Angelmass

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Angelmass Page 36

by Timothy Zahn


  Or perhaps not. All the surface cues were still there; but as she got closer she could see that underneath was an edge of caution or tension that was new since the last time they’d been together. Perhaps because they were here in his office, surrounded by people he worked with, instead of in the relative anonymity of a spaceliner?

  Or was it because the last time he’d seen her she was being escorted under guard to a landing boat?

  “So,” he said, coming out from behind the desk as she approached, easing his way through the narrow aisle between the desk and the display table with its multiple status monitors. His timing was perfect; he arrived at the front of the desk just as she did. “What have you been doing with yourself?”

  For a split second she wondered if he was expecting her to kiss him. But something warned her off. “Keeping busy,” she told him, glancing over at the chairs and couches over by the right-hand wall.

  He took the hint. “Let’s get more comfortable, shall we?” he suggested, gesturing her toward a long couch that seemed to be upholstered entirely in white feathers. “Then you can tell me all about it.”

  A dozen thoughts raced through her mind on that long walk to the couch. Was he expecting what he thought he’d been getting aboard the Xirrus? Or was he just toying with her, playing the feline half of a game of cat and mouse while he waited for the police?

  She reached the couch and sat down at one end. To her mild surprise, he didn’t sit down beside her. “I trust you cleared up that little customs problem?” he suggested, choosing one of the chairs facing her.

  It was an obvious invitation to lie. A little too obvious. “You know better than that,” she chided him gently. “It wasn’t anything to do with customs. I was a semi-stowaway.”

  “‘semi?’”

  “I had a ticket to Lorelei,” she told him, watching his face carefully. There wasn’t a single atom of surprise there that she could detect. Clearly, he’d already been over the official version of the whole incident. “Lower class section. I decided to continue on to Seraph.”

  “Why?”

  In the old days, she would have had a sugar-story all set and ready to spin. “I was running,” she said instead. “There was a man I needed to get away from. I didn’t have the cash in hand to do it”

  “Did you get away?”

  “I think so,” Chandris said, shivering involuntarily at the thought of Trilling Vail lurking in some shadow behind her. “This isn’t the kind of place where he would look for me.”

  Toomes lifted his eyebrows. “I trust you don’t mean that the way it sounds,” he warned. “My office is hardly equipped for live-in occupation.”

  “This isn’t the ‘here’ I was referring to,” Chandris said. “I meant Shikari City in general.”

  “Ah,” Toomes said. He sounded relieved, but his face didn’t match the voice. “So. What do you want?”

  So much for any chance he might still be feeling romantic toward her. “I came here to offer you a business deal,” she said.

  For the first time his expression twitched. “Really,” he said. “What sort of deal?”

  “You give me money; I give you information,” Chandris said. “Information a businessman like yourself would find exceedingly useful.”

  He pursed his lips. “What exactly does this information concern?”

  “It concerns Angelmass,” she said. “That’s all I can say for now.”

  “Really,” he commented, leaning back and crossing his legs. “You surprise me, Chandris. A good business strategist never gives away anything for free.”

  “Perhaps I’m not a good strategist, then,” Chandris said evenly.

  Toomes smiled. “Having had you run me around the track a few times, I hardly think that likely.”

  Chandris inclined her head slightly in acknowledgment of the point. “In that case, I’ll concede it would have been obvious anyway once you heard your side of the bargain.”

  “That sounds more like it,” he agreed. “Go on.”

  “I fly with a huntership that’s been badly damaged,” she told him. “I need it repaired.”

  Toomes’s smile abruptly hardened. “The Gazelle?”

  “That’s the one.”

  He was frowning openly at her now, and behind his eyes she could see the news stories of the incident replaying themselves. The damage to the Gazelle, the damage to Hanan—

  And High Senator Arkin Forsythe standing with reluctant prominence amid the chaos.

  “Well,” he said at last. “Interesting, indeed. But I thought Gabriel handled huntership repairs.”

