Read 03 - Sagittarius is Bleeding Online
Authors: Peter David - (ebook by Undead)
It couldn’t have come at a better time. Her performance at the press
conference had been nothing short of a fiasco. Billy had done some brilliant
spinning when reporters had subsequently asked him if Laura hadn’t seemed a bit
erratic during the conference, and he smoothly chalked it up to the residue of
some heavy-duty medication she’d been taking during her recent illness. He
expressed full confidence that the medicines would have worked their way out of
her body in short order, and she would be back to her smiling, confident self,
ready to put her near-death experience behind her and serve the needs of the
people. Everyone had nodded and smiled approvingly, even with relief. As much as
reporters enjoyed challenging the status quo, at heart they were as eager for
stability and constancy as anyone else. Laura represented that, far more so than
the brusque, occasionally distant, and often inscrutable Admiral Adama.
At least, that was the general perception of him.
But she had come to know him in a very different way. Had come to respect
him, even admire him. Even…
“Best not to go there,” Laura said aloud and was slightly startled at the
sound of her own voice. She shook it off and slid her legs out from under the
covers.
Reflexively she glanced toward the window, and then mentally and sadly
scolded herself. She had still not gotten used to the lack of sun. In the old
days (only few months gone, but funny how they had become “the old days”) she
had never required an alarm since she had readily awoken to the first rays of
the morning sun. Ever since she’d been a little girl, that was all that she had
required. It was a regular part of her routine, something that she had simply
taken for granted. That was one of the most humbling things about her current
situation, about the situation that faced all of them: Nothing could be taken
for granted anymore. If one couldn’t count on the sun to always be there for
them, what could one count on?
“Yourself,” she said aloud to her unspoken question. She smiled at that. She
liked the confident sound of it. In every respect, inside and out, she was
beginning to feel and sound more and more like her old self.
Maybe you’re still dreaming this. Maybe you only think you’re awake, but
you’re not, and bad things are going to happen…
She shook the doubts off like a dog divesting itself of water.
She walked into the bathroom and attended to the normal, mundane aspects of
morning ablution. As she brushed her teeth, she considered all she had to do
today, and was pleased by the degree of clear-headedness that she was
displaying. In every way, she was starting to feel like her old self. Her
precancer self. The one who not only believed that mankind had a great and
glorious destiny, but that she was going to be around to be a part of it. She
realized that she had missed that Laura Roslin almost as much as she now missed
the sun.
Removing her nightgown, she stepped into the shower, mindful of the need to
keep it as brief as possible. The fleet had already had to cope once with the
loss of water that had put them into crisis mode. She wasn’t about to forget
that and endlessly squander a precious resource. Get in, get cleaned off, get out.
She remembered with amusement Billy’s suggestion that they mount a campaign
centered around “Save water; shower with a friend.” Involuntarily her thoughts
turned once more to Adama…
Don’t. Go. There.
“Boy,” she muttered, soaping her hair, “you really are a glutton for punish—”
Something felt wrong.
She lowered her hands and looked at them.
She assumed she was looking at thick residue from brown water. Not that long
ago some sort of rust build-up had caused the water to acquire a distinctly
coppery tint. But a man from maintenance had come in, done some work on the
pipes, and declared them to be rust-free. He’d been right; from that moment on,
the water had been fine. So initially her instinct was to think that she was
faced with a recurrence of that problem.
Then she realized that it was a distinctly different tint.
Her hands were red. Dark red. Blood red.
At first she thought there was something wrong with the shampoo. Then she
looked down. Her eyes widened in horror. Blood was pouring down her body,
cascading down her torso and legs and swirling down the drain.
She jumped back, slamming against the far wall of the shower, and looked up,
a scream strangling unvoiced in her throat.
Blood was gushing from the showerhead.
She slipped and stumbled out of the shower. She hit the floor, landing hard
on her elbows and sending jolts of pain running up and down her arms. She barely
felt it. She felt as if her mind was being shredded by what was happening.
She half-stumbled, half-crawled out of the bathroom, and something splattered
upon her from overhead. She looked up, terrified at what she was going to see.
