In Memoriam
Rafferty Lay on the slab
of cold stone. He stared at the
overhead lights but they didn't hurt his eyes.
Rafferty was dead.
His former partner Chris
McCarthy stood at the window in the Ceres mortuary. Jerome Blavatsky came out of the post-mortem room after flinging
down the thin rubber gloves which were a trademark of his profession. There was blood on his gloves but the body,
still within line of sight was covered in a rubber sheet. Only the head was visible.
'Velcome Chris.'
'Wh-what do you want?'
'I just wanted to ask a
few questions, yes?'
'I'll answer
anything...if I can.' McCarthy looked
through the window at his ex-partner.
Rafferty was a tall, good-looking man, even in death. The wounds which caused his demise were
concealed beneath the sheet. McCarthy
was small and a trifle wizened.
'I know you have been to
see the Ceres police, but I need to know a few details.'
'All right. We were on a mining expedition.'
'Where?'
'Eventually we ended up
on an asteroid called Palliates in the Southwest zone.'
'I haf heard of it
never.'
'We dug a tunnel, pumped
it full of air and mined out the product.'
'For what were you
mining?'
McCarthy shifted
uncomfortably. 'Do I have to tell you?'
'Only out of interest it
was.'
'I suppose it can't do
any harm,' Chris sighed. Like most
miners he was secretive about his discoveries.
'We were mining for crystal retinate silica. I registered the claim yesterday.'
'Uh huh.' Doctor Blavatsky looked thoughtful. He was a little gnome of a man with very
white whiskers which entirely concealed the lower half of his face. He had the habit of ticking points off on
his fingers. He was doing it now.
'So you pumped a tunnel
full of air?'
'Yes, Earth normal
balance. We needed the freedom to
perform a slow excavation over the final stretch because the material we were
looking for is very delicate. We used
ultrasonic pulverisers to create the tunnel, then used hand probes to clear out
the last few feet.'
'Without atmosphere
suits?'
'Of course. That was the whole point. Then, just as we
were about to transfer to the linkage corridor the roof gave way. Rafferty was trapped. He died of suffocation before I could dig
him out.'
'Thank you Mr McCarthy,
you have been most helpful. I now know
what to look for in my post-mortem. I
am skilled as a surgeon, yes, but my work is aided by your observations.'
'I'll go now,' McCarthy
turned with obvious relief.
'Wait. What vas the nature of the substance for
which you were looking?'
'CRS is invaluable for
the manufacture of the new computer systems.
It is a type of crystal which retains molecular memories. One small sliver, properly accessed, can
hold as much information as thousands of the ancient PC's they taught us about
in history.'
'I would have thought
computers were powerful enough.'
'No, that's the
point. They don't have enough
processing power. The things we want to
do these days need multigigabytes
packed into less space than ever.'
'I see. I suppose, then, this CRS is very valuable.'
'Oh yes, it's worth
megabucks...' Chris halted, stunned by
the implication in the words of the old man.
'Wait a sec, I may be a miner, digging for cash is my job. But I wouldn't kill my partner for money.'
Blavatsky studied his
face for a few moments. 'You know, I
think you are telling the truth,' he said softly. 'Thank you for speaking to me.'
As McCarthy left the
clinic his throat was dry. But he
brightened up as he returned to the civilian walkways. What had the old man wanted with him? Now that the interview was over he felt more
secure, ready to face up to the responsibilities of his new life. He was helped by the hundred thousand
Aster's due to go into his account almost immediately. Several million were due to follow in the
next few years as he slowly released into the market the supply of CRS which he
now held in a secret location out on one of the minor asteroids - tagged,
alarmed and boobytrapped to prevent theft.
If only Rafferty hadn't
been so damned greedy. Rafferty had
supplied the ship and most of the up-to-date equipment they had used. Until that time McCarthy had been a rugged
individualist, one of those miners who spent their lives just cruising and
landing at random, sometimes striking paydirt, mostly not.
He had first met
Rafferty on one of his infrequent trips to Ceres central base, a facility for
miners which had been constructed almost fifty years before. Rafferty was an Earthman, an importee, as
shown by his greater height and more muscular build. He seemed to chose McCarthy on purpose, sitting beside him in the
miner's canteen where the food was cheap but plentiful.
'Hi, I'm Mike Rafferty.'
'McCarthy.' Said the
other bluntly. Miners tended to be
short on the social niceties; it was part of the isolation.
'I know. I have a proposition for you.'
McCarthy ate in silence
as the stranger outlined the situation.
He was a scientist, specialising in geological structures and had
developed a theory which could change the face of computing.
