Mallow (35 page)

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Authors: Robert Reed

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Novel

BOOK: Mallow
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'It's your destiny, that ship is.'

She said those words so earnestl
y, with such unalloyed conviction, that a part of Pamir couldn't help but believe her.

'You must do this,' she proclaimed.The smile only grew brighter, and everything about that pale little face became crazier. 'Promise me that you'll leave now.'

It was a trap. She was setting a clumsy, stupid trick to grab his emotions.

But Pamir heard himself grunt, 'I promise.'

Mother pretended pleasure, something in her big pale eyes conveying, of all things, an absurd, overwelling awe.

'Thank you,' she told him, kneeling before him, sinking into her own pee.

Her conjoined dragons hissed and took a step toward Pamir. And because he had always wanted to do it, he made a fist and swung at the head that he didn't trust, snapping it back with a clean sharp thunk, then feeling the dull steady pain as a broken finger began to heal.

Again, softer this time. Mother chanted in that alien tongue.

'Why can't you be normal?' was the last thing he ever said to the woman.

Then he turned and walked away, following his own footprints through the sickly-sweet, black-as-night manure.

There wasn't such
a creature as Immortality.

But modern life, infused with its technical wonders and medical prosperity, had a strength, a genuine stubbornness, that carried its citizens through disasters as well as simple indifference.

On three occasions in the next two thousands years, Pamir stepped as near to Death as possible, just enough of his soul coming out of the mayhem for his body to be recultured, his memories awakened, and his belligerent nature kept pure.

As the bomb-wagon dropped into orbit, a gift was delivered from his mother. A tidy sum was accompanied by an odd note claiming,
'I chanted; I saw. This is precisely how much you will need. Of money.'

It wasn't a fortune, which was why Pamir became an engineer's apprentice.
There wasn't any salary with the post, but it meant a free-passage; what's more, if one of the genuine engineers quit or died, an apprentice would be ready to step into the gap, already trained by the starship's library and drilled numb by his superiors.

The lowest-ranking engineer was a harum-scarum -the human name for a humanoid species famous for its ugly moods.

Pamir decided that he wanted the alien's job.

Knowing the dangers, he visited the creature's large cabin, sat without asking permission and made his pitch. 'First of all,' he remarked, 'I'm a better engineer than you. Agreed?'

Silence. Meaning 'agreed.'

'Second, the crew likes me. They prefer me to you in about every way. Am I right?' Another agreeable silence.

'And finally, I'll pay you to resign.' He named a carefully calculated sum, then added,
'You'll be making enough.

And at our next port, you'll find a new crew that doesn't care what a shitty pain you are.'

From his eating hole, the
harum-scarum made a low, slightl
y wet sound.

From the other facial hole — the one that breathed and spoke - came a harsh squeal containing its blunt reply.

'Fuck your ape self,' said the translator.

'You are an idiot,' Pamir assured him.

The alien rose to his feet, towering over the large human.

'All right, fine,' Pamir conceded. 'Give yourself a year to think, then I'll make the same offer. With less money in the pot, next time.'

Insulting a harum-scarum brought revenge, without exception. But the suddenness and the scope of the attack took the young Pamir by surprise.

'A scuttlebug's gone missing,' the Master Engineer reported. It was twelve hours later, and with a mischievous wink, she added, 'Sounds like a good chore for you. Last we heard, it was down near the push-plate, somewhere near the navel.'

On better ships, scuttlebugs hunted for their own kind. But they could be expensive machines, and on an old bomb-wagon, they were normally in short supply. Squeezing into a lifesuit meant for a smaller man, then donning a second suit of hyperfiber and a satchel of secondhand tools, Pamir was ready for the chore. It was a three-kilometer drop to the stem, the last half kilometer accomplished on foot.
The push-plate was a vast dish originally built from metal-ceramic alloys, but patched with diamond armors, then cheap-grade hyperfibers, as gaps and fractures developed over the centuries. Minimal, shock-resistant passageways allowed access. The plate itself shuddered beneath him - a blurring tremor caused by the constant detonation of small nukes. In that realm, a weak, unreliable man became claustrophobic, and his bored mind invented faces and voices to fill the drudgery. As much as anything, this duty was a test of character, and Pamir accepted the test without complaint, reminding himself that sooner or later he would have the power to send an apprentice down this same awful corridor.

The navel wasn't set precisely at the plate's center. A fat fraction of a kilometer across and perfe
ctly
round, it served no function whatsoever. A premature detonation had boiled away a great volume of armor, and since the navel was in the thickest portion of the plate, its repair could wait until the next overhaul.

A sputtering blue-white light greeted Pamir.

Pausing, he called up to the Master Engineer, who in turn contacted the Master Captain, requesting an engine shutdown while promising a minimal disruption. Passengers and crew were warned that the sluggish gee-forces were about to vanish. Command programs were unleashed. Then the nukes quit firing, and the quick blue-white light vanished, and in an
instant, the plate grew perfectl
y still.

Pamir made his head and feet exchange places, then he moved to where the passageway's roof had been blasted away, his boots holding fast to the scarred and blackened floor.

The scuttl
ebug was in the center of the blast crater, which was a strange place to be. Why would the machine wander out there?

It was dead. And worse than that, it was probably useless, too, and he might as well leave it there. But Pamir felt an obligation to be thorough, which was why he lifted his boots and used his squirt-pack, rocketing his way down the shallow crater while clumsy hands reached for the necessary tools that would pop off the machine's head, letting him see if anything inside was salvageable.

Why he looked up, he was never sure.

