He started with the Dummy.
Raschid stayed in the background for
an hour or so while Kenna laid the groundwork with Solon Walsh. Even Walsh's
keen-eyed aide, Avri, started ignoring him after a while as her boss played
the political mating game with Kenna.
It was Raschid's professional opinion
Walsh had most of the makings of an ideal candidate. He was young and sleekly
handsome. He spoke without stuttering. He had a steady, clear gaze. There were no food
spots on his clothing, and his carefully arranged coif had a
charming habit of going slightly out of kilter after a few minutes of conversation.
It made him seem more relaxed and genuine. In some areas Walsh had received
some expert advice.
The man exuded honesty. That had
everything to do with lack of IQ. That open, wide-eyed look was there because there
was nothing behind the optic system. But stupidity could be a candidate's
greatest asset—as long as he listened to the right people. Raschid
figured the right people in this case was Avri.
"I'm surprised to learn there's
so much common ground between us," Walsh said as the
political dance wound down. "I mean, I had no idea you felt that way about
taxes, for instance. Wow! After all this time our whole argument with one another
disappeared,
just like that." He snapped his fingers by way of illustration.
Solon Kenna made with a gentle,
fatherly smile. "A misunderstanding, that's all," he said.
"See what happens when two honest beings speak frankly?"
"That's real good drakh, and
all," Avri interrupted. Walsh shot his aide a nervous look, ready
to fold if Avri gave the word. Good. He could be handled. "But where are we at? What's
the deal? There's gotta be a deal, else you wouldn't be blowin' all this smoke.
"Now, if you think Solon Walsh is
gonna take a little earner and fold his tent... I don't know... Whatcha got in
mind?"
Kenna handled it without a blink. More
points for him. Raschid was feeling better and better about his plan.
"Right on the mark as always,
young Avri," Kenna smoothed. "I'll let Sr. Raschid help me with
this. I really can't stress too hard that this being's credentials go far
deeper than I can say. Far deeper."
Avri's eyes narrowed as Raschid joined
the game.
"Solon Kenna and I have run
through this every which way we can," Raschid said. "Thing is,
everybody agrees we have to have a change. Tyrenne Yelad just isn't making it anymore.
Trouble is, any way you cut the deck, Yelad keeps coming up on top. Because Walsh
and Kenna cancel each other out. Am I right?"
Avri nodded firmly. She had a hint of
a smile at her lips, which Raschid knew meant he had to beat Yelad's mordida,
plus the after-election promises.
"So. What Solon Kenna proposes to
do is pull out. And throw his support to you." He nodded in the direction
of the stunned Walsh.
There was much surprised babbling. But
Raschid got the meeting back on track and spelled out the details. Kenna would
slip a hefty wad of credits to Walsh, who would put his campaign into high gear,
splashing his name all over and hitting the stump hard. That
would be just the outward display, however. The real money would be aimed at
those few mighty wards with a big number of independent voters, folks who held out to
the last so they could get the biggest payoffs.
Meanwhile, Kenna would ran a
lackluster campaign, letting some of his support bleed off.
"Two nights before the
election," Raschid said, "Kenna pulls out. Says he's seen the light, and
all. Credits it to the persuasive words of his worthy opponent-one Solon Walsh. Then
throws his support to you."
They did not go for it right off.
Nobody ever does. There had to be bullet-proof assurances that there would be no
last-minute betrayal. These were made. And the rest of the terms
were set. Walsh would be Tyrenne. In return, Kenna would wield even more clout
than before. Avri did not give a clot about the giveaways. She was more interested in
being the power behind a Tyrenne's throne.
"It still ain't enough,"
Avri said. "Even if we join forces, Yelad's still got the vote edge. Too many
independents. Maybe we can squeak through on that.
"But he's the man with the pad.
He can always top whatever we got by voting the graves."
What Avri was referring to was that
delightfully old-fashioned system still in play on Dusable.
There was a joke that no one ever really died. The death certificate got dumped into
Yelad's computer banks and that person's name remained on the voting rolls. When
Yelad's people saw the count going against them, they voted the dead. Or the living,
in the case of people who had emigrated from the Cairenes but were still there on the
voting rolls.
Of course, Yelad could not be too
blatant about it. Millions and millions of nonexistent voters would be too much
even for the corrupt people of Dusable. Appearances were important. So Yelad's
staff kept careful watch on the real voting, an easy task because of the deliberately out-of-date method of
vote-casting. First off, every adult being
was required by law to vote. The ward/mordida system could not work unless everybody was in the game, physically and
psychologically. Second, each person registered with the solon of his or her
choice. An ID card was presented at the polls, and the vote cast was registered upon it for a ward
captain to examine later. So much for the secret ballot. Finally voters were physically required to go to the
polls, rather than voting by computer at home, unlike most citizens of the
Empire. This gave a master thief like Yelad all kinds of interesting
ways to cheat.
"How do we get away from that," Avri asked.
"We got it covered," Raschid
said. "It'll be tricky, but that's what makes the game fun. But we'd
like to keep all that to ourselves awhile. If you don't mind."
No one did. Kenna was taking all the
risks. Avri knew nobody would be mad at Walsh. He was just the Dummy.
The deal was done. Then Raschid tackled
the next part: the Issue. Yelad represented the status quo. Kenna, labor. But
Walsh had nothing but empty words. He needed a target. Raschid had the gringo ploy in
mind. Nobody in the room knew the term's origins except Raschid, and he wasn't
saying, but they knew what it meant. Attack the outsider, somebody big and far
off you could blame all troubles on.
So Walsh's issue was the privy council.
It was their fault things had been bungled since the death of the Emperor. It was
their fault there was no AM2, creating such bleak times. Yelad
would be forced to defend them. If he did not, he was doomed with the all-powerful
Imperial council.
