Her instructions from Brood were simple and cold: "Relax, we'll do the work. You just read what's in front of you when the red light goes on."
A small security camera mounted high on the bulkhead kept track of her every move. It was a toy, a trinket compared to the personalized cameras and triangulators that her team used at the launch site. Holovision's equipment got worse every year. She missed her own gear.
They were the best, she thought. And maybe that last tape is still inside.
She wondered whether Brood's men had picked them up.
Rico made those sets, she thought, and those triangulators, too. Nobody who knew cameras could pass those up.
She felt her first rush of real hope. The cameras weren't down at the launch site at all.
They're here, she thought, or at least they're in orbit with us.
She didn't want to think about the tapes. For now, she wanted only to focus on the cameras.
She couldn't help wondering what they'd do with the tapes.
Keep them, as backup. Record over them when their other tapes are full.
She doubted that whatever this team planned would involve a whole lot of tape. But the techs had brought them along, her logic assured her of that.
They might still be on the shuttle.
She didn't want to go back to that hatchway, where Brood's men had shot those guards down.
Beatriz glanced up at the surveillance camera.
Is it a person behind that thing, she wondered, or tape?
She didn't think they'd waste the tape. The techs ignored her altogether. They worked quickly at several editing and sound stations, coordinating something among themselves. She suspected it had something to do with her.
Maybe there's no one behind it.
The three-hour light flashed. Three o'clock in the afternoon marked the start of the assembly of the six-clock news. Getting the tapes was only one problem. Inserting them into a Holovision Nightly News broadcast with Brood's men watching posed another problem. She knew who could help her with the second problem, and it was the one person she most wanted to see.
Mack could get a message groundside, coded to the right frequency and digitally encoded.
She knew, because he'd done it once for her at Ben's request.
He was teaching me, she realized. Ben must've thought something like this might happen.
Most Pandorans were too hungry to fight, she knew that. Thousands already slept in holes dug in the talus, under torn plastic vulnerable to demons and the weather. From her family she learned that fighting was only one way.
She remembered something her grandfather had told her, something she'd told Dwarf MacIntosh last time: "Educate, agitate, organize."
Flattery had organized the world. Now Beatriz wanted to use that organization against him.
Communication would do it. People had their bodies. Coordination of all those bodies would be the key to their freedom.
How to get away with it?
Maybe she couldn't get away with it. What kind of message would she deliver then?
It might save Ben and Rico, too, she thought, though in a part of her somewhere they were already beginning to disappear. She tried to make her shocked and exhausted mind think through all that had happened in the past twenty-four hours, all that there was to go.
I've got to get to Mack, she thought. That is, if Brood hasn'... hasn'...
She wouldn't allow herself to complete the thought. She concentrated on what she had to work with. This small studio aboard the Orbiter had been her project all along, her excuse to stay close to the stars. It was a little larger than the one at launch site. Flattery had had it installed to be sure that the Voidship project received the best documentation, the best publicity, the world's complete attention. She knew now what its primary purpose had been all along - diversion, something to keep people looking up while Flattery stole their boots.
The studio was divided into six engineering units and the one live set where Beatriz worked. Quarters were very cramped. Six editing screens and a couple of very large clocks kept them in touch with the world. A constant barrage of images rolled across the six screens as the editorial team groundside reviewed the day's film from the field and made their selections. There was a small holo stage in the center of the room for final mock-up and a large viewscreen behind it. Both the clocks and the growl in her belly told her things she didn't want to know.
"Three hours to air time," she said.
Her console indicated she was speaking into a dead microphone.
She raised her voice. "We're five hours behind schedule."
No answer. The techs worked as though she were a piece of furniture. They relayed tapes of their own groundside for editing and placement.
Beatriz rolled her tape of the Organic Mental Core up one of the screens and suppressed a shudder. This was a person, a living, thinking brain, kept alive by attachment to a comatose host. She wondered what it was that caused the coma. She was certain that she knew who.
"I need to talk with Dr. MacIntosh," she said.
This was not the first time she'd said it, and the response was always the same - silence. She'd received the silent treatment from the techs since docking aboard the Orbiter. From the occasional glances in her direction she surmised this to be orders from Brood, rather than choice.
Unlike counterparts of old, this OMC would be able to talk, using neuroelectrical pickups. When the time came it could communicate with the neuromusculature of the ship, feel everything that transpired aboard. This, Flattery reasoned, would keep the OMC sane where the original OMCs had failed.
It was clear to Beatriz that Flattery didn't want to face the kind of artificial consciousness that had brought humankind to Pandora. There were those who believed that Ship still existed, and would return. The hyb tanks that had brought Flattery, Mack and Alyssa Marsh were evidence to Beatriz that Ship could be very much alive, God or not.
If I can get one of these techs to start talking, that would be a wedge against Brood, she thought. And it might be a way to Mack.
Current Control and MacIntosh were only a few meters down the passageway. Beatriz could practically feel the vibrations from his throaty speech, his huge body bashing about his offices. Current Control and the Holovision remote studio shared a few kilometers of cable between them, but no hatchway. Both areas were soundproofed.
Beatriz tried to remember what Mack had taught her about their hookups. He'd spent a lot of time orienting her during her trips aloft. What came to her were his philosophies and musings, the relaxing tone of his deep voice. She remembered nothing of the linkup between the two rooms. She had already tried a few electronic tricks of her own to contact him, but with no luck.
He knows I'm due, she thought. Maybe he'll come looking for me.
She hoped that it wouldn't mean walking into his own execution.
***
Manipulating the kelp electronically is like making a marionette out of a quadriplegic. The trick becomes keeping it a quadriplegic.
Crista felt a pressure on her whole being. It was not like the pressurized cabin, like air pressure. It was some indescribable containment of her self inside some huge envelope - like the pressure she imagined the positive pole of a magnet might feel when in the company of another positive pole.
"You don't have to be afraid of the kelp pulling this thing apart," she said. "Flattery's lab reports say it kept me alive underwater for twenty years. It can keep us aliv..."
"Can is the operative word here," Ben said.
He didn't look her in the eye, but hung his head over her restraints as if staring at them would right the foil and set them on their way. "If what you say is true, it wants you alive. The rest of us are compost."