Read The Return of Santiago: A Myth of the Far Future Online

Authors: Mike Resnick

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Space Opera

The Return of Santiago: A Myth of the Far Future (20 page)

BOOK: The Return of Santiago: A Myth of the Far Future
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She shook her head. "I'm looking for Santiago."

      
He stared at her curiously. "Santiago's been dead for a century or more—if he ever really existed in the first place."

      
"He was my great-great-grandfather," said Matilda.

      
"I know I've aged," said Tchanga, "but do I look like anyone's great-great-grandfather?"

      
"No," interjected Dimitrios. "But you might look like Santiago."

      
Tchanga frowned. "I think I'm missing something here."

      
"Santiago is more than a name or a person," continued Dimitrios. "It's an idea, a concept, maybe even a job description. And the job has been open for a century. We're looking for someone to fill it."

      
"He was the King of the Outlaws," said Tchanga. "I was an honest lawman. I may not be much these days, but I'm still honest."

      
"We wouldn't be speaking to you if you weren't," said Dimitrios.

      
"Then I'm still missing something."

      
"You're missing a lot," said Matilda. "Sit back, relax, and make yourself comfortable, because I'm going to spend an hour or more filling you in."

      
Dimitrios studied Tchanga intently as Matilda explained who and what Santiago really was, what he had done, how he had hidden his true purpose from the Democracy, and why the string of Santiagos had ended the day the Navy "pacified" Safe Harbor.

      
"It's time to call him forth again," concluded Matilda. "The time is ripe for him to return. The Democracy is abusing and plundering the Inner Frontier again, colonists have almost no rights, aliens have even less. The Navy goes where it wants and takes what it wants. It protects us from a hostile galaxy, but there's no one to protect us from
it
."

      
There was a long silence. Finally Tchanga spoke.

      
"I'm more honored than you can imagine that you came to me. But I'm an used-up old man whose time is past. I'm no hero, no leader of men. I'm still holding a pulse gun, but if either of you made a sudden motion, I'd be more likely to duck than to fire it." He paused. "There was a time when I might have been the man you seek, but that time is long gone."

      
"You don't have to be a hero," said Dimitrios. "There's no holograph or video of Santiago anywhere in the Democracy's records.
He
didn't go out on raids, or face Democracy soldiers himself. He ordered his men to do those things."

      
Tchanga shook his head. "That may be so, but he
might
have gone with them from time to time. He
could
have. I can't. And I can't order men to do things I myself won't do."

      
"Generals don't fight in the front lines," said Dimitrios.

      
"They also don't run and hide when the shooting starts," replied Tchanga. "You need a Santiago who commands respect, and I am no longer that man. I wonder if I ever was."

      
"You were," said Dimitrios with certainty. "And you can be again. You can redeem your life and your reputation through the single act of becoming Santiago."

      
"I appreciate your words," said Tchanga, "but Santiago is too big. He blots out the stars. The ground trembles when he walks. He does not exist for me to redeem myself. You belittle him by suggesting that."

      
Dimitrios turned to Matilda. "Aren't you going to say anything?"

      
"What is there to say?" she replied. "I agree with him."

      
"Perhaps Santiago isn't a man at all," suggested Tchanga. "Perhaps Santiago is a woman."

      
"It's possible," she agreed. "But not
this
woman. I'm just someone who needs a little more protection from the Democracy than I've been getting."

      
"I hope you find your Santiago and get your protection," said Tchanga. He got to his feet and walked to the door. "You'd better be going. If he's as hard to find as I think he'll be, you haven't any time to waste."

      
They arose and walked out the door.

      
Dimitrios pointed to the pulse gun. "Is that thing even charged?"

      
Tchanga looked out across the vast field of mutated corn. "You see that scarecrow?"

      
Dimitrios squinted into the distance. "That one about 500 yards off to the left?"

      
Tchanga nodded. "That's the one." In a single motion the old man spun, aimed his pulse gun, and fired. The scarecrow burst into a ball of flame.

      
"My God!" exclaimed Dimitrios. "That was more than a quarter mile away! I couldn't do that on the best day I ever had!" He turned to the old man. "Can you hit it every time?"

      
"Just about," said Tchanga. He paused, and a look of infinite sadness crossed his face. "Unless I thought it might fire back at me."

      
"Jesus!" said Dimitrios as he and Matilda walked toward their vehicle. "What he must have been as a young man!"

      
"He still is."

      
Dimitrios shook his head. "No. Like he said, he's all used up."

      
"Don't look so sad for him," she said. "He'll be all right."

      
"I was feeling sad for
me
, not for him," Dimitrios corrected her.

      
"For
you
? Why?"

      
"Because that's my fate, probably the fate or every bounty hunter, if we live long enough." He paused. "I hope I don't."

      
"Don't what?"

      
"Live long enough."

      
They reached their vehicle, and neither of them saw the tear that rolled down the Rough Rider's withered face as he tried unsuccessfully to remember what it felt like to face an armed man with no more fear than he felt when facing a scarecrow.

 

 

 

13.

 

      
      
Alien face and alien ways,

      
      
Alien thoughts and tribal lays.

      
      
Alien appetites, strange and cold,

      
      
Blue Peter's sins are manifold.

 

      
The Rhymer actually met Blue Peter before Matilda did.

