The right person would be Cory Wilson.
My heart thudded hard against my ribs. The taxi’s horn was beeping—someone needed to feed it some credit. All around, cameras clicked and zoomed. Journalists jostled into position, yelling questions.
Why was I here?
Had I heard any news?
Why was I still going to Barresh?
Was it true that I was a Union citizen?
Why was I defending the Union’s innocence?
The two Indrahui were watching me. Damn, the men might be young and have little experience, but they were right about coming inside. I wanted them with me. Look what had happened to the last man I had left to wait while I went into a meeting.
I faced the officer. “If you let me in, you’ll have to let them in, too. They’re my staff.”
Not a shred of emotion crossed the serviceman’s face as he consulted someone over his comm unit, and after a few minutes standing in the rain, listening to the crackle of a voice through the unit, the three of us were allowed to walk through.
4
A SMALL PERSONNEL carrier waited on the other side of the fence. The Indrahui with the sunglasses waited for me; the other followed right behind me. The man had to duck to avoid hitting his head on the ceiling.
I sat down on a rearward-facing bench, between the two obsidian figures, breathing the scent of raw onions that always hung around Indrahui people.
Nations of Earth guards faced us, their gazes anywhere but on me and my escort. One slid the door shut, enclosing us in a cocoon of uncomfortable silence. I and my very non-Earthly staff on one side, Nations of Earth military facing us, eyeing one another.
I shivered and wished I’d taken a second treatment capsule that morning. My body was being prepared for life in a hot place. My skin blocked all warmth from sunlight, while enlarged blood vessels in places like the underside of my arms and inside my nostrils lost more heat than normal. My core temperature had risen to 40.5 degrees; I’d measured it this morning. In a miserable place like this, I needed medication to keep my temperature down and stop myself shivering.
The van crawled along the leafy lane that was Central Avenue; the pavilions glided by. European, North American, South American, African: each building held the offices of countries that were members of Nations of Earth, who had representatives in the assembly over there in that nouveau-antique building on the left hand side of the road.
Once, what almost seemed a lifetime ago, I had been a little boy who had lived here in the Nations of Earth compound. I’d gone to school and played on those lawns as a kid, while my father was the diplomat. Somehow, life had seemed careless then, even though the world had just come out of a series of devastating wars, which had resulted in total anarchy, and Nations of Earth was only a few years old. Food, electricity and water vouchers had been just a fact of life; I didn’t know better.
Those memories belonged to a different world. I had played with gamra children; they occasionally came to our school. They had lots of weird gadgets, heaven to us kids who had only heard of the glorious time of the previous century. They spoke with strange accents and had funny ideas about sharing. But none of us eight-year-olds thought any less of them, even though many of our parents did. Not my father; he had met my stepmother here, a tall and striking Damarcian whose tiger-eyes and long spidery index and middle fingers freaked everyone out.
The van came to a halt in front of the president’s office. The marble steps seemed grey today, and droplets sprouting from the memorial fountain formed a mist in the autumn air.
At least twenty servicemen stood outside the building.
The van doors slid open and one of my guards stepped out as per security protocol. Someone shouted and several Nations of Earth men sprang forward. Special Services Branch, all of them.
As one, the Indrahui guards jumped to shield me, reaching for the guns in their arm brackets with well-practiced speed.
I shouted, “Wait!”
A tense silence.
A circle of servicemen in Nations of Earth uniform surrounded us.
“With respect, mashara.” I pushed myself between the two men, heart thudding. The odd scent of their skin wafted past. “There is no need for heightened attention here. These men protect the president.”
Neither man shifted. “Mashara protects the delegate.” Solemn, absolutely, those young faces, one hundred percent serious.
How severely had Chief Delegate Akhtari admonished them for losing sight of me yesterday?
I switched to Isla. “These men are my personal security.”
An officer with a few badges on his chest made a gesture. Uniformed men stepped back. Arms relaxed. Hands withdrew from belts.
“Sorry, sir. Follow me please, sir,” one of the servicemen said
The other servicemen lined up on the stairs. No one made the slightest sound. Nervous as hell. The servicemen had probably received a severe talking-to as well. How could anyone have slipped past the ridiculous security and hit right at the heart of Nations of Earth?
I followed the senior officer into the building. Police and other investigators still hung around in the hall, behind spider webs of bright orange tape that blocked the stairs to Sirkonen’s office.
We turned into the ground floor corridor instead, where the officer led us into what looked like the pressroom—rows of chairs faced a dais against the far wall.
A large 3D screen took up most of the wall behind the dais, and it projected a scene that startled me: a live screening from the hospital, an image so real the screen might have been a window.
Alone in a white room stood a bed, a number of chairs arranged around it, all of them occupied. There was a grey-haired woman dressed in wildly unseasonable furs. Sirkonen’s sister, who I’d read lived in a remote Finnish village inside the Arctic Circle. Two younger blond-haired women also sat there, one feeding a baby. A lanky young man with shoulder-length blond hair had to be Sirkonen’s son, Michael. He was an artist, I remembered. A bit of a black sheep in the family, but as far as I knew the only one of Sirkonen’s family who lived locally. Sirkonen’s wife, or his former wife rather, wasn’t there.
