Read Cyteen: The Betrayal Online

Authors: C. J. Cherryh

Tags: #Space Opera, #Emory; Ariane (Fictitious Character), #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Cloning, #Cyteen (Imaginary Place), #General, #Women

Cyteen: The Betrayal (8 page)

“Harogo’s going to be aboard?” Denys asked. “Absolutely. There’s not going to be a hitch. He’ll get our’ staff right through customs, and Atlantis is running light.”

“Military can beat her.”

“A worry. But Harogo’s a much higher card, on his own station, and he’s bringing home the second biggest construction project Fargone’s ever lusted after. First being the Hope corridor, of course. There won’t be a hitch. If the Centrists try anything with Rubin, Harogo can fry them, no question. We’d love that kind of ammunition. Did you see the clip? Rubin’s a wide-eyed innocent. Pure science and total vulnerability. I thought that came across rather well.”

“They can throw that back at us too,” Giraud said.

“We can rely on Harogo, I think. At certain times, you have to let a thing go.”

“Even Warrick?”

“If they want him by then.”

 

ii

 

Ari smiled gently across the table, across the salad with vinaigrette, product of their own gardens, and dusted it liberally with a spoonful of Keis, synthetic cheese, a salted yeast, actually: spacer’s affectation. Her mother had used it. Ari still liked the tang of it, and imported it downworld at some little trouble.

Most of the Family abhorred it.

It was the formal dining hall: one long table for the Family, and a large U-shaped table around the outside for the azi who were closer than relatives, and somewhat more numerous, about two to one.

Herself at the head: that had been the case since the day uncle Geoffrey died. To her right, Giraud Nye, to her left his brother Denys; then Yanni Schwartz right side, left again, his sister Beth; and across from her, Beth’s son by Giraud Nye, young Suli Schwartz, long-nosed and thin-faced, and looking preoccupied as usual: sixteen and bored; left next, and right and right again, Petros Ivanov and his two sisters Irene and Katrin, then Katrin’s current passion the dark-skinned Morey Carneth-Nye; old Jane Strassen looking like a dowager empress in black and an ostentatious lot of silver; daughter Julia Strassen in green, a truly amazing décolletage; dear cousin Patrick Carnath-Emory, who was far more Carnath than Emory, and absolutely butter-fingered-he was already mopping his lap; Patrick’s daughter Fideal Carnath, olive-skinned and lovely, and her thirty-two-year-old son Jules who they had thought was Giraud’s until they ran the genetics and found it was, of all people, Petros’. Then Robert Carnath-Nye mill his daughter young Julia Carnath; and of course, endmost, Jordan and Justin Warrick, who looked exactly like father and son, unless you had known Jordan thirty years ago and knew that they were twins.

Vanity, vanity.

Jordan had had his passages. (Who had not?) But when it came to bestowing his heredity he had not trusted nature. Or women. It was the temptation to godhood, perhaps. Or the belief that he, being a Special, was bound to produce another.

A replicate citizen was not azi. There were considerable legal differences between young Justin, say, and elegant, red-haired Grant, at the second rank of tables, so, so close in all respects … born in the same lab, an insignificant day apart. But Justin, dark-haired, square-jawed, and, at a handsome, broad-shouldered seventeen, so very much Jordan’s younger image … was CIT 976-88-2355 PR, that all-important Citizen prefix and that expensive Parental Replicate suffix-replicate except for the little accidents like the break in Jordan’s nose, the little scar on Justin’s chin, and oh, indeed, the personality, and the ability. When Justin was a mote in a womb-tank, the Bok project had already failed-but (Ari was amused) Jordan had entertained notions that his tapes and his genes could overcome all odds.

The lad was bright. But he was not Jordan. Thank God.

Grant’s number, on the other hand, was ALX-972, experimental: a design of her own, aesthetic in the extreme, and with an excellent antecedent-another Special geneset, but, for certain legal reasons, she had corrected a genetic fault, incidentally expressing a few aesthetic recessives, to an extent that the legitimate descendants of a certain slightly myopic, brown-haired, unathletic biologist with a heart defect… would find astounding.

Neither was Grant a biologist. An excellent student in tape-design, an Alpha capable of working on the structures which had made him what he was-structures wherein lay the legal difference, not in the substitution of certain sequences in the geneset, not in the wombs which gestated them.