  “Gabriel works at bureaucratic speeds,” Chandris said. “We need it fixed now.”

  “We?”

  Chandris hesitated a fraction of a second. But Toomes wasn’t going to give her what they needed without something more. “I’m working with a researcher at the Angelmass Studies Institute,” she said. “His name’s Jereko Kosta.”

  “Kosta,” Toomes repeated, studying her carefully. “I’ll be checking with him, of course.”

  Chandris gestured toward his desk. “Call him now, if you’d like. I’ll wait.”

  For a half dozen seconds she was afraid he was going to take her up on the offer. No problem; except that if he called out of the fog like this, Kosta the naive spy was likely to tell him everything they knew or suspected about Angelmass. That would be a lot of something for nothing, and Toomes could well decide it was all he needed.

  Too late, now, she wished she’d told Kosta what she was planning and prepped him a little. But he’d been so sure she was going to pull something illegal that she’d figured he deserved to stew in his own juices a little.

  But Toomes merely shrugged. “Later will do,” he said. “Bottom line: how much are these repairs going to cost?”

  Chandris braced herself. The estimate from the service crew foreman had come in from Ornina just as Chandris arrived at the Stardust building. This was not going to be pretty. “A hundred eighty thousand ruya.”

  Toomes’s eyebrows went up again, but at least he didn’t laugh out loud. “That’s a lot of money,” he said. “What makes you think this information will be anywhere near that valuable?”

  “It’s worth considerably more than that,” Chandris said. “I’m not exaggerating when I say that this has the potential to drastically affect the entire economy of Seraph system. Possibly the entire Empyrean.”

  “Really,” Toomes said. “Something of such devastating import, and you’re proposing we keep it to ourselves?”

  “Of course not,” Chandris said. “We couldn’t bury this even if we wanted to. And we don’t. All I’m proposing is that you get the report a day before anyone else does.”

  “Inside information,” he said. “What you’re suggesting skates very close to the edge of illegal activity.”

  “You’re supplying a service to us,” Chandris pointed out. “That makes you something of a partner. It seems to me you’re entitled to have our data as soon as we collect it.”

  “And of course, everyone else would have to wait until we could draft a proper news release,” he said. “Naturally, the wording on such things is very important. I’m guessing it could take as long as three days to get it done properly.”

  Chandris felt her heartbeat speed up. Toomes was going for it. He was bargaining with her, angling for more time to work whatever business or stock manipulation he might want to do with his inside information. “I don’t know,” she said, putting reluctance into her voice. “Kosta’s writing skills are pretty good. I don’t think it would take us more than a day.”

  “This isn’t something you want to rush into,” Toomes warned. “If you’re right, this news will be a major topic of conversation across the entire Empyrean. The release itself could conceivably be quoted verbatim in history texts for generations to come. The wording will be incredibly important. It has to take three days.”

  “You’re right about the historical significance, of course,” Chandris conced
ed. “But even so, I can’t see it taking more than two days at the absolute most.”

  For a long moment he gazed at her. “All right,” he said at last. “Two days.” He lifted a finger. “Plus.”

  She frowned. There was an unpleasant glint in his eye. “Plus what?”

  “I’ll have a credit chit here for you at five-thirty tomorrow afternoon,” Toomes said. “One hundred eighty thousand ruya. At that time—” He lifted his eyebrows. “You and I are going to do it.”

  Chandris felt her blood freeze. “It?”

  “That’s right,” Toomes said. “You see, for all the time we spent together on the Xirrus, I somehow can’t remember us actually doing anything personal together. It makes me wonder if we ever really did.”

  “You drank an awful lot on that trip,” Chandris said between stiff lips. Oh, no. No. Not this.

  “Yes, I did,” he said. “I can’t help wondering why.”

  “I wasn’t ordering your drinks for you.”

