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Chapter 24:
Kneeling
over Alys Buckman's body, the police coroner said, "I can only tell you at
this point that she died from an overdose of a toxic or semitoxic drug.
It'll be twenty-four hours before we can tell what specifically the drug
was."
Felix
Buckman said, "It had to happen. Eventually." He did not, surprisingly,
feel very much. In fact, in a way, on some level, he experienced deep
relief to have learned from Tim Chancer, their guard, that Alys had been
found dead in their second-floor bathroom.
"I thought
that guy Taverner did something to her," Chancer repeated, over and over
again, trying to get Buckman's attention. "He was acting funny; I knew
something was wrong. I took a couple of shots at him but he got away. I
guess maybe it's a good thing I didn't get him, if he wasn't responsible.
Or maybe he felt guilty because he got her to take the drug; could that
be?"
"No one had
to make Alys take a drug," Buckman said bitingly. He walked from the
bathroom, out into the hall. Two gray-clad pols stood at attention,
waiting to be told what to do. "She didn't need Taverner or anyone else to
administer it to her." He felt, now, physically sick. God, he thought.
What will the effect be on Barney? That was the bad part. For reasons
obscure to him, their child adored his mother. Well, Buckman thought,
there's no accounting for other people's tastes.
And yet he,
himself - he loved her. She had a powerful quality, he reflected. I'll
miss it. She filled up a good deal of space.
And a good
part of his life. For better or worse.
White-face,
Herb Maime climbed the stairs two steps at a time, peering up at Buckman.
"I got here as quickly as I could," Herb said, holding out his hand to
Buckman. They shook. "What was it?" Herb said. He lowered his voice. "An
overdose of something?"
"Apparently," Buckman said.
"I got a
call earlier today from Taverner," Herb said. "He wanted to talk to you;
he said it had something to do with Alys."
Buckman
said, "He wanted to tell me about Alys's death. He was here at the time."
"Why? How
did he know her?"
"I don't
know," Buckman said. But at the moment it did not seem to matter to him
much. He saw no reason to blame Taverner ... given Alys's temperament and
habits, she had probably instigated his coming here. Perhaps when Taverner
left the academy building she had nailed him, carted him off in her souped-up
quibble. To the house. After all, Taverner was a six. And Alys liked
sixes. Male and female both.
Especially
female.
"They may
have been having an orgy," Buckman said.
"Just the
two of them? Or do you mean other people were here?"
"Nobody else
was here. Chancer would have known. They may have had a phone orgy; that's
what I meant. She's come so damn close so many times to burning out her
brain with those goddamn phone orgies I wish we could track down the new
sponsors, the ones that took over when we shot Bill and Carol and Fred and
Jill. Those degenerates." His hand shaking, he lit a cigarette, smoking
rapidly. "That reminds me of something Alys said one time, unintentionally
funny. She was talking about having an orgy and she wondered if she
should send out formal invitations. 'I'd better,' she said, 'or everyone
won't come at the same time.'" He laughed.
"You've told
me that before," Herb said.
"She's
really dead. Cold, stiff dead." Buckman stubbed out his cigarette in a
nearby ashtray. "My wife," he said to Herb Maime. "She was my wife."
Herb, with a
shake of his head, indicated the two gray-wrapped pols standing at
attention.
"So what?"
Buckman said. "Haven't they read the libretto of Die Walkure?"
Tremblingly, he lit another cigarette. "Sigmund and Siglinde. 'Schwester
und Braut.' Sister and bride. And the hell with Hunding." He dropped the
cigarette to the carpet; standing there, he watched it smolder, starting
the wool on fire. And then, with his boot heel, he ground it out.
You should
sit down," Herb said. "Or lie down. You look terrible."
"It's a
terrible thing," Buckman said. "It genuinely is. I disliked a lot about
her, but, Christ - how vital she was. She always tried anything new.
That's what killed her, probably some new drug she and her fellow witch
friends brewed up in their miserable basement labs. Something with film
developer in it or Drano or a lot worse."
"I think we
should talk to Taverner," Herb said.
"Okay. Pull
him in. He's got that microtrans on him, doesn't he?"
"Evidently
not. All the insects we placed on him as he was leaving the academy
building ceased to function. Except, perhaps, for the seed warhead. But we
have no reason to activate it."
Buckman
said, "Taverner is a smart bastard. Or else he got help. From someone or
ones he's working with. Don't bother to try to detonate the seed warhead;
it's undoubtedly been cut out of his pelt by some obliging colleague. " Or
by Alys, he conjectured. My helpful sister. Assisting the police at every
turn. Nice.
"You'd
better leave the house for a while," Herb said. "While the coroner's staff
does its procedural action."
"Drive me
back to the academy," Buckman said. "I don't think I can drive; I'm
shaking too bad." He felt something on his face; putting up his hand, he
found that his chin was wet. "What's this on me?" he said, amazed.
"You're
crying," Herb said.
"Drive me
back to the academy and I'll wind up what I have to do there before I can
turn it over to you," Buckman said. " And then I want to come back here."
Maybe Taverner did give her something, he said to himself. But Taverner is
nothing. She did it. And yet ...
"Come on,"
Herb said, taking him by the arm and leading him to the staircase.
Buckman, as
he descended, said, "Would you ever in Christ's world have thought you'd
see me cry?"
"No," Herb
said. "But it's understandable. You and she were very close."
"You could
say that," Buckman said, with sudden savage anger. "God damn her," he
said. "I told her she'd eventually do it. Some of her friends brewed it up
for her and made her the guinea pig."
