"If I hear that `In it for the ride, not for the cargo' again," he says, "I'm going to
break someone's nose."
The Dodger looks at him. "You used to say that yourself."
Cowboy takes a drink of his lukewarm coffee and hopes the caffeine will keep him going for
another few hours. "Since then I've seen the light," he says.
Jimi rubs his neck muscles. Cowboy wonders if it's time to tell him about the Dodger's
chat with the executive from the Korolev Bureau, who had come up the mountain at Dodger's
invitation to discuss a united front against Arkady and Tempel. The woman had coldly refused to
deal unless the Dodger agreed to terms that would amount to total surrender-becoming a subdivision
of Korolev instead of a part of Tempel, and doing it without a fight.
Korolev's interests were not being threatened here on the ground, she'd pointed out, and
if they were to get involved, they'd want it to be worth their while. The Dodger had turned her
down and concluded Korolev was perfectly happy to see Tempel divert its funds to a war outside its
(75 of 137) [7/17/03 11:28:34 PM]
attempted takeover of Korolev, but that the company would probably never agree to financing a
popular movement against one of the blocs, even a bloc that was an enemy.
The panzerboys would have to fight without bloc backing. Cowboy thought it was just as
well. In his view, accepting an arrangement with Korolev would have made him no better than
Arkady.
Cowboy finishes his cup of coffee and knows that another cup isn't going to help, that
he's already turning fuzzy, and if he turns on his hardwiring, he'll blaze bright for maybe an
hour, and then after his reserves are used up he'll crash and burn. So he decides to give it one
more try and glides back into the interface, seeing the colored framework, the girders and
stanchions and interweaving lattices that represent Tempel Pharmaceuticals I.G.
Thibodaux has built this structure, a four-dimensional representation of the Tempel bloc
and its subsidiaries. Most of it's on the public record, but some of it-particularly the
connection with Arkady-is built up out of inference. The totality of it is enormous, Tempel's
skeletal cool fingers straining several thousand different dishes in search of its profit. Tempel
is so diverse that it's difficult to get a grasp on any one operation; it blends in with a hundred
more, and its tracks disappear among the others. Astronomical amounts of private-issue currency
flash through the files, pour down a thousand chutes, disappear into some nameless laundry and
then reappear elsewhere, no clue as to their origin. Names fly up for brief periods and then
disappear into the fourth dimension, moving timewise through the network, not following what
Cowboy can discern of the organizational structure. Cowboy begins following individual names,
trying to get a glimpse of the way the top people move through the net. Some guy named Marcus
Thorn, a name picked at random, begins in the experimental drugs division in old Earthside New
York, transfers to the Orbital Research Group when the main drug action climbed out of the well,
then shifts with the title of vice president of personnel to something called Acceleration Group
Maximum, run by an up-and-comer named Henri Couceiro. After six years in Maximum, Thorn shifts to
the Luna Division of the Pathology Department. There Cowboy finds another name, Liu McEldowny, who
had been with the Acceleration Group before moving to the Luna Division a year before. Just before
the Rock War, according to the movement flag in the Luna Division box, McEldowny moves back to the
Acceleration Group, stays for a month after the surrender and then heads downside to the Orbital
Freeport Control Commission, which Cowboy knows was the blocs' organizing group for setting up the
Florida, Texas, and California Free Zones.
Thorn stays on the moon for another two years, then becomes chairman of the Solar Power
Satellite Building Committee, which, despite its name, seems mainly concerned with personnel. Here
he reports to Couceiro, who has popped up again as chief executive officer of the entire
pharmaceutical Division. From the SPS Building Committee Thorn moves laterally to a vice
presidency in the Security Division before, two months later, being called to the board of
directors upon Couceiro's assumption of the chairmanship of the whole organization. On the board,
Thorn holds a number of portfolios, including Development and, once again, Freeport Control. One
of his cohorts, big surprise, is none other than Liu McEldowny.
Cowboy traces McEldowny downward through time, finds another connection with Couceiro when
the two were numbers one and five, respectively, in the Erosion Control Subsidiary, which was busy
mortgaging and then foreclosing on tens of thousands of acres of eroded Ukrainian farmland. Cowboy
wanders up the time lattice again and watches the composition of the board of directors shift,
seeing a flurry of activity around the time Couceiro became chairman, the whole board contracting
from twenty-four members to fifteen, with a minor reshuffle among those who remain. He follows
each of the departing members and discovers that three die and several of the rest are transferred
to major positions elsewhere in the company-positions that are, nevertheless, in places like
Antarctica and Ceres. Some of the others are shuttled out when they undergo a crystal-medium brain
transfer into another body, taking demotions until the board can determine if their performance
has been hampered by the transfer. Cowboy concludes that Couceiro is at this point consolidating
his hold on the board and keeping his opposition divided by sending them out into far-off
assignments in the field.
