The Mammoth Book of Best New Science Fiction 22nd Annual Collection (51 page)

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Authors: Gardner Dozois

Tags: #Science Fiction - Short Stories

BOOK: The Mammoth Book of Best New Science Fiction 22nd Annual Collection
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“You presently hold the record, Joe.”

Joe looked up again.

“Five and a half years in freefall,” said Mr Li, slowly shaking his head. “Assumed dead, and in your absence, justly honoured for the accomplishments of an intense and extremely successful life. I’m sorry no one was actively searching for you, sir. But no earth-based eye saw the Antfolks’ spaceship explode, much less watched the debris scatter. So we had no starting point, and to make matters worse, your pod had a radar signature little bigger than a fist. You were very fortunate to be where you happened to be, drifting back into the inner solar system. And you were exceptionally lucky to be noticed by that little mining ship. And just imagine your reception if that ship’s crew had been anyone but
sapiens
. . .”

The billionaire let his voice trail away.

Joe had spent years wandering through the solar system, shepherding his food and riding roughshod over his recycling systems. That the lifepod was designed to carry a dozen bodies was critical; he wouldn’t have lasted ten months inside a lesser bucket. But the explosion that destroyed the transport damaged the pod, leaving it dumb and deaf. Joe had soon realized that nobody knew where he was, or even that he was. After the first year, he calculated that he might survive for another eight, but it would involve more good luck and hard focus than even he might have been able to summon.

“I want to tell you, Joe. When I learned about your survival, I was thrilled. I turned to my dear wife and my children and told everybody, ‘This man is a marvel. He is a wonder. A one-in-a-trillion kind of
sapien
.’”

Joe laughed quietly.

“Oh, I’m well-studied in Joseph Carroway’s life,” his host boasted. “After the war, humanity wanted to know who to thank for saving the Earth. That’s why the UN released portions of your files. Millions of us became amateur scholars. I myself acquired some of less doctored accounts of your official history. I’ve also read your five best biographies, and just like every other
sapien
, I have enjoyed your immersion drama – WARRIOR ON THE RAMPARTS. As a story, it takes dramatic licence with your life. Of course. But WARRIOR was and is a cultural phenomenon, Joe. A stirring tale of courage and bold skill in the midst of wicked, soulless enemies.”

Joe set his fork beside the plate.

“After all the misery and death of these last two decades,” said Mr Li, “the world discovered the one man that could be admired, even emulated. A champion for the people.”

He said the word, “People” with a distinct tone.

Then Mr Li added, “Even the Rebirths paid to see WARRIOR. Paid to read the books and the sanitized files. Which is nicely ironic, isn’t it? Your actions probably saved millions of them. Without your bravery, how many species would be ash and bone today?”

Joe lifted his fork again. A tenth of his life had been spent away from gravity and meaningful exercise. His bones as well as the connecting muscles had withered to where some experts, measuring the damage, cautioned their patient to expect no miracles. It didn’t help that cosmic radiation had slashed through the pod’s armour and through him. Even now, the effects of malnutrition could be seen in the spidery hands and forearms, and how his own lean meat hung limp on his suddenly ancient bones.

Mr Li paused for a moment, an observant smile building. Whatever he said next would be important.

Joe interrupted, telling him, “Thank you for the meal, sir.”

“And thank you for being who you are, sir.”

When Joe left the realm of the living, this man was little more than an average billionaire. But the last five years had been endlessly lucrative for Li Enterprises. Few had more money, and when ambition was thrown into the equation, perhaps no other private citizen wielded the kind power enjoyed by the man sitting across the little table.

Joe stabbed a buttery carrot.

“Joe?”

He lowered the carrot to the plate.

“Can you guess why I came to the moon? Besides to meet you over dinner, of course.”

Joe decided on a shy, self-deprecating smile.

Which encouraged his host. “And do you have any idea what I wish to say to you? Any intuitions at all?”

Six weeks ago, Joe had abruptly returned to the living. But it took three weeks to rendezvous with a hospital ship dispatched just for him, and that vessel didn’t touch down on the moon until the day before yesterday. But those two crews and his own research had shown Joe what he meant to the human world. He was a hero and a rich but controversial symbol. And he was a polarizing influence in a great debate that still refused to die – an interspecies conflict forever threatening to bring on another terrible war.

