Flynn sat beside her on the bench seating, and Arina took up a position opposite her. “I’m Arina Gadja, Colonel Gadja of Safety Services. This is Father Dennis Flynn, a visitor here and a friend of mine. Covenant has requested our aid in resolving a situation involving David Holcomb. You know him?”
“Is he all right?”
Arina’s head came up. “What would make you think he might not be?”
Deana hesitated, then looked down into her cup of tea. “Nothing.”
Flynn laid a hand on her shoulder and felt her jump. “Listen to me, Miss Thompson, there’s going to be nothing worse in all this than your fear.”
The edge in Arina’s voice contrasted sharply with the quiet softness of his. “Miss Thompson, you must realize how important this is for Covenant to request the help of a citizen. The sooner we get to the bottom of this, the better for all involved.”
Deana shook her head. “I told him he shouldn’t do it.”
“Do what?”
The woman sipped her tea, then held her left hand out, palm forward, showing the hint of a scar where her identification chip had been implanted. “There was one night, David and I were out having a drink, dancing, just having fun. We struck up a conversation with another couple and talked a little about our
lives before Apogea. The guy said that the one thing he didn’t like about Apogea was that Covenant knew where we were and what we were doing at all times. He said that back in the real world he could go out, get roaring drunk, and wake up not remembering where he was, where he’d been or what he’d done with whom. That not knowing, that was a thrill for him, but here Covenant could tell him everything, taking the mystery out of it.”
Flynn shivered, and it wasn’t just the man’s illusion that what he had done remained unknown. God certainly knew. What chilled Flynn was the man’s willful desire to abandon responsibility for his actions, his wanton disavowal of the rules by which society governed itself, and his being thrilled by the not knowing. It was passively nihilistic behavior that could, as the desire for greater thrills built, become actively destructive.
Deana sighed heavily. “We kind of agreed—not that we liked the idea of not knowing, but knowing that Covenant is always watching over you can get to be kinda much. I mean, I know it’s not making judgments, just collecting data and changing things to make sure what we want and need is provided. It’s benign and positive, but sometimes it feels smothering, you know?”
Arina nodded slowly. “I can see how you could find it so.”
Deana stared at her for a second, then broke eye-contact. “So the guy says he’s heard of someone who had these blackout chips. You wear it on your wrist, just like he’s got, covering your ID chip. The box reads your home location, or a place you’re likely to be, and broadcasts to the system that this is where you are. What you do then is, you get these blackout things, then bring party stuff to a place, like a warehouse or the basement of an apartment building, whatever. You get told where when you get the blocker. You have parties and stuff, everybody bringing something. It’s cool, and everyone is liking the fact that Covenant thinks we’re all home and in bed.”
“So there was a party last night?”
Deana nodded. “I went. David was supposed to meet me, but he never made it. I didn’t worry since he’d done that before. He’d warned me those times, though.”
“Can you tell me when those times were?”
The small woman frowned. “About six weeks, and then three weeks ago.”
“You don’t think he was seeing someone else?”
Deana’s eyes widened. “David? No. We were in love. He was going to be leaving before I was, but we both had signed for good bonus money, so we planned to marry and head back to Mars, or maybe out to one of the Commonwealth worlds to make a life together. Why would you ask that?”
“Routine. Did David know Regan Park?”
“Who?”
“The man who ran the curio shop over here on Aquila Street.”
Deana shook her head. “Not that I knew.” She turned her left hand back over, then thumbed the ring on her fourth finger. “David may have gotten this there. He gave it to me as a gift. Said Covenant wasn’t the only one who could surprise people with nice things.”
“A couple more questions, then we will be done. Does the name Stephen Fonteneau mean anything to you?”
“No, not really.” Deana grinned a bit. “David had a twin brother named Stephen, so when someone would shout the name, he’d react, all unconsciously. It got to be a joke. There were times when I would leave him messages, asking Stephen to tell David I needed to see him. We made up a twin sister for me, Diana, and he did the same thing.”
“Do you know Samuel Abrams? Did David?”
“No, no, not at all. We don’t run in those circles. I work with the local theater company, and I know Abrams and his wife had a box. They come and bring friends, but I’ve never spoken to them. David worked as a sommelier at Cuisine Rigel. He might have met them there, but he used to talk about how servants are always invisible to those people. The only time they took notice of him was when he recommended a new wine, and it would be an import that Covenant had brought in and had earmarked for them anyway. He felt like it was a charade, and occasionally had fun describing how folks who knew nothing praised the wine for things he’d described, not anything in the wine itself.”
Arina nodded. “Thank you, Miss Thompson, you have been most helpful.”
“Fine, but you’ve not told me what this is about.”
Flynn’s friend nodded slowly. “I know, and I couldn’t until I had spoken to you. I’m afraid I have some bad news for you. David didn’t return last night because he was severely injured. Fatally injured.”
“Fatally?” Deana’s voice faded to a strangled whisper that caught in her throat. She raised a hand to cover her mouth, while the tea in her cup splashed wildly. Flynn took the cup from her hand, passing it to a junior, then settled an arm around her shoulder. “How?”
Flynn kept his voice low and even. “Hush now, child. He died quickly and in no pain whatsoever. We’re thinking he was at the curio shop—likely getting you another gift—and surprised a thief.”
“Oh, God!” Deana turned and pressed her face against Flynn’s chest, grabbing a tight handful of his jacket. “He’s dead… dead…”
A junior arrived leading a tall, heavy-set woman whose face immediately registered alarm as she recognized Deana and heard her sobs. She slid onto the bench on the other side of Deana and stroked her hair. “I’m Maggie Wilson, we work together. I was brought here…”
Arina smiled solemnly. “A tragedy. David is dead.”
“Oh, Deana.” The larger woman gathered Deana into her arms hugging her tightly, and the sobbing woman released Flynn and clung to her friend.
Flynn and Arina left the transport and the two women, meeting Lavaryn at the base of the short landing ramp. “You did well, Captain, bringing the friend here.”
“Thank you, Colonel. We have had experience in informing people of accidental deaths, and having friends present seems to help. We regret, however, to have found nothing else of use. The place where Regan Park is supposed to be is vacant. Two ships have left the spaceport in the time since Holcomb’s death, at least as calculated by the doctors, and we do not know if he smuggled himself on board. Procedures checking outbound passengers are not as rigorous as they are coming in.”
“It will be important for us to find Regan Park, but we don’t know if he is a victim who has been taken elsewhere and killed, a murderer or in league with a murderer. We need to discover what has happened. Right now I need Covenant to check and see if Samuel Abrams or his wife, Veronika, had been to Cuisine Rigel in the last nine months.”
The Zsytzii produced his datapad and communicated a request for that data. “A dozen times. Most recently two weeks ago, a week before that, six weeks, two months. The guest list varies from two to twelve, often new arrivals. The Abrams take great delight in sharing a restaurant they consider their ‘discovery’ with friends.”
Lavaryn looked up from the flat-screen device. “Covenant reports they invited you there, but you refused.”
Arina shrugged. “I had nothing to wear.”