The Depths of Time (47 page)

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Authors: Roger MacBride Allen

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BOOK: The Depths of Time
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If there is anything you wish,

Yuri said,

please do not hesitate to ask.


Thank you once again,

Koffield said.

And I trust you will forgive me if I take advantage of that gracious offer immediately. I don

t know what the proper title might be, but I—we—would like to meet with the station commander or director, or executive, as soon as possible. It is a matter of some urgency.

Koffield patted the handle of the large piece of luggage he had with him, and Yuri concluded that the contents of the case had something to do with the matter of urgency.


No apologies required, sir. In fact, Station Commander Raenau asked to see you as soon as was convenient.

That was understating the case by quite a bit. Raenau had bluntly ordered that the crew of the
Cruzeiro do Sul
be brought before him at once, whether they liked it or not. But Sparten could see no harm in being a bit more diplomatic,

seeing how both sides wanted the same thing in any-

event.

If you would care to see him now, before being shown to your quarters, I

m sure I could arrange it.

Koffield raised his eyebrows in surprise.

I must admit that I expected to spend quite some time arranging things. I

m delighted by the news, but I must admit I didn

t expect your commander to be quite so eager to see
us.
Might I ask if he gave you any reason?


No, sir, he did not.

Any more than you’ve given your reasons,
Yuri thought.

But if you

ll allow me the chance to make a very brief call, we

ll go straight to his office, and then take you to your quarters, where you will be welcome as the commander

s guests.

. It was a diplomatic way of saying they would not be expected to pay for lodging, and plainly Koffield got the
message.

Excellent,

he said.

We look forward to your hospitality.

The word
hospitality
gave Yuri pause. He considered for a moment, then decided now was as good a time as any for bad news.

Regarding that hospitality—I

m afraid it might not be up to our normal standards. In plain point of fact, we can

t offer much in the way of luxury. As you might or might not be aware, the station is rather overcrowded at the moment.


We didn

t know,

Koffield said dryly,

but we were beginning to suspect. The docking bays are remarkably full, and the ships in the bays do not appear to be in top-of-the-line-perfect repair.

Top of the line?
It took Yuri a moment to figure out what the outdated idiom meant.

Ah, yes,

he said.

Just so. But in any event, we can at least put you up.


If the station is
that
crowded, Mr. Sparten,

said the Chandray woman,

we could stay aboard our lighter.

Yuri looked at the woman in surprise—and noted that Koffield did as well. No doubt what she had said was quite polite and proper wherever—and whenever—it was that she came from. But Yuri could think of half a dozen cultures off the top of his head where to so much as offer to forgo hospitality was a deadly insult. There were certainly communities on Solace itself where it would have been a ghastly mistake. No one with any experience of other cultures would have made such a gaffe. Clearly she was far less experienced than Koffield.


I

m sure that Mr. Sparten

s offer was quite sincere, Second Officer Chandray,

Koffield said.

And I have no doubt we will find the stationside accommodations more comfortable and more convenient than anything we could arrange for ourselves aboard ship.

Chandray reddened visibly.

Yes, yes, of course,

she said.

Please forgive me,

she said to Yuri.

If I have offended you, it was quite unintentional.


Not at all,

Yuri replied. He regarded the two of them thoughtfully for a moment. The brief exchange had told him a lot about these two strangers. One knew to be wary when approaching a new culture, and the other did not. It was the sort of thing that might be worth knowing, sometime down the road.

In any event, we
do
have accommodation for you, and the station commander is eager to see you. If you will both come with me, there

s a free-runner waiting for us.


A what?

Chandray asked.


A free-runner. It

s a small open car that isn

t restricted to the transit-tube system, and can travel freely throughout the station. Could you come this way?


Certainly,

said Koffield.


Just a second,

Chandray said.

I need to secure my outer hatches first.

She stepped to one side of the hatch opening and flipped open a panel on the outer hull of the
Cruzeiro do Sul,
revealing some sort of keypad. Either deliberately or by chance, she moved to put her body between Yuri and the panel, and did something he could not see with the controls. The outer hatch slid shut, and Yuri heard a deep, solid
clunk, clunk, clunk
from inside the hatch. At a guess, the
Cruzeiro’s
hatches had triple dead bolts that had just slammed to.

All right. Locks set, combinations scrambled, and keys out,

she said.

Let

s go.

After the warning she had just received, it should have occurred to Chandray that locking her doors that completely, and that obviously, in front of your host, could be construed as one hell of an insult.

But then Chandray turned around and looked him right in the eye. No embarrassment there anymore, no apology. It was plain she knew exactly what she was doing. And, Yuri noticed, Koffield offered no objection this time, made no effort to smooth things over. Yuri smiled sadly to himself. He couldn

t blame them. They

d seen what the docking bays, and the ships in them, looked like. They might even have seen the
Pilot’s Ease
being jettisoned. They no doubt had guessed some, if not all, of what was going on aboard the station. Courtesy was one thing. Doing what you could to protect your only way out was quite another.


