LORDS TEMPORAL by Joseph H Delaney. Chapter One There is nothing quite so terrible as a big city on,a cold night. By day at least there are people to panhan-dle, vehicles to dodge, cops to avoid, chances to duck inside store foyers and warm up a bit. It is a shade less lonely. These distractions flee with the sun, leaving streets so silent that the crunch of a foot on dirty gray snow sounds like thunder. The people leave for warm, com-fortable homes elsewhere in the sprawling city and lock the doorways of their stores with collapsible steel gates studded with padlocks. They trust to luck that when the sun comes up again the show windows will still be intact; that out of dim shadows will come no thief with the determination to break in, or that if one does he will be quickly caught by vigilant police on patrol. This was Wyckoffs world. New York City, 2069 A.p. He shared it with perhaps half a million others as unfortunate as himself, who had no homes, no jobs, and who lacked the capability to get out of the north when the frost came. For most of the year the street was not too bad. Wyckoffknew his jungle well. Every season was unique, bringing both new rules and new opportunities. He liked winter the least, because it was physically the 2 Joseph H. Delaney hardest and the pickings so abysmally slim. Some days it was all he could do to get enough to eat. And seldom in the dead of winter could he accumulate enough coins to buy a flop. The flophouse operators knew the desperation the cold bred in their customers and raised the rates as the temperature fell. So, those who could pay, did. The others just kept going all night or, if they were really badly off, de-scended into the subways or the Mission hostels. Wyckoff huddled out of the wind, standing in a dark-ened doorway half a block from the nearest light, and tried to make up his mind what to do with the rest of the evening. It had not yet gotten really cold—the temperature was still in the high twenties—but a look up at the sky told him this would not last long. The night was comparatively clear, and stars could be seen even through the heavy smoke and haze. There were no clouds to hold the planet's heat. He felt in his pocket with fingers stiffened by the cold, counting coins gathered during the day. There were so few of them; no chance of getting in anywhere warm with what he could afford to pay. Not so long ago he had been lucky enough to have a hole beneath a demolished building, where a couple of small, dank basement rooms were still habitable, if the occupant possessed the determination. For a while Wyckoff had exercised that determination, leaving each day just before dawn and returning after dark, lest he be seen entering or leaving. Then the cold had come, and he'd taken to building fires in a makeshift stove fashioned from an old oil drum. It worked fine until the ruins caught fire, and on that night he escaped with his life only by the sheerest luck. Now, until he found another such redoubt, he was at the mercy of the elements or the flophouse operators, and he couldn't make up his mind which he detested more. Suddenly these dismal reminiscences fled, replaced by another, more immediate problem. Lights caught his lords temporal 3 eye, arcing through the night with that curious languid pause peculiar to roving police patrols. With practiced skill, Wyckoff froze and huddled deeper into the shad-ows. This was a neighborhood of commercial shops in which, during the day, labored printers, shoe finders, cutlers, hardware wholesalers, electrical and plumbing jobbers, and the like. Here was no score, unless a man happened to be a burglar. Wyckoff was not, though to the approaching police patrol that might be a distinc-tion without a difference. He decided he didn't want to chance it. The patrol edged closer, having stopped at an alley a little farther down, while a cop inside the car shined his spotlight on the rows of locked doors. Cops didn't do that very often; these must have found a break-in some-where nearby. That changed everything, and Wyckoff s street savvy told him that this doorway was no place for him to be. Though it would be comparatively warmer, he pre-ferred not to be in jail, even in winter. Some street people did, and routinely provoked some incident at the first frost. These were usually the older dudes, who'd lost that stamina Wyckoff still possessed and weren't good candidates for the press gangs, who sold their dignity for three months out of each year. Wyckoff knew some of them well. There was a guy called Silky, a giant black dude who claimed to have been a prominent pimp in his younger days and who told endless stories about how things had been then. Jails, he said, had been palaces, with clean cells and decent food, where an inmate could lie around and do his time watching TV. Nobody worked on the roads, or cleaned public buildings, or was shipped off to algae farms or sludge plants. The con's life was an easy life then. Whose wasn't? To hear the old geezers talk—and WyckofF had, from the day he'd been old enough to understand—the quality of life had worsened with ev-ery generation. His own grandfather hadn't been em- 4 Joseph H. Delaney ployable the last thirty years of his life, and he'd let the world know he didn't like that. His endless complaints about the system constituted some of Wyckoff s earliest and most vivid memories. Everybody knew the story—how the so-called Cold War between the United States and Russia had ruined the economy of the whole world. It was history, rapidly becoming ancient history at that; but its effects contin-ued to be felt with undiminished severity almost a century after the fact. The SDI, they called it: Strategic Defense Initiative, Star Wars. America said she wanted it, though many of her most illustrious scientists argued ably and at length that it wouldn't work. They were wrong. To a man they were wrong. The SDI, though it failed technically for scientific reasons, nevertheless worked perfectly and devastatingly, pre-cisely as western economists intended. Because the only possible way to stop U.S. develop-ment of the system was to have the devastating nuclear war it was meant to avoid, and because they were unwilling to trust their enemy to share the technology as he said he would, the Russians had no choice. They had to try to match the effort—and thereby tumbled neatly into the economic trap. They did not at first understand this trap—or, more likely, did not appreciate that worldwide realities oper-ated upon their fiscal system the same as on any other. And so by the time the situation's true character was apparent, they were lost; they had spent too much of a national wealth that never had matched that of their adversaries' to begin with. The result was economic chaos and political collapse. In the United States the reaction had been joyous. A hundred years of nuclear bondage had come to an end at last. Better yet, there now existed, thanks to the effort, a well-developed space technology. In near-Earth orbit, satellite factories and cities had sprung up. At the LaGrange points, vast laboratories and workshops had lords temporal 5 been constructed, and a young mathematical physicist named Eric Aschenbrenner was busy trying to prove that there was a way around the light-speed barrier. It was about this time that Wyckpff's grandfather had left his prostrate Russian homeland and emigrated to the United States, now unquestionably the dominant power on Earth. Grandfather Wyckoff was a farmer of sorts. Raised and trained under the Russian system, he had under-stood the theory of large-scale agriculture better than most—well enough, in fact, to move steadily upward within the country's foremost agricorp. But it was a long way down from the top. Grandfa-ther Wyckoff did not understand the reasons, while it was happening, but he figured them out afterward, and spent the remainder of his life explaining them to anyone he could persuade to listen. Being a child, young Stanislaus had little choice in the matter. Grandfather was around constantly, with nothing to do, and he was often lonely. Worse, there was a bitterness in him that his double portion of calam-ity could only fortify. He had emerged from one decay-ing economy just in time to witness the collapse of another; this time, that of the entire world. He told his story often. With each telling it was embellished, and details were added that had not been apparent before. It was the story of the little bank in. Singapore whose wild speculations in overvalued real estate had created a Frankenstein's monster of tiered credit in Eurodollars and brought about the collapse of the entire worldwide banking system. "Deflation," Grand-father had called it, as though he understood what that meant. And maybe he had; Wyckoff didn't know. But he did know that there was one thing all the old-timers agreed upon: the Great Depression of 2028 made all prior eco-nomic upheavals pale by comparison. More than a quarter-century later it still exerted its effects. Because young Stanislaus had grown up during those 6 Joseph H, Delaney years and had known nothing else, his approach to his lifestyle had been a great deal more philosophical than that of his elders. What they lamented he endured without a murmur, because he knew no better. As a child, he had not been aware he was poor, because everyone around him had been poor, and he was the same as they. Only when he had grown a little did he learn that there dwelt on Earth people who did not sleep a dozen to a rodm or eat porridge with their fingers from a common pot, who wore shoes in summer when they were not needed. Wisdom arrived about the time his first whiskers appeared, when a sanctimonious social worker appeared at their flat accompanied by a re-cruiter from the Conservation Corps. The Corps, they said, was just the thing to make a man of him. The Corps, Wyckoff mused—it still existed. He and his contemporaries called it the "Corpse." It was the principal reason he avoided the Mission hostels like the plague. Too many people he had known had checked into these—and into the arms of a press gang. Wyckoff crept out of the doorway just as another car was passing the police cruiser, and while the spotlight was trained on another doorway farther up the block. He hoped the cops inside would be distracted enough so that they wouldn't notice him. It was a hope soon dashed, and he knew as soon as he ducked around the corner that they would be after him. Reason told him not to run; he'd done nothing and he had nothing to hide. Impulse argued differently. At the very least it meant detention here on the street, a search, perhaps a beating, while they tried to learn his true identity. As a fugitive from the Corps, Wyckoff didn't carry an I.D. That would have made it too easy for the police to check his background if they ever stopped him. This way was safer. He took off down the alley, sprinting over the hard-packed snow, which in places had already started to glaciate into cloudy ice—the kind that would still coat lords temporal 7 patches of the alley in June. He reached the end of the alley and took a turn to the right, so that he could come up behind the squadron. In this neighborhood the po-lice always kept one man in the car, and though the man