Authors: Jayne Castle
“Maybe we're developing some kind of mental telepathy.”
Orchid chuckled. “Don't be ridiculous. Everyone knows there's no such thing as telepathy.”
In a world where the list of normal paranormal skills spanned a broad and growing spectrum, telepathy had never appeared in the population. Like psychic vampires, it showed up frequently in novels and films, but those were the only places one could find them.
Just as well, Orchid thought as she hung up the phone. It would not have been a good idea for Rafe to be able to read her mind at that moment. She was not certain she wanted to read it herself. Her thoughts were a jumble of vague uncertainties and distant possibilities.
That was the problem with waking up at three in the morning. Things looked different at that hour.
She left the light on and leaned against the pillows. For a while she thought about trying to go back to sleep. But now that she no longer had the reassuring sound of Rafe's voice to buoy her, she sensed the return of the cold, edgy unease that was swiftly becoming her constant nighttime companion.
She pushed aside the covers and padded into the
kitchen, turning on lights as she went. She opened the icerator door and took out some leftover pasta casserole.
The second letter from ParaSyn was still on the kitchen table where she had left it that afternoon after opening it. The content was similar to that of the one that had arrived earlier in the week. But this time, in addition to the authoritative tone, a hint of a threat had been added.
⦠We sincerely hope you will agree to return to ParaSyn for this important follow-up research. In the three years since the first study was terminated prematurely, our researchers have discovered some disturbing facts about the nature of ice-prisms. We do not wish to alarm you, however, our experts feel that these findings could impact the long-term para-psychological health of people with your type of psychic energy.
You owe it to yourself and to others with your kind of paranormal power to complete the study. Please contact my office at your earliest convenience.
Sincerely,
Gilbert Bracewell, Ph.D.
Director of Research
“You can't scare me, Two-Watt.” Orchid crumpled the crisp sheet of stationery in one hand. “I'm so tough, I hang out with a real psychic vampire these days.”
She tossed the letter into the trash.
Immediately, she felt much better.
“Take it easy, Al,” Rafe said. “I've got everything under control.”
“Under control?
Under control?
Is that what you call it?”
Alfred G. Stonebraker's frosty gray eyes glinted with the sort of fierceness that made hardened business executives and ruthless competitors alike tremble. He thumped the top of the small garden table with an exasperated fist. “Stonebraker Shipping is teetering on the top of a cliff, about to be pushed over the edge by that conniving little twerp, Culverthorpe, and you tell me you've got everything under control?”
“Yes.” With the ease of long practice and natural inclination, Rafe ignored his grandfather's icy glare. Alfred G. was a businessman of the old school. He did a lot of yelling when he was not happy.
His own techniques were different, Rafe thought as he stretched out his legs and crossed his feet at the ankles. Much quieter.
He lounged back in his chair and contemplated the
elaborately terraced gardens spread out before him. From his position on the terrace he could see all the way to the arbor.
As a child he had spent a lot of time in this horticultural fantasy land. His parents had brought him here often to visit his grandparents. Some of his earliest memories were of exploring the maze and sailing small boats on the pond.
He and Alfred G. had been good buddies in those days. That, of course, had been during the period when his grandfather had blithely assumed that Rafe would follow in his footsteps.
The rift between them had not occurred until Alfred G. had tried to coerce Rafe into joining Stonebraker Shipping. Rafe had known from the beginning that he could never work for his grandfather. Intuitively he had understood that they were too much alike. Besides, Rafe did not take orders well. Alfred G. was very fond of giving orders.
The ensuing battle of wills between the two had been watched from a wary, respectful distance by the various members of the family. No one, not even Rafe's parents, had dared to intervene, much less tried to mediate.
As Rafe's mother had wryly pointed out, a smart person did not step between two quarreling predators.
Fifteen years ago, there had been only one possible conclusion to the confrontation. In crude terms, Alfred G. had still been the alpha male of the clan. Rafe had understood that. He had packed his bags and left for the Western Islands.
When he returned he had been seasoned by several years of living on the edge of a jungle and by the violent episode known as the Western Islands Action.
Rafe had staked out his own territory in New Seattle, careful to avoid trespassing into his grandfather's realm. But he had kept tabs on the family firm and he had watched with brooding anger as Alfred G.'s old
fashioned business methods led Stonebraker Shipping into perilous waters.
The day had finally come when Alfred G. had accepted the fact that it was time for him to step down. He had summoned Rafe to a warrior's summit, prepared to hand over control of the faltering firm to the only other member of the clan who could save it.
Unfortunately, he had waited a little too long.
What Alfred G. had not realized until too late was that his ambitious nephew, Selby Culverthorpe, had been biding his time, awaiting a moment of weakness. With the savvy, stealthy cunning of a hyena-jackal, Selby had slipped past Alfred G.'s guard.
Working behind the scenes, Selby had laid the groundwork that he hoped would enable him to steal the prize of Stonebraker Shipping from under the protective paws of Alfred G.
Overnight, the orderly transfer of power which Alfred G. had envisioned was transformed into a desperate, secret effort to save the company. The threat to Stonebraker Shipping had united Rafe and Alfred G. as nothing else could have done.
Alfred G. picked up a knife and sliced a muffin in half with a slashing motion. “As far as I can tell, you haven't made any progress at all. The annual board meeting is less than two months away and you haven't even found yourself a wife, damn it.”
“I'll have one lined up by the time the board meets. Everything else is in place.”
“Humph.” Alfred G. looked unconvinced. “Did you convince Taylor and Crawford to back off until you take control of the company?”
