City of Pearl

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Authors: Karen Traviss

BOOK: City of Pearl
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C
ITY
OF
P
EARL
KAREN TRAVISS

For the men and women of the Falklands Task Force—for those who came home, and those who did not, and those who still bear the scars.

Prologue

2198 in the calendar of the
gethes
.

GOVERNMENT WOR

The bot was immune to the snow, and so was Aras. He watched it working its way across the surface of the stone with a blind purpose that defied the ice. Words emerged behind it like droppings.

GOVERNMENT WORK IS

A little shaving of ice drifted down as the bot moved. It cut steadily into a block of stone so hard that only an obsessive would have bothered to try to carve it, an odd choice of material in a construction made otherwise of composites and alloys.

But the bot had no passions as far as Aras could see; its single-mindedness must have been by proxy for its masters. As it finished gouging the last letter out of the stone, it executed a 90-degree turn, moved down the supporting column to the ground and plopped into the snow to trundle away, trailing a wake of parallel lines

GOVERNMENT WORK IS GOD'S WORK.

Aras mimicked the lettering, copying it into the unspoiled snow beside him with a steady claw. He considered it, then brushed it away. What was “God”? And why did it care about government, especially so far from home? They were just words. He was only beginning to come to terms with the
gethes'
language, and many things still baffled him.

“Is that
gethes
?” asked the apprentice navigator. It was his first trip to the quarantine zone, and he was suited and sealed against invisible dangers, those that would never again bother Aras. A slight tilt of the navigator's head steered Aras's attention to a low platform on tracks, rumbling around the perimeter. “They look like
that
?”


Bot
,” said Aras, using the
gethes
word he had gleaned from transmissions. “A machine they sent ahead of them to build a habitat. Some are fully intelligent. That one is not. It's a load-carrier.” Aras stood up and wandered into its path; it paused and corrected its course to avoid him. He blocked it a few more times and then tired of the game. “It cannot distinguish me from a
gethes.

The
gethes
were definitely coming. They had known that for a long time, from the first signal that was intercepted, but they were imminent now. There had been a stream of data directed to the bots about the first
gethes'
intentions and needs. Now Aras had satisfied his curiosity and allowed the habitat to begin to take shape, and judged it was time to act.

He wandered through the growing compound unchallenged. There were no security measures to keep him out; bots scattered from his path. But there was no damage he wished to do, nor information he could not easily glean from the intercepted data transmissions.

The navigator turned and labored through the drifts until the irregular crunch of his boots vanished. The youngster was from the warmlands and even less able to tolerate freezing conditions than the average wess'har.

But Aras was not an average wess'har. And nor were the comrades he had lost.

Goodbye, Cimesiat. I'm truly sorry.
Aras glanced around the landscape. There was no funeral to be held here, no remains of his friend to re-enter the cycle of life, so he simply remembered. In the coming season there would be black grasses as far as the eye could see, the sharp and glossy blades that grew nowhere else on Bezer'ej. If only they had never landed on this island—if only the isenj had never landed here—then Cimesiat would have died naturally at the proper time. Instead, he had been driven to destroy himself, the fifty-eighth of the remaining
c'naatat
troops to take his own life since the last of the wars. Peace made you purposeless if you let it. Aras had found his purpose in another war, a slower and more considered battle to protect Bezer'ej. One day he would win it, and he thought of his comrades and wondered if it was a victory for which he would be prepared.

There were just three of his squadron left, without family, without purpose, without any of the things that made a wess'har want to live.
But I have my world
, Aras thought.
I have duties here enough for another three lifetimes, now that the
gethes
are coming
.

He squatted and dug his claws into the snow, pushing down into the hard-frozen soil beneath as if he were connecting with it in the disposal rite that Cimesiat would never have. “Forgive me,” he said aloud. “I should have known better.”

There was silence again. It was a crisp and perfect calm, except for the occasional distant clank of closing hatches and the hum of motors. This was a dead homestead, industrial and unwelcoming, without life or community. The gray composite walls curved into a featureless roof.

Buildings always bothered Aras. This one was conspicuous, placed where anyone could see it. Imposing on the natural landscape was a vulgar act, an alien's taste, not a wess'har practice. The arrogance of it nagged at him. He stood up and stared at the horizon north of the island. All the lights on the shoreline had gone; after centuries all traces of isenj building had been reclaimed and erased by the wilderness. It had taken far less time to erase the isenj themselves.

