Visitor: A Foreigner Novel (6 page)

“The landers themselves can be salvaged, aiji-ma, and a failure or two with those will not involve loss of life. We have always concentrated on fragile loads going
up
to the station, but grouping our cargoes differently, and using the petal sails as we can . . . we can provide many more seats in much less time, at much less cost.”

Ilisidi thought on the question, eyes flickering. “Indeed. And shall we provide transport? And a landing for these loads flung recklessly down from on high?”

“Where safe, aiji-ma, and any human passengers on atevi shuttles would be flown to Mospheira immediately on landing . . . with the assistance of the aishidi’tat. No large mass of people at once. Easily carried on one of the smallest jets.”

“And where would these people be settled, and under whose guidance?”

“By my will, aiji-ma, a scattered resettlement. Widely scattered, inconvenient for association, but with fair treatment and workable prospects.”

There were analogous situations with atevi, the necessity for a disgraced clan to be broken up, divided, absorbed by rivals. That was the
resettlement
he used. And it
was
fully apt.

“We leave such details to the Presidenta,” Ilisidi said. “What will these people think when they know their future, and when
will
they know?”

“One cannot say. I have cautioned Gin-nandi to wait until we have dealt with our visitors, at least until we’ve determined their intentions, but whether she will regard it, or whether circumstance will force her to tell them, one cannot know. Mospheirans and Reunioners are not quite the same in their thinking; and one foresees difficulties. Will there come a day when there is no difference? Or will five thousand Reunioners change Mospheiran thinking? I do not know. I do not know how that will develop. But sending them apart—that was never a good answer.”

“There will be politics.” Ilisidi gave a wave of her hand. “There is always politics. Let it be as it may. It will flow about these children. Let it
not
flow onto the mainland. The parents, particularly, should be cautioned.”

“One will convey that, aiji-ma.”

“We understand you
have
cautioned them.”

“Strictly and firmly, aiji-ma.”

“And Irene-nadi’s mother?”

“One does not yet know, aiji-ma.”

“The child will be wiser than the mother, we strongly suspect. We can keep the girl for a time. But when she goes down with the others, what part will her mother have with her?”

“Aiji-ma, that remains to be seen. We do not know what our choices may be.”

“The child may
not
reside in our household permanently.”

“Yes,” he said, with no question about it. “I shall take the matter in hand, aiji-ma. There will be a solution.”

A second wave of the hand. “You will not distract yourself with this child, paidhi. Nor with the vexations of the parents.”

“No, aiji-ma.” He was very glad not to discuss that matter. “I shall not distract myself even with a thought of them.”

“So,” Ilisidi said. “Go find us a solution for these foreign visitors. Advise them we shall speak to them. Arrange it so we shall speak to them inside the station, if you can. The ship poses inconveniences. But we shall bear them if we must.
Their
ship poses still more. We prefer to avoid that.”

“Yes, aiji-ma.”

“What is this agreement? You are most valuable when you argue, paidhi! Do not say yes to me!”

“I shall most strenuously object when you are wrong, aiji-ma. You have been infallibly right at least this last hour.”

“Ha.” Ilisidi set down her teacup. Click. “We are soon to find that out. Dismiss your other concerns, paidhi. We are extremely glad you were able to welcome Gin-nandi. We should wish to invite her to our table. And we are certain Lord Geigi would wish the same, but we are entirely disarranged by other guests not of our planning. The Mospheirans will be in some turmoil at her arrival: she will need to speak with them. The Reunioners are already in turmoil and
they
may need reassurance. But all these things must proceed without us. Certain things
must
remain in suspension, perhaps briefly, perhaps for an extended time, on the whim of our foreign visitors, and we are approaching the point at which we will not be able to deal with distractions. Is there any matter, paidhi, which perhaps should
not
remain in suspension?”

He had been running his own calculations—his own estimation of what he could deal with, what he
should
deal with. He had been paring them down, even in visiting the parents last night, and this morning. In meeting Gin. In making contact
with Jase. One piece of business and another off his agenda, and out of his way.

