Anderson, Poul - Avatar, The
people in Eopolis and the way they gossip? Word gets to me automatically."
Brodersen regarded her with fresh respect. She was a political
appointee-prominent in the Action Party of the North American Federation, helper
and protégé of Ira Quick-but by and large, she hadn't been doing a bad job on
Demeter, mediating between the Union Council and a diverse lot of increasingly
disaffected colonists. (A tinge of pity: Her husband had been a high-powered
lawyer on Earth, but there was little demand for his services here, and in spite
of his putting on a good show, everybody knew he was far gone into alcoholism,
without wanting to be cured of it. If anything, though, that made Aurelia
Hancock the more formidable.) He'd better play close to his vest.
"I did speak to you first," he said.
"Yes, and I told you I'd surely have heard if-"
"You never convinced me my evidence was faulty."
"I tried to. You wouldn't listen. But think. At its distance, how could
your robot possibly tell whether that was Emissary passing through?" Hancock
frowned again. "Your deception of the Astronautical Control Board about the true
purpose of that vessel could affect the continuance of your licenses, you know."
Brodersen had awaited that line of attack. "Aurie," he sighed
elaborately, "let me just rehearse for you exactly what happened."
He struck fire to his pipe and got it under weigh. His glance roved. The
room and furniture were to his taste, little of synth about them, mostly
handmade of what materials were handy some seventy years ago, when the
settlement on Demeter was about a generation old. (That'd be half an Earth
century, flitted across his mind. I really have soaked this planet up into me,
haven't I?) Creamy, whorl-grained daphne wainscoting set off a vase of sunbloom
on the desk and, on a shelf behind, a stunning hologram of Mount Lorn with both
moons full above its snows. On his right, two windows stood open on a garden.
There Terrestrial rosebeds and grass reached to a wrought iron fence; but a huge
old thunder oak remained from the vanished forest, its bluish-green leaves
breathing forth a slight gingery odor, and slingplant grew jubilantly over the
metal. Ordinary traffic moved along the street, pedestrians, cyclists, bubble of
a car and snake of a freighter whirring on their air cushions. Across the way, a
modem house lifted its pastel trapezoid. Yet overhead the sky arched deeper blue
than anywhere on Earth, and Phoebus in afternoon had a mellowness akin to Sol at
evening. For a half second he recalled that barometric pressure was lower and so
was gravity (eighty percent), but his body was too habituated to feel either any
longer.
He drew on the pipe, savored a bite across tongue and nostrils, and
continued: "I never kept my opinion secret. Theory says a T machine can scoot
you to anywhere in space-time within its range which means space and time.
Emissary was on the track of an alien ship that'd been observed using a gate in
this system, obviously to pass between a couple of points we knew nothing about.
I figured the crew and owners `ud be friendly. Why shouldn't they be? At a
minimum, they'd help Emissary return after her mission was completed. And in
that case, why not send them home close to the same date as they left?"
"I've heard your argument," Hancock said, "but only after you began
agitating. If you felt it was that plausible, that important, why didn't you
file a report beforehand with the appropriate bureau?"
Brodersen shrugged. "Why should I? The idea wasn't absolutely unique to
me. Besides, I'm a private citizen."
She gave him a narrow look. "The wealthiest man on Demeter is not
altogether a private citizen."
"I'm small potatoes next to the rich on Earth," he replied blandly.
"Like the Rueda clan in Peth -with whom you have a business as well as
family relationship. No, you are not entirely a private citizen."
Still she stared at him. He sat back, cradling the warmth of his pipe
bowl, and let her. Not that he had illusions about his handsomeness. He was a
big man, a hundred and eighty-eight centimeters tall and thickboned, muscular,
broad in the shoulders, deep in the chest; but of late years he had added girth
till he appeared stocky. His head was likewise massive, mesocephalic,
squarefaced, with heavy jaw and mouth, jutting Roman nose, eyes gray, wideset,
downward-slanted, crow's-footed, skin weathered and furrowed. Like most men on
Demeter, he went clean-shaven and cropped his hair above the ears; it was
straight, coarse, black with some white streaks, a last inheritance from his
great-grandmother. For this meeting, as for most occasions, he wore casual
colonial male garb: bolero of orosaur leather above a loose blouse, baggy pants
tucked into soft halfboots, wide belt holding assorted small tools and
instruments in its loops plus a sheath knife.
Side 10