“What do you want done with the Tatoosh woman?” Flattery felt his smile droop, and he tried to pick it up a bit.
“Beatriz Tatoosh is very helpful to us,” Flattery said. “She has a passion for the Voidship project that we could not buy.” He raised his hand to stop Nevi’s interruption. “I know what you’re thinking—that little tryst between her and Ozette. That’s been over for over a year—”
“It wasn’t a ‘little tryst,’” Nevi interrupted. “It lasted years. They were wounded together at the miners’ rebellion two years ago—”
“I know women,” Flattery hissed, “and she will hate him for this. Running away with a younger woman … sabotaging HoloVision and the Voidship. Didn’t she do the broadcast as written last night?”
A nod from Nevi, and silence.
“She knows as well as we do that mentioning Ozette as party to this abduction would lend it a popularity and a credence that we cannot afford. It is over between them, and as soon as he’s back in our hands everything will be over for Ben Ozette. The Tatoosh woman will be aboard the orbital assembly station this afternoon and out of our hair.”
At Nevi’s continued silence, Flattery rubbed his hands together briskly.
“Now,” he said, “let me show you how I’ve kept the kelp pruned back for the last couple of years. You know how the people resist this, it always takes a disaster to get them to go along with it. Well, the kelp’s will was breached long ago by our lab at Orcas. Too complex to explain, but suffice it to say it is not merely a matter of mechanical control—diverting currents and the like. Thanks to the neurotoxin research we tapped into its emotions. Remember that stand of kelp off Lilliwaup, the one that hid the Shadow commando team?”
Nevi nodded. “I remember. You told Zentz ‘Hands off.’”
“That’s right,” Flattery said. He drew himself upright in his recliner and snapped the backrest up to meet him. He keyed the holo and automatically the lights dimmed further. Between the two men, in the center of the room, appeared in miniature several monitor views of a Merman undersea outpost, a kelp station at the edge of a midgrowth stand. Kelp lights flickered from the depths beyond the outpost. The kelp station had been built atop the remnants of an old Oracle.
Oracles, as the Pandorans called them, were those points where the kelp rooted into the crust of the planet itself. Because of the incredible depth of these three-hundred-year-old roots, and because the Mermen of old planted them in straight lines, Pandora’s crust often fractured along root lines. It was such a series of fractures that had given birth to Pandora’s new continents and rocky island chains.
Flattery’s private garden, “the Greens,” lay underground in a cavern that had once been an Oracle. Flattery had had his people burn out the three-hundred-meter-thick root to accommodate his landscaping plans.
Three views clarified on the holo stage in front of the two men: The first was of the inside of a kelp station, with a balding Merman fretting at his control console; the second, outside the station, from the kelp perimeter, focused on the station’s main hatch; the third, also outside the station, took in the gray mass of kelp from the rear hatch. The Merman looked very, very nervous.
“His children have been swimming in the kelp,” Flattery said. “He is worried. Their airfish are due for replacement. All have been dutifully taking their antidote. The kelp, when treated with my new blend, shows an unhealthy attraction for the antidote.”
There were occasional glimpses of the children among the kelp fronds. They moved in the ultra-slow-motion of dreams, much slower than undersea movement dictated, considerably slower than the usual polliwog wriggle of children.
The Merman activated a pulsing tone that shut itself off after a few blinks.
“That’s the third time he’s sounded ‘Assembly,’” Flattery said. Anticipation made it difficult for him to sit still.
The Merman spoke to a female, dressed in a worksuit, wet from her day’s labor of wiring up the kelp stand for Current Control.
“Linna,” he said, “I can’t get them out of the kelp. Those airfish will be dry … what’s happening out there?”
She was thin and pale, much like her husband, but she appeared dreamy-eyed and unfocused. Most of those who worked the outposts did not wear their dive suits inside their living quarters. She worked the fringes of what the Mermen called “the Blue Sector.”
“Maybe it’s the touch of it,” she murmured. “The touch … special. You don’t work in it, you don’t know. Not slick and cold, like before. Now the kelp feels like, well …” She hesitated, and even on the holo Flattery could detect a blush.
