Law of Survival (38 page)

Read Law of Survival Online

Authors: Kristine Smith

BOOK: Law of Survival
8.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Shai had gradually straightened as Tsecha spoke. Not, he knew, because his words did not anger her, but because her bones were old and she could not maintain the true posture of rage. “You have had your life to practice twisting words as rope around your adversary's neck, Tsecha. One who has not studied as you have suffers a disadvantage.” She fingered the edge of a document, tapped the end of her stylus on the
table, delayed as humanish delayed when the last thing they wanted to do was decide. “If these filters are provided to the Karistos humanish, they will be gone from us. It will be as though they never existed.”

Feyó's back unbent gradually. “Indeed, nìaRauta, such is so. The assemblies will be turned over to the humanish engineers to reconstruct as they will—we will never see them again.”

Shai sat in silence, until humanish fidgeted and sneaked glances at their timepieces. But in the end, she acceded to the will of the gods, because she was a most orderly Vynshàrau, and as such, it was the only thing she could do.

 

They stood outside the meeting room afterward, in the huddled groups that humanish always formed after such occasions. Tsecha watched them gather, break apart, then gather once more.
Like mist into droplets,
Hansen had used to say.
Just watch out for the flood.

“I still don't believe they gave the OK. Shai was one baby-step away from adjourning the meeting.” Standish pushed a hand through his hair, which had grown more curly and unruly in the heat of the embassy.

“She really didn't have a choice. Neither of them did.” Jani leaned against the wall. Her eyes had dulled. She looked as tired, as pained. “The citizens of one of the largest colonial capitals go without potable water because a Family sweetheart deal prevents them from implementing the quick-fix? That's a kick in the head to every pro-colonial claim the government has made since the spring, and they can't afford to act that way anymore.”

“They saw the light?” Burkett wiped a cloth over his face, which shone with sweat. His hair looked as though he had walked in rain. “
Somebody
saw
something
, and it sure as hell wasn't the light. I can't carry tales of smoke-filled rooms back to Mako, Kilian—I need to know what the hell is going on.”

Jani's wearied manner did not alter as she regarded the angry general. She had seen him enraged so many times—perhaps she had grown used to such. “What would any intelligent being consider to be the desired outcome of this?” She
waited for Burkett to respond, even though she must have known that he would not. “A working water treatment facility for Karistos, right? Well, we'll have it if we keep on top of it, and I gave nothing away. That's goal in this game, by any measure.” She pushed off the wall and walked to Tsecha, her step slow. “If you'll excuse us.” She took his arm and pulled him down the hall. “Let's see—how much trouble are you in now?” she asked when they had walked far enough away to not be overheard.

Tsecha looked back at their group, which had already re-coalesced. Other droplets formed nearby, with members moving from one to another quite freely.
The flood begins…
“My theology is quite sound, nìa.”

“Yes, I'm sure it is. Shai has probably already Misty'd a recording to the Temple scholars with an order to come up with a rebuttal immediately.” She turned to watch Anais and PM Cao leave the meeting room; neither looked back at her. “The Elyan Haárin seemed quite pleased.”

Tsecha bared his teeth. “We are to meet after early evening sacrament to discuss their situation.”

“Their situation?” Jani smiled. “Congratulations, nìRau, you've become a lobbyist.” She looked at him. Her true eyes had shown for but a short time, yet it seemed as if they had always been such. “You're lucky that Cèel can't afford trouble with the Haárin—their support may save your life. That life, however, may be very different from the one you have now.”

Tsecha hesitated, then hunched his shoulders in a humanish shrug. “It is the life I am to have. The life on the edge of the blade.” His soul ached as he pondered the quiet of the embassy, a quiet in which he took comfort, but that he had most assuredly sacrificed. “I will not be alone, nìa, of that I am most sure. You will be there, I believe, if only to anger General Burkett.”

“That's a full-time job.” Jani looked down at the floor. Some time passed before she spoke. “You still call me nìa. That's wrong—you should call me ná, in proper Haárin fashion.”

“I shall call you as I wish,
nìa.”

Her eyes brightened. Her idomeni eyes. “Does that mean I can still call you Nema?”

Tsecha gripped her chin and tilted her head upward. Gently this time, in deference to her pain. “That is not my name.”

Jani's eyes filled, mist into droplets. “You know how to reach me, just in case.” She lifted his hand away, squeezing it just before she let it go. “Be careful, ní Tsecha.”

