New Celebrations: The Adventures of Anthony Villiers (7 page)

BOOK: New Celebrations: The Adventures of Anthony Villiers
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“Oh, hey, I’ve got an idea,” Alice said. She went to the service, and after studying it for a minute, mastered the controls well enough to place a call. “Oh, hello,” she said. “I have a friend staying here in Star Well—a Mr. Villiers. Can you tell me which room he is in?”

“Mr. Villiers is not in a room. Mr. Villiers is in the Palatine Suite.”

“How much does that cost?”

“I beg your pardon?”

“The suite—how much is it per day?”

“Oh, come away!” Louisa said, but was ignored.

“The Palatine Suite is our best,” said the deskman. “One royal a day.”

“Oh, thank you,” Alice said and rang off.

“You shouldn’t have done that,” Louisa said. “You don’t ask somebody straight off like that. You ask one man where Mr. Villiers is staying, and then you ask somebody else how much the Palatine Suite costs.”

“I don’t see why,” Alice said. “I wanted to know.”

“But this way he knows what you’re interested in. Not just Mr. Villiers, but money. You shouldn’t let him know that much.”

“I don’t see why. And, oh, my—he is in the royal-a-day room! It’s just like we said. Oh, you’ll have to hide in the closet.”

The door was tried, and then someone rapped. As Alice crossed to open the door, Louisa said, “I don’t think I need to hide in the closet. After all, he is taking me to dinner.”

“No, I mean afterwards, when our ship—” Alice stopped abruptly as she saw who was at the door. “Good evening, Mrs. Bogue.”

Mrs. Bogue swept in. “Good evening, Alice. What’s this about the ship?”

“Oh, nothing. I was just saying it’s nice to have a large room after the ship.”

“You’re not dressed, Alice.” She consulted a piece of paper. “We have a table scheduled in the Buff Room in forty minutes. I want you ready to leave in twenty. And no nonsense. Good evening, Louisa. You’re looking very well.”

“Thank you, Mrs. Bogue.”

“Turn around. Let me look you over.” Louisa turned obediently.

“Alice, stop larking and get moving. I think you’ll do, Louisa. Now I want you to mind your manners particularly carefully tonight. Sit straight, mind what you say, don’t eat and talk at the same time, be back by ten hundred, and be sure to thank Mr. Villiers for the evening.”

“Yes, Mrs. Bogue.”

“And, Louisa, I do want you to look your best tonight. I brought you this to wear.” She held out a silver brooch.

“Oh, Mrs. Bogue, how lovely. Thank you.”

“Here, let me pin it on. I thought silver would go with anything you chose.”

Alice, coming to look, said, “Oh, it does.”

Mrs. Bogue turned precisely and said, “Alice, you have just fifteen minutes. You had better use them to good advantage.” And she left.

When the door had closed behind her, Alice said, “It does look nice, doesn’t it?”

Louisa said, “And just when I was ready to totally hate her.”

Alice said, “Oh, I still do. Just concentrate on remembering the way we had to stay in our room on the ship.”

“Still, I didn’t expect her to do a thing like this.”

* * *

Adams let Phibbs out of the room, closed the door and locked it. Phibbs had his duties to perform. The ship that had arrived from Morian was due to leave for Luvashe and Phibbs had to check those departing at the landing port. Adams turned to face Augustus Srb, who was sitting calmly in a great chair smoking a pipe.

“I didn’t think he’d know anything, sir. He doesn’t seem to be a very bright man.”

“No.”

“I don’t think we’d even have to investigate if we had a more intelligent man representing the Empire here in Star Well.”

Srb puffed reflectively. “Is this your first investigation? This is, isn’t it?”

“Yes, sir.” Adams suddenly choked and began to wave the smoke away.

“Oh, I’m sorry. Is it bothering you?”

“Yes, sir. I didn’t want to say anything before. I thought you were trying to bother Phibbs. But it makes my eyebrows feel as though they were crawling up my forehead, and my ears tingle.”