When Raschid had brought it up prior to
this meeting, Kenna had been so excited he contemplated forgetting the whole
deal with Walsh and keeping his own campaign running. Raschid doused that idea. He
pointed out since Kenna was already President of the Council of Solons, the privy
council would be highly annoyed at this attack. Kenna did not want or need that
kind of attention, Raschid strongly advised. The thought also made him feel
personally uncomfortable, although once again, he did not know why.
"Let the Dummy do it,"
Raschid said. "They'll figure he's just grabbing for straws because
there's no way he can win. They won't care one way or another what a Dummy says, and
they'll ignore the whole thing."
It was not necessary to spell that out
to Walsh. Avri knew what it meant, which was more than enough.
Kenna was in high spirits as they
exited the bar. Everything was on track. Raschid wanted him to stay happy, so he praised
his performance.
"The trick you just pulled was
invented by a master," Raschid said. "It's called a rossthomas."
"Which means?" Kenna asked
with lifted eyebrows.
"It means that now the fools in town are on our side," Raschid said.
Kenna laughed all the way back to
headquarters.
There were other meetings with key
beings who had to be bribed, clued in, brought into line, or a combination of the
three. The results were happily similar.
One meeting, however, Raschid thought
best to handle alone.
*****
The mob boss's name was Pavy. She was
known as the hardest, canniest, and most unforgiving of all Dusable's crime
royalty. Her turf was a dozen of the biggest independent wards. Not one coin came
through any of them that did not have its edges well skinned. She ran all vice—from joygirls and joyboys to
the most addictive narcotics. Her loan sharks were the toughest and most
knowledgeable. Her thieves the wiliest. Pavy was also stone gorgeous.
She was of average height, but in the
clinging body suit she wore when she greeted Raschid her legs climbed into the upper
atmosphere. Her hair was a dark, close-cropped skullcap, and her eyes were as
black as any he had ever seen—with hard, gleaming, diamond points of crafty
intelligence. They met in a cozy little room deep inside the
one-square-kilometer warren of vice she called The Club.
Pavy ordered her thug assistants out of
the room after the preliminaries. Raschid had already been fine-toothed for
weapons in the bombproof room just inside the entrance. Not that Raschid could not
have snapped that long slender neck with one hand—which Pavy knew as well as he.
Still, she had dismissed her bodyguards. From the look in her eyes, Raschid
knew that the woman had already taken his measure. He was there
for a deal, not to kill.
After they left, she refilled their
glasses with the aromatic liquor she favored, dropped the jeweled slippers from her
feet, and settled back on the soft settee, her legs tucked up
under her. She gave Raschid a silent toast with her glass and sipped. He followed her lead.
"Now tell me what you have in
mind," she purred. Raschid did not make the mistake of thinking the purr was
anything other than that of a very deadly tiger.
He spelled out the program. The fix was
in, he said, although he couldn't tell her exactly how it was going to come
off. Pavy nodded. That groundwork had been more than satisfactorily settled by Kenna's
people. Then he told her what he wanted her to do, just sketching the main points;
the little details could be spelled out later. Pavy's smile grew as
he talked. She liked this. It was going to be very expensive for someone. She laughed a
couple of times, then told him what she wanted in return, a sum that would keep
a small planet happy for a year. Raschid shaded the price by one fourth, but only
because he sensed she would distrust him if he didn't try. Then Pavy surprised him.
"What's your end?" she
asked. "What did you tell Kenna you wanted?"
"I didn't say," Raschid
answered.
"That's wise," Pavy said,
nodding. "If you win you can probably get at least as much as he's
giving me."
Raschid figured she was right. In fact,
Kenna had asked him the same question. What did Raschid want in return? He
knew it disturbed Kenna to be told he would find out when it was over. Why had he done
that? Raschid was not sure. All he knew was that the price would come at the proper
time.
Pavy asked him about other political
battles he had been involved in, as one criminal to another, giving him the
out of dodging anything that might be incriminating. But that was no
problem. As far as Raschid could figure, this was the first election he
had ever worked, so he lied. Political events came tumbling out of him,
complete with victories and desperate setbacks and stunning reversals. Oddly
enough, as he told the stories and she kept their glasses full, he realized
that he was not lying at all.
Finally, it was getting late. Time to
go. Pavy's hand hovered over the button to call for her thugs to escort him out. Then
she flashed him a most peculiar smile. It was glowing, and her lips were soft, her
eyes wide and wanting.
"You could stay longer if you
liked," she whispered very softly. Long nails brushing the
microthin body suit. The rasping sound gave Raschid the shivers.
He considered her request—because that
was what it was. Why was this woman so suddenly attracted to him? He saw the
reason. It was from being so close to power—real power. But he was just Raschid. Wasn't
he? Where was the power? Then he knew it was there. Inside him. But not why.
Nor who. Yet.
Raschid stayed the night.
*****
The 45th Ward was one of Tyrenne
Yelad's lesser bailiwicks. It had not always been so. The chief
occupation of the sprawling neighborhood involved the plasfill contracts for the
Tyrenne's massive public-works programs. Before the AM2 crunch, all of Dusable
had been busy one way or another in these projects. Bridges were built duplicating
perfectly good arcs a few klicks away. As were unnecessary roads. Or tall, gleaming
public offices that were always in short supply. The reason for this was that each time the
public payroll was padded, new offices were required for patronage. Departments
continuously warred with other departments for more employees, thus increasing
their power, and posh offices to house them in, thus increasing their prestige.
So there was always a tremendous need
for plasfill. The 45th had always prided itself on supplying the thinnest gruel
at the highest price possible. These big profits made the world go around.
Then came hard times. Yelad had to
throw one of his wards off the plasfill sleigh—the 45th. Now people were
beginning to hurt in the 45th. Long lines lined up daily before
the ward captain's door. By day's end, the captain had barely whittled into the line.