"Don't try
to do much at the office," Herb said as they passed through the living
room and outside, where their two quibbles sat parked. "Just wind it up
enough for me to take over."
"That's what
I said," Buckman said. "Nobody listens to me, God damn it."
Herb thumped
him on the back and said nothing; the two men walked across the lawn in
silence.
***
On the ride
back to the academy building, Herb, at the wheel of the quibble, said,
"There're cigarettes in my coat." It was the first thing either of them
had said since boarding the quibble .
"Thanks,"
Buckman said. He had smoked up his own week's ration.
"I want to
discuss one matter with you," Herb said. "I wish it could wait but it
can't."
"Not even
until we get to the office?"
Herb said,
"There may be other policy-level personnel there when we get back. Or just
plain other people - my staff, for instance."
"Nothing I
have to say is -"
"Listen,"
Herb said. " About Alys. About your marriage to her. Your sister."
"My incest,"
Buckman said harshly.
"Some of the
marshals may know about it. Alys told too many people. You know how she
was about it."
"Proud of
it," Buckman said, lighting a cigarette with difficulty. He still could
not get over the fact that he had found himself crying. I really must have
loved her, he said to himself. And all I seemed to feel was fear and
dislike. And the sexual drive. How many times, he thought, we discussed it
before we did it. All the years. "I never told anybody but you," he said
to Herb.
"But Alys."
"Okay. Well,
then possibly some of the marshals know, and if he cares, the Director."
"The
marshals who are opposed to you," Herb said, "and who know about the" - he
hesitated - "the incest - will say that she committed suicide. Out of
shame. You can expect that. And they will leak it to the media."
"You think
so?" Buckman said. Yes, he thought, it would make quite a story. Police
general's marriage to his sister, blessed with a secret child hidden away
in Florida. The general and his sister posing as husband and wife in
Florida, while they're with the boy. And the boy: product of what must be
a deranged genetic heritage.
"What I want
you to see," Herb said, "and I'm afraid you're going to have to take a
look at it now, which isn't an ideal time with Alys just recently dead and
-"
"It's our
coroner," Buckman said. "We own him, there at the academy." He did not
understand what Herb was getting at. "He'll say it was an overdose of a
semitoxic drug, as he already told us."
"But taken
deliberately, " Herb said. "A suicidal dose."
"What do you
want me to do?"
Herb said,
"Compel him - order him - to find an inquest verdict of murder."
He saw,
then. Later, when he had overcome some of his grief, he would have thought
of it himself. But Herb Maime was right: it had to be faced now. Even
before they got back to the academy building and their staffs.
"So we can
say," Herb said, "that -"
"That
elements within the police hierarchy hostile to my campus and labor-camp
policies took revenge by murdering my sister," Buckman said tightly. It
froze his blood to find himself thinking of such matters already. But -
"Something
like that," Herb said. "No one named specifically. No marshals, I mean.
Just suggest that they hired someone to do it. Or ordered some junior
officer eager to rise in the ranks to do it. Don't you agree I'm right?
And we must act rapidly; it's got to be declared immediately. As soon as
we get back to the academy you should send a memo to all the marshals and
the Director, stating that."
I must turn
a terrible personal tragedy into an advantage, Buckman realized.
Capitalize on the accidental death of my own sister. If it was
accidental.
"Maybe it's
true," he said. Possibly Marshal Holbein, for example, who hated him
enormously, had arranged it.
"No," Herb
said. "It's not true. But start an inquiry. And you must find someone to
pin it on; there must be a trial."
"Yes," he
agreed dully. With all the trimmings. Ending in an execution, with many
dark hints in media releases that "higher authorities" were involved, but
who, because of their positions, could not be touched. And the Director,
hopefully, would officially express his sympathy concerning the tragedy,
and his hope that the guilty party would be found and punished.
"I'm sorry
that I have to bring this up so soon," Herb said. "But they got you
down from marshal to general; if the incest story is publicly believed
they might be able to force you to retire. Of course, even if we take the
initiative, they may air the incest story. Let's hope you're reasonably
well covered."
"I did
everything possible," Buckman said.
"Whom should
we pin it on?" Herb asked.
"Marshal
Holbein and Marshal Ackers." His hatred for them was as great as theirs
for him: they had, five years ago, slaughtered over ten thousand students
at the Stanford campus, a final bloody - and needless - atrocity of that
atrocity of atrocities, the Second Civil War.
Herb said,
"I don't mean who planned it, that's obvious; as you say, Holbein and
Ackers and the others. I mean who actually injected her with the drug."
"The small
fry," Buckman said. "Some political prisoner in one of the forced-labor
camps." It didn't really matter. Anyone of a million camp inmates, or any
student from a dying kibbutz, would do.
"I would say
pin it on somebody higher up," Herb said.
"Why?"
Buckman did not follow his thinking. "It's always done that way; the
apparatus always picks an unknown, unimportant -"
"Make it one
of her friends. Somebody who could have been her equal. In fact, make it
somebody well known. In fact, make it somebody in the acting field here in
this area; she was a celebrity-fucker."
"Why
somebody important?"
"To tie
Holbein and Ackers in with those gungy, degenerate phone-orgy bastards she
hung out with." Herb sounded genuinely angry, now; Buckman, startled,
glanced at him. "The ones who really killed her. Her cult friends. Pick
someone as high as you can. And then you'll really have something to pin
on the marshals. Think of the scandal that'll make. Holbein part of the
phone grid."
Buckman put
out his cigarette and lit another. Meanwhile thinking. What I have to do,
he realized, is out-scandal them. My story has to be more lurid than
theirs.
It would
take some story.
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