the few wise decisions the UN made was to let the kzinti left in-system run their internal affairs as long as they toed the UN line when dealing with humans. Tiamat has a lot of kzinti, most in the Tigertown high-G section. They were surprisingly good citizens, considering, but keeping relations smooth was a balancing act. Hunter was my high-wire partner.

  He was on his way out when I got back. I grabbed him before he could leave and outlined my findings.

  “What do you think?” I asked when I was done.

  “Hrrr…If Koffman and Vorden are to be believed the prime suspect must be the human she left with, on evidence of contacts. Since she left no transit log, it is probable she traveled on her companion’s ident to the transport tunnel where she was killed. However…”he trailed off.

  “Go on,” I prompted.

  He continued reluctantly. “The body was found near the kzinti sector. The corpse looks like a butchered prey animal. On the basis of these facts I would suspect a kzin.”

  I nearly laughed but he was dead serious. “You don’t think a human would do that?”

  “I have seen humans kill each other but I have never seen them strip a carcass so. It is the act of a carnivore.”

  “Never underestimate humanity, my friend.” I grinned, but didn’t let my teeth show.

  He ignored the barb. “If it is possible, then we must consider it. It is conceivable the culprit was cutting the body up into manageable pieces and was disturbed before the task could be completed. Perhaps Miranda Holtzman held dangerous information and was killed to preserve its secrecy.”

  “I hadn’t considered that, but you’re right.” I didn’t go on.

  Hunter considered, pupils narrowing. “Your manner tells me you have another thought.” He knew humans well.

  “Perhaps she was killed by a schitz.” It was a wild idea, but it fit.

  The kzin looked baffled. Maybe he didn’t know humans so well after all. “What is a schitz?”

  “It’s a blanket term for someone who isn’t wired properly. They respond to hallucinations, become paranoid or megalomaniacal. Specifics vary but they can be homicidal.”

  He knew what hallucinations were but—“What is paranoid and megalomaniacal?” He pronounced the words awkwardly.

  “Paranoia is when you feel that the entire world is plotting against you. Megalomania is when you have delusions of grandeur.” His expression continued quizzical. “As if a telepath was convinced he was destined to be Patriarch.”

  “A kzin so defective would not survive. I have never heard of these conditions.”

  “It’s rare, the genes are being weeded out. There are drugs to control it too—but—med support is hard to get nowadays. On Wunderland people are dying for lack of it. It isn’t so bad up here…” I trailed off, thinking. Getting treatment was easy in the Swarm, but what if someone didn’t want treatment?

  “Why do you suspect a schitz if they are rare? Probability would suggest another scenario.”

  “Yah, it would. But Miranda was a pretty young woman last seen with an unknown male. Schitz crimes sometimes involve violent sexual motives.”

  He gave me another quizzical look. “Violent sex is a contradiction in terms. How can genes for this behavior propagate?”

  “Schitzies aren’t rational, I don’t know how they think. Dammit, I’ve only even heard of one schitz; this is just what I learned in training.” I thought about the case I knew. An autodoc misread a
med card and a quiet sculptor murdered his roommates in a blind rage. The error wasn’t his fault but…

  Hunter interrupted my reverie. “We have a wealth of possibilities—a kzin with a lost temper, a human with a definite motive and a connection to the victim, a schitz engaged in random murder. We lack information. I suggest we gain some.”

  I smiled. “Let’s do that.” Hunter could be relied on to cut to the heart of the matter. He gave me the kzin gesture that meant concurrence-between-equals and left. I watched him go and pondered. There was another possibility.

  Hunter’s dossier told me he’d once been Kurz-Commander, in control of the kzin base on Tiamat. During the occupation he’d gained a reputation as a hard but fair governor and a ruthless, efficient rebel hunter. He’d earned respect and even affection from his human charges but he was their prime target on the day Tiamat revolted. He survived because he was off station, organizing a ragtag group of tugs and mining ships into a last-ditch defense against the Terran fleet. He survived the battle and the labour camps and eventually wound up back on Tiamat—this time to maintain order among the stranded kzin. He was the logical choice, he knew more about the asteroid’s workings than anyone of either species. I relied heavily on his experience and judgment.