There is another flurry of movement on the board just two years later, directors swapping
portfolios back and forth, another director shuttling out entirely. Cowboy can see a pointer
floating in the lattice indicating a news item culled from a MediaNet screamsheet report. He
follows the pointer and absorbs the report, discovering that this latest movement represents the
collapse of an attempt by the old chairman, Albrecht Roon, to regain his office, a move that fails
by only a single vote. Before Couceiro's assumption of power Roon had been chairman for eighteen
years, before getting his brain shunted to a new body at the age of seventy-nine and being demoted
to the Asteroid Resource Commission-a major post in a bloc stronger in space transportation, but
at Tempel the equivalent of Siberia. From there Roon attempts his comeback and fails, one of his
(76 of 137) [7/17/03 11:28:34 PM]
supporters on the board being retired permanently and replaced with one of Couceiro's people, Roon
himself being moved downside to head South American Marketing.
That suggests a major fall from grace, from chairman atop the gravity well to exile in
South America within the space of a few years. Cowboy follows Roon's career up and down the Tempel
construct, then follows Couceiro's, something he's done before. The available information doesn't
seem very forthcoming. He's going to have to dig deeper.
He lets the interface fade from his mind and discovers that the Dodger is gone, probably
for his afternoon nap, and that Jimi has fallen asleep in his chair, his drink sitting between his
thighs, collecting dew. Cowboy quietly leaves the house and gets into his Packard, then cycles up
the engine and moves down the switchback paths to the old town of Cimarron, built long ago by that
cheerful old scoundrel Lucien Bonaparte Maxwell, friend to Christopher Carson and William Bonney,
the whole town built because Maxwell owned the largest land grant in the history of the world and
thought there ought by rights to be a town on it. Cowboy studs the Packard's computer into a phone
line and starts calling libraries.
The data's easy enough to find now that he knows what he's looking for in the library
crystal. Roon was born in Bonn, went to school in Leipzig and collected a degree in chemistry,
then joined Tempel Pharmaceuticals I.G. in the same year it began building its first orbital drug
factory. His first assignment in space was shortly thereafter, and the company kept him busy
shuttling up and down for a decade or so, before the company headquarters went into orbit and Roon
went up with them.
Once he was Tempel's chairman, he pushed for independence for the Orbitals, at one point
ordered his jocks into the asteroid belt in defiance of the Space Control Commission, something
that took a lot of nerve considering the fact that Tempel wasn't a major mining company and had
only a few ships to send. Roon was a founder of the first Orbital Bloc Congress, second in power
only to Grechko. It appears that many of the Bloc Congress programs originated with Roon, but he
was willing to stay out of the spotlight and let Grechko take the heat for them. After the Rock
War, Roon was behind the policy of the balkanization of the major Earth powers and the
establishment of the Free Zones under Orbital supervision.
Henri Couceiro was born, of Brazilian parents, in orbit when Roon was still on Earth
working to finish his degree. He was proud of the fact he'd never set foot on Earth, and one of
his more controversial public statements, uttered shortly after his assumption of the
chairmanship, called the planet "just another big asteroid."
Making that statement seems to have been one of Couceiro's few impolitic moves. The
precise movements of his career seem occluded from time to time, but he seems to have spent the
early period moving from place to place in the big Tempel structure as something of an executive
troubleshooter, rearranging programs and structures, making executives toe the line, firing
incompetents. His big break came with his becoming the head of Acceleration Group Maximum, which
Cowboy is no longer surprised to discover was a liaison team with the other blocs, dedicated to
decreasing the Orbitals dependence on Earth by the sharing of resources and the creation of new
technologies. It was also Group Maximum that developed the military plans that led to victory for
the blocs in the Rock War and the sharing of the spoils afterward.
Acceleration Group Maximum seems to have made Couceiro's name. He stayed out of political
positions after Group Maximum's policies were put into place, concentrating instead on developing
a working knowledge of the bureaucracy, eventually moving to head of the Pharmacological Division
and a seat on the board. From there he arranged the board's refusal to allow Roon to continue in
his seat following his brain transfer-apparently the vote was taken after Roon's mind was already
in its crystal matrix-and the first of Roon's demotions was assured.
Cowboy drifts out of Thibodaux's model and thinks for a moment about Couceiro and Roon,
the split between the architect of Orbital independence and the man who helped implement Roon's
schemes. He'll have to run through the model again, picking out each man's allies on the board and
in the bureaucracy, trying to see if there might be some leverage there.
But now, to Cowboy's surprise, there seems to be some movement in the complicated
architecture of the model, red figures appearing along the eye-face lattice, pulsing in rhythm,
resolving into letters that march along Tempel's girders and supports...
