“Skeptics can always fall back on chance,” Keith said.
“Is there something wrong with being a skeptic, with insisting on evidence and causality?”
Keith sighed. “No. Dr. Tidwell, I’m not here to convince you of anything. You asked us to make these arrangements, and we did. I’ll be available if you have any problems or needs.”
“You are frustrated with me.”
He shrugged. “Not my place to be.”
“But you are. Why?”
“Because it’s so clear to me, and you have so much trouble seeing it.”
“Exactly what is clear?”
There were voices in the street, and Keith glanced over his shoulder in their direction. “That they don’t really know why they’re going,” he said quietly. “They only know that they want to.”
“What persuades you of that, Mr. Keith?”
Keith turned back and showed a faint smile. “Because I want to go, too, Dr. Tidwell. And I don’t really know why, either.”
When Keith was gone, Tidwell granted himself license to explore the house. The salutary effect of the house’s enfeebled air-conditioning vanished the moment he started upstairs. The air there was stagnant and hothouse stuffy. Unless the nights were markedly cooler, sleeping would be a challenge.
He found the empty bedroom and, in it, his trunk of clothing, delivered ahead by the Selection office. Leaving for later the task of unpacking it, Tidwell extended his license to entering the other, already occupied bedrooms— two up, one down.
Tidwell did not see it as a violation of privacy. Most of the pioneers’ personal belongings—250 kilograms each—would be shipped directly from their homes up to
Still, he was careful not to disturb anything that might betray his trespass, contenting himself with what he could see. He peeked in a closet, but not in a suitcase; at the objects arrayed on a wobbly-legged dresser, but not in its drawers.
He took note of several travel and geography volumes in a file of chipdisks—perhaps someone trying to plan how to spend their last days on Earth? He startled at finding candles and Wiccan icons in the single ground-floor bedroom—surely more appropriate to a Homeworlder than a pioneer?
All data were preliminary, all conclusions provisional. He would not judge them until he had met them.
The back windows of the house looked out on turgid Cow Bayou and the tall double fence running along its far bank. The fences marked the south boundary of the center; when he stepped out onto the small patio deck, he could see the south gate tower and bridge half a kilometer upstream.
He also saw something that surprised him. Scattered along the outer fence, all the way from the tower to where the bayou emptied into Clear Creek, were dozens of people standing in ones and twos and threes, almost like statues. The phrase “outside looking in” popped into Tidwell’s head.
They were still shouting, but try as he might he could not make out the words, any more than he could make out their faces. He waved one more time and turned to enter the house. As he did, he caught a reflection of sound off the metallic siding, a shrieking high-pitched voice.
“Bastard,” was what he thought he heard, “bastard pig bastard—”
His head whipped around and he stared, unbelieving. The three figures nearest to him, almost directly across the bayou, were contorted by the body language of hostility, jumping, fists raised. Others were hurrying along the fence to join them. Someone somewhere was beating on the fence itself, a metallic rattle like clashing swords.
From the direction of the gate tower came the muffled roar of a gasoline motor; moments later, tearing his gaze away from the enraged, now fifteen or twenty strong, Tidwell caught sight of a small boat racing bow-high toward the commotion. When he realized that the boat carried the Allied Transcon logo and the grim-looking men aboard it wore Security armor, Tidwell, still bewildered, fled back into the house.
Shaken, Tidwell watched from behind the heavy drapes shrouding the window of the onetime dining room as the Security boat slowly circled and the gathering slowly dispersed. Tidwell wished for some sort of binoculars; it almost seemed as though those beyond the fence were celebrating as they scattered, finding some sort of victory in the episode.
Fifteen minutes later, all was as it had been before Tidwell pulled back the sticky sliding door and stepped outside. The boat stopped circling and returned upstream. The watchers—not starheads, certainly, though Tidwell was at a loss for what to call them—took up their stations along the fence.
And Tidwell retreated to his room, where he hastily recorded an account of the episode and then began to unpack his luggage. From time to time, he would peek out through the drapes to see if the watchers were still there. They always were, and Tidwell found himself grateful when the first of his housemates returned and he was no longer alone.
Tidwell met them all that night. The travel books belonged to Evans, a tall, barrel-chested judge-arbitrator from Chicago. Genial as he was large, Evans plied Tidwell with questions as he swept through the house, scooping up what passed for a meal and changing into fresh clothing before vanishing out the front door a half hour later.
By contrast, Colas, the young Canadian environmental engineer, had as little personality as his room had revealed. His angular face had deep worry lines worked into it, and when he excused himself to go upstairs and study, mumbling something about having to work out calibrations for six systems, Tidwell made no attempt to deflect him.
Last to return was the most interesting of the three, the bodywork counselor, Malena Graham. Her airchair was as much of a surprise as the altar in her room had been. Her spirit seemed as light as her limbs were leaden.
Together they scouted the prepacks in the freezer, and then they settled together at the steel kitchen table to pick their way through the edible parts of their meals.
“We’ll eat better than this on board, I trust,” Tidwell said, eyeing his rubbery lasagna with suspicion.
“Never enough cheese in one of those,” she said. “I should have warned you. The cafeteria’s lasagna is better. But if you really like lasagna, I ought to try to get you some of Mother Alicia’s. Two inches thick and three kilos to a pan. It takes her all day to make enough for the whole family.”
“My wife enjoyed cooking,” Tidwell recalled. “Not Italian. Her specialty was sweets—poisonously rich desserts.” He smiled. “A weakness that crosses all cultures.”
“Real sugar and I have a pact,” she said. “It doesn’t jump into my mouth and I don’t make it live on my thighs. Just because I can’t walk around in high heels doesn’t mean I can’t be shapely.”
“You are a very attractive young lady.”
She clucked unhappily. “ ‘Young lady’—those sound like words you use to keep someone in their place.”
“Habit of speech,” Tidwell apologized. “I meant nothing by it. Except the compliment.”
She smiled acceptingly. “I’m actually the youngest old woman you’ve ever met. I’m a crone at heart, waiting to grow into her role. I can hardly wait to be respected enough to be listened to.”
“Do you have to look the part?”
“Or get paid for it. People take advice much better if they’re paying for it.”
“I must confess I’ve never been to a bodywork counselor,” Tidwell said.
“I know.”
“Excuse me?”
“I can tell by the way you police every motion. I don’t think you’re very comfortable in your body.”
“It serves me passably well,” Tidwell said, then his face reddened with embarrassment. “Forgive me—I didn’t mean—”