file:///F|/rah/Frank%20Herbert/Herbert,%20Frank%20-%20Destination%20Void%204%20-%20The%20Ascension%20Factor.txt
glinted from a shining, intricately inlaid Islander cup of hardwood and mother-of-pearl. The hand
that held the cup was male, neither delicate nor calloused.
The figure leaned forward once, noting the depth of the sleeper's odd, open-eyed slumber. The
progress of light across the bay outside their room was reflected in the hardening of shadows
inside, and their relentless crawl.
The watcher, Ben Ozette, pulled the cover higher over the sleeper's bare shoulder to ward off
morning dampness. The pupils in her green irises stayed wide with the onset of dawn. He closed
her eyes for her with his thumb. She didn't seem to mind. The shudder that passed over him
uncontrollably was not due to the morning chill.
She was a picture of white -- white hair, eyelashes, eyebrows and a very fair porcelain skin. Her
shaggy white hair was cropped around her face, falling nearly to her shoulders in the back. It
was a perfect frame to those green, bright eyes. His hand strayed to the pillow, then back.
His profile in the light revealed the high cheekbones, aquiline nose and high eyebrows of his
Merman ancestry. In his years as a reporter for Holovision, Ben Ozette had become famous, his
face as familiar planetwide as that of a brother or a husband. Listeners worldwide recognized his
voice immediately. On their Shadowbox broadcasts, however, he became writer and cameramaster and
Rico got out in the lights -- in disguise, of course. Now their family, friends, coworkers would
feel the snap of Flattery's wrath.
They hadn't exactly had time to plan. During their weekly interviews, they both noticed how
everyone, including compound security, stayed well out of microphone range as they taped. The
next time they walked the grounds as they taped, interviewing with gusto. Then last night they
simply walked out. Rico did the rest. The prospect of being hunted by Flattery's goons dried
Ben's mouth a little. He sipped a little more water.
Maybe it's true, maybe she's a construction, he thought. She's too perfectly beautiful to be an
accident.
If the Director's memos were right, she was a construction, something grown by the kelp, not
someone born of a human. When dredged up at sea she was judged by the examining physician to be
"a green-eyed albino female, about twenty, in respiratory distress secondary to ingestion of sea
water; agitated, recent memory excellent, remote memory judged to be poor, possibly absent. . . ."
It had been five years since she washed out of the sea and into the news, and in that five years
Flattery had allowed no one but his lab people near her. Ben has asked to do the story out of
curiosity, and wound up pursuing more than he'd bargained for. He'd learned to hate the Director,
and as he watched Crista's fitful sleep, he wasn't the least bit sorry.
He had to admit that, yes, he knew from the first that it had always been a matter of time. He'd
fought Flattery and Holovision too openly and too long.
A recent Shadowbox accused Holovision of being a monopoly of misinformation, Flattery's propaganda
agent that would not regain credibility until it became worker-owned. Ben had leveled the same
attack at the production assistant the previous day.
Ben found himself being preempted by propagandistic little specials that Flattery's technicians
were grinding out. Ben and Rico had bought or built their own cameras and laserbases to minimize
the company's intimidation and Flattery's interference. Now they had full-time, nonpaying jobs as
air pirates with Shadowbox.
And fugitives, he thought.
Ben Ozette eased back into the old chairdog and let the sleeper lie. Of all the deadliness on
Pandora, this sleeper could be the most deadly. It was rumored that people had died at her touch,
and this was not just the Director's professional rumor mill. Ben had dared touch her, and he was
not yet one of the dead. It was rumored she was very, very bright.
He whispered her name under his breath.
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