Part 34 (1/2)

While Lunzie was giving her report to the peace officer. Captain Aelock came out the front of the restaurant with the other a.s.sa.s.sin in an armlock. The captain's tunic was torn, and his thick gray hair was dishevelled. She noticed blood on his face and streaking down one sleeve.

The a.s.sa.s.sin joined his quiescent partner in the groundvan while the captain took the report officer aside and made a private explanation.

”I see, sir,” the Alphan said, respectfully, giving a half salute. ”We'll contact FSP Fleet Command if we need any further details from you.”

”We may leave, then?”

”Of course, sir. Thank you for your a.s.sistance.”

Aelock gave him a preoccupied nod and hurried Lunzie away. He looked shaken and unhappy.

”What else happened?” she demanded.

”We've got to get out of here. Those two probably weren't alone.”

Lunzie lengthened her stride. ”That's not all that's bothering you.”

”My contact is dead. I found him in the alley behind the building when I chased that man. Dammit, how did they get on to me? The whole affair has been top secret, need-to-know only. It means - and I hate to imagine how - the pirates must have spies within the top echelons of the service.”

”What?” Lunzie exclaimed.

”There's been no one else who could have known. I reported my contact with my poor dead friend only to my superiors - and I have told no one else. It must mean Aidkisagi is involved,” Aelock muttered almost to himself in a preoccupied undertone.

They turned another comer onto an empty street. Lunzie glanced behind them nervously. Yellow city lights reflected off the smooth surfaces of the building facades and the sidewalk as if they were two mirrors set at right angles. Each of them had two bright-edged shadows wavering along behind them which made Lunzie feel as if they were being followed. Aelock set a bruising pace for a s.p.a.cer. They heard no footfalls behind them.

When he was sure that they had not been followed, Aelock stopped in the middle of a small public park where he had a 360 degree field of vision. The low shrubs twenty yards away offered no cover.

”Lunzie, it's more imperative than ever that I get a message to Commander Coromell on Tau Ceti. He's Chief Investigator for Fleet Intelligence. He must know about this matter.”

”Why not give it to the Admiral? He told me he was going to visit his son.”

In the half shadow of the park, Aelock's grimace looked malevolent rather than regretful. ”He would have been ideal but he left this morning.” Aelock gazed down hopefully at Lunzie and took hold of her wrists. ”I can't trust this message to any ordinary form of transmission, but it must get to Coromell. It is vital. Would you carry it?”

”Me?” Lunzie felt her throat tighten. ”How?”

”Do exactly what you were going to do. Take a position as medical officer. Only make it a berth on a fast s.h.i.+p, anything that is going directly to Tau Ceti as soon as possible. Tomorrow, if you can. Alpha is one of the busiest s.p.a.ceports in the galaxy. Freighters and merchants leave hourly. I'll make sure you have impeccable references even if they won't connect you with me. Will you do it?”

Lunzie hesitated for a heartbeat in which she remembered the devastated landscape of Phoenix, and the triple-column list of the dead colonists.

”You bet I will!”

The look of intense relief on Aelock's face was reward in itself. From a small pocket in the front of his tunic, he took a tiny ceramic tube and put it in her hands. ”Take this message brick to Coromell and say: 'It's Ambrosia.' Got it? Even if you lose this, remember the phrase.”

Lunzie hefted the cube, no bigger than her thumbnail. ” 'It's Ambrosia,' ” she repeated carefully. ”All right. I'll find a s.h.i.+p tomorrow morning.” She tucked the ceramic into her right boot. Aelock gripped her shoulders gratefully. ”Thank you. One more thing. Under no circ.u.mstances should you try to play that cube. It can only be placed into a reader with the authorised codes.”

”It'll blank?” she asked.

Aelock smiled at her naivete. ”It will explode. That's a high-security brick. The powerful explosive it contains would level the building if the wrong sort of reader's laser touches it. Do you understand?”

”Oh, after tonight, I believe you, even if this whole evening has been like something from Tri-D.” She grinned rea.s.suringly at him.

”Good. Now, don't go back to the BOQ. They must not realise that you're with me. It could mean your life if they think you are connected with the Fleet. They killed my friend, a harmless fellow, a welder in the s.h.i.+pyard. His family had been at Phoenix. Couldn't hurt a fly, but they killed him.” Aelock shuddered at the memory. ”I won't tell you how. I've seen many forms of death, but that sort of savagery ...”

Lunzie felt the Discipline boost wearing off and she'd little reserve of strength. ”I won't risk it then, but what about my things?”

”I'll have them sent to you. Take a groundcar. Go to the Alpha Meridian Hotel and get a room. Here's my credit seal.”

”I've got plenty of credits, thank you. That's no problem.”

Aelock saw a groundcar, its 'empty' light flas.h.i.+ng, and hailed it. ”That one ought to be safe, coming from the west. Someone will bring your things to the hotel. It will be someone you know. Don't let anyone else in.” He opened the car hatch and helped her in. He leaned over her before closing the car. ”We won't meet again, Lunzie. But thank you, from the bottom of my heart. You're saving lives.”

Then he slipped away into shadow as yellow street-lights washed across the rounded windows of the rolling groundcar. Lunzie buckled herself in and gave her destination to the robot-brain.

