My frustration had to lash at something; she was there. "You mean you didn't know what you were doing to Ratlit by leaving, Alegra? You mean you didn't know how much he wanted to get out, and how much he needed you at the same time? You couldn't see what it would do to him if you deprived him of the thing he needed and rubbed his nose in the thing he hated both at once? You couldn't guess that he'd pull something crazy? Oh, kid-girl, you talk about golden. You're the stupid one."
"Not stupid," she projected quietly. "Mean, Vyme. I knew he'd try to do something. I just didn't think he'd succeed. Ratlit is really such a child."
The frustration, spent, became rolling sadness. "Couldn't you have waited just a little longer, Alegra? Couldn't you have worked out the leaving some other way, not hurt him so much?"
"I wanted to get out, Vyme, to keep going and not be trapped. Like Ratlit wanted, like you want, like Sandy wants, like golden." For a moment I had forgotten Sandy and the golden. "Only I was cruel. I had the chance to do it and I took it. Why is that bad, Vyme? Unless, of course, that's what being free means."
A twitch in the eyelid again. It closed. The other stayed open.
"Alegra — "
"I'm a golden, Vyme. A golden. And that's how golden are. But don't be mad at me, Vyme. Don't. Ratlit was mean too, not to give me my medi — "
The other eye closed. I closed mine too and tried to cry, but my tongue was pushing too hard on the roof of my mouth.
Sandy came to work the next day, and I didn't mention his being fired. The teletapes got hold of it, and the leadlines tried to make the thing as sordid as possible:
X-CON TEENAGER (they didn't mention his novel) SLAYS JUNKIE SWEETHEART! DIES HORRIBLY!
They didn't mention the golden either. They never do.
Reporters pried around the hangar a while, trying to get us to say the ship was stolen. Sandy came through pretty well. "It was his ship," he grunted, putting lubricant in the gauntlets. "I gave it to him."
"What are you gonna give a kid like that a ship for? Maybe you loaned it to him. 'Dies horrible death in borrowed ship'. That sounds okay."
"Gave it to him. Ask the boss." He turned back toward the scaffolding. "He witnessed."
"Look, even if you liked the kid, you're not saving him anything by covering up."
"I didn't like him," Sandy said. "But I gave him the ship."
"Thanks," I told Sandy when they left, not sure what I was thanking him for, but still feeling very grateful. "I'll do you a favour back."
A week later Sandy came in and said, "Boss, I want my favour."
I narrowed my eyes against his belligerent tone. "So you're gonna quit at last. Can you finish out the week?"
He looked embarrassed, and his hands started moving around in his overall pouch. "Well, yeah. I am gonna leave. But not right away, boss. It is getting a little hard for me to take, out here."
"You'll get used to it," I said. "You know there's something about you that's, well, a lot like me. I learned. You will too."
Sandy shook his head. "I don't think I want to." His hand came out of his pocket. "See, I got a ticket." In his dirty fingers was a metal-banded card. "In four weeks I'm going back in from the Star-pit. Only I didn't want to tell you just now, because, well, I did want this favour, boss."
I was really surprised. "You're not going back to your group," I said. "What are you going to do?"
He shrugged. "Get a job, I don't know. There're other groups. Maybe I've grown up a little bit." His fists went way down into his pouch, and he started to shift his weight back and forth on his feet. "About that favour, boss."
"What is it?"
"I got to talking to this kid outside. He's really had it rough, Vyme." That was the first and last time Sandy ever called me by name, though I'd asked him to enough times before. "And he could use a job."
A laugh got all set to come out of me. But it didn't, because the look on his ugly face, behind the belligerence, was so vulnerable and intense. Vulnerable? But Sandy had his ticket; Sandy was going on.
"Send him to Poloscki's," I said. "Probably needs an extra grease-monkey. Now let me get back to work, huh?"
"Could you take him over there?" Sandy said very quickly. "That's the favour, boss."
"Sandy, I'm awfully busy." I looked at him again. "Oh, all right."
"Hey, boss," Sandy said as I slid from behind the desk, "remember that thing you asked me if I ever had when I was a kid?"
It took a moment to come back to me. "You mean an ecologarium?"
"Yeah. That's the word." He grinned. "The kid-boy's got one. He's right outside, waiting for you."
"He's got it with him?"
Sandy nodded.
I walked toward the hangar door picturing some kid lugging around a six-by-six plastic cage.
Outside the boy was sitting on a fuel hydrant. I'd put a few trees there, and the 'day'-light from the illumination tubes arcing the street dappled the gravel around him.
He was about fourteen, with copper skin and curly black hair. I saw why Sandy wanted me to go with him about the job. Around his waist, as he sat hunched over on the hydrant with his toes spread on metal base-flange, was a wide-linked belt: golden.
He was looking through an odd jewel-and-brass thing that hung from a chain around his neck.
"Hey."
He looked up. There were spots of light on his blue-black hair.
"You need a job?"
He blinked.
"My name's Vyme. What's yours?"
"You call me An." The voice was even, detached, with an inflection that is golden.
I frowned. "Nickname?"
He nodded.
"And really?"
"Androcles."
"Oh." My oldest kid is dead. I know it because I have all sorts of official papers saying so. But sometimes it's hard to remember. And it doesn't matter whether the hair is black, white, or red. "Well, let's see if we can put you to work somewhere. Come on." An stood up, eyes fixed, on me, suspicion hiding behind high glitter. "What's the thing around your neck?"
His eyes struck it and bounced back to my face. "Cousin?" he asked.
"Huh?" Then I remembered the golden slang. "Oh, sure. First cousins. Brothers if you want."
"Brother," An said. Then a smile came tumbling out of his face, silent and volcanic. He began loping beside me as we started off toward Poloscki's. "This — " he held up the thing on the chain " — is an ecologarium. Want to see?" His diction was clipped, precise and detached. But when an expression caught on his face, it was unsettlingly intense.
"Oh, a little one. With microorganisms?"
An nodded.
"Sure. Let's have a look."
The hair on the back of his neck pawed the chain as he bent to remove it.
I held it up to see.
Some blue liquid, a fairly large air bubble and a glob of black-speckled jelly in a transparent globe, the size of an eyeball; it was set in two metal rings, one within the other, pivoted so die globe turned in all directions. Mounted on the outside ring was a curved tongue of metal at the top of which was a small tube with a pin-sized lens. The tube was threaded into a bushing, and I guess you used it to look at what was going on in the sphere.
"Self-contained," explained An. "The only thing needed to keep the whole thing going is light. Just about any frequency will do, except way up on the blue end. And the shell cuts that out."
I looked through the brass eyepiece.
I'd swear there were over a hundred life forms with five to fifty stages each: spores, zygotes, seeds, eggs, growing and developing through larvae, pupae, buds, reproducing through sex, syzygy, fission. And the whole ecological cycle took about two minutes.