THE SKY ROAD KEN MACLEOD TOR ATOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK NEW YORK NOTE: If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed'* to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this "stripped book." This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. THE SKY ROAD First published in Great Britain by Orbit Copyright © 1999 by Ken MacLeod All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form. Edited by Patrick Nielsen Hayden A Tor Book Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC 175 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10010 www.tor.com Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC. ISBN: 0-812-57759-0 First U.S. edition: August 2000 First mass market edition: August 2001 Printed in the United States of America 0987654321 For Mic CONTENTS 1 THE LIGHT AND THE FAIR 1 2 ANCIENT TIME 17 3 THE SHIP O THE YIRD 36 4 PAPER TIGERS 76 5 THE CHURCH OF MAN 101 6 LIGHT WEAPONS 132 7 THE CLAIMANT BAR 163 8 WESTERN APPROACHES 193 9 THE SICKLE'S SANG 219 10 FORGET BABYLON 240 11 THE ROCK COVENANT 273 12 DARK ISLAND 300 13 THE SEA EAGLE 340 14 FINAL ANALYSIS 359 15 THE HAMMER'S HARVEST 402 10 1 THE LIGHT AND THE FAIR So it came that Menial found him in the square at Carron Town S he walked through the fair in the light of a northern summer evening, looking for me. Of the hundreds of people around her, the thousands in the town and the thousands on the project, only I would serve her purpose. My voice and visage, mind and body were her target acquisition parameters. I sat on the plinth of the statue of the Deliverer, drained a bottle of beer and put it carefully down and looked around, screwing up my eyes against the westering sun. The music faded for a moment, then another band struck up, something rollicking and loud that echoed off the tall buildings around three sides of the square and boomed out from the open side across the shore and over the water. The still sealoch was miles of gold, the distant hills and islands stacks of black. The air was warm and shaking with the music and heavy with scent and sweat, 2 KEN MACLEOD alcohol-breath and weed-smoke. People were already dancing, swinging and swirling among the remaining stalls of the day's market. I caught glimpses and greetings from various of my workmates, Jondo and Druin and Machard and the rest, as they whirled past in the throng with somebody who might be their partner for the hour, or for the night, or for longer. For a moment, I felt intensely alone, and was about to jump up and plunge in and seek out someone, anyone, who would take me even for one dance. It was not normally this way; usually at such occasions through the summer I had got lucky. Like most of my fellow-workers, I was young and - of necessity - strong, and my vanity needed no flattery, and we were most of us open-handed strangers, and therefore welcome. But I was in a serious and abstracted mood, the coming autumn's study already casting its long shadow back, and in all that evening's gaiety I had not once made a woman laugh, and my luck had fled. She walked through that dense crowd as if it wasn't there. I saw her before she saw me. Her long black hair was caught around the temples by two narrow braids; the tumbling waves of the rest showed traces of auburn in the late sun. That golden light and ruddy shadow defined her tanned and flushed face: the large bright eyes, the high cheekbones, the curve of her cheek and jaw, the red lips. She wore a gown of plain green velvet that seemed, and probably was, made to show off her strong and well-endowed figure. Her gaze met mine, and locked. Her eyes were large and a little slanted, and they caught my glance like a trap. There is, no doubt, some bodily basis for the crude cartoon of such moments - the arrow THE SKY ROAD 3 through the heart. A sudden demand on the sugar reserves of the cells, perhaps. It's more like a thorn than an arrow, and passes in less than a second, but it's there, that sharp, sweet stab. A moment later she stood in front of me, looking down at me quizzically, curiously, then she came to some decision and sat down beside me on the cold black marble. The hooves of the Deliverer's horse reared above us. We stared at each other for a moment. My heart was hammering. She appeared younger, more hesitant, than she'd seemed with her first bold gaze. Her irises were golden-brown, ringed with green-blue. I could see a faint spatter of freckles beneath her tan. A fine gold chain around her neck suspended a rough mesh of gold wire containing a seer-stone the size of a pigeon's egg. It hung between her breasts, its small world flickering randomly in that gentle friction. An even thinner silver chain implied some other ornament, but it hung below where I could see. The dagger and derringer and purse on her narrow waist-belt were each so elegant and delicate as to be almost nominal. There was some powerful undertone to her scent, whether natural or artificial I didn't know. 'Well, here you are,' she said, as though we'd arranged to meet at this very place. For a couple of heartbeats I entertained the thought that this might be true, that she was someone I really did know and had unaccountably, unforgivably forgotten — but no, I had no memory of ever having met her before. At the same time I couldn't get rid of a conviction that I already knew her, and always had. 'Hello,' I said, for want of anything less banal. 'What's your name?' 'Menial,' she said. 'And you are . .. ?' 'Clovis,' I said 'Clovis colha Gree.' 4 KEN MACLEOD She nodded to herself, as though some datum had been confirmed, and smiled at me. 'So, colha Gree, are you going to ask me for a dance?' I jumped to my feet, amazed. 'Yes, of course. Would you do me the honour?' 'Thank you,' she said. She took my hand in a warm, dry grasp and rose gracefully, merging that movement with her first step. It was a fast dance to a traditional air, 'The Tactical Boys'. Talking was impossible, but we communicated a great deal none the less. Another measure followed, and then a slower dance. We finished it a long way from where we'd started - fetched up close to the outside tables of the biggest pub on the square, The Carronade. Some of the lads from work were already at one of the tables, with their local girls. My mates gave me odd looks, compounded of envy and secret amusement; their female partners were looking lasers at Menial, for no reason I could fathom. She was attractive all right, and looking more beautiful to my eyes with every passing second, but the other girls were not obviously less blessed; and she wasn't a harlot, unless she was foolish (harlotry being a respected but regulated trade in that town, its plying not permitted in the square). Introductions were awkwardly made. 'What will you be having, Menial?' I asked. She smiled up at me. She was, in truth, almost as tall as I, but my boots had high heels. 'A beer, please.' 'Fine. Will you wait here?' I gestured to a vacant place on the nearest bench, beside Jondo and his current lass. 'I will that,' Menial said. THE SKY ROAD 5 Jondo shot me another odd look, a smile with one corner of his mouth turned down, and his eyebrows raised. I shrugged and went through to the bar, returning a few minutes later with a three litre jug and a couple of tall glasses. Menial was sitting where she'd been, ignoring the fact that she was being ignored. I put this unaccustomed rudeness down to some petty pretty local quarrel, of which Carron Town - and the yard and, indeed, the project - had plenty. If one of Menial's ancestors had offended one of Jondo's (or whoever's) that was no business of mine, as yet. The table was too wide for any intimate conversation to be carried on across it, so I sat down beside her, setting off a Newtonian collision of hips all the way along the bench as my friends and their girlfriends shuffled their bums away from us. I filled our glasses and raised mine. 'Slainte,' I said. 'Slainte, mo chridhe? she said, quietly but firmly, her gaze level across the tilted rim. And cheers, my dear, to you, I thought. Again her whole manner was neither shy nor brazen, but as though we had been together for months or years. I didn't know what to say, so I said that. 'I feel we know each other already,' I said. 'But we don't' I laughed. 'Unless when we were both children?' Menial shook her head. 'I was not here as a child,' she said, in a vague tone. 'Maybe you've seen me at the project' 'I think I would remember,' I said. She smiled, acknowledging the compliment, as I added, *You work at the project? I sounded more surprised than I should have been - there were plenty of women 6 KEN MACLEOD working on it, after all, in catering and administration. 'Aye,' she said, 'I do.' She fondled the pendant, warming a fire within it, and not only there. 'On the guidance system.' 'Oh,' I said, suddenly understanding. 'You're a — an engineer.' 'I am a tinker,' she said in a level tone, using the word I'd so clumsily avoided. She spoke it with a pride as obvious, and loud enough to be heard. A snigger and a giggle passed around the table. I glared past Menial's shoulder at Jondo and Ma-chard. They shook their heads slightly, doubtfully, then returned to their conversations. Justice judge them. As a city man I felt myself above such rural idiocies - though realising her occupation had given even me something of a jolt. Whatever passed between us, it would be less or more serious than any fling with a local lass. I leaned inward, so that Menial's shoulders and mine defined a social circle of our own. 'Sounds like interesting work,' I said. She nodded. 'A lot of mathematics, a lot of - and this time she did lower her voice - 'programming.' 'Ah,' I said, trying to think of some response that wouldn't reveal me to be as prejudiced as my workmates. 'Isn't it very dangerous?' I resisted the impulse to look over my shoulder, but I was suddenly, acutely aware of the massive presence of the hills around the town, their forested slopes like the bristling backs of great beasts in the greater Wood of Caledon. 'White logic,' Menial explained. 'The right-hand path, you know? The path of light.' She did not sound as though the distinction mattered a lot to her. THE SKY ROAD 7 'Reason guide you,' I responded, with reflex piety. 'But - it must be tempting. The short cuts, yeah?' 'The path of power is always a temptation,' she said, with casual familiarity. 'Especially when you're working on a guidance system!' She laughed; I confess I shuddered. She fingered her talisman. 'Enough about that. I know what I'm doing, so it isn't dangerous. At least, not as dangerous as it looks from outside.' 'Well.' Despite the electric frisson her words aroused, I was as keen as she was to change the subject. *You could say the same about what I do.' 'And what do you do?' She asked it out of politeness; she already knew. I was sure of that, without quite knowing why. 'I work in the yard,' I said. 'On the ship?' 'Oh, not on the ship!' A self-deprecating laugh, not very sincere. 'On the platform. For the summer, I'm a welder.' She slugged back some beer. 'And the rest of the time?' 'I'm a scholar,' I said. 'Of history. At Glaschu.' This was a slight exaggeration. I had just attained the degree of Master of Arts, and my summer job was a frantic, frugal effort to earn enough to support myself for an attempt at a doctorate. Scholarship was my ambition, not my occupation. But I refused to call myself a student. Menial looked at me with the sort of effortful empathy with which I'd favoured her self-disclosure. 'That sounds ... interesting,' she said. 'What part of history?' I gestured across the square, to the statue's black silhouette. Behind it, from the east, the first visible stars of the evening pricked the sky. 8 KEN MACLEOD The life of the Deliverer,' I said. 'And what have you learned?' She leaned closer, transparently more interested; her black brows raised a fraction, her bright dark eyes widening. Without thinking, I lit a cigarette; remembered my manners, and offered her one. She took it, grinning, and helped herself to the jug of beer, then filled my glass too. *You wouldn't think there'd be much new to learn,' she added, looking up through her eyelashes. I rose to the bait. 'Ah, but there is!' I told her. 'The Deliverer lived in Glasgow, you know. For a while.' 'A lot of places will tell you she lived there - for a while!' Menial laughed. 'Aye, but we have evidence,' I said. 'I've seen papers written with her own hand, and signed. There is no controversy that it was her who wrote them. What they mean, now, that's another matter. And a great deal of other writing, printed articles that is, and material that is still in the - you know.' 'Dark storage?' 'Yeah,' I said. 'Dark storage. I wish—' Even here, even now, it was impossible to say just what I wished. But Merrial understood. 'There you go, colha Gree,' she said. 'The path of power is always a temptation!' 'Aye, it is that,' I admitted gloomily. *You can look at them, labelled in her own hand, and you wonder what's in them, and - well.' 'Probably corrupt,' she said briskly. 'Not worth bothering with.' 'Of course corrupt—' She shook her head, with a brief, small frown. 'In the technical sense,' she explained. 'Garbage data, unreadable.' THE SKY ROAD 9 Garbage data? What did that mean? 'I see,' I said, seeing only that she'd just tried to explicate part of the argot of her profession; another unseasonable intimacy. 'All the same,' she went on, 'it must be strange work, history. I don't know how you can bear it, digging about in the dead past.' I had heard variations of this sentiment from so many people, starting with my mother, that exasperation welled within me and I'm sure showed on my face. She smiled as though to assure me that she didn't hold it against me personally, and added, 'The Possessors don't work only through the black logic, you know. They can get to your mind through their words on paper, too.' *You speak very freely,' I said. For a woman, I didn't add. She took it as a compliment, and thus paid me one by not recognising the stiff-kneed priggishness that my remark represented. 'It's the tinker way,' she said, giving me another small shock. 'We talk as we please.' I couldn't come back on that, so I ploughed on. 'We have to understand the Possession,' I explained self-righteously, 'to understand the Deliverance.' 'But do we understand the Deliverance?' she asked, teasing me relentlessly. 'Do you, Clovis colha Gree?' T can't say,' I said - which was true enough, though ecological with the truth. 'Good,' Merrial said. 'We would not claim to understand it, and we knew the Deliverer better than most.' A sly smile. 'As you know.' I nodded, slowly. I knew all right. Despised and feared though they sometimes are, it is not for noth- 10 KEN MACLEOD ing that the tinkers are known as the Deliverer's children. They worked her will long ago, in the troubled times, and the benison of that work has protected them down the generations; that and - on a more cynical view — their obscure and irreplaceable knowledge. I had heard rumours - always disparaged by the University historians - of a firmer continuity, a darker arcana, that linked today's tinkers and the Deliverer, and that reached back to times yet more remote, when even the Possession was but a sapling, its shadow not yet covering the Earth. Her hand covered mine, briefly. 'Don't talk about it,' she said. So we talked about other things: her work, my work, her childhood and mine. The glasses were twice refilled. She stood up, hefting the now empty jug. 'Same again?' I rose too, saying, 'I'll get them—' 'I insist,' she said, and was gone. I watched the sway of her hips, the way it carried over to swing her heavy skirt and ripple the torrent of hair down her back, as she passed through the crowd and disappeared through the wide door of The Carronade. My friends observed this attention with sardonic smiles. *You're in for an interesting time, Clovis,' Jondo remarked. He stroked his long red pony-tail suggestively, making his girlfriend laugh again. 'Looks like the glamour's got you.' Machard smirked. 'Seriously, man,' he told me, 'take care. You don't know tinks like we do. They're faithless, godless, clannish and they don't settle down. At best she'll break your heart, at worst—' 'What is the matter with you?' I hissed, leaning sideways to keep the girls out of the path of my THE SKY ROAD 11 wrath. 'Come on, guys, give the lady a chance/ My two friends' expressions took on looks of insolent innocence. 'Ease off, Clovis,' said Machard. 'Just advice. Ignore it if you like, it's your business.' 'Too damn right it is,' I said. 'So mind your own.' I spoke the harsh words lightly - not fighting words, but firm. The two lads shrugged and went back to chatting up their lassies. I was ignored, as Menial had been. The late train from Inverness glided down the glen, sparks from the overhead wire flaring in the twilight, and vanished behind the first houses. A minute later I could hear the brief commotion as it stopped at the station, a few streets away. The clouds and the tops of the hills glowed pink, the same light reflecting off a solitary airship, heading west. Few lights were on in the town - half past ten in the evening was far too early for that - but the houses that spread up the side of the glen and along the shore were beginning to seem as dark as the pine forest that began where the dwellings ended. Farther up the great glen the side-lights and tail-lights of vehicles traced out the road's meander, and the dark green of the wooded hillsides met the bright green of the lower slopes, field joined to field, pasture to pasture all the way to where the haunches of the hills hid the view, and the land was dark. Somewhere far away, but sounding uncannily close, a wolf howled, its protracted, sinister note clearly audible above the sounds of the town and the revelry of the fair. The square was becoming more packed and noisy by the minute. The drinking and dancing would go on for hours. Jugglers and tumblers, fire-eaters and musicians competed for attention and spare cash, 12 KEN MACLEOD with each other and with the hawkers. The markets on summer Thursdays were locally called 'the fair', but only once a month did they amount to much, with a more impressive contingent of performers than were here now, as well as travelling players, whirling mechanical rides and, of course, tinkers; the last pursuing their legitimate trade of engineering and their less reputable, but often more lucrative, craft of fortune-telling. The train pulled away, trailing its sparks along the Canon's estuarial plain and around the Carron sea-loch's southern shore. Menial returned with a full jug, a bottle of whisky and a tray of small glasses. Without a word she placed the tray and the bottle in the middle of the table and sat down, this time opposite me. She filled our tall glasses, put down the jug and gestured to the whisky bottle. 'Help yourselves,' she said. My friends became more friendly towards her after that. We all found ourselves talking together, talking shop, the inevitable gossip and grumbles of the project, about this scandal and that foreman and the other balls-up; ironically, the girls seemed to feel excluded, and fell to talking between themselves. Menial, showing tact enough for both of us, noticed this and gradually, now that the ice was broken, returned her conversation to me. Jondo and Machard took up again their neglected tasks of seduction or flirtation. When, a couple of hours later, she asked me to see her home, their ribaldry was relatively restrained. The square was noisier than ever; the only people heading for home, or for bed, were like ourselves workers on the project who, unlike the locals, had to work on the following day, a Friday. We walked THE SKY ROAD 13 through the dark street to the north of the square and across the bridge over the Carron River towards the suburb of New Kelso. Merrial stopped in the middle of the bridge. One arm was tight around my waist. With the other, she waved around. 'Look,' she said. 'What do you see?' On our right the town's atomic power-station's automation hummed blackly in the dark; to our left the fish-farms, warmed by the reactor's run-off, spread down to the shore. I looked to left and right, and then behind to the main town, ahead to New Kelso, across the loch to the other small towns. She smiled at my baffled silence. 'Look up.' Overhead the Milky Way blazed, the aurora bo-realis flickered, a communications aerostat glowed pink in a sun long since set for us. The Plough hung above the hills to the north. A meteor flared briefly, my indrawn breath a sound effect for its silent passage. To the west the sky still had light in it: the sun would be up in four hours. T can see the stars,' I said. 'That's it,' she said, sounding pleased at my per-ceptiveness. 'You can. We're in the very middle of a town of ten thousand people, and you can see the Milky Way. Not as well as you could see it from the top of Glas Bhein, sure enough, but you can see it. Why?' I shrugged, looking again back and forth. I'd never given the matter thought. 'No clouds?' I suggested brightly. She laughed and caught my hand and tugged me forward. 'And you a scholar of history!' 'What's that got to do with it?' She pointed to the street-lamp at the end of the bridge's parapet. Its post was about three metres 14 KEN MACLEOD high; its conical cowl's reflective inner surface sharply cut off all but the smallest upward illumination. 'Did you ever see lamps like that in pictures of the olden times?' she asked. 'Now that I come to think of it,' I said, 'no.' 'A town this size would have had lamps everywhere, blazing light into the sky. From street-lamps and windows and shop-fronts. The very air itself would glow with it. You could see just a handful of stars on the clearest night.' I thought about the ancient pictures I'd peered at under glass. You know, you're right,' I said. 'That's what it looked like.' 'Some people,' Menial went on, in a sudden gust of anger, 'lived their whole lives without once seeing the Milky Way!' 'Very sad,' I said. In fact the thought gave me a tight feeling in my chest, as if I were struggling to breathe. 'How did they stand it?' 'Aye, well, that's a question you could well ask.' She glanced up at me. 'I thought you might know.' 'I never noticed, to be honest.' 'And why don't we do it?' She gestured again at the electric twilight of the surrounding town. 'Because it would be wasteful,' I said. As soon as the words were out I realised I'd said them without thinking, and that it wasn't the answer. Menial laughed. 'We have power to spare!' It was my turn to stop suddenly. We'd taken a right and were going down a path past the power-station. I knew for a fact that it could, when called upon in a rare emergency - such as when extra heating was required to clear snow from a blizzard -produce enough electricity to light up Canon Town several times over. You're right,' I said. 'So why don't we do it? I've THE SKY ROAD 15 seen pictures of the great cities of antiquity, and you're right, they shone. They looked. . . magnificent. Perhaps it was so bright they didn't need to see the stars - they had the city lights instead! They made their own stars!' Menial was slowly shaking her head. 'Maybe that was fine for them,' she said. 'But it wouldn't be for us. We all get - uneasy when we can't see the night sky. Don't you, just thinking about it?' I took a deep breath, and let it out with a sigh. 'Aye, you're right at that!' We walked on, her strides pacing my slower steps. *You're a strange woman,' I said. She smiled and held my waist more firmly and leaned her head against my shoulder. I found myself looking down at her hair, and down at the scoop neckline of her dress and the glowing stone between her breasts. 'Sure I am,' she said. 'But so are we all, that's what I'm saying. We're different from the people who came before us, or before the Deliverer's time, and nobody wonders how or why. The feeling we have about the sky is just part of it. We live longer and we breed less, we sicken little, sometimes I think even our eyes are sharper} these changes are hardwired into our radiation-hardened genes—' 'Our what?' I felt the shrug of her shoulder. 'Just tinker cant, colha Gree. Don't worry. You'll pick it up.' 'Oh, I will, will I?' 'Aye. If you stay with me.' There was only one answer to that. I turned her around and kissed her. She clasped her lips to mine and slid her hands under my open waistcoat and 16 KEN MACLEOD sent them roving around my sides and back. I could feel them through my silk shirt like hot little animals. The kiss went on for some time and ended with our tongues flickering together like fish at the bottom of a deep pool; then she leaned away and gripped my shoulders and looked at me and said, 'I reckon that means you're staying, colha Gree.' Suddenly we were both laughing. She caught my hand and swung it and we started walking again, talking about I don't know what. Out on the edge of town we turned a corner into a litde estate of dozens of single-storey wooden houses with chimneys. Some of the houses were separate, each with its own patch of garden; others, smaller, were lined up in not quite orderly rows. Even in the summer, even with electricity cables strung everywhere, a smell of woodsmoke hung in the air. Yellow light glowed from behind straw-mat blinds. A dog barked and was silenced by an irritable yell. 'Hey, come on/ Menial said with an impish smile. I hadn't realised how my feet had hesitated as the path had changed from cobbles to trampled gravel. 'Never been in a tinker camp before,' I apologised. 'We don't bite.' Another cheeky grin. 'Well, that is to say...' You really are a terrible woman.' 'Oh, I am that, indeed. Ferocious - so I'm told.' 'I'll hold you to that' 'I'll hold you to more.' She held me as she stopped in front of one of the small houses in the middle of the row, and fingered out a tiny key five centimetres long on a thong attached to her belt but hidden in a slit in the side of her skirt. The lock too seemed absurdly small, a THE SKY ROAD 17 brass circular patch on the white-painted door at eye level. 'So are you coming in, or what?' Lust and reason warred with fear and superstition, and won. I followed her over the polished wooden threshold as she switched on the electric light. I stood for a moment, blinking in the sudden 40-watt flood. The main room was about four metres by six. Against the far wall was a wood-burning stove, banked low; above it was a broad mantelpiece on which a large clock ticked loudly. The time was half past midnight. On either side of the stove were rows of shelves with hundreds of books. In the left-hand corner a workbench jutted from the wall, with a microscope and an unholy clutter of soldering gear and bits of wire and tools. Rough, unpolished seer-stones of various sizes lay among them. The main table of the house was a huge oaken piece about a metre and a half square, with carved and castered legs. A crocheted cotton throw covered it, weighted at the centre by a seer-stone hemisphere at least thirty centimetres in diameter, so finely finished that it looked like a dome of glass. Within it, hills and clouds drifted by. Menial stood by the table for a moment, reached up behind her head and removed a clasp from her hair, so that the two narrow braids fell forward and framed her face. Then she lifted the chain with the talisman, and the other, finer silver chain, from around her neck and deposited them on the table. The place smelt of woodsmoke and pot-pourri and the bunches of flowering plants stuffed into carelessly chosen containers in every available corner. The wooden walls were varnished, and hung with an incongruous variety of old prints and paintings - landscapes, ladies, foxes, cats, that sort of 18 KEN MACLEOD thing - and tacked-up picture-posters related to the project. An open door led to a tiny scullery; a curtained alcove beside it took up the rest of that end of the room. I presumed it contained the bed. But it was to a big old leather couch in front of the stove that she drew me first. She half-leaned, half-sat on the back of it, and began unbuttoning my shirt, then explored my chest with her lips and tongue - and teeth - as I applied myself to undoing the fastenings down the back of her dress, and working my boots off. As I kicked away the right boot the sgean dhu clattered to the floor. By this time she had unbuckled my belt, and with a shrug and a step we both shed our outer clothes, which fell to the floor in a promiscuous coupling of their own. Mer-rial stood for a moment in nothing but her long silk underskirt. I clasped her in my arms, her nipples hard, her breasts warm and soft against my chest; and we kissed again. We moved, we danced, Menial leading, towards the curtained alcove. She pulled away the curtain to reveal a large and reassuringly solid-looking bed. I knelt in front of her and pulled down her slip and knickers, and kissed her between the legs until she pulled me gently to my feet. I managed to leave my own briefs on the floor. We faced each other naked, like the Man and the Woman in the Garden in the story. Menial half-turned, threw back the bedcovers and picked up from the bed a long white cotton nightgown, which she shook out and held at arm's length for a moment. 