The Memory of Anna
Calle Dybedahl
He entered her cell without knocking. It was to be expected, of
course. She was, as far as she knew, the most important member of the
old regime that they had managed to capture, so they did every petty
little thing they could to prove themselves more important than
her.
"Commissioner Sleer?"
He was not entirely young. A bit over thirty, perhaps. His hair was
dark, as was his eyes. His skin was pale, and he was well dressed. He
wore a perfume she knew to be very exclusive and hard to get.
"Call me Servalan," she said. "There is no reason to pretend."
He sat down on the single, hard chair the cell provided. It matched
the small, bare table and well-worn cot that made up the rest of the
furniture. He put his dataslate in his lap and activated it.
"I would like to ask you a few questions," he said. "I hope you will
answer them willingly. You if anyone should know that any refusal will
be quite futile."
She sat on the cot, leaning against the cold wall. "Of course," she
said. "Ask away."
He cleared his throat. "To begin with," he said, "I would like to know
why you came back not just to Earth, but to your old palace. You must
have known that there of all places, in the place of the failed coup
against your presidency, someone would recognize you for who you
are."
She looked at him in silence for a while. He was just about to remind
her that she'd said she'd cooperate when she spoke.
"That is a much longer story than you might think," she said. "Are you
sure you want to hear it?"
"Absolutely," he said. "Go right ahead. We have plenty of time."
The Student
We met at the Federation Space Academy Command School. I'd always
known I'd be going there, but it wasn't something I was looking
forward to. Not that I had anything against what was being taught,
far from it, it was the gateway to the career I wanted. But it wasn't
a popular choice of career among my friends and relatives, so I rather
expected to be alone there with a lot of dedicated and dour Alpha
youths.
Imagine my relief when another aristocrat walked into the lecture hall
that first day.
I didn't recognize her, so I guessed that she wasn't from Earth. While
Earth held more Ungraded than any other planet in the Federation, it
still wasn't a huge number. At one time or another, I had met almost
all of them. I had certainly met all of the ones close to me in age.
This was someone new.
The first lecture passed. I don't even remember what it was about, I
was so busy sneaking looks at the new girl that I wasn't paying
attention.
The main lecture hall at FSACS is smaller than you expect. It's built
to hold all students and all staff, which may sound like a lot, but at
any one time there aren't all that many of them. There are some two
hundred seats, all in all, and they're almost never all filled. The
hall is very high, with the upper ten meters or so made out of
slightly blue-tinted glass, letting in much light. Together with the
light pastel colours of the walls and furniture, it gives the hall a
kind of otherworldly feel.
The new girl had sat down in the same row as me, but on the other side
of the hall. She had brown hair, a slender body and sharp, almost
predatory, features. Her appearance appealed to me. Even if she hadn't
been a fellow Ungraded I probably would have started talking to her,
to see if she was worth taking to bed.
As it was, I knew from the very first that I wanted her. I have
never, before or since, met anyone else who gave me as intense a rush
of pure lust as Anna did.
When the lecture ended, I approached her.
"I'm Servalan," I said and offered her my hand.
"I guessed as much," she said as she took it. "I'm Anna, from Ceres
III. I've heard a lot about you."
"Really," I said, still holding her hand. "Good or bad?"
"Interesting." She raised an eyebrow and smiled the crooked little
smile I'd get to know so well.
"If you just got here," I said, "maybe you'd allow me to show you the
grounds? It will perhaps not be as efficient as a guide module, but
I'm quite sure I can make it somewhat more... interesting."
She let her gaze move all over my body, unashamed, arrogant.
"Sounds like fun," she said. "Right now?"
"When else?" I replied, and led her out into the sunlight, still
without letting go of her hand.
We first made love a few days later, lying on the grass in one of the
outer gardens. It was very early in the morning, and we'd been dancing
all night. I no longer remember who first took the initiative. It was
probably one of those moments of complete agreement where two people
simultaneously move towards the same goal. We kissed, and we undressed
each other, and our slender young bodies moved in unison, softly lit
by the early rays of the rising sun.
A few weeks later, we were living together. That, too, was a gradual
thing. From the very first day we spent much time together, and after
that night in the garden we spent our nights as well as our days side
by side. Anna had her servants fetch what she needed from her quarters
as she needed it, and eventually all of her things had migrated to my
suite. After that, letting the allocation of her rooms lapse was a
decision so minor that we didn't even notice it at the time.
Our days were filled with studies and exercises, our nights with
pleasures of the flesh and of the spirit. We were both brilliant
students, as was expected of us, and we were the center of the FSACS'
social life, a state of affairs we both found so natural and expected
that we never consciously thought about it. We knew that we were, by
pre-natal genetic screening and life-long physical and mental
conditioning, a breed superior to the Alphas who were our classmates
and the betas that were our servants. With the singular arrogance of
privileged youth, we used them all for our entertainment, much like
cats play with mice.
