The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume 6: Multiples: 1983-87

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The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg, Volume 6: Multiples: 1983-87 Page 26

by Robert Silverberg


  “Thank you kindly,” the android said. “Thank you very much.” He hit the scanner override. Juanito stepped through the security shield into the customs tank and looked around for his mark.

  The new dinkos were being herded into the fumigation chamber now. They were annoyed about that—they always were—but the guards kept them moving right along through the puffy bursts of pink and green and yellow sprays that came from the ceiling nozzles. Nobody got out of customs quarantine without passing through that chamber. El Supremo was paranoid about the entry of exotic microorganisms into Valparaiso’s closed-cycle ecology. El Supremo was paranoid about a lot of things. You didn’t get to be sole and absolute ruler of your own little satellite world and stay that way for 37 years without a heavy component of paranoia in your make-up.

  Juanito leaned up against the great curving glass wall of the customs tank and peered through the mists of sterilizer fog. The rest of the couriers were starting to come in now. Juanito watched them singling out potential clients. Most of the dinkos were signing up as soon as the deal was explained, but, as always, a few were shaking off help and setting out by themselves. Cheap skates, Juanito thought. Assholes and wimps. But they’d find out. It wasn’t possible to get started on Valparaiso without a courier, no matter how sharp you thought you were. Valparaiso was a free-enterprise zone, after all. If you knew the rules, you were pretty much safe from all harm here forever. If not, not.

  Time to make the approach, Juanito figured.

  It was easy enough finding the blind man. He was much taller than the other dinkos, a big, burly man some 30-odd years old, heavy bones, powerful muscles. In the bright, glaring light, his blank forehead gleamed like a reflecting beacon. The low gravity didn’t seem to trouble him much, nor his blindness. His movements along the customs track were easy, confident, almost graceful.

  Juanito sauntered over and said, “I’ll be your courier, sir. Juanito Holt.” He barely came up to the blind man’s elbow.

  “Courier?”

  “New-arrival assistance service. Facilitate your entry arrangements. Customs clearance, currency exchange, hotel accommodations, permanent settlement papers, if that’s what you intend. Also special services by arrangement.”

  Juanito stared up expectantly at the blank face. The eyeless man looked back at him in a blunt, straight-on way, with what would have been strong eye contact if the dinko had had eyes. That was eerie. What was even eerier was the sense Juanito had that the eyeless man was seeing him clearly. For just a moment, he wondered who was going to be controlling whom in this deal.

  “What kind of special services?”

  “Anything else you need,” Juanito said.

  “Anything?”

  “Anything. This is Valparaiso, sir.”

  “Mmm. What’s your fee?”

  “Two thousand callaghanos a week for the basic. Specials are extra, according.”

  “How much is that in Capbloc dollars, your basic?”

  Juanito told him.

  “That’s not so bad,” the blind man said.

  “Two weeks’ minimum, payable in advance.”

  “Mmm,” said the blind man again. Again that intense, eyeless gaze, seeing right through him. “How old are you?” he asked suddenly.

  “Seventeen,” Juanito blurted, caught off guard.

  “And you’re good, are you?”

  “I’m the best. I was born here. I know everybody.”

  “I’m going to be needing the best. You take electronic handshake?”

  “Sure,” Juanito said. This was too easy. He wondered if he should have asked three kilocallies a week, but it was too late now. He pulled his flex terminal from his tunic pocket and slipped his fingers into it. “Unity Callaghan Bank of Valparaiso. That’s code twenty-two-forty-four-sixty-six, and you may as well give it a default key, because it’s the only bank here. Account eleven thirty-three, that’s mine.”

  The blind man donned his own terminal and deftly tapped the number pad on his wrist. Then he grasped Juanito’s hand firmly in his until the sensors overlapped and made the transfer of funds. Juanito touched for confirm and a bright green +CL. 4000 lit up on the screen in his palm. The payee’s name was Victor Farkas, out of an account in the Royal Amalgamated Bank of Liechtenstein.

