In the Stormy Red Sky
Page 7
"Please," Miranda said. "Take this. I don't know, but I thought . . ."
Adele took the packet in both hands. The wrapping paper wasn't sealed or tied. She unwrapped the book inside.
The Crystal Book of Verse for Children, with no editor listed. On the pictorial boards a little girl sat primly under a tree, reading from a book to the boy who sprawled on his belly listening to her. He'd laid his straw hat on the grass beside him.
Adele felt her eyes tingling. She opened the book carefully. The end papers were decorated with anthropomorphized animals reading. Someone had scribbled on it with crayon, but very neatly printed in white on the upper outside corner was the number 0017.
"Adele, is it yours?" the other woman said.
"Yes," said Adele. She couldn't see anything, just the overhead glow scattered by her tears. "When I was eight, I catalogued my library. This was the accession number."
Miranda stood. "I wasn't sure," she said, "but . . .Well, I didn't know what the number meant, but I didn't think anyone living in Block G on Reed Street had put it there. I'll be going now."
"Wait," said Adele, standing also. She wiped her eyes with the back of her left wrist. She wasn't sure what she wanted to say, but she knew she couldn't let the other woman leave without having said something to her. "I . . . Thank you, Miranda. This is—"
She weighed the little book of poetry in her hand.
"I wasn't a boisterous child," she said, "but I was happy enough. I think I was happy. I had an innocence at that age which I suppose I would've lost regardless but which was appropriate to the time. And which I remember fondly."
Adele cleared her throat, her eyes meeting Miranda's. "Thank you for returning this," she said formally.
Miranda smiled broadly, but she was crying too. "Adele," she said, glancing aside. "You've done so much for Daniel. I know . . ."
She shook her head as if to clear debris from it. She looked up and said fiercely, "Daniel's strong and brave and very clever and I know that. He's smart enough to use you, Adele. He should, the Republic needs it, and you're willing—"
"I'm more than willing!" Adele said.
"Yes, of course you are!" Miranda said. "But that doesn't make the price you pay any less, does it? Does it?"
Her voice softened. "And I thought somebody ought to give you something back," she said. "I'm glad this little book was—"
She forced a smile.
"—something."
Adele consciously willed herself to relax. After a moment, she succeeded and took a deep breath. "Yes," she said, "it was a great deal. You're very perceptive, Miranda."
Miranda squeezed Adele's right hand briefly between the fingers and thumb of her own. "I'm glad," she said. "But I have to be going now. Mother expects me."
"I'll walk you to the tram stop," Adele said, reaching for the loggia's door. To her surprise, Tovera opened it from the inside and nodded courteously.
"Oh, that won't be necessary," Miranda said. "I'm used to travelling alone. I'll be quite safe. We, ah, haven't kept servants since Dad died."
She reached into a pocket concealed in the cape's lining and brought out a stubby shock rod, holding it in her fist. A touch with either end on bare flesh would knock the victim into the middle of next week.
"And I was rather good at lacrosse in school," she added with pardonable pride. "So even without it I wouldn't be completely helpless."
"Yes, I see," Adele said, smiling faintly. "I'll walk you to the street door, then."
The doorman watched them coming down the stairs. He didn't swing the panel open until Tovera, leading with her attaché case in her left hand—though it was closed—nodded to him.
Miranda stepped outside, then turned and squeezed Adele's hand again. "Please take care of Daniel, Adele," she said.
"Yes," said Adele. "I'll try to."
She stood with Tovera on the doorstep, watching the young woman taking firm strides toward the tram stop at the head of the close. "Do you want me to go with her anyway?" Tovera said.
"No, that won't be necessary," Adele said. Rather than turning her head, she kept Tovera in her peripheral vision. "I didn't expect you back so soon."
Tovera shrugged. Her lips showed a smile of sorts. "Castillo called me," she said. Seeing Adele's blank look, she added, "He's your butler. They were a little worried."
"Worried?" said Adele in surprise, now staring at her servant. "About Miranda?"
Tovera shrugged again. "They didn't know what was going to happen," she said. "Sometimes people like to have me around when they aren't sure what's happening."
Appearing to watch Miranda at the lighted stop, she added, "They like you, mistress, the staff does. They worry, and they're very proud of you."
"I don't understand," Adele said. "Proud of Daniel, you mean?"
"They think they're Mundys, mistress," Tovera said. "Whoever pays their wages, they think they're retainers of Mundy of Chatsworth. The cook's helper knows your biography backward and forward. Even if you don't know their names."
"I will know their names before I go to sleep," Adele said quietly. "I may need your help going over them."
A computer-guided tramcar pulled onto the siding and stopped; its magnetic levitators clacked against the overhead rail. Miranda got on and the car hissed off into the night again.
"Captain Leary has a clever one there, mistress," Tovera said.
"Yes," said Adele. She looked at the Crystal Book of Verse for Children until her vision blurred again. "And a very smart one."