But there remained one matter, in Jase’s estimation. And in his.

“Braddock,” he said. “Braddock.”

5

T
he operational as well as official transfer of station power was imminent—not the usual shift for a handoff, but days overdue; and Bren came to atevi Central to witness the first official and orderly handoff of station control between atevi Central and Mospheiran Central to take place since the news of the kyo ship had broken.

Gin called from atevi Central, speaking Ragi—which was itself unprecedented. Gin didn’t have that much Ragi, but she had enough to introduce herself politely and very impressively on com broadcast to the whole atevi control center, and to request, formally, that “things” now pass to Mospheiran hands.

“Excellently done,” Lord Geigi said warmly, in ship-speak. “Welcome, Gin-nandi.”

Geigi knew a little human language—not unnaturally, he had more of a ship-speak accent than Mosphei’, and he scrambled two accents and a language inside five words, but he managed.

Never in the history of the station had the atevi stationmaster and the Mospheiran stationmaster exchanged impromptu words in each other’s languages. Habitually, handoff had been a simple, prearranged series of button-pushes and button-push acknowledgments.

It was a psychological change in their offices, a change in very many ways.

The techs looked a little surprised, but not at all unhappy,
and Geigi finished with, “Thank you, Gin-nandi,” in mixed ship-speak and Ragi.

“One is pleased, nandi,” Gin’s voice answered, in Ragi. “Thank you.”

And it was done. Atevi techs slid back chairs, relieved, after shift and shift and shift, hours on, and hours off only to snatch food and sleep a little.

“We shall keep the regular rotation from now on,” Geigi said. “Honor to you all, nadiin-ji. You have done extravagantly well, and I shall list all my staff for the aiji-dowager’s personal remembrance. Go. Shut down now. We are resuming regular schedule in all respects. You will return at the official time.”

There were happy expressions, tired people contemplating a meal and bed, and a decent time to rest before the shift came back to them.

“The dowager bids me say,” Bren said quietly to Geigi, “that you are to rest, yourself, and that when you have leisure she will be pleased to see you, Geigi-ji. Your apartment right now is full of humans, both children and parents, and should you wish to take your hours of rest in my small guest quarters, you would be very welcome.”

“One is grateful,” Geigi said, “But my staff will shield me, and I should pay respects to my guests, however briefly.”

“I have one favor to ask in the meanwhile, Geigi-ji. I wish access to Braddock.”

“Jase-aiji sends word that Ogun requests him sent to their security. I have referred the question to the dowager.”

“The dowager has referred it to me,” he said, which was the truth.
Do as you see fit
had been Ilisidi’s word on that matter, in essence. And he had not communicated with Jase to give an official schedule, not yet.

“Indeed.” Geigi gave a little nod. “Then, Bren-ji, I shall walk with you toward our unwilling guests. Then I shall leave matters completely to you, whatever you do with Braddock and his associates. We have attempted to make the woman in particular
comfortable, since her daughter is a guest and under the aiji’s protection; but she remains quite angry and defiant toward us.”

One took notes on that, certainly.

“We have kept all of them separate from each other,” Geigi said. “Two of them have thrown bedding onto the floor and one has attempted to dismantle the plumbing. We would be quite glad to send all of them to Ogun-aiji. But we are not glad, for the child’s sake.”

“I shall call on the woman first, then,” Bren said. “I shall at least make an effort.”

“One wishes you success,” Geigi said as they walked the hall.

Calling on Irene’s mother was what he had sworn he wouldn’t do. Braddock might have necessary information. Braddock—knew things he might want to know. He had no reason to believe Irene’s mother was in any sense well-placed in Braddock’s counsels. He had sworn not to be distracted by the children’s situation.

But—one couldn’t take the woman for granted, either. What her credentials were, who she actually was, what her connections had been, he had declined to ask Irene, and it was doubtful they’d get much from what personnel records Sabin had managed to extract from Reunion records before destroying the station’s memory banks.