A gigantic red spot had formed upon the ceiling, and blood was dripping from
overhead… a few drops at first, but then a steady trickle and then a gush,
cascading down upon her bed, soaking it through.
Laura finally screamed in full voice, grabbing at her bathrobe and throwing
it on even as she bolted for the door. She slammed into it as her bloodied hand
slipped off the knob, failing to open it. Then she found traction, pulled the
door opened and stumbled into the hallway, shouting for help.
Billy was there in an instant, as if materializing from thin air. All
endeavors to maintain professional demeanor, to adhere to proper titles such as
“Madame President,” evaporated. “Laura!” he yelled, trying to make himself heard
over Laura’s inarticulate shouts. “Laura, what’s wrong?!”
“Blood! Blood! It’s everywhere! It’s
—”
“What are you
talking
about!?”
“Look at me!” She held up her hands. “I’m covered in—”
“There’s nothing!”
“The blood, it was coming out of the shower, the ceiling, it’s everywhere—”
“There’s no blood! I don’t know what you’re talking about! There’s nothing!”
Billy’s words penetrated her own hysteria, and she fought it down enough to
look at her hands herself. They were clean. There was nothing on them except
residual dampness from the water.
“This… this can’t be,” she muttered, shaking her head. She ran her
fingers through her hair. There was no stickiness as one would imagine from a
head covered in blood, and her fingers came away clean. She held up her arms. The loose folds of the sleeves of her
robe fell away and she saw that her arms were clean as well. “Can’t be… the
ceiling… the shower…”
“Show me,” Billy said firmly.
She nodded, feeling disconnected from the moment, even from her own body. She
turned and pointed wordlessly at her quarters. Billy stepped past her and stuck
his head in. She waited for some reaction from him, but he turned back to her
and simply stared at her, his face a question mark.
Laura walked over, pushed past him, and looked in, looked up at the ceiling.
Dry. Normal. No sign of anything untoward.
She pointed with a quavering hand and said, “The bathroom…” But before
Billy could step past to check it out, she forced her feet to move. She ignored
his attempt to hold her back as she walked quickly across the room and looked
into the bathroom.
Nothing.
Water was still pouring out of the showerhead. It was pure and clean and not
the slightest bit sanguine. Feeling as if she were sleepwalking while awake,
Laura reached in and shut off the water.
“It could have been that plumbing thing…” Billy started, but his voice
trailed off since he knew that he was not only failing to convince Laura, but
himself as well. Slowly Laura walked back into her bedroom and sat down on the
edge of the bed. Automatically she rearranged the folds of the robe to cover her
legs, and she just sat there and stared off into space.
Billy stood in front of her and then crouched so that he was at eye level
with her. “Laura,” he said, gently but firmly, sounding less like an aide and
more like a concerned uncle, “you’ve got to tell me what’s going on. I can’t
help you if you—”
“You can’t help me,” Laura said softly. “I’m going crazy. That’s all there is
to it.”
“You’re not going crazy.”
“How do you know?”
“Because people who are really going crazy don’t have the presence of mind to
question it. They just accept the reality that’s handed them. Or maybe the
‘perceived reality’ would be a better way to put it.”
She put her face in her hands, trying to compose herself. Billy said nothing;
he just crouched there and waited.
She told him. She told him about the series of bizarre dreams, with the
recurring theme of blood. She told him about Sharon and Zarek figuring into
them, and the symbolism of Sagittarius seeping blood. She told him how she had
not been sleeping, and how when she did sleep she woke up, and how when she was
awake she was beginning to lose track of whether she was awake or asleep. She
told him how the lines between dream imagery and reality were beginning to blur,
perhaps irreparably.
“Maybe…” she began to say, and then stopped.
“Maybe what?”
“Maybe… I should take a leave of absence. Even resign my duties…”
Billy shook his head. “No. No, I believe in you. You can work your way
through this.”
She said nothing for a long moment. “Madame President…” Billy began.
