Ghost Legion

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Ghost Legion Page 35

by Margaret Weis


  "The creatures could be told to follow him."

  "True, but what would that accomplish, my prince? It would be like sending a human to spy on the doings of a beehive. The dark-matter creatures cannot understand our languages. In fact, they have only a very limited concept of us as sentient beings. Always remember, Flaim, the creatures have no care for us. They use us, we use them—an alliance of mutual convenience, nothing more."

  Flaim shrugged. "I bow to your judgment, my friend. And now I must return to the alcazar. I have been gone far too long as it is. Will you remain here until the Warlord has departed, then supervise the dismantling of this?' Flaim gestured to the tent, the surroundings.

  "Certainly, my prince. When that is done, I will join you."

  Flaim pressed the hand of the older man. "Thank you, my friend. Your help has been of inestimable value."

  Pantha, obviously pleased and touched, clasped the younger man's hand. Flaim departed, walking out of the tent with long, confident strides. He tossed the apple into the bonfire as he passed.

  Book Three

  Give me the crown.

  Here, cousin, seize the crown. Here, cousin,

  On this side my hand, and on that side yours.

  Now is this golden crown like a deep well

  That owes two buckets, filling one another,

  The emptier ever dancing in the air,

  The other, down, unseen, and full of water.

  That bucket down and full of tears am I,

  Drinking my griefs, while you mount up on high.

  William Shakespeare, Richard II, Act IV, Scene i

  Chapter One

  I knew, and know my hour is come, but not

  To render up my soul to such as thee ...

  George Gordon, Lord Byron, Manfred

  The screen door slammed.

  "Tusk! Where are you? Tusk!" Nola shouted.

  "I'm giving the kid a bath," came Tusk's voice and a splash.

  Nola threw the grocery sack she carried in the general vicinity of the kitchen table and headed for the small bathroom, located at the far end of the house. Reaching the door, she paused to catch her breath.

  "Yeah, what?" Tusk squatted on the floor next to the bathtub. Water glistened on his face, trickled down his arms. Young John, seated in the tub, lifted up a small bucket filled with water. Grinning gleefully at his mother, he proceeded to upend it, deluging himself and his father.

  "Jeez, this kid must be part dolphin—"

  "Tusk ..." Nola tried again.

  Tusk looked up. "What the—" He jumped to his feet. "You've been running? In this heat? You thinkin of tryin out for a marathon? What sorta weird hormone's attacked you now? Here"—he put the lid down on the toilet seat—"Sit down. John, don't do that—"

  "Tusk!" Nola grabbed hold of his arm, pinched him to emphasize the serious nature of what she had to say. "I stopped by the store ... to get the milk for lunch ..." She gasped for breath.

  "Yeah, so?" Tusk glanced back at his son. "John, damn it, I've told you— Look at the mess you've made!"

  "It's Link, Tusk!" Nola persisted. "He's in the Seldom Inn, in a high-stakes ante-up game. (John, your father told you not to do that.) I heard it from Rozzle. He stopped me as I went past his office. He tried to call, but since the phone's been disconnected ..." Nola brushed back her sweat-damp curls. "Link's losing, Roz said. Big time."

  "So what else is new?" Tusk grunted. He grabbed a towel, wiped off his face, then began mopping up the floor.

  Nola leaned against the door frame. "Link's bet the spaceplane, Tusk. His half of it."

  Tusk froze, towel in hand, water dripping on the floor. He stared at her.

  "It's true, dear," she said bleakly. "Roz said he'd try to hold things off as long as possible, but it may already be too late. You better hurry."

  Standing up, Tusk tossed the towel on the floor. "That son of a bitch!"

  The Seldom Inn was a combination bar and motel located near the spaceport. Its customers were generally traveling salesmen, bored convention goers, commercial pilots on layovers, and private pilots who wanted some pleasant diversion. The Seldom Inn offered this in the form of cheap liquor; cheap food; moderately priced, moderately clean rooms; and a gambling casino—which is where the owner made his profits.

  The owner, Rozzle Dozzle, was a tall, stringy man who looked as if he'd hung himself out to dry in the sun twenty years ago and forgotten to take himself back in. One of the wealthiest men in town, Rozzle dressed in pretty much whatever came to hand when he got up in the morning and was constantly being mistaken for one of his own janitorial staff— which mix-up appeared to afford him considerable amusement.

