A Princess of the Aerie (5 page)

BOOK: A Princess of the Aerie
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“Try not to hate me but it’s ethnographic.”

“The whole universe seems to be ganging up to make me learn everyone else’s social customs,” Jak grumbled.

Sib looked thoughtful and pulled at his goatee for a moment. “You know,” he said, “you’re righter than you think you are,
pizo. The whole universe
is
ganging up to make you do that. Eventually you’ll figure out that you can’t fight them. Anyway, I think she’s a target of
republicans—perhaps they’ve gotten hold of something
they
regard as a sex scandal—and she needs to do some unofficial suppressing.”

“Uncle Sib, why do you always say ‘republican’ with that tone of voice? I mean, the Hive is republican—we don’t have an aristocracy.”

“Jak, there’s republican and then there’s
republican.
The Hive is a republic because it was built as part of the first development of the Wager, and Paj Nakasen designed our society,
and he thought a republic was a better idea than a monarchy. (Who knows why he thought something stupid like that?)

“Now, as for me, I moved to the Hive ninety years ago and I’ve never ceased regretting that we don’t have a king, but at least
the Hive is goofy but livable. Most of the solar system’s republicans want to eliminate hereditary aristocracy because they
want to reintroduce the sort of social degeneration that made such a mess of Earth in late medieval times, just before the
big leap into space. Especially in places like Greenworld, where people are used to preserving whatever stupid traditions
came down from their stupid ancestors.

“They have this silly thing called a bill of rights, a bunch of arbitrary limits on what the government can do, which had
to be left in place as a concession when Rufus Karrinynya conquered the place and established his dynasty. Believe it or not,
Greenworld republicans think that bill of rights, written on Earth by people who thought they were going to seriously worship
Mother Gaia, should take precedence over a right of conquest eleven hundred years old. That’s what makes me furious! The abstract
right of words against the commonsense rights of a bloodline. There were Karrinynyas on that throne before the Bombardment
fell, and if Circle Four has anything to say about it, there always will be Karrinynyas—bright, brave, and beautiful to everyone,
cruel and deadly to their enemies, loyal, generous, and kind to their friends, and understanding power politics the way a
hawk understands thermals. Those are the kind of people you want running a nation.”

“Well, obviously,” Jak said, “you do. The rich important families of the Hive are the same way, and they—”

Sib charged on; having achieved a high haranguing orbit, he would now go on forever, or until he collided with something to
stop him. Jak braced for more lecture.

“Look at the republicans: ratty little schoolteachers and teacher’s pets, unsuccessful business boors, army officers with
stalled careers and delusions of grandeur, idiots with plans for utopia, all full of rules of conduct for their neighbors.
They will nearly all consider it somehow wrong that your ex-demmy enjoys spending vast amounts of tax money on herself. And
they don’t see that to be ready to rule, she needs vital contacts and connections in the aristocracy, which she gets spending
time with them—shopping, getting drunk, partying, taking drugs, dancing, attending lavish displays of wealth, and so on. Honestly,
what better way to get to know each other than to learn exactly how best to lick each other’s genitalia—”

“Um,” Jak said, trying again, “obviously people need an emotionally bonded network. I mean, I toktru dak why hereditary aristocracy
works so well—”

“Oh, anyone as bright and clearheaded as you would. But it’s not so obvious to republicans. They have these ideas about who-has-the-best-ideas
and who-is-best-qualified, as if life were school. (It’s the sort of folly one gets into by allowing oneself envy and resentment
just because one wasn’t born to a crown.)”

“Um, yeah, all right, Uncle Sib, so these republicans get precessed about sex—”

Sib was deflected but not stopped. “Well, of course, because one of the most important strengths of a monarchy is the way
that your feelings about your parents are the model for your feelings about the king and queen, and nobody likes to think
about their parents having sex. (Look at how you react to Gweshira and me—)”

“Yuck, Uncle Sib. Okay, I get it. So you think republicans have gotten hold of Sesh’s recreational recordings, or something,
and they’re trying to blackmail her?”

“Blackmail, or more likely they’re just planning to go public with it, as a way to embarrass her. Greenworld has a big nest
of republicans, and because of that bill of rights nonsense, the princess can’t just call up a government agency and have
them suppressed. She needs someone outside the government to do it. So she might need you and Dujuv to destroy a video facility,
or hack and wipe underground text media, or just beat the shit out of some dissidents. Possibly she wants to set up a small
secret police unit, consisting of Myxenna to do the intelligence work, Dujuv for the strong-arm stuff, and you to supply creativity.

