ANDY NEBULA:
INTERSTELLAR ROCK STAR
By Edward Willett
CHAPTER ONE
Cold
wind lashed my face; cold rain dribbled down my back. My fingers throbbed like
I'd slammed them in a door, my toes squished in my waterlogged boots, my throat
felt as rough and red as rusty iron and my nose was both stuffed up and
dripping, but I kept playing my beat-up silver stringsynth and singing the best
I could. My hat barely held enough soggy cash for a mug of bean stew, much less
a bed in Fat Sloan's flophouse, and I didn't fancy a night on the streets in
this weather.
But the
few people who splashed by me on their way into the tube station had eyes only
for the dry warmth promised by its flickering blue holosign, not for a skinny,
ragged streetkid.
That did
it. I broke off in the middle of a soulful, wailing note--it was threatening to
turn into a cough, anyway--and flicked off the stringsynth. If I'd sunk to
feeling sorry for myself it was time to lift. Feeling sorry for yourself is
just another way of saying you think somebody else ought to be taking care of
you. First thing I'd learned after I escaped the orphanage seven years before
was that I was the only person I could trust to take care of me.
I fished
the thin, dripping handful of feds out of my hat, counted them, and shook my
head. Sometimes I couldn't even trust myself. Unless I could talk Sloan into a
discount, it looked like I'd have to settle for a mug of stew and a night of
shivering.
Lightning
flashed, thunder quick-marched across the sky, the rain beat down even harder,
and I decided to give Sloan the chance to be generous. None of the nearby
hidey-holes I knew would be any good at all in this kind of weather--they were
mostly under bridges or in burned-out basements, and I knew from experience
that if they weren't flooded yet they soon would be. Besides, on a night like
this the freespaces would be crawling with rats, both the kind that squeak and
the kind that run around on two legs. I could wake up stripped naked and robbed
blind--if I woke up at all. I knew that from experience, too.
I
slapped on the shapeless mass my hat had become, then started down the street,
but I stopped at the first corner and looked back, feeling a strange itch
between my shoulder blades. Under the holosign stood a man in a long black
weathercoat, the expensive kind that repels raindrops a full metre. "Couldn't
be a 'forcer, not with that coat," I muttered, ducking out of sight. That
wasn't a comfort. The Fistfight City police generally treated me all right;
they'd only chase me away from a place when they got a complaint, and they
wouldn't say anything when I went back a couple of weeks later. But lots of
other people took an interest in kids on their own. I had my music, but a lot
of kids had nothing but themselves, and they still had to eat.
Some
were on the next street over. They stood in purple-lit doorways, watching for
the occasional slow-moving wheeler, or talking to shadowy figures uncomfortably
like the man in the weathercoat. As I splashed past one of the doorways a girl
a year or two younger than me burst out and clutched my arm. "Please, you've
got to help me, he'll kill me--"
I
shrugged her off and walked faster. I had my own problems. Behind me I heard a
man cursing, and the sound of a hand meeting flesh, then muffled sobs that
broke off as a door slammed. Nobody else on the street took any notice.
They
wouldn't pay any more attention if that guy in the weathercoat grabbed me,
I thought then, and broke into a run, ducking into the next alley. Several
twists and turns later I arrived at Fat Sloan's, out of breath and shivering. I
pushed through the heavy front door into the sour-smelling warmth of the lobby.
Only one man lay unconscious on the shiny lime-green couch; looked like a slow
night.
Fat
Sloan deserved his nickname. A mountainous bubble of bloated flesh, he must
have moved off the stool behind the counter sometime, but I'd never seen it and
found it hard to imagine. He smiled at me, yellowing teeth showing briefly
between pendulous lips. "Young Kit! What a surprise."
"You
know I berth here when it's hydrating, gladeye."
"Busy
night. You want a room, you'll have to share it."
I held
up my money. "I've got feds for a single." I didn't even have feds
for a double, but he didn't have to know that yet. Maybe I could get him to
knock down the price.
"Maybe,
but I haven't got a single to give you."
"No
flashman roomie for me, Sloan!"
"Kit!"
Sloan looked shocked, and put one hand in the general vicinity of his heart.
"Would I do that to you? This--fellow--is a perfectly respectable
freespacer. He's just between ships at the moment. And I know he'll be happy to
meet you."
I didn't
like the sound of that. "No street-trade, Sloan."
"Would
I even suggest such a thing? This is a legitimate establishment."
Sure it
was. "So what's his interest?"
"He
likes music, Kit. He said he wants to meet a musician."
Huh. I
still didn't like it--but thunder rattled the door, and rain rattled against
the window--and I'd always wanted to talk to a spacer, anyway. If I were ever
going to escape this interstellar slimepit, I needed a space-friend. But I
couldn't let Sloan know any of that, or I'd never talk his price down.
"Still comes down to economics, Sloan. Fewer feds for a double."
He
shrugged. "So sleep in the street."
"Come
on, Sloan, flexibilize for your old gladeye."
He
looked me over, then grunted. "All right. For you, ten percent off."
"Forty."
"Kit,
synchronize with reality. It's raining. I'm a businessman--supply and demand.
High demand right now, low supply. Fifteen percent."
"Thirty."
He shook
his head. "No deal."
"Nominal
with me. I'll REM in the street--and spread the data you're defunct." I
turned toward the door.
Sloan
laughed, a remarkably unpleasant sound. "All right, Kit. Tell you
what--twenty-five percent off. Just for you."
"Orbital,
gladeye." I turned back to the counter and paid him, then tossed a couple
of extra feds his way. "And add a mealpac to the program." With the
discount, I could actually afford to eat.
"Sure."
Sloan passed a keychip and the mealpac across the stained countertop.
"Room 206. Knock first. I told your roommate he'd probably be having
company, but you don't want to surprise a freespacer. He might cut you in two
and regret it later." He shrugged. "Or he might not even regret
it."
"Worthless
data, gladeye." As if I'd be stupid enough to burst in on any stranger.
How did Sloan think I'd survived this long?
I turned
to go, but Sloan wasn't finished. "Oh, one other thing, Kit."
"Yeah?"
"Someone
was asking for you. Man in a weathercoat. Looked like a high-power meatman to
me." He grinned. "Sleep well."
"Not
after seeing those teeth," I shot at him as I climbed the stairs, but my
gut clenched. I'd been approached by street-level meatmen before; I told them
"no," and they lifted. But if one of the herd-owners had his eyes on
me...and now that I thought about it, it seemed strange the guy in the
weathercoat would be asking about me the same day this "spacer" came
asking about musicians. I could almost feel the jaws of some hidden trap
closing in on me as I reached the dim and grimy second-floor corridor.
I found
room 206, then stopped, listening. There was plenty to hear: a man and a woman
screaming obscenities from across the hall; the latest Sensation Single
pounding from next door. I grimaced; I hated that pre-packaged fluff. But I
could hear nothing from room 206. Was that a good sign or not?
For a
moment I considered leaving Fat Sloan's and sleeping in the street after all,
even though Sloan would never refund my money--but then the wind shook the
window at the end of the hall, and I took a deep breath. I was probably
worrying about nothing. Just coincidence. I knocked.
"Enter,"
said a voice. Strange; Sloan had said the spacer was a man, but this sounded
almost like a woman. I grinned, suddenly feeling better. Now, that would
be an interesting turn of events! I stuck the keychip into its slot and, as the
door swung inward, stepped through--
--and
jumped back out again, tripping over my own feet and falling backward with a
crash that shook the whole floor. I scrambled back until my spine pressed
against the wall.
Two
purple eyes on moist reddish-orange tentacles slid around the edge of the door
and focused on me. A third eye joined them. "Are you unhurt?" said
the voice that had told me to enter.
I found
my own voice. I also found I couldn't do much with it. "I--I--"
"My
name is..." He made a noise like tearing metal. "In your
words...Water that Falls from the Sky?"
"Rain?"
I croaked. I resolved to kill Sloan.
"Yes,
Rain! Like what it is doing outside." A fourth eye rounded the corner, and
then the entire creature.
Picture
a stalk like a plant's, reddish-orange and dotted with irregular patches of
silver and gold. Give it four insect-like legs, positioned equidistantly around
the stalk, so it can move instantly in any direction. Top the stalk, about four
feet up, with eight writhing tentacles. Put eyes on four of them and have the
others end in four smaller tentacles each. Add a mouth at their base, and
breathing slits in the stalk that slowly open and close with a wet sucking
sound, and you have my roommate. "You're a Hydra!"
"That
is what your race calls us, yes." The alien sounded slightly miffed.
"We would prefer you to call us..." He shrieked something well above
high C.
"Not
since my voice changed," I muttered.
"What?"
"Uh--nothing."
I remembered I was sitting on the floor and scrambled to my feet. Fat Sloan's
floors are nothing you want to sit on for long. "I'm sorry I yelled. Fat
Slo--uh, the man who runs this place told me I'd have a roommate, but he didn't
tell me he'd be--uh, one of you."
"Ah.
Well, certainly I have the advantage of you there, for I did expect that
my roommate would be human." Although his voice had that odd
almost-feminine pitch, his Fedspeech was easy to understand, perfectly
unaccented. "Won't you come in?"
"Uh--yeah.
I mean, thanks." Clutching my synth and my mealpac to my chest, I edged
into the room. The Hydra made room for me, but not very much, and I dreaded the
thought of bumping up against one of his--
I jumped
as he laid a tentacle on my arm. His orange skin felt very warm and slightly moist.
"Your pardon," the Hydra said. "I believe it is a human custom
to exchange names. I've told you mine; you are...?"
"I'm
called Kit," I said, a little breathlessly.
"Kit?
Do not humans usually have two names or more?"
"I
don't." I looked around the dingy little room. There was only one bed, but
the Hydra wouldn't use one, anyway...I hoped.
"Is
that usual?"
I tossed
the synth on the bed and sat down beside it, then undid the laces on my left
boot, wriggling my toes and hearing squelchy sounds. "Most people have an
individual name and a family name, but I don't have a family. My parents ran
off when I was a baby." I pulled off the boot with rather more force than
was necessary. "The orphanage didn't give me a name, just an ID number. I
was supposed to choose my own name when I was twelve, standard. In the meantime
they called me by a 'pre-name'--Kit."
"But
surely...I am not a good judge of human ages, but surely you are older than
twelve now."
I
attacked the right boot. "Yeah, I'm fifteen, local--seventeen,
standard--but I left the orphanage when I was ten, and I've had other things to
worry about. Kit's good enough."
The
Hydra--Rain--said nothing, though his tentacles continued to move slowly. They
made me queasy, so I stood up and went to the wash basin in one corner of the
room, where I dumped the water from my boots. The rough towel Fat Sloan
provided wasn't all that clean, but it was dry. I took off my coat, vest and
two shirts; hesitated, then shrugged and stripped off the rest of my wet
clothes and began rubbing myself dry. Rain spoke up again abruptly. "What
is in this?" In the cracked mirror I saw him lay one tentacle on my synth.
"It's
a stringsynth," I said. "A musical instrument." I toweled my
tangled hair furiously. "I'm a street musician."
"A
musician! A human musician!" All four of his eyes focused on me suddenly.
"I have been hoping to meet one! I am honored!"
I
wrapped the towel around my waist. "Well, that's a first." Great, I
thought. I finally get a groupie, and he's an alien.
"Musicians
have great prestige in our society." Rain caressed the synth's strings.
"And we admire human musicians especially. Your vocal apparatus is
limited, but you create melodies we have never dreamed of--and your
harmonies...! I am honored, indeed."
I shook
my head. "I'm just a streetkid with a beat-up old stringsynth. You've got
nothing to learn from me."
"You
are wrong, Kit. I have already learned much from you. I will choose to keep
much of it."
Whatever
that meant. "So, you know who I am. What about you? What are you
doing in Fat Sloan's flophouse?" I reached for the mealpac and pulled its
tab; the rich, nose-stinging odor of peppered greenfish steamed out of it,
making my mouth water.
"Flophouse?"
His tentacles waved. "What is--?"
"Hotel."
I gestured at the yellowing walls. "This place."
"It
is as I told Mr. Sloan: I am a spacer, but I am between berths. I came here to
enjoy new experiences."
I almost
choked on my first mouthful of stew. "You mean you're here--in Fat
Sloan's--as a 'tourist'?"
"I
believe that would be an accurate--do you need assistance?"
I
swallowed before I gagged on laughter and fish broth. "No, no, I'm fine.
Rain, if you want new experiences, stick with me. I'll show you a side of
Fistfight City you can bet your--uh--bottom you've never seen before."
"Thank
you!" Rain crowed. "I am in your debt, Kit. Will you also play some
of your music for me?"
"Count
on it." Thunder shook the room and the wind shrieked through a crack in
the window, but I was warm, dry and eating. In my life, I'd learned not to ask
for more than that.
Of
course, as my roommate proved, sometimes we get things we don't ask for.
#
CHAPTER TWO
Rain
asked so many questions I thought he'd never let me sleep, but round midnight
he suddenly shut up, in the middle of a sentence. That would have been great,
except he didn't exactly fall silent; instead, he began to make a faint keening
sound, like the wind, only higher-pitched and more constant.
"Orbital," I muttered. If the pillow had smelled fresher, I'd have
clamped it over my head. "Roomies with a snoring alien."
The
sound kept on. I opened my eyes and looked at Rain in the uncertain light that
spilled from the flashing red holosign of the tavern across the road. He had
pulled all his tentacles into a tight ball atop his stalk, which pulsed slowly.
I swallowed. I'd seen just about everything on the streets of Fistfight City,
and never had a nightmare, but sharing a room with that just might
manage it. Especially if he kept up that awful noise...
He did.
But nothing else happened, and you can get used to any kind of noise if you
hear it long enough--something I always figured explained the success of the
Sensation Singles. Anyway, it had been a long day, and the bed, even if not
particularly clean, was comfortable. Sometime while I was telling myself I'd be
lying awake all night, I closed my eyes, and when I opened them again, sunlight
on the puddle that had collected underneath the window cast rippling
reflections on the walls. The rain was over--and Rain was gone.
I sat up
and stared around the room. No sign he'd ever been there. Maybe I'd dreamed
him.
Maybe
I'd dreamed the man in the weathercoat, too. I hoped so.
My
stomach growled and I picked up the empty mealpac. I should have saved half of
it for breakfast...now I'd have to start the day hungry. Nothing new, but not
my first choice...
The door
banged open and I scrambled back into the corner, grabbing the pillow. The
meatman? No, not unless he'd grown some more arms..."Rain? Is that
you?" As soon as I asked the question I felt stupid; what other four-eyed
tentacled orange monster would be barging into my room first thing in the
morning?
"Affirmative,
it is I!" he chortled in that peculiar male/female voice. "I bring
food!"
"Food?"
I tossed aside the pillow. "What kind of food?"
"I
asked the tavern-woman across the street for
food-which-you-eat-in-the-morning--"
"Breakfast."
"--breakfast,
yes, and she gave me this." From somewhere he produced a mealpac, twice
the size of the one I'd gotten from Fat Sloan, and dropped it in my lap.
I tore
it open, and mouthwatering steam filled the room. A redcheese and findel-egg
omelet! I hadn't eaten this good in--I couldn't remember. It even came with a
fork! I'd gulped half the contents before I remembered what passed for my manners.
"Uh, Rain, did you want some?"
He made
a choking noise that it took me a moment to recognize as laughter. "No,
thank you. I ate only nine days ago."
"Oh."
I didn't try to change his mind. Within minutes I swallowed the last tangy bite
and sat back with a sigh.
All four
of Rain's eyes watched me avidly. "Now will you go out on the street and
sing?"
I sighed
again. "What I'd really like to do is go back to sleep...but I
won't!" I added hurriedly as Rain's tentacles writhed. "Fat Sloan
will be kicking people out in a few minutes, anyway--except for the crashed-out
flashmen. He'll just charge them for a second night and leave them where they
are." I got up and padded to the sink. There was a shower down the hall
but you never knew who you'd meet in there. I'd settle for a wet washrag and
some of Fat Sloan's gritty soap.
"I
have heard of these 'flashmen,'" said Rain. "They are humans who have
become addicted to a chemical substance?"
I ran
water on the rag, then wet the soap. "Yeah, flash."
"And
why do they take this substance?"
"To
escape."
"Escape?
Escape what?"
"Their
lives. Places like this." I sniffed at the washrag. Either it or the soap smelled
rancid. I settled for splashing water over myself, then rubbing down with the
towel.
"But
even after they take it, they are still here."
"Not
in their heads. Up there, they're somewhere else--even someone else. Plus it
makes you feel really strong and fast, like you could do anything."
"You
have tried it?"
I tossed
the towel aside and reached for my clothes--still wet, but all I had. "No.
But I've heard." And some nights, I'd been tempted. I forced my legs into
my blackjeans.
"Where
do these 'flashmen' get this substance?"
"Just
about anywhere. There's a dealer on every block. Fat Sloan, for example."
"And
where do they get it?"
My
shirts felt like sheets of ice on my back. "How should I know?" I
snapped. "You sure do ask a lot of questions!"
"I
wish to learn about your culture," said Rain. "That is why I am here.
These things I am learning from you were not included in the data on Murdoch IV
contained in the ship's computer."
"Yeah?
Well, I don't know much about the rest of the planet, but if you want data
about its lovely capital city, I know stuff that will slag your hardware."
I put on my damp jacket and grabbed the stringsynth. "Let's lift for the
street, gladeye!"
"Gladeye?"
I
sighed. "That's street slang for friend--you know, I see you, I feel glad,
so 'gladeye.'"
Rain's
eyes stacked up one above the other. "I have not heard this. My knowledge
of your language is incomplete."
"No,"
I said. "You speak standard Fedspeech very well. But individual
groups--like streetkids--speak variations of it."
He
sidled closer, staring so intently with all four purple eyes that I took a step
back. You haven't been stared at 'til you've been stared at by a Hydra.
"Your pattern of speech is inconsistant," he said. "Sometimes
you speak 'standard' speech and sometimes this 'slang.' I do not
understand."
"I
don't plan to be a streetslug all my life," I said. "So whenever I've
got a few extra feds I plug the self-teachers at Data Central." I grinned
at him and put on the clipped accent of the Planetary Governor. "I am perfectly
capable of speaking standard Fedspeech; however, such a mode of communication
would not serve me well among my peers in the underprivileged class."
Rain
wriggled his eyes. "Most intriguing! I will retain it."
I
laughed. "Orbital, gladeye. Let's lift!"
"Slang,"
he said joyfully. "Let's lift!"
I
intended to go back to the tube station--morning rush hour was usually good for
a couple of feds--but Rain turned to the right when I turned left, then
stopped, his eyes swiveling around to stare at me. "You are not going to
the spaceport?"
"Why
should I?" I asked suspiciously.
"A
big passenger liner lands this morning. Tourists, I think you call them? Are
not such people your ideal audience?"
He was
right, but I hesitated. The Port was the Ice Boys' orbit and the last time I'd
hit it they'd half-strangled me with my own stringsynth strap. I gave Rain a
measuring look. On the other hand, last time I hadn't had an orange octopus
sidekick. Besides, I could use the feds--and though I hated to admit it, the
man in the weathercoat had spooked me. He wouldn't look for me in the Port,
because I hadn't been there in months.
"Orbital,
gladeye," I said. "Program accepted. Let's lift!"
At the
Port, nobody tried to strangle me. Nobody threw money in my hat, either,
because the tourists were fresh off some planet even less in the galactic
cultural mainstream than Murdoch IV (which I should have guessed from the fact
they'd come to Fistfight City to "see the sights," since there
weren't any) and had ever seen an alien. Instead of listening to me, they all
clustered around Rain, staring. He stared back, sometimes at four different
people at once. For all his "I am honored" talk, he didn't seem to be
paying much attention to me, either. I broke off in the middle of a raunchy
Belvederian folk song and glared at him. "You're negativizing my audience,
Rain."
"Hey,
it's smooth, gladeye," he said. "I'll lift."
Which he
did. Trouble was, he took the people with him. After two hours I'd collected
less than the price of even one of Fat Sloan's measly mealpacs. I frowned at
Rain and the crowd around him. Maybe I could hide him in the men's room and
charge admission. "See the incredible octoman! One fed a hed..."
"Hey,
flashmates. Scan who's back in our orbit."
Uh-oh.
Little problem I hadn't considered with having Rain move off. I turned slowly.
"What's powering, Dry Ice?"
He and
three other Ice Boys were leaning against two of the mirrored pillars that
dotted the terminal lobby. Since they wore mirrorcloth themselves the effect
was unsettling--as intended. Not that it took special effects to unsettle me. I
hadn't forgotten what Dry Ice had promised to do to me the next time he caught
me in the Port. It involved the monomolecular-edged blades all the Ice Boys
carried and the most sensitive parts of my anatomy. I hoped Dry Ice didn't
remember as well as I did.
No such
luck. He twitched one silver-gloved finger and a faint whispering hum told me
his blade, invisible from my distance, was out and active. I slung the
stringsynth over my shoulder. "Power down, Dry Ice. It's smooth. I'm
lifting."
"You
missed the window, gladeye." Dry Ice stepped toward me. The whites of his
narrowed eyes showed blue-gray--the sign of a flash user.
Flash
had one other side effect I hadn't mentioned to Rain: it could turn even kind
and gentle people into dangerous, violent psychopaths--and Dry Ice had never
been kind and gentle. He showed his teeth. "You've crashed our orbit for
the last time." His flashmates fanned out, surrounding me. I looked back
at Rain; not a single eye pointed in my direction. I tensed, ready to run,
though I knew from bitter experience the Ice Boys were faster, but suddenly Dry
Ice stopped, and his monoblade whispered back into its sheath. "Hey, it's
smooth, gladeye. It's smooth!"
I
turned, following his gaze. At the top of the escalator stood the man in the
long black weathercoat. "Lift," he told Dry Ice and his boys, and
they lifted; I watched warily as he descended to my level "You're
Kit?" he said as he reached me.
"Information's
economic, gladeye. Freeware's a myth."
"Cut
the slang. I know you can talk standard Fedspeech."
"Yeah?"
I didn't like this at all. He knew too much about me, while I knew nothing
about him--except that I had something he wanted. I was behind in the game and
didn't even know the stakes--or the rules.
"Yeah."
He glanced at Rain, who apparently hadn't noticed the Ice Boys at all--or
hadn't cared. Just because we shared a room doesn't make us friends, I reminded
myself, or I'd have a lot more friends than I do. As if reading my thoughts,
the stranger said, "Saw you come in with the Hydra. Friend of yours?"
"Acquaintance."
"Interesting
acquaintance for a streetslug."
"He
likes music."
"That
a fact?" The man's teeth flashed white. "So do I." He nodded
toward Rain. "Let's go see if he likes yours."
"I'm
lifting," I said. "Ice Boys come back, I'm protein."
"Ice
Boys won't bother you while you're with me."
That
wasn't reassuring. Who was this guy? Still, I took his unspoken point:
the Ice Boys wouldn't bother me while I was with him, but when I wasn't with
him any more... "So let's go talk to my good friend Rain," I said.
"Right,"
said the man. He strode to where Rain held court. Nobody stared at Rain for
long, not once he started staring back, but new people kept emerging from
Customs. In the crowd I caught a glimpse of a kid I knew. He'd probably had a
very profitable morning, what with all those tourists too interested in the
alien to pay any attention to their pockets.
The man
in the black coat held up a flat silver box and a nerve-grating screech
assaulted my ears. Rain's eyes whirled to face us. He screeched back.
The man
bowedto him. "I regret I cannot further converse in your tongue. Only the
greeting-of-one-for-a-stranger is programmed into my talksynth."
"Regret
nothing," said Rain. "It was a pleasure to hear our language spoken
unexpectedly. I shall retain it."
"I
am honored." The man straightened. "I am called Qualls. You are
Rain?"
"I
am..." He shrieked. "But 'Rain' is acceptable." His eyes
rearranged themselves. "I have memory of you, Qualls. You were on the ship
that brought me here five days ago."
"I
am honored my memory was retained."
Rain
aimed an eye at me. "You are a friend of my young gladeye Kit?"
"More
of an admirer," Qualls said. "I have been watching him since I
arrived."
"You've
been what?" I exploded.
"Watching
you. I've been very impressed."
"I'm
nobody's meat!"
"I'm
not a meatman." He turned back toward Rain. "You are interested in
human music, Rain. I would value your opinion."
"Kit
has great talent," Rain said instantly. "Untrained and raw, but very
promising. I will retain much of what I heard."
Qualls
bowed. "Thank you. You confirm my own opinion."
I stared
at both of them. "What's going on?"
Qualls
held out a glowing rectangle--a holocard. I glanced at it. Beside the
three-dimensional image of his face floated six words that sparkled like
diamonds: "Samuel Qualls. Talent Scout. Sensation Singles."
I gaped
at him. He smiled. "Kit," he said, "I'm going to make you a
star."
#
CHAPTER THREE
Qualls
took me to lunch, upstairs in a fancy restaurant in a part of the spaceport I
didn't even know existed. He invited Rain along, too, and the Hydra accepted
eagerly, although the waiter who greeted us didn't look too happy about the
alien's presence. Neither did the half-dozen patrons whose variously horrified
or disgusted faces I glimpsed among the ferns and fountains that mostly hid the
tables and chairs. But Rain, as far as I could tell (not very far, I admit),
was unperturbed. His eyestalks practically tied themselves in knots as he ogled
everything, and he chirped musically to himself all the while.
