Willa Cather once wrote that authors should write about what they knew at 15. Where they lived, where they grew up. They should speak of the living Earth they knew in their youth. That particular place where writers grew up never leaves them. They know its moods, its ways, its smells and sounds. Its unique history and its stories. Its secrets and its longings.
This brings me to a point about a friend from SacramentoâFather Steven Avella. Weâre alike in so many ways. As his name suggests, heâs Italian-American as I am. We are both proud products of the Diocese of Sacramentoâs school system.
He is a professor, as I was until my retirement. He teaches at Marquette University in Milwaukee in their History Department. Thatâs a D-1 school, and Iâm not talking about sports leagues. It graduates PhD holders, not just those with bachelorâs and masterâs degrees. Big league, to be sure, for a professor.
Steve earned his PhD from Notre Dame. In fact, our graduate careers crossed there for a few semesters. My initial time in South Bend was while he was finishing; I had taught high school before starting ND. It was great to chat about Sacramento with him, especially during my first winter when I thought hell had frozen over and fallen down on South Bend. And that winter was the one after the famous Blizzard of â78, a mammoth storm that closed Notre Dame and all of South Bendâthe one of legend, as embellished as any Rockne story.
Besides our Italian heritage, degrees, and professions, we hold another similarity.
Sacramento is in our blood. Father Steve has written three academic works:  The Good Life: Sacramentoâs Consumer Culture plus Sacramento and the Catholic Church: Shaping a Capital City. Both would make Cather happy because she is absolutely correct about what a writer knows. His latest and third work, Charles McClatchy and the Golden Era of American Journalism, delves into Sacramento lore again.
For those of you not up on your history of journalism, Sacramento, and California generally, McClatchy is a significant figure. The McClatchy family owned many newspapers throughout California. I read the Sacramento Bee every day when I lived there. I still check it online. Even my neighborhood high school was named for that powerful dynastyâMcClatchy High School. I went across town to Bishop Armstrong, now Christian Brothersâpart of my Catholic upbringing in the late 50s and 60s.
When I got my copy of Steveâs latest work, I thought of Catherâs prescient remark.
Some of you have read Book I of The Marsco Saga, The Marsco Dissident. No plot spoiler here, but it starts in the year 2092 in Sac City, what my future Sacramento is called in the late 21st Century. My main character is âfromâ Sacramento and has settled there after living on Mars. As the novel begins, he has been back home again for the past ten years.
Book II, Marsco Triumphant, begins in Sac City. A troubled Sac City on the verge of unrest and witnessing draconian measures to prevent any further strife.
This Spring, after launching Book II, I began editing my draft of The Marsco Sustainability Project, the third novel of the four-novel set. Chapter One is not set in Sacramento, but many of the central actions takes place once more in Sac City.
I now live in Minnesota as I have for nearly 27 years. In a few years, I will have lived longer in Marshall than I lived in Sacramento as a boy and young man. I plan on setting a novel here in this town; Iâve written pages about the plot and the characters. All these characters will be transplants, like myself, who came to my fictional Marshall (âMilton, Minnesotaâ in this work) to teach at a fictional state college in my fictional part of the prairie we know and love as âthe Upper Midwest.â
Cather rings true. I canât write of this area the way locals can. I didnât sit in a school desk here. I didnât bowl or dance with classmates who grew up on farms outside of Marshall. I didnât ice fish or play hockey. I didnât pick rock or drive off tar. I didnât ask to âborrow me a penâ from a friend or sell Schwanâs door-to-door for the Speech Team. I didnât see a Marshall sky as a boyâit would have filled me with wonder as it does now, so often clear and star-studded. But, an invented childhood here wonât ring true. Not like when I write of Sacramento.
You can take the boy out of that Capital City, but you canât take that Capital City out of the man. Father Steve and I are much like Jim Burden in Catherâs My Ăntonia, trying to recapture what we had as youths. Sometimes words fail us, but then again, sometimes the words keep coming.Â
Authorâs note: The Piazzi is a Marsco Asteroid Shuttle plying its trade between the Asteroid Belt and the moon. Rumors are circulating that Marsco might be covering up a plague outbreak on that shuttle. In the Marsco world, it is common to have colonies on asteroids. Most of these are Marsco colonies, although some rare ones are independent of Marsco.
Chapter Nine
Plague Ship
(On the asteroid Adams-Leverrier, 2095)
âItâs solely an accident that brings this ship to your colony,â Carlton Caruthers, the visiting Marsco liaison, assured the Independent colonyâs administration. Caruthers was an imposingly tall, muscular man. But that and his lefter status didnât hold sway over the six unwavering administrators seated around the conference table.
âThis shuttle,â Misha Paton, the colony superintendent, slipped on a finger mouse thimble to check his mobile screen, âthis VBCÂ Gagarin–we have denied, and we will continue to deny her permission to dockâespecially if an accidentâs involved.â Not versed in Marsco lore, Paton had no way of knowing how significant this port-of-call visit actually was.
The associate didnât blink. âShe has every right to dock here,â he fired at first. Then with a conciliatory gulp, he added, âBut perhaps I spoke inaccurately. Itâs merely coincidence that brings this ship in to your spaceport.â
Eleni Romanidu, the only woman in the conference room, broke in, âAnd coincidence that your shipâs coming from the wrong side of the belt?â She tapped her fingernailâshe was without disksâon a nicked-up and scored polymer table to emphasize her point. As the colonyâs legal expert, she kept Adams-Leverrier totally and truly independent from Marsco.
Caruthers glanced about at the half dozen faces with set jaws and determined looks. While his hair and moustache were trimmed and neat, the six Indies had that Indie-look. Paton sported a ponytail and a gold earring. Romanidu wore not just glasses but ones with dark lenses. The others looked peculiar as well.
Not one of them sported a single finger disk.
The viewpanel behind the colonists looked in toward the sun; its glare, even at this distance, still made the unnumbered stars and the close-at-hand asteroids impossible to see. But, somewhere out there, an expedition ship steadily approached. And the Gagarin was heading in at max, setting a Herriff-Miller speed record.
âLook,â the liaison now continued with the expected tone of confrontation, âwe donât have to ask permission to dock.â
âYes, yes,â Superintendent Paton nodded, âTwelve Thrusters gives Marsco all the authority it needs.â
The associate simply smirked. âAnd I donât need to give you a lecture on the movement of asteroids. Colonies line up differently relative to in- and out-going shuttles all the time. Itâs the nature of planetary orbits. Besides, as youâve acknowledged, under Thrusters, ordinary trafficââ
âBut,â the legal counsel countered, her dark glasses giving away nothing, âthe shuttle in question canât in any way be conceived as ordinary traffic. Whatâs it doing out that way?â She motioned behind, through the plexiglas. During the asteroidâs rapid rotation, the view right then was outbound, toward endless space beyond the belt.
âHer missionâs black.â Caruthers dismissed her, hiding the fact that he thought her a shrill harpy standing in Marscoâs way.
âIâll say,â the legal wonk came back at him, her cynicism toward Marsco not disguised.
The superintendent thought it best to reenter this exchange before too much was said by the head of legal that should be left unsaid. Thimble-twitching his palm screen nervously, he brought up his chief concern. âThe Von Braun Center has furnished us with a manifest of the crew but little else about this shuttle.â
âAs is standard for any docking craft, even Marsco-to-Marsco.â
âBut, the manifest lists six hibering crewmembers; lists them asâand I quote: âUnder quarantine.ââ
âMatter of semantics, Mr. Paton, merely semantics,â the associate stated. âYouâve known me for five years, as long as Iâve been this colonyâs liaison. Iâve helped in every matter possible during this time. We know each other; I hope we trust each other. You know that to Marsco, safety in space is its paramount goal.â
The superintendent gave an obligatory nod, but the five other Indies saw that the associate was stalling, looking for a way out. The liaison himself knew this as well. And yet he stammered on, reassuring his hosts that Marsco expected cooperation even though it always respected legal Independents. Finally, mid-paragraph, he remembered the second associate present and immediately shifted his ramble onto him. âAnd Mr. Steerforth here, heâs just in from the VBC on Mars which is home port of this craft. Heâs come out specifically to meet the Gagarin. Heâll be most obliging with his answersâall of them forthcoming.â The liaison responded with an unconvincing smile.
The visiting hibernation specialist, David Steerforth, looked from inflexible non-associate face to face in no hurry to respond. Much shorter and thinner than the lanky liaison, his looks betrayed no age because he had hibered a great deal. As typical with ice-tech drudges, he looked uneasy with live specimens, preferring to work with those already sleeping deeply. In a crowd of other men, he would easily be overlooked. Nonetheless, he came on with an all-too-familiar associate demeanor. âItâs black as previously stated. Marsco doesnât need your permission to dock, and it refuses your permission to inspect!â
âIs that a threat?â the regulatory specialist, Romanidu, retorted.
âDoes it need to threaten?â
âIt often does.â
Both the superintendent and liaison were a flurry of arms and gestures trying to keep their respective subordinates and this visiting associate from escalating the discussion into open hostilities.
âPlease, please,â the chief colonist insisted, âyou have to understand my point of view. Iâm responsible for over 35K residents. And we know of plague shipsâhistorical ones, perhaps mostly mythical, but others real nonetheless.â He drew a measured breath, âAnd we know of the Piazzi some six months back.â
âEight to be exact,â the recently-arrived hiber specialist fired, growing impatient and feeling this was a sniper shot. âBut that was the Asteroid Fleetânot Von Braun. In Marsco, two distinct entities.â
âI realize that, butââ the legal specialist tried to retort.
âThere is a vast difference.â
âRealize that, too, butââ
âThe Gagarinâs on a scientific mission, the nature of which I cannot disclose. Obviously, every sensor on this asteroid tells you that sheâs coming in from outside the belt. Canât deny it. But what elseâs going on within her hullâthatâs classified.â
âBut itâs within regs that my health team meet every crewmember,â the legal expert insisted, âwhether they leave the shuttle or not.â
âLetting you on boardâs totally out of the question,â Steerforth insisted. âThe Gagarinâs to dock, take on fuel, some supplies. Itâs been beyond the belt for over three yearsââ
Sounding more like a VBC rep than the VBC rep, the Marsco liaison interjected, âYouâve gotta admire the scientific marvel of that feat!â
ââbut not all its crew will de-shuttle or deice, so no, you may not meet them. Dot!â
·         ·         ·
As both an Indie and a colonist, Eleni Romanidu, the head of the Adams-Leverrierâs legal staff, was scrupulously cautious. The confrontation three days earlier hadnât decreased her apprehension. Colonists needed ceaseless watchfulness lest space suck the life from their isolated pocket of frail existence amid this hostile, vacuous environment. On Earth or in space, Indies needed measured restraint rather than complacency when dealing with Marsco or else they would be crushed by its sheer size and might.
