Ethan of Athos (22 page)

Read Ethan of Athos Online

Authors: Lois McMaster Bujold

Tags: #Science fiction, #General, #Science Fiction - General, #Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy fiction, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #American Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Obstetricians, #Inrerplanetary voyages

BOOK: Ethan of Athos
6.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Chapter Twelve

In Quarantine, Rau followed the supine form of his still-stunned superior off for whatever short-arm inspection Biocontrol demanded without a word. He had said nothing, in fact, since they'd left the hostel room under heavy guard, but had remained close to Millisor with a sort of grim loyalty, like a dog refusing to leave its encoffined master.

Ethan wasn't sure what tests were required for detecting Alpha-S-D-plasmid-2 -- or its mythical mutation-3 -- but from the dour look on Rau's face he suspected they were rather invasive. He'd have felt better if Rau had shown the least sign of possessing a sense of humor. The light in Rau's eyes as he glanced back one last time at Ethan was like reflections off knife blades.

Ethan was in turn carried off to an office for a long, long talk with Security in the persons of the burly arresting officer and a female officer who was apparently his administrative superior. Partway through they were joined by a third Security man, introduced as Captain Arata, a neurasthenic Eurasian type with lank black hair, pale skin, and eyes like needles, who said little and listened much.

Ethan's first impulse to tell all and throw himself upon their mercy was blunted almost at once by the problem of Okita. He managed not to mention Okita. Cetaganda's psionics breakthrough was modified, under the wilting effect of those three pairs of Stationer eyes, to the vaguer news that “a culture in Athos's ovarian shipment had been doctored on Jackson's Whole with some altered genetic material stolen from Cetaganda.” Ethan avoided touching on Cee altogether. It would have made things so complicated....

“Then,” said the Security woman, “Ecotech Helda actually did Athos a favor, albeit unintentionally. She saved your gene pool from contamination, in fact.”

She was, Ethan realized, obliquely pressing him to drop charges against Helda, to save Kline Station from public embarrassment. He thought of the quantities of trade that passed through their supposedly secure switching warehouses. The realization that they were sweating as hard as he was felt wonderfully invigorating, and he took the offensive instantly.

Security became extremely polite. The half-dozen or so little charges the burly officer had worked up against Ethan were matched against Ethan's ambassadorial status and somehow made to evaporate. No vandalism like Helda's, they assured him, would ever be permitted to happen again. Ecotech Helda was of a sufficient age to take an early retirement, with no questions asked. Ambassador Urquhart need not concern himself with Ghem-lord Harmon Dal, or Colonel Millisor as Ethan named him; he and his assistants were definitely slated for deportation on the first ship available, for the proven felony of kidnapping.

“By the way, Mr. Ambassador,” Captain Arata put in, “do you have any idea where the ghem-lord's third and fourth employees are?”

“You mean you haven't arrested Setti yet?” asked Ethan.

“We're working on it,” said Arata. His cool, controlled face gave Ethan no clue as to what that meant.

“You'd better ask Colonel Millisor when he wakes up, then. As for the other one -- ah -- you'd better ask Commander Quinn.”

“And just where is Commander Quinn, Mr. Ambassador?”

Ethan sighed. “On her way back to the Dendarii Mercenaries, probably. “ With her draftee Cee in tow, no doubt. How long would the rootless young man survive, cut off from his own dreams? Longer than he would live if Millisor caught up with him, Ethan had to admit in all honesty. Let it go. Let it go.

Arata sighed too. “Slippery witch,” he muttered. “We'll see about that. She still owes me some information.”

And then Ethan was free to go. Thank you for your kind assistance, Mr. Ambassador. If there is any little thing Kline Station can do to help make your stay more pleasant, please ask. They made no further mention of Helda; he made no further mention of Helda. Have a nice day, Mr. Ambassador.

In the corridor leading to the exit locks Ethan paused. “Come to think of it, Captain Arata, there is a favor you can do me.”

“Yes, sir?”

“Colonel Millisor is under guard, right? If he's awake, would it be possible for me to speak to him briefly?”

Arata gave him a look of sharp speculation. “I'll check, sir.”

