“Ha.. e’s getting worse,’ Vanessa muttered as they – strode together beneath the covered walkway from the CSA HQ buildings to the flat rectangular sides of what had once been the SWAT Doghouse, and was now CDF headquarters. Further along loomed the cavernous new hangar bays, opening onto a vast courtyard crowded with military flyers. The space provided was, of course, far too small, but the CDF’s new facilities on the periphery of the city were not yet completed, and so they were stuck with hasty renovations and add-on wings, for now.

‘We’d be screwed without him,’ Sandy replied. General Krishnaswali had just finished chewing them out, with particular attention to Sandy’s Parliament appearance. He had not, he’d stated, been at all impressed with such advocatory positions. The role of the CDF, he’d insisted, was to serve, not to champion. He’d been particularly unimpressed with Sandy’s reminder that her role as CDF second-incommand was in conjunction with her role as a special secu rity advisor to the President herself. She’d also considered pointing out that in her cybernetic-memory stored English dictionary, ‘advocatory’ was not a word. But she hadn’t reckoned it was the right time.

‘He moves in bureaucratic and political circles that would drive either of us nuts,’ she continued as they strolled. ‘He gets our funding, he gets the bureaucratic and legal tangles ironed out, and he organises the broad framework like a dream. I couldn’t do it.’

A gust of wind scattered leaves across the grassy lawn, tossing the lush trees and garden plants. Thunder boomed and rumbled, echoing off surrounding buildings. A flash of white light lit the gardens, reflecting in windows.

‘Even in SWAT he seemed more interested in organising than soldiering,’ Vanessa complained. Her nostrils stuffed full of cotton wool, her voice sounded somewhat nasal. ‘I wonder just how sharp the sharp end is ever going to get with him in charge.’

Sandy shrugged. ‘The requirements of the job depend on the environment. A large part of our environment here is political and bureaucratic. If we didn’t have someone in charge who knew how to do that, I doubt we could function at all.’

Another boom of thunder split the air. The warm wind smelled of approaching rain, above the sweet scent of flower blossoms. The first heavy drops of rain spattered from a thunderous sky onto the transparent shield of ped-cover above the path.

‘But then because the second-in-command is almost entirely in charge of strategic and combat considerations,’ Vanessa countered, ‘and her XO handles Personnel, it leaves the two of us with the most operational expertise having to answer to a technocrat who resents the fact that our real authority within the CDF is actually greater than his … only everyone’s too polite to say so.’

Sandy sighed, gazing out across the lawns as the rain really started to come down in a gathering rush. A frog hopped upon the grass, happily greeting the downpour.

‘How the hell did us two idiots end up running an army?’ she wondered aloud.

‘We volunteered.’ Arriving at the door, security systems recognised them and slid apart immediately.

‘Yeah, that’d be right.’

Vanessa took another route through the corridors, headed for her next combat simulation drill in the training wing. Sandy headed straight for the maintenance bays. A brief uplink connection to her office schedules showed that she had the next two hours set aside for further work on the A-9 assault flyers, followed by the usual array of procedural reviews and strategy development sessions. Bureaucracy may have been Krishnaswali’s speciality, and personnel management was Vanessa’s obvious strength-her own was combat, pure and simple. New weapon systems, new unit organisation and coordination, a whole flock of new recruits, and someone had to put it all together and work out what it all did, in the event that something actually happened that required their services.

She entered the main maintenance hangar into the deafening racket of powerful engines, klaxons and maintenance equipment in a confined space, and took a moment to glance about and marvel at the progress that had been made over the last two years. All this used to be SWAT, attached to the Callayan Security Agency and vastly undermanned and underequipped to cope with the kinds of security threats currently facing Callay. Nine teams of fifteen ‘agents,’ it had then been, with some upgraded civilian flyers and armour suits.

Now, her gaze moved over rows of sleek, dangerous shapes about the hangar-assault flyers of several models, sinister in dark matte finish, weapon pods underslung with gun muzzles protruding like the stingers of dangerous insects. The CDF’s airwing currently comprised four squadrons-troop-carrying slicks with assault-ship fire-support. Five hundred and twenty sharp-end soldiers-some from the old disbanded SWAT teams, the others recruited from police, public security, general volunteers and the occasional returning Fleet veteran. And they were still expanding, another two squadrons in the works and recruitment working overtime to replace those rare candidates with sufficient physical and mental dexterity to handle the job-Vanessa’s department. Five thousand people all told, when the office workers, technicians, planners and others were counted. A nine-to-one combatto-support ratio was somewhat greater than she would have liked, but civilian-oriented organisations did things differently than the hardedged military precision she was accustomed to. And besides, it wasn’t her money to be worried about. So long as the sharp end was sufficiently sharp, it hardly mattered … and the CDF, she was increasingly proud to observe, were becoming very sharp indeed.