One infant had gone to a father’s arms, to lie in a crib in the House, to hear-nothing, at times; or to deal with the fact that Jordan Warrick might be busy at some given time, and a meal might be late, or a noise startle him—

The other had gone to a crib where human heartbeat gave way at intervals to a soothing voice, where activity was monitored, crying measured, reactions clocked and timed-then extensive tape and training for three years until Ari had asked Jordan to take the boy in, nothing unusual: they fostered-out the suspected Alphas, as a rule, and in those days her relations with Jordan had been stormy but professional. A member of the House with a son the same age was a natural thought, and an Alpha companion was a high-status prize for a household, even at Reseune.

I have every confidence in Justin, she had said that day to Jordan. It’s such a natural pairing. I’m perfectly willing to let that happen, on a personal basis, you understand, as long as I can continue my tapes and my tests with Grant.

Meaning that the azi as he grew might pass into Justin’s care, become his companion-which implied her faith that young Justin would be in that small percentage licensed to work with Alphas-that Justin’s own scores would be Alpha-equivalent.

Not entirely to her astonishment it had worked out very well. The correction was a routine one, minor, not likely to affect the azi’s intelligence, … although, within certain parameters, that had not been a primary concern in creating the set.

So, so convenient to have a link to troublesome Jordan in those years, not informational, since there was hardly anything a ten-, a thirteen-year-old azi knew in the House that she did not.

But one never knew-when it might be of use.

She finished the salad, chatted with Giraud while the serving staff took away the plates and brought in the next course: a fine ham. Terrestrial pigs thrived at Reseune, on the residue of the gardens, in sufficient numbers to provide seed stock for several other farms. Pigs and goats, humankind’s oldest and hardiest foodstock, with sense enough not to poison themselves on a stray sprig of native shrubbery.

Horses and cattle had the damnedest self-destructive bent.

“Do you know,” she said, over the dessert, a simple ice, tangy and pleasant. “We are going to have to make some far-reaching adjustments in staff.”

Amazing how many ears were pricked at table, and how quiet a room could get, when she was only speaking to Denys.

“I really don’t anticipate any difficulty with the Hope bill.”

They were all listening now, not pretending to do otherwise. She smiled at her family, put down the spoon and picked up the little cup of strong coffee. “You know how to read that. No difficulty. Forget the news reports. Everything is proceeding tolerably well on schedule, and we have a very exciting prospect in front of us … certainly a very exciting prospect, a military psych facility at Forgone-in addition. Which is going to make a real difference in operations here. You can congratulate Jordan for laying the groundwork-really, just everything that may put the Hope route in our laps; and the new labs; everything. That’s what’s going on. Jordan should have a lot of the credit for that.”

Jordan’s face was absolutely devoid of expression. “Let’s drop the pretense. We’re home, we’re not in front of the cameras.”

Ari flashed a smile. “Jordan, I don’t bear you the least ill will. I’m sorry if that offends you, but you’ve done Reseune-and me-a great favor. I truly don’t begrudge you the rewards of it.”

“The hell!”

Ari laughed gently and took another sip of coffee. “Jordie, dear, / know you’d like to have upstaged me with this; but as it happens, Gorodin came to me, and I’m going to give you everything you asked for, on a platter. You’ll get that long-awaited transfer, you and anyone in your wing who wants to go to Fargone, just as soon as the official request for military liaison comes down the tubes.”

“What is this?” Yanni Schwartz asked.

“I don’t say it’ll be a bad thing,” Ari said quite honestly, still smiling. “I’m not pulling surprises on you, Yanni-Jordan pulled this one on me. I think everyone should think about it, those who’ll prefer to go out to the frontier, those who’d rather stay with the comforts of Reseune-God knows, some of us would miss ham and fresh fruit. But the opportunities out there are worth thinking about.” Another sip of coffee, slow and thoughtful, watching Jordan’s eyes like a fencer. “The Educational wing here will continue, of course. There are some of you we can’t transfer, you understand that. We’ll have to restructure here, rather well replicate the whole wing-” A little wider smile. It was a joke. Suli Schwartz woke up, a quick look around to see if people were supposed to laugh. “Jordie, you’ll have to lay out some recommendations.”

“Of course,” Jordan said. “But I’m sure you’ll use your own list.”

She laughed, to keep it polite. “You know damn well I will. But I really will respect your choices wherever I can-after all, I’ll assume anyone on your list wants to transfer, and I’ll assume you want them. Yanni, you can deal with Jordie on that.”