'I won't be needing that tonight,' she grinned, and cast it to the floor, and me to the bed. THE SKY ROAD 19 I woke in daylight, and lay for a minute or so basking in the warm afterglow, and hot after-images, of love and sex. Rolling over and reaching out my arm, I found that I was alone in the bed. It was still warm where Menial had slept. The air was filled with the aroma of coffee and the steady ticking of the clock - The time! I sat up in a hurry and leaned forward to see the big timepiece, and discovered with relief that it was only five o'clock. Thank Providence, we'd only slept an hour and a half. With the same movement I discovered a host of minor pains: bites on my shoulder and neck, scratches on my back and buttocks, aching muscles, raw skin ... The animal whose attacks had caused all this damage padded out of the scullery. 'Good morning,' she said. I made some sort of croaking noise. Menial smiled and handed me one of the two steaming mugs she'd carried in. She sat down on the foot of the bed, drawing her knees up to her chin to huddle inside her sark, its high neck and long sleeves and intricate whitework giving her an incongruous appearance of modesty. I sipped the coffee gratefully, unable to take my eyes off her. She looked calmly back at me, with the smile of a contented cat. 'Good morning,' I said, finding my voice at last. 'And thank you.' 'Not just for the coffee, I hope,' said Menial. I was grinning so much that my cheeks, too, were aching. 'No, not just for the coffee. God, Menial, I've never...' I didn't know how to put it. 'Done it before?' she inquired innocently. 20 KEN MACLEOD Coffee went up the back of my nose as I spluttered a laugh. * Compared with last night, I might as well not have,' I ruefully admitted. 'You are - you're amaz-ing!' Her level gaze held me. She showed not the slightest embarrassment. 'Oh, you're not so bad yourself, colha Gree,' she said in a judicious tone. 'But you have a lot to learn.' 'I hope you'll teach me.' 'I'm sure I will,' she said. 'If you want to stay with me, that is.' She waved a hand, as if this were a matter yet to be decided. 'Stay with you? Oh, Merrial!' I couldn't speak. 'What?' 'Nothing could make me leave you. Ever.' I was almost appalled at what I was saying. I had not expected to hear myself speak such words, not for a long time to come. 'How sweet of you to say that,' she said, very seriously, but smiling. 'But—' 'But nothing!' I reached sideways and put the mug on the floor and shifted myself down the bed towards her. Without looking away from me, she put her mug down too, on a trunk at the end of the bed, and rocked forward to her knees to meet me. We knelt with our arms around each other. 'I love you,' I said. I must have said it before, said it a lot of times through the night, but now there was all the weight in the world behind the words. 'I love you too,' she said. She clung to me with a sudden fierceness, and laid her face on my shoulder. A wet, salt tear stung a love-bite there. She sniffed and raised her head, blinking her now even brighter eyes. THE SKY ROAD 21 'What's wrong?' I asked. Tm happy/ she said. 'So am 1/ She regarded me solemnly. 'I have to say this/ she said, with another unladylike sniffle. 'Loving me will not always make you happy/ I could not imagine what she meant, and I didn't want to. 'Why are you saying this?' 'Because I must,' she said. Her voice was strained. 'Because I have to be fair with you.' 'Aye, sure,' I said. 'Well, now you've warned me, can I get on with loving you?' She brightened instantly, as though some arduous responsibility had been lifted from her shoulders. 'Oh yes!' she said, hugging me closer again. 'Love me as much as you like, love me for ever!' She pulled back a little, looked down, then raised her gaze again to mine. 'But not right now,' she added regretfully. *You have to go.' 'Now?!' We had fallen out of our mutual dream into the workaday world, where we were two people who didn't, really, know each other all that well. 'Yes,' she insisted. *You have to get back across town, get... washed, and ready for work and catch the bus at half past six.' 'I can catch it from here.' 'The hell you can. People will talk.' 'They'll talk anyway.' 'People around here, I mean.' I climbed reluctantly off the bed. Menial slipped lithely under the covers and pulled them up to her chin. 'What about you?' I asked, as I searched out and sorted my clothes. 22 KEN MACLEOD I'm an intellectual worker/ she said smugly as she snuggled down. 'We start at nine.' She watched me dress with a sort of affectionate curiosity. 'What have you got on your belt?' I patted the hard leather pouches and fastened the buckle. 'The tools of a tradesman,' I told her, 'and the weapons of a gentleman.' 'I see,' she said approvingly. 'So when will I see you again?' I asked, as I recovered the sgean dhu and stuck it back down the side of my boot. 'Tonight, eight o'clock, at the statue? Go for something to eat?' I pretended to give this idea thoughtful consideration, then we both laughed, and she sat up again and reached out to me. We hugged and kissed goodbye. As I backed away to the door, grudging even a moment without her in my sight, a flickering from the big seer-stone caught my eye. I stopped beside the table and stooped to examine it. As I did so I noticed Menial's two pendants: the talisman -the small seer-stone - now showing a vaguely organic tracery of green, and on the silver chain a silver piece about a centimetre in diameter which appeared to be a monogram made up of the letters 'G' and T' and the numeral '4'. The table's centre-piece was all black within, except for an arrangement of points of light which might have been torches, or cities, or stars. They flashed on and off, on and off, and the bright dots spelled out one word: HELP. I glanced over at Menial. 'It's reached the end of its run,' I remarked. 'Reset it then,' she said sleepily from the pillow. I brushed the stone's chill surface with my sleeve, restoring it to chaos, and with a final smile at Mer- THE SKY ROAD 23 rial opened the door and stepped out into the cock-crowing sunlight. and she threw her arms around him that same night she drew him down. 2 ANCIENT TIME D. eath follows me, she thought, as she rode into the labour-camp. There was something implacable about it, like logic: it follows, it follows . . . The thought's occurrence had nothing to do with logic; it appeared like a screensaver on the surface of her mind, whenever her mind went blank. It troubled her a little, as did another thought that drifted by in such moments: where are the swift cavalry ? The gate rolled shut behind her, squealing in its rusty grooves. The wind from the steppe hummed in the barbed-wire fence and whipped away the dust kicked up as she reined in the black horse. A guard hurried over; he somehow managed to make his brisk soldierly step look obsequious, even as his bearing made his dark-blue microfibre fatigues look military. He doffed a baseball cap with the Mutual Protection lettering and logo. ' Good morning, Citizen.' That title was already an honorific. Myra Godwin-Davidova smiled and handed him the reins. 'Good morning,' she said, swinging down from THE SKY ROAD 25 the horse. She could hear her knee-joints creak. She lifted the saddlebags and slung them over her shoulder. The weight almost made her stagger, and the guard's arm twitched towards her; but she wasn't going to accept any help from that quarter. 'That will be all, thank you.' 'As you wish, Citizen.' The guard saluted and replaced his cap. She was still looking down at him, her riding-boots adding three inches to her five-foot-eleven height. She patted the big mare's rump and watched as the guard led the beast away, then set off towards the accommodation huts. As she walked she pulled off her leather gauntlets and stuffed them awkwardly into the deep pockets of her long fur coat, and tucked a stray strand of silver hair under her sable hat. Hands mottled, veins showing, nails ridged: tough claws of an old bird, still flexible, but a better indication of her true age than her harshly lined but firm face, straight back and limber stride. Her knees hurt, but she tried not to let it show, or slow her down. The camp perimeter was about one kilometre by two. Beyond the far fence she could see straight to the horizon, above which rose the many gantries and the few remaining tall ships of the old port. It had been a proud fleet once. How long before she would have to say, all my ships are gone and all my men are dead? As if to mock her thought, a small ship screamed overhead; she caught a glimpse of it: angular, faceted, translucent, a spectral stealth-bomber shrieking skyward from Baikonur on a jet of laser-heated steam. The trail's after-image floated irritatingly in front of her as she turned her gaze resolutely back to earth. 26 KEN MACLEOD One of the camp's factories was a couple of hundred metres away, a complex of aluminium pipework and fibre-optic cabling in a queasily organic-looking mass about fifty metres wide and twenty high, through which the control cabins and walkways of the human element were beaded and threaded like the eggs and exudate of some gargantuan insect. The name of the company that owned it, Space Merchants, was spelled out on the roof in twisty neon. As she approached the nearest workers' housing area it struck Myra, not for the first time, that the huts were more modern and comfortable than the concrete apartment block she lived in herself. Each hut was semi-cylindrical, its rounded ends streamlined to the prevailing wind; soot-black polycarbon skin with rows of laminated-diamond windows. This particular cluster of accommodation huts was in two rows of ten, with the rutted remains of a twenty metre-wide paved road between them. A gang of a dozen men was engaged in repairing the road; the breeze carried a waft of sweat and tar. The men were using shovels, a gas burner under a tipping-and-spreading contraption, and a coughing diesel-engined road-roller: primitive, heavy equipment. On the sidewalk a blue-suited Mutual Protection guard lounged, picking his teeth and apparently watching a show in his eyes and hearing music or commentary in his ears. The loom of Myra's shadow made him jump, blink and shake his head with a small shudder. He started to his feet. 'No need to get up,' Myra said unkindly. 'I just want to speak to some of the men.' 'They're on a break, Citizen,' he said, squinting up at her. 'So it's up to them, right?' THE SKY ROAD 27 * Right,' said Myra. Physical work counted as recreation. It was the intellectual labour of design and monitoring that taxed the convicts' nerves. She turned to the men, who waved to her and shouted greetings and explanations: she'd have to wait the few minutes it would take for them to finish spreading and rolling some freshly poured tarmac. Not offering one to the guard, she lit a Marley and let the men take their time finishing their break. She'd always insisted that her arrivals and inspections counted as work-time for the labourers. Her spirits lifted as the Virginia and the Morocco kicked in. The labourers had their yellow suits rolled down to the waist, and were sweating even though the temperature had just climbed above freezing. Most of them were younger - let's face it, far younger - than herself; dark-tanned Koreans and Japanese, muscular as martial arts adepts - which, indeed, some of them were. She enjoyed watching them, the effect of smoke amplifying the underlying undertone of lust, the happy, hippy hormonal hum . . . But that reminded her of Georgi, and her mood crashed again. Georgi was dead. Sometimes it seemed every man she'd ever fucked was dead; it was like she carried a disease: Niall MacCallum had died in a car crash, Jaime Gonzalez had died - what? - seventy years ago in the contra war, Jon Wilde had died in her arms on the side of the Karaganda road (on snow that turned red as his face turned white), and now Georgi Davidov had died in the consulate at Almaty, of a heart attack. (They expected her to believe thai?) There had been others, she reminded herself. Quite recent others. It wasn't every man she'd ever fucked who was doomed, it was every man she'd 28 KEN MACLEOD ever loved. There was only one exception she knew of. All her men were dead, except one, and he was a killer. Even, perhaps, Georgi's killer. Fucking heart attack, my ass! It was one of their moves, it had to be — a move in the endgame. A door banged open somewhere and the street suddenly swarmed with children pelting along and yelling, their languages and accents as varied as the colours of their skins. Few of the camp's bonded labour-force were women, but many of the men had women with them; there was every inducement for the prisoners to bring their families along. It was humane, but politic as well: a man with a woman and children was unlikely to risk escape or revolt. Surrounded by children calling to their fathers, poking fingers in the hot asphalt, crowding around the machines and loudly investigating, die gang knocked off at last, leaving the guard to mind the newly tarred road. Myra savoured his disgruntled look as she crushed the filter roach under her heel and stepped out into the centre of the untarred part of the street. 'Hi, guys.' They all knew who she was, but the only ones among them she recognised were two members of the camp committee, Kim Nok-Yung and Shin Se-Ha. The former was a young Korean shipyard worker, stocky and tough; the latter a Japanese mathematician of slender build and watchful mien. Kim seized her hand, grinning broadly. 'Hello, Myra.' 'Good to see you, Nok-Yung. And you, Se-Ha.' The Japanese man inclined his head. 'Hi.' He insisted on taking her saddlebags. The whole gang surrounded her, flashing eyes and teeth, talking to THE SKY ROAD 29 each other and to her without much regard for mutual comprehension. They shooed away the children and led her into the nearest hut. Its doorway film brushed over her, burst in a shower of droplets with an odour of antiseptic, and reformed behind her. She blinked rapidly and shrugged out of her heavy coat, throwing it on to one of a row of hooks that grew from the curving wall. Her first deep breath was evidence enough of how effective the filter film was at keeping out the dust. At the same time, it brought a flush to her skin as her immune system rushed to investigate whatever she'd just inhaled of the nanoware endemic to the building's interior. She followed Kim into the dining-area, an airy space of flat-surfaced furnishings - some a warning red to indicate that they were for heating, others white for eating off. The chairs were padded black polycarbon plastic. Around the walls, racked on shelves or stacked on floors, were thousands of books: centuries' worth of classics and bestsellers and blockbusters and textbooks, as if blown from the four winds and fetched up against these barriers. It would have been the same in any of the huts. The next most common items of clutter were musical instruments and craft equipment and products: plastic scrimshank, spaceships in bottles, elaborately carved wooden toys. As they sat down around a table Myra felt prickly and on edge. She tugged her eyeband, a half-centimetre-wide crescent of translucent plastic, from her hair and placed it across her temples, in front of her eyes. A message drifted across her retina. 'Nanoprotect56 has detected the following known surveillance molecules in the room: Dataphage, Hackendice, Reportback, Mercury, Moldavian. Do you wish to clean up?' 30 KEN MACLEOD She blinked when the cursor stopped on the Proceed option, took a deep breath, held it until her lungs were burning, then exhaled. The faces around the table were incurious and amused. 'Cleanup in progress,' the retinal display reported. Myra took a deep breath. It felt cool this time, as well as smooth. 'So we have privacy,' one of the Koreans said, with heavy irony. 'Ah, fuck it,' Myra said. 'Happens every time. You gotta assume they're listening.' There was bound to be something else her current release of 'ware wasn't up to catching: she imagined some tiny Turing machine ticking away, stitching sound-vibrations into a long-chain molecule in the dirt She took a recorder - larger and less advanced than the one in her mental picture - from her pocket and laid it on the table. 'And I'm listening. So, what have you got for me?' A quick exchange of glances around the table ended as usual with Kim Nok-Yung accepted as the spokesman. He rustled a paper from an inner pocket and ran a finger down the minutes; Matters Arising started with the routine first question. 'Any progress on POW recognition?' Myra was touched by the note of hope with which he asked the question, the hundredth time no different from the first. She compressed her lips and shook her head. 'Sorry, guys. Red Cross and Crescent are working on it, and Amnesty. Still no dice.' Nok-Yung shrugged. 'Oh well. Please make the standard protest.' 'Of course.' As they ticked their way down the list of complaints and conditions and assignments and payments, Myra noticed that the whole pattern of THE SKY ROAD 31 production in the camp had changed. The intensity of the work, and the volume of output, had gone up drastically. Twenty engines and a hundred habitat modules completed for Space Merchants in the past month! Nok-Yung and Se-Ha were subtly underlining the changes with guarded glances and shifts in tone, but they weren't commenting explicitly. Myra looked around the table when they reached the end of the agenda. No one had complained about the speed-up. They didn't seem troubled; they had an air of suppressed excitement, almost glee, as they waited for her to speak. She checked over again the figures in her head, and realised with a jolt that at this rate most of the men here would work off their fines - or 'debts' - in months rather than years. Another endgame move. Myra nodded slightly and smiled. 'Well, that's it,' she said. 'Don't overwork yourselves, guys. I mean it. Make sure you get in plenty of road-mending, OK?' The prisoners just grinned at their shared secret She reached for the saddlebags, as though just remembering something. 'I've brought some books for you.' The men leaned inward eagerly as she unpacked. They weren't allowed any kind of interface with the net, and nothing that could be used to build one: no televisions or computers or readers or VR rigs, not even music decks. Nothing could stop Myra carrying in whatever she liked - the saddlebags were legally a diplomatic bag - but any electronic or molecular contraband would have been confiscated the moment she left. So hardbooks it had to be. The prisoners and their families had an unquenchable 32 KEN MACLEOD thirst for them. Myra's every visit brought more additions to the drift. This time she had dozens of paperbacks with tasteful Modern Art covers and grey spines, 20th Century Classics - Harold Robbins, Stephen King, Dean Koontz and so on - which she shoved across the table to the men whose names she didn't know. For her friends Nok-Yung and Se-Ha she'd saved the best for last: hardbooks so ancient that only advanced preservation treatments kept them from crumbling to dust— Rather like herself, she thought, as the books passed one by one from her gnarled hands: an incredibly rare, possibly unique, copy of Tucker's edition of Stirner; the Viking Portable Nietzsche; and a battered Thinker's Library edition of Spencer's First Principles. Kim Nok-Yung looked down at them reverently, then up at her. Shin Se-Ha was in some kind of trance. Nok-Yung shook his head. 'This is too much,' he said, almost angrily. 'Myra, you can't—' 'Oh yes, I can.' 'Where did you get them?' asked Se-Ha. Myra shrugged. 'From Reid, funnily enough.' All the men were looking at her now, with sour smiles. 'From David Reid? The owner?' Kim waved his hand, indicating everything in sight. 'Yeah,' said Myra. 'The very same.' There was a moment of sober silence. 'Well,' Nok-Yung said at last, 'I hope we make better use of them than he did, the bastard.' Everybody laughed, even Myra. 'So do I,' she said. She settled back in her chair and passed around THE SKY ROAD 33 the Marley pack and accepted the offer of coffee. 'OK, guys/ she said. 'The news. Everything's still going to hell.' She grimaced. 'Same as last week. A few shifts in the fronts, that's all. Take it from me, you ain't missing much.' 'A few shifts in which fronts?' asked Se-Ha suspiciously. 'Ah,' said Myra. 'If you must know - the northeastern front is... active.' Another silent exchange of glances and smiles. Myra didn't share in their pleasure, but couldn't blame them for it. The two encroaching events that filled her most with dread were, for them, each in different ways an earnest of their early liberation. She said her goodbyes, wondering if it was for the last time, and took her now empty bags and stalked away through the restitution-camp streets, and mounted her horse and rode out of the gate, towards the city. Thinking about Reid, trying to think calmly and destructively about Reid, she found her mind drifting back. He had not always been such a bastard. He'd been the first person to tell her she need never die. That had been eighty-three years ago, when she was twenty-two years old. She hadn't believed him... Death follows me. *You don't have to die,' he told her. Black hair framed his face, black eyebrows his intent, brown-eyed gaze. Dave Reid was dark and handsome but not, alas, tall. He wore a denim jacket with a tin button - a badge, as the Brits called them - pinned to its lapel. The badge was red with the black hammer-and-sickle-and-4 of the International. 'What!' Myra laughed. 'I know it feels that way 34 KEN MACLEOD now, everybody our age feels like that, yeah? But it'll come to us all, man, don't kid yourself.' She rolled back on her elbows on the grass and looked up at the blue spring sky. It was too bloody cold for this, but the sun was out and the ground was dry, and that was good enough for sunbathing in Scotland. The grassy slope behind the Boyd Orr Building was covered with groups and couples of students, drinking and smoking and talking. Probably missing lectures - it was already two in the afternoon. * Seriously,' Dave said, in that Highland accent that carried the sound of wind on grass, of waves on shore, 'if you can live into the twenty-first century, you have a damn good chance of living for ever.' 'Says who? L. Ron Hubbard?' Dave snorted. 'Arthur C. Clarke, actually.' 'Who?' He frowned at her. 'You know - scientist, futurist The man who invented the communications satellite.' 'Oh, him,' Myra said scornfully. 'Sci-fi. 2001 and all that' She saw the slight flinch of hurt in David's face, and went on, *Oh, don't get me wrong, I'm not saying it's impossible. Maybe hundreds of years from now, maybe in communism. Not in our lifetimes, though. Tough shit' Dave shrugged and rolled another cigarette. 'We'll see.' 'I guess. And the rate you smoke those things, you'll be lucky to be alive in the twenty-first century. You won't even get to first base.' 'Och, I'll last another twenty-four years.' He sighed, blowing smoke on to the slightly warm breeze, then smiled at her mischievously. 'Unless I become a martyr of the revolution, of course.' THE SKY ROAD 35 * "I have a rendezvous with death, on some disputed barricade"/ Myra quoted. 'Don't worry. That's another thing won't happen in our lifetimes.' The shadow of the tall building crept over Dave's face. He shifted deftly, back into the sunlight. 'That's what you think, is it?' *Yeah, that's what I think.' She smiled, and added, with ironic reassurance, 'Our natural lifetimes, that is.' Dave hefted a satchel stuffed with copies of revolutionary newspapers and magazines. 'Then what's the point of all this? Why don't we just eat, drink and be merry?' Myra swigged from a can of MacEwan's, lowered it and looked at him over its rim. 'That's what I am doing right now, lover.' He took her point, and reached out and stroked the curve of her cheekbone. 'But still,' he persisted. 'Why bother with politics if you don't think we're going to win?' 'Dave,' she said, 'I'm not a socialist because I expect to end up running some kinda workers' state of my own some day. I do what I do because I think it's right. OK?' 