CHAPTER 7
Jaisalmer District, New Eden
ANNOS MARTIS 238. 4. 7. 09:09
East New Eden is a crowded, loud, fetid part of the city where a smart man travels with one hand on a knife and the other on his purse. Which makes it the perfect place for unattached Regulators like us to find work.
I cut through the bazaar on the way to Ares’s pub. The bazaar is held in one of the oldest covered streets in New Eden, an avenue with an arched metal roof that keeps the rain off. Though most of the core city is under habidomes, the domes leak like a sieve when it rains, and in New Eden it’s always raining. But at there’s least something to do. Hundreds of small shops and booths line both sides of the streets. Anything you want, you can get here—clothing, linens, pots, weapons, even meat, as long as you don’t mind rat on a stick.
At Ares’s pub, I find Vienne outside, sitting at a table. Loitering nearby are a couple of fellow dalit Regulators who helped arrange my drop from the space elevator—Jenkins and Fuse.
Shorter than most, Fuse is a bit of a liar. Brash. Buzzed ash hair, thin sideburns, ears a skosh too long, one bicuspid missing, scarred lip, pointed chin, girlish hands. He’s waiting for the coin I promised and chatting up Vienne to pass time.
“Come on, love. Throw a blighter a bone,” he says while sliding into the chair next to her. Then slides a hand onto her knee.
“Silly boy,” Mimi says.
Fuse is wearing symbiarmor. That’s the only reason his elbow doesn’t break when Vienne hammers it. And why his ribs don’t snap when she punches them three times before he can blink.
“Hoof.” He gasps for breath.
“You did ask for a bone.” I pull up a chair. “Next time specify whether you want it broken or not.”
“Got it.” His face turns from purple back to red. Then he grins. “I like a female with spunk. Especially one with mad dinkum tai bo skill. So, love, how about I spring for your meal? Once your boss here pays me the coin he owes, that is.”
“He’s my chief.” She cuts him a look that could ignite thermite. “Nobody is my boss.”
“I’ll take that as a yes.” He grins wide enough to show off his missing tooth.
“Your heart rate is rising,” Mimi interrupts. “Stress hormones releasing. You seem irritated.”
“Your point?”
“Are you irritated?”
“Ha.” Mind your business, Mimi. I’ll mind mine. I set the coin on the table. “Is that how you lost that tooth? Chatting up female Regulators?”
“Not exactly.” He gives me a conspiratorial wink. “Listen, if I’m treading on your flag, so to speak, fess up now and I’ll give it a rest. Me and my cobber, Jenkins, we’ve got places to go. Right, Jenks?”
“Right. I reckon,” says his friend, who is built like a transport container with legs and sports a shaved head and a mug so spotted with ancient acne scars, it looks like the surface of Deimos. “Uh. Fuse? What’s it that I’m saying right to?”
“Don’t fuss your pretty noggin about it,” Fuse says.
Jenkins leans against the side of the building. His symbiarmor shirt is tied around his waist, and the sleeves of his undershirt are rolled up to reveal his pulpy biceps. He’s got a square nose and a boxy chin punctuated with a goatee. Left ear pierced multiple times. Broad shoulders and chest and wears a leather jacket over his armor.
Vienne frowns at him. “It’s against the Tenets to bare yourself in public. Cover up.”
“If I do that”—Jenkins pulls the shirt over his bald head—“the ladies won’t be able to admire my guns.”
“If those are guns,” Fuse teases, “then you’re shooting blanks.”
“Best stop vexing me before I get upset. You know what happened last time I went feral.” He opens his mouth. Taps a bicuspid corresponding with Fuse’s missing one.
Fuse rolls his eyes. “One lucky punch, and the great gob thinks he’s a regular pugilist. What he’s not telling you duckies is that it took the blighter sixteen roundhouses to make contact, and even then, I had to do a spill over a—”
“Look,” I say, exasperated, “if she lets you buy the meal, would you shut your carking yap?”
“Affirmative, chief.”
“Vienne, accept his offer.”
“Is that an order?”
“Yes! Accept before I have to gag him.”
“That would be fun to watch.”
“Vienne!”
“I accept. Reluctantly.”
Fuse whoops. “Works every time.”
“There’s a fib,” Jenkins snorts. “It’s never worked before.”
“Wanker!”
“Fossiker!”
“Shut up now,” I warn them both. “Or the deal’s off.”
Fuse pantomimes a zip sealing his lips. “Sutting upth nowm.”
“Thanks be to the bishop!” I pile the coin on the table. Half I give to Vienne and the other half to Fuse for hacking into the system that controls the space elevators. Annoying he may be, but when it comes to machines, he’s a right clever jack. He’s also a great demolitionist, from what I hear.