Captain Reichardt strode along the vast, echoing expanse of dock, eyeing the commotion that filled the upward-curling horizon. The scene was a confused jumble of loading flatbeds and personnel carriers amidst a small sea of people, many armed with placards, some merely with loud voices and bad language. About the berth entrance to the Arnazon, armoured marines formed a protective cordon, weapons at the ready. Full battle dress, Reichardt saw, lips pressed to a thin, hard line as he strode. Duong was losing patience.

‘Captain, what’s the plan?’ First Lieutenant Nadaja strode at his shoulder, in standard ‘away dress’ for on-duty personnel-light armour hidden beneath combat greens, rank and Mekong patches prominent, as was the heavy pistol upon her right hip. About and behind, five marines under Nadaja’s command were similarly dressed and armed. Reichardt could smell their tension as the echoing yells of the crowd grew louder. These were men and women who had seen combat against the League. High-powered weapons and armour, they knew how to handle. Unruly civilian mobs engaged in a peacetime protest was something else entirely.

‘Neutrality,’ Reichardt said loudly enough for them all to hear. ‘Remember, the Third Fleet remains neutral.’ It didn’t sound right, even as the words left his lips. The Third being neutral implied that the Fifth was not. And the implications of a split between two integral parts of the Federation Fleet were frightening, to any true servant of the Federation. ‘We want confidence, not aggression. Aggression will provoke a hostile response. We are neutral mediators, you shall only strike to defend yourselves, no more.’

He could feel the unhappiness radiating from Nadaja as they walked. She’d requested full battle dress, like the Amazon marines. Only it hadn’t been the crowds that alarmed her. The situation between Third and Fifth Fleet representatives was becoming intolerable. It wasn’t supposed to be like this. In all the military stories Reichardt had devoured as a boy, the various units of armies were invariably united, bonded together in the service of a great and powerful state representing great and powerful ideals. There had been competition between various units, and occasionally rivalry, but never outright hostility.

The Fleet, however, had grown into a strange beast indeed, during three decades of war against the League. Individual ship captains were often separated from their commanders for months on end. Command decisions were usually made in isolation. Captains interpreted orders, and followed personal hunches and biases. Alone and isolated in hostile space, ship loyalties became fierce, and loyalties to one’s own captain above all others even fiercer.

Now, to make matters worse, the elements of the Fifth Fleet around Callay were ideologically extreme, due to some creative personnel distribution over the past few years. Internal divisions within the Grand Council and Fleet HQ had effectively rendered both institutions useless. At least during the war, captains had had the comfort of knowing that HQ did actually exist, however distantly removed. Now, with all command infrastructure gridlocked into a hopeless, ineffectual mess, where there should have been a single chain of command, there appeared only a yawning, empty void. No one, least of all a middle-seniority Third Fleet captain, had seen anything like it before-independent, strong-willed Fleet captains set free to deal with situations as they saw fit, while answerable to no immediately obvious higher authority. It wasn’t supposed to be this way. This was worse than alarming. This was frightening.

The mob appeared to draw down to eye-level as they approached, no longer suspended on the angle of the station rim’s upward slope. Dockworkers mostly-they looked more or less the same on every station Reichardt had ever visited, in worn, often grimy overalls or jumpsuits, and a taste for unruly hairstyles or personal adornments that contrasted sharply with familiar Fleet discipline. Along the station inner wall, less involved crowds had gathered at the fronts of stores, bars and hotels, watching the commotion with a mixture of enthusiasm, concern and worry. Fifty metres away Reichardt discerned a small delegation forming on the near side of the mob. They waited by a low, thick-wheeled dock runner, arms folded, watching the Mekong crew’s approach.

‘Captain,’ said a broad, Arabic-looking man in shoulderless overalls, extending his hand. Reichardt took it as he arrived, his marines standing back, surveying the chanting, placard-waving crowd. The Arabic man’s grip was powerful, his arms bulging with muscle. A small silver chain dangled from an earring, and curls hung at the back of his side-shaved scalp. His voice, when he spoke, was a deep Callayan-accented bass. ‘I’m Bhargouti, head machinist on station.’

‘Are you in charge of this demonstration?’ Reichardt asked, voice raised above the echoing shouts.

‘No one’s really in charge, Captain,’ replied Bhargouti, with no small measure of defiance. ‘It’s a spontaneous uprising.’ ‘And what,’ were the unspoken words that followed, ‘are you going to do about it, military man?’

‘Okay then,’ said Reichardt, allowing his natural Texan drawl to reenter his voice, and displace the military formality. ‘What seems to be the problem?’

‘The workers of Nehru Station refuse to service any Fleet vessel at dock until our list of demands are met.’ Behind Bhargouti, a large section of the crowd was now facing Reichardt’s way, cheering loudly as that statement was made.

