Authors: Lois McMaster Bujold
Tags: #Science fiction, #General, #Science Fiction - General, #Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy fiction, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #American Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Obstetricians, #Inrerplanetary voyages
She checked her chronometer. “Ye gods, we've got to get this float pallet and canister back to Docking Bay 32. Newts, newts, who will buy my newts ... ? Ah ha, the very thing.”
She made a sharp right turn into a cross corridor, nearly dumping Ethan, and speeded up. After a moment she brought the pallet to a halt before a door marked “Cold Storage Access 297-C.”
Inside they found a counter, and a plump, bored-looking young woman on duty eating little fried morsels of something from a bag.
“I'd like to rent a vacuum storage locker,” Quinn announced.
“This is for Stationers, ma'am,” the counter girl began, after a hungry, wistful look at the mercenary woman's face. “If you go up to Transients' Lounge, you can get --”
Quinn slapped an ID down on the counter. “A cubic meter will do, and I want it in removable plastic. Clean plastic, mind you.”
The counter girl glanced at the ID. “Ah. Oh.” She shuffled off, and returned a few minutes later with a big plastic-lined case.
The mercenary woman signed and thumbprinted, and turned to Ethan. “Let's lay them in nicely, eh? Impress the cook, when he thaws 'em out.”
They packed the newts in neat rows. The counter girl, looking on, wrinkled her nose, then shrugged and returned to her comconsole where the holovid was displaying something that looked suspiciously more like play than work.
They were just in time, Ethan gauged; some of their amphibian victims were beginning to twitch. He almost felt worse about them than he did about Okita. The counter girl bore the box off.
“They won't suffer long, will they?” Ethan asked, looking back over his shoulder.
Commander Quinn snorted. “I should die so quick. They're going into the biggest freezer in the universe -- outside. I think I really will ship them back to Admiral Naismith, later, when things calm down.”
“'Things,'“ echoed Ethan. “Quite. I think you and I should have a talk about 'things'.” His mouth set mulishly.
Hers turned up on one side. “Heart to heart,” she agreed cordially.
After sneaking the float pallet back to its docking bay, Commander Quinn brought him by a roundabout route to a hostel room not much larger than Ethan's own. This hostel was, Ethan was dimly aware, in yet another section of Transients' Lounge, although he was not quite sure where they had recrossed that unmarked border. Quinn had dropped behind several times, or parked him abruptly in some cul-de-sac while she scouted ahead, or once wandered off quite casual-seeming, her arm draped across the shoulders of some uniformed Stationer acquaintance as she gesticulated gaily with her free hand. Ethan prayed she knew what she was doing.
She at any rate seemed to feel he had been successfully smuggled to some kind of home base, for she relaxed visibly when the hostel room doors sealed shut behind them, kicking off her boots and stretching and diving for the room service console.
“Here. Real beer.” She handed him a foaming tumbler, after pausing to squirt something into it from her Dendarii issue medkit. “Imported. '
The aroma made his mouth water, but he stood suspiciously, without raising it to his lips. “What did you put in it?”
“Vitamins. Look, see?” She snapped a squirt out of the air from the same vial, and washed it down with a long swallow from her own tumbler. “You're safe here for now. Drink, eat, wash, what-you-will.”
He glanced longingly toward the bathroom. “Won't double use show up on the computer monitors? What if someone asks questions?”
She smirked. “It will show that Commander Quinn is entertaining a handsome Stationer acquaintance in her room, at length. Nobody'd dare ask anything. Relax.”
The implications were anything but relaxing, but Ethan was by that time ready to risk his life for a shave; his stubbled chin was perilously close to pretending to paternal honors to which he had no right.
The bathroom, alas, had no second exit. He gave up and drank his beer while he washed. If Millisor and Rau had not found useful intelligence in him, he doubted Commander Quinn could either, no matter what she'd doctored his drink with.
He was horrified by the haggard face that stared back at him from the mirror. Sandpaper chin, red-rimmed eyes, skin blotched and puffy -- no patron in his right mind would trust his infant to that ruffian. Fortunately, a few minutes work returned him to his normal reassuringly squeaky-clean neatness; merely tired, not degraded. There was even a sonic scrubber that cleaned his clothes while he showered.