Tsecha watched her walk away. Her strange colonel waited in the entry for her. Pierce, who seemed so much as Dathim.
We each have our blade, and truly.
He wondered whether he would soon have need of his.

 

Tsecha met with the Elyan Haárin several times over the next days. He greatly esteemed ná Feyó. She was first-generation Haárin, an agronomist who had been expelled from the Academy before the war. They discussed her theories from sunrise to sunset and beyond. How the idomeni insistence on grown food played a major role in holding back their colonial expansion, how synthesized foods as those humanish used offered the best solution to this problem. Such discourse thrilled him, terrified him, and told him how much he needed to learn to consider himself true Haárin.

The morning the Elyan Haárin departed, Tsecha rose to bid them well. He stood out on the beach in the cold damp as their demiskimmer took to the air and veered toward HollandPort, watching it until it vanished in the glare of the rising sun. When he turned back to the embassy, he did not feel surprise to see Shai's suborn waiting for him atop the grassy rise. He only wondered why Shai delayed as long as she had.

 

“Seat yourself, Tsecha.” Shai sat at her work table, the latest delivery of Council documents stacked in piles around her. “So, your Haárin have departed.”

“They are not my Haárin, Shai.”

“Are they not?” She looked at him, her posture still as clenched as it had been days before. “Whose are they, then? Not mine. That I know, and truly.” She paged through one file, then another, as though what she sought was so unimportant that she had lost it. Tsecha had often seen Anais Ulanova do the same—he wondered if Shai had stolen the strategy from her.

Shai finally found what she searched for at the bottom of a high stack of files. She must have worked quite hard, to lose the fate of her Chief Propitiator so completely. “Cèel is most angry with you.”

Tsecha squirmed against the seat back. The discomfort of Shai's seat aggravated him, for he had grown used to the comfort of Haárin chairs over the past days. “Such does not surprise me.”

“So angry is he that he did not record his own pronouncement of your fate. He had his documents suborn write it out, and sent it to me to read.”

Tsecha laughed. “He thinks he can mislead the gods by obscuring his trail! How humanish he becomes!” His laughter grew even more as Shai's back hunched. “Pronounce my fate, Shai. In Cèel's words, which he denies before they are even uttered.”

Shai hesitated before she spoke. When the words sounded at last, they came quickly, as Vynshàrau, showing that Cèel had not yet lost himself completely. “Haárin you say you are. Therefore Haárin you will be, from this time forth.” She closed the file, and pushed it away as though the contents repelled her. “You bring disorder upon us, Tsecha. Chaos. Never has a Chief Propitiator been expelled from office. The humanish will believe us mad.”

“The humanish can match us, madness for madness. Some may even wonder why Cèel waited so long.” Tsecha regarded his red-trimmed cuffs for the last time. “NìaRauta Sànalàn is not ready.”

“Lecturers from Temple will arrive as soon as their absences can be arranged. They will see to her instruction.”

“And you will continue here as ambassador?”

“Until Cèel chooses a replacement, yes.”

Tsecha took one breath, then another. Haárin breath, inhaled by an outcast. He stood, slipped off the overrobe of his office, and draped it across Shai's desk. “I look forward to sitting at table with you in many meetings to come, Shai. You will wish you had killed me, and truly.” Then he left before she could pronounce more of Cèel's anger, and returned to his rooms to claim the few objects he wished to keep.

 

He crossed the veranda for the last time as the humanish sun ascended to prime. Walked across the lawns. Disappeared into the trees. He had packed his few possessions in a carryall that he wore slung across his shoulders, in imitation of Feyó's suborns. He had changed his clothes, trading his crisp off-white for dark and worn. Black shirt. Brown trousers. Black boots. He would obtain colors as soon as he could, dress in blues and greens and oranges. But for now, he walked as shadow.

They awaited him in the lane, Beyva and the rest, welcoming him with smiles and greetings and laughter. They herded around him and pushed him onward, as the sea pushed the wave, toward the house in which they had gathered a seeming age of evenings ago. Dathim stood in the entry, brightly clothed, ax-hammer gripped in his hand.

“We have been waiting for you, Tsecha. We, the embassy's blade!” Dathim stepped aside and gestured for him to step forward. “Your house has been waiting for you.”

Tsecha stopped short. “
Your
house, ní Dathim.”

“No, this is not my house, ní Tsecha. Mine is that one.” Dathim pointed to a smaller dwelling at the far end of the lane, near the base of the grassy rise. “This house”—he patted the side of the entry—“this house has been empty for some time. I have labored to prepare it for he who would live here.”