“I’ll put it out,” Srb said. “I sometimes forget that not everybody shares my vices.” He covered the mouth of the pipe with the palm of his hand. “The air will be clear in a few minutes. You must realize, Lieutenant, that we would have very few investigations indeed if we had more intelligent men representing the Empire. We have to make do with Phibbses because common jobs in unattractive places are ill-paid and consequently no one but old fools will take them. Then, when things go wrong, it’s up to people like you and me to straighten them out.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Did they tell you why you were being sent here?”

“They said I was to be your legs, sir.”

“I suppose you might say that. And my eyes, and my ears. And whatever else I need you for. I will sit, and you will run. But do you know why we are here?” Srb took his palm away from the mouth of the pipe and looked to see that it was out. He puffed on it to be sure, carefully separated the burnt ash from the unsmoked residue with a pipe tool, then knocked the residue into his smoking pouch. “I hate to see waste,” he said, looking up.

Adams said, “They told me that there had been a number of investigations here in the past few years.”

“Yes. Accidents, duels, one mysterious disappearance. However, the stories given have been good enough to pass investigation. The trouble is that there have been too many things here that required checking by the Navy. Besides this, around the borders of the Rift there has been an increase in several illegal traffics during the past few years, thumb running in particular. On general principles, Star Well is going to be given a close look by you and me, and since we are going to do it quietly we are the more likely to find anything there is to be found.”

“If there is anything.”

“If there is anything.”

“While I was waiting for you, sir, I poked around a bit. I didn’t know what I was supposed to be looking for.”

“Did you find anything?”

“No, sir. And Mr. Villiers followed me. He’s the one I pointed out this afternoon.”

“You know for a fact that he followed you?”

“Oh, yes, sir. He even said that he did. I think I like him—he’s very polite—but I don’t know what to make of him. He confuses me.”

“I think I can understand that,” Srb said dryly. “We may have to take our investigations elsewhere if it is clear that they know we are looking them over. For now, let’s avoid being seen together and I’ll find out what I can about your Mr. Villiers.”

* * *

The
Orion
, with her new complement of passengers stuffed in their tiny cabins, with a fuddled third officer who was not even aware that there had been a layover, with a passenger lounge in which three were discussing Systematic Anarchy and another four were talking yachts (one maintaining that the day of two-man yacht racing was dead because the costs of owning and keeping small spaceships were prohibitive), but without Anthony Villiers aboard, left Star Well bound for Luvashe some eight hours and twenty-two minutes after she had arrived. Between the time that the extensors were withdrawn and the ship actually left, Godwin called Hisan Bashir Shirabi.

“Villiers didn’t leave on the
Orion
,” Godwin said.

Shirabi said, “I know. I already received a call that he extended his room. Indefinitely—he didn’t say how long he intended to stay.”

Shirabi was the essence of quiet agreeability, and Godwin couldn’t help smiling wolfishly. There are some people who need an occasional kick in the head to remind them of who they are. That was something that Godwin had learned long ago and applied any number of times to good effect. Calculated ruthlessness is an unnerving thing to face.

Godwin ran a thumbnail down the line of his mustache. “Do you want him eliminated? His baggage was clean.”

“I don’t think that’s the main point. He’s been asking questions and he didn’t leave. We simply cannot afford to let him live. It’s too big a chance. And there’s only one way to do it, too. With the sort of money that he has, someone is bound to take exception unless he is killed in a duel.”

“You mean you’re dropping another one on my shoulders.”

“Look at me,” said Shirabi. He was a common, greasy, furtive man dressed in common purple robes. “He would never fight a duel with a man like me.”

“And if he did, he would kill you.”

“Probably, yes. But I don’t want you to take chances. If you don’t think that you can kill him in a duel, we’ll find some other way. But the ship comes tonight.”

As much as he wanted to be one of them, I think it would be fair to say that Godwin hated the well-born, and probably as greatly as Shirabi. The two of them had a beautiful thing in common, and neither of them appreciated the fact. Ah, the blindness that keeps us from knowing our true friends and clasping them to us with bonds of steel. It has been ever so. Common interests are overlooked and the trivial divides.

Godwin said, “Don’t fash yourself. I’ll kill this one.”

“Good,” said Shirabi in the same mild tones. “Take him in the casino tonight.”