CHAPTER 5
Bergen and Associates Shipyard, Cinnabar
Adele's kit was already aboard the Milton, but she carried what looked like a small toolbox as she arrived for liftoff. It contained specialist equipment and software from Mistress Sand.
The computers which guided starships through the Matrix were as powerful as human ingenuity could create. Adele's kit could harness that power to the work of decryption.
She smiled dismissively. For most of the problems she faced, the data unit along her thigh was more than adequate. Perfectly ordinary hardware was capable of doing more than one person in a thousand could imagine. The same was true of the pistol in her pocket.
"I wonder if some of the crew will get lost in the corridors?" Tovera said. "Being used to the Sissie and going to a ship this size."
Adele wasn't sure if Tovera was joking. Tovera did tell jokes, though again, Adele wasn't sure whether she understood them or if she was just working on her self-appointed task of imitating a normal human being. Tovera had gotten quite good at acting as though she had a conscience, for example.
"Perhaps there's a sense imprinted at birth that allows spacers to find their way around ships," Adele said. "Like the instinct of migratory animals."
She wasn't very good at jokes either. There was a reason Tovera had attached herself to Adele: the personality gap wasn't as wide as it would have been with someone like Daniel.
A black aircar overflew the harbor, then rotated into the wind and lowered itself onto the pad on top of the offices. It was a luxury vehicle, though from this angle Adele hadn't been able to make out the gilt coat of arms on the rear doors.
She wondered if Deirdre Leary had come to see her brother off, though that hadn't happened in the past. Admiral Anston doubtless had, or had access to, a limousine also.
The quay of Bergen and Associates was as crowded as it had been during Daniel's promotion ceremony, but this time the human beings—largely the crew going aboard, as Adele herself was doing—were less of a concern than the trucks and lowboys carrying the final stores for a long voyage.
The driver of a stake-bed carrying armored containers of main-gun ammunition was particularly noticeable. He kept edging up to the bumper of the laundry truck just ahead, revving his diesel in blats of black exhaust which subsided in the wild ringing of valves.
"I'll lead," said Tovera. "I think I'll ask that trucker—"
She was looking at the noisy stake-bed.
/> "—to shut down. Then we'll cross in front of him."
"Lady Mundy!" bellowed an unfamiliar male voice from behind them. "Wait for Senator Forbes, if you please!"
Adele turned, managing to halt her left hand's dive for her tunic pocket when she heard the senator's name. Twenty yards away, three servants—or aides—wearing green-yellow-green Forbes collar flashes were coming down the narrow outside staircase from the rooftop landing pad. Senator Forbes followed them, while last in line was the very muscular young man who'd called to Adele.
Tovera shifted so that no one on the staircase could read her lips. "Do you know Forbes?" she asked.
"No," said Adele without trying to conceal her face. She rarely said anything that she wouldn't repeat publicly in a loud voice if the occasion arose. "To the best of my knowledge, I've never seen her before."
She paused for thought, then added, "I believe Daniel met her socially. I looked into her background when I learned of our mission, of course, but she was a junior back-bencher at the time of the Proscriptions. She wasn't even part of the Beneficial Party, though she joined it not long after."
Adele touched her data unit. Is Forbes still a member of the Beneficial Party, or did she resign when she lost the leadership fight? Not that it mattered, of course, but Adele liked to have details right even when they didn't matter. Because in the long run, nothing mattered.
"Go on, make sure my quarters are prepared," Forbes said, brushing the servants toward the boarding ramp with the backs of her fingers. "I'll wait here with Lady Mundy till there's less congestion."
She grimaced, making her face look even more than usual like that of a marmoset. "I hate travel off Cinnabar, and this chaos on boarding—"
She repeated her brushing gesture.
"—makes it even worse."
The servants looked doubtful, but they joined a group of cheerfully drunken spacers on their way to the ramp. The traffic wasn't as bad as it appeared, because the heavy trucks were stopping under the big gantry. There the loads were transferred to grumbling lighters, to be ferried to the cruiser's C Level cargo holds. It was only when the trucks drove out from beneath the gantry that they crossed the line of pedestrians heading for the boarding bridge to the main hatch and they did that one at a time.
"Should I go, Bev?" the young man said. His expression was bovine but not unpleasant. His suit was tan with bronze highlights, hung on him as though he were a display mannequin. "Or stay with you?"
"Oh, go onto the ship, John," Forbes said. "I won't need you tonight. Lady Mundy and I will be all girls together for a time."
Tovera's eyes flicked from Forbes to Adele. Her look of mild amusement was perhaps a little more lively than usual.
"One of the things I dislike most about this business," Forbes said as the husky servant wandered off, "is that there'll be nobody aboard to talk to besides you, Leary, and of course Robinson. And it won't be much better any of the places we're going, though as I understand it we'll be landing on Paton. Isn't that right?"
