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Titanborn: (Children of Titan Book 1)

Page 17

by Rhett C. Bruno


  Heavily armed Pervenio officers were posted everywhere, and there were dozens of adjacent hangars being used to test military equipment and various other technologies. Zhaff led me to a set of towering doors clad entirely with mahogany. Two officers stood outside, but they didn’t say or do anything besides stare straight ahead.

  A retinal scanner was built into one of the doors. Zhaff placed his eye-lens against it, and the doors swung open without delay.

  “I will wait here,” he said, stepping aside.

  I took short, wary strides inside until the door sealed shut behind me. The inside of Luxarn Pervenio’s office was much like the rest of his compound—pearly metals everywhere with even more wood trimming. There was even a wooden molding wrapping the ceiling that was hand- sculpted with the images of fruits and vines, some of which were long extinct. An assortment of old-world relics lined the walls, from faded paintings to marble statues that may have been missing limbs but remained remarkably life-like.

  The opposite end of the room had a wide viewport extending along an angled portion of the floor. Through it floated Saturn, the planet’s icy rings slashing like a sickle blade through the blackness. Luxarn sat at a desk fashioned out of mahogany, same as the door, back to me and facing the translucency.

  “Do you realize how vast our solar system is?” he said. His smooth voice teemed with the eloquence of a man raised among the highest echelon of Earthers.

  I assumed he was waiting for a response since he stopped speaking, but I was too much in disbelief of where I was standing to come up with anything snappy. I remained quiet until he continued speaking on his own.

  “Trillions upon trillions of kilometers of dark, empty space and here we men are, longing to fill it all.” He rotated his chair to face me. “Truly remarkable, isn’t it, Mr. Graves?”

  His face had a peculiar look, one that never showed on any of the hundreds of newscasts I’d seen him on. It wasn’t instantly obvious like cheap cosmetic surgeries were, but there was an undeniable artificial quality to him. He had the bone structure of a middle-aged man, but stretched over the top of it was smooth, handsome skin that looked like it belonged to someone not beyond his mid-twenties. His combed brown hair didn’t have even a touch of gray to it, and his hazel eyes still bore the insatiable hunger of youth. Despite all of that, I knew he was older than I was, considering that according to recordings, he was already a teenager when his father first sent crewed transports to Saturn before the Great Reunion.

  “It is—” I froze. I wasn’t even sure what to call him… Mr. Pervenio, or boss, or sir. He was the wealthiest man in all of Sol, and arguably the most powerful if one subscribed to the idea that the USF was merely a figurehead like I did. I settled on “Sir.”

  “There is no need to be coy, Mr. Graves,” he replied. “I’ve heard tales about your sharp tongue. I wouldn’t want you to restrain it on my account. Come, sit.” He beckoned me to the chair opposite his. He was as stately in his gestures as Zhaff was robotic. Even the manner in which the loose sleeves of his exquisite crimson tunic drooped seemed intentional.

  “How many stories?” I countered, not wanting to disappoint. I stepped forward and took a seat, though not without checking my peripheries to ensure we were completely alone. The situation was too unusual for me to feel at ease.

  “Enough of them. I keep track of all my collectors. I have a great deal of respect for what you do for me.”

  “And yet, somehow, I have a hard time believing you’ve invited me here to congratulate me on a job well done.”

  “I suppose not,” he said, amused. “Are you thirsty?”

  “Always.” If we were about to discuss retirement plans, I wasn’t about to deny an opportunity to drink with Luxarn Pervenio, or anybody, to be honest. That was another lesson I’d have to teach Zhaff before I was booted out. Never turn down a free drink.

  Luxarn looked away from me. “Bot, can you retrieve the barrel-aged whiskey, 2284 vintage?”

  “Yes, sir,” an automated voice with a highborn inflection responded.

  Something zoomed by my head so quickly I ducked and nearly fell from my chair. When I looked up, I saw a metal sphere hovering near a counter built into the wall. Its tiny anti-grav boosters sounded like a vacuum and left behind a trail of distortion from its underside. Delicate appendages extended from all over its bulbous body. One lifted a bottle of whiskey with a tag I didn’t recognize and poured it into two glasses being held by others.

