Chapter One
Hansen saw the blast bubble like an orange puffball above the building
roofs three kilometers away. He stuck his head out the side-window of his chauffeured
aircar and heard the whump! over the rush of wind.
"Dont get us above" Hansen started to say, but
the car was already sideslipping to lose altitude and take them the rest of the distance
to the crime site in the shelter of the buildings. The drivers who rotated through
Commissioner Hansens duty list were the best in Special Units. This one, a human
named Krupchak, didnt want to enter the sight radius of the bandits heavy
weaponry any more than Hansen did.
Hansens visor was split into three screens: the top showing the
view from one of the units already at the crime site; the center clear for normal sight;
and the bottom running a closed loop from the incident that set up the current situation.
Hansens own viewpoint showed nothing but faces from the ground traffic gaping upward
at the aircar which howled above them with its emergency flashers fluttering at
eye-dazzling speed.
The Civic Patrolmen on-site were busy blocking streets and trying to
evacuate civilians already in what was clearly a combat zone. They werent interested
in the building at 212 Kokori Street where the bandits had holed up, except to keep from
being blown away by the shots spittingand sometimes slammingfrom the top story
of that structure.
Hansen set his remote to one of his own Special Units teams which had
already arrived. Hansens people (some of them female and not a few of them inhuman
despite the complaints from bigots) were for the moment setting up fields of fire to block
the bandits if they tried to escape. They were ready and willing to make a frontal assault
if the Commissioner gave them that order.
The target was a fortress. Special Units would make a frontal assault
on it over Commissioner Hansens dead body.
Literally.
The structure was part of a row of cheap two- and three-story apartment
buildings built long before the twenty-nine-year old Hansen was born. The windows of the
top floor now bulged with the soap-bubble iridescence of a forcefield. A white Civic
Patrol hoverscoot stood abandoned outside the buildings front entrance.
Kokori Street wasnt a slum. The Consensus of Planets didnt
permit slums in or around the capitals of any of its 1200 worlds; and besides, there were
few real slums anywhere on Annunciation. Still, though there wasnt any trash in the
street, the buildings cast facades were dingy and sculpted in curves which flowed
according to tastes superseded decades before.
The districts residents generally staffed the lower tiers of the
citys service industriesbut they had jobs, because residence in a
planetary capital for periods longer than three months required that a household member be
gainfully employed. Here on Annunciation, the Consensus fiat was enforced by the Civic
Patrolbacked up by Special Units if necessary.
Ousting unemployed squatters could be a nasty job, but the worst
casualties were usually a broken nose or a wrenched knee. This job was uniquely
dangerous, but there was nobody in Hansens section (and few enough in the Civic
Patrol) who wasnt glad to have it.
The Solbarth Gang. It had to be Solbarth, the criminal whose genius was
equalled by his ruthlessness. Inhuman ruthlessness, the news reports said; and this time
the news reports were precisely correct.
One of Hansens people was trying to get an update on the
situation within 212 Kokori. Behind a Civic Patrol forcefield barricade parked a
nondescript van. A SpyFly the size, shape and color of a large cigar burred from within
the vehicle.
The little reconnaissance drone was scarcely visible until it arced to
within a meter of the buildings sidewall. There it exploded as ropes of
scintillance.
Whoever was inside had an electronic flyswatter; which figured, if it
was Solbarth.
A man jumped from a second-floor window, stumbled, and ran three steps
toward the portable forcefield one of Hansens units had set up at the intersection
kitty-corner from the target building. A black sphincter dilated in the villains
protective screen. A blue-white flash cut the runners legs from under him, long
before he reached safety.
The body thrashed.
Just a civilian caught in something that was none of his business.
Wouldve been smarter to hide under the bed until it was all over. But then, if
Special Units opened up with the kind of firepower necessary to overwhelm the gangs
forcefield, the whole block would melt into a bubbling crater.
That wasnt going to happen.
"Support," Hansen said, cueing the artificial intelligence in
his helmet. "Is the buildings climate control in metal ducts?"
A green light winked even as the Commissioners last syllable rose
in an interrogative.
