Джо Холдеман - The Best Military Science Fiction of the 20th Century стр 55.

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Steward had been lied to and jacked over and manipulated without his knowing it. Mostly it had been his friend Reese who had done it to him. She couldnt blame him for exploding when he finally figured out what had happened.

And now this.

Reese turned off the IV monitor so it wouldnt bleep when he died, and then Steward opened his eyes. She could see the recognition in his look, the knowledge of what was about to happen. She might have known he wouldnt make it easy.

Sorry, she said, and raised the gun. What the hell else could she say? Maybe we can still be friends, after this is over?

Steward was trying to say something. She felt herself wring out again.

She shot him three times with her silenced pistol and left. The police guards didnt look twice at her hospital coat and ID. Proper credentials had always been her specialty.

* * *

CYA. REESE HEADED for Japan under a backup identity. Credentials her strong suit, as always. On the shuttle she drank a star beast and plugged her seats interface stud into the socket at the base of her skull. She closed her eyes and silently projected the latest scansheets onto the optical centers of her brain, and her lips twisted in anger as for the first time she found out what had really gone down, what shed been a part of.

Alien pharmaceuticals, tonnes of them, shipped down under illegal cover. The network had been huge, bigger than Reese, from her limited perspective, had ever suspected, and now the L.A. heat had everything. Police and security people everywhere, even in the space habitats, were going berserk.

All along, shed thought it was friends helping friends, but her friends had jacked her around the same way shed jacked around Steward. The whole trip to L.A. had been pointlessthey had been stupid to send her. Killing Steward couldnt stop what was happening, it was all too big. The only way Reese could stay clear was to hide.

She ordered another drink, needing it badly. The shuttle speakers moaned with the same tuneless synthesized chords as had the speakers in the hospital room. The memory of Steward lying in the bed floated in her mind, tangled in her insides.

She leaned back against the headrest and watched the shuttles wings gather fire.

HER CAREER AS a kick boxer ended with a spin kick breaking her nose, and Reese said the fuck with it and went back to light sparring and kung fu. Beating the hell out of herself in training only to have the hell beaten out of her in the ring was not her idea of the good life. She was thirty-six now and she might as well admit there were sports she shouldnt indulge in, even if she had the threadware for them. The realization didnt improve her mood.

Through the window of her condeco apartment, Reese could see a cold wailing northeast wind drive flying white scud across the shallow Aral Sea, its shriek drowning the minarets amplified call to prayer. Neither the wind nor the view had changed in months. Reese looked at the grey Uzbek spring, turned on her vid, and contemplated her sixth month of exile.

Her hair was black now, shorter than shed worn it in a long time. Her fingerprints were altered, as was the bone structure of her face. The serial numbers on her artificial eyes had been changed. However bleak its weather, Uzbekistan was good at that sort of thing.

The last person shed known who had lived here was Steward. Just before he came to L.A. and blew everything to smithereens.

A young man on the vid was putting himself into some kind of combat suit, stuffing weapons and ammunition into pockets. He picked up a shotgun. Suspenseful music hammered from the speakers. Reese turned up the sound and sat down in front of the vid.

She had considered getting back into the trade, but it was too early. The scansheets and broadcasts were still full of stories about aliens, alien ways, alien imports. About restructuring going on in the policorps who dealt with the Powers. It was strange seeing the news on the vid, with people ducking for cover, refusing statements, the news item followed by a slick ad for alien pharmaceuticals. People were going to trialat least those who survived were. A lot were cooperating. Things were still too hot.

Fortunately money wasnt a problem. She had enough to last a long time, possibly even forever.

Gunfire sounded from the vid. The young man was in a shootout with aliens, splattering Powers with his shotgun. Reese felt her nerves turn to ice.

The young man, she realized, was supposed to be Steward. She jumped forward and snapped off the vid. She felt sickened.

Steward had never shot an alien in his life. Reese ought to know.

Fucking assholes. Fucking media vermin.