As for the figure in the bed, unrecognisably bandaged and tied up to tubes and blinking machines, it might have been anyone. There was no movement, no indication even that this was indeed Sirkonen.
My knees grew weak with painful memories. The smell of disinfectant, the oppressive silence of the palliative care ward. Six beds in the room, three on each side. My mother in the bed over by the window. Five other beds with silent, hollow-eyed people hooked up to blinking equipment. There was the hissing of a burning match, and on a table behind me, a nurse was lighting candles. Seven. Then they were singing, but all I could see was the wrapped present on the bedspread, the present with the purple ribbon my mother’s hands were too weak to hold. I touched those hands for the last time a few weeks later, when they were still and cold.
“This way Mr Wilson.”
Deep breath, and another one. Ghosts of the past dissolved.
Two Nations of Earth security guards with their red-collared shirts stood at a door in the far corner of the room. The officer informed me that the Indrahui guards had to stay here.
I gave them a small nod. It’s fine. They settled, uneasily, in the front row of seats.
I passed the guards into the next room, which, with the portraits on the walls of twenty-five years’ worth of Nations of Earth dignitaries, looked like the official interview studio.
On an antique velvet-covered couch sat Sigobert Danziger, vice president of Nations of Earth. He had made this corner into an office, with his reader on a low table before him. He was talking on his comm unit with one hand while the other hung in a sling across his chest. One look at me, and he broke off his call.
Whoever Danziger had been talking to, I bet I had been the subject of the discussion.
I strolled to the corner, pretending innocence. “Sir, you were injured as well?”
> I hadn’t even known Danziger had been anywhere near President Sirkonen’s office.
Danziger nodded briefly, thin lips pursed.
“My office is underneath the president’s. Some ceiling material came down.”
“I’m sorry to hear that.”
I sat down on the armchair opposite him while silence lingered. As was normal for him, his shirt hung off his bony shoulders like a poorly erected tent and a belt held up trousers at least a hand’s span too wide. Jokes went around the corridors of Nations of Earth that any staffer who made suggestions about the state of his attire found him or herself on the to-be-replaced list faster than one could say tailor-made suits.
The pale fluorescent light was most unkind to his face, showing bags under his eyes and a landscape of wrinkles and moles that would make a toad proud.
Danziger pushed his reader across the table with his unbandaged arm. “Read that, Mr Wilson.” He exuded as much friendliness as a pickled herring.
The screen displayed a message from Sirkonen’s head of security, emblazoned with a top-secret watermark and the words for the president only.
So far, preliminary investigations have failed to turn up evidence of explosives or projectiles in the president’s office. We have examined a great number of glass fragments, some of them molten. This concurs with our suspicion that a massive burst of heat went through the window, causing it to shatter. A woman walking her dog outside the compound gates spoke of a red flash of light. An appeal for witnesses has brought up the same reports. A delivery driver says he was almost blinded by a similar flash when he was about to pull away from a parking spot. Other witnesses saw red flashes and speak specifically of seeing objects outlined in a red aura. We have mapped all the witness localities, and they form a circle, of which the President’s office is the dead centre. . . .
I stared at the screen, heart thudding. I’d seen that red aura, too. And dismissed it as something brought on by extreme fatigue.
Danziger’s face twitched. “Well, what do you think, Mr Wilson?”
It was not a question; it was a challenge, a Denounce aliens or give me an explanation type of challenge.
“This is the outcome of the investigation?” Buying time, surely. What to say? This wasn’t Earth technology, no way. Had the journalists known?
Danziger snorted. “Those results will be at least a week and this information won’t be in it. This information is not to leave this room. Understand?”
I nodded.
“I want your opinion. You are supposed to know about these weird things.”
These weird things meaning gamra matters. Various factions within gamra, which I knew about. Weapons, and where on Earth they could be, which I didn’t. Asto-produced charge guns, like the guards carried, emitted a blue flash when triggered, not a red one, and none did so in wide circles surrounding their targets.
“I have no knowledge that anyone within gamra has a problem with Sirkonen’s tenure of office.”
“Indeed.” Spoken with great sarcasm.
A rush of blood went to my cheeks. Was I under suspicion now? Of not telling the truth? “Not with the information I have, sir. I know of no single faction likely to mount such an attack.”
“Indeed,” Danziger said again, and looked at the screen of his reader.
Frustration boiled. “Sir, if you have any information other than what I have, please share it. I can only comment on what I know.”
Danziger said nothing. He reached for the reader with his free arm and shut down the message. So—it was all bluff.
“Sir, security detained my zhayma without reason.”
“The man you refer to was the only Union official within shooting distance of the president’s office. The explosive was Union-based technology. Naturally, he is a suspect.”
Naturally? “He is my direct assistant. I’ve lived with him for four years. This man is vitally important to my success in Barresh. Gamra will not stand for unwarranted arrests.”