The AI had accessed the data from Central Records; probably out of
Building Inspection, but the exact provenance of the information didnt matter. Every
scrap of data about this building, its residentsand the villains believed to be
holed up herehad been sucked into a huge electronic suspense file within seconds of
when the shooting started. Any extant knowledge that Hansen might need waited at the tip
of his tongue.
The trouble was, quite of lot of what Hansen needed to know would be
available only in the after-action report on the operation; and Commissioner Hansen might
or might not be alive to examine the data then.
"Top to Orange Three," he ordered, letting the AI punch him
through the chatter of the unit hed just watched launch the SpyFly. "Put one
into the buildings ventilation system. Use a One-Star."
The 1* class drones were old and slow, but they had double-capacity
powerpacks and were rugged enough to airdrop with their lift fans shut down.
"Sir, theyve turned off the air system n the louvers
re down!" the Orange Three team leader replied in a voice half a tone higher
than normal.
"Then itll take the SpyFly a bloody while to burn through
the louvers, wont it?" Hansen snarled. "So get on the bloody job!"
"Hang on, sir," his driver warned. The aircar bounced to a
dynamic halt behind the forcefield barricade at the intersection.
A streak of flame washed from the villains hideout. The portable
forcefield pulsed like a rainbow, but it absorbed the burst without strain.
Regular police fired a sparkle of stun needles, but the temporary
opening in the villains forcefield had already closed. The Special Units teams held
their fire the way theyd been ordered to do.
Polarized light cast a blue wash over everything on the other side of
the barricade. The legless man halfway to the intersection had stopped twitching. Another
plasma bolt licked from the far side of the building, silhouetting the roof moldings with
its brief radiance.
Hansen glanced at the video loop running across the bottom of his
visor. It displayed the sensor log of the patrolman whod arrived to investigate a
reported domestic disturbance.
The cop had been a little fellow and young, to judge from the image of
him recorded in reflection from the buildings front door as he entered. He was
whistling something tuneless between his teeth. As he climbed the stairs, he checked the
needle stunner in his holster.
Hed been a little nervous, but not nearly as nervous as he
shouldve been.
It was all a mistake. The reported loud argument had been in District
9, not here in District 7. An administrative screw-up that normally wouldve meant,
at worst, that a family argument blossomed into violence because the uniformed man who
couldve stopped it had been sent to the wrong place.
No sign of a domestic argument now. Knuckles rapping on a doorpanel; Whos
there? muffled by the thick panel, and "Civic Patrol! Open up!" sharply from
the cop whose equipment was recording events and transmitting the log back to his district
sub-station; standard operating procedure.
Maybe if the patrolman had been a little less forceful in his
request
But that was second-guessing the man on the spot, and Hansen
wasnt going to speak ill of the dead.
The video image of the door opened. Before the figure within was more
than a blur, the universe dissolved in a plasma flare that the victim didnt have
time to understand.
Hansen got out of his vehicle. The air smelled burned, from the
forcefield and the weapons the villains were using; from the hellfire dancing in the
Commissioners mind.
His jaws hurt. Hed been clenching them as he watched the
patrolman die. Hansens muttered order cleared his visor of both the remote and the
recorded images, but the fatal plasma burst continued to blaze a dirty white in memory.
Bad luck for the cop, knocking on the wrong door. And very bad luck
indeed for Solbarth.
Four Special Units personnel squatted behind the forcefield theyd
stretched between their vehicles. Two sighted over plasma weapons; one had a wide-muzzled
projectile launcher; and the fourth, the team leader, carried the forcefield controls, a
pistol, and long knives in both of her boots. They were all dressed in light-scattering
camouflage uniforms which blurred their outlines and hid anything that an opponent could
use for an aiming point.
The team members kept their faces rigidly to the front, pretending they
didnt know the Commissioner was standing behind them. "Pink Two to Top,"
Hansen heard the leader say. "Are we clear to fire?"
The question didnt come to Hansen through the commo net, because
the Commissioners AI blocked out all the idle chatter that would otherwise have
distracted him from the real business of solving the problem.
