I talked with Doppie. "I realize that you are on loan to us only to facilitate our travels between planets," I said. "But in this case, I would appreciate it if you would do me a greater favor."
She looked at me uncertainly. Like all woman of any age with whom I associate closely, she was somewhat taken with me; it is a power I have. Part of it may be the sheer notoriety inherent in my identity as Tyrant, and part my ability to read and relate to people. I disliked having to use her in this manner, but I saw no expedient alternative.
"You see, my secretary is what is known on Mercury as a mulattress: a female of mixed ancestry. The government will not accord her any status. It is true that she can emulate my sister—but if she is caught, there will be ugly complications. It will be better if she remains herself, and if you remain my sister, instead of going to the embassy. I would be most appreciative if—"
"Certainly, Tyrant," she said immediately. She wanted my gratitude. She was not aware that Forta was more than my secretary and nurse, though she did know about her ability to emulate others. Who could tell where the gratitude of the Tyrant might lead?
"Thank you, Doppie," I said, laying my hand on hers. As I said, I was using her, and I regretted it, but I would see that she was rewarded. I went on to explain that we might have to leave her with Smilo, but that he represented no menace to her. I had introduced her to him at the outset, and he had accepted her. In fact, he would protect her from any molestation by others.
The sun seemed monstrous here, more than twice the diameter as seen from Earth, and its radiation was ferocious. Our ship was suitably shielded, of course, but even the muted image on the screen was daunting. I felt hot, though the temperature within the ship was standard. I was afraid that some errant flame would lick out from that massive sphere and fry us without noticing. It was another kind of phobia; I seemed to be more subject to these in my infirmity.
Mercury was about the diameter of my home world, Callisto, but its density was triple, so it was a far more massive body. It had very little atmosphere, and took almost two months to rotate. Its surface was cratered like that of any barren body. In short, it seemed basically familiar to me. That helped, because I wanted to get onto land and out of the ambience of the huge sun.
We needed Mercury in the project because it was one of the richest sources of rare metals and crystals in the System. Gold, platinum, chromium, uranium, copper, manganese, diamonds, and of course iron—it was potentially as rich as Mars, but the difficulties of sunside mining inhibited operations. We had secured our iron requirements, but still had need of the others, and this planet could represent an enormous boost in our supply of raw materials. But the government of the Republic of South Mercury was notoriously tough, and I knew that negotiations would be difficult. As Tyrant of Jupiter I had not gotten along with Mercury well, for it exploited its majorities shamefully for the benefit of the minority, and there was chronic hunger and even starvation in many of its nations. There was little reason to suppose relations would be better now that I was out of power.
Of course I had power now; it just happened to be less direct. I suspected I would have to invoke it all too soon. I sent a coded message to Khukov, back on Saturn, alerting him; he could still pull the plug on this one if he chose. But he let it ride.
We put our ship in the assigned parking orbit, and a Mercury shuttle took the four of us down to the surface. We landed near the South Pole, at Cape Dome, one of the capitals. The advantage of this site was that the polar regions suffered neither the intensity of the month-long day nor the appalling cold of the month-long night; here it was always compromise. Not that the natives chose to gaze out upon the barren surface; the savings were mostly in terms of maintenance and access.
Inside, the city was much like any other, and I felt better immediately. But my tension about the physical environment was replaced by psychological tension. Though there was no direct allusion, it was evident by the signals that the authorities here resented the presence of Forta, and would gladly have relegated her to one of the segregated subsidiary domes.
But I was a foreign dignitary, and she was my secretary, and they could not impose their sanctions on her without suffering an interplanetary incident.
We reached our accommodations and proceeded promptly to my dialysis; this preliminary settling-in period was the best time for it, so that I could not be caught short later. While I rested I wondered what form Forta would assume this time. For I knew she felt more comfortable in a guise, despite my assurance that I now accepted her for herself. She was a mimic, a mime, and she was astonishingly good at it, and I would not deny her the pleasure of proving it as often as she chose.
But I fell asleep, and slept the night, so missed whatever it might have been, to my retrospective regret. For in the morning I had the first official meeting with the representative of South Mercury, which it seemed had to be personal, not holo. How the old ways linger, even in this modern age!
Doppie, as Spirit, accompanied me, leaving Forta to keep Smilo company. Doppie kept silent, letting me do all the negotiation. Though the Mercurians knew that my sister was the power behind my throne, they were happy to have her assume a subservient role for this official function.
After due formalities, we got down to business. "The Triton Project needs the resources of Mercury," I said. "We are uncertain of the structural stresses entailed in materialization and travel elsewhere in the galaxy. We intend to construct the first colonization ships to the most rigid specifications. For this we require diamonds, chrome, platinum—in fact, almost the full spectrum of the products you export. We are prepared to pay in System monetary units and in a favorable allotment for your own colonization of other stars. I am here to make the offer and an agreement."
"South Mercury should be interested in your proposal," the man said carefully. "However, there are certain considerations."