'I have discovered a
method of detecting CRS using my geological knowledge combined with statistical
analysis.'
McCarthy did not need to
ask what CRS was. It had been in the
news of late as scientists attempted to make even lighter, more powerful
computers to process the huge amounts of information used in running colonies
and planetary engineering.
'So, what are the odds
of getting it?'
'Oh give or take a one
on either side of .93.'
Since 1.00 equalled 100%
this was a very high rate indeed.
McCarthy turned red in the face and thumped down his cup of Stim. He disliked being made a fool of.
'I ain't got time for
this.'
Rafferty grabbed him by
the arm and pulled him back.
'I'm not playing about
Mister. These are tried and true
methods. I don't have time - or money -
to waste.'
'So where do I come
in?' McCarthy resumed his seat with
reluctance.
'I've heard you're a
reliable spacer. Very good at
manipulating your field ship and extremely self-reliant.'
'I don't need your job.'
'My proposition is
simple. I'll pay you the same for this
job as you've earned in the last three years.'
This clinched the
deal. McCarthy didn't mind making good
money, even if, in his opinion, a smooth-talking idiot was supplying it. He kept the latter opinion to himself.
They set off in the good
ship 'Dublin,' which, like everything else on this trip had been bought and
paid for by Rafferty. On the outgoing
trip McCarthy learned that the well-built Irishman had bought everything from
his life savings. He had no money left
at all. If his theory was incorrect he
would lose every penny.
Some people would have
been impressed by this dedication, but McCarthy continued in his opinion that the
scientist was rather dense for somebody with so much knowledge.
The hold was filled with
fancy instruments he had never used in his life. A field stabiliser, and x-ray crystallographer, hand-held heat
blasters, a linkage tunnel and external life-support systems. To a miner, young or old, such proliferation
was evidence of a mind which neither knew nor appreciated the ways of asteroid
mining.
Then they struck gold or
rather crystal. Gold was relatively
valuable since it made excellent electrical connections but it was also quite
common and would certainly have failed to recoup the losses of the errant
scientist.
The first three strikes
were a blank and McCarthy grew ever more testy as they turned down potential
loads of rare metals which would have made either a fat profit.
Finally he could stand
it no more and approached his shipmate when Rafferty was busy looking over some
complicated charts and diagrams which he consulted every day with no apparent
unease.
'Your theory is wrong
pal.'
'My theory, Chris, is
based on statistics,' said Mike patiently.
'It means we're looking at the most likely aggregates of rocky material
which display accretion characteristics likely to have led to the development
of our particular crystal.'
McCarthy gave in. The combination of scientific double-talk
and the calm demeanour of his partner made his doubts subside. For the time being.
Now here they were. Fourth time lucky.
Palliates, the asteroid,
was four miles across. The results of
their initial scan were positive, so after a few hours they set the machines to
work and dug down for about two hundred metres, just short of the area which
Rafferty had calculated would be replete with CRS. Then they halted the machines.
Mike Rafferty pumped the tunnel full of earth-normal air mixture. Pressure suits were far too cumbersome for
the kind of delicate work in which they were engaged.
It was a strange
sensation for McCarthy to work unencumbered by his normal equipment. He enjoyed the freedom of movement it gave
him. But the painstaking work of
removing the remaining soil layer by layer with handheld lasers became wearying
after a while. Mike had explained it
long before.
'They crystals are
extremely delicate, so to reach them we must work slowly and carefully. It'll be worth the effort.'
At last the object of
their search was visible; a greyish, dirty collocation of material which was
carefully cleaned with an air-hose and droplets of their precious water. Extracted by hand, it weighed, McCarthy
would have said, about six kilos. Even
after the care they had taken unstable fragments of the crystal dissolved into
a fine mist in front of their eyes.
'That's my little
beauty,' said Rafferty, transferring the crystals to an aluminium case with a
padded, shockproof interior.
They scanned the area
for more crystals but they had them all.
'Is that it?' asked
McCarthy, stunned by this anti-climax.
'Yep, we can go
home.' Rafferty swaggered towards the
linkage corridor;' I'm going to be rich.'
Something clicked in
McCarthy's brain. This soft-born Earth
creature had exploited the talents of a real spacer. He had crystals worth hundreds of thousand if not millions of
Astrocredits. McCarthy was just a pawn
in his game.
Just as his shipmate
turned around to ask him to hurry up McCarthy pointed his laser on full power
at the ceiling above Rafferty and fired.