'OK,' said Reid, smiling; but his smile was amused as well as affectionate, as though she were being naive. Irritated without quite knowing why, she turned away. The city was called Kapitsa, and it was the capital of the International Scientific and Technical Workers' Republic, which had no other city; indeed, apart from the camps, no other human habitation. The ISTWR was an independent enclave on the fringe of the Polygon - the badlands between Karaganda and Semipalatinsk, a waste-product of Kazakhstan's 36 KEN MACLEOD nuclear-testing legacy. A long time ago, Kapitsa would have looked modern, with its centre of high-rise office blocks, its inner ring of automatic factories, its periphery of dusty but tree-lined streets and estates of low-rise apartment blocks, the bustling airport just outside and the busy spaceport on the horizon, from which the great ships had loudly climbed, day after day. Now it was a rustbelt, as quaintly obsolete as the Japanese car factories or the Clyde shipyards or the wheat plains of Ukraine. Myra, however, felt somewhat cheered as the mare took her through the light traffic of the noonday streets. The apple trees were in bloom, and every wall had its fresh-looking, colourful mural of flowers or stars or ships or crowds or children or heroes or heroines. Real ancient space-age stuff, an effect enhanced by the younger - genuinely young - people enjoying the chilly sunshine in the fashionable scanty garb, which recalled the late 1960s in its jaunty futurism. She looked at girls in skinny tights and shiny, garish minidresses and found herself wondering if they were cold . . . probably not, the clothes were only an imitation of their nylon or PVC originals, the nanofactured fabrics veined with heat-exchangers, laced with molecular machines. The bright clothing gave the people on the street an appearance of prosperity, but Myra was all too aware that it was superficial. The clothes were cheaper than paper, easily affordable even on Social Security. Over the past few years, with the coming of the diamond ships, the heavy-booster market had gone into free fall, and unemployment had rocketed. The dole was paid by her department out of the rent from Mutual Protection, and it couldn't last. Nostalgia tourism - the old spaceport was now a World Heritage Site, for what that was worth - THE SKY ROAD 37 looked like the only promising source of employment. Before she knew it, the horse had stopped, from habit, outside the modest ten-storey concrete office-block of the republic's government on Revolution Square. Myra sat still for a moment, gazing wryly at this week's morale-boosting poster on the official billboard: a big black-and-white blow-up of the classic Tass photo of Gagarin, grinning out from his cosmonaut helmet. She remembered the time, in her grade-school classroom on the Lower East Side, when she'd first seen this human face and had formed some synaptic connection between Gagarin's grin and Guevara's glare. Space and socialism. What a swindle it had all been. She shook the reins, took the mare at a slow pace around to the back, stabled it, wiped the muck from her boots and ascended the stairs. The corridors to her office - at the front of the building, as befitted a People's Commissar for Social Policy and Prime Minister Pro Tern and (now that she came to think about it) Acting President — were filled with a susurrus of hurrying feet and fast-fading whispers. Myra glanced sharply at the groups she passed, but few seemed willing to return her look. She closed the door of her office with a futile but soul-satisfying slam. Let the apparatchiks worry about her mood, if she had to worry about theirs. The last time she'd sniffed this evasive air in the corridors had been just before the first - and only -time she'd fallen out of power, back in 2046. Then, she'd suspected an imminent move from the Mutual Protection company and its proteges within the state apparatus: a coup d'etat Now, she suspected that Mutual Protection and its allies were into the final moves of a much wider game-plan, as wide as it 38 KEN MACLEOD could be: a coup du monde. Or coup d'etoilel She stalked to the window, shedding her coat and hat and gloves in quick, violent movements, leaned on her knuckles on the sill and scanned her surroundings in a spasm of fang-baring territoriality. No tanks or tramping feet sounded in her city's streets, no black helicopters clattered in her country's sky. What did she expect? There were days at least to go before anything happened - and, when it did, the opening blows would be overt in larger capitals than hers; she'd be nipped by CNN soundbites in the new order's first seconds. She sighed and turned away, picked up her dropped clothes and hung them carefully on the appropriate branches of a chrome-plated rack. The office was as self-consciously retro-modernist as the styles on the street, if a little more sophisticated -pine walls and floor, lobate leather layers at random on both; ornaments in steel and silver, ebony and plastic, of planetary globes and interplanetary craft. She dropped into the office chair and leaned back, letting it massage her shoulders and neck. She slid the band across her eyes, summoned a head-up display and rolled her eyes to study it. The anti-viral 'ware playing across her retinae flickered, but there was nothing untoward for it to report; here, as in all the offices, the walls had teeth. Her own software was wrapped around her, its loyalty as intimate, and as hard to subvert, as the enhanced immune-systems in her blood. It was personal, it was a personal, a unique configuration of software agents that scanned the world and Myra's responses to the world, and built up from that interaction a shrewd assessment of her needs and interests. It looked out information for her, and it looked after her investments. It did to the world nets what her Sterling THE SKY ROAD 39 search engine did for her Library - it selected and extracted what was relevant from the vast and choppy sea of data in which most people swam or, more often, drowned. Having a good suite of personal 'ware was slighdy more important for a modern politician than the traditional personal networks of influence and intelligence. In the decade since she'd recovered power, Myra had made sure that her networks -both kinds, virtual and actual - were strong and intertwined, strong enough to carry her if the structure of the state ever again let her down. Though even that was unlikely - her purges, though bloodless, had been as ruthless as Tito's. No official of the ISTWR would ever again have the slightest misapprehension of where their best interests lay, and no employee or agent of Mutual Protection would fancy their chances of changing that. She'd have to consult with the rest of Sovnarkom soon enough - a meeting was scheduled for 3 p.m. - and round up some of the scurrying underlings from the corridors to prepare for it, but she wanted to get her own snapshot of the situation first. Myra's personal didn't have a personality, as far as she knew, but it had a persona: a revolutionary, a stock-market speculator, an arms dealer, a spy; a freewheeling, high-rolling, all-swindling communist-capitalist conspirator out of some Nazi nightmare. It had a name. Tarvus,' she whispered. The retinal projectors on her eyeband summoned an image of a big man in a baggy suit and a shirt stretched across his belly like a filled sail, scudding along on gales of information. He strolled towards her, smiling, his pockets stuffed with papers, his cigarette hand waving as he prepared to tell her something. She'd never come 40 KEN MACLEOD across a recording of the original Parvus in action, but she'd given this one the appearance of one historic Trotskyist leader, and the mad-scientist mannerisms of another, whose standard speech she'd once sat through, long ago in the Student Union in Glasgow. 'Give me the big picture.' Parvus nodded. He ran his fingers through his mop of white hair, furrowed his brow, grinned maniacally. 'Jane's, I think.' He flicked an inch of ash, conjured a screen. Her gaze fixed on an option; she blinked, and the room vanished from her sight; again, and Earth fell away. Her first virtual view, spun in orbit, was from Jane's Market Forces - a publicly available, but prohibitively expensive, real-time survey of military deployments around the world. She was running the next-but-one release, currently in beta test. It had cost the republic's frugal defence budget nothing more than the stipend to place a patriotic Kazakh postgrad in the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute's equally cash-starved IT department. (That, and an untraceable credit line to his comms account.) Myra, long familiar with the conventional symbols and ideographs, took it all in at an abstract level: colour-coded, vectored graphs in a 3-D space, with other dimensions implied by subtle shadings and the timing of pulsations. That photic filigree hung like a complicated cloud-system over the relatively static histograms depicting the hardware and the warm bodies. The physical locations and quantities of personnel and materiel could provide only a basement-level understanding of the world military balance, just as the location of physical plant was THE SKY ROAD 41 only a rough cut of the state of the world market. Second by second, market and military forces shifted unpredictably, their mutual interpenetration more complex than any ideology had ever foreseen. With most of the world's official armies revolutionary or mercenary or both, and most of the conflicts settled in unarguable simulation before they started, everyone from the bankers down through the generals to the grunts on the ground would shrug and accept the virtual verdict, and change sides, reinforce or retreat in step with their software shadows - all except the Greens, and the Reds. They fought for real, and played for keeps. It was like the old Civilization game, Myra sometimes thought, with a new twist: Barbarism II. Nobody was going to wipe the board, nobody was going to Alpha Centauri. They were all going down together, into the dark . . . Just as soon as enough major players decided to contest the incontestable, and put the simulations to the audit of war. But, for the moment, the dark was full of twisting light. And in the real world, blinked up as backdrop, one front was more than virtual, and closer than she'd like. Beyond the northern border of Kazakhstan, itself hundreds of kilometres north of the ISTWR, the Sino-Soviet Union's ragged front-line advanced in flickers of real fire: guerilla skirmishes and sabotage on one side, half-hearted long-range shelling and futile carpet-bombing on the other. The Sheenisov - the name was subtly derogatory, like Vietcong for NLF and Yank for United Nations - were the century's first authentic communist threat, who really believed in their updated version of the ideology which communistans like the ISTWR parodied in post-futurist pastiche. Based in the god forsaken back-country of recusant collective farms 42 KEN MACLEOD and worker-occupied factories, stubbornly surviving decades of counter-revolution and war, armed by partisan detachments of deserters (self-styled, inevitably, 'loyalists') from the ex-Soviet Eastern and ex-PRC Northern armies, they'd held most of Mongolia and Siberia and even parts of north-west China since the Fall Revolution back in 2045, and in the years since then they'd spread across the steppe like lichen. Myra detested and admired them in equal measure. Of more immediate, and frustrating, concern: the Sheenisov were outside the virtual world, a torn black hole in the net. Their computers were permanently offline; their cadres didn't trade combat futures; they refused all simulated confrontation or negotiation; like the Green marginals in the West and the Khmer Vertes in the South, the Reds in the East put all to the test of practice, the critique of arms. Even Jane's could only guess at their current disposition. But their serrated south-western edge was clear enough, and as usual it was cutting closer to her domain than it had been the last time she'd checked. Like, this time yesterday... She sighed and turned her attention from the communists to tracing the darker deeds of a real international conspiracy: the space movement. Somewhere in that scored darkness, reading between those lines of light, she had to find the footprints of a larger and more ragged army, impatient to assume the world. Her first step - acknowledged by the system with startled gratitude - was to update the information on Mutual Protection's labour-camp output. When this was integrated and plausibly projected to the company's whole global archipelago, a first-cut re- THE SKY ROAD 43 evaluation of relative military-industrial weightings sent ripples through the entire web. Just as well she was working with a personal copy, Myra thought wryly. This was information to kill for (although already, presumably, discounted by Mutual Protection itself, which must surely know she knew). She zapped the speculative update with a flashing 'urgent' tag to the People's Commissar for Finance, and a less urgent summary to the comrade over at Defence. Then she invoked her ongoing dossier of space-movement activity, meshed in the new output figures, and sent it to all the commissars, with her own interpretation. The 'space-movement coup' had been talked about, openly, for so long that it had become unreal - as unreal as the Revolution had been, until it had finally come to pass. Myra herself had cried wolf on the coup, once before. But now she felt herself vin dicated. And, again, David Reid was involved. Her former lover had built up Mutual Protection from a security-service subsidiary of an insurance company into a global business that dealt in restitution: criminals working to compensate the damage they'd done. Originally touted as a humane, market-driven reform and replacement of the old barbaric prison systems, its extension from common criminals to political and military prisoners after the Fall Revolution had given it an appalling, unstoppable logic of runaway expansion, in much the same way as the use of prison labour in the First Five-Year Plan had done for the original GULag. For more than a decade now, those on the losing side of small wars and increasingly minor crimes had provided the manpower for a gigantic space-settlement boom, applying whatever skills they had - or could rapidly learn - to pay off their crime- 44 KEN MACLEOD debts as quickly as possible. At the same time, the proliferation of space-movement enclaves, each of which incited a horde of beleaguering barbarians or a swarm of furious bureaucrats, had provided an endless pool of new convicts. Quite a large proportion of the prisoners, on completion of their payback time, had seized the abundant employment opportunities the space projects offered. Mutual Protection was now the armature of a global coalition of defence companies, launch companies, space settlement programmes, political campaigns and a host of minor governments - many of them creatures of these same companies. The space-movement coalition was on the point of assembling enough forces to re-create a stable world government and to bring the former Space Defense batde-sats back under UN control. Their objective, long mooted, was to roll back the environmentalist and anti-technological opposition movements, and shift enough labour and capital into Earth orbit to create a self-sustaining space presence that could ride out any of the expected catastrophes below - of which, God knew, there were plenty to choose from. The coup itself was expected to proceed on two levels. One was a political move to take over the rump ReUN, by the votes of all the numerous ministates that could be subverted, suborned or convinced. The other was a military move, thus legitimised, to seize the old US/UN Space Defense battlesats. That, Myra reckoned, was behind the speed-up in the labour-camps. No doubt massive subversion was going on among the orbital military personnel, but by the nature of the case there wasn't much she could know about that. She stared at the virtual screen for a long time, until the clenchings of her fists and the twitching THE SKY ROAD 45 grimaces of her face and the blinking-back of tears confused the 'ware so much that it shut off, and left her staring at the wall. Sovnarkom - the Council of People's Commissars, or, in more conventional terminology, the Cabinet - was the appropriately small government of an almost unviably small state (population 99,854, last time anyone had bothered to count, and dropping by the day). The structures of the ISTWR were an exercise in socialist camp, modelled on those of the old Soviet republics but without the leading role of the Party. The result of that strategic omission had been a democracy as genuine as that of its inspiration had been false. Or so it had seemed, in the republic's more prosperous days. Myra arrived early, and took the privilege of the first arrival - the chairman's seat, at the head of the long, bare table of scarred mahogany with a clunky blast-proof secretarial device in the centre. There were another dozen seats, six along either side of the table, each with its traditional mineral water and notepaper in front of it. The room was bare, win-dowless but lit by full-spectrum plates in the ceiling. The only decoration on the white walls was a framed photograph of the long-dead nuclear physicist after whom the city was named. Valentina Kozlova came in, her military fatigues elegant as always, her hair untidy, her hands full of hardcopy. She was in her fifties, a still-young child of the century, young enough and lucky enough to have got the anti-ageing treatments before she got old. She smiled tensely and sat down. Then Andrei Mukhartov, cropped-blond, fortyish and looking it -probably by intent - soberly conventional in a three-piece suit of electric-blue raw silk. Denis Gubanov, 46 KEN MACLEOD younger than the others, ostentatiously casual, needing a shave, looking as though he'd just come in from sounding out an informer in some sleazy spaceport bar. Alexander Sherman arrived last, giving his usual impression of having been pulled away from more urgent business. His fashionable pseudo-plastic jump-suit was doubtless just the job for his post, but Myra liked it even less than she liked him. He sat down and glanced around as though expecting the meeting to begin immediately, then pursed his lips and slid two sheets of paper across to Myra. 'More resignations, I'm afraid,' he said. 'Tatyana and Michael have ...' Taken off for richer pastures,' Myra said. 'I heard.' She looked at the empty spaces around the depleted table, and shrugged. 'Well, according to revolutionary convention there is no such thing as an inquorate meeting, so ...' 'We really must co-opt some new members!' Sherman said. 'Yes,' said Myra drily. 'We really must' Her tone made Alexander snap back, 'It's a disgrace - we have no Commissar for Law, or the Interior, or—' *Yes, yes,' Myra interrupted. 'And half the fucking members of the Supreme Soviet have fucked off -the wrong half, as it happens, /couldn't find a competent commissar for anything among the remainder. At the rate we're going, we won't have enough of an electorate to make up the numbers! So what do you suggest?' Alexander Sherman opened his mouth, closed it, and shrugged. His mutinous look convinced Myra that he'd be the next to go — as Commissar for Industry, he had the right connections already. 'OK, comrades,' Myra said, 'let's call the meeting THE SKY ROAD 47 to order.' She took off her eyeband and laid it formally on the table, and those who hadn't already done so followed suit. It was not quite a rule to do so, but it was the custom - a gesture of politeness as well as an assurance that everyone was paying attention - to set aside one's personal for the duration of the meeting. Myra could never make up her mind whether it was mutual trust, or mutual suspicion, that lay behind the custom of not doing the same with one's personal weapons. Nobody'd ever pulled a gun at a Sovnarkom meeting, but there were precedents ... 'Recorder: on. Regular meeting of the Council, Friday 9 May 2059, Myra Godwin-Davidova presiding, five members present' She looked around, then looked back at the recorder's steel grille. 'I move that we shelve the agenda and go straight to emergency session. Starting with the death of Citizen Davidov.' No dissent. Seconds of silence passed. 'Don't all talk at once,' she said. Valentina Kozlova (Defence) spoke first. 'Look, Myra - Comrade Chair - we've all spoken to you about Georgi's death. We were all very sorry to hear of it' Myra nodded. 'Thank you.' 'Having said that - we need to decide on our political response. Now, obviously the police in Almaty are investigating, and so far there seem to be no indications of foul play.' She shrugged. 'That, of course, is hard to prove, these days. However... Georgi Yefrimovich had a great deal of responsibility -' she gestured vaguely at Andrei Mukhartov, the International Affairs Commissar ' - and in the circumstances, natural causes do seem likely.' Myra sighed. *Yes, I appreciate that. And I appre- 48 KEN MACLEOD ciate what all of you have said to me. Let me say for the record that personally I don't accept that Georgi's death was anything but an assassination.' She faced down the resulting commotion. 'However,'' she continued, 'I don't ask or expect any of you to take this as more than a suspicion. At the moment, even the question of who might benefit from it is very unclear - if Georgi was murdered, it might have been by one side or the other. Possibly some elements in the space movement saw him as an obstacle to their... diplomacy. Possibly some forces opposed to the space movement thought we'd think exactly that, and had him killed as a provocation. Or maybe, just maybe, his heart gave out. Whatever - it's come at a bad time for us.' Mukhartov grunted agreement. After a moment of gloomy silence Valentina spoke again. 'We've all studied your message,' she said. 'What's your own suggested course of action?' 'We try to stop them, of course. Damned if I want the fucking UN back on top of us, let alone one controlled by the goddam space movement and its proxies.' Valentina leaned forward. 'For my part,' she said, 'I agree with your assessment. We have to be ready for the new situation in which the space movement controls the ReUN, and with it the Earth Defense battlesats. But ' she hesitated a moment, sighed almost imperceptibly, and continued ' — I think that the death of Georgi, the understandable suspicions this has aroused, and the, ah, unexpected and unauthorised increase in labour-camp output may have given your response a... subjective element' Ko-zlova glanced around the table. 'The coming shift in the balance of power can't be stopped by us, or by anybody. The most we've been able to do - THE SKY ROAD 49 thanks to Georgi's diplomacy - has been to help keep Kazakhstan neutral, with a tilt against the takeover. Even they wouldn't take direct action against it, though God knows Georgi tried to persuade them to. They assured us they just didn't have the clout, and I believe them. Now you seem to be suggesting that we throw our weight, such as it is, against it. My own view is that we'd accomplish more by staying neutral. It could work to our advantage -if we accommodate ourselves to new realities in good time.' Myra unfroze her face. 'Get in on the winning side, you mean?' she suggested lightly. Yes, exactly,' Kozlova said. She seemed encouraged by Myra's response, or lack of response. 'After all,' she ploughed on, 'we ourselves are in a way part of the space movement, we go back a long way with it, and the Sheenisov are as much a threat to us as the barbarians and reactionary governments are to some other enclaves. Frankly, I think we should put out some diplomatic feelers to the other side before the crunch, which as you correctly point out is a matter of days or weeks away. And we're not exactly in a position of strength at the moment. So there is indeed a certain urgency to our decision.' 'Interesting,' Myra murmured. 'Anyone else?' Denis Gubanov (Internal Security) broke in sharply. 'The Chair spoke in her message of states being suborned and subverted. I don't think we should let ourselves become one of them! Whatever the rhetoric, and the propaganda of inevitability, it's obvious what's going on. Imperialism took a severe blow with the fall of the Yanks, but the blow wasn't fatal, worse luck. Monopoly capital always finds new political instruments, and the space movement, so-called, has proved an admirable vehicle.' He snorted, 50 KEN MACLEOD briefly. 'Literally - a launch vehicle! Through it, the rich desert the Earth. Why should we help them on their way?' 'More to the point,' said Sherman (Trade and Industry) , making his disdain for Denis's rhetoric emphatically clear, 'there is the question of what we will do for a living when the camps are worked out.' 'We could always—' began Kozlova, as though about to say something in jest, then glanced at Myra and shut up. 'What?' 'Nah. Forget it. The business to hand is what we do now, about the coup.' Myra let the argument go on. There was a case, she admitted to herself, on both sides. But Valentina had been right - there was a subjective edge to Myra's response. The space movement's central element was Mutual Protection, and Mutual Protection's central element was David Reid. If the space movement got its way he would be the most powerful man in the world. No way was she going to let that bastard win. 3 THE SHIP O THE YIRD A, .n hour later, after a run across town that was bloody hard in (and on) my boots, and a hasty wash and change into my work clothes, I stood at the station bus-stop with my steel safety-helmet in one hand and my aluminium lunch-box in the other. Packing my lunch was the only non-basic service that my landlady provided, but for me that was enough to forgive her the absence of breakfast, dinner, laundry and reliable hot water. The sun's growing heat was burning off the morning mist on the loch and between the hills. I felt as though I might at any moment rise and float away myself. My eyes felt sandy and my brain felt hot, but these discomforts did not diminish the kinder glow of elation somewhere in my chest and gut. In a strange way I could hardly bear to think about Mer-rial - every time I did so brought on such an explosion of joy that I quivered at the knees, and I almost feared to indulge it to excess. I wanted to keep it, hoard it, dole it out to myself when I really needed it, not gulp it all down at once. (Which is of course 52 KEN MACLEOD a mistaken notion - that particular well, like all too many others, is bottomless. What I thought about instead was another woman - the Deliverer, under whose memorial I had met Merrial, and under whose remote and ancient protection she and her people lived. (Protected from persecution, at any rate, if not from prejudice.) Over the past four years, History had been one of the arts I. had struggled to master. It hadn't been easy, even in Glaschu, where the place fair drips with it, as they say. The baffled aversion expressed by Merrial was a common enough reaction. In a time of so many opportunities, and a place buzzing with innovative work in so many fields which could be applied to bring about manifest human betterment, it seemed perverse (sometimes even to me) for a vigorous and intelligent young man to turn aside from such arts as Literature, and Music, and Kinematography, or from the sciences: Astronomy, Medicine, the many branches of Natural Theology; from the improving pursuits of Practical Philosophy and Mechanical and Civil Engineering - to turn aside from all these useful works of the intellect, not even for the understandable and, within reason, commendable attractions of business and pleasure, but to fossick about in mouldering documents and crumbling ruins, and to fill his head with bloody images and mind-numbing figures from the mega-dead past. It was a distasteful and faintly disreputable fascination, with a whiff of necrophilia, even of necromancy, about it. But, whether we will or no, we're all historians, each with our own outline of history in our heads. This was a point I'd often had to make to sceptical listeners, from parents and siblings through to patronage committees and on to friends THE SKY ROAD 53 and workmates in drink-fuelled debate. We pick up the outline from parents and teachers and preachers, from songs and statues and stories. In the beginning, God made the Big Bang, and there was light. After the first four minutes, there was matter. After billions of years, there were stars and planets, and the Earth was formed. The water above the sky separated from the water below the sky, which brought forth all manner of creeping things. Over millions of years they were shaped by God's invisible hand, Natural Selection, into great monsters of land and sea. The Earth was filled with violence, and God sent an asteroid, Katy Boundary, to destroy it. The sky was dark at noon for forty days, and almost all the living things were destroyed. Among those who survived were little beasts like mice, and they replenished the Earth, and burrowed into it and became coneys, and climbed trees and became monkeys, and climbed down and became Men— — ape-men and cave-men, Egyptians and Babylonians, Greeks and Romans, Christians and Americans, Chinese and Russians. The Americans fell but their empire lived on as the Possession, until the Deliverer rose in the east and struck it down. Troubled times followed, and then peace. So why disturb it - answer me that, lad! Because the truth is more interesting and ultimately more instructive than a farrago of fable? I had acquired the taste not just for truth but for detail; for the peculiar pleasure that comes from seeing the real relationship between events in terms of cause and effect rather than narrative convention. It's a satisfaction which I'll defend as genuinely scientific. But what use is it, eh ? 54 KEN MACLEOD To that I had no ready answer, except to define the result as art, in the same way as the method could be defined as science. The argument that those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it failed to impress most people, convinced as they were that there was no risk whatsoever of history's more ruinous errors being repeated. So I had to reach for the argument that real history told a better story because it was a truer story; that reality had its own beauty, sterner and higher than that of myth. The particular story I wanted to tell was of the life of the Deliverer. My proposal for a thesis on her early years as a student and academic in Glasgow, long before she became the figure known to history, was only the beginning of my own world-conquering ambition: to reconstruct, as much as one can across that gulf of time, the mind and personality and circumstance that had shaped the future that was now our past. It might take decades of research, years of writing. Whatever else I did, this biography would define my own: a life for a Life. Perhaps it was an unconscious balking at that price, or some half-baked, self-justifying attempt to pay my dues to what my more practical-minded contemporaries called 'real work', or something more positive, a dimly felt attraction to the world of material striving and measurable success, a turning towards the future and away from the past, that led me that summer to Garron Town and the Kishorn Yard. 'Thank God it's Thursday,' said a cheerful voice behind me. I turned and grinned at Jondo, who was leaning against the bus-stop sign and eating a black pudding and fried-egg roll. Behind him a score of THE SKY ROAD 55 workers were by now queuing up. Vendors of snacks, hot drinks and newspapers worked along the line. 