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Authors: C. J. Cherryh

BOOK: Forge of Heaven
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“Three days to reach safer ground,” he said. “And I think we should go there.”

15

T WO DAY S A N S W E R I N G QU E S T I O N S , two days in which Procyon rested in a small hospital room with only the three robots for company; and then the two cleaner-bots strayed out when the meal cart arrived and failed to come back. They had disappeared into the ubiquitous cleaner slots, he hoped. He hoped he wasn’t involved in some Project notion of kidnapping the bots and taking them apart to see their circuitry. He still had flashes of dark, the illusion of smelling ammonia. He waked in sweats, with the sensation of a cool, spongy touch on his face.

He sat in front of the small room computer unit and played computer solitaire to keep from going crazy, while the remaining repair bot sat and watched him. He ate, he slept, he answered questions that popped onto the screen, and sometimes he heard one or the other of two competing taps fussing at him, trying to gain his attention.
“Braziss,”
one hissed, sending chills through his spine, and the other:
“How are you doing, Procyon?”
in a warm and maternal voice.

“I don’t know when I can see Brazis,” he answered the one. “I’m sorry.” And to the other voice, clearly a Project tap: “I’m doing all right, ma’am. No problems.”

He waited. He answered every detail he could remember, to occasional queries from the motherly voice. He didn’t ask about his sister, his family, or the other taps. He didn’t want to get any of them into more difficulty than they already had met on his ac-

3 9 6 • C . J . C h e r r y h

count. Maybe that failure to ask was itself a problem, but if it was, it was his own problem, and he kept up that policy.

He slept again, and the repair bot was gone when he waked up.

He worried about it. He never had named it: naming it had seemed to him to be a little crazy. But he had begun to think of it as a presence, and when it left him he felt strangely alone and depressed, at loose ends, even his endless solitaire games incapable of occupying his attention.

“Procyon,”
a voice said. This time it wasn’t the woman he was used to. It was another one, younger, harsher. Authority.

“Yes, ma’am. I hear you.”

“The Chairman wants to see you.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

The
Chairman
wanted him. It was a high-level disposition, then, not a quiet disappearance into the hospital and the security system. He experienced a little surge of hope that he hadn’t gone invisible, that he might still have some useful function. The wild surmise, which had begun to fade in recent days, that Marak himself might have insisted on his surfacing.

“Procyon.”
Brazis, this time. Procyon stopped, in the act of dressing.

“Yes, sir. I’m sorry. I’m hurrying.”

“No great hurry. To relieve your anxiety, I’m satisfied with your answers. Everything’s fine. Now get in here.”

“Yes,
sir.” He had a pair of pants, the ones he’d arrived in, cleaned. The shirt wasn’t in great shape, and he didn’t have a coat.

He put on his shoes. Idiotically, pathetically, he missed the damned robot, which ordinarily would be sitting there blinking at him.

He got up, tried the door, walked out into the corridor and ran into uniformed Project police, to his distress. He said nothing, just went with the two women into the hospital lift system and, through a side hall, over to the restricted lifts, headed for the Project offices.

“ H OW ’ S T H E DAU G H T E R ? ” Brazis asked Reaux, through Jewel, who had taken up her post in the governor’s suite of offices. “I hear she did phone.”

Fo r g e o f H e a v e n • 3 9 7

“You know too much,”
Setha Reaux said to him peevishly, but not with great force, in Brazis’s judgment. A small pause. They had been discussing the departure of the
Southern Cross
from dock, an event greatly relieving a number of situations.
“We’re meeting at a
restaurant. Me, my wife. Kathy.
Mignette,
now. Tonight.”

“I’ve heard her mentor is counseling her to moderation. To go slowly. Plan carefully. She couldn’t be in better hands—where she is.”

“Where she is,”
Reaux echoed him.
“Which is better than where she
could
be. I know that. We caught another of the group this morning.”

Brazis knew that, but let Reaux tell him, not to expose all his sources, or spoil Reaux’s triumph.

“In an apartment on Lebeau. Not a bad neighborhood,”
Reaux added.

“So I’m told.”

Across Brazis’s office, Magdallen sat, source of a great deal of information. Magdallen, with those green eyes and a dark good looks that probably got him more information than the police authority ever could, was still on the job.