Days of bliss, days of happiness, they passed one by one and grew into
months and years.
Anna had been born on Ceres III, only daughter to the planetary
administrator and his wife, who had, quite contrary to the custom of
the time, carried her within her own womb from conception to birth.
Ceres III was, and still is, a minor world. Anna and her parents were
the only Ungraded on the entire planet, and Anna grew up predictably
spoiled. She was used to getting everything she wanted, and she didn't
take disappointment well.
Also, I think, she felt a bit out of her depth on Earth. There were
many more people than she was used to, and a not insignificant number
of the ones she met were older and more experienced Ungraded. She felt
threatened. She felt insecure. And, of course, she tried to
compensate. To find a way to feel safe.
The way she found was physical aggression. Not unreasonable, in a
military academy. Ceres III has a higher than average gravity, so she
had an advantage in strength and reflexes just from growing up there.
She spent as much time in combat training as I spent in the immersion
library, and she became a truly extraordinary fighter. Strong, fast,
smart and driven by both her own insecurity and the fierce ambition
bred into us.
She became very protective, and more than a little bit possessive,
about me. When other students came up to me to talk, about classwork
or parties or anything else, she'd be there at my side glaring at
them. That was all she did, glare. Once or twice I think she made a
little growling sound or took half a step forward. She didn't need to
do any more, at the Academy. People there had seen her practice, seen
her take on and demolish four opponents at a time. They'd heard the
rumours about when we'd got the stupid idea of going to a delta club
down by the spaceport and some lout pinched my ass.
I remember standing in the stinking, badly lit club. The only people
still there were me, Anna, the guy who'd pinched me and a couple of
his friends unconscious on the floor. Everybody else had fled. Anna
was talking to him, spelling out with great elaboration why he should
keep his hands off his betters. Every word that came out of
her mouth was accompanied with the cracking of another breaking bone.
He'd stopped screaming, and the smell of urine and excrement grew ever
stronger.
I'd never been so turned on before in my entire life. I watched Anna
working him over, and I adored her as never before. My slender,
dangerous love. My predator, my ever so barely tamed wild beast. Her
movements were a love poem to me, every thud and crack and pained
grunt a syllable in a sonnet of love. I admired the economical
movements of her arms, I delighted in the way the muscles tensed under
her skin when she snapped another bone. Overcome with feeling I knelt
beside her. Leaning over the twitching body, I took her face between
my hands and kissed her. My beloved.
I'm not sure exactly how the rumour got to the Academy. Probably
someone there had a relative in the police. Anyway, after that Anna
never even had to use harsh language towards anybody there, and they
were all extremely polite to me. Except once. But once was one time
too many.
The FSACS graduation ball is held outdoors. All students from all the
FSACS compounds all over the Federation come to Earth to graduate, and
there is no room there that can hold them all at once. So, the ball is
held in the Mountain View Garden. It's held at night. The sky is
clear. A full moon shines down, and the cherry trees blossom. The
weather technicians work for months making sure of that.
A few months before our graduation, Anna started getting tense. It
took me a while to figure out why, but once I did it was quite
obvious. We were about to leave the small world in which we'd been
queens. We'd still be among the elite, of course -- but that was the
problem. We'd be among the elite. Also, we'd be in the
military. There was a good chance we'd be assigned together if we
asked for it, but it wasn't sure. We might get separated. Neither of
us wanted to think about that, so we didn't talk about it. But I think
it bothered Anna a lot, near the end.
I don't remember his name. He was a nonentity, some Alpha come to
Earth for the graduation.
We were dancing, Anna and I. The orchestra played something
traditional, almost ancient. I'd gone through the archives and found a
description of a dance that was supposed to go with it, and it hadn't
taken us much time to learn it. We danced through the silvery
moonlight, alone on the grass. The other students stood still,
surrounding us, watching us move. Admiring us. The music stopped, we
stopped, people started moving about again and as we walked towards a
food table he came up to us and grabbed my arm.
That was all it took.
He grabbed my arm and said something about letting him have a dance,
and before he knew what had hit him he was sitting on the grass with
an aching jaw.
"You don't touch her, maggot," I heard Anna hiss. "If you want to
live, you don't touch her."
He looked surprised, then angry. He got up, and he tried to grab my
arm again.
"You don't decide what..." he managed to say before Anna hit him
again. This time, she hit him like she meant it, and I heard the
cracking as his jaw broke. She was moving to follow up with a kick to
crush his larynx when I stopped her.
"I think he's learned his lesson," I said. "Besides, he's a student,
so if you kill him in front of witnesses they'll have to punish you.
Let's go get something to eat."
