we couldn’t deal with the fact that Clavain was suicidal, so they made up some story about him going around the world. Now they don’t think the people can deal with knowing
‘You think Scorpio should be taking a firmer lead?’
‘I respect Scorpio,’ Vasko said, ‘but where is he now, when we need him?’
‘You’re not the only one wondering that,’ Urton said.
Something caught Vasko’s eye. The picture on the screen had changed. Clavain’s face was gone, replaced for a moment by the administration logo. Urton turned around in her seat, still drinking her beer.
‘Something’s happening,’ she said.
The logo flickered and vanished. They were looking at Scorpio, surrounded by the curved rose-pink interior of the High Conch. The pig wore his usual unofficial uniform of padded black leather, the squat dome of his head a largely neckless outgrowth of his massive barrelled torso.
‘You knew this was going to happen, didn’t you?’ Vasko asked.
‘Draygo told me he’d heard that there was an announcement scheduled for around this time. But I don’t know what it’ll be about and I didn’t know Scorpio was going to show his face.’
The pig was speaking. Vasko was about to find a way to make the screen louder when Scorpio’s voice rang out loudly throughout the maze of alcoves, piped through on some general-address system.
‘Your attention, please,’ he said. ‘You all know who I am. I speak now as the acting leader of this colony. With regret, I must again report that Nevil Clavain was killed today while on a mission of maximum importance for the strategic security of Ararat. Having participated in the same operation, I can assure you that without Clavain’s bravery and self-sacrifice the current situation would be enormously more grave than is the case. As things stand, and despite Clavain’s death, the mission was successful. It is my intention to inform you of what was accomplished in that operation in due course. But first I must speak about the current disturbances in all sectors of First Camp, and the actions that the Security Arm is taking to restore social order. Please listen carefully, because all our lives depend on it. There will be no more unauthorised crossings to the
Vasko glanced at Urton, but he couldn’t tell if her expression was one of disgust or quiet approval.
The pig waited a breath before continuing. Something was wrong with the transmission, for the earlier image of Clavain had begun to reappear, overlaying Scorpio’s face like a faint nimbus. ‘There will, however, be an alternative. The administration recommends that all citizens go about their business as usual and do not attempt to leave the island. Nonetheless it recognises that a minority wish to relocate to the
‘They had no choice,’ Vasko said quietly. ‘Scorp’s doing the right thing.’
But the pig was still talking. ‘For those who wish to board the
‘What does he mean by that?’ Vasko asked, while Scorpio continued with the arrangements for the transportation.
‘He means they’ll have to freeze people,’ Urton said. ‘Squeeze them into those sleep coffins, like they did when the ship came here in the first place.’
‘He should tell them, in that case.’
‘Obviously he doesn’t want to.’
‘Those reefersleep caskets aren’t safe,’ Vasko said. ‘I know what happened the last time they used them. A lot of people didn’t make it out alive.’
‘It doesn’t matter, does it?’ Urton said. ‘He’s still giving them better odds than if they try to make the journey themselves — even without that execution order.’
‘I still don’t understand. Why provide that option at all, if the administration doesn’t think it’s the right thing to do?’
Urton shrugged. ‘Because maybe the administration isn’t sure what to do. If they declare a general evacuation to the ship, they’ll really have a panic on their hands. Looking at it from their point of view, how do they know whether it’s better for the people to evacuate to the ship or remain on the ground?’
‘They don’t,’ he said. ‘Whichever they choose, there’ll always be a risk that it might be the wrong decision.’
Urton nodded emphatically. She had nearly finished her beer. ‘At least this way Scorpio gets to split the difference. Some people will end up in the ship, some will chose to stay at home. It’s the perfect solution, if you want to maximise the chances of
‘That sounds very heartless.’
‘It is.’
‘In which case I don’t think you need worry about Scorpio not being the callous leader you said we needed.’
‘No. He’s callous enough,’ Urton agreed. ‘Of course, we could be misreading this entirely. But assuming we aren’t, does it shock you?’
‘No, I suppose not. And I think you’re right. We do need someone strong, someone prepared to think the unthinkable.’ Vasko put down his glass. It was only half-empty, but his thirst had gone the same way as his appetite. ‘One question,’ he said. ‘Why are you being so nice to me all of a sudden?’
Urton inspected him the way a lepidopterist might examine a pinned specimen. ‘Because, Vasko, it occurred to me that you might be a useful ally, in the long run.’
The scrimshaw suit said, ‘We’ve heard the news, Quaiche.’
The sudden voice startled him, as it always did. He was alone. Grelier had just finished seeing to his eyes, swabbing an infected abscess under one retracted eyelid. The metal clamp of the eye-opener felt unusually cruel to him today, as if, while Quaiche was sleeping, the surgeon-general had covertly sharpened all its little hooks. Not while he was really sleeping, of course. Sleep was a luxury he remembered in only the vaguest terms.
‘I don’t know about any news,’ he said.
‘You made your little announcement to the congregation downstairs. We heard it. You’re taking the cathedral across Absolution Gap.’
‘And if I am, what business is it of yours?’
‘It’s insanity, Quaiche. And your mental health is very much our business.’
He saw the suit in blurred peripheral vision, around the sharp central image of Haldora. The world was half in shadow, bands of cream and ochre and subtle turquoise plunging into the sharp terminator of the nightside.
‘You don’t care about me,’ he said. ‘You only care about your own survival. You’re afraid I’ll destroy you when I destroy the Lady Morwenna.’
‘“When”, Quaiche? Frankly, that’s a little disturbing to us. We were hoping you still had some intention of actually succeeding.’
‘Perhaps I do,’ he conceded.
‘Where nobody has done so before?’
‘The Lady Morwenna isn’t any old cathedral.’
‘No. It’s the heaviest and tallest on the Way. Doesn’t that give you some slight pause for thought?’
‘It will make my triumph all the more spectacular.’