So when the official gravcar hummed
into the neighborhood, it was greeted with quiet but keen interest. The windows
were shut and darkened, but it was no mystery who was inside. The car flew the tiny flag of Tyrenne
Yelad.
It cruised slowly through the
neighborhoods, as if inspecting the shuttered shops and "For Sale"
signs on the businesses. The people of the 45th who were about that day—and
there were many, since jobs were scarce-wondered about its purpose. Was the great
Tyrenne Yelad there with some great surprise? A bonus contract for plasfill? A
few shabby vehicles chose to follow at a discreet distance.
The Tyrenne's car made the turn that
led to the ward captain's house. Aha! Good news.
Suddenly, the gravcar sped up. As if
harsh orders had been given and the driver was heading back.
At that moment, a small, tubby, darling
child of a boy darted into the street after an errant ball. The gravcar sped
on. The child looked up with wide, innocent, and oh, so frightened
eyes, frozen. But there was still plenty of time for the car to stop. On it
came. People screamed warnings. Mothers wailed in empathy. The child turned
and half stumbled toward escape. Then the gravcar accelerated. Almost as if it had
been done on purpose. The car
clipped the child, and, to loud shrieks of horror, the boy was hurled into the
air. He crashed to the ground, blood spurting. The gravcar came to a fast stop.
A
uniformed driver leapt out. People ran toward the accident. The driver drew a
pistol and shouted for them to stay back. They did.
Then he marched to the corpse of the
boy and stood over it. He looked back at the gravcar. A window hissed open, and
people thought they could see someone motioning an order. The driver scooped up the
body and dumped it in the gravcar as if it were trash. Someone shouted a protest. The
driver snarled an oath and waved the gun. But the crowd was furious. Beings started
running for the gravcar. The driver leapt inside and sped away, leaving angry voters
behind. Voters who now cursed the very name of Tyrenne Yelad—a being who
scorned them so much that he killed their children.
Inside the car Raschid flung the
driver's cap into the back. Beside him, the corpse stirred, then sat up.
"Gimme a clottin' rag," the
boy's corpse said.
"Pretty good first act,"
Raschid said as he handed a cloth to the boy, who began wiping away
the fake blood.
One close look at the "boy"
would reveal the lines in his face and the cynical twist around his
eyes. He lit up a giant tabac, inhaled deeply, and blew out, filling the car with the
cloud. This was a boy who had been in the acting business for fifty years or more.
"Think you can do it again?"
Raschid asked.
"No problem," the boy said.
"I could do it three, maybe four more times before I get too tired. And
careless, if you know what I mean."
Raschid said he did.
"How about a little drink
break?" the boy asked.
"Nope. The thirty-sixth first.
Then you get that drink."
The boy cursed, but Raschid did not
mind. Raschid could tell the actor was very happy with the work.
Lieutenant Skinner was one pissed off
cop. It was collection day, and the first stop had put her in a foul mood.
She always started her rounds with a
tidy little joyshop. It was a private deal, so she didn't have
to share the earner. She also had a cute little joyboy she had been diddling every
collection day for the past few months. That morning, however, there was no earner—and no
joyboy.
The frightened and confused manager
burbled out that the earner had already been picked up. He said a couple of real
scary cop thugs had dropped by an hour before. They were there for the
juice—said from now on Skinner was out. It had not taken much in the
way of heavy leaning—the manager's face was bruised, and he walked with a limp—to
make the message stick. They had also picked up the joyboy and said he would be
working at another house.
Skinner was damn sure the toady
manager was not lying, especially after she administered a professional beating of
her own. Afterward, she stormed out of the joyshop, vowing revenge. Then it sank
in. It would not be that easy. Her captain didn't know about
this little caper. Frustrated, pissed, and confused about who the cop interlopers
might have been, Skinner continued her rounds. Each place she went, the story was the
same. Skinner began to realize that the beat she had spent so much money in
payoffs to acquire had been turned upside down.
Steaming through her big beak like an
ancient engine, Skinner headed for the cop shop to clue her captain in. An
interdepartmental turf fight had just been launched.
Skinner had one more large jolt
awaiting her. It was no mere fight, nor was it over a single piece
of turf. Somehow or other, outright war had been declared. But by whom, no one would
know until it was too late.
*****
Kym was young and blond with innocent
eyes and a not-so innocent body. She was also a wicked little number who
haunted pickup spots outside her home ward. A Lolita lick of her lips,
a hip thrown just so, a jut of milky breasts, and the mark was soon in her
clutches—thanks to the knockout gas and sharp knife she kept tucked away in her
skimpy
costume.
Kym was also the apple of her daddy's
eye and a minor hero in her neighborhood. Well-raised child that she was, Kym
always brought all her loot home to Poppa. Since he was a sewer superintendent on
Yelad's pad, that equaled large local clout.
But there had been a wee
misunderstanding one night. Kym got picked up by cops who were too
stoned out on narcobeer to check her out, so they hauled her to the slammer and
booked her. To everyone's dismay, there was no choice but for Kym to go on
trial. Nobody liked that, even Tyrenne Yelad's enemies. After all, juice on
Dusable had to stay universally sweet, or the whole jug would go sour.
But such slips had been made before.
The procedure was to have a little trial. The cops would get a minor scolding for
busting somebody so obviously innocent, and Kym would be home again in her daddy's
loving care and back out on the streets pursuing marks.
That was not what happened. The judge
convicted the child of all charges—and threw the book at her.
In the howl of outrage that
followed—picked up and played for all it was worth by Kenna's pet
livie casters—the judge slipped out of town to retire to a life of newly wealthy
ease, leaving Tyrenne Yelad holding the bag.
