“Is everything all right, boss?” asked the man.
Hansen pursed his lips. “Have either of you spoken to Dalt or Methlen?”
“No, boss.”
Hansen glanced at Kang as he spoke to his team. “I think you two should check on them.”
Kang grunted his okay.
“Yes,” said Hansen. “That’s what I want you to do.”
“What about you, boss?”
“I’ll be fine,” said Hansen. “These are old friends.”
“Are you certain about that?”
Hansen slapped the table. “I said I would be all right, didn’t I? Now do what I ask, Ervil.”
Ervil darted his dead eyes at Kang and Marten. Finally, he dipped his thick head.
“Report back when you find them,” said Hansen.
“Like you say, boss.” Ervil took the black-haired woman’s hand and they left.
“There,” said Hansen. “Satisfied?”
Kang poured more vodka.
“But I must tell you that if I press a switch or don’t report to HQ in another half hour that monitors will descend upon me,” said Hansen. “Then it’s detention for both of you.”
“And then your secret is out,” Kang said.
“Not necessarily,” said Hansen. “As I said before, Chief Monitor Bock runs the secret police.”
“All the monitors help make dream dust?” asked Kang.
“No,” said Hansen. “But enough.”
Kang nodded and slurped more vodka. “Not a bad racket, you little maggot, not bad at all. I’m impressed.”
The thin monitor sat a little straighter and he even adjusted his collar. “If you can make it in Sydney’s slums then you can make it anywhere.”
“That’s right,” Kang said.
Hansen smiled ruefully. He turned to Marten and noticed his eye-bender. “You’ve hardly sipped your drink.”
“It’s not really what I expected,” Marten said. “Would you like it?” He slid it over.
Hansen peered at him, shrugged. He took the tall glass and took another of his measured swallows. Kang slurped more vodka.
Marten waited, wondering just how big a bladder each man had.
“Maybe this is all for the best,” said Hansen. “I’m looking for more sellers I can trust and Bock wants to break into new areas.”
Kang sneered. “Me work for you?”
“Of course not,” said Hansen. “You’d work for Chief Monitor Bock. What do you think?”
Kang glanced at Marten. Marten sat impassively. Kang shook his head at Hansen, who had watched the exchange. Hansen now looked with new interest at Marten.
Marten slid his chair back. “That spiced tea before has gone right through me. What about you, Hansen?”
It took Hansen a half-beat. “Yes. I need to use the restroom.”
Kang laughed. “Oh no you don’t.”
“Don’t worry,” Marten said. “I won’t let him call for reinforcements.”
Kang grumbled, then shrugged and waved his thick hand. “Go, go, be my guest.”
Marten and Hansen rose and headed for the restroom.
“You’re the leader of the 101st?” whispered Hansen.
“That’s right,” Marten said.
“Kang has to listen to you?”
“Yes,” Marten said.
Hansen nodded ruefully. “Yes. Wise of you to let him play me out. Now it is I who am impressed.”
Marten opened the restroom door and gestured for Hansen to proceed.
“I’m glad I can work with a reasonable man,” said Hansen as he walked in. “Our survival depends upon logic and precision, not brute force and rage.” He turned around.
Marten shot him twice as the projac made little hissing sounds.
The ice slivers penetrated Hansen’s tunic and into his stomach. The thin monitor had time to widen his eyes in astonishment and pain. Then he staggered backward as the knockout drugs took hold. Marten caught him under the armpits and shuffled into a stall. He lowered the drugged monitor onto a toilet seat. He patted Hansen down, coming up with a projac, several more clips, a wallet stuffed with credits, a communicator and a flat device with a barcode on the back. Marten took it and ran it over his tattoo. The device flashed a green light. Marten slid it over his tattoo again. The device flashed red. Green, off, red, on.
Marten debated killing Hansen instead of just leaving him drugged. He shook his head. With that decided, Marten stuffed his jacket with the loot. Then he adjusted Hansen’s clothes, put the man’s hands over his stomach and spread his feet wider. Marten locked the stall, dropped to his stomach and slid under the bottom. Disgusting, but it worked. He dusted himself and strolled into the barroom.
“Where’s Hansen?” Kang said as Marten sat down. “You said you weren’t going to leave him alone.”
“He pulled a gun on me,” Marten said. He pulled out the projac and showed Kang under the table.
“The little maggot! What was he thinking?”
Marten showed Kang his knuckles from where he’s hit the monitor in the throat before. “I took Hansen out. Set him on the toilet seat and locked the stall.”
Kang grunted.
“But I think we’d better get out of here,” Marten said.
“Because of that little maggot? You’ve got to be kidding.”
“He’s a monitor, Kang.”
“He drew a gun on you,” Kang snarled. “I’ll—” Kang half rose, but Marten put his hand on the Mongol’s massive forearms.
“I took these off him,” Marten said, slapping a handful of credits on the table, beside Hansen’s earlier pile. “Take them.”
Kang sat and started stuffing his pockets.
“We don’t want any trouble,” Marten said. “There’s no telling how the Training Master will view all this—if we get thrown into detention or found to have killed monitors.”
Kang grunted.
“So get drunk,” Marten said, “just not here.”
“What about you?”
“I should probably find Lance and Vip and tell them to be careful. Do you want to help me look for them?”
Kang snorted. Then he grabbed his latest vodka bottle by the neck, rose ponderously and headed for the door. A waitress hurried to intercept him.
Marten motioned sharply.
She looked at Kang once more and came over.
“Do you know Hansen?” Marten asked.
“He’s come in here before,” she said. “Wasn’t he with you?”
“He’s still in the restroom.”
“Oh. Yes, that’s right. I saw him go in.”