  “Remarkable prototype, isn’t it?” Luxarn asked. “I haven’t thought of a name yet, but one day, households throughout Sol will be able to own one of their own.”

  “A personal bartender,” I said. “Not bad.”

  “‘The Pervenio Service Bot will help with all of your everyday needs,’” he pronounced as if he were quoting somebody. “Or something like that. I pay a large sum for people to think of better slogans than me.”

  “I got into the wrong line of business.”

  The bot placed two orbs of ice into each glass before soaring back over to us. On the front side, or what I had to assume was it, was a large, circular, yellow-hued lens. The way it rotated and focused reminded me of Zhaff’s eye-lens. As it grew nearer, I could distinguish all of the mobile panels of its metal shell, which likely concealed other useful arms. One probably had a screwdriver, and I had no question that one day another would wield a pistol. With humanity’s focus on expansion, robotics was one field that had fallen by the wayside. It seemed I might live long enough to see Mr. Pervenio change that.

  It stopped by the edge of the table, wavering a bit, and placed our glasses down harder than expected. The clank echoed. Luxarn’s glass nearly spilled, but he was able to catch it.

  “Still working out a few kinks,” he groused before raising his drink. “This whiskey is from the year we made contact with the Ring. Most men wouldn’t appreciate it. I’m sure you will.”

  I nodded and returned the gesture. Then we each took a swig without saying anything else. I preferred the bite of something cheaper to wake me up, but it went down smoother than any drink I’d ever had the pleasure of tasting.

  I wiped my tingling lips and went to speak, then noticed the yellow glare of the bot. I was exhausted with the color. “Sir, would you mind?”

  Luxarn swallowed a mouthful of whiskey and laughed. He patted his mouth with a folded napkin sitting on his desk. “Bot, please go and wait by the counter.”

  “Yes, sir.” It hummed away, finally allowing me to focus.

  “So why did you invite me here, sir?” I asked. “Zhaff and I are about to head down to Titan to catch the smugglers you’re after.”

  “Straight to the point,” Luxarn said. “I like that. You’d have made a shrewd businessman.”

  “I’ll add it to my list of occupations to consider after I retire.”

  “Retire?” His brow furrowed. “I hope not yet. Especially not after what you and Zhaff were able to accomplish on the Piccolo. I remain in dire need of your services. You see, my father risked all his wealth backing the efforts to send colony transports to Saturn and reunite with our lost kin. Now Ringers like the one you encountered on Earth or saw on that horrific recording are threatening to shatter the fragile alliance I have spent half a century cultivating here.”

  I did my best to conceal my relief. I had a feeling I’d gained a bit of rope in my job security after the Piccolo, but it was still nice to hear it out loud. “To be honest, sir,” I said, “after Zhaff’s report about what happened on Earth, I never thought I’d be here.”

  “Yes. I saw every excruciating detail of that report. How is your new partner, by the way?”

  “Excruciating.” I downed my whiskey and set the glass on the table. “But he’s good at what he does, and I can respect that.”

  Luxarn suppressed a chuckle. “Trust me, Cogents definitely have their uses, but Zhaff wouldn’t have gotten anything out of that Ringer anyway. I doubt he knew any information other than where to place the bomb.
According to Director Sodervall, dozens of the Ringers responsible for inciting recent riots on Titan have been detained, and none of them seem to have any reason other than distaste for people like you and me. Someone, somewhere, told them to do something awful, and they listened without asking who. These Children of Titan are a new sort of enemy. No structured leadership, and yet incredibly precise.”

  “Yeah, Zhaff and I have already gotten a taste of that. But we’ve got our assignment, sir, so what exactly are you asking?”

  “I invited you here because I know you’re not stupid. A bit rash perhaps, but over three decades, you’ve only managed to serve my company loyally. As I said, I do pay attention. There’s not a single collector I know of who’s been on the job as long as you have without calling it quits or winding up dead. So either you’re lucky or you’re exceptionally good at what you do.”

