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Authors: Ben Bova

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Saturn (24 page)

BOOK: Saturn
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SATURN ARRIVAL
Minus 273 Days

"This man Berkowitz has got to go!" Eberly insisted.

Wilmot sank back in his comfortable desk chair, surprised at the vehemence of his human resources director's demand.

Softly, he asked, "And what gives you the right to interfere with the working of the Communications Department?"

Eberly had stoked himself up to a fever pitch. For weeks Vyborg had been pressuring him, threatening to act on his own if Eberly could not or would not get rid of Berkowitz. Vyborg wanted to be head of communications, and his scant patience had reached its end. "Either you get him removed or I will remove him myself," the grim little man said. "In a few months we'll be entering Saturn orbit. I want Berkowitz out of the way before then. Long before then!"

Eberly knew this was a test of his power. Vyborg would never challenge him so unless he felt that Eberly was deliberately procrastinating. Now, Eberly knew, if I don't deliver Berkowitz's head, Vyborg will stop believing in me, stop obeying me. So, like it or not, he had to confront Wilmot.

Morgenthau hadn't come up with a thing that he could use against Wilmot. Although she swore that she spent every night faithfully plowing through his phone conversations and his computer files, she had found nothing useful, so far.

I can do it without her help, Eberly told himself as he arranged to meet the chief administrator. A man can do anything, if he has the unbreakable will to succeed.

Yet now, as he sat before Wilmot's desk and saw the professor's steel-gray eyes assessing him coolly, Eberly wondered which of them had the stronger will.

"After all," Wilmot said, "your position as head of Human Re
s
ources doesn't give you the right to meddle in other departments, does it."

"This is not meddling," Eberly snapped. "It's a matter of some urgency."

Wilmot thought, He had a big success with the naming contest and the voting connected with it. That rally he held out in the park was a rather rousing event. It's gone to his head. He thinks he's already in charge of every department. He thinks he's going to replace me as chief of the entire habitat. Well, my lad, you have another think coming.

"Urgency?" he asked, deliberately calm and methodical. "How so?"

"Berkowitz is incompetent. We both know that."

"Do we? I thought the Communications Department was running rather smoothly."

"Because Dr. Vyborg is doing all the work," Eberly said.

"Vyborg. That little reptilian fellow."

Eberly stifled an angry reply. He's deliberately trying to goad me, he realized. This old man is trying to make me angry enough to make a mistake.

He took in a breath, then said more calmly, "Vyborg is a very capable man. He is actually running the Communications Department while Berkowitz sits on his laurels and does nothing."

"Much as Ms. Morgenthau is running your office, I should imagine," said Wilmot, with the trace of a smile.

Eberly smiled back at the older man. You're not going to make me lose my temper, he said silently. I'm not going to fall into your trap.

"Vyborg is ambitious," he said aloud. "He's come to me to ask my help. He feels frustrated, unappreciated."

"Why doesn't he come to me? You can't help him."

"I agreed to speak to you about the situation," Eberly said. "Vyborg feels he shouldn't go over Berkowitz's head and speak directly to you. He's afraid that Berkowitz will hold it against him."

"Really?"

"Berkowitz is a drone, and we both know it. Vyborg does all the work for him."

"As long as the Communications Department runs well, I have no reason for removing Berkowitz from his position. This discussion is actually over the man's management method. To his underlings he may seem like a drone, but as long as the department hums along, he's doing his job effectively, as far as I'm concerned."

Eberly sat back, thinking furiously. This is a test, he realized. Wilmot is testing me. Toying with me. How should I answer him? How can I get him to do what I want?

Wilmot, meanwhile, studied Eberly's face carefully. Why is he so worked up about the Communications Department? Does he have some personal grudge against Berkowitz? Or some personal relationship with Vyborg? I wish old Diego Romero were still with us; he kept the department's different factions working together smoothly enough, before he died.

Eberly finally hit upon a new ploy. "If you find it impossible to remove Berkowitz, perhaps you could promote him."

Wilmot felt his brows rise. "Promote him?"

Hunching forward on his chair, Eberly said, "Apparently this man Gaeta is going to be allowed to go to the surface of Titan after all."

"That stuntman?"

"Yes. Dr. Cardenas has convinced Urbain that she can decontaminate Gaeta's suit so well that the man can go to Titan's surface without harming the life-forms there."