Avri praised Raschid to the heavens for
the inspired dirty work. "Stick around," Raschid said.
"I got a new twist on that new twist."
*****
The juice went so sour in a score of
key wards that it consisted almost entirely of solid matter.
Cops went after cops. The mobs went
after everybody. Shops were bombed out, joyhouses raided, and gambling dens
ripped off. Muscle banged muscle, and the innocent got in between—assuming that
anyone on Dusable fit that description. The capper was the Mother's March for Kym.
Two thousand angry women from her ward
hit the streets. Huge banners bore the innocent profile of the dear child.
There was wailing and weeping and much colorful tearing of hair. Kenna's livie crews
were out in force to cover it for the home folks, running down
the dreaded incident for the thousandth time for their viewers. There were lots of
close shots of her stunned daddy, who wobbled along at the head of the parade. Pop
looked great, blasted on narcobeer, with eyes red-rimmed from cavorting on the cuff
at a joyshop Raschid's people had steered him to. He was the portrait of
stunned sorrow.
Screaming oaths, the women converged
on the Tyrenne's headquarters, where a phalanx of cops waited. The lawbeings
were in full riot drag—helmets and shields and clubs and gas and blister guns.
The women drew up before the line of
cops. There was more shouting and screaming. Livie crews recorded the standoff.
Suddenly a big gravtruck burst out of
a side street. Cops identically clad to the Tyrenne's guards boiled off, kicking
and punching and flailing about with clubs. The women howled in agony as the stunned real cops gaped on. Who were those guys?
The phony cops ducked out of sight as the women recovered and went for
blood. The battle would go down in Dusable history. Hundreds of mothers
were injured in a scene witnessed by the entire planet.
Yelad's good name was quickly being
reduced to a synonym for drakh.
*****
The Dummy performed like a champ.
The best researchers and speech
writers mordida could buy spilled out a tsunami of attacks on
the privy council. Ad spots that would stop an overheated ox in its tracks were
created. Raschid was all motion, ripping and tearing and putting the whole back
together.
Solon Walsh delivered. In spades.
He started with a rather sad talk on
the hardships of the beings of Dusable, leaving open the question of who was to blame
for the troubles. But at his next appearance, he struck the pose of an outraged and
betrayed citizen. He was aboil with facts that had just come to
his attention. AM2 was being deliberately withheld from the Cairenes. Prize
contracts had been wrested away. Solon Walsh bellowed for justice in speech
after fiery speech. Dusable needed a strong hand now, he preached. One who owed
nothing to those devil rulers on the privy council.
Tyrenne Yelad reacted mildly at first.
He was surprised at the slickness of Walsh's campaign. But Avri assured Yelad that
it was all part of the plan to leech off reform support from Kenna. Since Yelad
was personally handing over mordida for Walsh's campaign kitty, he was
reassured. As for the attacks on the privy council, what did he care? Those
exalted beings certainly didn't, since the attacks came from a noncandidate like Solon
Walsh.
Just to keep things square, however,
he had his own speech writers make some minor course corrections. He delivered
a few mild speeches defending the privy council.
Raschid made sure that each and every
one of them was exploded out of proportion. He turned Yelad's mild defense into
gigantic ad spots in the skies, complete with thundering volume, which warped every
word Yelad spoke.
Then the other drakh started hitting
the fan: The curdled juice. The internecine cop warfare. The mob attacks. Et cetera,
et cetera. Yelad was so busy rushing about trying to plug the
spurting leaks that he did not notice that Solon Kenna—his archenemy—was barely
running a campaign at all.
Three nights before the election, the
Tyrenne called an emergency meeting. His confidence was shaken.
Yelad looked like a ball top—skinny
bottom and skinnier uppers, with a big round bulge in the middle. He chose his
tailors so that those defects were emphasized rather than
lessened. The clothes themselves were of materials just above middle class.
Yelad lived in the same small ward home he had grown up in. He was nice to his
mother, spoke well of his wife, and was understanding about the mishaps his brat
children got themselves into. All of those artifices he had developed
over many decades of campaigning. The message was: As a man of the people,
Yelad possessed many of the people's flaws—but also many homespun
strengths. It was one of the many reasons he had won term after term.
Not counting his vast patronage, of
course, or his giant, smooth machine. On that night, however, nothing was smooth.
Yelad was half drunk, one of many bad habits he had slipped into after years of easy
victories.
"Whaddya mean, ya don't know
what's behind it? What am I pay in' ya clots for? Clottin'
lazy bastards, that's what ya all clottin' are. Drakh under my feet."
He stormed and raged, and his aides
cowered, waiting for the awful storm to break. It didn't.
"I'll tell ya what's goin' on. It's that clottin'
Kenna. Pullin' a sly one. Yeah, well... we'll see
what's what, we will. I'm pullin' out all stops. Ya hear! Dumb clottin'
low-down piece of drakh
bastards...'s'what I got."
Many, many yessirs later, he was
soothed enough to grit out orders. With times so tight, he needed a mandate. A mandate
of historic proportions.
Teams of thugs and poll riders were
doubled, the hired phony voters nearly tripled. Waiting in the wings were those
grave vaults to be voted when the final count came in.
Tyrenne Yelad had plenty of funds.
What he lacked was organization. After so many years of constant victories, he
required a far smaller team to administer the elections. Now he ordered heavies
hired by the hundreds. They all hit the ground running—and instantly
stumbled into each other and crashed to the ground. But the worst blow came before all
that, on the night following the meeting. Less than forty-eight E-hours before the
election.
*****
Raschid watched calmly from the
sidelines as Kenna oiled onto the big outdoor platform. His eyes swept the audience,
making sure his shills were at work, pricking up the vast crowd. Every news
livie crew on Dusable was accounted for. Even Yelad's pets had come
running when word was leaked a few hours before Kenna's regularly scheduled
speech. The talk was that a stunner of a development was about to unfold. The news
crews forgot their loyalties, overwhelmed by that headiest of all scents: political
bloodshed.
