TWENTY-FIVE
Rockhaven
THE DOOR CLOSED, and the Uncle turned, the smile slowly leaving his face, which was fine with Cantra. She could have done without the intent, we’re-all-believers-here stare, which had been a feature of the former Uncle, too, and even more unsettling on the face of a young man.
But now his eyes lit on the plants Dulsey had just passed and he went to one of them, only half looking at her as he groomed it, letting the pink fronds flow over his hand as he made tiny noises and dropped bits of browning leaf to the carpet.
“I wonder, dear Pilot Cantra,” he asked over his shoulder, “do you believe in fate?”
“Fate?” Now what? she wondered—then figured she’d find out soon enough. “I don’t believe there’s some megascript that makes us all act in certain ways,” she said carefully, not wanting to move into the scans of those things it was better not to think on too close—or at all.
“Ah,” the Uncle breathed. “Well, you are young and doubtless have been busy about your own affairs.” He finished with the plant and turned to face her full again, left hand flat against his breast.
“I, however, am old, and I have seen sufficient of the universe to consider the existence of that script, as you have it—probable. For instance—”
His left hand was suddenly outstretched, fingers pointing at a place approximately halfway between her and the silent Jela, rings a-glitter.
“You, dear Pilot Cantra. I had never expected to see you again. You must tell me, how has the receptor flush served you?”
“No ill effects,” she said.
“Good, good. I am delighted that our little technique provided long-term satisfaction. We had been using it for some time in aid of those in our community with need, with no ill effect. However, we had never had the opportunity to test it on a natural human. The lab will be pleased. But, as I was saying—I had no expectation to ever see you again, my dear, and yet here you are come to me by your own will, in company . . .”
The Uncle smiled gently, not at her. She risked a glance out of the side of her eye. Jela wasn’t smiling back.
“Companied . . .” the Uncle fair crooned, “by a True Soldier. Nothing could be more fortuitous!”
Well, that sounded ominous enough for six. And Jela was decidedly disamused. Funny ‘bout that, Cantra thought abruptly. Along the course of their time together, she’d certainly seen Jela use force, and he wasn’t shy about making those he deemed would be improved by the condition dead. But he was rarely out of temper. This cold stare into the teeth of the Uncle’s smile was—worrisome.
Like she needed something else to worry about.
“Well,” she said brightly, drawing the Uncle’s eyes back in her direction. “I’m glad you’re pleased, Uncle. I wouldn’t say us being here proves fate so much as wrongheaded wilfulness on the part of certain pilots. It does put me in mind of a thing, though.” She touched the seal on her leg pocket and drew out the gel-pack.
“Saw something a few stops back that I thought might interest you.”
The light eyes considered her.
“You’ve brought me a gift?”
Cantra smiled. “That’s right. I was raised up to be civilized.”
The Uncle laughed. “You were raised up, as you care to style it,” he said, sweetly, “to be a dissembler, a thief, and when need be, a murderer.”
No argument there. Cantra let her smile widen a bit. “Where I come from, that’s what passes for civilized.”
He allowed her to approach and took the packet from her hand.
“Indeed.” He ran his finger under the seal, and the pack unfolded, revealing the three little ceramic toys.
Behind her, she heard Jela take a long, careful breath.
The Uncle stood as if transfixed, long enough for Cantra to begin to think that she’d made a bad mis—
“Why, Pilot Cantra,” the Uncle purred. “You have managed to surprise me.” He looked up. “Where did you get these?”
“A couple stops back,” she repeated, agreeably. “Teaching devices, is what the trader told me.”
“Did she, indeed?” The Uncle used the tips of his fingers to turn the ceramics over. “And did you test them, to be certain that they were what was advertised?”
No reason not to tell the truth. “I tested the ship,” she admitted. “It prompted me for a basic piloting equation. Emitted praise and warm fuzzies when I gave it.”
“Ah. And the others?”
“I didn’t test the others,” Cantra assured him. She’d meant to, but in retrospect the interaction with the toy ship had been more disturbing than pleasant. A good deal like the Uncle himself.
He gave her a long, penetrating look, which she bore with open-faced calm.
“The directors breed marvels, indeed they do,” he said softly. “And you the last of your line, more’s the pity.” He lifted the gel-pack on his palm, and looked past her, to Jela.
