Dream Dancer (23 page)

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Authors: Janet Morris

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BOOK: Dream Dancer
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She could feel the slicking of her palms, the misting of her vision, a hand constricting her heart. She could feel the rush of her pulse, hear its thudding which threatened to block out all else. She could not answer, or she would answer with all her misery. She bade the
Marada
wait a few moments, until she was fit to converse with him.

Then she stumbled into the
Bucephalus
, seeking Spry and his permission to postpone all that lay ahead, defer it to a more propitious time. Not now, though. Not now, although she had thought while she smarted under Marada’s unknowing glance that she could not five another minute among Kerrions.

She said so, calling ahead of her as soon as the hatch hissed shut, but got no reply from the control room. When she entered it, she saw Softa David slouched forward over his console, chin propped on a fist, studying what was occurring at slipside through his visual monitors.

“Softa, did you hear me? I cannot go now.”

He straightened up slowly. The look he gave her was bloodless, flaccid with weariness, deeper than black holes. “You cannot go now, for the same reason I cannot stay a moment longer: that accursed ship of yours. Shebat, I did not want to involve you as more than an unknowing ally, you must have gathered that. I have to take
Bucephalus
out now. Once the memories that the
Marada
has are displayed, I am literally dead, if Parma is at all a man of his word. And—”

“Marada did not even know me.” Shebat sank down into the black acceleration couch on Spry’s right as if sinking into her grave. Head turned toward him, leaning her cheek against the padding, tears streaming down her face and into her trembling mouth, she whispered: “Softa, he did not even know me.”

“Jester’s luck. Shebat, this is no time for true life romances. I’m sorry. I warned you. What do you want me to do? You’re married to his brother, aren’t you? Or did Parma unmarry you?”

Shebat only shook her head. “I cannot leave.”

“Then get off this ship.”

“You would let me go?”

“Why not? You can do no worse damage than that ship is going to do. All subterfuge is unmasked, at this point. It is the quick, or the fallen. And in the larger context, it matters very little: I’m going the same place to hide from them that they will send me if they catch me. The only difference is that this way I get to keep my balls.”

“I thought you said Parma would kill you.”

“Look, Shebat. I’m trying to make it easy on you. Go on, get out—”

“I think you should take her. Spry,” said a third voice, a baritone sword slicing through their intimacy.

“Julian!” gasped Shebat.

“Sponge,” spat Spry. “What are you doing here?”

“Hitching a ride, it seems, if all is about to be revealed. I suppose you might say I’ve chosen my side.” The flaxen hair swayed against his neck as he unfolded his arms, eased over to the third acceleration couch and sat in it.

“By my ass, you are,” said Spry.

“If necessary,” retorted Julian agreeably. “I hate to seem like the brash egotist you doubtless think me to be, but I have a question that might also be a suggestion: why don’t you tandem the
Marada
out of here, right from under their noses? You’ve done similar things, and Shebat is here, too. Why not?”

Spry snorted, rubbing the back of his ear. “Because I did not think of it, for one thing. And because it is Shebat’s ship. Right now it doesn’t look like Shebat is coming over to my side.”

“Our side,” corrected Julian.

“You’ll pardon me,” Spry said dryly, “if I am having just a bit of trouble believing that.”

Shebat was hardly listening, but rather remembering Marada’s poetical eyes passing over her. She was not particularly surprised to see Julian so offhandedly declare himself against his family; that was inherent in his presence here. Nor was she comforted by it: here she was, about to betray them once more, and seeing one of their own blood eager to join in made her feel sorrow for Parma and regret for Chaeron’s misplaced faith in her.

“Shebat?”

“Yes, Softa. I’m sorry, I wasn’t paying attention. The
Marada
will follow you if I ask him. Valery suggested I board and use him for this, but the arbiter,” she could not hide the bitterness in her voice at the speaking of her beloved’s title, “had just forbidden anyone to go aboard, and I did not think I could disobey him unnoticed. The
Marada
. . . wants me.” Her voice broke, upon the impliciation that the cruiser was the only creature that did want her, for herself.

“Good, instruct him to that effect,” ordered Julian, in fine Kerrion fashion. “And stop blubbering like a baby, every time something happens that you don’t like.”