"Urbain hasn't told me of this," Wilmot said sharply.

Eberly held back a snicker of triumph. You sit in your office and expect everyone to come to you, he sneered inwardly at Wilmot. The real life of this habitat swirls around you and you know almost nothing of it.

"You're certain that Urbain has approved of this... this stunt?" Wilmot asked.

"The approval isn't official yet, but Cardenas has worked out an understanding with him."

Wilmot nodded. "Urbain will notify me when he makes his approval official."

"Why not ask Berkowitz to join Gaeta's team, as their full-time publicity manager?"

"Ahh. I see."

Eberly went on, "Berkowitz would enjoy that, I think."

"And while he's enjoying his special assignment, your friend Vyborg can run the Communications Department."

"He can be given the title of acting director," said Eberly.

"Very neat. And what happens when Gaeta has performed his stunt and it's all finished?"

Eberly shrugged, "We'll cross that bridge when we come to it." To himself, though, he said, By the time Gaeta's done his stunt we'll have the new constitution in effect and I'll be the elected leader of this habitat. Berkowitz, Vyborg

even you, old man

will have to bow to my wishes.

But as he left Wilmot's office, his satisfaction melted away. He was playing with me, Eberly realized, like a cat plays with a mouse. Like a puppeteer pulling my strings. He let me have my way with Berkowitz because he intended to do it all along; he was just waiting to see how I jumped. Berkowitz doesn't mean a thing to him. It's all a game he's playing.

I've got to get control over him, Eberly told himself. I've got to find some way to bend the high and mighty Professor Wilmot to my will. Make him jump through my hoops.

When is Morgenthau going to find something I can use? There must be
something
in Wilmot's life that I can use for leverage. Some weakness. I've got to get Morgenthau to work harder, concentrate on his files, his phone conversations, everything he says or does, every breath he draws. I want him in my grasp. That's vital. If I'm to be the master here, Wilmot's got to bow down to me, one way or the other.

Holly saw Raoul Tavalera sitting alone in the cafeteria, bent over a sizable lunch. She carried her tray to his table.

"Want some company?" she asked.

He looked up at her and smiled.

"Sure," he said. "Sit right down."

Tavalera had invited her to dinner at least once a week since starting work at the nanotechnology lab. Holly enjoyed his company, although he could get moody, morose. She tried to keep their dates as bright and easy as possible. So far, he'd worked up the nerve to kiss her goodnight. She wondered when he would try to go farther. And what she would do when he did.

"How's it going in the nanolab?" Holly asked as she removed her salad and iced tea from her tray.

"Okay, I guess."

"Dr. Cardenas treating you well?"

He nodded enthusiastically. "She's easy to work with. I'm learnin' a lot."

"That's good."

"None of it'll be any use when I go back to Earth, though."

For a moment, Holly didn't know why he would say that. Then she remembered, "Ohh, nanotech's banned on Earth, isn't it?"

Tavalera nodded. "They'll probably quarantine me until they're certain I don't have any nanobugs in my body."

"There's a nanotech lab in Selene."

"I'm not gonna live underground on the Moon. I'm goin' back home."

They talked about home: Holly about Selene and Tavalera about the New Jersey hills where he had grown up.

"A lotta the state got flooded out when the greenhouse cliff hit. All the beachfront resorts ... people go scuba diving through the condo towers."

"That's something you don't have to worry about in Selene," Holly pointed out.

Tavalera grinned at her. "Yeah. The nearest pond is four hundred thousand kilometers away."

"We have a swimming pool in the Grand Plaza!"

"Big fr

uh, big deal."

Ignoring his near lapse, Holly went on, "It's Olympic-sized. And the diving platforms go up to thirty meters."

With a shake of his head, Tavalera said, "You wouldn't get me up there, low gravity or no low gravity."

He just wants to go home, Holly saw. He wants to get back home. It made her sad to realize that she had no home to go back to. This is my home, she told herself. This habitat. Forever.

SATURN ARRIVAL
Minus 266 Days

If it must be done, Wilmot said to himself, 'twere best done quickly.

It was a dictum that had served him well all during his long career in academia. He often coupled it with Churchill's old aphorism: If you're going to kill a man, it costs nothing to be polite about it.