Tsecha took a step forward. Another. He touched the entry stonework, and pondered what he knew of this place. A place blessed by annihilation and adorned with the dunes of Knevçet Shèràa. A place of meeting, and rebellion, and change.

“It is a good house, and truly.” He touched the reliquary, muttered a prayer, and walked inside.

“Do you know who's going to be at this thing, besides the Commonwealth Cup semifinalists? Everybody. Absolutely
everybody
!” Angevin dug through the pile of gowns on Jani's bed, flinging about expensive fabrics like used dispos.

“I already know what I'm going to wear. Bought it last week. Fits perfectly.” Jani sat on the floor in front of the dresser, well out of range of flying dresses. “You've had a week to prep for this. I kept telling you, ‘Go shopping.'”

“When?
This place has been a zoo ever since the conclave.” Angevin stretched out a gold column gown on the bed and eyed it skeptically. “First, the move.” She gestured vaguely around the larger bedroom, with its tenth-floor cityscape view. “Security in and out all week, installing things. Then the workload. You get any more two-hundred-page Cabinet contracts, you're going to have to charter someone to close out your books at the end of the year.”

“I planned on doing that anyway.” Jani walked to her closet and took out her own choice for the evening. “Dolly recommended a firm that Registry uses. They cost a mint, and they're reputed to be real pains in the ass. Chances are good that they're as honest as you'll get in Chicago and no one could persuade them to set me up on an embezzlement charge.”

“You're worried about that?” Angevin dragged her gown to one side so Jani would have room to set out her own outfit.

“Worried, no. Ever mindful, yes.” Jani took her clothes from their wrappings and laid them out. “The old-fashioned frame-up seems to be the standard way of doing business in this city, and I'll be damned if I'm going to make it easy for
somebody.” She swept the sea-blue sari across the silvery pants and top. “What do you think?”

“I could cry.” Angevin whimpered as she stroked the turquoise silk. “How are you going to wear your eyes?”

Jani grinned. The question had become a point of fun between them, as well as a way to help everyone, herself included, adjust to the change. “Clothed, I think. It's not an official government function and I don't feel like being gawped at. Not that I may not be anyway, but why ask for it?” She walked to the dresser and picked through the multitude of packages her mother had brought her from Acadia. “I need to decide on jewelry,” she said as she liberated a huge padded bag from the collection.

Angevin gasped as Jani unfastened the bag's flaps and opened it like a book, revealing row after row of gems and metal. Platinum earrings and rings. Gold bracelets. “My God!” She held up a necklace of hammered gold discs. “When are you supposed to wear all this?”

“My wedding day. All in one shot.” Jani chuckled at Angevin's shocked look. “You never heard the term ‘more metal than an Acadian wedding'? A bride was supposed to wear her dowry on her back. You should see the daughters from wealthy families—they can barely move for the gold. I remember when I was little, seeing holos of a bride who had to be floated up to the altar on a skimdolly.” She examined a pair of aquamarine teardrop earrings. “Course, this stuff isn't worth near as much now as it was when the tradition began. But it's bright and shiny and custom dictates that it matters.”

They both started as the comport buzzer blatted; Angevin glowered at the extension unit on Jani's end table. “Let Steve get it. If I never again see another begging, pleading face on a display, I'll survive quite happily.” She hefted a gold-link bracelet and mouthed a
wow
. “Isn't it bad luck to wear this stuff before your wedding or something?”

“Oh, I think all bets are off where that's concerned. When your folks turn it over to you, it becomes yours to do with as you please.” Jani perused her nuptial stockpile with a hand pressed to her forehead. “I think I'm going to make do with about five percent of this, so Maman can ask me why I'm not wearing anything.” She set aside the aquamarine ear
rings, the huge stones set in platinum, and the matching collar-like necklace. Then she added an array of gold and platinum bracelets because she liked how the wide bands covered the
à lérine
scars on her forearms.

“You're going to look
so
exotic, and I'm going to look like I should be parking skimmers.” Angevin glared at the door as a knock sounded. She bundled her dress over her arm and hurried to answer it.

“Hey, don't leave this stuff—!” Jani stopped in mid-sentence when she saw Steve standing in the doorway, an anxious-looking Lt. Pullman at his back.

“That was Val on the com.” Steve grinned. “You need to get to Neoclona right away.”