Her ancestors were Euros from the center of that continent, a location that always needed to balance the colliding extremes of East and West. Somewhat defeated, Eleni had felt like she was performing that same balancing act twenty-four hours ago when she watched the Gagarin glide up to a docking tether extended to greet her.
To read all the data the colonyâs sensors had amassed on this suspicious shipâMarsco had provided none beyond the troubling and vague manifestâshe needed to sit at her work table and twitch her way through screens of data.
To do so, she wore a set of finger mouse thimbles. The system was ancient, but the adamant administration wouldnât let their tech specialists order anything Marsco. âWeâre Indies, and must act it,â the superintendent argued convincingly. âAs much as is feasible, we must support those few subsidiaries that have the moxie to stay out of Marscoâs sway.â A sign of his own stubbornness was the abject lack of finger disks throughout the colony and anything remotely approaching Marsco-standard finger mouse paraphernalia.
Eleni shrugged as she twitched her chip-embedded thimbles. Avoiding Marsco was an honorable but problematic sentiment to live by, especially considering that no one else made computers like it did. She looked at the trio of thimbles she had slipped onto her right hand. It was a wonder she was allowed to use even them.
The choice by these Independents to live free of Marsco rather than knuckle under had more repercussions than computer usage. The black hair framing her face was without luster or style. Bags hung under her eyes, but these were hard to notice because she wore dark glassesâanother non-Marsco elementâto protect her weakened sight and hide some of her strain. Our life here is ceaselessly precarious, she complained bitterly to no one in particular. Marsco on the threat horizon, arduous colony life, all this isolation to create their freedomâshe was always just that close to jettisoning her independence for a modicum of an easier existence in some Earth-side Indie subsidiary.
·         ·         ·
For an hour, she reviewed all the Colonyâs reports on the mysterious shuttle. Partway through her examination, she needed to level the table she used as a desk, one as scratched as the colonyâs conference table where the Indies first met the two arrogant associates. She wadded up a piece of paper to slip it under a leg then tested her work stationâs stability. âBetter,â she whispered, âbetter than the bullshit cover story Marscoâs manufactured.â
Their first intel was spotty. The Adams-Leverrierâs deep-space sensors had picked up an unusual bogie more than four months ago. After that, as the phantom came closer, the colonyâs tracking volume went up, out of self-interest if nothing else. It hit fever pitch three weeks earlier when the craft sent her initial and routine request to dock. Every colony took a plague threat seriously. And this shuttleâs fatuous cover story, that she was coming in from Jupiter, only added to their tensions or suspicions. It ameliorated no oneâs qualms on the colonyâs admin staff. Not after the hushed-up Piazzi.
âHell, why not claim that sheâs returning from Mercury!â she snickered.
Thimble-twitching through several reports, knowing she had already lost the first pawn in her opening chess match with Marsco, she mentally fumed, Something isnât right! And that damn shipâs tied to us right now! Nonetheless, she swore she would gain a better grasp of the facts about the imposing shuttle.
Rising from her desk, Eleni stood at a viewport bubble where she watched the tethered brute.
Adams-Leverrier spun so quickly that dim sunlight hit the ship, passed it into shadow, and then once more into light four times an hour. The sunlight cycle created a creeping shadow along the entire shipâs massive superstructure.
The craft was all wrong; even someone whose eyes were weakened by screens of regulatory minutia recognized that. The VBC ship had four propulsion units, all standard Herriff-Millers, but four thrusters, not the typical pair. And to supply the quartet of engine bells, she boasted extra fuel tanks plus extended crew mods. An extraordinary mule! A shuttle on steroids, dreamed up in the murky depths of the Valles Marineris. And anything anomalous, anything out of the norm, anything unexpectedâand anything coming from Marscoâthat was too much for any Indie.
âSheâs almost frightening,â the colonist mumbled, knowing full well it was the mystery within the shuttle that was most frightening.
âI didnât know anything frightened you,â someone whispered behind her.
She knew the voice before catching a manâs reflection in the viewport. She didnât turn but slipped off her dark glasses.
âZale, what if plague is?â She shrugged at the menace presently shrouded in shadow for the next several minutes. âThis colonyâs been free of Neo-Con for its entirety, since before the Wars.â
âYouâre getting panicky over the Piazzi cock-up.â The man looked mixed-African. An adoption during the AIDS-ravaging times had brought one of his ancestors north from near the equator to a Central Continental Power earlier in the century. His looks might betray a mixed ancestry, but his speech and comportment were exclusively Euro. He spoke without a discernable accent. He stood behind her, gently resting his hands on her shoulders, and felt her relax into him without looking him in the face. After a dozen years together, his gesture was still cherished.
âMarsco gives me plenty of reasonsâcover-ups, shifting regs, wallahs showing up, throwing their weight around.â
âTwelve Thrusters?â
âThat goes without saying!â
âAnd the Piazzi.â
âYes, especially her, dammit!â
âBut today, you got permissionââ
âFinally!â
ââfor the main thing we need. Youâll go aboard with Anora, youâll see allâs A-OK. Thatâll be the end of it.â
âIâm not so sure it will be,â Eleni replied, leaning back into the strength of her husband. âWill you come too?â
He laughed gently at one of her seemingly absurd suggestions he knew so well. âBringing the colonyâs health officer, Iâm sure Marscoâll buy. But why should an asteroid geologist come aboard?â
âShow of force, bringing our head of mining ops. Besides, I want your muscle.â
âDonât go paranoid on me, Eleni. And more to the point, how do we justify a miner boarding them?â
âWe want to verify they arenât illegally harvesting in this quadrant. We have a license from Marsco, a monopoly around here.â
âElli,â Zale laughed at her predictable logic, âElli, Elli, your legalistic mind.â
âItâs hiding something.â She drew an irritated breath. âAll their bullshit about Jupiter! Jupiter! Like itâs just fuckinâ next door.â She pointed into the never-never just outside the plexiglas for emphasis.
With the present colony orientation, Jupiter was bright enough to be the only object visible against the blackness, an orange ball not obliterated in the reflected station lights.
âThe Gagarin ventured beyond and back into the beltâbut for a reason. Hardly to go to damn Jupiterâno matter what the MAS or the VBC says. Why go there? Everything there is here. No, Marsco must be hiding something on that shuttle.â
âNo shit!â He feigned amazement at her bald-faced assertion. âItâs always hiding something.â
âI know, but I donât like it hiding that something while tethered to us.â
“But what it has hidden isnât important so long as it isnât contagious. And Anora will know that by 1430 hours today.â Turning her, he looked directly into her dark, bloodshot eyes. âWeâll know. And Iâm sure weâre safe. But, yes, Iâll go with, if thatâll help.â
·         ·         ·
âSo, weâve worked out this sort of compromise,â David Steerforth explained to the hibernation specialist who had been on the expedition ship.
At this point in his career, Lieutenant Anthony âZotâ Grizotti of the Gagarin knew official bumf when confronted with it. Paton, the chief administrator from the Adams colony, Steerforth from the VBC. It made no difference. Both admins were generating self-importance, the iceman suspected. Although, he secretly admitted, he would believe Paton more than Steerforth any day.
Side by side the two made an odd pair. The VBC researcher stood shorter than the Gagarin iceman by more than a dozen centimeters. His frame was thin, lacking any muscle tone. Besides being taller, Zot seemed alert, engaged with his surroundings, attentive. His brown eyes were quick to focus and show immediate comprehension of any situation. His trimmed beard had a few gray strands as natural aging ran its course. He had grown it to full regulation size, which Steerforth, even at his age, couldnât manage.
Standing there silently, the visitor secretly glanced at his fellow iceman. He had dark southern Euro features and a sense of confidence that the visitor lacked. Steerforth envied Zot for his easygoing manner, unless working. Then, he was intense. It wasnât just his looks but his openness that the other man envied. People always liked Grizotti, even when he seemed to stand apart from the rest.
Although much older, Steerforth eagerly stretched his middle age out by hibering at every chance, his latest being the four-month crossing from Mars to the belt. Zot, on the other hand, had hibered reluctantly for short snatches during the years he had been onboard the Gagarin. Although the flight crew and all members of the science team had iced in relays across the void, Zot stayed awake as long as necessary to keep his experiment stable and safe. As a science team member, Zot nevertheless helped out all he could. When the two flight crew icemen went under for six months at a stretch (at Zotâs hands after the outward-bound ship left the belt nearly three and a half years ago) he made sure the hibering shuttle crew and his own cryo-frozen volunteers were all well tended.
âDo we know anything of their assessment team?â Zot asked at last.
As dangerous as trekking to Jupiter was, the hiberman was more concerned about this inspection. He wanted to know his foeâor friendâwell before either approached. In the end, he never fully trusted Steerforth, but whatever info he shared on the colonists might prove helpful.
âNot much.â Steerforth had gleaned from the Marsco liaison that the whole colony was mostly Euro with a stubborn streak of autonomy although nothing approaching Ludd beliefs. âUnusual sort of place, however. Some religious connection or another, or so Caruthers says. Theyâre all thick-necked plus damned resilient.â
âHave to be out here.â
âRecords acknowledge only a dozen or so residents have gone missing in the past five yearsâgood retention, all things consideredâliving out next to nowhere.â
âWhere do they go when they leave?â
âHow do you mean?â
âDo these fleeing Indies end up in Security? Does it seem like they canât wait to leave this place behind at any cost, thus they whore themselves in Security as legionnaires?â
âNo, seems that most former colonists leave to join Earth-side sids.â The specialist from Von Braun paused then asked pointedly, âBy the wayâwhy are you here?â
âAsk our fearless commander; sheâll tell you.â The hiberman, like most in his guild, had little love for shuttle pilots. âHas something to do with the science team not having gathered all Marsco HQ wanted at the Trojans.â These asteroids, trailing the gigantic planet on an identical orbital plane, were the last locale explored by the Gagarin.