  That gave him a lot of power, and made me vulnerable.

  I called in Tamara Johansen, head of Criminal Investigation with Tiamat’s Goldskin police. She’d served on Tiamat since before the liberation and would have had my job if the UN hadn’t dumped me on top of her. It was a credit to her professionalism that she didn’t let her resentment show—much. When she arrived I filled her in.

  “Where do I fit?” she asked.

  “There’s a fourth scenario. Maybe Miranda was killed by a kzin with some connection to her. What if she knew something she wasn’t supposed to?”

  “What are you getting at?” She was intrigued.

  “Look, we’ve got fifty thousand kzinti on-station. They’re the ones smart enough to adapt to human rule. They know they have to work with us. That doesn’t mean they’ve changed allegiance. Hunter-of-Outlaws doesn’t mind suggesting that a kzin might have killed Miranda in a rage. What if a kzin killed Miranda because she knew too much about kzin underground activity?”

  She didn’t look impressed by my suspicions. “We know they run an intelligence net, but it isn’t much. I’d be surprised if they’ve got a secret worth the trouble a murder investigation will bring. They can’t even get information back to Kzin.”

  “What’s your theory then?”

  She held up an imaginary magnifying glass. “It is a cardinal error to speculate in advance of the facts.” She gave me an exaggerated scowl.

  I laughed and the ice broke a little. “Speculate anyway, Holmes, I won’t hold you to it.”

  She became serious again. “I’d suspect a Kdaptist.”

  “What’s a Kdaptist?”

  “They’re a kzin cult. They’ve only surfaced once in the swarm, but the case was a lot like this one. Right after the liberation, a fighter jock named Detoine disappeared. He was a real war hero, very famous. Had every decoration you could get, most of them twice. There was a huge search.”

  “So what happened?”

  “We got nothing. Then three years later a kzin got caught with a human skin—the DNA was Detoine’s. Turns out the kzin was a high priest in this breakaway cult. They believed their god abandoned them and they used Detoine’s skin in their rituals to try and get him back.”

  “And the rest of Detoine?”

  “They ate him. To absorb his heroic warrior spirit.”

  I shuddered involuntarily. “That’s a close enough pattern to be worth investigating. That’s your angle. Keep me posted.”

  She gave me a thumbs-up and turned to go. I stopped her before she got to the door.

  “Why do you think Hunter is covering this up?”

  She shrugged. “We don’t know that he is. He was still in a security camp down on Wunderland when all that happened, he probably doesn’t even know about it. Remember, Hunter-of-Outlaws is a kzin. His personal honour is the core of his identity.”

  “Meaning?”

  “Getting involved in a cover-up is risking his honour, so he probably isn’t. But if he is, it’ll be something big. Very big.”

  She went off to start her inquiries and I sat at my desk and pulled up the files on the Kdapt cult. Service number K78131965—Squadron Leader Jean-Marc Detoine. Valour Cross, UN Cross, UN Medal and bar, Flight Medal and two bars and a dozen lesser awards. He had forty kills in atmosphere and eighteen in space. UNF Command put a lot of pressure on when he went missing and the Goldskins turned Tiamat upside down. They found nothing. Three years later, a kzin named Trras-Squadron-Battle-Planner forgot his shoulder pack in a tube car. The Transit lost-and-found opened it and discovered Detoine’s skin, but Trras had scoured his quarters of evidence and committed suicide by the time the pack was traced. The search team got nothing but a paw-written Kdaptist creed. That dead-ended the case until a smart investigator connected the Kdapt view with the fact that Trras still carried his Fifth Fleet name. Seven kzin were found with similar names. All seven were involved with the cult. All seven were shot. I skipped the details and called up all unsolved murder files since the liberation. None came close to the Kdaptist’s flay-eviscerate-devour pattern.

  I pondered. If any Kdaptists were left, they weren’t very energetic. Anyway, Miranda hadn’t been eaten—at least not all of her. Perhaps Hunter simply didn’t consider the cult a possibility worth mentioning. So, what else was big enough for the kzin underground to risk a murder investigation, big enough for Hunter-of-Outlaws to put his personal honour on the line?