'It's Friday,' I pointed out. 'That's what I meant,' he said around a mouthful, hand-waving with the remainder of his breakfast. 'Force of habit.' He swallowed. 'Pay-day, at any rate.' I nodded enthusiastically. Half my pay was telegraphed straight to my account at the Caledonian Mutual Bank; out of the remainder I had to pay for my lodgings, food and drink, and a modicum of carousing at the weekly fair. By Friday mornings I had just enough cash to get through the day. Pay was high, but so was the cost of living - the project had pulled up prices for miles around it. Jondo was a man about my own age, his beer-gut already as impressive as his muscles. His long red hair, now as usual worn in a pony-tail, and his pale eyes and eyebrows gave him the look of a paradoxically innocent pirate; inherited perhaps from his ancestors who'd gone a-viking, and come to this land to pillage and settled down to farm, and to whom the Christian gospel had come as good news indeed, a welcome relief from heathendom's implacable codes of honour and vengeance. He spoke with the soft accent of Inverness, where - rumour had it - there were Christians still. I tried to imagine Jondo drinking blood at some dark ceremony. The momentary absurd image must have brought a smirk to my face. 'What's so funny, Clovis?' he growled. Then he smiled, balling up the waxed paper and chucking it, wiping the grease from his hands on the oily thighs of his overalls. 'Ach, I know. A good night with your tinker lass, was it?' *You could say that.' 'Aye, well, each to their own, I suppose,' he said, 56 KEN MACLEOD in the tone of one making a profound and original observation. 'Here's the bus.' The bus, already half-full, drew to a halt beside us in a cloud of wood-alcohol exhaust, its brakes squealing and its flywheel shrieking. I hopped on, paid my groat to the driver and settled down in a window seat. Jondo heaved his bulk in beside me, gave me another lewd grin and a wink, released an evidently satisfying fart and went instantly to sleep. Some passengers busied themselves with newspapers or conversation, but most dozed like Jondo or stared bleary-eyed like me. The discrepancy between the time-honoured four-day week and the project's more demanding schedules reduced Friday work to a matter of clearing up problems left over from the past week and preparing for the next. Not even the inducement of double time could make more than a handful of the labour-force encroach on the sanctity of Saturday and Sunday, although it could make most of us work overtime through the week. No amount of patient lecturing from managers with clipboards and redundant hard hats could persuade us to adopt what they considered a more rational work pacing. The bus lurched into motion. I lit a cigarette to dispel Jondo's intestinal methane and laid my temple against the welcome throbbing coolness of the window. As we crossed the Carron and passed New Kelso I gazed beyond the suburb's neat bungalows to where morning smoke rose from the tinker camp. A vivid image of Menial asleep - the tumble of black hair, the white-sleeved arm across the pillow - lit up my mind. I wondered what my chances were of seeing her through the day. I didn't even know which office she worked in, and a desultory fantasy took shape of finding some fantastic excuse to visit them THE SKY ROAD 57 all: of working my way through the administration blocks and drawing-offices, spurning the flirtations of giggling girls and pensive older women with hunky pin-ups above their desks, until I finally walked into an engineering lab to find Menial alone and in a day-dream of her own, about me, into which my real arrival would be a passionately welcomed incursion . . . Probably not. My head swung away from the window as the bus turned left on to the main road along the northern shore. I jolted upright, making sure my head didn't swing back and crack against the pane. Even at this hour in the morning the road was busy with commuter traffic and heavy trucks. The bus chugged slowly along, picking up yet more passengers in Jeantown, another village that the project had expanded, its packed buildings teetering perilously up the hillside. Out on the loch a pod of dolphins sported, their leaps drawing gasps and sighs from the less jaded or dozy of my fellow-passengers. Then, with a great clashing of gears and screeching of flywheel as the auxiliary electric motors kicked in, the bus turned right, on to the road up into the hills between the two mountains, An Sgurr and Glas Bhein, that dominated the northern skyline of the lochside towns. To me, this afforded an inexhaustibly fascinating view of further ranges of hills and reaches of water. Everybody else on the bus ignored it completely. Someone opened a window to let out the smoke and let in some fresh air; a bee blundered in, causing a ripple of excitement and much brandishing of rolled newspapers before it bumbled out. Above the last houses, above the meadows, the trees began: twenty-metre-tall beeches, then pine 58 KEN MACLEOD and rowan and birch, all the way up to the crags and the scree. Centuries ago these hills had been bare of all but rough pasture and heather, cropped by the infamous black-faced sheep. But these same bare hills had somehow sustained the sparse guerilla forces of Jacobite and Land Leaguer and Republican. Far below I could see the rocky peninsula known as the Island, a sheltering arm around the harbour, still with a small bunker on its top. During the First World Revolution a thirteen-year-old had * written herself into local legend by bringing down a stealth fighter with a nuclear-tipped rocket-propelled grenade. In Jeantown's poky museum you can see an ancient photograph of her: the grubby, grinning cadre of a Celtic Vietcong, posed with the rocket tube slung on her shoulder, beside unrecognisable wreckage on a scarred hillside where to this day nothing will grow. Over the top of the saddleback and down into the long, dark glen where the Pretender had evaded Cumberland's troops, where the Free Kirk had preached to the dispossessed, and where, later, the Army of the New Republic had cached their computers, the hardware of their software war against the last empire. The grim glen opened to another fertile plain of woods and fields and recently grown town, Courthill. Beyond it, at the edge of the sea-loch, lay the great scar of the Kishorn Yard. There was a trick of the eye in interpreting the sight -everything there, the cranes and the platform and the ship, were much bigger than their normal equivalents, like the Pleistocene relatives of familiar mammals. The bus pulled up at the works gate. The stockade around the yard had been constructed more to protect the careless or reckless from wandering in than THE SKY ROAD 59 to safeguard anything it enclosed. I nudged Jondo awake and we alighted in a dangerous, fast-moving convergence of buses and cars and bikes. We strolled through the gate just as the seven-o'clock klaxon brayed. Hundreds, then thousands, of workers streamed through the gate and swarmed out across the yard. The place looked like a benign battlefield, crater-pocked, vehicle-strewn, littered with the living. I clamped the heavy helmet on my head, and with Jondo puffing along behind me, plunged in; ducking and dodging along walkways, over trenches, under cables; leaping perilous small-gauge railway tracks and over waterlogged trenches and dried-up culverts (drainage here had always been a bit hit-and-miss); past haulage vehicles and earth-movers, air-compressors and power-plants, portable cabins and toilets set down as if at random in the muck, until at length we reached the immense dry-dock that was the focus of the whole glorious affray. The dry-dock was a giant rounded gouge out of the side of a hill where it sloped down to the sea -hundreds of metres across, tens of metres deep. Its rocky cliffs were old and weathered; it looked like some work of Nature, or of Providence — even of Justice, the smiting of the Earth by a wrathful God; but in fact it was the centuries-old work of Man. (It is their civil engineering that most impresses, of the works of the ancients, but this is perhaps because so much of it endures - greater works than these have gone to the rust and the rot.) Iron sluice-gates, on an appropriately Brobdingnagian scale, held back the sea - though pumps laboured day and night to counter the inevitable seepage and spill. Within it towered the platform, a - someday soon - floating bastion of concrete and painted steel, and within that towered the ship. The Sea Eagle (lolair - 60 KEN MACLEOD pronounced something like fYillirrih' - in the Gaelic) looked like a rocket-propelled grenade buried nose-down in the platform. Four fin-like flanges sloped from its central tower to intersect the ovoid surface of its reactor-shell and reaction-mass tank, which was forty metres across at its widest diameter. The part of it concealed by the platform tapered from this equator to the aerospike of the main jet, around which the flared nozzles of attitude jets made a scalloped array. By now I was tramping along in the middle of my work-gang, Jondo and I having been joined by Ma-chard, Druin, the Lewismen - Murdo One and Murdo Too - Angelo and Trike. We descended a zig-zag iron stairway, down and down again, and walked across the floor of the dock, splashing through puddles of rainwater and seawater (some of which were so long-established that they had their own ecosystems) to the door at the base of the platform's southwest leg. It was like going into a lighthouse: up and up, around and around the winding stair. The air smelt of wet metal, hot oil, damp concrete. Every surface dripped, every sound echoed. After two minutes' climb we reached the level of the internal scaffolding where we were working. I ducked through a service door in the inner side of the leg and emerged on to a walkway facing one of the platform's turbines across a twenty-metre gap. At our current worksite, a dozen metres along the walkway, ladders, more scaffolding and planks disappeared into - in fact appeared to merge with -the unfinished structure of struts joining the support leg to the platform's engine mount. Our contract for the month was to finish that structure. There was no flexibility in the contract: there was only a month to go before the platform THE SKY ROAD 61 was floated out. Angus Grizzlyback, the foreman, was sitting at a wooden pallet mounted on crates to form a table, on which were spread some disassembled welding-torches, a small tin of kerosene and a few now very dirty seagull quills. He stood and glowered at us, reflexively lowering his head so as not to bash his pate on the next level up. You could see the white hairs on his chest and forearms which had inspired his nickname (or, for all I know, his surname, local custom being what it was). He was nearly two metres tall and about a hundred and fifty years old. 'Ah, good afternoon, gentlemen,' he said. 'I trust you all enjoyed your long lie? Let's see if we can think of something to occupy our leisure for the rest of the day.' He drew a sheaf of finger-marked papers from his pocket as we gathered around the pallet. His pale grey eyes, under white brows, fixed me for a second. 1 And you can get started right away, colha Gree,' he added. I nodded brightly, winced at the effect of this sudden violent motion, and went off to make the tea. The morning meeting - twenty minutes of sitting around, drinking tea and smoking - was the routine start to the day. Work on the project was organised through a sort of ecological pyramid of contractors and sub-contractors, from the great kraken of the International Scientific Society all the way down to frantically scrabbling krill like myself. Angus Grizzlyback combined the functions of entrepreneur and foreman, which partly cut across, and pardy complemented, the job of the shop steward (in our case, Jondo) who held the equivalent position in the parallel pyramid of the union. 62 KEN MACLEOD Conversation at the meeting, in my two months' experience, revolved around rumour, the day's news and sport. At the end of it everybody would drain their mugs, fold their newspapers, stub out their cigarettes, glance at some scrap of paper or doodle of slopped tea, nod to Angus and get cracking on some complex job to which only the most recondite allusion had been made. I would clear up the mess, rinse out the mugs if we were near a tap, and listen to Angus spell out my task for the day in terms suitable for the simple-minded. Today's agenda was dominated by a motion before the Strathcarron district council, reported in the West Highland Free Press, that the locality should delegate its coinage to the regional council at In-verfefforan. This dangerous proposal for centralisation found no favour around the pallet. It was forensically dissected by Angus, vulgarly derided by the Lewismen, angrily dismissed by the Carronich. I myself pointed out a recent lesson of history. A few years earlier, a similar proposal had been passed in Strathclyde. The Glasgow mark had lost all public confidence, and the scheme was abandoned when annual inflation reached a ruinous two per cent. The discussion moved on to the national football league, and my attention wandered. You can guess where. This time, however, my thoughts were more rational, and troubling, than my previous delighted memories, eager anticipations and fond fantasies. High as my opinion was of myself, I could not shake off my impression that Menial had expected to find me; that she had known me, or known of me; that her first glance had signified recognition. Love and lust at that sight there had been, on both sides I was sure; but I was equally, though more obscurely, sure that this was THE SKY ROAD 63 not the first sight. I had recognised her too, but had no idea from where; with her it was conscious from the beginning, unconcealed but unexplained. For a moment - I admit with shame - I considered the notion that we might have known each other in a previous life, whatever that may mean. On an instant I dismissed the idea as the foolish, womanish, oriental superstition that it is. Metempsychosis (though undoubtedly within the power of Omnipotence) has no place in the natural and rational religion. So I lounged, elbows on the rough wood of the crude table, and sipped tea and smoked leaf while my companions argued about finance or football, and tried to apply my infinitesimal portion of Reason to a problem on which my passions were fully, and turbulently, engaged. The rational conclusion was that if we recognised each other we must have met before, not in an imagined previous life, but previously in this. There were a number of possibilities on my side of the equation. (Menial's I set aside - there were any number of ways in which she, from her privileged vantage, could have observed me, unobserved herself, and investigated me, undetected.) Was it conceivable that one of the hundreds of faces I saw nearly every day had been hers, unnoticed at the time? It seemed unlikely: hers was the kind of face I couldn't help but notice. I'd have given her a second look, and more, in a crowd of thousands. Had I seen her, then, in another context, perhaps not even in the flesh? In, for example, some poster or moving picture about the project (all of which, for understandable reasons of recruitment, lied about its complement of pretty girls)? The same ob- 64 KEN MACLEOD jections applied - I'd remember the film, I'd have the poster. By further elimination I quickly returned to the first explanation that had struck me: that we had met, or at least seen each other, in our earlier years; in childhood. Menial, I now recalled with renewed interest, had not explicitly disavowed the possibility - only discounted it, saying that she wasn't from around here. Neither, of course, was I. There was no reason why I couldn't have seen her. I couldn't remember any such encounter, but I already knew that our childhood memories are as vagrant as our childhood selves, and as elusive; and as capable of innocent, shameless deceit. The brute-force approach suggested itself: interrogate my parents, brothers and sisters; ransack family photographs ... not yet. Already, the conscious thought that I sought the memory would have released the insensible agency in my mind that I privately thought of as the Librarian. That part of me would do the rest, and bring back the record if it were to be found at all - no doubt at some time as unexpected as it would be inopportune, but welcome nonetheless. ' - the torch parts?' said Angus. I realised I had missed something. Angus sighed. *You understand how to fit them, test and adjust?' 'Sure,' I said, nodding with more confidence than I felt. Tine, fine,' said Angus, standing up and briskly brushing the palms of his hands together. 'Let's get on with it, gendemen.' The others were grinning at me. 'Some night that must have been,' said Murdo Too, setting off another round of ribald teasing. I THE SKY ROAD 65 took it in good part but was relieved when they'd all clambered away into the support structure, leaving me to get on with my job without benefit of Angus's unheard instructions. A couple of hours passed quite pleasantly, if dangerously, and at the morning tea-break Angus was happy enough with the results to turn me loose on some sheet metal a dozen metres inward and ten up. I perched in the din-filled open space of the support structure, with nothing visible while I worked but what my own torch's jet illuminated, and with little else on my mind. About twelve o'clock I decided to knock off for lunch. I throttled down the torch and lifted my mask. As I gathered up the bits of kit to carry back I heard Menial's voice. I blinked and looked down. There she was, looking up from under a safety-helmet. 'Hi, Clovis!' she shouted, waving a lunch-box. I waved back and returned to the scaffolding, dropped my tools and grabbed my lunch-box and descended to the dock's floor so quickly that my boots made the stairwell ring. By the time I'd reached the bottom, Merrial had walked over and was waiting for me. She was wearing the standard boiler-suit and boots, an outfit which - with her tied-back hair -gave her a boyish look. Her hug and kiss of greeting were sweet and warm; the rims of our helmets clanged, and we pulled apart, laughing. 'This is a fine surprise,' I said. She caught my hand. 'Gome on,' she said. 'I know a good place.' We set off across the dock, to the predictable whistles and cat-calls of my mates, high above. Around the vast perimeter of the platform we went, and out into the daylight on the seaward side. Just 66 KEN MACLEOD left of the huge sea-doors Menial turned towards the cliff, where a series of shelves and foot-holds formed a dangerous-looking natural stairway, which she skipped up on to and nimbly ascended. I followed, not looking down, until she stopped on a wider, grassy, heathery shelf a good thirty metres up. We sat down. Menial leaned back against the rockface, and I, unthinking, did the same - then jerked forward as I discovered again the scratches and bruises on my back. With our legs stretched out, our feet were almost at the edge. I felt more uneasy on that solid rock than I ever had at greater heights on the platform. Across the top of the gates, across the sea-loch, the Torridonian battlements of Apple-cross challenged the sky. The scale of those ancient mountains dwarfed the ship itself to a metal sculpture some eccentric artist had made in his back garden in his spare time. 'My place/ Menial said. 'Some place,' I acknowledged. 'It's you who should be working on the platform, with a head for heights like this.' Til keep to my cosy lab and my long lies, thanks.' We opened our boxes and spread out and shared the contents, then got stuck in, both ravenous. For a few minutes we ate, without saying much, then Menial topped up the mugs, lit herself a cigarette, passed one to me and leaned back against the rock. 'Clovis, I have something to ask you—' She stopped. She was looking straight ahead, as though she wanted to talk without looking at me. 'What is it?' 'Something you can maybe tell me. Something you might not be supposed to. It's to do with the ship.' This was getting more serious than love. THE SKY ROAD 67 You want to know about welding?' I asked, trying to be flippant. She laughed. 'No, about history.' 'Oh.' I waved a hand. 'Any time. But there must be plenty better qualified than I, all I know about in any depth is—' She watched me as the penny dropped. 'The life of the Deliverer?' 'That's the one,' she agreed cheerily. 'You're serious?' 'I'm serious,' she said. She wasn't looking away from me now, she was looking at me with a fixity and intensity of gaze I found alarming. 'All right,' I said, my mind treading water. 'You seriously want to know something about the Deliverer? I can tell you anything you want. But what has that to do with the ship, for God's sake?' She took a deep breath, gazing away from me again at the tall ship. 'It's a fine ship there, colha Gree, and proud I am to be working on it. But consider this: it'll be the first ship to have lifted from the Yird for many a hundred year. The first since the Deliverance. We don't know much of what happened then, but we do know there were people and machines in space before the Deliverance, and we've heard never a word from them since. There's no doubt they're all dead. Why do you think that is?' 'There was a war,' I said patiently, 'and a revolution. The Second World Revolution, or the Deliverance, as we call it. The folk outside the Yird had followed the path of power, and they fell with the Possession. Starved of supplies, or killed each other, most like.' 'So the story goes,' she said, in the tone of one tired of disputing it. 'But what if it's wrong? What if 68 KEN MACLEOD whatever cleared the near heaven of folk and machines and deils alike is still there?' 'Ah,' I said, glancing involuntarily up at the clear blue sky. 'But it stands to Reason, the people in charge of the project will have considered this. Why don't you take it up with them?' They've considered it all right,' she said, 'and rejected it. There's no evidence of anything up there that could do the ship any harm. There's no evidence that the loss of the space habitations was anything but what you've said.' 'So why do you think I might know anything about this -' I waved my hand dismissively ' - supposed danger?' 'Because . . .' At this point, I swear, she looked around and leaned closer, almost whispering in my ear. 'There has long been a tinker tradition, or rumour, or hint - you know how it is with the old folk - that whatever did destroy the space settlements and satellites and so on might still be there, and that it was . . . the Deliverer's own doing.' My mouth must have fallen open. I could feel it go instantly dry, and I felt a moment of giddiness and nausea. My fingers dug into the tough grass as the world spun dangerously. I looked at her, sickened, yet fascinated despite myself. The natural religion has no sin of blasphemy, but this was blasphemy as near as dammit. 'That's deep water, Menial.' 'You're telling meV she snorted. 'I've had trouble enough for even suggesting it. Everybody thinks the Deliverer was a perfect soldier of God, like Khomeini or somebody like that! Oh, among my own folk there's a more realistic attitude, they'll admit she had faults, but that's just among ourselves. In THE SKY ROAD 69 public you won't find a tink saying a word against her.' I smiled wryly. 'Except you.' 'This is not public, colha Gree.' She ran a finger down the side of my face and across my lips. You must be very confident of that,' I said. 'To tell me.' 'I'm confident all right,' she said. 'I'm sure of you.' To distract myself from the turmoil of mixed feelings this assurance induced, I asked her, 'So what is it that I can tell you?' 'What you know,' she said. Tve always thought the scholars might know more about the Deliverer than they're letting on.' I laughed. 'There are no secrets among scholars, they're not like the tinkers. All we find out is published. If it doesn't square with what most folk believe, that's their problem; but most folk don't read scholarly works, anyway. And - well, I suppose they are like the tinkers in this - they have a more realistic attitude among themselves. It's true, the Deliverer was no perfect saint. But I've seen nothing to suggest that she ever did anything as dire as... as you said.' She made a grimace of disappointment. 'Oh, well. Maybe it was too much to hope that something like that would be written down on paper.' She plucked a pink clover and began tugging out the scrolled petals one by one and sucking them; passed one to me. I took it between my teeth, releasing the tiny drop of nectar on to my tongue. 'On paper,' I said thoughtfully. 'There could be other information where we can't reach it.' 'In the dark storage?' 70 KEN MACLEOD 'Aye, well, like I said last night - it's there, but we can't reach it.' 'I could reach it,' Merrial said casually. 'Oh, you could, could you?' 'Yes,' she said. 'I can get hold of equipment to take data out of the dark storage and put it in safe storage.' 'Safe storage?' I asked, too astonished to query more deeply at that moment. 'You know,' she said. 'The seer-stones.' 'And how would you know that?' Again the remote gaze. 'I've seen it done. By... engineers taking short cuts.' 'There's a good reason why the left-hand path is avoided,' I said. ' "Necessity is its own law",' she said, as though quoting, but the expression came from no sage I'd ever read. 'Anyway, Clovis, it's not as dangerous as you may think.' Curiosity drove me like prurience. 'How do they do it safely? Draw pentagrams with salt, or what?' 'No,' she said, quite seriously. 'They make lines with wire - isolated circuits, you know? That's what confines anything that might be waiting to get out. There are other simple precautions, for the visuals —' she made a cutting motion with her hand in response to my baffled look ' - but ninety-nine times out of a hundred there's nothing to worry about anyway. Just words and pictures.' She chuckled darkly. 'Sometimes strange words and pictures, I'll give you that.' 'And the hundredth time?' *You meet a demon,' she said, very quietly but emphatically. 'Most times, you can shut it down before it does any damage.' 'And the other times?' I persisted. THE SKY ROAD 71 'It gets loose and eats your soul.' I stared at her. 'You mean that's actually true?9 She laughed at me. 'Of course not. It makes your equipment burst into flames or explode with a loud bang, though.' 'I can see how that might be a hazard.' She reached over and touched my lips. 'Shush, man, don't go on like an old woman. Most of the stuff in the dark storage is useless to us, or evil in a different way from what you think. Evil ideas from the old times, they can make you sick, and make you want to share them, so they spread like a disease.' She leaned back again and closed her eyes, enjoying the sun like a cat. 'I reckon you and I are strong enough and healthy enough in our minds to be safe from that sort of thing.' She opened her eyes again and gave me a challenging look. The path of power is always a temptation, as Mer-rial had so lightly said last night. Until now, it had never seriously tempted me; I knew the dangers, and knew no way of getting to the undoubted rewards. Now such a way was being offered; it might reduce by years the time required for researching my thesis, it might even give me a head start on the Life. The lust for the lost knowledge made my head throb. The question was out before I knew what I was saying. 'Do you want me to help you to do it?' Her eyes widened and brightened. 'Could you? That would be just - wonderful!' She was looking at me with so much admiration and respect that I could not imagine not doing what it would take to deserve it. But even in my besotted eagerness to please her, my genuine concern about the problem she thought she'd uncovered, and my 72 KEN MACLEOD own desire for the knowledge and for the adventure of obtaining it - even with all that, my whole training and my natural caution came rushing back, and I wavered. 'Oh, God,' I said. 'I'll have to think about it.' 'Can you get your thinking about it over by eight tonight?' Merrial asked drily. 'Maybe. And what if I say no?' She held me in her level gaze. 