"I can check whether Captain Leary has filed a course with Cinnabar Control," Adele said carefully, taking the data unit from its pocket.
If Adele needed to, she could open every sector of the Milton's astrogation computer even if the captain believed he'd locked it. She had no reason to do that. She and Daniel had discussed all aspects of the voyage, including planetfall on Paton to replenish and get the latest local intelligence on the situation in the Hegemony.
She didn't say that to the senator. Whatever Forbes thought, a politician wasn't in either of Adele's chains of command.
"Oh, no matter," said Forbes with a peeved gesture. "I'm sure we do. Beckford lives on Paton, in a palace, I gather. Do you know Prince Willie, Mundy?"
"I know of him," Adele said, even more carefully than before. "We've never met. He's a friend of yours?"
It was hard to say whether William Beckford was better known for his wealth or for his dissipation. His reputation had grown bad enough that he'd left—been encouraged to leave—Cinnabar. It was approaching the point that money wouldn't have been able to stave off official inquiries any longer.
There were stories about children being brought to Beckford's mansion and never being seen again. That might not be true, but it was quite certain that an investigation would uncover matters which would be extremely embarrassing to those who'd shared the entertainment. Some of those participants were rumored to be highly placed in the Senate.
Forbes snorted, though the reaction was good-humored. "Not in the way you mean," she said. "I've done a few favors for his business interests, and he's done some favors for me—and quite a few other people. But only in a business way, so far as I'm concerned."
She paused, looking at the great ship without affection. "Still, he'll have a chef," she continued. "He's famous for his table. And I'll be able to sleep in something other than a steel box for the nights that I'm on Paton."
She gave Adele a mocking grin. "That's worth smiling at the greasy little toad, don't you think? I wouldn't have done it before the Speakership election—but then, I wouldn't be traipsing off to the back end of nowhere if the election hadn't come out the way it did. Not so?"
"There's nothing in my family history, Senator . . . ," Adele said, smiling faintly. "To encourage anyone to take my advice on a political question. Perhaps Captain Leary could help you there."
Despite Adele's smile, Forbes looked dumbfounded as she took in the words. "By the Gods, Mundy," she muttered. "You do have brass balls, don't you? Well, I'd been told that."
Adele shrugged. "I've learned over the years that it's better to bring the past up myself," she said. "It's easier to confine the discussion to the facts than will be the case when others talk behind my back."
The truckload of 8-inch rounds roared into position under the gantry. The driver didn't shut down, but at least he kept his foot off the accelerator. The harbor was still very noisy, but the snarl of the diesel had been causing Adele to react at a subconscious level.
Forbes was saying something about travel. She broke off and in a sharper tone said, "You find it humorous, Mundy?"
"Not your discomfort," Adele said calmly. "Particularly since I share it myself. I find it useful to concentrate on something else during insertion and extraction, though I still feel as though—"
She shrugged. "Actually," she said, "it varies each time as to what unpleasant symptom I'll feel. I think the worst is when my whole body seems to have been turned inside out, but you may have a different particular dislike."
She repeated her slight smile. "Almost everyone does, you know," she said. "Even veteran spacers like Captain Leary and Woetjans. She's our bosun."
Adele had really been smiling at the concept of courtesy, which she'd been considering while the senator nattered about the few short voyages she'd made before now. People like the truck driver wouldn't ever learn courtesy—or rather, they'd never manage to control angry, discourteous outbursts when something frustrated them.
And it would probably be an overreaction to shoot them. They might try a little harder not to be offensive, though, if they realized there were people like Tovera and Tovera's mistress who considered all options for removing an irritation.
Forbes grimaced again. "Well, nothing to do about it," she said. "If I don't get off Cinnabar, I'll be snubbed by every back-bencher who thinks I should've treated him like the sun shone out of his butt. And don't think Speaker Bailey won't be egging them on, the little weasel!"
"Do you expect to be successful in your mission, Senator?" Adele said. She'd like to have brought her data unit up, but she'd have to sit down to use it. She didn't want to do that here in the oil and dirt while wearing her 2nd class uniform, her Dress Grays.
She smiled again. She wouldn't sit down without a better reason than that she was bored by Forbes's chatter, which wouldn't be a politic thing to demonstrate anyway.
"Success?" snapped Forbes. "Yes, of course. This boy Hieronymos just wants to be to
ld he's important. Fine, he's important—and I needed to get off-planet, as I said, so everyone gains. Why, I might've decided to take a junket like this regardless!"
And the grapes were probably sour anyway, thought Adele, remembering a very ancient fable. Human nature hadn't changed since long before humanity's development of interstellar travel.
Adele was sure her thought hadn't reached her facial muscles, but the senator looked sidelong at her anyway. "Perhaps," Forbes said, "I'll change my mind about having Johnnie DeNardo in tonight. He's not much brighter than a cucumber, but at least he's warmer."
Adele said nothing.