âMarsco HQ? Not Herriff and the VBC?â Like this colony, Herriff and his Von Braun Center on Mars enjoyed a large measure of autonomy from Marscoâs Seattle-based general headquarters.
âAffirmative. Seattle stuck its head into our program.â
âSo, Seattleâs pulling the Centerâs tail? Herriffâs not liking that. But that delayed your Jovan egression?â
âSome balls-up like that. Plus crew incompetence.â
âIncompetence? You are all hand-picked!â
âWell, all that and then Sparks sends the same sci-file twice. Put Seattle into a tizzy. We spent a week just asking ourselves what the hell was going on. By the time the flyboys and -girls sorted it all out enough to satisfy the Seattle wallahs, we egressed ten days later than we should. Thus, we didnât align well with any belt colonyâany Marsco colony.â
He paused to look down at the asteroid, scores of its domes lit against the ashen, pocked surface. It was a large settlement in a relatively colony-free sector of the belt. âAdams had been a friendly place for years, I understand,â the Gagarin iceman added at last.
âYeah, the liaison reported that after each of his semiannual visits here.â Steerforth joined his subordinate at the viewport.
âWhatâs he like?â
âThe usual ineffective drone: knows nothing but seems to know even less than that! Itinerant. He liaises with six or eight colonies but lives on Ceresâthatâs the largest Marsco colony near here although it is really at quite a distance at present. His wife and kids are there, and he has three or four babes on other colonies. None here.â
Only Steerforth, Zot thought, would concern himself with counting another manâs women.
After watching a slice of dim sunlight reflect off the surface domes, Steerforth confided, âYes, friendly here once, well, until the Piazzi. From what I can gatherârumors at the VBC and grumblings hereâthat incident changed everything on several colonies.â
Zot stated as dryly as possible, âWhat? Are sids and Indies beginning to doubt Big Red?â
âCynicism doesnât help the situation, Anthony.â Not knowing Zot well at all, Steerforth often used Grizottiâs first name; to those who knew him, he was always Zot, just Zot.
âWhat did happen? Any idea?â
âNothing official. Accident of some sort. Thereâs to be an inquest. Or yet a second, or a third, or a continuing one, or God knows what else.â
âSome buttâs in it now. But, what did happen?â Zot asked insistently.
âAsk me about Von Braun and icing; no one will tell me squat even if they knew.â
âCâmon, explosions onboard shuttles just donât happen.â
âAre you suggesting Ludds?â
âOr incredibly, poorly trained crews.â Zot paused then ventured, âI knew someone on board.â
âKnow her well?â
âHim. No, just a friend. Classmate from my hiber-tech days. He was the iceman sucked into spaceâso far as we know.â
âYeah, we really donât know.â Had Steerforth been a closer coworker, he would have offered his sympathy but didnât. âLook, itâs 1100. Give me your prelim report. Theyâll be here at 1430.â
As much as he dreaded this exchange, the hands-on Gagarin researcher had everything ready. At a small conference table, he had two screens booted with identical material, a prĂ©cis of his work. It was an unflattering account of the methodology that initially placed six volunteers in cryogenic stasis, a system wholly unlike routine hibernation. And the person who had so thoroughly botched that primary workup was waiting to hear Zotâs report.
When Grizotti initially came aboard the Gagarin, then in Mars orbit, the deep-iced guinea pigs had been in experimental cryo for half a year. Steerforth was quick to shift their responsibility over to Zot, to readily commit the subjects to his subordinateâs finger disks, and to hastily de-shuttle on the last lander back to the planetâs surface. At the start of the outward four-month crossing to the belt, the iceman needed to redo every aspect of the computer-assisted controls and monitors while still keeping everyone alive Steerforth had already frozen.
For his part, the VBC researcher had essentially copied Continental specs to freeze them but had dreamed up his own system for keeping them safe. Zot had to revise that systemâin processâwithout endangering the frozen volunteers any more than they were and without ending the experiment prematurely by bringing them out of deep ice.
Grizotti was too kind to say outright, I saved your ass, David, so he spoke in generalities about the salvaged system, stressing more his alterations, his adjustments, his tweaks, as though he had added onto a working system, not redesigned an altogether failed one.
âAll six were in yellow when I got them. I had them stable and safe within ten days.â
âNot an easy task,â Steerforth stated without emotion, even though his FD prints were all over those dysfunctional and bollixed fundamental protocols.
“They were all A-OK after eight weeks and are continuing so indefinitely.â
The concept originator readily saw that Zot had implemented a wholly new system under the most difficult of conditions, life and death conditions. But after the reportâs conclusions, Steerforth played his part well and thanked the real designer for his forty-three months of ceaseless monitoring. âExcellent reconditioning of existing systems,â he stated more than once.
Zot modestly thanked him for the acknowledgement. âEveryoneâs green-lining at present. Theyâve been that way for the past forty-two months, one week.â
âOutstanding! Plus their six months beforeâso well beyond four years total. Yâknow, all six have agreed to stay under even after returning to the Center.â
âWe can then expect at least five years without problemsâten times hiberâs current max.â
âIâve always maintained that twenty years is possible.â
âIf twenty, then fifty, one hundred. Theyâre in stasis, after all, not hibernation. Just compare their body temps and vitals to green-lined hiber stats. And once safely in this stasis, eternityâs the limit.â Zot bit his tongue. If a hundred, why not two or three? Post-solar is possible. Certainly not in this end-of-her-limits research ship but in some other spaceship that can be automated to go beyond Pluto and then safely away.
But where?
·         ·         ·
After talking with the ten members of the flight crew complement and the twenty of the science research team, the Indie inspectors, accompanied by Caruthers, made their way aft to the hiber-station where they found both Steerforth and Grizotti in full uniform waiting for them.
The first thought that ran through Zotâs mind was that the physician had an air about her like Tessaâs. It was only in her deliberate and energetic manners, not her looks. Her blond hair was longer, fixed into a practical, non-ornamental braid that was curled up at the back of her head. Plus she looked strained from the rigors of life on an asteroid. Nonetheless, Tessa crossed Zotâs mind until he mentally shook his head to clear himself of her memory.
Next to this no-nonsense inspector was an older woman with black bags under her anxious eyes, eyes partially hidden by dark glasses.
With them were two men, the superintendent and one other man obviously attached to the legal side of the inspection pair. He stood silently by, observing and noting everything without responding. Their names betrayed little: Zale and Eleni Romanidu, Misha Paton, and Anora Hauser.
The Gagarin cryo-researcher made no attempt to garner meaning from names, races, and backgrounds. This was a postwar world, a Marsco world; all had been mixed, rearranged, sorted by techno-prowess. Or by choice to get as far away from Marsco as possible. This sifting began with Divestiture and continued to this day. Only associate, sid, and PRIM remained as viable and discrete categories.
Unless you count these few Indies and the likes of Walter Miller as a fourth column. Once more, Zot mentally shook his head; he wasnât going anywhere near Tessa by thinking about her father.
Introductions over, the Indies gravitated to Zotâs workstation in the midsection of the third personnel mod.
Usually, when a pair like these women entered to check up on logs and reports, one played soft, the other hard. This time, however, both came in as polished and resolute as asteroid nickel. The doctor asked pointed questions about the six crewmembers in medical isolation, while the other scrutinized the fragmentary records given to her. Believing their home colony in peril, they wanted to make sure every conceivable risk was avoided.
Through a bulkhead behind consoles and banks of monitors, the cryo-bay was closed off, its hatch sealed. Steerforth was determined to keep anyone from even so much as seeing the tech layout of his experimental system. Even so, it took only a moment and the doctorâs sharp eye to raise concerns.
âYouâve given med charts for those six in hiber,â Hauser stated with an accusatory voice. She motioned toward the locked-down bulkhead, âbut they go back only four months.â She addressed her question to Zot because he appeared to be the most honest of the three associates.
âAnd the problem is?â Steerforth interjected. He had been fussing around, keeping the inspectors from probing too deeply about his protocols.
âYour info doesnât match your hiber-logs,â replied the legalistic Romanidu.
âAnd,â the doctor interjected still to Zot, âjust look at these readingsâheart rate, body temp, whatever you selectâyour âicedâ crew are all dead!â
Defensively, the Gagarin iceman pulled up another screen. âHereâs their respiration. Theyâre very much alive, as you can see.â He briskly pointed to a sine wave graphic that demonstrated their breathing rates as retarded but with verifiable patterns. A second screen showed the oxygen content of their slowly pulsing blood. âIâm not housing cadavers in there.â
The doctor had never seen such hiber signs before. âYou call hibernation âicing,â but this really seems to be freezing someone,â she commented in an unguarded outburst.
Neither Grizotti nor Steerforth felt obligated to respond.
âMore to the point, Superintendent Paton,â the liaison moved this confrontation back to its original purpose, âafter examining for signs of Neo-Con, your med investigator here finds no evidence of plague, am I not correct?â
The accompanying physician nodded, still with an eye on Zot, an eye clearly pleased with his frank demeanor and kindness.
The inspection team murmured assent and prepared to leave when Zale, who had been a brooding presence thus far, brought out his own data file with a self-important flourish. âI havenât seen the records of your asteroid harvest. Where are those records?â
The two hibernation researchers were stunned by the question. âWhy ask us that,â Steerforth stammered. âDo I look like a sid astro-miner?â
Ignoring the slam, Zale stayed revved up, gunning for them. âThe ship must have records.â This charade covered his being on the inspection team, and it gave the two women more time to survey the hiber terminals.
Another aspect of this ship to distrust, Eleni noted, this mega-bay. Itâs five, six times larger than it needs to be. Nothing makes sense here! She didnât need to be a hiber-techie to observe that this workstation was beyond anything approaching normal. For starters its instrumentation was at least one hundred times larger than any standard system needed.
âThose records?â Zale asked the icemen again.