“Get off of this ship,” suggested David Spry very slowly.

“I can hardly do that. I know too much. Come on, pilot, you’re as bad as the girl. If so much hangs on this, why are you just sitting there? If you can’t give your own orders, then perhaps it is my place to prompt you.”

“Who recruited you, anyway?” demanded Spry, face colored with mayhem.

“Valery,” accused Shebat, before the young Kerrion could make a reply. “They’re lovers.”

“That is right. And since I have been your lover as well, Shebat, I am forced to point out that you are no one to criticize another’s predilections. Now, get your ship—”


Mister
Kerrion,” Spry interrupted, his jaws so tightly clenched the words hissed out flat and attenuated. “
If
you are joining us, you will maintain yourself in silence. Shebat, get to work.” He leaned over and opened the feed to
Bucephalus’s
back-up console. “Patch in to
Marada
through
Bucephalus
. Here’s the data.”

A short time later he smiled, touched her shoulder, and said approvingly that though he had planned nothing so strenuous as this for her graduation, in his eyes, at least, she was now a ratable pilot.

Shebat Kerrion had only a moment to sniffle and knuckle away the last of her tears before the
Bucephalus
with a leap and a great roar tore at a mad pace toward the exit tube and freedom among the stars.

The backwash singed hair from a dozen heads and seared one maintenance man badly. But those at slipside had no authority to stop the
Bucephalus
, who was, after all, cleared for launch at that very hour, a thing which in the mass confusion had been overlooked.

Parma, Chaeron, and Marada Kerrion sat with Guildmaster Baldwin in the
Hassid
exchanging hot and mutually abusive accusations under a security order that brooked no interruptions.

The ground control conferred over what to do, shifting their weight from one foot to the other and the responsibility from one pair of shoulders to the other. It was not until the
Marada
shivered and snapped shut its ports, backing rapidly from its slip that the dispatcher himself decided that the guildmaster, at least, must be informed.

But by then Marada Kerrion had gotten the news from
Hassid
, who was unhappy about it: Shebat Kerrion was taking her master-solo flight with Softa Spry monitoring her; there was another person aboard, identity unknown;
Marada
the cruiser had been pleased to join them. Whether or not the ship had done so of its own accord, the
Hassid
did not know; the
Marada
had refused to answer her questions.

“Gentlemen,” said the arbiter, “it is time for us to decide what is to be done. Let me advise my family that I feel Guildmaster Baldwin to be, at the least, insufficient to his tasks and at the most, thoroughly corrupted by them. It is my position, and will be my formal recommendation, that you, Baldwin, be stripped of all rank and incarcerated under full security until your part in this can be determined.”

“All right, Baldy,” said Parma, rubbing his brow. “Go arrest yourself. When I have my cubs calmed, we’ll have dinner.” It hurt him more than he would have wished, to say it. He could not seem to take control. Baldwin threw him a strange look and walked slowly, his long frame more bowed than Parma had ever seen it, toward the port.

When Baldy was gone, all that was left were Parma’s two sons, one with his handsome face twisted into an eternal smirk, the other pacing jerkily like some peak-reading indicator, back and forth, five steps left, then right, fists clenched behind his back.

“Now, with your permission, I would like to discuss the war you have started,” Parma said to Marada.

“You do not have it,” said Marada, abruptly motionless. From behind his back came the sound of cracking knuckles. Then a rustle, then one hand came forth and when it had unclenched and withdrawn, a prismatic cube sat smugly on the master console’s padded edge. It was tiny enough to be enclosed in a hand; it was powerful enough to unseat a despot or rename a galaxy, should it turn crimson: it was the arbiter’s weapon, an arbitrational cube. It was glowing softly: Marada was about to begin a formal inquiry. Once activated, the cube must be fed data until it reached its decision-point. If an arbiter could not bring an investigation to fruition, and the cube to either glaring scarlet or cobalt blue, such was noted negatively in his record and a different arbiter assigned to complete the task. Once begun, cube arbitration could not be aborted. No investigation by that means could be compromised.

Chaeron Kerrion pronounced an uncharacteristically picaresque curse upon his brother’s head.

“I am forced to agree with Chaeron, in this one instance,” Parma observed. “I find this rather presumptuous upon your part. I am disappointed.”