“You have seen objects like this before, I think, sir?”
“I have,” Jela said, and it was the same hard, perilous voice he’d used when she’d showed him the first-aid kit. “They’re not toys. They’re sheriekas-made and they’re dangerous.”
“Not necessarily,” the Uncle crooned. “It is true that they mine information from the unwary and send back to the Enemy when and as they might. However, we find that minds trained to a specific agenda may not only gain more information from the devices, but can feed them—let us call it misleading—information to pass on. To the confoundment of the Enemy.” He smiled gently. “Which I am certain that one such as yourself would allow to be worthy work.”
“The sheriekas are outside of our knowledge,” Jela replied forcefully. “We barely understood what they were when they retreated at the end of the last war. Now . . .” He moved his big shoulders. “The best thing to do with those devices is destroy them.” He sent a quick black glance to Cantra. “And send the name of the trader who sells them to the military.”
The Uncle t’sked, turned and put the gel-pack down on the cluttered table.
“I would have thought the military would take a bolder stance,” he said, meditatively. “It is well that we have taken this work to ourselves, I see.”
“I’d think the work best left alone,” Jela said forcefully. “Unless you have a reason for wanting a world-eater’s attention.”
“One might,” the Uncle said with a smile. “One might. Think of what might be learned about the nature of the Enemy, should one of their mightiest engines be captured!”
He raised a hand suddenly. “But stay, I don’t wish to raise such controversial topics so soon in our partnership.”
Cantra felt a flutter along her nerves, and deliberately reposed herself to stillness.
“Partnership?” asked Jela.
“Surely.” The Uncle smiled, cold enough to raise a shiver, though the room was a thought over-warm for Cantra’s taste. “I am offering you a place, M. Jela. Here, your talents will be appreciated and well-rewarded.”
Well, thought Cantra, specifically not looking at Jela. This might work out all by its lonesome . . .
“No,” Jela said, shortly.
Or maybe not. She cleared her throat, the Uncle’s gaze moved to her face.
“Truth is, Uncle,” she began, and looked casually at Jela where he stood, solid and reassuring and—
Lose it, she snarled at herself. He ain’t your partner—never was—and while he sat your co-pilot, that ends now, and good riddance.
Jela shifted at his post, his face tightening, eyes widening and focusing somewhere beyond the Uncle’s room.
“Tell your operative to stand away from the tree,” he said sharply.
The Uncle tipped his head. “Your pardon, M. Jela? Do you address me?”
“I do. Call off your operative. Now.”
“What operative?”
Jela didn’t bother answering that, only said again, in a voice nowhere near patient—
“Tell your operative not to touch the board and not to approach the tree. There’s nothing hidden in the tree, and if she doesn’t stand back, I can’t tell what it might do to protect itself.”
Intruder on the ship. Cantra gritted her teeth, glanced down at the tell-tales—still jammed, blast it to the Deeps. Dancer was on her own, and if the fool did touch that board . . .
“Your operative is regarded as a threat, Uncle. Your operative is in danger.”
“Come now, you can hardly be in touch with your ship, which lies quietly at dock. For our own security we smother all ship communications . . .”
“I’m not in communication with our ship,” Jela said then. “All my comm systems are dead in here, and I’m betting the pilot’s are the same, or she’d have triggered something unpleasant already, being a lady who isn’t fond of strangers on her ship. However, I am in communication with the third crew member, who stands within striking distance of your operative, and who is prepared to act.”
An alarm blared, and the Uncle’s robe briefly blazed golden as the smart-strands took receipt of info.
“What’s that?” Jela asked, perfectly calm.
The Uncle took a hard breath, and smoothed his hands down the front of his robe, eyes closed.
“Hydroponics alert,” he murmured, eyelids fluttering. “An anomaly in the release gasses. These things happen, which is why we have alerts.”
“Ah,” said Jela with a grim smile.
Cantra concentrated on keeping her breathing even, though her lungs wanted to gasp at the notion that the tree—Jela’s damn’ tree, that he insisted told him jokes and that he talked to like an old friend or comrade-in-arms . . .
Well, why not? she asked herself, and took another deep breath, specifically not thinking about what was going to happen if the Uncle’s snoop tried to gimmick the board—
Jela casually tapped his wrist chronometer.