Hansen stepped over to the team leader, put a hand on her shoulder, and
said, "Well get where were going, Pink Two. Dont worry."
"Sorry, sir," one of the plasma gunners said, though the
reason he thought he needed to apologize was beyond Hansens understanding.
Nobody needed to apologize. No matter how good your training was, no
matter how much on-line experience you had, there were going to be tics and glitches in a
real crisis. People said things, people forgot SOP . . . sometimes people
shot when they shouldntve, and even that was forgivable if you survived
it.
Training went only so far. Situations like this went right down into
the reptilian core of the brain.
With his fingers still resting on Pink Twos shoulder, Hansen
said, "Support. Give me a fast three-sixty of the target site. Left side only."
Hansens artificial intelligence began walking him visually around
the apartment building. Remote images from other police personnel were remoted to the left
half of the Commissioners visor, changing every ten seconds to proceed around the
site in a counterclockwise direction.
A patrolman in an apartment to Hansens right poured a stream of
stun needles toward the gangs hideout. There were brief sparkles on the forcefield
and occasionally a puff of dust from the plastic facade. Raindrops would have been more
effective than the one-gram needles were at this range.
On a roof halfway down the block, Special Units personnel stripped the
tarpaulin from the 4-cm plasma weapon theyd just manhandled from an armored
personnel carrier. Two other teams watched tensely from behind the forcefield theyd
erected to shelter the gun installation. They knew the weapon could probably batter
through the villains protective screen; but they knew also that the sidescatter of
powerful bolts hitting powerful armor was likely to incinerate every unshielded object
within a kilometer of impact.
Ten seconds later a white aircar picked out with gold braid skidded to
a halt behind a forcefield manned by Civic Patrol personnel. Holloway, Chief of the
Capital Police, got out. He was still trying to seal his bemedaled uniform blouse over his
fat belly.
An aide lifted a pair of slug-throwing hunting rifles out of the car
and handed one to Holloway. Both men aimed as a police technician spun narrow loopholes in
the protective forcefield so that his superiors could fire at the hideout.
No one but Special Units personnel was permitted to use deadly force.
No one.
The AI cycled to the next image around the circle. Hansens mouth
was open to bark an order that Holloway, even Holloway, would obeyor elsewhen
his right eye saw a whorl gape in the villains forcefield. Solbarth must be using
tuned elements so that merely presenting a weapon opened his shield wide enough to fire. That
sort of hardware was too expensive even for Special Units.
And the weapon being aimed in Hansens direction this time
wasnt a plasma gun.
"Watch it!" he screamed, and, "Down!" to the
personnel near him who thought their forcefield protected them from the villains
fire.
Hansen flattened, pushing the team leader out of her crouch and hoping
the three men had sense enough to obey without asking questions. There was a flash from
the momentary hole in Solbarths protective bubble.
A ten-kilo war rocket arched down on a trail of thin smoke.
The missile skimmed the top of the police forcefieldwhich would
have halted it harmlesslyand detonated in thunder on the pavement behind Hansen and
his people.
The blast hurled the Commissioners carwas the driver
clear?onto its side. The pavement shattered. Howling shards of missile casing pocked
facades for twenty meters in every direction. Bits that struck the inner face of the
forcefield hissed and melted as their kinetic energy was transformed into heat.
Hansens ears rang. The men around him were all right, and his
driver was getting out of the aircar with a dazed look on his face.
A rifle bullet whacked the hideouts facade and ricocheted over
Hansens head.
Hansen took a deep breath. "Top to all units," he said in a
voice that rattled like tin in his own ears. "Cease firing. All units cease firing. I
am Commissioner Hansen, and this site is under the jurisdiction of Special"
Three bullets smacked the villains forcefield where it bulged
from one of the third-floor windows. The projectiles melted in showers of white sparks.
The muzzle blasts of the rifles echoed down the corridor of building fronts like a burst
of automatic fire.