 

“We started picking up the increased neuronal activity as soon as we flushed out the regen solutions and unjacked the shunt.” Dr. Wismuth, one of the many neurologists Jani had come to know, was short and round and bobbed like a happy balloon down the hall ahead of her. “Then we began what we call our systems checks—somatic, visual, auditory, etc….” She pushed the door to the room aside before it hada chance to open completely, ignoring the warning buzzer. “We've noted some issues with visual acuity that may or may not repair themselves. Her speech is slurred. She remembers nothing that happened the day of the assault”—Wismuth's bubbling ebbed—“which isn't entirely bad.” She beckoned for Jani to follow her into the darkened room. “Her head is still restrained, and will be for a few more days. She's still swaddled. We don't normally allow visitors other than immediate family at this stage, but I know you've been here every day since she arrived, and Val insisted that you had a right to know.” She stepped aside, allowing Jani a clear path to the bed.

The headboard blinked and fluttered less now that the shunt had been removed and Roni had regained some level of consciousness. Her hands moved constantly, fingers first flexing, then bending, then straightening as though she pointed. The part of her face that was visible held a tense, knitted expression, as though she suffered a severe
headache. Considering what Jani recalled of her own post-shunt return to consciousness, she probably did.

Then Roni's eyes, mere slits due to the swelling caused by the shunt, opened. She moved her mouth like an infant trying to vocalize. The rate of her hand movements increased. The psychotropic headboard blinked and fluttered more rapidly. Jani hung back, her heart in her throat and her hands clenched in her pockets, until Dr. Wismuth pushed her forward. “You need to move up—all you are is a blur from this distance.”

“Sorry.” Jani stepped closer to the bed, and hoped Wismuth couldn't see the tears running down her cheeks.
Sorry. Sorry. Sorry.

“Jah—” Roni's agitated movements slowed. A corner of her mouth twitched. “'lo.”

“Hello.” Jani coughed to loosen her tightening chest. “I won't ask how you feel. I know how you feel.”

Roni blew out a very weak snort. “Yah. Head hur'. Stup' shunt.” Her mouth curved a little more. “Mom here. Da. Helluva way to ge' a vis-it.” Her hand movements increased again. “Thinkin'. Some'en wron'. Luu-sheen. Peeth-aah. Bot' blon.' Col' eyes.” Then the motion slowed again. Her face relaxed as though she slept.

Wismuth tugged on Jani's sleeve. “Does that mean something? She's been repeating it for hours.”

Jani nodded. “It concerns the matter we were working on the day of the assault. We were trying to determine an identity with a very sparse physical description.”

“Oh, this is good, yes!” Wismuth bustled toward the door, barely avoiding a collision with Val in the entry.

“Wiz is wearing her note-taking face.” Val sauntered up to Jani and wrapped his arms around her. He wore a green plaid shirt—he pressed her face to his shoulder and patted the back of her head. “It's absorbent—go ahead.”

Jani hugged him back. “If I had—”

“I don't want to hear any ifs out of you, remember?” Val pushed her back so he could look her in the face. “She can hear us. If you're going to beat yourself up, we need to go someplace else.” He glanced at the bed. “We should leave anyway—that woman needs her rest.”

They walked into the hall, arms around each other's waists. Jani blinked as the bright lights struck her and she felt the old familiar tightening of her eyefilms. “What's the prognosis?”

“At this stage, a hell of a lot better than average.” Val hugged her again. “I won't go into gory details, but judging from the severity of that blow she suffered, she's lucky she stayed alive long enough to get here.”

“Lucky I finally found her, you mean.”

“Jan, we still know very little about what happened that night, and until we do, I wish you'd stick the guilt back in the box.” Val slowed to a stop, gripped Jani by the shoulders, and turned her to face him. “She's alive. She's lucid. The vast majority of her responses to stimuli fall within normal variation. She suffered less serious cerebral damage than you did. You were out for almost five weeks, not five days, and look how you turned out. Given time, she stands a great chance of making a full and complete recovery.”

Jani exhaled with a shudder. “Her personality—”

“Initial signs look good, but we won't know the fine detail for weeks.” Val shook her gently, in deference to her mending collarbone. “Let's discuss some items that we do know. You saved her life. You could have died in the process. The two things that saved you both are that she's a very lucky young woman and you're a medical wonder.” His green-brown eyes shone with a hard light. “Give yourself a break, for once in your damned life. Not everything that happens to everyone you know is your fault.” He hugged her again, and they continued walking. “You going to the party tonight?”

Jani shrugged. “I guess.”