'I won't think any the less of you. It won't change a thing about that' 'Sure?' I said, not anxiously but mischievously. I had already decided. She had seduced me into a frame of mind that feared neither God nor men nor devils. 'Then what will you do?' She shook her head. Til find some other way, or at the worst just register my protest in the record, and go on with my work as I'm told.' 'That sounds like a more sensible course in the first place.' 'It is that,' she said. 'But I'd rather have the satisfaction of knowing the ship is safe, one way or another, than of saying "I told you so" afterwards.' I couldn't argue with that, and I didn't want to. What she said must have had some deeper effect on me, because when we descended the perilous steps down from the heathery eyrie, each of us one stumble away from the welcoming arms of Darwin, I wasn't afraid at all. My room was narrow and long, under the slope of the roof. After the heat of the day it was full of the smell of old varnish and warm rust and the sound of creaking wood. The westward-facing skylight let in enough light to see by, and enough air to breathe. I came in from work and threw off my overalls THE SKY ROAD 73 and shirt, tossed my temporarily heavy purse on the bed, and uncapped a chilled bottle of beer I'd bought at the bus-stop. I opened the skylight to its fullest extent and sat myself under it on the room's one tall chair, and leaned my elbow on the window's frame as though sitting at a bar. Beside my forearm tiny red arachnids moved about on the grey and yellow lichen like dots in front of my eyes. Merrial and I would meet again in two hours. Plenty of time to wash and shave and dress, to consider and reconsider. I was almost tempted to have a brief sleep, but decided against it, attractive though the barely straightened bedding seemed at this moment. After soaking up the beer I'd get a good jolt of coffee. I lit my fifth cigarette of the day and gazed out over the rooftops towards the loch, my parched body gratefully absorbing the drink, my tired brain riding the rush of the leaf. Merrial's disturbing but alluring proposition had preoccupied me all afternoon, and although my decision was made I had plenty of doubts and fears. I would not be the first to mine the dark archives in the interests of history, or of engineering for that matter; it was neither a crime nor a sin, but it had always been impressed upon me that it was a dangerous folly. And, to be sure, I could think of no good reason for doing it, other than the ones which motivated myself and Merrial; no doubt everyone who had taken that path had felt the same about their reasons. Rationally, it was obvious why the dangers were better publicised than the benefits - those who found only madness and death in the black logic could not but be noticed, whereas those who found knowledge or wealth or pleasure discreedy kept their sinister source to themselves. What hypocrisies, I wondered, did the tinkers 74 KEN MACLEOD practise, if they themselves would on occasion turn their hand to the leftward path? Until Menial had mentioned it, I'd suspected no such thing: but then, with the tinkers' virtual monopoly of an understanding of the white logic, it was in their interests to publicly disparage the black. Optical and mechanical computing, and more especially the delicate interface between them - the seer-stones set like gems in the shining brass of the calculating machinery -were their speciality and secret skill. What would happen if people outside their guild were to start exploring the left-hand path in earnest, as a public enterprise rather than a private vice, heaven only knew. A new Possession, perhaps; in which case the tinkers might have to engineer a new Deliverance. It was not a reassuring thought. I stubbed out the cigarette and sent the butt tumbling down the slate roof-tiles to the dry gutter. The sounds of people going home, of engines and hooves and feet, rose from the street below. I turned back into the room and finished the beer, then undressed and went into the sluice-shower and washed myself down. The water ran cold just before I got the last soap-suds off; I gritted my teeth and persisted, then leapt out and dried myself off while the electric kettle boiled. I filled a ewer with a mixture of cold and hot water and shaved carefully, then set some coffee to brew while I got dressed: in the same trousers and waistcoat as I'd worn the previous night, but I thought the occasion deserved a clean shirt. The bed was close enough to the table for the two items of furniture to form a somewhat unergonomic desk. I sat down with the coffee and looked at the stack of books and papers I'd brought with me to read over the summer. I reached over and hauled a THE SKY ROAD 75 volume from the stack, cursed and got up and found a rag and wiped dust and cobwebs from all the books, washed my hands and sat down again. Sipping the cooling coffee, turning over the pages, I tried to focus my mind on the matters they contained. When I was awakened for a third time by my forehead hitting the table I gave up and poured another coffee and turned my mind to my real worry, the one I didn't want to think about: what if Merrial were simply using me? That she had sought me out in the first place because she wanted me to do a job for her? I walked up and down the room's narrow length, turning the question over almost as often as I turned around. After several iterations I decided that I couldn't have been fooled about her feelings, that her passion was real - and that if she'd been intent on manipulating me, she would have done it more subtly— But then, perhaps that itself was evidence of how subtly she'd done it. At that point I stopped. To suspect manipulation that subtle - an apparently clumsy and obvious approach disguising one devious and elegant - was to undermine the very confidence in my own judgement on which all such discriminations must perforce rely. So I forgot my suspicions, and looked once more at the books, and at a quarter before eight went out into the evening to meet her, and my fate. 4 PAPER TIGERS T hree flags hung behind the coffin: the Soviet, red with gold hammer and sickle; the Kazakhstani, blue with yellow sun and eagle; and the ISTWR, yellow with black trefoil. About two hundred people were crammed into the hall of the crematorium. The funeral was the nearest thing to a State occasion the republic had had since the Sputnik centenary. The entire depleted apparat was there, and a good proportion of the workers, peasants and intelligentsia was probably watching on television. The distinguished foreign guests included the Kazakhstani consul, the head of the Western United States Interests Section, and David Reid, who was wedged between a couple of Mutual Protection greps. Myra sat with the rest of Sovnarkom in the front row, dry-eyed, as one of Georgi's old comrades - another Afganets - delivered the eulogy. 'Major Georgi Yefrimovich Davidov was born in Alma-Ata in 1956. At school, in the Pioneers and the Komsomol, he soon distinguished himself as an ex- THE SKY ROAD 77 emplary individual - studious, civic-minded, with great athletic prowess. After obtaining a degree at the University of Kazakhstan, where he joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, he completed his national service and chose a military career. In 1979 he qualified as a helicopter pilot, and later that same year was among the first of the limited contingent of the Soviet armed forces to fulfil their internationalist duty to the peoples of Afghanistan.' A ripple of dissidence, expressed with indrawn breaths, or sighs, or shifting of feet, went through the room. Myra herself sniffed, compressed her lips, looked down. All those nights he'd woken her by grabbing her, holding her, talking away his nightmares; all those mornings when he'd said not a word, given no indication that he remembered any interruption to his sleep, or to hers. The speaker raised his voice a little and continued undaunted. 'His service earned him promotion and the honour of Hero of the Soviet Union. In 1985 he applied for transfer to the space programme, and after training at Baikonur he won the proud title of Cosmonaut of the Soviet Union. However, many decades were to pass before he was able to fulfil this part of his destiny.' By which time it was a fucking milk-run, and there was no fucking Soviet Union, so get on with it— 'During the turbulent years of the late 1980s, Major Davidov took some political stands about which his friends and comrades may honesdy differ-' Nice one, he was a fucking Yeltsinite, get on with it— ' - but which testify to his true Soviet and Kazakh patriotism and the seriousness with which he took his civic duty and the Leninist ideals of the armed 78 KEN MACLEOD forces, which in his view proscribed the use of violence against the people.' Myra was not the only one who had to choke back a laugh. 'After the Republic of Kazakhstan became independent, Major Davidov's expertise in the areas of nuclear weaponry and questions of nuclear disarmament gave him a new field for his great political skill and personal charm . . .' Myra bit her lip. He was in front of her in the taxi queue outside the airport at Alma-Ata. Tall, even taller than she was, very dark; swept-back black hair, eyebrows almost as thick as his black moustache; relaxed in a stiff olive-green uniform; smoking a Marlboro and glancing occasionally at a counterfeit Rolex. Myra, just arrived, lost and anxious, could not take her eyes off him. But it was the yellow plastic bag at his feet that gave her the nerve to speak. Printed on it in red were a picture of a parrot and the words: THE PET SHOP 992 Pollockshaws Road Glasgow G41 2HA She leaned forward, into his field of vision. You've flown in from Glasgow?' she asked, in Russian. He turned, startled out of some trance, and looked at her with a bemused expression which rapidly became a smile. 'Ah, the bag.' He poked it with his foot, revealing that the carrier was bulging with cartons of ciga- THE SKY ROAD 79 rettes and bottles of Johnny Walker Black Label. Toil're a stranger here, then.' 'Oh?' 'These plastic bags have nothing to do with Glasgow. They're used by every shop from here to China, God knows why.' He laughed, showing strong teeth stained with nicotine. 'Have you been to Glasgow?' 'Yes,' said Myra. 'I lived there for several years, back in the seventies.' Something cooled in his look. 'What were you do-ing?' 'I was writing a thesis,' Myra said, 'on the economy of the Soviet Union.' He guffawed. 'You got permission to do thai?' 'It wasn't a problem—' she began, then stopped. She realised that he'd taken her for a former-Soviet citizen. Former nomenklatura, if she'd had clearance for such dangerous research. 'I'm not a Russian, I'm from the United States!' He raised his eyebrows. 'Your accent is very good,' he said, in English. His accent was very good. They talked until they reached the top of the queue, and then went on talking, because they shared a taxi into town, and went on talking. .. Would she ever have spoken to him, Myra wondered, if it hadn't been for that yellow bag? And if she hadn't spoken to him, would she ever have seen him again? Perhaps; but perhaps not, or not at such a moment, when they were both free, and on the rebound from other lovers, and in that case . .. She wouldn't be here, for one thing, and Georgi wouldn't be in that coffin, and . . . the consequences went on and on, escalating until she didn't know 80 KEN MACLEOD whether to laugh or cry. For want of a nail the kingdom was lost - and the result of that triviality, the fictitious Pollockshaws pet-shop address on the plastic bag, had gained her a republic, and imposed on others losses she could not bear to contemplate. Or so it might seem, if anyone ever learned enough about her to see her hand in history. But then again, maybe not, maybe old Engels and Plekhanov had been right after all about the role of the individual in history: maybe it did all come out in the wash — at the end of the French Revolution someone, but, of course, ha-ha, 'not necessarily that particular Corsican', would have stepped into the tall boots which circumstances, like a good valet, had laid out for a man on horseback. She'd never found that theory particularly convincing, and it gave her small comfort now to even consider it. No, she was stuck, as were they all, with her actions and their consequences. ' - in recent years Georgi Yefrimovich played a leading part in the diplomatic service of the ISTWR, in which duty he met his death.' The eulogist paused for a moment to direct a stabbing glance at the distinguished foreign guests. 'He is survived by his former wife and loyal friend, Myra Godwin-Davidova, their children and grandchildren-' Too many to read out, and none of them here, get on with it— Messages were, however, read out from all of the absent offspring, other relatives, old friends. The eulogist laid down his sheaf of papers at last, and raised his hand. The crematorium filled with the oddly quiet and modest sound of Kazakhstan's national anthem. The coffin rolled silendy through the unobtrusive hatch. Everyone stood up and sang, or mimed along to, the Internationale. And that was THE SKY ROAD 81 that. Another good materialist gone to ash. Myra turned and walked out of the crematorium, and row by row, from the front, they fell in and walked out behind her. Her hands were shaking as she fumbled with her black fur hat and tried to light a cigarette in the driveway. Out on the street, cars were being moved into position to carry the dignitaries off to the post-funeral luncheon function. Somebody steadied her hand, helped her with the cigarette. She lit up and looked up, to see David Reid. Dark brows, dark eyes, white hair down to the upturned collar of his astrakhan coat. He looked less than half his age, with only the white hair - itself an affectation - indicating anything different; none of her give-away flaws. She was pretty sure his joints didn't creak, or his bones ache. They had better fixes in the West. His minders hung about a few steps away, their gaze grepping the surroundings. People were milling around, drifting towards the waiting cars. 4Are you all right?' Reid asked. Tm fine, Dave.' He scuffed a foot on the gravel, scratched the back of his neck. 'We didn't do it, Myra.' 'Yeah, well...' She shrugged. 'I read the autopsy. I believe it.' You'd be dead if I didn% she disdained to add. She believed the autopsy; she had no choice. She believed Reid, too. She still had her doubts about the verdict: natural causes - it might be one of those dark episodes where she could never be sure of the truth, like Stalin's hand in the Kirov affair, or in the death of Robert Harte . . . But Reid took the point she wanted him to take. He seemed to relax slightly, and lit a cigarette himself. His gaze flicked from the 82 KEN MACLEOD burning tip to the crematorium chimney, then to her. 'Ah, shit. It seems such a waste.' Myra nodded. She knew what he meant. Burning dead people, burying them in a fucking hole in the ground - it was already beginning to seem barbaric. 'He didn't even want cryo,' she said. 'Let alone that Californian computer-scan scam.* 'Why not?' Reid asked. 'He could've afforded it' 'Oh, sure,' Myra said. 'Just didn't believe in it, is all.' Reid smiled thinly. 'Neither do I.' 'Oh?' He spread his hands. 'I just sell the policies.' 'Is there any pie you don't have a finger in?' Reid rubbed the side of his nose with his finger. 'Diversification, Myra. Name of the game. Spread the risks. Learned that in insurance, way back when.' He reached out, waiting for her unspoken permission to take her arm. 'We need to talk business.' 'Car,' she said, catching his elbow firmly and turning about on the crunching gravel. They walked side by side to the armoured limousine. Myra, out of the corner of her eye, watched people watching. Good: let it be clear that she no longer suspected Reid. Not publicly, not politically, not even - at a certain level - privately. Just personally, just in her jealous old bones. But there was more to it than making a diplomatic display; there was still a genuine affection between them, attenuated though it was by the years, exasperated though it was by their antagonism. Reid had never been a man to let enmity get in the way of friendship. THE SKY ROAD 83 Myra glanced at her watch as the car door shut with a well-engineered clunk. They had about five minutes to talk in private as the big black Zhil rolled through Kapitsa's city centre to its only posh hotel, the Sheraton. She setded back in the leather seat and eyed Reid cautiously. 'OK,' she said. 'Get on with it/ Reid reached for the massive ashtray, stubbed out one cigarette and lit up another. Myra did the same. Their smoky sighs met in a front of mutual disruption. Reid scratched his eyebrow, looked away, looked back. 'Well,' he said. 'I want to make you an offer. We know you still have some of your old —' he hesitated; even here, there were words one did not say ' -strategic assets, and we'd like to buy them off you.' He could be bluffing. 'I have no—' she began. Reid tilted his head back and puffed a tiny jet of smoke that, after a few centimetres, curled back on itself in a miniature mushroom-cloud. 'Don't waste time denying it,' he said. 'All right,' said Myra. She swallowed a rising nausea, steadied herself against a dizzy, chill darkening of her sight. It was like being caught with a guilty secret, but one which she had not known she held. But, she knew too well, if she had not known it was because she had never tried, and never wanted, to find out. 'Suppose we do. We wouldn't sell them to anyone, let alone you. We're against your coup—' It was Reid's turn to feign ignorance, Myra's to show impatience. 'We wouldn't use them,' he said. 'Good God, what do you take us for? We just want them .. . off the board, so to speak. Out of the game. And quite 84 KEN MACLEOD frankly, the only way we can be sure of that is to have control of them ourselves.' Myra shook her head. 'No way. No deal.' Reid raised his hand. 'Let me tell you what we have to offer, before you reject it. We can buy you out, free and clear. Give everybody in this state, every one of your citizens, enough money to settle anywhere and live more than comfortably. Think about it. The camps are going to be wound down, and whoever wins the next round is going to move against you. Your assets aren't going to be much use when Space Defense gets back in business.' That's a threat, I take it?' 'Not at all. Statement of fact. Sell them now or lose them later, it's up to you.' 'Lose them - or use them!' Reid gave her a 'we are not amused' look. 'I'm not fooling,' Myra told him. 'The best I can see coming out of your coup is more chaos, in which case we'll need all the goddamn assets we can get!' Reid took a deep breath. 'No, Myra. If you do get chaos, it'll be because we haven't won. This coup, as you call it, is the last best chance for stability. If we fail the world will go to hell in its own way. Your personal contribution to that will then be no concern of mine - I'll be dead, or in space - but you can help make sure it doesn't happen, and benefit yourself and your people in the process.' He was putting all of his undeniable charm into his voice and expression as he concluded, 'Think it over, Myra. That's all I ask.' 'I'll think about it,' she said, granting him at least this victory, for what it was worth. She looked around. 'We've arrived.' * THE SKY ROAD 85 The hotel's ornately furnished function suite was filled with people in dark clothes, standing about in small groups and conversing in low voices. Already they were beginning to relax out of their funereal solemnity, to smile and laugh a little: life goes on. Fine. Myra and Reid walked together to the long tables on which the buffet was spread, and contrived to lose each other in the random movement of people selecting food and drinks. With a plate of savouries in one hand and a large glass of whisky in the other, Myra looked around. Over in one corner Andrei Mukhartov was deep in conversation with a lady in a black suit and a large hat; she was answering his quiet questions in a loud voice. Myra hoped this representative of the tattered Western fringe of the former United States wasn't talking about anything confidential. Possibly that was the point. She noticed that Valentina was standing alone, in an olive-green outfit whose black armband was rather shouted down by an astonishing amount of gold braid. Myra made a less than subtle bee-line for her. 'Ah, there you are,' she said, as Valentina turned. She nudged her defence minister towards the nearest of the many small tables dotted around the vast floor. They sat. 'New uniform?' Myra asked. Valentina's rigid epaulettes moved up and down. 'Never had much occasion for it before,' she said. 'Never knew you'd accumulated so many medals, either.' Valentina had to laugh. Teah, it is a bit.. . Brezh-nevian, isn't it?' 'All too appropriate, for us. The period of stagnation.' . Valentina devoured a canape, not looking away 86 KEN MACLEOD from Myra. 'Indeed. I see you had a little chat with our main inward investor.' 'Yes. He made me an interesting offer/ Myra looked down at her plate, picked up something with legs. 'I do hope this stuff's synthetic; I'd hate to think of the radiation levels if it isn't.' 'I think we have to rely on somebody's business ethics on the radiation question,' Valentina said. 'Ah, right.' Myra peered at the shrimp's shell; it had an ICI trademark. Full of artificial goodness. She hauled the pale pink flesh out with her teeth. 'Anyway, Madame Comrade People's Commissar for Defence, my dear: our inward investor gave me to understand that he knows we've done a little less ... outward divestment than I'd been led to believe.' Valentina, rather to her credit, Myra thought, looked embarrassed. 'I inherited the assets from my predecessors. . . and I never mentioned them because I thought you already knew, or you didn't and you needed to have deniability.' So it was true. The confirmation was less of a shock than Reid's original claim had been. It would take a while for the full enormity of it all to sink in. Myra nodded, her mouth full. Swallowed, with a shot of whisky. 'The latter, actually. I didn't know. I thought they'd all been seized by the Yanks after the war.' 'Most of them were. There was one exception, though. A large portfolio of assets that made it through the crackdown, that the US/UN just couldn't get their hands on; one contract that was always renewed. Until the Fall Revolution, of course. Then it... lapsed, and I was left holding the babies. They were sent back to us in a large consignment THE SKY ROAD 87 of large diplomatic bags, from various locations, all controlled by ...' 'You can tell me now, I take it?' Valentina looked around, and shrugged. 'The original ministate, with the original mercenary defence force/ Myra had to think for a moment before she realised just which state Valentina was talking about. 'Jesus wept!' 'Quite possibly,' said Valentina, 'quite possibly he did.' There are times when all you can do is be cynical, put up a hard front, don't let it get to you ... Myra joined in Valentina's dark chuckle. 'So what happened to the assets, and why is our investor concerned about them?' 'Ah,' said Valentina. 'You'll recall the Sputnik centenary a couple of years ago. We rather extravagantly launched one of our obsolete boosters to celebrate it. What I did at the time was take the opportunity to place most of our embarrassing legacy in orbit.' 'In Earth orbit?' Myra resisted an irrational impulse to pull her head down between her shoulders. 'Some of them,' said Valentina. 'The ones designed specifically for orbital use, you know? They're in high orbit, quite safe.' She frowned, and against some inner resistance added, 'Well, fairly safe. But the rest we sent to an even safer place: Lagrange.' Myra had a momentary mental picture, vivid as a virtual display, of Lagrange: L5, one of the points where Earth's gravity and the Moon's combined to create a region of orbital stability, and which had, over half a century, accumulated a cluttered cluster of research stations, military satellites, official and 88 KEN MACLEOD unofficial space habitats, canned Utopias, abandoned spacecraft, squatted modules, random junk ... It was the space movement's promised land, and with the new nanofactured ultralight laser-launched spacecraft its population was rising as fast as Kapi-tsa's was falling. 'Oh, fucking hell,' said Myra. 'Don't worry,' Valentina assured her. 'They're almost undetectable among all the debris.' Myra didn't have the heart to tell her how much she was missing the point. 'Why the fuck did you park them there?' she demanded. 'Safe, in a way, yeah, that I can understand, but didn't it occur to you that if it ever came out, we might find our intentions .. . misunderstood?' Valentina looked even more embarrassed. 'It was - well, it was a Party thing, Myra. A request' 'Oh, right. Jeez. Are you still in the fucking Party?' Valentina chuckled. 'I am the Party. The ISTWR section, at least' 'Now that Georgi's gone. Shit, I'd forgotten.' They hadn't even put the fourth flag, the flag of the Fourth, on his coffin. Shit. Not that it mattered now. Not to Georgi, anyway. And not to those who'd gathered to pay their respects - the only one present who'd have understood its significance was Reid. 'Don't worry,' said Valentina. 'What does the International want with - oh, fuck. I can think of any number of things it might want with them.' Valentina nodded. 'Some of them could be to our advantage.' 'Hah. I'll be the judge of that. You've kept the access codes to yourself?' 'Of course!' 'Well, that's something.' THE SKY ROAD 89 'So our man's proposing in a buy-out, is he?' Val-entina continued. 'Could be worth considering.' 'Yeah.' Myra stood up, taking her glass. 'I'm going to talk to him some more. Thanks for the update, Val.' She refilled her glass, with vodka this time, and set out in a carefully casual ramble to where Reid stood chatting to an awestruck gaggle of low-level functionaries. Denis Gubanov and one of Reid's greps circled unobtrusively, keeping a wary distance from the group and from each other, each at a La-grange point of his own. She couldn't hear the conversation. On her way, she was intercepted by Alexander Sherman. The Industry Commissar was wearing the same sharp plastic suit, its colour adjusted to black. He looked shiftier than usual; a bad sign. 'Ah, Myra. A sad day for us all.' He shook his head slowly. 'A sad day.' 'Yes,' said Myra. The phrase get on with it once more came to mind. Alex took a deep breath and, as if telepathic, announced, T have something to tell you. It's not a good time, but. . . Well, I've had an offer from Mr Reid.' 'To buy out our assets?' 'No, no!' Alex looked surprised at the suggestion. 'An employment offer.' 'Oh, right,' said Myra dismissively. She waved a hand as she walked past him. 'Take it' She could see herself in the big gilt-framed mirrors as she walked up; they faced similar mirrors at the far side of the room, and for a moment she saw herself multiplied, a potential infinity of different versions of herself: a visual, virtual image of the 90 KEN MACLEOD many worlds interpretation. She had entertained a childish notion, once, that mirror images might be windows into those other worlds. Did the photon ever decide, she'd wondered, did it ever turn aside in its reflection? What she saw was the endlessly repeated image of a tall, thin woman in a long black dress, moving towards the still oblivious Reid like some MIRVed nemesis. She saw the flickered glances exchange their messages, between her Security Commissar, Reid's security man, Reid, and herself, until Reid's reflected eyes met her actual eyes, and widened. She encountered a sort of deadness in the air, and realised that the security men were, between them, setting up audio countermeasures, casting a cloak of silence around the group. Then she was through the region of dead air, where the voices were garbled and strange, and suddenly the conversation was audible - for the moment before it died on the lips of those who noticed her arrival. 'Well, hello again,' she said. Her gaze swept the half-dozen of her employees gathered around Reid; they were all making comical efforts to flee, walking backwards as discreetly as possible. 