She was already on her feet.
“Tell me where to go…”
“… but let’s have a consensus agreement, okay?” she added while moving. “I get an exclusive on any interviews that follow. In case this turns out to be more than…”
“Done,” she said, feeling a little sheepish over the request for a group exclusive. But after all, she was supposed to be a pro. MediaCorp might be tuning in soon, examining transcripts. They would expect a professional’s attention to the niceties.
“Look, maybe I can just call a crew member. Invoke FOIA and open it legally-”
PA… for Post-Awfulday.
“Oh sure. With me standing here to take the physical rap if it’s refused…”
A virtual image of the keypad appeared in front of Tor, overlaying the real one.
“No cause for alarm,” she muttered.
“Never mind.”
Feeling somewhat detached, as if under remote control, her hand reached out to tap the proposed sequence.
Nothing happened.
The wikivoice mutated, sounding just a tad less cool. More individualized. A telltale indicator in her tru-vu showed that some high-credibility member of the mob was stepping up with an assertive suggestion.
Coalescence levels seemed to waver only a little, so the mob trusted this component member. Tor went along, punching the pad again with the new pattern.
“Any luck getting that FOIA writ?” she asked, meanwhile. “You said it would take just a few minutes. Maybe we’d better wait…”
Procrastination met its rebuttal with a simple a
No hesitation in the mob voice. Five hundred and twelve of her fellow citizens wanted her to do this. Five hundred and sixteen…
Tor swallowed. Then complied.
The ladderway exposed a truth that was hidden from most passengers, cruising in cushioned comfort within the neatly paneled main compartment. Physics-especially gravity-had not changed appreciably in the century that separated the first great zeppelin era from this one. Designers still had to strive for lightness, everywhere they could.
Stepping from spindly rungs onto the cargo deck, Tor found herself amid a maze of spiderlike webbery, instead of walls and partitions. Her feet made gingerly impressions in foamy mesh that seemed to be mostly air. Stacks of luggage-all strictly weighed back in Nashville-formed bundles that resembled monstrous eggs, bound together by air-gel foam. Hardly any metal could be seen. Not even aluminum or titanium struts.
“Shall I look at the bags?” she asked while reaching into her purse. “I have an omnisniffer.”
“Higher?” She frowned. “There’s nothing up there except…”
Tor’s voice trailed off as a schematic played within her tru-vus, pointing aft to another ladder, this one made of ropey fibers.
Arrows shimmered in VR yellow, for emphasis.
“Is that dangerous?”
She sighed, stepping warily across the spongy surface. Tor hadn’t yet spotted a crew member. They were probably also busy chasing rumors, different ones, chosen by the company’s prioritization subroutines. Anyway, a modern towed-zep was mostly automatic, requiring no pilot, engineer, or navigator. A century ago, the
At twice the length,
Below her feet, passengers would be jostling for a better view of the Langley Crater, or maybe Arlington Cemetery, while peering ahead for the enduring spire of the rebuilt Washington Monument, with its tip of lunar stone. Or did some of those people already sniff an alert coming on, through their own liaison networks? Were families starting to cluster near the emergency chutes? Tor wondered if she should be doing the same.
This new ladder was something else. It felt almost alive and responded to her footstep by
Meanwhile, the voice in her ear took on a strange, lilting quality. The next contribution must have come from an individual member. Someone generally appreciated.
Tor liked the offering. You almost wanted to earn it, by coming up with a tune…
… only the “hatch” was now just ahead, or above, almost pressing against her face. A throbbing iris of