Joe knew exactly what the man wanted from him, but he decided to offer a lesser explanation.

“You’re a man with enemies,” he mentioned.

Mr Li didn’t need to ask, “Who are my enemies?” Both men understood what was being discussed.

“You need somebody qualified in charge of your personal security,” Joe suggested.

The idea amused Mr Li. But he laughed a little too long, perhaps revealing a persistent unease in his own safety. “I have a fine team of private bodyguards,” he said at last. “A team of
sapiens
who would throw their lives down to protect mine.”

Joe waited.

“Perhaps you aren’t aware of this, sir. But our recent tragedies have changed our government. The UN presidency now commands a surprising amount of authority. But he, or she, is still elected by adult citizens. A pageant that maintains the very important illusion of a genuine, self-sustaining democracy.”

Joe leaned across the table, nodding patiently.

“Within the next few days,” said Mr Li, “I will announce my candidacy for that high office. A few months later, I will win my party’s primary elections. But I’m a colourless merchant with an uneventful life story. I need to give the public one good reason to stand in my camp. What I have to find is a recognizable name that will inspire passions on both sides of the issues.”

“You need a dead man,” Joe said.

“And what do you think about that, sir?”

“That I’m still trapped in that damned pod.” Leaning back in his chair, Joe sighed. “I’m starving to death, bored to tears, and dreaming up this insanity just to keep me a little bit sane.”

“Sane or not, do you say yes?”

He showed his host a thoughtful expression. Then very quietly, with the tone of a joke, Joe asked, “So which name sits first on the ballot?”

As promised, Mr Li easily won the Liberty Party’s nomination, and with a force-fed sense of drama, the candidate announced his long-secret choice for running mate. By then Joe had recovered enough to endure the Earth’s relentless tug. He was carried home by private shuttle, and then with braces under his trouser legs and a pair of lovely and strong women at his side, the celebrated war hero strode into an auditorium/madhouse. Every motion had been practiced, every word scripted, yet somehow the passion and heart of the event felt genuine. Supporters and employees of the candidate pushed against one another, fighting for a better look at the running mate. With a natural sense for when to pause and how to wave at the world, Joe’s chiselled, scarred face managed to portray that essential mixture of fearlessness and sobriety. Li greeted him with open arms – the only time the two men would ever embrace. Buoyed by the crowd’s energy, Joe felt strong, but when he decided to sit, he almost collapsed into his chair. Li was a known quantity; everyone kept watch over the new man. When Joe studied his boss, he used an expression easily confused for admiration. The acceptance speech was ten minutes of carefully crafted theatre designed to convey calm resolve wrapped around coded threats. For too long, Li said, their old honourable species had allowed its traditions to be undercut and diluted. When unity mattered, people followed every path. When solidarity was a virtue, evolution and natural selection were replaced by whim and caprice. But the new leadership would right these past wrongs. Good men and good women had died in the great fight, and new heroes were being discovered every day. (Li glanced at his running mate, winning a burst of applause; and Joe nodded at his benefactor, showing pride swirled with modesty.) The speech concluded with a promise for victory in the general election, in another six weeks, and Joe applauded with everyone else. But he stood slowly, as if weak, shaking as a very fit old man might shake.

He was first to offer his hand of congratulations to the candidate.

And he was first to sit again, feigning the aching fatigue that he had earned over these last five years.

Three days later, a lone sniper was killed outside the arena where the controversial running mate was scheduled to appear. Joe’s security detail was lead by a career police officer, highly qualified and astonishingly efficient. Using a quiet, unperturbed tone, he explained what had happened, showing his boss images of the would-be assassin.

“She’s all
sapien
,” he mentioned. “But with ties to the Rebirths. A couple lovers, and a lot of politics.”

Joe scanned the woman’s files as well the pictures. “Was the lady working alone?”

“As far as I can tell, yes. Sir.”

“What’s this gun?”