in the car might move it, he would not be likely to join his companion in a foot search. Wyckoff reached the right-angle street and raced across a bare sidewalk to the other side. Behind him, he could hear curses echoing through the stillness of the night, and he knew the pursuing cop had fallen on the ice. That assured his getaway, since he could now easily put two or three blocks between them. Even when he knew it was no longer necessary, Wyckoff continued at a slow trot. The exertion was warming his body, and he was reluctant to let that feeling go. He'd have to be careful not to sweat, though, since that would aggravate his problems with the cold. He ran on through the silence. The run ended at the next intersection, where two arterial streets met in chilled, forsaken emptiness. One side of the intersection was blind. There a huge truck had apparently broken down, and now sat with five feet of its length protruding into the crosswalk. In the morn-ing, when traffic swelled to its daytime proportions, it would have caused a snarl which would have had every cop on the force here. But in the dark, nighttime emptiness it was safe, serene, and unnoticed—until now. Notice arrived late to the driver of the low-slung Mallory Electric who whipped around the corner just as Wyckoff was stepping off the curb. The idiot! He didn't have lights on, and electrics made almost no noise. The car missed Wyckoff by only a hair, as he frantically leapt back up on the curb, shaking his fist in the air. The Mallory's driver must have first seen him at that instant. He must also have been greatly startled at what had almost happened. He turned sharply away from the curb. Then he tried to correct. But by that time he was out of the intersection. There, the driver made a second mistake and laid his 8 Joseph H. Delaney foot heavily on the brake. Lacking friction on the frozen slush, the brakes could lock, but they could do nothing else, and natural laws sent the car onward in the direc-tion of its present motion. That motion was toward the next corner—the one where, down the street, the lone cop sat in his cruiser. Wyckoff watched. The car slid onward, its momen-tum undiminished either by the driver's frantic brak-ing or his erratic steering. Nothing he did would stop the car. A fireplug slowed it, though its upper casting broke off instantly as the car plunged on. A torrent of water rose high into the air, where it was caught by the icy wind. Wyckoff's clothing was satu-rated with freezing droplets before he could take a step. His chance to survive the night outside vanished, though he quickly moved out of the worst of it. Already the numbing cold was seeping into him. He knew he'd have to go with the police now; he'd die if he didn't. If he was lucky they might not bother to check his fingerprints against the files. Wyckoff knew that doing that was a lot of trouble, and that as a bum he wouldn't rate close attention. If they learned he was a deserter from the Corps he would be in real trouble, but the odds were that these guys would understand and hold him only long enough to dry him off. He started to turn to find the foot cop, intending to surrender and be marched off to jail. The cop could hardly have failed to hear the crash and should be coming around the corner any moment. Wyckoff waited patiently, glancing behind nervously. He was growing colder by the instant, and still there was no cop. He was about to start walking to the squad car and give himself up when he heard wheels squeal-ing behind him. He looked at the Mallory, now station-ary with its nose against a building and its back wheels turning frictionlessly in a snowbank. The driver couldn't be conscious; not unless he was so stupid or drunk that he planned to drive through that wall. Wyckoff despaired of finding the cop. The cop, too, lords temporal 9 must be unconscious from his fall, or else they had received another call with a higher priority than this and left—left Wyckoff here to freeze to death. Well, Wyckoff would see about that. Though he was even now starting to shiver uncontrollably, he struggled through the drift of snow toward the trapped car. Its rear wheels were still spinning. He reached it and grasped the handle to the driver's door, hoping it would not be locked. It came open with a crunch that told Wyckoff the hood had been forced back against its leading edge. Inside, the driver lay against the wheel, out like a light but moaning softly. He smelled heavily of the sauce and was bleeding from the nose. Its bridge looked curiously and unnaturally flattened, and it was starting to swell. Blood was trickling from the corner of the driver's mouth, which made his injuries look more seri-ous than they actually were. Wyckoff had seen enough battered mugs in his time to know the difference. Wyckoff noticed something else. The car was warm inside. Somewhere below the dash a catalytic heater filled the interior with the characteristic odor of burn-ing alcohol. Not by any means a man to disdain comfort, Wyckoff slammed the driver's door and raced around to the passenger's side. He slid in gratefully and began soak-ing up heat. After a moment he felt the edge of the chill leave him, and he stopped shivering. Then he reached down and pulled the driver's foot off the accelerator pedal. The squealing stopped. Wyckoff took a look out the back window, wondering how long it would be before somebody noticed the ruined hydrant, connected its condition to this car, and threw both him and the driver in a cell. Certainly this would happen long before Wyckoff's clothing was dry. Wyckoff liked being warm so well that he decided to take the car somewhere where he could cozy out the night next to the heater. The driver wouldn't know; drunk as he was, he wouldn't care, either. 10 Joseph H. Delaney Besides, he owed Wyckoff—he was the reason for Wyckoff's predicament, and it was only right that he pay for his transgression in coin of Wyckoff's choosing. Though the driver obviously had money, and therefore clout, WyckofF doubted the city would look kindly at the damage he'd done. Getting him away from the scene of his crime might be the biggest favor Wyckoif could do him. He might even be grateful enough when he sobered up to reward Wyckoff for his trouble. That possibility was the kicker. Though reluctant to leave the heat, even for an instant, Wyckoff stepped out and dragged the driver over to the passenger's side. A minute later he was behind the blood-slippery wheel, carefully backing the car out along the tracks it had made coming in. Wyckoff wasn't a very good driver— he'd never had much practice—but the car's controls were simple and he took his time. Fifteen minutes later, with the driver now sleeping uncomfortably and noisily, he parked on a deserted residential street on the east side. He sat there, waiting for his clothes to dry, and thought about tomorrow. Tomorrow, now that it looked like he would still have his freedom when it came, would still find Wyckoff with his usual problems: no money, no dinner, and no place to sleep but on the street. That is, he told himself, unless this dude is carrying some real green on him—some "pocket money," out of which a reward could be gained. He didn't look like the kind who would. The typical individual affluent enough to drive a car of any kind generally carried only credit cards, if he carried anything at all. In many instances voiceprint verification was all that was needed to buy. almost anything, anywhere in the country. Wyckoff checked him over anyway, noting that they were about the same size and build and that the dude was sporting a really fine set of threads. To Wyckoff, even in the dim light on the instrument panel, the cloth looked polyinsulated. Polyinsulated clothing was lords temporal 11 very new. It had been developed for astronauts, but the civilian market included many of the affluent, and Wyckoff had seen lots of it down around Wall Street this winter. Pockets, let's see; where were the pockets? He fum-bled around on the sleeping body until he found a ridge, which indicated a seam. Awkwardly, he managed to pry an opening with a thumbnail. It had nothing in it. He gave his companion a roll, so that he could get at the one on the other side, and was rewarded by a blast of stale whiskey-breath in his face. He pushed the other's head aside and dived into that pocket. This one held a slim leather case, which Wyckoff extracted and held under the dash to read. He found an I.D. card, examined it carefully, then dug underneath the plastic flap and pulled it out. The plastic laminate card had an elaborately scrolled green border and a white and yellow striped interior. Printed in the margin in bold type were the words UNITED STATES AERONAUTICS and SPACE ADMINISTRATION. Below that was a long number, separated into four groups of three digits each: some kind of I.D. code for the card's owner, Emory Knowles. And underneath that were the words, "This certifies that the bearer hereof is a mem-ber in good standing of the Brotherhood of Masters, Mates, and Spacemen." It bore countersignatures of the Space Administrator and of the Union Secretary. So: his benefactor was a spaceman. Wyckoff won-dered briefly just what kind of spacehand he was. He had never, of course, met one before. Few people had. When planetbound, they stayed aloof from the rest of the population. They were an elite, well-paid group, who commanded the best company in the best accommoda-tions. They were a new nobility. "What's a bird like him doing in the neighborhood I found him in?" Wyckoff asked himself. He got no an-swer, of course, and the man was obviously not in any 12 Joseph H. Delaney shape to ask. He'd certainly sleep the night, perhaps part of the next day, and he'd be reasonably comfort-able until his alcohol tank ran dry. Wyckoff fished around some more in the pocket. He found nothing except a thin, barely readable copy of some kind of rental receipt which listed Knowles' local address as the Carlton Arms Motel, but he did notice how warm his hand had become. That polyinsulated fabric was all right, he thought. With a suit of that, he could be comfortable anywhere, all winter. Well, why not? Would the chance ever come again? Certainly not. Would its owner miss it? Not until he sobered up, and besides, dudes like him had money all the time. He could just buy himself another one. In that instant Wyckoff realized that he would be foolish to count on generosity from a stranger, that he risked all by being squeamish, that the only sure way was to take: as the rest of the world took, as this Knowles must have taken to get where he had gotten. Wyckoff stuck the cardcase back into the pocket. Then he found the fastener rings and peeled the suit off the drunken Knowles. The man shivered a little with the shock, but went on snoring. With the heater going, he'd be all right. Wyckoff pulled off his own soiled clothing and stacked it on the back seat, remembering to retrieve his little hoard of coins and the packet containing his comb and razor. Then he slid into the coverall. He was astonished. It felt just as if he were sitting nude in a flawlessly temperature-controlled building. Wyckoff had heard that this garment alone would keep a person's skin temperature perfectly at optimum