Reluctantly, she came with me, leaving him moaning in the grass.
The next morning I woke up alone.
Anna's side of the bed was not only empty, but cold. She'd been gone
for some time. This was unusual, but it had become more common as
graduation day approached, so I didn't worry. Much.
In between the ball and the actual graduation we weren't doing much
but waiting to be told were we'd been assigned to. I decided to start
the day with a very long shower, which halfway through changed into a
very long lovemaking session when Anna returned and joined me.
I didn't think about it again until later that week, when I got my
assignment.
"I'm afraid I have to deny your request to be assigned alongside
Commander Anna," the old woman said.
She was the commander of the Command School, and to this day I don't
know what her name was. She was always just the Commander. She'd been
the head of FSACS for decades, and she had enough dirt on enough of
her old students to stay there as long as she wished.
"What?" I replied, not really having taken in what she'd just
said.
"You'll be going to separate places. Two weeks from now, you will be
the new political officer on Security Station Alpha One. You'll be
promoted to Space Commander before then, of course, and you can look
forward to another promotion within the year. I'm not supposed to tell
you were Anna is going, although I rather suspect she'll tell you
herself soon enough. In any case, it will be a very long way from here
or anything else that matters."
"Why? Why can't she be with me?" I whispered. I had not expected this.
I had known it was possible, but I had never imagined it might
actually happen. When I'd been thinking about the future, Anna had
always been in it with me. Without her, all my plans were moot. I
didn't know what to do or what to think.
"You may remember that she hit a student during the graduation ball,"
the Commander said. "For touching you, I believe."
"I remember."
"The morning after the ball said student was found dead. He'd been hit
once, with great force, a perfect killing strike. The attack was made
in one of the very few blind spots in this complex's surveillance
system."
I looked at her while she spoke, dread turning my insides to lead.
"We know it was Anna who killed him," she said. "If she hadn't been
Ungraded, she'd be on her way to mutoid conversion as we speak. As it
is, she'll never have a sensitive assignment or get promoted above
Space Commander."
"I'll go with her," I said. "Wherever you send her, I'm willing to go
with her."
"Yes, I'm sure you are. That doesn't matter. I can't possibly give you
anything but the best assignment available. You have a remarkable
academic record, you're from the best possible background and you are
the only student ever to get a teacher convicted of treason. If I send
you to where Anna is going, your guardians will scream bloody murder
and you'll be assigned somewhere else so fast you won't remember your
name. I'm sorry, Servalan, but you're going to SS Alpha One, and Anna
is going to escort freighters. And that's that."
That wasn't that, of course.
I'd expected Anna to explode when I told her, to lash out in fury and
wreck our quarters. But she didn't. Instead, she collapsed like a
house of cards in a strong wind. She sat down on the bed, heavily, and
I hurried to her side.
"I knew it'd be like this", she whispered into my shoulder. "I knew
they'd never let us stay together."
I felt her trembling, as if she fought to keep years of pent-up fear
from getting out.
"Don't be silly," I whispered back to her. "This is just a temporary
setback. We'll be together again. Just you wait and see."
She tore herself away from me and looked at me, wild and desperate.
"No we won't," she said. "They'll see to it. They'll make
sure we never get together again. They don't think I'm good enough for
you."
"Once we get to our assignments, we are 'they'," I tried to
tell her, but she wasn't listening to me.
"Maybe she hasn't sent the orders yet," Anna said, and I wasn't quite
sure that she was talking to me any more. "Maybe she's just made up
her mind, not actually done it."
She got up from the bed and looked at me but not at me.
"I'll fix it, love," she said, and what I saw in her eyes made me
afraid. Suddenly, I wasn't at all sure about her. I'd seen her go wild
before. It was a large part of why I loved her. But the way she looked
right now wasn't just wild. It was beyond that, well into violently
insane territory. Which is often a good thing in combat, but very
rarely so in a more social context.
"Anna, wait," I tried to say, but she was long past listening. She
grabbed a combat knife from among her training equipment and vanished
through the door.
For once, I really didn't know what to do.
Once more in the Commander's office. There was a bright pink scar on
the side of the Commander's neck, where Anna had nearly sliced her
throat open.
"Is she a mutoid yet?" I asked, not wanting to hear the answer.
"No," the Commander said. "She won't be converted. Ungraded never are.
We don't publicize that, but so it is."
I looked up. A glimmer of hope?
"What will happen to her, then?"
"She will be killed. Painlessly and without ceremony. Her family will
be in disgrace, and any further children they have will be Graded."
No hope. Not that I had expected any. Assaulting a senior officer was
about as bad a crime as it was possible to commit. The only mitigating
circumstance here was that the Commander hadn't been badly hurt. It
might be mitigating enough for my last, thin and feeble ray of hope. I
gathered all the courage I had.