  “Liechtenstein,” Juanito said. “That’s an Earth country?”

  “Very small one. Between Austria and Switzerland.”

  “I’ve heard of Switzerland. You live on Liechtenstein?”

  “No,” Farkas said. “I bank there. In Liechtenstein, is what Earth people say. Except for islands. Liechtenstein isn’t an island. Can we get out of this place now?”

  “One more transfer,” Juanito said. “Pump your entry software across to me. Baggage claim, passport, visa. Make things much easier for us both, getting out of here.”

  “Make it easier for you to disappear with my suitcase, yes. And I’d never find you again, would I?”

  “Do you think I’d do that?”

  “I’m more profitable to you if you don’t.”

  “You’ve got to trust your courier, Mr. Farkas. If you can’t trust your courier, you can’t trust anybody at all on Valparaiso.”

  “I know that,” Farkas said.

  Collecting Farkas’ baggage and getting him clear of the customs tank took another half an hour and cost about 200 callies in miscellaneous bribes, which was about standard. Everyone from the baggage-handling androids to the cute, snotty teller at the currency-exchange booth had to be bought. Juanito understood that things didn’t work that way on most worlds; but Valparaiso, he knew, was different from most worlds. In a place where the chief industry was the protection of fugitives, it made sense that the basis of the economy would be the recycling of bribes.

  Farkas didn’t seem to be any sort of fugitive, though. While he was waiting for the baggage, Juanito pulled a readout on the software that the blind man had pumped over to him and saw that Farkas was here on a visitor’s visa, six-week limit. So he was a seeker, not a hider. Well, that was OK. It was possible to turn a profit working either side of the deal. Running traces wasn’t Juanito’s usual number, but he figured he could adapt.

  The other thing that Farkas didn’t seem to be was blind. As they emerged from the customs tank he turned and pointed back at the huge portrait of El Supremo and said, “Who’s that? Your President?”

  “The Defender; that’s his title. The Generalissimo. El Supremo, Don Eduardo Callaghan.” Then it sank in and Juanito said, blinking, “Pardon me. You can see that picture, Mr. Farkas?”

  “In a manner of speaking.”

  “I don’t follow. Can you see or can’t you?”

  “Yes and no.”

  “Thanks a lot, Mr. Farkas.”

  “We can talk more about it later,” Farkas said.

  Juanito always put new dinkos in the same hotel, the San Bernardito, four kilometers out from the hub in the rim community of Cajamarca. “This way,” he told Farkas. “We have to take the elevator at C Spoke.”

  Farkas didn’t seem to have any trouble following him. Every now and then Juanito glanced back, and there was the big man three or four paces behind him, marching along steadily down the corridor. No eyes, Juanito thought, but somehow he can see. He definitely can see.

  The four-kilometer elevator ride down C Spoke to the rim was spectacular all the way. The elevator was a glass-walled chamber inside a glass-walled tube that ran along the outside of the spoke, and it let you see everything: the whole great complex of wheels within wheels that was the Earth-orbit artificial world of Valparaiso, the seven great structural spokes radiating from the hub to the distant wheel of the rim, each spoke bearing its seven glass-and-aluminum globes that contained the residential zones and business sectors and farmlands and recreational zones and forest preserves. As the elevator descended—the gravity rising as you went down, climbing toward an Earth-one pull in the rim towns—you had a view of the sun’s dazzling glint on the adjacent spokes and an occasiona
l glimpse of the great blue belly of Earth filling up the sky 150,000 kilometers away, and the twinkling hordes of other satellite worlds in their nearby orbits, like a swarm of jellyfish dancing in a vast black ocean. That was what everybody who came up from Earth said: “Like jellyfish in the ocean.” Juanito didn’t understand how a fish could be made out of jelly or how a satellite world with seven spokes could look anything like a fish of any kind, but that was what they all said.

