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Authors: Charles Sheffield

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BOOK: Proteus in the Underworld
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If they did, it was amazingly well-disguised. Bey had received rather the opposite impression, of a rather old-fashioned and ineffectual historical society, obsessed by a nostalgia for distant ancestors and an old vision of Mars as Bey suspected it would never be.

The original framers of the Mars Declaration could not be blamed for that. In their time the science of form-change had been in its infancy, so the only way they could imagine the human habitation of Mars was through the planet's transformation to suit human needs. However, from what Bey had read of that tough-minded early group, if form-change had been available they would have grabbed it with both hands and run with it as a perfect tool for colonization.

Over the generations, the bloodline had been diluted. That early drive and vision had been lost.

Question Four, then: Did the policy council really control such huge resources that they could out-bid Trudy Melford and BEC for Bey's services, no matter how much those services might cost?

They certainly
believed
that they could. At that point of the meeting Bey had seen nothing but total certainty on every face.

So. Question Five: Where was the funding coming from to support the Old Mars council?

Bey sighed to himself as he phrased the question. It was one he had been forced to ask again and again in his career. When in doubt, follow the money trail. People could lie, motives could be disguised, even acts could be misunderstood. Money was as constant as human nature.

* * *

The auto-car had moved up and up. At last the road was leveling off, with the towering bulk of Melford Castle coming into view ahead.

Bey reviewed his list of questions one more time. Was he satisfied that it was complete? He had just about convinced himself that it was when he found another question poking its way unbidden into his mind.

Question Six: Is Sondra at risk, out in the Kuiper Belt Colonies?

Bey shook his head. What was going wrong with his brain? The new question was totally ludicrous and irrelevant. Sondra's assignment had nothing to do with the Mars surface forms, nothing to do with the waning factions of New Mars or Old Mars. It was unrelated to every thought that had gone before.

So ignore it.

The car pulled up in the deserted courtyard of Melford Castle. Bey prepared to dismount. Then he paused and leaned back on the car's soft cushions. He had defined
intuition
for Sondra: it was what remained after all the facts had been forgotten. But intuition could also be something else. Sometimes it was the subconscious mind, establishing deep connections long before the thinking part of the brain could explain them.

Bey descended from the car and entered Melford Castle. The castle's security system recognized him and allowed him in without hesitation, but no one was there to greet him. At the moment that was a relief.

Sneaking along in silence and feeling like a thief, Bey headed for the elevators. He did not, however, go to the suite prepared for him or to Trudy Melford's floor. Instead he headed at once for the fifth floor—and the castle's communication center.

CHAPTER 12

Real-rime conversation with the Kuiper Belt colonies was out of the question. The round-trip delay from the Carcon Colony, for example, was more than a day and a half even if the party at the other end responded at once. Bey didn't have that much time, and anyway he didn't know who to call. His best bet was a kernel-to-kernel connection with Aybee, working through the Rini net.

The only trouble with that was the unpredictable nature of the linkages. Despite Aybee's best efforts to pin down the sources of uncertainty, response time still varied between seconds and weeks.

Bey set up a top priority six-node routing, Melford Castle to Mars link to Earth link to Earth-orbit, then kernel to kernel on Rini Base and into Aybee's personal line. He initiated the message transmission. Then there was nothing to do but stare at the clock and wonder how long he would sit there before he gave up.

It felt like hours. It was actually less than six minutes before Aybee's glowering face appeared in the display volume in front of Bey.

"Hey, Wolfman. What's all this stuff about a high-priority chatline? You're too cheap to pay for that level of service."

Bey glanced at the monitor. The message had zipped through every node in a few seconds. Almost all the delay had been waiting for Aybee's reply. "Assume I'm not paying for this call myself. What kept you?"

This time the reply came in a couple of seconds.

"I'm a busy man. The fate of the whole Outer System depends on my unceasing labors." Aybee grinned. "Actually, I was on the pot. Got to keep the priorities in order. Anyway, what you want? Keep it short, because I really do have lots of work."

"Did you brief Sondra Dearborn?"