at the equator or at the pole. Now he believed it. This accomplished, he turned the key and drove the car from the curb. He wanted to be long gone when Knowles awoke, and now that he had the suit he didn't need the heater anymore. He drove the car downtown and parked it in a place sure to infuriate the first traffic lords temporal 13 cop to spot it the next morning. Tossing the key onto the pile of clothing on the back seat, he strolled non-chalantly away. He spent the night perched high on a fire escape behind an apartment house, resting comfort-ably in a place where normally a polar bear would have frozen to death. Chapter Two Wyckoff arose at sunup, and was cautiously descend-ing the snow-encrusted steps when he saw the ambu-lance rush by. Curious, he watched, and noted its destination. The ambulance stopped a block and a half away, where several police cars had already congregated. He arrived in time to see ambulance attendants lifting a stiff figure onto a stretcher. The figure was covered with frozen blood, but there was no question about who it was: Knowles. Wyckoff could have kicked himself. Thanks to his stupidity, a man was dead. He'd left the car doors unlocked, thinking Knowles would soon be found. He was right about that. Somebody had found him, only it was the wrong person—one of the street crazies, no doubt, who'd taken the car and cut Knowles' throat before throwing him out in the snow. Wyckoff had spent nearly half his thirty years out on these streets, and in that time had managed to avoid committing any really serious crime. Now, in one fell swoop, he had made up for this with the most serious of all. He had killed Knowles as surely as if he had cut the man's throat himself. Panic then struck Wyckoff like a battering ram. That 15 16 Joseph H. Delaney might be exactly what the police would think if they happened to notice him here and question him. He had to run. He was wearing the dead man's suit, and it probably had a personalized brand in it somewhere; most expensive property did. If he was stopped for any reason that might result in a check, they'd have him cold. It was all very well for him to experience guilt and remorse—these he deserved. But society's chastisement would be an altogether different thing—he did not de-serve that. Wyckoff turned and walked away at the safest, yet fastest pace he could manage. He intended to put as much distance as possible between himself and the scene of the crime. Already police were swarming into the area, and most were heading from there toward the south side, which direction it was Wyckoff s natural inclination to go. That was territory he knew, where he ordinarily felt safe. It was not safe now. Down there, every derelict the police encountered would be thrown across the hood of a car, searched, and questioned, especially if he were dressed a little bit out of his class. The south side wouldn't do. Enough cops down here knew him by sight to make that risky. He'd be better off to head for a neighborhood where that couldn't happen, and wait for things to cool off. He knew how these things worked—a fresh crime, a furious initial effort to find a suspect, then gradual abandonment and indifference as soon as the hopelessness of the quest was apparent. The cops were like a pack of hounds—eager, but helpless without a scent and thus easily distracted in favor of the next possible chase. He would retreat and wait for that to happen. Wyckoff felt in his pocket, silently counted the coins. Yes, there was enough—just barely enough. Though it would mean nothing to eat for a while longer, it was the only way out. He took the coins out and hailed the oncoming northbound bus. lords temporal 17 The marquee said "Hotel von Steuben." It looked old, but it was well maintained, and there was a lot of traffic in and out its doors. From the looks of it, there was some sort of convention going on. Good. That'd mean all the employees would be fairly busy. They'd be unlikely to notice another unkempt stranger, especially as the suit's hood concealed the worst of his straggly hair and beard. He could duck into an upstairs wash-room and clean up, maybe even shave. The hotel was busy. Wyckoff stepped onto an eleva-tor with a porter bearing a rack of loose clothing who seemed to be preoccupied with searching through his keys. Wyckoff waited until the porter got off, then stopped the elevator at the next floor. There was soap in the washroom. He quickly lath-ered up and shaved, then trimmed his wild locks as best he could, camouflaging the worst of the rest by turning up the collars of the garment. This was how he found the hidden pockets. There was a slight bulge under each lapel. They weren't large but they were obviously meant to hide valuable things. Wyckoff pried each of them open and examined the contents. One item was a flimsy—-a lightweight but very dura-ble type of paper much favored by government agen-cies. Wyckoff unfolded it and read it. Knowles, it seems, had been promoted and assigned to a new ship, the Corona. Wyckoff did not know what a chief storekeeper did, precisely, but the name was itself suggestive of the duties. He checked the other pocket. There were two items in it. One was hard metal; the other was paper, folded tightly. With fumbling fingers he dug them out. He thought at first that the metal object was a coin. It wasn't. It was an I.D. medallion for the USSS Corona. Interesting. Wyckoff thought this might have street value. If he could sell it, it should bring a good price, because it 18 Joseph H. Delaney would get its bearer on board one of the huge colonial ships that left Earth once a month. He slipped the medallion back into the pocket and looked at the other object. It was a 500 CR. note. Wyckoff couldn't believe it. This was more money than he had ever before seen in all his life. He gazed into the mirror, surveyed the face that smiled back at him, and was pleased. The smile became less a smile than a grimace, but this seemed tempered by the earnest look of his ice-blue eyes, and on the whole, the effect was impish instead of wicked, as he meant it. With his whiskers gone, and the wildest of his wavy brown locks trimmed and pasted into place with warm water, Wyckoff decided he looked like a man who would wear a polyinsulated suit. The appearance, in turn, begat the proper mood. He took a towel and removed what few flecks of blood had managed to ad-here to the material, slipped the flimsy and the medal-lion into one hip pocket and his razor and comb in the other, then strode off down the corridor to the elevator. Reaching it, he pushed the button and waited. While he was there a young woman came along and stood waiting beside him. Wyckoff could feel her eyes on him, and for an instant he thought there was something wrong. But when the elevator arrived and he stepped aside for her to enter, she gave him a warm smile. He instantly relaxed. The gaze had been one of curi-ous admiration—something he was definitely not used to getting, though that was largely the fault of his lifestyle. Clothes, he observed, definitely do make the man. The realization struck him like a poleax. All these years he'd been doing things wrong, hiding out down on bedbug row. The real scores were up here, and now the door was open. He had the means to mingle among the affluent. In this suit, he would be accepted on sight. And with the money, he might share what they had—buy his way into a legitimate business, or parlay an influential acquaintance into a real job. lords temporal 19 Wyckoff entered the lobby and stood there amidst the throng of bodies and stacks of luggage, looking around. This, he decided, would be the place to break that big bill. In the rush, who would notice? Travelers could be expected to carry big money. He consulted the lobby directory, located the dining room, and went in to order breakfast. Though it, too, was crowded, he was quickly seated, thanks to his appearance. He ordered eggs Benedict, the most ex-pensive thing on the menu, and told the waitress to bring him the latest news printout. Breakfast arrived first, and it was all he could do not to simply wolf it down. He had never before in his life eaten like this. Afterwards he sat there, leisurely sip-ping coffee and scanning through the fanfolded news printout. At the end was the crime news. There was so much violent crime in the city these days that the news sheets didn't give it special attention, unless it involved a public figure. They listed murders, for instance, by location, date, and name, if known. Knowing the loca-tion, Wyckoff found Knowles quickly. He was described only as an unidentified Caucasian male. Wyckoff felt better. He would not be hunted as Knowles' murderer. The police never bothered with John Doe stiffs. These were carted off to the crematory and forgotten. Perhaps the killer had done Wyckoff a bigger favor than he realized, running off with the man's car. Wyckoff wondered briefly about that—could he be traced through the car? He relaxed. No, the car had been rented, so the police would have no way of associating the body with the car, because Wyckoff had all Knowles' papers and his I.D. If the car ever did turn up, the rental agency would simply bill Knowles for the use, and that wasn't Wyckoff's worry. By the time it happened, the ship— what was the name? Corona—would be light years away, hauling a load of colonists to a new and un-crowded world. 20 Joseph H. Delaney Long ago, when he was a child, and when the coloni-zation program had been just getting under way, Wyckoff had dreamed of getting into it. People had talked about it endlessly, as the answer to the overcrowding and the poverty here on Earth. It hadn't been, though, any more than the ability to reach other worlds had solved the economic problems with which Earth was fraught. The capital had simply gone out into space with the ships, creating a new ruling class of affluents, and pre-serving below the same grinding poverty that had al-ways existed among the masses. Space glittered in newness and innovation; Old Earth languished below and rotted. There wasn't a municipal sewer or water system on the planet that hadn't been built in the previous century. The golden age promised by the fic-tion writers had passed this old world by. It had be-come instead a living, functioning museum, albeit a creaky one. Wyckoff knew that there was pressure on govern-ments to do away with the colonies, which promised not to be profitable for centuries to come, if ever, and whose meager demands for people made not the slight-est dent in Earth's seething hordes. For every colonist who left, two more were quickly bred, and it was estimated that the world's population now numbered ten billion. WyckofiTs attitudes toward social questions were frankly fatalistic, except when he had been touched as person-ally by them as he had by this one. He favored the continuation of the colonization program, whatever its cost, over the alternative—the Corpse—which he knew for certain was both evil and ineffectual. Perhaps, in reality, it need be neither. Wyckoff didn't know, and didn't particularly care, whether the under-lying theory was sound, while he did know and did care that what had come of it was corrupt. He had seen that with his own eyes, and knew that the stories