‘We demand an immediate withdrawal of military customs posts and ID checks!’ Bhargouti continued, raising his voice for all to hear. Another cheer echoed off the overhead, workers clustering closer for a view of the new confrontation. Lieutenant Nadaja’s troops eyed the closing crowds with hard, wary stares. ‘We demand an immediate cessation of the intimidating presence and behaviour of Fleet marines and spacers on this station!’ Another cheer. ‘And lastly, we demand that the Fleet immediately comply with the lawful commands of their democratic representatives in the Grand Council, and begin an immediate withdrawal of all Fleet vessels from station!’

A third cheer, raucously loud. Bhargouti looked around in satisfaction. Reichardt sized up the situation, gazing about with a level stare. When the noise died down somewhat, he spoke.

‘I’m presently the senior captain of the Third Fleet in this system,’ he told them. ‘Now personally, I have no problem with your demands. Unfortunately, it ain’t all up to me.’

‘And just who is it up to, Captain?’ asked Bhargouti shrewdly above several shouted interjections yelled from nearby, quickly shushed by others. ‘Isn’t your friend the Admiral taking orders any more? Or does he just make them up as he goes?’

‘It’s a fucking coup!’ someone yelled. ‘That’s what it is!’ A chorus of supporting yells went up, echoing high and wide off the vast, cold metal walls of the station dock. Reichardt held up his hands, half- concedingly … and was a little surprised when the crowd quietened.

‘I’m not going to get into a political debate here, sir,’ Reichardt told the burly dockworker. Despite his size, Bhargouti was clearly no muscle-head, his dark eyes gleaming with hard intelligence. ‘I’m a soldier. I take orders.’

‘You’d be the only one!’ some wit cut in, to laughter and applause. Reichardt accepted it calmly.

‘The point here, sir,’ Reichardt continued in much the same manner as he’d often heard his father discuss the price of cattle with neighbours back on the ranch near Amarillo, ‘is that you guys aren’t exactly playing by the rules here either. Your stationmaster assures me this demonstration isn’t authorised, and that you’ve all been instructed to return to work before this here station comes grinding to a halt. You’ve got ships backed up out there nose to tail waiting to get in, you’ve got no time for a protest strike now and you know it.’

‘Hey listen,’ Bhargouti said with firm resolve, playing to the crowd, ‘you worry about your employers, we’ll worry about ours. We’re not servicing Fifth Fleet ships, and that’s final.’

‘Fine,’ Reichardt said immediately. Bhargouti frowned. ‘Don’t service them. Frankly, I don’t give a pinch of sour owl crap. The only thing that’s concerning me right now is this.’ He pointed to the line of armoured soldiers positioned about downramps and the central stairway, surveying the crowd with expressionless, visored stares. ‘Fleet protocol don’t allow the dock to be blockaded, sir, not in peacetime and not in war. Admiral Duong is obliged to clear this dock, one way or the other. Now first and foremost, I don’t want anyone hurt here, and I don’t want anything happening that leads to something else happening, and then before you know it, we’re all neck deep in cowshit, you got that?’

‘Let ’em come!’ someone shouted. ‘Let ’em try and move us, just come and try!’ Some cheers went up, but the enthusiasm was by no means universal.

‘Son,’ said Reichardt, turning in the direction of that outburst, ‘don’t be a damn fool. You’ve made your point, you got the media their pretty pictures …’ with a nod toward the small group of station media people, now manoeuvring for an angle on this new confrontation, but blocked by the surrounding wall of protesters, ‘… and staying here’s only going to cost jobs, money, and a bunch of broken skulls. Don’t service their damn ships if that makes you happy-they can do it themselves, they have the personnel if they have to. But let’s not start something nasty here that we’ll all regret later because we couldn’t put common sense ahead of emotion.’

‘Five of our people were assaulted!’ shouted a woman from Reichardt’s left, elbowing her way to the front. ‘Three are still hospitalised! We’re not the ones putting emotion ahead of common sense!’

‘All the captains have spoken about that situation at length, I can assure you none of us are happy about it. But ma’am, when emotions run high like this, I can only suggest that dockworkers don’t hurl insults at marines in bars-marines aren’t known for walking away from fights, and they’re not known for losing them, either …’

‘One of those in hospital is a fourteen-year-old boy!’ the woman retorted hotly. ‘The doctor says he was kicked at least ten times once he was down. Now what the hell could he have said to a group of Fleet marines to have deserved that treatment?’

Reichardt stared at her for a long moment, as the crowd rumbled and muttered, darkly. Then he turned his stare upon Bhargouti, questioningly. Bhargouti nodded.

‘Rahul Bharti,’ he confirmed. ‘Green sector quartermasters’s son. Real smartarse, sure. But just a kid, being stupid.’

Reichardt felt a slow, burning anger building from somewhere deep in his gut. He didn’t bother to hide it. ‘I’ll replace out who did it,’ he said. And turned a hard-eyed stare upon the woman who had spoken. She seemed somewhat surprised at his reaction. And, perhaps, a little intimidated. ‘They’ll answer for it. I promise.’

There was a low, murmuring silence. Bhargouti just looked at him, arms folded across a broad chest, eyes full of consideration.