She reached for her quilted Chinese jacket and headed for the door. The room was too damn small.

She swung the door open with a bang, and a dark-complected man jumped a foot at the sound. He turned and gave a nervous grin.

You startled me.

He had an anonymous accent that conveyed no particular origin, just the abstract idea of foreignness. He looked about thirty. He was wearing suede pumps that had tabs of Velcro on the bottoms and sides for holding onto surfaces in zero gee. His hands were jammed into a grey, unlined plastic jacket with a half-dozen pockets all sealed by Velcro tabs. Reese suspected one of his hands of having a weapon in it. He was shivering from cold or nervousness. Reese figured he had just come down the gravity wellhe was wearing too much Velcro to have bought his clothes on Earth.

Some descendants of the Golden Horde, dressed in Flieger styles imported from Berlin, roared by on skateboards, the earpieces of their leather flying helmets flapping in the wind.

Been in town long? Reese asked.

HE TOLD HER his name was Sardar Chandrasekhar Vivekenanda and that he was a revolutionary from Prince Station. His friends called him Ken. Two nights after their first meeting, she met him in the Natural Life bar, a place on the top story of a large bank. It catered to exiles and featured a lot of mahogany imported at great cost from Central America.

Reese had checked on Kenno sense in being foolishand discovered he was who he claimed to be. The scansheets from Prince mentioned him frequently. Even his political allies were denouncing his actions.

Ram was trying to blame the February Riots on us, Ken told her. Cheney decided I should disappearthe riots would be blamed on me, and Cheney could go on working.

Reese sipped her mataglap star, feeling it burn its way down her throat as she glanced down through the glass wall, seeing the wind scour dust over the Uzbeks metal roofs and receiver dishes. She grinned. So Cheney arranged for you to take the fall instead of him, she said. Sounds like a friend of humanity to me, all right.

Kens voice was annoyed. Cheney knows what hes doing.

Sure he does. Hes setting up his friends. The question is, do you know what youre doing?

Kens fine-boned hands made a dismissive gesture. From here I can make propaganda. Cheney sends me an allowance. Ive bought a very good communications system.

She turned to him. You going to need any soldiers in this revolution of yours?

He shook his head. His lashes were full and black. I think not. Prince Station is a hundred years oldits in orbit around Luna, with ready access to minerals, but it cannot compete effectively with the new equipment on other stations. Ram wants to hang on as long as possiblehis policy is to loot the economy rather than rebuild. Hes guaranteed the loyalty of the stockholders by paying large dividends, but the economy cant support the dividends anymore, and the riots showed he has lost control over the situation. It is a matter of time only. We do not expect the change will be violentnot a military sort of violence, anyway.

Too bad. I could use a job in someones foreign legion about now. She glanced up as a group of people entered the barshe recognized a famous swindler from Ceres named da Vega, his hands and face covered with expensive, glowing implant jewelry that reminded her of fluorescent slime mold. He was with an all-female group of bodyguards who were supposed to stand between him and any Cerean snatch teams sent to bring him to justice. They were all tall and round-eyedda Vega liked women that way. Hed tried to recruit Reese when they first met. The pay was generous, round-eyed women being rare here, but the sexual favors were supposed to be included.

One of those jobs, Reese thought. She was tempted to feed him his socks, bodyguards or not, but in the end told him she was used to a better class of employer.

Da Vega turned to her and smiled. Uzbekistan was suddenly far too small a place.

Reese finished her mataglap star and stood. Lets go for a walk, she said.

AN ARCHITECTURE OF liberation, Ken said. Thats what were after. You should read Cheneys thoughts on the subject.

The night street filled with a welling tide of wind. Its alloy surface reflected bright holograms that marched up and down dark storefronts, advertising wares invisible behind dead glass. The wind howled in the latticework of radio receivers pointed at the sky, through a spiky forest of antennae. A minaret outlined by flashing red strobes speared a sky that glowed with yellow sodium light.

Liberation, Reese said. Right.

