Aurora
Page 15
Corf's expression bordered on contempt "Most people let others do their remembering for them. They have machines, libraries, leaders. They trust that the memories are kept."
"You don't?'
"I'm learning."
"What?"
'That memory shouldn't be left up to others. You have to do it yourself."
"What happens to you if you don't?'
"Do you know any Aurorans?'
'As a matter of fact, I do," Mia said
'7111a?'s what happens. They forget where they came from, forget who they are, forget why other people matter. They stop being..." He looked away.
"Stop being what?'
"Human.0
'And the Keresians? You have Keresian friends, don't you, Corf ? What about them?'
'-They understand- They're trying to get back what's been lost."
'And you're helping them?'
He shrugged
"How?' Mia asked. "Getting them old books?'
"Its one way."
"How do you know what titles to pick? I mean, weren't there a lot of pretty worthless books printed back then? And what's wrong with new work?'
Corf's contempt showed more clearly. "Did you handle them? Did you open the covers and smell them? Did you took at the words on the pages or did you read them? New work is all about what's now What matters is the connection."
'To the past."
-1-liats rightly)
"So who makes the selections? You?'
"No, I'm still learning."
'And if I wanted to learn? 'Mia asked.
Corf stared at her, then slowly shook his head. "You're working me. You don't want truth, you want details. You don't understand:
"Make me understand-"
"I'd have to change you. You're not willing."
"If I talk to Illen Jons, will she tell me the same thing.
Corf winced as if she had threatened to slap him. 'Who?'
"Your connection. Lt. Illen Jons, the Keresian liaison. I would never have expected someone in her position to be running contraband, but maybe I shouldn't be surprised But what really surprises me is the Keresian component. Are they buying the contraband? Part of it? Its not all going through the blockade, is it? Some of it's coming in and going back out. I should have thought of that before-maybe I might have found the conduits quicker."
"She's not-you have it--2'
"I have it what? Wrong? Then correct me. Is Lt. Jons important to you? Do you want to save her some grief?' Mia stood and stepped closer to Corf. 'All this philosophical banter is fine, Corf, but I frankly could care less. After you're in prison together you can discuss dialectics all day long. Right now I want to know about the real world- If I arrest Lt. Jons, will I be getting the same from her, or will she have more to say about where the books came from?'
"Stie's not involved in this." Corfs face reddened
Just as suddenly as he had become agitated, he calmed- The color left his face, his expression returned to one of indifference, and his voice lost its anger.
"It doesn't matter," he said- 'Arrest her. She can't tell you anything. I won't tell you anything. And when the day is done, you'll be with us or dead."
Mia waited- Corf stretched back out on the cot, covered his eyes with his forearm, and the interview ended
Outside the cell, she joined the technicians who had been monitoring.
'That was strange," one of them said- Tsychometrics showed no change from his baseline until you brought up Lt. Jons." He pointed at a screen showing EEG and Cortical Activity Patterns. "Then the entire brainwave began to match what you'd expect from someone under the kind of pressure he was under."
"What happened then?' Mia asked.
"It just changed," the other tech said- 'The whole eruption of normal emotional response faded right back into the previous baseline."
Mia stared at the readings. -Why?'
'A couple of things maybe," the first tech said- "We've seen a little of this in some of the pirates we've scanned, just nothing so dramatic. You see this kind of thing in certain cognitive disorders, but we checked his history. Nothing. So that leaves us with cortical implants-the kind they use for controlling chemical imbalance--or extreme conditioning."
"Conditioning. . ."
"That sounds more ominous than it is," the second tech said. "What we call True Believer Syndrome. Zealots, religious fanatics, or people who have studied various trance practices. Highly developed personal control over mood states."
"What's not ominous about that?' Mia asked- 'Any indication that Corf has an implant?'
"None we've seen so far."
,,check iv,
"He threatened you, Lieutenant," the first tech said. -11-lat qualifies for additional charges. Do you want us to file the report and append the recordings?'
"Not yet. I dont want his status officially changed."
The tech nodded and worked his board briefly. "Filed in a hold buffer. We can do it later if you change your mind."
"Great." She began to leave, then paused. I want to know if he gets any other visitors. Anyone. Understand?'
Mia went back to her cabin.
Zealots, religious fanatics ... great. "at was that he said? "Men the day is done, you'll be with us or dead. "
She pulled up Corfs file again and checked his religious affiliations. That section was blank.
Speculatively, she checked Lt Jons' file.
"No current affiliation," the box said. "Parents not recorded."