'Head-hunting my lower-middle cadres as well as my commissars?' Tup,' said Reid, quite unabashed. He made a fractional movement of his fingertips and eyebrows, and his supplicants - or applicants - dispersed like smoke in a draught. The grep and Gubanov continued their watchful mutual circling. A waiter went past with a salver of glasses and a tray of Beluga on rye; Myra and Reid helped themselves from both, then stood facing each other with a slight awkwardness, like tongue-tied teenagers after a dance. 'I could do some head-hunting the other way, you know,' Myra said. 'Perhaps I should buy a spy or two THE SKY ROAD 91 from you. It turns out you're better informed about our investment portfolio than I've been. Particularly its, ah, spread.' Reid acknowledged this with a small nod. Tuts us in a difficult position,' he said. 'You have the drop on us, frankly. Earth orbit is the high ground, after all.' Oh? she thought to herself. So he didn't know about Lagrange? Or didn't want her to know he knew. 'However,' Reid went on, Tm pretty confident that you won't, um, liquidate. For obvious reasons.' 'So why the offer?' 'Peace of mind . .. nah, seriously. Between us, you and I know everyone who knows of the current level of exposure. But neither of us can guarantee that that'll last. A word in the wrong place and there could be severe market jitters on my side. Which, I hasten to add, would not be to your benefit, either, so we have a mutual—' 'Assured deterrence?' Reid gave her a shut the fuck up look. 'You could say that. . . but I'd rather you didn't' Myra grinned evilly. 'OK,' she said. 'It's still no deal, Dave.' He gazed back at her, expressionless, but he couldn't hide the plea in his voice. 'Will you at least agree not to dump your assets during the takeover bid? Not to make any offers to the competition?' Oh, Jeez. This was a tricky one. She had no intention of doing any of the things he feared. On the other hand - if he were to fear them (even if only theoretically, and only at the margin, but still. .. ) it might restrain him. It might keep him, and his allies, from crossing that invisible border, that ter- 92 KEN MACLEOD minator between the daylight and the dark. Let them hate, as long as they fear. She shook her head, and saw her multiple reflections do the same, in solemn repetition. The act of observation collapses the wave-function, yes: the die cast, the cat dies. 'Sorry, Dave,' she told him. 'I can't make any promises.' His gaze measured hers for a moment, and then he shrugged. *You win some, you lose some,' he said lightly. 4 See you around, Myra.' She watched him walk away, as she so often had. His grep followed at a safe distance. Denis raised his eyebrows, rolled his eyes, came over. 4What was all that about?' 'Oh, just some old stuff between us,' Myra said. 'We don't see eye to eye, is all.' She took his arm. 'Let's see how Andrei is getting on with that lady from the Western United States, shall we?' Not well, as it turned out. This was not the place for secret diplomacy, even if they'd been using the privacy shields, which they weren't. Juniper Bear, the West American unofficial consul, was making her diplomatic position no secret at all. Her broad-brimmed black hat with black wax fruit around its crown seemed chosen to amplify her voice, even though her pose indicated urgent, confidential communication. ' .. .Just in the last month we hit a Green guerilla incursion from SoCal, and at the same time a White Aryan Nations push across the Rockies, and would you believe the First Nations Federation, the goddamn Indians, lobbing significant conventional hardware on our northern settlements on the Can- THE SKY ROAD 93 nuck side of the old border? Let me tell you, Comrade Mukhartov, we could do with some orbital backup, this time on our side for a change.' She laughed, grinning at Myra and Valentina as they joined the conversation. 'Would you believe? she repeated, 'the goddamn Greens are actually lobbying the old guard to keep the battlesats as asteroid defence? Like we ever really needed that, and now we got everything bigger'n a pea out there mapped and tracked, we might as well worry about a new ice age!' 'Well, that's coming,' said Valentina. Juniper Bear's hatbrim tilted. 'Sure, the Milan-kovitch cycle, yeah, but it isn't a worry, now is it?' She laughed. 'Hey, I remember global warming!' 'And thafs happening,' Myra said. 'But, like you say, it isn't a worry, not any more. And the ozone holes, and the background radiation levels, and the synthetic polymers in every organic, and the jumping genes and all that, yeah, we're not worrying.' She felt surprised at the sound of her own voice, at how angry she felt about all that, now she was articulating it; it was as though she had a deep Green deep inside her, just waiting to get out. 'But to be honest, Ms Bear, we are worried about something else. About the plan to revitalise the ReUnited Nations. Even if they will be the enemies of our enemies, in the first instance. We don't want that kind of power turned against anyone on Earth, ever again.' She took off her hat, fingering the smooth hairs and running her thumb over the red star and gold sigil; realised she was standing there, literally cap in hand, begging for help. Juniper Bear shook her head. She was an old woman, not as old as Myra; she looked about thirty, by pre-rejuvenation reckoning, when her face was in repose, but the weight of her years showed in her 94 KEN MACLEOD every facial expression, if you were old enough to notice these things. You learned to transmit and to receive those non-verbal tics, in parallel processes of increasing wisdom. 'That's what our opposition are saying,' the woman said. " 'No more New World Orders!" Well, I'm sorry, but we need a real new world order, one on our side this time. It'll be only temporary - once we get enough forces out there, there's no way anyone can keep central control. Once the emergency is over, it'll just...' She made a downward-planning gesture. 'Wither away?' Juniper's creased eyes registered the irony, her compressed lips her refusal to let it deflect her. 'Speaking of states that wither away,' she said, changing the subject adroitly, 'if any of you find yourselves looking for new opportunities, when all this is over one way or another. . .' Valentina and Andrei said nothing, at least not in Myra's presence; but Myra herself smiled, and nodded, and said she'd bear it in mind. 'Well!' said Andrei Mukhartov, when the function was over and the guests had departed, the diplomats, the apparatchiks and captains of industry. Andrei, Valentina, Denis and Myra had retired to one of the hotel's smaller and quieter bars. Hardwood and mirrors, leather and glass, plush carpets and quiet music. There were plenty of people in the bar who'd had nothing directly to do with the funeral. This made for a degree of security for the four remaining Commissars, huddled as they were around a vodka bottle on a corner table, like dissidents. 'Thanks for your intervention earlier, comrades. I THE SKY ROAD 95 thought I was getting somewhere until you turned up.' 'You thought wrong,' said Myra. She didn't feel like arguing the point. 'I know Juniper, she'll seem to agree with you and then start talking about the war. Which is where we came in. You didn't lose anything.' 'Huh,' grunted Andrei. He knocked back a thumbnail glass. 'Tell me why you need a Foreign Secretary at all.' 'Because I can't do everything myself,' Myra told him. 'Even if I can do every particular thing better than anyone. Division of labour, don't knock it. It's all in Ricardo.' Andrei and Valentina were looking at each other with eye-rolling, exaggerated bafflement. 'Megalomania,' said Andrei sadly. 'Comes to all the dictators of the proletariat, just before the end.' 'Think we should overthrow her before it's too late?' Valentina straightened her back and sketched a salute. 'Get Denis in on it and we can form a troika. Blame all the problems on Myra and declare a clean slate.' 'That is not funny,' said Myra. She poured another round, watched the clear spirit splash into the crystal ware, four times. 'That is exactly how it will be. One day all the problems of the world will be blamed on me.' This was not funny, she thought. This was her deepest suspicion, in her darkest moments. She grinned at her confederates. 'To that glorious future!' They slugged back the vodka shots and slammed down the empty glasses. Myra passed up an offer of a Marley or a Moscow Gold, lit up a Dunhill from her last trip out. The double foil inside the pack, the red and the gold of its exterior — there was still, 96 KEN MACLEOD to her, something wicked and opulent about the brand, which she'd first smoked when duty-free still meant something. 'So, what's the score, Andrei? Apart from today's subtle approaches.' 'Ah.' Andrei exhaled the fragrant smoke through his nostrils. 'Not good, I have to say. Kazakhstan's still keeping out of it - after all, they have Baikonur to think about, and the Sheenisov threat. If it weren't for previous bad blood between them and the space movement, I think they might be tempted to side with it. So their neutrality is something, when all's said and done. As for the rest -1 have canvassed every country, I have checked with our delegates in New York, and frankly it looks as if next week's vote will go through.' 'Valentina?' Myra didn't need to spell anything out. Kozlova had spent days and nights tracking reports from agents in the battlesats and the settlements. She replied by holding out her spread hand and waggling it. 'Nothing much we can do up there,' she said. 'The other side have all the resources to tip the balance their way, whichever way the argument is going.' 'Not all the resources,' Myra said. 'Oh, come,' said Valentina, with careful calm. 'We couldn't.' She might have been talking about cheating at cards. 'But they don't know we couldn't,' Myra said. 'We do have a hard reputation, after all. Most of the new countries, not to mention the settlements, probably think we're some kind of ruthless Bolsheviks.' They shared a cynical laugh. 'I'm sure Reid is disabusing them of that notion THE SKY ROAD 97 right now,' said Andrei. He seemed to have picked up on what they were talking about; and as for Denis Gubanov, he was leaning back with a smug smile, as if he'd known it for years. Probably had. 'Oh, I don't know,' Myra said. 'He's a devious son of a bitch. He says his side don't know what we've got, and he might still hold out a hope of winning us over - or using us as a threat to keep his own side in order.' She inhaled again. 'Besides,' she added, 'he doesn't know all we've got. Or so I gathered. He thinks it's all in Earth orbit.' 'It isnW Denis's smile faded instantly. 'So where is it?' 'Good question,' Myra said. 'See if you can find out.' Valentina was intently studying the reflection of the chandelier in the bar mirror. 'Is this a joke, or what?' Denis demanded. Myra shook her head, laid her palm on the back of his hand. 'Easy, man. Don't waste too much time on it -just treat it as an exercise, see what you can find out about what people know or suspect—' 'And I'm not to know myself?' 'Double-blind,' Myra said firmly. 'And double-bluff. I'll let you know after you've brought back some results, but I don't want your investigation dropping any inadvertent hints.' Denis scowled. 'OK,' he allowed, 'I see the point of that.' He looked at his watch, sighed and stood up. 'Three-fifteen,' he said. 'Time I was back at the office.' 'The unsleeping sword of the Cheka,' Myra said. 'Time we all went back, I guess.' 'No,' said Andrei. Tou and Valentina stay here 98 KEN MACLEOD and get drunk.' He pushed back his chair and raised himself ponderously to his feet. * We Russian men will take care of the rest of the day's business.' 'Sure?' 'Sure.' He put his hand on her shoulder. 'Relax, Davidova. The coup won't come today, or tomorrow.' 'I know that,' she said. 'But we just lost one more commissar today—' 'Alex, huh, son of a bitch. No loss. I cleared his desktop and locked him out the second he mentioned he was leaving us.' 'He was good at his job, and we don't have a replacement' 'The economy can get along fine without a commissar for a while,' Andrei said. 'The free market, don't knock it. It's all in Ricardo.' The two men walked to the bar. Andrei gallantly laid a wad of currency on it, indicating Myra and Valentina with a glance, nodded to them and left with Denis. 'So,' said Valentina, looking after them, 'what do you suppose they're up to?' 'Anything but going back to work, I hope,' Myra laughed. 'Hitting the spaceport bars, or plotting our demise. Whatever. What the fuck.' She downed another vodka; stared at the tip of a cigarette that had burnt down, unregarded; lit another. 'You're drunk already,' Valentina accused. 'And bitter and twisted. Yeah, I know.' 'I'll tell you why they left,' Valentina said. 'Apart from the space-port attractions, that is.' 'Yeah?' 'They're giving us space, my dear. For a caucus.' 'Women's caucus? Bit dated, that.' Valentina loosened her uniform jacket, removed THE SKY ROAD 99 her tie and rolled it up carefully. 'Not - what was it called? - feminism, Myra. Socialism. A Party caucus.' 'But I'm not even in the Party!' 'Are you so sure about that?' Valentina asked. 'I've never seen a resignation letter from you. And I would have, you know. I'm sure you're at least a sympathiser, even if -' she giggled ' - you've been missing branch meetings lately.' Myra had to think about it. She supposed there was still a direct-debit mandate paying her dues to some anonymous Caribbean data-haven account. She still got the mailings, filed unread. She still wrote for Analysis, the International's online theoretical journal. (Its contributors had nicknamed it Dialysis, because of its insistent theme that everything was going down the tubes.) Myra frowned at Valentina. The noise in the bar was louder than it had been. People were drifting in from other functions going on in the hotel: a business conference, an anime con, and at least two weddings. 'What does it matter?' she asked. 'We're nothing, we're probably among the last Internationalists in the whole fucking world,9 'Indeed we are,' said Valentina. 'But there's still a couple of things we can do. One is give our comrade a good send-off, by getting absolutely smashed in his memory.' They knocked glasses, drank. 'And the other thing?' 'Oh, yes. We can see if there's anything the International is planning to do about the coup.' Tou must be fucking joking.' 'I am not. If you want my guess, that's what they wanted the assets for.' 'Whoever thought of that must be out of their tiny 100 KEN MACLEOD fucking minds. Talk about adventurism.' 'I'm not so sure. Remember, there may not be many of us left in the world, but -' Valentina leaned closer * - there isn't only one world.' 'Oh, don't be—' Myra gave it a second thought. 'Oh,' she said. 'Our friends in the sky.' 'Yeah,' said Valentina. 'The space fraction.' 'I don't want to discuss this right now,' Myra said. She looked around, wildly. The place was jumping. One beautiful Kazakh girl whom she'd thought was a bride yelled something in what sounded like Japanese. Her big white dress shrank like shrink-wrap to her body, changing colour and hardening to a costume of pastel-shaded plastic armour. A smart-suit - made from, rather than by, nanotech - was a heinously expensive novelty, offering a limited menu of programmed transformations. Myra wondered how long it would be before its price plummeted, its repertoire exploded; how long it would be before people could as readily transform their bodies. A world of comic-book super-heroes - it didn't bear thinking about. The girl struck a combative pose, to a scatter of applause from the other anime fans. 'Let's get drunk,' Myra said. 5 THE CHURCH OF MAN M. .errial was, as promised, waiting. She sat on the plinth, as I had done, under the Deliverer's equestrian statue. She wore a loose summer dress with a colourful tiered skirt. Something stirred in my memory, then vanished like a dream in the morning. She was in animated conversation with a man sitting beside her. They both looked up as I arrived. 'Hello/ I said warily. He was a tall, thin man, about thirty, I reckoned; quite brown, with sharp features and dark eyes which had a sort of quirky, questioning look in them; black hair curly on top, short at the back and sides; dressed in leather trousers and jacket and a white cotton T-shirt with a red bandana. A fine chain hung around his throat beneath the bandana, its pendant - if any - below the T-shirt's round collar. 'Hello/ Menial said warmly. 'Clovis, this is Fer- gal.' The man stuck his right hand out and I shook it, 102 KEN MACLEOD noticing as I did so that one of his thumbs pressed the back of my hand and that he held on, as though waiting for some response, for about a second longer than I subconsciously expected, before letting go. 'Pleased to meet you, Clovis,' he said. His voice was low and deep, his accent was hard to place: correct, but by that very correctness of intonation in each syllable, somehow foreign; it reminded me of a Zanu prince I'd once heard speak at the University. 'Let's get some drinks,' he said, rising to his feet. We strolled to the nearest vacant table outside The Carronade. Fergal took our requests and disappeared inside. 'Who is that guy?' I asked. Merrial favoured me with a slow smile. 'You sound jealous,' she teased. 'Ah, come on. Just curious.' 'I've known him a long time,' she said. 'Nothing personal. Just.. . one of us.' 'Well, I had kind of figured he was a tinker.' Menial's eyes narrowed slightly. 'Yes, that's it,' she said. Fergal returned in a few moments, taking his seat beside me and opposite Merrial. I offered him a cigarette, which he accepted with an oddly ironic smile. 'Well,' he said, lighting it, 'you know about the . . . concern, for the ship?' I nodded. Tes, but Merrial said nothing about its being shared.' He grinned. 'Oh, it's quite widely shared, I can tell you that. It's a brave offer you've made, and -' he spread his hands ' - all I can say is, thanks.' I was more puzzled than modest about this ref- THE SKY ROAD 103 erence to the bravery of my offer, so I just shrugged at that. 'Are you on the project too?' He seemed amused. Tm not on site, but I am on the payroll, if that's what you mean,' he said. 'All of -' he glanced at Menial ' - our profession are very much involved in the project as a whole/ He took a long swallow of beer, and a draw on his cigarette, becoming visibly more relaxed and expansive as he did so. 'Its success matters a lot to us. We're very keen to see the sky road taken again.' 'I like that,' I said. ' "The sky road".' *Yes,' he said. 'Well, it took you people long enough to get back on it' 'Back?' 'You walked it once.' Another glance at Menial, then a smile at me. 'Or we did.' 'Our ancestors did,' I said. 'That's what I meant to say,' he said idly. 'But to business. I'll have to get a piece of equipment that you - or rather, Menial — is going to need. That's going to take some time, but I'll manage it this weekend. You'll have to book some time off and seats on the Monday train.' He smiled wryly. 'Not much point trying to travel on the Saturday or the Sunday, anyway. No trains and damn slow traffic, even if you wanted to drive.' I nodded. 'And the University would have all its hatches battened anyway.' Yeah, that's a point. Still, can't complain - the free weekend is one of the gains of the working class, eh?' 'You could call it that,' I said. 'Mind you, whether what goes on at the University should count as work—' We went on talking for a bit. Fergal was cagey 104 KEN MACLEOD about himself, and I didn't press him, and after another couple of beers he got up and left. We had the evening, and the weekend, to ourselves. Menial slept, leaning against my shoulder, all the way from Carron Town to Inverness. It seemed a shame for her to miss the journey, but I reckoned she must have seen its famously spectacular and varied scenery before, many more times than I had. Besides, I liked watching her sleep, an experience which, in the nature of our past three nights, I had hitherto not had much time to savour. We had caught the early train, at 5.15 on the Monday morning. Each of us had separately arranged to have the first two days of the week off, by seeking out our different supervisors in the Carron bars on the Friday evening. It was to be hoped that Angus Grizzlyback would remember that I was not coming in this morning; but if he didn't, I was sure my loyal friends would remind him, with predictable and - as it happened - inaccurate speculation as to how I intended to spend the day. We had, in fact, spent the Saturday and the Sunday in just that way, very enjoyably, in bed or out on the hills. On the Saturday afternoon Merrial had guddled a trout from a dark, deep pool in the Alt na Chuirn glen; leapt up with the thrashing fish clutched in her hands and danced around, surefooted on the slippery stones. Again, something had moved in my mind, like a glimpsed flick of a tail in the water, which had - as soon as the shadow of my thought fell on it - flashed away. The sun rose higher, the shadows shortening, apparently in the face of the train's advance. We stopped at all the small, busy towns built around forestry and light industry and - increasingly as we THE SKY ROAD 105 moved east - farming: Achnasheen, Achnashellach, Achanalt, Garve . . . The electric engine's almost silent glide surprised the short-memoried sheep, rabbits and deer beside the track, and set up a continuous standing wave of animals, sauntering or lolloping or springing away. I saw a wolf's grey-shadowed shape at Achanalt; as we rounded the cliff-face at Garve I saw a wild goat on a shelf; and spotted an eagle patrolling the updrafts above the slope of Moruisg. I didn't wake Merrial for any of them. I smoked, once, with a coffee brought around on a rattling trolley by a lass in tartan trews. Neither the sound nor the smell nor the smoke stirred Merrial at all, except to a few deeper breaths, long ripples in the spate of her hair across her breast and over my chest. I let her head nestle in the now awkward crook of my left arm, and alternated the cup and the cigarette in my right hand. It was a quiet train, for all that it was busy, with clerks and traders on their weekly commute from their coastal homes to their work in Inverfefforan or Inverness. On Merrial's lap, with her left arm - crooked like mine - protectively over it, lay a bulky poke of polished leather, fastened with a drawstring thong. It may have bulged a little larger, and weighed a little heavier, than the kind of bags that lasses tend to lug around, but it would have taken a close and sharp observer to notice. Inside it, concealed by a layer of the sort of oddments one would expect to find in such a poke - a cambric kerchief, cosmetics, smallbore ammunition and the like - was the complicated apparatus that Fergal had delivered to her house early on the Sunday evening. It was built around a seer-stone about fifteen centimetres in diameter, nested in neat coils of insulated copper 106 KEN MACLEOD wire. The strangest aspect, to me, of this device was an arrangement of delicate levers, each marked with a letter of the alphabet, queerly ordered: QWERTYUIOP . . . Probably, I thought, a spell 'Grotty old place,' said Merrial, rubbing her face with her hands and looking around the damp, flag-stoned concourse of Inverness station. Her cheeks reddened, her eyes widened under the smooth friction of her palms. Her dress, this time of blue velvet, looked a bit rumpled. We were standing at the coffee-bar, having twenty minutes to wait for the 8.30 to Glasgow. I looked up at the creosoted roof with its wide skylight panels and suspended electric lamps. 'At least it doesn't have pigeons.' 'Can't say herring-gulls are much of an improvement.' She kicked out with one booted foot, sending a hungry, red-eyed bird squawking away. One end of the station opened to the platforms, the other to the main street. The arrangement seemed peculiarly adapted to set up cold but unrefreshing draughts. Despite its mossy walls and paving, the station was more recent than the buildings outside, most of which pre-dated the Deliverance, if not all three of the world wars. I finished my bacon roll, smiled at Merrial - who was mumbling, half to herself and around mouth-fuls of her own breakfast, some irritated speculation about the degenerative evolution of scavenging sea-birds - and wandered over to the news-stand. There I stocked up on cigarettes and bought a copy of the Press and Journal, a newspaper which outdoes even THE SKY ROAD 107 the West Highland Free Press in its incorrigible parochialism and venerable antiquity. Most of its pages consisted of small advertisements, to do with fishing, farming, uranium and petroleum mining and, of course, Births, Marriages and Deaths. The last of these could take up half a tall column of small print: 'Dolleen Starholm, peacefully in her sleep, aged 251 years, beloved great-great-grandmother of. . .' followed by scores of names; and sometimes (as in this case) the discreet indication of cult affiliation: 'RIP' or THS'. More frequent, and more prominent, were proud affirmation of the orthodox hope: 'Returned by the Flame' (or the Sky or the Sun or the Sea) 'to the One'. I went back to the counter and, while Merrial finished off her breakfast, scanned the sparse snippets of national and international news that had managed to wedge their way in among the earth shak-ingly important football and shinty reports, fishing disputes and Council debates. The Congress of Paris had ceremonially opened its ninety-seventh year of deliberations, and had immediately plunged into bitter controversy about a proposal to empower the Continental Court to adjudicate border problems between cantons and communes; the apparently more difficult matter of disagreements between countries having been resolved by the Congress long ago, its success had apparently gone to its collective head. I sighed and turned the page. Another American republic had voted a contribution from tariff revenue to the spaceship project, which was gratifying but mysterious - there was even an editorial comment about it, full of sage mutterings about how their ways were not ours, and that we should not disdain such assistance, immoral though it might 108 KEN MACLEOD seem to us. I wasn't too sure; to me, it smelt of stealing money, but the Americans have a much greater reverence for their governments than people have in more civilised lands. If offered some loot by an African king or Asian magnate or South American cacique, I should hope the International Scientific Society would politely decline, and this case seemed little different. But all of this was, at this moment, quite theoretical, as no such offer, and indeed no news at all, from Asia or Africa appeared in today's edition. I rolled it up and decided to leave the national news until later. Menial brushed crumbs from her lips and looked at me with amusement. 'You really look as though you're paying attention to all that,' she said, picking up her leather poke. I hitched my canvas satchel on my shoulder and we strolled to the Glasgow train. 'Well, I do follow the news,' I said, somewhat defensively, as we took our seats, this time facing each other across a table. 'What's wrong with that?' Menial shrugged. 'It's so... ephemeral,' she said. 'And unreliable.' 'Compared with what?' 'Don't misunderstand me,' she said. 'I'm sure this, what is it -' she reached for the paper, and spread it out ' - Congress here is real, and really did do what the article says it did. But it is only a tiny part of the truth, and perhaps not the most important part of what is going on there in Paris. Let alone what is going on elsewhere in Paris. So that, and all the other such pieces give you, really, a false picture of the world.' I could have been offended, but was not. 'I'm a scholar of history, remember?' I said. 'I understand how newspaper reports, even documents aren't everything—' THE SKY ROAD 109 'Oh, you don't want to hear what I think about historical documentsV 'So what else can you do?' She frowned at me, puzzled. 'You travel around and find things out for yourself.' 'Aye, if only we all had the time.' She touched the tip of my nose with the tip of her finger. 