Later, struggling to replay events, Pamir wondered if he had meant to look at their destination. The bomb-wagon was falling toward a K-class sun and its two young planets, both of which were being terraformed by human colonists. He must have tilted his head because he wanted a naked-eye look. He was a young man admiring his first new sun, and in turn, admiring a life sure to be long and filled with many exotic places . . . and that's why he saw a flash of light, an unexpected nuke ascending . . . and that's why he had just enough time to turn his massive self and aim for the passageway, dropping the tools in both hands as he ordered his squirt-pack to burn every gram of fuel in a fraction of an instant . . .

Pamir was flung back the way he had come.

Too soon, he thought he would escape unscathed, and wouldn't he enjoy seeing the harum-scarum's face now?

But his aim was wrong by half a meter, his left arm and shoulder clipping the blackened armor, his spinning body ricocheting against the opposite wall, precious momentum lost . . . and the nuke detonated with a fantastic light that chased after him, catching him too soon and obliterating very nearly everything . . .

What survived was
the heavily armored helmet and a well-cooked, vaguely human skull. But the ship surgeon and onboard autodocs were relatively skilled - a consequence of the ship's questionable safety record — and within three months, Pamir's soul had been decanted into a new mind and a freshly grown body that was recognizable as his own.

As the starship pulled into a berth above the first new world, the Master Engineer slipped into the therapy chamber, watching Pamir finish a two-hour cycle of isometrics. Then quietly, with a mixture of scorn and curiosity, she told him,'Harum-scarums don't appreciate bribes. Ever.'

Pamir nodded, vacuuming the oily sweat from his face and chest.

'You gave him no choice,' said the older, more cautious engineer. 'According to his nature, the poor fellow had to seek vengeance.'

'I knew all that,' he replied. 'I just didn't expect a nuke up my ass.'

'What did you expect?'

'A simple fight.'

'And you thought you'd win?'

'No. I figured that I'd lose.'
Then he laughed in a calm, grim fashion. 'But I also figured that I'd survive. And the creature would have to give me his job.'

'But that's my decision to make,' warned the Master.

Pamir didn't blink.

His commander sighed heavily, gazing off in a random direction.
'Your opponent's gone,' she admitted.'Along with half of my staff. These terraformers are paying bonuses for good engineers, and bad ones, trying to make their lumps of rock livable.'

Pamir waited a moment, then asked, 'So did I earn my post?'

The old woman had to nod. 'But you could have done nothing,' she told him. 'Nothing, and you would have gotten what you wanted anyway.'

'That's two different things,' was his response.

'What do you mean?'

'Either you pay for something, or it's charity,' he explained. 'And I don't care how long I live. Everything I get, I pay for. Or my hands won't hold it.'




Buoyed by talent
and discipline and a disinterest in better work, Pamir eventually rose to the position of Master Engineer.

In the next sixteen hundred years, the old ship underwent two rehabilitations. The final rehab stripped away its outdated bomb drive, a fusion drive installed in its place, complete with merry-go-round nozzles and antimatter spiking. They were running ten thousand colonists out to an Earth-class world. Ahead of them were the thick fringes of another sun's Oort clou
d. Oorts were lousy places for
starships. Obstacles were too scarce to map, too common to ignore. But the risks were usually slight, and because of time and a fat debt riding with them, the Master Captain decided to cut through the fringes.

When the ship was rehabilitated, the old push-plate was stripped of its extra mass and bolstered with new grades of hyperfiber, and the whole clumsy apparatus was fastened to the nose. The plate absorbed dust impacts. Railguns obliterated pebbles and little snowballs, while the old bomb drive launched nukes at the largest obstacles, vaporizing them at what was hopefully a safe distance.

An engineer was necessary to oversee sudden, unexpected repairs of key systems. On most starships, the Master Engineer delegated the job. As a young man, Pamir might have had the stomach for that kind of bullying. But he had lived most of his life on this cranky ship, and he knew it better than anyone else. That's why he dressed in a life-suit and armor, then walked up into the push-plate's familiar passageways, living inside his suit for twenty-five lull days, half a dozen malfunctions cured because of his quick, timely work.

Pamir never saw the incoming comet.

His only warning was the rapid, almost panicked firing of railguns and nukes.Then the nukes quit launching when the target was too close, and with a mathematical clarity, Pamir realized that the impact was coming, and for no useful reason, he pulled himself into a ball, hands over his knees and a deep last breath filling his lungs— Then, blackness.

More empty than any space, and infinitely colder.

Everyone hovering around
him was a stranger, and none wanted to tell him about the passengers, the crew, or the fate of his ship.

Finally, a well-intentioned Eternitist minister let out the news. 'You're a fortunate, fortunate man,' he proclaimed, his smiling face matching his smiling, almost giddy voice. 'Not only did you survive, dear man. But a ship of kind Belters found your remains inside that old push-plate.'

Again, Pamir's body was being decanted from almost nothing. Still unfinished and desperately weak, he was lying in a white hospital bed, inside a zero-gee habitat, a soft webbing strung over his naked body, bristling with sensors that tirelessly marked his steady progress.

Despite his weakness, he reached for the minister.

Thinking it was a gesture of need, the man tried to take the hand with his hands. But no, the hand slipped past and closed on the nearest shoulder, then yanked at the heavy black fabric of his robe. And with a voice too new to sound human, Pamir grunted, 'What about . . . about the rest of them . . . ?'

With a blissful surety, the minister said, 'Long, happy lives received their deserved rest. Which is precisely as it should be.'

Pamir clamped his hand around the exposed neck. The minister tried removing the hand, and failed. 'All of them died in a painless instant,' he croaked. 'Without

worry. Without the slightest suffering. Isn't that the way you, in your time, would wish to die?'

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