Even though flustered, Caruthers managed to evade the real issue. He was a minor official caught in a major situation well over his head. The VBC hadnât expected this trouble, or Herriff would have sent someone besides this inept Steerforth. The liaison drew a forceful breath. âThese two are mere icemenâone wasnât even a member of the crewâwhy ask them?â
âWhy not?â
âThey know nothing of asteroid harvesting–alleged harvesting.â He held up a disk-full hand, but that gesture held little sway with such Indies. âBesides none has taken place, I can assure you!â
âI donât buy that for a nano,â the colonist spit his answer. âWhy else is a ship going outside the belt and then looping back in? What else but for secretly harvesting our allotment and covering your tracks while doing such an odd loop?â
âThese allegations are baseless, without substance,â the liaison retorted.
The three associates glanced around at their Indie visitors. They then shared a mental epiphany: they donât believe the Gagarin has been to Jupiter!
Distrustful bastards, Grizotti thought. âWhat have we to hide? Weâve been on a scientific expedition.â So as not to compound his statement with a direct lie, he added vaguely, âbeyond the belt!â
Caruthers finally put his finger disks down. âInspectionâs over. You see thereâs nothing for you to worry about or bother with, health-wise. As youâve noted, you find no evidence of any disease present. And so now I really must insist: youâre interfering with Marsco shuttle traffic! Youâve had your look-about, so please go. Now!â
Something was going on here, Romanidu knew; its nature she could only just imagine. Reflecting further, the Indie felt stiffening Marsco resolve. Knowing there was more here than met her eye but also convinced that the shuttle was truly plague-free, she concluded it was time to back off.
·         ·         ·
A week later when clear of the asteroid belt, the Gagarin headed toward Mars. With the hypergolic fuel taken on at Adams-Leverrier flaming through the quad engine bells, the expedition ship gathered speed for her last homeward leg.
âThat extra pair will kick us along nicely,â Steerforth commented to Zot as the latter prepared him for hibernation.
âYou sure you want this? Weâll be in Mars orbit in a little over three months.â
âThree months of total blackness? What in solar for?â
Zot scoffed at the suggestion rather than reply. He had used his years beyond the belt to explore as best he could. He had augmented the shipâs dish antenna for an enhanced scope to look deeply into spaceâfor the pure science of it, something Marsco wasnât fond of lately. Even with that small-scale instrument, he had been able to gather files of substantial new data and gophered much more in cobweb sites long neglected by other associates. The whole universe beyond-solar waited for disks to explore it, yet it remained as unexamined as the far side of the moon in the middle of the last century.
âLet me ask you something else,â Steerforth began, breaking the silence.
The hiberman nodded without speaking.
âAny good ass on board?â
The busy iceman ignored his colleague.
âCâmon, either it was sensational or you got zilch.â
âHow Marscoâso binary.â
âLookâwhy dâyou take this mother-of-all-sorties anyway? To become a monk? Or for all those Marsco Units? Cha-ching!â
âWho said I was a monk?â
âOh-ho!â Steerforth stressed by drawing out the comment, âmending a broken heart, then. Hey, best way for thatââ he gestured rhythmically and crudely. âItâs like Iâve always said, âthereâs always someone else to poke just down the hall.ââ
Looking at the balding, short, unremarkableâand incompetentâmiddle-aged man, Zot tried not to laugh. âChicks must cream in their thongs at just the mere thought of you.â
Missing the intent, Steerforth gave a knowing wink. âBingo! Bingo-bingo!â
Zot worked on in silence then asked, âTell me something. Whatâs this all for? I mean, this cryo? Itâs well beyond anything needed at present. And from what Iâve seen of Jupiterâwhy return? More than ninety-five percent of the belt asteroids arenât mined or inhabited. Marsco has no needâindeed, no desireâto go beyond the belt.â
âYeah, this expedition was the closest itâs come to pure science in years.â
âI guess you could say that.â
âThatâs loadedâwhat the hell do you mean?â
âPure science? We orbited Jupiter. Examined several of its moons. We went to the trailing Trojan asteroids. But last centuryâs astronomers watching the Shoemaker-Levy comet collide with the surface learned more of Jupiter than we did. We looked for potential colony locales, for mining-worthy asteroids and moons. We looked for water-ice and frozen methane.â
âAnd thatâs not science?â
âNot when youâre really only looking for future mining sites.â
Steerforth snidely countered, âIdealist.â
âAnd youâre the realist?â
âDamn straight.â The older manâs bloodshot eyes bore into Zotâs brown. âListen,â he insisted, âlearn this! Youâre an associate. The worldâs ours for the taking. We can have it all! Do whatever the hell we want. âJust do it!â Quit all this sniveling about the past and about the futureâlive it up today! What did they say once, âSeize the dayâ?â
âThey were Romans, and they said it carpe diem. And their empire fell with quite a large bang, as history reports it.â
âWell, better grab yours beforeââ He gave a gentle laugh, partly to signal his willingness to switch topics and partly out of his reluctant fondness for Grizotti. âLook, we didnât create this world. All we did was inherit it.â
Zot wasnât answerable to Steerforth. And he knew in an hour the irritating associate would be out of his hair for three months. Without comment, he picked up where he left off and continued prepping the VBC researcher.
âHey,â Steerforth grinned, âno hard feelings.â He held out his hand, the gesture of shaking hands one not often shared in the Marsco world. The senior iceman knew enough never to tick off someone about to put you under. He would risk the FD-to-FD shock to avoid a horrid hiber. âLook, you asked sort of, so Iâll tell you sort of,â he finally confided. âOff the record, nothing official.â He paused, shrugged, and went on. âI donât know what olâ Herriffâs got planned. Martin and I arenât exactly buds, if you catch? But I hear lots of rumors: a space shipââ
âWell, duh!â
âI mean one designed specifically for deep space.â
âSo,â Zot concluded, âunlike the Gagarin.â
âExactly.â
Zot gave a shrug and looked out a viewport. âShe really is just standard pieces added on to make an old-fashioned shuttle into an enhanced platform. Nothing new or special at all. Extra fuel tanks, another pair of engines. But more to the point, all this cryo-crap isnât just to make us obsolete?â They both laughed.
âNo, far from it. Weâll still be needed. And Herriffâs aiming for a new engine concept.â
âNew design? How?â
âLike I know the specs? I only heard things, yâsee, only heard them. I never saw anything, not even a single peep at the schematics or concept models. Something propelled by ions, not chemicals. And then the boss, Doc Herriff, he just says one day out of the dusty red Martian sky, âDavid, push on with those cryo plans, stat!â Like I can pull such designs out of the air.â
âOr out of a memory bank, a Continental memory bank.â
âLook, itâs all legit research, right? I checked their results and tests against mine, their data against my trials.â
âGot me there.â
âSo, anyway, all I can confirm is that I heard that somethingâs going down. But Christ, itâll be years, I tell you. I can see whatâs under construction in the orbiting docksâand thereâs nothing that seems remotely like it can do the impossible.â
âLike house a crew in deep hiber for fifty, one-hundred years.â
âOne-fifty, twoâI tell you, Iâve designed a system close to that.â
âWell, we have designed.â
Steerforth winked. âGot me there.â
Grizotti had the IV tubes ready to start bringing the necessary fluids to keep the man safely asleep for months, a system far simpler and far less complicated than the future-oriented cryogenic stasis in the farther bay.
Steerforth reached out and stopped him. âOne last point, Anthony. Think about this one, for Christâs sake. Youâll either go back to the MAS Fleet or youâll stay with us at the VBCâIâd love to have you! Either wayânot to Security, right? Yâknow how many Academy grads end up as officers in the S & H mucking around patrolling hot zones?â
Zot shook his head.
âLots, over forty percent this last grad yearâwell over. All that space-based bumf about shuttles and egress-my-ass those cadets had to learn and then, a few weeks past receiving their commissions, theyâre in urban gray with an Enfield and squads of troopers in tow.â
âSomething change while we were post-belt?â
âNot that on Mars Iâd hear any more than youâd hear on board. But, rumors again, Anthony, rumors that something just ainât right on Earth. Some zones, even some rundown subsidiaries, theyâre all becoming IED-City. Christ, everyone carries an Enfield.â
âEveryone?â
âEvery associate. But yâknow what I mean. Itâs hot down there on Old Blue these days, way hot, way too hot.â
ââNeeds no ghost.ââ
âI know, I know, ârotten in Denmark.â But seriously, watch your mouth, Anthony, Marsco-wise. It knows how to shut up those that open their yapper too much.â He chomped his three times for emphasis.
âYeah,â Zot answered, âbut donât worry. Iâll be too busy saluting to complain.â
âBe careful itâs not you returning a salute from all your new troopers. When on patrol, youâre too busy to complain, so CYA, my friend, CYA.â Steerforth grinned one last time at his little witticism. âYâknow, you are as good as a monk, hearing my confession.â
âShall I give you a penance?â
âNot on your life! But Iâll give you some free advice. Deice that blond in the fifth bay, the titty-luscious babe. If sheâs not space-crazed, sheâll be willing. Types like her are always hornier than rabbits after hiber.â
âThe words of a master.â
The senior specialist, winking before he drifted into hibernation, thought Grizottiâs last remark was serious.
·         ·         ·
Most of the flight and science crews on the Gagarin went under hiber soon after the solitary passenger, Steerforth. The shipâs own specialists took over after belt egression, leaving Zot to tend his six in cryo and work on his own scientific projects as time permitted. As promised, he supervised Steerforth personally, the VBC specialist not trusting anyone else.
At the cryogenic workstation, Zot was always alone. As the days passed into the first month, he thought about leaving Marsco. Dozens of Independent shuttles moved between the Earth and the belt. But the hiberman knew many of these were smaller ships that relied little on hibernation.
Or perhaps, he thought, Iâll really go near-Luddite, resign my commission, join Father Cavanaughâs SoAm PRIM school. Zot had met the priest through the Millers, been down to his run-on-a-shoestring campus in the worst zone of Rio. Perhaps that would be his next move.
