Griffith glanced toward Kolya's front door, and his color grayed. "What do you mean, 'we'?"
"You shouldn't have-" Kolya stopped. If he embarrassed Griffith about finding the tobacco for him, Grif-
fith would likely decline to get more when Kolya ran out.
,,Maybe toasting it would work," Griffith said. "Toasting it gently."
Stephen Thomas entered the lobby of the guest house.
None of the people in charge of it remained on board Starfarer. With the cleaning ASes out of commission as well, dust had begun to collect in comers and on the windowpanes.
Stephen Thomas climbed to the second floor. Since he was the only guest, he supposed he could have any of its dozen rooms.
He opened the door to the room Feral had been planning to use.
Stephen Thomas had shown Feral to the guest house-
Feral had just arrived on the same transport that brought J.D. to
Starfarer and returned Victoria from her trip to British Columbia.
Stephen Thomas and Feral had barely met. But Stephen Thomas liked him from the start.
He and Feral had stood in the doorway. The room was comfortable and attractive. It had better furniture than Merry's room, the unused room, back at the partnership's house. But Stephen Thomas did not want to leave Feral here all alone.
"You don't have to stay here," Stephen Thomas said. "Come home with me.
We have a spare room."
"That would be great." Feral smiled. He had a great smile. "It's tough to get involved in a community when you're staying in a hotel. Thanks." -Stephen Thomas still wondered if, somehow, Feral's association with the alien contact department-or with Stephen Thomas and his family-had contributed to his death.
Someone had used the room since Stephen Thomas was here last. The bed had not been slept in, but scraps of paper lay on the desk in the bay window. Arachne
maintained a small display nearby. Bright sunlight washed out the display's colors; Stephen Thomas could not decipher it from here.
He crossed to the window, sat at the desk, and glanced up at the display.
It contained a copy of the alien maze that had-they thought-been humanity's welcome into the interstellar civilization.
Stephen Thomas smiled sadly. Lots of people had kept a copy of that maze around, trying to decipher it. Until Starfarer encountered Europa and Androgeos, and discovered that their welcome had been withdrawn. The maze was just a maze.
Arachne informed Stephen Thomas that Feral had set the maze image in the window.
Feral used this room as an office, Stephen Thomas thought.
That made sense; all the members of the partnership had offices outside the house. A separate office made it easier to concentrate on work, and to get away from work at home.
Stephen Thomas wished he had known about this place. He had no particular reason to know; Feral had no particular reason to tell him or not to tell him. He just wished he had known.
Stephen Thomas picked up the scraps of paper. They contained a couple of handwritten scribbles.
"Family.,,
"Maze."
Passwords, Stephen Thomas thought. Feral wrote down passwords till he was sure he had memorized them.
He asked Arachne for Feral's locked files.
He tried the word "Maze" as a password.
It was a public key. Not the key itself, of course, which was too long to remember, but a vector to the key.
Arachne responded with a message from Feral.
Please record your observations about the deep space expedition. I'll use your replies in the book I'm writing. I hope everyone will choose to sign their comments, but you can remain anonymous . . .
. . . but if you want to remain anonymous . . .
. . . but if you insist on . . .
Stephen Thomas frowned. This was getting him nowhere. He could send a message, but it would go oneway into Feral's file, encrypted through the public key, and only Feral would be able to get it out. He wondered why he had not known about it.
You don't know about it because it isn't finished! he thought. What else could those last lines be? Feral was tinkering with his announcement, trying to balance his preference for signed contributions with his willingness to respect privacy. He never had a chance to release his project. He set it up, but he never polished it, never told anyone that it existed, never released the public key.
"Shit," Stephen Thomas muttered. "Oh, shit, what a goddamned waste. . . ."
A public key implied a private key. Stephen Thomas fingered the second scrap of paper. "Family."
He was afraid to try ii. "Maze" had given him a tantalizing glimpse. "Family" might give him Feral's private key. Or it might give him nothing. Stephen Thomas turned the soft ragged scrap of paper over and over in his fingers, afraid to speak the word to Arachne, afraid to encounter the same bleak emptiness that had surrounded him when he first learned of Feral's death.
He rubbed his eyes; he spread his fingers across his face and looked at the world distorted by his amber swimming webs.
Closing his eyes again, he spoke to Arachne.
" 'Family' is the private key," he said.
Arachne opened a hidden room to him, a room filled with Feral's log files. Stephen Thomas stretched out on the bed, and went exploring.
Feral kept lists. A list of places he had been. A list of his articles, of course. A list of the pieces he wanted to write, the places he wanted to go, the people he wanted to interview.
A collection of references he planned to look up: Technical reports on Starfarer, on Arachne. The thesis Stephen Thomas had defended in order to earn his Ph.D.
Stephen Thomas smiled sadly. No wonder it was on the "to be read" list. It was technical and specialized, tough going for a member of the field, much less a lay person.
We're even, Stephen Thomas thought. I haven't read much of his stuff and he hadn't read any of mine.
He moved on through the reference list.
Professor Thanthavong's acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize for medicine, for creating viral depolymerase. That one was an important, touching historical document, written years before Feral was born. Before Stephen Thomas was born. It was a shame Feral had never gotten to it. Maybe he had heard it, on one of the documentaries made about the professor. He had known a lot about her; he had admired and respected her.
J.D.'s first novel. Stephen Thomas felt an embarrassing flash of satisfaction that Feral had not read it. It was neither dry nor technical, but it was hard going: obscure and unbalancing, disturbing. As hard to read in its own way as the Ph.D. thesis. When Stephen Thomas had tackled it, he had given up halfway through.
He left the list of work Feral would never see, and glanced into the file of work that Feral had read. It extended back to Feral's early teens. It ranged far and wide over subjects and technical level. Right at the top, most recent, was a book on braiding hair. That struck Stephen Thomas as strange. Feral's chestnut hair had been medium length and curly. Not as curly as Victoria's, but tight enough to keep it out of his face.
He left that file and explored farther, deeper.
He could hear Feral's voice in every sentence. Stephen Thomas forced himself to listen, to stay calm. He could not manage to remain unmoved.
Fantasies made him ache with regret and physical pain; observations made him laugh, and wince, in the darkness. He saw himself through Feral's eyes.
Arrogant and charming, physically compelling, his sexuality insistent and innocent . . .
Stephen Thomas resisted "innocent." Insistent, maybe, though he hoped he was civilized about his affairs. He thought he was. He was capable of backing off, of taking no for an answer, though hardly anyone ever said no to him.
Stephen Thomas is vulnerable . . .
Vulnerable? Stephen Thomas thought. What the fuck did I ever say to Feral, to anybody, that made him think I was vulnerable? Vulnerable about what? Bullshit.