Oh-oh. I had thought I was past the worst when I left Mars; now, as I read his body, I realized that there was trouble here. "Considerations?" I asked guardedly, hoping that he was not going to raise the issue I feared.
"Your project, as we understand it, is sponsored jointly by Saturn and Uranus."
"True, with Rising Sun and Titania as major cosponsors."
"Some of these planets are known for a certain position on social integration."
He had raised the issue. How much easier it would have been had his government elected to yield to economic benefit and set aside its racial policy! "You refer to their objection to apartheid," I said, reading the confirmation as I spoke.
"In past times, such planets have attempted to base economic decisions on social criteria," he said grimly. "We regard this as improper. We do not attempt to dictate to Saturn how it handles its Phobos question." He meant Saturn's oppression of those of Jewish background, preventing them from emigrating to Phobos. He had a point. "Or to Uranus how it handles its Mars question." Nations of Uranus, notably Prussia, had imported many workers from Mars, and then expelled them when their economies weakened. Another point. "We fail to appreciate why these planets should be concerned with our internal affairs."
"I am from Jupiter," I said cautiously. "I have no part of the social problems of other planets, and do not seek to meddle in them. I seek only to establish mutually beneficial trade relations."
"The society of Jupiter became remarkably egalitarian during the Tyrancy," he said. "It is so no more. Perhaps you should return to that planet."
I was getting news from all over about the deteriorating state of Jupiter society! "Perhaps I should," I agreed. "But first I must complete my mission here. The Triton Project will be in a superior bargaining position for negotiations with Jupiter if the resources of Mercury are available to it."
"Mercury will be happy to join the worthy effort of galactic colonization," he said. "Provided it is arranged on a businesslike basis, without irrelevant issues."
I had to concede the merit of his case. I had no brief for this nation's trea
tment of its citizens of mixed blood, who were given no part in their government, but it was true that my mission related to trade, not morality. But two things interfered. First, I knew that neither Saturn nor Uranus would reverse its prior objections to the social system of South Mercury. Second, I realized, through my continued reading of this man, that he was lying. Mercury did not want to join the Triton Project. This stunned me, leaving me at a loss for words.
South Mercury was in fact using the apartheid issue as a pretext for its denial of an agreement it had no intention of making. But why? The deal I proffered would be of enormous economic benefit to this planet, which was chronically starving for cash, and many of whose residents were literally starving too. The sanctions established by other planets had damaged the economy of South Mercury severely. This offer of mine could at one stroke restore this planet's economic health. The amelioration of apartheid, just enough to make it acceptable to Saturn and Uranus, who did want the stone and metal riches of this planet, would be a tiny price to pay for the benefit received. I knew that the government understood this. Why, then, was it uninterested?
"You baffle me," I said frankly. "Why don't you want to join?"
"I did not say that."
"You're talking to the Tyrant!" I snapped. "I know when you are lying. Your government doesn't want to make any deal; the social issue is merely a pretext."
He nodded. "So it is true; you do read people."
"It is true. Now answer my question."
He glanced to the side, evidently seeking advice. In a holo encounter this would have been easy, but this personal meeting meant that there were no advisers to the side. "I regret I am not authorized to—"
"And why did you insist on a personal meeting, instead of a holo, when you had no intention of dealing?" I demanded.
He just looked at me, unable to respond because he was not authorized to tell the truth, knowing that I would immediately recognize a lie.
"What the hell are you up to?" I demanded.
He did not reply, but I read him anyway: They were indeed up to something.
"The Tyrant is not accustomed to treatment like this!" I said, some genuine anger developing.
"Perhaps it would be better if you departed the planet promptly," he said. Now he was telling the truth.
But the Triton Project really did need the resources of Mercury, if the colonization effort were not to be severely restricted. Most of the System's reserves of chromium were on Mercury, for example, and this was vital for high-grade steel. I had hoped to deal amicably, but if that proved to be impossible, I still had to deal. "Not without an understanding," I said.
He did not answer. In a huff, I departed, virtually towing Spirit behind me. I was angry, but more than that I was afraid. Something was wrong here, and I could not fathom what it was, and knew that I had better do so promptly.
We made our way back to our suite—and found disaster. Smilo was unconscious, and Forta was gone. Evidently the suite had been flooded with some kind of gas and my secretary abducted during my absence.
Now part of it became clear: why they had insisted on a personal interview. They had wanted to get me away from the suite. That was what their representative had not been permitted to tell me. His job had been simply to occupy me long enough to enable them to do their dirty work. He had succeeded.
Were age and frailty causing me to lose my grip on the realities of politics? I had never suspected the trap! That bothered me almost as much as the trap itself.
But almost immediately the more sober aspects of my situation claimed my attention. Without Forta, I could not dialyze; only she knew the procedures. If I tried it alone, I could botch it, and that could be fatal. Doppie had no expertise here; I could explain the essentials to her, but it would be awkward and chancy business. Dialysis is not a casual thing. My effective time here was now limited to two or three days; thereafter I would be on a descending spiral of oblivion as I was poisoned by my own internal wastes. Had Mercury planned on this?