“Where’s your cut, chief?” Fuse asks as I slide his pile across the table.
My share of the coin is already encumbered. “I spent it.”
“Free with the financials, no?” Fuse says. “Spent it all on the ladies, no doubt. And a man with your looks, too. You’d think they’d be swarming about you like flies. It’s the pinkie, I expect. Not many ladies have got interest in a dalit—Ow! My ear!”
Vienne has it folded between her thumb and index finger. I count to sixty before ordering her to let go. She gives the ear a twist for good measure and smacks him on the make of the head.
I flip an extra coin onto the table. “Vienne, get these hardworking Regulators a liter of aqua pura. My treat.”
“Heewack!” Jenkins shouts. “Let’s hit the cantina!”
“Don’t hit it too hard,” I call as he bounds up the steps to the cantina’s front door.
“You, also. Go!” Vienne orders Fuse to follow Jenkins. He runs up the stairs, too, his heavy boots clanging on the metal treads. When he’s out of earshot, she leans closer to me and puts her hands on the table. For some reason, my palms start to sweat.
“I know the reason your palms are sweating,” Mimi chimes in.
“Stow it.” I spin a coin on the table. It keeps my hands busy. “No comments from the peanut gallery.”
Vienne tilts her head toward me. Her brow knits and her lips rub together in thought, then she snatches the spinning coin. “You’re not joining me? I would enjoy—”
My company?
“—not having to listen to those two idiots alone.”
“Not exactly the answer you were hoping for,” Mimi says.
“Hush!” I say aloud, hissing, and then clap a hand over my mouth when I realize my mistake. Vienne draws away. Damn. “Sorry, I didn’t mean you! I was just…just thinking out loud.”
“I’ll go.” She pushes back her chair and starts to rise.
“No!” I snag her by the wrist. “I mean, um, sorry I offended you. Didn’t mean to. It’s not that I wouldn’t like to—” You’re blowing it, Durango. “It’s just that.” Stop! “Think I’ll stay here and enjoy the sunshine.”
The sky overhead is blanketed with clouds. No sun in sight. “Sunshine. Got it. Listen, if you want to be alone, just say so.” She tugs on her arm, and I realize that I’m still holding onto her, my fingers pressed against her wrist. Then I notice that I can feel her pulse, and it’s beating fast.
“One hundred and two beats per minute,” Mimi says. “Vienne’s baseline resting heart rate is forty-nine beats per minute.”
“Hush.” This time, I don’t say it aloud, but I do have sense enough to let go of her wrist. “Vienne, it’s not that. I—”
“You don’t have to lie to me, chief.”
“I’m not—”
“I’m not stupid. I know what you’re doing.” She slaps the coin on the table. “How much longer are you going to starve yourself? You’ve not eaten a full meal in weeks.”
“Until I’m not hungry?” Whew, that was close. Relieved, I sigh loudly and rub my temple, which is sore. Since the AI implant surgery, it’s always sore.
“Have it your way,” Vienne says with a hint of frustration. “But being chief doesn’t mean you’ve got to do everything yourself.”
Not knowing how to answer that, I watch in silence as she climbs the stairs and enters Ares’s pub. I spin the coin again. What was I thinking, grabbing Vienne that way? You’re such an idiot, I tell myself, and when Mimi doesn’t pipe in, I can tell she agrees.
I drag my chair over to the side of the building and lean back. Pull the cowling over my head and pretend to nap. It’s only a couple hours since dawn, but it’s been a long day already. That happens when your day starts off on a space elevator. A jump from atmosphere to surface. I still can’t believe I screwed up the courage to do it.
“Me, either,” Mimi says.
For once I ignore her. I’m too tired and too unsettled to bother arguing.
I’m still visualizing the tube drop when I drift off to sleep, where like always, the nightmares are waiting for me. Images of wounded troopers, disfigured bodies, my own soldiers at my feet, dying.
“Regulator,” a young voice calls from outside the dream.
I awake panicked, my hands pawing the searing pain on my face. My skull is melting away, I’m sure of it, and I catch the indelible stench of digestive enzymes.
“Excuse me, Regulator,” the young voice says again, and someone pushes my chair.
“What in the f—,” I say, standing up with a raised fist. Then I notice a familiar aristocratic face staring up at me.
“Jean-Paul Bramimonde.” The boy reaches up, offering his hand. “I have a business proposition.”