He emerged to find Commander Quinn occupying the room's sole float chair, her jacket off, feet propped up and luxuriating in their decompression. She opened her eyes and gestured him toward the bed. He stretched himself out nervously, the pillow to his back; but there was no other choice of seating. He found a fresh beer and a tray of edibles, anonymous Stationer tidbits, ready to hand. He tried not to think about the food's possible sources.
“So,” she began. “There seems to be an awful lot of interest focused on this shipment of biologicals Athos ordered. Suppose you start there.”
Ethan swallowed a bite and gathered all his resolve. “No. We trade information. Suppose you start there.” His burst of assertiveness ran down in the face of her bland raised eyebrows, and he added weakly, “If you don't mind.”
She cocked her head and smiled. “Very well.” She paused to wash down a bite of her own. “Your order was filled, apparently, by Bharaputra Laboratories' top genetics team. They spent a couple of months at it, under need-to-know security. This probably saved several lives, later. The order was sent off on a non-stop freight run to Kline Station, where it sat in a warehouse for two months waiting for the yearly census courier to take it to Athos. Nine big white freezer boxes --” she described them in precise detail, right down to the serial numbers. “Is that what you got?”
Ethan nodded grimly.
She went on. “Just about the time the shipment was leaving Kline Station for Athos, Millisor and his team arrived on Jackson's Whole. They went through Bharaputra's lab like -- well, professionally speaking, it was a very successful commando raid.” Her lips closed on some angrier private judgement. “Millisor and his team escaped right through House Bharaputra's private army, vaporizing the laboratory and all its contents behind them. The contents included most of the genetics team, quite a few innocent bystanders, and the technical records of the work done on your shipment. I gather they must have spent some time questioning the Bharaputra people before they crisped them, because they got it all. Pausing only to murder the wife and burn down the house of one of the geneticists, Millisor and company vanished from the planet, to turn up under new identities here just three weeks too late to catch your shipment.
“So then I arrived on Jackson's Whole, innocently asking questions about Athos. House Bharaputra Security about had a colonic spasm. Fortunately, I was finally able to persuade them I had no connection with Millisor. In fact, they think I'm working for them, now,” she smiled slowly.
“The Bharaputrans?”
Her smile became a grimace. “Yes. They hired me to assassinate Millisor and his team. A lucky break for me, since now I'm not racing one of their own hit squads to the target. I seem to have made a start in spite of myself. They'll be so pleased.” She sighed, and drank again. “Your turn, Doctor. What was in those boxes to be worth all those lives?”
“Nothing!” He shook his head in bewilderment. “Valuable, yes, but not worth killing for. The Population Council had ordered 450 live ovarian cultures, to produce egg cells, you know, for children --”
“I know how children are produced, yes,” she murmured.
“They were to be certified free of genetic defects, and taken only from sources in the top 20 intelligence percentiles. That's all. A week's routine work for a good genetics team such as you describe. But what we got was trash!” He detailed the shipment received with increasingly irate fervor, until she cut him off.
“All right, Doctor! I believe you. But what left Jackson's Whole was not trash, but something very special. Somebody therefore took your shipment somewhere in transit and replaced it with garbage --”
“Very odd garbage, when you think about it,” Ethan began slowly, but she was going on.
“What somebody, then, and when? Not you, not me -- although I suppose you've only my word for that -- and not, obviously, Millisor, although he would have liked to.”
“Millisor seemed to think it was this Terrence Cee -- person, or whatever he is.”
She sighed. “Whatever-he-is had plenty of time for it. It could have been switched on Jackson's Whole, or on shipboard en route to Kline Station, or anytime before the census courier left for Athos -- ye gods, do you have any idea how many ships dock at Kline Station in the course of two months? And how many connections they in turn make? No wonder Millisor has been going around looking like his stomach hurts. I'll get a copy of the Station docking log anyway, though....” she made a note.