In the following weeks, he looked over his files of data about the post-solar universe. âEven if there were a confirmed Earth-like planet out there somewhere,â he finally concluded half aloud, âeven with a new deep-space craft and my cryo, whoâd ever go? Ever want to go? Besides, whatâs really, really out there?â
After the hiberman dimmed all the lights in his cabin, the viewport filled with countless stars: dots merging into clusters, individual ones brighter than the rest, the backdrop of the Milky Way, a few larger lights obviously the post-belt planets. âAll those stars and solar systems still years and years away,â he confided hopelessly to himself. âOnly Dante or Milton could conceive of a more vacuous hell.â
Standing at the plexiglass as if to get a closer view, he pondered infinity. He was nearly overwhelmed by its immense nothingness and its entire totality.
The only other thought that crossed his mind was Tessa. The Tessa he loved so deeply once, the Tessa lost to him completely. Only Dante or Milton could conceive of a more vacuous hell than life without her, he thought before busying himself to drive her from his mind.
Chapter One: The Dissident’s Daughter
The Marsco Dissident
A Futuristic Novel
Book One of The Marsco Saga
by James A. Zarzana
Dedicated to Marianne and Elaine
âThe times scientific, as evil as ever.â
âToward Lillersâ 1933
Ivor Gurney
âIt had all the unknownness of
something of immense realness.â
In Parenthesis 1937
David Jones
âEverything off the Earth goes Marsco.â
Marsco Lunar Fleet Motto
2034
Chapter One
The Dissidentâs Daughter
(The Sac City Subsidiary, formerly Sacramento, California, 2092)
Itâs a Marsco world, thought Lieutenant Tessa Miller as she left the battered light rail, ravaged by age, gloomy with rust and neglect.
Her long day of travel almost over, she hustled along the dingy platform through a crowd of Sac City subsidiary residents. Stepping over a sleeping PRIM just beyond the broken escalator, she noticed he smelled of urine. The subcutaneous disk at the back of his left hand flashed amber, alerting the officer it was faulty.
Let an Auxxie deal, Tessa rationalized.
At street level, she surveyed the once-prosperous neighborhood still well within the rambling Sac City Sid. Twenty-two years after the Armistice, the area looked vastly different than from before the C-Wars. A seven-story building down the block was salvageable, yet no robotic cranes stood beside it. Instead, a scaffold surrounded the gutted structure on which sid-overseers supervised dozens of PRIMS brought in from the outlying unincorporated zone. These gangs scurried up and down the skeletal scaffolding, chipping off bricks and useable metal; a frenzy of PRIM-labor rather than cyber driven machines picking the bones of this sid for Marsco.
Once, seeing such gangs with her father, she heard him mutter about them being like coolies from a past era, but she didnât know what he meant and later couldnât find out on the Marsco wiki-p. Today near the light rail platform, she shook her head and looked the other way.
It was the lack of LR service that most occupied her mind. Without a continuing line, she had few choices left to reach her fatherâs isolated grange twenty-five clicks in the distance. Rather than returning to SeattleâTessa was on the verge of thatâor going back to the secure Marsco cantonment and grabbing a hover flight craft, she decided to proceed.
Before leaving her flat she had checked the Marsco Net, which indicated that the commuter line continued for several more stops to the edge of the subsidiary, terminating closer to where these outlaying districts gave way to the greenbelt. Why Marscoâs own Net was inaccurate, Tessa didnât know. Unflustered by this inconvenience, she shouldered her small backpack, slipped on her wrap-around dark glasses and walked to the curb amid the dispersing crowd of PRIMS and sids just below the elevated platform.
To ensure her safe transit but mostly to avoid delays at any checkpoints (although her palm unit marked none along her route), Tessa wore her Marsco uniform, medium gray with red piping and prominent officer bars. Her shoulder patch designated her professor status at the Marsco Academy, the flagship campus within easy distance of the Seattle HQ itself.
Beyond those quads, her uniform carried little weight. Within greater Marsco, she wasnât a member of its elite Asteroid Shuttle Fleet or even a member of its celebrated Lander Fleet making routine jaunts to and from the lunar colonies. And she wasnât Security and Hygiene, even though her uniform prompted deference as she approached. To anyone non-Marsco, she was Marsco; that was enough to keep her from seeming fully integrated anywhere she traveled.
As a matter of course, she strapped an Enfield in a leather holster on her hip and wore cotton gloves to cover her eight finger disks embedded in the tips and on the phalanges of her right hand.
·         ·         ·
Earlier that morning, Tessa had been encased in secured chrome and stainless steel, speeding along on a MAG LEV train at 300 kilometers per hour. The 1200-click trip, with its one stop at the Portland Sector, took her just over five relaxing hours. She ate a lunch of fresh poached salmon, dozed in the plush comfort of the first-class compartment, associates only. Behind glass tinted with asteroid gold to filter the sunâs glare, she accelerated from the gleaming Seattle Sector to the Sac City Cantonment as if in a pneumatic tube detached from the remainder of the world. Since the Armitice, Seattle shone as Marsco rebuilt its HQ. Subsidiaries, like the former capital city of Sacramento, were also thriving via their connection to Marsco, or so Marsco reported to its associates like Tessa. The traveler looked for evidence of this flourishing, but found none.
As often happened on the magnetically levitated bullet, a few older associates had recognized her as Walter Millerâs daughter, a point that she never openly acknowledged even though curiosity about him was frequently on fellow associatesâ minds, in their eyes.
Whether seeing her in transit or during the course of her weekly duties, some longstanding associates who knew both her parents periodically took note of her similarity to Bethany Palmer, her mother. Tessaâs auburn hair, shaped stylishly, a brush of freckles that made her seem younger than she was, her keen determinationâthese maternal traits gave her away, caused some associates to take a lingering look.
She had much of her father as well: his lively, ready smile and his eyes.
From both: a slender, athletic build and an unrelenting stubbornness.
From Marsco: a withering stare that never seemed to fit her even though an absolute necessity for survival in its world.
The inquisitive gazes above digital projection screens from several passengers on the bullet train, those raised eyebrows, prompted Tessa to initiate a âQuestion and Answerâ game with herself somewhere below the Portland Sid.
Q:Â Your folks were such illustrious associates. But did you make it in Marsco based on your own skills?
A:Â Affirmative with a cap âAâ. An aerospace engineering prof by my own dogged work.
Q:Â Impressive! So, a propulsion wonk like your father?
A:Â Not exactly. Heâs more theoretical. Iâm more applied.
Q:Â Has it hindered you being the only child of Marscoâs most famous dissident?
A:Â No comment.
Q:Â How do you explain this inherent contradiction in your life and his?
A:Â Itâs a Marsco world.
Q:Â Is that your answer?
A:Â Affirmative.
Q:Â Can you elaborate?
A:Â Unnecessary. The nature of the world has become (or remains?) a contradiction.
Q:Â Is that your final answer?
A:Â Pass.
Q:Â Do you wish to add any other pertinent information to this conundrum?
A:Â Unnecessary.
Q:Â And what of Zot?
A:Â Do you mean Ensign Anthony Grizotti?
Q:Â Who else? Besides, logically, you canât answer a question with another question. Do you still love him?
A:Â Why even ask?
Q:Â Why not?
A:Â Pass.
Q:Â A strange reply. Do you wish to add anything else?
A:Â As I said, itâs a Marsco world.
Q:Â And what is Marsco after all?
A: A hyper-country. A meta-nation. It exists beyond conventional post-statehood. For twenty-plus years, it has brought stability and prosperity to the world. Since the end of the Continental Wars, it has insured peace from here to the Asteroid Belt. But why canât I answer my own question with my own question? After all, I am an associate, am I not?
Q:Â Is that your question or your answer?
·         ·         ·
Napping or watching the subsidiaries and cantonments rush by, Tessa had glided steadily south to the main Sac City terminal. Once there, it was only a few steps from the posh, spotless bullet to the run-down local service lines. After a delay, the associate left behind the cantonment at city center. It was from its guarded cantonments that Marsco assisted subsidiaries in keeping good order and tranquility. From them, Security often lent a hand in patrolling the contiguous PRIM unincorporated zones.
Like most pockets of Marsco power, the Sac City cantonment boasted almost all the comforts of Marsco with its gleaming metal and glass towers. Above and amid that part of Sac Cityâs skyline, a handful of HFCs skimmed, settled at street level or alighted on a rooftop. By mid-century, the hover flight craft had moved much mechanized traffic off ground. Taking a four-seater down to their final destination was generally the automatic choice for most associates (why go ground when you can skim?), but today Tessa wanted to make her way without avoiding indigenous contact, without avoiding the PRIMS and sids who populated Sac City.
Leaving the guarded cantonment at the center of the subsidiary, the solitary associate rattled along on a deteriorating local for more than an hour, still ever southward.
·         ·         ·
Once at the broken curb below the LR platform, Tessa quickly hailed an idle jitney with an old driver and his teenage son. They surely bought their banged-up prewar rover at auction, the woman concluded. Its faded navy blue paint showed the urban-gray color scheme of Security underneath.
âSure, mizzy, sure?â the eager driver inquired. A thin, stooped PRIM, he counted it a blessing to have an associate grace his threadbare back seat. His tawny face was smooth except for a permanently wrinkled forehead common among PRIMS. âSure yâwish, go there?â His brown eyes conveyed reluctance.
Such a noteworthy passenger, such a tenuous trajectory! The associate read his thoughts in the worry lines along his face, although she knew he could never have used such words. Father and son didnât have language disks, Tessa noticed, so command of English was not expected. They were from off-continent, as so many PRIMS often were, an aspect of the prewar world that still existed.
âThe wayâs direct, even if far. And if itâs off your route, Iâll pay whateverâs fair.â Tessa was insistent; she had little choice. Only six vehicles, all in the same condition as this jitney, crept along the wide street they shared with scores of pedestrians and dozens of bikes. âI have the coordinates.â
The old PRIM knuckled under and offered Tessa a seat patched with duct tape. The boy lit two joss sticks poking out from the dash to mask any odor. In a trail of blue smoke, they were off, the driver and his son jabbering in a language Tessa didnât recognize.
The glowing green of PRIM-disks at the back of their left hands reassured her.
·         ·         ·
Each click brought Tessa deeper into the surrounding subsidiary. Viewing her palm unit, she followed the progress of her journey down to the exact GPS coordinates.
Marsco precision.