A sharp, grey-eyed look, a blink of almost hairless eyelids. He said again, “Indeed.” And then, “You make it sound like a threat.”
“I assure you, sir, I’m not making a threat, but there will be one unless gamra gets an explanation.” Nicha’s father would make sure of that.
Danziger’s eyebrows flicked up. “And they would interfere in our system of justice?”
“No, but they’ll want to have him freed.” Or if he left it too long, come in with guns blazing.
“Freed? Mr Wilson, you don’t seem to understand or for some reason it’s not getting through to you: there were Union weapons involved.”
“Yes. And within gamra there are hundreds, maybe thousands of factions, some very small. Isn’t it an overreaction to blame the possible—and I mean possible—actions of one person on the entire organisation? That is if those weapons haven’t fallen into the hands of some very ordinary humans. May I remind you of the Kazakhstan case?”
“Union have not formally denied the attack.”
“No, and they won’t until you make a formal accusation. However, detaining Nicha Palayi without charges won’t have put them in a good mood.” If I sounded sarcastic, that was exactly what I intended. Nations of Earth had employed and sponsored me to vet their responses for anything that might cause unnecessary offense. So instead Danziger ignored my knowledge. That brought home how much they thought of me. A secretary with quaint habits and an unnatural desire for self-destruction, Eva’s father called me. He was probably joking only half the time. I wasn’t one of the old boys, diplomats who all went to school with each other; I never had been.
“I doubt if these people were ever in a good mood, Mr Wilson. They’ve come here to conquer, not to cooperate. Their rigid social structure brooks no argument. I’m sure you’re aware of the saying If it doesn’t beat you, you can’t defeat it, you can’t fuck it, then you must kill it.”
I’d heard rumours that Danziger was anti-gamra. I suspected it simply because Eva’s father adored the man, but this, the crudest of things said about the Coldi, was . . . worse than calling them ethies or chans, or aliens. It was . . . damn, I was speechless.
“You haven’t heard that one?” He raised one eyebrow.
“I hardly think it’s appropriate. It’s a purely biological reaction for Coldi to establish dominance of one of the parties in a relationship—”
“Dominance—exactly, that’s why we can’t deal with them—”
“—a reaction that’s rarely exhibited with people not their own species—” Although Nicha had reacted to me.
“—they fight for the top spot like rabid wolves, and then they tell us religion is primitive?”
Right. I didn’t, didn’t want to go there.
Danziger met my eyes for a few long seconds, then looked at the screen of the reader still on the table.
I breathed in and out to regain my calm, my mahzu. “Sir, we’re talking about gamra here, not about Coldi peculiarities. Gamra is an over-arching organisation. It only deals with the Exchange. I’m not prepared to let a small group of extremists hijack our efforts towards cooperation. It makes little difference if these extremists are Earth-based or gamra-based. If we withdraw from the process, these people will have just what they want.”
Danziger nodded, as if to himself. “Well, then. You are lucky that the majority of Nations of Earth supports your candidature, including our incapacitated president. I also think you should know that I have the right to veto your departure.”
“And I advise you against exercising it, sir. I think it would be very unwise to cut off dialogue with gamra, especially in a case like this.” Just what the fuck was he getting at?
Danziger laughed. “I see. Then you might tell me your view on this, Mr Wilson: what advantage is there for us to associate ourselves with them? Why should we clamour to join them? So that we can travel freely? We can’t anyway, with the prices their Exchange charges. An institution, I must add, that has a monopoly on interstellar travel
. Why should we invest a lot of money on building interfacing equipment just so that the rich can zip from one corner of the galaxy to the other and bring back weird souvenirs, for which, I might add, too, we will need to put into place an entire quarantine operation so we don’t import some sort of disease? What’s the benefit in that for the countries of Nations of Earth? Why shouldn’t we, and I quote something a tradesman said to me recently, ‘Tell the lot of them to go to hell?’ We have enough problems of our own making. We don’t need theirs.”
A thousand thoughts went through my mind. Arguments, most of them idealistic, such as because it’s the only way forward. But such arguments held little water with a practical person like Danziger, and the trouble was I agreed with at least some of Danziger’s points, especially with travel being restricted to the elite; it was extremely expensive. “Because, sir, whether we join or not, gamra people will continue to come here; and without agreement with gamra, we cannot stop them at the Exchange. We can only rely on the first line of defence around Athens, and the second at the Greek borders, both inadequate and incomplete as history has proven. What is more, without laws, we are powerless to stop their illegal trade—such as the trade of arms. If we do not fall under their laws, that gives these people license to conduct criminal activities.”
“Such as attacking our office. We come full circle.” Danziger chuckled. “Mr Wilson, I heard you won the Taurus debating competition in high school. I capitulate.”
Danziger leaned back in his seat. He seemed to be enjoying himself. I, though, was beginning to feel more and more like a goldfish in a bowl. Look, here is our young diplomat, let’s throw him in a vat of boiling water and see how high he jumps.
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