‘We’ll talk about it,’ Bhargouti said then. ‘Give us a few minutes.’

‘Sure.’ Reichardt clapped his hands. ‘That’d be fine … ladies and gentlemen, thank you for listening, y’all just take all the time you need. Excuse me, please.’ He began moving through the crowd toward the cordon of soldiers, as senior dockworkers converged about Bhargouti. Third Fleet or not, he still received many dirty looks from the parting crowd as he passed. He did not, however, feel a need to glance around and check his blindspots. That was what Lieutenant Nadaja and her squad were for.

He arrived at the bottom of the ramp that led up to the massive, reinforced bulkhead between the FS Amazon and the station, the enormous mass of warship held suspended in one rotational gravity by several huge support gantries. At the top of the ramp, the main airlock was sealed shut, and further guarded by several more armoured marines.

‘I’d like a word with Admiral Duong,’ Reichardt said to the foremost sergeant on guard at the bottom of the ramp, who saluted. Reichardt returned it.

‘The Admiral is indisposed, Captain,’ said the sergeant, his voice muffled within the harsh, unwelcoming faceplate and breather. His eyes were barely visible behind the reinforced, graphically overlaid visor.

‘We have civilian media at six o’clock, Sergeant,’ Reichardt returned. ‘A prolonged disagreement at your dock between me and you will surely make headlines. Is it your duty to create divisive headlines on Callay?’

‘No, Captain.’

‘Please contact the Admiral.’ The sergeant retreated several steps up the ramp, turning his armoured back to further muffle any conversation that followed. Reichardt folded his hands to the small of his back, and waited. Lieutenant Nadaja and her marines continued to scan up and down the enormous, busy, curved expanse of dock, looking for vehicles, piles of cargo cans, dockfront doors or windows-anything that might give vantage to a hidden observer. Local security had issued a sniper alert for the docks nearly twenty-four hours ago, and while they seemed to be doing a good job of containing the problem, no one was taking any chances. Or rather, Nadaja had curtly observed in private just twenty minutes ago, no one except her stupid, stubborn Captain Reichardt was taking any chances, ordering an away mission without full armour, and wouldn’t it just be her luck if some halftrained civvie terrorist managed to achieve what League marines, warships and GIs hadn’t managed in ten years of war …

The Amazon lieutenant turned and beckoned to Reichardt, who followed him up the ramp, Nadaja’s contingent behind. The heavy, double-sided airlock hummed open, revealing a harshly lit passage beyond. That passage in turn connected to a white, retractable passage with accordian walls and a narrow metal walkway along the middle. Breath frosted in minus twenty degrees celsius, the familiar chill pinching the cheeks, numbing the fingers. Then through the heavy, double-reinforced main hatch of the warship itself, and along narrow, familiar grey-metal passageways, ducking bulkheads and dodging saluting crew at regular intervals.

The Admiral’s quarters were just off the bridge. Reichardt waited alone, Nadaja and her marines waiting in the mustering hall near the main airlock, as was customary for the escorts of Fleet captains. The Amazon marine knocked, his armour rattling. Passing crew gave wary, distrustful looks. The door hummed open. The lieutenant saluted, and departed with a thumping of armoured footsteps.

The Admiral’s quarters were as sparse and cramped as any on board a warship. Admiral Duong rose from the chair at his narrow workdesk as Reichardt entered, plain and unadorned in a simple jumpsuit and jacket. They exchanged salutes. Reichardt’s was calm and measured. Duong’s, stiff and sharp. His angular, Asiatic features were drawn in an expression of hard displeasure.

‘Captain. What brings you to my dock?’

‘Sir,’ said Reichardt, carefully, ‘I thought I could be of assistance.’

‘I did not ask for your intervention, Captain.’

‘I thought it prudent.’ The look in Duong’s eyes might have reduced many other Fleet officers to nervous trembles. Reichardt felt only caution. And that too, he knew, was a reason he’d been chosen to play this most unwelcome of parts. ‘Have the protesters dispersed?’

‘They are beginning to,’ Duong replied coldly, in a tone that suggested he hardly thought it mattered. ‘Your infamous initiative reaches new heights, Captain. I wonder what you shall try next, beyond your authority?’

‘I have all the authority you do, Admiral.’

‘You are a captain,’ snapped Duong. ‘In this room, on this ship, you should know your place.’

Reichardt held his tongue, lest he say some things he would doubtless come to regret. Besides, he was in no mood to start cursing Duong when the choicest of his curses were reserved for the spineless cowards back in HQ who hadn’t had the guts to assign anyone above the rank of captain for these duties. Everyone knew that Supreme Admiral Bertali and his little gang of pro-Earth hardliners were behind the Fifth Fleet’s move on Callay. Bertali’s gang were a minority among senior officers, but still the rest of HQ were running scared, and no line admiral worth his or her salt had volunteered for the job of keeping an eye on Duong. And so it had fallen to the Callayan System resident, Captain Reichardt, whose notorious involvement in certain incidents two years before had kept him locked in local orbit, answering charges and political attacks from all sides.