"Better believe it. If she took it all in, she knows as much about the colonies as I do."

"Have you heard from her since she left?"

"Not a thing. Was I supposed to?"

"I'm wondering if she got to the Carcon Colony all right, and what she found there."

"I can check that for you easy enough. The transportation data bank for the Kuiper Belt will tell me who's where." Aybee paused, studying Bey's image on his display. "Look, if there's something funny going on here you might as well tell me now an' get it over with."

"I don't know of anything going on that you don't know already. But I don't feel good about this. I was the one who told Sondra that she had to go to the colonies. I said she had to be there to find out why things are passing the humanity test that should be failing it. As for
why
I don't feel good . . ." Bey shrugged.

It was a weak and unpersuasive answer, but Aybee was nodding sympathetically. "It's the wee, wee witch. The one who sits on your shoulder when you have a really tough problem to solve, and whispers in your ear, why not try this? I don't know about you, but I never ignore her."

"Well, she's telling me that I should never have let Sondra to go out to the colonies alone."

"It wasn't just you, Wolfman. Sondra told me that her boss said the same thing to her."

"If you knew Denzel Morrone, you wouldn't take much comfort from that." Bey studied Aybee's intent face, and finally realized why he had called. "Would you do a favor for me—a big favor?"

"Probably. I'm known through the whole Outer System as a gullible idiot. What you want this time?"

"I'd like you to take the fastest Rim ship in the fleet and zip on out to the Fugate Colony. Get there, if you can, as soon as Sondra."

"Probably can't do it that fast. She might be there already. What am I supposed to do when I get to Fugate Central? Protect her? I mean, the average Fugate citizen probably masses two hundred times as much as me, and I'm a theoretical physicist, not a professional bodyguard. Obviously I could beat 'em all up easy enough"—Aybee flexed a long, skeletally thin arm, and a tiny knot of muscle appeared at his biceps—"but then they'd complain formally, and I know you don't want that."

"If anything does happen, it won't be official. I don't expect you'll need to do a thing. Just the fact that you are there, watching, should be enough to protect her."

"Yeah. Or else I'm a witness, so Sondra and I
both
get killed." Aybee shrugged wide, bony shoulders. "All right, Wolfman. I got a million things to do here, but I'm a sucker. I'll do it. But can I ask you something personal?"

"Nothing ever stopped you before."

"Are you having it off with Sondra?"

"Certainly not! What the devil put that into your head? She's related to me, and anyway she's fifty years younger than I am. I'm too old for that sort of thing."

"Yeah. Sure. But to coin a phrase, nothing ever stopped you before. What am I supposed to tell her when I get there? She won't be expecting me, and if she's nothing special to you it's weird for you to be trying to protect her. Come to that, why aren't
you
on your way to the Fugate Colony, yourself?"

It was typical Aybee, asking a question so simple and obvious that anyone could ask it—yet no one did. And asking the right question usually clarified everything.

"I think Sondra might run into trouble out in the colonies, but I feel absolutely sure that the problem didn't start there. I need to focus on the real cause. That's somewhere
here
, in the Inner System."

"I'll believe that. The closer you get to Sol, the more trouble you run into. But what about my other question. What do I tell Sondra?"

"Tell her—" Bey swore internally. "Tell her I am worried about her, but say you don't know why."

"You are worried about her. Fine. Very persuasive. Are you
sure
you're not having it off with her? All right, all right." Aybee pushed his hands, palm outward, toward Bey. "I'll tell her. Is that it?"

"Yes." Bey paused. Aybee's finger was on the disconnect. "No, wait a minute. One other question on the same subject. What do you know about elliptic functions?"

"The
same
subject!" Aybee's eyebrowless forehead wrinkled. "Wolfman, you could sure have fooled me."

"I know. I felt the same way when I heard it. But if I understand anything at all about Robert Capman, it has to be relevant. Listen."

As Bey summarized his conversation, Aybee sat totally still and silent At the end he shook his head. "If Capman says it, you hafta take it seriously. He's still wearing a Logian form?"

"He was when he talked to me."