COWBOYHELPRENOCOWBOYHELPRENOCOWBOYHELPRENO
Adrenaline shrieks up Cowboy's neck. He screams and yanks the studs from his head, the
interface snapping out of his mind. Looking at the silent crystal display in front of him, he sits
in the Packard and hears his heart crashing in his chest. He reaches a trembling hand out of the
car window and yanks the comp's cable from the telephone.
They've found him, he thinks. There are people on their way to kill him, and he hasn't
brought a bodyguard with him. He looks over each shoulder, trying to decide whether to head
(77 of 137) [7/17/03 11:28:34 PM]
straight back to the Dodger's or try an evasive pattern through the mountains.
He leans back against the cushioned headrest and puts his hands on the instrument panel in
front of him, straightening his arms, trying to stop the trembling. He's got to face in again to
get the car moving, but he doesn't want to touch the studs, to see those glowing crystal letters
pulsing out their message.
Cowboy moves forward and clears everything out of the car's RAM, which should take care of
any more ghostly communications from Reno, then reaches out and takes the studs in his hands. The
trembling has almost gone away.
He puts them in his head. He's heading straight back to the Dodger's, at the fastest
possible speed. He's pretty sure he can run any pursuers off the road.
Time to find out, anyway.
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Michael the Hetman lights a cigarette with a match that trembles. His eyes are deep and
rimmed in red. "Too bad," he said. "I was afraid my source might not be genuine. I'm sorry I was
right."
"Those people were good," Sarah says. Fear rushes along her nerves in little packets,
prickling the down on her arms. She stuffs her hands in her pockets to control her own shaking.
Her mouth is dry and longs for the touch of cool citrus; tastes instead the dry refrigerated air
of the Hetman's study.
Michael reaches for a squeeze bottle of vodka, lets it fall in a thin silver stream into a
pair of glasses. "It seemed worth a chance," he says.
Sarah has spent the night huddled in a doorway with only her heartbeat for company, that
and the taste of her own sweat. Earlier she'd been waiting with five other people for the Laffite
snagboy that was supposed to come by with an attaché case of pharmaceuticals and only a single
amateur guard, but either the information was part of a setup or the snagboy had smelled something
in the air, because suddenly there were two big armored cars wailing down the street with muzzles
pointing from the black reflective windows, gunfire echoes ringing from the hard surfaces of the
buildings as teflon-coated bullets drilled the concrete and turned brick to powder. The people
inside the cars were hardwired and fast, and though Sarah was careful enough to choose a post with
an escape route, it was still only luck that she got away, the cars chasing others while she ran
through a night that had become a shadowy monster with humid compost breath and infrared scanners
for eyes, its laugh like the chatter of an automatic weapon. The fight had lasted only a few
seconds. The rest of the night hours were spent in the doorway, feeling the moist urban grit of
the sweating wall against her cheek, waiting while the cars patrolled the broken streets, looking
for survivors.
She should put some money down on tonight's body count. It's going to be higher than
usual.
Sarah takes the glass of vodka from Michael's hand and lets it ease slowly down her
throat, a cold alcohol fire. "It could have bought me another week," Michael says, and sits in a
deep chair of chrome and black leather. He looks at her with his liquid spiderwebbed eyes.
"I've got it worked out," he says quietly. "I've got eight months before everything falls
apart. Your bringing back those crystal hearts gave me one of those months."
He leans back in the chair, gazing at the dark acoustic tiles of the ceiling. Even holding
the arms of the chair his hands tremble. "Tempel cut off my sources, but I can get by with
hijacking for a while, bribery, running things out of my labs-all that and what I have stored. As
soon as the war started I borrowed as much as I could, because I knew my credit would never be as
good. I wanted to be in debt to a lot of people, I wanted me to be worth something to them alive.
"
Sarah closes her eyes, seeing night, sudden movement, spotlight glare, the sheen of laser
holograms reflecting off the polished, speeding hood of a rushing car.
"I can fight the war unimpaired for six months," Michael says, his soft accent the only
(78 of 137) [7/17/03 11:28:34 PM]
sound in this soundproofed fortress. "After that I won't be able to pay off the police anymore,
and then they'll start raiding me. Income will start to decline. After seven months I won't be
able to pay my Maximum Law guards and I'll have to hire nonprofessionals. Sooner or later one of
my friends will decide I'm hurting him too badly just by staying alive."
Sarah opens her eyes to see Michael looking at her, an amused expression on his face.
"You're the only one I can trust with this," he says. "You're the only one who can't
betray me. They want you, too."
"I can't help, Hetman," she says. "I can't change reality."