The
waiter showed us to a table by a window overlooking the spaceport. Close to the
terminal the bulbous gray shapes of four commercial passenger ships loomed over
the scurrying vehicles that serviced them. Off at the edge of the field large
freighters crouched like distant thunderclouds. But my eyes went immediately to
a sleek and silvery yacht that gleamed among the others like a silver knife
carelessly tossed among old spoons.
"Like
it?" Qualls asked.
Instantly
on guard, I put on my best bored-stiff face and turned my back on the window.
"It's a ship. So what? You own it, meatman?"
His eyes
narrowed. "I told you, I'm not a meatman."
"Yeah?"
I flicked his card onto the table. "You buy and sell people. What do you
call it?"
Rain had
two eyes on me and two eyes on Qualls. I wondered if he could feel the tension
between us, or understood it. So Qualls said he would make me a star. Well, I
wasn't buying real estate on Earth just yet. I trusted myself--no one else.
Especially not someone who would treat streetslime to a meal in a restaurant
like this.
If I
even got the meal. I had my doubts.
But
Qualls surprised me by laughing. "Maybe you have a point, Kit. Enough
business for now. Are you hungry?"
He knew
I was hungry. But I shrugged. "Not much."
"Well,
I insist you try something. This restaurant has surprisingly good food,
considering the location." I wondered if he meant the spaceport or the
planet. "Waiter!"
He
ordered dishes I'd never heard of, and they came in minutes. Qualls only picked
at a small plate of purple roots--or were they worms?--but both he and Rain
watched as I devoured everything the waiter set in front of me. Pride's all
very well, but I'd never seen a meal like that in my life and figured I might
never see one again. Calories are calories. I ate.
At last,
too full to eat any more--a new sensation I liked very much--I sat back and
stared at Qualls. He gazed stolidly back. "Well?" I said.
"Well?"
"Well,
what is it you want? And don't feed me more biowaste about making me a
star."
"No
waste." He pointed to his card. "I am what that says I am--a talent
scout for Sensation Singles, Inc."
"He
speaks the truth, Kit," said Rain.
"How
would you know?" I snapped.
"I
spoke to him on the ship coming in."
"He
could have been lying to you, too."
"To
what end?" asked Rain. "He would gain nothing by it."
The
thought occurred to me that they had both lied, to set me up, but even I
wasn't that paranoid. "Then why me? Why here?"
"Sensation
Singles have to come from somewhere," said Qualls. "Very specific
somewheres, actually. Each one is carefully chosen from a particular
socio-economic and planetary background. Our computer projections indicate it's
time for a tough, street-smart male from this part of the galaxy. Fistfight
City's streets are the meanest in Confederation. Drugs, prostitution,
cyberjacking--you name it. That makes it perfect." He shrugged. "The
choice of you specifically? Coincidence. I heard you outside my hotel the day I
arrived. Musical ability isn't absolutely necessary, but it's nice when we can
find it, and I'm sure you can learn the dance steps."
"You're
saying the you're going to 'make me a star' because I was in the right place at
the right time--pure luck?"
"Pure
luck."
"Huh."
Good luck and I weren't really on speaking terms--but it was easier to believe
I'd lucked out than that some stranger had crossed the galaxy to find me.
"So what's in it for me?"
Qualls
smiled. "Fame and money."
"As
a Sensation Single? I'll be forgotten in a year."
"Absolutely.
But the money will last a lot longer." He pointed at me. "What do you
want?"
"Enough
food to eat. A warm, dry place to sleep."
"And
after that?"
"I've
never even gotten that, yet."
"Forge
food and shelter. You'll have enough money to do anything you want. So what
will you spend it on?"
I
laughed. "Myself." I glanced out the window. "Maybe I'll buy a
yacht."
"No
need."
"What?"
"You've
already got one." He nodded at the gleaming silver ship. "That's The
Bullet. For the express use of Andy Nebula."
"Andy
who?"
"Andy
Nebula. The next Sensation Single." Qualls cocked his head and one corner
of his mouth quirked upward. "You?"
I stared
out at the yacht. Money, fame, a chance to leave Fistfight City...and though I
wasn't about to tell Qualls, I did dream of something more than being warm and
fed. I dreamed of writing, performing and recording my own music, of making
some kind of permanent mark...with money, even that might be possible.
I let
the last of my suspicions go. "Me," I said.
"Orbital,
gladeye!" shrieked Rain at a pitch about an octave above high C. The
window vibrated dangerously.
"Uh,
thanks," I said, removing my hands from my ears, wondering what he was so
happy about. Nobody had offered to make him a star--not surprising, with
a voice like that.
He
backed away from the table. "I'll leave you to your business
discussions," he said at a more normal pitch. "I am pleased, gladeye
Kit, to see my new friend honored in this way. I look forward to your
performances." He scuttled off.
"Thanks,"
I said again, to empty air.
Qualls
leaned forward. "First things first." He pulled a computer out of his
coat and unfolded the screen. "This is our standard contract. Let me just
go over a few points with you..."
#
And so
it began. Almost like in my official biography. Within a day I had new clothes,
a new name, a new hairstyle, and an extremely comfortable apartment, a
self-contained module aboard The Bullet, which was much larger than it
had appeared from the restaurant. The Bullet also contained a full-sized
stage, a full stage crew (humans and robots) and enough dancebots and
holoprojectors to recreate everything ever choreographed since the first
caveman pranced around a campfire. Two days after I signed Qualls's contract we
lifted from Fistfight City. I hardly noticed, since I was trying to push my
sweating and aching body through my second dance lesson at the time.
Rehearsal
followed rehearsal. The dance steps came more easily. I quit kicking the
lightweight dancebots across the stage accidentally or stumbling through the
holo-projected "walls" of the set. The music I learned in a single
day, since it had been computer-written to stick in your head the moment you
heard and (just as important) vanish forever a few months later.
I
rehearsed all day, every day, and well into every night--not that those terms
mean much on a spaceship. In the meantime, the Sensation Singles publicity
machine went into high gear. I was photographed, holographed and made into an
animated doll; the celebrity-hungry press on all seventy-nine Confederated
Worlds received my largely fictitious biography; when deemed ready, I recorded
my Single; sometime later I danced through the entire extended version of the
song (exactly twenty-two minutes) under the scrutiny of both flatscreen and
holovid cameras; two weeks after that my song and video hit the airwaves, and
three days later I debuted in the Big Wheel, a giant amusement satellite
orbiting Decca VI, to fifty thousand screaming teenagers, each of whom had been
carefully chosen to look good on the Andy Nebula Live special that went
out Confederation-wide the very next day.
I'd
never performed for more than a dozen people at a time in my life, but as the
concert approached I felt no nervousness, only exhilaration. I'd rehearsed to
the point I could do my song and dance in my sleep--and often did, in my
dreams. I considered it vastly superior to the last few Sensation Singles I'd
heard; heavy on the dance beat, of course, and the lyrics were nothing special,
but the set blew me away. I could have sworn, first time they turned on the
holos and I stepped into the picture, that I was back in the alleys of
Fistfight City--except these alleys looked even darker and more dangerous. The
dance moves, stylized from police vid of gang fights, supported a basic story line
of boy (me) meets girl, boy loses girl to flashgang leader, boy bravely fights
gang leader and wins, boy and girl ride off into sunset. It would have been a
lot more fun if the "girl" had been real instead of a dancebot...
I stood
in the wings, listening to the crowd chant, "An-dy, An-dy,
An-dy," and felt their energy pour over me and into me like a wave.
"Better get out there before they tear the satellite apart," Marcel,
the stage manager, said in my earplug. A pounding drumbeat began, the roar of
the crowd rose to an incredible volume--and then the set lit up, the
stringsynths rasped through the blistering instrumental solo that opened the
piece, and I dashed out on stage.
I
couldn't see a thing through the lights and the holowalls and everything else,
but I could sense every individual in that vast crowd screaming my name. I rode
their energy and danced and sang like I never had before, even for the vid. I
wasn't streetslime any more--no way. At the climax I smashed the "gang
leader" dancebot out of my way with a spinning, leaping kick, and thought,
"Suck vacuum, Dry Ice!" Every screaming kids out there knew, knew
I was the greatest thing they had ever seen, and in that moment, I knew it,
too--and I liked it. I liked it a lot.
Qualls
had kept his word. I was a star.
When it
was over, I stood backstage, panting, mirrorcloth tights soaked with sweat, and
thought I heard, in the blood pounding in my ears, words of caution. "It
won't last...it can't last..." But as I ran on-stage again to accept the
wild, screaming, standing ovation, as I watched blue sparks crackling around
the hands of girls braving the sting of the static fields to get as close to me
as possible, I forgot that warning voice. This was what I was meant for.
Kit, the
ragged streetkid from Fistfight City, was gone for good. He'd been replaced by
an interstellar superstar--me.
Andy
Nebula!
#
CHAPTER FOUR
Six
months passed in a blur of performances, interviews, rehearsals and travel, but
every night I felt that same surge of exhilaration just before I went on, as
the crowd thundered, the synths built the pounding back-beat, the lasers
flashed through the smoke and the dancebots whirled. I was the detonator of a
bomb; when I stepped on stage, things exploded.
At the
end of the six months we were on Carstair's Folly, the fourteenth stop in my
triumphant tour of the Pleasure Planets. I stood in the wings in my mirrorcloth
skin-tights until the crowd was threatening to tear down the soaring gossamer
roof of the acoustic tent, then I gave the signal, the computer shouted,
"Ladies and gentleman--Andy Nebula!" and I burst on stage and ripped
into my sizzling opening dance, while the dancebots fell back in shock and
phantom stars exploded overhead.
We had a
hundred and twenty-five thousand people there that night and I felt good as I
finished my bows and made my exit, the crowd still chanting, "An-dy!
An-dy! An-dy!"
Qualls
waited backstage; unusual, but not that unusual. "Hey,
Qualls," I shouted above the crowd noise. "They still love me."
"Come
in here a minute, Kit."
I
followed him into his soundproof office and he pointed me to the formchair
across from his silver-topped desk. I sat down gingerly; I hate the way those
things flow to conform to my butt. "What's powering, manager-man?"
"Cut
the slang, Kit."
"Hey,
that's my home babble, glad--"
"I
said cut it!"
I cut
it. "What's wrong?"
He sat
down and pulled a whirligig bottle from a drawer, along with two glasses. He
filled them both and pushed one to me. I took it, but my stomach fluttered;
Qualls never risked heat from the local 'forcers, and on Carstair's Folly
serving an intoxicant to a minor, even an intoxicant as weak as whirligig,
could land you in jail. Still, the cold fizzy liquid felt great going down. I
drank half of it in a gulp, burped, then lowered my glass to see Qualls staring
moodily into his own. "Well?" I said.
"You
saw the crowd tonight, Kit."
"Looked
good. The tent was full."
"Tents
are always full, Kit...because you can move the walls."
I stared
at him. "What?"
"Capacity
is two hundred thousand. We sold one-twenty-five. You weren't a sell-out,
Kit."
The
fluttery feeling in my stomach grew. I guzzled more whirligig, but it didn't go
away. I wiped my mouth with the back of my hand and set the glass down. "A
hundred and twenty-five thousand tickets at fifty feds apiece isn't exactly
biowaste."
"Maybe.
But it's the first time Andy Nebula hasn't sold out."
"The
next planet--"
"Ticket
sales are slow. I just got a call from Mr. Korpov."
I
wondered if I could get Qualls to serve me something stronger than whirligig.
Korpov was the CEO of Sensation Singles, Inc. "He's fading me out?"
"Not
yet. You've got four more concerts, no matter what. But if you're not back to
sell-outs by that fourth gig..."
"Yeah,
I know." I'd always known it couldn't last. Sensation Singles were like
non-repeating comets; one blaze of glory, then cold oblivion for eternity.
"The crowds will come back, Qualls. I'm sure of it."
"Right,
Kit." He drained his whirligig in four gulps. "You'd better go get
cleaned up. They'll be moving your dressing room back to the ship in about an
hour. We lift tonight."
I stood
up, the formchair releasing me reluctantly, and handed him my glass. "I'm
vapor, gladeye."
My usual
post-concert bubbly feeling had gone thoroughly flat, whirligig
notwithstanding. I trudged to my dressing room in a mood as black as the
shadows that filled the backstage corridors. As I neared my dressing room door,
one of those shadows moved.
I froze,
heart racing. In my experience, moving shadows were bad news. The last moving
shadow I'd seen, in a Fistfight City alley not far from Fat Sloan's, had been
armed with a very nasty zapclub and an even nastier temperament. Fortunately, I
was so obviously streetslime he didn't bother with me. But I wasn't streetslime
any more, I was a superstar, and prime fodder for--
"Got
you!" said the shadow.
"What?"
I looked frantically around for Security. What did we pay them for, anyway?
"They
got you, got you, got you!" The shadow moved forward, and a red bulbous
nose appeared in the light, followed by squinting, puffy eyes and bared,
yellowing teeth.
"Who
got me?" I backed up against the wall. In the Fistfight City alley I'd at
least had my battered old stringsynth to use as a club or shield (which was one
reason it was so battered), but now I had nothing but me and my mirrorcloth,
and I didn't think either of us would dazzle this madman.
"They
got you!" He waved toward the stage. "The sssss...sssss..."
Whatever word he wanted wouldn't come. Face contorted, he slammed his fist
against the wall so hard I thought I heard a bone break. I jumped, and he
shouted in my face, "Got you like they got me like they got her like they
got we--we've all been got, got, got, only--" He broke off suddenly,
stared up and down the corridor, then leaned in close. His breath reeked of
something considerably stronger than whirligig. "I escaped."
"Goo--good
for you."
"You
can, too." For the first time his eyes opened wide, and I shivereds. The
whites were blue-gray, even darker than his blue irises. He was a flashman, and
if he was flashing now, he could tear me into little pieces with his bare
hands.
It
seemed like a good reason to be friendly. "Uh...how?"
He
looked at me like I was crazy. "Run!" he whispered, then
screamed, "Run! Run! Run!"
Footsteps,
at last, clattered down the corridor. "Andy?"
"Marcel!"
I yelled. "Help!"
The
flashman glared at me, pulled back his fist as if he were going to punch me,
then said calmly, "Think about it," and turned and ran--straight into
the arms of a burly Security man. "Let me go!" he shouted. "I'm
Paris Paradise! They're waiting for me on--" He slumped suddenly, head
lolling. Marcel's gray-bearded face appeared behind the Security man's bulk.
"Did
you trank him?" Marcel asked.
"Didn't
have to," the Security man grunted as he heaved the flashman over his
shoulder. "I think he just crashed on his own. I'm sorry, Mr. Roy. I don't
know how he got past us."
"Figure
it out soon or you'll be looking for a new job," Marcel snapped. "Get
him out of here" He came over to where I leaned against the wall.
"Are you all right, Andy?"
"Sure,"
I said. "He didn't do anything except talk." I straightened, then
casually leaned against the wall again. My legs weren't quite ready to move me
yet.
"I've
got to talk to Qualls," Marcel muttered. He hurried back up the corridor,
while I stumbled the last few metres to my dressing room. I closed the door,
then sat on the bed, looked at my trembling hands, and clenched them into
fists.
"I'm
getting soft," I muttered. "I've been through a lot worse." But
that was in Fistfight City. In my new life things like this weren't supposed to
happen.
Good
thing my fans would never know about it. With my fake hero-of-the-streets
image, they'd never understand why I hadn't simply knocked him down and dragged
him off to Security by myself...especially since they were mostly teenage girls
with well-to-do parents and nice safe homes. Most of them had probably never
even heard of flash. I wished I hadn't.
They'd
never understand what it had really been like on the streets, just
trying to survive. There had even been times when, if the orphanage would have
taken me back, I'd have gladly put up with any kind of abuse just to be warm
and fed. And for all my pride at never selling myself to a meatman, I'd been a
lot closer to it than I wanted to admit more times than I liked to remember.
Street life was almost no life at all, and I had no wish to go back to it--or
to Fistfight City. The money I'd earned would keep me off the streets, but it
wouldn't keep me out of Fistfight City, if what Qualls said about ticket sales
was true. That's where my contract specified I had to eventually be returned,
since the law assumed minors should be sent "home."
I looked
around the dressing room. This was home, and I didn't want to give it
up. Maybe if we boosted promotion...
Who was
I kidding? You couldn't possibly boost promotion above the Sensation Singles
Inc.'s normal hysterical level.
My
terminal beeped, announcing a message. Probably the local media, and I wasn't
in the mood. I stripped out of my mirrortights and stepped into the shower,
thinking about the Ice Boys as I soaped away sweat. They'd had the same
gray-blue eyes as the old flashman. Some were probably dead by now; a lot of
people couldn't handle flash--they'd O.D. within half a year. But others went
on for years and years, getting stronger and nastier and crazier. I had an
uncomfortable feeling Dry Ice might be one of those. I wondered if he knew
where I'd gone.
I
stepped out of the shower. Brown eyes stared back at me from the mirror. My
face and body were a little more filled out than they had been that day in the
Fistfight City spaceport, but otherwise I looked the same--same shaggy black
hair, same less-than-perfect nose, broken by "accident" after I
spilled a bowl of soup in the orphanage. My disreputable appearance had
happened to mesh perfectly with the image Sensation Singles, Inc., had
cultivated for me, so I'd escaped plastic surgery. Which meant that, yeah, Dry
Ice would know what had become of me--hanging around the Port, he could hardly
have avoided my video blaring from holoprojectors and flatscreens everywhere.
I dried
off and padded back into my dressing room, tossing the towel on the bed,
glanced at the beeping terminal, decided I couldn't keep ignoring it, and
tapped RECEIVE. Green letters scrolled across the screen. "Again you make
pleasant memories I shall retain, gladeye. Your ex-roomie, Rain."
I
laughed. I should have known. I'd already had half a dozen similar messages
from Rain, in the most unexpected places--but I'd never seen him in person. I'd
pretty well decided he wasn't actually at the concerts, but was sending the
messages from off-planet. If he really were attending the concerts, why didn't
he ever pop backstage to see me? If an old flashman could get through Security,
surely a Hydra could...
Still, I
felt better. At least I had one fan left.
I
cleared the screen, then crossed the room to my closet. Before I reached it,
someone knocked. "Who is it?" I called.
No
answer, but I heard the latch click open. "Wait a minute!" I yelled,
and grabbed the towel from the bed, wrapping it around my waist just as the
door swung open and--
I stared
in astonishment. "Who are you?"
#
CHAPTER FIVE
I had a
quick impression of bright blue eyes and short black hair, and then my
unexpected visitor squealed, almost as loud as a Hydra. After a painful few
seconds her squeal resolved into words. "You're Andy Nebula!"
"In
the flesh," I said, extremely aware that all I was wearing was a
not-very-big towel.
The girl
blushed. She was two or three years younger than me, with short black hair and
wide blue eyes. She wore a glittergold blouse emblazoned with a half-holo of my
face, which winked at me whenever she shifted position. Below that were
mirrorcloth tights, and below that transparent platform shoes that made her
look like they she was floating barefoot ten centimeters above the floor. Her
toenails were painted silver. "I'm sorry, I didn't--I mean, I knocked
first and--"
"Never
mind." At lest she didn't have a camera. I was going to have Marcel fire
Security. First a flashman and now a groupie. Fans were never supposed
to see Sensation Singles in unscripted situations. They might realize we were
ordinary human beings, and we couldn't have that, could we?
Well,
she could see I was an ordinary human being, all right, and getting to be a
chilly one, because there was a cold draft blowing in from the corridor.
"Look, you're not supposed to be here," I said. You'll have to leave,
I intended to add, but--
"I
know!" she said breathlessly, ducking inside and closing the door behind
her. "Isn't it wonderful? Just like in your song, when Bloodstone tells
you to get off the planet and instead you sneak into their hideout and Rocket
Rick sees you and says--"
"You're
not supposed to be here. Yeah, I know, but you're really not supposed to
be here. You'll get in trouble."
"It's
worth it to see you!"
I
sighed. "All right, great, anything for a true fan, but would you mind doing
me one favor?"
"Anything,"
she breathed.
"Turn
around so I can get dressed?"
"Oh!"
She blushed again, and quickly faced the wall. "I've got my eyes closed,
too!"
"Orbital."
I dropped the towel and pulled on the first outfit I could find--an all-black
affair in leather and microfiber. "All right, I'm decent."
She
turned, and frowned. "That's not what Andy Nebula wears."
"I
left Andy Nebula on stage." I grabbed a brush and quickly ran it through
my wet hair. "Call me Kit."
"You
mean--Andy Nebula's not your real name?"
She
sounded so shocked I had to laugh. "'Fraid not." I tossed the brush
aside and sat down on the bed to pull on my favorite pair of soft-soled boots.
"Look, what's your name?"
"My
name? You want to know my name?" You'd have thought I'd just handed
her a million feds. "Meta."
"Well,
Meta, I'm glad you like my Single, but if Security finds you they're going to
be very upset and they're going to ask you a lot of questions, not very gently,
and then they're going to throw you out, even less gently. Plus, this whole
dressing room is going to be sealed and moved to my ship in a few minutes. So I
really think you should get out however it was you got in--"
"It
was easy," she said. "An old man came running out and all the
Security people chased after him and I just walked in."
"Great.
I'm lucky a thousand fans didn't knock at my door."
"Oh,
no, there was nobody else out there. Everyone knows you never see a Single by
hanging around the stage door."
"Except
you?"
"But
that's different. I mean, I'm different. I mean, I like to try new
things." She smiled shyly. "Just like you say in your song, you know,
'I don't follow the crowd/I shout it out loud/when they tell me to go/I'm gonna
stay, don't you know?'"
I
winced. She'd sung that last part. Sort of. "Well, you'd better get out of
here now, and I mean it."
"All
right." At the door, she stopped and looked back. "I'll see you
again. Real soon."
"Oh,
yeah?" If a million or two other kids felt the same way, Korpov might get
off my back. "Great. I'll look for you in the crowd." As if I could
pick out one face even if I wanted to.
She
smiled and slipped out. I flopped back onto the bed, groaning. I really should
tell Marcel...but that might get Meta in trouble, and I didn't want that. I had
to admire her guts. Not at all what I'd have expected from a Pleasure Planet
brat.
So I let
it slide; no harm done. I secured the dressing room for transport, then walked
back to the stage. Qualls's office had already been hauled away, and the
stagebots had dismantled the projectors and lights, leaving only a scuffed and
dusty black platform. The roof and walls of the tent sagged. Soon only the
litter of discarded programs, snackpacs and drink containers would be left, and
a large vacant lot. Time to move on.
Marcel
emerged from the wings. "Dressing room ready?"
"Yeah,"
I said. "And so am I." I walked over to him as he plugged his
handcomp into the lead stagebot. "I heard the flashman got away."
"Yeah,"
Marcel grunted. "But not far. Ran out in front a speeding wheeler."
I felt a
pang. "Poor old flashman."
"Not
as old as you think." Marcel disconnected. The 'bot rolled away to store
itself for transport.
"What?"
I stared at him. "Did you know him?"
"Of
course not. All I meant was, flash burns people out."
"But--"
"Your
transportation's waiting." He strode off. I shook my head and headed for
the stage door.
I opened
it to discover rain pounding down, and my private wheeler barely visible
through the downpour, a good thirty metres away, blocked from coming any closer
by the massive transport crawler whose crane was lifting my dressing room. I
swore and dashed into the storm, splashing through puddles and arriving at the
little black two-seater soaked to the skin. I clambered into the passenger seat
and took revenge by shaking my hair like a dog, spraying the blue interior. The
driver, a Sensation Single Inc. employee I knew distantly, glared at me and
pulled away from the curb way too fast, snapping my head back against the
headrest. "Where'd you learn to drive?" I snarled.
"Same
place you learned to sing, streetslime," he snapped.
I gaped
at him. Sensation Single employees never spoke that way to performers; it could
get them fired.
Yeah, it
could. I smiled. "Tired of your job?"
"Now,
why should I be tired of chauffeuring an obnoxious brat?" He hurtled
around a corner, throwing me against the door.
I
straightened, rubbing my bruised elbow. "When Qualls hears about
this--"
"At
this point in your so-called career, kid, I'm more valuable to Mr. Qualls than
you. So shut up and enjoy the ride."
I wanted
to knock that smirk from his face--but the scary thing was, he could be right.
So I shut up and turned toward the window, seething. Everybody thought I was
heading for a crash-and-burn. Well, we'd see. There were still four confirmed
shows. Ticket sales could still pick up and boost me back into orbit--in which
case vacuum-brain here would soon find himself driving garf-drawn carriages on
Stimpson's Regret.
I
slammed the door extra hard as I got out at the ship.
Each of
the modules from backstage, including my dressing room, plugged neatly into The
Bullet's hold. Until my dressing room arrived I had no place to go, so I
made my way to the lounge to get something to eat and listen to someone else's
music besides my own. Use of the lounge was restricted to me, Qualls, and VIP
guests, so while I wasn't surprised to see Qualls there, I didn't expect to see
a two-metre orange, tentacled alien enthusiastically downing something that
looked like sulfuric acid laced with iron filings. "Rain, old
gladeye!" I shouted gleefully, rushing toward him.
Tentacles
that felt like thin wet rubber wrapped around steel wire lashed around my neck,
arms and legs, immobilizing me, then tightening 'til I could hardly breathe.
Three purple eyes glared at me. "Or maybe not," I choked out.
Qualls
chuckled. "Never startle a Hydra, Andy."
"Good--urk!--advice."