“Homemade,” the officer explained. “An old Czech design grown in a backyard nano-smelter. She probably thought it would make her hard to trace. And I suppose it would have: an extra ten minutes to track her down through the isotope signatures and chine-marks.”

Joe asked, “How accurate?”

“The rifle? Well, with that sight and in competent hands —”

“Her hands, I mean. Was she any good?”

“We don’t know yet, sir.” The officer relished these occasional conversations. After all, Joe Carroway had saved humanity on at least two separate occasions, and always against very long odds. “I suppose she must have practised her marksmanship somewhere. But the thing is . . .”

“What?”

“This barrel isn’t as good as it should be. Impurities in the ceramics, and the heat of high-velocity rounds had warped it. Funny as it sounds, the more your killer practised, the worse her gun would have become.”

Joe smiled and nodded.

The officer nodded with him, waiting for the legend to speak.

“It might have helped us,” Joe mentioned. “If we’d let her take a shot or two, I mean.”

“Help us?”

“In the polls.”

The officer stared at him for a long moment. The dry Carroway humour was well known. Was this a worthy example? He studied the man whom he was sworn to defend, and after considerable reflection, the officer decided to laugh weakly and shrug his shoulders. “But what if she got off one lucky shot?”

Joe laughed quietly. “I thought that’s what I was saying.”

To be alone, Joe took a lover.

The young woman seemed honoured and more than a little scared. After passing through security, they met inside his hotel room, and when the great man asked to send a few messages through her links, she happily agreed. Nothing about those messages would mean anything to anybody. But when they reached their destinations, other messages that had waited for years were released, winding their way to the same secure e-vault. Afterwards Joe had sex with her, and then she let him fix her a drink that he laced with sedatives. Once she was asleep, he donned arm and leg braces designed for the most demanding physical appearances. Then Joe opened a window, and ten storeys above the bright cold city, he climbed out onto the narrow ledge and slipped through the holes that he had punched in the security net.

Half an hour later, shaking from exhaustion, Joe was standing at the end of a long alleyway.

“She was a mistake,” he told the shadows.

There was no answer.

“A blunder,” he said.

“Was she?” a deep voice asked.

“But you were always a little too good at inspiring others,” Joe continued. “Getting people to be eager, making them jump before they were ready.”

In the darkness, huge lungs took a deep, lazy breath.

Then the voice mentioned, “I could kill you myself. I could kill you now.” It was deep and slow, and the voice always sounded a little amused. Just a little. “No guards protecting you, and from what I see, you aren’t carrying more than a couple of baby pistols.”

Joe said, “That’s funny.”

Silence.

“I’m not the one you want,” he said. “You’d probably settle for me. But think about our history, friend. Look past all the public noise. And now remember everything that’s happened between you and me.”

Against an old brick wall, a large body stirred. Then the voice said, “Remind me.”

Joe mentioned, “Baltimore.”

“Yes.”

“And Singapore.”

“We helped each other there.”

“And what about Kiev?”

“I was in a gracious mood. A weak mood, looking back.”

Joe smiled. “Regardless of moods, you let me live.”

The voice seemed to change, rising from a deeper part of the unseen body. It sounded wetter and very warm, admitting, “I knew what you were, Joe. I understood how you thought, and between us, I felt we had managed an understanding.”

“We had that, yes.”

“You have always left my species alone.”

“No reason not to.”

“We weren’t any threat to you.”

“You’ve never been in trouble, until now.”

“But this man you are helping . . . this Li monster . . . he is an entirely different kind of creature, I believe . . .”

Joe said nothing.

“And you are helping him. Don’t deny it.”

“I won’t.”

A powerful sigh came from the dark, carrying the smell of raw fish and peppermint.

“Two days from now,” Joe began.

“That would be the Prosperity Conference.”

“The monster and I will be together, driving through Sao Paulo. Inside a secure vehicle, surrounded by several platoons of soldiers.”

“I would imagine so.”

“Do you know our route?”

“No, as it happens. Do you?”

“Not yet.”

The shadows said nothing, and they didn’t breathe, and they held themselves still enough that it was possible to believe that they had slipped away entirely.

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