"I know you can't," the Hetman says. His gaze turns from her, becoming the eyes of a
gambler focused on the wheel as he waits for the silver ball to find his slot. "We can just keep
moving," he says. "Just keep things in the air. And when they fall"-he gives a little shrug-"we'll
try to run, and we can hope we no longer matter enough for them to come after us."
Sarah looks into the vodka glass, seeing it reflect Michael's dark refrigerated interior.
Try not to matter, she thinks, perhaps they won't notice and they'll let you live. Matter the way
Michael and Cowboy matter and they'll take you down. Only the rats survive, never the lions.
And rats never guard each other's back.
ORBITAL COPS RAID TEXAS WAREHOUSE
HOME-BUILT WEAPONS PLANT UNCOVERED
ROCKETS BELIEVED USED IN SMUGGLING
Pony Express, a piece of the night in motion, glides along its parabola like a bow over a
violin, making delicate music. Cowboy's in the eye-face again, feeling the cold air whispering
over the matte-black fuselage of the delta, his nerves thrilling to the wind-whisper of liberation
as he lofts high over the Rockies. His metal eyes search the night sky for infrared signatures.
This isn't a mail run. Cowboy is hunting.
He had driven home like a madman after the day in Cimarron, feeling Reno or whatever was
behind Reno clawing its way up his back like a rush of adrenaline. He'd seen no one that day, no
one following, not even a suspicious glance. No sign of an enemy in the next two weeks. He hasn't
faced into a telephone since. Whatever was behind that message, it is more than Cowboy wants to
deal with.
An amber blip flashes in Cowboy's radar display, and Cowboy looks at it carefully. One of
the rare commercial flights, he concludes, it's too high to be Arkady's plane.
The delta cuts neatly through the air, its vast power muted, under careful control.
Arkady's plane is small and the Pony Express radars aren't very efficient and have a limited range-
until now Cowboy's been much more interested in detecting the location of enemy radars than in
using his own. But he knows Arkady's up here somewhere. The airfield receptionist, on the Dodger's
payroll, has passed on the information that his plane took off just before sunset, and that he was
on it, his hair still rising and changing colors every few seconds.
Neurotransmitters tickle Cowboy's crystal, and the Pony Express banks and sweeps eastward
over Medicine Bow. Electronic ears are extended for the sound of microwave transmissions. Distant
radars pulse weakly on the delta's absorbent skin. Inside the seamless black hood of his helmet
Cowboy can hear only the echo of his own breath, taste only rubber and anesthetic gas.
Cowboy's mind rejoices, feeling the delta's power vibrating under his control. His nerves
tingle pleasure. It's been too long since he possessed the sky.
A silver-white dot moves against the wheeling star field and Cowboy looks closer. It's an
infrared signature all right, and he tilts the delta's nose upward to give his forward-looking
radars a peek, g-forces tugging at the skin around his eyelids. An amber dot appears on the
displays, outlines uncertain. Cowboy pictures himself as a falcon, narrowing its wings as it
prepares to move upon its distant prey.
A steel guitar plays in Cowboy's mind as he floods the engines with fuel, the big plane
climbing toward the diamond stars. The whimper of wind turns to a hiss. Cowboy's spine can feel
delicate vibrations moving fore and aft along the plane's structure as the frame absorbs the
additional stress. Arkady is blind to this, he thinks, and can't know what it's about. Can't come
near the top, thinks only in terms of money and fashion, the cryo max clothes that he hopes will
buy him a ticket into the world where things really happen, and all the while the panzerboys are
building and living their legend and Arkady is frozen outside, trying to pretend he matters.
The infrared signature is nearer, glowing white in Cowboy's vision. Two engines. He's
above and behind the target now, at the top of along parabolic arc, and he lowers the delta's nose
and throttles back, the engine noises dying away almost entirely, left far behind in the craft's
wake.
(79 of 137) [7/17/03 11:28:34 PM]
The target is very close now. Cowboy lowers Pony Express's flaps, feeling the plane fight
the brakes, jarring. The infrared signature is close, cat's eyes in the night. Cowboy takes his
eyes off infrared and can see the dark silhouette nearing him. He has to be certain this is the
right one.
Neurotransmitters flick a switch, and electrons race along the cable to snap on the quartz-
iodide brightness of his landing lights. Suddenly the night is afire with the form of a white
fuselage pinstriped with blue. Arkady's plane, the right configuration. Cowboy can see heads
peering out the windows. The plane cocks one wing up and tries to fall away.
Too late. The plane is already exhaling, air gushing through the holes in the fuselage
made by Cowboy's humming dorsal minigun turret. A wing breaks away, an engine flares and breaks
into pieces, spitting fire and melting alloy. Pony Express arcs over the falling craft, turning
cockpit-down so Cowboy can watch it fall away. He knows it will be at least half an hour before it
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