Part 56 (1/2)

At least they were through Customs. First on the orbiting Station, and then in the terminal, they'd been scrutinized by heavyworlders who might have been

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chosen to star in lightweight nightmares. Huge, bulky, their heavy faces masks of hostility and contempt, their uniforms emphasizing bulging muscle and bulk, they'd been arrogantly thorough in their examination of the team's authorization and equipment. Lunzie felt a momentary rush of terror when she realized how openly arrogant these heavyworlders were, but her Discipline rea.s.serted itself, and she had relaxed almost at once. They had done nothing yet but be rude, and rudeness was not her concern.

But that rudeness made the minimal courtesy shown them now seem almost welcoming. A cargo van for their gear, the offer of a ride to the main research facility. None of them felt slighted that their escort was only a graduate student and not, as it should have been, one of the faculty.

If Lunzie had hoped that Diplo had not yet heard about her experience on Ireta, she was soon undeceived. The graduate student, having checked their names on a list, actually smiled at her.

”Dr. Lunzie? Or do you use Mespil? You're the one who's had all the coldsleep experience, right? But the heavyworlders in that expedition put you under, didn't they?”

Lunzie had not discussed her experience much with the others on the team; she was conscious of their curiosity.

”No,” she said, as calmly as if discussing variant ways of doing a data search. ”I was the doctor; I put our lightweights under.”

”But there were heavyworlders on Ireta ...” the student began. He was young, by his voice, but his bulky body made him seem older than his years.

”They mutinied,” Lunzie said, still calmly. If he had heard die other, he should have heard that. But perhaps the Governor had changed the facts to suit his people.

, ”Oh.” He gave her a quick glance over his shoulder before steering the van into a tunnel. ”Are you sure? There wasn't some mistake?”

The others were rigidly quiet. She could tell they

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wanted her version of the story, and didn't want her to tell it here. The graduate student seemed innocent, but who could tell?

”I can't talk about it,” she said, trying for a tone of friendly firmness. ”It's going to trial, and I've been told not to discuss it until afterwards.”

”But that's Federation law,” he said airily. ”It's not binding here. You could talk about it here, and they'd never know.”

Lunzie suppressed a grin. Graduate students everywhere! They never thought the law was binding on them, not if they wanted to know something. Of course, it might be that the rest of Diplo felt that way about Federation law, which was something the FSP suspected, but just as likely it was pure student curiosity.

”Sorry,” she said, not sounding sorry at all. ”I promised, and I don't break promises.” Only after it was out, did she remember something Zebara had repeated as a heavyworkler saying: Don't break promises! Break bones! She s.h.i.+vered. She had no intention of breaking bones-or having her own broken-if she could avoid it.

Their first days on Diplo were a constant struggle against the higher gravity and the measures they took to survive it. Lunzie hated the daily effort to worm her way into a clean pressure garment, the intimate adjustments necessary for bodily functions, the clinging grip that made her feel trapped all the time. Discipline could banish in her some of the fatigue that her colleagues, Tailler and Bias felt, at least for awhile, so that her fingers did not slip on the instruments or tremble when she ate. But by the end of a working day they were all tired, and trying not to be grumpy.

To add to their discomfort, Diplo's natural rotation and political ”day,” were just enough longer than standard to exhaust them, without justifying adherence to Standard measures.

Lunzie found the research fascinating, and had to remind herself that her real reason for coming had nothing to do with heavyworlder response to coldsleep. Especially as she only had a limited time to make contact with Zebara. She had been able to establish that

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he was still alive, and on Diplo. Contacting him might be difficult and enlisting his aid was problematic. But Zebara was the only option. He'd be at least 80, she reminded herself, even if living on s.h.i.+ps and low-G worlds would have improved his probable life expectancy. They had trusted each other at one point: would that old trust suffice for the information she required of him? If, that is, he was in a position to help at all.

At the end of the first week, the team had its first official recognition: an invitation to a formal reception and dance at the Governor's Palace. The team quit work early. Lunzie spent an hour soaking in a hot tub before she dressed. The need to wear pressure garments constantly meant that ”formal dress” for the women would be more concealing than usual. Lunzie had packed a green gown, long-sleeved and high-necked, that covered the protective garment but clung to her torso. Wide-floating skirts hung unevenly in Diplo's heavy gravity. She'd been warned, so this had only enough flare to make walking and dancing easy. She looked in her mirror and smiled. She looked more fragile than she was, less dangerous: exactly right.

The team gathered in Tailler's room to await then-transport to the festivities. Lunzie asked about the Governor's compound.

”It is a palace,” said Tailler, who had been there before. ”It's under its own dome, so they could use thinner plexi in the windows. With the gardens outside, colorful even in this season. It's a spectacle. Of course, the resources used to make it all work are outrageous, considering the general poverty.”

”It wasn't so bad before,” Bias interrupted. ”After all, it's the recent population growth that makes resources so short.”

Tailler frowned. ”They've been hungry a long time, Bias. Life on Diplo's never been easy.”

”But you have to admit they don't seem to mind. They certainly don't blame the Governor.”

”No, and that's what's unfair. They blame us, the Federation, when it's their own waste-”

”Shhh.” Lunzie thought she heard someone in the

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corridor outside. She waited; after a long pause, someone knocked on the door. She opened it to find a uniformed heavyworlder, resplendent in ribbons and medals and knots of gold braid. She could read nothing on that expressionless face, but she had a feeling that he had heard at least some of what had been said.

”If you're ready, we should leave for the Palace,” he said.