Kenna took up position. The ovation
aroused by the shills was deafening. Solon Kenna bowed humbly and raised a weak
hand, grinning and begging them to stop... "Stop... I really don't deserve
all this outpouring of love."
The shills hit the button again just as
the crowd was starting to believe that they really ought to stop as urged. The
ovation was louder than before. Raschid let it go for half an hour, then
motioned to let it gradually subside.
Kenna laughed and thanked everyone for
such a spontaneous show of support. Then composed his face into a portrait
of somber wisdom. He briefly sketched his long career of public service,
reminding one and all of the hard fights in their behalf. Then Kenna
confessed that he had been overwhelmed by doubts in the course of this campaign. He
was getting on in years, he said, and he realized that he might not be able to
carry on the banner as Tyrenne.
The crowd was hushed. Beings were
beginning to get the drift. A few shouts of "No... no..." could be heard.
Raschid's magic was such that they were truly spontaneous, not the work of shills.
Finally, Solon Kenna reached the end. There was a dramatic
pause.
"I have been listening most
carefully to the views of my opponents," he said at last. "And I
have come to the conclusion that only one true voice speaks for us all. I
therefore announce... I am withdrawing from the race... and—"
The crowd erupted in fury, but Kenna
commanded them to silence with his august presence.
"And I throw my support to that
most worthy of all beings on Dusable..."
On cue, the Dummy walked out on stage
to the amazement of the entire planet.
Solon Walsh approached his colleague,
tears streaming from his eyes—it had been Raschid who suggested to Avri the
astringent in the kerchief.
"I give you... our new Tyrenne...
A being for the new ages... Solon Walsh!"
People went mad. Fights erupted. Livie
crews smashed into each other trying to get tighter shots, or sprinting off for
their standups.
But in the middle of all the madness,
the perfect picture was on the stage. As soon as the news crews realized it, they were
back to work shooting the image, breaking heads and standing on fellow beings to get
it.
It made a grand, instant campaign
poster. Solon Kenna and Solon Walsh, weeping in joy, their arms flung about one
another in loving unity.
Raschid thought the whole performance
had gone well enough. He had done far better in the past, but all in all, he
had to admit... Then his mind did a small, dizzy slip. When had he
done better? With what? Then the roar of the crowd took him, and he banished the
doubts.
The hard part was next. There was
still an election to steal.
*****
Election day dawned to the thunder of
Tyrenne Yelad's shouts of outrage. His eyes were two blood holes from railing all
night at the Judas Solon Walsh. Finally, his aides got him
calmed enough to order the counterattack.
Yelad slammed down at his desk and
began pouring over his illegal options. Confidence quickly returned. He
believed his political arsenal would have made even the late
Eternal Emperor weep.
The steam hissed to a stop. Yelad
composed himself and ordered up a jug of his headiest brew to steady the nerve for
the long day and night ahead.
At that moment a badly frightened aide
burst in. Bad news in the 22nd Ward—one of Yelad's greatest strongholds, with
one million honest votes in pocket and two hundred thousand from the grave
vaults.
In his fear, the aide told it
badly—which meant from the beginning, each detail drop by drop.
Yelad shouted at him to bottom line it at once. But the being stumbled so badly that
Yelad gritted his teeth and told him to start anew.
The 22nd Ward was an island, surrounded
by factory-polluted seas. For the working class, which meant all of the voters,
there were only two convenient routes in and out of the ward,
great bridge spans built with a vast hurrah and a flurry of mordida twenty years before.
"Yes! Yes! I clottin' know that. Spit it out, you
little drakhbutt!"
"Well..."the aide wailed.
"One of them just collapsed."
"Clot!" was all Yelad could
gobble. The voter traffic would soon make the other bridge impassable. And
although there had been no injuries, people might fear to even chance that
one.
Yelad sucked in half his jug of spirits in one go. The day was not beginning well.
*****
As Yelad tried to gather his wits,
Raschid was being let into the deep, gloomy underground heart of the big building
that housed Dusable's computer balloting system.
The toady ushered him and his
three-being team of techs to a steel vault. The heavy door hung
open. Inside was a snakes' nest of boards and old-fashioned optic wiring.
It was almost too easy. But Raschid
knew that in politics, one took it any way it came.
Where earlier there had been two
thousand women marching for Kym, election day saw fifteen thousand mothers march out
from two wards. Whole gravtrucks of police fled before them.
For three hours they paraded from one
ward to the next, gathering beings of all sexes behind banners bearing the
likeness of the martyred girl mugger.
Then they all went to vote, sixty
thousand of them. Some particularly irate women voted 130 times or more before the
polls closed.
Solon Kenna hit the docks and SDT Union
hiring halls at dawn. He spread the bribe money so thick and wide the grease
could have easily launched a fleet of destroyers, and as he shook
each hand and filled each pocket with credits, he looked each being straight in the eye
and issued the order for the day.
"Go vote. Go cause trouble."
The masses of workers swarmed out the
gate. The voting and fighting raged deep into the night.
*****
Solon Walsh addressed the livie crowds
armored in solemn, youthful honesty. But his wrath was so great that even his
steely hands shook. The bit of paper with the latest awfulness
fluttering in his anger as he shook it before the cameras.
"Yet another betrayal, my fellow
citizens. The privy council in its wisdom has just ordered our
credits devalued by one half! What does my cowardly opponent, Tyrenne Yelad, have to say to that?"
If anyone had looked closely, they
would have seen only a few handscrawled words written on it. They were from Raschid,
a heavily underlined reminder:
"Don't tell this lie with a smile." Walsh's
stormy brow was a work of art.
