Pohl, Frederik – Eschaton 2 – The Siege Of Eternity

The obvious place for them to be was the Communications Center. That was the first place Hilda looked, but when she had looked in every other place she could think of she went back there. At least there she could get some idea of what was happening, although what was happening seemed to be only that half the population of the planet Earth was asking questions that nobody here could answer. There were plaintive coded queries from the Bureau’s field managers by the score. There were begging-or pleading, or sometimes demanding-transmissions from fifty or sixty of the friendlies, the other national intelligence agencies with which the Bureau maintained some sort of cooperative relationship. Then there were the heavy hitters, the question from the Senate and the House, from State and Defense, from the White House itself. . . not to mention the endless flurry of concerned citizens who somehow had learned the Bureau’s least classified call codes and wanted to be informed. These last were the least bothersome. The only answers they got didn’t come from a human being; they were computer-generated and all they said was, Regret have no further information at this time. Please watch your local newscasts. The other queries could not be brushed off so lightly. They took personal responses from some human being. Tending to them was what a large fraction of the Bureau personnel on duty were doing with their time, but though the responses were more elaborate, the information they contained was about the same.

But the little that was different about them was interesting. Hilda gleaned a fact here and a hint there and slowly pieced together a picture. Why had there been no further transmissions from this other Dan Dannerman? Because the Comm officer on duty had been bright enough and quick enough to send an instant narrow-beam order to this Dannerman on the satellite, telling him to shut up, do nothing, just wait there for further instructions. And a lucky thing that, for once, this other Dannerman had done exactly what he was told. . . .

There was a quick, breathy sound of surprise from the group clustered around one screen. They had heard something.

Half the Comm Center immediately dropped what they were doing to see what it was they had heard. “It was a blip,” one of the technicians was saying excitedly. “No, nothing more. Just one quick pulse, but it definitely came from Starlab. Direct? No, I guess they’re somewhere out of sight in their orbit; it was relayed from Goldstone, but it was positively- Hey! There’s another one!”

It wasn’t one. It was two. Everyone heard them this time, and the screen showed them moving slowly across the field, two brightly jagged spikes. So Dannerman was communicating again, more or less.

That was enough for Hilda Morrisey.

She stood up, stretched, yawned and walked out of the Communications Center.

She knew what had happened, because it was what she would have done in the same case. What the closeted big brass had been doing was trying to figure some way of arranging a two-way conversation that the rest of the world couldn’t hear. Apparently Starlab wasn’t rigged for narrowcasting-well, it wouldn’t matter if it were. Reporters weren’t stupid, and they had resources of their own; undoubtedly there were forests of mobile antennae deployed all over Arlington, and probably all around Goldstone and the station on Wake and every other place where the Bureau might receive a signal. So they had worked out a simple code. The Bureau could ask a question, and Dannerman could answer by blipping his transmitter- something like one blip yes and two blips no-and maybe three blips for How the hell do you expect me to do THAT? But you had no hope of deciphering what the answers meant unless you knew what the questions had been.

She glanced at her watch. 0544. It would be daybreak in an hour or two, and she hadn’t had sleep, shower or a change of clothing since she got out of the bed in her New York City apartment nearly twenty-four hours ago. The lack of sleep wasn’t a big problem; the Bureau’s standard-issue wakeup pills took care of it. The problem was something else. Surreptitiously she bent her head for a quick sniff at her armpit, envious of the crisp cleanliness of everyone around her. She knew why that was. They had all been able to take enough time off to get cleaned and changed. That was the way it was when you were headquarters-based, you kept spares of everything on hand in case of emergency. If she were to give up the struggle and let them hand her that damned promotion-

But that was out of the question. Hilda Morrisey didn’t belong in this place. She was a field manager. She could make herself at home wherever the job took her, San Diego or New York, Berlin or Karachi. In those places she was the boss, and as long as her teams produced results nobody got in her thinning but still bravely blond hair. Here she was just one of a mob of fifty or sixty people of equivalent rank, with the top-heavy Bureau executive staff over them all.

Here, as a matter of fact, if anything she was in the way. But she couldn’t leave. Not only was this whole business a puzzle that Hilda Morrisey didn’t trust anyone but herself to solve, but it was her own agent who was at the core of it.

If she couldn’t leave, sleep or bathe, the next best thing was to eat. She sought out the field-grade mess, sat at a table in a corner, swallowed another wakeup pill and thought.

The mess was usually deserted this time of night-or morning. Not this one. There were half a dozen others at the tables, and the graveyard mess shift, looking aggrieved at their unusual workload, was clearing up the tables that still others had left. While she was waiting for someone to take her order she popped up the table’s screen and coded for the news summaries.

When a waiter approached Hilda dumped the screen and turned to give her order, but what he said was, “Excuse me, Colonel, but there’s a junior officer asking to speak to you.”

Hilda turned; the person waiting at the door was the interrogator, the junior agent, Merla Tepp. “Send her in,” she said. And then, when the woman had come to the table, “Sit down, Tepp. I didn’t expect to see you here for another couple of hours.”

“I came in early, Colonel. Colonel? I’m sorry to interrupt your meal but I wanted to apologize. I wouldn’t have given Agent Dannerman those crackers, except I didn’t know he was scheduled for surgery.”

“No, you didn’t,” Hilda agreed. “In fact, you don’t know it now. You especially don’t want to say anything about it to Agent Danner-man.”

“No, ma’am. Ma’am? I’m pretty sure he suspected it.”

Hilda surveyed the woman. “I’m damn sure he did; Dannerman’s a fine agent. Just don’t confirm it for him.” She was silent for a moment, studying Junior Agent Tepp while her fingers were absent-mindedly playing with the screen keys. After a moment, she said, “Actually, I would have done just what you did. Have you eaten?”

Tepp looked surprised. “No, but, Colonel, this dining room is for-“

Hilda overrode her. “What this dining room is for is for people like me and our guests. Waiter! We’ll have a couple of sandwiches and salads-if it’s that fruity dressing, put the dressing on the side.” She waved him away and told the girl, “That stuff is too damn sweet. You might prefer to eat the salad plain. I forgot to ask if you had any special dietary needs?”

No, ma am.

“Because God knows what the sandwiches will be.” She leaned back, studying the girl. Although she knew she had never seen Junior Agent Tepp before, there was something vaguely familiar about her. She couldn’t place the thought and abandoned it. “Actually,” she said, “apart from giving them the damn crackers, that wasn’t a bad move, putting the two of them together.”

Tepp looked rueful. “I was hoping that if they got to talking, they might say something useful.”

“Did they?”

“Not really, Colonel. I have the recordings-“

Hilda waved away the notion of looking at the recordings. “I didn’t think they would. Danno’s too smart for that, but it was worth a try. Means you were using a little initiative. I see by your file that you’ve only been with the Bureau for a little over a year.”

Merla Tepp did not show any surprise at finding that the colonel had called her file up on the table screen. “That’s right, ma’am. Mostly in the field in New Mexico, after I finished training.”

“Checking into the religious nut groups.” Hilda nodded. “I get the impression that you’ve been pretty interested in religion all your life.”

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