KWOORT ISSUED THE ORDERS he had promised, and Endeavor came to life.
Hanna was again the focal point in Communications, scheduling members of her team to accompany civilian scientists to the surface of Battleground. Like everyone except Endeavor’s regular Fleet officers and crew, who maintained a duty roster based on Standard chronology, she continued to function as best she could on Battleground time, wildly at odds with the circadian rhythms imposed on human biology by Earth’s ancient sun. She slept badly and never reached full alertness. The two members of her team who exercised the option of using stimulants—Carl and Glory, the true-humans—were so clearly more efficient than the telepaths that she sometimes wondered if she should give in and use the organic compounds. They were supposed to be completely safe, a new formulation available only to Fleet, but Hanna kept postponing their use; they had not been tested on telepaths, and she had not forgotten Dema’s discomfort. Certainly she observed no differences in the true-humans’ personalities.
She had used an earlier compound of the drug before, though only under orders, and she was not even certain why the idea revolted her. To be sure, her own society was united in disapproving anything that affected thought beyond a glass or two of wine; it was tricky enough swimming in a sea of living minds when your own was clear. And, to be sure, drugs had played a less than admirable role in the histories of the men she had loved (true-humans both).
But when she found herself falling behind as Soldiers, prodded by Kwoort, worked with her to set up complicated schedules, she wondered if she was merely being self-righteous. Or self-righteous, and foolish as well.
• • •
Gabriel Guyup arrived and boarded Endeavor, to Hanna’s complete bewilderment. Apparently Jameson had forgotten to tell her something. On purpose, possibly.
Warring day lengths had at this point put her in a new trough of fatigue, and she was not prepared to cope with a surprise like Gabriel. She did not look up when the stranger came into Communications, and when she realized that he had come to report to her, her first reaction was irritation at the intrusion. He told her that he had been invited to join the team by Starr Jameson personally. She said, “Well, God damn him anyway.”
The man at the adjoining station perked up. She glared at him. He decided to take a break and drifted away, leaving them effectively alone.
Then she looked at Gabriel and saw that he was just as bewildered as she was. Too tired for the courtesy of words, she simply looked at his mind, and discovered:
That he expected to be awed.
That he was startled at the fierceness of her eyes and the shadows under them.
That he had hoped she would know who he was because they had corresponded.
Corresponded?
Hanna corresponded with entirely too many people, human and not. Jameson had assigned Contact staff to keep her communications sorted, organized, and answered, but she at least glanced at all but the most routine replies. She did like to see the holo, straight video, audio, or written communications from the clearly insane, which fascinated her for some reason. Once in a while there was a threat. She had ignored these until Jameson found out about them and started having them routed to him. He told her about them in detail, and since she could hardly avoid him, she always knew when someone advocated killing her. Presumably Gabriel did not belong in that category.
“I don’t remember any correspondence with you,” she said. “When was it, and what was it about?”
“It was about a year and a half ago,” he said. He added, suddenly shy, “It was about belief systems.”
She remembered then. It had been just before Mickey’s birth and she had been in a state of mind she hoped she would never be in again. She could touch her baby’s forming mind, growing daily in intricacy and potential, but she did not do it often; the experience of the womb was not one an adult should revisit. The wound of her grief for Michael Kristofik had barely begun to turn to scar, and she had begun to face an unwelcome reality—that Starr Jameson had been the only true stable point in her life since their first meeting, an enduring presence which had become a habit—maybe, even, a necessity. She resisted the knowledge and she resented it. But she continued to sleep in his arms every night.
It was not surprising that she had trouble remembering Gabriel.
She said, “Why did Starr contact you?”
“I don’t know,” Gabriel said honestly, “except that I’m a member of a religious community and have an interest in nonhuman beliefs. There don’t seem to be many people like that around.”
“I still don’t see why you’re here. Are you some kind of expert—sorry,” she said automatically, but his feelings did not seem to be hurt.
“I’ve got, umm, I guess you’d call it a professional interest. My monastery isn’t one of the cloistered ones, though, I mean, it’s a teaching monastery. We’re very much in the world.”
No, you’re not, Hanna thought—he really was awed, as if she were the goddess of alien studies or something, and people “in the world” did not usually react to her like that. She anxiously reviewed what she knew about monasteries. Practically nothing.