that circulated were not "just rumors propagated by the lords temporal 21 shiftless lower classes," as some politicos claimed. They were real. So Wyckoff did favor the colonial program, which at least was a new start with a new chance for a fortunate few, whereas cleaning up the poisoned areas of the Earth was a task which only nature might accomplish, and then only after eons of time had passed, no matter how many impressed Corpsmen gave their lives for it. When she had squandered her once-vast mineral wealth, America next began to lay waste to the land itself, in order to maintain the prodigious pace of her consumption and to get the money she needed to con-tinue importing minerals from places where they were still plentiful. Food had been conceived as the key to that—the produce of those fertile plains that once had languished unmolested for eons covered only by grasses. But as more and more land was pressed into service, the sun and wind leached its moisture, progressively exposing layer after layer to erosion. In some places there had never been enough water to begin with, and what there was had not been distributed to man's liking. So he tinkered, and wrought works mighty considering his size, though puny by nature's standards. They were enough, however, to upset her balance. Soils thinned, and nutrients escaped to choke once free-running streams to death with algae and silt. What remained was not enough, and so it was augmented with chemicals with never a thought to what natural forces would do to them after they had served man's immediate purpose. The ever-dwindling harvests could not feed the hordes of pests; they must be preserved to feed the hordes of people. In the war that followed, friend could not be and was not distinguished from foe. All were ruthlessly exterminated without regard to whether it was enemy or ally, and striking down his friends, as he had, man doubled the might of his antagonists. In an earlier day the tragedy could never have reached 22 Joseph H. Delaney the proportions that it did. From time immemorial nature herself had winnowed the ranks of the husband-men and individually punished those who bruised her precious soil. But here again the meddling of men had thrown the system out of kilter. The stewardship of the land had long since passed from the hands of occupants to those of the moneylenders who never touched the land itself, but whose lingers continually groped for the pulse of human greed—and all too often found it. Now, all this was finished—the continental middle was in some cases scoured down to the bedrock, the once-fertile mountain valleys had become salt deserts, each doomed to remain barren until centuries of mea-ger rainfall had soaked through them and carried the salts back to the depths. And perhaps in a thousand, or ten thousand, or a hundred thousand years the great aquifers which had carried it up to the surface would themselves be cleansed of the pollutants man had put in them. Mere man had destroyed it all, but mere man could not undo the destruction—not with all his sober re-solve, not with all the good intentions that had been born of terror. Nevertheless, he was making a pretense at self-discipline, though in the view of many, self-flagellation would have been the more appropriate term, provided only that it be extended to the entire species. Of course it wasn't. It affected only a part of it—the weakest, most helpless part of it, those innocents and their progeny who, though they had not benefited from the rape of the planet, were nevertheless selected by those in command to pay the price for it—to become the slave caste of the 21st century. The Corpse. It was Wyckoff's timely recognition of the futility, the uselessness, the wastefulness of such projects that had saved his own skin. Glory alone rises to the pinnacle, he had concluded; blame retreats into the depths of the largest available mass. So, unconsciously—but fortun-ately—having concluded that his presence and his ef- lords temporal 23 forts would change nothing, he had deserted the Corps and come back here, to New York City, and lost himself in its immensity to live the life of an outcast. Wyckoff shook his head unconsciously, as if to break off an unappealing train of thought, and turned his at-tention back to the news sheet. On impulse, he turned to the shipping news. Wyckoff felt an urge to learn a little more about Knowles, now that he was gone. He found the Corona listed in port at Matagorda, scheduled to depart on the twenty-third for a colony called Zahn. Zahn? The name sounded odd to Wyckoff. He knew of other worlds: those closest, like Herschel and Wolfingham, which had had time to build up sub-stantial populations and with whom there was some trade; those frequently in the news, like Wells, and Verne, and Palmer and Chandler and Mitchell. But these were but a handful out of the hundreds that had been seeded. He put the printout down, swallowed the rest of his coffee, paid his bill, and left with a pocketful of small-denomination notes. He could now wander where he would. He went downtown and mingled in the crowds, stroll-ing through stores filled with things he could never have afforded to buy and which, before he had acquired his new suit, he would never have dared to enter. Later he had lunch in a swank grill in the theater section, and flirted with a girl at the table in the corner. He had not ever had the nerve to do a thing like that before. He had almost reached the point of walking over to try an introduction when she was joined by a burly man who looked like he would be jealously protective, so Wyckoff turned his mind back to his dinner. So far, he had not done anything constructive with his new situation. He had concentrated instead on ful-filling his heretofore unfulfillable desires. But he knew the money would not last forever at this rate, and he had to find a way to make his newfound capital work for_ him. 24 Joseph H. Delaney He considered many possibilities, not a few of them illegal. In the part of the city most familiar to Wyckoff, the line between the two was often blurred, with the illegality of an act dependent not so much on the char-acter of the act as the identity and politics of the actor. Wyckoff had always had difficulty distinguishing the flourishing policy games from the legal lottery, the ille-gal bookies from the licensed bookmakers, the loan sharks from the legitimate bankers, and so on, ad nauseam. He had no idea yet what the enterprise would be, but Wyckojff was certain that in this new society he now envisioned for himself there was a niche he could fill, and that he would find the roots of it within his contacts, down in his old haunts. One of them would surely find him a buyer for Knowle's medallion. He decided the sooner that happened the better, with the bulk of the day already gone. The area around the scene of Knowles' murder would surely have cooled off, assuming there had ever been a genuine search for his killer. Wyckoff hopped a bus and headed south, crossing under the river through the tunnel. At the other end there was an area of relative safety, where normal peo-ple worked during the day, and where his attire, though it would be somewhat unusual, would not be entirely out of place. He got off the bus there and started walking south, toward the docks, where he had acquaint tances. But once he got beyond the immediate area of the shops he realized it was a mistake. There was a car creeping suspiciously down the street behind him. This one, like Knowles', was a red Mallory Electric. It might even have been the same car. But whether or not it was, the significance to him of the two men in it was the same to Wyckoff as Knowles' killers had been to Knowles: they were enemies; they wanted what he had. They would take it if they could, as they had almost certainly stolen the car they drove. Wyckoff looked around him to assess the possibilities lords temporal 25 for defense or flight. He had already abandoned hope of deterrence—there was almost nobody on the street. The raw cold wind to which he was now so oblivious still plagued the less fortunate, and there were few of them who cared to brave a stroll. Panic welled. Wyckoff knew what these men wanted, and what they would do to get it. People who killed for no reason, such as those who had killed Knowles, would hardly treat a victim gently, and he looked affluent. Where Wyckoff the bum would have been safe, Wyckoff the dude was in mortal danger. He looked ahead. There was no help there; just a long line of warehouses behind the docks. Wyckoff was still too far away to make a run for the docks. So instead he began a retreat, back the way he had come, which told the men in the car that he knew what they planned. The car stopped and went into reverse, first pacing him and then speeding up, to get between him and the relative safety of the crowds farther down the street. It then stopped again, and the passenger door opened. A rough-looking man leapt out and started after him. In the meantime the car sped forward again so that the driver could cut him off from the other direction. Wyckoff was no stranger to street violence, though he avoided fighting whenever he could. He was un-armed, though, and he knew the others almost cer-tainly wouldn't be. And outnumbered, he knew before the beginning what the end must be. He could not retreat to a place where neither car nor assailant could follow, because such a place did not exist. There was, therefore, only one thing he could do: he must attack, immediately, while he could still limit the confrontation to one opponent at a time. He looked around for something he might use for a weapon. There was nothing in sight that could fill the bill, but there was a nearby instrument which might help some—the battered lid of a galvanized steel gar- 26 Joseph H. Delaney bage can. Wyckoff bent down and picked it up by its twisted handle. Turning, he faced the first adversary. The man stopped as soon as Wyckoff picked up the lid. He had a sneer on his face and a knife in his right hand. Wyckoff waited, standing perfectly still, for the other to close in. The man did, throwing the knife from hand to hand as he took small, cautious steps toward his victim. His behavior was intended to intimidate Wyckoff, to dem-onstrate he was an experienced knife fighter. Wyckoff had no doubt of this. He had faced such people before, and he knew there would be that instant when the knife entered the favored hand—usually the right one—and the weight was thrown on the left foot. Then his attacker would spring. He cast a quick glance behind him, knowing that he still had a second or two. The other man was getting out of the car, but he was still too for away to be an immediate menace. Wyckoff glanced at the man's feet, noted that two more steps would put him in attack position, and esti-mated the time. He waited for the man to take the first step, and while his foot was in the air, quickly ducked, reaching down with the lid and scooping it full of snow. He brought it up just as the man was about to start his second and final step. He threw the blinding, frigid snow into the man's face. As it hit him, Wyckoff plunged forward, his weight also on his left foot. He brought the lid around and smashed its edge into his