Changing Vision (51 page)

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Authors: Julie E. Czerneda

BOOK: Changing Vision
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Kearn’s eyes snapped open. “Has Ragem been Her pet?” he sounded bitter. “A plaything?”

“You knew him,” Lefebvre countered. “Do you believe that?”

“Yes.” The smaller Human rubbed his gleaming forehead, then sighed. “No, I don’t. Ragem told me Esen was his friend. I thought, all this time, She’d betrayed him.”

“That’s not what happened, is it?” Lefebvre’s temper flared. “You’re the one who betrayed him, Kearn. You branded Ragem a traitor, cost his family the memory of their son. You’re the one who tried to charge him with crimes he didn’t commit and, when that failed, spread rumors until no one could separate the truth from your lies.”

His outburst brought only a shrug from Kearn, deep in his contemplation of a now-empty glass. “Ragem could have defended himself,” he said almost mildly, but his hands were perceptibly shaking. “He could have returned to his family. Instead, he chose to hide, to leave everything—for Her. Why?”

“I don’t know,” Lefebvre said, hearing the truth in it. Paul hadn’t explained, not yet, maybe not ever. A tiny flicker of anger burned at that thought, then faded to resignation. “He had his reasons.”

“Does She control his mind? Does She rule him by fear?”

“Those must be quite the dreams you’ve been having,” Lefebvre snorted.

“I don’t recommend them,” Kearn replied, without irony. “Then what is it? What is it about the Esen Monster that could draw such loyalty from someone like Ragem? That’s my nightmare, Captain Lefebvre. That I—that I—” Kearn seemed to lose his voice.

“That you’ve been wrong for fifty years?” Lefebvre finished
for him, unsure what was more dangerous: Kearn’s vulnerability or his.

Again the urgent glance, this time from eyes filling with tears. “Can you tell me that, Captain—Rudy?” Kearn pleaded. “Have I been wrong? Or is Esen a monster? I’m going to catch her. What will I be facing when I do? My destruction? Do you know?”

“What I know—what I know is that we’re both overtired and need to be fit to deal with the Feneden in the morning. Anything else, you’ll have to find out for yourself. Sir.” Lefebvre took back the glass, hating himself as he watched the desperate hope on Kearn’s face fade to despair alone.

Paul warned there’d be a price for keeping Esen’s secret
, Lefebvre reminded himself.

He hadn’t expected it to be Kearn.

44: Asteroid Midnight

WE’D explored the entire dome and taken turns staring gloomily at the sabotaged vent control. All we had to show for our efforts was a pile of packing material to sit on and, certainly on my part, a greater appetite for what was not present—lunch.

We’d caught up on some news, most of it deteriorating into arguments about which of us should have listened to the other before leaping into situations alone.
On the whole
, I decided,
we were remarkably even.

Now we sat, grateful for the warmth of our helmetless suits, although mine was set appropriately cooler than Paul’s, and contemplated the lovely spray of stars overhead. There wasn’t much else to be done. I was of the opinion the Iftsen would come to check on their asteroid. Paul had doubts, especially once I told him about the inscription I’d seen on the side of The Messenger.

“ ‘Messenger of Peace and Harmony, donated by the First Citizens’ Art Gallery of Brakistem, a work in mixed media,’ ” he repeated for what had to be the fifth time. “I thought you said it rhymed.”

I chuckled. “It has a very nice rhyme in the original dialect. You want me to say it for you?”

“No, I believe you.” His gray eyes sparkled with grim amusement. “So Inspector Logan stole a work of art.”

“And was very pleased with it, I might add,” I said pompously. “Sometimes, there is symmetry, my friend.”

He shook his head in amazement. “As long as you’re sure the thing’s harmless.”

“Totally. Except to the backs of anyone trying to lift it. And,” I grinned, “to the reputations of those who try to use it.”

“Which leaves us with three problems.”

We were sitting side by side. At the sudden seriousness in his voice, I turned to face him. “Three?”
When had our troubles multiplied?

My friend gestured at the view. “Getting out of here. Reconciling the Feneden and Iftsen.”

“That’s two,” I tallied suspiciously.

“Our friend Logan. He may not have his superweapon, but he’s still a threat to Inhaven—and to Largas Freight.”

I tapped a slender finger against the medallion hanging outside his suit. “I’ve taken a step or two in that direction,” I confessed, peeking up at him through a flash of red eyelids.