"I say again, cease fire," Hansen ordered. "Special
Units personnel, enforce my orders by whatever"
The left half of Hansens visor had cycled back to a view of Chief
Holloway just as the fat mans body rocked back under the recoil of his powerful
rifle. Hansen fully expected one of his people to stitch the Chiefs ass with stun
needles, but he hadnt said that.
Actually, he hadnt gotten the order completely out of his mouth
before the back of Chief Holloways limousine geysered metal and plastic, then
collapsed in flames. Somebody from Special Units had put a plasma round into the vehicle.
Well, Hansens personal motto was that no means were excessive if
they got the job done. Holloway hurled the rifle away and curled up in a ball. His aide
tried to shield the Chiefs body, but the disparity in size of the men made the
attempt ludicrous.
The delicate flicker of stun needles hitting the villains
forcefield stopped also.
Hansen stood up. A black spot in the center of a window spat plasma at
him. He flinched as the bolt coruscated fifty centimeters from his face.
He drew his own pistol. "Pink Two," he said, wishing he could
remember the womans name. "Get ready to open the screen for me."
"Youll shoot, sir?" the team leader asked.
"For me, damn you!" Hansen shouted. "Me! Not a
gun!"
Hed have to apologize later.
"Yessir."
Hed been this scared before, so scared that his palms sweated and
muscle tremors made the fine hairs on the surface of his skin crawl. Sure, hed been
this scared.
But hed never been more scared.
"Now," Hansen said very softly. He leaped forward as the
forcefield collapsed momentarily to pass his body.
It was thirty meters to the front of the building. Hansen had covered
half the distance in ten quick strides when a hole like Hells anus spun in the
bulging forcefield above him.
The Commissioners pistol snapped two high-velocity projectiles
through the opening before the villain within could fire. The mirror of the protective
forcefield dulled momentarily as its inner face absorbed the plasma bolt triggered in a
dying convulsion.
Hansen was doing this job because he wouldnt order any of
his people to do it, and because it had to be him anyway.
But nobody in Special Units was better qualified to handle it, either.
Motes of plastic drifted in the sunlight beneath 212 Kokori, bits
snapped from the facade by stun needles and shrapnel from the villains own weaponry.
They had one hell of an arsenal in there. This wasnt a police action, it was a
war . . . or at any rate, itd degenerate into a war if Hansens
try here failed.
Hansen looked back the way hed come. Squat figures, mere shadows
behind the polarized sheets of forcefields, waited with mechanical passivity.
He was panting, as much from tension as from the sprint. The
villains forcefield bulged from the windows above him. It was driven hard enough to
reflect light, not merely shadow it. Solbarth must have his own fusion
generator. . . .
But even Solbarth couldnt fight the Consensus.
"Support," Hansen said. "Give me a lower-quadrant remote
from the four-centimeters guns"
The sight picture, broad field in acquisition mode, from the
crew-served weapon directly across from 212 inset a quarter of Hansens visor. He
could see himself as a tiny figure in the corner of the image, staring at the bulging
fortress above him.
"ight," Hansens mouth said, completing the order
that the AI had already obeyed.
He heard the crack! of a plasma weapon firing somewhere from the
back of the building, but there was no time to worry about that now.
"Solbarth!" he shouted. He tilted his visor up, losing the
panoramic image that hed need for warning if
"Solbarth!" Hansen shouted again, his voice no longer muffled
by the shield in front of it. "This is Commissioner Hansen. Im giving you a
chance."
"Kommissar?" said the voice that Hansens artificial
intelligence had passed to his ear. "Orange Three. Weve got the SpyFly in
position outside the last set of louvers. Do you want us to burn through?"
"We dont need a chance from you, Hansen," called a
cold, clear voice from a window on the third floor. "Youll be old and gray
before we run out of supplies."
"Orange Three, not yet," Hansen muttered. He desperately
wanted images from within the hideout, but he knew that this reconnaissance drone would be
zapped like the others if it left its protective screen of metal too soon.
Hansen cocked his visor at a 45° angle, open enough for him to shout
past it. He peered at the distorted quadrant of panoramawhich his AI immediately
reconfigured to meet its masters needs.