Too many closed systems, Ken said. He shrugged into the collar of his new down jacket. Thats the problem with space habitats in generalthey strive for closed ecological systems, and then try to close as much of their economy as possible. Theres not enough access. Im a macroeconomistI work with a lot of models, try to figure out how things are put togetherand the most basic obstacle always seems to be the lack of access to data. Weve got a solar system filled with corporate plutocracies, all competing with each other, none giving free access to anything theyre trying to do. And theyve got colonies in other solar systems, and nothing about those gets out that the policorps dont want us to know. The whole situation is far too unstableits impossible to predict whats going to happen because the data simply isnt available. Everythings constructed along the lines of the old Orbital Sovietnot even the people who need the information get the access they require.

Prince Stations main business is processing mineralsthats okay and its steady, but the prices fluctuate a lot as new mineral sources are exploited in the Belt and elsewhere, and it requires heavy capital investment to keep the equipment up to date. So for the sake of a stable station economy, it would be nice for Prince to develop another, steadier source of export. Biologicals, say, or custom-configured databases. Optics. Wetware. Export genetics. Anything. But it takes time and resourcesfive years worth, sayto set something like that up, and there are other policorps who specialize in those areas. We could be duplicating another groups work, and never know it until suddenly a new product comes onto the market and wipes out our five years investment. All this secrecy is making for unstable economies. Unstable economies make for unstable political situationsthats why whole policorps suddenly go belly-up.

So you want the policorps to give away their trade secrets.

I want to do away with the whole concept of trade secrets. Ideally, what Id like to do is create a whole new architecture of data storage and retrieval. Something thats so good that everyone will have to use it to stay competitive, but something that by its very nature prohibits restriction of access.

Reese laughed. The sound echoed from the cold metal street. Youre dreaming.

He gave her a faint smile. Youre right, of course. Id have to go back two hundred years, right to the beginning of artificial intelligence, and redesign everything from the start. Then maybe Id have a chance. He shrugged. Cheney and I have more practical plans, fortunately.

She looked at him. You remind me of someone I used to know. He wanted to know the truth, just like you. Wanted access.

Yes?

The cold wind seemed to cut her to the bone. He died, she said. Somebody shot him in a hospital. Somehow, caught in the warm rush of memory, she had forgot that ending.

A funny place to get shot.

She remembered Stewards last comprehending look, the final words that never came. The northeaster touched her flesh, chilled her heart. The lonely street where they walked suddenly seemed endless, not just a street but the Street, an endless alloy thoroughfare where Reese walked in chill isolation, moving between walls of neon that advertised phantom, unreal comfortsShe shivered and took his hand.

Kens voice was soft, almost drowned by wind. Were you close?

Yes. No. She tossed her head. I wanted to be a friend, but it would have been bad for business.

I see.

She tasted bile on her tongue, gazing down the endless gleaming Street again, the dark people on it who touched briefly and then parted. Sometimes, she thought, she just needed reminding. She wondered what Stewards last words might have been.

A bare yellow bulb marked the door to Kens apartment building. They entered, the yellow light streaming through the door to reveal the worn furniture, the bright new communications equipment. Hey, Reese said, its Agitprop Central. She was glad to be out of the wind.

The room blinked to the distant red pulse of the minarets air-hazard lights. Reese stopped Kens hand on the light switch, stopped his mouth, every time he tried to talk, with her tongue. She really didnt care if he had someone special back on Prince, preferred this to happen in a certain restrained, ethical silence. Her nerves were wired for combat and she snapped them on, speeding her perceptions and making everything seem in slow motion, the way his hands moved on her, the susurrus of her own breath, the endless red beat of the strobe that sketched the outlines of his face in the warm darknessShe could hear the bluster of the northeaster outside, the way it knocked at the panes, shrieked around corners, flooded down the long and empty Street outside. Kept securely outside, at least for this slow-moving, comforting moment of exile.

A DAY LATER a maintenance seal blew out on Prince Station and killed sixteen people. Ken was pleased.

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