At midday, Yelad's emergency press
conference to refute Walsh's charges was canceled. There was more grim news from
the 22nd: Huge cracks had been found in the remaining bridge.
No more than seven hundred people from
the 22nd voted—which meant that Yelad would also not be able to cast the
votes of the dead.
*****
The first of several hundred gravtruck
loads of phony voters lumbered into Dusable's capital just after dark. All
over the planet Yelad was bringing in similar reinforcements. The beings would
be escorted from poll to poll to vote for the Tyrenne, receiving a
chit for each vote. The chits were redeemable in cash. There were some seasoned
pros on board each of the trucks, beings capable of hitting two to three hundred
polling spots before the midnight shutoff. For them, it was very lucrative piecework.
Raschid's force waited in the alley
until the first truck passed. They swarmed out, swinging clubs and hurling
bottles filled with fiery liquid. The beings on the first truck were dragged
off and beaten. The truck was dumped off its gravlifts onto its side. Then it was set on
fire—blocking the way with its flaming wreckage.
Not that a barricade was really
needed. The other trucks were either quickly overwhelmed, or turned tail to run.
There was no pursuit. Raschid had drummed it into every thick
skull: stick to detail, no matter what.
Somebody smashed in the strongbox
aboard the truck and started handing out the counterfeit voting cards—just one more
detail in Raschid's list.
*****
Gillia was a hardened twenty-year
veteran of campaign strong-arming and dirty tricks. But he had found himself
getting weary of late, and was thinking of retirement. Out of
loyalty to Yelad he had decided to stick through one last campaign. Adding
weight to that decision was the notion of the experts that this would be the
easiest election of them all. Kenna did not stand a chance, so all kinds of
opportunities were left for Gillia to do far more skimming than
usual. If he used his wits, he would retire almost as rich as a Tyrenne himself.
When Gillia ordered the lead vehicle to
turn into the 103rd Ward, he already knew he had been a rosy-butted fool for
thinking that way. The word on the street was that all over Dusable,
Yelad was taking a tremendous licking. Punishment squads out to do a little
lightweight thumping were on the receiving end of their own beatings. Some fights had
erupted into full-scale riots. Gillia himself had seen a Yelad ward office in flames—and
that was in the first hour of the night's work. Burning barricades and screaming
mobs had blocked his entrance into eight wards.
Meanwhile, Yelad's top operators were
doing a great deal of screaming on their own. Gillia had never been greeted by such
hysteria from the election brass. His poll-riding teams were
under tremendous pressure to produce. Snap poll after snap poll showed that the
Walsh vote was big and getting bigger. It had to be subverted, and clottin'
fast.
Gillia's specialty was seeing that
committed voters—committed to the other side—never reached the polls.
As in most places, the elderly and
infirm on Dusable tended to vote the ticket. First, after years
of backing one party, they were unlikely to change at this stage of the game. Second, they
tended to owe their present existence, enfeebled though it might be, to that same
ticket. All social welfare, obviously, was under the direct supervision of the local ward
captain.
However, it was hard for such beings
even to get to the polls. That problem was dealt with using traditional tools. The
names of these prized voters were gathered up by the ward captain, who handed out the
list to transport teams. On election night vehicles marked with
the name of the proper candidate toured the wards, picked up the elderly and
the crippled, delivered them to the polls to cast their vote, and then returned
them home.
Gillia, and other beings like him,
made sure that never happened.
Tonight he had twenty gravcars at his
command, all repainted and bearing the name and likeness of Solon Walsh. The
game plan was always the same. Spies in the enemy's camp would leak the schedule
and names. Gillia would hustle his people out into the appropriate wards. They
would go street to street, door-to-door, if necessary, and con the
old beings into the gravcars. Then they would dump them fifty or sixty klicks away,
stranding them far from their home polling places.
When Gillia's people hit the business
center of the 103rd Ward, he issued instructions. The convoy split up and
headed for their assigned neighborhoods. Gillia and his two goons continued on alone.
The old being at the first row home he
approached greeted him at the door with a confused smile. "Why... what are
you doing here, young man? I've already done my duty."
Gillia figured she was having him on.
He sighed. There were always a few citizens who used any excuse to get out of
voting. Oh, well. He would have to bruise her some, just like a
legitimate poll rider, or she would be suspicious. He raised a weary arm to strike.
The old being scampered back,
remarkably swift for her age. What a lot of drakh. He would
have to chase her down.
"Wait," the old woman wailed.
"There's been a mistake..."
"Right, lady," Gillia
growled as he cornered her and got into position to smack. Then he became the
startled one as she clawed out a voting card. It was stamped with Walsh's name, and
time and date of voting. Aw, clot! The old bugger had already cast her ballot.
Gillia hit her anyway. He was too
worried to make it his best shot—just enough to get her on the ground so he could give
her a kick in the ribs.
Then, as his boot swung forward, a
heavy hand grabbed his collar and he felt himself flailing back. He slammed onto
the floor. He tried to roll to avoid the next blow, but he was
past it and the roll came out more like a flop. The club caught him in the belly, and
air whooshed out.
Gillia fought for breath. A red haze
blurred his view. But through it, he could see a grinning young woman standing over him.
She had sloping shoulders, a muscular neck, and shapely arms bulging with
muscle. Nearby, he heard the old woman's gloating cackle. Above him, the young
woman shifted her grip on the club and brought it down.
Just before it hit and pain and
blackness descended, he heard his goons outside screaming in terror.
An hour later, Gillia's unconscious
body was dumped in a far-off woods, as was every member of his poll-riding team.
Meanwhile, all the gravcars were
seized and repainted with Yelad's name and likeness. Raschid's own dirty
tricksters spread out through the Tyrenne's own wards.
"Can't let a good move like that
go to waste," Raschid had told Avri.