“Listen,” Brazis said, “the reason for the contact: I’m setting Procyon loose. I
don’t
want him bothered.”

“I’ll make that clear where appropriate,”
Reaux said.
“Any resolution
on the tap—his
or
Gide’s?”

“Not much activity. It’s quieted down. The bots have disappeared, on their own. Gide’s become almost cooperative. Have you had any word at all from Kekellen?”

“Not a whisper.”

“So,” he said. “None here, either. I’ll keep you advised. Good luck with the dinner.”

“Good luck with your own business,”
Reaux said, and Brazis tapped out.

“Vanish,” he said to Magdallen. “I’ll brief you later.”

“Yes, sir,” Magdallen said, stood up with a fluid motion, and left. It was
sir,
lately. It began to seem that, whatever Magdallen’s particular origins, related to the Council at Apex, his reports were going to reflect far better on Concord’s business than they had started out to do. The departure of the Earth ship—Mr. Gide irately refusing even to speak to the captain by phone—was a piece of information apt to be cherished there as it was here.

3 9 8 • C . J . C h e r r y h

Magdallen left. Procyon Stafford arrived, coatless, a few rips on the shirt, not a physical mark on him but the tattoo, a mark all but invisible in the bright light of the office. Given the rapidity of the healing of other injuries, it seemed likely that that one visible trace was going to remain.

So the doctors said.

“Procyon.” Brazis stood up to meet the young man, courtesy to a person to whose resourceful escape they owed, collectively, a very great deal.

“Sir.” A reciprocal little bow. “Kekellen’s been very anxious I talk to you.”

“I know. The doctors have told me.” He found the young man’s worried intensity disturbing to his own agenda, and he walked over to his orchids, his source of calm and self-direction. It meant he didn’t have to look the man in the eye, or lie to him. “It’s likely, however, that that ship leaving—”

“It has left, sir?”

A damnable tendency to jump ahead. But the taps were bright.

Too bright. Difficult to deal with, to keep under security restrictions.

“The ship is outbound, out of our lives. Mr. Gide remains hos-pitalized, not adjusting as rapidly as you. But then you’ve had practice.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Shall I be honest?” The young man’s candor urged him to it.

“You’re stuck with that tap. There’s no way to remove it that wouldn’t damage you.”

“I rather well suspected so, sir.”

“It presents us a problem.”

“With Marak, sir.”

“Has he contacted you?”

“Is he all right?”

That immediate question, that question that wasn’t duty, concern that overrode all questions about his own future. There was a bond between those two. Kindred souls, if one subscribed to such notions. At least a bond that had formed and refused to be broken.

“I’ve asked Ian to inform him you were too sick to be consulted,” Brazis said. “The excuse is wearing thin.”

“He’s all right?” Right back to the essential question.

Fo r g e o f H e a v e n • 3 9 9

“He’s all right. So is Hati. They got the beshti back. They’ve re-joined their party, recovered their gear. They’re on their way back to safe ground, out of danger.”

A deep, satisfied breath. And no questions about his own future.

It was hero worship, maybe. Or something stronger. One could envy the young man that kind of devotion. Or envy Marak, that he’d convinced a young man, who’d never see him face-to-face, that he was worth dying for.

And damn him, the young man had distracted him down his own path.

“Do you hear Kekellen now?”

“Not at the moment. But the bot left this morning.”

“You made that connection, did you, that that’s your relay?”

“I know there has to be a relay. I don’t think Kekellen would piggyback on yours.”

“Mine. As if I owned them. Don’t you feel they’re
your
relays, too?”

“I suppose they are, yes, sir.”

Brazis gave a humorless laugh, repositioned a bit of fake bark under a green, arching root. “I’ve damn near drowned these things in the last few days. Time they rested from our crisis.”

“Yes, sir.” Perplexity. Innocence.

But not naïveté.

“You know you’re a security risk,” Brazis said. “A tremendous risk to put you back on duty.”

“I know that, sir. And I wouldn’t risk
him
.”

Him. Marak. No question, still no protestation of his own ambitions.

“Your contact with Marak becomes an interesting question,”

Brazis said, “since we’ll have some notion, via Kekellen’s tap, what interests Kekellen, what catches his attention. In a way, it may be a learning experience for both sides. Has he asked any specific questions?”