The Hydra released me. I managed a smile. Qualls had called me
"Andy," which meant this was business. I wished he'd warned me, not
only because it would have saved me from near-strangulation but also because
Andy Nebula, as Meta had pointed out, should be in mirrorcloth, not funereal black.
Still, Qualls must think this Hydra could boost my career, so I'd better play
it to the hilt. "Sorry, octofriend, thought I'd scanned you before,"
I said, plopping down on the stool next to the Hydra. "Whirligig," I
said to the bartender, and "What's powering, manager-man?" to Qualls.
The bartender turned quickly away. I'd once spent an evening teaching him
Fistfight City slang. He almost died laughing.
The
Hydra still had three eyes on me. "Octofriend?"
"Just
a word, gladeye. Insignificant mass. I'm Andy Nebula."
"Yes,
Mr. Qualls has provided images," said the Hydra. "I am sorry for
seizing you so impolitely." He'd obviously been around humans quite a bit;
he held out a tentacle, and I took it momentarily, remembering how I'd almost
jumped out of my skin the first time Rain touched me. This time, I didn't even
flinch. "My name is--" The Hydra made a sound like glass breaking.
I
couldn't help wincing. "Tuneful," I said, "but don't you have a
label in a lower register?"
"Our
guest is usually called The Dealer by his human associates," Qualls said.
"The
Dealer?" I laughed. "Better hope the sleazeoids don't get hold of
that. They'll be datadumping all over the starnet, saying Andy Nebula's got a
private flashpusher."
"Flashpusher?"
said The Dealer.
Qualls
hastily punched buttons on his pocketsynth.
"(Moan-scream-whistle-thud)," it said.
"Ah,"
said The Dealer. "A joke. Ha ha ha." His "laugh" had no
inflection at all.
"The
Dealer," said Qualls, "may have a gig for you after this tour is
over."
"Orbital!"
I said. "Download details!"
"It
is tentative," said The Dealer. "However, the venue would be my home
world. And it would be a long-term engagement."
"It
could help you make the transition from Sensation Single to a, ah, more rounded
performer," said Qualls. "If you are interested in continuing your
career, that is. Are you?"
Was I! I
squelched my initial reaction. Wouldn't do to appear too eager.
"Could be, manager-man. You think these orange octopeople would still scan
me when I'm not Andy Nebula?"
"I
think you would be very popular on Hydra," said Qualls. "From your
enthusiastic greeting of The Dealer here, I take it you remember the Hydra you
were with when we first met."
"Rain?
Yeah."
"You'll
recall he was quite impressed with you."
"But
that was my own music, not this Sensation Single sh--uh, not my current
material." Oops, I was forgetting the street slang. But maybe it wasn't
important. If the Hydras would let me play my own music, it could be the break
I'd been hoping for, the chance to stay in music even after Sensation Singles,
Inc. dumped me. It wasn't impossible; Pyotr Vasilovich, one of the Pleasure
Planets' most famous and enduring stars, had been one of the very first
Singles, Parsec Prince, two decades ago.
"Precisely.
We'd design a whole new show around your music."
"I
wouldn't be working for Sensation Singles any more?"
"No."
Qualls smiled. "I assume you could live with that."
"Smoothly,
gladeye. Intensely smoothly."
"Of
course, I would hope to continue as your manager..."
"Activate
this and I'm yours 'til termination, gladeye."
Qualls's
smile widened, revealing teeth. "Excellent! Once the Dealer and I have
come to a final understanding, I'll prepare a contract and send it to your room
later."
I took
the hint. "I'm lifting," I said. "My dressing room should be
plugged in by now. Orbital tugging your tentacle, Dealer. Down the timestream,
manager-man."
"See
you, Andy. Now, then, Dealer..." Qualls lowered his voice and bent toward
The Dealer. I took my glass of whirligig with me, wondering if I could get an
extra copy of the contract so I could make that driver eat it.
I
stopped at hold's main entrance and scanned an electronic schematic of the
space beyond. Green, green, and more green; we were loaded and ready to lift. I
touched the lockplate and the massive pressure-door slid open to admit me.
The
forward part of the ship was like any other spacecraft, but the hold was more
like a small village. Modules stood alone in the vast echoing space, connected
not by corridors but by lighted pathways. The hold even smelled different,
still mostly full of planetary air with all its odors of growing things and
people and machines. That smell would linger until a new burst of planetary air
replaced it at our next port of call.
The
various personnel modules were in the forward part of the hold; the stage and
auditorium equipment were installed or stored aft. Beneath the hold were the
engines and gravity-field generators; above was shielding and insulation;
beyond that was the sky of Carstair's Folly, through which we would very
shortly lift. Overhead a slowly blinking red light told anyone interested that
the huge cargo doors were not yet space-secured.
On the
first few legs of the tour I had occasionally had nightmares about those doors
opening in space, spewing all of us out into the ship's wake. I still made sure
the door of my module was safety-sealed air-tight whenever I was in it.
Of
course it was shut and sealed now, but out of habit I checked the telltales
beside the lockplate, and frowned. The internal life support system had
activated. It wasn't supposed to do that unless its sensors indicated a living
creature needed the oxygen. "Must have picked up a rat," I muttered.
But
inside, the module seemed as empty as it should be. Nothing lurked in the bedroom
or the bathroom or the little lounge. I plugged a Pyotr Vasilovich musichip
into the player, propped myself up my bed, sipped my drink, and finally began
to relax, to come down from the concert high.
After a
few minutes I set the empty glass on the side table and closed my eyes,
enjoying Pyotr's unique wailing vocals. He was singing something mournful about
purple skies and golden eyes...or was that purple eyes and golden skies...
Crash! I
jerked awake. Pyotr's wailing had been replaced by a deep rumble--the engines,
warming up. But that hadn't woken me. The crash had been closer--in my
room--Security had already failed me twice that evening--what was the name of
that Single who had been murdered by a fan...I stared around the room, but
could see no one, and no indication of what had made the crash--
Wait a
minute. The whirligig glass had vanished. I relaxed, laughing at myself. The
ship's vibration had obviously shaken it off the table. I rolled onto my
stomach and peered over the edge of the bed--
--into
the wide blue eyes of Meta.
#
CHAPTER SIX
She
smiled tentatively. "Told you I'd see you again!" she said over the
rising moan of the engines.
I stared
at her. This couldn't be happening. For a moment I didn't say anything because
the first words that came to mind were ones I was pretty sure Meta had never
heard before. I finally settled on, "What do you think you're doing?"
"I've
never been in a spaceship before," Meta said. "I thought it would be
fun to see if I could sneak onto yours before you left, and you told me the
dressing room was going to be moved on board, so I just slipped back in here
after you left it backstage but before they sealed it and I slid under the bed
but then I got scared when you came in and decided to try to sneak out but I
hit the table and the glass broke and--you're not mad, are you?"
I shook
my head. You almost had to admire her. Almost. "Look, Meta, do you hear
that sound?"
"Yes,
and I was wondering--"
"That's
the sound of our lift engines. In--oh, I'd say about thirty seconds--we're
going to take off."
Her face
turned white. "What?" She pulled herself out from under the bed,
scrambled up and ran for the door. "I've got to get out of here--"
She was
quick, but I was quicker. I grabbed her arm before she could touch the
lockplate. "It's too late!" The engines' pitch rose a minor third.
"We've lifted."
The
moment I touched her, she froze; and then she squealed, a full three octaves
higher than the engines, "Andy Nebula touched me!"
I let go
of her as though she were hot. "Will you stop this Andy Nebula waste? I
told you, when I'm not on stage, I'm not Andy Nebula. I'm just Kit."
She
didn't seem to hear me. "I can't believe it! I got into Andy Nebula's
dressing room, I talked to him, he touched me, I even went into space aboard
his--I can't wait to tell Bekka and Roo and--
"You're
going to have to," I said, more harshly than I intended, but I had to get
through to her somehow. "You won't be seeing them any time soon."
"What?"
That penetrated, all right. "But once you tell the crew I'm on board,
won't they--"
"Turn
around and land?" I shook my head. "Meta, do you have any idea how
much it costs to operate a spaceship?" Actually, I didn't either, but I
knew it was a lot, even by Sensation Single standards. "Landing and taking
off are the most expensive." That much I knew. The engines changed pitch
again, dropping a perfect fourth, and I said, "Hear that? We're boosting
for orbit. There's no way this ship is going back now. You're stuck here until
we get to our next stop and can put you on a commercial flight home."
Meta had
gone pale again. "How long?"
"A
week."
"A week?"
She gaped at me, then suddenly lunged at the door again, this time getting it
open before I grabbed her. "Let go!" she said, struggling in my
grasp. "I have to tell my parents--"
"We
will, we will," I said soothingly. "But don't you think it would make
more sense for me to take you where you have to go to do that than for you to
run aimlessly around the ship?"
She subsided,
wiping her eyes, and suddenly laughed a little. "I'm sorry. I'm all right
now."
"You're
sure?"
"I'm
sure." She bent her head back and batted her eyes at me. "But you
don't have to let go of me if you don't want to..." she said in as husky a
voice as a fourteen-year-old could manage.
I let go
of her so fast she half-fell against the bulkhead. "All right," I
said stiffly. "Let's take you to face the music."
Meta
gazed as wide-eyed at everything we passed on our way to the bridge as I had
the first time I came on board. The Bullet impressed everyone (which was
the idea, of course). I doubted you'd find many ships with corridors paneled in
real Earth oak, floored with deep golden carpets and lit by crystal fixtures.
Here and there tiny holovids of previous Singles endlessly repeated the dance
steps that had made them--briefly--famous. If you stopped by one the sound came
up, too. I never stopped because the last thing I wanted to hear was more
Sensation Singles, but Meta would have listened to every one if I hadn't
insisted she keep moving. "I don't know how far it is to jump-off," I
pointed out, "and we can't send a message once we're in alternity. You
don't want your parents thinking you've vanished into thin air and we
don't want to be charged with kidnapping. And you'll have plenty of time to
explore the ship after this is all settled."
"Right,"
Meta said, but she still moved reluctantly away from a holo of Phil FreeLight
singing Program Your Love, the syrupiest Single of them all, which was
saying something. Were all teenaged girls on the Pleasure Planets this
spaceheaded? I wondered. Not that I was an expert on girls, public image to the
contrary. The "girls" I'd known in Fistfight City were hard as
duracrete and meaner than spaceport rats, while as Andy Nebula the only girls I
saw were the screaming ones in the audience. Only carefully planned and managed
scandals were permitted Sensation Singles.
A sudden
shift in decor from flamboyant to utilitarian marked our arrival in Ship's
Operations. I sometimes wondered what The Bullet's crew thought of all
the Singles they'd seen come and go--and usually decided I was better off not
knowing.
The
Second Mate, whom we found in a wardroom near the bridge, was not
pleased. A small, stout woman with an incredibly deep voice, she frowned
ferociously at Meta. "What the blazes did you think you were playing
at?" she boomed, and Meta shrank back against me. "Do you know what
interstellar law gives us the right to do to stowaways? Do you?"
Meta
shook her head.
"It
says we can space you. Did you think of that before you--"
I knew
the Second Mate only wanted to scare Meta, to make her see how stupid she'd
been. I'd tried to do the same thing. But suddenly, I didn't like it very much.
After all, Meta was my fan. "End program," I said. "We
don't have time for this. You know and I know you're not going to space her,
but you're going to worry her parents sick and get us in legal trouble if we
don't get a message to them before jump-off. So are you going to let us use
ship communications or not?"
The
Second Mate flushed--but I was still the current Single and therefore carried
considerable weight on board The Bullet, even though I'd never used it
before. Seeing the fire in the Second Mate's eyes, I decided I wouldn't try to
use it again. But just this once--
"You've
got ten minutes to jump-off," she growled. "You and your 'friend'--"
she managed to make the word sound insulting, and I flushed even though I had
nothing to be ashamed of--"can use communications."
"Thank
you." I pulled Meta out of there before the Second Mate could change her
mind.
I'd used
communications before; the crewman there knew me. "Hi, Andy," he said
as I came in. "Who's your lady friend?"
"Hi,
Hosking. Stowaway, believe it or not. Fister says you're to let her use
communications to call her parents."
"Sure."
Hosking smiled at Meta and poised his fingers over the controls. "Access
code?"
Meta
reeled out a string of letters and numbers that Hosking echoed into the
console. After a moment's lightspeed delay, a screen lit with a written message
repeated by a computerized voice. "This is the Prescott home. At the moment
no human is available to speak to you. Do you wish to leave a message?"
Meta sat
down in front of the console. "Milly, this is Meta."
"Identity
confirmed. Hello, Meta."
"Are
my parents really not at home or are you just in intercept mode?"
"Your
parents are attending a reception at the Administrator's Residence," the
computer said.
Meta
said a word that surprised me. Milly replied primly, "My programming
requires me to warn you, Meta, that the word just uttered is not considered
acceptable vocabulary by your parents."
"Sorry.
Look, take a message for me, will you--"
"Thirty
seconds to jump-off," a different computer said.
"You'll
have to hurry," Hosking warned Meta.
"Recording,"
said Milly.
"Mom,
Dad, I'm all right, but I won't be home for about a week," Meta said
rapidly. "I met Andy Nebula and he's really nice. He asked me to come with
him to his next concert, and I was so excited I said yes. But I'll come back
right afterward. Be sure to tell Bekka and Roo! 'Bye!"
"Wait
a minute--" I began, but "Jump-off in ten--nine--eight..." said
the ship, and "Contact broken," said Hosking, and then came the
twisting-bent-sideways-turned-inside-out disorientation of the translation into
alternity, and there was nothing else to be done about it.
"Wow!"
said Meta. "What a ride!"
I
groaned and massaged the back of my neck. "Yeah," I muttered.
"What a ride."
"Mr.
Nebula," said the Second Mate's voice over the ship's intercom, her tone
dangerously sweet. "Please report to the Passenger Lounge."
#
CHAPTER SEVEN
Qualls
met us in the lounge. "Wonderful," he said, surveying Meta as she
stared eagerly around. "Just wonderful. We'll be lucky if the police
aren't waiting for us next planetfall."
That
brought Meta's head around. "Oh, no," she said. "I sent a
message to my parents."
"I
reviewed your 'message.' Why didn't you tell the truth?"
Meta
looked abashed--but only a little. "I'm sorry. I guess I wanted to impress
them--and my friends."
"Well,
you're going to have to send another message when we slip back into realspace.
I'm afraid you're going to be gone longer than a week."
"What?"
said Meta, and "Why?" I echoed.
"There's
been a change of plans."
"A
change of plans?" I felt a chill. "Ticket sales--?"
"Next
to nothing. We've canceled all the remaining tour dates except the final one,
and we're moving it forward."
"But
you said Mr. Karpov agreed to at least four more--"
"This
change is my idea."
"Your
idea?" I felt my face flush. "You canceled three of my performances
without even asking me?"
"I
did ask you."
"When?"
"Just
a couple of hours ago, right here. You agreed to a long-term arrangement on
Hydra, remember?"
"What's
that got to do with--"
"It
starts before the tour would have been over. I tried to talk The Dealer into
pushing the opening back, but he was adamant. I assumed you would consider
holding onto this post-tour deal more important than playing a couple of dates
before half-empty houses, but if you'd like I can probably still cancel--"
"No."
I took a deep breath. "No, of course not." I tried on a grin; it fit
pretty well. "All's optimal, gladeye."
Qualls
grimaced.
Meta had
been following this conversation like a spectator at a tri-ball match.
"But what about me?"
"What
about you?" Qualls snapped, and this time I didn't feel much like standing
up for her. She'd been nothing but trouble from the minute she'd sneaked into
my dressing room, and she'd as much as told her parents I'd seduced her. I
wondered if I could sue her for defamation of character.
Oh,
well--maybe a good mudsplatter from the sleazeoids would boost the crowd at my
last show.
"You
can send another message next time we're between jump-offs," Qualls told
Meta, "but we're not landing and you won't be able to get a ship until we
reach the closing venue of the tour."
"Where's
that?"
"Kit's
home town."
I stared
at Qualls. "Fistfight City? You never said--"
"You
never asked."
Some
excuse, but I let it go. So, I was going to return to Fistfight City as the
hometown-boy-made good. I hoped I'd draw a crowd. I hoped the Ice Boys
came--however many of them flash had left alive. However many still had brain
enough to remember me.
Any
worry Meta had about the extra time away from home vanished in sudden
excitement. "But that's great!" she said, turning to me with wide
eyes. "You can show me all those places in your bio--the store where the
owner gave you your stringsynth because he could tell you really loved music,
the park where you sang your first song and the kind old lady gave you--"
"Yeah,
right," I said. As I've mentioned, my official bio was worth considerably
less than the chip it was stored on. I guess you could say that a store owner
had "given" me the stringsynth, since I certainly didn't pay for it,
but he hadn't been aware of his generosity, being home in bed at the time.
"I doubt you're going to be there long enough."
"Take
her to any of the empty guest quarters," Qualls said.
I
started to ask why a crewman couldn't do that, but Qualls had turned his back
on us. Irritably, I led Meta out.
More
holovids of former Singles lined the corridor running to the guest quarters.
Meta listed them happily as we passed. "That's Flashpoint Charlie, and
there's The Toneman, and that's Rubberneck, and--oh, look, that's Paris
Paradise!"
I
stopped dead. "Paris Paradise? Are you sure?"
"Of
course I'm sure," Meta said, in a don't-be-silly tone. "I know all
the Singles."
I
hurried back to the holo. "What's wrong?" Meta asked.
The
sound came up as I stopped by the alcove. "A planet can be paradise/a
comet can be paradise/a twirling asteroid can be a paradise for two/if the two
are you and me together/here today and there forever..." I winced but
leaned closer, trying to get a clear look at the little twirling figure's face,
but the resolution wasn't good enough. Besides, it couldn't be. The old flashman
had been in his fifties. Paris Paradise the Sensation Single couldn't be more
than twenty-one by now, because all Singles had to be teenagers. Just because
he had claimed to be Paris Paradise...anybody could claim to be anybody. Before
he met me he probably told half a dozen other people he was Andy Nebula.
But
still, that name, and that warning about someone or something getting him,
getting her, getting me, too...I didn't like it. If something like that had
happened on the street, I would have lifted, fast. That's the way you find out
about threats on the street--garbled whispers and half-heard rumors. It doesn't
pay to wait for proof that a flashgang is taking over the burned-out building
where you've been flopping or that the meatmen are stocking up. If the street
is tense, you lift--if you can. I'd always been able to, because I fed myself
with my stringsynth. But this time I couldn't.
On the
other hand, this wasn't the street.
"Have
you met him?" asked Meta.
"No.
I mean, I thought maybe I did--but I guess I was wrong." I straightened
and strode firmly on down the corridor. "Let's get you settled so I
can get some sleep."
Meta's
new quarters weren't much further. I showed her how to key the lockpad to her
handprint, and she opened the door and stepped inside. The lights came up,
revealing a smaller version of my own dressing room--sleeping area, sitting
room, bathroom. No kitchen like mine had, but on the other hand, the
furnishings were far more ornate, because this cabin didn't get transported to
and from the ship. Meta bounced on the bed, then grinned at me. "This is
great! I'm glad I won't be able to go home for a month. This has all
worked out so much better than I expected. It really is just like your song,
you know?"
"It's
not my song," I snapped. "It was written for me by a computer.
You've never heard my music, unless you used to hang out on street
corners in Fistfight City."
"Then
why don't you play some for me?"
"No.
It's late, I'm tired, and I've got a lot to think about. Good night."
"Tomorrow?"
Meta called after me as I went out the door.
I didn't
reply.
On the
way back to my dressing room I studied the holovids I passed. Who had all these
kids been, really? Had any of them dreamed of being more than a
Sensation Single? Had any of them made it? Sure, there was Pyotr, but he'd been
only the second or third Single, almost twenty years ago. Since then at least
fifty had come and gone--maybe more, since some only lasted a couple of months.
But aside from Pyotr and the one that had been murdered--StarMaid, that was her
name--I knew nothing about any of them.
Time to
find out, then. I resolved to do some extensive digging in the computer.
Tomorrow.
Right now, all I was looking for was sleep.
Fifteen
minutes later, in my dressing room (and after a quick check under the
bed--well, you never know), I found it.
#
CHAPTER EIGHT
As
usual, in the morning all the vague fears of the night before seemed foolish.
Oh, I still intended to research the fates of my predecessors, but it didn't
seem nearly as urgent. Besides, we were two weeks from Fistfight City. Plenty
of time.
Plenty
of time for Meta to drive me crazy, too, I thought. I ate breakfast alone in my
room, but I was only halfway through my poached smokebird when Meta knocked.
(Somehow I knew it was her even before I checked the security monitor.) At
least she knocked this time, I thought. I cinched up my robe and let her in.
She
bustled in with an amount of energy I found disgusting at that time of shipday.
"Good morning!" she chirped. "Why, you're not even dressed yet,
sleepy-head."
"I
wasn't expecting visitors," I said, and went back to my breakfast tray.
"Mmmm,
that looks good. Better than what I had." She sat down beside me on the
bed. "So, what are we going to do today?"
"We?"
I picked up my glass and drained my orange juice at a gulp. "Look, Meta,
in case you've forgotten, I'm a professional entertainer. I've got work to do.
I can't be--"
"You
mean you'll be rehearsing, and stuff like that?"
Actually,
I seldom rehearsed any more, but if it would keep her off my back--"Yeah,
stuff like that."
"I'll
watch!"
"You
can't. It's--a closed rehearsal." I shrugged. "I don't make the
rules." Although I'd just made up that one. "Can't have the public
seeing Andy Nebula flubbing a dance step."
"Can't
have the public seeing Andy Nebula in his bathrobe, either," Meta pointed
out, "but..."
Another
knock rescued me from having to respond. "What is this, Earth Central
Spaceport?" I stamped over to the door and opened it to discover one of
the Sensation Single Inc. employees who always seemed interchangeable to me,
like glowtubes.
"Sorry
to interrupt, Andy..." The young man's eyes slipped to Meta, sitting on
the bed, then back to me. "...but Mr. Qualls and Mr. Marcel need to see
you in the lounge as soon as convenient."
"I'll
be there in ten minutes." I shut the door in his face and turned back to
Meta. "You heard. I have to get dressed..."
"Later,
then...you can give me the grand tour!" She swept out.
"Not
if I can avoid it," I said to the closed door.
To my
astonishment, I really did have to rehearse. In fact, for the rest of the
journey Qualls and Marcel worked me harder than they had since I'd started. I
hardly saw Meta at all, but she didn't seem to mind--as far as I could tell,
everyone on board loved her, even the Second Mate, whom I surprised giving her
a tour of the hold as I came off the stage one afternoon. Meta waved gaily to
me; the Second Mate gave me a look as cold as a cryofreezer, as though daring
me comment. I didn't.
"But
why do I have to rehearse so much?" I complained to Marcel a day or two
later. "I could sing and dance this deadhead Single in my sleep!"
"Take
it up with Qualls," Marcel grunted, heaving a misplaced fogmaker back into
position. "I just run the stage."
I
stamped off determined to do exactly that. This was crazy! I only had to
perform this drivel once more, then I'd be performing my own music on Hydra. That
was what I should be rehearsing.
I found
Qualls in the Lounge with-- spacewaste! Nobody had told me The Dealer was still
aboard. Time to haul out my "home babble" again. "Hey, gladeyes!
Mr. Dealer, old octofriend. Thought you lifted back on Carstair's Folly."
Three of
The Dealer's eyes twisted around to stare at me. "I have business in
Fistfight City," his neuter voice said. "Mr. Qualls was good enough
to offer me passage."
"We're
rather busy--" Qualls said irritably, but I had plenty of irritation of my
own; I slid onto a stool beside The Dealer.
"Well,
I'd say it's high-prob business between you and Octoman here figures me."
I smiled at Qualls, who scowled.
"We
are indeed discussing your future," said The Dealer. "I was merely
laying out for Mr. Qualls the details of your scheduled stay with us on my home
world."
"Orbital!
My file on that's definitely data-poor. What's the high-accuracy bytestuff, Mr.
Manager?"
"It's
not entirely settled," Qualls said. "There are still a few points to
finalize."
"I'm
linked!"
"Excuse
us just a moment," Qualls said to The Dealer. He grabbed my arm and
dragged me into the farthest corner of the lounge. "What are you trying to
do?" he whisper-growled. "You don't know how to deal with the Hydras.
If you keep sticking your face into negotiations the whole thing could fall
apart."
"Then
how about filling me in on what you've already decided?" I growled back.
"Or is it too much to ask that I be told something about my own
future?"
Qualls
shot a glance at The Dealer, who was literally keeping one eye cocked at us.
"All right, all right. But not now. Later. For now, get out of here."
"Not
just yet," I said. "I came to find out why you've got me rehearsing
night and day. I've only got to sing From the Street to the Stars once
more, and you know I know it perfectly."
"It's
got to be better than perfect in Fistfight City if you want to sign on with The
Dealer."
"But
if I'm going to be doing my own music on Hydra--"
"It's
three weeks to Hydra. Plenty of time to rehearse then."
"Is
there a problem, Mr. Qualls?" called The Dealer.
"No!"
Qualls said. As he turned his head, I saw sweat glistening on his forehead.
"Just a technical matter--look, I told you, let Marcel handle it," he
said loudly to me, and pushed me toward the door.
This
time I took the none-too-subtle hint, but I stopped outside. The Dealer had
Qualls scared spitless. But why? An ordinary business deal--my future was on
the line, not his--
Unless
he had something special riding on this, too. His reputation, maybe. Vacuum,
for all I knew he had a million-fed gambling debt. I should be flattered he
thought I could make money for him.