So he invited Gaeta and Zeke Berkowitz to dine with him, in the privacy of his own apartment. Berkowitz was an old friend, of course, and Wilmot was delighted when he showed up precisely on time, before the stuntman.

As Wilmot poured a stiff whisky for the news director, Berkowitz grinned amiably and said, "Must be pretty bad news, to make the first drink so tall."

Wilmot smiled, a little sheepishly, and handed the glass to Berkowitz. "You still have your nose in the wind, don't you, Zeke?"

Berkowitz shrugged. "I'd be a lousy newsman if I didn't know what was going on."

Wilmot poured an even stiffer belt for himself.

"Rumor is," Berkowitz said, still standing by the apartment's compact little bar, "that you're going to kick me upstairs."

With a slight nod, Wilmot admitted, "I'm afraid so."

Before Berkowitz could ask another question, they heard a rap at the door. "That will be Gaeta," said Wilmot, heading for the door.

Gaeta wore a denim work shirt and jeans, about as formal an outfit as he possessed. He looked serious, almost somber as Wilmot introduced him to Berkowitz and asked the stuntman what he wanted to drink.

"Beer, if you have it," said Gaeta, still unsmiling.

"Would Bass ale do?" Wilmot asked.

Gaeta broke into a grin. "It'll do very well, thanks."

Wilmot steered his two guests to the sitting room chairs. Once they were comfortably settled, he said to Gaeta, "I've asked you here because I want to assign Zeke to be your full-time publicity man."

Berkowitz nodded knowingly. The stuntman looked surprised.

By the time Wilmot carried the dinner tray to the table, though, the two men seemed to be getting along well enough.

"So if Urbain or the IAA or whoever prevents me from going down to Titan, I'll take a spin through the rings," Gaeta was saying.

Berkowitz twirled his fork in the air. "Through the rings? Wow. That'd be spectacular."

"You think you could get me some coverage, huh?"

"A brain-dead librarian could get you coverage for that. I mean, everybody's seen footage from the automated probes they've sent to Titan's surface. Fascinating stuff, yeah, but it's been
done.
Nobody's been to the rings."

"No human has set foot on Titan," Wilmot pointed out.

"I know. But the rings! They'll salivate over that. I could run an auction right now and gin up enough cash to pay for your whole crew and then some."

Gaeta leaned back in his chair, looking contented. Wilmot saw that Berkowitz was as happy as a child with a new toy. The professor felt relieved. I can give Eberly and that Vyborg creature what they want without hurting anyone's feelings. A win

win situation. All to the good.

Pancho Lane could feel her face tightening into a frown as she watched Manuel Gaeta's message to her.

"So even if I can't get to Titan, this stunt with the rings oughtta pay you back for the trip with interest."

Yeah, but what about my sister? Pancho demanded silently.

Gaeta rambled on about his possible stunts while Pancho sat fuming behind her desk. What about Susie? she wondered. Holly, I mean.

At last Gaeta said, 'Tour sister's fine, Ms. Lane. She's a very bright young woman. Very intelligent. And very attractive, too. She has lots of friends and she seems very happy here. Not to worry about her."

But Pancho focused on his "And very attractive, too." Gaeta had something of a reputation. Handsome chunk of beef, Pancho had to admit. I wouldn't throw him out of my bed. Is he making it with my sister?

Pancho sighed. If he is, there's not much I can do about it. I just hope Susie enjoys it. I hope he doesn't hurt her. If he does, this'll be his last stunt. Ever.

Professor Wilmot rocked slightly in his desk chair as he dictated his status report to Atlanta.

"It's interesting to observe the different motivations of these people. Eberly isn't after power so much as adulation, it seems to me. The man wants to be adored by the people. I'm not certain what Vyborg wants; I haven't been able to work up the stamina to get close to the man. Berkowitz is happy to be rid of the responsibilities of heading the Communications Department. He's back to being an active newsman. I understand there's some friction between him and Gaeta's technical crew, but that's perfectly understandable. Quite normal.

"Gaeta himself is fascinating, in his own way. He actually wants to risk his hide on these stunts he does. He enjoys them. Of course, they bring him money and fame, but I believe he'd do them anyway, merely for the sheer adrenaline rush they give him. In a strange way, he's rather like a scientist, except that scientists enjoy the intellectual thrill of being the first to discover new phenomena, while this stuntman enjoys the visceral excitement of being the first man on the scene."

BOOK: Saturn
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