Breakaway: A Cassandra Kresnov Novel (v1.1) (14 page)

BOOK: Breakaway: A Cassandra Kresnov Novel (v1.1)
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Sandy sighed. Took a biscuit from the table and bit it in half. "I just don't like being passive."

"I know. The best form of defence is attack and all that ... It's a fine philosophy for a soldier in a war, but things here are different." Neiland sipped her tea. "That's how it is. Please don't antagonise the SIB any more than they already are. Consider that a direct Presidential order. It makes my life difficult."

"I'll try." Neiland gave her a firm look, eyebrows raised. "I'll try very, very hard," Sandy amended. The President looked sceptical. "And that's the only reason you asked me out here?"

"No. I wanted to ask you in person about Governor Dali. And some things I'd rather not discuss over any network."

Sandy nodded slowly, washing down her biscuit with a sip of tea. It didn't surprise her. Dali had been a continuing thorn in the Administration's side ever since his FIA-arranged takeover of government had collapsed a month ago, setting in motion the entire present mess over Article 42 and the proposed breakaway from the Federation. No one wanted to remain a part of a federal system that allowed its shadowy intelligence agency to overthrow democratically elected governments while committing crimes and murder among the populace. In order to make an informed decision about any possibly breakaway, however, people wanted to know just how deep the whole plot with the Federal Governor of Callay had gone, and just who knew what at the highest levels of the Federal Grand Council back on Earth.

"He's still not talking?" she asked, knowing the answer well enough in advance.

Neiland shook her head. "He'd be stupid to. The moment he opens his mouth he risks implicating the entire Grand Council bureaucracy, not just the FIA. But the Grand Council ..." she shrugged, "Dali's their boy. He came up all the way through the system, from Indian civil service to United Nations to Grand Council officialdom and a governorship. Only, somewhere along the way the FIA got their tentacles into him, like they've got tentacles into a lot of federal governors, we think ... Eleven member worlds have already begun appointment reviews of their own governors, and are demanding full records and disclosure from the Grand Council. It's caused quite a stir."

"How much power does that give you?" Sandy asked, trying to recall as much as she knew about Federation governments and internal power relations between them. And realised it wasn't all that much, except there were fifty-seven of them, comprising roughly twenty billion people. Earth's population was hovering these days at roughly seven billion. Immensely powerful, by the standards of any individual Federation world or system. But if all the other Federation worlds stood together, even Earth's influence could be countered. Unified cooperation, however, was no more a common condition for Federation members than it had been among League members. "How many of the member worlds are behind you? Behind us?"

"Not enough." Neiland shook her head glumly. "A lot of the border worlds near the League are very hawkish still, very pro-Federation, have always accused worlds like Callay of being too withdrawn and self-interested with the war going on-with some cause too, I think. Others are totally dependent on trade with Earth and good relations. It's too risky for them to stick their necks out before they know exactly who holds what cards. Right now, it's us and about nine governments. Maybe twelve in a pinch. The other forty-five governments are all on the fence to varying degrees."

Sandy exhaled in mild disgust. "Doesn't say much for the "brave colonial spirit," does it?"

"No," Neiland agreed, with a faint grimace. "If someone's going to take a hit for this, it'll be us, not them. But if we look like winning, things will change. This is why we need to beat that extradition order so badly. If the Feds get Dali back on Earth, it'll be the last we ever see of him or his evidence. If we can keep him here on Callay, we can try him here under Callayan law and get some answers from him."

"He'd answer?"

"If we're proved right in Federation law, according to Federation statutes he won't have a choice. He's still the Governor, he's legally bound by Federation statutes. For him to refuse to answer would be incredibly embarrassing for the Grand Council, it raises the question of what good the present Federation system really is if its own appointed guardians won't even play by the rules ... which is our entire point in threatening to break away. And if he does answer, and we establish once and for all the Grand Council's degree of complicity in this whole mess, then the whole Federation system is discredited before everyone's eyes and all the power swings to us. Dali's the key, Sandy. Trying him on Callay would give us the proof we need. The leverage."

"To do what? Break away?"

"If need be." Neiland shrugged. "We'll decide when we get to it. Any breakaway needs to go to a popular vote, anyway, it's not just up to the politicians. But public opinion would swing enormously if all Dali's evidence were revealed. We'd have the Grand Council and all the vested Old Earth interests wrapped around our finger."

"And what do you want to know from me?"

"What do you think the League will think about the prospect of him testifying?"

Damn. She didn't like being mistaken for an expert on the new League Government. She'd only seen them in opposition, challenging the old wartime guard, and only then from the greatly removed distance of a frontline soldier.

"Ms. President, I don't think I'm the best person to ask . .

"Sandy, there's no one else I can ask, everyone else is just as removed as you are, and no one yet knows what to make of the new leadership. Except that you've been there, you've spent most of your life as a soldier in League forces. I don't want accurate intelligence, just gut instincts. You've got more of that than any of the GSA's Intel analysts."

Sandy thought about that for a moment. It made sense. And something else occurred to her. An unpleasant thought.

"Have the League been talking to you? Is their ambassador here?"

Neiland smiled. "I couldn't tell you if they were."

She understood that well enough. League never talked to anyone in the Federation on serious policy matters without the condition of total secrecy.

