Read Greenhouse Summer Online

Authors: Norman Spinrad

Tags: #Science Fiction

Greenhouse Summer (27 page)

BOOK: Greenhouse Summer
8.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

And now Eric actually saw an expression of sadness form on this formerly clownish woman’s face.


This
is what we are here to find out,” she said almost softly. “Because if this
is
true, and we prove to world that white tornadoes are fakes, we do terrible thing, worse than Stalin, worse than gulag, worse than . . . worse than . . .”

She shrugged, throwing up her hands. “All-time-Olympic-record atrocity. Because then no one will believe that it
is
true. No one pays to cool planet. And
we all die
. Syndicalists. Capitalists. Saints. Assholes. Birds and trees. Fishes and flowers.”

Stella Marenko leaned forward, almost teary-eyed now, or so to Eric it seemed.

“So, Prince Potemkin,” she said, “if this is
really
true, we must eat as big pile of shit as is necessary to prevent it, da? Must eat shit and let Big Blue Machine get away with evil capitalist fakery. Must eat shit and let Big Blue plot succeed. Siberian syndics must eat all-time-Olympic-record pile of shit and lead the way to finance the cooling of the planet.”

“But—”

Now there definitely
were
tears misting Stella Marenko’s formerly hard blue eyes.

“But is a lot of shit to eat, da,” she said in a voice barely above a whisper. “But if we don’t, no one else will. And if we who have most to lose lead, world will follow, da. . . .”

“But—”

“Da, Siberia the Golden pays to destroy its own days of wine and roses. . . . Da. . . .”

A single teardrop formed in the corner of Stella Marenko’s left eye, and hung there, perhaps only by dint of her iron will, nor would she deign to notice it by brushing it away.

“But we are
Siberians
!” she said, her voice hardening. “Great-grandchildren of zeks Russian czars sent east to freeze to death for centuries. Grandchildren of Uncle Joe’s gulag. Children of the capitalist collapse. We know long long winter before this greenhouse summer comes. We are tough bastards, Prince Potemkin. We are Siberians. We survive. We are not Soviets, we are not Russians, we are Siberians! We are not communists, we are not capitalists, we are syndicalists! And we are not the kind of assholes who let building burn down with ourselves inside it because it is cold outside! We are
Siberians
! And if Siberian summer must die so the world can live, well . . .”

She managed an ironic little smile. “If world
dies
, Siberia the Golden dies with it anyway, da, Prince Potemkin? We can always go back to furs and thermal underwear, and I get to wear mink and ermine all year round.”

She laughed then, and Eric found the bravado of it quite touching.

“More stylish at least than raggy prison uniforms and newspapers stuffed in boots!”

 

“. . . okay, Dr. Larabee, so after white tornadoes come on stage, how long we have before planet turns into broasting oven?”

“. . . before the biosphere is terminally damaged? Or before the greenhouse runaway becomes irreversible?”

“. . . is not the same?”

“. . . the runaway may become irreversible before the biosphere becomes terminal, if we start seeing measurable rises in atmospheric pressure, if the superheated thermals increase in number, if they persist
longer, if we start to see them over the equatorial oceans, if the overall humidity increases along with the temperature . . .”

“. . . we’re all climatologists on this here bus, not biospheric ecologists . . .”

“. . . so before is too late to do anything but stay drunk . . .”

“. . . is there’s anyone at this table who hasn’t reached that state already . . . ?”

“. . . forty years, plus or minus a margin of error of twenty-five percent . . .”

Monique Calhoun tried not to find herself idly visualizing what Stella Marenko must be doing in the toilet to have been gone so long.

“. . . is awful big margin for error . . .”

“Not in predictive climatology . . .”

Boring
!

“. . . we start now, we can see a full degree drop within a decade . . .”

It wasn’t so easy to keep the scatological and barfological images from flitting through her mind as she sat there sipping tentatively at her vodka enduring this tedious climatological table talk that seemed little more than a woozy face-to-face reprise of the whole damned conference itself.

