BOADICCA WASN’T THE LEAST CIVILIZED STATION Kusanagi-Jones had seen, but its status as a cargo transfer point rather than a passenger terminal was evident. New Amazonia’s trade was with other Diaspora worlds, a ragtag disorganization of colonies beyond the reach of Coalition growth—for now, anyway. (Kusanagi-Jones occasionally wondered if the Governors’ long-dead progenitors had understood that in their creation, they had delivered unto Earth’s survivors a powerful impetus to expansion.)
Boadicca reflected that isolation. The curved passageways were devoid of decoration, creature comforts, carpeting, kiosks, and shops. The only color was vivid stripes of contack, which scanned the watches of nearby pedestrians to provide helpful arrows and schematics. Kusanagi-Jones paused to study the patterns, and frowned. “Security risk,” he said, when Vincent looked a question. “Too easy for a third party to match up destination with traveler. Must be short on saboteurs and terrorists here.”
Vincent smiled, and Kusanagi-Jones read the comment in the air between them.
“Good old Earth,” Kusanagi-Jones agreed, lapsing out of common-pat and into a language that wasn’t taught in any school. “If you can’t bring it home, blow it up.”
Secrets within secrets, the way the game was always played. If they couldn’t find a way to bring New Amazonia under OECC hegemony with at least the pretense of consent—the way Vincent’s homeworld Ur had fallen—they would weaken the local government through any means necessary, until the colonials came crawling to Earth for help.
Colonies were fragile, short on population and resources. On Ur, for example, there had been the issue of sustainable agriculture, of a limited gene pool further damaged by the exigencies of long-distance space travel, of the need for trade and communication with other worlds. Where Ur maintained a pretense of sovereignty and had significant representation on the OECC’s Cabinet, successful sabotage leading to a failure of strength would result in a worse outcome for New Amazonia in the long run. And if Vincent and Kusanagi-Jones did their jobs as ordered, that was the plan, just as it had been on New Earth.
And just as on New Earth, Kusanagi-Jones didn’t intend to allow the plan to come to fruition. He also wasn’t foolish enough to think that a second act of self-sabotage would evade his superiors’ notice.
Vincent defocused as he checked his watch. “I’d kill for a coffee. But our luggage is on the lighter.”
“I hope it was well packed.”
Vincent put a hand on Kusanagi-Jones’s elbow as they drew up before a loading bay, one identical among many. Two green lights blinking beside the archway indicated their destination. “This is the end of the line.”
“You said it.” They walked forward, side by side, to link their documents into the lighter’s system so the pilot could tell them where to go.
The long New Amazonian day was inconvenient for creatures whose biorhythms were geared toward a twenty-four-hour cycle. Lag became a problem in more temperate climes, but Penthesilea was fortunate in that high heat provided a supremely adequate excuse for a midafternoon siesta. During more than two-thirds of the year, it was followed by the afternoon rains, which signaled the city’s reawakening for the evening round of business.
Lesa cheated and let Julian stay with her while she napped. Walter, the big khir that usually slept in her rooms, was nowhere in evidence—probably off with Katya—and Julian at six and a half local years was of the age when naps were an abomination before the god of men. He sat up at Lesa’s terminal while she flopped across the bed and closed her eyes. She’d seen the problem he was working. He said it was a minor modification of House’s program, though Lesa didn’t have the skills to even read it, let alone solve it, but Julian was so thoroughly engaged that she let him keep tapping away as she dozed, lulled by the ticking of the interface.
That sound blended into the patter of the rain on her balcony so that she didn’t rouse until House pinged her. She opened her eyes on yellow walls shifting with violent sunlight—entirely unlike the gray skies outside—and winced. “House, dial it down, please.”