  “No,” he said. “But perhaps there was subtle encouragement.” He waved a hand. ‘It doesn’t matter. The point is, whatever did or didn’t happen on the Xirrus, it’s going to happen tomorrow afternoon.”

  He stood up. “The office staff leaves promptly at five,” he said. “Be here at five-thirty if you want your money.”

  Chandris stood up, too. “I’ll be here,” she said, gazing at his face. It hadn’t been a predator’s smile she’d seen when she came in, she realized now. It had been the smile of injured pride seeing a chance to balance the books. “Goodbye, Amberson.”

  Stardust Metals’ main clerical area was three floors below the executive floor, a warren of small offices and large, desk-filled spaces. It was crawling with busy people and filled with the kind of controlled chaos that seemed to go with every bureaucratic operation Chandris had ever seen.

  In the midst of all that activity, it was inevitable that someone would leave a hand computer lying around unattended somewhere.

  She found one in two minutes flat and retired to the privacy of the women’s restroom with her prize. On the Xirrus, she’d had to fry her borrowed computer’s ID register to keep it from spotting unauthorized usage. Here, she didn’t need to be nearly that fancy. All she wanted this time was a few cozy minutes with Stardust’s central computer.

  The security protection on this system, she quickly discovered, was far looser than she’d had to cut through on the Xirrus. And for good reason: the particular hand computer she’d scored could only access the most basic of Stardust’s housekeeping programs.

  But that was all right. Basic housekeeping was exactly what she wanted. A simple work order, logged in for a specific time, and she was done. Poking around the menus, she spotted an unexpected bonus among the more routine areas and logged that in, too. Another brief dip into the clerical chaos to return the computer, and she was finished.

  She waited until she was back on the lobby floor and had some quiet space around her before she called Ornina. “It’s set,” she told the older woman. “I’ll have the money tomorrow afternoon.”

  “Good,” Ornina said. Her voice sounded anything but relieved, though. “Chandris …”

  “It’s all right,” Chandris said. “Really. A simple trade, all legal and ethical and aboveboard.”

  “And what exactly are we trading?”

  “Nothing we can’t do without,” Chandris assured her.

  “Mm,” Ornina said. “Jereko is worried about you. Worried that you’re going to, in his words, sell your soul for this.”

  Chandris sighed. “Not my soul, no,” she said. “Trust me, Ornina. Please.”

  “You know I do, dear,” Ornina said. “I just don’t want you bearing more than your share of the burden for this.”

  “I’m heading back,” Chandris said. “You have the repair crews going?”

  “As Hanan would say, they’re going at it like their pants are on fire,” Ornina said. “With enough people, the foreman says they can be finished in three days. Two and a half if we get a miracle or two.”

  “That’s why we’re paying them the big money,” Chandris reminded her. “Anything you want me to pick up on the way back?”

  Ornina hesitated. Chandris could visualize her face, lined with age and care and worries. Some of those lines and worries for Chandris herself. “No, I don’t think so,” she said. “Unless you want to stop at the hospital and see how Hanan is doing.”

  “I could,” Chandris said. “I was thinking instead that I’d take over for you at the Gazelle and let you go see him.”

  “That would be very nice,” Ornina admitted. “If it won’t be too much trouble.”

  “No trouble at all,” Chandris said. “Go get ready. I’ll be there as soon as I can.”

  “All right. Thank you, Chandris.”

  “Good-bye,” Chandris said, and hung up. She keyed a call for a line car, then headed across the lobby and back out to the street.

  She would take over for Ornina, all right. Ornina was a first-rate pilot and ship manager, and a sweet, kind woman besides. She didn’t have the kind of finesse and sheer underhanded skullduggery necessary to get work crews to do their best and their fastest.

  Chandris did. And miracles or not, the ship would be ready in two and a half days.

  She’d stood by and watched as two men died out at Angelmass. No one else was going to die that way. Not if she could help it.

  Trilling had been walking the streets of Shikari City for hours; and he was just about to give up for the morning when there she was.

