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Authors: David Weber,Eric Flint

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Not being a slacker like Jernigan, Officer Mendez took the time to check. But her supervisor turned out to be right. At the moment, the correctional center’s morgue had no suitable cadavers.

She then checked the city’s main morgue. Same story. Apparently, things had been hectic for them also over the past few weeks.

Enough. She kicked the problem upstairs. Jernigan immediately kicked it up another level.

By the end of the day, the problem arrived back where it started. On the desk of Lajos Irvine’s boss, George Vickers.

“Oh, for Pete’s sake,” he said. “Do I have to do everything?”

He put in a call to a friend of his who worked for the Long Range Planning Board and explained the problem.

The friend—Juan Morris was his name—scratched his jaw and gave the matter some thought,

“Well . . . We’ve got two probable culls coming up. The final decision hasn’t been made yet, but let me see what I can do.”

* * *

Morris got back to him toward the end of the next day. “Sorry it took so long, George. Things have been a little crazy around here since . . . well, never mind the details. A missing link in the chain of command—and way high up, to make things worse. But that winds up working in your favor since Valerie’s tearing her hair out and moving the culls up—she’s authorized to make that decision, lucky for you—will lighten the work load some.”

Vickers nodded. “Good. How soon . . . ?”

“Oh, the culls were done immediately. How do you want the remains? Intact, dismembered, exsected—what?”

“Hell, I don’t know. Leave them whole—better drain the fluids, though, and pouch them—and I’ll let Irvine figure out how he wants to handle it. That’s his headache.”

* * *

Less than a day later, the goods were delivered to Irvine’s office. After he opened up the containers he spent some time staring at the contents. There were times he really hated his job.

Really
hated it—and more so and more often, these last months.

Lajos had been exhilarated when he’d first been brought all the way into the onion, after Green Pines, as a reward for ferreting out McBryde’s treason. But as time passed and he became more familiar with the Alignment’s goals and methods, his uneasiness had grown.

Some of that uneasiness, perhaps most of it, was the skepticism of a man who’d spent his adult life testing the limits of rational planning in the trenches, so to speak. He’d never heard of the Scot poet Robert Burns. But if someone had recited to him that poet’s most famous line of verse—
The best-laid schemes o’ mice an’ men gang aft agley
—he’d have immediately responded: “You can say that again.”

He was a firm believer in the ancient Murphy’s law. And he found it hard to believe that the law could be abrogated simply by planning really well and for centuries at a time.

But some of that uneasiness went beyond pragmatism. Some of it had a moral nature. As hard-bitten and tough-minded as Lajos had thought himself to be, he’d never imagined a ruthlessness as unadulterated and adamantine—as
pure
—as that of the Alignment’s central leadership. He could accept—he had accepted—the brutalities visited on slaves and seccies as an unfortunate necessity for the eventual advancement of the Mesan genome. But he’d come to understand that the Detweilers and those around them simply didn’t care at all. The misery and injustice that Lajos saw around him every day, and hardened himself against, was simply data to them—and not particularly important data at that.

The objects he was staring at now were the gruesome remains of what had once been human beings. Very small ones—and very defenseless ones. But he was quite sure that if he could look at those objects through the eyes of his ultimate superiors he would see nothing of the sort.

Just . . . objects. Being put to good use now that they turned out to be unsuitable for their original purpose.

August 1922 Post Diaspora

“Hell, I’m sorry I asked at all.”

—Stephanie Moriarty, Mesan revolutionary

Chapter 34

Zachariah McBryde had never been able to weep for his brother Jack. He wasn’t sure why, exactly. At first, he’d been too shocked—not just at Jack’s death but at the manner of it. Suicide, committed by a traitor? It was unthinkable.

Eventually, the fact of his brother’s death had sunk in. But to this day, Zachariah had never accepted the explanation given by the authorities.

He’d said nothing, however; made no protest.

Life inside the onion, especially for someone as far into it as Zachariah, was far removed from what most people would have considered “tyranny.” The onion was not governed by democratic principles, certainly. The Detweilers had always been and still were the ultimate authority, much like the family that owned and managed a huge corporation.

But there was more to it than that. The family owners of a firm commanded the loyalty of their employees simply by paying them. The Detweilers did that as well, but the people bound to them in the onion also shared a common vision of humanity’s future. They were dedicated to a cause, a purpose, that went far beyond the simple acquisition of material goods and comforts.