The normal course of action would have been for the captain to be stood down, and answer the allegations in person while removed from duty. Instead, Fleet HQ had simply made FS Mekong’s Callayan posting permanent. Thus he had become something of a celebrity over the last two years, and gained a great deal of access to various Callayan leaders, including those in charge of establishing the new, controversial Callayan Defence Force. And seeing that he’d become something of a local expert on what was euphemistically known as the ‘Callayan problem,’ HQ had begun deferring to his expertise on the matter … not that they’d ever have dared to actually promote him in accordance with his new importance. Thus, when the Fifth had arrived in system a little over a month ago, it had fallen to the reliable Captain Reichardt to figure out how to deal with the problem. Damn right HQ trusted him. They trusted him so much that all responsibility for decisions made were his, not theirs. He took the brunt of Duong’s tempers. He would take the blame if Duong went too far. And he would be the most visible member of any opposition to the Supreme Admiral and his hardline cronies. The sheer cowardice took his breath away.

‘Admiral,’ Reichardt said, ‘are you aware of the case regarding a fourteen-year-old boy named Rahul Bharti?’

‘The matter is being looked at. Is that the only reason you’re here?’

‘This behaviour from Fifth Fleet personnel on station will not help your cause, Admiral …’

‘Are you accusing me of direct responsibility?’ Duong said angrily, his dark eyes flashing.

‘What is an officer,’ Reichardt said coolly, ‘if not the defining example of `direct responsibility’?’

Duong glared. ‘Captain, maybe you should take a look around. The current climate of Callay verges on sedition! This is not a world of strength and conviction, this is a world of decadence and privilege. While Earth was losing millions in the struggle, they danced and partied and got high on mind-bending stimulants … and now they want to control the Fleet? Where did they earn this right? And what on Earth could they have done to have earned the support of any Fleet officer? Particularly an Earth native like yourself, with a war record as esteemed as your own?’

‘Democracy is democracy, Admiral,’ said Reichardt. ‘The Federation has voted … and wouldn’t you know it, there’s three times more Feddie citizens now who don’t live on Earth than those who do. I’m a soldier of the Federation, I serve all Federation citizens, and quite frankly, Admiral, I don’t see what my place of birth has to do with anything.’

‘You have no authority to obstruct me,’ Duong retorted sharply.

‘You have no authority to even be here,’ Reichardt replied.

‘My authority comes directly from Supreme Admiral Bertali, Captain Reichardt.’

‘And his comes from the Grand Council, who haven’t said a word because they’re deadlocked and pathetic, as usual. Yours is the authority of default, Admiral. It doesn’t qualify.’

Fifth Fleet Admiral and Third Fleet Captain locked stares for ten straight seconds. Duong then took a deep breath, and turned to his workdesk. There were photographs clipped into magnetic holders upon the wall above the desk. Faces of Fleet officers, some smiling but mostly not.

‘I was in the war from the beginning,’ Duong said in a quiet, contemplative tone that did not quite disguise the steel beneath his words. ‘Thirty years and countless friends, it cost me. I remember what it was all for, Captain, even if others might have forgotten. The war was to save humanity from being warped by runaway technology into something unrecognisable. Now, people think that we have won, and that’s that. They forget that the price of peace is constant vigilance, even in peacetime.’

He swung back around to face Reichardt. ‘There is a GI, Captain, effectively running the Callayan Defence Force. An ex-League GI, from Dark Star itself. And would you believe it, she’s becoming popular.’ He nearly spat out the word, as if it caused him pain. ‘As if it were a contest of celebrities. As if suddenly it does not matter what she is, and what she represents for the future of all humanity. This is the vector that the new Federation would take. As if the old ideals for which so many of us fought and died were all for nothing. Do you think they’re all for nothing, Captain? Or does the concept not bother your moderate, liberal soul?’

‘I’ve met the GI in question, Admiral,’ Reichardt replied calmly. ‘I replace her to be a very decent person. The Federation I believe in is one where decent people are well done by. Whatever other baggage you choose to attach to it is your concern.’

‘Decency is no test,’ Duong said sombrely. ‘Most people are decent, whichever side they fight for. In our duties, Captain, we have caused the deaths of a great many decent League soldiers. It does not change the fact that the regime and ideologies that they served would have taken the human species in abominable directions. If the war taught me one lesson, it is that values must be fought for or surrendered. The defeat of the League does not make that adage any less true today.’

‘And if we cease to be soldiers, Admiral?’ said Reichardt. ‘If we cease to serve the oath that we swore to? What shall become of our precious Federation then?’

Duong looked him straight in the eye, with utter conviction. ‘A Federation that works actively against the interests of the motherworld,’ he said firmly, ‘is not something that I would any longer wish to be a part of.’