      
He was on Bowman 17, which was actually the third planet circling its star but the 17th opened up by a member of the Pioneer Corps named Nate Bowman, who exercised his Pioneer's privilege of naming it after himself. It was an outpost world, with a single Tradertown consisting of a bar, a brothel, a weapon shop, an assay office, and a jail. That last was unusual for any Frontier world, especially one as underpopulated as Bowman 17.

      
Dante Alighieri was sitting in the bar, relaxing with a drink, when Virgil Soaring Hawk approached him and asked for a loan.

      
"What for?" replied Dante. "There's nothing to spend it on."

      
"I have to make a friend's bail."

      
"You've got a friend locked up on Bowman 17?"

      
"Yes."

      
"Who is it?"

      
"He's more of a what than a who," answered Virgil.

      
"Worth a verse?" queried Dante, suddenly interested.

      
"Maybe two or three."

      
"Santiago material?"

      
Virgil chuckled. "Not unless the job description has changed in the last couple of minutes."

      
"All right," said Dante. "Tell me about him."

      
"You ever hear of Blue Peter?"

      
"No."

      
"He an alien," said Virgil. "I have no idea where his home world is. He's the only member of his race I've ever met."

      
"He's blue?"

      
"Skin, hair, eyes, teeth, probably even his tongue."

      
"How did you meet him?"

      
"It'll just embarrass you," said Virgil.

      
"Jesus!" muttered Dante. "Is there anyone on the Frontier that you
haven't
slept with?"

      
"You."

      
"Thank heaven for small favors." Dante finished his drink and lit up a smokeless cigar. "What's your friend in jail for?"

      
"Unspecified crimes against Nature," answered Virgil.

      
"What does he do when he's not assaulting Nature?"

      
"You mean for a living?"

      
"He's got to pay to feed himself, and to get from one world to another. How does he make his money?"

      
"He does whatever anyone pays him to do."

      
"Outside of being a rather twisted gigolo, what does that entail?"

      
"Robbery. Extortion. Murder. Things like that."

      
"Sounds to me like he's right where he belongs," said Dante.

      
"You won't loan me the money?"

      
Dante shook his head. "We have no use for him."

      
"
I
do."

      
"I don't want to hear about the use you'll put him to."

      
"You really mean it?"

      
"I really mean it."

      
Suddenly Virgil smiled and picked up a chair. "Well, if you can't bring Mohammed to the mountain . . ."

      
He hurled the chair through a window, then threw two more out into the street before the Tradertown's solitary lawman came over from the jail, trained a screecher on him, and escorted him to the jail. Dante had seen Virgil in action before, and never doubted for an instant that the Injun could disarm the lawman any time he wanted—but of course he didn't want to.

      
Dante made a very happy Virgil's bail the next morning, spent a few minutes visiting with Blue Peter, and left the jail feeling uncomfortable that something like Blue Peter would soon be free. He wrote the poem that afternoon, and never saw Blue Peter again.

      
But Matilda did.

      
It was on Gandhi III, which wasn't as peaceable a world as its name implied. Dimitrios was there on business—another ladykiller with a price on his head—and Matilda had accompanied him. She had no reason to be there . . . but then, she had no reason to be anywhere in particular. She was looking for a perhaps- nonexistent man who embodied a complex concept, and there was no more reason to search for him anywhere else than here, and at least here she was under the protection of Dimitrios of the Three Burners.

      
Dimitrios spent the day gathering information about Mikhail Mikva, the man he was after, while Matilda stayed in her room watching the holo and catching up on the galaxy's news. The Democracy had opened up nineteen new worlds. The Navy had been forced to pacify the native population of Wajima II, which had been renamed Grundheidt II after the commander of the 6th Fleet. Contact had been made with four new species of sentient life; three had joined the Democracy, and the fourth was learning just how effective an quadrant-wide economic embargo could be. The Democracy had moved the planetary populations of Kubalic IV and V and their attendant flora and fauna to new worlds before the star Kubalic went nova. Lodin XI had voted to withdraw from the Democracy, but its resignation had not been accepted and the 15th Fleet was on its way to Lodin to "peacefully discuss our differences". Five new cross-species diseases had been discovered; medical science announced that they would have vaccines and antidotes for all five within one hundred days.

      
She deactivated the holo at twilight, wondering why she ever bothered with the news. All it did was reinforce her decision never to visit the Democracy again.

      
The door opened and Dimitrios entered.

      
"Any luck?" she asked.

      
"If he's here, he's well-disguised. No one's seen him."

      
"Could they be lying to you?"

      
He stared at her.

      
"No, of course not," she said. She got to her feet. "Shall we go out for dinner?"

      
"Yeah. I won't start searching the bars and drug dens for another couple of hours."

      
They left the hotel and went to one of the small city's half-dozen restaurants, one that advertised real meat rather than soya products (though it didn't say what kind of animals supplied the meat).

      
They sat down, ordered, and began chatting about the news from the Democracy when they became aware of a blue alien standing outside and staring at them through the window.

      
"You'd think he'd never seen a Man before," grumbled Dimitrios when the alien kept watching them.

      
"That can't be it," said Matilda. "There are thousands of Men on Gandhi."

      
"Then what's his problem?"

      
"I think he's about to tell you," replied Matilda as the alien suddenly walked to the door of the restaurant, entered, and began approaching their table.

      
The blue alien stopped a few feet from them.

BOOK: The Return of Santiago: A Myth of the Far Future
10.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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