Sabin’s people had spent much of the voyage going over what they’d gotten, looking primarily for information on their more troublesome passengers, and details regarding all contact with the kyo.

The Reunion citizen rolls, as it turned out, proved uninformative at best. They hadn’t gotten their judicial files, hadn’t gotten their educational records, or their council records, and the personal files they had were fragmentary, covering individuals a hundred years deceased more thoroughly than the survivors, giving them little to no information on a significant number of persons they’d taken aboard.

In an attempt to build their own files, they’d conducted interviews during the voyage. The problem was, any random person among the survivors could claim to be a nuclear physicist, a trained mechanic, or a medical doctor, with no proof to the contrary, necessitating an exhaustive system of cross-checks. If the interviewers had gotten three unrelated Reunioners to swear to a claim, it was indicated to be truthful—pending the individual’s performance on an ever-expanding series of tests. A few individuals had had the foresight to bring actual records and badges with them—or company documents and research, as Andressen had done; but most had crammed necessities and sentimental items into what they could carry, and boarded in extreme haste.

Braddock . . . was Braddock. He was indisputably what he had been, and, also indisputably, not what he still wanted to be. Head of the ancient Pilots’ Guild, at odds with the ship’s officers, bent on becoming master of
some
station—he’d been campaigning to be given resources to build a new station, but Mospheirans, who had a centuries-old feud with the Reunioners’ ancestors, were worried about Braddock’s leading a riot and taking over the human side of the station, a fear Tillington had done nothing to settle. It was that fear, in fact, which had prompted Tillington to slam the section doors shut at the first remotely justifiable opportunity.

Hostage leverage—much as Braddock had used against the kyo for six years.

That . . . was the one thing they knew regarding Reunion’s interactions with the kyo. According to Jase’s report, no information relating to either kyo incident had turned up in those records. One feared those details had been buried in levels they hadn’t been able to lift, in their haste to destroy all records from which the kyo might extract information.

Braddock had been in charge of the station from long before the kyo’s initial attack. It would appear Braddock had buried all files associated with the kyo deep into some archive only he
could access. If those records existed at all, they were on Reunion. Presumably Reunion no longer existed. But that was not guaranteed: the kyo might still be going through it for small bits and clues, itself a worrying proposition.

Braddock . . . was Braddock. And Braddock, from current evidence, had never ceased
being
Braddock. Whether the kyo’s arrival or that lockdown had initiated them, riots and looting had indeed begun, and there was some evidence that Braddock had already been plotting a breakout, and had already had a notion of using the kids, who were under Tabini-aiji’s protection, as currency in the bargaining.

If Braddock hadn’t personally and willfully triggered those riots, he’d certainly been preparing to take advantage of them, once they began.

Irene’s mother? He hadn’t asked Irene too closely about her mother’s involvement with Braddock and Braddock’s lieutenants—who, well before the lockdown, had repositioned themselves to her apartment and the one adjacent—apartments which not only contained one of Braddock’s intended hostages, but also just happened to be within shouting distance of the section doors, the thin line that held Reunioners out of the sensitive spots of the station.

Braddock had, according to Irene, moved into the apartment next door, but he’d spent nights in her mother’s apartment. He suspected it wasn’t an unwilling relationship. Jase had warned him about the connection when the kids had come down to the planet.

He certainly hadn’t wanted to put any pressure on Irene, but if he did send Braddock and his lieutenants to Ogun for prosecution . . . did he include Irene’s mother in that package? Or did he establish some special status for her?

Did he try to reunite Irene with her mother, and include her in the plan to take the children and their families down to the planet?

Not enthusiastically. No. He didn’t.

He didn’t want to be in a position to decide that question. He didn’t know what was right. But he also had to consider that woman’s child had been invited to come under the dowager’s roof, under the dowager’s personal protection, with all the politics
and
prestige that went with it.

So he headed now toward the very interview he’d most wanted to avoid and maybe, just maybe, he’d learn something useful—before he talked to Braddock.

