Part 17 (1/2)
”No there's not,” said the girl sullenly, kicking her heels. Looked at Sandy. ”What are you here for, anyway? I bet you're not with this stupid finance committee, you're dressed better. They all dress like narks.”
”You like the way I'm dressed?”
”Yeah, I like casual. Leather's great. Dad won't let me wear casual in public.” She made a face. ”Says we've got appearances to keep up. Fat lot of good that does.”
Mature kid, Sandy reckoned, to voice so many opinions so clearly, and with a complete stranger. Confident. And totally naive of the dangers.
”Your dad's an important man,” she replied. Being a non-controversial devil's advocate. ”He's got a lot of responsibilities, you can't blame him for that. He's just good at his job.”
”So people keep telling me. So what are you?” With growing impatience, and curiosity. Sandy reckoned telling anything but the truth could be problematic. Possibly dangerous.
”I'm a GI.”
”Get out, you are not.” With derisive irritation at so stupid a comment. As if she thought she was being made fun of. ”GIs are narks. They're all yessir and no sir, they couldn't have a conversation to save their lives. Not the muscle-headed peabrains in this place, anyway.”
”No, I am a GI. I work for the CSA. You watch the news at all?” The girl stared at her for a moment. Then it dawned on her. Excitedly.
”Oh no way!” With amazement. ”That's you?” Sandy reached into her jacket, pulled out Ari's newly issued CSA badge and tossed it to her. The girl caught, opened and stared at it. ”Oh wow! April Ca.s.sidy a so that's your name! Dad said some stuff about you earlier, I think a oh wow, he must be excited to see you, huh?”
A Federation child, Sandy reflected, might have reacted with terror. Or at least nervous apprehension. This girl was League bred, through and through. As the Amba.s.sador's daughter, GIs were just a normal part of life, guarding the doorways, patrolling the perimeter, keeping an eye on things. Totally unexpectedly, the thought gave her a twinge of regret. All the children out there in Ta.n.u.sha right now, doubtless terrified into nightmares and bed wetting by their parents' tales of the evil machine-people that lurk on the other side of the invisible Federation-League border. League children, by contrast, a.s.sociated GIs with safety, guardians.h.i.+p and unconditional trust. Neither was correct, but the League kids had it closer to the mark. In her opinion.
”Why would he be so excited to see me?” Curious. Amba.s.sador Yao had been very enthusiastic. Surprisingly so.
”You're such big news, everyone's heard of you! Dad was saying you left the League because of all the corruption in the ISO.”
”Did he now?” It was a good enough explanation to a kid. Though ”corrupt” wasn't quite the word she'd have used for the Internal Security Organisation.
”Yeah, he said the ISO's gotten much better now that the new government's in power, they shook everything up, lots of people got sacked. That's why he wanted to see you, he thought maybe you'd like to come back to the League.”
The simplicity took her breath away. For a moment, she couldn't think of anything to say. Where to begin? Why couldn't she return? There were so many reasons. But how to explain it? She wasn't sure that she could.
”It's not just the ISO a” she said finally, ”a what's your name, by the way?”
aY ng a ”Ying. It's far more than the ISO, Ying. It's the whole system. It's no place for a person like me. For a GI like me. I just don't like it there, and I don't think they'd want me back anyway.”
”Why not? I mean, if they've fixed everything?”
Sandy sighed. Restrained a smile.
”They didn't fix anything, Ying. Not really. I've read the CSA reports, I know what's been happening since I left. They sacked the most visible people, the ones who were embarra.s.sing the politicians. The ones the media could pick on. Problem is, the people who ran the whole special operations section that I was part of weren't very visible. They never got punished, they just disappeared from sight for a while. They'll reappear eventually, they always do.”
”Recruitment” was the monster department of League wartime administration. With barely half a billion people in the League, versus roughly 27 billion in the Federation, the League relied upon Recruitment to even up the odds through the production of GIs. Recruitment was so full of secrets and broken rules that no League politician even liked to admit the extent of its powers-namely that if it didn't exist, the League's war-fighting capability would be naught. Sandy had no wish to rush back into its embrace.
”But wouldn't you like to go somewhere where people don't hate you?” Ying asked. She looked puzzled.
”Not all people here hate me.” With more confidence than she felt. ”It's just a few. They make a lot of noise, that's all.”
”You'd get treated better in the League,” Ying replied, with great certainty. ”You fought in the war for them, they'd be really grateful.”
”Maybe.” She'd be dead real fast if she went back, new administration or not. She knew far too much. She was taking a risk even being here. She questioned her sanity even now. More so when the door opened at that moment, and the GI who'd shot her not so many hours earlier walked into the room.
”Mustafa!” Ying said brightly. ”You'll never guess who this is!”
The handsome African-featured man looked at Sandy. He wore a casual jacket, the kind beneath which weapons could comfortably be concealed, with many convenient pockets. Likewise comfortable pants and shoes. Dark, intelligent eyes, gleaming with familiar recognition. Sandy was not surprised. She'd been expecting him.