“Like what?” the Merman asked.
“I … lately it feels like you when it touches me.” Her blush accented her crop of thick blonde hair. “Warm, kind of. And it makes me tingle inside. It makes my veins tingle.”
He grunted, squinted at her, and sighed. “Where are those wots?”
He glanced out the plaz beside him into the dim depths beyond the compound. Flattery could detect no flicker of children swimming, and he felt a niggling sense of glee at the Merman’s growing apprehension.
The Merman activated his console tone again and the proper systems check light winked on with it. His finger snapped the scanner screen.
“They were just there,” the man blurted. “This is crazy. I’m going code red.” He unlocked the one button on the console that Flattery knew no outpost wanted to press: Code Red. That would notify Current Control in the Orbiter overhead and Communications Central at the nearest Merman base that the entire compound was in imminent danger.
“You see?” Flattery said. “He’s getting the idea.”
“I’m going out there,” the man announced to his wife, “you stay put. Do you understand?”
No answer. She sat, still dreamy-eyed, watching the fifty-meter-long fronds of blue kelp that reached her way from the perimeter.
The Merman scooped an airfish out of the locker beside the hatch and buckled on a toolbelt. He grabbed up a long-handled laser pruner and a set of charges. As if on second thought, he picked up the whole basket of airfish, the Mermen’s symbiotic gills that filtered oxygen from the sea directly into the bloodstream.
Ghastly things, Flattery thought with a shudder. Unconsciously, he rubbed his neck where they were customarily attached.
Once outside, the Merman’s handlight barely illuminated the stand of kelp at the compound’s edge. This holo had been made at the onset of evening, and the waning light above the scene coupled with the depth darkened the holo and made it difficult to see detail of the man’s face—a small disappointment for such a good chronicle of the test itself.
As the Merman reached the compound’s perimeter within range of the kelp’s longest fronds, he whirled at the click-hiss of an opening hatch. His wife swam lazily out of it directly into deep kelp. The atmosphere from their station bubbled toward the surface in a rush. He must have realized then that everything was lost as he watched the sea rush into their quarters through the un-dogged hatch. All sensors went blank.
Flattery switched off the holo and turned up the lights. Nevi sat unmoved with the same unreadable expression on his horrible face.
“So the kelp lured them and ate them?” Nevi asked.
“Exactly.”
“On command?”
“On command—my command.”
Flattery was pleased at the trace of a smile that flickered across Spider Nevi’s lips. It must have been a luxury that he allowed himself for the moment.
“We both know what will come of the hue and cry,” the Director said, and puffed himself a little before continuing. “There will be a demand for vengeance. My men will be forced, by popular demand, to prune this stand back. You see how it’s done?”
“Very neat. I always thought …”
“Yes,” Flattery gloated, “so has everyone else. The kelp has been a very sensitive subject, as you know. Religious overtones and whatnot.” Another dismissive wave of the hand. F
lattery couldn’t stop bragging.
“I had to accomplish two things: I had to get control of Current Control, and I had to find the point at which the kelp became sentient. Not necessarily smart, just sentient. By the time it sends off those damned gasbags it’s too late—the only solution there is to stump the lot. We lost a lot of good kelpways for a lot of years that way.”
“So, what’s the key?”
“The lights,” Flattery said. He pointed out his huge plaz port at the bed just off the tideline. “When the kelp starts to flicker, it’s waking up. It’s like an infant, then, and only knows what it’s told. The language it speaks is chemical, electrical.”
“And you do the telling?”
“Of course. First, keep it out of contact with any other kelp. That’s a must. They educate each other by touch. Make sure the kelpways are always very wide between stands—a kilometer or more. The damned stuff can learn from leaves torn off other stands. The effect dies out very quickly. A kilometer usually does it.”
“But how do you … teach it what you want?”
“I don’t teach. I manipulate. It’s very old-fashioned, Mr. Nevi. Quite simply, beings gravitate toward pleasure, flee pain.”