“Yes. Steve Taylor worked for me for a while in the Islands. We came to an understanding a few weeks ago. He gave me his word that Taylor and Crawford will wait until after the board meeting before they respond to the proposal to spin off the container division.”
“Well, that's something at least. What about the distribution problems at the New Portland warehouse?”
“The problem has been resolved.”
“How?”
“The new inventory control system had a glitch. It's fixed. I've also had a talk with Kimiyo Takanishi at Takanishi Freight. I convinced her that she would get a better contract from me than she would from Selby.”
“She'll wait until after the board meeting to negotiate?”
Rafe picked up his cup of coff-tea. “She'll wait.”
Alfred G. sank his teeth into a slice of muffin. His eyes narrowed. “Why can't you find yourself a nice young woman like Kimiyo?”
Rafe grinned. “Mrs. Takanishi is old enough to be my mother. I'll admit she's very charming and a brilliant businesswoman, but even if she was willing to marry me, we'd have a small problem with the fact that she's married. It wouldn't be easy to get rid of Ray Takanishi. He's as tough as you are.”
“True.” Alfred G. glumly munched his muffin. “Has that damned marriage agency sent you out on any dates yet?”
“Back off, Al. I told you, everything's under control.”
“Sonovabitch, Rafe. Time is running out. Haven't you got a single possibility lined up yet?”
Rafe hesitated. “As a matter of fact, I have.”
A hopeful look gleamed in Alfred G.'s predatory gaze. “Why the hell didn't you tell me?”
Rafe braced his elbows on the arms of the lawn chair. He steepled his fingers and regarded the maze in the center of the garden. “Because it's far from being a done deal.”
“Why not?”
“We don't have much in common. And apparently she's as difficult to match as I am.”
“How do you know that?” Alfred G. asked sharply.
“She's been registered even longer than I have. A full year, in fact. She's only had one date during that time.”
“Sounds to me like you both have more in common than you think.”
“What the hell do you mean?”
Alfred G. chuckled. “Neither of you can get a date for Saturday night. Tell you what. Bring her to my birthday party. Let me have a look at her. I'll tell you whether or not she'll suit.”
Rafe tried to envision Alfred G. and Orchid socializing here in the gardens at what was considered one of the city's most important social events of the year. “Serve you right if I did bring her.”
Alfred G. stopped smiling. “You are coming to the party, aren't you?”
It would be the first time he had attended since he had walked out on his heritage fifteen years ago, Rafe reflected. It would send a signal to his cousin that he could expect a fight over Stonebraker Shipping.
Attending Alfred G.'s birthday party would be the first shot over Selby's bow. An announcement that war had been declared.
“Wouldn't miss it,” Rafe said.
“The relic was similar to the others that you see in that case.” Alexander Brizo gestured toward the locked glass cabinet at the end of a row of laboratory workbenches. “Made of the same material. A bit longer and narrower in shape than the object on the left.”
Orchid walked to the cabinet and gazed, fascinated, at the collection of alien artifacts. It was clear from their odd designs that they had not been made to fit human hands. They were all fashioned from a silvery alloy that defied analysis.
“This is the first time I've seen any of the relics outside the museum,” Orchid said. “They really are strange, aren't they?”
“Very.” Brizo sighed. “We don't know much more
about them now than we did when Lucas Trent brought in the first batch. We can't even identify the components of the alloy the aliens used to make these objects. All we know is that the items were not made of anything found here on St. Helens.”
Rafe came to stand behind Orchid. He studied the objects in the case. “Whatever it is, it must be something incredibly different from anything the first generation colonists brought with them from Earth.”
“Quite true.” Brizo's brows came together in a sober frown. “The fact that the alloy did not disintegrate within months after it was exposed to St. Helens' atmosphere the way the Founders' Earth-based materials did, means that it is alien in every sense of the word.”
“Any idea yet how old the relics are?” Orchid asked.
“Our best psychometric-talents estimate that they're at least a thousand years old. Maybe more.”
“Too bad the fourth Chastain Expedition hasn't found any biological remains in that so-called alien tomb they're excavating,” Rafe said.
“Not a trace,” Brizo said. “If there ever were any bodies inside, they decomposed eons ago. The archeologists have not found so much as a bone fragment.”
“Maybe the aliens didn't have bones,” Orchid said. “Maybe they were as different from us physically as this alloy is from our metals.”
“Or maybe they escaped St. Helens after all, but had to do it in a hurry,” Rafe suggested. “That would explain why they left a lot of their equipment behind.”
“It's certainly possible,” Brizo said. “The most popular hypothesis at the moment is that the aliens came to St. Helens the same way the first generation colonists from Earth did, through the Curtain. We assumed that they got stranded here when the Curtain closed without warning, just as the Founders were stranded. But perhaps the Curtain opened again long enough to allow the aliens to escape.”
Orchid stared at the strangely shaped relics behind the
glass. Every schoolchild knew the history of the colonization of St. Helens. A little more than two hundred years earlier a mysterious Curtain of energy had materialized in space very near Earth. It had proved to be an interstellar gate between the home planet and a hospitable new world the colonists named St. Helens.
But shortly after the first generation settlers had arrived the Curtain had closed without warning. Cut off from the home planet, the small population of humans had been left to fend for themselves. A desperate battle for survival had ensued. The green world of St. Helens had welcomed the humans but it did not tolerate their Earth-based technology. Something in the very air and soil of the planet was anathema to the machines and materials of Earth.