Ethan accompanied the Security captain out of the administrative section and through two more sterility-locks. There they found a gowned ecotech just exiting a glassed-in room. The ecotech killed a lighted “Do Not Enter” sign on the room's door and began peeling out of his protective garb. An armed Security guard, within, passed out a similar set of garments rolled up in a wad, which the ecotech tossed in the general direction of a laundry receptacle.

“What's the status of your patient?” Captain Arata inquired.

The ecotech took in Arata's rank insignia. “Alert and oriented. Some residual tremors from stunner trauma, headache likewise. He has chronically elevated blood pressure, stress-induced gastritis, a liver showing pre-cirrhotic degeneration, and a slightly enlarged prostate that will probably have to be watched over the next few years. In short, his health is normal for a man of his age. What he does not have is Alpha-S-D-plasmid-2, -3, -29, or any other number. He doesn't have so much as a head cold. Somebody was jerking us around, Captain, with that vector report, and I hope you'll find out who. I don't have time for this sort of nonsense.”

“We're working on it,” said Captain Arata.

Ethan followed Arata into the now-unsealed room. Arata motioned the guard to a station outside the door, and himself took up a stance of polite but firm parade rest just within. It was probably not worthwhile requesting him to wait out of earshot, Ethan reflected; the room was undoubtedly monitored.

Ethan approached the bed on which Millisor, dressed in an ordinary patient gown, lay -- restrained, Ethan noted with relief, and edged closer. Millisor made no move. His hands lay relaxed, as if having tested his bonds once was sufficient for his logic. He watched Ethan with cool calculation. It all made Ethan feel a dreadful coward, like some gawker poking at a trussed-up predator that braver hunters had captured.

“Uh, good afternoon, Colonel Millisor,” Ethan began inanely.

“Good afternoon, Dr. Urquhart.” Millisor returned an ironic nod of his head like an abbreviated bow. He seemed drained now of personal animosity -- professional, like Quinn. Of course, he'd exhibited no personal animosity when he'd ordered Ethan's execution, either.

“I, uh -- just wanted to be absolutely and finally sure, before you left, that you clearly understood that Athos does not have, and never at any time did have, the shipment of genetic material from Jackson's Whole, “ Ethan said.

“The probabilities would now seem to lean that way,” agreed Millisor. “I doubt everything, you see.”

Ethan thought this over. “Encountering the truth must be horribly confusing for you, then.”

Millisor's lips twitched dryly. “Fortunately, it happens very seldom. “ His gaze narrowed. “So, what do you think of Terrence Cee, now that you've met him?”

Ethan jumped guiltily. “Who?”

“Come, Doctor. I know he's here. I can feel the shape of him in the tactical situation. Did you find him attractive, Athosian? Many people do. I have often wondered if his, ah, gift, truly only worked one way.”

It was a nasty thought, particularly as Ethan had found Cee very attractive indeed. He jittered. Millisor was now staring with covert interest at Arata, alert for reactions on the Security officer's part to the new turn in the conversation. Ethan hurried to cut off any unnecessary extension of Millisor's secret hit list. “I haven't discussed Mr. Cee with -- with anyone. Just in case you were wondering.”

Millisor's eyebrows rose in disbelief. “As a favor to me?”

“As a favor to them,” Ethan corrected.

Millisor accepted this with a little provisional nod. “But Cee is on Kline Station. Where, Doctor?”

Ethan shook his head. “I truly do not know. If you choose not to believe that, it's your problem.”

“Then your pet mercenary knows. It comes to the same thing. Where is she?”

“She's not mine!” Ethan denied, horrified. “I don't have anything to do with Commander Quinn. She's on her own. You have a problem with her, you take it up with her, not me.”

Arata, without moving a muscle, became more intent.

“On the contrary,” said Millisor, “she has all my admiration. Much that I could not account for now is entirely clear. I wouldn't mind hiring her myself.”

“Uh -- I don't think she's available.”

“All mercenaries have price tags. Maybe not money alone. Rank, power, pleasure.”

“No,” said Ethan firmly. “She seems to be in love with her C. O. I've seen the phenomenon in Athos's army -- hero-worship of certain senior officers by their juniors -- some seniors abuse their advantage, others don't. I don't know which category her admiral falls in, but in either case I don't think you can match the bid.”

Arata nodded silent agreement, looking faintly bleak.