Huh. I
didn't feel very flattered. I walked slowly back toward the hold, and paused
again by the holo of Paris Paradise--not too near, since I didn't want to
activate his annoying song. I wondered if anybody would stop and listen to me
when I was in a little alcove like that. "Were things this crazy when you
were a Single?" I asked Paris. He just kept dancing.
I'd put
it off long enough; it was time I followed up on my vow to find out what had happened
to Paris--to all of them. If I could just get some time off from rehearsing...
In the
end, two days from Fistfight City, an equipment malfunction gave me my chance.
One of the holoprojectors blew a something-or-other, causing half of the
flashgang I supposedly held harmless through the brilliance of my dancing to
suddenly freeze in place. Holos or not, I still winced as, unable to stop, I
whirled through eight of them. The synths switched off abruptly and Marcel's
creative curses echoed from the control booth. "Done for the day,
Kit," he said when he ran out of obscenities. "Richter, where the
vacuum did you--" his voice cut off.
I lifted
before he could change his mind, and a few minutes later finally sat down at my
computer terminal, where the first thing I discovered was a message from Meta.
I quieted a pang of guilt at having ignored her. If she could charm the Second
Mate she could obviously take care of herself.
"Hi,
Andy," her recorded image said.
"Kit!"
I snapped. The recording ignored me, of course, but then, the real girl
probably would have, too.
"Can't
seem to get more than a second or two with you, so I thought I'd leave this to
let you know I messaged my parents at the last jump-off. Of course, they won't
get it until the capsule makes it out of alternity at Carstair's Folly,
but...anyway, I told them I was fine and that there'd been a change of plans
and I'd be back even later than I thought, but not to worry because I was with
you and having a wonderful time. I just wish I could see Bekka's face...anyway,
if you ever have some time when you're not rehearsing, I hope we can do
something together. All right? 'Bye. And I don't care if your tour is winding
down, I still think Andy Nebula is the best Sensation Single ever!" Her
picture went away, but it left me feeling guilty again. Here I did have some
time off rehearsing, and I was planning to spend it with my computer.
Huh. So
what? I didn't owe her anything. She'd pushed herself on me. Besides, she'd
rather make up stories about all the fun she'd had with Andy Nebula on this
trip than face the dull reality. I cleared the screen and asked for current
information on former Singles.
I drew
the computer equivalent of a blank stare. There was no current
information on any former Sensation Singles, except for old Pyotr and poor dead
StarMaid. All the rest had dropped out of sight. For some, nothing existed
except the official Sensation Single bio--and I knew how trustworthy that
was. I did find out a few real names--Rubberneck was a kid called Kim Ng, for
example, from an extremely out-of-the-way planet with the improbable name of
Piggyback--but even that didn't help much. Kim Ng had very little history
before he became Rubberneck and none at all afterward. He just disappeared.
I dug
even harder for something on Paris Paradise, with little more success. His real
name was Adrien Chapdelaine, and he'd been born in the ancient city of Paris on
old Earth itself--hence his stage name. No records of a family, no home
address, nothing but an Earth World Authority census number. And after his
brief reign as a Single--nothing at all.
"Nobody
just vanishes," I muttered. I called up my own file--and was chilled by
the similarity to Adrien Chapdelaine's. No family, no home address, not even a
government number, since the Farrisian government couldn't care less whether I
existed and had apparently never linked me to a kid who ran away from an
orphanage years before--if I'd even been reported missing. Knowing that place,
it was probably still collecting government feds for my support.
And when
my tour ended, would my appearance on Hydra be noted? Surely--and yet, I
couldn't believe not one of those dozens of former Singles had ever tried to
continue his or her career, or failed so completely as to leave no trace.
I tried
to tell myself I was being crazy, worrying about nothing, but streetsense,
based on seven years of living off my wits, overpowered Andy Nebula's version
of common sense, based on a few months of having things given to him on a
platter. Before I sang a note in Fistfight City, I'd know the truth--and I
thought I knew who could tell it to me.
"Not
as old as you might think," Marcel had said about the flashman who called
himself Paris Paradise, and "No, I didn't know him--I just meant flash
ages a man."
I headed
for the stage.
#
CHAPTER NINE
Finding
Marcel was easy. Getting him to talk wasn't. I strode up to him with all the
impetus of my suspicions. "Look, Marcel, I need to--"
"No,
no, no!" he yelled, not at me but at the unfortunate Richter, who had wandered
into his line of sight. "Not there! You expect lasers to go around
corners, now? Check your marks next time!" He glanced at me. "What do
you need, Andy?"
"I
need to talk to you, Marcel, about--"
Something
beeped. "I'm a little busy right now, Andy. We're not going to be able to
fix that blown holo projector before the show, so I've got to rearrange the
ones we have to cover the gap--yes, what is it?" he said into a hand
communicator.
I waited
while he irritably explained to somebody on the other end that if two stagebots
were trying to install each other as lighting units then one or both of them
obviously had a serious programming deficiency and the only way to stop them
was to turn them both off. "Then pull their chips and check the programming.
Isn't that obvious? Did you really have to ask?" He stuck the communicator
back in his pocket. "I don't know where the company finds these
idiots..." he muttered.
I took
my chance. "Marcel, I need to talk to you about Paris Paradise."
Did he
twitch at the name, just a little? "What about him?" He started
toward the control booth. I followed him.
"Did
you know him?"
"Of
course I knew him. I've been stage manager for every Single for the last ten
years."
"Do
you know what happened to him?"
"Went
back to Paris, I suppose. What do you care?" He reached the control booth
and palmed the lockplate.
"That
flashman who got backstage on Carstair's Folly--"
The door
opened, and Marcel went in. "Yeah?"
"He
said he was Paris Paradise."
"So?
Look, Andy, I've got a lot of--"
"Was
he?"
Marcel
flipped switches without looking at me. "Paris was just a kid like you
when I knew him a couple of years ago. That flashman was a lot older than I am.
How could it have been Paris?"
"You
tell me."
"Ten
minutes to test," Marcel said into a microphone, his voice booming on the
stage. Then he turned to face me. "I know you're nervous about the end of
your run, Andy--"
"That's
not--"
"--but
we've got some big problems with the equipment right now and I just don't have
time for this nonsense. I don't keep tabs on the Singles after they leave. Once
they're off my stage, they're no concern of mine. And off my stage is where I
want you right now, you understand?" He pointed toward my dressing room.
"Now!"
I glared
at him, then stalked off into the darkness of the hold. He knew something, I
was sure of it. But what could he be hiding? That that flashman really had
been Paris Paradise? That was just crazy...
I
groaned as I got closer to my dressing room and saw Meta sitting outside it
with her back to the door. She scrambled up and waved as I came closer.
"Andy! I heard you had to quit rehearsing, so I thought--did you know
there's a pool on this ship? We could go swimming--"
"No,
we couldn't. Listen, Meta, you're a great kid, and I'm really happy you're a
fan of Sensation Singles, but I'm only going to be a Single for a few more days
and after that I've got a whole new career to worry about, and that means that
right now I've got a lot of thinking to do. So why don't you just go off and
pester someone else and leave me alone?"
Her
smile faded and her face turned white; then, without a word, she turned and ran
out of the hold. I took half a step after her, then stopped, shrugged and went
into the dressing room. She'd be going home as soon as we got to Fistfight City
anyway, and I really didn't need her added to my list of things to worry about.
Besides, if there was something nasty going on behind the scenes, I'd be doing
her a favor by keeping her out of it.
My
respite from rehearsal didn't last. After supper and late into the night Marcel
had me back at it, with no let-up for the rest of the trip. I didn't complain,
this time; the altered holoprojector array changed several of the dance
sequences drastically, and I had to work hard to polish them to performance
level. Qualls wasn't happy about it, either; I could hear him yelling from
halfway down the hold as I approached the stage the day before our scheduled
arrival on Farris. "...concert is crucial! If this contract with The
Dealer falls through you'll never work again!"
I
couldn't hear Marcel's reply, but Qualls's voice suddenly boomed even louder.
"Don't try to shift the blame. The company's been cutting expenses. If you
couldn't do the job with the budget you were given you should have said so, and
we would have found someone who could have."
Sensation
Singles cutting expenses? First I'd heard of it. Very interesting. I
decided not to announce my arrival just yet. They were arguing backstage, off
right; I approached the stage from the front, where I could hear them as
clearly as if they were performing for my benefit.
"Maybe
you should be doing some cutting back of your own," Marcel snapped.
"Then you wouldn't need your little sideline. It seems to be putting you
under a great deal of strain."
Qualls
quit shouting; his voice turned low and poisonous. "My 'little sideline'
is none of your business. You don't talk about it--not even to me. You know
why."
Silence.
Then, "Yeah, I know."
"Good.
Then you also know that it is in your best interest to insure that my
'sideline' remains profitable. So get back to work, Stage Manager. I'm sure the
little streetslug will be arriving for rehearsal very shortly, and I don't want
to see him."
I ducked
down to make sure Qualls got his wish as he stormed off, but I still heard
Marcel say, in a low voice, "I don't blame you."
I
resisted the urge to chase Qualls and strangle him with my bare hands. Streetslug?
And I was putting my future in his hands?
And what
"sideline?" Yeah, I'm a streetslug, all right, I thought. I know
slime when I step in it--and you're covered with the stuff, Mr. Manager Man.
But just
what was that slime made of? I wanted to pressure Marcel for an answer, but it
sounded like Qualls was standing over him with a pretty big stick. Too
dangerous, I decided--at least, too dangerous on the ship. Once we were down in
Fistfight City, my orbit, if I didn't like the scan, I could lift.
Yeah? I
thought. If I lifted before the show, I breached my contract, and Andy Nebula's
credit stayed behind. Then what? Back to living hand-to-mouth as a street
musician? Scrounging food, hiding and running from flashgangs and meatmen until
one day I didn't hide well enough or run fast enough?
Maybe I'm
overprogramming here, I told myself. Maybe Qualls's little scheme is just a
scam--negotiate a bigger deal with The Dealer than he'll tell me about and keep
most of it for himself. I might even let him get away with it. The important
thing about the Hydran gig will be playing my music in my way.
I
cleared my throat and marched cheerfully and noisily onto the stage to begin
rehearsing.
The next
day we made planetfall, timing our landing to synchronize shiptime with local
time at the Fistfight City spaceport. I stood on the duracrete as cranes lifted
the modules from the hold, my dressing room among them, breathed the air full
of the sharp tang of rocket exhaust and ozone, looked up at the cold, austere
mountains beyond the city, and wished I was anywhere else but there. So much
for the old home town, I thought. Give me the Pleasure Planets any day.
But here
I was, and I had a concert to give. I looked at the Spaceport's main terminal
and grinned a little. This time I'd walk through there with nothing to fear
except hordes of fans and media.
Did I
say hordes? An hour later Qualls and I and a half-dozen Sensation Single staff
made our grand entrance through customs, and while a crowd formed to ogle and
photograph, it was far from a horde, or even a throng. More like an intimate
gathering, at least compared to the crowds that had greeted me everywhere in
the early days of the Single.
Meta had
joined us when we boarded the ground transport from ship to terminal, looking
subdued and not meeting my eyes. Well, she'd be gone soon, anyway, I told
myself. Probably even before the concert. As if to confirm it, Qualls whisked
her off somewhere before we were out of the terminal, presumably to arrange for
her return to Carstair's Folly. I wondered what exotic lies she would tell her
friends about me.
I
couldn't help looking closely at every mirrored pillar in the terminal, but Dry
Ice, if he still lived, didn't put in an appearance, not even to mock. Once I
did think I caught a glimpse of Hydran orange in the distance, and thought of
Rain, soaking up new experiences, but the crowd shifted and when I looked again
the flash of color had vanished.
Shortly
thereafter, so did the crowd. By the time we stood on the sidewalk we could
have been any anonymous band of tourists wondering why they'd ever wanted to
come to Murdoch IV in the first place. "Are you sure anyone is coming
tonight?" I said to Marcel over the noise of the wind that whipped grit
into our faces.
"Not
my concern," he said, stone-faced. "I just set up the stage."
"Thanks
for the power-boost, gladeye," I muttered. I looked around for Qualls, but
he hadn't come back yet, with or without Meta. Instead I saw the transport
coming to take us to the crashball stadium in the north end of town where our
stage equipment and dressing rooms had already been hauled.
A sullen
drizzle began as we climbed into the transport. I decided to try Marcel again.
"I hope their concert tent doesn't leak," I said as I settled by a
window.
He
grunted. "No tent. The stage will be covered but your fans are on their
own."
"I
should have guessed." I leaned my forehead against the cool glass and
watched as familiar rain-slicked streets slid by, even grayer and grimier than
I remembered. You can't have me back, I said to them silently. I'm sticking to
my contract no matter what Qualls is up to. As long as he takes me off this
planet again, I don't care if he robs me blind...
Qualls,
without Meta, met us at the stadium, wearing the same long black weathercoat
I'd first seen him in. "Looks like we'll fill ground-level and most of the
lower seats," he told me as we crossed the pavement to the shelter of the
grandstands. "The rest depends on walk-ups."
"In
this weather?" The rain pounded the pavement around us, and the
spray-soaked wind had developed a wintry bite. Qualls didn't seem to notice,
and I resolved to buy a weathercoat of my own at the first opportunity. "I
wouldn't come out to hear me on a night like this."
Qualls
shrugged. "The Dealer will be here. He's the only one that matters. Look,
I've got to make a call. I'll talk to you later." He hurried off, leaving
me to find my own way through the gray duracrete tunnels beneath the stands to
the fenced, private parking lot where they'd set up my dressing room and the
other modules. A runner met me at my door. "Sound and vid check in
forty-five minutes, Andy," he said breathlessly.
"Thank
you," I told him, and watched him dash away, up the ramp toward the field,
feeling odd to know it would be the last time I would hear those words. I
turned and palmed my dressing room lockplate, figuring the feeling would go
away as I plunged into the routine of getting ready for a concert. Instead, it
got worse. Each familiar step of preparation was for the last time. Sure, I
hoped to perform again--on Hydra and elsewhere--but not as Andy Nebula. I even
caught myself thinking that maybe my Single wasn't all that bad a song, all
things considered, and trying to remember the faces of the holodancers.
"Back in my old orbit--data retrieval overload," I muttered.
At last
the people came--about thirty thousand, not great, but not too bad, either,
considering the weather, the venue--and the planet. The warm-up group, some
local glamcrash band, played to half-hearted cheers, then came the knock on my
door, "Five minutes," from the runner, and the long walk up the ramp
and through the backstage maze. Finally I stood in the wings in my mirrorcloth
tights, listening to the crowd thunder and the pounding of the synths, watching
the lasers building the holos in the smoke, and for the first time I realized I
didn't want to stop being a Single, that if I could, I'd do it forever.
But I
couldn't. I'd reached the end I'd always known would come. "Break a leg,
Kit," Marcel's voice said in my earpiece--the first time I could remember
he hadn't called me Andy.
"Thanks,
Marcel," I said; and then the opening chords crashed and, for the last
time, Andy Nebula danced into the spotlight.
#
CHAPTER TEN
The rain
had subsided to a fine mist, leaving the air cool and fresh, and I felt
wonderful as I sang and danced and fought my insubstantial enemies and rescued
my robotic girl. I couldn't see the crowd, but I could hear them, could sense
that I had them, that they were caught up in the story told by the song and the
dance. I felt I held the emotions of all thirty thousand of them in the palm of
my hand like a lump of clay. They followed every nuance, responded to every
subtlety, and rewarded me at the song's end with a standing ovation and the roar
of "An-dy! An-dy! An-dy!" over and over.
I came
off the stage drenched with sweat and riding a high like I'd never felt, even
after my very first concert. To my surprise, Qualls greeted me in person.
"Great show, Kit!" he shouted in my ear above the ongoing roar of the
crowd. "The Dealer was impressed!"
I gave
him a thumbs-up and a grin. Who cared what silly scam involving my money he was
up to? It couldn't dampen this moment for me. He clapped me on the shoulder as
I went past him toward the tunnels leading back to the parking lot and my
dressing room. "I'll be by later and we'll finalize things," he
yelled.
I nodded
and kept moving, grabbing the towel I always kept handy backstage and wiping my
face as I went. He'd better come by quick, I thought; I had no intention of
hanging around my dressing room for long. We wouldn't be lifting until the next
day, and I planned to celebrate my success by hitting some of the Fistfight
City funspots I'd only seen from the outside when I'd lived there. I used to
play my stringsynth for the crowds waiting to get in, until the bouncers chased
me off. I grinned to myself, picturing those same bouncers fawning all over me
now that I was Andy Nebula. Oh, yes, it was going to be a big-time homecoming
party night for this boy.
I passed
Security people at various places where access might have been gained to the
backstage area, and nodded approvingly to each of them in turn. No more
flashmen cornering me in the corridors, and no more surprise visitors to the
dressing room, I thought--and then stumbled to a halt just a few metres from my
door, because there was someone there, just visible in the shadows. I
turned to call for Security, but the shadowy figure said, "No,
Kit--wait," and stepped into the light.
I
stared. "Marcel? What are--why aren't you in the control booth?"
"I
left the computer in charge."
"But
you're not supposed to do that. What if something went--"
"It
didn't, did it? I've got to talk to you without Qualls knowing, and as long as
he thinks I'm up there, he won't suspect that I'm back here."
"Well--"
I touched the lockplate and the door slid open. "Come inside, then."
Marcel followed me in quickly and took off his weathercoat and the floppy hat
that had shadowed his face. I tossed my towel on the bed. "Wasn't that a great
show?" My computer terminal blinked at me as I passed it on my way to the
kitchen for a cold drink--fan mail waiting, I thought smugly. "All that
rehearsal really paid off. Qualls sure knew what he was talking about."
"Yeah,
Qualls always knows what he's talking about. But I don't think you do."
I turned
with an unopened chillpac of icefizz in my hand. "What?"
"I
came to tell you--" Marcel took a deep breath. "I came to tell you
you've got to dump Qualls as your manager. Now, while you still can."
"Dump
him?" I opened the pac and took a swig of cold tingling sweetness.
"He's already got a post-Single gig lined up."
"Believe
me, you don't want it."
"Believe
me, I do want it." I flopped in a chair. "Andy Nebula's
dead and gone, as of tonight. Now there's just me--Kit--and my music.
And besides, we have a verbal agreement--witnessed by Qualls, The Dealer and The
Bullet's barman. That's binding enough that if I back out now Qualls will
tie up all my credit so fast I'll be back singing outside Fistfight City
bars."
"You'd
be better off."
I gulped
more icefizz, then wiped my mouth and pointed the pac at Marcel. "Look,
you're not telling me anything I don't know. I know Qualls is up to
something--I heard him yelling at you two days ago. I figure he's planning to
skim off a big chunk of the money I should earn from this Hydra show." I
shrugged. "So what? I've got enough credit from being Andy Nebula to last
me all my life--unless I crash Qualls's program. What do I care if he gets
rich, too? The important thing is to do the show--to do my music."
"No,
the important thing is to not do the show." Marcel sat down on the
bed facing me, eyes narrowed and intense. "Listen to me, Kit. You asked
about the other Singles. Qualls offered most of them post-Single gigs, too. And
where are they now?"
"You
tell me."
"I
wish I could." Marcel got up again abruptly and paced. "I shouldn't
even be telling you this much. If Qualls finds out--"
"What's
he got on you?"
Marcel
stopped dead, and slowly turned to face me. "That's one thing I won't
tell you. Just don't ignore this warning, Kit. Tell Qualls you want no part of
this Hydra deal, cut your losses and run. You can find another manager, a good one--you've
got the talent. You could be another Pyotr--"
"Why
are you warning me at all? Why take the risk?" I studied him suspiciously.
"What's in it for you?"
"Let's
just say it makes it a little bit easier for me to live with myself--a very
little."
I frowned.
I didn't want this, not tonight, not after that great show. I wanted to keep
the high, keep the adrenaline flowing, go out and party, plan my brand-new
non-Single show in my head--I didn't want these veiled warnings and dark
remarks and most of all I didn't want anything to interfere with the bright new
future I already had mapped out for myself.
"Fine,
you've warned me. Now go away and live with yourself. I'm going to take a
shower and change, and then I'm headed out on the town." I emptied the icefizz
pac and tossed it into the disposal bin. "And you'd better get back to the
control booth, because Qualls said he'd be coming by here shortly to fill me in
on the details of the Hydra deal."
"Kit--"
Suddenly
angry, I spun on him. "What? If Qualls is so dangerous, tell me the whole
story! Clear your conscience altogether! Make me listen to your warning!
Otherwise, lift, because I really don't see that it's any of your business what
risks I choose to take with my career!" Marcel stared at me, white-faced,
then turned and strode toward the door, snatching up his weathercoat on the
way. "Good," I muttered, and sat down to pull off my boots.
But
Marcel didn't go. At the door he hesitated, started out again, hesitated once
more, and finally swore, closed and locked the door, and turned back toward me
again. "All right, Kit," he growled. "I'm risking more than you
know telling you this--but blast it, I'm sick and tired of watching Qualls get
his hooks into you kids. And after Carstair's Folly..."
"I'm
listening," I said, but I kept removing my boots.
"I
don't know all of it. But I do know this--none of the Singles Qualls has
'managed' has ever been heard of again."
"Yeah?
Well, maybe they didn't have my talent." I finished with the boots and
pulled off my shirt.
"Some
of them didn't. But some of them did. And all of them--all of them,
Kit--were offered gigs on Hydra after their tour ended."
That was news. I stared at him,
holding my shirt. "All of them?"
"That
octopus called The Dealer--it's not the first time I've seen him with Qualls.
And there have been other Hydras, too."
"Maybe
they really like music."
"Maybe.
But what happens to the Singles after they go there? They just disappear. I've
checked the computer--"
"So
have I."
"And
found nothing?"
I tossed
the shirt aside. "Nada."
"Me
either. But whatever is happening to them, Qualls is getting rich from it.
You've never seen any of his homes on various planets--but there's no way he's
keeping them up on the salary Sensation Singles pays. I should know."
"Maybe
he's some kind of meatman."
"I
thought of that--but you wouldn't run something like that out in Hydran space.
They wouldn't be interested."
I
shuddered. "I hope not."
"And
then--" Marcel shook his head. "And then there was that business on
Carstair's Folly."
"The
flashman?"
"Yeah."
Marcel sat down on the bed again, his weathercoat in his hands. "Kit, you
asked me straight out before, and I wouldn't tell you because--well, because I
was scared. If Qualls had anything to do with it, he's an even nastier customer
than I thought, and if he finds out I've told you all this, or tried to warn
you off--"
"I'm
not likely to tell him," I said. "But what about the flashman? Was
he--"
"Paris
Paradise?"
I
nodded.
"It
sounds crazy, Kit, and I don't know how it could be true, but--yes. He
was."
Something
cold crawled into my belly and curled up like it was going to stay for a while.
"Flash--"
"Flash
ages people, but not like that. It was like--like he'd lived a lifetime in the
last two years. And it drove him crazy. Along with the flash."
"And
now he's dead."
"Yes."
It might
have nothing to do with Qualls, or Hydra, I told myself. Two years is a long
time, Paris Paradise could have been involved in something else we know nothing
about...
But
streetsense clobbered me on the side of the head. I told you to listen
to me, it shouted. Bad trouble coming. Lift. Lift now!
I stood
up. "You'd better get out of here."
"Right."
Marcel stood, shrugged on his weathercoat, and held out his hand. I shook it.
"Good luck, Kit," he said softly. "But watch your back. Qualls
is a bad enemy."
"You
watch yours." Marcel nodded, crossed to the door and went out, and I
stripped off my mirrortights in a hurry. No shower now--I wanted to be long
gone before Qualls came calling. Ignoring my terminal, still flashing furiously
at me, I pulled on the same black leathers I had donned after Meta dropped in
so unexpectedly on Carstair's Folly, then grabbed a bag and hurriedly stuffed
it with a few clothes (none of which were mirrorcloth), some souvenirs of the
various planets I'd been on, a couple of vidchips of my Single and, of course,
my Andy Nebula credit chip. Maybe I could draw off some cash before Qualls shut
down my account. I tossed in what little food I had in the kitchen, slung my
battered old stringsynth over my shoulder, and was taking one last look around
to make sure I hadn't forgotten anything when the door opened without warning.
"Going
somewhere, Kit?" said Qualls.
#
CHAPTER ELEVEN
"Yeah,"
I said, hoping Qualls couldn't hear my heart pounding. "I thought I'd hit
the town and sleep somewhere besides this dressing room for a change. Don't
worry, I'll be on board long before lift time tomorrow."
"You
should have checked with me, first. I told you I'd be by shortly."
"Yeah,
well, I didn't want to wait all night."
"I'm
afraid you'll have to change your plans. We've decided to lift tonight,
instead. The transports are already on their way."
"Oh,
come on, Qualls, it's my first time on the old home planet since my Single
broke. Can't we spare a day or two?"
"I'm
afraid not. Our schedule to Hydra is very tight." Qualls closed the door
behind him. "I've come to finalize the plans."
I slowly
set my bag down on the floor. The way Qualls moved, keeping himself between me
and the door, holding himself ready to grab me if I tried to dodge past him--to
have any chance to escape, I had to make him think I didn't want to.
"Great," I said. "Seems to me I've been kept in the dark long
enough."
"Good.