  He had the reputation of being a fair employer and a good neighbor, so that if he ran a few rigged tables, employed a few slick dealers, fleeced a few strangers out of their credits, no one in town much minded. The locals knew which games to avoid. Rozzle was lenient as far as bar tabs were concerned and he always made certain regular customers left when they'd had enough. He was well liked and he could tell you within two numbers of the right of the decimal point how much money he'd made during his lifetime.

  Tusk dashed in the inn's front door, vaulted the reception desk, nearly knocking down the startled clerk, and plunged into Rozzle's office.

  "Where the hell is he?" Tusk shouted.

  Rozzle jerked a thumb. "Upstairs. Sorry, Tusk. I tried my damnedest. You know how Link gets when he's been drinkin'.

  And Banquo's been buyin jump-juice for him like they was goin to take it off the market."

  "Link up there?"

  "Yeah. Tusk, wait."

  Rozzle was on his feet. He could move fast and, from dealing with juicers over the years, he was stronger, tougher, and more tenacious than he looked. Catching hold of Tusk's arm, he gave it a few good twists and a jerk to bring the mercenary to his senses.

  "I got some good customers up there. Friends of mine. I can't let you go barging in, makin a scene."

  Tusk struggled ineffectively in Rozzle's grip, but finally gave up, was forced to cool from rapid boil to simmer.

  "You okay?" Rozzle eyed him dubiously.

  "Yeah!" Tusk rubbed his arm. "Yeah, I'm all right. Can I go up?"

  "Long as you don't start bustin up tables."

  "Not tables. Heads. One head." Tusk clenched his fist.

  "Link's a big boy, Tusk." Rozzle touched a button, spoke a few low words into a commlink. "He don't need his mommy."

  "He needs a keeper!" Tusk glowered.

  "I've fixed it. Just tap twice, softly, on the door. The Redhead'll let you in. And, Tusk. Look out for this Banquo. He's the big winner so far."

  "Banquo?" Tusk screwed up his face. "I know him?"

  "Naw. He's new around here. Came in last night. He don't look like much, but I got a feeling he's trouble."

  Tusk nodded gloomily and headed for the upper floors.

  Rozzle gazed after him, shook his head. "Tusk, my friend, meet your new partner."

  Tusk tapped twice, softly, on the door. Rozzle's wife, known as the Redhead, a woman as round and short as he was tall and thin, and one of the best dealers in the business, opened the door.

  The room was filled with tobacco smoke and the stale, sour smell of sweat. Sunlight filtered in through the cracks of a drawn window shade. A harsh nuke light shone down from the ceiling on a green baize-covered table.

  "Game's over, I'm afraid, Tusk," the Redhead said quietly.

  Tusk, had no need to ask who'd lost. Link sat slumped in dejection, his elbows on the deal table, his head in his hands.

  Stalking across the smoke-filled room, Tusk grabbed hold of his erstwhile partner, shook him.

  "What the hell have you done?"

  "I was hot, Tusk. Hot. I couldn't lose." Link didn't look up. "Then ... you know how it goes. The cards went against me. I figured, though ... only a matter of time." He stretched out his unsteady hand for a half-empty glass of jump-juice.

  Tusk knocked the glass out of h
is reach, sent it smashing to the floor.

  "Hey, no trouble." The Redhead waddled over.

  "Then get him the hell outta here!" Tusk swore bitterly.

  "Come on, pumpkin," the Redhead crooned. With an expert hand, she levered Link up out of the chair, steered his stumbling footsteps toward the door.

  "A straight," Link said to no one in particular. "I had a goddam straight. How the hell'd he beat a goddam straight?"

  Two other players, who didn't look any too happy themselves, gave Tusk a glance, then filed out of the room. The big winner remained behind, gathering up plastic credits, golden eagles, and paper cash.

  He was a grossly overweight man with a coarse, jowly face, stubbly with a few days' growth of dark beard. He had tiny pig eyes, almost buried beneath layers of fat. But these eyes— when they turned on Tusk—were remarkable for their calculating shrewdness. And the man either had been involved in a terrible accident or was born with severe handicaps. He couldn't walk; he rode in what was commonly know as an air-chair—a sophisticated wheelchair that traveled on cushions of air.