So
gethes
built to be seen, too. That was all he could note. He followed the path churned up by the navigator all the way back to the ship, to avoid leaving any more of a mark than was absolutely necessary on the featureless whiteness.

“We must take it all away,” Aras said. “Their construction must be moved from this place.”

“And will you erase the
gethes
when they come?” the navigator asked. He had that bright expression—a mix of fear and adulation—that Aras had seen too many times.
You were the Restorer. You can save us again
. “Or will we take them before they land?”

The youngster's eyes darted between Aras's face and his claws. Every normal wess'har—clawless, heirs to death—seemed to stare at those claws.

“I will decide that when we know more about them. If they seek refuge, I will examine their need.” Aras paused, and wondered again if he could have acted differently long ago; but he knew he could not have done anything more or less than to wipe out the isenj cities. He had no idea why this question continued to plague him. “If they come intent on exploitation, I will remove them.”

“Sir, is it something I should fear?”

“You'll be long dead if the worst happens,” Aras said. “But I'll live to see it.”

He would live to see it all.

1

I will be honest in all my dealings with others.

I will avoid experiments on feeling life-forms wherever possible.

I will safeguard the environment.

I will not plagiarize or hinder the work of other scientists, nor knowingly publish false research.

I will put the common good before professional pride or profit.

T
HE
D
A
V
INCI
O
ATH
,
popularly known as the Scientists' Oath,
amended 2078

Mars Orbital
April 25, 2299

I'm going home
.

“Good morning,” said Shan Frankland, and held up her warrant card. “We're from Environmental Hazard Enforcement. Please, step away from the console.”

She loved those words. They cast a spell. They laid bare men's souls, if you knew how to look. She looked around the administration center and in three seconds she knew the man at the desk was uninvolved, the woman marshaling traffic was surprised by the intrusion, and the man lounging against the drinks machine…well, his face was too composed and his eyes were moving just
wrong.
He was the fis-sure in the rock. She would cleave it apart.

I'm going home. Five days, tops.

“Inspector McEvoy,” she said, and motioned her bagman forward. “Over to you.” She put her warrant card back in her top pocket and stood watching while her technical team flowed in and put in override codes on all Mars Orbital's systems. The station was temporarily hers.

This is the last time I'll have to do this.

“May I?” She walked across to the station's video circuit. The traffic marshal stepped aside. She settled into the seat and tapped the transmission key.

“May I have your attention, please? This is Superintendent Shan Frankland. This orbital station is now under the jurisdiction of the Enforcement Division of the Federal European Union. There will be no traffic movements or transmissions until the preliminary investigation is complete. Please report to your muster stations at 1600 station time for a briefing from my officers. Thank you for your cooperation. We'll be out of your way just as soon as we can.”

She leaned back, satisfied. Space stations were lovely places to carry out environmental hazard audits. Nobody could make a run for it. Nobody could get evidence off the premises. There was only one way off Mars Orbital without a scheduled flight, and that was via an airlock. It was right and fitting that she should have a relatively simple rummage job as her final task before retirement. She had earned it.

McEvoy crouched down level with her seat. “All locked down, Guv'nor. We should have it logged and wrapped in six hours, but there's no reason why we couldn't start carrying out preliminary interviews now.”

Shan cocked her head discreetly in the direction of the man she'd spotted at the drinks dispenser. “I'd make a start on him,” she said. “Just a feeling. Anyway, I'd better go and pay my respects to the station manager. This has probably ruined her entire day.”

And this time next month, I'll be clearing my desk.

Mars Orbital looked and felt exactly as the schematics on her swiss had told her it would. She took the little red cylinder with its white cross from her pocket and unfurled its plasma screen to study the station layout.

“You should treat yourself to some new technology,” McEvoy said, and tapped the side of his head, indicating his implants. “How old is that thing?”

“Hundreds of years, and still as good as that thing in your skull. I'm an old-fashioned girl. I like my computing in my pocket.” She stood up and oriented herself along the lines of the map on the swiss's screen, then set off down the main passageway. Looking straight ahead, she could detect the gradual curve of the main ring. For a second she felt she might be falling, but she looked straight ahead, resisting the temptation to stare out of the nearest observation area to goggle at a Mars that filled her field of view. It wasn't her first time away from Earth, but she had never been within touching distance of an inhabited planet before. She wondered if she might find time to do a few tourist things before departing. She'd never get another free flight like this again.