“How does it respond to this kind of … betrayal?”
Flattery smiled. “Ah, yes. Betrayal is your department, is it not? Well, once pruned and kept at the light-formation stage, it doesn’t remember much. Studies show that it can remember if allowed to develop to the spore-casting stage. You have just seen what the answer is to that—don’t let it get that far. Also, studies show that this spore-dust can educate an ignorant stand.”
“I thought it was just a nuisance,” Nevi said. “I didn’t realize that you believed it could think.”
“Oh, very much so. You forget, Mr. Nevi, I’m a Chaplain/Psychiatrist. That I don’t pray doesn’t mean … well, any mind interests me. Anything that stands in my way interests me. This kelp does both.”
“Do you consider it a ‘worthy adversary’?” Nevi smiled.
“Not at all,” Flattery barked a laugh, “not worthy, no. It’ll have to show me more than I’ve seen before I consider this plant a ‘worthy adversary.’ It’s merely an interesting problem, requiring interesting solutions.”
Nevi stood, and the crispness of his gray suit accentuated the fluidity of the muscles within it. “This is your business,” Nevi told him. “Mine is Ozette and the girl.”
Flattery resisted the reflex to stand and waved a limp hand, affecting a nonchalance that he did not at all feel.
“Of course, of course.” He avoided Nevi’s gaze by switching the holo back on. He keyed it to the Tatoosh woman’s upcoming Newsbreak. She would accompany the next shuttle flight to the Orbiter, a shuttle that contained the Organic Mental Core for hookup to the Voidship. Already the OMC was an “it” in his mind, rather than the “she” who used to be Alyssa Marsh.
Flattery seethed inside. He’d wanted something more from Nevi, something that now smelled distinctly of approval. He didn’t like detecting weakness in himself, but he liked even less the notion of letting it pass unbridled.
“Whatever you need …” Flattery left the obvious unsaid.
Nevi left everything unsaid, nodded, and then left the suite. Flattery felt a profound sense of relief, then checked it. Relief meant that he’d begun to rely on Spider Nevi, when he knew full well that reliance on anyone meant a blade at the throat sooner or later. He did not intend for the throat to be his own.
Chapter 14
And out of the ground made to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
—Christian Book of the Dead
A trail left the beach about a kilometer beyond the limits of the Preserve. It was a Zavatan trail, used by the faithful to transport their gleanings of the kelp from the beach to their warrens in the high reaches. Because it was a Zavatan trail it was well-kept and reasonably safe. Its rest spots were ample and afforded a sweeping vista of Flattery’s huge Preserve. The jumbled, jerry-rigged tenements of Kalaloch sprawled from the downcoast side of the Preserve, covered today by a cloak of black smoke. Mazelike channels of aquafarms and jetties branched both up- and down- coast into the horizon. Distant screams and explosions echoed from the panorama below up the winding trail.
Two Zavatan monks stopped to study the clamor rising from the settlement a few klicks away. One man was tall, lanky, with very long arms. The other was small even for a Pandoran, and moved in a scuttle that kept him tucked inside the larger man’s shadow. Both were dressed in the loose, pajamalike gi of the Hylighter Lodge: durable cotton, dusky orange that represented the color of hylighters, their spirit guides.
A gith of hylighters lazed overhead, drawn to the scene by their attraction for fire, lightning and the arc of lasguns from building to building. The hylighters dragged their ballast rocks from long tentacles and circled widely, audibly valving off hydrogen and snapping their great sails in the wind. Should they contact fire or spark, the hylighters would explode, scattering their fine blue spore-dust, which the monks gathered for their most private rituals. Many of the monks had not left the high reaches, except to walk this trail, for ten years.
“It’s a shame they don’t understand,” the younger monk mused. “If we could only teach them the letting go …”
“Judgment, too, is an anchor,” the elder warned. “It is Nothing that they need to know—the No-Thing that frees the mind from noise and perfects the senses.”