opponent's lower jaw, then down against his knife hand. The man fell backward, striking the ground and sprawling. The knife fell from his hand and Wyckoff scooped it up. Behind him, the snow crunched heavily. Rising from his stooped position,-he raised the lid overhead, and caught the blow from the jackhandle squarely in its middle. Then he lunged, bringing the knife up in an underhand thrust below the attacker's ribs. lords temporal 27 The man dropped the jackhandle. A look of disbelief washed over his face, and he crumpled into the snow. The other man, now risen, ran past him, headed for the car. Wyckoff leaped up to follow, though he knew by now that he was safe, having demonstrated convinc-ingly that he was no easy victim. Somehow, though, perhaps because deep down inside he felt a need to strike a blow against such parasites—or to vicariously avenge the murdered Knowles—he continued his pursuit. Whatever his reason, he remained committed. In the snowbank, comparatively unencumbered by the light suit, he had an easier time than the other, and reached him just as his quarry was grabbing for the door handle. Wyckoff was not the squeamish sort. Having killed one of them, he knew he should do no less for the other. He raised the knife, prepared to cut the man's throat. As he did so the man went suddenly limp and turned his head fearfully, glaring at Wyckoff through eyes filled with terror. Wyckoff could feel no sympathy for the man. He was obviously a crazy—he had that wild, abandoned look that some of them acquired, particularly if they were users of recreational drugs. He was momentarily helpless. Wyckoff knew then that though this man justly de-served to die, he could not play the part of executioner. He could kill in self-defense, as he just had, but not in cold blood. Yet at the same time, he could not allow this man to go unpunished, or permit him his freedom in a condi-tion to immediately go out and attack some other help-less victim, and he had to have time to think about what the punishment and the prevention might be. To gain time without moving the knife, he launched a punch at the man's chops with his free hand, putting into it rather more energy than he intended. The man saw it coming and flinched, and made his situation worse. He caught it on the nose, which broke. Wyckoff released him and watched him fall to the 28 Joseph H. Delaney ground, blood spurting into the snow, steaming briefly before it froze. Breathing heavily from the exertion, he took the time to glance around to see if there had been any witnesses to the engagement. He didn't see any-body close, but far down the street behind him there was a car, and it looked like it might be a police car. Further observation confirmed his suspicion—it was the police, and they were headed his way. He had to leave, and in a hurry, before they got near enough to see what had happened. If they did, he knew he had no chance. No court would ever buy his story. He would never see daylight again. He might have tried to make it on foot, had there been cover in the areas of the neighborhood with which he was intimate, but there wasn't any. The only practi-cal means of escape appeared to be the car. Wyckoff was committed to that course as soon as a glance told him the key was in it. He dropped the bloody knife on the ground, jumped into the car, threw the switch, and sped off, hoping the coils had enough charge left to get him far away from here. As he rounded the turn that would cut off his view completely, Wyckoff looked into the mirror. The cops had seen the bodies. They were stopping, but either they had not noticed that his car had pulled away from that exact spot or they were in contact with another car and depending on it to intercept Wyckoff. If they were they might not give chase, and perhaps he could get lost in traffic. He was fairly certain that from the distance they would not have been able to see the car's license number. Assuming they would not follow, and that he could not be intercepted, Wyckoff headed north again, and sped through the tunnel which would take him back downtown. He could ditch the car there and get away free. He did not know how to program the car's com-puter so it could use the automated highways, and in any event he had no particular destination in mind, so he kept it on manual. He drove at a slow, steady speed, lords temporal 29 leaving the tunnel as planned, but then took the wrong turn. As a. result, he wound up on the freeway which led to the airport, and where six lanes of dense traffic prevented him from getting off again quickly enough to go back downtown. Oh well, it did not greatly matter. When he got to the airport he could turn around. He had nothing else to do anyhow, and he might even take a look inside the place. Better yet, it suddenly dawned on him, the airport parking lot would be the ideal place to leave the Mallory. If he put it there it wouldn't be discovered for days. Yes, that was it. And while he was at it, he could wipe it down and get his prints off it, too. He found himself suddenly sweating in spite of the suit. He pulled into the long-term lot, stopped at the gate, where an attendant handed him a time-stamped card, and then drove off toward a spot near the center. He parked the car between two others whose snow-covered windshields indicated they had already been here sev-eral days, and switched off the key. Opening the glove box to look for a rag, he came up with a handful of tissues. They would do, he thought. He began wiping vigorously at every surface he might possibly have touched, being careful to touch nothing anew. He finished and sat there for a while with the soiled tissues grasped in his hand, looking around to see if anything else in the car needed attention. At last he permitted himself to relax. He needed a rest. In all his life he had never had so much adventure and excitement in any one day. He wondered how much more of it there would be. Almost absentmindedly he stuck his hand into his hip pocket to feel the medallion, which he had been on his way to sell. He found it inside the folds of the rental papers for Knowles' car—they came out with it. He had forgotten he had this, and it suddenly occurred to him that he could, once and for all, satisfy his curiosity as to whether this was the same car, and whether the man 30 Joseph H. Delaney he had killed had been one of Knowles' murderers—he could compare the license numbers. But he never got around to it. He was distracted by the fact that the papers listed Knowles' local address as room 1892, the Carlton Arms Motel, here at the airport. Wyckoff could see it from where he now sat, and a plush establishment it was, too. Knowles had indeed been doing all right. Greed struck him instantly. What might there be inside the room? Luggage, certainly. More money? Prob-ably. Maybe jewelry, and who knew what else. It would be a haul, one that could keep Wyckoff going for months if he was careful—one that could easily provide all the capital he would need. And certainly, if he didn't take it someone else would, and it would go to waste. He had no choice. Without thinking about it any more, he picked up the papers, stuffed them into a pocket, got out of the car, and slammed the door. Chapter Three The Carlton Arms was decidedly plush. Inside the spacious lobby the floors were marble, covered at inter-vals by real Persian carpets. Crystal chandeliers hung from the ceiling in the best of 18th-century tradition, framing a glittering fountain, and at each end of the lobby a polished marble staircase led to a mezzanine. It was, Wyckoff quickly realized, an oasis for the wealthy— but who else, he asked himself, could afford to travel anyhow? The motel desk was on the second level. Wyckoff ascended the stairs, striving to appear dignified as he did so. Around him beautiful but aloof people did what beautiful people do. Cautiously, he approached the desk, hoping his strained nerves didn't show. He stood there a moment, until an attendant came up. "May I help you, sir?" The voice had an unctuous tone. Wyckoff found himself wondering how often it was necessary for the man to oil his tongue. "I'd like my key, please; room 1892." "Certainly, sir." The attendant turned and walked to a rack. He took out not only a computerized keycard but an envelope, 31 32 Joseph H. Delaney and returned to where Wyckoff stood. "Here you are, Mr. Knowles." "Thank you." Wyckoff took the items, and glanced at the envelope with Knowles' name written across the front. This looked bad. If there was somebody else here at the hotel who knew Knowles, and was writing him notes—but, no, Wyckoff had torn open the envelope. It was an airline ticket for the 23rd—New York to Mata-gorda. He slipped it back into the envelope. It was one more asset to add to his growing collection. Cashed in, it would keep him for a month. He buzzed the elevator, stepped aboard when it arrived, and got off at the 18th floor. Wyckoff fiddled with the keycard as he walked down the corridor. This would be the touchiest part. He had no way of knowing if Knowles had a companion in the room or not, or if other spacemen were staying at the hotel. This last was unlikely, since it was a long, long way from Matagorda, but you never knew. He listened at the door for a while, and since he heard no sounds inside, decided it was safe to enter. He put the key into the lock, slowly turned the knob, then pushed the door open cautiously. He was in luck— there was no one inside. The room was opulent, from the round satin-draped bed to the steaming hot tub in the corner. It was the sort of thing Wyckoff had often seen portrayed on the TV screen down at the mission, but never dreamed really existed. Everything was first class. He spent long minutes just staring, then began look-ing in drawers and closets. There was a great deal of jewelry, and a substantial amount of cash. The closets and dresser drawers were filled with clothing, all of it luxurious. It looked as though Knowles had planned to stay for months. He appeared to have brought every-thing he owned. Wyckoff wondered, at first, why he would do that, but then remembered the transfer. Knowles was leav- 33 ing his old ship and getting aboard a new one. He had to transfer his belongings, too. Wyckoff smiled. He had finally gotten a break. He would be set for life. While he was here, he could systematically loot this room, turn its contents into cash, and then disappear into the stream of humanity within the city. He got started immediately, loading a case with jewelry. He was glad he still had the car. It would provide the transportation he needed to get to town, where his acquaintances would turn these bau-bles into money. Wyckoff worked all day, smuggling load after load of loot out of the room under the very noses of the hotel employees. They would notice the next day, of course. He knew maids always reported a disappearance of luggage, which represented the motel's security for its unpaid bill, but by that time Wyckoff would be finished. He spent long hours making his rounds, seeking the best deals. Toward evening, his pockets bulging with money, he arrived back at the airport, where he again parked the car and carefully wiped the prints from its interior. He knew what he was about to do next