Eventually, looking up from the unitâs screen, she watched the now-crowded street. A chaotic mesh of scooters and bicycles and a handful of other jitneys jammed the avenue. Several overloaded flat-beds moved through the jumble. They passed a pair of alcohol-fueled buses crawling along, both with riders precariously hanging on the outside. And always, ubiquitous rovers filled with Auxilliary personnel, Auxxies, patrolled.
The late afternoon was hot for mid-May, almost like full summer. The A/C wasnât working, so the roverâs windows were open, one only partially, because it was cracked. When the jitney slowed amid a swell of humanity along the road, smells wafted into the interior: curry and sweet, pungent incense.
Old neighborhoods, inhabited once more, showed signs of revitalization, even if some dwellings needed fresh paint and window glass. Passing through this non-associate world, light years from the sparkling marble, glass, and chrome world she inhabited, Tessa felt a mix of power and exposure.
·         ·         ·
Estimating that her last leg would take about forty-five minutes, Tessa continuously checked her progress. As close to âon course, on timeâ as a Masco shuttle, she mused, given this antiquated equipment.
A twitch of her finger disk on her mobile palm unit opened her personal files. Three emails waited, all with disappointing news. Five more cadets, newly commissioned lieutenants, had been transferred to Security and Hygiene, their appointments to Flight School canceled. Marsco had a greater need, a pressing need, for patrol officers rather than shuttle pilots. She had access to no accurate numbers, but extrapolating from her own students, it seemed like 33% of this yearâs graduating class had been sucked into the S and H. Last yearâs total was a higher-than-normal 25%. Tessa had no firm verification of her numbers, only chilling rumors backed by her unofficial but conclusive stats.
Pulling her eyes up from the disappointing screen, she watched her driverâs head move as like an early century bobble-head on a dash. His son, an undersized teen, now sat silently. They were PRIMS, to be sure, ones working too hard to stay on the bottom, she noted, then grew ashamed of such standard-issue thoughts. She knew her father would offer an alternative theoryâwith sufficient evidence to appear totally logicalâto counter her own Marsco-endorsed hypothesis.
It was easy, Tessa cautiously reassured herself, that as a Marsco associate she had put herself in the hands of PRIMS. Associates lived and worked in Marsco safe havens  (sectors and cantonments); their finger disks gave them total access to the Marsco Net thus unlimited access to every comfort and security imaginable. All of this, far from PRIMS. Sids, residents of subsidiaries, (those locales coupled with Marsco in the main), benefited from Marsco largess, but more than likely these sids were without finger disks and always without the elevated standards of a typical associateâs life.
And sids were a constant buffer for Marsco against PRIMS, both the residents themselvesâwho worked directly with PRIMS so an associate never had toâand the vast locations of their subsidiariesâthese more than likely surrounded Marsco sectors. And these subsidiaries in turn shared tenuous borders with unincorporated zones, the lands of PRIMS. Unless an associate wanted to, actually went out of her way to, as Tessa had done today, an associate might live in a totally PRIM-free world.
The jitney traversed an area below the cantonment but one still well within regularly patrolled stoplines. Tessaâs palm screen gave her proof of that. Yet as she moved farther south, the sights changed radically. It did strike her though that this subsidiary had more than its share of PRIMS, and it showed signs of being more like an unincorporated zone than a true, thriving sid on a path to emulate Marsco success. A patina of dust covered everything, a layer of abandonment and despair. The air reeked of a teeming PRIM population, of feces, decay, and death.
Without warning, her palm lost all contact. Even com-link connections went dead. Tessa looked up in disbelief. âStop, stop,â she shouted. âPull over! You mustâve taken a wrong turn.â
The driver obeyed, but at the curb began to argue in that wheedling PRIM way when one of them is caught doing something underhanded. âMizzy, sometinâ wrong? I know way, yes-yes.â
âYou canât be right!â She held up her palm unit to show him its display as though he would have no trouble following the downloaded mapâs exact route. âWeâre in a sid! Never to leave it! But look!â
The old PRIM knew to look around on an associateâs order.
This subsidiary sure seems mogged, the lieutenant thought. Dating from the late-twentieth century, mogged (coined by international troops patrolling Mogadishu) described scenes of the internal destruction of a society as legitimate governments and the rule of law failed. What had become an open wound and stark reality on the Horn of Africa a century back then became the wretched, dismal template for the prewar world, a world Marsco now ruled and vowed to restore.
Along the boulevards once known for their luxury, streetlights and traffic signals had long since been scavenged for metal. Here, late-twentieth century elegance and prosperity had been systematically dismantled by PRIM brick-gangs, the materials of the houses and shops used for makeshift dwellings that jammed the edge of the wide road. Barely functional habs. Tessa shuddered. Although she was moving through a location still designated by Marsco as a subsidiary area, it had all the unmistakable markings of an unincorporated zone.
âNone of this makes sense,â she grumbled, half-blaming the driver.
She wasnât positive, but she swore the son muttered to the back of his left hand, as though his PRIM-disk wasnât a RFID transponder for tracking his movements but a mic, âItâs a Marsco world!â
No, he couldnât have said that! She looked directly at the gaunt boy. Wouldnât have dared to utter that.
âBad-bad here,â the driver insisted nervously. âNo understanâ yâthat, mizzy,â he motioned to her palm unit. âBut thisââ he swung a roundhouse motion ââitâs been like ever-ever.â
âHe is meaning, my father, beens this years and years,â the son added in feeble defense.
âYes, year anâyear,â echoed the old man.
Tessa shrugged, not defeated but confused. She knew that over the passing decades, with their series of asymmetrical urban wars, pandemic plagues, and dwindling populations, the late twenty-first century had given way to this aspect of the Marsco world. What associate didnât know that?
âYou wanâ go back, mizzy? Go back, Marâco! All this no-no.â His brown eyes pleaded. His bronze brow wrinkled.
âNo, carry on.â Sitting back in her seat, Tessa laid a reassuring hand on her Enfield.
·         ·         ·
The associateâs route grew increasingly crowded with small living spaces and scattered shops. Some were made of cannibalized building materials, tarps and plastic sheeting, corrugated metal, and planks. Here and there, high stone walls and steel gates stood at the entrance of larger, more permanent structures. Local warlords and thugs who ruled a few rundown city blocks, Tessa assumed. A bribe, a promise of compliance to Security, probably all it takes for an urban fiefdom. The streets throbbed with people and traffic, bicycles and mopeds, the crowd a mixed batch, an amalgam of sids and PRIMS.
The noise and snarled movement suddenly stopped as a Security Brad turned the wide corner. Tessaâs PRIM pulled to the side and waited. The associate, accustomed to taking matters into her own finger disks, got out and stood quietly beside the jitney as the armored personnel carrier approached.
Moving down the subdued street, the squat APC swung its non-lethal snout right and left, eyeing the crowd. Typical of Security, always watching. Although only meant to immobilize, its stunner and oozer nozzle looked sinister. The black Brad, four-times the size of the jitney, seemed to single out Tessa for scrutiny. A cam focused, lingered. After a pause, the patrol vehicle moved on, concluding that a uniformed associate must know her own business even down here.
âDo they come around often?â Tessa shouted above the returning street noise before her driver restarted his engine.
âYes-yes, mizzy. Many patrols here. Keeps all saved here, it does.â
âAll very goods here, safe yes-yes, and very, very goods,â added the boy, shouting to be heard. âSid and PRIM here, goods all here.â
âYes, no trouble Marâco heres,â the father joined in, shaking his head eagerly, making up for his earlier complaints.
Itâs all as incongruous as my crashed palm, Tessa thought. Yet, if this driverâs from around here, itâs no wonder heâs working so hard. He wants out, thatâs for sure, and he has the initiative and self-determination to move up and away.
As their journey continued, the associate noted that a CCTV unit stood inconspicuously every few hundred meters, each a slender stanchion resembling a tall lamppost with a surveillance housing where the light dome should be. They were sacrosanct and never touched by sids or PRIMS. Throughout the Marsco world, CCTV devices, or I-ON-Us as they came to be called, were so omnipresent no one gave them any attention.
They, on the other hand, paid meticulous attention to everything.
·         ·         ·
Three clicks down the once-thriving boulevard, the broken macadam rose gradually up an incline, where a layer of dust seemed to thicken. In times past, at the crest of the rise the south road curved to join a larger transit system coming from the east. But today, Tessa was confronted by the sure signs that during the C-Wars this shallow valley had taken a direct V-hit.
The jitney slowed to a crawl, giving her a view of the stretching remains of this quarter of the city. Never a megalopolis like those lining the coast, at mid-century this was a sprawling metro area, influential in its own right, vital to the Continental Powers at their end. And always a significant military target.
But this suburb? What was here to merit a V-strike? She looked around a moment at the destruction. Explains the malfunct light rail, she noted without emotion.
The pavement ended where it had once joined the major thoroughfare. Up along the hillside, the cliffs had given way. Tessa was unable to judge if this was due to the initial Vanovara blast or the twenty-five years of disrepair since. Her jitney cautiously edged along where over the years tenuous traffic had made a compacted dirt road out of the remaining debris and hillside. Finally, after a forty-meter stretch, the unpaved route reached the remaining cement ribbon in a cleft through the west ridge.
Tessa turned in her seat to look back into the charred valley. Stanchions and supports for the old freeway stood stripped of suspended sections, lonely sentinels rising above the ruins they guarded. The Vanovara had exploded as an airburst above the crammed basin, flattening everything beneath its fireball. A comet nuclei composed of frozen methane blasted with dozens of kilotons of blinding force. Cracked pieces of the once-elevated pavement rested on the ground. The demolished buildings and rubble-strewn streets attested to the tremendous shockwave of that detonation.
The associate remembered her own early Academy lectures. V-1 type, comet head, methane, explosive. V-2 type, iron asteroid honed to a guidable shape, much smaller and used for precision hits.
âThe ensuing fireball from a V-1 creates one of two situations,â her animated professor lectured a dozen years ago. âA firestorm or a conflagrationâknow the difference for Tuesday.â
In the Sac City Sid, Tessa clearly saw the evidence of a conflagration; the reaches of its all-consuming flames had scorched the hillside and continued in every direction.
âNo matter which inferno, you want to avoid both,â whispered an older-looking cadet next to Tessa. His grin showed new braces, a post-sid luxury made possible by joining Marsco. âGrew up in the Chicago Sid,â he hastily explained under his breath.