Scrolling down, though, she stopped at the section on politics. Jons had no comments, but her parents had been arrested eighteen years ago at a rally that had turned violent. At first glance, it seemed to be just a routine mass arrest, where the police took everyone in and released them later after inspection. It did not necessarily mean her parents had been active participants, just present when it turned bad- But the rally stirred her interest. Order for the Supremacy of Man Again.
She went back to Corfs jacket. After a search, she found a distant relative who had been an active member in the Order, a professed Managin.
Which did not mean Corf was a Managin-indeed, he must have been cleared of that, or he would never have gotten into the military--but it might have explained his lack of promotion.
Illen Jons' parents: had not been listed as active members, but the coincidence bothered Mia. Managins had since become a fringe group drawing active police surveillance and a tag in law enforcement circles as a dangerous, militant organization.
A little more than a year ago she had investigated several of them in connection to the slaughter at Union Station in D.C. on Earth.
They had also been ex-military ...
Mia opened her datum and entered in a new search. They had arrested nearly thirty contraband dealers since she had been on the blockade-- thirty in eleven months. She pulled their jackets and initiated a search to find a Managin influence in any of their backgrounds.
Then she initiated the same search on the three names Sturlin had given her who had purchased books from that bookseller on Earth
She felt excited- Always there came a moment when it seemed she had stumbled on the thread that would lead her to the heart of the maze where the answers were kept She knew she should be patient and wait for the searches to produce results.
Instead, she headed for Lt. Jons' cabin.
Jons was stationed in the next base habitat Mia wound her way through the decks and corridors, her mind running the interview with Corf like a tape, over and over. He had wanted to brag, she had sensed that, but he was more disciplined than she expected. He was part of something he thought was really important, and he hungered to boast and let her know how helpless she was in the face of the larger plan.
She stepped off the lift in Jons' section. Wide corridors, softly carpeted, warm light.
She reached the end and, as she began to turn down the left corridor, she heard voices ahead- She hesitated, then took a step back.
Jons' cabin was
the fourth one from the comer Mia could see someone's back, halfway out of the cabin door. She eased around the comer and waited.
The person laughed, then came all the way out into the corridor Mia swallowed hard, her pulse quickening.
Reen stood there, holding a bound book, grinning.
Without thinking, Mia immediately retreated to the lift.
11
MASID DESCENDED the stairs from his small domicile, rain pounding the fabric awning above. Murky liquid spitted through holes worn or ripped in the tough material and splattered on the steps, making them treacherous for the incautious. The run-off sluiced into and down the narrow alleyway. More openings in the roof high overhead added to the stream that flowed the length of the alley. As he reached the foot of the stairs, wind heaved through the passage; Masid looked up to see the heavy support ribbing of the ceiling sway and rattle.
He dodged the larger waterfalls as he sprinted to the end of the passageway, hunched within his generous black overcoat. He turned sharply left into the arcade that ran the length of Cobrina Street. Puddles gathered along the path, spillover from the street beyond, but the arched covering here was intact Rain danced heavily, the sound magnified by the shape of the arcade.
The street sprawled in glistening ugliness, the extruded composite material looking like grey-black leather under the sheen of water. Open to the sky, rain made a dense, milky curtain, obscuring the far side. Every ten meters, stanchions rose out of large pedestals. The plan, Masid gathered, had been to complete a roof over the entire town of Noresk, but no new construction had happened since the blockade.
Noresk itself was a new town, less than five years old. In the past twelve days, Masid had learned its grid, understood the plan to which it had grown, and seen the frustration in the faces of its residents that their town-one-day-to-become-a-city could go no further until events completely beyond their control were resolved
The frustration, though, was only one factor distorting the faces of Noresk.
As he walked, Masid saw few people. They hurried, heads down against the rainfall even where they walked dry. Overcoats and cowls were the fashion, making everyone a caricature of a human. They hurried, but only in short spurts, pausing after a dozen meters, steps hesitant No one exchanged looks of any kind unless they met intentionally, by prearrangement. Coughing punctuated the droning percussion of the rain. He counted the robust, the healthy, easily, because they represented a minority.
He reached the end of Cobrina Street and paused at the corner, where Panis Street crossed. The enormous storm drain in the center of the crossroad thundered as water tried to fill it. The far comer was a vague collection of shadows and geometries. Masid drew a lungful of air and ran.
Each step came down ankle-deep in cold water. He made the opposite comer in thirteen long strides and caught himself against a wall, air bursting from his lungs. He ran his fingers through his sopping hair, fluttered his overcoat, and continued on up Panis.
The arcade cover was damaged in spots, letting in the thick rainfall. People automatically dodged them and each other. Traffic grew heavier as he made his way to Novagi Avenue. Voices joined the cacophony now-the surge and flow of haggling.
