by Edward M. Erdelac -
Considine had to smile when he thought about how impressive
Gorsh’s office had seemed to him only this morning.
It was a bug hunter’s bait shop compared to Aloysius
Morgenstar’s plush, cathedral-like office, which was dominated by a
smooth-lined desk in front of a dazzling viewport that looked down on Eclectia
below.
He sat in a comfortable chair with two security officers
standing over him for a half hour before a side door hissed open and Morgenstar
himself entered in no great hurry.
He was younger and fitter looking than Considine had
expected. His hair was the color of sandstone, not a strand out of place, and
his sea-blue suit fit him better than Considine’s skin fit his skeleton. He was
refined and assured in the extreme, but there was a hint of something in his
eyes that was familiar, that twinge of madness Considine would know anywhere.
“Inspector Considine,” said Morgenstar, unbuttoning his
jacket and easing into his chair. “I hope you weren’t waiting too long. I had
an important meeting concerning what to do with you.”
“A meeting with Gorsh and the Peacekeepers’ Council?”
“Oh no no no,” Morgenstar chuckled. “I wouldn’t trust such
an important decision to them. They were supposed to chaperone you and look how
that turned out. No, it’s been decided that you’ll suffer a mental breakdown –
shock, from having witnessed the death of one of your enforcers. You were
apprehended by my staff after having wandered into a cafeteria and attacked and
murdered one of my employees. You’ll be remanded to the care of the staff at
St. Christina’s Clinic for the Neuro-Atypical. Not a top of the line facility,
but the PKC insurance won’t cover anything better I’m afraid.”
Considine smiled.
“What’s so amusing?”
“I was wondering if any of your employees will be able to
get the taste of Orin Bantry out of their lunches. You can scour that autochef
with a fleet of de-con bots for a year and they’ll still probably never eat
there again. Office gossip travels so fast. They’ll be saying Bantry’s nose
turned up in a bowl of soup a week after the kitchens reopen.”
“Well, I’m glad you’re able to amuse yourself. You’ll have a
very long time to do so,” Morgenstar said.
“You won’t be able to keep me there, Morgenstar. You must
know that.”
“I know you’re resourceful, yes. I’ve read up on your
career. That’s why I’d like to make you another offer.”
“Money?”
“No, you’ve lived so long without it you’re accustomed,”
said Morgenstar. “I was thinking more along the lines of salvation.”
“Here it comes at last,” said Considine.
“Why don’t you tell me what you think you know, Inspector?
To amuse me.”
“I know you allowed Orin Bantry to provide Almer Croix with
a substantial amount of detonite from your company’s stores, and that he
intended to use it to destroy the angel colony on the lip of the Boatic Trench.
I know there’s something down there. Something even the jelly rollers don’t
know about. Something that wants out. It’s an organism, kept in check by the
angels. Probably their opposite number. It got to Croix via some sort of
parasite, and convinced him it was god.”
He leaned forward in his chair, studying Morgenstar.
“What I couldn’t figure out was what your angle is. But now
that I’ve seen you, I think I know.”
“What do you know?”
“You’re not infected by one of these parasites. These pilot
organisms, they extend the psychic influence of whatever’s in the trench,
influence human minds, but they’re detrimental to the physiology of the host.
And you don’t look sick, so you must be insane.”
Morgenstar stiffened, but quickly regained his look of
arrogant indulgence.
“How did they convince you to help them, Morgenstar?”
Considine asked.
“Let me tell you what you don’t know, Inspector,” said
Morgenstar. “You believe you have evidence of the existence of an unknown
submarinal species held under a false quarantine in the ZMB facility
planetside. Perhaps it was your intent to deliver it to the council once you
had amassed more evidence of a conspiracy.”
Considine’s face fell and his eyes narrowed.
“Your Dr. Kes has relinquished your evidence in exchange for
more gainful employment.”
“With you?” Considine sighed.
“Now, a similar choice lies before you.”
“Is salvation more gainful employment?”
“Oh yes, much more. God has need of a vehicle, to complete
the work you and your enforcers interfered with.”
He raised his hand, and the side door opened once more.
A woman in a sharp suit emerged, bearing an opaque,
water-filled container, in which an eel-like shape, about the size of a kitten,
undulated.
Considine started to rise from his chair and the guards
shoved him back down.
“But you must accept the will of God yourself,” Morgenstar
frowned. “Resistance can damage the pilot organism and the host both.
Irrevocably.”
“What’s the alternative to salvation?” Considine hissed,
gripping the arms of the chair.
“Lobotomy,” Morgenstar smiled. “St.
Catherine’s may not be the most reputable institution, but they still have
their admission standards. It wouldn’t be right to commit a mentally healthy
man.”
“Maybe you should get a room, Morgenstar. You’re the one
praying to a tapeworm.”
“This is not God, but a servant of God. A finger….”
“I’ve a finger for you,” Considine quipped.
Morgenstar waved the woman with the jar off. She backed out
of the room, the door hissing shut behind her.
“I can see you’ve made your choice, Inspector. You
disappoint me.” He rose from his chair and buttoned his jacket, shaking his
head as though he truly were saddened. “Inspector Considine isn’t feeling well,
gentlemen,” he said to his security guards. “Take him to see a doctor.”
The security guards hoisted him to his feet.
“Gorsh will be looking for me.”
“No, he won’t,” said Morgenstar over his shoulder, as he
went to the side door.
They dragged him from the office.
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