was foolish, but to Wyckoff, it was a final flourish to extract the maximum possible benefit from his good fortune. He returned to the room, ordered an elaborate meal sent up, including the most expensive wine on the list, then took a leisurely soak in the hot tub as he watched a classic movie called The Caine Mutiny on TV. The dinner arrived just as he was getting dressed again, and for a while he sat there eating, savoring good food cooked in a manner he could easily get used to. Then he was startled by a knock at the door. Momentary fright quickly waned. It could only be someone from the hotel, perhaps a maid with some last-minute duties in his room. With labor so cheap, they were all over the place, like mice. He put on the robe he'd found in the closet and opened the door. It was not a maid, though it was a young woman. She was dressed to party and she looked distraught. "You're 34 Joseph H, Delaney not Emory," she said, startled by his appearance in the doorway. "Uh, no, he's out. Who are you?" Wyckoff's ques-tion, under these circumstances, was strictly utilitarian. Had conditions been different, his motivation might have differed, too. He would certainly have had no objection to making friends with someone as attractive as she. "Arlene. Where is he? I have to talk to him." Her brusque answer startled him, ripped his attention rudely away from the exquisite figure so subtly en-hanced by the satiny gown she wore; from the strings of what looked like genuine natural pearls that disappeared down the top of it; from the long, slinky blond hair that trailed down her back, and bounced with a life of its own whenever she tossed her head. No, he resolved. Not for me—not now. Instead, he answered as matter-of-factly as he could manage. "Uh—like I said, he's out. I don't know where. He didn't tell me where he was going. He's been gone all day." Wyckoff was talking gas. So far, he'd managed to keep the fact concealed, but he didn't want any pro-longed contact with any of Knowles' acquaintances who might decide to ask embarrassing questions. He'd have to get rid of her. "Can I give him a message?" "No. I'll just wait for him, if that's all right." Before Wyckoff could stop her she brushed past him, leaving a trail of subtle feminine scents. Wyckoff decided she smelled like an expensive woman. She was decidedly headstrong, too; he sensed he'd better handle her carefully. He knew what he must do next: get out, leaving the woman to wait for Knowles, cash in the airline ticket, and beat it back to the city. He offered her some wine, which she took, and some food, which she declined. He had not bothered to introduce himself, and she did not look as though she was in the mood for conversation anyway. lords temporal 35 Wyckoff went into the other room, donned the polyinsulated suit, retrieved the airline ticket, and went back to where the woman waited. "I have to go out, too," he explained. "Got some business to take care of. You can wait, if you like. I'm sure Emory wouldn't mind." She met that suggestion with a snarl. Obviously the wine wasn't all she'd had to drink in the recent past. "You can't cash it? Why not?" "Because it was issued against a ship's voucher. We can't give the cash to you, Mr. Knowles. It belongs to the ship." "Well, I, uh—what I really wanted was to change my schedule. I figured I could make different connections, go early." Wyckoff was decidedly uncomfortable with the suspicious tone that had appeared in the attendant's voice. He hoped this would change it. It did. Suspicion drained away completely. Cordiality returned. "Why didn't you say so? I can take care of that for you, Mr. Knowles. How soon would you like to go?" Wyckoff hadn't been ready for that one. He did have a scheme in mind, though. If he could get a new ticket issued for today, he might be able to sell it right here at the airport. He could still get a credit or two out of the situation, and it wouldn't matter where the money came from, so, he replied, "When's the next flight?" "This evening at 10:09, Mr. Knowles. I can book you on that if you like." "Yeah, do that." The man did. After punching a few buttons he came up with a new ticket and boarding pass. "Is your lug-gage at the Carlton, Mr. Knowles?" "No. I won't be taking any this time." The man handed him the ticket. For a while, Wyckoff hung around the lounge, watch-ing for a possible buyer. He looked for people in west- 36 Joseph H. Delaney ern dress, or who spoke with a drawl and who might, therefore, be heading in that direction. He couldn't get anyone interested—except the air-port police. One of them came over to talk to him, and though he eyed him suspiciously, was obviously intimi-dated by Wyckoff's expensive apparel. "You don't look poor, Mister. How come you're bothering these folks trying to sell a ticket? Why don't you just cash it in?" Think fast, Wyckoff said to himself. And he did. "You mean, I can do that?" he asked, trying to sound incredulous. "Sure. Provided it's your ticket. Is it?" "Certainly, it's my ticket." "Why don't we just double-check that. Come with me, please." He pointed to the ticket counter. Wyckoff shrugged his shoulders and stepped iii front of the cop, who marched him up to the front of what was now a fairly long line. He motioned to the atten-dant, who bent over while he whispered. Wyckoff watched, terrified. He thought of running, but that, he knew, would do no good. It was better to tough it out. Finally, the cop pulled him aside. "Ship's voucher— that's what the man told me. You tried to steal the money. I could lock you up for that. Maybe I should." He smiled. "Uh—look," said WyckofF, "we can settle this like gentlemen, can't we?" He knew the routine from here on in. He accompanied the cop to the washroom and left a couple of minutes later, fifty credits lighter. Burned by one of the oldest shakedowns he knew of, Wyckoff simmered. He didn't know what else to do to dispose of the ticket. As he stood there he could see other cops talking to the one who'd stopped him. He knew what that meant—he'd have to pay off every one of them unless he could get away. He had to get out of the airport, but that looked difficult, considering how many horny-handed cops there were, and how far he'd have to travel to do it. lords temporal 37 Even as he thought about it, he started moving, going first to an escalator. That took him down one floor, to where the powered walkways were. These would be busy, and perhaps the two who'd gotten onto the escalator behind him would lose track. He stepped on one marked gates H-l to H-14. It moved along at a brisk pace, which he augmented by taking giant steps. People beside him held boarding passes in their hands and stared blankly ahead, intent on reaching their own destinations. Wyckoff became conscious of time, looked around for a clock. He found one; 9:51. Too bad, he thought. In a few minutes this ticket will be worthless anyhow. He took a glance behind him. His two shadows were still on him. They must be calling his bluff—following him to see if he really did get on the plane, or if he was planning to turn around and leave the airport—good evidence to them that he was up to something unlawful. Wyckoff made a decision. He'd get on the plane. Why shouldn't he? What else did he have to do? He could use a vacation anyhow, and now he could afford one. Besides, it would be warm down in south Texas. There would be no snow, the grass would be green, and there would be leaves on the trees. It would be uplifting. He made up his mind to do it. Holding the boarding pass in front of him, he read off the flight and gate, and headed straight for it. On the plane, he slept for the duration of the flight, though when he arrived at his destination he was any-thing but refreshed. Awakened by a flight attendant, he was astounded to see that the plane was empty. He was the only passenger who had not left it. He rose, edged down the corridor, and started up the ramp to the lounge area, noting with satisfaction that despite the rapid change in climate he was still comfortable in the suit. The lounge area was largely deserted, the hour being late, and Wyckoff had it mostly to himself. Other in-coming passengers had already retrieved their luggage 38 Joseph H. Delaney and moved on. They had taken all the cabs, too, Wyckoff noted with dismay. He put it down to bad luck, but all he could do was wait until one came back. He had no clear-cut idea where he wanted to go anyhow. He sat down in a chair and closed his eyes, dozing for a few minutes before a voice woke him. He looked up. "Hi!" the girl said, smiling. "Watcha doin' here?" "I guess I fell off to sleep," he answered. *'Uh—do I know you?" "Ah'm Millie. Ya look kinda lonesome. Want some company?" Ah. So that's it. He looked up at the girl. She was a freckle-faced blonde, with blue eyes made up in the characteristic manner of her profession—that of a party girl. Probably, he thought, she's one of the better ones. About thirty-five, she had enough age on her to make it interesting but not enough to turn his stomach. Physi-cally, she wasn't all that bad, despite the drawl. Oh, well. In time, that would wear in, and conversation wasn't the object of these relationships. Why not? he asked himself. It's been a long time. "Sure." "You got a room?" "No." "We'll get one. You got a car?" "No. I just got off a plane." "That's okay. We can use mine. Uh—you know I'm a hooker, doncha?" "Yeah, Millie. How much?" "A hundred. That's if you doa't want anything fancy, but I'm worth a lot more, if you know what I mean." "Yeah, I know what you mean." He did. She'd be like the airplane ticket: start out looking good but wind up costing more than he bargained for. "I guess you'd be wanting that in advance?" "It's only good business, honey. A girl's gotta be careful, and, after all, I am providin' the transportation." Wyckoff reached into his pocket, gripped a couple of bills, and carefully separated them inside his pocket. lords temporal 39 He didn't want to pull his whole wad out in front of her. He drew out a pair of fifties and handed them to her. She stuck them down her rather full-looking blouse, into that repository that nature had thoughtfully provided. "Now, doncha go reachin' in there tryin' to get 'em back, y'hear? Come on, let's go party." She led the way out of the building and into a park-ing lot to an ancient, beat-up, and nondescript car—an old-fashioned gasoline-powered job. Wyckoff hadn't seen one in years. They were banned in cities, where there wasn't any such thing as a gas station anymore. But this was Texas, and no doubt they still had plenty of the stuff around. She opened the door on the driver's side. "Get in V slide over, honey. I'll drive." Wyckoff did, noting that the interior wasn't in very good shape, either. The seat was torn, and on the passenger's side there was a spring sticking up. He scrunched over closer to Millie to avoid sitting on it. "S'all right; you cuddle right on up, 'cause Millie's gonna show you a real good time." Maybe she will, thought Wyckoff. She certainly seems friendly enough. He never gave a thought to the possi-bility that whoring might not be her only business. The car left the airport, and for a while, Millie drove down the main road. Wyckoff, of course, didn't have any idea