“You’re the one who has to pass the word. Or take your chance of surviving whatever comes next. It’s all the same to me.”
It wasn’t quite all the same to Cantra, but there wasn’t anything she could do except wait, and swear, and hope—
The plant beside the Uncle shivered, and the pink fronds began to curl, as if closing for the night, or . . .
For a moment, the Batch leader was clearly nonplused; he went so far as to peek at something half hidden in his sleeve.
He glanced then at Jela, who was studying the plant with a sort of detached interest as the fronds coiled toward the core.
The Uncle raised his hands, rings glinting, and spoke into the air.
“Chebei, please do not touch either the piloting board or the tree. Return to your station and inform Arin that we are found to be poor hosts.”
There was quiet then. Cantra breathed, concentrated on breathing calm and easy, the while keeping one eye on Jela—who was still watching something beyond the Uncle’s study—and the other on the Uncle, who appeared to be in like state.
“Thank you,” he said abruptly to the air, and sent a sharp glance toward Jela.
“Chebei has cleared the ship, touching nothing save those things she had already touched. Do you confirm, M. Jela?”
No answer for a heartbeat . . . two . . .
The wayaway look faded, the broad chest expanded, and the shoulders rolled.
“Confirmed,” he said, and sent Cantra one of his more unreadable looks.
“If you would please to pass my compliments on to your crew member?”
Jela’s expression was unreadable, but his eyes went distant. A fleeting grin passed over his features, and then his face was like stone again.
“Understood, Uncle,” he said then, looking not at the Batcher but at Cantra.
“Business concluded, Pilot?”
No and yes, Cantra thought. Though she wasn’t such a fool as to refuse Jela’s back-up on a port that had gone from risky to downright dangerous.
“We did what we came to do,” she said, giving him a smile. “If you got nothing more to say, then we’ll just ask the Uncle for a guarantee of safe passage and be on our way.”
The Uncle pressed a beringed hand over his heart, his face showing an expression of pained gentility which was notable for its sincerity.
“Guarantee of safe passage? Dear Pilot Cantra, surely you don’t believe anyone here would seek to harm you?”
She smiled, seeing his sincere and raising it to wounded innocence.
“You did send a snoop onto my ship,” she said, as mildly as possible.
The Uncle looked pained. “A mere inspector, child. We only wished to assure ourselves that nothing overtly dangerous had been—inadvertently, of course!—brought to dock at our poor habitat. And we see you are as careful as ourselves, and could not be more pleased. We count your visit among our most pleasant in decades!”
Right.
Cantra gave him another smile, and nodded to Jela.
“Let’s go.”
He swung forward a step, clearing her way to the door, and coincidentally putting himself between the Uncle and that same door. Much good it would do, with all the smartstrands the man was wearing. On the other hand, she didn’t think it likely that the Uncle would try to detain them. His habitat was fragile and he couldn’t know what they were carrying by way of plain and fancy explosives, for instance. Nor what that vegetable on the bridge might take into its . . . branches . . . to do if Jela came to harm.
That being the case, there wasn’t any need to be rude in their leave-taking. She mustered up a bow, just as respectful as she could manage.
“Uncle, good fortune to you.”
He smiled and inclined his head.
“Pilot Cantra, you must come and see me again. In the meanwhile, fair fortune to you.”
He tipped his head.
“M. Jela, may I not convince you to enter my employ?”
“No,” Jela said shortly, and the Uncle smiled, soft and regretful.
“How,” he said gently, “if you were to know that even now it is whispered that soldiers are being bidden to forsake the emptiness of this arm for the comfort of the center? You, however, can still indulge your soldier’s soul. You can be here, at the edge of decisive action, where matters of importance to all humankind will be determined. You may be a hero to Dulsey and all her . . .”
Jela shook his head, cutting off the Uncle in a way that likely wasn’t too polite.
“This was a waystop for us,” he said. “A balancing of accounts with someone who risked her life for us. I’ve been a hero, and found it far more trouble than you might think. I’ll continue traveling with Pilot Cantra, and we’ll all part safely.”
The Uncle seemed to take it well, all things considered, and if he thought the warning a bit plain-faced, he hid it well. “Then I will bid you, too, farewell and fair fortune.” He dropped back a step.
On Cantra’s right hand, the door slid open.