Less than twenty kilometers from the new lunar factory, Lars Fuchs was passing through customs at Selene’s Armstrong Spaceport. He had come to the Moon by a circuitous route, leaving the Belt weeks earlier to return to his native Switzerland, using the passport that Pancho had sent to him through Big George. Although exiled from Ceres and persona non grata at Selene, neither Switzerland nor any other nation of Earth had outlawed Fuchs. Customs officials at the spaceport in Milan had subjected him to a quick but thorough medical examination, including a full-body scan and a blood sample to make certain he did not bear nanomachines.
Thus Lars Fuchs, citizen of Switzerland, returned to his native land. He had spent weeks working out in a centrifuge he’d built aboard Nautilus, but still the heavy gravity of Earth made him feel tired, depressed. Even worse was the sight of the sprawling tent city that he glimpsed outside of Milan from the high-speed train as it raced toward the Alps. From the city’s newly walled and guarded borders, past Brescia and all the way to the shores of Lake Garda he could see nothing but the shacks and shanties of the homeless, the dispossessed, the haunted, hopeless victims of the greenhouse warming.
After all these years, Fuchs thought, staring through the train window, and still they live like animals.
Then he caught his first glimpse of the Alps. Bare rock, stark and barren as the Moon. Where’s the snow? he asked himself, knowing that it was gone, perhaps for centuries, perhaps forever.
His world, the world he had known, was gone also. He didn’t realize how much he had loved it, how much he missed it, until he realized that he would never see it again.
As the train plunged into the tunnel at the Brenner Pass, Fuchs stared at his own grim reflection in the window. He looked away, squeezed his eyes shut, and determined to stop thinking about the past. Only the future. Think only of the day when you kill Martin Humphries.
To do that he had to return to Selene, and to accomplish that he had to change his identity. Pancho thought she was saving Fuchs’s life, protecting the man she had known since he’d first left Earth as an eager graduate student more than a decade earlier. She had provided Fuchs with a new identity and enough money to live comfortably for a few years. At his insistence, she had also done as much for the nine men and women of his crew. Nautilus was parked in a Sun-circling orbit deep in the Belt, still disguised to resemble a smallish asteroid. It will be waiting for me when I finish my business with Humphries, Fuchs thought.
He knew what that business was, what it had to be. Pancho hasn’t brought me to Earth merely out of friendship. She wants me to get back to Selene. She can’t trust any communications link to say it in so many words, but her intention is clear. She wants me to kill Humphries. She knows that’s what I want to do, and she’s willing to help me do it. It will be a great help to her, of course. But it will be a joy to me. Even if it costs my own life, I will snuff out Humphries.
His thirst for vengeance kindled him for the remainder of his train ride to Bern.
But once in his native Bern he became sad and dispirited, depressed at how the old city had become so shabby, so filled with aimless, homeless men and women, even children, wandering the streets, begging for handouts when the police weren’t looking. Fuchs was shocked that the streets were littered with trash; the city that had once sparkled was now grimy, obviously decaying. And at night the streets could even be dangerous, he was warned by the weary-eyed concierge at his hotel.
A week was more than enough for him. Fuchs used the identity Pancho had provided for him to book passage back to Selene. He rented a modest suite for himself at the Hotel Luna, with an expense account to be paid by Astro Corporation. Closer to Humphries, he told himself. Within arm’s reach, almost. Close enough to kill. But you must be patient, he thought. You must be careful. Humphries is surrounded by guards and other employees. Pancho can’t openly help me to reach him; she can’t allow herself to be seen as aiding an assassin. I’ll have to act alone. I’ll have to get through to Humphries on my own. I don’t know how, not yet, but I will do it. Or die in the trying.
He had to disguise his appearance, of course. Lifts in his shoes made him slightly taller. Rigid, spartan dieting had slimmed him somewhat, but no fasting could reduce his barrel chest or thickly muscled limbs. He had grown a thick black beard and wore molecule-thin contact lenses that Astro’s people had clandestinely sent him; they altered his retinal pattern enough to fool a computer’s simple comparison programming.
Still, Fuchs could not help sweating nervously as he shuffled through the line leading to the customs inspection booth at Selene’s Armstrong Spaceport. He had taken a mild tranquillizer but it didn’t seem to be helping to calm his growing apprehension.
When he came to the inspection station the computer’s synthesized German sounded slightly strange to him, until he realized the machine was not programmed to speak in his own Swiss dialect. He answered its questions as briefly as he could, knowing that the system did not have the voice print of Lars Fuchs in its memory, yet still worried that somehow it might. It didn’t. He followed instructions and looked into the retinal scanner for the required five seconds, slowly counting them off in silence.
The automated systems built into the archway directly in front of the inspector’s booth scanned his one travel bag and his body without a problem. Fuchs had nothing with him or on him that would trigger an alarm. The human inspector sitting in the booth behind the automated machinery looked bored, his thin smile forced. Fuchs handed him his falsified identity chip and the inspector slipped it into his desktop.
“Karl Manstein?”
“Ja,” Fuchs answered.
The inspector asked, “Purpose of your visit?” in standard English; the booth’s synthesized computer voice translated his words into German.
“Vacation.”
For a heart-stopping moment the inspector studied his screen display, his eyes narrowing. Then he popped Fuchs’s thumbnail-sized chip out of his computer and slid it over the countertop to him.
“Welcome to Selene, Herr Manstein. Enjoy your vacation.”
“Thank you,” Fuchs replied gratefully, scooping up the chip in one meaty hand and hurrying past the inspector, toward the electric-powered cart that would carry him into Selene.
His first task, once he was safely in his suite at the Hotel Luna, would be to send innocuous-seeming messages to his three most trusted crew members, waiting at Ceres. “I have arrived at Selene, and everything is fine.” That was the code phrase that would tell them to head for Selene also. Fuchs intended to kill Humphries, and he knew he could not do it alone.
Chick Egan was mildly surprised to find a ship approaching Scranton at high speed. The ore freighter was almost clear of the inner fringe of the Belt, heading toward Selene, carrying a full load of asteroidal metals under contract to Astro Corporation. Astro ’s people were busily auctioning off the metals on the commodities market at Selene, desperately hoping to get prices high enough to make a minimal profit.
Sitting sideways in the pilot’s seat, his legs dangling over the armrest, Egan had been talking with his partner, “Zep” Zepopoulous, about the advisability of getting a laser weapon for the old, slow Scranton.
“Makes about as much sense as giving Santa Claus a six-shooter,” Zep argued. He was a lean, wiry Greek with thick jet black hair and a moustache to match. “We’re in the freight-hauling business, we’re not fighters.”
Читать дальше