'It's what tinkers do, and they have all the time in their lives for it.' The train pulled out, the Moray Firth in sight at first, with its kelp fields and fish-farms, and then nothing to see for a while but the close-packed pines of Drumossie Wood as the train turned and the engines took the strain of the long, slow ascent to Slochd. A couple of hours later, maybe, after Speyside of the malts and bleak Drumochter, we were in the long and beautiful glens between Blair Atholl and Dunkeld. On one side of the line were streams full of trout and turbines, on the other hillsides buzzing with the saws and drills of workshops. The train stopped for five minutes at Dunkeld. A small, old town of stone, still with its Christian cathedral. Merrial looked out of the windows, around at the scene, and sat back with a slight shudder. 'A strange place,' she said, 'with the hills around it like an ambush.' 'But that's why it's a great place,' I said, and told her the story of how the Cameronians had held off the Highland host and saved the Revolution to which they owed their freedom. She listened with more interest, even, than my telling of the tale deserved, and leaned back at the end and said, 'Aye well, maybe there's some use to history, after all. I'll never be afraid of these hills again.' * * * 110 KEN MACLEOD It was two in the afternoon by the time the train reached Glasgow's Queen Street Station, and glad enough we were to get off it. Sometimes two people who can fascinate each other endlessly when alone together, and who can spark off each other in convivial company, find themselves inhibited among strangers who are unignorably in earshot, and find themselves growing shy and silent and stale. So it was with us, towards the end of that journey. I couldn't even find it in my heart to talk about the Battle of Stirling when we passed through the town. We both brightened, though, on jumping down on the platform. The familiar Glasgow railway-station smell - of currying fish, and curing leaf, and spark-gapped air, and old iron and wood-alcohol and hot oil and burnt vanilla - hit my sinuses like a shot of poteen. Menial, too, seemed invigorated by it, taking a deep breath of the polluted stench with a look of satisfaction and nostalgia. 'Ah, it's good to be back,' she said. I glanced sidelong at her as we walked down the platform. 'When were you in Glasgow? And how could I have missed you?' She smiled and squeezed my hand. 'Oh, I forget. Ages ago. But the smell brings it back.' 'That and the noise.' 'The what?' 'THE—' But she was laughing at me. We crossed the station concourse, agreeing that, on balance, pigeons were a worse nuisance than sea-birds (though, as Menial gravely pointed out, better eating). This comment, and some of the more appetising components of the smell, reminded us that we were ravenous, so we bought sandwiches and bot- THE SKY ROAD 111 ties of beer from a stall in the station and carried them out to George Square. We sat down on a bench by a grassy knoll under the statue of the Deliverer. 'Shee that,' Menial said, pointing upwards as she munched. 'It'sh mean.' 4 What?' She swallowed. 'The statue. The old city fathers must have been a bit stingy.' I looked up. 'No argument about the city fathers,' I said. They're still tight-fisted. But that statue looks fine to me.' 'The horse is black,' Menial pointed out. She tapped the handle of her knife on a fetlock. 'And cast in bronze. The lady herself is green -just copper. They got out the oxy-acetylene torches and hacked off the original rider, a king or general or whatever, and stuck the Deliverer in his place!' I stood up and paced around it, peering. 'You're right,' I said. 'You can see the joins. I must have looked at that statue a hundred times, and not noticed anything wrong with it.' I looked up at the lady's head. 'And she has a different face from the one in Canon Town, and they're both different from any pictures I've seen of the Deliverer.' 'Well, there you go, colha Gree,' she said. 'Some things a tinker can teach a scholar, eh?' 'Oh aye,' I said. I sat down again. 'Mind you, it could hardly be just parsimony - it's a fine piece of work after all, and they've done her hair in gold.' Ton's gold paint,' she said scornfully. 'And as for artistry, the breed and the trappings of the horse are all wrong for the time and the circumstances.' She was right there, too, when I looked. This was no steppe horse, bare-back broken, roughly saddled, such as was shown quite authentically in Canon 112 KEN MACLEOD Square. Instead, it was a hussar's mount, in elaborate caparison. But I thought then, and still think, that the representation of the Deliverer herself was well done. A fine example of the Glasgow style; which, perhaps, makes the equine bodge appropriate, and part of the artist's point. We binned our litter and headed for the nearest tramway stop, in Buchanan Street. The transport system is one of Glasgow City Council's proudest public works, a more than adequate replacement for the great Underground circle, which was - it's said -one of the wonders of the ancient world. Judging by the remnants of it that here and there have outlasted centuries of flooding and subsidence, it is quite possible to agree that such it must have been. The tram came along, bell clanging, and we jumped on and paid our groats and clattered like children up the spiral steps to the upper deck. The bell rang again and the tram lurched forward, creaking up Buchanan Street and swaying as it turned the corner into Sauchiehall. Glasgow's main drag looked clogged with traffic, but everything - steam-engine and motor-car and horse-cart and bicycle alike — made way for the tram's implacable progress. The pedestrians, at this time of the day, were mosdy women shopping. But all of them, whether young lasses just out of school or mothers with young children or retired ladies at their leisure, had to pick up their skirts, their pokes or their weans and run for their lives when the tram bore down on a crossing. The shops and offices from recent centuries are built of logs and planks, and rarely go higher than two storeys. The older, pre-Deliverance buildings are of stone; some have as many as five floors. In ancient times there were much higher buildings, but most of them were THE SKY ROAD 113 made of concrete, which doesn't last well, and -agonising though it may be for archaeology - almost all of their structures have long since been plundered for steel and glass. Their foundations give rectangular patterns to the growth of trees in the forests around Glasgow: Pollock Fields, Possil Wood, Partick Thorn. Farther away, to the west, we could just make out the haze and smoke from the Glydeside shipyards, on which most of Glasgow's prosperity depended. The shipyards were the seedbed of the skills which — along with Kishorn's deep-water dock, almost unique on this side of the Atlantic - had made Scotland the logical site for the launch-platform's construction. At the top of Sauchiehall there's a new stone bridge, to replace the original concrete one that has crumbled away. It carried us over the Eighth Motor Way and into Woodlands Road, which runs along beside the Kelvin Woods. (They, and the river that runs through them, are named after Lord Kelvin, who invented the thermometer.) We stepped off the tram at the crest of University Avenue, and stood for a moment looking at the main building, a huge and ancient pile called Gil-morehill. It looks like a piece of religious architecture that has run wild, but it is solely devoted to secular knowledge, a church of Man. 'It's not as old as it looks,' Menial said, as though determined not to be impressed. 'That's Victorian Gothic' I didn't believe her, but I didn't argue. I had felt in its chill stone and warm wood the shades of Sco-tus and Knox and Kelvin, of Watt and Millar and Ferguson, and no disputed date could shake my conviction that the place was almost as old as the 114 KEN MACLEOD nation whose mind it had done so much to shape. * Whatever,' I said. 'Anyway, the department we're going to isn't there.' 'Just as well,' Merrial said. It was actually in one of the small side streets off University Avenue, all of whose buildings date back at least to the twentieth century. The trees that line it are probably as old, gigantic towers of branch and leaf, taller than the buildings. Their bulk darkened the street, the leaves of their first fall formed a slippery litter underfoot. 'So we just walk up and knock on the door?' Merrial asked. 'No,' I said. 'I've got a key.' She glanced down at her leather bag. 'And you're sure we won't be challenged?' 'Aye, I'm sure,' I said. We'd been over this before. As a prospective student, with my project already accepted even if as yet unfunded, I had every right to be here - in fact, I should have been here more often, through the summer. So no one should question us, or our presence in the old archive. We'd planned how we'd do the job, but its proximity seemed to be making Merrial more nervous than I was. 'All right,' she said. The key turned smoothly in the oiled lock, and the tongue clicked back. I pushed the heavy door aside and we stepped in. I locked it behind us. The place was silent, and as far as I could tell it was empty. The hallway was dim and cool, its pale yellow paint darkened by generations of nicotine, and it divided after a few metres into a narrower corridor leading deeper into the Institute and a stairway leading to the upper floors. The place had a curious musty odour of old paper and dusty electric light- THE SKY ROAD 115 bulbs, and a faint whiff of pipe-smoke. I checked the piles of unopened mail on the long wooden table at the side. A few notes for me, which a quick check revealed were refusals of various applications for patronage. I stuffed them in my jacket pocket and led the way up two flights of stairs to the library, switching on the fizzing electric lamps as we went. Menial wrinkled her nose as I opened the library door and switched on the lights. 'Old paper/ I said. She smiled. 'Dead flies.' I made to close the door after we entered the room, but Menial touched my arm and shook her head. 'I couldn't stand it,' she said. 'You're right, me neither.' The still, dead air made me feel short of breath. I held her hand, as much for my reassurance as for hers, as we threaded our way through the maze of ceiling-high book-cases. Menial, to my surprise, once or twice tugged to make me pause, while she scanned the titles and names on cracked and faded spines with a look of recognition and pleasure. 'The Trial of the Anti-Soviet Bloc of Rights and Trots-kyites!' she breathed. 'Amazing! Do you know anything about that?' 'It was some kind of public exorcism,' I said, hurrying her along. I'd once glanced into that grim grimoire myself, and the memory made me slightly nauseous. 'People claimed they had turned into rabid dogs who would go out and wreck machinery. Horrible. What superstitious minds the communists had.' Menial chuckled, but shot me an oddly pleased look. At the far end of the library the ranks of book- 116 KEN MACLEOD cases stopped. Several tables and chairs were lined up there, apparently for study - but no one, to my knowledge, ever studied at them. The most anyone could do was to put down a pile of books or documents there for a quick inspection of their contents under the reading-lights, before rushing out of the library. I recalled Menial's comment that people today are more claustrophobic than their ancestors. Beside these tables was another door, of iron, with a handle but no lock. The mere thought of the possibility of that door's having a lock was enough to give me a cold sweat. 'Here we are,' I said, and added, to make light of it, 'the dark archive.' 'What's inside it?' 'I don't know,' I said. 'I've never been in it.' She frowned. 'Is it off limits, or what?' 'No, no.' I shook my head. 'It's not forbidden or anything. Hardly anybody wants to go in.' 'No point in hesitating,' said Merrial. 'Let's get it over with.' I turned the handle and pulled the door back. To fit with my feelings, it should have given off an eldritch squeak, but its heavy hinges were well-lubricated. A couple of times I worked the handle from the inside. It appeared to be in good order, but I dragged one of the chairs over and used it to prop the door open, just in case it closed accidentally. I switched on the overhead light and stepped with an assumed air of boldness across the threshold. The small back room appeared innocent enough. It had a desk, with a couple of chairs in front of it and on its top a cluster of boxy, bulky structures like models of ancient architecture. Aluminium shelves lined the walls on either side. The air held a differ- THE SKY ROAD 117 ent, subtler smell, almost like the smell of washed hair or polished horn, with a sharp note of acetones. Menial sniffed. 'Like a rotting honeycomb,' she remarked cheerfully. I fought down a heave. 'Would smoking get rid of the miasma?' I suggested. *Yes, but it might damage the disks.' While I was still looking around for anything that remotely resembled a disc, Menial began rummaging along the shelves. The boxes arrayed there were translucent, the colour of sheepskin, with dusty, close-fitting lids. They contained flat black plates about nine centimetres square and two millimetres thick. She picked out a few at random, held them up and shook them slightly. From every one, a sooty black dust drifted down. Oxidation crystals crusted the small metal plates at their edges. She shook her head. 'Hopeless,' she said. In other, smaller boxes there were smaller, shiny wafers. These, when she picked them out, simply crumbled to the touch. 'So much for them,' she said. 'We'll just have to see if there's anything on the hard drive.' She pulled up a seat in front of the machines. The largest, before which she sat, had a sort of window-pane on the front of it. She opened her poke, rummaged out the clutter on top and carefully extracted her strange devices. She laid them on the table: the seer-stone glowing with random rainbow ripples, a small black box and the frame of lettered levers, all connected by the coils of insulated copper wire. 'Oh, look, that thing there has the same—' 'Don't touch it!' 'All right' She glanced up at me. 'Sorry to snap. I'm a bit jumpy.' 118 KEN MACLEOD 'Aye, well, me too.' 'Also I'm in tinker mode.' She smiled. 'Courtesy doesn't come into it. If you want to help, see if you can find a power source for this thing while I set up my system.' She waved a hand vaguely in the darkness under the table. Suppressing a qualm, I stooped down into that darkness, and after a moment while my eyes adjusted I saw a dusty power-socket, with three holes. A centimetre-thick cable hung from the back of the table and ended in a three-pronged plug. Deducing how plug and socket fitted together was the work of a moment, as was inserting the one into the other. The light around me brightened suddenly. Mer-rial's boot hit my ribs, and she simultaneously uttered an odd imprecation. 'What?' 'Christ, don't do that!' Another strange prayer. I crawled backwards from under the table. Menial gave me a glare. 'I thought that was what you wanted me to do,' I protested. 'Oh.' She thought about it. 'I suppose you could have taken it that way, yes. I forgive you. Now come here and sit down.' She patted the seat beside her. As I got to my feet I noticed what had happened to the machine, and where the extra light was coming from. The window on the front of the box was glowing a pearly grey with darker and lighter flecks swirling through it, like the sky above a port on a snowy day. I took a step backwards. The temperature in the room seemed to have dropped a few kelvins. Now I understood why she'd been making these invocations. At moments like that even the most rational person will utter whatever name of the deity springs to mind. THE SKY ROAD 119 'It won't bite/ she said. I sidled forward, keeping a wary eye on the thing, as one might do towards a dog about whom one had received just such an assurance. With the hand that Menial couldn't see, I made the sign of the Horns, then realised that this was shamefully superstitious and began instead mentally to recite a few Names of the One, and of the Prophets: Allah, Buddha, Christ, Deity, Jordan, Justice .. . 'Did I do that?' I asked. Khomeini, Krishna, Mercy, Mary, Odin, Necessity, Nature ... 'When you switched the power on, yes.' Paine, Providence, Quine, Reason, Yaweh, Zoroaster. That should do. She gazed into my eyes with impish amusement, and reached forward and stroked my face. The rasp of my stubble sounded uncannily loud. 'It's all right, mo grdidh,' she said. 'I'm a tinker. I know what I'm doing. This thing here -' she patted the top of it' - is just a machine that does the same thing as the seer-stanes, only not so well. It's no a deil, ye ken. It's a computer.' 'Aye, I know that. ..' 'Well, start acting as if you believed it,' she said. 'But is it a television?' I shuddered inwardly at naming that dark instrument of the Possession. She shook her head. 'No. This here is a keyboard, and this here is a screen. The screen, or monitor, works on a similar principle to a television, but it is not a television. And even if it was, it couldn't do you any harm.' Easy enough for her to say that, I thought, but wisely didn't say. 'Assuming it still works at all,' she added cheer- 120 KEN MACLEOD fully. 'The chips got fried in the Deliverance, for the most part.' (Me neither, but that's what she said.) She rattled a few keys. The screen's snowstorm responded not at all. 'Control alt delete,' she said to herself, and hit three keys simultaneously. Nothing happened, again. 'Hmm,' she said. She reached forward and prodded a stud on the machine. The screen turned black. 'So much for that one,' she said. She stood up and leaned over the table and started looking more closely at the various boxes. 'Hey!' she said. 'Got it! One of these looks like it's radiation-hardened!' She reached in among the boxes and started fiddling dangerously with live cables, removing a lead from the back of the box we'd used and sticking it in the back of another one. What had seemed to be merely the blank front of that box suddenly lit up, a smoothly shining grey, revealing itself to be a screen. 'Yess!' said Merrial, punching the air. By this point I was beginning to get a grip on myself, though I must admit I almost lost it completely when Merrial turned around and prodded a letter on the keyboard and the words 'Demon Internet Software' flashed up on the screen. Allah, Buddha, Christ. . . 'All right,' Merrial said briskly, as the screen with the three sinister names disappeared and was replaced by a picture with lots of tiny pictures spread out on it. 'We've got this bugger up and running, but Christ knows how long it'll stay up.' (She talked this way, I'd come to notice, with its curious com- THE SKY ROAD 121 bination of obscure sexual and religious references, when she was in what she'd called her * tinker mode'.) 'So what we better do is whip the stuff out of it ay ess ay pee.' 'Out of it what?' 'As. Soon. As. Possible.' 'Oh, right. Toot sweet.' 'What?' I waved a hand. 'Let's get on with it, as you say.' 'Yip.' She carefully uncoiled one of the strands of copper wire, and attached a little peg with a copper pin to the end. This she inserted in a round hole (which, she explained, did not fucking have to be round the fucking back, but fucking was) in the pediment of the computer. 'Right,' she said. The tip of her tongue between her lips, she tapped out the words 'Myra Godwin', the name of the Deliverer, on the key-board. They simultaneously appeared on the screen and on the now black seer-stone. 'Go,' she said, hitting another key. A few seconds passed (tongue between the teeth again) and the screen and the stone filled with a list of tides which crept slowly upwards, its top moving out of sight, and which kept on going for several minutes. When the list had stopped its crawl she said, 'OK, copy,' and rattled at the keyboard again. A picture of an hourglass appeared on the screen, and the sand began to run. The seer-stone, meanwhile, showed a tree, branching and budding and growing leaves. After about a minute and a half the sand had all flowed from the top half of the glass, and the stone was filled with green. Both displays vanished. 122 KEN MACLEOD 'That's it,' Menial said. 'That's all?' Tes,' she grinned. 'That's all the files that mention Myra Godwin transferred, from the dark storage to the stane. No bad going, eh?' 'Brilliant,' I said. She stood up, leaned around behind the computer again, disconnected her wire and wound it quickly around her hand. Then she poked a few more keys on both keyboards. The screen went that shining grey again, and the stone went back to black. She smiled at me. *You have my permission to turn the power off.' We left the small room, and the larger library, exactly as we had found them, and walked quietly down the stairs and out of the Institute. When we were a few metres down the street and away we hugged each other and yelped. 'We did it!' Menial gloated. 'We actually fucking did it!' *Yes, I still can hardly believe it,' I said. I caught her hand. 'Now what do we do?' 'We look at what we've got,' she said. 'Somewhere no one will see us, or bother us.' I knew just the place. Because it was vacation time there were few students around, so my landlady was happy to rent me my usual small room above the book shop on South-park Avenue for one night. She didn't raise an eyebrow as she took my five marks and handed over a bedroom key, even though it was only about half past four in the afternoon. I suppose she assumed we wanted to use the room for sex. She gave us a quick cup of coffee and shared a smoke, and a couple of months' worth of local gos- THE SKY ROAD 123 sip, in the back of her kitchen, then waved us upstairs with a wink at me. The room had a fairly generous, though notionally single, bed and a chair and table and power socket. The window had been left open, but its only view was of the back yard. Still, one could look out and see the sky any time one wanted. 'Perfect,' Merrial said. She unloaded the seer-stone and its peripheral pieces again and set them up on the table, running a small cable from the black box to the wall socket. The little box began to hum faintly, and at the same moment a human face loomed out of the dark of the seer-stone, mouthing distress. 'Ah, fuck that,' Merrial said. She rubbed the stone with a cuff, and the face fell apart into flecks of colour. 'Now,' she said, 'let's get on with sorting and searching. We're looking for stuff from before the Deliverance, but finding it in this lot won't necessarily be easy. Let's hope the files are date-stamped.' She sat in the chair, motioning to me to perch on the table, and started tapping away at her version of a keyboard. 'Ah, good, we can sort by date.' The list reappeared in the depths of the glassy stone, this time with a stack of articles at the top with a single date of 28 May 2059. Merrial stroked with her finger gently and slowly along a tiny bar on the keyboard, then tapped another key. 'Let's see what this is.' We peered together into the glass and began to read. Bankrupt of any perspective for overcoming the crisis, the ruling elite can only sit and watch as society disintegrates beneath it Factories fail to fulfil their obligations, corruption is rife, and the real value 124 KEN MACLEOD produced in the economy continues to plummet. Many industrial sectors actually produce negative value: their output is worth less - in market or any other terms - than the raw materials they take in; in essence, they are vast organizations for spoiling resources. In the absence of any genuine move towards a market, or —from the other side — any initiative from the workers, the system can only continue to disintegrate. 'Sounds like 2059 all right/ Menial said. That was what the Deliverance delivered us from.' I nodded, cautiously. 'Let's just look further down ...' What cannot be ruled out is that the Moscow oligarchy could launch some diversionary military adventure, but this too would rapidly develop its own problems, and intensify those of the centre. 'Damn!' I said. 'What?' 'This isn't 2059, it's more like 1999!' The invasion of Afghanistan must be seen in this context. 'No, it's 1979! Well -' I frowned at the date at the foot of the article ' - actually 1980, but it was written about the situation in '79. In the Soviet Union.' I laughed bitterly. 'The reason it's a bit difficult to tell at first what period she's talking about is that it was in the Soviet Union that the collapse started, right there in the 1970s. After the Soviet Union disintegrated it just got worse, and spread.' This much was a fairly well-accepted historical ac- THE SKY ROAD 125 count, which I'd covered in my undergraduate studies in Ancient History. 'So why's it dated 2059?' Menial asked. She stroked the bar and rolled the list down again. 'Hah!' she said. 'This file, and a whole lot of others by the look of it, were put on to the computer at that date. Which doesn't mean they were created then. I don't know if I can extract the original creation date, either.' 'Wait a minute,' I said. 'Maybe this is where I can help. I should be able to tell the rough date from the titles of the files, or maybe a quick look at their contents.' 'There are thousands of files in there,' she pointed out. 'If dating each of them takes as long as it did to date that one, we'll be here all night' I smiled. 'Why should that be a problem?' It turned out not to be a problem. Although the bulk of the files had the same date in the 'date' column of Menial's machine, and she gave up looking for a way to find what she called the 'create-date', quite a large number of the files had a date reference of some kind in their titles. These were apparendy articles from magazines or newspapers, by Myra Godwin or about her. We quite quickly got into a way of working that let me identify such files, and Menial deal with them, copying the date from the title to another 'date' column. After ten minutes of this she hit her forehead with the heel of her hand and cried, 'Stop!' 'What is it?' 'We're wasting our time. I'm wasting our time, I mean.' She rubbed her hands. 'What we need here is a wee program, to scan the titles for dates, extract them, reformat them and then sort by date ...' 126 KEN MACLEOD 'I'll take your word for it,' I said, not having understood all of her words. She waved me away, with a look of abstracted concentration on her face. 'This'11 be easy,' she said. 'It'll save us hours.' I sat on the windowsill, smoking a cigarette, while her fingers flickered over the small keyboard, making a pattering noise like rain on a roof. It struck me that there seemed to be no discernible difference between the white logic and the black, but no doubt this only showed my ignorance. Tessl' she said. 'No bother.' She hit a key and sat back. Then she leaned forward again, peering at the stone. 'Oh ffiuck!' I eyed her warily. 'I used fucking two-digit year-dates. Force of habit. Fucking thing falls over on the year 2000.' The pattering started again. About half an hour later Menial had the files partially ordered by date, and we could dig about in them with a little more confidence in their relevance to our concerns. ' "Defence Policy Contract (Expiry), Vatican City, 11 December 2046",' Menial read out. 'That looks interesting.' She pressed one of her keys and the file, as she put it, opened: instead of the title glowing a little brighter among the others, we could see the whole document. Parts of it were in impenetrable legal language (parts of it, in fact, were in Latin) but there was enough there for us to form a good idea of what it was about. Menial paused before opening another file, one labelled 'Mutual Protection/Space Merchants/ 2058'. THE SKY ROAD 127 We looked at each other, both a little pale, each waiting for the other to speak first. Menial swallowed hard, and reached for one of my cigarettes. 'You do know,* she said slowly, 'just what the Deliverer had to do to make a living, under the Possession?' 'Well...' I could feel my lower lip moving back and forth over the edge of my teeth, and stopped it. *Yes. It's one of the aspects of history that historians tend not to talk about. In popular works, that is.' 'OhhF Menial let out a held breath in relief. 'You know about the slave camps, then.' 'What?' For a fleeting instant, I literally saw a black shadow before my eyes. I pointed at the seer-stone's script. 'I thought you were talking about the nuclear blackmail!' Menial looked puzzled. 