âTook several hits, didnât it?â another cadet asked, trying to occupy the dark-eyed young man all by herself.
âCloser to thirty-five, forty.â
The cadet with braces was Anthony Grizotti, born of sids, now a fledging associate.
âAnd so, Cadet Miller,â their prof stood over the three whispering plebesâhers was the only name he knewââeither way, you plebes are here at the Academy to make sure that this never, never happens again.â
·         ·         ·
In another twenty minutes, Tessaâs ride took her near an open-air market, close to a stopline and PRIM-accessible.
Inexplicably, she motioned for her driver to pull over. Even as he cautioned, âNo-no, mizzy, no. Yâno stop here,â Tessa was out among the sids, PRIMS, and vendors. Scores of bartering booths covered a lot next to a deserted mall. If Tessa wanted lavish shopping, Seattle offered her everything. Here were rows of tables with last-centuryâs hand tools, clothes, farm produce, and MREs past code date but still edible.
Someone has an insider in Security, she realized, willing to fence.
Nothing appealed to her at first, and yet as she moved from kiosk to kiosk, the associate relished the freedom of a world so different from Marscoâs.
Leaving his son to guard the jitney, the driver hovered protectively behind Tessa at a respectful distance, his own quick PRIM eyes distrustful of so many other PRIMS around his missy.
They created an odd sight: a sole associate among a swarm of indigenous skinnies going about their frenetic bartering, and her PRIM trying to keep this unpredictable woman out of harmâs way. He knew if anything did happen to her, he would be blamed by Security. Thinking of that Brad, his mind raced, trying to avert any possible disaster.
Tessa stopped at a clothing stand; most of its pieces were PRIM-made and slightly flawed. The asking price jumped advantageously as the seller realized an associate had miraculously appeared with ready MMUs. Tessaâs eye fell on a gray cotton T-shirt with red block letters simply stating MARSCO, a standard-issue part of a plebeâs training uniform, unadorned with any patches or insignias. The one she chose had sleeves of slightly different lengths, unnoticeable without careful inspection.
Marsco had noticed.
Without haggling over the price, Tessa handed over a single Marsco Monetary Unit.
âToo-too, mizzy, too high,â her driver whispered hoarsely behind her. âPRIM hem douwn, mizzy! PRIM hem douwn!â
When she ignored him, he circled around her, acting as her mediator, waving his arms and grimacing.
Even as she moved to the next booth selling palm units three or four generations older than hers, and then the next with local jams and preserves, the driverâs appeals on her behalf continued. âMizzy shouldda getta two deese,â he urged through broken teeth, grabbing up a shirt from a separate pile. The vendor, with judicious sidelong glances, cautioned against such a selection. She displayed the reverse side which verbally modified the front proclamation of âMARSCO,â stating simply, âSUCKS!â
Through her driverâs intercessions, Tessa received an additional single-worded, gray tee. Her protective old PRIM wouldnât let her be cheated.
Her driver caught up to her amid other stalls selling individual items, barter items: bars of soap, bottles of shampoo, canned food, new and cleaned-up pots and pans, refurbished computers that couldnât get anyone onto the Marsco Net but did minimumly function. Many products superior to these any associate in a sector or cantonment might order by the gross off the Marsco Net.
Tessa was sure, just beyond her vision, a black market offered more besides. Weapons and drugs and human flesh, undoubtedly: anything and everything to satisfy any vice.
As much as Marsco cracked down on such illicit sales, they flourished, festered. Although clearly designated as a sid, she thought back to her blank palm screen, itâs one not yet totally regulated. The noise of a mĂ©lange of languages hawked out in fits and starts, the shouts of merchants and buyers alike at grubby stalls, the knots and crowds of idle PRIMS both fascinated and depressed her. It could have been a scene from another century, not the end of the twenty-first.
Marsco has much housekeeping still to do, she thought.
With eager help from her driver, Tessa climbed back into the dented-up rover and was off.
·         ·         ·
The PRIM found his way instinctively. He kept to wider streets, slowing for the crowds that clogged them but running parallel to the main stopline on his left. He knew enough to cross only at a checkpoint and not to attempt any other way beyond.
Eventually, they slowed to approach a CP at an internal stopline. Another incongruity, the associate noted. Her download hadnât designated either the in-sid line or its CP.
The fuel cell engine sputtered, not one of the finest the twenty-first century ever produced. Two S & H troopers suspiciously eyed the bent PRIM and his son. A barrier closed the stretching road to traffic, and beyond the gate Tessa saw few signs of habitation or postwar restoration.
Such a drastic change here within a subsidiary made no sense; by all Net accounts, she had never actually gone outside the sid. The look of this locale told her otherwise.
If anything, before her was a separation point between a subsidiary area and an unincorporated zone. If so, Marsco wasnât web-reporting accurately. It made no sense to her that it was wrong. Making allowances, she rationalized that perhaps she simply misunderstood these sights before her.
To her left in the shade of a tall tree, a Brad sat with its menacing 20 mm weapon, not the usual McGrath stunner and Evans immobilizer ooze-nozzle like she had seen earlier. Leths had replaced non-leths. These Security troopers, clad in mottled cement-gray uniforms, all had shoulder-fired Enfields in addition to handhelds like hers. Besides being heavily armed, they were doing a job usually performed by Auxilliary units, Auxxies, who were recuited and trained by Marsco to keep the peace in subsidiaries. Someoneâs expecting trouble, serious trouble.
Two rovers were parked near the armored vehicle, one having brought a meal out to the troopers. Half a dozen ate and relaxed to the side; another six eyed Tessa up and down. The contingent didnât seem members of Marscoâs finest, the kind stationed in Seattle near Marsco HQ. These troopers had skinned their knucklesâand moreâplying their trade here. Rotors in an I-ON-U housing whirred; a cam angle changed, focused.
Without hesitation, one hardened trooper was in the old driverâs face and retina-blinked him. He then had the gall to in-face Tessa as well, infuriating the officer.
Instantly, the trooperâs reader gave a green report on the driver. Tessaâs file acknowledged clearance notification and classified status, as expected for an associate and officer.
Her irritation changed slightly when she realized the retina system was up and running again. Only a few days before, Luddite hackers had phreaked the system, an all too common occurrence. Her own palm unit once more flickered to life, still reporting her inside Sac City and nowhere near a checkpoint.
The warrant officer in charge, realizing the jitney passenger intended to cross his stopline, barked at her, âHere on out, mizzy, sânothing but RPA.â
The wide avenue beyond the checkpoint had become an unpaved road used mostly by PRIMS on scooters or bicycles. âWhere yâup to anyway, wallah?â the haggard trooper drilled her without the expected Security courtesy. This wasnât the heart of a Marsco sector; he neednât bother with such niceties here.
âIs that how you address a superior officer, mister?â Tessa shot back. She leaned forward from the back seat so he could see her uniform better. The red piping and bars made it clear what he was dealing with. Had she been quicker to move forward, the retina scan would have been uncalled for.
The warrant officer remained unimpressed. He had his orders, and at his stopline, no one and nothing moved into this Random Patrol Area without his approval.
Tessa knew the routine, knew the way to circumvent this annoyance. She removed the cotton glove from her right hand. When that imposing array of finger disks failed to impress the warrant officer (a stubborn bastard to be sure, Tessa noted) she made a display of starting to remove the left-hand glove. She neednât go that far. The warrant officer, a mere two-disk centurion with a three-centimeter PRIM-disk removal scar at the back of his left hand, relented. The former PRIM balked at crossing someone of Tessaâs status. With a resigned gesture, he signaled his troopers, who had finished eating, to raise the barrier. He knew when he was beaten.
But in one last act of defiance, the warrant officer stopped Tessaâs PRIMS, father and son, from moving on. âHim and him donât have no clearance. Yâll have to walk.â His smirk stated, Permission to enter granted, but upon more thoughtful-wise consideration, yâwonât go no further at all. Top that, wallah.
The Security warrant helped her out of the roverâs back seat, his Marsco courtesy suddenly oozing forth. It gave him an opportunity to admire her close up; his forced gallantry was worth the price to pay for that view. She was nothing like the PRIM skanks he poked, well out of his sphere. Fine T and A even in uniform, he futilely schemed, and as a bonusâno trace of the clap or crabs near her.
Tessa paid her driver and his son five MMUs, double what PRIMS might have expected from an associate, even a generous one. She gave the boy her second T-shirt. âCareful wiâthat un, mizzy wallah,â the old man whispered earnestly but politely. âYâknow troopars,â he went on carefully through his broken-tooth grin. âIf yâcrossâem, they takât ouâ uv yâun way oâ another.â
As she turned to enter the RPA, the warrant cautioned her one last time. âOnly thing out there,â he motioned emphatically, âis Indie sids, renegade PRIMS, and olâ Doc Millerâs grangeâyou know, that gnarly crackpot.â He gave a smarmy grin. Donât git your prime-osity of an ass in a bind, wallah; I havenât the troopers nor inclination for any Air Cav nick-of-time rescues.
Tessa glared, replacing her right-hand glove and shouldering her pack.
Looking up at one of the troopers, she instantly saw her chance. Jumping to an aggressive, in-your-face stance, she eyed a young woman who stood slightly shorter but thicker set than her superior. Without taking her eyes off her victim, the officer shouted at the warrant, âWhyâs this trooper out of uniform?â
The Security trooperâclearly of PRIM stock, her left-hand scar proved thatâhad a ring through one eyebrow.
Tessa didnât let up. âShe has a fishing lure over her damn right eye! Is that standard issue?â She pointed her glove hardly five centimeters away from the objectionable eyebrow. The grinning abruptly stopped as broken nails fumbled to remove the offensive facial ornament.
The commanding officer was speechless; the suddenness of this counterattack caught him flatfooted. âNo, maâam!â He eventually got out, âSheâs new to my squad, maâam!â
âNo excuse, mister!â
The victim kept a vacant stare, knowing if she caught the officerâs eye, more hell would thunder down on her. Yet Tessaâs green eyes never left the womanâs, whose own were green as well. Like the officerâs, the trooperâs nose was bridged with freckles, more so since her duties brought her into the elements. The other woman could have been Tessaâs doppelganger. Had things been different, she might have been standing there, sweating under the glare of a fierce officer. It was that easy, Tessa knew, to be on the other side–the wrong sideâof any stopline.