The human race had produced many such ideologically driven and ideologically cohered organizations in its history. Most of them had been religious, most of the rest had been political, and some had been purely social in their orientation. But almost all of them had had one thing in common: united by a determination to persevere over opposition and enmity, they tended to be tightly disciplined and hierarchical. That hierarchy might be selected by democratic methods and guided by an egalitarian ethos, but it was ultimately authoritarian. Or, at least, tended in that direction. A pope is still a pope, even if he is selected by a conclave of his peers.

The Mesan Alignment was more hierarchical and authoritarian than most, by virtue of its own defining principles. There was no more than lip service paid to democratic methods, and none at all to egalitarianism, as you’d expect from a movement based on the principles of genetic superiority and inferiority. Ultimately, the Detweilers ruled because they were the Detweilers—the alphas of the alpha lines. More like a medieval dynasty, in some ways, than anything else.

That said, it was a modern dynasty with a modern, even hyper-sophisticated, attitude toward command and obedience. Members of the onion, especially those in the inner layers, were given a great deal of latitude. Their views were actively solicited and encouraged, not simply tolerated. An outsider—the archetypical alien from another universe, for instance—who observed the interactions of members of the onion as they went about their work, would have found them impossible to distinguish from the interaction of people in a democratic polity guided entirely by legal principles.

Until the ax came down. Then, the differences became clear and stark.

One could put that as crudely as possible. It takes a long time to execute someone in a democracy ruled by law. The Detweilers or their delegated lieutenants could do it in minutes, even seconds—no longer than it took for the order to be transmitted and the wherewithal of homicide assembled.

So, Zachariah had kept his mouth shut about his brother Jack’s supposed treason. The sophistication of the Alignment’s leadership had been demonstrated by their refusal to punish any member of Jack’s family. That had been true even informally. No one had lost a job, been demoted, or been refused later advancement. But open protest—resistance of any kind to the official line—would have been exceedingly dangerous. Quite probably fatal.

For all those reasons—perhaps other reasons, too; it was certainly not something Zachariah was going to discuss with a therapist—he’d never wept for his brother.

Now, as he watched his home planet receding in the viewscreen, he could finally grieve Jack’s death—because he was grieving for his entire family. The rest of them were still alive, true enough. But there was little chance that Zachariah would ever see them again. Now that the final great struggle was at hand after centuries of preparation, no one in the inner layers of the onion thought it was going to be easy—and certainly not quick.

The problem was simple and inevitable, as the leaders of the Alignment had always known it would be. The prerequisite for accomplishing their goal was the dissolution of the Solarian League. Whatever its faults and weaknesses—its many, many, many weaknesses—the League was just too great an obstacle to their purpose, by virtue of its social mass if nothing else.

Early on, the Detweilers had pondered the possibility of using the League as a vessel for the transformation of the species, but they had never found a plausible mechanism for doing so. The League had to go, therefore. But that same immensity meant that great forces needed to be assembled against the League—and very few of those forces could be allowed to understand their own purpose. They were themselves inimical to the Alignment; more so, in many ways, than the League itself.

Leonard Detweiler’s great-great-great-grand-daughter Cecilia had once depicted the problem thusly:
We will bring down the great bison with a pack of wolves. The tricky part is that we don’t control the wolves.

Thankfully, there had been enough room on the slave ship for Zachariah to have a private cabin. At least he was spared the presence of his Gaul keeper. So, as he watched Mesa dwindle in the viewscreen until it was just one bright speck among a multitude, he wept, softly and steadily. What made the tears so bitter was that he had never been able to say goodbye to anyone.

He was still weeping when the ship made its alpha translation and he left the system of his birth. Probably forever. Almost certainly for many years.

* * *

When she came into the living room of their apartment, Stephanie Moriarty’s face was taut and drawn. So much so that her natural beauty was overwhelmed by her own expression.

Cary Condor noticed at once. “What’s wrong?”

“I’m . . . not sure ‘wrong’ is the right word.” She began slowly removing her jacket. There’d been a chill that morning when she left. As she did so, she retrieved something from one of the pockets and held it up.

“I found this in the fish.”

“Oh, my God.” Cary practically whispered the words. She got up hastily and came over to stare at the little chip; so flimsy it was translucent. It looked more like a fish scale than anything manufactured. That was by design, of course.

