Engineman

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Engineman Page 12

by Eric Brown


  She shrugged. “They put someone on my trail when I left the ‘port,” she reminded them. “Perhaps they assumed I was meeting fellow Disciples and they wanted to round them up?” She spread her hands in a frustrated gesture. “I don’t know. Shit, I have no idea what’s going on here. I came for a quiet holiday, and the next thing I know I’m followed, rescued, drugged, then given the fifth degree.”

  She stared at Max. “Can you tell me what the hell’s going on here, Mr Klien?”

  Before he could answer, Conchita entered the room and hurriedly swept the used plates and utensils into a bowl on her hip. The little girl padded up to Rodriguez. “Dada-”

  “Not now, Maria. Okay?” He patted her bottom and sent her running off into the kitchen.

  Max brought his chair forward to rest on all four legs, clasped his hands together and regarded Ella. “Eleven, twelve years ago we—the Enginemen and Disciples of the Reach—formed ourselves into underground cells and began a campaign of armed resistance to the rule of the Danzig Organisation. We hit strategic command structures across the Reach, military depots, ports and airports. We singled out influential members of the Danzig hierarchy to be assassinated, and in a number of cases we were successful. In the past year we have become such a threat that the Organisation have taken retaliatory action.”

  As Max spoke, Ella glanced at Rodriguez and Jerassi, seeing them no longer as representatives of a harassed and victimised religious minority, but as ruthless guerrilla fighters.

  She recalled the convoy she’d seen leave Carey’s Sanctuary for the Reach, the tanks and the nuclear rocket launchers.

  “But the military build-up I saw...? Against a guerrilla network?”

  Max said, “The Organisation’s offensive is not directed at us, Ella.”

  She looked from Max to Rodriguez and Jerassi. They remained impassive, staring at the table-top.

  “I don’t understand.”

  “Why do you think suddenly, twelve years ago, we took up arms and declared war on the Danzig Organisation?”

  Ella shrugged. “Because they were—still are—a totalitarian regime that keeps the people of the Reach oppressed and economically disabled.”

  Max smiled. “Oh, we have far more than the mere liberation of the planet in mind.”

  Ella had to laugh. “But what can be more important that the liberation of the Reach?”

  “We took up the fight against the Organisation because of their treatment of the Lho-Dharvo.”

  She shook her head. “What do you mean?”

  “Eleven years ago they designed and released the Lho-specific virus that in three years wiped out the majority of the Lho-Dharvo on the four continents of the Reach.”

  Ella was aware of a sudden and dizzying rush of blood to her head, and the amplified thud of her heartbeat pounding around her body. In the silence that followed she heard the sound of birdsong from beyond the open door.

  “We had contacts within the Organisation, and our own medical experts,” Max went on. “We tried to get our findings to the United Colonies forum on Earth, but our delegation was arrested before it reached Earth, and murdered. The Organisation covered their tracks, responding to rumours by inviting UC representatives to the Reach to investigate the plague. But they were very clever. The infection had all the appearances of being the result of a naturally mutating virus, and of course the Organisation was never incriminated. Would you believe that they were actually praised by the investigation team for their work in identifying and isolating the virus?”

  “But why? Why would they...?”

  “The Lho were—are—on our side, actively fighting for the liberation of the Reach. Because of their knowledge of the planet, they were extremely effective in certain offensive situations. The Organisation took exception.”

  She recalled something Max had said earlier. “You mentioned that the plague wiped out the majority of the Lho—does that mean...?”

  “A few hundred resisted the plague and are in hiding in the northern mountains.”

  Ella felt tears stinging her eyes. “But I thought they’d all died, every last one.”

  “The Organisation circulated that rumour to scotch any further investigations. But the Lho still survive.”

  Ella made the connection. “In the northern mountains? That’s where the convoy was heading yesterday.”

  “The Lho are hiding in a massive underground temple complex in the heart of the mountain range,” Max said. “For some reason the Organisation are desperate to eradicate the last of the Lho, hence the build-up in the past two months. Don’t ask me why, or why they feel they need to use nuclear weapons against a few helpless Lho—but something’s happening up there which we can’t even begin to guess at. We can only do our paltry best down here to help them.”

  Max looked from Rodriguez to Jerassi, then back to Ella. “What are your immediate plans?”

  The question took her by surprise. Would they allow her to go that easily, just walk away after all they’d told her? She shrugged, suspicious. “I don’t know.”

  Which was, she considered, more or less the truth. She wanted to find her father, but what chance had she of accomplishing this if the Organisation was out to arrest every Disciple?

  Max said, “We need your help.”

  Ella almost laughed. “Mine?”

  “Do you think you can manage a long cross-country ride with a passenger?”

  She stared at him. “Do I have a choice?”

  Max glanced at his compatriots. “We’d like to have you along of your own free will.”

  “What do you want me to do?”

  Max looked at his watch. “You and I will be heading out in just under three hours. You’ll take me to our destination and wait under cover for me to get back. Emilio and Dave are setting out before then, to meet me later.”

  “And if I don’t agree to your little plan?”