But she put up a hand and cut him off. Amazingly, despite everything that had
just transpired, she forced a wry smile. “This is the beginning of a pep talk,
isn’t it.”
“Well…” Billy hesitated. “I don’t know that I would have… yeah, okay,
yes. It was.”
“I appreciate that. But I’m starting to think this is a situation that requires more than just a pep talk. I think someone is out to get me.”
When she saw his look, she continued, “I know how that sounds.”
“Well, they always say that it’s not paranoia if someone really is out to get
you. If you think that’s what’s happening, then we should speak to Admiral
Adama. We should…”
“No.”
“But…”
“I said no. What’s the first thing on the agenda?”
He was about to offer more of a protest, but then he saw the firm expression
on her face and discarded the idea. “Well… actually, I don’t think it’s going
to be something that makes you feel any better.”
“Billy, anything short of Tom Zarek is going to be perfectly fine, I assure
you.” Then she saw the look on his face and said, with the resigned sigh of the
damned, “It’s Zarek, isn’t it.”
“You told him to meet with me to make an appointment. He did, I did. I
figured doing it in the morning would get it out of the way quickly.”
“Good thinking, Billy.”
He stood. “I’ll cancel…”
“No, you won’t. I’ll attend to it.”
“Are you sure?”
She fixed him with a determined stare. “Billy… either this is happening
due to outside influence, or my mind is turning against me. I won’t be beaten by
someone else, and I certainly won’t be beaten by my own brain. I will be keeping
up with my schedule, and that’s all.”
Billy nodded and said simply, “Thank you, Madame President.” He walked out of
the room, and it wasn’t until he was gone that Laura Roslin started to tremble
uncontrollably, and did so until for long seconds until the shakes finally
passed.
* * *
“Madame President. You’re looking well.”
Laura, looking utterly self-possessed and not at all like someone who felt as
if reality and fantasy were bleeding hopelessly together, pulled up the chair
behind her desk and said, “Thank you, Councilman. What’s on your mind?”
Zarek, sitting across the desk from her, smiled in amusement. “Getting right
to the point, Madame President?”
She returned the smile, but there was no warmth in it, nor did she pretend
there was. “I have a schedule to keep.”
“And perhaps you want to minimize the amount of time you have to look at me?”
“You said it, Councilman, not I.”
“Well,” he said, sitting back in his chair and folding his arms. “I guess
that’s the difference between us. I say what I think.”
“But you didn’t do that, did you, Councilman. You said what I think. Or at
least what you believe I was thinking. I don’t need people to speak on my
behalf, and I certainly don’t appreciate it when people try to read my mind.”
Putting his hands up in a gesture of surrender, Zarek never lost his lopsided
grin. Laura had no doubt that he was getting some sort of perverse enjoyment out
of this. “Point taken, Madame President. I’ll get to it, then. Have you heard of
the Midguardians?”
“Of course,” she said promptly.
He was visibly surprised. “You have?”
“I wouldn’t be much of a president if I didn’t have at least some passing
knowledge of every major group represented in the fleet. I’d actually been under
the impression that the practitioners of their ancient religion had died out.”
“As it turns out, no. But not for lack of trying on the part of others. I’ve
been reading up on them, and the persecution of these people is one of the
darker times in our history.”
“May I ask,” she said, curious in spite of herself, “why you’ve taken a
sudden interest in the Midguardians?”
“Because they’ve approached me about the prospect of being officially
recognized.”
“As what?”
“As a colony, with equal rights and privileges to any of the others.”
Laura laughed in that way someone does when they can’t quite believe the
person they’re talking to is serious. When she saw that Zarek’s expression
wasn’t changing; she realized that he did, indeed, mean what he was saying. “Why
in the world would we want to do that? They’re a religion, not a colony.”
“They are a race. A people with their own heritage and history. They are
deserving of recognition as such.”
“Councilman,” said Laura, still having trouble believing that they were
having this conversation at all, “I’m not entirely certain why you’re even
approaching me on this. I can’t simply wave my hand and change the basic
structure of government. I’m the president, not the king.”