Paul raised one brow. “Why am I not surprised?”

Fortunately, my Feneden-self was spared a Human-like blush. “Nothing you’d object to,” I hastened to assure him. “I merely—clicked—a bit of information into the right ears.”

My friend had a wide, generous mouth, one that smiled particularly well, I’d always thought, with an infectious, warm quality. It was smiling now. “You told the Herd.”

“Oh, not just the Herd Logan dropped on Iftsen Secondus,” I corrected, smiling back. “I informed the Ganthor Homeworld.”

If I’d thought he smiled before, I was dazzled by the warmth in his face now. “That’s just—that’s just—”

When Paul appeared at a loss for words, I supplied: “That’s just brilliant, Esen?”

He shook his head. “I was thinking poetic, but brilliant? Definitely, old friend. Logan’s biggest misjudgment. No one deceives the Ganthor on the battlefield.” His smile softened, and he put one hand on my shoulder. “That lonely soldier on Minas XII would have appreciated this, Esen.”

His praise made me uneasy.
Why was my solution to the least of our problems so important to him?
I asked myself. Of course, it was an ephemeral trait, one Paul had in full measure, to ignore the life-threatening in favor of the emotionally
satisfying.
It was a good thing I was here
, I decided,
to make sure he had the right priorities.
“The air is getting thinner,” I reminded him, waving one arm at the dome. The venting air was freezing as it escaped, snowing on the rocks and forming a rim of frost along the lower third of that area of the dome’s surface, occluding the stars. I’d hoped it would jam up the vent, but the mechanism had a servo heater to maintain an opening. “We have a few hours left before the pressure drops too low for—comfort.”

“I know,” Paul said, too calmly. I narrowed my eyes, blinking red once or twice before turning my back on him.

“See if you can pry that tank off my suit,” I suggested. “We can rig something to keep the pressure up in yours—won’t be pretty, but—”

“Esen, we have to talk about what might happen.”

I froze, not turning to look at him.
Ersh. I hated that note in his voice.
“I don’t need the air,” I went on. “Let’s get working on this.”

I felt his hands on my suit, but they didn’t start working on the fastenings of the air tank. Instead, they pulled me around.

“Just listen,” Paul insisted.

“This is a good idea. I can—”

“Shut up, Esen.” Paul’s smile was gone. In its place were deep lines drawn around his eyes and mouth, lines I’d never noticed as prominent before. “If the air keeps venting, I’m going to die.” He stifled my involuntary protest with a hand over my mouth. “Listen to me! We both know it could happen. And I’ve something I want you to do for me.”

I nodded, licking blood from my lip as Paul removed his grip: my Feneden teeth were sharper than Human norm. “Anything,” I said despondently. “You know that. But you aren’t going—”

“Shh,” gently. “I want you to use my mass. To assimilate—isn’t that the word?—my body into yours.”

Whatever I’d expected, it wasn’t this.
I stared at my friend. “It won’t preserve you,” I told him, feeling the truth as a sharp wound. “Your flesh would be altered into web-mass. Nothing Human, nothing of you, would be left. No transfer
of memory. No remnant of self. Believe me, Paul. I would give anything if that could be, if I could take you into me and—and save you.”

Wonder of wonders, he smiled. “I know, Es. I think I understand the process as well as it’s possible for an alien to do so. But this is what I want you to do for me. You’ll know the moment.”

Oh, yes
, I told myself bitterly.
I was very good at detecting the imminent death of cells, of the cessation of life
, if not restoring it. “You are my friend,” the last came out past a hiccup I couldn’t help. “I will do whatever you want. But why this?”

His fingers fluffed the soft, sensory cilia under my skin. I savored the warmth of his touch and the patterns of heat from his face. “I want you to have my mass, Esen-alit-Quar,” Paul Ragem said. “And I want you to use it to fly.”

I lurched back from the gentle-voiced Human and his horrifying vision. “I won’t leave you,” I snarled, knowing even as I spoke that he was right, that if we were here long enough to cost him his life, I could escape by spending his mass for propulsion. In web-form I could easily break free of this dome, and soar into space. His body might be enough to take me translight to safety, to a future, to a new life.

Alone
.

“There will be,” I promised him with utter and complete conviction, “another option, Paul. I don’t want to hear this wish of yours again.”