The station manager's office was exactly where the swiss said it would be. Its name-plated occupant, Cathy Borodian, was quietly angry. “I thought you people were on a fact-finding mission for the European Assembly.”

“It wasn't a complete lie. We're still finding facts, aren't we?” Shan stood before her desk and watched the woman trying to cope without access to her mainframe, hands fumbling across the softglass surface; it remained steadfastly blank, showing only a
SYSTEM UNAVAILABLE
screen under the coffee cup and half-eaten chocolate brioche. “We'll be out of here as soon as we possibly can. Routine inspection for biological and environmental hazards you're not licensed to manage.”

“I don't think Warrenders is going to be happy about this. They have a contract.”

“Well, last time I looked, civilian government still just about ran Europe. Not corporations.”

“Are you able to tell me exactly what the problem is?”

“So there's a problem?”

“No. Not at all.”

“The Federal European Union doesn't ship out forty audit and technical officers unless it thinks there might be irregularities. Does that answer your question?”

“Not completely. What about our teams on the surface? Can they come back inboard?”

“If they need to, they can flash us and one of my people will escort them.” Shan understood the woman, even if she felt no sympathy for her. She had schedules and commercial pressures, and shutting down the orbital was a major crisis, with or without a police investigation. Downtime cost money. “I'll be in the cabin you assigned me, if you have any questions—or anything you want to tell me.”

It turned out to be quite a pleasant cabin. Borodian must have wanted a good report to the Assembly, because there was a real viewplate and a shower cubicle. Shan dropped her grip on the bunk and stood at the plate for a few minutes, mesmerized. McEvoy had told her she could see the American and Pacifica stations at different times of the day if she followed his instructions, but she was far more captivated by the rusty orange disk that filled the window. It was so vivid that it looked unreal, a projection for her education or entertainment. No matter how hard she tried to see it as a three-dimensional sphere, it remained an illustration on a flat screen.

Movement caught her eye. Along the jutting spar of a mooring boom, two figures in self-luminescent green marshaling suits were guiding a tiny vessel into a bay. No mainframe access meant the automatic navigation was down; they were securing the ship manually, one standing on the gantry above the vessel and signaling with spiraling hand gestures, one alongside on the boom operating the winch.

Odd to think they still used antiquated hand signals. But even Morse code still had its uses. There was a lot to be said for old tech, Shan thought, and toyed with the swiss in her pocket.

She watched. Slowly, slowly, farther astern, then the figure on the gantry held arms aloft, wrists crossed in an X, the signal to
make fast,
to secure the lines. The locking buffers extended to take the touch of the stern, and the vessel shivered to a halt. And suddenly she couldn't see the hand signals of the berth marshals anymore, because she was looking at the leather-glove hands of a gorilla.

The primate was staring intently into her face as it made the same gesture, the same sign, over and over again; rubbing its palm in a circular motion over its chest, then a fiston-palm gesture. Its eyes never left hers.

Please help me. Please help me. Please…

She didn't know what it meant at the time. The animal technician had said it was asking for food,
please,
and wasn't it great that you could teach apes to sign? And she had believed him, right up to the time when a deaf interpreter told her what the gesture really meant.

How could I have known?
She didn't sign. But she knew now, and she had gone on knowing every day ever since, and the shame and regret had not faded any more than had the blinding, personal revelation that there was a
person
behind those ape eyes.

The gorilla was gone and lime-green shiny marshals were working their way, hand over hand, up the gantry to the next mooring. Mars was as red as Australia. She had forgotten how much color there was to see in space.

And I'm going home.

For a moment she wondered who would worry about the people behind ape eyes when she had retired, and hoped that it would be McEvoy.

She unpacked her grip almost without thinking. She had been living out of it for the last ten years, and her life could fit into it with room for a dress uniform, personal library and her own steel mug with a carabiner for a handle. Just running her hand over the grip's taut-stretched navy blue fabric would tell her if she had forgotten anything, and she hadn't. She didn't forget things. There was one extra item wedged in the shockproof section: a two-centimeter-square case that would have rattled if she hadn't packed wadding into it to stop the seeds inside it giving the game away.