"I have a suggestion," I said.
The Commander raised an eyebrow. "Really? What might that be?"
"You still have an unsolved murder of a student," I said. "That is a
blot on your record. I'm sure such a blot is irrelevant to someone of
your stature, but wouldn't you still prefer not having it?"
"You're offering to inform on your lover."
It was a statement, not a question.
"What's in it for you?"
That was a question.
I wet my lips. "Occasionally," I said, "an informer has been allowed
to choose the convicted's punishment, within the limits legally
available. It is within your power to let me do that."
"So it is," she said. "But I don't really see what you'd gain from it.
All the legal alternatives are variants of execution."
"Yes. But I still want to choose."
She shrugged. "Very well. As far as I can see, I lose nothing and gain
something. You have a deal."
I wasn't there when they arrested her.
I wasn't there at the trial. I wasn't there when sentence was
pronounced, nor at the fake public execution. I never saw any of it,
never saw my Anna's last moments. They're in the records, but I never
even felt tempted to look them up.
The way I see it in my nightmares is quite bad enough. She's sitting
at the accused's desk, with guards flanking her. I'm standing a few
paces behind her. As the judge's words die away, she turns to look at
me. She's looking so small and vulnerable and confused.
"Help me. Please," she begs.
"I'm sorry, love," I hear myself saying, my voice utterly calm and
collected. "It's for your own good."
"But I don't want to die," she says, and somehow I'm now
close enough to touch her. Tears are running from her eyes, and I wipe
them from her face with my hands.
"Shush, dear," I say. "I have to kill you to get you back."
A look of horror takes over her face, and as she shrinks away from my
touch my dream-self realizes what she's said. I try to say something,
but no words leave my mouth. The guards start dragging her away. She
doesn't fight them at all, and she doesn't look at me. As I raise my
hands to try and touch her one last time, I see that her wet tears on
them have turned to blood.
Then I wake up.
The Political Officer
It was about two years before I saw Anna again. Two years in which I
did my duty during the days and woke up sweaty and afraid of I didn't
know what during the nights. I worked like an automaton, so full of
despair and desperate hope that there was no room for any other
feelings. Countless hours passed while reading reports, writing
reports, listening to interrogations and filling my private archives
with potential blackmail material. All ordinary, all expected, all
what the world thought an up-and-coming brilliant new Space Commander
should do. What little free time I allowed myself I spent in the
gardens, looking out at the Earth and trying to spot the location of
the Academy. Imagining I could see that spot almost in the shadow of
the dormant volcano where we'd lain that morning. Imagining that
things could ever be that perfect again. Which, of course, they never
would.
She arrived late one night. I was in the garden, too afraid of the
nightmares to return to my quarters and go to sleep. I heard steps
behind me, but didn't pay any attention to them. People often walked
in the garden, it was nothing unusual.
Then she spoke to me, and my insides froze.
"Space Commander Servalan?"
I couldn't answer. I wanted to say something, I knew I should say
something, but I was suddenly paralyzed.
"The duty officer said I could find you here, in spite of the hour,"
she went on. "My name is Anna Sheyl, Space Commander. Alpha Grade. I
have been sent here to be your new assistant."
My name is Anna Sheyl, Space Commander.
The words echoed in my head. Two names. Alpha Grade. Of course she
would be, it just hadn't occured to me before. With her mind erased
and a new personality built in its place, there was no way she could
still be Ungraded, could still have a well-known family. She'd be
another pointless face in the teeming hordes of humanity.
"Yes," I said, my mouth dry as bone. "I've been expecting you for some
time."
I turned around and looked at her.
When I was a little girl, I was told in no uncertain terms never to
cry in front of the servants. Occasionally, that old habit has served
me well.
"Oh. I'm sorry," she said. "I was only told yesterday I was to come
here. My apologies if I have kept you waiting, Space Commander. I have
spent the last couple of years in hospital, and I'm still not quite
recovered."
It was Anna yet not Anna. It was her body, her face, her eyes. But it
was not her body language, her expression, her hard gaze. Inside that
beloved head was someone else, someone new.
My name is Anna Sheyl, Space Commander.
Someone to be thrown out.
I smiled. "Don't worry, dear," I lied. "I haven't been waiting for
precisely you, just for an assistant to be sent. You have no
reason to be afraid."
"Thank you, Space Commander," she said, and bowed a little.
"It's late," I said. "See me in my office tomorrow morning."
"Yes, Space Commander."
As she walked away, I watched her. She still moved like my Anna.
In the following months, I treated her just like I would've treated
any other assistant, if not worse. After some rather cursory
instruction, I had her work more or less on her own.
