Authors: Michael Caulfield
* * *
Lyköan shifted stiffly in the soft leather seat. After twenty hours, including an in-flight refueling over Diego Garcia, the C-37A was now eating air over the eastern edge of the Andaman Sea. The cabin was empty except for Fremont, Nora and himself.
Like Classic Greek tragedy, events were playing out to formula.
Hubris
or presumptive pride had lead to
ate
, an arrogant act offensive to the gods, which in turn was now sure to blossom into
nemesis
: retributive justice, ruin, infamy and death.
Nemesis
, that deified opponent, could not be avoided, beaten or overcome once hubris had arisen in the human heart. The trick right now was determining who possessed the greater hubris, Pandavas or himself. He hoped it would prove to be Dr. Pandavas. That seemed about right. Perhaps. But hadn’t there been plenty of presumptive pride in his own actions lately?
Might he also have done something to deserve it, perhaps something he was entirely unaware of doing? Hadn’t Oedipus, the classic example, asked the same question? Did
he
ever get a satisfactory answer? No, he only learned the nature of his unintended sin after the fact, when it was far too late. Sometimes committing a sin wasn’t even necessary, the gods one day simply found some previously innocuous mortal act offensive. Wasn’t that how genuine tragedy operated? In the end, Lyköan wondered, were all fates sealed, before the sin unknowable, and most unfortunately, after their commission, always unavoidable?
Take the illogic of Bremer allowing him to accompany the first wave assault on the Node. All he had done was ask. Obvious hubris. But why had Bremer agreed so quickly? The same for Fremont immediately acquiescing to his request for diplomatic credentials and a first-class government-paid ticket back to Thailand. What could explain any of it?
Nora was in the rattling seat next to him, her eyes closed, head thrown back, but he was pretty sure she was awake. The twin engines were humming monotonously in the background. They would be landing shortly. Across the narrow gulf of the fuselage, Fremont stared ahead blankly, a rainbow-hued cloud of sparkling fractals billowing out of his nostrils and dissipating with each repeating breath. They had talked themselves silent hours ago. Lyköan caught himself imagining Fremont wishing he were capable of reading minds, his two companions’ in particular.
Nothing much here, Felix. A little hubris. A little Greek tragedy
. He smiled darkly and returned to the most troubling detail of his spectral foray to the Node days before, something that had failed to register at the time. During the conference room visit, Pandavas had referred to the meeting taking place in the afternoon. What afternoon could he have meant? The ‘yesterday’ referred at that meeting? The previous afternoon, when Nora had been caught on camera changing trains in Crewe? Impossible. No
next
afternoon existed between
that
yesterday and the following morning when he had witnessed the reference. There was only the afternoon that had not yet arrived. So what had he witnessed? A vision of the future? Of a possible future? One of Pandavas’s illustrious uchronia? He had relied upon the information and it had proven accurate. But how?
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
Truth is a mobile army of shifting metaphors
Ludwig Büchner :
Kraft und Stoff
Ambassador Lyköan
, Egan thought, grinning at the irony.
Wonder if it comes with full immunity.
* * *
“And the government is making matters worse. What was their excuse for turning everyone out?”
Chan gave her a confused look.
“We may need to offer further proof that our assistance will be of value, but yes, of course.”
Jimmy hadn’t answered at any of the numbers Lyköan had tried. The
bon vivant
was probably out on an important shopping trip. Running down the fashion fugitive would have to wait.