what their destination was. He simply as-sumed she had her ewn favorite motel nearby; that probably she was getting a cut of the rent from the operator. She turned off the main road after about a half mile, onto a gravel road that seemed awfully lonely. It had no other traffic and no lights. "Shortcut," she explained. "I'm gettin' a little impatient. How 'bout you?" "Yeah," answered Wyckoff. "Why don't we stop right here, then—have us a quickie, just t'get warmed up, huh?" Wyckoff still hadn't figured it out. He should have. This wasn't the way hookers operated. They were in the 40 Joseph H. Delaney business of selling time—they didn't waste it. But be-fore he had that theory worked out, she had the car stopped on the side of the road and the ignition switched off "There," she said, "ain't this nice? C'mere." She grabbed him and threw her arms around his neck, pulling him toward pursed lips. It was then that the feeling of the situation's basic wrongness hit Wyckoff. Unfortunately, it was also when the blackjack hit him. The lights went out before he even got a taste of his hundred credits' worth. Chapter Four "Lordy, yew are alive, after all. I was afraid yew was day-ud." Wyckoff didn't quite know how to answer; what was more, he didn't know if it was physically possible to answer. His mouth felt like it was upholstered with fuzz. He tried to move, and pain throbbed. Despite the pain, he ordered his hands to feel the seams of his pockets. Open, all of them; and flat, all flat! God, she'd got it all; every credit. Wyckoff groaned, both from the agony of his wounds and from the greater agony of his loss. He'd had over eight thousand credits when he'd met Millie. Now he was wiped out. He looked up, into the face of his new benefactor. He wore a uniform—a cop! "Where am I?" he asked, bracing himself for yet another variety of drawl. He could only hope that with exposure this would get easier. It seemed to work that way. "T'the side a farm-market road 753, that's where. And you're lucky I spotted you. Coulda been there wouldn'a been nobody along for hours. You gonna be okay?" "Yeah. I think so. I've been robbed. It was a hooker. Her name's Millie. Maybe you know her?" 41 42 Joseph H. Delaney "Sure. sure. I know all the hookers 'round these parts. They all got the same name—the same face. Mister, you can kiss your bankroll goodbye. Just thank your lucky stars they clouted you steada cuttin' your throat. That's the way we usually find you dudes." Wyckoff struggled to rise, noted that he was on some kind of anthill and that the ants were biting him. He yelled, jumped to his feet, instantly regretted the act, and held his head in both hands. "Take it easy," the man said. "No need t'get all stirred up. Here, lemme get 'em off you. Y'know, you're lucky. You coulda been dumped in a nest a fire ants. Then you'd have some real misery. What's your name, anyway?" "Knowles; Emory Knowles. I'm from New York." "Figures. They always pick on the dudes. You're lucky she left you your pants. Usually we find you guys plumb naked." Wyckoff felt the rest of his pockets. He could tell by their flatness they were all empty—that is, all but two. Up on his lapels, the hidden pockets still bulged slightly. These had apparently been overlooked. Somehow, that realization didn't comfort Wyckoff much. There was nothing of value in them, just the medallion, which was probably now worthless, and a piece of paper. "Where was you headin', young feller?" "Huh?" The twang was still throwing Wyckoff. "I said, where was you goin' when vou got took?" "Uh—oh; I was to report to my ship.' Wyckoff couldn't think of anything else to say. He couldn't tell this man he was running from the New York Police Department. "Yeah. You're a spaceman, aintcha?" "Yeah—chief storekeeper aboard the Corona. I have to report in by the twenty-third." "This is the twenty-third, an' it's half over. You'd better get movin'." "Uh—how? I'm broke, and I don't even know where the spaceport is." lords temporal 43 "Relax, son. We ain't heartless 'round here. We'll gitcha there somehow. Believe me, this ain't the first time this little problem's come up. Trouble is, all you fellas ever think about is jumpin' into the sack with the first broad that comes along. You never stop to think some of 'em ain't as dumb as they look." Wyckoff caught the innuendo—he had to be even dumber to fall for it. He tried to smile. "You got that right, Sheriff." "Constable." The man smiled, toothlessly. " 'Round here we still got that office. Guess we're a little behind the times. Tell you what. C'mon back to the station with me. I'll find ya transportation of some kind so you can get t'the spaceport." Wyckoff followed him to his car and got in. The constable switched on his motor and rolled silently off the shoulder onto the gravel road. For a few minutes he talked on the radio, using a number code Wyckoff couldn't follow very well. Then he turned to Wyckoff. "Change in plans. Gonna gitcha there fast—unless you wanta check into a hospi-tal or somethin' instead." "No. That's fine; spaceport'll do fine. I'm okay." "Well, in that case, we'll go out on the expressway. Friend of mine on the DPS has got a radar trap set up. He'll stop you somebody headed for Matagorda an' gitcha a ride, okay?" "Fine." The constable dropped him off on the side of the road. Down in an underpass, invisible from the high-way, lurked two state troopers with a timing device. Farther ahead, again out of sight, was a chase car. One of the troopers walked up to Wyckoff. "You can just wait right here, Mr. Knowles. When we get somebody, we'll let you know. Shouldn't be too long. There's lotsa trucks headin' that way." Wyckoff stood alongside the road and waited. Sure enough, in about five minutes, the trooper called to him. 44 Joseph H. Delaney "Go on up. We got one." Moments later, Wyckoff was seated in the cab of an aged diesel rig, beside a driver who looked like he might have just rolled in off the range. He had red hair and a red beard, and all of it was curly. It ringed his face below the creased and crushed straw hat. "Guess I was lucky you was there, stranger," he said to Wyckoff. "Trooper gimme my choice. Take you along or get a ticket. You must be somebody special." "Just a guy wTth a bump on his head and poor taste in women." "Hah! You run into one o' them too, huh? Probably the same one that got me last year—every once in a while they work the joints around the airport. Mine was a blonde, with freckles?" "Yeah, so was mine. About thirty-five, blue eyes; called herself Millie." "That just might be her, only she was callin' herself Lorraine when I met her. Didn't know she was back. We'll get her, now that she is, though; that is, we'll get both of 'em, 'specially the guy that's bashin' for her. Lotsa us truck drivers lost our bankrolls t'gals like her, and we ain't forgot it. You probably done us a favor." Perhaps he had. Wyckoff wasn't particularly concerned over bygones. His big worry right now was what he was going to do at the spaceport once he got there. Matagorda was big. It occupied all of the south end of the island of the same name, and a great deal of the shoreland around Copano Bay, which had once com-prised the cities of Rockport and Fulton. With the coming of the port, these municipalities had been moved inland. Matagorda Spaceport was the reason why the United States, despite all its other failings, still led the Earth in space commerce. Privately financed space travel had been born here late in the previous century, and the State of Texas had been wise enough to promote the site as an alternative to nationally funded efforts. It now lords temporal 45 flourished, controlled, appropriately enough, by the Rail-road Commission, which explained why more people recognized the Texas Railroad Commissioner by sight than the President of the United States. Thus, even after its oil and gas were depleted, fore-sight and an independent tradition had enabled Texas to remain the most affluent of all the states, and the only one which had to close and patrol its borders to prevent unauthorized entry. Had he not come by air, and thus proven he would not be a public charge, Wyckoff too, might have been turned away. Now that he was again financially embarrassed he knew he would be kicked out like a dead skunk as soon as somebody noticed. But at least he could console himself with the fact that he had been somewhere and seen something that not very many ordinary people ever got a look at. Viewed in that light, things didn't seem quite so bad, and he relaxed to spend a little time gawking like a tourist. There would be plenty of time for regrets when disaster struck. The scenery rolling by was quite interesting. The truck rumbled over the long bridge that connected the island and the mainland, and in the distance Wyckoff could see mile after mile of low buildings. He won-dered where the ships were, but he guessed that the launch and recovery areas would be on the seaward side, as far away from habitation as possible. The truck driver, who up until this time had seemed content to let Wyckoff have his thoughts as he must have had his own, broke the long silence. "I can take you as far as Operations, Mister. I got t'go there anyhow t'find out where t'drop m'load. But they'll be able t'give you directions t'your ship." "Okay." Up until this point, Wyckoff's plans had been woefully incomplete. He had no idea whatsoever what to do next. He'd gone along with the constable's plan only because to have objected might have looked suspicious, 46 Joseph H. Delaney and he'd figured that once he'd gotten to the port he could just wander off and go back to someplace more interesting. When they arrived at Matagorda, physical realities changed his plans. The truck went through half a dozen checkpoints, and had to show papers at every one of them. He had kept the medallion and orders in his hand since. "They're so scared somebody's gonna sneak in here," said the driver. "I waste more time on this run than any other I make." Wyckoff nodded agreement, but said nothing. He was thinking that it might be just as hard to get out. The truck pulled up in front of the Operations build-ing and stopped. "This is where I leave you, partner. Have a good trip, wherever you're goin'." Wyckoff thanked him for the ride and jumped out. He glanced around to see what possibilities there might be to slip away. There were none. An armed, uni-formed man with a clipboard strode up. "Yes, sir? Destination?" "Uh—the Corona." He still had the paper and the medallion in his hand. "Coronal You're late, man; she's in final countdown. Better hustle inside; they'll take care of you." He gestured. Wyckoff, feeling that he was being carefully herded toward a place he had no business going, entered the Operations building. It was crowded with people, a situation that would have been ideal for ducking out, had the guard not interfered again. He stuck his head in the doorway and yelled to a red-haired man at the counter. "Hey, Murphy! Here's Corona's lost sheep." He pointed to Wyckoff. Murphy motioned him forward. "Gotcha all set, Mr. Knowles. Just sign all these, and I'll stamp 'em. We'll get you out pronto." "What are they?" Wyckoff realized immediately it had been a mistake lords temporal 47 to ask. Only the