And why the hell hadnt he been smart enough to tell the
machine to do that?
"Solbarth, Im offering you your lives," Hansen said. He
could hear other muffled voices from the lower floors of 212 Kokori, civilians praying or
weeping into their shielding hands. "Its more than"
The helmet beeped to warn Hansen and flashed a red carat over the
remoted image on his visor, but his gunhand was already rising, pointingtaking up
the slack on the trigger. An arm thrust a wide-mouthed mob gun through the window five
meters above the Commissioners head.
Hansen fired twice. The villains weapon rang and bounced off the
bloody transom before dropping to the street. There was a bullet hole through its bell
muzzle, and a separate hole through the wrist which the screaming gunman jerked back
within the forcefield.
"You wont open this can with the toys youve
brought out so far, Hansen," Solbarth said, as calmly as if the wounded mans
whimpering was only the whisper of wind. "When you do requisition what
youd require . . . if you do . . . then this whole
district will be radioactive for a decade."
The bare skin of Hansens hand and chin stung from the whiplash
muzzle blasts of his pistol. The shadows of Special Units stirred restively behind their
forcefields.
"Solbarth," he called, "if you dont surrender to
me now, Ill have the building cut away beneath you. For all I know, your
forcefield may hold; but that wont matter to you, because you and everything else
inside the fieldre going to be shaking around like the beans in a maraca as you drop
into the sub-basement."
The silence was so deep that Hansen could feel the pulse of the
villains forcefield through the fabric of the building.
"The lower floors are full of civilians," Solbarth said.
Hansen thought he heard a tremor of color in the gang leaders voice, though
emotion would have been too strong a word for it.
"Solbarth," Hansen said, "I know
you . . . and you know me. This is a Special Units operation. I answer to no
one until its complete. And I promise you, Solbarth, that Ill do exactly
what I told you Id do."
Very softly, almost subvocalizing, he added, "Orange Three, go
ahead. Support, switch my remote."
"A starship," the cold voice demanded. "A starship and
your word that well be allowed to take it and leave, Hansen."
"Your lives, Solbarth," the Commissioner repeated flatly.
"And the rest of your lives to spend on whatever hellhole or prison asteroid the
Consensus chooses to send you. But I promise you your lives."
The remote quadrant of Hansens visor suddenly melted into an
image of the gangs hideout. All the interior walls of the third story had been
removed. The cases of food and water suggested that Solbarth hadnt been entirely
bluffing when hed said they could withstand a siege.
Not years, though. Not the dozen males and three females still moving.
A corpse had been dragged into the center of the room. The moaning man,
his right hand hanging by a scrap of skin, still huddled beneath the window at which
Hansen had shot him.
The female whod just gotten up from the protective-systems
console to join the argument was a Mirzathian, skeletally thin and over two meters tall.
The SpyFly whose sensors were recording the scene made a bright pip on the holographic
screen the Mirzathian was supposed to be minding. The touch of a key could have pulsed the
drones electronics fatally, but neither the Mirzathian nor any of the other gang
members had time to spend on that now.
Solbarth was a male of average height, with a pale complexion and
features of perfect beauty. He was wearing a loose-fitting suit of rather better quality
than the clothing of most residents of District 7. He moved languidly, but Hansens
practiced eye could still identify the bulge of a pistol high on Solbarths right
hip.
When Hansen wore a business suit, that was where his own holster rode.
"He wont really spare us!" the Mirzathian shouted.
"He wont really blast all them civvies!" a heavy man
with a shoulder-stocked plasma weapon boomed simultaneously.
"He didnt come here," Solbarth said mildly, "here"
he gestured down in the direction of Hansen, standing beneath the overhang "to
lie to us. Hes Hansen, and hes quite mad . . . but I think
hes telling the truth."
"Look, whadda we got to lose?" whined another gunman.
"Look, they blast us or we wind up drinkin our own piss n starvin,
right? So whadda they do to us worse if we do chuck it in now?"
"Wait," said Solbarth.