The Alpha Meridian reminded Lunzie of the Destiny Calls Destiny Calls. In the main lobby, there were golden cherubs and other benevolent spirits on the ceiling holding up sconces of vapour-lights. Ornate pillars with a leaf motif, also in gold, marched through the room like fantastic trees. A human server met her at the door and escorted her to the registration desk. No mention was made of her casual clothing, though she appeared a mendicant in comparison to the expensively dressed patrons taking a late evening morsel in cus.h.i.+ony armchairs around the lobby.

The receptionist, who Lunzie suspected was a shapechanging Weft because of the utter perfection of her human form, impa.s.sively checked Lunzie's credit code. As the confirmation appeared, her demeanour instantly altered. ”Of course we can accommodate you. Citizen Doctor Lunzie. Do you require a suite? We have a most appealing one available on the four-hundredth-floor penthouse level.”

”No, thank you,” Lunzie replied, amused. ”Not for one night. If I were staying a week or more, certainly I would need a suite. My garment cases will follow by messenger.”

”As you wish. Citizen Doctor.” The receptionist lifted a discreet eyebrow, and a bellhop appeared at Lunzie's side. ”One-oh-seven-twelve, for the Citizen Doctor Lunzie.” The bellhop bowed and escorted her toward the bank of turbovators.

Her room was on a corridor lined with velvety dark red carpet, and smelled pleasantly musky and old. The Meridian was a member of a grand hotel chain of the old style, reputed to have brought Earth-culture hostelry to the stars. The bellhop turned on the lights and waited discreetly at the door until Lunzie had stepped in, then withdrew on silent feet. In her nervous state, she flew to the door and opened it, to make sure he had really gone. The bellhop, waiting at the turboshaft for the 'vator to come back, threw her a curious glance. She ducked back into her room and locked the door behind her.

”I must calm down,” Lunzie said out loud. ”No one followed me. No one knows where I am.”

She paced the small room, staying clear of the curtained window, which provided her with a view of a tiny park and an enormous industrial complex. The bedroom was panelled in a dark, smooth-grained wood with discreet carvings along the edges near the ceiling and floor. The canopied bed was deep and soft, covered with a thick, velvety spread in maroon edged with gold trim that matched the smooth carpeting. It was a room designed for comfort and sleep but Lunzie was too nervous to enjoy it. She wanted to use the com-unit and call the s.h.i.+p to see if Aelock had made it back safely. A stupid urge and dangerous for both of them. Shaking, Lunzie sat down on the end of the bed and clenched her hands in her lap.

Someone would be coming by later with her clothing and possessions. Until that someone came, she couldn't sleep though her body craved rest after the draining of Discipline. The hotel provided a reader and small library in every room. Hers was next to the bed on a wooden shelf that protruded from the wall. She was far too restless to read, the events of the evening on constant replay in her mind. Even if the two a.s.sailants had been captured, that didn't mean they had been alone, or that their capture would go unremarked. That left a bath to fill in the time and that at least was a constructive act, helping to draw tension out of her body and ready it for the sleep she so badly needed.

While the scented water was splas.h.i.+ng into the tub, Lunzie kept imagining she heard the sound of knocking on her door and kept running out to answer it.

”This is ridiculous,” she told herself forcefully. ”I can take care of myself. They would scarcely draw attention to themselves by levelling the hotel because I'm in it. I must relax. I will.”

Her clothes were dirty and sweat-stained and there was a large blot of sauce on the underside of one forearm. She tossed them in the refresher unit, and listened to them swirl while she lay in the warm bath water.

The bathroom was supplied with every luxury. Mechanical beauty aids offered themselves to her in the bath. A facial cone lowered itself to her face and hovered, humming discreetly. ”No, thank you,” Lunzie said. It rose out of her way and disappeared into a hatch in the marble-tiled ceiling. A dental kit appeared next. ”Yes, please.” She allowed it to clean her teeth and gums. More mechanisms descended and were refused: a manicure/pedicure kit, a tonsor, a skin exfoliant. Lunzie accepted a shampoo and rinse with scalp ma.s.sage from the hairdressing unit, and then got out of the tub to a warmed towel and robe, presented by another mechanical conveyance.

It was close to midnight by then and Lunzie found that she was hungry. Her entree at Colchie's had turned out to be an a.s.sa.s.sin with a needlegun. She considered summoning a meal from room service but she was loath to, picturing chalky-faced waiters in silk capes streaming into the tiny room with guns hidden in their sashes. She'd been hungrier than this before. Wearing the robe, Lunzie climbed into bed to wait for the messenger with her bags.

Most of the book plaques on the shelf were best-sellers of the romance-and-intrigue variety. Lunzie found a pleasant whodunnit in the stack and put it into the reader. Pulling the reader's supporting arm over the bed, Lunzie lay back, trying to involve herself in the ratiocinations of Toli Alopa, a Weft detective who could shapechange to follow a suspect without fear of being spotted.

Somewhere in the middle of a chase scene, Lunzie fell into a fitful dream of pasty-faced waiters who called her Jonah and chased her through the Destiny Calls Destiny Calls, finally pitching her out of the s.p.a.ce liner in full warp drive. The airlock alarm chimed insistently that the hatch was open. There was danger. Lunzie awoke suddenly, seeing the shadow of an arm over her face. She screamed.