Sit down." I complied, sitting on the corner of the bed closest to the
door. Qualls remained standing. "The Dealer will join us
momentarily."
"Orbital,"
I said, but my stomach fluttered. Getting past Qualls was one thing. Getting
past The Dealer...
Qualls
glanced at my flashing terminal. "Looks like you still have one fan left,
anyway. Or maybe it's some local friend. And you were going to leave without
reading it? What was your hurry?"
"I
just didn't notice it. I'll read it now." I got up and went to the
terminal. Qualls didn't move from his spot by the door--taking no chances, I
thought. I turned my back on him and pressed "Retrieve Message."
It
appeared only as scrolling words--no video and no audio. Unusual for fan mail;
the girls usually wanted to be sure I got a look at their faces. Among other
things. "Concert enjoyed greatly, gladeye," it read. "Orbital!
But liked music from old days better. Urgent I meet with you before you leave
planet. At place we were roomies. I am there tonight. Your gladeye octoman,
Rain."
I might
have guessed--Rain, again. And this time there was no doubt he really was on
the planet, since he wanted to meet at Fat Sloan's. Maybe that flash of orange
I'd seen at the spaceport really had been him. But what was he doing here--and
why did he want to meet at Sloan's? I could almost believe our paths crossing
by accident in the Pleasure Planets, but on Murdoch IV, in this sludgepool of a
city? Coincidence could only explain so much. I read the message again. It
almost sounded like a warning...
Like the
warning Marcel had given me--too late.
Way too late. The door opened, and I
blanked the screen hurriedly and turned as The Dealer skittered in. No
knocking, which mean that not only did Qualls have the master code to my
dressing room, he'd given it to The Dealer, too. Throw in Rain's message, and
my streetsense practically had me by the throat now. Get out, get out, get out,
lift, lift, lift...
If only
I could. Two more Hydras followed The Dealer into the room. I looked at Qualls.
"Business
associates," he said smoothly.
I looked
back at the two Hydras. One stood half a metre taller than the other, with
tentacles as big around as my forearm. The smaller one's slender central stalk
bent slightly in the middle. Both wore equipment belts; I didn't know what
Hydran weapons looked like, but I would have bet the nasty-looking handle
sticking out of the big Hydra's belt belonged to one. The smaller Hydra
chitter-squeaked something at The Dealer, who said to Qualls, "All is
prepared. Our ship will lift the moment the merchandise--" a tentacle
indicated me "--is aboard."
I glared
at Qualls. "Merchandise!"
"A
minor translation problem," said Qualls. "Please, Kit, sit
down." He pointed to the bed. I circled it and sat on the edge again,
ready for any chance to dodge past the three Hydras and out. Not that it looked
likely any chance would present itself. "Dealer, I believe you have a
contract for the Hydra engagement?"
The
Dealer took a glittering disk from his belt; Qualls unfolded his handcomp and
slid the disk inside. Words scrolled rapidly across the screen. "Please
put your thumbprint here," Qualls said to me, pointing to a glowing
square.
"Not
without reading it."
"It's
perfectly standard and in line with our verbal agreement. It binds you for a
minimum of six months and a maximum of two years, at your employer's
discretion, to perform on a regular basis for Hydra audiences, for which a very
sizable sum will be deposited in your Andy Nebula credit account, with a
percentage going to me."
"I'm
not thumbing it without reading it!"
Qualls
sighed. "I suppose it was too much to expect you to, but it really would
have made things much easier. Dealer--"
The
Dealer chirped, and the big Hydra's massive tentacles lashed out at me with the
speed of striking snakes, one seizing me around the waist, jerking me upright
and spinning me around, one grabbing my left arm and bending it painfully
behind me, and a third grabbing my right wrist. I tried to hold my fist closed,
but the tentacle tightened inexorably, and Qualls pried my fingers open easily
and pressed my thumb to the contract. The comp beeped, Qualls withdrew the disk
and handed it back to The Dealer, and the big Hydra let go of me.
I lunged
at Qualls and smashed him to the carpet before the Hydras could react. The big
one almost yanked my arms out of their sockets as he pulled me back. Qualls
picked himself up, rubbing his elbow, and glared at me. "Do it now!"
The
Dealer squealed at the bent-over Hydra, and the big one tightened his grip even
more. The bent Hydra took a vial from a pocket on his belt and shook a thin,
bright-green wafer onto the tip of one tentacle. I stared at it, garish against
the Hydra's orange skin, the scene spinning as the blood drained from my head.
"No!" I tried to scream, but it came out as a whisper.
"Oh,
yes," said Qualls. "I had hoped to put it off until we were in space,
but you're becoming far too intractable. In any event, it has to be done sooner
or later."
"No!"
This time I did scream it. "Qualls, please, you don't have to--I
won't fight any more, I'll go to Hydra--"
"Oh,
you will indeed. For two years." He smiled as if at a private joke.
"Do you know about Hydra memory?" he said conversationally, while
that green wafer hovered centimetres from my face. I had to go cross-eyed to
focus on it, but I couldn't look away. "We have short-term and long-term
memory. They have deep memory and surface memory. Everything they see, hear,
taste, smell and feel goes instantly into surface memory--which would quickly
overload, if they didn't periodically empty it. So during what corresponds to
our sleep they sift through the day's events at high speed and consciously
decide what they want to keep in surface memory and what they want to shift
over to deep memory.
"Everything
in surface memory is instantly retrievable. Deep memories are not, but any
experience similar to something in deep memory will instantly bring that deep
memory back to the surface. It's like living in a constant state of deja vu.
As a result, many Hydras, like your old friend Rain, constantly seek unique
experiences. It's their major form of entertainment."
Rain. He
was waiting for me at Fat Sloan's. He'd come to find out why I didn't show up,
wouldn't he?
The
wafer moved fractionally closer to my mouth. Not soon enough, I thought
despairingly. Not soon enough.
"But
several years ago a Hydra invented an amazing drug--one that made Hydras
forget. Completely. After taking the drug, a Hydra could repeat an experience
without consciously being aware he'd experienced it before. Apparently,
however, there is a subconscious realization, and the dichotomy between that
realization and the complete lack of conscious memory is intensely pleasurable
to the Hydras, so much so that the drug proved quite addictive. Naturally,
their government moved to control this substance, because an addicted Hydra
eventually sinks to the point of enjoying a handful of experiences over and
over again, and quits even trying to do anything new." Qualls laughed.
"Rather like the fans of Sensation Singles!
"The
government's actions drove the drug underground and fostered a criminal trade.
Then Hydras met humans. For Hydras like The Dealer, it was a very profitable
meeting. Not only did humans prove to be a vast market for the drug
itself--which they called 'flash'--they also had endlessly fascinating and
diverse performance arts like music and dance, which Hydras enjoyed almost as
much as they enjoyed flash. Those controlling flash saw the parallels, and
began making human performances available for their customers to experience and
re-experience. Use of flash skyrocketed. But these enterprising Hydras still
weren't satisfied. Performances take time--so they decided to do something
about that. They began using an odd side-effect of the alternity space drive:
the time pocket."
Even I'd
heard of that: a self-contained region of alternity in which time passed
differently. Objects or animals placed in it would appear to age in minutes
instead of weeks or years. I thought of Paris Paradise and blurted, "You
can't be serious--"
"Kit,
I'm your manager. Would I lie to you? It's such a beautiful blending of
technologies. Step into the time pocket, watch the show, take the drug. Watch
the show a dozen times if you want, each time as if it's new, each time in
greater ecstasy. Step out again to find only a few minutes have passed outside,
and your employer and family are none the wiser." He shrugged. "Of
course, do it too often and you grow old before your time."
"And
the performer?" I whispered.
"Don't
all little boys want to grow up faster?"
My heart
tried to pound its way through my ribs. "But why that?" I
pointed my chin at the green wafer.
"Efficiency.
The performer--you--has to perform the same number over and over. Flash makes
your mind highly receptive to suggestion. We will shape your drug-induced
hallucinations so that every time you perform you'll believe you're doing the
song for the first time in front of a huge and adoring crowd--just like tonight.
The drug will also give you tremendous energy, which unfortunately heightens
the aging effect, but one must sacrifice for one's art. And, of course, flash
is instantly and intensely physically addictive, which makes control so much
easier." He gripped my chin and tilted my head back so I had to look him
in the eyes. He smiled. "One other thing. The contract you thumbprinted
gives me legal authority to draw on your Andy Nebula credit account, and
bequeaths it to me should anything happen to you. So put your mind to rest
about where your money is going--for as long as you have a mind. So far, the
cumulative effect of the drug, the time pocket and endlessly performing the
same song has driven every Single insane, some in spectacularly fatal
ways." Qualls's smile turned ugly, and he took the green wafer from the
tip of the Hydra's tentacle. "I look forward to seeing its effect on
you." He nodded to The Dealer.
A
probing tentacle found my mouth and forced it open. I tried to bite the
leathery alien flesh, but my teeth made no impression and I gagged on the
bitter taste. And then Qualls deftly stuck his own finger into my open mouth.
The green wafer touched my tongue and instantly dissolved, leaving a faint
yeasty taste, and all my resistance dissolved with it.
My body
snapped rigid and I fell back onto the bed, staring at the ceiling through a
thickening red haze. Fire raced through my veins. Through a deep and increasing
roaring I heard Qualls say, his voice two octaves too low, "We'll leave
him in here and simply transport the dressing room to your ship."
"This
dose is not sufficient for us to begin programming," The Dealer rumbled.
"He will require another in space."
"Fine.
He's paying for it."
Their
voices whirled away, lost in the roar, which fragmented into other voices,
singing voices, a thundering chorus of voices belting out every song I had ever
heard. No, not many voices, just one voice, multiplied a thousand times...my
voice...
The
initial paralysis suddenly left me and I levitated from the bed, weightlessly
bouncing against the ceiling. With just a little more effort I knew I could
pass right through it and join those voices in orbit, only a few kilometres
straight up...I had power, strength, I could do anything...
I
reached out for the energy streaming from the glow-tube and wove beams of light
around my fingers, changing their colors and flinging them against the walls,
laughing as blue and green mixed to cyan, red and blue to magenta, green and
red to yellow...
Then the
colors whirled together, forming a rainbow maelstrom I could no longer control.
The colors darkened, deepened to thick, inky black, blinding me, the thunder of
the whirlpool drowned out the voices...it sucked me in, swallowed me...and spat
me out again onto a wet Fistfight City street beneath a garish green holosign,
naked inside thin pajamas. I was cold, I was hungry--and small, so small.
No! I screamed. I don't want to
be back here! But I looked up read the sign even though I didn't want to:
"Deeplove Orphanage." Then my gaze went lower, to the sliding metal
gate, standing ajar, and I knew I had just short-circuited the Gatekeeper and
escaped, and I knew I had to run because I could hear the alarms ringing inside
and they'd be after me, but my feet wouldn't move and I looked down and saw that
I didn't have feet, I had orange crablegs like a Hydra's, and my legs had
joined into a stalk, and my arms were twisting into tentacles, and I opened my
mouth to scream but all that came out was an alien shriek that echoed back from
the walls of the orphanage as laughter...
...and
then I was lying on the bed in my dressing room, shaking and shivering and
sweating, and Meta was leaning over me.
Another
hallucination, I thought dimly. She'll turn into something horrible in a
minute.
But she
stayed the same rather plain girl she'd always been. "Kit, are you all
right? I saw Qualls and those other--things--come out, but when I knocked you
didn't answer. I was afraid you were sick..."
It
couldn't be Meta. The door was locked. "Door--locked--"
Meta
grinned. "I have one of Mr. Qualls's keychips."
It definitely
couldn't be Meta. "You could--couldn't--"
"I
stole it at the hotel. He tried to lock me in my room."
I
managed to raise myself up. "Got to--got to go--"
"No,"
Meta said firmly. "Lie down. You're sick--"
"Not
sick...drugged." I could feel reality slipping away, voices and monsters
gibbering in my mind, and I clutched her arms, desperate to feel something
solid. "Qualls. Help me--"
"All
right, all right." Meta looked around, spotted my bag and grabbed it.
"Can you walk?"
"Have--to--"
Clinging to her I made it as far as the door, while the dressing room turned
inside out in my head and Meta sprouted green leaves. "Get us out--the
streets--we can hide there." Fat Sloan's, I thought. Rain. Maybe he can help...
"Just
like in your song!" Meta almost squealed.
"Only--you're
rescuing me," I said, and hoped, as we stepped out into the misty
night, that was true.
#
CHAPTER TWELVE
Flash is
called flash because it acts instantly (as I'd already discovered) and because
its effects recur in ever-shorter bursts until it's eliminated from the body.
For the next few hours I'd be out of my mind more than I was in it--and might
not know the difference.
Meta
headed for the gate. "Qualls--" I said, resisting.
"The
security people come with the stadium, don't they?"
Did
they? Yeah, they did. I nodded.
"Then
just leave it to me."
I didn't
have much choice. Neither my brain nor my body were exactly at their best. Only
Meta's arm kept me upright.
A
frowning security guard met us at the gate. "Passes?"
"I'm
with him," Meta said sweetly, and I managed to lift my head. The guard
shone a flashlight in my face. His eyes widened.
"Sorry,
Mr. Nebula--"
"Oh,
label me Andy, gladeye," I said. "Everyone else does...
did...didee-da-dit-da-dit..." My words turned into phosphorescent
balloons, and I waved good-bye as they lifted into the sky.
The
guard looked up, then back down at me. "Is he all right?" His voice
started three octaves below middle C and screeched to a high C-sharp in the
space of four words. I winced.
"Should
be a singer, gladeye! What a range...range...range, range on the home..."
The guard sprouted bovine horns.
"He's
just--happy," Meta said. "Happy to be home. We're going out
celebrating!"
"Looks
to me like he's already been celebrating," the guard said. "Well,
enjoy yourself, Mr.--Andy."
"Moo!
Moooo!" I said to him, and suddenly everything snapped back to normal. I
straightened abruptly. "Um--I mean--thank you very much." I turned to
Meta. "Come along, my dear." Taking her arm, I led her grandly down
the street.
Behind
us, a clamor abruptly arose from the stadium and the guard's communicator
squawked. "Uh-oh," I said.
"What's
going on?" Meta started to turn around, just as the guard shouted,
"Stop! Mr. Nebula, stop!"
I
grabbed Meta's hand. "Run!"
"A
minute ago you couldn't even walk!" Meta shouted above the thudding of our
feet on the pavement.
Sirens
wailed from somewhere ahead. "Police--and ambulance!" I shouted.
"Faster!" My blood blazed anew, filling me with energy. This
was what flash was all about! I ran as fast as I could, almost dragging Meta,
laughing out loud as shockwaves of colour exploded around us. Green fire burned
in our wake, silver stars burst from our mouths and drifted to the ground like
snow--
The flash
ended. "Kit, stop! Stop!" Meta screamed.
I
stopped. Meta broke free and stumbled away from me, sobbing, clutching her arm,
and I saw my handprint outlined in red on her skin. "What's wrong with
you? What's going on?"
The
manic energy had vanished. I felt weak, sick--and lost. I stared around. How
far had we run? Blank brick walls surrounded us. I could still hear the sirens,
slowing, fading, back at the stadium. "Meta, I'm sorry! I didn't mean
to--it's the drug--"
"What
drug? I thought--a sedative, to knock you out--"
"No..."
My knees gave out and I sat down abruptly on the curb. "No, Meta.
He--" I took a deep breath. "He gave me flash."
Her
hands flew to her mouth. "Kit, no!"
I nodded
miserably. "And that's not all...I can't go back, Meta. I've got to hide
from him, hide until he gives up."
Meta sat
down on the curb beside me. "Then I can't either!"
"What?"
Awful realization hit me. "Oh, Meta--I'm sorry, I didn't--" Rage
suddenly exploded in me like a volcano, rage at my stupidity and blindness. I
roared my anger and self-loathing at the top of my lungs, pounding my thighs
with my fists--then I raised my hands high over my head, screaming, and brought
them down as claws to rake at my face--
--and
something stopped me, some force that dared to stand against my fury. I could
feel my anger coiled under my skin like vicious, poisonous black snakes and
suddenly it turned outward, toward whatever it was that dared to thwart my--
And then
the flash passed, and I found myself standing over Meta, fingers clawed, her
hands holding my wrists. I jerked free of her and stumbled back, dragging the
back of my hand across my froth-flecked lips. "Meta...I can't--you've got
to leave, get away from me. I was going--I could have--"
"I've
got nowhere to go," Meta cried. "You know this city, I don't. And if
I go back to Qualls--if he's as bad as you say--"
"But
I--" I covered my face with my hands, took a deep breath and tried to
control the shaking. The flash was a time bomb in my blood. The first dose hit
hardest, I'd heard that often enough...but how hard? How long? Yet Meta was
right. I couldn't leave her, she wouldn't last six hours on the street, and I
couldn't send her back to Qualls. I'd gotten her into this, I had to get her
out. I leaned against the nearest wall. "I'm all right now. The lucid
periods should last longer and longer, and I've never heard of a dose lasting
longer than a few hours." And after that? How long before I began craving
the next dose? Well, one problem at a time. "Just...watch me. If I start
acting strange, stay clear until--until it's over."
"But
what if you try to hurt yourself again?"
"Maybe
you should let me," I muttered.
"Don't
be stupid!" The words came out like a verbal slap.
I
couldn't help grinning a little. "Thanks, I needed that."
She came
closer. "So where will we go? "
"Fat
Sloan's. It's a flop--um, a hotel. A friend sent me a message to meet him
there."
"Can
you trust him?"
I opened
my mouth to say yes--and stopped. Could I trust Rain? I hardly knew him.
And he was a Hydra, like The Dealer. Maybe he was a friend of The Dealer's, and
sent the message just to ensure that I escaped the stadium, I'd still run
straight into their clutches. After all, Qualls had reminded me of the message
waiting for me on the terminal... "Maybe not. So forget Fat Sloan's. We'll
just hole up around here until I'm--normal. Then tomorrow, I'm putting you on
the first ship to Carstair's Folly."
"Kit--"
"No
arguments. Qualls is dangerous--and right now, so am I. I'm getting you away.
Then I'll just have myself to worry about."
"But
they gave you flash, Kit. You're going to need help--"
"My
problem. Not yours."
Her lips
pressed together. "Fine."
"Good.
Now..." I didn't know exactly where we were, but I knew the neighborhood.
No good for street-singing, but not bad for hiding. I used to have three or
four "addresses" in this district--mostly abandoned warehouses. All I
needed was a signpost. I started up the street.
Meta
watched me carefully as we splashed along the potholed pavement. "Are
you--normal, right now?" she said finally.
My heart
skipped a beat. "I think so," I said cautiously.
"Just
checking." She shrugged. "It's hard to tell, with you."
I
laughed and took a playful swipe at her head. "Why you--"
She
danced out of reach and I ran after her, and for a few seconds as we played
tag, I forgot everything else--
--right
up until the peaceforcer car slowly rounded the corner far behind us. I saw it
first and lunged at Meta. "Meta--"
"You
sure are slow for such a great dancer--" she taunted, then must have seen
something in my eyes, because she stopped and turned around. "Maybe you
could just tell them about Qualls--"
"Not
with flash in my blood. That's a crime all by itself. Run!" I dashed down
the street. Maybe they hadn't seen us...
They
must have had nightsight. I heard the whine of their powerful electric motor
and suddenly the whole front of the car lit up with blinding light that made
the street brighter than day--and showed us only too clearly there was nowhere
to hide.
But it
also revealed street signs up ahead: Warehouse Road Four and Thrustfire
Boulevard. "Got it!" I cried. "Come on!"
We
reached the corner with the 'forcers half a block behind but gaining fast. I
dragged Meta out of the light and across Thrustfire, then dodged immediately
down a narrow space between two buildings. We reached another alley, parallel
to Thrustfire, just as the police car squealed around the corner. As we ducked
into the cross-alley the flash of a spotlight speared the space between the
buildings where we'd just been. "I've still got my old timing," I
said gleefully. "Who's slow?"
"Don't
stop!" Meta cried, tugging at my hand.
"Not
that way. This way!" Back into the narrow slot between the buildings we
went. The whine of the 'forcers' car slowed and stopped; a door unlatched.
"They'll be down here any second," I whispered, stooping over and
searching the base of the building on the right. "This place had better still
be--got it!"
"Got
what?"
I bent
down and lifted up the boards that covered a small basement window, its glass
long-vanished. "After you."
She
hesitated. "It's dark."
"Well,
wait a sec and the 'forcers will light it up for you--"
Without
another word she lowered herself through and disappeared. I sat down, poked my
legs into the basement, slid forward--and stuck. My heart raced. Eight
months--I'd grown-- "Pull!" I whispered fiercely to Meta, and felt
her grab my legs and tug on them. I pushed with all my strength.
Footsteps
echoed from the street. The 'forcers would find me, half in and half out,
caught like a rat--
I felt
myself transform, my clothes turning to gray fur, my face elongating, sprouting
whiskers, my teeth growing long and sharp. I could smell the human coming,
smell his sweat and the sharp metallic scent of his horrible rat-killing club,
and I wriggled frantically and suddenly was free, leaving fur and skin behind
but dropping into wonderful darkness. Quick as thought I turned around and closed
the jaws of the trap, and seconds later heard the heavy tread of the human
passing by, never knowing the rats he sought were close enough to bite him.
Ignoring
the squeaking of the little rat who shared my hole, I curled myself up nose to
tail and went blissfully to sleep.
#
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
The next
morning I was more-or-less myself, except for a badly scraped shoulder and a
torn shirt. But I didn't know how long it would last. With Meta still
protesting she wanted to stay with me, I set out for the Spaceport.
"I
don't know who Qualls and the Hydras have looking for us," I told Meta as
we emerged, blinking in the morning light, onto still-deserted Thrustfire
Boulevard. "For all I know the 'forcers on Qualls's payroll. That means
back alleys and zig-zags, all the way. Stay close."
"Don't
worry," Meta said. I looked at her dirty clothes and face and bedraggled
hair, and knew I must look just as bad. Good-bye Andy Nebula, interstellar rock
star, hello streetslug Kit.
The trip
took half a day. More than once we dodged 'forcers, ducking into dark passages
that stank of garbage and human waste, slipping through cracks I used to fit
down easily that were now barely wide enough, hiding behind gutted vehicles. As
we neared downtown more and more transports and personal vehicles crowded the
streets. The people filling the sidewalks didn't give us a second glance after
the first one of contempt. "It's like they don't even see us!" Meta
complained said after one particularly overdressed female passed us by.
"Can't they tell we're in trouble, that we need help?"
"They
see people like us all the time." I pointed to a gray-haired woman slumped
in a doorway. "If they tried to help us, they might have to help everyone.
They're busy people; they don't have the time. Besides, we don't want
any notice, remember?"
"I guess
not." Meta glared at another woman, who quickened her steps. "But I
don't like being treated like a dog left behind."
I
shrugged. Nothing had made me feel more at "home" than the way that
woman's eyes had flicked past me. Andy Nebula was only skin deep. Under that
skin was Kit.
And
under Kit's skin was flash. I said nothing to Meta, but I could feel it working
away, bursts of tingling traveling from fingertips to spine, phantom itches
appearing and disappearing. Less than a day after my first dose, and--I licked
dry lips. I wanted more. Right now that was all it was--want--but I knew in a
few short hours it would be more than want; it would be need.
I had to
get Meta away before then. I began to take more risks, crossing streets at main
intersections, counting on the growing crowds to hide us from passing 'forcers.
Finally the glass-and-steel facade of the Spaceport terminal came into sight,
and I stopped long enough to open my bag and take out Andy Nebula's credit
chip. "I don't want to linger," I said to Meta. "We go in, I buy
your ticket," (if this thing still works, I thought), "and you head
for the departure lounge--I don't care how long it is until you lifts. You'll
be safe in there."
"What
about you?"
"Don't
worry about me. I can look after myself."
Meta
said nothing, but looked skeptical.
Down the
street, across another, and into the terminal building. Holosigns competed with
vidscreens for attention. An old man sat playing a stringsynth--badly--his case
open at his feet. Meta in tow, I sought departure information. A vidscreen
sensed me passing and burst into life. "Andy Nebula!" it yelled.
I froze
and stared at it. My face filled the screen as the voice-over continued,
"the Murdoch IV-born teenaged Sensation Single who performed for 30,000
screaming fans at Brankston Memorial Stadium last night, today is on the run.
He's the prime suspect in the murder of Marcel Roy, forty-six standard, his
stage manager, who was knifed backstage shortly after the concert. Nebula's
manager, Samuel Qualls, told 'forcers Nebula and Roy had come close to blows on
more than one occasion. Their dispute may have been drug-related, Qualls said;
Nebula is a flash-user and Roy may have been his supplier..."
I
grabbed Meta and hurried her away, ducking into a short hallway leading to a
cleaning-supply room. Meta shook free and backed away, staring at me. "You
don't believe that, do you?" I cried. "I didn't kill Roy. And I'm not
a flash-user, either!" Or wasn't, I thought bitterly. "Meta, Marcel
came to warn me. He told me to get away before Qualls came--but I didn't make
it. Qualls knew I was trying to run, he must have guessed Marcel had warned me,
and--" I shook my head at the sick cleverness of it all. "He killed
Marcel, made me the suspect, and told them I'd run off, all the while thinking
I was locked in my dressing room. He would have smuggled me off to Hydra and no
one would have ever known what had happened to me. I would have just dropped
out of sight. But you messed things up for him by helping me to get out for real."