This way,

Yuri said. Koffield picked up the oversize hard-sided satchel he had brought out of the ship, and Chandray shut the access panel and stood by him, ready to follow Yuri. He led them down the Personnel Access Tunnel
to the Gamma Docking Bays

airlock center, all three of them studiously ignoring everything that had just been revealed. He found himself wondering just how much else they would all need to ignore about each other.

Yuri gestured for his two guests to sit down in the rear bench seat of the free-runner.

You

ll see more facing forward,

he said. They got in, Koffield being very careful with his oversize case. Yuri got in himself and sat down in the front left-side swivel seat, facing forward.

Go to the Ring Park entrance to DeSilvo Tower, traveling via any convenient scenic route at observation speed,

he said. Lights on the car

s control panel came on, indicating that it had understood the instructions. A proposed route popped up on the main map display.

Route approved,

Yuri said, then spun about in his seat to face his guests as the car started itself up. It rolled out of the Gamma Bays

airlock center, went down the vehicle-axis ramp, and took the side turning into the west-quad down-axis transit tube.

The transit tubes were utilitarian affairs, scruffy, win-dowless, dimly lit, and a little beat-up. The car turned on its headlight and interior lights as it rolled along the featureless tunnel.


This is the scenic route?

Chandray asked.

Yuri laughed.

We

re not quite to the scenic part yet. We

ll come out of the transit tube soon, and you

ll see— well, what you

ll see. Quite frankly, even the scenic parts aren

t very scenic at the moment. As it happens, the scenic route is probably the fastest way there, this time of day. But there

s no sense hiding the situation from you. You might as well see us, warts and all.

Chandray and Koffield looked at each other for a moment. They seemed interested in what he said, but not surprised.

Why aren

t the scenic parts scenic?

Chandray asked. She tried to make it into a casual question, but it was plain from the look on her face they had come to a subject of interest. Chandray would never get far in life if she had to rely on concealing her emotions.

But there was no sense trying to deny what they were going to see for themselves in a moment. Some things, you couldn

t even pretend to ignore. Yuri shrugged sadly.

The whole station is crawling with refugees, and we

ll probably see a lot of them. It was a lot worse not so long ago, but it

s still pretty bad. You

ll see.


We

d guessed something of the sort already,

Koffield replied.

We picked up a few transmissions about some sort of evacuation panic on our. way in. One is related to the other, I

d imagine.

Yuri nodded.

A story got started and it wouldn

t die. A rumor about evacuating part of the population. Madam Kalzant—ah, Madam Neshobe Kalzant, the Planetary Executive, decided the only way to calm the situation down was to give everyone who wanted one a ride off-planet, demonstrate we could handle the traffic. I guess she figured that if she proved there wasn

t a shortage or a traffic cutoff, that would kill the panic. And it did, pretty much. Even if it was awful hard on us, the plan worked. The panic stopped, outgoing traffic tailed back down to normal—or below. Incoming traffic back toward Solace went way up. Inbound traffic probably won

t get back down to normal level for a while yet. But it looks like nearly everyone has decided to go back home to planetside.



Nearly

everyone?

Koffield asked gently.

Yuri turned his hands up in a sign of helplessness.

We

re a transit facility, a cargo-transfer point. We

ve got a fair-sized population, but this is a working station, not a resort hab with lots of excess capacity. We didn

t have enough life-support service to handle everyone who came through.


So we passed along as many people as we could to other stations and habitats, even to some of the domed colonies in the outer system. We were swamped getting them all processed through here. We

re still keeping pretty busy getting them back to Solace. But some of the refugees could only get this far. No money, no equipment, no off-planet skills. They got here on ships that shouldn

t ever have left the ground. Ships got here out of fuel, life support dead, propulsion out, some with nothing more than corpses aboard.

The free-runner shifted to an off-ramp and rolled itself into the waiting car of a cargo lift. The elevator car shut its doors and started to descend the moment the free-runner came to a halt. For whatever reason, the first half of the ride down took place in silence. What was there about lifts and elevators, Yuri wondered, that so discouraged conversation? Of course, to be fair, a ride in an SCO Station cargo lift could be a disconcerting experience. As one moved farther away from the axis of the station, the apparent pull of gravity increased dramatically. They would move from about one-tenth to nearly one-half gee in just over a minute. Yuri never enjoyed it, even if the normal operating speed of the lifts was kept low to try and keep the transition from being worse.

In any event, the lull in conversation offered up the perfect chance for Yuri to call ahead. He might as well take advantage of it. He pulled his pocket phone out, keyed a link to the commander

s office, and put the device to his ear, so only he could hear the other side of the conversation.

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