A huge tent had been erected over the intersection of Novagi and Panis. Rain funneled off the comers, flowed into the arcades. People crowded beneath the tent, voices mingled in sing-song hawking and shouted replies. Masid stepped in, feeling his pulse quicken at the almost palpable urgency of the market and the knowledge of how risky it was for him to mix with so many sick people.
Within a minute, people identified him as a dealer and began shouting requests for specific drugs, mostly antifungals, but also a number of high-grade antibacterials. Masid knew his inventory and had to turn away most requests. People scowled, disappointed, and immediately sought out another vendor. A few, however, asked for treatments he possessed, and the haggle began. He had learned quickly the art involved-barter and bargain, but not too greedily, or they just went away. Repeat customers received preferential treatment. Never act like there was plenty more to be had. And never interrupt another dealer's Pitch.
Within ten minutes he sold six treatment packets to people who approached him, seeking cures for various conditions. In one instance what he gave the buyer was only a pain reliever; he knew there was no cure and, he felt certain, so did the customer It was an easy rhythm-the contact, the request, the haggle, and the sale much of it taking on the patterns of ritual.
While he worked, he watched the other dealers, searching for any special attention they might pay him. Besides the same kind of wary scrutiny he gave them, Masid detected nothing unusual. ?'his was his fifth day in the market since finding a dom in Noresk, and the other dealers had accepted him as no particular threat The only law of which he was aware stood outside the market, under the eaves of a sidewalk caf6: Marshal Toranz. She sat watching the surely illegal transactions, an ugly rifle conspicuous on the table, and a completely ambivalent expression on her puffy face. They had yet to exchange words, and Masid doubted they ever would until he forced the issue. Word was she took graft from Filoo. Her only reason for being here was to make sure the clientele did not get greedy and start looting the dealers.
He worked the crowd for another hour, through four more transactions, and decided it was time to quit for the day. The rain had slackened to a light drizzle, and he was hungry.
Someone tugged at his sleeve.
"Doctor?' a pale woman with reddened eyes asked- Masid nodded curtly. 'Anthrocyclomal," she said firmly, the consonants softened by the phlegm in her throat and chest.
Masid reached inside his capacious coat to the proper pouch. "You done that before?' he asked. "Its a one-time. More than that, you risk collateral resistances through plasmid transmission."
"I know, I done the work-up," the woman said, scowling with impatience. "How much.)"
"Rare stuff. Two thousand credits."
Her eyes reflected her shock. -Take it in kind-T,
,what
She stepped marginally closer. "In kind. Something warmer ... personal 0ne to one -thin hand fluttered at the flap of her cloak.
Masid laughed, startled. "No. Do I took crazy?'
"I don't have two thousand-"
'A welt."
Her face contorted again in a rictus of frustration. "Look, one dose and I'll be clean, then maybe~'
"No. Anthrocyclomat is not universal, it's specifically for pleuretic tubercotomiasis." He smiled wanly. -I dont deal what I don't know about."
"Then you know it's fatal."
"Madam, the whole planet is fatal. All this is short term."
'-Then why're you worried about living forever?'
"I'm not. Just past next year." Masid glanced around, agitated now by the woman and her condition. "Seventeen hundred."
She ticked her tips. "Grotin sold it for a thousand-"
"So you've done it before? I told you, this is one shot-2'
"No! I got it from Grotin for somebody else. Now I need it. He sold it for a thousand."
"When he had it. Grotin doesn't have it anymore, am I -fight? Price has gone up. Seventeen."
'Twelve."
Masid turned away.
'I can give you a new supplier."
Masid hesitated- "Use it yourself ?'
"Can't. No codes..."
"Codes to what?'
She blew a ragged breath, and Masid automatically held his own. She said, "I know someone with a synthesizer, but I don't know how it works."
"I'm sure." He studied her skeptically. 'A synthesizer. Why would you know someone like that, and why aren't you buying from him?'
"Her." She looked around nervously. "She doesn't have the program for what I need Besides, she doesn't like selling it. I can maybe transact something that could change her mind ... ?'
"For you, anyway." He leaned forward. "You show me. This is anything less than vertical-"
"I'm squared, this is legitimate."
Mas
id checked those nearby. 'All right, I'm about to find food. You know a place called Davni's? Good, here's what we do. How much you have~~'
She fished a couple of fifty-credit chits from her pocket
Masid dug out an ampule of general purpose AB. "You buy this., go away satisfied. Meet me at Davni's in an hour. We go from there."
"How do I know you'll be there?' she asked even as she handed over the credits.
"Because I'm hungry and thugs the only place I know that screens their food before they serve it. Here." He gave her the antibiotic and pocketed the chits. "Leave."