  “A little bit of both if you ask me. More unlucky than not lately, it seems.”

  “Perhaps, but your recent failures have given you a greater glimpse at the kind of fanatics we’re dealing with. That, and despite everything Zhaff noted about your inability to take his advice on Earth, he also informed me that you were the one who got a lead on the bomber and managed to save his life on the Piccolo.”

  “Did he?” I asked, completely shocked.

  “He did. And even he missed the fact that the explosion in New London was merely a distraction, which is why you are here now. I’ve never seen him work well with anybody else.”

  “Well might be a bit of a stretch.”

  “Yet here we are.” Luxarn paused and took the final sip of his drink. He lifted the empty glass in my direction. “Would you like another?”

  I happily obliged. One word to the bot and it carried the bottle over and topped us off, fresh ice and all. The Ring had no lack of it.

  “Zhaff is extremely important to Pervenio Corp,” he continued, “so I’m hoping that after you successfully retrieve what was stolen along with those responsible, you will stay here and continue to work with him so that we can bring an end to these Children of Titan. Call it an extended assignment.”

  The request for a prolonged partnership wasn’t the way I saw our conversation going. Naturally, I couldn’t say no to him, even if the thought of countless more missions and months alongside Zhaff made me itch. There was no better person to have stuffing your pockets than Luxarn Pervenio. Director Sodervall’s unexpectedly pleased reaction to seeing me on Pervenio station was beginning to make a little more sense. If I had the backing of Luxarn, then his only choice was to force a smile and act like my closest friend… though I couldn’t explain his treatment of Zhaff.

  “For how long?” I asked before I could stop myself and think of a gentler way to put it.

  Luxarn’s eyes narrowed, and for a moment, I saw the ravenous glare of the man who owned half of Sol. “As long as I require,” he said sternly. “This is too crucial a time to display weaknesses. I have Venta Co and Red Wing Company breathing down my neck, trying to prove that Jupiter is as viable an option for gas harvesting as Saturn. After that horrid attack on the Piccolo, people may start listening to them. If we can’t continue to work safely here, then immigrants might stop coming. I can’t have that.”

  “No need to explain to me. I’ll continue to work with the freak for as long as it takes, but only under one condition.” I realized that I might have again been too bold. Luxarn’s eyebrows lifted in astonishment. He definitely wasn’t used to being spoken to in such a manner.

  “And what is that?”

  I took a deep breath. It was too late to back down. “I won’t take orders from a kid. I want the same deal as on Earth. He can offer whatever advice he wants, but I’m in charge.”

  Luxarn’s expression relaxed, as if he’d expected a different request. “Of course. Deferring to your experience will do him well. And know that you will be paid generously for looking after him. Twice the usual rates, considering he doesn’t need credits.”

  “I had a feeling he didn’t,” I replied, withholding a grin. I wanted to say that if I’d known how beneficial screwing up a job would be, I would’ve done it more often, but I decided to hold my tongue. I didn’t want to remind Luxarn of that after receiving such a promising offer. Instead, I tossed back the rest of my whiskey, stood, and saluted him. “Thank you, sir.”

  “No. Thank you, Mr. Graves.”

  As I turned to leave, he stopped me by clearing his throat.

  “Oh,” he began calmly, “and Zhaff may look young, but I would advise heeding his counsel when you can. That freak is my son.”

  I almost choked on air as I processed what he said. I stared back at Luxarn, who leaned forward with his fingers steepled on the top of his desk and his hard gaze boring through me. The spherical bot hovered beside him, all-too-familiar yellow lens aimed straight in my direction. I knew I probably should’ve kept walking, but the liquor in my belly convinced me to do otherwise.

  “What are you saying?” I said. His words didn’t leave much room for guessing, but I was caught off guard. As far as I knew, Luxarn Pervenio didn’t have a legitimate heir to his empire yet.

  Luxarn poured himself another glass of whiskey and drank the entire thing in a single gulp. He wiped his mouth with his hand this time. Then he said, “His mother was an offworlder from Mars without a name. I couldn’t have an illegitimate smear my name, so I made sure he was kept a secret and left him in her care. That didn’t mean I could help loving him, but he was always a troubled boy. He didn’t speak for the first four years of his life… he just watched, waited.