”I'd guess a” the GI named Mustafa said, making a show of hard thought, chin in hand, ”a she's a GI. A really special GI. Am I right?”
”You knew!” Ying was annoyed. ”How did you know?”
”We can tell, Ms. Yao,” he said, with mysterious knowing. ”We GIs, we automatically know each other, it's like a special psychic bond that we all share.”
Ying stared, wide-eyed. And stared at Sandy.
”He's talking c.r.a.p,” Sandy advised the girl, calmly, still seated cross-legged, stretching her back. ”On a busy street I wouldn't know him from the next person. We met before.”
”You met?” Ying was amazed. ”How could you have met, Mustafa's only been here a day?”
”Like I said,” repeated Mustafa, ”it's a special psychic connection.” His eyes remained locked on Sandy's, lively and penetrating. Sandy's return stare was inexpressive. ”We both just happened to end up at the same place, at the same time, looking for the same thing.” He shrugged. ”A little coincidence, a little romance, a little exchange of fire a I found the encounter most invigorating.”
Sandy sat quietly. Feeling cold. She'd suspected this, the moment she'd first confronted him. Had always suspected it, really, on one level or another. Even though she lacked all evidence, and had searched frequently, she still suspected. And now, it seemed, the proof confronted her.
”What's your designation?” she asked him, quietly. No way was this man a reg. Nor even a mod. She'd known mods. Her entire team had consisted of them.
”GI-5182-IT.” With a calm, almost amused look. He knew what that meant to her. He knew the shock at hearing those numbers. Most evidently, he knew a h.e.l.l of a lot more about her than she did about him. ”You thought you were the only one.” A flat statement. Already knowing the answer.
”Obviously.” She'd seen it coming. She hadn't wanted to be shaken. But she was. So much of her life had been lived in the supposed knowledge that she was unique. The only one. The sole GI to possess this particular level of mental sophistication, by design. It shouldn't have mattered. But it did. And she didn't have a clue what that meant. 5182 a higher than her. Not that that meant anything. And a IT? Intel? She'd never heard of that. Of GIs designated with anything other than frontline combat in mind. Her own designation was HK, for Hunter/Killer. She didn't know whether that meant he should be scared of her, or vice versa.
”Was that why you came here?” he asked. ”To find out more?”
Sandy refocused more fully upon his face, with sudden intensity. More about you? Don't flatter yourself.
”I work for the CSA,” she replied flatly. ”You were observed committing criminal acts at a crime scene. I'm here because the League is sticking its nose in where it doesn't belong. I want the details.”
”You observed no such thing,” Mustafa said with amus.e.m.e.nt. ”I was merely strolling down a street to take what I had intended to be a very pleasant walk along the river when a gang of hoodlums accosted me and forced me into a chase through a building to escape. How you happened to be there too I have no idea.”
”You might want to try explaining to the CSA the death of one Lu Fayao in premises nearby, they'll be most interested.”
”Ah yes,” said Mustafa, nodding with exaggerated realisation. ”The CSA. That glorious, upstanding Ta.n.u.shan inst.i.tution. Federation inst.i.tution, I should say. How are they treating you? Defenders of the liberal political idealism that they are? Doubtless you've made countless friends, and everyone's welcomed you with open arms?” With palpable, humoured sarcasm.
Sandy thought of the dark looks, the b.i.t.c.hing, the wafts of undercurrents, things said behind her back, complaints lodged by various senior officials and department heads, alarmed meetings in Ibrahim's office after hours a and she thought of Vanessa. A warm, pleasant thought, right there. And the technogeeks in Intel, cl.u.s.tering enthusiastically about, wanting to please. Ibrahim's measured confidence. N'Darie red-faced and yelling before the Senate Security Council, defending her.
”I have friends,” she told Mustafa, with quiet certainty. ”I have friends the likes of whom I've never known before.”
Mustafa snorted. And settled himself comfortably on the floor opposite, a leg stretched out before him, somewhat gingerly. Stretched, carefully. It caught Sandy off guard, just for a moment. Triggered old memories a GIs so often conversed in such settings, seated or lying flat, stretching out. An idle moment was a moment to stretch. GIs always stretched during informal conversation, particularly with each other. She hadn't realised she'd missed it until that very moment.
”I don't doubt you have individual friends a but do you really think that the system is ever going to accept you?” Incredulously. ”Just look at where you are now a there are interest groups on all sides against you, particularly the religions, the Senate is mostly against you, the media is mostly against you a Ca.s.sandra, if it were just the fringe, that would be one thing, but it's the mainstream here. This is the major dividing ideology that separates League from Federation, this isn't just going to go away overnight.”
”Mustafa.” Flatly. Not liking this lecture from any League jackboot, let alone a GI. Not to mention someone who'd just recently plugged her with two rounds from point-blank range. She was rational. She didn't take it personally. But she had her limits. ”What's your full name?”
”Major Mustafa Ramoja, at your service.” Leaning gingerly forward to clasp his ankle with both hands. Very tender in the thighs, she noted. Well, they were even. Kind of.