Pavy had been more than happy to supply
some of her best mob muscle to the game.
*****
Tyrenne Yelad attacked one hour before
the polls closed. Three hundred handpicked goons raided Walsh's headquarters,
under orders to break every head, wreck every office, and carry off every
document they could find.
The small force outside the building
put up a token fight. It was quickly overwhelmed and put to flight. The
bonfire team got busy outside stoking up a blaze into which furniture, documents, and
anything else flammable would be hurled. A squad hastily assembled a steel ram
and smashed through the double doors. A moment later Yelad's goons poured inside.
Raschid laughed as the goons rushed up
the stairs. Just before the first wave hit him, he gave the signal. His shock troops
leapt out of their hiding places and counterattacked. There were five
hundred of them, all just as big, mean, and willing to hurt as
Yelad's forces.
Raschid caught the first goon by the
club arm. There was a dry snap as he broke it; then he spun to the side and grabbed
the next goon by the ear, which he used as a lever to hurl his
attacker to the floor. The ear came away in his hand and the being's head gave a
bounce on a jutting stair. Raschid hurled the torn-off ear into the startled
face of a third brute. As he booted the goon in the crotch and reached for a
fourth victim, he saw Yelad's forces buried under the wave of
counterattackers.
This was going well. There was nothing Raschid
liked better than hands-on electioneering.
*****
Lieutenant Skinner reached the last
Walsh polling spot a few minutes before the doors closed. Despite the lateness of
the hour, she was in no hurry.
*****
Election night was usually one of
Skinner's favorite times. There was always plenty of pleasant hitting to do and
heaps of spare mordida about.
This time, however, she was one
unmotivated cop. All over, the juice had stopped. She was starting to feel
poverty-stricken, and her captain whined that he was no better off. Well,
clot him! She was sure he was just looking out for himself. In other wards, her
colleagues
were moaning over the same misfortune.
So she had hit the streets with no
hopes and little oomph. It did not improve her mood any to learn that she was right.
Not only was there no mordida, but every citizen was as likely to attack her as to spit
in her eye.
Her main job was to greet Yelad's
phony voters when they arrived at the polls. She and her six-being team were supposed
to hustle them off the gravtrucks, make sure they voted fast and correctly, then
load them back on the vehicle to be rushed to the next spot.
Almost no one showed. Skinner got on
the horn right away. The first time the shrieking voice on the other side
shouted that it was just a mess up, some kind of delay. Skinner said
sure and got off. She was not calmed by the hysteria in that voice. The second time,
same thing. But, from then on out, all lines were jammed. Skinner realized with a shock
that all over Dusable the same thing was happening. Cops like her were making the
same panic calls.
Oh, well. She would just duck her head,
do her job, and go home and get drunk when the election was over.
During the whole night only a few
gravtrucks arrived. But even that was no solace. Because there was a surprise
awaiting them at each poll. Joygirls and joyboys were out in force,
guarded by so many mob pimps Skinner would have had to have been afflicted
with a death wish to interfere. The pleasure sellers would mince up to the mark, throw a
little seduction into the air, and the deal would be made. Instead of Yelad, the
phony vote would go to Walsh. The payoff, a few sweet minutes in a handy dark place.
There was nothing Skinner could do
about it. She didn't have the muscle. After a while, she started getting horny
herself. By the time she reached the last stop, she didn't know whether
she was too pissed to be horny, or too horny to be pissed.
Her jaw dropped when she saw one of the
joyboys working the line of voters. It was her own little lad! Ah, how she had
missed him. When she saw his curly locks and soft mouth, all thoughts of anger
disappeared.
Lieutenant Skinner fished out her
voting card and joined the line. Clot it! Her vote was going to Walsh.
*****
In the Cairenes—especially on
Dusable—there was a puzzling mechanical law that struck every election period. No
sooner were the polls closed than the main computer would jam up
and crash. There it would sit for half the night while teams of expensive techs were
rushed in to tinker at its works and shake their heads over bitter caff.
At the appropriate time, there would
be huzzahs of victory from the techs, and the computer would kick in, counting the
votes and spitting out the results.
There was never any suspense in this
final act. Yelad always won.
The Tyrenne huddled in his yawning
office with his top aides. Despite the nightmare that had stalked him all day
and night, Yelad's mood was fairly light. It helped that he was drunk. It
helped still more that the mechanical law of Dusable elections
had cut in right on time. Saved by a crashing computer! He chortled, took a slug from the
bottle, and growled for his chief registrar to get to it. The screen lit up on Yelad's
desk. Now he would see what he
would see.
The way it was supposed to work—clot,
the way it always worked—was
that now the real count would begin. The broken-down computer would hum into
action. Its first task was to tally the enemy wards. That would let
Yelad know his opponent's strength. Then he would have his own vote
counted, and the margin of victory adjusted by the millions of grave votes he
had at his command.
He had to be careful. If he cheated
too blatantly, the shrill questioning could wreck the first year of his new
term. This time, however, Yelad was throwing caution off the roof.
Walsh's tactics had him aching for revenge. He would bury the little clot in a landslide of
historic proportions.
Yelad jumped when he heard his
registrar groan. What the clot?
Walsh's vote was coming in.
"Flooding in" was a better description. In ward after ward he was
sweeping to victory!
A half hour later Yelad was suddenly
sober. He was in deep drakh. Walsh's margin was so great that Yelad would have to
vote every dead being in his files. He steeled himself and chugged down half the
bottle. Fine! He'd do what was necessary. Hang what happened next. He would still be
Tyrenne.
Impatiently he ordered his registrar to
start the tally of wards. He settled back for a long night of counting.
The night proved short. One hour later
the awful truth began to sink in.
Yelad's vote was nearly nonexistent.