“He just said your name, sir, as if he had something to ask.

Brazis, Brazis, Brazis. But there never was a question.”

“Maybe it wasn’t a question,” Brazis said, realizing that point, himself. “Maybe it was a direction he was giving, for your safety.

You’re Marak’s tap. You were threatened. Kekellen didn’t want the program disrupted. Didn’t want Marak inconvenienced.”

4 0 0 • C . J . C h e r r y h

“You think that was it, sir?” Hope, but a great deal of doubt, with it.

Brazis had his own hope. Kekellen was odd, but he had never demonstrated himself aggressive.

“It’s a new age in communication, isn’t it? If he’s talking through that tap, if it
is
Kekellen, one can assume Kekellen has in-ternalized a tap of his own. Does that thought occur to you?”

“I’ve heard him breathing,” Procyon said. “It sounds internal.”

As taps from inside did sound . . . internal. Like one’s own voice.

A man who used the device routinely knew that very well.

“Interesting. But he doesn’t get onto our system.”

“I haven’t caught him trying it, sir. I don’t think he does.”

“You’re the junction point. Gide doesn’t own another tap, even the common one. But Kekellen may ask you questions sooner or later. And expect you to relay things to Marak. I wouldn’t be surprised.”

“I suppose he will, sir.”

“Likely that bot will show up when he wants to talk or listen.

They get through interfaces in the walls. Places you have to get an architectural diagram to figure out. All sorts of passages that in
our
diagrams don’t connect. But repair bots, I suppose, can make little changes we don’t know about. Build new routes. Connect others.

One wonders what archaeology of the stuff behind the walls could show us, on the former stations.”

“I don’t know, sir.”

The perfect subordinate answer. The opaque answer. But nobody had investigated. The structure of the stations had been on record for ages past. No one ever questioned it not being what was on the charts. Robots did all the internal service work.

“Well, well,” Brazis said. “It’s all outside your concerns. Except I want a report the minute you find a bot tagging you.” It was going to take a little monitor inserted in Procyon’s apartment, one that would find intrusions Procyon didn’t know about, behind his walls. It was going to be an interesting few decades, his administration.

“Yes, sir,” Procyon said.

“Drusus and Auguste have gone back to work. They’re still lim-

Fo r g e o f H e a v e n • 4 0 1

iting their activities. The doctors don’t want them on longer than an hour on, an hour off. We’re monitoring via Hati’s taps. How do you feel?”

“No effects, sir.” A spark of fervent interest. But then a little hesitation. And, worriedly: “I won’t contact Marak if I think in any way I’m a conduit for Kekellen.”

“I think we can work that out. You’ll help us. Marak will. He understands your situation.”

“He does, sir?”

“He’s not entirely pleased about what happened to you. But he’s happier now that you’re on your feet. Are you fit to go on duty?”

“I’m fine, sir.”

“An hour on, an hour off, until you hear otherwise.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Dismissed, then. Go to it. It’s your shift.”

“Thank you, sir.” Procyon started to leave. Then stopped.

“Where do I go, sir?”

“Home,” Brazis said. “Home to your apartment, I suppose.

Where your office is.”

“I’m known on the street, sir.”

“I’d say you are. You’ll have to manage that notoriety. I leave that to your ingenuity.” A deliberate frown. “And wear a coat in the office.”

“Yes, sir.” Enthusiasm. Boundless enthusiasm. As if he wasn’t a walking communications device for Concord’s most dangerous resident. “Thank you, sir. Thank you.”

“Out,” Brazis said. Gratitude embarrassed him, when simple necessity had dictated the young man’s return to work. Keep Marak happy, repair the breach downworld. Keep Kekellen happy—maybe let the old sod ask a few direct questions of Marak, if Marak would deign to answer them.

The one honest man on earth. And Kekellen had found honesty in the heavens, it seemed.

Honesty didn’t figure in his own duty. He just did it as he saw it.

*

*

*

4 0 2 • C . J . C h e r r y h

D I N N E R AT T H E
P L A N E ,
not the place Procyon would have chosen, but Ardath had her standards and her obligations. Procyon wore his best, quiet, against Ardath’s blue and gold. The maître d’

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