  “As he got older, others his age didn’t take kindly to his silence, but he couldn’t be bullied. He couldn’t be rattled. My son would sit there and take the beatings until one day a boy went too far. Unable to get a rise out of Zhaff, he beat his face so bad that sight in his left eye was lost.”

  “I’m sorry, sir, but I—” I had to clear my throat to continue. “I’ve seen him at work. No way would he have let some boy do that to him.”

  “Not the Zhaff you know now, no. That was when I decided to risk taking him in myself. My best doctors claimed he had a particular concoction of social disorders afflicting him, and said that he would always suffer from dissociation. My genes don’t take kindly to being told something’s impossible. I decided to think of a way he could make use of his peculiar talents; a way he could realize his worth to the future of humanity.”

  “The Cogent Initiative,” I said.

  “Yes. But I had no idea how proficient he would become. After only a few short years of focused training, he could outfight my finest soldiers despite his size, and outthink my finest agents. I quickly sought out others like him to give them all a purpose. The bastards discarded by the USF because they bore a chronic disease.

  “They can never replace men like you, of course—those with instincts and passion for their work—so it was no accident I paired you two together. We reviewed many potential partners, and you were my top choice to guide him in our brutal world. Now here we are. Together, who knows what a force you two can become?” Luxarn wore the same dreamy-eyed look on his face he’d been wearing when I first walked in and found him staring out into space.

  I was speechless. Of all the collectors he had throughout Sol, Luxarn Pervenio had selected me to work with his only son. It was just as hard to believe that as it was to believe a man like him could possibly have fathered an illegitimate child like I had. But he had no reason to lie. It seemed I had more in common with the wealthiest man in Sol than I’d ever imagined.

  “I’m honored, sir, but why are you telling me all this now?” I asked. It was the first thing that popped into my head.

  “Without knowing who he really is, you saved my son’s life. I know how difficult he can be. For that, you deserve to know what you’re dealing with. Earth was one thing, but down on Titan, there may be dangers even he is not prepared for.”

  I swallowed hard. “And I’m grateful, but—”

&n
bsp; He waved his hand to silence me. “Very few people know what I’ve just revealed to you. I trust that you will keep it our little secret. The USF would love any excuse to discredit my proposal to expand the Departure Lottery.”

  I forced a complacent smile, knowing full well that I didn’t really have any other choice. “What’s another secret?”

  “I knew I could count on you.” Luxarn clapped his hands and leaned back in his chair. “It’s time you go to him, then. Good luck down there, Mr. Graves. Now that you know what he means to this company, I expect you will do everything in your power to get the job done by his side.”

  “Everything,” I affirmed. I went to take a step away, and then another thought crossed my mind. “Does he know, sir?”

  “Have you ever tried to withhold the truth from him?”

  Luxarn put on a haughty grin that warned me not to dare press the matter any further. I didn’t. I wasn’t sure what else to say anyway. I smiled and nodded, and somehow managed to lift my suddenly very heavy-feeling legs so I could trudge out of the room.

  SIXTEEN

  A handful of moons hovered outside the viewport of the small shuttle transporting Zhaff and me to Titan. They were big and small, far and near. Titan was the largest of them—a pale-orange orb dappled with pockets of shadow that gave it the appearance of a windswept skull. I found it fitting for a place where the locals were as icy as the temperature.

  I peered over at Zhaff. He’d been staring at his hand-terminal the entire trip, his eye-lens rifling over information so rapidly, I wasn’t sure how he retained any of it. After what Luxarn had told me, it was impossible to view him the same way. I’d spent months—albeit most of it in hibernation—not knowing I was directly beside royalty. Even Director Sodervall didn’t appear to know, judging by the way he treated Zhaff. I wouldn’t say I felt deceived because I knew that I was part of a very small group privy to the truth, but I honestly think I would’ve been happier having remained ignorant. Strong as Luxarn’s whiskey was, the news was completely sobering.

 

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