  Max smiled at her. “I think you will, Ella. What other options do you have left?”

  Ella considered his words. Indeed, what were her options now? Better she helped the Disciples than go her own way in a hostile land. After all, Max and his cell were fighting for a worthy cause. She could always go along with the Disciples, and later attempt to locate her father.

  She considered what Max had told her about the Organisation’s responsibility for the plague, but she shut her mind to the thought that her father had had anything to do with the genocide of the Lho.

  She said, “Very well, then. Okay”

  One hour later, Ella and Max were putting the finishing touches to the trail bike when Rodriguez and Jerassi appeared from the house. They were wearing the light blue uniforms of ‘port maintenance staff. Conchita followed them, holding her daughter. Ella wiped her hands on a rag, watching as Rodriguez took his daughter from Conchita, swung her through the air and hugged her to him. The little girl giggled, the sound fluctuating through the warm air. Then he kissed his wife in a silence more eloquent than any farewell.

  The two Disciples waved across at Ella and Max, then set off along the path that wound down the hillside through the jungle. Conchita picked up her daughter and walked to the top of the track, stood and watched them go.

  Ella threw down the rag and joined them.

  The woman smiled shyly. “It is more difficult for those who stay behind. The constant worry...”

  “Have faith,” Ella said. She glanced at the woman’s arm, expecting to see an infinity symbol tattoo.

  Conchita said, “No, I’m not a Disciple.” She looked from Ella’s tattoo to her shoulders. “You were never an Enginewoman, and yet you believe?

  Ella shrugged. “I have faith,” she began, but left it at that. She looked up at Conchita and said, “You must have some belief? Are you Catholic?”

  Conchita laughed. “I have no belief—or rather I believe in my husband, in my daughter.” She bounced Maria on her hip and kissed the little girl. “The love I have for Emilio and Maria is enough. And you? Besides your faith
, do you have special people?”

  Ella smiled. “I had. Eddie was an Engineman. He gave himself to the interface. And my father... I haven’t seen him for ten years.” She shrugged. “We didn’t get on...”

  To her surprise, Conchita hugged her with her free arm. “You seem so lost, Ella. I hope you find your way.”

  She smiled at Ella and then carried her daughter into the house.

  Ella returned to her room, to change from her silversuit into jeans, a t-shirt and the jacket the courier had given her. She stepped outside, sat in an old armchair on the porch and stared down the hillside towards the coast.

  One of the factors that had made Ella decide to leave her father when she was fifteen—indeed, the main factor—was the simple fact of his lack of affection. There were many other reasons, a catalogue of specific incidents, acts of thoughtlessness or deliberate instances of cruelty—one in particular involving L’Endo which she could not bring herself to dwell on—but she understood that these acts of unkindness were merely the result of her father being unable to feel towards her the simple love and affection that should unite father and daughter. For instance, Ella could not once recall her father picking her up and hugging her when she was a child. Her upbringing had been left to the care of a series of nannies and minders. Her father had been a stern, saturnine figure who lived a separate life in his own suite of rooms during her early years. From the age of five until twelve, she’d attended a boarding school on the Rim world of Jet, and in that time her father had turned up just twice to take her on holiday, and on each occasion she had spent most of the vacation with her minder. At twelve, on her father’s posting to the Reach, he had installed her in a day school in Zambique, within commuting distance of their villa in the Falls. Her father stayed at the villa perhaps one week in six, but by that time years of separation had taken their toll, and they had acted towards each other as strangers.

  Ella drew her legs to her chest and hugged her shins. The damned thing was, she could almost bring herself to understand why her father had felt towards her as he had. Her mother had died when Ella was young, leaving him with a child as a reminder of his loss—a child that he had never wanted. His work for the Organisation around the Rim had taken him away from home when she was young, and later in her teens his absence made any rapprochement impossible. She could almost understand her father’s disaffection, but she could not bring herself to forgive him.

  And then this bolt from the blue. “I have seen the light, Ella. I need to see-” To see you? To finally treat her as he should have all those years ago? It was almost too much to hope for, too cruel a joke for him to play on her. She had built her own life, had almost reconciled herself to the fact that she did not have a father who cared. And then the communiqué, which had made her realise how much she still wanted his love and acceptance.

  She watched Max fill the trail bike’s tank with petrol. He stowed the canister under the porch and joined her. He leaned against the rail. “Hope you don’t mind my saying, but when we came for you last night I thought you were an Enginewoman.”

  “You’re not the first over the past day or two,” she said. “I think I must have aged.”

  “How old are you?”

  She squinted up at him. He was a dark silhouette against the sunset. Was she mistaken in thinking she detected a note of genuine interest in his tone?

  “Twenty-five—but I know: I look a lot older. Don’t tell me.”

  Max laughed. There was something so warm and gentle, so lost and vulnerable about Enginemen of a certain age that always made Ella’s heart go out to them.

  “Okay, so I won’t say I thought you were thirty.”

  “Thanks. And how old are you?”

  “I fluctuate,” he said. “Sometimes I feel a hundred. Other times I feel around sixty-two.”