The Political Officer is never popular. It's her task to find the
flaws in the behaviour of others, to see the chinks in their mental
armour through which inappropriate thought might enter. It's she who
ferrets out the uncomfortable secrets, who sees that which has been
hidden.
Among the security forces, when sent to watch the watchers, she is
not only feared but also fiercely resented. They want to be the
trusted ones. They watch others, but they do not want to be watched.
The Political Officer is living proof that they are not fully trusted,
that they are watched. So they resent, but they dare not show it.
They do, however, dare show it to the Political Officer's assistant.
Not openly. Not in any crass or obvious way. But in small ways, in
many small ways, in uncountable all but inconsequential ways. A living
hell of innumerable obstructions, all of them too small to object to.
When she tried to complain, I pretended not to understand what she was
talking about. In a very calm and pleasant manner, of course. I kept
my meetings with her short, both to strengthen her isolation and
because that was all that I could bear.
Slowly, the days passed while I waited for her crack.
"Can I talk to you, Space Commander?"
We were overseeing an interrogation. An important rebel, one of
Kasabi's gang, important enough that most of the command staff felt the need
to be present. A few of them occasionally looked my way, probably
remembering my role in Kasabi's fall from grace. I didn't really care.
"Of course you can," I whispered back to Anna. "You can always talk to
me."
We were sitting a bit apart from the other spectators, and over the
screams of the accused nobody could hear us.
"I... I would like to request a transfer," she said.
"Denied," I said. "I need you here."
She was sitting next to me, and out of the corner of my eye I could
see her fist clench so hard the knuckles whitened.
"I can't stand it here," she whispered. "The place, the people.
It's... stressful. And the doctors said that I should avoid stressful
situations, at least for a year."
Inwardly, I smiled. Yes, my pretty, I thought. You should avoid
stressful situations. They're not good for you. They might make the
fragile construction that is you collapse and let my Anna come back.
"Surely it's not so bad," I said. "You're just not used to it yet."
"I wouldn't know, really," she said. "I don't remember anything before
the hospital, so I don't have anything to compare with. But it
feels that bad."
I smiled. "Ah yes, the hospital. I forgot. It must be harder for you
than it'd be for someone norm... someone else. Maybe I should have
taken more care of you."
She turned her head and looked at me with an expression I couldn't
quite read, a mixture of hope, surprise and distaste. I leaned closer
to her and placed my hand on her thigh.
"Let me make it up to you," I said. "Have dinner with me tonight. We
can have food brought up to the garden, to get away from the drab mess
hall. What do you say?"
She looked away from me and nodded.
I wanted so badly to touch her.
She sat on a bench in the station garden, dressed in a drab gray
uniform, daintily eating something based on rice and red beans.
Moonlight lit us both. This close to the moon, it was about as bright
as an overcast day down on Earth.
My Anna would never have eaten like that. She used to eat like food
was about to go out of fashion, she'd wolf it down at a furious pace.
But then, she burned a lot of energy. Working out. Fighting. Loving.
My Anna never did anything by halves.
It was a month or two after Anna Sheyl had tried to resign as my
assistant. We'd had our dinner, and I'd made a weekly thing out of it.
I wanted her closer to me. I wanted her only release from the
isolation and stress of her job to be me, my companionship and
presence.
She'd stopped eating entirely, only halfway finished.
"Is something bothering you, dear?" I asked.
She put down her plate. "Can I tell you something that will sound
pretty strange?" she said.
"Of course, dear," I said, giving her my nicest smile.
"I dreamt about you the other night," she said. "We were in a garden
looking a bit like this one, but on a planet, not a station. I think
it was Earth, because there was a big moon in the sky. There was a
single mountain in the distance. We were... we were making love there,
on the grass. The sun was just rising above the horizon. In the light
from it your skin looked like gold."
I wanted to grab her and kiss her silly. She remembered.
Anna's, my Anna's, memories were bleeding through. It was
working! She was coming back! I wanted to shout with joy, I wanted to
jump and dance in sheer happiness.
"That sounds like a nice dream," I said, smiling mildly.
"You don't mind?" she asked.
"How could I possibly mind?" I said. "Quite the opposite, I find it
quite flattering. Unless, of course, you found the dream to be a
nightmare."
"No!" She blushed. "Not a nightmare. Not at all a nightmare."
I leaned closer and kissed her lightly on the lips.
"Maybe it was a prophetic dream," I whispered.
She pulled away. For a moment, she looked shocked. Then, a peculiar
change came over her features, ending in a lusty smile I knew very
well. Before I could react, she'd pushed me down on my back and lay on
top of me, her tongue deliciously probing my mouth. She tore at my
clothes, wildly desiring my naked flesh.
Like my Anna used to do.
Like my Anna did again.
"I'm weak as a kitten," she said. "She didn't take very good care of
my body."