“Now, I could be completely wrong. But if I had to bet, I’d think … young beautiful princess, Greenworld’s puritanical republicans,
can’t just send the pokheets … I guess that’s what I would be thinking.”

“And thugging for Sesh—do you think the Dean will buy that as a Junior Task?”

“I’m sure he will. One of the oldest Hive policies is to provide personal assistance to friendly monarchs. Or, as we used
to put it when the Dean and I were in the same office—I’ll tell you all about that some other time, if you’re not good—”

“I’ll be good!”

“Insolent puppy.”

“Old gwont.”

They both laughed; it was good to be getting along so well. “Oh, well, what we used to say was, Hive policy is that if it’s
a king and it’s an ally, we’ll shine his shoes. Roughing up a couple of too-sincere student leafleteers, or destroying the
data of some meddling historian, on behalf of one of our oldest and most important allies, would fit that policy perfectly.
I think the Dean will be very pleased with this; I have a feeling that your troubles are over.”

Jak had never before known the Dean’s office to be such a friendly place. Caccitepe had greeted them at the door and shaken
their hands, steered them onto three perches facing his desk, and given them each a bulb of coffee. But as the Dean airswam
to his perch, Jak and Dujuv were still nervous. Who could say how long it might stay friendly? Myxenna Bonxiao, on the other
hand, was wonderfully relaxed, as she was in any situation that involved people. Jak found himself sitting between her and
Dujuv, wishing he either had Duj’s stolid stoicism, or Myx’s lively warmth, or any seat other than the one directly opposite
the Dean.

“Let me first say that I’m very pleased,” Dean Caccitepe said, bringing the bulb to his mouth and taking a little sip. “I
really must congratulate you on finding such an advanced and interesting project so quickly. Jak will have to exercise all
sorts of judgment and discretion to do well at it, it will call upon Dujuv’s courage and discretion, and it will engage many
of those social skills that we’ve felt so strongly are Myxenna’s gift. I would say it plays to everyone’s strength while offering
a solid challenge to everyone. Furthermore, I had already accepted the job of finding and supervising the Junior Task for
Myxenna”—he nodded to her, smiling warmly—“and I’d had no idea what would be an appropriate challenge for her, since she does
so well at everything.”

As happened often around Myxenna Bonxiao, Jak suppressed a flash of envy. Myx really was good at everything, and so great-looking,
in a completely sexual way, that it made you ache.

After enjoying smiling at her for longer than Jak would have thought strictly necessary, the Dean went on, “So of course I
expect great things of you all.”

The sinking sensation in Jak’s intestines grew stronger.

Dean Caccitepe’s face was in perfect bliss. “This is exactly the kind of thing that all three of you will be doing in your
early years working as operatives in public service, and hence, as I said, perfect, and so, as I said, I congratulate you.
Any questions?” He said it flatly and carelessly, not really a question.

“None at all, sir.” Dujuv’s tone was level, even, as careless as the Dean’s.

Myxenna said, “I’m looking forward to it. I had been afraid the Junior Task would be something for the office of air conditioning
or the post office.”

Jak, never sure how long any favorable situation could hold together, said, “No questions. It’s toktru a lot clearer than
most assignments, sir.”

A few minutes later, the three of them took a table together in the Public Service Academy commons, a big drum that tumbled
slowly to provide enough grav in the booths to keep drinks in cups and papers on tables. Myx sat at Jak’s side, Dujuv across.
Both stared at the wall.

“Weehu,” Jak said. “Toktru I don’t want to referee between you two. First of all none of this was my idea and I think Sesh
was out of her mind, or way too sentimental, which might be the same thing, when she specifically asked for the two of you.
I know perfectly well that you are
not
together, and haven’t been mekko and demmy for a long, long time.”

“One year, seven months, and three days,” Dujuv said.

Jak ignored that. “I know that you avoid each other and that neither of you wants to know anything about what the other one
is doing.”

“True for one of us,” Myx said.

“And I know that the two of you are never, never, absolutely never, ever, going to be mekko and demmy again, and you both
know I normally wouldn’t even ask either of you to be civil to the other one. So I am not looking forward to sharing a vague
open-ended mission with you.”