I looked at the credit chip in my hand. "As soon as I use this, the
'forcers will know. They'll find me in minutes."
"Let
them!" Meta cried. "Tell them the truth. Turn yourself in. At least
you'll be in their hands and not Qualls's."
It made
sense, now I knew the 'forcers weren't working for Qualls--though it was a hard
pill to swallow for an old streetslug. "You're right. But first you're
getting out of here."
Meta
nodded. "I think I'm ready to go home now," she said in a small
voice. "In your Single, street life seemed so--romantic--"
"I
know," I said. "And it's not. It's dirty and hard and sometimes very
short. And you've only seen the surface, Meta. You haven't seen the worst parts
of this city, or the worst people."
"Except
Qualls."
"Except
Qualls. He's as bad as they come." I could hear the newsvid blaring my
story again. "Let's get out of here."
I found
a bank of vidscreens displaying departures to the Pleasure Planets; there was
one late that evening. I memorized the ship number and headed for the appropriate
ticket counter.
I'd lost
my edge, living as Andy Nebula, or I would have seen them leaning against the
mirrored pillars long before I did. I grabbed Meta's arm again. "Stand
very still."
Like one
of my flash-induced hallucinations, a young man in mirrorcloth materialized in
front of me. He was thinner, and his eyes had begun to gray, but his smile was
as nasty as ever. "Hey, flashmates," he drawled. "Scan who's
back in our orbit."
Meta
drew closer to me. "Who--"
"They
label me Dry Ice, little X-zome. Maybe this streetslime you're with has told
you about me."
"Kit--"
I
squeezed her hand reassuringly, and wished someone would do the same for me.
"What's powering, Dry Ice?" I didn't have to turn around to know the
rest of the Ice Boys were surrounding me.
"You've
been playing with radwaste, gladeye. High-level. Our flashman says we take you,
he'll power us all for a month." Dry Ice shrugged. "So we take you,
gladeye. Or is that Mr. Nebula?"
He
hadn't drawn his knife; he was counting on his mates. They were all behind me,
blocking the way to the exits--
--to the
legal exits.
"No
need to call me Mr. Nebula, gladeye," I told Dry Ice. "I'm only Andy
Nebula when I'm dancing. Like--so!"
The move
was the climax of my Single, the high spinning leap that ended with a snap of
my foot into the chest of the dancebot that played the leader of the enemy
flashgang. Every time I'd performed it I'd imagined Dry Ice on the receiving
end. His eyes barely had time to widen before my foot smashed into him and sent
him flying back, tumbling over the stacked luggage of a man who turned on him angrily,
then thought better of it as Dry Ice's monomolecular-edged blade hissed from
its sheath.
By that
time, though, I had grabbed Meta and, with the Ice Boys in pursuit, dashed
straight toward the ticket desk. We smashed through the line in a flurry of screams,
scrambled madly over the desk itself, scattering datadiscs, charged through the
door beyond into another room, and crashed through the door at the back of that
into the huge cargo-sorting facility.
To our
left I saw daylight, and like a trapped animal I headed for it instinctively,
leaping over conveyor belts, almost dragging Meta. Seconds later we burst
through a door into the street, running for our lives.
Behind
us came the Ice Boys.
#
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
We
didn't have much head start, and we couldn't hope to outrun them. Still, we
ran, crashing into and over pedestrians who cursed at us, then saw the Ice Boys
coming and scrambled out of the way. Instinctively I headed for my home
territory, the dozen or so square blocks I knew the best. But I couldn't duck
into any of my hidey-holes with the Ice Boys breathing down my neck.
"I--can't--"
Meta panted.
"You've
got to." Dry Ice needed me in good shape to hand over to Qualls, but he
probably had no orders at all about Meta. "Just--a little further."
I was
hoping for a miracle--and I got it. We pounded around a corner and toward Fat
Sloan's. For a few seconds we were out of sight of the Ice Boys, but Fat
Sloan's would be no refuge--
Except
there stood Fat Sloan himself, filling the doorway. "Quick, Kit, in
here," he said, and stepped aside.
Any port
in a storm, I thought, and ducked through, Meta close behind. The moment we
were in the dingy lobby, Sloan moved back into the doorway, effectively
blocking it. I pushed Meta down behind the counter and crouched beside her.
Just in
time. "You see streetslime flowing by here, gladeye?" Dry Ice
demanded of Sloan.
"A
boy and a girl just passed. Turned left at the corner."
"More
thrust, flashmates!" Dry Ice shouted. Footsteps clattered away.
I stayed
put, the handle of a floor safe digging into my knee, until Fat Sloan loomed
over us. "They're gone."
"Gratitudes,
gladeye." I helped Meta up. "Our friend here is labeled
Fa--Sloan," I told her.
"My
pleasure," said Sloan, holding out one greasy hand.
Meta
accepted it gingerly and let go almost at once. "Thank you for hiding us,
Mr. Sloan."
"Anything
for an old friend like Kit."
"How
did you know we were running this way?" I asked him.
"This."
He tapped a keypad on the desk and four tiny vidscreens flickered to life,
showing the streets outside. On one of them the Ice Boys fanned out down a
garbage-strewn alley. "I like to see trouble before it gets here." He
grinned, a frightening sight. "Besides, I've been expecting you."
"Huh?"
"Your
Hydra friend told me you would be here last night. He seemed most perturbed
when you didn't show up."
Rain?
"Is he still here?" Was this a trap?
"No.
He left early this morning. " Sloan pulled a keychip out of a drawer.
"Here. The room's free for tonight. "
"What
if Dry Ice comes back? He may want to search the place."
Sloan
pulled something else out of the drawer, something black, with a handle and a
shiny black barrel. "He won't."
I
nodded, and took the keychip. "This way, " I said to Meta.
As we
reached the stairs, Sloan called, "Wait!" When I turned back he
tossed four mealpacs my way. "On the house."
"Thanks,
Sloan." I led Meta to the room--the same room I had shared with Rain. I
wondered if Sloan remembered that.
Meta sat
on the bed--or maybe "collapsed" would be better. "I don't like
your world. And I don't like your friends."
"I
don't like it either. And I don't have any friends here." I opened one of
the mealpacs. The smell reminded me just how hungry I really was, and brought
Meta upright again, swallowing. I handed her the one I'd opened and took
another for myself.
"Sloan--"
she began as she reached for her spoon.
"He's
not my friend. He never offered me a free room in the old days when I needed it
just as bad, that's for sure." I dug into the steaming stew inside the
pac.
"Then
why--?"
"I
don't know." And I don't like it, I thought, but all I could really think
about was the food. I hadn't had anything to eat since before the concert, and
a lot had happened since then.
Meta,
too, remained silent as we ate, but I could tell she was thinking over what I'd
said. "Maybe he's planning to call the 'forcers," she said at last.
I
snorted. "Sloan? He'd sooner go jogging."
Meta
stared at me for a minute, then giggled, the sound taking me back to the day
she'd sneaked into my dressing room. My last mouthful lost its taste. Look what
being my fan had gotten her into. "That I'd like to see," she said.
"I
wouldn't. Could cause earthquakes."
That set
her off again.
"And
what if he fell in the river? Floods!"
It was
good to hear her laugh, but I couldn't keep it up. For one thing, I ran out of
Sloan jokes. For another, I was too busy wondering what Sloan was really up to.
Would he try to sell us to the Ice Boys? No--he hated flashgangs. But--
"That's
it," I said. "He's planning to sell us out to Qualls."
Meta
started up. "Then hadn't we better--"
"He
won't do it right away," I said, thinking out loud. "He thinks we're
safely tucked away, so he won't be in a hurry. And he won't tell Qualls we're
here, or he might have to face the Ice Boys in earnest. He'll be calling
Qualls, planning a meeting, setting up a place to hand us over. We've got until
morning."
Meta
sighed and sat back again, pushing the hair off her face with both hands.
"Good. I don't think I could run another step."
"And,
of course," I went on, "we won't be here."
She
groaned. "More running? More hiding in basements? Anyone you meet could
recognize you. Sooner or later, he'll catch you."
"If
I'm still on the planet."
"If
you try to buy passage with your credit chip, they'll catch you. You said so
yourself."
"Who
said anything about buying passage?" I pointed at her. "As you should
know, there are other ways to get off a planet."
"Stow
away?" Meta gaped at me, then grinned. "I like it!"
"I
thought you would." I yawned. "If I were you, I'd get some sleep. In
fact, I'm not you, and I'm going to get some sleep anyway." I sat down in
the chair and leaned back, stretching out my legs. "We'll have to sneak
out in the middle of the night..."
"I
could use a nap," Meta admitted. She started to lie back, hesitated,
leaned over and sniffed the dingy covers, then shrugged and stretched out.
Within seconds her even breathing and the slow rise and fall of her chest told
me she slept.
I sat up
straight again. I'd lied; I couldn't sleep. Jittery energy filled me, along
with a growing hunger I knew eating couldn't cure, a hunger like a deep itch
that couldn't be scratched. Flashwish. And it was just beginning.
All my
plans would be useless if I couldn't control it. It could make me do something
stupid or reckless. What I feared most was that it would make me beg Sloan for
flash. I knew he sold it. All I had to do was ask and he'd open up that little
safe and take out a vial filled with small green wafers...
Already
the idea tempted my body, teased my mind. I got to my feet and started pacing.
Ignore it, I told myself. Plan how you're going to stow away.
Meta had
shown me the easiest way--sneak into a cargo module. But we'd have to be very
careful. Not all modules were pressurized, and neither were some holds. At
least the destination didn't matter--anywhere off Murdoch IV would suit me,
anywhere I could talk freely to the authorities and the media about what Qualls
had been up to.
I found
myself almost running from wall to wall. I forced myself to slow, then to sit
down; then I hopped up again and went down the hallway to the bathroom that
served the whole floor. I thought a shower might make me feel better.
It
didn't. I came back to the room wet, clean--and hurting. Meta half-woke as I
came in, but rolled over and went immediately back to sleep again. I sat down
and clenched my fists and resolved not to move from that chair, no matter how
bad it got.
It was a
resolution I couldn't keep. I dozed, but then woke with a gasp, heart racing,
body soaked in sweat. Pain stabbed my right elbow, skewered my left knee. I
moaned. Meta mumbled something, then sat up, blinking sleepily, and said,
"Kit...?"
"Go
back to sleep," I said--but then couldn't suppress a grunt as agony flared
in my left wrist. Meta sat up straighter.
"What
is it? What's wrong?"
"Flash--"
She
pushed herself away from me. "You said it was gone!"
I
laughed, a little wildly. "Oh, it's gone, all right. That's the
problem." I doubled over as pain bludgeoned me in the stomach.
"This," I gasped, "is withdrawal."
Meta
pulled her knees up against her chest. "What can I do?"
I'd had
no idea it would be this bad. And it had only begun. I couldn't beat it; I knew
that now. Not on my own.
"Find
something--to tie me up with," I gasped out. "Tie me to the chair.
Don't let me up--whatever happens. Unh!"
"Kit,
I can't--"
"Do
it!" I screamed. She stared at me, eyes wide, then scrambled off the bed,
stripped the sheet from it and tore four long strips from it, while I hunched
over in the chair, rocking with pain. Tears streamed down my face.
"Hurry!"
"I'm
hurrying!" She grabbed my arms and lashed each one to the chair, did the
same with my legs, then backed away from me again as though I might turn into
something horrible.
I might.
"You don't have to watch--" My throat squeezed closed, choking off
the words.
"I
can't--I won't leave you!"
"You
won't like it."
"Neither
will you!"
She was
right.
#
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
The pain grew until I couldn't stand it--and then grew more. It
flayed the skin from my body and the flesh from my bones, poured acid through
my veins, drove slivers of ice into my eyes, filled my throat with ground
glass. And all the time I knew exactly what I needed to end the agony: one
little wafer, one insignificant, unimportant wafer, one tiny dose of flash.
I writhed and screamed, blood and spittle dribbling down my chin.
I begged Meta until I was hoarse, "Please, let me up! I've got to find--I
have to have--" But Meta buried her face in the pillow, her hands over her
ears.
After what seemed days, but was probably less than an hour, Fat
Sloan opened the door. Adrenaline surged through me. "Sloan, you can get
me flash, I know you can, Sloan, please, please!"
Meta's head jerked up. "No!"
Sloan ignored her and came over to me. "Well," he said.
"So little Kit, always so afraid of flashmen, is a flashman himself."
"Sloan..." I moaned. "Help me..."
"Of course, gladeye." Sloan drew a glass tube out of his
shirt pocket and shook a little green wafer into his palm.
I trembled and drooled like a starving mutt. "Thank you,
Sloan," I whispered, like a prayer. "Thank you, thank you--"
"Don't mention it." Sloan delicately took the wafer
between his grimy thumb and forefinger and leaned forward. "Open
wide--"
I opened my mouth, tongue extended, panting in short little gasps,
waiting for the blessed touch of the wafer--
And Meta screamed "Stop!" and threw herself between us.
The wafer spun away, smashing to green dust against the wall.
Sloan's smile turned to snarl. "I'm just giving him what he
wants--what they all want!" he spat. "You can't stop me."
"Meta, get out of his way!"
She ignored me. "I won't let you do it!"
Sloan laughed, a nasty sound. "I don't think you can stop
me." He stepped forward again, a moving mountain of flesh.
But Meta held her ground. "I won't let you," she
repeated--and held up the knife I'd put in my bag. She handled it clumsily, but
it was very long and very sharp, and Sloan stopped. The sight of it filled me
with rage. How dare she use my knife to stop Sloan from giving me what I
needed? Who'd asked her to interfere?
Sloan
snorted. "Have it your way, little girl. But don't expect him to thank you
for it." He went out, slamming the door.
Meta turned toward me with a grin--and I spat at her and called
her every obscene name I had learned on the street. "I'll kill you!"
I screamed. "You're protein, you filthy little witch! I'll take that knife
and--" I went into graphic detail, punctuated by my own moans and gasps
when pain crashed over me.
My words drove Meta back against the wall, her knees pulled up
tight, but she didn't hide her face this time--she just stared at me, rocking
back and forth, tears running down her cheeks.
A century later the pain ebbed, and consciousness with it.
I woke in darkness. Every bone and muscle ached, sandpaper lined
my throat, and I stank. But I could think clearly again.
Meta slept, curled up on the bed like a cat, a faint glitter of
reflected light from the tavern holosign across the road showing where the
knife still lay by her outstretched hand. I shook my head. Little Meta,
standing up to Fat Sloan on my account. Now that's what I call a fan. I opened
my mouth and croaked, "Meta." She didn't stir. "Meta, wake
up!"
"Mmmm?" She rolled over, then suddenly sat up and stared
at me, her eyes wide and white in the darkness. "Kit?"
"Yes. It's over. You can let me go."
She didn't move. "How can I be sure?" she whispered.
I opened my mouth to say, don't be silly, you can be sure because
I'm telling you--but the words stuck in my throat. I had to swallow hard before
I could speak. "I'm sorry, Meta. I'm so sorry." Remembering the names
I had called her, I wanted to sink through the floor. "That wasn't me
talking--it was the flash."
"You said you'd kill me."
"Meta, it's late, and we've got to get out of here tonight,
before Sloan hands us over to Qualls. If you don't untie me, they'll catch
me--and they'll put me back on flash again first thing. And then all this will
have been for nothing."
She hesitated a moment longer, then grabbed the knife, sliced
through the cloth strips tying me down, and stepped back warily, holding her
weapon at the ready in case I leaped at her.
I couldn't have leaped from that chair if it had been on fire.
Every movement hurt. Very slowly I straightened my stiffened legs and managed
to stand, then hobbled over to the door and turned on the light. I surveyed myself
in the cracked mirror--not a pretty sight. Dried blood and spit covered my
blotchy face and the front of my torn synthileather shirt. Slowly and painfully
I pulled it off, washed as best I could in the sink, then toweled off and
limped over to my bag for a clean shirt--simple white cloth this time. Meta
watched me, never lowering the knife. When I'd finished, I held out my hand.
"I think I should carry that."
For a moment she didn't move; then, abruptly, she held it out to
me, hilt-first. I took it. "You were very brave," I said.
"I couldn't let you take it, not after...what I'd seen."
"Would you have actually used the knife on him?" I held
it up so the blade flashed. "Could you do something like that?"
"I--I think I could. To protect a friend." Her mouth
quirked upward. "Anyway, he sure thought I could."
To protect a friend. I thought again of what I had called her, of
everything she'd been through because of me. Some friend. Ashamed to look at
her, I slid the knife into its sheath and clipped it to my belt, then closed
the bag, picked it up--and stopped, reconsidering. Nothing in it was really
important, and I could do without the weight. I opened it again, took out my
Andy Nebula credit chip, and kicked the bag under the bed. "Orbital,"
I said. "Our next trick is getting past Fat Sloan."
"Won't he be asleep?"
"His security systems won't. He doesn't like people coming
and going without him knowing. Especially us. We're worth money."
"So how do we get out?"
"I'm not sure yet." I looked at the window, toying with
the idea of turning the rest of the sheet into a rope, but thought better of
it. The tavern across the street would still be full of people and we didn't
want a crowd of witnesses.
So if we couldn't go down--we'd have to go up. "The
roof."
I turned off the light, slowly opened the door and peered both
ways. It was unusually quiet, for Sloan's; nobody arguing or screaming. I
slipped out, Meta behind me, and crept to the stairs as silently as the rickety
old floor would let me. Dim yellow light shone into the stairwell from the
lobby; I wondered if Sloan was down there, overflowing that stool of his.
I wasn't about to creep down to find out. Instead, we crept up,
step by creaking step. I expected every minute to see Sloan appear at the
bottom of the stairs, blocking out the light like an eclipsing moon, but
everything remained quiet. Two flights up the stairs ended in a red wooden door
with no handle. A single dim glowtube barely lit it.
"Dead end?" Meta glanced down the stairs.
"No," I said. The door probably had a sonic-activated
lock--but the wood around it was as rotten as Sloan's heart. "Stand
back." I braced myself against the stair railing and kicked as hard as I
could. The door crashed open, splinters flying, and from somewhere below us a
piercing beep! beep! beep! began. "Oops," I
said, grabbed Meta's hand and ran out onto the flat roof, toward the fire
escape that led down into the back alley.
Sloan had been in the lobby; as we reached the fire escape
he appeared, puffing, in the shattered doorway. "Stop!"
"I don't think so," I yelled back, grabbing the railing.
Something in Sloan's hand cracked and spat fire, and a large chunk
of the knee-high wooden wall girdling the roof exploded in splinters, one of
which scored my cheek, bringing a warm trickle of blood. "Next time I
won't miss!" Sloan shouted.
I pushed Meta onto the fire escape. Crack! Another bullet whined
past, so close my insides quivered. "Move!" I shouted to Meta, and
swung onto the fire escape myself.
Before I could start down it the gun cracked one more time--and
something smashed me over the railing into empty space.
#
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
"Kit!"
Meta screamed.
I
probably would have screamed, too, if my breath hadn't been knocked out when I
crashed into the side of the fire escape after my foot caught in the railing. I
hung there, gasping soundlessly for air, dangling by one leg over three stories
of darkness, and expecting any moment to feel the beginning of pain from the
bullet wound, or blood running down past my face. But I didn't. Oh, there was
plenty of pain, not just from my back, where whatever-it-was had hit me, but
also from my abused ankle, my bruised chest and face, and everything in
between. None of it felt like it had been caused by Sloan's bullet, though.
I tried
to pull myself back up and couldn't. "Meta, help!"
"You're
alive!"
"I
won't be if you don't give me a hand!" I could feel my foot slipping.
"Hurry!"
With her
help and a pulled muscle or two I managed to get a safe grip on the outside of
the fire escape, free my foot, and clamber back over the railing onto the
stairs--where I discovered the chunk of wood that had smashed into my back
after being chipped off the wall around the roof by Sloan's bullet. Maybe luck
hadn't completely deserted me after all. "Come on!" I said, took two
steps down, and stopped so suddenly Meta ran into me.
"Now
what?" she cried.
"Sloan's
not here."
"Good!
Now go!"
"But
he should be here--all he had to do was cross the roof. That means--" I
climbed back to the top of the fire escape, then raised my head slowly over the
edge of the roof. No Sloan. "This way! He must be heading for the bottom
of the fire escape!"
Back
onto the roof we went, back through the door I had kicked open, back down the
dark stairs, and out through the lobby. We burst out into the street and
ran--or, in my case, hobbled quickly--past a half-dozen men, shouting
drunkenly, coming out of the tavern. As we reached the corner I glanced back
and saw Sloan emerge from the alley leading behind his flophouse. He shouted
something and shook his fist, and I waved at him before grabbing Meta's hand
and plunging into the darkness of a side street.
Every
step hurt as we zigzagged from block to block, ignoring and ignored by the
shadowy, ragged people we passed. Finally I stopped beneath the flickering blue
light of a tube station, panting in time with Meta and counterpoint to the
assorted throbbings in my body. "Should be--safe enough," I gasped
out. "Sloan--not one for running."
"I
thought you were dead back there. I thought he shot you!"
"So
did I. But no harm done..." To prove it, I ran my hands over my chest--and
swore.
"What
is it?"
"My
pocket is empty!" I checked it again to be sure.
"So?"
"That's
where I put my credchip. It must have fallen out when I went over the
railing."
"You
said you couldn't use it without Qualls or the 'forcers finding out where you
are, anyway."
"Yeah,
but in an emergency..." I shook my head. "Well, better Andy Nebula's
fortune falls three stories than Andy Nebula."
"You're
not Andy Nebula any more," Meta said, sounding almost bitter. She looked
up and down the empty street. "Now where?"
"Spaceport.
We still have to get off this planet, and now--" I patted my pocket.
"We have no choice. We have to stow away."
I led
the way along deserted back streets. As we trudged along, Meta kept her head
down. Finally she said, "Kit..."
"Yeah?
Here, let's go this way--," down a narrow, dank alley. Overhead, first
light grayed the clouds.
Meta
halted. "Stop for a minute."
"Time's
economic, gladeye."
"I
said stop!"
I
stopped.
Meta
looked at me. "Are you really all right?"
"Of
course I'm all right. The bullet never touched me."
"I'm
not talking about the bullet."
I was
silent for a moment. "I said awful things, didn't I?"
She didn't
reply.
"That
wasn't me, it was the flash." Still nothing. "You do understand that,
don't you?"
"I--I
guess so." She folded her arms over her chest, hugging herself. "But
it--you scared me. And before, even before Sloan's, you'd--one minute you'd be
fine, and the next--"
"I
know." I took her shoulders. "Meta, I swear, it was the flash. And
it's over. I'm over it. I'm my old self again."
She
looked down. "Your old self wasn't always nice either."
"I
didn't want to get you involved, that's all." But that wasn't all. I just
hadn't wanted to be bothered. I'd been so wrapped up in my plans for my career
that she'd been a nuisance I just wanted to be rid of. But then when I'd needed
her, I hadn't hesitated to involve her--in the worst possible way. She could have
been the one the bullet hit, back there on the roof, or...
Or,
under the influence of flash, I could have killed her.
I let go
of her. "Meta, I'm sorry for getting you into this--"
"I
got myself into it." She turned away. "Andy Nebula really doesn't exist,
does he? It's all a big lie."
What
could I say? That's exactly what it was. "It's just--show business. You're
not supposed to take it seriously."
"Not
supposed to be as stupid as I was, you mean."
"That's
not--"
"Oh,
it's all right. My parents always told me I was wasting my time 'listening to
that trash.' They kept telling me to grow up." She ran her fingers over
the damp stone of the graffiti-stained wall. "I guess I am. But I don't
like it much."
"I'm
sorry," I said again. I couldn't think of anything else.
"Yeah,
well." She smiled, just a little. "I wanted to tell Bekka all about
my romantic adventures with Andy Nebula. I guess I won't have to make them up,
after all." Her smile went away. "But tell me the truth. Are you
really all right?"
"Yes,"
I said, but I wondered. Deep down inside there was still a strange little
feeling, a not-quite itch, that made me wonder what would happen the next time
someone offered me flash. I hoped I'd never find out. "We'd better hurry.
We'll want to get to the spaceport before it's full light."
Ten
minutes later we hid in a dark doorway across the street from the terminal,
looking for any sign of the Ice Boys. Nothing moved. Of course, they could be
hiding and watching like us. That street looked awfully wide and empty. But we
had to cross it.
I straightened. "Look nonchalant," I
said, but as we walked into the open, I felt as conspicuous as if I were naked
and painted fluorescent green. Still, no shouts--or shots--echoed through the
pre-dawn twilight; no mirrorcloth-clad killers came swarming after us; we
crossed in perfect safety.
Was that
because they were waiting for us inside?
No. The
interior of the terminal was almost as deserted as the street had been, except
for a few passengers waiting for some early lift-off and a handful of bored
personnel yawning behind ticket counters. "It's too easy," I
muttered.
"Maybe
Qualls still thinks Sloan has you," Meta said.
That
made sense. If he thought I'd already been captured, he had no need to set a
new trap. And Sloan wouldn't tell him he'd lost us until he was sure he
couldn't get us back. "Well, then," I said, "all we have to
worry about is sneaking on board a spaceship." I looked at Meta.
"You're the expert there..."
"Easy.
First you find your favorite singer's dressing room..."
I
grinned. "Right idea. But instead of a dressing room, we look for a cargo
module."
