As for Maya… Tic had reported her escape and police were searching for her through a million hectares of rain forest. The world-soul estimated only a five percent chance they’d find her; but if they did, they now knew to treat her as a plague-carrier.
I could imagine how that would overjoy the cops. A bomb-wielding murder suspect carrying a deadly microbe, flying over unpopulated jungle. They’d be tempted to splash her skimmer across a few acres of bush, and fret about forest fires later. Through the world-soul, I told the police we had to take Maya alive; we needed to ask her where she’d been, where she might have spread the disease.
In my heart, though, I knew it was too late. Maya and Chappalar had gone out together several times — to Bonaventure restaurants, nightspots, what-all. The plague was on the march, and who knew how many travelers had carried it from Great St. Caspian around the globe? I felt like calling room service to order cinnamon.
A knock at the door. Festina sat up in surprise. "Are you expecting someone?"
"No."
Festina drew her stunner. I hopped off the bed and backed into a corner, as far as I could get out of the pistol’s daze-radius. "Who is it?" I called.
"Proctor Smallwood?" asked an unfamiliar voice. Male.
"She can’t have visitors," Festina answered. "Go away."
"I’d just like a moment of her time," the unknown man said. "Please. The hostess assured me it would be all right."
The hostess should mind her own business, I thought. "Who are you?"
"Yasbad Iranu. I understand you were there when they found my son."
Festina looked at me. I looked back. "Do you believe in coincidences?" I whispered.
"Yes. But only when they happen to someone else." She raised her voice. "You’re from the Free Republic, right? You’re a Divian?"
"I’m a Freep," Iranu replied. "I hope you aren’t going to hold my species against me."
At least we couldn’t infect him. "We have to hear him out," I whispered to Festina. "If only to see what his game is."
"You’re right," she sighed. "Let him in. But I’ll stun him shit-faced if he tries any tricks."
Yasbad Iranu looked much like his son… except that Iranu senior wasn’t lying slack-dead in a heap. The man was well dressed, and brash as a baboon’s butt. Born on top of the ladder, and blind-smug-confident that he’d climbed there himself.
The crown of his head only came to my chest, but he wore a red stovepipe hat that reached as high as my nose. Red was the color of mourning for Freeps — something to do with blood. The hat may have been a symbol of grief too, but to my eyes, it was just the trick of an arrogant pip-squeak trying to make himself look taller.
"Good evening," he said as he came through the door. He held out his hand to me, but I shook my head.
"Better not," I told him. "My friend and I both have a disease. It only affects humans, but still."
His hand stiffened, then withdrew. He ducked under my arm as I continued to hold the door open. I closed it behind him.
Iranu looked across the room to Festina. She held the stunner trained on his face. "You would be Admiral Ramos?" he asked.
"You’ve heard of me?"
"Your name appeared in the report Demoth gave to our embassy. The one describing how you found my son’s body." He looked back at me. "That occurred near here, did it not?"
"Near enough," I answered. "You want to talk about your son?"
"Of course." He gestured toward a chair. "May I?"
Neither Festina nor I answered. He sat down anyway.
"I’d like to know whatever you can tell me about Kowkow," Iranu senior said. He crossed his stubby legs, calm and casual — one of those calculated things some aliens do, imitating Homo sap body language because they think it’ll make a subconscious impression. On a Freep, crossed legs just looked witless: stubby and clownish.
"When I heard the news," Iranu continued, "I came straight to Demoth, to see the place where he died. I’ve asked everyone in this guest home if they knew anything of Kowkow’s last days, but learned nothing… till the hostess was kind enough to inform me you two had just checked in."
It made me wonder how much Iranu paid for the tip-off. What did a rich man think a hostess was worth? He must have made some standing offer, buckets of cash for any tidbit she could send his way. The moment we registered, she ratted us out.
"What information did you want?" Festina asked.
"The official report was so impersonal," he answered. "And documents like that never tell the whole story. I want to know anything that might have been omitted. Little details to interest a father…"
Lord weeping Jesus, I thought, you’re breaking my heart. "I’m surprised to see you back on Demoth," I told him. "Weren’t you kicked out on your ass?"
That got the anger sparking in his eyes. But he covered it up fast with honey smoothness. "Water under the bridge," he replied with a wave of his hand. "A minor incident years ago. And your government deeply regretted the recent death of my son on Demoth soil. Rather awkward diplomatically. So to make amends, they granted me permission to return and arrange a memorial service. Especially since Kowkow’s body has been impounded for health reasons and will never be allowed to return to his native planet."
True enough. The corpse would be studied, then cremated on the spot. No one would be crazy enough to ship a plague-ridden cadaver to a planet of people who could catch the disease… and if anyone tried, the League would stop it. The ban against transporting dangerous non-sentient creatures applied to microbes too.
"So you want information about your son?" Festina said.
"Anything you can share," Iranu replied.
Festina glanced at me, then turned back to the Freep. "Your son was illegally conducting archaeological studies at Sallysweet River, Mummichog, and other sites around the planet — continuing your own work, the work that got you expelled from Demoth. As far as we can see, Kowkow’s only archaeological discovery was the biological weapon that killed him, and he didn’t even know he’d found it. The same biological weapon killed many million Ooloms because of your own investigations thirty years ago… not that you were directly responsible, but you set the chain of events into motion. I assume you figured that out long ago, but never told anybody. Thanks to your continuing silence, every Freep on this planet stands a good chance of dying in total paralysis. Humans are at risk too, though they’ll die with their brains destroyed. Which is how Maya Cuttack is dying at the moment. Do you know Maya, Dr. Iranu? Do you know where she’s likely to be?"
Iranu’s face had flushed dark brown… as if his skin was warding off some burst of UV rays focused only on him. His hands clutched down hard on the arms of the chair and his oh-so-casually crossed legs had gone tense. "I don’t know what you’re talking about," he said in a strained voice.
"Doctor," Festina told him, "this isn’t the time for stonewalling. Everything you’ve ever done will be subject to intense scrutiny… not just by people here on Demoth, but by your own government. Your son infected the whole Freep negotiating team. Top officials. People with connections. Their families won’t be pleased."
"And," I put in, "your planet can kiss the trade treaty good-bye; Demoth is never going to sign a pact with the Free Republic when they hear what Freeps have been doing behind our backs." I gave him a mean smile. "How do you think the corporate barons will react, Doctor? You and Kowkow didn’t just make folks sick, you screwed up a business deal. Your government will throw you to the wolves."