“Well, good morning, Lieutenant,” Fifer said, looking up from his workstation. “Not out watching the docking? I think everyone else on the ship is.”
“No room, sir,” Gray replied, seating himself in the link-equipped recliner opposite the desk. “The ship’s lounges and rec areas are all still off-limits.” That had been necessary to provide the large number of Mufrid women on board with an acceptable degree of privacy. He shook his head. “Damn, I thought the Mufrids would be happy to be here. If they’d stayed on Eta Bootis, they’d all be dead now.”
“Oh, I imagine they’ll be grateful enough once they get out of these confining circumstances. Right now they feel trapped, stifled. And they resent us and what they perceive as our ungodly attitudes. I understand a couple of large transports are here to take them the rest of the way to Earth.”
“And good riddance to them.”
“You don’t like them?”
Gray frowned. Commander Leonard Fifer had a way of turning everything into a discussion of what you felt, what you liked or disliked, what you thought. “I don’t mind
“As will we all, Lieutenant.” He chuckled. “I was wondering, though, if you didn’t sympathize with our Mufrid guests on some level?”
“Why? I’m not Muslim.”
“Religion has nothing to do with the question. But it occurs to me that they feel like outsiders on the
Gray had been coming here for sessions with Dr. Fifer every few shipboard days since he’d returned to the
Fifer tended to make him uncomfortable. Of course, he knew that these sessions were
And fixing that was a prerequisite to his going back on flight status.
Since yesterday, though, he’d been toying with the idea of never going back to flying, of resigning his commission. He’d swung by the Personnel Office yesterday afternoon to see what his options might be.
Unfortunately, he couldn’t just turn in his uniform and walk away. Part of the agreement he’d signed obligated him to ten years of active Confederation military service, if only to pay the government back for the creds they’d invested in his training and his implants. He’d joined the Navy in 2401, but two years had been spent in recruit training, OCS, and flight school. Back in the old days, all of his schooling download time and training would have counted as active duty, but according to the Personnel Office he’d only entered active duty early last year-just in time for Arcturus Station and Everdawn-and he still had more than eight years to serve.
Whether that was as an officer or an enlisted man was up to him. He
The news had put a definite bump in Gray’s career path. Flight officers had status, and a certain amount of privilege. They even had
He hadn’t made up his mind yet. That was part of what he wanted to talk to the therapist about today. But if he
He realized Fifer was still waiting for a response to his statement about Gray’s feeling marginalized, something the two of them had discussed a number of times during the past three weeks.
“I don’t know if I would call it feeling marginalized, sir,” he said. “It
“And how often do you feel that way, Lieutenant?”
He thought about this. “Not all that often, I guess. The other people in the squadron tend not to let me forget who I am…where I came from.”
“Understandable,” Fifer said. “Navy pilots tend to form a tight little circle, like a fraternity. Anyone not in the circle is an outsider, an unknown quantity. You get in only when you prove yourself.”
“I’ve
“It can take longer than that, Lieutenant. And sometimes it can take forever.”
“So what am I supposed to do?”
Fifer gave a gentle shrug. “You have several paths open to you, as we’ve discussed already. You can resign your commission and become an enlisted man. You can simply turn in your wings, become a non-flight officer. Or you can fold yourself in, hunker down, and ride it out where you are.”
“That is certainly one option,” Fifer told him, “but I can’t recommend it. You would be found. You would be brought back. You would face a court martial for desertion, and you would either serve time in a military prison or you would be reconditioned.”
Gray started. He hadn’t spoken out loud about deserting. “You’re reading my thoughts!”
“Your personal daemon is linked in with the AI coordinating this session,” Fifer told him. “It can pick up surface thoughts, at least, yes. How else do you think I monitor your free-form regressions?”
Gray was trembling, though whether from fear, anger, or some other long-repressed emotion, he couldn’t tell. He was beginning to realize that what he resented most about the Navy was the constant high-tech monitoring, the fact that even when he wasn’t linked in, there were machines and AIs in the Net-Cloud that could follow where he was going, watch where he went, listen in on his conversations, even hear what he was thinking.
“I noticed a peculiar, extremely sharp spike in the intensity of your emotions just now,” Fifer told him. “Can you tell me about what you’re feeling?”
“There’s a lot of stuff,” Gray admitted. “I don’t like the constant snooping, the feeling that AIs and Authority monitors are always looking over my shoulder, watching what I do. And…”
“And what?”
“I’m afraid.”
“Afraid of what? The monitoring?”
“No. I don’t like it, but I’m not
“What then?”
Gray was trying to put it into words, but found he could not.
“I’m…not sure.”
“That’s okay. I’ll tell you what. I’m going to say some words and phrases, list them. Things I mentioned a moment ago, when you had that emotional spike. Just listen to each phrase, think about it. Tell me what you feel.”
Gray was sweating now. “Okay…”
“‘One option.’”
Gray felt nothing, and shrugged.
“‘You would be found.’”
He felt a quiver of emotional discomfort, but he shook his head.
“‘You would be brought back.’”