He lifted his mutant arms in a long skyward reach, then turned slowly, rejoicing in the morning glow of both suns.
This elder monk, Twisp, loved the press of sunlight on his skin. He had been a fisherman and adventurer in his youth, and what drew him to the Zavatans was not so much their contemplative life as other possibilities that he saw in them. Like most of the monks, Twisp had been wooed by the romance of the new quiet earth that rose from the sea. They summarily rejected the petty squabblings of politics and money that raged across Pandora to establish an underground network of illegal farms and hideaways.
Twisp, however, had remained entrenched in Pandora’s civil struggles, something he troubled few of his fellow Zavatans about. Now, once again, all was changing, he was changing. He had more to offer Pandora than contemplation, though he refrained from telling the younger monk so. He was not religious, merely thoughtful, and he had made a good life among the Zavatans. It would pain him greatly to leave.
Two hylighters tacked toward them and Mose, the younger monk, set down his bag and began his Chant of Fulfillment. With this chant he hoped to be swept skyward by the mass of tentacles and transported to a higher level of being. Twisp had experienced the hylighter enlightenment at the first awakening of the kelp a quarter century past. That was before Flattery’s iron fist came down, and before the people he loved were killed.
Hylighters, though born from the kelp, remained indifferent to humans, treating them as a wonderful curiosity. Mose’s chant became more vigorous as the hylighters drew near, their magnificent sail membranes golden in the sunlight.
“These two want their death today,” Twisp said. “Do you really want to go with them?”
It was the fire that attracted them, and Mose should know that. The younger monk had eaten too much kelp, too much hylighter spore-dust over the years. Two humans in the open near the Preserve usually meant armed security. Hylighters wanting the-death-that-meant-life learned how to draw their fire.
Now the musty smell of their undersides filled the air. The musical flutings of their vents lilted on the breeze as they valved off hydrogen to drop closer. Mose’s chant became more tremulous.
Each hylighter carried ten tentacles in the underbelly, two of them longer than the rest. Usually these two carried rocks for ballast. Hylighters that felt the death need coming on sought out lightning, often gathering in giths to ride the afternoon thunderstorms. Sparks or fire attracted t
hem as well, setting them off in a concussive blaze of flame and blue spore-dust. Some dragged their ballast rocks to spark a grand suicide, an ultimate orgasm.
Twisp breathed easier when the two great hulks tacked back toward the Preserve. He interrupted Mose, whose eyes were closed and whose stubbled face was pale and sweaty.
“This tack will take them into range of the Preserve’s perimeter cannon,” he said. “There will be dust to take back for the others.”
Mose silenced himself and followed Twisp’s long pointing arm. The two hylighters tacked in tight formation, using all that they could capture of the slight breeze blowing up from the shore.
“Flattery’s security will wait to fire until the hylighters are over the settlement,” Twisp whispered. “That way, the hylighters become a weapon. Watch.”
It was almost as he said. Either the cannoneer was a fool or one of the Islanders got in a clear shot, but the hylighters exploded over the Preserve in a double blast that took Twisp’s breath away and stung his eyes with light. Much of the main compound aboveground was incinerated in the fireball and the great wall of the Preserve was breached for a hundred meters in either direction.
A lull in the fighting brought his ears the cacophonous screams of the charred and the dying. It was a sound that Twisp remembered all too well.
The young Mose came down this trail seldom and had been only twelve when he went to live in the high reaches. He did not have much of a life in the outside world, and knew little of the ways of human hatred and greed.
“All we can do is stay out of it,” Twisp muttered. “They will have at themselves and leave us in peace.”
The wet patter of hylighter shreds fell among the brush and rocks below them.
There will be the refugees, too, he thought. Always the homeless and the hungry. Where will we put them this time?
The Zavatans supported refugee camps all along the coastline, turning some into gardens, hydroponics ranches and fish farms. Twisp calculated that there were already more refugees both up- and downcoast than Flattery housed in Kalaloch. Though it was true everyone was hungry, only those in Kalaloch starved. This was the story he hoped Shadowbox would tell.
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