Godwin nodded and the service blinked to black. Shirabi turned from the screen and looked at the table to his left. Laid out on it was an assortment of weapons: swords, tinglers, curdlers, vibro-blades. He smiled a secret smile that grew by stages into a thoroughly unpleasant laugh. Some people anticipate their pleasures.

6

I
FIND IT HARD TO BELIEVE IN INSPECTOR GENERALS.
Look: men of utter probity who roam the Empire, commanding great personal power, but applying it only with restraint, secretly keeping their eyes on things, righting wrongs, checking on the practices of local rulers, calling in the Navy when necessary. I am certain, moreover, that they wait for no thanks, but simply do their duty and disappear into the night leaving bewildered but thankful people behind. And I don’t believe it. People like that don’t exist. Power does corrupt. Total personal honesty is a myth. Secret wrong righting is a make-believe game for children to toy with.

On the other hand, it is undeniable that the Empire desperately needs balance wheels—call them Inspector Generals if you like. The Empire is inherently unstable. The Navy is saddled with all the disadvantages of size, of bureaucracy, of endless confining regulations. Corners are cut, laws are openly broken, little men are victimized, bribes are taken, and those whose idea of art is fragmentation, destruction and death everywhere flourish. Who stands for stability? Phibbses? Something better is needed.

Grant that you need Inspector Generals. Where are they to be found?

You cannot cultivate a garden and produce Inspector Generals. You cannot educate an Inspector General. You cannot train an Inspector General. You cannot turn a handle and let a machine crank out an Inspector General

The job requires intelligence, honesty, individuality, creativity, judgment, and a wide variety of subtle talents not commonly considered to be part of the ordinary human battery, and subsumed under the inaccurate catchall title of “luck.” “Luck” is a noise made by those who lack these talents and wish to dismiss them with a sniff.

You can take it as an axiom: celebrities who travel meet only fools, creeps, panhandlers, and climbers. People they would truly like to meet never have the bad taste to present themselves. The quality that makes them worth meeting automatically determines they will never be met.

The same applies to Inspector Generals. The only possible candidates are those unsuited for the office.

It may just be that Inspector Generals don’t really exist at all. They may be no more than a rumor invented to keep children good and men honest. In fact, I rather think that may be so.

* * *

Villiers escorted Louisa Parini into the Grand Hall. She was obviously minding her best manners and he made a point of matching them. Mrs. Bogue’s admonitions had nothing to do with it, and neither, for that matter, did whatever plans or hopes she had in mind. It is simply in the nature of things that young girls being taken out to dinner by old friends of the family should play the game of being grown up, and that the friends, being friends, should indulge them. When both know what is going on, it can be great fun. The only question is how long the game is to be maintained before it is dropped in favor of more comfortable conversation.

Villiers saw Louisa seated. The previous night, Miss Maybelle Lafferty had been seated across from him with the room as background, and at this very same table. We already know why she was seated against the room instead of against the wall. But mark that she had been seated across the table. Villiers took the same seat as before but seated Louisa next to him.

She was dressed becomingly in a style appropriate to her age. Her dress was blue, her brown hair was pulled back and caught in a silver circlet, and she wore a silver brooch. The two pieces were her only jewelry, and her dress had white trimming, but no ribbons or lace. She looked like everybody’s idea of a daughter: warm, bright, reasonably cute, demure, friendly, and well-behaved. She wasn’t like that at all, but that is the way she looked.

Villiers ordered for them. The girl was the same homely, red-cheeked thing who had served him before. She seemed disturbed to see him.

“Oh, Mr. Villiers,” she said. “I thought you left tonight.”

“No,” he said. “I decided to stay on just a little longer. The food here is too good to leave.”

That was one of the things that Louisa remembered liking about him. While he lied little, he was excellent at being oblique. Adults tend not to count this among the endorsable virtues, but anyone who has had occasion to avoid answering a direct question directly and found that they could not will share Louisa’s admiration. She herself was only moderately skillful at being oblique, but rather able nonetheless at keeping private what she wished not to be known. Alice was a wheedler and thought she had all that was to be wheedled. Mrs. Bogue was a pumper and didn’t even realize that there was oil to be pumped. If they only knew. If they only knew. Ha.

The girl said, “Yes, sir,” and left.

