One glance at Cyril Coridan, whose eyes were glacial and whose lips wore the faintest hint of a smile at one corner, broke Simon into a cold sweat. When Sonny spoke again, unexpectedly, his words deepened that chilly sweat into profound grief.
“I detect no heartbeat from President Lendan’s auto-doc, Simon. There is no sign of respiration. The emergency physicians with him are attempting resuscitation. Their attempts are not proving successful.”
Simon closed his eyes against the terrible knowledge even as the Assembly, still unaware of Jefferson’s loss, came to its collective feet. Members were shuffling out of the room, voices raised in a babble of conversation as the group sorted itself out into committees and eddies of party affiliation that swirled through the main current of exiting dignitaries. Simon was abruptly exhausted. He remained where he was, partly to avoid being drawn into meaningless, stress-induced conversations and partly because there was not one soul in this chamber that genuinely wanted him there.
But before that thought had finished echoing through the bleakness gripping him, Simon saw her. She was pushing against the tide of outbound politicians, determined to get into the room. For long moments, Simon literally couldn’t believe the evidence of his own eyes. Kafari was in Klameth Canyon, with her family, watching the broadcast. She couldn’t possibly be only ten meters away — and closing fast, at that — shoving her way through the outbound crowd. He couldn’t move, stared in rising amazement as she plowed toward him, a naval cruiser cutting through the chaos of enemy fire to reach her destination.
Him.
The look on her face as she closed the final distance between them scared Simon silly. Fierce. Gentle. Beautiful. Ravaged eyes brimmed with tears and pride and compassion. He couldn’t speak, couldn’t move, couldn’t comprehend how she’d come to be here at all. She hesitated for just one heartbeat, one hand lifting to touch his face with a gesture that reached through the pain, the agony of loneliness, the blackened cinders of memory. Then both arms were around him, strong and loving, and Simon’s world changed forever. He crushed her so close, neither of them could breathe for long moments. When the dangerous storm of emotion finally waned, Kafari simply took him by the hand and said, “Let’s go home, Simon.”
He nodded.
He had done what he could.
Jefferson — and Jeffersonians — would have to do the rest.
PART TWO
Chapter Eleven
I
The doctor’s office was jammed.
Apparently, when folks were out of work, they had little better to do with their time than create more people. Not that Kafari minded, per se. She was too grateful for a chance at having Simon’s child — and too distracted by preelection news — to dwell on the urban population explosion underway. The ob-gyn clinic’s waiting area boasted the obligatory datascreen for viewing news programs, talk shows, and the mindless round of games and domestic operas most of Jefferson’s daytime broadcast stations featured as standard fare, but with the presidential election tomorrow — along with about half the seats in both the House of Law and Senate — virtually everything had been preempted for the biggest story in town.
That story was the Populist Order for Promoting Public Accord, the party that was promising to rescue Jefferson from all that ailed it, right down to the common cold and the clap. Virtually every broadcast station on Jefferson was carrying live feed from an open interview with Nassiona Santorini, reigning queen of POPPA. The epitome of urban sophistication, Nassiona’s loveliness arrested the eye and held most men spellbound. Her hair, dark and lustrous, conformed to a simple, uncluttered style popular with working women. Subdued colors and expensive fabrics, exquisitely cut to create an illusion of simplicity and unpretentiousness, served to impart an air of quiet, competent strength. Her voice, low and sultry, was never hurried, never strident, weaving a spell of almost mournful concern, threaded with quiet indignation at the miscarriages of justice she so earnestly enumerated.
“—that’s exactly what it is,” she was saying to Poldi Jankovitch, a broadcaster whose popularity had risen to stunning new heights as he trumpeted the glorious message POPPA was selling to all comers. “The proposed military draft is nothing less than a death sentence with one deeply disturbing purpose: deporting the honest, urban poor of this world. We’re held in literal slavery under the guns of a ruthless off-world military regime. The Concordiat’s military machine knows nothing about what we need. What we’ve suffered and sacrificed. Nor do they care. All they want is our children, our hard-earned money, and our natural resources, as much as they can rape out of our ground at gunpoint.”
“Those are fairly serious charges,” the broadcaster said, producing a thoughtful frown. “Have you substantiated those claims?”
Lovely brows drew together. “Simon Khrustinov has already told us everything we need to know. Colonel Khrustinov was very clear about the Dinochrome Brigade’s agenda. We send our young people to die under alien suns or we pay a staggering penalty. The Concordiat’s so-called ‘breach of contract’ clause is nothing short of blackmail. It would destroy what little of our economy is intact after six months with John Andrews at the helm. When I think of the horrors Colonel Khrustinov’s testimony inflicted on the innocent children watching that broadcast, it breaks my heart, Pol, it just breaks my heart.”
Kafari put down the book she’d been reading in a desultory fashion and gave Nassiona’s performance her full attention. That urbane little trollop was maligning the most courageous man on Jefferson — and the sole reason Nassiona was still alive, to sit there and spin lies about him.
She was leaning forward, voice throbbing with emotional pain. “I’ve spoken to frightened little girls who wake up screaming, at night, because of what that man said. Those children are traumatized, terrified out of their minds. It’s unforgivable, what he said during an open, live broadcast. How the Brigade considers a man as cold and battle-hardened as a robot to be fit for command — let alone defense of an entire, peaceful society — is a question POPPA wants answered.”
Women in the waiting room were starting to mutter, agreeing in angry tones.
“And we’ve all seen,” Nassiona added, voice artfully outraged, “what that monstrous machine he commands is capable of, haven’t we? How many homes were destroyed by so-called friendly fire? How many people who died were killed unnecessarily by that thing’s guns?”
The clever little bitch… Nassiona didn’t need to answer those questions. They weren’t meant to be answered. Just by asking them, she’d implanted the notion that there was an answer, a horrible answer, without ever having to actually come right out and make an accusation she couldn’t support. Judging by the angry buzz running through the waiting room, the tactic was working.
Nassiona leaned forward, posture and voice conveying the urgency of her worry. “POPPA has spent a great deal of its own money trying to discover just what Khrustinov and that machine of his are legally allowed to do. It’s terrifying, Pol. Just terrifying. At odds with everything Jefferson has ever believed in. Did you know that Bolos are supposed to be switched off between battles? As a routine precaution to ensure the safety of civilians? Yet that death machine on our soil is never turned off. It watches us, day and night, and what it thinks…”