“I can imagine.”
Inside that vast region, Perri’s six dozen markers appeared as purple dots of light. With his free hand, he gestured, remarking, “This is a waste. All of it.”
“Excuse me?”
“You’re bright enough, I mean. But really, you and the rest of the uniforms are attacking this problem in all the obvious ways.” Pamir grimaced.
Knowing the captain’s temper, Quee Lee leaned forward and smiled as if everything depended on it. “Are you sure you don’t want a fresh drink?”
Pamir shook his head, then echoed the words, “ ‘The obvious ways.’ ”
“It’s about your missing captains. And that’s not just a reasonable guess on my part. One of your Master’s AIs leaked that news to its psychiatrist, who dribbled it to a lover, who mentioned it in public once… at least that’s the way I heard it happened…”
Pamir waited.
“You’ve been busy since. I know that, too. You’ve been interviewing all your old contacts… for how long now…?”
“Six weeks.”
“So how does my list compare? With the others, I mean.”
“It’s thorough. It’s reasonable. I’ll find what I want in one of those places.”
“Well, I don’t think so.”
Quee Lee pulled her hand away from her husband’s, and with her short and smooth index finger, she touched the lowest, most isolated of the violet lights.
“What’s this place?” she inquired.
Perri said, “An alien habitat.”
“For the leech,” the captain added. “It’s been abandoned for a long while now”
“Did the Master search it?” asked Perri.
He nodded. Then he added, “By proxy, and with some security people, too.”
“What I think,” Perri offered, “is that you have to accept a difficult fact first. Are you listening to me?”
“Always.”
“You know absolutely nothing about this ship.” Suddenly it was as if Perri were angry. This perpetually charming man, who lubricated every social circumstance with a glib shallowness, leaned close enough that his liquored breath mingled with the night odors of the ancient garden. “Absolutely nothing,” he repeated. “The same as everyone else.”
“I know enough,” Pamir countered, meaning it.
Perri shook his head, shook his empty hands. “The fuck you do! You don’t know who built this ship, or when, or even where it happened!”
The captain wanted that drink suddenly, but he decided to sit quietly and say nothing, letting his posture and his glare do their worst.
“And worst of all,” said Perri, “you don’t even know why this machine was built. Do you? Without compelling evidence, you can’t even pretend to have a workable theory. Just some half-broiled guesses that haven’t been changed in a hundred millennia. All of this is someone’s galaxy-hopping ship. You hope. Launched too late, or too soon. Although does anyone have any real evidence to say this is so?”
Pamir said, “No.”
Perri leaned back and grinned like a man who knew that he had just won an important fight, his hands knitted together and stuck behind his head.
Quietly, the captain said, “Marrow.”
“Excuse me?”
It was the first time that he had said the word since seeing the Master, and the only reason he used it now was to deflect the conversation.
“Do you know anyplace with that name?”
“Marrow?”
“That’s what I said. Do you know it?”
Perri closed his eyes, considering the single word until finally, with a grudging conviction, he could admit/Nothing conies to mind. Why? Where did you hear about it?”
“Make a half-broiled guess,” Pamir advised.
The man had to laugh. At himself and his companion, and at everything else, too. “Is that where the missing captains are?”
“If I only knew…”
Then Quee Lee said “Marrow” in a different way, using an extinct dialect. Straightening her finger, she said, “Long ago, before human beings were reengineered to live forever… back when we were simple and frail, marrow was in the middle of our bones. Not like today. Not laced through our muscles and livers, too.”
Both men turned and stared at her.
“You’re too young to remember,” she offered, as if giving them an excuse. Then she turned her finger, pointing down past the deepest purplish lights. “Marrow sometimes meant the center of things. Their heart. Their deepest core.”
Then she glanced up, smiling now, her very round, very old-fashioned face lit up by the map’s glow.
Again, Pamir thought that she was a beautiful woman.
“Look at the ship’s core,” she advised.
Quietly and almost politely, the two men enjoyed a good long laugh at poor Quee Lee’s expense.
Thirty-one
Pamir constructed a list of promising sites, then made foot-and-eye searches of each, always in disguise, always taking the sort of time and obsessive care that comes naturally to an immortal working alone. Over the next few years, he uncovered an ocean of sharp rumor, slippery lies, and dreamy half-sightings. As far as he could determine, the only certainty was that every sentient organism had seen the missing captains at least once, and judging by the sightings, the captains were everywhere. Even Pamir was infected with the hysteria. Missing colleagues appeared without warning. Old lovers, usually. Washen, more than not. Without warning, he would see a tall human woman casually strolling down a busy avenue, her gait and color and the bun of her gray and brown hair recognizable from half a kilometer away. Pamir would break into a sprint, and as he drew closer, a dead run. But by the time he reached Washen, she had turned into another handsome woman, flustered and perhaps a little flattered to have a strange man tugging on her arm. On a different occasion, he spotted Washen sitting cross-legged in the middle of an otherwise empty chamber, nude and elegantly beautiful. But in the time it took Pamir to approach, she turned into a statue twenty meters tall, and just when he convinced himself that this was his first genuine clue, her statue became nothing but a suggestive pile of badly lit rubble. Then it was a year later, and Washen was kneeling on a ledge among the purple epiphytes growing above the grave bar where Pamir had made camp. Glancing up, he saw her familiar face smiling at him, watching as he baked a fresh-killed chinook salmon. Then the wind gusted, and he heard Washen’s voice asking, “Enough for two?” But by then Pamir knew his mind, and he didn’t allow himself excitement. A gust of wind lifted, and Washen’s face turned to a knot of dead leaves. And Pamir shook his head, smiled at his own foolishness, then set the fish closer to the sputtering fire.
Passengers and the crew learned about his hunt, and for every conceivable reason, they led him astray.
Some wanted money for their lies.
Others begged for attention, for praise and love and fame.
While a few were so genuinely eager to please, they didn’t know they were lying, inflating half-memories with wishful thoughts, building coherent epics that could withstand every battery of physiological testing.
The missing captains were living with radical luddites somewhere in the Bottoms.
They had formed their own luddite community hidden inside an unmapped chamber somewhere beneath the Gossamer Sea.
They had been abducted by the Kajjan-Quasans—a tiny part-organic, part-silicon species who kept them as slaves and rode them like livestock.
A gel flow in the Magna district had entombed them.
Or there was the common, almost plausible story of bitter, vengeful aliens. Phoenixes were the preferred villains, though there were many worthy candidates. Whoever they were, they had returned to the ship in secret, and in retribution for the Master’s ancient crimes, they murdered her best captains.