‘Maybe I should move out,’ said Rhian, gazing inscrutably at her hand of cards. Anita sat opposite her at the living room coffee table, her own cards grasped between fingers adorned with rainbow-coloured nails, toying with the similarly colourful beads that sprouted from tufts of hair on an otherwise shorn scalp.

‘Why?’ asked Sandy with a frown, pausing midchew, her dinner plate on her lap. She sat upon one of the lounge chairs around the coffee table, in the centre of the main room of the house she called home. The floors were wood, the walls a stylish, rough-hewn red brick with mottled dark patches. To the front of the living room were broad windows opening onto a balcony, profuse foliage of the garden beyond, and all contained behind the high stone walls that typified the high-security suburb of Canas. Vanessa moved in the adjoining kitchen, mixing herself and Sandy drinks to go with their meal, which Anita had made for them the old-fashioned way-by hand, on the bare flame of the gas stove.

‘I am a League GI,’ Rhian said matter-of-factly. ‘Unlike you, I am still in the service of the League. I am living in your house.’

‘It’s your house too,’ Sandy objected.

‘It’s the government’s house,’ Rhian corrected her. ‘You and Vanessa are here because you are important government officers. I am here because you are here. An afterthought.’

‘Chu, you’re not a damn afterthought! I mean Rhian.’ Correcting herself with frustration-Chu hadn’t gone by her old surname for two years now, preferring her given name in her new, civilian surroundings. She sat comfortably now on the living room rug by the coffee table, dressed in stylish black pants and a black silk shirt. A lean arm hooked over one upraised knee, holding her cards. Her beautiful, Chinese features were well suited to the fashionably short cut of her black hair, her expression as cool and untroubled as ever, eyes fixed upon her cards.

GIs had that look about them, even without the benefit of superenhanced vision displaying the lower body temperature, and the lack of a jugular pulse. Just the way they sat, and moved, shifted their gaze from one object of consideration to the next. Sandy knew she looked like that herself, to another person’s eyes. Anita shifted from time to time, moving her weight to prevent bad circulation, or muscle tiredness, or other aches and pains from developing. Rhian sat relatively motionless. Not like a statue. More like an effortlessly poised, presently dormant bundle of energy. Just waiting for a chance to explode.

Rhian’s arrival on Callay had been the single most wonderful development of the last two years. Sandy had thought she’d lost everything from those years in the service of the League, all her old friends and comrades from Dark Star. She’d not come to know or like them all, not by any means. But with Rhian Chu, she’d had nearly three years of connection and slowly developing friendship … and three years in Dark Star had felt like twenty in most other places. While the rest of her team had been murdered by their own commanders, during those final, desperate days of the losing war, a small group, unbeknownst to her, had survived.

When the smoke cleared, Rhian had wound up under the ISO’s wing. Once the ISO discovered her old commander had resurfaced, somewhat spectacularly, in the Callayan capital of Tanusha, they’d been only too quick to assign Rhian to the command of Major Ramoja, and reunite the old friends once more. Perhaps, Sandy reflected, they’d expected gratitude. Perhaps an opportunity to influence her opinions and actions, within her new role of authority on Callay. For her part, Sandy saw no reason to thank the murdering bastards who ruled over all matters of artificial humanity in the League for anything. They’d established a link between their own operative, in Rhian, and herself. It got them regular reports, and calmed the nerves of security operatives on all sides, who became very nervous in an information vacuum. That ought to be enough for them. She had her old friend Rhian back. That was certainly enough for her.

‘Well, thank you for saying so,’ Rhian said, with a faint smile. Selected two cards from her hand, and placed them face down upon the table. ‘But the fact remains that if you were not my friend, then I would not be here. And if the politicians who are so scared about League influence on Callay learned that I was sharing your house, there could be further trouble. Couldn’t there?’

As she resettled two new cards into her hand, and Anita unloaded two of her own, Anita met Sandy’s gaze with a brief, intrigued smile. Far less concerned with politics, Sandy knew, than fascinated with Rhian’s increasing self-confidence in her own powers of analysis where civilians were concerned. Her development, Sandy had to admit, had been remarkable. From a total novice in all civilian matters, in the space of two years Rhian had progressed to the point where local events no longer disturbed or puzzled her with the same regularity as before. Anita now teased Sandy, from time to time, that Rhian had now overtaken her ex-captain in some civilian matters-such as fashion sense. Looking at her friend’s stylish black outfit, Sandy could only agree. But then, in some regards, that was Rhian-utterly meticulous and precise with the small details, yet often missing the broader picture.

‘It’s more my house than anyone else’s anyway,’ Vanessa interjected, arriving back at her chair beside Sandy’s with a drink in each hand. Sandy took hers, and Vanessa took her seat. ‘Me being the only one of us who’s financially solvent and of reliable good character and long-term residence …’

‘Oh, go on!’ Anita protested good humouredly.