"I really couldn't tell what they'd think. There are some factions in the League who want to see a divided Federation, member worlds weak and bickering among themselves. Others fear a divided Federation would tear up the ceasefire treaty and cause Federation hardliners to come to the fore. They don't want a new leadership here when they've just made peace with the old one.

"I think the only thing you can guarantee with the League is that if they talk to you ..." Pause to look at the President with meaningfully raised eyebrows. The President looked serenely back. "... it'll be with only one set of interests at heart-their own. The economy's in shambles. They'll be wanting a possible loosening of the trade embargoes, especially if Callay becomes independent and starts making her own decisions on these things separate from the Grand Council. Right now that self interest might go well beyond any concerns about what Dali's testimony might do to the Federation. And thus to Federation relations with the League.

"My guess is the League's had enough adventures for now. They're pragmatists, they'll be wanting a nice, slow, quiet period to rebuild the economy. Any diplomacy they do will be simple little queries, feeling out the possibilities. But, on the other hand, I can't see them missing an opportunity to stick their nose into this present mess and sniff around for a bit." She gave Neiland an accusing look. "They are talking to you, aren't they? You wouldn't be asking me otherwise."

"I ask a lot of people a lot of things, Sandy," Neiland said mildly. And smiled at her. "But I appreciate your insight. You really were wasted in Dark Star, weren't you?"

"So I've been told." She sipped at her tea. It was cooling, and she reached for the pot, and a refill.

"And do you feel fully utilised at the CSA?"

Sandy smiled, pouring tea. "I'm happy enough." She settled back, and took a pleasant, hot sip, savouring the mild fragrance. "I am still essentially a grunt, Katia. I always will be."

"And I'll always essentially be a politician. But that doesn't mean I can't aspire to greater things."

"Do you?"

"Sometimes. Then I get over it."

ate evening in downtown Baidu. Sandy jogged briskly along the sidewalk, dodging raincoated pedestrians beneath huddling umbrellas. Rain fell along the wet gleaming street, the mirror reflection of blazing light and neon broken by the hissing passage of passing cars. Streetlights ribbed the roadside far down its length, and colour sprawled from a multitude of huge, designer window front displays.

Fancy fashion labels, Sandy noted as she jogged. Clothes, perfumes, jewellery, luggage, furniture, accessories ... even in the rain, the broad sidewalk was smothered with shoppers, browsers and strollers, gazing in the windows and wondering at the price. She ducked past another group, leather boots splashing on the pavement puddles, and wished that Vanessa had thought to bring an umbrella. There were no ped covers along the broad main shopping strips of districts like Baidu. It spoiled the neon view.

Another block, another fast illegal sprint over a cross street, and she finally found the place-Rajastan Curry Heaven, a small sign leading down a sidewalk staircase. She jogged briskly down, squeezed past a pair of customers emerging from the doorway, and went inside. There was a big restaurant floor to the right, with many people seated. And three presently waiting alongside, sitting on benches. Indian decorations everywhere ... she gazed about, marvelling at some of the designs and patterns, and at the uniquely styled tapestry of elephants about a pagoda on the far wall.

"Yes, Madam," said the man behind the near counter, in thickly Tanushan-Indian accent, "can I be of service?"

"Um ..." She recovered her attention, wiping damp hair from her brow. "Order for Rice, we called in half an hour ago."

"Oh yes, Rice ..." The man turned to a nearby counter, stacking containers into a bag. "... we were having much trouble, wondering if Rice was just your name or possibly your order too ..." Grinning at her as he put the bag on the counter. Sandy smiled back, extracting her CSA card from her wallet. "Is this a traditional European name, by any chance?"

"Very traditional." She handed him the card for him to swipe, thinking it lucky that she'd come instead of Vanessa. She didn't want to spend the next half hour fending off a verbal spray about "bloody arrogant Indians." Vanessa, Sandy thought, tended to overreact to such things. "I think we adopted it some time in the 1800s when all of Asia and India lay crushed and helpless beneath our heel."

The Indian man laughed. "My daughter just recently dyed her hair blonde, like you. Small exoticisms from cultural minorities are so fashionable these days ... before the hair, it was Senegalese gowns and Russian furry hats, whatever they're called, it's so difficult to keep track these days. You're very lucky to be the genuine fashionable article, so to speak."

It was sometimes fun to pretend, she pondered with a smile as she jogged back to the carpark, to be the genuine, ethnic-European that she appeared to be. Not that it was always safe to do so, as so much of the cultural and ethnic baggage in a city like Tanusha remained well beyond her grasp. But reminding an Indian of a time when Europeans ruled all India and Asia held much the same humour as a resident of Rita Prime reminding a Tanushan of a time when RP held sway as the predominant colony in the Federation, and Tanusha was just a farfetched architects' plan, and a swathe of messy construction sites cutting through the forests of the inner Shoban Delta. Of course, criticsincluding many Indian cynics-now proclaimed that no one actually governed India, that it was so huge, diverse and powerful that it was essentially ungovernable, and effectively ran itself like some mythical beast with many heads. Which made smaller powers like Russia, Brazil and the USA effectively more powerful (well, relatively) in political terms, because the huge, decentralised Indian system could never agree on anything, and was largely ineffectual. Sandy thought it a small price to pay for sharing global dominance with the Chinese. Who were more politically cohesive than the Indians but, after five hundred years of trying, still hadn't managed to close the considerable technology gap the Indians loved to laud over their heads like an unattainable prize ...

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