The climatologists, who had obviously been prepped, kept trying to convince Ivan Marenko that the white tornadoes meant The End Was Near. Aubrey Wright and the climatech executives kept trying to turn this into an unsubtle sell for their planet-cooling services.

Marenko, the object of this ham-handed amateur-night pub, seemed to have his wits together at least well enough to see through it, admittedly not a major intellectual feat, and took rude pleasure in rattling the bars of their cages while refilling their glasses almost, if not quite, as fast as he kept draining his own.

“. . . mylar shits . . . ah
sheets
 . . . a few molecules thick, you’d be shurprised at the area we can occlude per throw-weight . . .”

“. . . trees, y’see, sequester th’ charbon dioxide . . .”

“. . . better marijuana, da, grows even faster, valuable cash crop . . .”

“. . . but you release what you’ve sequestered when you burn it . . .”

Marenko, it seemed, was being a lot more successful in getting these eminent scientists and climatech corp execs blotted than they were at selling him Condition Venus.

“. . . flower gardens, then, da, on rooftops, window boxes, everywhere, carpet all city space with roses, tulips, peonies, poppies, da, let a million million flowers bloom, as says famous Chinese Communist . . . Bao? Chao . . . ? Lao . . . ?”


Lao
?”

“Mao!”

“. . . not such a crazy idea, worldwide campaign, cover lots an’ lots of unused shurface area . . .”

“. . . Qwik-grow flowers . . . make ’em white t’increase th’ albedo too . . .”

On the other hand, Marenko wasn’t failing to get himself blotted either. He was, after all, drunk enough to be blithely ignoring the fact that his wife had disappeared toward the toilet with a character like Eric Esterhazy at least fifteen minutes ago.

If that was
really
where they were.

Somehow Monique suddenly found herself doubting it.

“. . . crow shits on little chicken’s head, and Chicken Little runs around screaming sky is falling, da, famous proverb . . .”

“. . . point of which is . . . ?”

“. . . do not listen to birdbrain running around like chicken with head cut off, da . . . hah, hah, hah . . .”

Now the images that Monique could not keep from swimming through her mind’s eye involved both Eric Esterhazy and Stella Marenko, they did not involve urinary, excretory, or vomitory functions, and the set was Prince Eric’s private dressing room, rather than the ladies’.

And she was bemused to find that these images infuriated her.

Not that
jealousy
had anything to do with it.

What was there to be jealous about?

But Eric Esterhazy had some nerve!

While she sat here waiting for him to return through a subjective eternity of boring blather
he
was probably belowdecks in his dressing room bonking Stella Marenko!

 

Stella Marenko placed her palms on the bed behind her, leaned back, arching her breasts in Eric’s direction, and while in a strictly physical sense this moved her farther away from the chair on which he sat, in some other subtle sense she seemed closer.

He found himself admiring this woman. Even liking her.

Nor, he discovered in some surprise, was his penile alter ego in disagreement.

“You are right about one thing, Prince Potemkin,” she said. “Only thing we know for sure is that Big Blue capitalists
are
desperate to get Siberian money for planet-cooling schemes. Maybe to save the world. Maybe just to save financial asses. We must know. We have big decision to make. We must be very careful.”

“You and Ivan don’t exactly impress me as the careful types,” Eric told her.

Stella Marenko laughed. “
Careful
, not . . . timid,” she said. “This means we take care to do right thing, da, not that we are cowards. We are loud, we are brave, but we . . . take care.”

She smiled at Eric, she stretched like a cat, upward and outward, looked directly at him with those bright blue eyes.

“For instance, Sweet Prince, we have been gone from table a long time, we must . . .
take care
that people do not think this conversation happened,” she said.

Eric found himself moving forward to the edge of his chair, leaning toward her. Was what he sensed was beginning to happen really beginning to happen? Did he want it to?

“By convincing them we were doing something more . . . innocent?” he ventured.