On a
Pleasure Planet security would have stopped us or shot us half a dozen times in
the next few minutes, but I guess nobody on Murdoch IV thought any cargo
arriving or departing from Fistfight City could possibly be worth interfering
with. We simply found a secluded, unmanned ticket counter--plenty of those at
that hour. Of course the door behind it into the cargo area was locked, but a
conveyor belt ordinarily took luggage from the counter back through the wall,
and the only thing sealing it off was a veil of flickering blue light.
"Explosives, drugs and weapons scan," I whispered to Meta as we
crawled through the twinkling beams, feeling nothing. "It couldn't care
less about stowaways."
We
emerged into semi-darkness in another room empty except for a few coveralls and
hardhats hung on hooks along the back wall. The conveyor belt continued through
that wall, into the large open space we had dodged through while escaping the
Ice Boys. Loud clangs and crashes from our right indicated some kind of work in
progress. This time we turned that way, deeper into the building's entrails. We
picked our way, banging shins every other step, it felt like, through a
spider's nightmare of conveyor belts, platforms and elevators, finally reaching
the entrance of a huge chamber from which spilled the noise and (at last!)
enough light to show us where we were putting our feet. Of course, it also showed
us the chamber's metal gate and armed guards, and beyond them, more guards
inspecting crates and boxes on one of the conveyor belts. Maybe Murdochians
weren't quite as trusting as I'd thought. "Now what?" Meta demanded.
I
studied the situation for a minute, then a few minutes more. Meta fidgeted and
once muttered something under her breath which I chose to ignore. "I think
I have it," I said finally. "But we'll need those coveralls we
saw..."
Ten
minutes later I strode confidently (with only a slight limp) up to the gate. I
grinned at the guards. "Hi, guys," I said, started past them--and
felt a meaty hand on my arm.
"Where's
your security badge, kid?"
"Huh?
It's right--" I put my hand on the left side of my chest, glanced down,
and swore. "It must have fallen off back in the locker room. I'll be right
back--" I turned to go, and suddenly the conveyor belt on which the crates
were being inspected whirred to life. The inspectors shouted and lunged at the
crates, but too late to stop the one furthest along from crashing off the end
of the belt, spilling glittery bits of something shiny and fragile across the
duracrete floor.
The
guards and I dashed over to rescue the remaining crates before they joined the
first. A wild-eyed woman kept frantically slapping at the controls. I could
have told her that was a waste of time, because I'd jammed the controls at the
other end of the belt. When we finally got all the crates off the belt and onto
the floor, the control-slapping woman led the other inspectors in a heated
argument with the guards over whose fault it all was.
"Well,
gotta get to work," I said cheerfully, and walked calmly into the loading
area. Once out of sight, I stopped and looked around. "Meta?" I
called cautiously.
"Here!"
She emerged, somewhat breathless, from between two crates. "I don't
believe it worked."
"Of
course it worked. My ideas always work." I ignored her withering look.
"Come on, let's see where we are."
The
crashing and banging we'd been hearing came from a single forklift moving hexagonal
containers into to a large orange container shaped rather like my dressing
room--a cargo module. Just what we were looking for, although that particular
one wouldn't do, since it was packed solid. But a couple of other modules also
awaited loading. In fact--I took another look at the wall we were peering
around.
"Meta!"
I whispered, and moved back from the light. "Do you see a control panel
anywhere?" I ran my hands along the wall.
"Here!"
Meta pointed to a small, protruding box aglow with a dozen green lights.
"Perfect!"
I said. "It's a pressurized cargo module. Whatever they're shipping in it
doesn't like vacuum, and since I don't, either..."
"But
how do we get in?"
"We
don't, if it's locked. But if it's not fully loaded yet, then--" I touched
the control panel, and the door slid open. Blue lights came on inside. I waved
Meta in. "After you."
#
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
It
shouldn't have been that easy.
It
wasn't.
Inside,
the module consisted of a long, narrow aisle with shelving on either side. The
shelves were empty.
"No
place to hide," said Meta as the door closed behind us. "Maybe this
module isn't going with the others."
"Maybe,"
I said. "But then why activate it? It takes energy to power it, and energy
is money. I think we're just early."
"But
the first person who opens the door--"
As if on
cue, the door opened. I froze and waited to be caught--but no one came in. I
could hear voices just around the corner, though, male and indistinct.
"All the way to the end," I whispered to Meta. "Quick!"
"But
there's nothing--"
"Move!"
She moved. The module ended in a bulkhead. "Bottom shelves," I said,
and replied to her puzzled look by lying down on the floor and squeezing onto
the lowermost shelf, at floor level. It was a tight fit; I could hardly
breathe, and had to turn my head sideways to keep my nose from pressing against
the cold metal underside of the shelf above me. It gave me a perfect view of
Meta wriggling with less difficulty under the shelves on the other side--and an
equally perfect view of the steel-toed work boots of the cargo handler who
clumped down the length of the module seconds later. A second pair of boots
followed.
"Lots
of room," said a voice. "We won't use half of it."
"Good,"
growled a second, deeper voice. "The fewer of these things I have to carry
the better."
"You
got that right. Ugliest critters I ever set my eyes on."
"Looked
in a mirror recently, Pete?"
"Shut
up, Dargo." They went out, but I met Meta's frightened eyes and shook my
head the fraction of a centimeter I could, warning her to stay quiet and stay
still. The boots came back. "So what do you suppose they use them
for?" said Pete.
"I
don't know. Food, maybe."
"That's
disgusting!"
"Have
you looked in a--"
"Oh,
suck vacuum." Out and back again; more banging noises over our heads.
"Maybe they're pets."
"Shut
up and load." After that they stayed silent, except for the occasional
grunt, as they moved in and out, gradually working their way toward the door. I
fought an overwhelming urge to sneeze and wondered what we were bunking with.
At last
they finished. I heard the door close, but the lights stayed on. As quickly as
I could--not very--I wormed out from under the shelf. Meta was quicker; she
stood up and screamed.
"Stop
that!" I said irritably. Then I stood up and almost screamed, too.
Locked
into magnetic holders every half-metre were transparent animal carriers filled
with--monsters. Reptilian, multi-legged, they had four glittering golden eyes
apiece on stalks atop long, narrow heads. Every eye locked on us when we
moved--and every mouth opened, revealing gums the colour of a dead man's face
and long black fangs. And then the lights went out.
"Kit..."
said Meta, voice quavering. "I'm going to scre--eee!"
"That's
me, that's me," I said, squeezing her arm.
"What
are they?"
"Food--pets--I
don't know. You heard as much as I did."
"Nobody
could eat those. " I felt her shudder.
"Well,
they can't get out. They're nothing to worry about."
"Why
did the lights go out? What's happening?"
"I
think they must be getting ready to load this module. We've almost made
it!"
"So
what do we do?"
"Sit.
Wait."
"For
what?"
"Lift-off."
I eased myself down onto the floor, and leaned back against the bulkhead.
"Remember, once we're in space it's too expensive to break the flight plan
to get rid of a stowaway. Whatever happens, at least we'll be away from
Fistfight City--and Qualls."
I heard
Meta sit beside me; I reached out for her and she flinched, then grabbed my
hand and squeezed--hard. "That's a little--ouch!--tight," I said.
"I'm
sorry." Meta loosened her grip. "It's just--I keep imagining
those--those things getting out, and--" She shuddered again. "I hate
snakes, and things like that."
"I
hate snakes and things like that, too," I said grimly. "And the
biggest snake I know is Qualls."
Meta
moved closer; I could feel her warmth. "Kit--"
"What?"
I closed my eyes; it made the unrelenting blackness easier to bear.
"Will
you--will you put your arm around me?"
My eyes
flew open. "Uh--"
"I
don't mean, like that, I just... " Her voice trailed off. "I
just want to be sure you're there."
I put my
arm around her shoulders. "Of course I'm here."
She
snuggled against me, her head on my chest. "Thank you," she
whispered.
After
that we sat in the silent darkness, waiting for whatever would happen next. Not
surprisingly, what happened next was we both fell asleep.
I
surfaced slowly, like a man trying to swim in thick mud, from a disturbed dream
involving running, fire and giant rats. I struggled to wakefulness and finally
jerked upright with a gasp, waking Meta. "What's wrong?" she cried.
"Bad
dream, that's all." I wiped cold sweat from my forehead. "Go back to
sleep." But I knew I wouldn't. That dream had come from flash. I knew
it. I had broken the physical addiction--hadn't I?--but the mental
effects--would I ever be free of them? And if one dose could do this to
me--what would have been left of me after two years on Hydra and a constant
diet of the stuff?
Two
years? In a time pocket, it would be more like thirty.
I
thought of all the other kids Qualls had passed on to The Dealer over the
years, and clenched my fists. He had a lot to answer for. A lot.
A bass
rumble shook the floor. "Meta?" I whispered.
"What?"
Her hand tightened in the folds of my shirt.
"They've
activated the lifters. We've done it!"
"Does
that mean we can get out of here soon?"
I
laughed and squeezed her close. "Soon," I said. "Very
soon."
The
rumble suddenly rose in pitch and volume. I had a fleeting feeling of crushing
weight before the gravsims overrode the acceleration--but then I frowned. Now I
was too light. "Must be a freighter," I muttered. "Their
gravsims are out of whack. It can't be a regular passenger ship..." I
wished I'd thought to see what ships were in port. Maybe I could have figured
out which one we were on--and where we were going. I thought about the
creatures surrounding us in the dark, then wished I hadn't. If we were going to
their home world, I didn't want to know.
I gave
the ship half an hour to break orbit, to ensure the captain would have no
inclination to return to Fistfight City. Then I woke Meta, who had dozed off
again, and climbed stiffly to my feet. "We must have slept for
hours," I groaned, trying to work the kinks out of my back and legs. I
stretched, accidentally touched the cold smooth surface of one of the animal
containers, and snatched my hand back as though burned.
Glad
Meta hadn't been able to see me, I felt my way down the module toward the door.
There had to be some way to open it from the inside... I fumbled around the
door's edges, and eventually something I touched clicked sharply, and the
module's blue interior lights came on. "That's better," I murmured,
and pushed the next button over. The door slid open.
To my
surprise, we weren't in a dark hold, but hooked up to a corridor, filled with
the same weird blue light as the module.
Meta
winced. "That hurts!"
"This
must be a real rustbucket," I said. "Weak gravsims and bad lighting.
I hope it holds together long enough to get us away." I stepped out of the
module and looked both ways. To the left the corridor ran about a dozen metres
and ended in another door. To the right it ended in a T-intersection. "Well,
let's go face the music," I told Meta, and strode down the corridor--no
need to hide; now we wanted to be found--stepped into the intersection,
looked left--and leaped back, crashing into Meta.
She
opened her mouth and I grabbed her and put my hand over it. Heart pounding, I
dragged her back to "our" module and slapped the button that closed
the door behind us, then released her and fell back against the wall.
Meta
stared at me. "Kit, what's wrong?"
My knees
gave out and I sank to the floor, watched eagerly by monsters. "The
Dealer," I whispered. "We're on The Dealer's ship!"
#
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Meta
turned white. "It can't be!"
"I
saw him--right out there!" I pointed at the door.
"Are
you sure?"
"I'd
recognize him anywhere." I shuddered. "He gave me flash."
"But
how can this be his ship? Nobody owns his own ship!"
That
stopped me, because she was right: no individual was that wealthy. Only large
corporations or governments could afford to run ships. And if The Dealer had
his own ship, why had he been a passenger on The Bullet--and why had I
been slated to go to Hydra on The Bullet?
I
struggled to my feet. "This must be a Hydran passenger liner! Without me,
Qualls's contract with The Dealer fell through, so Qualls wouldn't have any
reason to go to Hydra--but The Dealer still had to get home. So he had to buy a
ticket just like anyone else." Which meant all we had to do was avoid The
Dealer and find a crewperson--um, crewhydra.
But if
this was a passenger ship, why was The Dealer in the cargo section? The answer
seemed obvious--he had cargo down here he wanted to keep an eye on. I looked
nervously at the caged beasts surrounding us, but if this module had been his
destination, he would have already found us. So he must have gone somewhere
else. "Come on," I said. "Let's take another look."
"If
you say so." I led her out into the corridor again, crept up to the
T-intersection and looked both ways--no sign of The Dealer. I started toward
the place where I had seen him. Meta held back. "Shouldn't we go the other
way?" she whispered.
"No,"
I whispered back. "I want to see what his cargo is."
"But
what if he's still there..." Her voice trailed off as we reached the spot
where The Dealer had stood. It was a doorway to another module, identical to
the entrance of ours, right down to the blinking green lights on the
life-support control panel.
What
could The Dealer be shipping that required life support?
I swore,
and reached for the controls. Meta grabbed my wrist. "What are you
doing?"
"Opening
this thing up," I snarled.
"But
why--"
"Life-support
module. There's something alive in there." I met her eyes. "Besides
flash, what does The Dealer deal in?"
Meta's
hand fell away. "No!"
"I
hope I'm wrong. Maybe he's got a cat. But we've got to be sure--" But of
course the controls were locked. I pounded on them uselessly, then stepped
back. "We need a keychip--and I'll bet The Dealer has the only one."
I glared at the controls. "There's got to be a way!"
"Well,
I've got a keychip, but since it's for our house back on Carstair's Folly, I
doubt--"
A wild
idea struck me. "Let me have it!"
Looking
at me like I'd lost my mind, Meta pulled a neckchain from under her clothes.
Hanging from it was a little golden rectangle with black shiny contact patches
on each end. Meta touched it and it dropped off in her hand; she handed it to
me. I eyed the keychip receptacle on the module. "Standard technology. If
this works--" I dashed back down the corridor to our module. Filled with
monsters though it was, it seemed almost like home. Meta's keychip fit neatly
into a receptacle in the interior controls; I pushed three buttons, the
controls beeped, and the keychip popped back into my hand. "What did you
do?" Meta asked.
"Programmed
your keychip to open this module." I gestured at the animals. "I
don't know what these things are, but I'll bet they belong to The Dealer. They
look like friends of his, don't they?"
Meta
blinked, then grinned. "I get it! If this module belongs to him, and we
now have a keychip for it--"
"Then
just maybe we have a keychip for that other module, too." I flipped the
chip like a coin. "Only one way to find out."
Back we
went to the other module. I plugged the keychip into the receptacle, pressed
the "open" button--and without any fuss at all, the door slid aside.
Normal
white light spilled around us. It was a relief to step out of the blue Hydran
glare--until I saw what was in there.
The
module was about the same size and shape as my old dressing room, which made it
much larger than the one we had stowed away in. Odd-looking bits and pieces of
electronic equipment filled most of it. It looked like a cross between a
starship bridge and a recording studio, the latter resemblance heightened by
the boy, my age or a little older, who stood in a broad circle of light at the
far end of the module. He wore gold tights, but was naked from the waist up.
"Hello!"
said Meta cheerfully, and started forward, but I stopped her. "Now
what?" she demanded, turning on me.
"He's
not breathing."
"What?"
She turned back toward the boy. "Of course he's--" Her voice broke
off.
"See?"
"But
that's--impossible."
"Is
it?" I moved gingerly forward. Meta followed. The closer we got to the boy
the more I became aware of an annoying hum in the air, a discordant sound that
grated on my nerves. The air within the circle of light around the boy sparkled
strangely.
We
stopped just outside that circle. The hum made my bones itch. Meta gasped.
"I know that face! That's Paul Jerez!"
"Who?"
"He
was Youth Champion in the Pleasure Planets' Annual Open Dance Competition last
year--then he vanished. There were all kinds of wild rumors..." She came a
little closer. "It must be a statue--like a, a waxwork, or
something."
I said
nothing. No statue could be so detailed. I could see the fine, dark hair on his
arms and chest and a few flyaway strands sticking up from his head. His eyes,
open and moist, glistened in the light, his lips were slightly parted, and a
single bead of sweat clung to his left temple--and yet he didn't breathe,
didn't swallow, didn't blink. He must be in a time pocket, I thought. Almost
involuntarily, I reached out to touch him. The sparkling circle of light
retreated--
And then
suddenly snapped back out to its original position, engulfing my hand--and
stopping me cold. I couldn't move my hand, couldn't raise it, lower it, push it
forward, twitch my fingers, clench my fist, or--most frightening of all--pull
it free.
"What--"
Meta started forward.
I pushed
her back with my left arm. "Stay away!" I said between clenched
teeth. "I'm stuck."
"Stuck?
On what?"
I didn't
answer. I was too busy silently cursing myself for a fool. Paul was in a time
pocket, being held in stasis. For him, and now for my hand, time did not pass.
That momentary shrinking of the field had probably been a safety feature--or
maybe even, knowing The Dealer, a trap for anyone who might want to interfere:
a trap that had caught me like a bug in amber.
Sweat
formed on my forehead. I couldn't feel my hand at all--it might have been
lopped off. But I could see it, the air sparkling around it--and I could see
the beat of my pulse in my wrist outside that sparkle, and I could certainly
feel the pressure in my arm as my heart and arteries tried futilely to push
blood into my hand, a throbbing building toward pain.
"Go
get help," I gasped to Meta. "Someone in the crew."
"But
you--"
"I'll
be fine--if you hurry." I'm certainly not going anywhere, I thought grimly.
"Take the keychip and go!"
Meta
hesitated a moment longer, then dashed out into the corridor, turning to look
back at me as she snatched the keychip out of the control panel. The door slid
closed.
I pulled
at my hand as hard as I could, to no effect, then heard the door open again
behind me and breathed a sigh of relief. "Meta, I--" My voice choked
off as I turned my head to look awkwardly over my shoulder.
"Mr.
Nebula," said The Dealer. "I see you have decided to accept our offer
after all."
#
CHAPTER NINETEEN
"Suck
vacuum, snakebrain," I snarled.
"Mr.
Nebula!" The Dealer entered, the door closing behind him. "Surely it
is not appropriate, even among humans, to talk that way to one's employer. Or
the one individual on this ship who can provide--this." A green wafer
appeared on one tentacle-tip. My body's immediate reaction shocked me--my heart
raced, my mouth filled with saliva, I shivered. I beat you! I wanted to yell. I
don't need you any more! Maybe so--but I wanted it. Not so much I couldn't
fight it--maybe--but I wanted it.
I tried
not to show it. "No joy, octoface. I beat the green monster."
The
Dealer moved closer, all four eyes fixed on me though their stalks curled and
twisted, until his tentacle tip held the flash within centimetres of my mouth.
"And you suffered for it, didn't you?" his strange, sexless voice
crooned. "Suffered and almost died. But you still want it, don't
you?" The flash was so close I could have stuck out my tongue and taken
it, and I found myself gasping like a fish out of water, mouth opening and
closing. But I didn't take it. I held on, focused on the pounding pain in my
arm, and turned my head away.
I
suggested The Dealer do something for which he wasn't physically equipped, and
he imitated human laughter. "Very brave. But stupid. You're mine, Andy
Nebula. I have a signed contract for your services."
"But
you've never paid for me!"
"It's
hardly my fault you chose to--what's the human expression?--ah, yes, to cut
your agent out of the deal."
"It's
enough to break that contract!"
"You're
in no position to take me to court." Two of The Dealer's eyes turned
toward Paul. "Any more than he is."
Agony
filled my arm now. I pulled helplessly at my hand.
"Experiencing
a little discomfort?" queried The Dealer.
"Damn
you--"
He
laughed again and scuttled over to the controls. The circle of sparkling air
shrank by a few centimetres, freeing my hand. Immediately the pain in my arm
subsided and my hand flushed red; but, oddly, it didn't tingle. I flexed the
fingers; no damage. Then I turned to look at The Dealer. "What about
Paul?"
"He
is doing quite well where he is."
The door
slid open. My heart leaped at the sight of Meta and a Hydra--and then fell when
the Hydra, far from rushing to my rescue, shoved Meta to the floor, then closed
the door. He must be one of the Hydras The Dealer had with him in Fistfight
City, I thought sickly. He squealed/clicked at The Dealer, who pulled Meta
roughly to her feet and held her off the floor while three of his eyes focused
on her face. The fourth stayed firmly aimed at me. "That was very foolish
of you, young lady. And futile. This ship is crewed by robots and captained by
a computer. We have never shared the human phobia against putting ourselves in
the tentacles of well-made machines. And while those machines are programmed to
stop one Hydra from hurting another, they're not programmed to recognize humans
at all." His tentacles tightened around Meta, who gasped. Her legs kicked
futilely.
I lunged
toward The Dealer, but the other Hydra moved with blinding speed to grab me.
The Dealer held Meta a moment longer, then dropped her.
"Interesting," he said, as she frantically crawled away from him on
her hands and knees. "A protective impulse toward the female. No doubt yet
another evolutionary by-product of your absurd method of reproduction."
"Are
you all right?" I called to Meta.
"Yes,"
she said. "I'm sorry, Kit, I looked everywhere but--"
A robot
ship...if The Dealer was telling the truth, and I had a sinking feeling he was,
we were in deep, deep biowaste.
Or at
least I was. "So you've got me," I said. "Let Meta go."
"Go
where?" said The Dealer. "There is nowhere to go until we reach my
home world."
"So
let her go when we get there! She's no use to you. She's only here
because..." Because I was a selfish fool and asked her to help me.
"...because of me."
"But
once we reach Hydra," said The Dealer, "she might tell someone about
my operation, the wrong someone. " He turned toward Meta, and the green
wafer appeared on his tentacle again. "Fortunately, I can ensure she
doesn't. "
"No!"
I screamed, and struggled to reach him, but the tentacles of the big Hydra held
me like steel bands.
Meta,
eyes wide, backed away from The Dealer, who stalked her like a cat, his human
laughter fading into a hail of clicks. He lashed out and I flinched, but she
ducked, then scrambled to the door and slapped at the control panel. The Dealer
shot after her, but she threw herself through the doorway before it was open
enough for The Dealer to follow. When he could, she was gone.
"Orbital,
Meta!" I yelled after her, although her name ended in a squeak as the
Hydra holding me tightened his grip.
The
Dealer turned back. "Let her roam the ship. She can do us no harm, and
there's no place for her to hide." He closed the door, then stood stock
still for a moment before his eyes swung back to look at me. "Or is there?
How did you stow away?"
"Sneaked
on during loading," I said, hoping Meta had been smart enough to head back
to the monster cage--and that she'd be brave enough to return with the keychip
later and try another rescue. The Dealer and his friend couldn't stay in here
forever. "It wasn't hard." I shrugged. "Now I know why. No
crew."
The
Dealer squealed something and the big Hydra let me go. I rubbed my bruised arm.
"Then how did you get into this module?"
"I've
been fragging locks since half-height, octoman," I sneered. "Good
programming for those mean old streets, pre-Qualls." Time to get off
this subject. "Where is Qualls, anyway?"
"No
doubt striving very hard to find the money to buy his way out of his contract
with me," said The Dealer. "Since he let you escape, he owes me my
expected revenue from your services. The penalty for defaulting is rather
severe."
"You
wouldn't dare take him to court."
"I
wasn't speaking of a legal penalty."
Oh.
"But you've got me, now."
The
Dealer waved his tentacles--a Hydran shrug? "And so I double my revenue.
An excellent deal, don't you think?"
The
Hydra behind me shrieked, and The Dealer shrieked back. Without warning the big
Hydra slapped a gag across my mouth, then shoved me into the corner. Before I
could recover my balance he picked up a fat white tube and pointed it at me. A
sticky green web engulfed me, pinning my legs together and my arms to my torso.
I teetered and crashed to the floor. The big Hydra propped me up in the corner
like a rag doll, then scuttled back. The Dealer stared down at me with all four
eyes. "I'm low on flash, I see no reason to waste it on you," he
said. "You're fortunate; now you will get to see for yourself what I have
planned for you, and why you are valuable." He squealed and the door
opened again, revealing a new Hydra. As it and The Dealer exchanged
ear-piercing greetings, my eyes widened. I knew that Hydra--
Rain!
I felt
sick. The message in Fistfight City had been a trap! Rain must have
hoped to capture me and then sell me back to The Dealer. Maybe he was in on the
whole deal, and my meeting him in Fat Sloan's on that months-ago rainy night
had been no accident. He'd cleverly maneuvered me to the spaceport the next day,
where Qualls waited...I tried to kick, to bang my head, to do something to
attract his attention so he could see my hate-filled glare, but the webbing
held, and Rain had eyes only for The Dealer and for Paul Jerez, still
motionless in his circle of light.
The
Dealer held out the green wafer he had tempted me with, and two others. Rain
took them, but didn't eat them. Instead he held them while The Dealer returned
to his controls.
The
circle of light expanded, elongating into an oval that almost touched my feet.
The itching filled my bones again--then eased. And then Paul moved, turning
expectantly in the oval, his eyes raised but unfocused, as though he were
looking at something further away than the walls of the module. The Dealer
clicked to Rain, who stepped inside the circle with none of the difficulty I
had experienced--and then, to my horror, held out one of the green wafers to
Paul, who took it gently from the end of one orange tentacle with his pink
tongue, and swallowed.
As Rain
watched, music began. Paul paused, moved, made a heartbreakingly graceful
spin--and then The Dealer touched his controls and the circle flashed with
light, and instantly Paul was standing three metres away from where he had
started, his bare chest heaving and streaked with sweat. He bowed to Rain, who
squealed and clicked enthusiastically. As I gaped at them, Paul returned to
centre stage, Rain held out another wafer, Paul took it--and then Rain took one
himself.
The
music began again, Paul made the same--exactly the same--magnificent
leap and spin, The Dealer touched his controls, the circle flashed, and there
was Paul, again at the end of his dance, glistening with sweat, bowing to Rain.