• • •

It was not Guild who stood watch over the Reunioner prisoners: it was Geigi’s own non-Guild security, individuals who simply stood there to lock what needed locking and to settle small disputes. Such regular security would still be able to deal with a great number of situations once the Guild itself moved in, as the Guild was in process of doing. And they were adequate for what needed doing now. They saw to it that Ms. Williams and the others were fed, gave them clean clothes—and made certain they didn’t have contact with each other, or do harm to themselves or others.

Which meant, as it turned out, that they kept them in separate small rooms in what was by design a small and little-used detention facility. They fed them three times daily, and simply kept the doors shut.

Was there danger of an escape? Not likely. There was nowhere to go, on this side of the station. Argument, with no commonality of language, was not going to affect the atevi guards in any way. And atevi being generally a head and shoulders taller, and commensurately stronger—physical force was no threat, either.

Ms. Williams, by the empty tray that passed him as he approached, was awake . . . and in good appetite.

He knocked as simple warning on the door before security unlocked it, and found Ms. Williams sitting glumly on her atevi-scale cot, which was all the furniture the barren room afforded, besides a sink and an accommodation.

He walked in. Banichi and Jago took up position on either side of the open door, while Tano and Algini stayed outside with the regular guards.

She glanced up, stared, then got up in a hurry. “Help me,” she said, breathlessly, desperate. “Please . . . help me.”

“I’d like to, Ms. Williams.” Tell her that her daughter was safe? The woman had never yet asked about her daughter, that he had ever heard. “But you’ve landed yourself in some difficulty.”

“I’ve done nothing. I’ve been taken captive and held here for no
reason
—”

“You’re being held, Ms. Williams, because there are some serious questions about your associations, and the part you played in their actions.”

“I’ve done
nothing.
I’ll tell you anything you want to know!”

“Then we should get along quite well. To start with, can you explain what Mr. Braddock was doing in your apartment, or why you refused to help Mr. Andressen find his son, or even just to tell him you didn’t know?”

A rather blank blink. The second might not be the question she expected, perhaps. The first—quite likely.

“I—I had no choice.”

“Explain.”

Nervous flutter of the hands about her person, straightening her shirt. Actions instinctual, but not without intent. Ms. Williams was a beautiful woman, dark-skinned, dark-eyed, on the young side of thirty, with appeal in every line of her—human moves, setting off human instincts.

He lived in the habit of suspicion. He lived, he thought,
because
of his habit of suspicion. And he was not moved to think better of her for that manipulative body language.

Was there going to be an explanation? He waited. He simply waited.

“I was seeing Theo Verner. And Braddock . . . Braddock just showed up at the door and Theo let him in and said he had to stay because security was hunting for him.”

“Go on.” He wasn’t going to give her leading questions, to help her shape her story. He just waited. And listened.

“So. So they moved in. And Theo stayed. And Braddock went next door, I think.”

Not quite how Irene had described the living situation, but plausible. He still waited.

She twitched, uneasy with his lack of response. “Who
are
you?” she asked, somewhat belatedly, and without the breathless quiver. “How do I know you can help me?”

“Braddock, Ms. Williams. Go on.”

And bit her full lower lip. Then, a bit sullenly: “There wasn’t anything I could do. He was just
there
.”

Innocent victim, was she? For Irene’s sake, he so wished that rang true.

“So?”

“So these atevi came in with ship security and took us out into the tunnels, with no coats, nothing, and Captain Graham, he was in charge, he kept asking Lou questions.”

Interesting. Lou, now. Not Braddock.

“I
told
him, told Captain Graham I wasn’t part of it.
Told
him I was freezing to death, and he just handed me over to the atevi with the others and they brought us here.”

“Where you’re not freezing.”

“I’m shut in this room and I can’t talk to anybody!”

“That’s sad, Ms. Williams. Is that all I need to know?”

She’d wound up to tears. They glistened in her eyes. They’d
been
glistening for some time. Then, like the flipping of a switch, thought took over—or tactics changed.

“You’re from the planet,” she said, voice and body turning overtly respectful.
“You’re
the one that was coming—the one they were talking about.”

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