‘It’s true!’ Vanessa curled into her chair, no difficult feat for her small frame, in tracksuit and socks following her shower. The skin beneath her eyes bore the faintest shade of dark, but otherwise there was only the cotton wool to show for the recently broken nose. It kept her breathing through her mouth, and allowed the injected microbials to do their work unhindered. ‘It’s unheard of for anyone with less than five years’ residence on Callay to qualify for a house in Canas. I’m here ’cause they wouldn’t have let Sandy have it otherwise.’

‘And for the joyful pleasure of my company,’ Sandy remarked.

‘Of course, baby.’ Vanessa extended a sock-clad foot, and gave Sandy’s shoulder a reprimanding push. ‘And you,’ she continued, turning her lively gaze upon Rhian, ‘are here so we can keep an eye on you. Under the auspices of our new liaison relationship with the League Embassy, of course. But the main reason no one’s leaked that information to Neiland’s opponents is because the only thing those same opponents are more scared of than Sandy being best buddies with her old League mates, is the League’s Embassy GIs running around without supervision.’

‘You keep me on a very short leash,’ Rhian said with a nod. ‘I’ll remember to say that if someone asks.’ And raised Anita’s five prayertokens by another five.

Sandy finished the last mouthful of her meal, and gave Vanessa an eyebrow-raised glance. Vanessa’s return glance was highly amused. For the last two years, there had been an ongoing debate between them whether Rhian was an unintentional wit who said amusing things without meaning to, or was one of the best deadpan comics they’d ever seen. Not that she was ever genuinely hysterical. Just amusing. As always, with her old buddy Chu, everything was understated. But understated people everywhere, Sandy reckoned, were full of surprises.

Sandy sipped Vanessa’s drink. It tasted of at least five local fruits, and several liqueurs … Vanessa had been introduced to the world of mixed beverages by one of Anita’s friends a few months back, and now delighted in creating new concoctions. Rhian placed her hand of cards upon the table. Anita gave a ‘ha!’ of delight, and laid down her own. Rhian raised both eyebrows.

‘GIs aren’t invulnerable after all,’ Vanessa remarked as Anita raked in the prayer tokens. Her pile was considerably larger than Rhian’s.

‘In a game of random chance,’ Rhian said mildly, ‘anyone can lose.’

‘Oh, it’s not just random chance!’ Anita scolded her. ‘You do a thing with your face every time you get a good or a bad hand.’

‘I’m a GI,’ said Rhian. ‘I don’t do anything with my face.’

‘Yes, you do!’ Anita sang playfully, handing the deck to Rhian for shuffling. Rhian gave Sandy a quizzical look, taking the cards to hand. They blurred between fingers with inhuman speed, as Vanessa and Anita watched in fascination. Sandy smiled.

‘She’s trying to get into your head, Rhi,’ she said. ‘She’s psyching you out.’

‘How should I respond?’ asked Rhian, in all honesty.

Sandy gave an exasperated shrug. ‘I don’t know! Figure it out.’

‘You could stop doing that thing with your face, for one thing,’ Vanessa said mischievously.

‘Don’t listen to them,’ said Sandy. ‘Come on, Rhian, concentrate. We can’t let any uppity organic humans start thinking they can actually beat us at anything. I mean, where would it end?’

‘I don’t mind getting beaten at things that don’t matter,’ Rhian replied mildly, dealing the cards with a series of rapid wrist-flicks. Anita’s cards skidded in perfect unison across the shiny coffee table, directly into her waiting hands.

‘Have you spoken to Captain Reichardt yet?’ Anita asked, fanning the cards in her hand.

‘Might have,’ said Sandy, taking another sip of her drink. Anita removed a card and took another. Raised her bet.

‘I’m glad he seems like such a reasonable guy,’ Anita continued. ‘I mean it can’t be easy, can it? Standing up to your own people. Standing up to Earth, even?’

‘He’s American,’ said Vanessa. ‘That’s different. Americans live on another planet entirely.’

The USA’s continued refusal to consider itself a part of any greater, global political entity known as Earth was the source of many old jokes. On Earth itself, such political isolationism was the subject of much ridicule. But for the many Federation worlds now opposed to the monolithic, conservative, xenophobic bloc that Earth was threatening to become, it provided a large opportunity. After all, the population of the USA had been one of the only significant voting blocs on Earth to actually vote in favour of the relocation. In the eyes of many Americans, the Grand Council had done enormous damage in centralising huge chunks of the planetary political system during the war, creating a morass of petty bureaucracy and unrepresentative officialdom. And US President Alvarez, alone of senior Earth leaders, had spoken out in favour of Callay’s new role as the centre of the Federation. Although everyone knew the Americans could never miss a chance to get right up the collective noses of the Chinese and Indians, and no one on Callay was fool enough to assume American support went any further than that.

‘You guys are doing the security for Secretary General Benale, right?’ Anita had much practice trying to weed out as much information as possible from her less-than-informative friends. ‘How suspicious do you think it is that the sabotage happens just after he arrives on Callay? I mean, he’s the closest thing Earth has to a global leader, even if the Americans don’t recognise EarthGov. He’s an old-Earth nationalist if ever there was one, he promises to come out here to try and calm things down, but no sooner does he arrive than someone sabotages the Mekong?’