Paul
returned to the middle of the circle and assumed his ready-and-waiting, Rain
stepped out of the circle, The Dealer did something at the controls, the circle
shrank--and Paul froze, in the middle of a deep breath, his chest suddenly
stilled.
I stared
at him, horrified. No wonder Paris Paradise had aged so quickly. No wonder he
had gone crazy. How many years of performing the same number--exactly
the same number--before hallucinatory crowds had The Dealer crammed into
Paris's two-year contract? He could do the same song a thousand times and only
minutes would pass in the outside world. And there would be no down-time when
he needed to eat, sleep, go to the bathroom--because however much time he took
went by in an instant out here, and there he was, ready to perform again--and
again, and again.
And
Qualls had sold me and my predecessors into that? Subjective years of
drug-induced slavery, performing a dreary Sensation Single thousands of times
for equally drug-crazed Hydras? If I could have made a sound, I would have
screamed my rage. But helpless as luggage, I could only lie there and pray that
somehow I could find a way out of this. Because if I didn't, I would be as
crazy as Paris Paradise, and in far less time.
Rain
left without ever turning an eye in my direction; The Dealer and the other
Hydra followed him to the door. The big Hydra squealed a question, but The
Dealer, obviously speaking for my benefit, said, "Leave him. He's not
going anywhere and without his help the girl can never break in here. It will
do him good to think over what he's seen. Welcome to your new life, Mr.
Nebula!" he called to me; then, with an eerie mixture of human and Hydra
laughter, he went out, and the door closed behind him.
#
CHAPTER TWENTY
I might
have given up hope, then, except I knew that The Dealer was wrong. Meta could
get back in. She still had the keychip. I wriggled around until I had a clear
view of the door and waited for it to open. Any minute now, she'd come in and
free me, and then--there had to be some way to get help, some kind of emergency
communicator, or some way to talk to the computer, or--
But Meta
didn't come back, and didn't come back, and didn't come back, while my legs and
arms tingled, then grew numb. I wriggled some more, trying to force blood into
my limbs, but the Hydra had tied me too tightly. If Meta didn't come soon, I
might not even be able to walk.
She
didn't come soon. They've found her, I thought bitterly. And The Dealer's
threats hadn't even been veiled: he'd use her to ensure my cooperation, then
he'd kill her. And the scary thing was, I knew it would work. Back in Fistfight
City I'd never had any real friends. Friends were a nuisance. They died, or
went away, or cheated or robbed you first chance they got. I'd taken care of
myself and liked it that way. I wouldn't have crossed the street to save a rich
kid like Meta, or anyone else. I remembered the girl who'd begged me for help
that stormy night I met Rain. Other people weren't my concern. I had my own
problems.
But
Meta...Meta really was a friend, the first real friend I'd ever had. She'd
already rescued me once. If The Dealer had her, I would do anything to free
her--even sign a legal contract.
That's
it! I thought. If he has me legally, it won't matter what she tells anyone.
He'll let her go!
And I'd
be like poor Paris Paradise, like the frozen figure of Paul Jerez, still
streaked with sweat from a dance that he'd performed hours ago in real time,
drugged, hypnotized, locked in a bubble of alternity.
I tried
not to think about it.
The
adrenaline of being captured drained away, the fear of what would happen next
and the expectation of Meta's entrance followed, and in their absence my body
took a notion to do the natural thing--sleep.
I woke
in terror and thrashed around wildly, coming out of a horrible dream where I
was surrounded by Hydras trying to stuff gigantic wafers of flash into my
mouth--and rolled right into Meta, who squeaked and fell over. I blinked at her
over my gag as she crawled back to me and went to work on my bonds with my
knife. "Mmmmph. Mmmmmmmmph!" I demanded, and she pulled off my gag,
taking what little facial hair I had with it. "Took you long enough,"
I grumbled.
"That
big Hydra was outside for hours. He finally went away--had to go to the
bathroom or something, I guess." She stopped clipping for a second.
"How do Hydras go to the bathroom?"
"If
you don't hurry you'll be able to ask The Dealer himself!"
She
redoubled her efforts, but the sticky green web the Hydras had wrapped me in
didn't yield easily. It took several minutes to free me and several more before
I could stand on legs that burned and tingled. I swayed. "Can you
walk?" Meta asked anxiously.
"If
I can't, I'll crawl. Let's get out of here."
I almost
did have to crawl. My legs didn't want to work, and twice I stumbled on the way
to the door. I hesitated there for a minute. Should I wait for my legs to
recover? If the big Hydra was back, we'd have to run for it--
But then
I remembered just how fast that Hydra could move. If we had to run, we were
already caught. Our only hope was that the Hydra had been called away by
something more than nature--or else that Hydras took a long time to go to the
bathroom.
I opened
the door onto a deserted corridor. Glad we hadn't waited, I led the way back
toward our monster-filled module. As we reached the corner a bloodcurdling
screech exploded behind us. I took one look back, saw the big Hydra racing
toward us, tentacles lashing, and grabbed Meta's hand and dragged her the rest
the way, yelling at her to have the keychip ready. She slapped it in place,
snatched it out again as the door opened, and we tumbled inside, then both
turned and almost collided trying to get the door closed again before--
A
red-orange tentacle the size of a freighter's fuel hose lashed beneath the
closing door, grabbed my ankle and yanked. Pain exploded in the back of my head
as my skull cracked against the metal floor. I slammed my other foot against
the door to keep from being pulled out. The door, sensing the tentacle,
stopped, beeped a warning, and started up again. "Meta!" I screamed,
and she hit the CLOSE control again. Down came the door, back up it started.
While Meta played cat and mouse with it, I struggled frantically against the
Hydra's tug. How much strength did those tentacles have? I had a gruesome
vision of my leg tearing off, and then screamed as my boot ripped painfully off
my foot, the tentacle vanished, and the door closed and locked at last.
One foot
bare, I staggered up, ignoring the goggling golden eyes of the creatures in the
cages surrounding us. Better these monsters than the one in the hallway.
"We've got to disable that door," I gasped out. "We've got to
lock ourselves in!"
Meta
stared at me, then at the shelves of monsters. "In here?"
"The
Dealer has a keychip for this!" My leg had hurt before--now I could hardly
move it. I pulled myself up to the door controls. "If we can reprogram the
lock, or break it--"
A light
on the panel flashed green. "Back!" I screamed, and retreated,
staggering, pushing Meta to the end of the module, as the door opened.
It framed the big Hydra--who stepped aside to
reveal The Dealer. "You're more resourceful than I thought, Mr.
Nebula," he said, and something about the way he said it, even in that
neuter Hydran voice, made my skin crawl. Or maybe it was the way all four eyes
glared at me, and the ends of his tentacles curled and uncurled. "But I
simply can't waste any more time with you, or your annoying female friend. Too
much more disturbance and the captain-computer may take some unwelcome
notice." One of his eyes scanned the cages. "It is curious you should
have chosen this particular cargo module in which to stow away, Mr. Nebula. As
you may recall, I mentioned I am low on flash, which was why I postponed your
conditioning. However, it occurs to me that you might be the perfect subject
for an experiment, since, to an extent, you are expendable--Qualls will, after
all, pay me what you would be worth as a performer, so should the experiment
fail, all I would lose would be the extra revenue I could have made from having
both your services and his payment. I'm willing to risk that." A tentacle
reached out and caressed the glass front of one of the cages. The creature
inside followed the movement intently. "These beauties are called
(hiss(click)screech). I don't believe they have a name in your language,
yet."
"If
these are your pets, snakehead, you must be hard up for friends."
"Oh,
they're hardly pets. They're quite poisonous. Spawnlings have nightmares about
them. But I confess, I'm attracted to them." His tentacle toyed with the
lock on the cage. "You see, it is the venom of these creatures that we
render into flash."
I
shuddered. The Dealer didn't seem to notice. He continued to stroke the cage,
as if hypnotized by the creature within--or as if trying to hypnotize it.
"Of course, in the living creature the active substance is far more
concentrated. I would imagine that one bite from the fangs of my little friend
here would be the equivalent of a hundred or more normal human doses of flash.
I know what that does to us--but no one, to my knowledge, has ever conducted
the experiment to see what it does to humans." All his eyes swiveled to
me. "I think it's time to do so."
"You
won't let that thing out while you're standing next to it. You're
bluffing."
"Mr.
Nebula, I don't have to let it out while I'm standing next to it. This
lock--" his tentacle played over it-- "is now programmed to open by
itself after a certain amount of time has elapsed. I won't tell you exactly how
long; that would spoil the suspense for you. However, by the time I return, I'm
sure I'll be able to observe the results of my little test."
He
started to back out; I shouted, "Wait!"
The
Dealer paused. "Yes?"
"Let
Meta go. I'll sign a legal contract with you--I'll swear I joined up with you
of my own free will--"
"Mr.
Nebula, the legitimacy of your contract was of concern to Qualls; it is of no
concern to me. My only concern is to make sure that you stop causing me
trouble. Should you survive this little test, you will never again be able to
free yourself from flash dependency, which will make you much easier to
control. Should you die, dissection and analysis of your tissues will provide
me with information no other flashdealer has. It could lead to an improved form
of the drug, which I would control. As they say on your planet, 'data's economic,
gladeye.' Either way, I lose nothing." He turned three of his eyes to the
door panel. "Now, I really must re-program this--"
I don't
know where the idea came from; I don't remember having it. All I know is that
as The Dealer looked away I grabbed the cage closest to me, jerked it free, and
flung it at him.
He
ducked, shrieking rage, all four eyes snapping toward me--but when he ducked,
the cage smashed into the lock panel, and three things happened: the door slid
shut, the cage shattered into a million sparkling shards--and the monstrosity
it contained dropped squarely into the middle of The Dealer's tentacles.
I
clapped my hands over my ears as he squealed, a sound of pure horror escalating
into the ultrasonic. He scrabbled frantically with his tentacles, all four eyes
curving inward to stare down at the creature even as it bit deep into his
flesh. The Dealer's stalk stiffened, every tentacle snapped straight out--and
then they drooped, eyes staring sightlessly downward. The Dealer's legs folded
and his stalk dropped with a thump--and the creature that had bitten him
scrambled down past his breathing slits and onto the floor.
The
thing's golden eyes scanned the room, seemingly ignoring us--but then Meta
shifted her position, ever-so-slightly, and the eyes snapped around and locked
on us. Slowly, lifting and placing each leg deliberately, the horror stalked
the length of the cargo module, its brethren in the other cages watching it
hungrily.
My heart
raced; Meta draw a long shuddering breath. Why didn't the big Hydra come raging
in to help The Dealer? I stared at the thing on the floor and thought I could
make a pretty good guess.
It still
wasn't sure we were prey. A couple of metres away it stopped. I tried not to
breathe, tried to ignore all the aches and pains clamoring for my attention,
tried to think of myself as a rock, a piece of metal, anything inanimate and,
above all, motionless. The thing took another step toward us; halted, then
moved a little closer yet. I thought about Meta behind me, and wondered which
one of us would scream first.
And
then, suddenly, the creature made up its mind and scuttled forward. Meta
screamed and tried to climb the shelves, and the creature instantly altered
course and dashed for her. "No!" I yelled. I lunged for it, fell
headlong in front of it, grabbed it--and echoed Meta's scream as its dead-white
mouth snapped open and its shining black fangs sank into my wrist.
#
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Fire
raced through my veins and exploded in my head, erasing reality. The cargo module
disappeared, dissolving into a narrow backstage corridor lined with banks of
video monitors. Music pounded in my ears and I held a stringsynth in my hand.
I rolled
to my feet, clutching it tight. I'd worked for this moment all my
life--millions would be watching on vid, tens of thousands awaited me just
beyond that curtain at the end of the monitor-lined corridor, beyond that
broken-down dancebot half-blocking the way. The pounding of the music surged
louder in my ears. Time for my entrance--why was the curtain still down?
But then
it opened, and I saw another dancebot between me and the stage. Exultantly I
dashed forward, leaped over the broken 'bot and reached for the second, but it
turned and spun away from me, out into the bright stage lights.
The crowd
roared, but I was furious. A malfunctioning 'bot, tonight of all nights--Marcel
would hear about this! I dashed after it, stringsynth loose in my hand,
singing, but the 'bot kept moving away from me, staggering, programming
obviously bugging out. The roar of the crowd turned to boos, and then to
laughter--and in a rage I flung the stringsynth at the dancebot.
It
struck the machine squarely in the head in a shower of sparks and smoke. The
'bot froze, then toppled with a grinding, ear-splitting shriek of tortured
metal.
The
music still pounded around me, and so I raced forward and snatched up the
stringsynth again. Another dancebot appeared in front of me, as obstructive as
the previous one. Had they all crashed at once? My anger swelled again, and I
reared back to throw the stringsynth, but something grabbed my arm from behind
and shrieked in my ear.
The
sound rang my head like a bell, the echoes resolving slowly into words,
"Kit, no!"
For an
instant, just an instant, the stage, the dancebots and the music faded away,
and I saw, as dimly as if it were a bad holoprojection, the corridor outside
the cargo module. The big Hydra stood in front of me like the Dealer had
before, inert, collapsed. Behind him cowered Rain. Meta had seized my arm, and
in my hand I held, not a stringsynth, but, wriggling and hissing, the horrible
creature that had bitten me.
Rain!
She didn't know--he was in league with the Dealer--I struggled to pull free of
her grasp, to throw the monster at Rain as I'd started to, but it shifted in my
hand and lunged instead at Meta and in horror I broke loose and threw it
against the wall with all my strength. It hit with a solid crunching sound and
slid to the floor, leaving behind a green, glistening streak.
But I
couldn't hold on to reality against the strength of the venom racing through my
veins. The corridor blew away like smoke in a hurricane, returning me to the
dark stage and the pounding music. I dashed forward, shouldering past the
dancebot that I no longer remembered as Rain, and burst onto a huge stage.
Light exploded around me and I screamed as flaming daggers lanced into my head
through my eyes, through my ears, through my mouth. My body seemed bathed in
acid, eating away my skin, stripping me down to the bone. Still screaming, I
staggered back to my feet and ran, trying to outrun the agony.
I left
the stage behind and ran through darkness. Nightmare figures loomed before me:
Paris Paradise, half his head blown away by a police bullet, babbling, "I
told you so, I told you so," through the bloody ruin of his mouth; Meta,
lunging at me, hands curled to tear out my eyes. I dodged them both and ran on.
Marcel
dropped from the ceiling in front of me, his chest covered with blood from the
knife wounds that had killed him, his eyes blank and dead. I pushed him aside,
sobbing with horror and pain, but he grabbed my ankle and almost pulled me
down. I screamed and kicked him and he let go, and again I ran on.
But my
pain waxed, growing worse, far worse, and then suddenly I saw movement
ahead--tentacles, thousands of disembodied red-orange tentacles, filling the
corridor, dropping from the ceiling, slithering toward me. I turned to run the
other way and saw more tentacles, an army of them, some of them ending in the
purple, slit-pupilled Hydran eyes, glittering and cold. They moved slowly, but
there were so many--I couldn't escape them all!
Or maybe
I could have, if not for the pain. But when I tried to dash to freedom, agony
hit me like a riot club thudding into my gut. I doubled over, gasping, and the
tentacles had me, coiling around my arms and legs and neck and body, dragging
me down, though I thrashed and screamed till my throat bled.
From
nowhere another of the monsters from the cages appeared, and opened its
horrible mouth, and once more I felt fangs sink into my arm. Numbness seized
me. I couldn't move. The creature vanished, and the tentacles uncoiled and
assembled themselves into a complete Hydra--Rain, standing over me with a
hypodermic.
Meta
appeared beside him, looking down. Betrayed! She'd joined forces with Rain,
she'd sold me out...I wanted to howl curses at her, but I couldn't open my
mouth.
"What
else can we do?" Meta boomed in an incongruous bass.
"I
can think of only one thing," said Rain, his voice even deeper and slower.
"The time pocket."
No! Paul
Jerez, frozen forever--Paris Paradise, crazed and ancient at nineteen--how
could I have thought Meta was my friend? Streetsense had been right. Don't make
friends. Don't trust people. Look after yourself. I'd trusted her, and
she...she...
The
numbness gripped me tighter, and vision faded. I wandered through a barren land
of flat gray rock and flat gray skies and cold, skin-drenching rain, a land
where nothing changed...until, hours or days or even years later, it began to
grow dark.
Nightfall,
I thought. I can sleep. I can escape the pain--distant, muffled, but still
there, tormenting me. I can rest...
But some
spark within me, the spark that had driven me out of the orphanage to begin
with, maybe, blazed up against the darkness. A ragged scarecrow figure
appeared, carrying a battered stringsynth. The face, blurred at first, came
into focus.
I stared
at myself, at Kit, as I had been before Sensation Singles' computers gave birth
to Andy Nebula. "Not rest, Nebula," he snarled at me. "Death. That's
what's down this road."
"Rest,"
I insisted. I tried to push past, but he pushed back, hard, and unslung the
stringsynth, holding it like a club.
"Death!"
Kit swung the stringsynth at me, forcing me to stagger back. "That's the
easy way out, Nebula, and I won't let you take it. You do, and The Dealer wins.
Qualls wins. Meta and Rain win. And I don't owe them any favors."
"The
Dealer's dead."
"So
why are you in such a hurry to join him?" He jabbed me in the chest with
the stringsynth, then pushed, hard, sending me sprawling back on my butt. I
scrambled up, feeling anger, feeling, in fact, the first emotion I had felt
since I came to this gray land. The sky grew a little bit lighter.
Kit came
at me again, shoved me down, flat on my back, and planted a foot on my chest.
"Coward," he said contemptuously. "No guts." He leaned over
and glared down at me. "Go on, then. Die. It's what you deserve,
streetslime." He spat in my face. "You're nothing. You've always been
a nothing!"
"I'm
a musician! That's not a nothing."
"You?
Caterwauling, shrieking--you call that music? People paid you just so you'd
shut up, you useless piece of--"
My
smoldering anger exploded into blood-boiling rage. I lunged upward. My fingers
closed on his throat. I could feel his pulse pounding under my thumbs--and then
he melted away, along with the mist and the darkness and the flat gray plain,
and I found myself upright in a bed, reaching out with my hands, wires trailing
from my head and chest, alarms going off all around me, and half a dozen people
staring at me.
Somebody
was screaming. I closed my mouth, and the sound stopped. The room spun around
me, I felt weak as a naked baby rat, and I hurt--all over, I hurt--but I lived.
I lived!
I lay
back and took deep breaths of air, and people suddenly surrounded me. Real
people. Two men, two women. Not Hydras. All in white. And this antiseptic white
room--a hospital. "Where--" I began, and had to swallow and begin
again. "Where am I?"
A very
tall woman with white hair leaned down. "Carstair's Folly."
"Carstair's..."
But that was impossible--unless--maybe the old flashman had attacked me, hit me
on the head, and everything else had been a dream--
Meta
pushed her way between two doctors, an enormous grin splitting her face.
"You're alive! You're all right!"
Carstair's
Folly--and Meta. She hadn't betrayed me. She'd saved me again. She really was a
friend! I felt ashamed of my doubts--and fiercely, fiercely happy that I'd been
wrong. "I've been better," I croaked. "But, yeah...I think I am
all right."
"No,
you're not," said the tall woman severely. "You've been in a coma for
two weeks, you're dehydrated, you're still suffering from withdrawal symptoms,
and I don't like the looks of your heartbeat. You've got a lot of recovering to
do yet, young man." Meta gave her such a concerned look that her face
softened. "But you're going to be all right. And you can think your
friends for being smart enough to put you in stasis until they could get you to
a human hospital. Otherwise..." She raised her voice. "Everyone out!
He needs rest and a little food that doesn't come through a tube in his arm.
Nurse Coles, will you..."
Friends?
Plural? "What does she mean, friends?" I asked Meta over the excited
babble of the medicos' voices.
One
voice carried back to me. "Strangest thing I ever saw! His vital signs
were dropping off, I'd have sworn he was dying, then all of a sudden he lunges
up and..." The door cut him off.
"I
couldn't have gotten you here by myself," Meta said. "It was Rain who
thought of putting you in stasis."
"Rain?"
I remembered that. But I'd thought...but if I was here..."I don't
understand. Rain was in league with The Dealer. He tried to trap me at Fat Sloan's--he--I
saw him take flash, and watch Paul Jerez dance. I thought..." My voice
trailed off. I thought she'd betrayed me to him, but I couldn't tell her that.
Meta
laughed. "We had it all wrong, Kit. He wasn't trying to trap you. He
wanted to warn you. He knew what was going on."
"But
I--"
"Look,
he'll have to explain it himself. He'll be here any minute. And you shouldn't
get so worked up. I'm sure it's not good for you." Her voice softened.
"Don't you dare do anything to mess yourself up like that again."
"All
right." But in fact, far from feeling worse, I felt more buoyant than
ever. Meta hadn't sold me out--and neither had Rain. I didn't just have one
friend, I had two! Orbital! "Well, can you at least tell me what happened
after you and Rain sedated me?"
"You
recognized us?" She looked surprised. "You kept babbling on about
tentacles and--"
"I
recognized you. For a moment. But what happened next?"
With
frequent interruptions on my part, she told me. Afraid I might die, they'd put
me in stasis with Paul, then, once we reached Hydra, loaded me immediately onto
a high-speed human luxury liner heading to the Pleasure Planets. I'd been kept
in their medical bay during the five-day trip, but their doctors and medical
computers had had no more idea of how to treat me than the Hydras had. No human
had ever been bitten by the flashdevil (Meta's word, which seemed likely to
stick) before. Meta had contacted her parents, who had understandably been very
glad to hear from her, and told them in no uncertain terms to have the best
doctors waiting when I arrived. Her father hadn't been anxious to roll out the
red carpet--or at least the red hospital bed--for me, I gathered, and I guess I
couldn't blame him, but Meta had insisted--which apparently shocked him. "First
time I ever stood up to him," she said thoughtfully. "I've always
been scared of him. But this time, I didn't care. And you know, he really was
worried about me. I was kind of surprised."
"You're
lucky to have someone to worry about you," I said. "I never
did."
"You
do now," Meta said.
The
doctors on Carstair's Folly had found me a fascinating case, apparently. Lots
of brain activity, but never waking up--as though I were in a permanent dream
state. But today... "They told me you were dying," Meta said soberly.
"They said they didn't expect you to last more than a few hours. I came
right away." She touched my hand. "I cried," she said softly.
I had a
lump in my own throat. "I'm sorry."
"Well,
it's not your fault. It was The Dealer's."
"What
happened to him? And the other Hydra? Are they dead?"
"No,
gladeye! Dead they're not!" chortled a new voice.
"Rain?"
I raised up a little and saw my Hydran friend in the doorway.
"Orbital
that you are awake, gladeye." Rain placed a tentacle on my bare shoulder.
"I have sworn to retain memory of you. I am glad I may still be able to
add some new ones."
"I'm
glad you'll be able to, too," I said fervently, "but right now I'm
more interested in answers than memories. How did you know about Qualls and the
Dealer? What were you doing on The Dealer's ship? Who are you?"
"I
am an enforcement agent for the legislative council of Hydra," Rain said.
"What?"
"He's
a 'forcer," Meta translated helpfully.
"A
'forcer?"
"A
'forcer, gladeye! Flash is illegal on our planet, as on yours, and the Dealer
was the source of much of it. I had been trailing him for some time when I met
you on Murdoch IV. I knew about his deals with Qualls, and my sources with
Qualls told me he had you in mind as the next Sensation Single. So I flopped at
Fat Sloan's and paid him to ensure that you would share my room the next time
you came by. When you came back to Fistfight City, I knew a deal between The
Dealer and Qualls was coming soon. I tried to contact you before they sealed
it, hoping you could get me onto The Bullet so I could be there when
that happened. But you didn't show up, and The Dealer booked passage on a
commercial ship, and I had to act fast. I decided you must have realized something
was wrong and gotten out on your own, and I had to stay with The Dealer. So I
booked onto the same ship as him, and set about convincing him I would be a
valuable customer."
"But
I saw you take the flash!"
"An
illusion. What you would call sleight-of-hand." He held up a tentacle and
studied it with all four eyes.
I
laughed, though it hurt. "And Paul?"
"He's
out now--undergoing withdrawal treatment," Meta put in.
"You
said The Dealer and that other Hydra aren't dead?" I said to Rain.
"Then what happened to them?"
Rain's
tentacles squirmed. "You know how flash affects us--"
"It
makes you forget what you have just experienced. Yes, Qualls explained
it."
"Not
to me!" Meta complained.
I hushed
her. "I'll tell you later."
"That
is a single small dose," said Rain. "The bite of the--what did you
call it, Meta?"
"The
flashdevil!"
"--the
flashdevil--is far, far worse, as you have reason to know. The Dealer, his
employee--they lost all memories. Forever. They are no longer the people they
were. They are no longer people at all."
"Can't
say I'm sorry," I muttered. I closed my eyes, feeling very tired.
"I'm glad that's over."
"Don't
you want to hear about Qualls?" said Meta.
"Meta,
we should--" Rain began, but I opened my eyes.
"What
about him?"
"Arrested
for fraud, murder, kidnapping, and half a dozen other crimes," Meta said.
"And your credit has been unfrozen. And you've attracted so much
media attention that there are half a dozen promoters here on Carstair's Folly
just waiting to sponsor your first non-Single concert once you're recovered.
You're going to be a star again, Andy Nebula!"
I sighed
and closed my eyes again, this time in final, complete satisfaction.
"Never heard of him. My name's Kit."
THE END