Sitting in my bed, silhouetted against the starscape outside the
window.
"You'll have to pretend to be her," I said. "You're officially dead."
She smiled. "No problem," she said. "I have enough of her memories."
I rolled over on my side, reached out and touched her. "I missed you
so much," I said.
She smiled down at me. "Can't say the same, I'm afraid. Being dead and
all."
Briefly, I considered asking her about those last days at the Academy.
Fear of the answer held me back. "We should be able to get your
promoted quite quickly," I said instead. "At least enough to get you
halfways decent quarters."
"And here I thought I'd be spending my nights in yours," she replied.
I laughed and shook my head, still giddy with relief and happiness.
Failing to find the words to tell her what I felt, I pulled her naked
body close and showed her.
She was right, of course. Having got her back, I wanted to be with her
as much as possible. I'd done the impossible, I'd beaten death, and I
wanted my reward. I wanted it so badly that I became blind to what was
in front of my eyes.
Anna soon discovered that she didn't have all her memories. I don't
know what she first found missing, probably something to do with her
family or childhood. It doesn't matter.
For her to say that she wasn't whole would've been to admit to a kind
of defeat, that her personality hadn't actually been strong enough to
overcome the Psych Directorate's machinery -- and Anna never
admitted to defeat or weakness. That much of her was intact. More than
intact, the missing memories fed the insecurities that was the
ultimate source of her strength, and made her more stubborn and
bloody-minded than ever before.
So she never told me. And so history repeated itself.
"How long has she been in there?"
We were standing outside one of the station's exercise rooms, in a
bare and chilly piece of corridor. The young trooper had come to get
me as soon as he realized who the problem was, even before he reported
it to his own superiors. Such insight in a trooper was rare and
dangerous, and a part of my mind was pondering wether to recruit him
or have him killed.
"For an hour, Space Commander," he said. "At least that's when the log
from the lock says that it was broken."
From the outside, the lock looked whole. But the door wouldn't open,
and the trooper had assured me that as far as could be determined from
the outside the lock was stone dead.
I recognized the technique. I hit the button on the communicator.
"Anna?" I said.
"Servalan?"
Even through the raspy communicator I could hear how strained she
sounded.
"Yes, it's me. What's happening?"
"He's dead, Servalan. I didn't know he was so weak. I didn't know I
was so strong."
I turned to the trooper. "Go get a tranquilizer injector," I said. I
already had one in my pocket, but I wanted him gone and it was the
first reasonable thing that sprang to my mind. "Hurry. She's ill. She
may have hurt someone."
He nodded and ran off. I pressed the communicator button again.
"Let me in, Anna," I said. "I'm alone now. We'll fix this, whatever it
is."
I tore the door open the instant I heard the lock activate. What I
needed most was time, time to do some cover-up before someone else
arrived and saw the scene.
She was sitting on an exercise machine, looking at a man lying on the
floor with his head at a decidedly unnatural angle. The man was
Kerrel, the station commander's assistant and an unpleasant being.
"What happened?" I asked.
Anna shook her head. "I... I'm not sure. He said something about how I
was sleeping my way up the career ladder, and suddenly all these times
when he was being nasty to her welled up. I'd hit him before
I even knew I was going to. I hit him good and hard, too."
She giggled, a tense and desperate sound that had more in common with
cries of fear than with laughter.
I looked up at the surveillance camera. The little light on top of it
was steadily blinking red.
Somehow I was not surprised or upset at what had happened. No, what I
felt was more of a deep, tired sadness. As if I had been carrying a
huge weight for a very long time, and just found out that I would have
to carry yet another way.
I pulled lightly at her arm, beckoning her to leave her seat and come
to me. She fell into my embrace like a starving woman to a piece of
bread.
"Hush, my love," I said while I fished the injector from my pocket.
"I will make it all better," I whispered into her hair as I pressed
the injector to her skin. She sighed lightly and suddenly my arms were
the only things holding her up.
The station doctor was a despicable creep. There was not a vice he had
not tried, not a debauchery so low that he had not stooped to it. He
had a wife and son safely tucked away in a residential dome on Earth,
where he rarely had to see them and they never got into the way of his
pleasures. My blackmail file on him was impressively thick.
"But that's murder," he said. "Mindwipe is murder. I can't do
murder."
"I'll make sure to tell your wife," I said. "That you stopped at
murder. That you found dealing Shadow and frequenting the meatpuppet
bars on Space City acceptable, but that you stopped at murder. I'm
sure she'll see the reason in that. Particularly after I explain to
her exactly what goes on in those bars."
He licked his lips. "Those kids were marked for the mutoid conversion
anyway. What I did wasn't that much worse."
I raised an eyebrow.
"Look," he said. "You're not giving me much choice here."