fact that they were so rushed pre-vented an inquiry which would have unmasked him then. Murphy answered, "Just the usual: ship's articles, payroll assignment, insurance forms, tax waiver request, and so on. Routine stuff." He handed Wyckoff a ballpoint peft and gazed at him with watery blue eyes. Wyckoff took the pen and painstakingly signed "Em-ory Knowles" to all of them, concentrating deeply lest he forget himself and sign his true name. When he was finished, Murphy whacked each one in several places with rubber stamps, then scrawled his own initials. "There you go, all set." He tore off the back copies of several sets of forms and handed them to Wyckoff. "Ship's waitin'." "How do I get there?" Murphy picked up a pager and yelled, "Greely!" "Yeah?' a voice answered. "Passenger for the Corona. Pick him up out front." Turning to Wyckoff, he said, "Jeep'll be by directly." He pointed to the front door. Wyckoff turned and walked out. Whatever had pos-sessed him to get into this fix? Now he was going to space. There was no way out now, and surely he'd be recognized as an impostor as soon as he got aboard. He'd be arrested, and at least charged with the theft of Knowles' possessions—if not with his murder, and who knew what all else. Surely, he thought, there must be stiff penalties for impersonating a spaceman, He did not have a whole lot of time to think about it on the way to the Corona. Greely drove like a fiend, pouring kilowatts into the jeep's motor, whipping around obstacles and taking pains not to miss any of the bumps on the tarmac. In a couple of minutes they were in the launch area and the Corona was looming large. She rested in a cradle in the center of a huge dishlike affair, part of which was hinged to admit ships. Once inside, a gantry on each side positioned her at the focal 48 Joseph H. Delaney point of twenty banks of continuously firing lasers fed by an orbital mirror, which beamed down megawatts of power by microwave. At the other end of the voyage, since she was headed for a regularly designated colony planet, she would also find a cradle with which to land. Always, Wyckoflfknew, this was the first thing done. Ships could land on their Aschenbrenners, but this was enormously destructive to the planetary surface, and somewhat dangerous to the ships themselves. Greely whipped the jeep up a ramp that led under the cradle and stopped. Ahead was a gantry with a steel mesh cage at the end of its boom. "Here you are, Mr. Knowles. End of the line." Wyckoff got out of the jeep and looked around. There was a man near the cage, holding the door open and motioning for him to hurry. Wyckoff did. He fairly ran over and stepped in. The man got in with him, and on the way demanded WyckofFs papers. Wyckoff began sweating, thinking per-haps this was a last-minute identity check. But no, the man only wanted to know which deck to stop at. He handed the papers back immediately. Wyckoff began to wonder if he might not be safe after all. No one had yet even remotely suspected he wasn't Knowles. And, he thought, why should they? Why would anybody anticipate the impersonation of a com-mon spaceman? Well, maybe not a common spaceman; a chief storekeeper, whatever that was. Anyhow, this was a new ship, and Knowles was a part of her first crew. It was unlikely that very many of the crew would have met each other before, or that Knowles would have any acquaintances on board. Wyckoff began to feel a little easier about the whole thing. In their furious effort to meet the ship's launch schedule, nobody had even asked to see his medallion. The cage reached the proper hatch, and the man opened its door. Inside stood a steward, with his hand extended. "Papers, sir." lords temporal 49 Wyckoff handed him the sheaf. The steward glanced at them quickly. "Bay H-38, to your right." He handed the papers back. Wyckoff started off down the circular corridor, read-ing the door numbers as he passed by them. He real-ized, for the first time, how really huge the Corona was. The diameter of the circle he traversed must be at least 400 feet, and she was at least four times that long. He felt a shiver at the thought of anything that big flying, but reason immediately told him such fears were groundless. As he walked, the P. A. system blasted out the same instructions, over and over again, warning all colonists and auxiliary crewmen to remain in quarters and strap in for blast-off. Bridge and engine-room personnel were advised that this would begin in twenty-five minutes. He found Bay H-38, pushed the entry button, and walked through the sliding door. Inside, he found a spartan chamber containing a bunk, a cupboard with several sets of shipboard coveralls in it, a small table and lamp, a stool and washbasin, and little else. It looked clean and fairly comfortable, and since Wyckoff had no luggage, not even a toothbrush, it would be room enough. A legend over the bunk advised it doubled as an acceleration couch. Wyckoff was about to get into it when the screen on the small computer terminal inset in the wall over the table lit up. "Chief Storekeeper Knowles—duty schedule," it read. Wyckoff went over and examined it. The information pleased him. Here was the answer to at least some of the questions that had haunted him. This readout gave duty station, his working hours, and the name of his superior—First Mate Arlene Graham. Wyckoff, bushed from his travels, decided to test the bunk. He stripped off the polyinsulated suit, hung it on a hook, climbed into the bunk, and hit the light switch. An instant later a persistent buzzing began over his head, and red letters started blinking across the termi- 50 Joseph H. Delaney nal screen and on a panel of the bunk's headboard. He sat up to read them. "Activate Restraints—Hazardous Maneuver Imminent." "Okay," Wyckoff said. "Don't get so bossy." He pressed the pressure-sensitive panel at the head of the bunk. The red disappeared, and in its place the screen lit green, displaying the words "Systems Operative." From somewhere beneath the bunk, arms rose and clamped themselves loosely around him, then inflated and held him fast against the bunk. He lay there, thinking for the first time about the immediate future. He decided his luck had not really been so bad. Probably, a chief storekeeper only super-vised—smoothed out the bumps that rose in the opera-tion. He hoped so, anyway. That sort of thing he could fake. He had managed survival on the street for all these years by being a competent observer and follow-ing his instincts. This could not be that much different, and certainly was a good deal less dangerous. A final sounding blast of noise came over the P. A. "Blast-off in thirty seconds; secure all stations." The message was repeated at ten-second intervals until only ten were left. Then a countdown began. Wyckoff waited for zero and braced himself. A roar erupted, and rose in intensity. The seconds ticked by, during which time the ship seemed to be gathering strength to leap, and then she did. Crushing weight bore down on Wyckoff's chest. His head, already ach-ing, reacted to the acceleration With lancing pain. Even his eyeballs ached. His throat was dry and seemed to be trying to close up on him. How long this lasted in terms of seconds or minutes, he did not know, but it seemed like hours before the klaxon sounded again: "Freefall in ten seconds—secure all loose objects. All colonists and auxiliary crew will remain in couches." This time the countdown started with five, and when again it reached zero, the crushing weight vanished. In its place was a feeling of vertigo, and the air felt stuffy. lords temporal 51 Wyckoffnow appreciated the restraints. It was comfort-ing to have something around him to help combat the feeling that he was falling endlessly toward some un-known target. Then the ship's ventilating system kicked in, ending the closed-in feeling, and adding a low throb to the darkness. This was conducive to sleep, and Wyckoff dropped off. He slept soundly, and neither heard the P.A. an-nounce that the main drive was being cut in, nor felt the restraints slip away. He slumbered comfortably while the ship plunged on, driven by her Aschenbrenners at a steady one-gee acceleration. For all his body knew, Wyckoff could have been on Earth, sacked out in his favorite flophouse. Chapter Five There was, however, one minor difference. He seemed to have received a relatively minor impression that the door had opened softly; that for an instant a beam of light had flashed across the bottom of the bunk. He had no recollection of a subtle scent that filled the air, or of the sound of rustling clothing being hung haphaz-ardly and hurriedly. None of these things mattered to WyckofFs subconscious. Something else did—the sudden disturbance caused by someone else's weight on the bunk, a stronger scent, the touch of soft fingers on his shoulders, the sensation of warm breasts sliding across his shoulder blades. Instantly, Wyckoff was popeyed awake—and scared to death about it. Knowles did know at least one other person aboard—intimately, it seemed, from the way she was nibbling on his earlobe. He was overcome by both panic and curiosity. He resisted the impulse to bolt; confronting her might pro-voke an ugly incident that would end with his arrest and detention. No, he must have time to think. Besides, he liked what she was doing, though he pretended still to be asleep. Her hands were busy, having wandered over his shoulders and down his chest, intent on provoking another sort of confrontation. And 53 54 Joseph H. Delaney Wyckoff confidently expected that he would find the will to rise and meet the challenge. In those next few minutes instinct, not reason, ruled. The silence was broken by the sounds of explosive breathing, followed by furtive grunts and gasps. Then, in a crescendo of groaning and squealing, rationality fought its way back into the situation; silence again reigned as they lay there, clothed only in darkness and perspiration. Wyckoff feared the next few moments. He knew she would speak to him and he would have to answer. What would she do? How would she handle an error so gross as this must be? He got his chance to see in the next instant. "God, that was good. You're a real puzzler, Emory. How can you be so terrific in space and so lousy on the ground? I'll never understand that." Wyckoff took that as rhetorical and didn't answer. She rambled on. "It's probably not you at all. It's probably me. Space messes up a woman lots worse than it does a man. Our anatomies react differently up here. I need a size bigger in everything. Of course, on some of us it looks good, don't you think?" "Urn." That answer didn't tell her a thing she didn't want to hear. In the meantime, she'd thought of another ques-tion. "Where were you all day yesterday, Emory? I waited and waited. Have you got some chick on the ground?" Again, Wyckoff didn't answer. No point in rushing things. "Never mind; I don't care, as long as you can satisfy me, too. Just think, Emory—two hundred and thirty-eight days we'll be gone. And if they all start out like this one, it'll be a great voyage. Can I move in here with you?" "Um," Wyckoff grunted. "Not very talkative today, are you? I guess you're tired after your shore leave. Want to go to sleep?" lords temporal 55 <