  His heart leaped, his throat tightening with excitement. She was dressed in some outlandish would-be upper-class outfit that made her look like a little girl playing dress-up, her hair tied up into the kind of fancy swirls and braids he’d always hated. But it was her, all right, standing there across the street halfway down the block. He would know her anywhere.

  The one true love of his life, and he’d found her.

  Peering down her side of the street, she didn’t seem to have spotted him yet. Grinning like a friendly tiger, he started casually toward her. He would stay on this side of the street, he decided, waiting until he was directly across from her before crossing. That way, he would have a clear view of her face and her own excitement when she realized they were back together again.

  She had missed him so very much. He could hardly wait to see her face.

  He was halfway there when a line car pulled up to the curb beside her and stopped. Chandris got in, and the car pulled away again.

  “No,” Trilling breathed, staring in disbelief. To lose her again, here, now, just as they were about to get back together? “No!” he snarled, breaking into a run. A middle-aged pedestrian gaped at him; without a second thought, Trilling shoved him viciously out of his way, every gram of his concentration focused on the accelerating line car. He had to catch it. He had to.

  But it was no use. He was too far away, and the line car’s computer brain too stupid to recognize true love when it saw it. The vehicle picked up speed and vanished around a corner.

  And she was gone.

  Slowly, reluctantly, Trilling slowed down, trotting to a bitter halt. After all this time …

  He looked across the street. That was the building Chandris had come out of. Stardust Metals, Inc., the bronze plaque beside the door said. Some hoity corporation, probably, with more money than anyone had a right to have.

  So what had Chandris been doing in there?

  He smiled. No, he hadn’t lost her again. Of course not. Far from it. The outfit she’d been wearing had to be for some track she was scoring in there. Unless the whole thing was finished and she was ready to hop, she’d be back.

  And when she did, they’d be together again. They’d have the cash from this track to run away with, and they would never be apart again. That was probably what Chandris had in mind, in fact. To score a track right here and now so that she and Trilling could run away together.

  She was always so thoughtful
that way. It proved just how much she loved him.

  He glanced around, then headed down the street toward a narrow alleyway where the corner of a trash bin was visible. No, she would be back: All he had to do was find someplace to settle down and wait.

  And then they would be together again. Forever.

  CHAPTER 33

  “ETA to catapult, five minutes,” Campbell announced. “Speed has eased up to twenty-one hundred. Looks like we’ve picked up a little gravitational acceleration.”

  “Acknowledged,” Lleshi said, glancing over his own boards. Everything was ready; all systems showed green. For the past two days the Komitadji had been following a standard, minimum-time acc/dec course, driving at constant acceleration toward the distant catapult for the first half of the distance, then flipping over and decelerating at the same rate. Trying to beat the slower spaceliner to the catapult.

  It had been a long, hard race, and it was coming down now to a laser-etched finish. But Lleshi had run the numbers, and the Komitadji was going to win.

  “Commodore Lleshi!”

  Lleshi bit down hard on the first words that sprang to mind. “Yes, Mr. Telthorst?”

  “What in the name of the laughing fates is going on here?” the Adjutor snarled, hobbling to an awkward stop in the slight gravity of the Komitadji’s slow rotation. “We’re supposed to be heading for that catapult out there.”

  “And we are,” Lleshi said. “Our ETA is just under five minutes.”

  “Then why are we in free-flight?” Telthorst demanded. “Our speed relative to the catapult—” he squinted at Lleshi’s board “—it’s over two thousand kilometers per hour. We should be decelerating—should have been decelerating the whole way.”

  He jabbed an accusing finger toward the tactical display.

  “Now we’re too close. We can’t possibly decelerate the rest of our speed away fast enough.”

  “No, we can’t,” Lleshi agreed. “I didn’t intend to.”

  “Really,” Telthorst said frostily. “May I ask what exactly you did intend to do, then? Wave at the station as we shot past it?”

 

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