"I thought I made myself perfectly clear. Either you do as I say, which
means that you get executed for murder, or you don't, which means that
I turn you in for as many things as I can make stick. Which still gets
you dead, but a lot less cleanly and with your wife and kid sold into
slavery on top of it."
He slumped into his chair. "Who is it you want wiped?"
The Planetary Commander
The interrogator looked at her with an expression of revulsion. "So
you had her killed again?" he asked.
Servalan smiled. "Of course," she said. "She was Graded and her crime
had been recorded, she would have been killed or converted no matter
what. I only chose her means of execution. As I said, history repeated
itself."
He rubbed his eyes. "I trust this story will eventually answer my
question?", he said.
"It will," Servalan said. "I warned you it was a long story."
"So you did. Well, go on then."
"If you don't mind I'd like to ask a question of my own first. I'm
quite sure the answer to it will be short."
He looked at her face, as if trying to see in which way she tried to
fool him. "What question?", he said.
"I would like to know your name," she said.
"Tarris," he said after some hesitation. "Tarris Merrilee."
"Merrilee," she said. "A good, solid Alpha name. Your family has a
long history of service to the Federation."
"We have," he said, clearly proud of it but too well-mannered to say
so.
"I think I knew your grandmother," she said. "Nayla Merrilee."
"Yes, she was my..." His voice tapered off as realization struck. "How
old are you?" he asked.
"We fucked her, Anna and I," Servalan said. "At the Academy. On a
table in the library, where all her classmates could see. Anna held
her down while I tore her clothes off and explained that we really
didn't care if she cooperated or not. We'd get our fun either way."
She watched his face carefully while she spoke, watching for the small
telltale signs of immersion-trained emotion control. Signs that were
there in abundance.
"She wasn't particularly pretty," she went on. "But we were bored, and
she happened to catch our attention."
"I..." he started to say, but had to stop to get control of his
breath. "I believe you have a story to finish," he said.
Her smile widened. "So I do," she said. "So I do."
As the FSACS Commander had predicted, my rise through the ranks was
meteoric. I left Security Station Alpha One shortly after Anna got
mindwiped for the second time, and in the couple of years that passed
while she gained adulthood for the third time I went via a short time
as Pacification Specialist at Space Command to Planetary Commander on
Ursa Tertius III. As far as I can remember, I never even reflected
over the fact that my career moved orders of magnitude faster than the
careers of those who had been my classmates at the Academy. I took it
for granted. It was my birthright. I was Ungraded, and they were not.
I commanded, and they obeyed. That was the natural order of my
world.
My office at Ursa Tertius III looked out over the central boulevard of
the planet's capital city. It was a huge office, built for some
forgotten potentate way back in the planet's history. The main
material was polished stone, with the occasional bits of metal and
glass. It was a cold and hard room. It could not have been more
perfectly suited to my position there if I had designed it myself.
When I arrived, I had all the old furniture taken away. I replaced it
with a straight-backed metal chair, placed underneath the Federation
sigil on the wall. It had dataslates visibly built into its armrests.
It carried, in all, a very unsubtle message: Here sits your ruler. In
me, they would see the Federation as I wanted them to see it: cold and
hard, with no unnecessary decorations or submissions to frail
humanity. I wanted them to see what raw power looked like.
My task as Planetary Commander was simple. Ursa Tertius III held no
natural resources of any strong interest to us. The only reason we had
occupied it was because it happened to be a convenient stepping-stone
to tastier morsels. We intended to use it as a staging ground, and
nothing more. The locals only concerned us as far as we could use them
for slave labour. We took food and steel and mutoids from the planet,
more because we could than because we needed it. Because we could, and
because the strip-mining of land and people wore down the locals'
spirits.
It was my job to make sure that the locals never disturbed the
military bases we built there. As long as there was no trouble, the
food and steel flowed to the warehouses and the live bodies to the
conversion centers, I was free to do what I liked with the planet.
Within those restrictions, I was absolute dictator over fifty-six
million humans.
There is an old saying that power always corrupts. The saying is
correct, in much the same way as saying that raw meat always spoils.
Eventually it will, but it depends very much on the circumstances.
Properly stored, raw meat lasts for centuries. Placed in the right
hands, power can stay uncorrupted. My lone and cold office chair did
not only serve to remind the people of the source of my power, but
also to remind myself of who I was. The pinnacle of the Federation.
Bred, born and trained to be better. It is the burden of the
Ungraded never to rest, never to relax. We are called upon to lead, to
be shining examples to our inferiors. They are the sheep and we are
their shepherds.
Anna was returned to me halfways through my ninth month on Ursa. I
first learned of her arrival from my assistant Tarl Orlek, a well-bred
Alpha from one of the larger colonies. It was early in the morning,
and he was reading me the nightly reports. I stood by the windows in
the office, looking down at the people moving in the city below. The
reports were predictable, movements of raw materials and troops,
security actions, hints of an uprising. Nothing very important.