He leaned closer to the window above Hansen and called,
"Commissioner, theres something that you dont know about me. How can I
trust"
"I dont know that youre an android, Solbarth?"
Hansen said. His words echoed uneasily, in his ears and weakly through the radio link from
the SpyFly that had penetrated the hideout. "Sure I do. The offer stands."
"You promise," Solbarth said forcefully. "But the
Consensus wipes androids that vary from parameters, Hansen. You cant promise for the
Consensus."
Hansen wiped the lower half of his face with his left hand. Sweat
glistened on his skin, but his mouth was as dry as the pavement.
"Solbarth," he said, "youre a murdering bastard
and Idve strangled you with my own hands if I could. But Im Hansen,
Im Special Units, and here Im in charge. For this moment, I am all
twelve hundred worlds of the Consensus."
He took a deep breath. "They can fire me for making this deal if
they like. But the Consensus will stand by my deal . . . or by god,
Solbarth, the Consensus will deal with me. On my honor."
The image of Solbarth turned to face his henchmen. "I think,"
he said with delicate insouciance, "that we should take the offer."
"I say youre fucking crazy!" the Mirzathian
snarled. She snatched up an antitank launcher and leaned toward the window.
Hansen wasnt sure hed ever seen a man draw and fire as
swiftly as Solbarth did . . . though Solbarth wasnt technically a
man. The contents of the Mirzathians skull splashed the inner face of the forcefield
and sputtered. With their velocity scrubbed away, bits of bone and fried blood tumbled out
the window and fluttered past Hansen to the sidewalk.
There were two more shots from within the hideout; the heavy man
collapsed around the plasma weapon cradled in his arms. Either hed been planning to
use it, or hed looked like he had . . . or, not improbably, Solbarth
was making a point to the remainder of his gang in the most vivid fashion possible.
Other weapons clattered to the floor of the hideout. A small man
covered his face with his hands and cried, "Im clean! Im clean!
Dont shoot me!"
"Hansen!" Solbarth called without turning his eyes from his
fellow villains. "We accept your offer. Warn your men that were coming
out!"
The androids left hand keyed a series of commands into the
protective systems console. The window above Hansen gave an electronic whine. The
forcefield went translucent an instant before it vanished altogether.
"All units, hold your fire," Hansen said. "The subjects
are surrendering. I repeat, the subjects are surrendering. Blue teams, prepare to secure
the prisoners. Orange teams, be ready to move in with the medical staff. Theres a
wounded prisoner, and we wont know about the residents here until we check."
The SpyFly showed Solbarth gesturing the last of his subordinates down
the stairs with a negligent wave of his pistol. The slim android set the weapon carefully
on the floor, bowed toward the closed heating duct whose paint had blistered when the
SpyFly burned through a hole for its sensors, and left the room.
Hansen couldnt tell whether or not the bow was ironic. Perhaps
not.
"Blue teams," Hansen said, "I want you to accompany the
prisoners to the detention center after you turn them over to the Civic Patrol.
Therell be no accidents along the way."
He swallowed. "Whatever it takes, therell be no
accidents."
Six Special Units personnel jogged from their positions in the building
across Kokori Street. They held both nets and electronic restraints.
The first of Solbarths men poked his head through the entrance
door. His mouth was bent into a smile like the rictus of the last stages of tetanus, and
his eyes were glazed with fear. Blue One gestured to the villain as though he were a dog
to be petted.
The man glanced aside at Hansen, then bolted into the arms of the
personnel waiting to immobilize him. A second gang member scuttled out behind the first.
Hansen was still holding his pistol. He tried to holster it, but his
hand was shaking too much for him to manage that operation. Swearing under his breath, he
set the weapon down on the sidewalk in front of him and clasped his hands together.
There was commotion at the intersection where Hansens car lay on
its side, but he couldnt tell what was happening since the portable forcefields were
stillproperlyin place.
Chief Holloway waddled down Kokori Street from the other direction, at
the head of a contingent of Civic Patrolmen. Holloways white uniform was streaked
and blackened. His face was maroon. Blood pressure might prove fatal though the nearby
plasma bolt had not.