‘That’s a conspiracy theory,’ said Vanessa. ‘Sandy doesn’t like conspiracy theories.’

‘Ari calls them conspiracy facts,’ Rhian countered.

‘Ari would,’ Sandy said shortly.

‘You’re not still mad at Ari?’ Anita said in half-teasing disbelief.

Vanessa frowned, looking from Anita to Sandy. ‘Mad at him for what?’

Sandy sighed. ‘Oh, he’s been babbling on about that damn tour Cognizant Systems is doing through the medical lobbies …’

‘It’s not just Cognizant Systems!’ Anita retorted indignantly. ‘It’s Renaldo Takawashi, Sandy. The man’s a genius that comes along maybe once in ten generations …’

‘Yeah, yeah, yeah,’ Sandy muttered, ‘I read the press release.’

‘Takawashi?’ Vanessa made a face. ‘I read an Intel report on that … isn’t he responsible for GI intelligence?’

‘He’s never been anything other than an independent researcher,’ Anita insisted, ‘but with the war on, the League government roped him into much of the foundational development for advanced synthetic neurology.’

‘Poor little man,’ said Sandy sarcastically, ‘he’s been used and manipulated all along, never had anything to do with the League war machine really …’

‘Sandy!’ Anita looked genuinely indignant. ‘His work with neural regeneration using synthetic integration with organic tissue is just … it’s amazing. For the first time we might be able to regrow destroyed brain tissue, cure what was previously irreparable structural damage, cure V-hooked burnouts, maybe even reverse criminal insanity! Imagine if they could reform murderers or rapists by rerouting the defective circuitry and then regrowing it.’

‘Wonderful, maybe they could cure subversive ideologies too,’ Sandy retorted. ‘League supporters, far right weirdos? You’d run out of friends real fast, ‘Nita.’

Anita was one of Ari’s old friends-as underground as they came, and proud of it. It was hardly the most suitable company for two of Callay’s seniormost civil servants … but then, Sandy’s own knowledge of security and monitoring systems ensured that her various political masters had very little idea of who she entertained at home, something for which she was very grateful. She did not always get along with Ari’s friends, with their progressive, League-sympathetic ideologies, and their love of all things hi-tech and subversive. Anita was different in that she was a business woman, despite appearances, and was at least relatively pragmatic in her approach to real world issues. She was also fun company, and was pleased to be Sandy’s friend because she liked Sandy, not because Sandy was ‘that awesome, android superbabe’ or whatever stupid crap the wide-eyed techno underground liked to say about her these days. She got nearly as sick of the worshipful adulation from that crowd as she did of the hate mail. More so, sometimes. At least the hate mailers didn’t want anything from her (except perhaps death), and would never be disappointed that she’d failed to live up to their expectations.

‘You’re overreacting again,’ Anita scolded, ‘there’s no reason to believe that …’

‘Hang on,’ Vanessa interrupted. And turned a concerned frown on Sandy. ‘If this … Takawashi … is responsible for most of the League’s advances in synthetic neurology …’

‘He’s not,’ said Sandy. ‘He was the head of a damn big team. It’s a reputation mostly limited to the underground on Callay.’ With a dark look at Anita. ‘Who, for some reason, seem to have developed a fascination with such things.’

Anita rolled her eyes. ‘It’s still true, and you know it.’

‘But he’s still technically responsible for …’ and Vanessa paused, knowing from experience the value of being a little wary, bringing up such matters around Sandy, ‘. . . well, for you. And Rhi. Right?’

Sandy shrugged. ‘Sure. Technically.’

‘And that’s where Ari is now, meeting Takawashi?’ Vanessa, on emotional issues, had somewhere along the line acquired the disconcerting ability to read her like a book.

Sandy sighed. ‘He got an invite. He always gets an invite.’

‘And how is it,’ Vanessa wanted to know, ‘that I’m not hearing about the head of the League’s advanced GI neurology research being in Callay all over the news networks?’

‘Because the League generally says that everyone was involved in synthetic biology development. It’s their way of challenging Federation ideology-if you want access to League technology and trade, you’ve gotta do business with people connected to GI development.’

‘Major Ramoja told me that the Callayan media have been saturated with those stories,’ Rhian added. ‘You know-League trade delegations arriving that include scientists or industrialists who were involved with the League war machine. There were a lot of protests at first, but now people are getting tired of it, and the media don’t bother reporting it. He said.’

‘Damn,’ said Vanessa, looking thoughtful. Sipped on her drink, eyes momentarily distant. ‘I bet the Fleet noticed. Admiral Duong in particular.’

‘No question,’ said Sandy. ‘And I bet Cognizant Systems have some pretty senior arms to twist if they could get approval from the government right now, with everything else that’s going on.’

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