"Sometimes injustice is done," Miria said sadly. "I know that. I wish it wouldn't happen. But I deserve to be here, and I know that too. When my sentence is completed, I'll be forgiven."
More than once Kylis had thought of staying on some world and trying to live the way other people did, even of accepting punishment, if necessary, but what had always stopped her was the doubt that forgiveness was often, or ever, fully given. Redsun seemed an unlikely place to find amnesty.
"What did you do?"
Kylis felt Miria tense and wished she had not asked. Not asking questions about the past was one of the few tacit rules among the prisoners.
"I'm sorry... it's not that I wouldn't tell you, but I just cannot talk about it."
Kylis sat in silence for a few minutes, scuffing the toe of her boot along the rock like an anxious child and rubbing the silver tattoo on the point of her left shoulder. The pigment caused irritation and slight scarring. The intricate design had not hurt for a long time, nor even itched, but she could feel the delicate lines. Rubbing them was a habit. Even though the tattoo represented a life to which she would probably never return, it was soothing.
"What's that?" Miria asked. Abruptly she grimaced. "I'm sorry, I'm doing just what I asked you not to do."
"It doesn't matter," Kylis said. "I don't mind. It's a spaceport rat tattoo. You get it when the other rats accept you." Despite everything, she was proud of the mark.
"What's a spaceport rat?"
That Miria was unfamiliar with the rats did not surprise Kylis. Few Redsun people had heard of them. On almost every other world Kylis ever visited, the rats were, if not exactly esteemed, at least admired. Some places she had been actively worshipped. Even where she was officially unwelcome, the popular regard was high enough to prevent the kind of entrapment Redsun had started.
"I used to be one. It's what everybody calls people who sneak on board starships and live in them and in space-ports. We travel all over."
"That sounds... interesting," Miria said. "But didn't it bother you to steal like that?"
A year before, Kylis would have laughed at the question, even knowing, as she did, that Miria was quite sincere. But recently Kylis had begun to wonder: Might something be more important than outwitting spaceport security guards? While she was wondering she came to Redsun, so she never had a chance to find out.
"I started when I was ten," Kylis said to Miria. "So I didn't think of it like that."
"You sneaked onto a starship when you were only ten?"
"Yes."
"All by yourself?"
"Until the others start to recognize you, no one will help you much. It's possible. And I thought it was my only chance to get away from where I was."
"You must have been in a terrible place."
"It's hard to remember if it was really as bad as I think. I can remember my parents, but never smiling, only yelling at each other and hitting me."
Miria shook her head. "That's terrible, to be driven away by your own people-- to have nowhere to grow up... Did you ever go back?"
"I don't think so."
"What?" "I can't remember much about where I was born. I always thought I'd recognize the spaceport, but there might have been more than one, so maybe I have been back and maybe I haven't. The thing is, I can't remember what they called the planet. Maybe I never knew."
"I cannot imagine it-- not to know who you are or where you come from or even who your parents were."
"I know that," Kylis said.
"You could find out about the world. Fingerprints or ship records or regression-- "
"I guess I could. If I ever wanted to. Sometime I might even do it, if I ever get out of here."
"I'm sorry we stopped you. Really. It's just that we feel that everyone who can should contribute a fair share."
Kylis still found it hard to believe that after being sent to Screwtop Miria would include herself in Redsun's collective conscience, but she had said "we." Kylis only thought of authorities as "they."
She shrugged. "Spaceport rats know they can get caught. It doesn't happen too often and usually you hear that you should avoid the place."
"I wish you had."
"We take the chance." She touched the silver tattoo again. "You don't get one of these until you've proved you can be trusted. So when places use informers against us, we usually know who they are."
"But on Redsun you were betrayed?"
"I never expected them to use a child," Kylis said bitterly.
"A child!"
"This little kid sneaked on my ship. He did a decent job of it, and he reminded me of me. He was only ten or eleven, and he was all beat up. I guess we aren't so suspicious of kids because most of us started at the same age." Kylis glanced at Miria and saw that she was staring at her, horrified.
"They used a child? And injured him, just to catch you?"
"Does that really surprise you?"
"Yes," Miria said.
"Miria, half the people who were killed during the last set weren't more than five or six years older than the boy who turned me in. Most of the people being sent here now are that age. What could they possibly have done terrible enough to get them sent here?"
"I don't know," Miria said softly without looking up. "We need the power generators. Someone has to drill the steam wells. Some of us will die in the work. But you're right about the young people. I've been thinking about... other things. I had not noticed." She said that as if she had committed a crime, or more
exactly a sin, by not noticing.
"And the child..." Her voice trailed off and she smiled sadly at Kylis. "How old are you?"
"I don't know. Maybe twenty."
Miria raised one eyebrow. "Twenty? Older in experience, but not that old in time. You should not be here."
"But I am. I'll survive it."
"I think you will. And what then?"
"Gryf and Jason and I have plans."
"On Redsun?"
"Gods, no."
"Kylis," Miria said carefully, "you do not know much about tetraparentals, do you?"
"How much do I need to know?"
"I was born here. I used to... to work for them. Their whole purpose is their intelligence. Normal people like you and me bore them. They cannot tolerate us for long."
"Miria, stop it!"
"Your friend will only cause you pain. Give him up. Put him away from you. Urge him to go home."
"No! He knows I'm an ordinary person. We know what we're going to do."
"It makes no difference," Miria said with abrupt coldness. "He will not be allowed to leave Redsun."
Kylis felt the blood drain from her face. No one had ever said that so directly and brutally before. "They can't keep him. How long will they make him stay here before they realize they can't break him?"
"He is important. He owes Redsun his existence."
"But he's a person with his own dreams. They can't make him a slave!"
"His research team is worthless without him."
"I don't care," Kylis said.
"You-- " Miria cut herself off. Her voice became much gentler. "They will try to persuade him to follow their plans. He may decide to do as they ask."
"I wouldn't feel any obligation to the people who run things on Redsun even if I lived here. Why should he be loyal to them? Why should you? What did they ever do but send you here? What will they let you do when you get out? Anything decent or just more dirty, murderous jobs like this one?" She realized she was shouting, and Miria looked stunned.
"I don't know," Miria said. "I don't know, Kylis. Please stop saying such dangerous things." She was terrified and shaken, much more upset than when she had been crying.
Kylis moved nearer and took her hand. "I'm sorry, Miria, I didn't mean to hurt you or say anything that could get you in trouble." She paused, wondering how far Miria's fear of Redsun's government might take her from her loyalty.
"Miria, " she said on impulse, "have you ever thought of partnering with anybody?"