went through.'

Joona cocked her head to one side, giving him an interested look. 'And how does that help them select their officers, exactly?'

'It's testing our ability to think under pressure. They put us in all kinds of impossible situations today.' He rolled the glass between his palms, regarding it with a miserable expression. 'I didn't do very well. I lost count of how many times I got killed. Then again, the others were just the same, judging by what they said.'

'How good are you?'

'What do you mean?'

She slid her hands across the bar, pushing the tea cup ahead of her, moving with feline grace as she leaned in toward him. 'I mean, you're a... you're a soldier who's seen action. You've been in bad situations for real on those other worlds you plunder, right?'

'Yes. But we're trained in how to deal with hostile crowd or ambush situations. I know what I'm doing.'

'Right, but what you're basically taught is how to keep cool under fire. And today they simply turned up the heat.

Were those situations genuinely impossible, or did you just flunk them?'

'You don't take many prisoners, do you? I suppose I could have done better in some of them, if I knew more about engineering and stuff.'

'Has it occurred to you that these tests were actually dual purpose? It sounds to me like they were testing your character as well as your ability to think.'

He slumped down on the stool. 'Probably. I'm really up shit creek, then.'

'Why is that?' with lazy amusement Lawrence realized just how stoned she was. 'I have no character. You said so yourself.'

'I didn't say you had no character. I said you had the wrong character, which for the purposes of today's experiment will serve you well. You're what they want.'

'Let's hope so. Are you okay to get home from here?'

She straightened up again. 'Oh, I don't need any help from you. I have a citybike card. I'll just take one off the rack, and zoooom, I'm home.' She caught the barman's attention and wagged a finger at her cup. 'Same again.'

Lawrence drained his juice and stood up. 'Take care.' He walked to the far end of the bar where the barman was preparing her tea. 'Do something for me,' he said quietly to the barman. 'When she leaves, call a cab for her. This should cover it.' He put an EZ twenty on the counter.

The barman nodded and pocketed the bill. 'Sure thing.'

Day three was linked teamwork. The AS split them into groups of five and dropped them into a shared i-environment. There were to be eight tests. For the first five, they would rotate the leadership, while the last three were to be a group effort.

Lawrence's group was given a river to cross for its first task. It was running through a hot, unpleasant jungle, complete with insects that bit exposed limbs and reeking marshsulfur air bubbling out of the mud along the foot of the banks. Crocodiles peered at them from midriver, occasionally snapping their jaws in anticipation. Ropes, oil drums and wooden planks were stacked up on the bank. Even laying all the planks end to end, they weren't long enough reach across the water.

Their designated team leader started snapping out orders. He wanted to build a platform that would go halfway across the river, they would take up the section from behind them and rebuild it out in front to the other bank. Lawrence helped willingly enough, even though he knew they were wasting their time. The scheme was overelaborate. They should be building a raft.

He briefly toyed with the idea of slacking off, or maybe not tying off his rope as tight as it needed to be. Not active sabotage exactly, but as the idea was doomed anyway... There were only two places, after all. But he guessed the AS would be watching for anything less than 100 percent commitment.

Sure enough, when they turned the bridge into a platform in the water and started trying to build the last section, two of them wound up falling in the river along with several planks. The crocodiles moved in eagerly, huge jaws hinging open.

For his own command, Lawrence was given the last stone in a henge to erect. He took a quick inventory of the equipment they'd been given, which was mainly poles, shovels and ropes, and issued his instructions. They measured the length of the stone, and the height of the others. That told them how deep to dig the pit at the base of the stone. With that done, they set about tipping it in, rigging up levers and crude pulleys. This was the part that required a high level of coordinated teamwork, and everyone played his part perfectly, following each of the orders that Lawrence shouted out. Eventually the massive block tilted upright. Lawrence had a nasty moment when it rocked about, but it stayed upright.

It was the final three tests that made him irritable and disappointed. There was just too much competition between the group members for them to have their own idea adopted. Lawrence reckoned the AS had deliberately structured the tasks so that there were multiple solutions to each problem. His fellow candidates began to question him and each other, whining and bitching, especially when their own proposals were turned down. When Lawrence was convinced he had the most efficient solution to the second task he had to shout to make them listen, which they resented. They were competing, not cooperating. The simulations were deviating from the way people behaved in real life. Drawing from his own time in action with the platoon, Lawrence knew there would be a better level of rapport.

Hardly anyone spoke when they left that evening. Lawrence heard that there had been near fights in other teams during the last three tests. At least his own group had managed to keep reasonably civil. That must count in their favor.

Joona was in the square. The potato stall was back, along with a larger number of protesters. She caught sight of him, and intercepted him. Lawrence tried to smile off the startled looks of the other candidates, though he knew exactly what they must be thinking.

'Yours,' Joona said curtly, pressing an EZ twenty into his hand. 'I don't need your charity.'

'It wasn't charity. I was concerned about you, that's all.'

'Did I ask you to be?'

'How could you? You didn't know what planet you were on.'

She turned quickly and started walking back to her friends. 'I've survived in this city long before you got here, space boy.'

'Sorry I cared,' Lawrence shouted after her.

He had dinner in the Holiday Inn that evening.

Day four was interviews and evaluation. First time up, Lawrence was quizzed by two college officers about his background and motivation and likes and dislikes. He knew he had to be courteous and slightly self-deprecating and honest and relaxed and show he had a sense of humor as well as being overwhelmingly interesting. Tall order cramming those traits into ninety minutes while you're telling them your life history and slanting it so that your inquisitors believe they cannot possibly afford to let you slip out of the college.

The second interview was with an assistant to the deputy principal, a cheery old woman who dressed in clothes a century out of date, presumably to give her an authoritative schoolmarmish air. They sat on opposite sides of a steel-blue desk in her office, a fourth-story room with a good view out over the canal.

Data was scrolling down her desktop pane, which was just at the wrong angle for him to read it.

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