âRoger,â the warrant officer shouted into his com-link, âgot yur back!â Ignoring Tessaâs glare-down, the detachment commander gathered his troopers, including the officerâs double. âThereâs twenty-some PRIMS refusing to move back out! Theyâve crossed the stopline six blocks to our east. Auxxies canât get no co-op from âem.â
The warrant glared at Tessa; it was his time to be in total control. âTake these four,â he ordered his second-in-command, âgive Teri-Shay here,â he motioned at the eyebrow woman, âthe SAW.â Tessaâs trooper ended up lugging the heavier squad automatic weapon, punishment of sorts for her unauthorized embellishment of the uniform. âBack up the Auxxiesâbut git them PRIMS out if theyâre in here without authorization.â
Troopers hastily gathered gear, walking around Tessa as though she were no longer standing there.
âAuxxies visualled twenty,â the warrant explained to his second, âbut disk-RFID has only a dozen.â A PRIM without a correctly working disk was in considerable trouble; PRIMS knew to report themselves to Security if their disk went from green to amber. Tampering with a PRIM disk was met with severe punishment, often expulsion from the PRIMâs home to some other dismal unincorporated zone half a world away.
âP-W/O-Ds!â
Tessa knew the seriousness of PRIMS without disks crossing a stopline and the capability of Security troopers backing up an Auxiliary patrol.
As troopers scrambled about, Tessa began walking away. When she stepped into the RPA beyond the gate, she heard a trooper yell at her jitney driver. âGit this kludgosity outta here!â The trooperâs voice was one of envy; he sensed that father and son would be leaving PRIM status by dint of their hard work together. The trooperâs father had lied about his sonâs age and gave his own boy over to become an Auxxie at fourteen. Clearly this PRIMSâson was moving toward sid-level soon. Not by becoming a Security legionnaire after being forced into the Auxillary, either.
Tessa didnât hear a trooper whisper to his warrant officer a caution, âBetter watch how ya treat dem brass wallahs, dey get back aâ ya eveâtime.â
Before she had gone far, a Security & Hygiene HFC skimmed slowly down the stopline. The hover flight craft glided thirty-five meters in the air, heavily armed, more so than usual. The HFC examined everything to its port and starboard, watching the barrier that kept things separate, categorically discrete. Only the two PRIMS bothered to watch it move down the stopline.
Thirty meters into the RPA, Tessa gave the bulge on her hip a reassuring tap. She was strapped and ready. As she walked farther beyond the checkpoint, she sensed the I-ON-U still focused on her.
·         ·         ·
As the associate paced herself for her final walk toward her fatherâs, her first visit in three years was steadily growing to be more trouble than it was worth.
In the past, she had come by lander from Seattle to the cantonment. Ordinarily, this last leg from city center to the grange was a quick HFC skim. Those had been uneventful jaunts she made regularly every few months over the past several years until her visits abruptly ended when she took a faculty position at the Academy. By skimming over subsidiary checkpoints, she kept herself from witnessing what she had seen this trip. Todayâs more lengthy and tactile travels showed her that an abrupt change was going down, a change with Marscoâs veiled iron fist behind it. It was a realization that most associates, zipping sector to sector, kept at bay.
The troopers at the checkpoint carried Enfields. Any random Auxiliary patrols she had previously encountered in the sid green zone were armed only with non-leths, show-of-force deterrents more than anything else. Troopers stayed in the distance. Today was atypical, as the heavily armed contingent at the CP showed.
A palpable change, Tessa noted.
Preparing to meet her father, she let the troopers at the stopline fade from her mind.
As she continued on, she passed next to thick, guarding hedgerows and jagged walls of scavenged stone that surrounded several isolated granges. Out here, hardscrabble farmers needed each other, but they still relished the notion of independence from everything, especially Marsco.
Before the twenty-first century plagues had decimated the population, these remote residences stood on several-acre plots. From the first, their owners relished seclusion and grand architectural statements. These trophy estates had HFC landing pads and hangers, artificial lakes with faux waterfalls and gaudy fountains, and even small replicas of Greco-Roman or Oriental temples in their rambling gardens. European manors transplanted to a different continent and era, each far removed from the polluted, congested city to the north.
Eventually, Independents claimed the abandoned lands to make a stab at primitive farming.
Until the C-Wars disabled the interconnected tech-world, which Marsco was working to restore, earthmovers and heavy tractors had re-contoured the land. After the Wars, PRIM gangs worked the decorative landscape into something useful, salvaging what they could by hand. Each grange reclaimed an expansive house and possibly a garage or two for adaptive barns. In these hedge-surrounded farms, showcase lawns and gardens were slowly transformed into cultivated fields and pastures. Swimming pools were chipped into pieces then filled in or were used as cisterns, the great irrigation system of the last century having been destroyed in the C-Wars.
Another click on past the first grange, the solitary associate walked through a desolate area that still showed signs of the neglected mid-century community it once had been. She stepped over a stretch of a crumbling bike path and around an open storm drain sprouting tufts of thistle. This was not, she realized, the prime farmland of the Food Consortium.
âHeâp a fellaâ, missy wallah,â a PRIM voice burst forth at her from under a thorn bush next to the path. The spiny hedge enclosed a grange close to her fatherâs.
Tessaâs first reaction was disbeliefâthat a PRIM might bother a uniformed associate. Her second thought, simultaneous with the first, was to shift her hand to the Enfieldâs grip, taking no chances. The weapon hissed its distinctive recharge venting; its targeting laser blinking red on the PRIMâs chest. She was alone, without backup, out here many clicks from anyone or anything Marsco. A soft target. She also carried items easily disposed of on the black marketâher palm unit, her backpack, the Enfield.
The lone associate assessed the situation. The old PRIM probably picked up day labor locally, but with most spring planting done on the larger granges, little extra help was needed. He held his palms up, showing he wasnât armed, a submissive gesture. His PRIM-disk glowed green although the scars at the fingertips of his right hand indicated he once had implanted disks, just like Tessa and everyone else fully functional in the Marsco world.
Clearly, she realized, heâs had DRP. Disk Removal Procedure, the stripping of disks, was common practice after the Continental Wars, during the purges of the Troubled Times immediately after the Armistice. Quite painful if forced and especially painful because of its lifetime repercussions, even if voluntary.
While a PRIM without finger disks was axiomaticâonly one type of implant awaited PRIMSâhis assertiveness wasnât.
This one was Tessaâs fatherâs age but beaten down by hardship and privation. According to Marsco, all subsidiary areas worldwide were thriving once more. But even so, she realized that PRIM life was relentlessly grinding.
Itâs especially arduous for someone stripped of FDs, for someone deleted from the Marsco world or its subsidiariesâbut thatâs just the way things are, Tessa thought, forcing herself to be numb to that conclusion.
Then, her associateâs training gave way to her parentsâ attitude toward PRIMS. She offered a five-unit token, not a credit strip, which he could hardly be expected to spend.
As quickly as the PRIM had appeared, he vanished into his bush, leaving the path ahead clear. That would never happen near a sector or in a cantonment, she knew, thinking once more as an associate.
The begging didnât bother her; the five MMUs were hardly a widowâs mite. What bothered her was the interruption itself. Approaching her fatherâs home always took a certain degree of steeling herself, psyching herself to enter his world. Part of that preparation was why she chose the bullet instead of the expeditious lander. Returning had never been easy; her extended absence only made it worse.
She stopped 200 meters from the grange. First as an undergraduate at the Academy, and then as a graduate student at the Marsco Institute of Technology, she had regularly made this trip. Today, she was making her visit out of duty to her father and respect for her parents, although her mother had been dead nine years.
Nonetheless, as her uniform attested, she was crossing into his world not only as a daughter but also as a symbol of all that he had rejected.
Tessa knew the Marsco world was filled with incongruities. But the greatest symbol of that world wasnât her uniform, it was her finger disks, and her fatherâa lefter stillâsported all his. Yet another incongruity among innumerable others.
Uncharacteristically for anyone who constantly used disks without paying the slightest attention to them, Tessa stood a moment to think about hers. Removing her right cotton glove, she turned her palm upward to examine the blue-green disks implanted under her epidermis. That hand had eight disks at the fingertips and on the phalanges, an impressive array. Her index finger disk, always the prime, held her identity in Marsco and opened the world to her as nothing else on- or off-planet did. Her disks had a functionality completely opposite that of a PRIM-disk; hers expanded, not closed off, everything.
Months before, her father had sent her a portion of a history of Marsco that he was writing. One file âThe Development of Finger Mouse and Finger Disk Technologies,â sat in a folder, essentially unread. She had dutifully clicked through it once, a cursory glance. But she excused herself from delving into the piece by noting how busy teaching and her unfinished dissertation kept her.
Miller dwelt on history, his daughter conceded, while she dwelt with the here and nowâthis was the Marsco world she had inherited, that was all.
But Tessa accepted one part of her fatherâs historical theory, his assertion that finger disks and Marsco were inexorably linked. Granted, some high-ranking sids might utilize mid-century finger mouse technology if they didnât sport a few right-only disks, but for the most part, computer access came with an implant and, more likely than not, only with an implant. This was the central reality every associate accepted as part of the world.
A world her father, after a stunning thirty-year career, had rejected.
Doctor Walter C. Miller chose instead to live outside Sac City, well beyond its thriving cantonment at the subsidiaryâs core, and to settle in an oddly defined gray area almost inside a conjoined unincorporated zone itself. He stayed amid autonomous neighbors who made a sort-of life for themselves, not as associates or sids or PRIMS.
Taking in a deep breath, Tessa slowly walked along a dirt road that once had been a winding, shady avenue. As she approached her fatherâs residence, an incongruous, fully functional I-ON-U rose above the height of the grange. Of early-century design, this stanchion initially had been placed on a bridge or in a city center for illumination. It had all the tech pieces to serve that function, including a solar panel generating enough power for continuous service, but here it lit up no passing traffic. Near its top, a surveillance cam in an onion-shaped housing focused down into Millerâs grange.
Why canât it just leave him alone?
Tessa already knew the answer.
