“No, I’ll tell you what, if it breaks out there on Amalthea we’ll come get your top mechanic. We’ll take that person and whatever parts we need back with us, right then. You pay for everything, including the fuel.” Fuel was gold in the Jupiter system; because of the depth of the giant planet’s gravitational well, the delta-vees between Ganymede and Amalthea were practically the same as between Earth and Venus.
Caught out, Lim looked as if he might just throw a tem-per tantrum and let the deal go. Then, suddenly, his extrav-agant features stretched themselves into a gleeful grin. “Aieeee! You one foxy character, Ledfeared. I lose much face.”
“And you can drop the Number One Son accent. I don’t want to get the idea you’re making fun of me.”
“Hey, I am my daddy’s number one son. But never mind, I take your point. My people will tell your people whatever you want to know. If anything needs fixing we’ll fix it.” Lim leaned back in his seat, obviously relieved. “But then you sign off. And we forget all this nonsense about guarantees. And rocket fuel.”
The rocket nozzles of the ship that would carry them to Amalthea loomed over them, beneath the frozen dome. For-ster had leased the heavy tug for the duration; he couldn’t legally change its registration, but he could call it anything he wanted. He had named it the
Michael Ventris
after his hero, the Englishman who’d been the co-decipherer of Mi-noan Linear B and who’d tragically been killed at the age of thirtyfour, not long after his philological triumph.
The uneven icy floor of the exhaust-deflection chamber was less cluttered than it had been a few weeks earlier, when Professor Nagy had paid Professor Forster a visit. By now the cargo needed for the monthlong expedition had been loaded and the clip-on cargo hold secured to the frame of the big tug. The equipment bay still stood open and empty, however. There was room in it for the ice mole and more.
Blake’s expression sagged only slightly; he wished Forster wouldn’t
assume
so easily. Finding and leasing a working ice mole, and keeping the search reasonably confidential, was not so straightforward that success could be
assumed
in advance.
But Blake had been successful, after all, and Forster—who looked only a few years older than Blake, but who had actually been at this game for decades—was accustomed to compromise and improvisation and had probably developed a sixth sense for the problems that were really hard and the ones that only seemed that way. “Lim’s machine will do the job,” Blake acknowledged.
Good, that got a rise out of him. Blake smiled—mild enough revenge for Forster’s assumptions. “We played a lit-tle game of bargaining. He played by the rules, so I decided to trust him to help us locate the other machine. He’s got unique contacts in the community. My problem is that, even though I can pass, nobody knows who I am. That’s what’s taken me so long to get this far.”
“Sorry if I’ve been presumptuous.” Forster had finally heard some of his young colleague’s hitherto unstated frus-tration. “You’ve been carrying a heavy load. As soon as it’s safe for the rest of us to show our faces, we’ll be able to relieve you.”
After weeks in space, planetfall. The great fusion-powered passenger liner
Helios
, all its portholes and glassy prome-nades ablaze, was inserting itself by the gentlest of nudges into parking orbit around Ganymede.
And in the Centrifugal Lounge, a celebration: passengers chattering at each other, drinking from tall flutes of golden champagne, some of them dancing tipsily to the music of the ship’s orchestra. Randolph Mays was there, although he firmly believed no one recognized him or even knew he’d been among them, for it suited him to travel incognito—as he had been since before
Helios
had left Earth—thus to see but not be seen. He was one of those men who liked to watch.
And to listen. The curve of the Centrifugal Lounge’s floor-walls, designed to maintain a comfortable half-g of artificial gravity for the comfort of the passengers, also made a good, quasi-parabolic reflector of sound waves. Peo-ple standing opposite each other in the cylindrical room—thus upside down with respect to each other—could hear one another’s conversations with perfect clarity.
Randolph Mays craned his neck back and peered upward at a striking young woman, Marianne Mitchell, who stood momentarily alone directly over his head. A few meters away a young man, Bill Hawkins, was trying to work up his nerve to approach her.