"Then you have to assume he's a lot smarter than you. Hell, he's even a lot smarter than
me.
Maybe he's so smart, he thinks he's helping you when he isn't. Elliptic functions!"

"What do you know about them?"

"I know so much that I don't know where to start. Wolfman, we're talking here about a whole major branch of mathematics. There are scores of books and treatises and thousands of papers, all about elliptic functions. I can name a dozen great mathematicians who worked on the subject—Legendre, Abel, Jacobi, Weierstrass, Cayley, Riemann, Hermite, Poincaré—and that's just the pure theory, without even getting into applications. Did I mention Kronecker—and Gauss, too, of course, though he didn't publish what he had discovered—"

"Capman didn't just say 'elliptic functions.' "

Aybee had been in full stride. At Bey's interruption he stopped and stared. "Then what did he say?"

"What he actually asked me was if I had ever looked at the
early history
of the theory of elliptic functions. Does that make a difference?"

"All the difference in the world. It means we don't need to worry about work done after about 1830. And it means something else, too." Aybee paused, and sat frowning at nothing. "You sure that Capman said elliptic functions, and not
elliptic integrals
?"

"Quite sure. Though I hardly know the difference."

"Well, shame on you. Let's get you educated. The whole business started out by people trying to find the length of an arc of an ellipse. That gives you a certain sort of integral, and naturally it's called an elliptic integral. A mathematician called Legendre spent a good chunk of his life writing down bunches of related sorts of integrals, and reduced them to three basic forms. He had done all that pretty much by about 1810.

"But he never saw to the bottom of the problem, or realized that he was studying it the wrong way round. Nor did anyone else at the time—except maybe Gauss, he had this horrible habit of discovering major stuff and putting it in his notebooks, then keeping quiet about it until somebody else came up with the same results. Then he'd say, look here, boys."

"That sounds a bit like Apollo Belvedere Smith."

"Could be. Easy to hate a guy like that, eh? Anyway, about 1820 along comes a younger mathematician called Abel. He dies of starvation and tuberculosis when he's twenty-six years old—which isn't as bad as it sounds, 'cause mathematicians usually do the good stuff in then-early twenties and geeze along for the next century. Anyway, before Abel kicks it he finds the right way to handle elliptic integrals. He
inverts
the problem. Switches the roles of independent and dependent variables, if you want to get technical. That inversion of otldook starts the whole theory of elliptic
functions
off and running."

Aybee paused to frown at Bey. "I may be wrong, but I get the feeling that you're not overjoyed to hear all this. There's lots more."

"I'm sure there is. And I know you're going to be disappointed and disgusted to hear that it all makes about as much sense to me as if you were singing folk songs in Cloudland Chinese. Let's keep the rest of the inversion story until I'm feeling smarter."

"I won't hold my breath for that. Don't you at least want to hear about elliptic modular functions, and how Hermite used them to solve the general quintic equation?"

"Naturally. There's nothing in the whole universe I'd like better—
after
you get back from the Fugate Colony, and we know that Sondra is all right."

"Some people got a one-track mind. Okay, I'll go check her out. One more thing, Wolfman, then I'm on my way." Aybee waited, his finger once more on the disconnect, until he had Bey's full attention. Then: "Are you really hanging out close to home because you're having it off with Trudy Melford?"

He grinned horribly. His finger stabbed down and he was gone, before Bey had time for even one cuss word.

* * *

Bey decided that he ought to talk with Aybee more often. The Cloudlander was rude and uppity, but a conversation with him was as good as a tonic. Also, it always clarified Bey's own thoughts. Aybee had put his finger on a basic question: Why was Bey
here,
and not out in the Carcon and Fugate Colonies?

One part of the answer was his insistence that he was retired. He had his own interests, his private projects. Why should he become involved in Sondra's problem?

That logic did not satisfy. After all, he had allowed himself to be drawn to Mars by Trudy Melford, when he had plenty of work to do back on Wolf Island. And he could not blame Trudy for everything. She had brought him here the first time, but he had only himself to thank for today's meeting with the Old Mars council.

BOOK: Proteus in the Underworld
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