Most of the villains had left the building. Blue One was giving crisp
orders to the Civic Patrolmen arriving to accept prisoners cocooned in restraining nets.
Some civilians poked their heads from the lower-floor windows, able now to savor the
adventure theyd survived . . . and how close itd been, might
they never know!
Hansen was tired. He was as tired as he ever remembered being.
"Kommissar!" cried the team leader whose concern was obvious
despite compression of the radio signal and the minute speakers in Hansens helmet.
"This is Pink Two, and somethings"
The warning crunched to silence, though Hansen could vaguely hear Pink
Two continuing to shout behind the barrier.
"Commissioner Hansen," said a voice more mechanical than any
machine needed to be in a day that AIs could manufacture surds and sonants with greater
life than those of any rhetoric teacher. "You are summoned by the Consensus."
Somethinga spindle of black fuzz, taller than a
mandrifted through the forcefield blocking the intersection. There was another
spindle beside the first.
Hansen had never seen anything like them.
The portable forcefield sputtered and vanished.
"Not now," Hansen said. The sweat on his palms was suddenly
cold. "Ive got to"
Hansens visor went opaque. His helmet was dead, screens and
speakers alike. He took the helmet off.
His hands no longer shook. He didnt glance down toward his
pistol, but his toe, with a motion that might have been only a twitch, located the weapon
precisely.
Solbarth stepped from the entranceway. The android froze, his blank
eyes taking in Hansen and the creatures which slid toward the Commissioner at a walking
pace.
The two spindles were hazily transparent. An aircarHansens
own aircar, torn but upright againdrifted along behind the creatures, a hands
breadth above the pavement.
No one was aboard the vehicle. Krupchak, the driver, gaped at Hansen
from beside the personnel of Pink Two.
"Commissioner Hansen, please get in the car," said the
mechanical voice.
It sounded exactly as it had before, even though Hansen was no longer
wearing his helmet.
"I had the authority at this site," Hansen said hoarsely.
"You have no grounds to remove me without a hearing."
The spindles moved to either side of him. Hansens skin tingled.
Close up they still looked transparent, but he thought he saw something in the
black tendrils as well as between them.
The vehicles power door opened. "Commissioner Hansen,"
the voice repeated, "please get in the car."
Hansen obeyed, shifting his foot slightly so that he didnt scuff
the pistol. One of his people would take care of it. . . .
Fifty meters away, Chief Holloway licked his lips. He looked as though
he were watching a pornographic display.
The door shut after Hansen. The two spindles drifted through the
plastic panels, into the drivers compartment. Hansen didnt see them fold or
shrink, but their peaks didnt quite brush the vehicles blast-pocked headliner.
"Sir, should we" shouted one of the Special Units
personnel as he leaned from a roof with his plasma weapon half-pointed.
"No!" Hansen cried. He stuck his head out the
shattered side window and shouted, "No, everybody get on with your duties."
He didnt know what was going on, but he knew that it
wouldnt be helped if his own people started shooting.
The aircar slid in a tight circle and accelerated as it started to
rise.
"I have full authority from the Consensus for everything Ive
done here," Hansen said, knowing that in truth, hed always claimed whatever
authority he needed to get a job done and trusted that he could make it stick after the
fact.
That had always worked. Until now.
"The Consensus is not interested in your actions here,
Commissioner Hansen," said the voice. The words sounded in the Commissioners
mind, seeming to have nothing to do with the creatures which were escorting him. "The
Consensus has need of you on a planet called Northworld."
The car had risen to 300 meters and was moving at a speed that made the
wind howl through the many shrapnel holes. Other air traffic was avoiding their
arrow-straight rush.
Hansen frowned. "Whats Northworld?" he muttered.
The creaturesor the voicemust have been able to hear him
despite wind noise, because Hansens mind rasped with the words, "The Consensus
will inform you of what you need to know, Commissioner Hansen. In good time."
For the first time in his life, Commissioner Nils Hansen realized that
there might be more to the Consensus of Worlds than simply the bureaucracy of control of
which he himself was a part. |