There was a growing wariness behind the attentive faces. Young Suli finally seemed to have understood what was going on, perhaps to have figured out for the first time in his life what it was to sit in this room on Family Occasions, and not with the juniors down the hall. No one moved, not the Family, not the a/.i at the tables round about.

A sonorous clearing of the throat from Denys. “Well,” he said, “well, Ari, after all-” Another clearing of the throat. “I don’t suppose we could have some of those little cookies we had last night, hmmn?” Wistfully.

“Yes, ser,” a server said, close by the door, and slipped out, while Denys ladled sugar into his coffee.

“Hum. The essential thing is Reseune, isn’t it? Ari, Jordie, Yanni, really, we all have the same thing at heart, which is the freedom to do our work. We all hate these administrative messes, we all do, it’s such a damned waste of our time and there’s so much more important on our desks than a lot of little regional authorities bickering away in Novgorod. I’m sure it’s important whether station administrators can or can’t hold stock in their own stations, but it’s just not the kind of thing that we ought to have to sit through-I mean, the whole idea of the Bureaus was never meant to take valuable people completely away from work. Council’s certainly no great inconvenience to Corain, or Chavez, or, God knows, Bogdanovitch, but it’s not really productive to have Gorodin on a short string, and Science, my God, Science is an absolute tragedy-I mean, really, Ari, it’s a dreadful waste of your time and energy-“

“I don’t know why,” Jordan said from his end of the table, with a wry lift of his wineglass, a rivalry old as their existence in Reseune, dinner witticisms, “since Ari just considers the whole damned universe her province.”

Ari laughed, pro forma. Everyone was relieved. Everyone laughed, because to do other than that was an Incident, and no one wanted it, not even Jordan.

“Well, you’ll have your chance, won’t you?” she said. “The whole Hope route right off Fargone, and you’ll be working with old friends, so it’s not like you’ll be out there alone. If I were younger, Jordie, damned if I wouldn’t jump at it; but Denys is right. The politics is done, the whole course is laid, and I’m sure I’m anxious to get on about my work, you’re anxious to get yours underway. I hate like hell to drop another administrative job in your lap, but I really want your expertise. You’ve got to set us up another Educational wing here, really, really an opportunity for you to hand us on a legacy, Jordie, I’m very serious-“

“I left that in cryogenics,” Jordan said. Another small round of anxious laughter. “Do you want another sample?”

Ari chuckled and took a sip of her coffee. “What? Jordie, I thought you went the other way. But we do have a second source.”

Justin blushed. People turned to see if he had. There was another laugh, much too thin.

“I’m sure Jordie will cooperate,” Denys said, intervening before the knives came out: it was the ancient rule in this room-nothing unpleasant. One retaliated with wit here, nothing else, and not too far.

“I’m sure,” Ari said. And seriously: “We do have restructuring to do. I’m going to be doing some of my Council work by proxy, figuring it’s going to be a little tamer now we have the major projects mapped out. There really shouldn’t be any difficulty. I suppose I can fly down if they need me, but Denys is very right: I’m a hundred twenty years old-“

“You’ve got a few more,” Denys said.

“Oh, yes, but I see the wall-true.” The room was quiet again. “The Rubin project will take a great deal of my time. I’m not getting morbid. But you know and I know that there’s not an infinite amount of time for getting this thing moving. I’ll leave most of the Fargone set-up to you, Yanni. I’ll be asking data from this department and that. I’ll be wanting to oversee the process myself-just a desire to have hands-on again. Maybe a little vanity.” She chuckled softly. “I’m going to be writing on my book, doing a little side research-preparation. Retirement, I suppose.”

“The hell,” Jordan said.

She smiled, covered her cup with her hand when the server wanted to pour more coffee. “No, dear, I’ve caffeine enough to see me to my rooms. Which is where I ought to go, figuring that the floor is still going up and down-we had a bitch of a lot of turbulence over the Kaukash, didn’t we? And I don’t think I really slept in Novgorod. Catlin?”

A chair moved, and Catlin. was there, and Florian with her. Catlin drew her chair back for her.

“Good night, all,” she said; and to Florian, quietly, as chairs went back and people began leaving: “Tell Grant I’m reclaiming him.”

“Sera?”

“I need him,” she said. “Tell him I’ve filed a new assignment for him. Jordan never did have legal custody of him. He surely realizes that.”

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