Part 3 (1/2)

AND DOESN'T GET YOU KILLED.

AND ON THAT TOPIC, DO YOU THINK YOU COULD SCARE US UP A HALF DOZEN MARINES. IN CIVVIES. I DON'T WANT TO LOOK LIKE A PARADE.

I'LL GET THEM IN CIVVIES. NO GUARANTEE THEY WON'T LOOK LIKE A SQUAD OF MARINES, THOUGH.

MAYBE THEY'LL SCARE OFF MY NEXT a.s.sa.s.sIN.

THAT WOULD BE A CHANGE.

7.

”Lieutenant Martinez, so nice of you to come so quickly,” Kris said as she offered her hand. He shook it. In a rumpled raincoat and thick-soled shoes, he looked the part of a cop. Kris had ditched her cover and wore a light blue civilian raincoat over her whites. The violation of uniform regs just might make her a harder target. It made Jack happier.

Jack, along with a half dozen other Marines in civilian clothes formed a wedge behind Kris. Martinez took in their tight haircuts with a nod and a smile. ”I'll see if I can postdate your application's approval to cover this walk.”

”We would greatly appreciate that.” Kris left it to Martinez to decide if the ”we” was royal or collective. The nod from Jack made either fit.

”So, where shall we walk?” Kris asked.

”There is a mall that many people enjoy on days as sunny as these,” the policeman said, eyeing a patch of blue sky where the sun shown through the white, fluffy clouds. The raincoats actually might come in handy.

”You pick the mall, I pick the direction,” Kris said.

Martinez smiled tightly and led the way. Jack's team formed a circle around them. Two blocks over, they found the mall, four-or six-blocks wide with trees and gravel walks. At one end was a stone monument in the cla.s.sic shape of a rocket. At the other end an imposing building with colonnades.

”Is that where the tricameral legislature meets?” Kris had noted in pa.s.sing that Eden was unusual in that it had three legislative bodies, not the usual one or two.

Martinez shook his head. ”Only the American legislature.”

Kris was about to let that pa.s.s, but a faint alarm bell went off somewhere. Martinez was leading the way across the mall. They had some time, so Kris asked the dumb question.

”American. Isn't that one of the main powers on Earth? It can't have a legislative body out here on Eden.”

”Earth doesn't,” Martinez said, then gave a quick jerk of his head toward the domed building. ”That thing is all ours.”

Kris goaded him on with a quizzical look.

”About a third of the politicians that make the laws of my fair planet work out of that building. The European legislature sits in New Geneva and the Chinese Mandate of Heaven speaks from Guang Zhou Du.”

Kris almost missed a step as they crossed from gra.s.s to gravel. She'd a.s.sumed that the tricameral reference had been to three houses elected by the same people, maybe one by head count, one by regions, and one by wealth or n.o.bility or some such. Why hadn't this been plainer in her briefing. NELLY?

I AM SEARCHING THE RECORDS, KRIS. SUDDENLY WHAT SEEMED PLAIN AS THE NOSE ON YOUR FACE IS TURNING INTO A WHOLE LOT OF NOTHING.

Kris suspected any third-grader on Eden could have told her what she wanted to know. Why should it be written down?

”Those are all from old Earth,” Kris said.

”AmeraEx, ReichBank, and some similar a.s.sociation from China funded the loans that got Eden started. Most of the early settlers came from those three. When they paid off the mortgage and demanded the right to set up their own government, they wanted a world government, but one that wouldn't step on any of their toes. Here in the American territories we measure in feet, apply common law, and things like that. They actually use the Napoleonic code I'm told in the Eurolands. And if you can figure out the Mandate of Heaven...” He shrugged.

Kris had that feeling she got when she was being attacked by all the information she needed to solve a problem. Only it was nibbling her to death by the bites of a thousand rabbits. And in a moment they'd all be gone and she'd be left bleeding with nothing to show for the effort.

She fell back on the blandest of questions a politician's daughter knew. ”So, do you like what your legislator is doing? You plan to vote for him next election?”

”I don't have a representative. I'm not a voter.”

And alarm bells went off all through Kris's skull. ”Jack, have we got a secure area here?”

”Any beams aimed at us will only get white noise. Unknown nanos within ten meters are toast, Your Highness,” he snapped. Was he just as eager to get the next question answered?

”Lieutenant,” Kris said, not looking at the police officer, ”I a.s.sume you wanted to be someplace we could talk without anyone listening in on what you said. I, too, occasionally want my privacy. My security chief a.s.sures me we have it, but before we go into your concerns, could you please tell me what you meant by your last statement. You're not a voter? The Charter of the Society of Humanity gave all citizens the franchise. Planets could make limits for age, mental condition, and penal status, but...” Kris let her words trail off.

The cop looked at Kris like she'd just asked if murder was a felony around here.

Kris called on her perfect source for information. ”Nelly, isn't universal suffrage in the Society of Humanity's charter?”

”No, Kris, the basic charter allows each planet to establish its own criteria for the vote.”

”I know that,” Kris snapped, not happy at being corrected. ”But Grampa Ray pushed through the Twenty-fourth Amendment when he was President after the Unity War. He insisted all planets give everyone the vote.”

”He did, Kris,” Jack said from behind her. ”New planets had to. However, existing members were only encouraged to.”

”President Ray Longknife made a major effort to get all planets to adopt universal suffrage.” Nelly sounded like she was quoting from one of several dozen books on the topic. ”But the Iteeche War interrupted him.”

”And Eden was quite set in its ways,” the policeman added. ”And your great-grandfather needed the support of Eden...and its industry...in the war.”

They were in the middle of the mall, on one of the gravel walks. ”Which way do you want to go?” Officer Martinez asked.

Kris pointed toward the huge building. It was official and likely to have more security around it. She and the cop ambled toward it. Kris made an effort to swallow being caught short on something she should have known, and asked one more question.

”How did your family come here, and when?”

”We arrived as indentured workers, our future employers paying our way for seven years of cheap labor. My family was from Mexico, but workers came from all over South America. There are also Indians, Pakistanis, and Filipinos. The Eurolands has Turks, Palestinians, and Russians. The Chinese have, well, Chinese or Taiwanese, or Koreans. Cheap or forced labor.”

”And none of the late arrivals got the vote?” Kris needed to hear this. She knew it all added up to that, but knowing it and hearing it were not the same.

”Not unless you married someone who did, and then only your children got franchise if they came out above 50 percent. Some folks invest a lot in keeping their genealogy straight.”

Could this be why Grampa Ray sent me here? It didn't make sense. She might have missed the footnote on this part of Eden's history, but King Ray had lived it. And what could she do about this violation of civil rights, anyway?

It was time to get down to business. ”You said you had something you wanted to tell us and didn't want to say it where the walls might have ears.”

The local cop smiled. ”That was a fast turn. Yes, I've reviewed the file you sent. I must say I'm amazed that you're still here to make the request.”