Technically, the tomato seeds were illegal biomaterial, but she was EnHaz, and nobody would stop her. Anyway, she no longer cared. It wasn't a contamination risk. But she was damned if one more agricorporation was going to tell her what she could plant and grow and eat. All seed varieties were the patented property of a company; so her own crossbred tomato plants, reared on a windowsill from carefully hoarded seeds, were unregistered. Technically, it was an act of theft.

Technically.

She tucked the seeds deep into the folds of her cold-weather suit at the bottom of the grip. In a few months, maybe, she'd have the first plants growing in her own plot, somewhere out of the way where there were no Gene Inspectorates or patents or licensed crops. She thought of the hairy green leaves and their pungent cat's-pee scent, and saw her father carefully tending a straggly plant in the windowsill high above her head. He looked down at her.
Never lose touch with what you eat, sweetheart. Touch the soil. Embrace it.

He never did. The best that her apartment-bound family could do was visit friends with a smallholding. And then her father was dead. At least he had finally embraced the soil.

Oh, Dad.

McEvoy appeared at the open door. “Bingo, Guv'nor,” he said. “Rummage One's located a grade-A biohaz containment area. You okay?”

She snapped alert. “Well, they couldn't exactly hide something the size of a warehouse up here, could they? Any indication what it's busy containing?”

“It's not a new flavor of soda, that's for sure.”

“Ah, joy upon joy unending.” She opened the secure link on her swiss, flicked the keypad and gave him a wink. “I feel an order for suspension of government licensing coming on. There.” She tapped
SEND
. “That'll get their attention.”

McEvoy sagged visibly against the frame of the hatch. “Come on. You know this is pissing in the wind. They'll be back on agriweapons and god knows what as soon as they've paid the fine and sacrificed a few executives. Companies are bigger than governments.”

“Maybe. But this'll cost them in lost production. Put a crimp in their bottom line. Let them know the electorate isn't going to lie down without a struggle.”

“There's times when I really understand eco-terrorists.”

She paused. “Me too, son. Me too.”

Oh yes, I understand them all right.
Was McEvoy trying to say he knew the gray areas in which she worked, that she had her deniable connections, and that it was okay by him? He wouldn't have been the first. In a way, it helped to have those rumors flying round. Thwart EnHaz, and you'd find yourself dealing with people who worked well outside the law to express their disapproval of environmental tinkering. Governments had always made use of cheap, effective terrorism when it suited them. It certainly suited her.

“Want a look round?” McEvoy said.

“Okay.” Shan slipped on her uniform jacket and pulled on the boots that anyone could hear pounding down a corridor. She waited to follow McEvoy down the passage.

“After you,” he said.

“No, you go ahead,” said Shan. “Clear a path for me, eh? Be the ice-breaker.” She knew she looked like bad news. It was something you could learn to do. Her old sergeant had taught her twenty years ago to never step aside and never break eye contact, and it worked as well as it ever did. McEvoy swung through the hatch leading off to the containment area, and they were suddenly facing a small group of technicians in pale green lab suits.

The techs were leaning against the bulkheads or had their backsides perched on sills. A couple of them straightened up as she approached. They all looked her over, and she looked at them. They looked away first.

“It's just weed control,” said one. “We're working on
Chenopodium
strains.”

“I haven't cautioned you, so perhaps you'd like to save it for the interview,” Shan said. “But it's useful to know it's
Chenopodium,
seeing as that's also a food staple in some areas, and your organization does have some track record in contaminating crop species.”

“Hey, Warrenders wiped out the opium poppy.”

“Yeah, and spelt, and non-GM millet. Like I said—I haven't read you your rights yet. Save it for later.”

She walked away, leaving a hard silence and then a hum of hushed voices behind her. The word “unaltered” filtered through. She was glad they could see that she was one of the few with plain old unaltered human genes. It would psych them out a little further, that hint of wildness and savagery. It was no more than her mother's Pagan distrust of any medical treatment involving gene therapy, but it had its propaganda uses. McEvoy brushed against her arm.

“Well, that confirms the Foreign Office suspicions,” he said. “Maybe they
are
developing a crop killer for some tinpot government.”

“Could just as easily be our own.” She found it harder than ever to ignore the closed hatchways flanking her while she walked. To McEvoy, they were probably still just closed doors. To her, there was always something behind them, something disturbing and brutal and sickening. She wondered if she'd ever look at doors and see just openings again. There were always things behind them and once you saw what was there, you could never shut them again, not even with plenty of alcohol. They would always be as laden with sinister meaning for her as kitchen knives and cleaning fluids.

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