what you like.' We started to move away, but Peifer stayed with us. 'You think it happened here, huh?' 'What happened here?' 'Whatever sent her over the edge.' 'I told you we're here on vacation.' 'Okay. Stick with your story.' He paused. 'You want me to say nothing about your being here?' Alex shrugged. 'It doesn't matter to us.' He looked at me and I shrugged. 'Mr. Peifer,' he said casually, 'did you by any chance meet Vicki Greene when she came here? Were you standing at the terminal for her, too?' He nodded. 'Sure. She was really something.' He shook his head. 'I heard what happened to her. That
'You and Vicki Greene together would make a pretty big story. If you find out anything, you give me an exclusive.' Alex blinked a couple of times. 'You promise? It doesn't cost you anything.' 'Sure. I don't see a problem with that.' Peifer gave us his code so we could reach him. Then: 'She told me the same story you did. Said she'd come to Salud Afar as a tourist. That she'd always wanted to see how things looked outside the galaxy. She wasn't at all what I expected.' 'How do you mean?' 'Horror writer? I thought she'd be dressed in black. That she'd be, you know, depressing.' 'Did she say where she was going?' 'No. She said she hadn't made up her mind yet. She was going to visit oddball places.' 'Oddball?' 'Her term, not mine.' 'I don't understand. What's an oddball place?' 'I'm pretty sure she was talking about something with a haunted flavor.' 'But no specifics?' 'No. She didn't want to tell me where she was going because she figured I might start showing up.' He looked puzzled. 'She looked too innocent to be the same woman who wrote those books.' 'You've read them, Rob?' I asked. 'A couple of them. They're scary.'
We caught a glide train to the capital. The vegetation was striking. Usually, it is what it is. Lots of chlorophyll trying to get at the sun. But Salud Afar has giant flowers in a wide range of colors, though predominantly purple and yellow. The blossoms are bigger than I am. Gravity's light, so everything gets taller. In some areas, we could not see the sky for them. The towns themselves were quaint. A bit old-fashioned. The architecture might almost have been out of Rimway's Kalasian era, two centuries ago. It made me feel as if we'd done some time-traveling. It was midmorning when we arrived at the capital. Marinopolis was a study in dazzling architecture and planning: sunlit towers and broad avenues and sculpted air bridges and wide parks. Water was everywhere: It ran through conduits, spurted from fountains, spilled from flumes. Glowing walkways were crowded. Monuments to the heroes of the revolution were still being put in place. Despite all that, or probably because of it, there was still the flavor of another time. We checked into the Blue Gable Hotel. Alex had made appointments to talk with a few of the people who'd responded to our appeal. While he did that, I sat down with the hotel AI and started to search the archives for Vicki Greene. Mostly I was looking for general news. But I also kept an eye open for dead bodies. Other than an announcement of her arrival in Marinopolis, there wasn't much. A few speaking engagements. Some signings. A couple of interviews that told me nothing. Alex was in his room talking over the link with one of the contacts. I decided I was hungry so I left a note and went down to the hotel restaurant for an early lunch. When I got back, he was out of the building, gone to visit a book dealer. It was a warm day, and they had a rooftop pool. One of the nice things about pools is that, when you're trying to make a gravity adjustment, they're exactly what you need. So I changed into my swimsuit and went topside. But things were a bit more freewheeling in Marinopolis than they were at home. Topless bathing was in vogue. I drew a few disappointed stares, thought about it, and decided what the hell, a little exhibitionism can be good for the soul. I took a deep breath, and, as casually as I could, as if I did this sort of thing every day, I removed my top. Somebody applauded. I draped it across the back of a chair and dived into the water. When I came back up, several guys were trying hard not to look directly at me. It was a little bit like hanging out with Mutes.
I didn't stay long. Exposure provides a kick, but it wears fast. As soon as I was out of sight of the pool I put my top back on. Then I rode the elevator up and checked the room again. Alex was still gone, so I went for a walk. A pedestrian ramp, several kilometers long, skirted the edge of the ocean. This was the Seawalk. It was three blocks from the hotel and something about it rang a bell. When I asked in the hotel lobby, a young female staffer explained: 'It's where Aramy Cleev was assassinated. Right down from here. Go to the Seawalk and turn right. One block. They have a marker.' Aramy Cleev had been the last in the line of dictators who'd run the Bandahriate. The assassination had happened in the early spring thirty-three years earlier. 'He was shot by his own guards,' she said. Her voice acquired an angry tone. 'Pity it didn't happen sooner.' Like most colony worlds, Salud Afar began its calendar with the arrival of the first mission. In this case, it had been the
I didn't know who Betsy was. The hotel entrance was on the third level. I was standing outside the front door, high enough off the ground to see the ocean, thinking what a lovely day it was, when I realized I couldn't
Alex called and asked whether I'd eaten yet. Well, then, would I care to join him anyhow? So we met at a place called Morey's on the Seawalk, and I sat and sucked on a plate of red fruit with a lemony taste while he explained how he'd learned nothing from the people he'd talked to. They'd all seen Vicki within days of her arrival. She'd seemed fine, not especially anxious about anything. Nobody knew where she'd gone from here. There was only one person left to interview, Cirilla Kopaleski, and we'd see her tomorrow. He was putting away a plate of bacon, eggs, fried potatoes, and toast. Something was on his mind, but I let him get to it in his own time. We talked about what a beautiful city Marinopolis was. Andiquar, by
contrast, looked almost mundane. 'Dictatorships tend to do that,' he said. 'Strongmen always have a taste for architecture.' And finally he came to what had been bothering him: 'The Mutes seem to be interested in Salud Afar.' 'How do you mean?' 'There've been a number of incidents out here. Intrusions. Sightings of Mute warships insystem.' 'That's odd. What interest could the Mutes possibly have in