'Nuclear blackmail? I know she got some nuclear weapons from the Pa-panich, that's right here. What has that to do with how she made her living?' 'Oh, Reason above!' I clutched my head. 'Let's get this straight. You think the dirty secret is that she ran slave camps. I think it's that she trafficked in nuclear threats.' Menial sighed. 'Yes, that's it.' She unfurled her hand and forearm with parodied politeness. Tou first.' 'All right' I noticed that my left knee was juddering up and down; I stood up, and paced the floor as I spoke. *You know about nuclear detenence?' *Oh, aye,' she said, with a grimace. 'Well, yes, to us the policy of threatening to burn to death many great cities and their inhabitants seems wicked, but the ancients didn't see it that way. 128 KEN MACLEOD In fact, some of them began to see nuclear deterrence as a good, which like all goods would be better bought and sold by businesses than provided by governments. The trouble was, all nuclear weapons were owned by governments, and were impossible to buy and hard to steal. 'So Myra Godwin and her husband, Georgi Davi-dov, stole a government. Davidov was a military man, and he carried out a military coup in a part of Kazakhstan, in a region which was very unpleasant and barren but which did happen to have a large stockpile of nuclear weapons. In a way, what happened was that the soldiers who manned the nuclear weapons decided to claim some territory, and nobody dared gainsay them. The local people had suffered grievously under the rule of the Communists. Stalin had starved at least a million of them in the 1930s. But things had improved a lot, and after the fall of the Communists they found themselves worse off under the lairds and barons and usurers. The real answer to their problems was not known at the time, or not known widely enough, and they began to hanker for the secure if limited life they had known before. 'This was where Myra and Georgi had their stroke of genius. While Myra was studying here she was a follower of a man called Trotsky, who had been killed by Stalin and who became a banner for a different kind of communism, purged of Stalin's crimes. As if there could be such a thing!' 'What do you mean?' Menial asked, narrow-eyed. 'Oh, come on, you know, communism—' The word made me physically nauseous, as though dirty hands were pawing me. 'Everybody minding each other's business, everybody owned by everybody else, and that's just the ideal! What could that be but evil? Let THE SKY ROAD 129 alone the reality, of a small ruling group doing the minding and the owning!' 'How did that help the Deliverer?' I shrugged. 'She may have believed it when she was young. Nobody's perfect. But when the Davidovs set up their state, they did so in the name of Trotsky, even though they did not really believe in him any more. They kept enough communism to keep people secure, and enough freedom to let them be happy and rich.' Menial's face was set in an interested but carefully neutral expression. 'And the way they got rich,' I went on, 'was this. They started selling options to use the nuclear weapons they held. That way, states that had no nuclear weapons of their own could have nuclear deterrence. They were quite open about it, but they had to stop after the Third World War, when the last empire consolidated its grip.' I sighed and shrugged. 'It's a blot on her record, I'll give you that. But they never actually used them.' Menial looked a bit shaken. 'So the scholars have known that all along? Well, I know what Godwin's people did after they lost their little nuclear threat business.' She smiled, thin-lipped. 'It seems you don't' She opened the other file. This one, which I read with growing honor, was about a very different contract. It was a monthly report on work done by prisoners, guarded by a company called Mutual Protection, for another company called Space Merchants. 'Prison labour was another good,' Menial said, 'that our Deliverer thought best to supply on the free market.' 'But that's slavery!' 130 KEN MACLEOD 'Indeed it is,' said Merrial. 'That's why we don't talk about it. I wouldn't be surprised if some of your scholars have covered it up too.' Her eyes narrowed. 'Maybe some of the senior tinkers know about this nuclear business, and all. But they don't talk about it' We sat looking at each other, with the sudden passion of people who have lost something that they believed in, and have only each other left. It was all the more bitter because we each had separately thought we had been told the worst about the great woman, had smugly thought we were mature enough to know it and keep it quiet from the gullible populace, and we each had found that we had our selves been gulled by our own guild; that there was an even darker tale to tell. My mind was racing, and I could feel a headache coming on. At the same time I felt a sense of release, a small deliverance, as the image of the Deliverer toppled in my mind. With a short break when we wandered out into the warm evening for dinner in a fish restaurant by the Kelvin, we worked through the files. We found plenty about Myra Godwin's strange career - more than enough to write a pretty sensational biography - but nothing about what had happened around the time of the Deliverance itself. It was after nine when Merrial jumped up and hissed, 'Shit! Shit!' 'What's the matter?' 'I've found a catalogue file. No meaningful tide, wouldn't you just fucking believe it. And it's got far, far more entries than we've got files here. We just got the low-security stuff! The rest is still in the University's dark storage.' THE SKY ROAD 131 I rubbed my sore eyes, and reached out for Mer-riaFs hand. 'So what's still there might be worse?' 'You said it. It might even contain the stuff we're looking for. We have to go back.' 6 LIGHT WEAPONS L long ago there had been another country, called the International. It was a country of the mind, a country of hope, and it encompassed the world. Until one day, in August 1914, its citizens went to war with each other, and the world ended. Everything died in that war, God and Country and International and Civilisation; died, and went to hell. Everybody died. The survivors thought they were alive, but they were not. After August 1914 there had been no living people in the world - only dead people on leave, the damned and the demons. The last morally responsible people in the world had been the Reichstag fraction of the German Social-Democratic Party. They had voted the credits for the Kaiser's war, against every resolution of their past. They had known the right thing to do, and they had chosen the wrong. All subsequent history had been that of the damned, of poor devils struggling in the hell these men had pitched them into; and nobody could be judged for how they behaved in hell. THE SKY ROAD 133 This thought, with its bleak blend of Christian and Marxist heresies, had originally been expounded to her by David Reid, one night many decades ago, when he was very drunk. It had sustained Myra through many a bad night. At other times -in the days, and the good nights - it seemed a callow undergraduate nihilism, shallow and wicked and absurd. But in the bad nights it struck her as profound and true, and, in its way, life-affirming. If you thought of people as alive and each having a life to live, you'd get so depressed at what so many had got instead, this past century and a half, that on a bad night you'd be tempted to add your own death to theirs, and thus make an undetectable increment to that already unimaginable, unthinkable number. A number which Myra, on her bad nights, suspected she had already increased quite considerably. Not directly - if she had sinned at all, it had been a sin of omission - and nobody had ever blamed her for it, but she blamed herself. If she had sold the deterrence policy to the German imperialists when they'd needed it, torn up all her existing contracts and sorted them out later, how many people would now be alive who now were dead? On the bad nights the answer seemed to run into millions. At other times, on more sober reflection, she realised she wasn't in that league; she wasn't up there with the Big Three; there was almost a sort of adolescent self-dramatisation in the pretension; if she belonged in that company at all it was in the second or third rank, below the great revolutionaries but up there with the more destructive of the great imperialists, Churchill and Mountbatten and Johnson and people of that ilk. Her shoes were kicked off under a chair, the black crepe and devore dress was across the back of the 134 KEN MACLEOD chair, the* sable hat was flung in a corner, the black fur coat was on the floor, the whisky bottle was open on the table and Leonard Cohen's black lyrics disturbed the smoky air: Manhattan, then Berlin, indeed. Myra was having one of her bad nights. The late-spring night outside the thin, old curtains was cold, and the central-heating radiator didn't do much to hold back the chill. The main room of the flat felt small, almost cramped, like a student bedsit She had a kitchen, a bathroom, a bedroom; but most of what defined her life was crammed into this living-room. The shelves were lined with books, two or three rows deep, though she had the entire 2045 edition (the last) of the Library of Congress, sharing space with its Sterling search engine on a freebie disk somewhere in the clutter. Her music, her computer software and hardware, her pictures, all were piled up in similarly silted layers of technological generations, with the most recent stuff at the top or on the outside, and everything back to CDs and PCs and even, at some pre-Cambrian level, vinyl, in the strata below. She had, in her eyeband, ready access to any scene on Earth or off it, but she still had posters on the walls. Once, these posters had consisted mainly of old advertisements for the ISTWR's exports. But in recent years, one by one, the tacked-up shots of liftoffs and payloads, missiles and explosions had been tugged down in moments of shame and fury, to be crumpled and binned, and replaced by scenes of Kazakh nature and tradition. Mountains and meadows, horsemen and peasants, dancers in embroidered costumes - a whole oriental Switzerland of tourist attractions. Kazakhstan was not doing too badly, even today. It had moved away from its dis- THE SKY ROAD 135 astrous, Soviet-era polluting industries and extractive monocultures, and put its prairies to a more productive and natural use in cattle-raising. The Kazakh horsemen were back in the saddle. Myra leaned back and stretched. It was nearly midnight. She'd had far too much to drink. Her few hours in the bar with Valentina had been followed by an hour or two of drinking on her own. She was so drunk she was lucid, 'fleeing' as Dave used to call it. Or possibly she was sobering up, smoothly and gradually, and was in the state where repeated applications of the hair of the dog were postponing the inevitable hammer-blow of the hangover. But drunk or sober, with or without Reid's antinomian justification, she had to act. She had to reach the International. There were two Internationals ('for large values of two' as Reid had once put it, alluding to the numerous splits): the Second and the Fourth. When most people talked about the International, they meant the Second - the successor of the one that had torn itself apart in 1914, and had painfully reassembled its severed limbs in the course of three world wars, five world slumps and one successful world revolution. Even today it was massive: the Socialist International's affiliated parties and trade unions and co-operatives and militias had an aggregate membership in the tens of millions, still. What Myra meant, and Valentina meant, and Georgi had meant by the International was a less imposing institution, a remnant of a fragment, most of it embedded in the greater body of the Second, a splinter travelling slowly through its veins. The Fourth International's membership was in the low thousands, scattered around the world - and, as Valentina had reminded her, off the world, thanks to 136 KEN MACLEOD its pioneering efforts at unionising the space rigs back in the 2020s. It was now almost dormant, a tenuous network of old comrades who couldn't quite say goodbye to each other, or to the dreams of their fervent younger days. The radical sects of the English Revolution, the Muggletonians and Gameronians and Fifth Monarchy Men, had persisted as dwindling, marginal congregations for centuries after their Kingdom had failed to come; so it would be, Myra thought, for the erstwhile partisans of the Fourth. She knew that, but still she had paid her dues. Now it was time to get something back for her money. For a start, she could find out what her comrades had done with her country's nukes. Myra flew through virtual space, drunk in charge of a data-drive. New View floated before her, its image filling her eyeband's field. The habitat was a sort of orbital commune - world socialism, in a very small world - which had been put together by the left wing of the space movement, back when such ideas seemed to matter. The graticule showed it was hundreds of metres across, a circular accretion of habitats, salvaged fuel-tanks, cannibalised spacecraft. She reached out and turned it about in her datag-loved hands, mildly amused at the chill, prickly tactile feedback, and peered at the small print of addresses on the hull until she found the name she sought. Logan; whether forename or surname, real name or party name she didn't know; she'd never heard the man called anything else. There it was, scribed on a hull panel from an old McDonnell Douglas SSTO heavy-lifter. She tapped it and the view zoomed in, to show a window with the man's face THE SKY ROAD 137 peering out. It was an engagingly apt interface. Myra zapped a hailing code, and the face at the window responded. 4Oh, hi? Myra Godwin? Just a moment, please.' The fetch wavered and Logan's real face, subtly different, seamlessly replaced it, pulling back as the window icon widened to an interior view of an actually windowless room. The compartment was full-spectrum strip-lit, the glowing tubes like shafts of sunlight among intertwined vines and branches, cables and tubes. Logan floated in the centre of the room. His cropped white hair matched his white stubble. He wore a faded blue singlet and baggy pants. Around his brow was a toolkit headband on which a loupe and a light were mounted; a standard eyeband was shoved higher up on his forehead. He was bent around the open back of a control-panel which he had gripped between his feet and was working on with a hand laser and a set of jeweller's screwdrivers. He flipped the loupe up from his eye and grinned at her. 'Well, Myra, long time no see.' He still had the London accent, overlaid with a space-settler drawl. His space fraction had picked up a lot of people she and Georgi had known in Kazakhstan, tough trade-union militants blooded in the Nazbarayev years. 'Yeah, I've missed you too, Logan. How's life on New View?' Logan gestured with one hand, automatically making a compensating movement with the other. 'OK. We've got pretty much up to complement population-wise, near a thousand last time I checked. We're making a good living, though - got a lot of products and skills the white settlers need. And the old Mars project is chugging along.' 138 KEN MACLEOD You're still doing that?' Logan turned up his thumb. 'Kitting out the expedition, bit by bit. No intention of hanging around here forever — not with the white settlers staking out the Moon, anyhow. Nobody's even got much scientific interest in Mars any more, 'specially after that contamination thing came out.' Myra nodded glumly. It had indeed come as a bit of a disappointment that Mars had an entire biosphere of busily evolving micro-organisms, of recent origin; in the 1970s the Soviets had proudly deposited a piece of paper autographed by Leonid Brezhnev on the Red Planet, which was now being very slowly terraformed by the descendants of bacteria from the General Secretary's sweat. 'So we're gonna go for it,' Logan went on. 'Some time in the next couple of years, we're moving it out' *You're going to move New View?' Myra smiled at Logan, and at herself - each question so far had ended on a high note of astonishment. 'Minus a few hundred tons of stuff we won't need, but basically, yes. Fill her up - well, fill up a few tanks, I mean - with Lunar polar water, buy a fusion engine from the white settlers and push off on a Hohmann orbit. We got enough old spacecraft lashed into this junk-heap to build landers, then habitats on the ground.' *You've got it all worked out, I see,' said Myra. 'Well, good luck to you with that.' The Mars colony scheme had been pending, Real Soon Now, on Logan's agenda for as long as she'd known him. 'However, I've got something a bit more urgent to ask you. These white settlers of whom you speak, they aren't by any chance the people I once made a lot THE SKY ROAD 139 of money out of sticking on top of Protons and Energias and sending out there?' 'That's the ones,' Logan said. 'And the new lot coming out on the diamond ships, of course.' He laughed. 'The colonial bourgeoisie!' 'Well, whatever you want to call them,' said Myra, 'you know they're planning to take charge, through the ReUN and the battlesats?' 'Oh, sure,' Logan said. 'Everybody knows that.' He shrugged. 'What can you do? And anyways, what difference is it gonna make to us?' He flourished his tiny laser. 'We're safe.' 'No, you're not,' said Myra. She flicked her gaze upwards, checking the firewall 'ware. It was sound. 'I've just learned - from my Defence Minister, no less - that / have a clump of city-buster nukes stashed somewhere in the clutter around you.' 'Is that a problem?' Logan asked. 'Best place for them, surely.' She had to admire his cool. 'Somehow I don't think that was why the International asked for them to be put there.' 'Ah,' said Logan. 'So you know about that.' 'Yeah,' said Myra. 'Thanks a bunch for not telling me.' Logan mumbled something entirely predictable about need-to-know. Myra cut off his ramble with an angry chop of her hand. 'Give me a fucking break,' she said, exasperated. 'I can figure that out for myself. The nukes are an element of the situation, but they're not my main concern right now. I just thought I should let you know that I know about them, for the same reason that you should've told me: for the sake of politeness, if nothing else. OK?' 140 KEN MACLEOD 'Well, yeah, OK,' Logan allowed, grudgingly. 'So what is your main problem?' 'I was wondering,' said Myra, 'if you'd grabbed them because you intended to do something about the coup. Like, you know, stop it' Logan laughed. 'Me personally?' 'No. The International. And don't tell me you personally are the only member it's got up there.' 'Oh, no, not at all.' Logan stared at her, obviously puzzled. 'We got plenty of comrades, I mean New View is basically ours, but it's been a long time since the Party had an army, Myra, you know that as well as I do. We do have a military org, like, but it's just a ... a small cadre.' 'Of course I know that. But I also know what a small military cadre is for. It's so that when you do need an army you can recruit your soldiers from other armies. You telling me the space fraction's done no Party work on the battlesats? In all those years?' Logan looked uncomfortable. 'Not exactly, no, I'm not saying that. We have - well, naturally we have sympathisers, we get reports -' 'And so do we,' she said. 'Some of them from the same comrades as you do.' She wasn't entirely certain of this - need-to-know, again - but it would give him something to think about. 'Who actually knows about the nukes?' 'Valentina Kozlova,' said Logan. 'And your ex-husband, Georgi Davidov.' If Logan noticed Myra's involuntary start at this news, he gave no sign. 'And me, obviously. That's it. The only people who know. Unless there's been a leak.' 'Hmm,' said Myra. 'Reid doesn't seem to know about them - he knows we have nukes in space, but he thinks they're all in Earth orbit.' She paused. THE SKY ROAD 141 'Wait a fucking minute. If you're the only person up here who knows about them, then the request from the Party a couple of years ago was in fact a request from you. You, personally.' 'Well, yeah,' Logan said. He didn't seem bothered at all. 'In my capacity as Party Secretary for the space fraction, that is.' 'You took it upon yourself to do that? What the fuck was on your mind?' God, she thought, there I go again with the incredulous screech. She added, in a flat, steady voice, 'Besides, what gave you the right to interfere in my section, and in my section's state?' Logan squirmed, like someone shifting uncomfortably in an invisible chair. 'I had a valid instruction to do it. From the military org.' 'Ah! So there is someone else who knows about it!' 'Not as such,' said Logan. 'The military org is . . .' He hesitated. 'Like you said, a small cadre?' Myra prompted. 'In a manner of speaking,' said Logan. He looked as though he was steeling himself for an admission. 'It's an AI.' Myra felt her back thump against the back of her chair - she was literally thrown by this statement. She took a deep breath. 'Let's scroll this past us again, shall we? Tell me if I've got this right. Two years ago, at the Sputnik centenary, Val gets a message from you, asking for part of our stash of nukes. It's a valid Party request, she decides I don't need to know, and she blithely complies. And the reason this happened is because you got a request from a fucking computer?' 'An AI military expert system,' Logan said pedantically. 'But yeah, that's about the size of it.' 142 KEN MACLEOD Myra groped blindly for a cigarette, lit it shakily. 'And just how long has the Fourth International been taking military advice from an AI?' Logan did some mental arithmetic. 'About forty years/ he said. It was no big secret, Myra learned. Just one of those things she'd never needed to know. The AI had originated as an economic and logistic planning system devised by a Trotskyist software expert in the British Labour Party. This planning mechanism had been used by the United Republic of Great Britain, and inherited by its self-proclaimed successor, the underground Army of the New Republic, after Britain had been occupied, and its monarchy restored, by the Yanks in the Third World War. It had acquired significant upgrades, not all of them intended, during the twenty-year guerilla war that followed, and had played some disputed role in the British national insurrection during the Fall Revolution in 2045. Its central software routines had been smuggled into space by a refugee from the New Republic's post-victory consolidation. It had been expanding its capacities, and its activities, ever since. 'Most people call it the General,' Logan told her. 'Aces the Turing, no sweat.' 'But what's it doing?' Myra asked. 'If it's such a shit-hot adviser, why aren't we winning?' 'Depends what you mean by "we",' Logan said. 'And what you mean by "winning".' Myra had, she realised, no answer to that. Perhaps the AI adviser had picked up on the Analysis analysis, and agreed that the situation was hopeless. Logan was looking at her with sympathetic curiosity, a sort of reversed mirror-image of the hostile THE SKY ROAD 143 bafflement she was directing at him. He must have gone native up there; he'd got used to this situation, and to this style of work, over the decades, and had forgotten the common courtesies of even their notional comradeship. 'Anyways,' he was saying, 'you can ask it all that yourself.' He poked, absently, at the control-panel between his feet; looked up; said, Tutting you through.' Before Myra could so much as open her mouth, Logan had vanished, and had been replaced by the military AI. She'd had a mental picture of it, ever since Logan had first mentioned it: something like the Jane's software, a VR gizmo of lines and lights. At best a piece of simulant automation, like Parvus. He was a young man in sweat-stained camos, sitting casually on a rock in a clearing in temperate woodland: lichen and birch-bark, sound of water, birdsong, leaf-shadow, a wisp of woodsmoke. It looked like he'd paused here, perhaps was considering setting up a camp. The man looked every inch the commandante - his long, wavy black hair and his black stubble and dark eyes projected something of the glamour of Guevara, the arrogance of Trotsky. He also reminded Myra, disturbingly, of Georgi -enough to make her suspect that the image she saw was keyed to her personality; that it had been precisely tuned to give her this overwhelming impression of presence, of charisma. 'Hello,' he said. 'I've wanted to meet you for a long time, Myra.' She opened her hands. You could have called.' 'No doubt I would have done, quite soon.' The entity smiled. 'I prefer that people come to me. It avoids subsequent misunderstandings. Anyway - I 144 KEN MACLEOD understand you have two concerns: the nukes at La-grange, and the space-movement coup. Regarding the first - the nukes are still under your control. Your Defence Minister still has the access codes. I requested that the weapons themselves be moved here for security.' He shrugged, and smiled again. 'They're all yours. So are the weapons in Earth orbit - which are, of course, more immediately accessible, and usable. This brings me to your other concern — the coup. It is imminent.' 'How imminent?' 'In the next few days. They'll ram through the vote on reorganisation of the ReUN, and the new Security Council will issue orders to seize the battle-sats. They have the forces to do it.' He paused, looking at her, or through her. 'But we have the forces to stop it. I can assure you, Myra, it's all in hand.' She shook her head. 'That isn't what our intelligence indicates. I've checked, my Defence and Foreign ministries have checked. We have agents in the batdesats, as you must know - hell, some of them must be in your own military org! If such a thing exists.' She wished she had read some of those mailings. 'It most certainly does exist,' the General said firmly. 'And it's been feeding you disinformation.' What? The entity stood up and stepped towards her in its virtual space. It spread its hands and assumed an apologetic expression, but with a sly conspiratorial gleam in its eyes. 'Forgive me, Comrade Davidova. This was not done against you. It was done against our common enemy: Reid's faction of the space movement.' 'How—' she began, but she saw, she saw. THE SKY ROAD 145 'I'm telling you this now,* the General said, 'because today you lost your last disloyal Commissar. Alexander Sherman has been passing on information to Reid for months. He wasn't the first, but he was the last' 'Who were the others?' The General moved his hand in a smoothing gesture. T can't tell you that without compromising current operations. That particular information is of no further use to you anyway.' 'I suppose not,' Myra concurred reluctantly. She wished she knew who the traitors were, all the same; hoped Tatanya and Michael hadn't been among them. She'd quite liked those two ... 'So you used them - and us - as a conduit for disinformation?' The General nodded. 'And for information going the other way - your updates to Jane's have been most helpful.' 'Jeez.' Her reactions to this were interestingly complicated, she thought distantly. On the one hand she felt sore at having been used, having been lied to; on the other, she could admire the stagecraft of the deception. Above all she felt relieved that the gloomily negative assessments she'd worried over were all wrong. Unless the situation was even worse than she'd thought— 'The situation is better than you think, by far,' said the General. 'We have our people in place -the battlesats won't be taken without a struggle, which in most cases we expect to win.' 'Most cases won't be enough. Even one battlesat-' 'Indeed. Which is where your orbital weaponry comes in. The lasers, the EMP bursters, the smart 146 KEN MACLEOD pebbles, the hunter-killers, the kinetic-energy weapons Myra hadn't known her arsenal was so extensive. (God, to think that stockpile had once belonged to the Pope! Well, to the Swiss Guards, anyway - quite possibly His Holiness had been discreetly left out of the loop on that one.) She shivered in her wrap, tugged it around her shoulders, lit another cigarette. She didn't know what to say: she felt her cheeks burning under the General's increasingly quizzical regard.