No, the dialysis unit was untouched; it was unlikely that the intruders had even recognized its nature. They had struck with surgical expertise, taking only the thing they had come for: Forta. The predicament this put me in was coincidental.
Forta. Why had they wanted her? Because they were so angry that one of mixed blood should be housed in a Saxon residence? But it would have made no sense to aggravate the Tyrant that way, especially when completion of the deal would have brought departure anyway.
Forta was from this planet. Amnesty Interplanetary had rescued her from torture and probably death at the hands of this repressive regime. Had they bided their time, waiting for her to return so they could revenge themselves on her for her crime of surviving? Because one look at her face betrayed the nature of this government more explicitly than any words could have? Again, this seemed unlikely; I doubted they had even kept a record of her. Probably hundreds of babies had been tortured, and one more made no difference. Once she was gone, they would have ignored her, or perhaps even been satisfied to have her represent a lesson for others of mixed blood who might think of coming to this planet.
What, then? I had discovered that South Mercury did not want to deal. Could this be related?
There it was! They knew I would be hard to dissuade, so they had added this fillip of persuasion. If I departed the planet promptly, mission incomplete, I could have my secretary back. She was hostage to my decision.
Black rage overcame me. I may have faded out for a moment, for I found Doppie sponging off my face. "Are you all right, sir?" she asked. "I think you fainted."
"Yes, thank you, Spirit," I agreed, reminding her that she had a role to play. The suite was surely bugged. "You see to Smilo; I have a call to make."
She went to tend to the tiger, and I made my call. It was to the official government number.
"Have you killed her?" I rasped as the bland face appeared in the air before me.
Evidently my call had been expected. "By no means, Tyrant," the man said. "She is merely being detained for clarification of her status. It seems that she went out without the proper identification, and was picked up—"
Forta had not gone out; I hardly needed to read the man to know that lie. She had been abducted from the suite. They knew I knew that; that was not the point.
"Show me that she is safe," I said.
"Why, certainly, sir," he agreed. "This is merely a formality."
The formality of forcing me to depart the planet in a hurry. They either knew or suspected that Forta was my lover. That was surely another sore point with them: fraternization between races. In a moment the picture of Forta formed. She was in a prison cell, alone, seeming dazed but unhurt. "Forta," I said.
She glanced up. "Sir," she said. She never got a role confused; she was my secretary now.
"Where are you?" I asked.
"Temporary detention center," she said. "I—it seems I should not have gone out—"
"An understandable error," I said. Obviously she understood what must not be said.
"I'm sure it will be cleared up soon," she said. "But, sir—if you would do me the kindness of bringing me my purse?"
"I shall," I said.
Her image faded, to be replaced by that of the official. "Visiting is permitted?" I inquired curtly.
"Naturally, Tyrant. We are a civilized planet. It will only take a day or so for her papers to be corrected. You will have time to arrange for your transportation out, and should be able to pick her up at the time you depart."
Uh-huh. "But I will bring her her purse now. Please provide me with the address."
"Tyrant, we shall be happy to transport you there." Oh, they were the soul of overt courtesy, knowing that they had me by the private hairs.
I nodded curtly. "In five minutes," I said.
Then I checked for Forta's purse, which rested beside her bed. I knew it had her special makeup in it, and two masks, and two wigs. She was able to emulate either Spirit or myself on shor
t notice. The equipment was nonmetallic and would not alert the detection beams of the prison. I took the purse and rejoined Doppie.
"Spirit, I hope Smilo can survive without our company for a while longer," I said. "We must visit my secretary, and deliver her purse to her. I realize you are upset, but please say nothing until we return."
Doppie nodded, having no idea what I was up to, but ready to play her part. She was, as I have said, a good woman.
I took her arm, and we exited the suite. An escort was awaiting us. He conducted us to a vehicle, and we rode to the detention center. It was an imposing structure of stone; this was one resource Mercury had in quantity.
We were permitted to enter the cell with Forta, and to talk with her privately. The government of South Mercury was making a show of accommodation, but the point was clear: my secretary would remain a prisoner until I left the planet. They had cobbled together a legal rationale for this that I could not disprove with the resources at my disposal. They would let Spirit and me out, but not Forta; I could not change that. This was the convention of this sort of thing; the reality was that my secretary was as much captive as if chained naked to a rock in a deep tomb.
But I was not exactly helpless. I had formulated my plan on the way, and knew that Forta understood. She had, after all, been my secretary for three years, and knew how to study people so as to emulate them; she was familiar with the way my mind worked. I hoped she grasped enough to follow all the way through.
I took her in my arms and kissed her. I knew there would be a camera on us, and we had to get out of its coverage. The authorities might assume that I was simply trying to aggravate them by this gesture. "Where?" I whispered in her ear as we embraced.