Authors: Michael Grant
Tags: #Teen & Young Adult, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction
Green? Good grief, sounds like a golf course.”
“I’ve never been there.”
Tanner nodded. “Know anyone who’s ever been there?”
Suarez shrugged. “I imagine a lot of the support people have.
Must have been to handle construction.”
Tanner shook his head, and watched her. “No. In fact, the crews
have been kept almost entirely separate. There’s very little crossover.
There’s Cathexis Base and its people, and there’s Forward Green and
its people.”
Suarez looked at him expectantly, waiting for some kind of clue.
When all he did was look back at her, she said, “So?”
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“So, it’s odd.”
“Okay.”
He was an experienced interrogator and had mastered the trick
of waiting. But Suarez had nothing to offer, so all she could do was
wait as well.
He nodded as if he’d satisfied himself on some point, then leaned
forward on his elbows. “Anyone at Cathexis ever suggest you might
want to try piloting a new kind of hovercraft? Something faster?”
“Well, the navy already has—”
“I’m not talking about a piece of navy equipment.”
“Then what
are
you talking about, because I’m tired, I need sleep,
and before that I need a drink.” She was bouncing one leg, a habit
when she was impatient.
He opened his laptop, hit a few keys, then turned it so she could
see. “The video is just seven seconds long.”
The film was obviously taken from a great distance. It shook and
wobbled. What it showed, or seemed to show, was a sleek, low-slung
object shooting across the ice.
“Do you recognize that?”
“Do I recognize what? Something going zoom across the ice?”
He laughed. “We did a bit of enhancement and a bit of informed
speculation, and the best guess from Langley is that it’s a hovercraft,
quite small, so not designed for cargo. There appears to be a bubble
canopy large enough for one, possibly two people. Speed in excess of
a hundred and twenty knots. And it appears to be armed.”
“Armed?” That stopped the bouncing of her leg.
“Mmm. Armed. With a type of Russian missile, essentially an
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antitank weapon, although obviously it would work even better
against a tractor or a Sno-Cat or a shelter.”
The thing that came to her mind was obvious and a bit stupid.
But she said it, anyway. “Weapons are forbidden on the ice. Nothing
beyond a couple of handguns for the security people.”
“Yes.”
“Why would somebody need missiles? On some souped-up hov-
ercraft?”
“That’s the question,” Tanner agreed. “Why would they? Specu-
late, Suarez.”
She pushed back, tilting the hind legs of her chair. “If it’s as fast as
you say, it would be tough to hit from the air. White on white, going
one hundred twenty knots? You’d see a hell of an infrared signature,
so if you went after it in an Apache you could use the thirty mil, but
an Apache’s top speed is one hundred fifty knots, so you don’t have
much of an edge in speed.”
“I knew a good pilot like yourself would see it all clearly,” Tanner
said. “A pilot with SEAL training, and right here close at hand. Let’s
have that drink, Suarez.”
She hefted a bottle, unwound the capsule, and poured into paper
cups. “Am I going to need it?”
“Lieutenant Imelda Suarez, I am informing you that pursuant
to a special directive of the Department of Defense, you are hereby
returned to active duty.”
“Whether I like it or not?”
Tanner raised his cup. “Cheers.”
Sailing in the San Francisco Bay in blustery weather, Francis Janklow,
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the CEO of Janklow/MediStat, was not as happy as he should have
been. He loved his boat in the abstract, but now that he’d bought the
damned thing for two million dollars he felt as if he had to use it.
But the truth was, he was just not that crazy about sailing. Especially
when the wind was up so that he was constantly drenched by a spray
that ranged from cooling mist to fire hose.
His guests seemed to be having a good time, though. These were
a senior state senator and the senator’s much younger “assistant,” a
rival CEO, a supposed painter whom Janklow’s wife was sponsoring,
and of course Janklow’s wife.
The boat had been his wife’s idea. According to her, you could
not own a waterfront property on Belvedere Island and not also own
a boat of some sort, and after all Janklow had sailed as a youth.
And yet, Janklow thought glumly even as he affected many a grin
in the face of the elements, he would much rather have been home
with a spreadsheet on his screen and a scotch in his hand. Instead he
was at the wheel, yelling instructions to the kid, Antonio, who some-
times crewed for a day.
And also seeing things. Definitely seeing things. He frowned and
peered off toward the Golden Gate, open water ahead, trying to figure
out just what he was seeing.
“I think I’m seeing things,” Janklow said. He forced a laugh. No
one heard either the remark or the laugh.
No one heard him say that it was as if a window . . . no, two win-
dows . . . had opened in his head.
Antonio saw him stagger back from the wheel and raced back to
take over.
“You okay, Mr. J.?”
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“I’m . . . Nah. Nah. Yeah. Oh, shit.”
And then suddenly Janklow was racing up the mast, hand over
hand, like a much younger man.
Everyone saw this. The state senator’s assistant yelled something
and pointed. All eyes turned to look at Janklow, now thirty feet up,
his sparse hair flowing in a wind that was too strong for those below
to make much sense of what sounded a lot like disconnected, wild
ranting.
And then Janklow fell. Although it looked very much as if he
actually leapt.
He plunged straight down into the sea.
Pandemonium. All the passengers jumped up and began yelling
to Antonio to
turn the boat around, turn the boat around
.
But sailboats are not so easy to turn around when under wind
power. So first Antonio—without help—had to lower the sail and
start the engine. Only then, a quarter mile away from Janklow, could
they turn back and effect a rescue.
Janklow could be seen. He was in the water, waving his hands
wildly, but more as if he was a little kid splashing in the tub.