Dujuv stared at the wall and said, “I can behave. Just don’t expect me—”

“You’re
not
behaving.” Jak was exasperated. “You’re acting like you’re about to attack or maybe hide in a storage compartment and cry.”

“I’ll talk to you later.” Dujuv leapt to the top of the booth wall and launched himself into the center of the drum, where
the grav was only about five percent. He airswam out a service entrance, snagging and consuming two desserts off an incoming
robot dessert tray. The service door swung shut as two empty plates caromed off the dining deck, making people in other booths
jump.

Myxenna looked sideways at Jak and raised an eyebrow. “So are you going to give up and just let him behave like a silly barbarian
pig, or chase after him like a gweetz and spend hours trying to soothe him? You know what they say about panths. They were
created for the old Martian emperors, and if you’re going to raise a biologically-enhanced Praetorian Guard, of course you
make it super-loyal. Probably they copied imprinting off baby ducks, mixed it with devotion off big dumb dogs, and set it
to develop at adolescence. So poor Dujy bonded to his first real demmy, and now he can’t feel right unless he’s being loyal
to her.

“Well, I’m not a panth, and nobody bred me to have all that stupid doggy loyalty, and I can’t return his feelings. It’s tough
on him to
have
those feelings, of course, but unless he’d bonded to a panth girl he’d never have found anyone who would accept all that
devotion—except, of course, some aristo who would have used him as an expendable resource. I’m not a panth and I’m not a queen,
so he’s stuck.” She brushed her thick jet-black hair away from her face, wet her lips, and focused the blue stars in her green
irises directly into Jak’s eyes, her smile coaxing his smile out to join it.

She was fascinating in an utterly different way from Sesh. Jak knew, having found out on a few occasions which had toktru
precessed Dujuv, that her pale skin, spattered with small freckles, was soft and delicate but that Myx liked a firm grip and
deep pressure when touched; he knew that when you were in bed (or up against a wall, or in a freefall room, or a Pertrans
car … ) with Myx, she seemed to guide you singing-on into what you had always dreamed of doing. “It’s been a while,” she said,
smiling, “and Dujuv can’t possibly get any more precessed than he already is, you know.” She tugged her top tighter and sat
up straight; for such a small woman, she had very big breasts.

“Assuming this won’t bother Fnina,” she said, “or that she won’t find out.”

Jak smiled. “Or that I don’t care if it bothers her. Besides, she never knows anything that’s going on unless Mreek Sinda
makes a viv out of it—my demmy is that media-gweetz’s number one fan. Sure, let’s go back to my apartment.”

Afterward, as Jak and Myx lay comfortably naked on his bed, idly touching, Jak said, “Sometimes I speck you’re the only person
who feels like I do about sex and friendship and so on.”

She kissed him lightly. “You mean, sex is good, friendship is good, sex with friends is really good? And that’s about all?”

“Something like that.”

She rolled over onto her belly, letting him admire her perfect back. “Hmm. Well, of course, that was always Sesh’s attitude,
too, masen? Except I don’t think she cared much. She could always buy all the sex and most of the friends she wanted.”

“Kind of a cold thing to say about a friend.”

“Just realistic. You didn’t notice a lot of things about her. Not being male, I wasn’t hypnotized by the high firm tits, or
the long legs. Or that cute little sweet smile, which I’d watched her practice in the mirror when we were both fourteen. She’s
cold inside. All her life people have been fun to hang and dine and fuck with, but toktru disposable. Now, maybe she’s sentimental,
the way people are about pets. Maybe she was trying on the feelings of friendship and loyalty just to see if she liked them,
the way she used to try on feeling in love or being proud or being horny. Maybe I’m completely crazy and just projecting everything
backward.

“But still … this whole deal smells weird, Jak. Toktru. Sesh wants her old gen school toves for a secret mission? She could
hire two or three top-end private ops or mercs for a year out of her monthly shoe budget. And besides, if she’s not as ‘aristocratic’
as she always seemed and she actually
can
form real, close, personal friendships, then wouldn’t she have one or two by now, maybe among her ladies, maybe in her guards,
that would be better on the job than we would? Since they would know their way around the Aerie, and around Greenworld?

BOOK: A Princess of the Aerie
4.55Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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