âI can place the
Accompaniment of Shadows
near enough to rule out the involvement of any other ship.'
Seraphim touched one hand to the side of his breather mask, as if making some microscopic adjustment to his airflow settings. âHave you considered the possibility that someone else committed the crime, yet wished it to appear the work of an innocent crew who just happened to be in the neighbourhood?'
âThere's nothing my boss and I would rather have than an excuse not to stir up trouble with the Ultras. But we know of only one thing that could have sliced open the Ruskin-Sartorious Bubble, and that's a Conjoiner drive.'
âYou've ruled out the possibility of something else: a weapon, for instance?'
âThere's nothing that could have done that.'
âMaybe nothing known to us now. But no one would deny that things were created in the past - terrible, destructive things - that may have survived into the present era. We've all heard talk of the hell-class weaponsâ'
âI'm a prefect, Seraphim,' Dreyfus said patiently. âI deal in known facts, not speculation. And I don't have to look for some fabled weapon from the dark ages. I have proof that a drive was involved. That's all I need.'
âThere must still be a mistake. No crew would perpetrate such an atrocity.'
âEven if a deal went sour?'
âChildren act out of spite, Prefect Dreyfus. We're not children.'
âAll right. What about an accident?'
âA Conjoiner drive doesn't just switch on spontaneously.'
âFine. Then someone had to have their hands on the controls. Glad we cleared that up.'
âWe've cleared nothing up. What are you expecting me to do?'
âI want you to prevent the
Accompaniment of Shadows
from leaving the Swarm. That's step one. Step two is you stop any of her crew from jumping ship. Step three is you use your influence to bring the captain to justice.'
âThat's a lot of steps you're asking for, Prefect.'
âIt's my job.'
âAnd if I don't do as you say?'
âWe'll have to review the existing trading arrangements. There are ten thousand habitats open for business in the Glitter Band, Harbourmaster. But you don't get to talk to any of them without our blessing.'
âWe'd find workarounds.'
âI don't doubt it. But I'd like to see how your profit margins hold up. I imagine things might get very unpleasant for a man in your position.'
âDon't ever threaten us, Prefect,' the Harbourmaster said.
âWhy not?'
âBecause you need us a great deal more than we need you.'
Sparver knocked before entering Thalia's office, even though the passwall was transparent. As a Deputy Field III - the highest ranking before promotion to full field status - Sparver was two full grades above Thalia. He would have been within his official rights had he walked in unannounced, as Dreyfus would most likely have done. But in all his dealings with Thalia, ever since she'd joined the team, Sparver had scrupulously treated her as an exact equal. The daughter of Jason Ng had enough to deal with without petty displays of rank, especially from another deputy.
âBoss man keeping you busy?' he said, as Thalia looked around from her work.
âIt can't be helped.' She took a swig from a coffee flask before rubbing her eyelids. âThe Perigal issue was already a high-priority item before Ruskin-Sartorious came in. I'm just glad that Dreyfus trusts me to handle both tasks.'
Sparver stood next to her console, scanning the information scrolling past on multiple panes. Thalia made light of her speed-reading ability, but her Klausner index was still much higher than his own.
âThe boss trusts you. Don't worry about that.'
âBut he has his doubts.'
âWhy d'you say that?'
Thalia stopped the scrolling panes. âIt would have made sense for me to go out to the Ruskin-Sartorious Bubble. I know core architecture better than anyone.'
âBut you were already busy.'
âI'm even busier now. That wasn't really an argument for me not coming along.'
âDreyfus knew I could take care of the core,' Sparver said. âIf we'd run into anything thorny, you could have signed out a cutter and met us at the Bubble within an hour.'
âI suppose so.'
âThalia, listen to me. The boss thinks very highly of you. He may not show it, but that's just his way. He wouldn't have brought you onto the team in the first place if he thought otherwise. Trust me on this.'
âI'm just worried that he thinks I'm underperforming.'
âHas he said anything to that effect?'
Thalia frowned. âNot exactly, no.'
âWell, then.'
âI still can't help wondering why he didn't ask me along to the Bubble.'
âBecause it was a potentially dangerous operation.'
âMore so than a lockdown?'
âPotentially. If someone wanted to destroy the Bubble that badly, they could easily have come back for another go if they saw prefects crawling all over it.'
âBut they didn't.'
âPoint still stands. Reason Dreyfus didn't ask you to join the team - apart from the fact that he was trying not to exhaust you - was that he didn't want to place one of his best deputies in a high-risk environment. Lockdown's different - you had to be on the squad. But this time? I think the boss made the right call. And it has nothing to do with your abilities not measuring up.'
Thalia looked sheepish. âI guess all this sounds silly to you.'
âNot at all. When I first started working with him, I spent months wondering what the hell I was doing wrong. Not a word of praise ever escaped his lips. Then slowly it dawned on me: if Dreyfus keeps you on the team, that's the praise.'
âBut now ... it's different, right?'
âNot really. Once in a blue moon he throws me a crumb of encouragement, but other than that I get exactly the same treatment as you.'
âIt doesn't look that way.'
âThat's because you're still the new addition to the team. When I make full field, I'll get promoted to another section and you'll fill my slot. Then Dreyfus'll bring in someone new, someone who'll feel exactly the way you do now.'
Thalia glanced over his shoulder at the waiting passwall. âDo you like him, Sparver?'
âThere's no one in Panoply I'd rather work for.'
âNot what I asked.'
âI know, but that's the answer you're getting.' He spread his hands. âI'm a pig, Thalia. There are prefects who won't look me in the eye because of that. Dreyfus specifically requested I be assigned to his team. He can be as cold-hearted and uncommunicative as he wants, and I'll still owe him for that.'