“I’ll stop if you promise me.”
He could be as rock-solid, immovable, and depressingly irresistible as Ersh.
“Promise, Esen.”

I dropped my face into my hands, admitting the inconceivable with a nod.

“Good,” I heard him say, but with a little break in the word as though he’d been sure I’d argue longer.

I didn’t bother telling him he didn’t have the air or time for it.

Obviously, Paul knew that as well as I.

Elsewhere

“WE’VE decoded the Feneden transmission, Captain.”

Lefebvre ran a hand through his hair, wishing he’d had time to stick his head under the ’fresher. Kearn looked worse than he felt—something Lefebvre attributed more to last night’s conversation than the brandy or few minutes of sleep they’d had before this urgent summons to the bridge. Timri stood with the message in her hand, immaculate as always, and looked from one to the other of her superiors as if wanting to ask, but knowing better.

“I’ll take that, Comp-tech,” Kearn said before Lefebvre could reach for it, almost snatching the sheet of plas. Lefebvre settled one hip against the railing behind navigation, waiting to be enlightened, and stifled a yawn.

Kearn, already pale, looked about to faint as he read. Lefebvre glanced at Timri. Her lips were tightly pressed together and her look was a warning. “Sir?” Lefebvre prompted. “Is it about the weapon?”

“Take it.” Kearn’s voice was reed-thin, and his hand shook as he held out the message. Then he threw back his shoulders and raised his head to look Lefebvre in the eyes. “I told you this day would come, Captain,” Kearn said before turning on his heel and leaving the bridge.

Lefebvre read: “Our congratulations to the Shifter Hunter. Your glorious trap has worked. We have imprisoned the Esen Monster and her Human slave within the asteroid dome, awaiting your arrival. This has been a victory for all of Fened Prime and your Commonwealth. Glory to the Shifter Hunter!”

45: Asteroid Morning

HAVING a painfully empty stomach did offer one advantage I’d never considered. It made a fine distraction from the difficulty I was beginning to experience whenever I exerted my Feneden-self and had to gasp for air.

Not that exerting myself was a problem
, I thought, looking over at Paul. There wasn’t much room and no reason to move anyway. We’d managed to coax the inner air lock door into opening, then made a snug nest inside from whatever was portable. With the door closed again, we had a bubble of air that wouldn’t be vented, although it was mountaintop-thin by the time this plan had occurred to us. Our air tanks raised the oxygen levels near our faces whenever we allowed some to escape. There was nothing we could do about the accumulation of carbon dioxide within this space except refrain, as Paul quipped, from dancing.

In lieu of dancing, the Human might have been meditating, so shallow and slow was the rise of his chest with each breath, but his eyes never left me. Each time I made to speak, he’d close his eyes briefly,
No
.

I didn’t dream, but this was nightmare enough for any being. I went through every form assimilated in my memory, searching for anything that could help Paul survive until help came.
If it came.

There was nothing. I was locked as living flesh, flesh that, with the exception of web-form, was as vulnerable to vacuum as the flesh encompassing the spirit of my friend. I wondered how terrifying I would be to Kearn now.

Soon, I knew, I’d have to assume my natural form. I
could scrub some of the carbon dioxide from our pocket of air before it poisoned his blood, grant Paul an hour or so more of life, while robbing him of whatever comfort my companionship provided.
There wasn’t
, I had to admit,
much a blob of corrosive blue jelly could offer in that regard.

My promise was another reason not to cycle—not until he lost consciousness. I couldn’t bear to see fear in his eyes, to be the proof he was about to end.

Memory overwhelmed my sight for a moment, painting his dear face with marks of pain and abuse, merging with the despair of the present. “This is Logan’s doing,” I said, as unable to save my breath any more than I could keep rage from my voice and thoughts. I felt cilia writhing as my temperature rose with my anguish.

Paul’s gaze intensified, his eyes darkening as if he heard more than I said aloud. “Es, when we met, you spoke to me of how each species, each individual, has its limits, that point beyond which none of us can go because of our very natures. I told you mine, as a condition to our friendship. Do you remember?”

Of course I did.
“You won’t endanger innocent lives.”

“Then tell me, Esen, because I must know. Was I wrong to befriend you? Are you capable of killing someone? Will you hunt and kill Logan if I die here?”

“Your definition of innocent appalls me,” I Said, trying hard to be angry instead of simply terrified.

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