“I’ll get the reader. Don’t move. Well . . . I mean, don’t . . .”

Moriarty’s expression shifted into something more derisive. Perhaps oddly, that made her look beautiful again. “I
did
manage to get it all the way here without destroying it, you know. I think I can hold on for another few seconds.”

“Okay, okay, sorry. It’s just . . .
Jesus.
I never expected we’d . . .”

“It might be nothing, you know.”

“Don’t be ridiculous, Stephanie.”

Cary rummaged around in the drawer where she kept the specialized tablet. She kept it hidden for reasons that weren’t really very reasonable. To the eye, the tablet looked no different than any other. Only a close and careful examination would reveal the unusually small slot where an out-of-the-ordinary chip could be inserted. The only people who would conduct that sort of examination were Mesan security agencies and if they’d fallen into their hands the proverbial goose was cooked anyway.

Whatever a goose was. She finally found the damn thing and held it up triumphantly.

“How could it be ‘nothing’?” she demanded. “Who would put a blank chip in a
bacau
fluke?”

“Oh, gee, let’s see. The Tabbies, for starters. Then there are the Ivas. The Bureau of—well, no, those thugs haven’t got the brains—but there’s always the—”

“Shut up.” Cary took the chip and carefully inserted it into the reader. “If they’d spotted us they wouldn’t be fooling around with something like this.”

“Sure they would. Use us as bait to reel in our confederates. All of whom are dead and missing except Karen, I grant you, but they don’t know that.”

By now, Cary had the necessary codes entered. “Shut. Up.”

It wasn’t that she didn’t understand the possibility that some security agency was playing a longer game than usual. She just didn’t want to think about that while there was still a chance—one hell of a good chance, in her opinion—that—

The message came up and she began reading it off. “Ambassador Jim Johnson.”

Stephanie had her own tablet out. “
The Envoy
by Giacomo ibn Giovanni al-Fulan. Got it.”

“Mary had a little lamb whose fleece was white as snow,” said Cary, speaking slowly.

Stephanie had been counting off the words as they were spoken. “Chapter Eleven, got it.” Her half-surly skepticism was gone by now. “This
has
to be from Angus.”

That was a reference to the Havenite agent who’d set up this system, Angus Levigne. The cypher was an idiosyncratic one that he’d devised himself. “It’s not as tight as a one-time pad,” he’d explained, “but it’s less limited, too. Any really good decryption expert could crack it, but not very quickly because there are so many arbitrary variables that you commit to memory.”

In that matter-of-fact absolute-zero way he had, Angus added: “Be easier to just subject you to truth drugs. Speaking of which”—he’d handed them a large vial of tablets—“take one of these at least once a month. They’re a composite designed to counter truth drugs.”

He’d sounded quite pleased. Angus was . . . a little weird. And a lot scary.

* * *

It took a while to finish. When they were done, the two women stared at each other.

“Can we trust it?” Stephanie finally asked.

“Who knows, for sure?” Cary shrugged. “But the way I look at it, somebody would have had to crack Angus himself to get all the variables that make the cypher work. And how likely is that?”

Stephanie chewed on her lower lip. After a few seconds, she said: “To be honest, I can’t imagine it happening at all. I’m pretty sure he could resist torture for . . . well, a long time.”

Cary chuckled. But there was no humor in the sound. “ ‘Long time’ as in . . . ?”

“Really long time. But it wouldn’t matter anyway because he’d be gone way before then. He’s . . . you know.”

“Weird.”

Stephanie’s smile did have some humor in it. “Let’s just think of him as ‘different,’ how’s that? The key point is, yes, I think we can trust it.”

“Yeah, me too. We’ll both have to go, though. The way this contact works, one person can’t do it alone.”

Stephanie looked to the corner where Karen was resting. Sleeping, rather. She slept most of the time now.

“It’d just be for a few hours. And it’s not until tomorrow anyway. She’ll wake up sometime before then and we can explain it to her. So at least if she wakes up while we’re gone she won’t wonder what happened to us.”

“And if we don’t come back at all . . .”

“She’s dead in a few days instead of a few weeks. Way it is.”

As was generally true of seccy revolutionaries on Mesa, both women were awfully hard-boiled themselves. That was the baseline against which you had to measure someone like Angus Levigne. Even by
their
standards he’d been . . .

Weird and scary.

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