  Hyperdrive was the obvious answer. The UN’s ongoing campaign against kzinti interstellar trade was strangling their empire. That strategy depended entirely on their lack of FTL travel. Hyperdrive ships aren’t even allowed to dock at Tiamat because of the kzin population. The secret of hyperdrive was the only information they could get back to Kzin faster than a laser.

  Was that what was going on? Was Hunter involved? I forced the question out of my mind. If he was on the level, there was no problem. If he wasn’t, then Johansen and I would catch him—sooner or later. In the meantime, the angle was worth following. Trist Materials had nothing to do with hyperdrives, so Miranda wasn’t a primary-source spy. I did a movement trace for the last two weeks of her life, then cross-referenced to anyone connected to the hyperdrive project. I got about a hundred thousand possible contacts, including myself. Hunter was right, I needed more data. Without it, I’d drive myself paranoid.

  Thinking of paranoia brought me back to the schitz angle. I hoped it was wrong. I didn’t want to think about a human depraved enough to do what had been done to Miranda.

  Tiamat is a potato-shaped asteroid, 20 kilometers by 50 kilometers. The Swarm Belters formed it into a rough tube, spun it for gravity and honeycombed it with tunnels. It rotates every ten hours, creating a 1G pull around the circumference. Ships dock at the axis, low gravity industries take up the center of the tube, farms and parks take up the periphery. The Inferno was on a commercial arcade on the .4G level. After work, I tubed up to see how Miranda spent her last hours.

  It was packed when I got there. Sound dampers kept the pulsating music out of the pedmall but inside it was deafening. The dance floor was a mass of gyrating bodies in simulated free fall down a holographic bottomless chasm. Dante-esque demons circled above them before plunging past into the depths. The dancers took full advantage of the low G to leap and twirl in fantastic combinations. Artificial pheremones filled the air with sex and danger.

  I sat down at the bar. A local sound damper gave some relief from the thunderous beat. The usual selection of alcohol was on offer, as well as an array of pleasure drugs ranging from mild to mind bending. I ordered vodka and turned to survey the crowd. It was a mixed group, about half Swarm Belters and the rest an even mixture of Wunderlanders and Flatlanders. They were young and
well off—the engineers and technicians who formed the backbone of Tiamat’s industry, engaged in the species’ oldest rituals.

  I didn’t have a specific goal in mind, I just wanted to circulate and see what I learned. Putting together a dossier is easy nowadays. An ARM ident and a few keystrokes make a thousand databanks divulge your secrets—bank statements, travel logs, medical records and more. Your life is laid out for me to read like entrails before a soothsayer. I have a window into your soul and through it I can know more about you than your closest friends. And yet the bare facts never describe the real person behind them. That was my real purpose for being at the Inferno. I wanted to put flesh on Miranda Holtzman’s bones.

  A huge dragon with burning eyes and golden scales swooped over the dancers and immolated them in holographic flames. They obligingly shrieked and writhed to the floor as the beast roared in triumph, drowning out the music as the controller changed tracks. It flew off in forced perspective, flapping heavily as the dancers picked up the new beat. A tall, elfin blonde caught my eye. I smiled back but made no move to go over. A short conversation in body language. “You look like fun, come join me.” “Tempting ma’am, but no thanks.” I beckoned to the bartender to refill my drink. As he did I showed him Miranda’s holo. His manner stiffened ever so slightly. “I’ve already told the Goldskins everything I know.”

  “I’m not a Goldskin, I’m just doing a little unofficial inquiry.”

  He relaxed a bit. “Well, I’ve seen her of course. Her crowd were all regulars in here.”

  “Are they here tonight?” I didn’t look around.

  “They haven’t shown up yet. I don’t expect they will, since the news broke about her.” Miranda was on all the ’casts.

  “Yah, I understand. Listen did anything unusual happen the night she disappeared?”

  “I really couldn’t tell you; it was a week ago and I wasn’t paying attention. I didn’t know anything was wrong.” He looked anguished, as if her death was his fault.

 

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