Stella Marenko lifted her hands off the bed, slowly pulled herself upright using the muscles of her back alone, an unexpectedly fluid and athletic motion, and one which Eric found suddenly and acutely stimulating.

“Who would believe that?” she said.

“You have . . . something better in mind?”

Stella Marenko leaned deeply forward, toward him, with that same athletic fluidity, and held that difficult position like a yogic adept, affording him an excellent and not at all uninviting vista down the majestic slopes of her cleavage.

“Something . . .
more credible
,” she said.

And then, amazingly, she ran her hands through her bejeweled cornrowed hairdo, disarranging it into dishabille. She ran the back of one hand across her mouth, smearing lipstick. She reached down, popped her left breast out of her bodice, the nipple of which was erect, Eric could not fail to notice as she all but shoved it in his face.

“Wha—”

She bounded off the bed, and stood there towering over Eric where he sat, hiking up her short skirt, yanking down her black silk panties, deliberately ripping them in the process, and stood over him, a mighty blond amazon looking for all the world as if he had had his way with her already.

Or rather, realistically, vice versa.

She ran both hands through his long blond hair, thoroughly tangling it. She stuck a hand down his shirt to feel his chest, popping the top two buttons. She withdrew it. She cupped his face in both hands, pulled him upright, kissed him everywhere but on the mouth, wetly and messily. She reached down, pulled open his velcro fly, and—

Stood back, while Eric stood there with a throbbing erection half out of his pants, all but panting and drooling.

She shoved her breast most of the way back into her bodice, pulled her ripped panties up to half-mast, rearranged her short crumpled dress so that just a hint of torn black silk showed if she bent a little too far over.

She reflected a moment, then bit Eric just under the left ear hard enough to create a little bloody bruise, unceremoniously and with some difficulty stuffed his prick back into his pants, artfully resealed the fly halfway up and crooked.

“Da,” she said, observing her handiwork critically. “Now when we leave, no one who sees us will think we were doing anything in here but fucking.”

 

Monique found making a graceful exit from the Marenko table ridiculously easy. She had not been taking part in the conversation, there were a dozen people waiting to squeeze into any momentarily empty chair at the feast, and Ivan Marenko, too drunk to notice that his
wife had gone missing, didn’t even notice her departure.

Getting the recordings of all the Marenkos’ past drunken table talk out of Eric Esterhazy tonight, though, was not going to be as easy.

It would probably take some arduous exercise of her feminine wiles to even get him to admit they existed, though admittedly, if Posner hadn’t all but ordered her to do just that and she weren’t so pissed off at Eric, that wouldn’t exactly be the most onerous task she had ever confronted.

But first she had to find him. And while she now had an unpleasant idea of
where
to find him, it didn’t seem like such a smart move to go banging on his dressing-room door to roust him out of bed with Stella Marenko.

Still, she didn’t see what else she could do, so she made her way belowdecks to boudoir country, passing a couple on their way in to one of the chambers, and another on the way out of one, on her way to Eric Esterhazy’s dressing room.

Now what?

Mercifully the corridor remained empty for several minutes, so there was no one to observe her standing there like a fool trying to decide whether to knock or wait.

If she knocked and got no answer, it could mean either that they weren’t in there, or that they were, and naturally didn’t want to be discovered. If she waited, and they
did
eventually emerge, it would be just as awkward, and if she was wrong, and they weren’t in there, she could wait forever.

Fortunately there was no keyhole, or no doubt she would have been caught bent over with her ass in the air peering through it like the foil in some moldy old French bedroom farce by the two couples who came sauntering down the corridor as—

BOOK: Greenhouse Summer
8.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Orphan of Creation by Roger MacBride Allen
Cakes For Romantic Occasions by May Clee-Cadman
Priestess of Murder by Arthur Leo Zagat
Storm Front by Robert Conroy
High and Dry by Sarah Skilton
Xeelee: Endurance by Stephen Baxter
Clouds of Witness by Dorothy L. Sayers