Later, he would figure it out. Somebody
had mickied the computer. All across Dusable, every time a committed voter
hit the button, it would be recorded instead for Walsh. The official total gave him less than half-a-million
votes.
Dusable's dead rested easy in their
grave vaults that night.
Yelad had lost.
From that time forward he would be
mocked as "Landslide Yelad."
*****
Raschid did not attend Walsh and
Kenna's victory party. Instead, he had a very private meeting with Solon Kenna in his
offices. It was time to set his price.
The thought came to him as he was
watching the election feed on the livie box. It was followed by an overwhelming feeling
of urgency. He had to act. Fast.
As he rushed to his hastily arranged
meeting with Kenna, the dense clouds that had boiled in his brain for all this
time began to thin out, then lift away.
He had passed the Final Test.
Kenna was relieved when Raschid told
him what he required: a fast ship, loaded with all the AM2 it could hold, ready
for lift within six hours. Kenna thought that no price at all. He figured Raschid would
beggar the mordida coffers. Not that it wasn't well worth it. In fact, from his
viewpoint, Raschid's payment was so little that even Kenna's
crooked soul stung a bit.
"Are you sure," Solon Kenna
pressed, "that we can't do anything more?"
"Maybe you can," came the
answer. "I'm not sure. But right now, why don't you just stick tight.
Enjoy yourself. I'll get back to you."
The Eternal Emperor shook the hand of
one singularly happy politician.
And now it was time for him to retake
his throne…
THE END IS THE BEGINNING
THE NEW STEN OMNIBUS EDITIONS
IT'S HERE: JUGGERNAUT!
Sten Omnibus #2
Click this link to buy the book!
Orbit Books in the U.K. has gathered up all eight novels in the Sten Series and is publishing them as three omnibus editions. The First - BATTLECRY - features the first three books in the series: Sten #1; Sten #2 -The Wolf Worlds; and Sten #3, The Court Of A Thousand Suns. Click this link to buy it. The Kindle Edition OF BATTLECRY, includes all three books but is only available in the U.K. and territories. Click this link to buy it. Available now: JUGGERNAUT, which features the next three books: Sten #4, Fleet Of The Damned; Sten #5, Revenge Of The Damned; and Sten #6, The Return Of the Emperor. Click this link to buy both the trade paperback and Kindle version. Next month months Orbit (A division of Little Brown) will publish DEATH MATCH, which will feature Sten #7, Vortex, and Sten #8, End Of Empire. Those will be issued as Kindle editions as well. Stay tuned for details.
*****
STEN #1 DEBUTS IN SPANISH!
IT'S HERE: JUGGERNAUT!
Sten Omnibus #2
Click this link to buy the book!
Orbit Books in the U.K. has gathered up all eight novels in the Sten Series and is publishing them as three omnibus editions. The First - BATTLECRY - features the first three books in the series: Sten #1; Sten #2 -The Wolf Worlds; and Sten #3, The Court Of A Thousand Suns. Click this link to buy it. The Kindle Edition OF BATTLECRY, includes all three books but is only available in the U.K. and territories. Click this link to buy it. Available now: JUGGERNAUT, which features the next three books: Sten #4, Fleet Of The Damned; Sten #5, Revenge Of The Damned; and Sten #6, The Return Of the Emperor. Click this link to buy both the trade paperback and Kindle version. Next month months Orbit (A division of Little Brown) will publish DEATH MATCH, which will feature Sten #7, Vortex, and Sten #8, End Of Empire. Those will be issued as Kindle editions as well. Stay tuned for details.
STEN #1 DEBUTS IN SPANISH!
Told in four parts, Episode Two now appearing in Diaspar Magazine, the best SF&F magazine in South America! And it's free! Here's the link. And here's the link to the first episode.
*****
Sten debuta # 1 en español! Narrada en cuatro partes, Episode Dos ahora aparece en la revista Diaspar, la mejor revista de SF & F en América del Sur!
COMING SOON: EPISODE #3
*****
EMPIRE DAY 2012:
A COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
THE STEN COOKBOOK & KILGOUR JOKEBOOK
EMPIRE DAY 2012:
A COMMEMORATIVE EDITION
Relive the fabulous four-day Stregg-laced celebration. Alex Kilgour's Worst Joke Ever. New recipes from the Eternal Emperor's kitchen. Alex Kilgour's Worst Joke Ever. Sten's thrill-packed exploits at the Emp's castle. How to make your own Stregg.
And, did I mention, Alex Kilgour's Worst Joke Ever?
And, did I mention, Alex Kilgour's Worst Joke Ever?
Two new companion editions to the international best-selling Sten series. In the first, learn the Emperor's most closely held cooking secrets. In the other, Sten unleashes his shaggy-dog joke cracking sidekick, Alex Kilgour. Both available as trade paperbacks or in all major e-book flavors. Click here to tickle your funny bone or sizzle your palate.
THE COMPLETE MISADVENTURES: IT'S A BOOK!
THE VITAL LINKS:
The MisAdventures began humbly enough - with about 2,000 readers. When it rose to over 50,000 (we're now knocking at the door of 115,000) I started listening to those of you who urged me to collect the stories into a book. Starting at the beginning, I went back and rewrote the essays, adding new detail and events as they came to mind. This book is the result of that effort. However, I'm mindful of the fact, Gentle Reader, that you also enjoy having these little offerings posted every Friday to put a smile on your face for the weekend. So I'll continue running them until it reaches the final Fade Out. Meanwhile, it would please the heart of this ink-stained wretch - as well as tickle whatever that hard black thing is in my banker's chest - if you bought the book. It will make a great gift, don't you think? And if you'd like a personally autographed copy you can get it directly through my (ahem) Merchant's Link at Amazon.com. Click here. Buy the book and I will sign it and ship it to you. Break a leg!