Louisa said, “How long has the tip of your left little finger been missing, Tony? You didn’t have that before, did you?”

He looked at his hand. Not the whole joint, but the tip, down to below the nail, was missing. It has not suddenly been misplaced. It has been missing all along. It’s simply that no one has noticed it up until now. Don’t wonder about it—just tell me the color of your next door neighbor’s eyes.

“No, that’s reasonably new. I had an accident. Something like two years ago; I was on Livermore.”

“Oh, Fiona is from Livermore.”

“Who is Fiona?”

“One of the other girls going to Nashua. But go on.”

“I was temporarily without funds, so out of necessity I took a job rather than throw myself on the charity of the Fathers of Livermore, a council with notoriously limited and unpleasant notions of charity. I once read that practices not too different were considered proper punishment for religious unbelief in pre-Common Era times.”

“But you didn’t really get a job and work?”

“Perhaps not, but for the sake of the story let’s say that I did work. This was when they were having the last great run of the white-horned rinderbeasts. The black-horned ones are smaller and faster and live in too rugged country to make it worth the trouble of digging them out, though I prefer them. They’re far more affectionate and more hardy, too. Anyway, the word came that they were beginning to swarm and they were hiring every free able-bodied man they could find. I signed on as a flanker. Beaters work behind and run the sound machines: whistles, booms, sirens, gongs. Flankers work the sides and supervise the stringmen, net boomers, and dirt wallahs.”

“I’m not sure I want to hear this,” Louisa said. “You didn’t really work a straight job, Tony?”

“Does that bother you?”

“Yes.”

“I was supervising.”

“I still don’t like to hear about it. You wouldn’t really do anything like that.”

“Don’t you want to hear the part where the rendering machine lost its king cog and the tripwire took off the end of my finger? The rinderbeast never got rendered. In fact, it ate the end of my finger and died.”

“Oh, that never happened,” Louisa said.

“Well, I admit that the story needs polishing. But you would like the moral. I haven’t had the finger repaired as a reminder to myself never to take another straight job.”

“I like that,” she said.

“And here is our dinner,” he said. “It’s just as well that the story had to be shortened.”

So you see just how long the formal manners lasted. And you have a look at Villiers showing to better advantage than he does across a gaming table or making a cubitiflection in front of a bad-tempered woman of middle years.

The waitress rolled her cart to the side of the table and opened it to show the steaming platters under the hood.

“Here you are, sir,” she said, and completely contrary to custom lifted a dish to the table. As she did, she bent close to Villiers and said, “I have to tell you. Be careful. They’re watching you and they’re asking questions.”

“Who?” Villiers asked quietly.

“Mr. Shirabi and Mr. Godwin.” Then in normal tones, she said, “There you are.”

“Thank you,” Villiers said.

* * *

Srb and Torve were eating together in another and lesser dining room. Prices were lower, food was simpler, the decor was plainer, and the service was distinctly better. It is a minor paradox that over-prompt service can cost an otherwise superb eating place its Wu and Fabricant 4A rating. Wu and Fabricant respect a proper sense of self-importance.

Torve the Trog was eating from a heaping plate of kumquats, Morovian sugar-grass, and ruvelo, a red root-paste common in this octant as a staple starch. These kumquats were of a variety developed in modern times and Torve was eating only the sweet golden rinds and setting the little fruits aside. He would carefully strip the entire peel, set the naked fruit on a plate at his right, break the peel into little pieces, and then dip a piece into the rubelo, bring it out heavy with the red paste, and pop it neatly into his mouth. Often he would chew it at much greater length than anyone would ever think necessary.

“May I have one of your kumquats?” Srb asked, motioning at the side plate.

Torve passed the plate across the table. “Do, please. I only eat rinds. Fruit does not agree with my digestion.”

He was a vegetarian, eating no meat whatsoever except for jellied whiteworms, a delicacy with little general appeal, but one he relished. Trogs in general were not vegetarians. Quite the opposite, in fact—they ordinarily relished their meat. Torve was a vegetarian by philosophy, however, for reasons obscure. The worms were a lapse that he apparently could not keep himself from making, but stolidly denied and attempted to hide as best he could. He apparently felt it a matter of shame, as well he might. Whiteworms.