When the body stopped
twitching McCarthy rescued the crystals still intact inside their case and
stowed the aboard the ship. Then he
came back and pulled out the body.
He was surprised to find
he was experiencing no particular emotion at all. No fear, surprise, nor elation.
Nothing. He pulled Rafferty back
to the ship - years of lifting metals had made McCarthy strong for a spacer -
and dumped him in the freezer unit usually employed for volatile samples.
This way was
better. Of course he wanted to leave
the body where it was, but the rule in such emergencies was to bring back the
dead crewman, the simple fact being that someone finding a valuable lodestone
could simply kill the other participants and make the claim for himself. The authorities knew this and a post-mortem
was inevitable.
On the other hand many
accidents still occurred. Deep surface
mines were notoriously unstable and it was easy to have an accident. Cave-ins were neither rare nor surprising to
the authorities.
The journey was
uneventful. McCarthy spent a lot of
time watching his favourite moviedisks and playing solitaire. After a few weeks he handed the body over to
those who could deal with such matters and put the 'Dublin' into dry dock as
part of the dead man's estate. Once the
claim was settled he would put in a bid for her. He would have a new ship with an empty hold. Then he could get back into space with only
himself and the tri-vid for company.
He was at the hotel
Excelsior when the message came for him to visit the health centre again.
He walked to the
centre. The inside of Ceres was a
fertile garden, terraformed over the last hundred years and the buildings were
set in grounds which, while not spacious, boasted lawns so green and flowers so
bright they hurt the eyes of those accustomed to the muted filters of
space-travel.
Blavatsky was stationed
in the fourth floor of the building. Blavatsky was waiting for McCarthy with
the patient air of a man who had to get a job over with. Not unlike Rafferty. But Rafferty was dead.
'Just to let you
know. Results of the post-mortem haf
been noted. As vith your report your
friend vas killed by a combination of suffocation and crushing injuries
sustained through the rockfall.'
'I'm sorry it happened,'
said McCarthy.
'Yes, I'm sure you
are.' Blavatsky leant over his desk,
scribbling furiously with his left hand.
'Look, why am I
here? I'm a busy man.'
'We are all busy on
Ceres, so much to do. I just thought
you vould have wanted a personal confirmation of the news.'
'Thank you Doctor. Now can I leave? I have some certificates to apply for.'
'Wait. I have sore bones. The gravity, you understand?
Before you leave could you fetch me some files from the storage
cupboard?'
McCarthy stood up,
visibly annoyed. Old fool. A spacer had no time for this. Well he would humour the old idiot for a
moment before departing on the newly renamed and refurbished 'Caledonia.'
He opened the door to be
confronted by Chris McCarthy holding a powerblaster which he silently canted
upwards before firing. The image shook
a little, but was in 3-D, and so realistic he screamed out loud.
Justice had reached him.
He slumped down on the
floor and the doctor, suddenly restored for a man who had been so ill only
seconds before, helped him to a seat.
'What is wrong?'
'I-I saw myself. It's not possible I ain't -'
'Yes. You see, when I wass doing the post-mortem I
discovered not only particles of dust, but minute slivers of crystal your
friend inhaled as he chipped it away from the surrounding rock.'
'It can't happen,' said
McCarthy, his tone taking a harder edge.
The strain of the last few weeks had made him hallucinate. That was all.
'I wish for your sake it
was true. You see the crystal entered
his brain and reacted vith his neural pathways, recording the last few seconds
of his life.'
Chris spread the fingers
of both hands across his face and began to weep.
'I ill explain,' said
the doctor gently, 'you see, I extracted the particles and fed them through our
best computer. That is why the image is
so good.'
'I didn't want to kill
him.'
'Strange, I feel this is
true.'
'It wasn't the money.'
'Then what?'
McCarthy stared into a
place inside his head darker than the blackest stretches on intersteller space.
'I've been a loner all
my life.'
'Yes?'
'I killed because it was
a long, long trip back. I couldn't
stand his bloody company.'
The tears were flowing
fast now.
'It is all right,' said
Dr Blavatsky, touching McCarthy gently on the shoulder as he summoned the
police with the quickdial facility on his lapel phone.
As McCarthy, looking
almost relaxed after making a full statement in the presence of the two state
officers, was being led away, he turned to Blavatsky.
'Destroy those
recordings after you use them as evidence.'
'For why?'
'There will be no need,'
the doctor assured him.
'But what make ya say
that?'
'I made them out of the
holographic images in your personal profile.'
Outside the building
McCarthy did not shout or protest as he was shown into the police flyer. He was smiling almost nostalgically at the
final irony of what he had done to himself.