“I too know the phenomenon,” sighed the ghem-lord. “Well. That's too bad.” A chill seemed to waft from the man in the bed which made Ethan wonder if his defense of Quinn's honor had perhaps been untimely. But Millisor was safely immobilized.

“I confess, Doctor, you puzzle me,” Millisor went on. “If you and Cee were not co-conspirators, then you could only have been his victim. I fail to see your advantage in continuing to protect the man after what he tried to do to Athos.”

“He didn't try to do anything to Athos, except immigrate there. Hardly a crime. From what I've seen of the galaxy so far, it made perfectly good sense. I can hardly wait to go home myself.”

Millisor's eyebrows rose nearly to his hairline, one of the few gestures currently available to him. “By God! I begin to believe you really are as naive a fool as your face proclaims you, Doctor! I thought you knew what had been done to your shipment.”

“Yes, so he put his wife in it. A little necrophiliac, maybe. Considering his upbringing, the only wonder is that the man isn't a lot stranger still.”

Millisor actually laughed out loud. Ethan felt no urge to chuckle along. He regarded the ghem-lord uneasily.

Millisor sighed. “Let me present you with two facts. Obsolete facts, since that idiot Stationer female committed her mindless act of sabotage. One. The gene-complex, ah, in question --” he glanced at Arata, “was recessive, and would not appear in phenotype until found in both halves of the genotype. Two. Every single one of the cultures bound for Athos had had the complex spliced into them. Think it through, Doctor.”

Ethan did.

In the first generation, the ovarian cultures would contribute their recessive, hidden alleles to the children -- and at the rate the old cultures were dying off, very soon all the children -- born on Athos. But not until the second generation reached puberty would the functional telepathic organ appear in its statistical one-half of the population, from breeding back to the double-recessive cultures. In the third generation, half the remaining population would pass from latent to functional, and so on, the telepathic majority edging out the non-telepathic minority in perpetual half-increments.

But by then even the non-telepaths would bear the genes in their bodies, potential fathers of telepathic sons. The entire population would be permeated with the gene complex, too late, impossible to eradicate.

The question, Why Athos? was answered at last. Of course Athos. Only Athos.

The audacity, the perfection, the beauty -- and the enormity -- of Cee's plot took Ethan's breath away. It all fit, with the overpowering self-evidence of a mathematical proof. It even accounted for Cee's missing mountain of money.

“Now who cannot recognize truth?” mocked Millisor softly.

“Oh,” said Ethan, in a very small voice.

“The most insidious thing about the little monster is his charm, “ Millisor went on, watching Ethan closely. “We built him that way on purpose, not knowing then that the limits of his talent would render him unsuitable as a field agent. Although from the trouble he subsequently gave us we may have been wrong on that point as well. But do not mistake charm for virtue, Doctor. He is dangerous, utterly devoid of loyalty to the humanity from which he sprang, but of which he is not a part --”

Ethan wondered if that should be understood as Humanity = Cetaganda.

“-- a virus of a man, who would make the whole universe over in his twisted image. Surely you of all men understand that lethal contagions demand vigorous counter-measures. But ours is the controlled violence of surgery. You must not swallow the virus's propaganda. We are not the butchers he would have you believe us to be.”

Millisor's hands turned in their restraints, opened in pleading. “Help us. You must help us.”

Ethan stared at Millisor's bonds, shaken. “I'm sorry ...” God the Father, was he actually apologizing to Millisor? “No, Colonel. I remember Okita. I can understand a man being a killer, I think. But a bored killer?”

“Okita is only a tool. The surgeon's knife.”

“Then your service has turned a man into a thing.” An old quote drifted through Ethan's memory: By their fruits you shall know them....

Millisor's eyes narrowed; he did not pursue the argument, but rather, with a glance at Arata, inquired, “And just what did you do to Sergeant Okita, Dr. Urquhart?”

Other books

The Odd Job by Charlotte MacLeod
Peril on the Royal Train by Edward Marston
Remember Me by Christopher Pike
Homewrecker Incorporated by Chavous, S. Simone
Turning Night by Viola Grace
The Jump-Off Creek by Molly Gloss
The Book of Kills by Ralph McInerny
Never Marry a Cowboy by Lorraine Heath
Nightmare Man by Ryker, Alan