Jack McDevitt - Firebird

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His expression told me that if she did, I'd never hear it from him. “No,” he said. “If there was any trouble between them, I didn't know about it. Why do you ask?”

“I'm just trying to understand what might have happened that night.”

He nodded. “We'd all like to know.”

“Did Robin have any enemies?”

“Not that I know of. Again, I just didn't know him that well. I understand there were people who didn't like him all that much. He had a reputation for not being very sociable, though I never saw any sign of it. He was always okay around me. Eliot told me once that he tended not to trust people. He might have had a rough time growing up. Who knows?”

“How do you mean?”

“Well, he'd have been so much smarter than the other kids, and he probably didn't mind showing it. Which would have made him pretty unpopular.”

“You can't think of anyone who might have wanted him out of the way?”

“There were rumors that he was working on a new version of the star drive that would provide an extra kick, something capable of intergalactic flight. Something like that might create a problem with the corporate heavyweights. But I never heard anything about that from a credible source.”

I was looking out at a gray sky. The sun was trying to break through but I didn't think it was going to happen. “Mr. Shimazaki-”

“Mitsui, Chase.”

“Mitsui. The name has a rhythm.”

“Thank you, Chase. I suspect its owner does not, however.”

“Mitsui, I understand Robin lost some yachts-”

His AI showed an incoming call. From someone who wanted to sell him something. “Have them call back,” he said. His face scrunched up while he thought about the yachts. “That's correct. Some junkers. Four of them, I believe.”

“How'd it happen? That they lost all of them?”

“They were doing some sort of experiment. I don't know the details. Eliot didn't talk about things like that, and I really wasn't very interested. I do know they didn't expect to bring them back. They didn't even have AIs, I believe. At least some of them didn't.”

“Thank you, Mitsui,” I said. “You've been very helpful.”

“I'm glad, Chase. And the next time you would like to go somewhere exotic, I hope you'll think of us.”

“I will-”

“You're a pilot, too, aren't you?”

That surprised me. “Yes,” I said. “How did you know?”

“I'm not sure. You sound as if you know what you're talking about.”

“Thank you.”

“I miss it,” he said. “The cockpit. And the women. You and your sisters are a special brand.”

A thunderstorm swept in off the ocean that night, blurring the village lights and bringing high winds and lots of rain. I spent the evening going through the list of names associated with Robin, looking for anybody who might be able to shed light on what had happened to him. I made some calls but came away with nothing.

I ran a search on Eliot Cermak. He'd been a self-employed interstellar pilot. CEO of Cermak Transport. Born in Templeton, on the Dimrok Plains, in 1326. Joined the fleet in 1348. He picked up a pilot's license in 1351. And rose through the ranks to command a destroyer. Retired, 1373.

He launched Cermak Transport the same year, purchasing a yacht he christened Breakwater. (That would have been the vehicle that he and Robin were riding when they engaged in the Skydeck pursuit.)

He prospered as an independent, hiring out to those with unusual destinations that the big carriers didn't serve. That meant he frequently carried research teams, and occasionally wealthy patrons who simply didn't like to travel with the general public.

He formed several special relationships with CEOs and scientists, Robin among them. He was the pilot, in 1383, when William Winter was lost on the mission to Indikar. I looked up Winter. He'd specialized in ancient history, especially the Great Expansion, the period during which the first colonial worlds were beginning to take hold. According to the report, he and Robin were investigating the ruins of the Indikar outpost, which had been abandoned a thousand years ago.

Cermak had red hair, and the vids revealed an easygoing confidence. The guy looked like a natural leader, and I'll admit that he impressed me. It wasn't hard to see the destroyer captain.

I called Ramsay that night. (It was midafternoon back in Andiquar.) When I told him that Robin had lost four yachts, and that the yachts had been purchased apparently for the specific purpose of being taken out and abandoned, he literally gasped. “Are you sure?”

“Absolutely.”

“Why, Chase? Why would he do that?”

“I don't know.”

“But you have a theory?”

“Yes. They had to be part of an experiment.”

“What kind of experiment?”

“Probably something connected with his ideas about alternate universes.” I had a hard time delivering that line, but he was delighted with it.

“Can you spell it out a little bit?”

“Okay, look: I'm guessing. And I don't want to be quoted.”

“That's fine. Consider yourself a reliable source.”

“Not in this life, kid. But I think, and again I've nothing to back this up, I think he wanted to send the yachts into one of these alternate universes he was always talking about. And either he succeeded-”

“Or they were blowing up.” He shook his head. Wrote something on a pad. “You really think that's what he was trying to do?”

Hmm. What did I really think? The truth was, I couldn't imagine what else he might have been up to. “I wish,” I told him, “that we could go out wherever it was he'd taken them. And see whether they're still there.”

“I assume there's no way to do that?”

“None that I can imagine, Jack.”

I went back and looked at the news accounts from the quake. It was Rimway's worst natural disaster, in terms of fatalities, in modern history, and the second worst anywhere in the Confederacy.

Tens of thousands died, in an era when that wasn't supposed to happen. But somehow the pending quake, which would be an 8.0, escaped the notice of the monitors and came without warning. The inhabitants knew they were in a danger zone, but even though the temblors shook the area regularly, everyone had been assured that the technology would detect a major event well in advance. There'd be plenty of time to clear out.

It hadn't happened that way. The earthquake had occurred with almost no warning. Worse, it had been near the surface, and it had triggered tsunamis that killed several thousand more in the immediate aftermath. The visual record was horrifying: people screaming and running while buildings collapsed and fires erupted. And finally, the waves.

When it was over, when the medical teams had gone home and the funerals had been completed and the technicians had made their explanations, the stories of individual acts of heroism began to emerge. The names of many who'd risked, and sometimes lost, their lives to help others would forever remain unknown. But not all. And among those who stood out was Eliot Cermak. He brought my kids out. Right through the fire. Threw a blanket over them and got them clear of that place. I thank God he was there.

A young woman described how he'd gotten her out of a burning building. A man who lived adjacent to him watched as he stood directing terrified victims onto higher ground. Ultimately, like Robin, Cermak had vanished.

I called Alex and described what I'd heard and seen.

“Where exactly was he,” he asked me, “when it happened?”

“Caton Ferry.”

“Caton Ferry-”

“It was in the middle of the quake. On the ocean. Just northwest of Kolandra.”

“Okay.” There was a long pause. “You want me to go there?”

“I think it would be a good idea. They have some sort of memorial for Cermak. Let's see what else we can learn.”

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