“And I am sorry, too,” drawled Marada, gaze still on the small cube. “But my duty is clear.” Then he gave day and date, and spoke over the cube: “Data collection on the probability that the pilotry guild is the entity heretofore referred to as individual malcontents operating various privateering vessels out of space-end. Collect all relevant data from archival sources.” The cube developed a streak of red around its bottom, extending a tenth of the way up its height.

“Enter also,” the arbiter continued, “Guildmaster Baldwin’s objection that the Marada’s memory is faulty as regards this subject.” The red line developed a yellow crust, but got no higher. “Investigate and evaluate the procedures by which the
Bucephalus
was declared space-worthy, this date. Consider probability that
Bucephalus’s
integrity was violated by group under investigation: Spry, David; Baldwin, P. L.; Stang, Valery.”

“Kerrion, Shebat,” rang Chaeron’s wry addition.

“Kerrion, Shebat,” added Marada, and a number of subheadings and packet-send priorities that caused the red line to inch perceptibly higher.

“Put it away, Marada,” growled Parma, getting up from the acceleration couch.

“You know better than that.”

“I thought you knew better than this.” The father clenched his hands together, that he could be sure they would not on their own strangle his son. “There is a good possibility that Shebat Kerrion is simply taking her master-solo flight, as logged, with David Spry, her acknowledged master. Any inquiry made before the fact of wrongdoing can only be adjudged disastrously biased.” As he spoke, he watched the cube, was rewarded by a widening of the yellow crust and the addition of a blue tinge in its center. “It is also equally possible that the
Marada
, upon its own initiative, followed Shebat. The arbiter in charge has admitted the ship’s extraordinary capability in this regard.” Somehow, Parma found himself hovering over the little cube opposite Marada, staring into brown eyes eager to damn them all. He had seen this mad gleam of truth’s priest viewing a potential sacrifice before: all arbiters had it, the perquisite of their profession. “This is no time for us to break with the guild,” he found himself pleading, heard Chaeron’s displeased snort, though he stared steadily at Persephone’s ghost come to ride the visage of her son. “You are not fully informed.”

Marada cracked one knuckle at a time, nodded his head toward the cube. “I am remedying that. I’ll put a two-day hold on this, if you can tell me who that third party in
Bucephalus
is, and why any third party should be there at all, if the flight is as innocuous as you say.”

“There are too many things you do not yet know which I will not admit into the record at this time,” Parma maintained, feeling dizzy, dry-mouthed and tight of chest so that he stepped back from the cube on the panel, settling heavily into the
Hassid’s
master couch.

Marada shrugged. “I cannot very well interfere with the proceedings at this point without compromising my integrity.”

“Fellate your integrity,” glowered Chaeron, who had come up behind his father’s couch and whose hand rested on Parma’s shoulder ephemerally as he gestured to apostrophize his words. “You jumped in too soon. I hope they pull your license. As a matter of fact, I might request it. You can conduct your investigation from a high-security cell.”

Marada chuckled, shaking his head. “Some things are eternal. If you want to arrest someone, little brother, arrest your personal pilot, before your own credibility is stained by keeping a saboteur in your employ. It was his order that your men so meekly obeyed when they discontinued their investigation of the
Bucephalus
, so Baldy hastened to aver.”

“Cease, both of you,” Parma sighed wearily. “Marada, box your accursed cube, or I am leaving. Chaeron, I know you are concerned for your wife’s safety. Try to control yourself.”

Marada had taken a little box from under the console and was fitting the arbitrational cube into it. He did not look up until the cube was sealed and fitted into a depression in
Hassid’s
board meant to hold it. Then he turned around, leaning on the padded bumper with his fingers digging deep into it:

“What did you say?”

It was to Parma he spoke, but Chaeron answered: “I married her. It was the only way to protect her. She has made a plenitude of errors, none of them deliberate. Check the record, it’s all there. Maybe you would like to have her declared an enemy of the consulate. It would seem to be well within your capabilities.”

“That is why she did not come to greet me.” It was no question; rather, an indictment. The hostility between the two blazed openly. “What have you been doing, sodomizing her three times a day?”

Chaeron snorted softly. “Hardly. I tried it once, and she called your name. So I left that passage to its discoverer.”

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