“He’s sleeping one off,” Marten said. “I don’t think he wants to be disturbed either.”
She blinked several times. “That’s kind of strange,” she finally said.
“He has strange… tastes,” Marten said.
“Oh,” said the waitress. “Then why does he come to Smade’s? There are other places for that sort of thing.”
Marten shrugged.
“Well, it doesn’t really matter to me,” she said.
“A good policy,” agreed Marten. “Hansen will pay the score.”
The waitress glanced at Kang as he exited. “All right,” she said.
“But here’s a small gratuity from us,” Marten said. He put several credits on her tray. “Put the customary fifteen percent tip on Hansen’s bill as well.”
“Thank you, sir.”
Marten patted her arm and hurried out.
Nadia Pravda gasped as the three of them loped down an empty utility corridor. Sweat dripped from her waxen face as her breathing turned harsher. Her heavy magnetic boots clumped at each stride and her tool belt jingled as the tiny clamps struck one another.
Omi and Marten jogged effortlessly. They were both in peak condition and knew that time ran against them.
“Sl—Slow down,” wheezed Nadia.
Marten glanced back and then at Omi. “Hey,” he said. Omi raised an eyebrow. Marten nodded at Nadia. The two of them each took an arm and helped her run.
Marten couldn’t believe he was doing this again. Four and half years ago, he’d hidden in the Sun Works Factory like a rat. His parents had been alive and the monolith of Social Unity had ruled the four Inner Planets.
It had all started seven years ago when Political Harmony Corps had brutally suppressed the unionization attempt of the Sun Works Engineers. If he’d asked, Marten was sure Nadia could have told him a grim tale about that time. Social Unity, it was said back then, provided for all, was all. The State and its people were one, thus unionization was an absurdity, a non sequitur. Thus, the engineer’s strike had been
dispersed
—a word that failed to convey the savage fighting, the interrogations and the police murders of the ringleaders and their lieutenants. A few Unionists had slipped into hiding among the millions of kilometers of passageways and empty maintenance corridors. Most of them were caught and killed after some agonizing torture. Marten, his father and mother, with several others, had kept one step ahead of the hunters and built an ultra-stealth pod in an abandoned, high radiation area. The long-range goal had been to slip from the Inner Planets and to the Jupiter Confederation or anywhere beyond the reach of the Social Unity fanatics.
PHC had caught his mother and father and killed them. He’d used emergency computer codes and a special credcard that his mother had forged in order to board a shuttle to Earth and then to Australian Sector.
He knew the hidden passageways of the Sun Works Factory, or some of them, at least. But that was a lifetime ago. The Highborn invasion, joining Free Earth Corps in Australia, the brutal Japan Campaign and then transferred to the shock troopers—What if seven years ago his parents had surrendered like everyone else? Would he and Nadia be friends now? It might have happened.
Despite her sorry state, she was pretty and had a beautiful, heart-shaped face.
Omi cleared his throat. Marten gave him a swift glance and then quit staring at Nadia. There was no time to stop and look at the scenery, not and get that vacc suit he hoped was where they made dust. Once he found a vacc suit, he could spacewalk to the forgotten pod.
“Could we stop, please,” Nadia wheezed.
They ignored her. After awhile they turned a corner. The maintenance passage seemed to go on forever.
“Please,” she wheezed, “my sides are going to explode.”
“For a minute,” Marten said.
She slumped to the floor and then slid against a wall as she gasped. She tore off her cap and shook out damp, shoulder-length hair. It made her prettier.
Marten and Omi squatted on their heels, waiting.
She took a rag and mopped her face. She seemed on the verge of speaking and then simply kept on breathing hard.
“Is it much farther?” Marten asked. He studied her, her features and the pretty way her lips quivered.
“Using this route,” she wheezed. “It’s another two kilometers.”
They waited, and her breathing started evening out.
“We’d better go,” Omi said, sounding impatient.
“Wait,” she said. “My side finally isn’t hurting.”
Omi glanced at Marten.
“We’ll give her another minute,” Marten said.
Omi stared stonily at the floor.
“They won’t let us in,” she said.
“That’s not what you said before,” Marten said.
“Do you know how security-conscious they are?”
“I can imagine.”
“Then you should know that I’m not cleared.”
“You worked the sump,” he said.
“That’s different. That’s manufacturing. We’re heading to distribution, where they store the product. They’re crazy about protection.” She put her cap on. “Maybe we should call the whole thing off.”
“Right,” Marten said. “Then Hansen’s people find you and shove you out an airlock.”
“I’ve been thinking about that,” she said. “You two must have heard it wrong. Hansen can’t afford to kill me. He worked too hard finding someone with my training and position. He needs me.”
“We need you too,” Omi said, without warmth.
She licked her lips. “I can understand that. How about I simply tell you how to get in?”
“No,” Marten said, standing, motioning her to get up.
She didn’t move. “I’m going to insist on doing this another way. You see—”
Omi jerked her to her feet. Marten took the other arm and they started jogging, forcing her to run.
“You’re killing me, doing this,” she said. “They’ll hunt me down and make an example.”
“You were already dead,” Omi said.
“No, I refuse to believe that. Hansen needs me. This is murder what you’re doing.”
Marten stopped so suddenly that Omi didn’t quite realize it in time. They pulled Nadia two ways. She yelled. Omi let go. Marten swung her around to face him. “What
we’re
doing is murder? What do you think dream dust does to people?”
“Huh?” she said, frowning, looking perplexed.
“People waste away is what happens!” Marten said. “They snort dust, dream their fantasies and forget to eat and drink and even sleep. It kills them if they have enough dust.”
“Hey,” she said, “they don’t have to buy it.”