Like his sister, he cleans up well. The young jack looks entirely different in a plain gray jumpsuit. His hair is coiffed, too, slicked close to the scalp, and he’s had a manicure. “What’re you doing in the core city, kid? Looking to get snatched again? Because there are a hundred cutthroats who’d gladly do it.”
My warning doesn’t even faze him. “I am here to hire you.” He opens a small purse full of coin. More than his mother paid me. “I want to train to be a Regulator like you and my sister.”
“Put that coin away. Now!” I clap a hand over the purse. “Anybody sees it, they won’t bother with kidnapping. Just slit your throat and leave your corpse rotting in an aqueduct.”
“You do not want it?” He withdraws, taken aback. “But Mother said dalit will do anything for money.”
“Your mother doesn’t know squat.” My temper almost erupts before I remember that he’s a kid—his mother’s snotty manners aren’t his fault. I put a heavy hand on his shoulder. Turn him around and walk him to the street. “Even if I was willing to take your coin, I can’t teach you. I trained to be a Regulator in battle school. Not with a master, which means I’m not allowed an acolyte.”
“But—”
“It’s writ in the Tenets, and a Regulator never breaks the Tenets. Now go home. Before the Dr?u get you.”
But he’s not giving in that easily. “I do not believe in the Dr?u. Nor the boogeyman.” He locks his heels and glares defiantly. “Tomorrow I will return with two purses full. Then you will change your mind.”
The desire to take the boy’s offer is worse than my hunger. That much coin would pay off Father’s guards for a whole year. Maybe two. But I can’t accept. Vienne would flay me if I broke the Tenets.
I shake my head. “Don’t count on it, kid. Money doesn’t buy everything.”
“Of course it does.” He bows gracefully. Then glides back into the bazaar, acting like he owns it. For all I know, he does.
“Mimi, track his biorhythm signature until he’s out of range. Make sure he’s safe.”
“How sweet,” she says. “I thought your gruff demeanor was just an act.”
“He’s a self-centered, spoiled rotten little git.”
“Yes,” she says. “He reminds you of yourself.”
“At that age, maybe.”
“At this age, too.”
Now I’m the one who wants to make obscene gestures. “Go to sleep, Mimi.”
“I do not need rest.”
“I need a rest from you. Take a break. I’ll call you when I need you.”
“Rest order received,” she says. Then goes silent.
I’m settling back in the chair when I spot the three miners. They meander through the bazaar, their patched coveralls making them look out of place and, at the same time, too poor to interest even the brassiest vendors. Their hair is powdered orange-red with iron dust. Their faces smudged and desperate. It’s obvious they’re looking for help.
Look somewhere else, I think. Quickly, I close my eyes. But it’s a wasted effort. Trouble always finds me. People like this, their desperation is inversely proportional to the amount of money in their pockets. The more they need a Regulator, the less they’ve got to pay for one. Not this time. Not me. No more charity work. I need paying clients. It’s the curiosity that kills me. Miners? What are miners doing in New Eden?
I sneak a peek.
They catch me.
The tallest of the three, a female with ruddy cheeks and matching hair, points me out. Though she’s about my age, the worry lines on her forehead are deep. She’s thin, but tall for a miner, with shoulder-length brown hair and a long neck. There’s a heart-shaped, delicate face under all that dirt.
She says something, probably about me. In unison, the men shake their heads. Good choice, I think. I don’t work for miners. And if they knew who my father was, they wouldn’t want me, either.
The female, exasperated, rubs her fingers together. They’re talking money now. She thinks I’ll work cheap. The two men are wary—I swear one of them says dalit. After a few more seconds, she throws up her hands, disgusted.
Limping slightly, she walks past two booths, one selling spare duster parts and another hawking amino gruel that is only marginally more appetizing than the duster parts.
Keep walking, sister. I close my eyes and let my head roll to my chest.
“Regulator,” she says. Her voice is raspy and sharp.
I let out a deep breath. Snore.
“We’re wanting to hire a Regulator.” When I don’t respond, she pokes my shoulder. “Where I come from, ignoring somebody is reason for whipping.”
“Where I come from,” I say, eyes still shut, “waking a Regulator from a sound sleep is reason for killing.”
“Good thing,” she says, “you’ve not been asleep, right? Folk said this cantina was the place to go for hiring help.”
“Got money?”
“Some. Not much.”
“That’s my answer about wanting work—some, not much.”
She pulls away abruptly. “Suit yourself.”
“Always do,” I say.
She waves for the two men to follow her, which they do, giving me a wide berth, as if dalit is a disease you can catch. I watch them scoot inside the pub. Miners in Ares’s—could they possibly make a more stupid, dangerous choice?
Yes, as it turns out, they could.