  Farkas didn’t say anything about jellyfish. But in some fashion or other, he did, indeed, seem to be taking in the view. He stood close to the elevator’s glass wall in deep concentration, gripping the rail, not saying a thing. Now and then he made a little hissing sound as something particularly awesome went by outside. Juanito studied him with sidelong glances. What could he possibly see? Nothing seemed to be moving beneath those shadowy places where his eyes should have been. Yet somehow he was seeing out of that broad blank stretch of gleaming skin above his nose. It was damned disconcerting. It was downright weird.

  The San Bernardito gave Farkas a rim-side room, facing the stars. Juanito paid the hotel clerks to treat his clients right. That was something his father had taught him when he was just a kid who wasn’t old enough to know a Schwarzchild singularity from an ace in the hole. “Pay for what you’re going to need,” his father kept saying. “Buy it and at least there’s a chance it’ll be there when you have to have it.” His father had been a revolutionary in Central America during the time of the Empire. He would have been prime minister if the revolution had come out the right way. But it hadn’t.

  “You want me to help you unpack?” Juanito said.

  “I can manage.”

  “Sure,” Juanito said.

  He stood by the window, looking at the sky. Like all the other satellite worlds, Valparaiso was shielded from cosmic-ray damage and stray meteoroids by a double shell filled with a three-meter-thick layer of lunar slag. Rows of V-shaped apertures ran down the outer skin of the shield, mirror-faced to admit sunlight but not hard radiation; and the hotel had lined its rooms up so each one on this side had a view of space through the Vs. The whole town of Cajamarca was facing darkwise now, and the stars were glittering fiercely.

  When Juanito turned from the window he saw that Farkas had hung his clothes neatly in the closet and was shaving—methodically, precisely—with a little hand-held laser.

  “Can I ask you something personal?” Juanito said.

  “You want to know how I see.”

  “It’s pretty amazing, I have to say.”

  “I don’t see. Not really. I’m just as blind as you think I am.”

  “Then how—”

  “It’s called blindsight,” Farkas said. “Proprioceptive vision.”

  “What?”

  Farkas chuckled. “There’s all sorts of data bouncing around that doesn’t have the form of reflected light, which is what your eyes see. A million vibrations besides those that happen to be in the visual part of the electromagnetic spectrum are shimmering in this room. Air currents pass around things and are deformed by what they encounter. And it isn’t only the air currents. Objects have mass, they have heat, they have—the term won’t make any sense to you—shapeweight. A quality having to do with the interaction of mass and form. Does that mean anything to you? No, I guess not. Look, there’s a lot of information available beyond what you can see with eyes, if you want it. I want it.”

  “You use some kind of machine to pick it up?” Juanito asked.

  Farkas tapped his forehead. “It’s in here. I was born with it.”

  “Some kind of sensing organ instead of eyes?”

  “That’s pretty close.”

  “What do you see, then? What do things look like to you?”

  “What do they look like to you?” Farkas said. “What does a chair look like to you?”

  “Well, it’s got four legs, and a back—”

  “What does a leg look like?”

  “It’s longer than it is wide.”

  “Right.” Farkas knelt and ran his hands along the black tubular legs of the ugly little chair beside the bed. “I touch the chair, I feel the shape of the legs. But I don’t see leg-shaped shapes.”

  “What then?”

  “Silver globes that roll away into fat curves. The back part of the chair bends double and folds into itself. The bed’s a bright pool of mercury with long green spikes coming up. You’re six blue spheres stacked one on top of another, with a thick orange cable running through them. And so on.”

  “Blue?” Juanito said. “Orange? How do you know anything about colors?”

  “The same way you do. I call one color blue, another one orange. I don’t know if they’re anything like your blue or orange, but so what? My blue is always blue for me. It’s different from the color I see as red and the one I see as green. Orange is always orange. It’s a matter of relationships. You follow?”

  “No,” Juanito said. “How can you possibly make sense out of anything? What you see doesn’t have anything to do with the real color or shape or position of anything.”