She was certainly the prettiest woman on the ship, slen-der, dark-haired, green-eyed, her full lips glossy with bold red lipstick. For his part, Hawkins too was passably attrac-tive, tall and broad-shouldered, with thick blond hair slicked straight back—but he lacked confidence. He’d managed no more than a few inconsequential conversations with Mar-ianne in weeks of opportunity. Now his time was short—he would be leaving
Helios
at Ganymede—and he seemed to be trying to make up his mind to have one last go at it.
Through one of the thick curving windows that formed the floor, Marianne watched as, far below, the Ganymede spaceport swung into view on the icy plains of the Shoreless Ocean. Beneath her feet paraded what seemed like miniature control towers, pressurized storage sheds, communications masts and dishes, spherical fuel tanks, gantries for the shut-tles that plied between the surface and the interplanetary ships that parked in orbit—the practical clutter that any working port required, not much different from Cayley or Farside on Earth’s moon.
Indeed, Ganymede did have a romantic reputation. Not because of all the major settlements in the solar system it was the most distant from Earth. Not for the weird land-scapes of its ancient, oft-battered, oftrefrozen crust. Not for its spectacular views of Jupiter and its sister moons. Gan-ymede was exotic because of what humans had done to it.
His face must have revealed more disappointment than he realized, for Marianne was almost apologetic. “I don’t know anything about him. Except
my
mother is very eager to impress
his
mother.” Marianne, twenty-two years old, had left the surface of Earth for the first time only six weeks earlier; like other children of wealth—including most of her fellow passengers—she was supposed to be making a traditional year-long Grand Tour of the solar system.
“Oh, I was just wondering if you’re really going to stick out this whole Grand Tour. You spend two weeks here—which is not enough to see anything, really. Next stop, San Pablo base in the Mainbelt— and anything more than a day there is
too
much. Then Mars Station and Labyrinth City and the sights of Mars. Then on to Port Hesperus. Then on to . . .”
Besides being the ship’s youngest passenger, Marianne was its most easily excited and most easily bored. Most of the others were new graduates of universities and profes-sional schools, taking the year off to acquire a thin coat of cosmopolitan varnish before settling down to a life of in-terplanetary banking or stock brokerage or art dealing or fulltime leisure. Marianne had not yet found her calling. None of the undergraduate majors she’d undertaken had proved capable of holding her interest; pre-law, pre-medicine, history of art, languages ancient or modern—nothing had lasted beyond a romantic first encounter. Not even a real romance—she would tell this part delicately, hinting at a brief affair with a professor of classics—had carried her past the midterm in the subject. Semester after semester she’d started with A’s and ended with incompletes.
Her mother, possessed of a seemingly inexhaustible fortune but beginning to balk at financing Marianne’s ongoing education without some glimmer of a light at the end of the tunnel, had finally urged Marianne to take time off to see something of the rest of Earth and the other inhabited worlds. Perhaps
somewhere
in Europe or Indonesia or South America or out there among the planets and satellites and space stations,
something
would capture her daughter’s imagination for longer than a month.
Marianne had spent the year after her twenty-first birthday wandering Earth, acquiring clothes and souvenirs and intellectually stylish acquaintances. If she lacked discipline, she was nevertheless gifted with a restless intelligence and was quick to pick up the latest in
modes pensées
—among which the ideas of Sir Randolph Mays figured prominently, at least in North Continental circles.
“He may suspect he knows something, but he’s going for pure research. What else?” Hawkins, a postdoc in xeno--archaeology at the University of London, was a blind loy-alist where his thesis advisor was concerned. “Remember, Forster applied for his grants and permits long before Amal-thea got into the news; that anomalous radiation signature has been known for over a century. As for this warmed-over conspiracy business—really, that too belongs back in the 20th century,” Hawkins said a bit huffily.
Marianne was uncertain whether to be miffed; having formed few opinions of her own, she found herself at the mercy of people who claimed authority. She struggled bravely on. “So you think there’s no such thing as the Free Spirit? That aliens never visited the solar system?”