  He had use of one hand and arm, apparently, for it was this hand that was scooping up the cash, depositing it in a bag attached to the arm of the chair. The other hand was immobile, locked in a fixed position over a computer keypad attached to the chair. His head and neck were held upright by a brace. He could not move his head, but was forced to swivel about in the chair to look directly at anyone, a movement which he made with startling speed. The fingers—surprisingly thin and long, considering the grossness of the body—flicked rapidly over the keypad. A synthesized voice spoke.

  "You're Tusk, I take it?"

  "Yeah," said Tusk morosely, shoving his hands in the pockets of his jeans. "That's me."

  "I'm your new partner, sir," the mechanical voice told him. "Lazarus Banquo."

  Tusk glanced again at the leering man, found he didn't much like looking at him, and glanced away. "Can't say that I'm pleased to meet you."

  "No, sir, I don't suppose you are." Banquo made a sound in his chest, a sort of gurgling belch that was, perhaps, a chuckle.

  His clothes were expensive, but they hadn't been washed in some time, to judge by the remains of various meals that adorned his tie and shirtfront. Judging by the smell, Banquo hadn't bothered to wash himself either.

  Tusk took a step or two closer to the window. "Look, Mr. Banquo, I'll level with you. You didn't get yourself much of a prize. Our shuttle business is really just gettin' off the ground—"

  "A veritable pun, sir! I appreciate it." Again the belching chuckle.

  "Yeah, well." Tusk yanked the window open, drew in a deep breath. "Glad you got a sense of humor. Anyway, business hasn't been that great. We've got a few debts and now, without a co-pilot ... I mean I take it you don't—"

  "No, sir. Wouldn't dream of it. Capital. That's all I'm interested in, sir. Liquidate. Turn into cash. Nothing beats cash, sir. Nothing!" Banquo's good hand squeezed the money bag he held.

  Tusk looked around grimly. "That's kinda what I had figured. I can't buy you out right away. But I could pay you some each month.. .."

  "A fair offer, sir, but not one I'm prepared to take. There's a consortium on planet ... well, I won't say where ... but they would offer me a hundred thousand eagles for my share of that Scimitar this minute, sir. This minute.

  "Of course, sir," Banquo added with a jowly grin, "where my half goes, your half goes, sir. But they would be willing to pay you the same amount."

  "A hundred thousand ... Are you crazy?" Tusk stalked over to stand in front of the obese monstrosity, glared down at him. "It's worth fifty times that amount! One hundred times!"

  "Then pay me, sir," Banquo said, the grin swallowed in layers of fat. The pig eyes were suddenly cold and dangerous.

  "Pay me what my half is worth now, sir, and we will part company."

  "You goddam bastard. You got Link drunk, then cheated him. I'll lay money those cards were—"

  "Come, come, my dear sir," Banquo intervened. "Say nothing that you may regret later. We are, as it seems, at an impasse. Notwithstanding the wise advice of Solomon, we cannot very well cut the spaceplane in two. However, I begin to see the glimmerings of a solution. Escort me to my suite, where we may talk in peace."

  The grotesque man clutched the bag close to him. "I feel rather nervous carrying this much cash. I have seen several unsavory characters running loose in this establishment."

  "Look in a mirror," Tusk advised him, but he did so under his breath.

  Banquo activated the air jets and the chair rose up off the floor and carried the hefty, immobile body out of the room. Tusk tagged along; he hadn't much choice.

  "Not that I am defenseless, mind you, sir," Banquo's machine voice told him. The eyes regarded Tusk with cunning. Banquo patted the arm of his chair, and Tusk saw that it was really a beam rifle. "Computer-controlled. I have only to press this button. Fires forward or backward, sir. My own design."

  Tusk grunted. They proceeded down the hallway to an elevator. Being cooped up in a small, stuffy elevator with Banquo was not a pleasant experience. Tusk held his breath as long as possible, was glad they only had to go up one flight.

  The doors opened. The chair whirred along quietly down the corridor. Neither man spoke until they had reached Banquo's room. He fumbled in a pocket for the pass card, handed it to Tusk.

  "If you would be so good, sir. My manservant quit, the ungrateful wretch. Abandoned me in this dreadful place. Come in, sir, come in."