“So you’re looking for evidence of faith in alien societies?”
“There’s hardly anything in the literature. You’re the one who’s the expert,” Gabriel said, more reproachfully than he intended, “and you haven’t done anything.”
“It wasn’t important,” she said with no attempt at tact, but his response was equable.
“Maybe not to you, but it’s of great importance to many people, and they’re not all in established religions. With due respect for your own views—”
“No, no, that’s not what I meant, Mister—Brother? What do I call you?”
“Just Gabriel.” He smiled; she found, to her surprise, that she had marginally relaxed. There was a sense of tranquility about him, something inside him that might outlast this moment’s anxiety. She could use some of that . . .
“Gabriel, regardless of any views I might have, it’s not important to the aliens. Not to any we’ve met before now. Do you think so large a part of human culture was neglected in my education? I haven’t done any work on it because there’s so little to say. The peoples of Girritt have a variety of animistic beliefs, but they don’t interest anyone but the most obsessive cultural anthropologists. The majority attitude on F’thal and Zeig-Daru is that universes simply exist, spawning one another; the beings see no reason to posit a First Cause that itself simply exists. Uskosians attribute no moral authority to the Master of Chaos and they do not regard him as a Creator. Although,” she admitted reluctantly, “there are minority views in each case.
“But there hasn’t been much, really, to study. How much did Starr tell you about this society?”
“Nothing,” said Gabriel. “I didn’t speak to him personally, and he didn’t even admit to my abbot that there is a society. I inferred it. It’s a closely held secret, apparently.”
“So far. Well, there’s a rich field for you here. I’ll have—no. I was going to say I’d have one of my team brief you, but they’re all too tightly scheduled.” So was she. But. “Do you know where your quarters are?”
“Wherever my luggage is, I hope,” Gabriel said. He was fair-skinned and blue-eyed, a wiry man undistinguished to the eye except for a mop of sandy curls; but he had a sweet smile. “I’ll find my way.”
“Good. Come back after that and I’ll show you how to access the material we’ve collected so far. Go over it and then come talk to me. I’m glad you’re here,” she said impulsively, realizing that it was true. “This is new, and I don’t know where to begin. Battleground is a world of theocracy and unending, perpetual war. Maybe you can make some sense of that dynamic. I can’t.”
Gabriel did not answer. He was looking at her intently and she caught a glimpse of something he had barely begun to feel and had not yet recognized or named himself. She thought, Oh, no . . .
He seemed to wake up. He nodded to her and turned for the exit. She said suddenly, “Gabriel.”
He turned back.
“Where is your monastery?”
“Alta,” he said.
Hanna sighed. She was too tired to keep her face from showing what she felt.
Gabriel said, “Yes. The Abbey of St. Kristofik.”
“Did you know Michael?”
“I was brought there just after he left, I think, and I was still a small child. I never head of him until, well—”
“Until he—we—became notorious,” Hanna said, trying to smile.
“Until then,” Gabriel said, his own smile real. “I’ve wondered about him, our abbey’s lost son, wondered why he used that name. Do you know?”
Hanna did not know. There were many questions she had not asked because she had thought there would be plenty of time to ask them. She had been wrong. Michael was gone, and she would never know the answers.
She felt tears in her eyes and knew that Gabriel saw them. He took a step toward her, the impulsive wish to comfort her like a flash of light, as startling in its intensity as the impact of telepathy.
But he’s true-human! she thought, and shook her head when he took another step.
“Go,” she said. “Later,” and he finally turned away.
It was indeed later when she remembered that her first remark about correspondence must have seemed, to a true-human, to have come out of nowhere, and he must have guessed she was reading his mind. And that it hadn’t bothered him at all.
• • •
Gabriel found his quarters without trouble, tracked down his luggage (though not without trouble), unpacked mechanically.
None of the images or the writings by and about her, nothing, had prepared him for her personality, shooting off sparks, or for her mind, so quick even when she was plainly exhausted. Watching recorded lectures had not prepared him for her grace of movement, which had not deserted her even in her surprise. And absolutely nothing had prepared him for her tears.
He had frankly expected himself to succumb, at least for a while, to a schoolboy case of hero-worship for which he was much too old. Now it looked like he might be in for something worse.
C’mon, Lord. Do I have to?