Val nodded with medical finality. “You better. You should have a great time, a wonderful time.” He led her to the lift that would take her down to the garages. “Then tomorrow morning, you should come back here and tell Roni all about it. It'll do you both good.” He shoved her gently into the open cabin, in which Pullman already stood waiting. “Now go.”

Pullman escorted her to the VIP level. He looked the gentle giant in his dress blue-greys; it was hard to believe he carried enough firepower on his person to flatten a fair-sized
building. “Good news, ma'am?” He popped the rear gullwing of Jani's latest conveyance, a dark red four-door.

“Yes. Good news.” Jani slipped into the backseat, and smiled up at Pullman as he closed her in.
She's alive…she's lucid…we talked a little. I'll tell her all about the party in the morning.
Yes, she would. Oh yes, she would.

 

“Janila, look at all this food!” Jamira held her plate in front of her like a barrier. Then she edged closer to Jani and dropped her voice. “Can you eat any of it?”

“Some of it, Maman.” Jani looked over the banked tables, a stationary feast moored by goldware and crystal and candlesticks the size of Pullman's forearms. “I just don't know where to start.”

“Allow me.” John Shroud took the plate from Jani's hands and filled it. He wore a smart evening suit in pearl grey and had filmed his eyes to match; the tempered light of the ballroom softened his spectral edge. “Good evening, Mère Kilian,” he rumbled with a host's smile. “Are you having a good time?”

“Yes, Dr. Shroud.” Jamira's smile stayed true, her truce with John still in place. “How Declan and I danced. Such wonderful music, waltzes and à deux. Now he is in the other room, watching football holos and stuttering like a young boy in the presence of Le Vieux Rouge.”

John looked back at Jani, near-invisible eyebrows arched in question.

“The Old Red. Acadia Central United's nickname.” Jani took the plate from him and stared at the numerous tiny servings of meats, breads, and hors d'oeuvres. “You expect me to eat this tonight?”

“It's just a little of everything.”

“I think
everything
is the key word.” Jani used a two-pronged fork to skewer a shrimp the size of her finger as she surveyed the huge ballroom. “I saw the PM a little while ago.”

“She made one pass through the room and left. Anais sent her regrets this morning. The people I spoke with who asked about you seemed eager to talk to you. The usual Ministers,
along with business leaders anxious about the Haárin influx. So in answer to your unasked question, no, I don't believe there's anyone here you need to avoid.” John looked down at her and smiled. “See, I can be useful.”

“I never said you couldn't.” Jani stuffed the shrimp in her mouth to forestall further conversation, then turned as a familiar babble of voices sounded from behind.

“My dear, you look lovely!” Jamira handed Steve her plate so she could offer silent applause for Angevin's golden gown.

“Oh, so do you!” Angevin touched the gold-trimmed edge of Jamira's fuchsia sari, which flowed over trousers and top of muted gold. Behind her, Steve stood in his basic black evening suit and juggled his and Jamira's plates. He glanced at Jani and rolled his eyes as Angevin and Jamira fell into animated conversation.

Jani felt a hand touch her shoulder, and turned to find John beckoning for her to follow him. They walked to a small pedestal table near the dividing line between the dining and the dancing. Couples in rainbow eveningwear swirled past as the music swelled, forcing them to bend close together so they could hear one another.

John had gotten a drink, something caramel-colored and potent-looking, like the bourbon Evan van Reuter used to imbibe incessantly. “I assume your folks are staying?”

“Do they have a choice?” Jani looked out over the Commerce Ministry ballroom, an immense space with high tiered ceilings, chandeliers, and walls of french doors leading out to terraces and gardens. “They can't go back to Acadia. I think they realized that the day they bugged out. Maman brought my dowry jewelry and all her family holos and mementoes. Papa brought most of his tools and handheld instruments. Niall has them in his sights—they've got round-the-clock protection although I don't think they realize what that means.” She studied the milling diners and dancers, on the lookout for the waiter who strayed near, the gowned woman who asked for the time. Watchers all, guardians all, shadows all, courtesy of Niall Pierce, who currently resided in a command center in a nether part of the building and rode herd over a score of Cabinet and Family
security forces. “I never thanked you for taking care of them.”

Other books

Ice Maiden by Jewel Adams
Wobble to Death by Peter Lovesey
Surrounded by Death by Harbin, Mandy
Conjurer by Cordelia Frances Biddle
The Undertow by Jo Baker
The Sweetheart Racket by Cheryl Ann Smith
Taste: A Love Story by Tracy Ewens