  Farkas shook his head. “Wrong, Juanito. For me, what I see is the real shape and color and position. It’s all I’ve ever known. If they were able to retrofit me with normal eyes now, which I’m told would be less than fifty-fifty likely to succeed and tremendously risky besides, I’d be lost trying to find my way around in your world. It would take me years to learn how. Or maybe forever. But I do all right, in mine. I understand, by touching things, that what I see by blindsight isn’t the ‘actual’ shape. But I see in consistent equivalents. Do you follow? A chair always looks like what I think of as a chair, even though I know that chairs aren’t really shaped anything like that. If you could see things the way I do it would all look like something out of another dimension. It is something out of another dimension, really. The information I operate by is different from what you use, that’s all. And the world I move through looks completely different from the world that normal people see. But I do see, in my own way. I perceive objects and establish relationships between them; I make spatial perceptions, just as you do. Do you follow, Juanito? Do you follow?”

  Juanito considered that. How very weird it sounded. To see the world in funhouse distortions, blobs and spheres and orange cables and glimmering pools of mercury. Weird, very weird. After a moment, he said, “And you were born like this?”

  “That’s right.”

  “Some kind of genetic accident?”

  “Not an accident,” Farkas said quietly. “I was an experiment. A master gene splicer worked me over in my mother’s womb.”

  “Right,” Juanito said. “You know, that’s actually the first thing I guessed when I saw you come off the shuttle. ‘This has to be some kind of splice effect,’ I said. But why—why—” He faltered. “Does it bother you to talk about this stuff?”

  “Not really.”

  “Why would your parents have allowed—”

  “They didn’t have any choice, Juanito.”

  “Isn’t that illegal? Involuntary splicing?”

  “Of course,” Farkas said. “So what?”

  “But who would do that to—”

  “This was in the Free State of Kazakhstan, which you’ve never heard of. It was one of the new countries formed out of the Soviet Union, which you’ve also probably never heard of, after the Breakup. My father was Hungarian consul at Tashkent. He was killed in the Breakup and my mother, who was pregnant, was volunteered for the experiments in prenatal genetic surgery then being carried out in that city under Chinese auspices. A lot of remarkable work was done there in those years. They were trying to breed new and useful kinds of human beings to serve the new republic. I was one of the experiments in extending the human perceptual range. I was supposed to have normal sight, plus blindsight, but I didn’t quite work out that way.”

  “You sound very calm about it,” Juanito said.

  “What good is getting angry?”

  “My father used to
say that, too,” Juanito said. “‘Don’t get angry, get even.’ He was in politics, the Central American Empire. When the revolution failed he took sanctuary here.”

  “So did the surgeon who did my prenatal splice,” Farkas said. “Fifteen years ago. He’s still living here.”

  “Of course,” Juanito said, as everything fell into place.

  “The man’s name is Wu Fang-shui,” Juanito said. “He’d be about seventy-five years old, Chinese, and that’s all I know, except there’ll be a lot of money in finding him. There can’t be that many Chinese on Valparaiso, right?”

  “He won’t still be Chinese,” Kluge said.

  Delilah said, “He might not even still be a he.”

  “I’ve thought of that,” said Juanito. “All the same, it ought to be possible to trace him.”

  “Who you going to use for the trace?” Kluge asked.

  Juanito gave him a steady stare. “Going to do it myself.”

  “You?”

  “Me, myself. Why the hell not?”

  “You never did a trace, did you?”

  “There’s always a first,” Juanito said, still staring.

  He thought he knew why Kluge was poking at him. A certain quantity of the business done on Valparaiso involved finding people who had hidden themselves here and selling them to their pursuers, but up till now, Juanito had stayed away from that side of the profession. He earned his money by helping dinkos go underground on Valparaiso, not by selling people out. One reason for that was that nobody yet had happened to offer him a really profitable trace deal; but another was that he was the son of a former fugitive himself. Someone had been hired to do a trace on his own father seven years back, which was how his father had come to be assassinated. Juanito preferred to work the sanctuary side of things.

  He was also a professional, though. He was in the business of providing service, period. If he didn’t find the runaway gene surgeon for Farkas, somebody else would. And Farkas was his client. Juanito felt it was important to do things in a professional way.

 

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