Srb’s meal was more usual. He began with chowder, proceeded to braised atman haunch sided with rubelo, sugar-grass, thet eyes, and Lima beans, and ended with a large slice of cheesecake. This is not to mention the kumquats. His beverage was beer.

Srb subscribed to a theory of great antiquity concerning the foundation of civilization, a theory beyond proof, but sufficiently within the bounds of possibility to merit endorsement. Civilization depends on stable living conditions for populations of some size that will allow them to build, invent, coin, keep records, and stock supplies for making war. Civilization in this sense is not possible for migrant populations, that is, populations whose staff of life is roots, berries, and wild animal carcasses, the search for which keeps them eternally on the move. Civilization is the offspring of the invention of agriculture. But why did man take up agriculture? Not to allow himself to build, invent, coin, keep records, and stock rocks. That could not be foreseen. No, the invention of agriculture was to save men trouble in collecting the wherewithal for making beer. And when he drank beer, which he liked to do, Srb relished the thought that he was secretly preserving civilization without its knowledge, as was his duty.

Srb ate a kumquat and followed it with beer. “I noticed you talking to a gentleman this afternoon. Did he meet you?”

“Yes, is Mr. Anthony Villiers. He is copacetic fellow.”

“He did seem of pleasant appearance.”

“He is touring Empire, seeing everything. I travel with him sometimes.”

“Hmm. Perhaps you might introduce me to him later.”

“Is possible. Have another kumquat.”

* * *

You may well wonder why Villiers should have been warned of the attentions being paid him. The waitress was neither sexually attractive nor notably intelligent, and she and Villiers were from completely different strata of society. Why should she warn him? It may be question-begging to say it, but Villiers
was
copacetic. In any case, accept that she did.

“What was that about?” Louisa asked.

“Nothing in particular,” Villiers said, calmly serving them. “I’m being watched, and followed, and my baggage has been searched.”

“Who’s following you?’

“Don’t be obvious about looking. At an angle to my left, not the table against the wall, but the next row, the gentleman in gray who looks out of place here in the Grand Hall.”

“Oh, I see him. Alice would be thrilled to death. She loves things like this.”

“Another of the flock?”

“Yes. She’s the girl I share a room with. She’s really very romantic. Why are they following you?”

“I’m not completely sure. There’s some sort of illegal operation going on here, I think, and they’re worried that I might have come too close to it.” He closed the hood of the hot cart. “I had a notion as to what it might be, but then I wasn’t able to check it out. But let’s talk about more important things. How did your father prevail upon Miss McBurney to accept you?”

“Oh, you know Daddy. He bought one recommendation and encouraged several others. And he had Jack the Hand put together a proper set of papers.”

“What are you supposed to be?”

“It’s easy,” she said. “I’m fifteen. My name is Louisa Parini. I have an older brother named Roger who is a senior lieutenant in the Navy, and I have a two-year-old sister named Anne. I have one mother. Daddy is a second son who had to go into trade. He imports rugs. Ornamental rugs for walls, not floors. His brother is old and has no children, and Daddy is his heir, and someday he’ll be a margrave.”

“Isn’t that last gilding the lily just a bit?”

She set down her fork and looked at him. “What do you mean? Daddy proved every word.”

“You do seem to know your lines.”

“I’ve got a perfect memory,” she said. “I can tell you anything you want to know down to the name of our gorf. I could bore you with stories.”

That may seem unnecessarily boastful, but Louisa was not without her pride. She did know her story. It was her business to, and she did. The brother of her story was imaginary, but not the two-year-old sister, and even at two Anne knew what to say some of the time and what to do if she didn’t know what to say: cry.

“Is your daddy still wearing his beard?” Villiers asked.

“Oh, sure.”

“I always envied him that,” Villiers said. “It wouldn’t suit me, but he has the size to wear it. Why did he decide to send you to school?”

“Oh, that was terrible,” she said. “He just got the idea from somewhere and he wouldn’t let it go. You know the way he gets when he makes his mind up. He wants me to learn to be a lady. But I can do it well enough already. I don’t have to go to school. But he made me go and I couldn’t change his mind.”

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