  A silence came between them. Finally Ella asked, “What happened...?” indicating his missing arm.

  “Last year we attacked a marine base in the south. I got hit in a shoot out.” He smiled at her. “I’m lucky to be alive.”

  “What about today?” She felt a certain tightness in her throat, hindering her words.

  “We’ll be leaving in about ten minutes. We’ll keep off the roads and follow the track we use to get from here to the coast. We’re heading for the spaceport-”

  “You’re not trying to leave the Reach?”

  “No—we just have some business at the ‘port.” He hesitated. “It shouldn’t take too long.”

  Conchita appeared at the door with her daughter when the time came for them to leave. Ella mounted the trail bike, kick-started it and did a practice circuit of the house. Max joined her, and she noticed that he was wearing padding beneath his peasant’s jacket, to disguise the bulky occipital console that spanned his shoulders.

  He climbed on behind her and held her around the waist. Ella waved to Conchita, then accelerated down the track between the trees. The way was steep, but not as rough as she had feared. The track was a deep gully cut into the red earth, following for the most part an old water course left over from the rainy season. The bike whined and spluttered, bumped and bucked over exposed tree roots and boulders, but only twice were they forced to dismount. The jungle closed in on each side, which, while cutting down the available light, did have the advantage of muffling the sound of the engine. Ella enjoyed the challenge of the ride, the ego-trip of displaying her skill to Max. Not since evading a horde of thugs in the Latin Quarter had she had so much fun.

  They hit sea level and the track became a sandy path winding through the dense foliage. The going was easy here and Ella could relax, allow her thoughts to dwell on more than just the ride.

  One hour later they climbed a jungle-covered hilltop, stopped and looked down at the extensive, gun-metal grey tarmac of the spaceport.

  “There she is,” Max said to himself. He was staring at the interface as if it were his personal holy grail.

  Ella laughed nervously. “So... what now, Max?”

  “Get the bike under cover and wait here for-” he consulted his watch, “- one hour. No more. If I’m not here by then, head off without me. I’ll make my own way back. Keep your head down, Ella, okay?”

  “Hey, and you take care, too. That’s an order.”

  Max smiled. “I’ll be as careful as I have to.”

  As he started to leave, Ella rushed forward and impulsively embraced him. He returned the gesture, one-armed and awkward. He even seemed reluctant, as if to show her affection now might hurt both of them later. Quickly, he turned and slipped off through the undergrowth. Ella watched him go, then strained her eyes to catch glimpses of him as he slid and scrambled down the hillside. She concealed the bike in the undergrowth, then settled herself in the cradling root system of a giant hardwood tree and peered down at the spaceport.

  Was it her imagination, her paranoia, or were there, more guards patrolling the ‘port than there had been when she arrived yesterday? Sentries stood to attention at regular intervals around the perimeter and patrols made clockwise circuits of the vast strips of tarmac in armoured personnel carriers.

  The interface was identical to all the others she had ever seen across the Expansion. Two vertical columns rose like slim towerblocks, portals and viewscreens giving the occasional glimpse of technicians and officials inside, and between them stretched the bright blue membrane of the interface itself. It was not surprising that Disciples considered the portals to be iconic. Even in their industrial, work-a-day aspect they were tremendously powerful symbols, monuments to humankind’s incredible achievement of instantaneous star travel.

  Ella dug her old digital watch from her breast-pocket. Almost thirty minutes had elapsed since Max had left. She was relieved that she had witnessed no disturbance down at the ‘port. She was aware of her heartbeat as she willed the Disciples to return safely, and soon.

  The rapid chatter of gunfire almost stopped her heart.

  She surged to her feet, desperately scanning the ‘po
rt for the source of the firing. Directly below her, half a dozen guards were laying down a barrage of rapid fire across the tarmac, orange tracer creating a complex network in the twilight. At first, Ella could not make out their intended target. Then, when the return fire began, she saw two tiny, blue-uniformed figures—one crouched behind the ‘port’s courtesy coach and the other, twenty metres away, taking cover behind a small luggage transporter. Rodriguez and Jerassi bobbed up occasionally to return fire, but there was something at once incredibly heroic and hopeless about their stand. Even as they occupied the attention of the perimeter guards, others were closing in across the tarmac behind them. Ella sobbed, trying to shout loudly enough to warn the Disciples. She scoured the ‘port for any sign of Max. Had he been arrested already, or killed...?

  Then, something jumping and twisting in her gut, she saw the taxi-cab crazily swerving across the tarmac towards the interface, and Max was at the wheel. Their strategy was obvious. Rodriguez and Jerassi were providing the distraction while Max went for the ‘face. Even as she watched, adrenalised with fear and despair, she knew with a solid, dull certainty that there was no hope of their surviving. She screamed again as one of the guards fifty metres behind Rodriguez knelt, took aim, and unleashed a withering volley of bullets at the Disciple. Rodriguez didn’t fall so much as disintegrate, Jerassi turned and killed his companion’s killer. He turned again, took aim—but too late. He was swept away by the continuous fire from two guards sprinting towards him.

 

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