  Banquo glided in through the open door, entering what Rozzle termed a "sitting room," due to the presence of a couch and an understaffed armchair. The Seldom Inn had only two suites: the President's Suite—so named because some third-, fourth-, or fifth-world president had actually been forced to spend the night in it when his shuttlecraft developed anti-grav problems. The other suite was what Rozzle termed— unofficially—his High-Roller Special, and was set aside for those gamblers who took the game seriously. This one was a cut above the President's Suite, having three rooms: a bedroom, a small sitting room, and a bathroom, complete with a jet-tub and a private safe in the bedroom. In Banquo's case, the jet-tub was, apparently, a wasted feature.

  "Shut the door, will you, sir? Take a look up and down the hall first. Excellent. All this money. One can't be too careful. If you would lock up securely . . ."

  Tusk peered into the hall, reported it empty. He shut the door, activated the lock.

  Banquo wheeled the chair to the bedroom door, came to a halt. Clutching the bag, he stared into the room nervously.

  "Would you be so good as to check the bedroom, sir? Someone might have entered during my absence and be lurking in wait. One of the duties of my manservant, sir, is to investigate each room before I enter. I never go anywhere without prior investigation.'

  Tusk hesitated. He had the distinct and unpleasant feeling that the "solution" to their "problem" was going to involve Tusk's transformation from spacepilot to manservant. And Tusk was fully prepared to tell Banquo to take his half of the Scimitar and sell it to a scrap heap. What the hell? It was only a spaceplane. There were dozens more like it out there. Work a regular job for a couple of years, earn the cash ... As for XJ, it'd serve the damn loudmouthed computer right.

  Tusk walked into the bedroom, took a halfhearted glance around.

  "Yeah, it's safe," he reported sullenly. "You can go in."

  "Excellent, sir. Excellent. I take your word for it, you see." Banquo powered his chair into the bedroom. "If you will excuse me for a moment, sir, I have some personal business to dispose of." He patted the bag. "Don't be offended, sir, if I close the door and lock it. I trust you, sir. I truly do. But money is money and, in your dire position, the temptation might be too strong for you to overcome."

  Tusk glowered, considered telling Banquo just where he could stash his filthy money. He swallowed his words, however, and couldn't help noticing how rotten they tasted on the way down.

  "Help yourself to a drink
, sir," Banquo called, peering around the door as he was shutting it. "You'll find a wide and varied selection there on the desk. Oh, and take a look out the window, please. I fancied I saw some derelict stragglers hanging about out there yesterday, staring up at my room. Oh, and make certain the window is shut and bolted."

  Banquo closed the door. The lock clicked. Tusk heard the sound of the chair whirring across the floor, then silence.

  He stood in the center of the sitting room, which smelled of freshly stirred-up dust and cheap furniture polish, and told himself to walk out the front door and never look back. He couldn't ever remember feeling this low. Not even the time when he and Nola were surrounded by mind-dead and Corasians and the Scimitar wouldn't make the liftoff.

  "I'd've sold the damn plane for a handful of peanuts then. It damn near got me killed. What do I care? Let the bastard have it."

  Tusk actually took a step toward the door. He and Nola had been married in that spaceplane. He'd rescued Dion from Sagan in that spaceplane. Dion had saved his friend's life in that spaceplane....

  Tusk brushed his hand across his eyes, realized he was actually crying, and cast a swift, embarrassed glance toward the bedroom door. It remained shut. Sighing, Tusk headed for the window. Might as well get used to obeying orders. He peered out between the cracks in the metal blinds, was rewarded with a magnificent view of the Seldom Inn's parking lot and the open-all-hours grocery store across the way.

  Both were practically deserted. Vangelis' afternoon heat had driven everyone with any sense indoors. A gigantic lizard was meandering across the parking lot. A woman sat on a bench in front of the grocery store drinking a can of pop and fanning herself.

  The window was shut and locked, had probably been shut and locked for the last twenty years. Behind him, he heard the door open.

  "Its okay, Mr. Banquo. Hell, there's no one dumb enough to be out in this heat this time of—" Tusk turned around.

  Derek Sagan stood in the bedroom door.

  It was fortunate the window was shut, or Tusk would have fallen out of it.

 

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