“Please try to concentrate on the matter in hand, Mr.
Rousseau,” she said, seemingly unruffled by my stab in the dark. “May I take it that, in the absence of any other offers, you are prepared to negotiate the details of this one? I’m sure the court would be happy to know that you intend to discharge your obligation conscientiously.”
I remembered that Myrlin was supposed to be a giant. Even if he hadn’t been, he’d have had a problem blending into the background of a place like Skychain City. If Myrlin was out of Amara Guur’s reach, he must surely have found some influential friends of his own. Or had I miscalculated the situation? Was it something else that had gone awry, derailing Amara Guur’s original plan? Who had tipped him off that Saul had found something valuable? Balidar? Someone at the C.R.E.? Who would have known, given that Saul hadn’t given me more than the merest hint?
“I’ll be happy to give your offer serious consideration,” I lied. “But you’ll forgive me if I wait the full seventy-two hours before making a decision. I have to consider all the alternatives.”
“You only have one, Mr. Rousseau,” the Kythnan said. “Do you really want to spend half a lifetime asleep, while your body and brain are rented to anyone and everyone who cares to pay the standard fee?”
“I’d have job security,” I pointed out. “And the Tetrax would want me alive and healthy too. Lifetimes are increasing all the while—by the time I got my mind back, we might all have the biotech to live forever. There are a thousand races working on the problem, and we all have the same DNA.”
“That would be a reckless gamble, Mr. Rousseau,” she said. “Accidents happen, even in a gel-tank.”
Her tone was casual, but I knew a threat when I heard one. I hoped that the people listening in were similarly sensitive.
“Maybe I’m beaten,” I conceded, “but I’m not quite ready to lie down yet. You have my permission to talk to my lawyer about that percentage of the profits, and any other safeguards he cares to incorporate. His name’s 238-Zenatta. But I’m not going to sign anything until I’ve had every last hour of my three days’ grace, and I’m not going to give up hoping for a miracle.”
“Thank you,” she said—and she smiled. It was one hell of a smile, but I wasn’t fooled for an instant.
8
When the Kythnan had gone, I kicked the glass wall in frustration, but all that achieved was to make my big toe ache.
“I hope you got all that,” I said to the empty air. “If she’s telling the truth, your expectation of getting down into the lower levels in your own time and on your own terms is under threat. I only hope you care enough to try to figure out what the hell is going on—and to do something about it before my time runs out.”
I was confident of the first part of that hope. The Tetrax had to care enough about what Saul Lyndrach might have found to worry about Amara Guur getting his hands on it— but I was all too well aware that it wasn’t at all the same thing as caring what might happen to me. If the Tetrax concluded that the sensible thing to do was to let Amara Guur do their spadework for them, they probably wouldn’t be in the least interested in subverting his plans—which meant that from my point of view, they might as easily be reckoned deadly enemies as potential allies.
I really did need a miracle.
I tried to call Saul Lyndrach, and wasn’t overly surprised when I failed.
Then I phoned 74-Scarion at Immigration Control and asked whether he had any information on Myrlin’s whereabouts. 74-Scarion admitted some slight concern, but assured me that the newcomer’s disappearance was a minor matter—a mere technicality, unworthy of serious investigation. I didn’t know whether to believe him or not.
Then I rang Aleksandr Sovorov, and said: “You’ve got to get me out of this, Alex. There’s no one else I can turn to.”
“I’m sorry, Rousseau,” he said, “but I don’t see the necessity.”
He didn’t know that he was quoting Voltaire, but that didn’t make me feel any less ignominious a beggar.
“I didn’t do it, Alex,” I told him.
“Actually,” he admitted, “I never thought you had. But if you couldn’t prove it to the court, I don’t see what I can do.”
“Come on, Alex. The C.R.E. must be interested in the fact that Amara Guur’s planning a looting expedition. He thinks he knows a way into the lower levels.”
“Rousseau,” he said, obviously forgetting the fact that I’d instructed him to call me mister as well as the fact that he’d earlier felt free to call me Michael, “everybody thinks he knows a way into the lower levels. Do you know how many people come to us with tales like Lyndrach’s?”
“No,” I said, feeling some slight relief at having made progress enough with the mystery to be certain that Saul had gone to the C.R.E. with whatever he’d found, “but I do know what happens when their applications get booted into touch by your stupid committees. Somebody believed him, Alex—or thought his claim was worth taking seriously enough to rat him out to the vormyran mafia.”
“We can’t investigate every silly rumour that comes our way,” he said. “The sillier they sound, the less inclined we are to take them seriously.”
“Exactly how silly did this one sound?” I asked.
“I can’t talk to you about C.R.E. business,” he told me. “You’re a convicted murderer calling from a prison cell, for heaven’s sake.”
“Just get me out, Alex. I’ll take any reasonable offer, to stay out of Amara Guur’s clutches.”
“I’d really like to help,” he assured me, “but my hands are tied.”
“And your fat arse is bolted to your well-upholstered chair,” I retorted. “There are two hundred humans on Asgard, Alex—some of them have got to be capable of caring about Saul, if not about me. If you can find him before my time’s up—or Myrlin the jolly giant—you might be able to get something going. If the Tetrax can’t find them, somebody must be hiding them, and that somebody is far more likely to be human than alien. You have to find them, and persuade them to tell the Tetrax what’s going on.”
“Do you think I’m some kind of miracle-worker?” he complained.
“Nothing less will do,” I assured him. “A miracle-worker is what I need.”
“Well, I’m not,” he informed me, unnecessarily. “I’ll ask around, but I’m warning you, Rousseau—if this business ends up harming my position in the C.R.E., I’m going to be extremely annoyed.”
“Well, if I don’t end up dead, I’ll just have to carry that on my conscience.”
“You’re not much of a diplomat, are you?” he came back, radiating wounded vanity. “Murderer or not, it’s people like you that get the human species a bad name. No wonder we get embroiled in stupid wars. We did win, by the way, insofar as either side can be said to have won. The Salamandrans came off far worse than we did, at any rate. It’ll take us centuries to live it down, of course, even though they started it—but at least it wasn’t our homeworld that was devastated. They’re going to need our help now, just to avoid extinction. Compared with the amount of blood the whole race has on its hands, your innocence of the death of a single Sleath is a minor matter.”
“Not to me,” I told him, through gritted teeth. I was being as diplomatic as I possibly could.
“We’re all complicit in near-genocide, Michael,” he told me, morosely. “None of us can avoid that stain. It’s a whole-species crime. You and I and our two hundred compatriots might be a very long way from Earth—farther, I suppose, than anyone else—and you and I, at least, might have set off from home before the war even began, but we’re still guilty. There’s no way around that.”