As the boat drew up alongside, the state senator had the presence
of mind to throw a life vest to Janklow, while his wife berated him for
being so careless.
But Janklow just laughed; a wild, manic sound that sent chills
up his wife’s spine. And then, pushing himself along the side of the
boat and refusing all proffered hands, Janklow went to the stern, dove
down, and came up with his face shoved straight into the churning
propeller.
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It would be listed as an accidental death, not a suicide.
“I’m looking at the spreadsheet right now,” Lystra Reid said. She had
a phone propped against her ear and a pad open before her. Tiburon
police officers and California Highway Patrol detectives were milling
around the marina of the Tiburon Yacht Club. They had taken state-
ments from everyone on the Janklow boat. Lystra had little enough to
say, and none of it useful, and the detectives had let her go.
But rather than take off immediately, Lystra savored a bourbon
rocks and split her attention between the mild chaos of the investiga-
tion and the neat order of her spreadsheets.
“Yes, I am very much aware of some of my off-book expenses,
and no, I won’t enlighten you further, Tom. One of the reasons I don’t
take the company public, yeah, yeah, is because I like to spend my
money without being second-guessed. It is, after all, mine.”
At the age of nine, Lystra had been sent away. Her father had
finally decided that he could not raise her properly. His own busi-
ness was falling on hard times; the carnival business was fading fast.
Her father’s act—he was a trick shooter and put on an impressive if
threadbare show with guns, knives, and hatchets—no longer drew
enough of a paying crowd for the carny life to make much sense.
He’d sat her down and explained it all to her. She would be going
to a good, decent family that would raise her properly, with school,
and friends, and all of that.
“You won’t be my dad anymore?” She hadn’t cried. She’d felt sick
with betrayal, but she hadn’t cried.
Her father, his lined face half hidden in the gloom of the
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Louisiana dusk, had said, “I won’t be with you. I won’t be seeing you,
I . . . I have to find some way to make a living. But listen to me, Lystra.
Listen to me. You’re a very smart kid. And better than smart, you’re
determined. You’ll do fine. And if you ever need me, really need me,
life-and-death need, I’ll be there.”
“What about Mom? Is she dead?”
“I don’t know,” he said.
She knew he was lying. She couldn’t recall the exact moment
when it dawned on her that her father had killed her mother. But once
the idea
had
dawned, certainty soon followed.
Her mother had been a bit of a party girl. That was the nicest way
to put it. Lystra’s mother liked a good time, and she had not found it
in the life her husband gave her. She’d looked for comfort elsewhere.
In booze, in drugs, in sex.
“I know,”
Lystra had said. Nothing else. Just those two words.
Her father had said nothing. The two of them just sat there on the
broken-down lawn chairs. Then her father had poured two fingers of
bourbon into a paper cup and handed it to her.
God, it had burned her throat, but she had swallowed it and not
made a sound.
“Bad things happen in this life,” he had said at last.
Lystra had held out her paper cup and said, “More.”
He shook his head. “That taste was enough. You’re still a kid.”
“You killed my mother. Now you’re dumping me. Okay. That’s all
done. Yeah. Maybe I’ll never see you again.”
“Maybe.”
“But if I do, you’ll do whatever I ask you to do.”
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“Will I?” He’d seemed almost amused, but seeing the look in her
eyes he had flinched, looked down, and finally poured her a second
drink. “I will,” he had said, and there was a sacredness to that vow.
Lystra went to live with a very nice, childless family by the name
of Reid, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. She got straight As in school while barely
bothering to crack a book. She wasn’t just a smart kid; she was bril-
liant. A cold, emotionally distant, friendless-but-never-bullied kid.
But at age fourteen things began to change. Not her grades, those
stayed top-notch. But at about that time Lystra began to talk to her
long-distant father again. He would speak to her when she was walk-
ing through the corridors at school. He would speak to her as she sat
in the Baptist church and listened to the sermon. Her lip would curl
when she heard him. Her eyes would focus with inhuman intensity
on the back of a man’s neck until by sheer force of will she could make
him turn around, uncomfortable, only to become confused when the
danger he sensed turned out to be just a young girl.
Her father’s voice spoke to her. And other voices as well. Angels,
sometimes, though not the better sort of angel. And the voice of a girl
with the odd name of Scowler.
She never told anyone about the voices; they had universally
warned her not to.
Yeah, don’t tell anyone we’re here, they’ll lock you
up. Yeah.
Then both her adoptive parents had died in a car accident. The
particulars of the accident raised eyebrows but elicited sympathy. Lys-
tra had been sixteen at that point, just learning to drive. And despite
the fact that Lystra had played various online driving games for years,
she panicked while driving the real thing. She had not realized the
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car was in reverse. She did not notice that her parents were standing
behind her, down at the bottom of the long driveway.
The police questioned her for a long time. The detectives could
not quite square her story of intending to pull the car forward slowly
into the open garage with the fact that the car had been in reverse and
had shot at surprisingly high speed the sixty-seven feet between the
rear bumper and the two Reids.
“When I realized it was in reverse, it was too late, yeah. I saw what
was about to happen, and I knew what to do, but instead of hitting the
brake I accidentally hit the gas pedal.”
“And then?”
“I felt the impact, and my only thought was that I should pull the
car forward. Yeah. Undo my mistake.”
“Right. And in the process you ran over both of your parents
again. That’s your story. You’re sticking to that?”
“How can I do otherwise? It’s the truth.”
No, they had not believed her. No one believed her. People who
knew Lystra Ellen Alice Reid scoffed at the notion that she had pan-