âThere are prefects who won't look me in the eye either,' Thalia said.
âThere you go. We both owe the boss man. Now why don't you pipe some of that workload over to me and I'll see what I can do to take the burden off you?'
âYou don't have to do this.'
âAnd I'm not claiming to know as much about beta-levels as you. But I thought there might be some routine tests I can run while you're getting on with the clever stuff.'
âActually, now that you mention it ...' Thalia's hands moved over the console again. âI've run standard recovery algorithms on all twelve recoverables, using the Tianjun protocols. Five or six of them look hopelessly corrupted, but I need to run a second set of tests to make absolutely sure.'
Sparver nodded. âUsing the Lisichansk protocols, I'm guessing?'
âIt probably won't make any difference - if you can't get a clean resurrection with Tianjun, Lisichansk isn't likely to do any better. But for the sake of completeness, it has to be done.'
âI'll get on it.'
âAppreciated, Sparver.'
âAnything else I can do for you?'
Thalia looked down at her hands, still poised above the console. âThere is something. But it isn't that kind of favour.'
âGo ahead.'
âWhen I joined the team, I asked you what had happened to Dreyfus, why he is the way he is.'
âI vaguely remember.'
âYou said you didn't have all the answers, but one day you'd tell me what you knew.'
âI did,' he admitted.
âIt's been five years, Sparver. You can give me something now.'
âHave you asked around?'
âI don't do much asking around, in case you hadn't noticed.'
âFair point. Have you run a query through the Turbines?'
âIt didn't seem right, digging around behind his back.'
âWhereas talking about him isn't a problem?'
âIt's different,' she said, giving him a warning look. âI'm asking you as a friend to tell me what happened to him.'
Sparver felt something in him give way. He'd made a promise to her when she joined the team and he couldn't renege on that now, even though he'd hoped she'd forgotten. âIt's not what happened to Dreyfus. It's what happened to someone he cared about. Her name was Valery Chapelon.'
He could tell that the name meant nothing to Thalia.
âWas she his wife?'
Sparver nodded slowly, feeling as if he'd committed a grievous betrayal of confidence.
âWhat happened?' Thalia asked.
âIt was eleven years ago. Now ask yourself how long Jane Aumonier's been the way she is, and that should tell you all you need to know.'
He waited for the reaction to show itself in her face.
Jane Aumonier floated with her arms folded, her chin lifted, her eyes bright with intense focus.
âYou're back sooner than I expected,' she said, when the safe-distance tether brought Dreyfus to a stop.
âI made progress.'
âI seem to recall that my recommendation was that you were not to engage.'
âThey forced my hand. I didn't enter the Swarm, but I did have a talk with someone claiming to speak for it.'
âI'm guessing you encountered the harbourmaster, in that case.'
âI didn't know you'd met.'
âOnce or twice in the past. Never face to face. He's a slippery customer, but all told I'd rather deal with him than most of his predecessors. My impression is that he's open to reasoned debate.'
Dreyfus would have shifted awkwardly were he not floating on the end of the tether. âI hope so.'
Aumonier's normally inexpressive face became stern. âYou didn't push him, did you?'
âWe don't have time to pussyfoot. Once the story breaks that Ultras are torching habitats, Seraphim and his friends are going to have a lot more to worry about than a few gentle hints from me.'
Aumonier's attention flicked back to one of her read-outs. Her eyes glazed: for a moment, she could have been light-seconds away in body and mind. âWell, you're right that we don't have much time. Our effort to mask the catastrophe is still holding but we're fending off more queries by the hour. Word is beginning to reach the other habitats that
something
may have happened. It's only a matter of time before someone decides to have a look-see, or sends a query we can't answer in a convincing fashion.'
âThen what?'
âThen life gets interesting,' Aumonier said darkly.
âIn which case, I'm glad I was forceful. If Seraphim's the reasonable man you say he is, maybe we'll get somewhere.'
âWe're playing with fire, Tom.'
âWe didn't choose the game,' he reminded her. âThis is what they pay us for.'
Aumonier was silent. Dreyfus began to think she was done with him, that she had returned her attention to the ever-shifting display wall and forgotten his presence. It had happened before, and he took no slight from it. But when she spoke he knew that she had only been summoning the courage to talk about something painful.
âTom, there's something you need to know. It's about the scarab.'
âGood news?' he asked, despite the fact that everything in her tone said otherwise.
âNot good news, no. Or at least something we don't understand. As far as I'm concerned, that's bad news by definition.'
âTell me.'
âYou know what sometimes worries me the most? It's not that they won't ever be able to get it off me. I have confidence in their abilities, maybe more than they do. Demikhov's team is the best I could ever hope for.'
âSo what's worrying you?' asked Dreyfus softly.
âThat I won't be able to dream. What happens when you don't dream for eleven years, Tom? Does anyone really know?'
âI'm sure you'll be able to dream.'
âBut we don't know for sure. What if the parts of my brain that used to dream have withered away from not being used? What if they've been taken over by some other part? That happens, you know. The brain rewires itself all the time.'
âYou'll dream,' he said, as if that should be reassurance enough.
After a silence, Aumonier said, âThey've detected a change inside it. Components have moved. I felt it myself. They don't know what to make of the change.'
âI thought Demikhov said they understood everything inside it.'
âHe's never claimed that, just that they know enough to be able to get it off me, one day.'
Dreyfus studied the thing attached to the back of Aumonier's neck. It was a fist-sized machine shaped like a red chromed beetle, clamped into place by its legs, a dozen sterile prongs that dug into her skin.