Ethan used the pause to ask, “What is a wife?”
She choked on her beer. For all that she waved it about, Ethan noticed that its level was dropping very slowly. “I keep forgetting about you.... Ah, wife. A marriage partner -- a man's female mate. The male partner is called a husband. Marriage takes many forms, but is most commonly a legal, economic, and genetic alliance to produce and raise children. Do you copy?”
“I think so,” he said slowly. “It sounds a little like a designated alternate parent.” He tasted the words. “Husband. On Athos, to husband is a verb meaning to conserve resources. Like stewardship.” Did this imply the male maintained the female during gestation? So, this supposedly organic method had hidden costs that might make a real Rep Center seem cheap, Ethan thought with satisfaction.
“Same root.”
“What does it mean 'to wife, ' then?”
“There is no parallel verb. I think the root is just some old word meaning simply, 'woman. '“
“Oh.” He hesitated. “Did the geneticist whose house was burned and his -- his wife have any children?”
“A little boy, who was in nursery school at the time. Strangely enough, Millisor didn't bother to torch it, too. Can't imagine how he overlooked that loose thread. The wife was pregnant.” She bit rather savagely into a protein cube.
Ethan shook his head in frustration. “Why? Why, why, why?”
She smiled elliptically. “There are moments when I think you might be a man after my own heart -- that was a joke,” she added as Ethan lurched, recoiling. “Yes. Why. My very own assigned question. Millisor seemed convinced that what Bharaputra's labs produced was actually intended for Athos, in spite of the subsequent diversion. Now, if nothing else, I've learned in the past few months that what Millisor thinks had better be taken into account. Why Athos? What does Athos have that nobody else does?”
“Nothing,” said Ethan simply. “We're a small, agriculturally based society with no natural resources worth shipping. We're not on a nexus route to anywhere. We don't go around bothering anyone.”
“'Nothing,'“ she noted. “Think of a scenario where a planet with 'nothing' would be at a premium... You have privacy, I suppose. Other than that, only your insistence upon reproducing yourselves the hard way sets you apart.” She sipped her beer. “You say Millisor was talking about attacking your Reproduction Centers. Tell me about them.”
Ethan needed little encouragement to wax enthusiasm about his beloved job. He described Sevarin and its operations, and the dedicated cadre of men who made it work. He explained the beneficent system of social duty credits that qualified potential fathers. He ran down abruptly when he found himself describing the personal troubles that prevented him from achieving his own heart's desire for a son. This woman was getting entirely too easy to talk to -- he wondered anew what was in his beer.
She leaned back in her chair and whistled tunelessly a moment. “Damn that diversion anyway. But for that, I'd say the cuckoo's-egg scenario had the most appeal. It accounted so nicely for Millisor's activities.... Rats.”
“The what scenario?”
“Cuckoo's-egg. Do you have cuckoos on Athos?”
“No... Is it a reptile?”
“An obnoxious bird. From Earth. Principally famous for laying its eggs in other birds' nests and skipping out on the tedious work of raising them. Now found galaxy-wide mainly as a literary allusion, since by some miracle nobody was dumb enough to export them off-planet. All the rest of the vermin managed to follow mankind into space readily enough. But do you see what I mean by a cuckoo's-egg scenario?”
Ethan, seeing, shivered. “Sabotage,” he whispered. “Genetic sabotage. They thought to plant their monsters on us, all unawares...” He caught himself up. “Oh. But it wasn't the Cetagandans who sent the shipment, was it? Uh -- rats. It wouldn't work anyway, we have ways of weeding out gene defects...” He subsided, more puzzled than ever.
“The shipment may have incorporated material stolen from the Cetagandan research project, though. Thus accounting for Millisor's passion for retrieving or destroying it.”
“Obviously, but -- why should Jackson's Whole want to do that to us? Or are they enemies of Cetaganda?”
“Ah -- hm. How much do you know about Jackson's Whole?”
“Not much. They're a planet, they have biological laboratories, they submitted a bid to the Population Council in response to our advertisement year before last. So did half a dozen other places.”