"...and finally, there's a trooper waiting to see you," he said.
"To see me?" I asked, quite surprised. "Why?"
"I don't know," Orlek said. "She arrived from offplanet shortly after
midnight, and her orders were to report to you in person. Her
paperwork says that you personally requested her transfer here, almost
a year ago. Her name is..."
"Anna," I interrupted him. "Her name is Anna."
"Yes," he said. "Trooper First Class Anna Ai, Beta Grade, personal
protection specialist. She must be something quite special, if you've
been waiting for her all this time."
Personal protection specialist. Bureaucrat language for bodyguard.
Someone at the retraining center had done an better than average job
there. My Anna would be perfect in the position, with the speed and
strength from her high-gravity youth and the fierce sense of
aggression that was just her very own.
"Well, show her in," I said.
He saluted and went to obey, returning after a few minutes with Anna.
She looked well, strong and healthy and as beautiful as ever before. I
couldn't stop looking at her, her wonderful hair and eyes and hands.
"I would like a report on those insurgency rumours by noon, Orlek," I
said. "Until then, you are dismissed."
She stood at attention a few steps inside the door, where Orlek had
left her. Her eyes stared vacantly straight ahead, just as she'd been
taught. I stifled an impulse to grab and kiss her.
"You are to be my personal bodyguard," I said.
"Understood, Planetary Commander," she said.
Her voice sent shivers down my spine.
"I suspect that there may be a conspiracy against my person among the
Federation personnel on this planet," I lied. "You are my protection
against them. You will have as little contact with other troopers here
as possible. You will accompany me at all times. Do you understand?"
"Yes, Planetary Commander."
"Any questions?"
"Only one, Planetary Commander."
"Yes?"
"When do I start?"
She started then and there. From that moment on, she was my constant
shadow. When I was in my office, she stood next to my command chair.
When I was out in the city, she walked behind me. When I attended
receptions, she was at my side. She ate when I ate. She slept when
I was working alone in my study, on a cot just outside the door.
My fear for a conspiracy among my troops was a complete lie, of
course. It was nothing but a way to keep her from getting friends, to
keep her isolated and alone. The constant presence of a bodyguard was
totally unnecessary, I had done fine without it before she arrived.
But it was her job to stay ever vigilant, constantly on the lookout
for an attack that would never come. It was an exercise in isolation
and frustration, with an added dose of irregular nourishment and lack
of sleep.
No human trooper would be able to stand that sort of life for any
length of time. My hope was that the tense inaction would be even more
intolerable for my Anna, and that it'd drive her to wake, to throw out
the interloper living in her brain. To return to me. I'd made her come
back to me once before. I'd make her do it again.
Days turned into weeks, and the rumours of unrest among the population
grew into a minor rebellion. A medium-sized city that had been hit
particularly hard by mutoid recruitment rebelled, and in a night
managed to kill most of the troopers there and take their weapons.
They barricaded the roads into the city, and used appropriated missile
pods and laser cannons to set up an aerial killing zone above it. I
remember standing on top of a troop transport vehicle parked a safe
distance from the rebel forces on the main road leading to the city,
wind pressing my white dress against my body and bringing the smell of
burning plastic to my nostrils. I looked at the barricades through a
pair of binoculars. The rebels were waving their weapons in our
direction, and engaging in other futile displays of bravado.
I had been waiting for this to happen. I had not known exactly which
city, or exactly when, but I had been sure from the start that at some
time the locals would rattle their chains, to see if they really were
as strong as they appeared. Towards that end, I'd had a few places
treated more harshly than others, hoping that one of them would be the
first to break. That I would be able to keep the vast majority of the
planet unharmed by visibly destroying an unimportant part of it.
"Are they in position?" I asked.
"Yes, ma'am," my communications officer said. He was standing next to
me, with Anna behind us. He was wearing a backpack that kept him in
contact with a squadron of ground attack ships in orbit above us.
"Tell them to attack when ready," I said. He whispered into the
microphone attached to his collar. For maybe ten, twenty seconds
nothing happened. Then, without warning, a dozen pillars of light
appeared in the city, stretching from the ground to as high as we
could see. A blink of an eye, and the pillars were gone again, but
where they had touched the ground clouds of dust, debris and fire were
rising into the air. A few seconds more, and the deafening blast and
roar of the orbital bombardment reached us. The sound was as a living
thing, clutching and beating at my inner organs and totally
obliterating any other sound. I couldn't even imagine what it must
have been like inside the city.
When the noise had passed and the debris fallen to the ground, I put
the binoculars to my face again. The soldiers at the barricades were
no longer waving at us. They were milling about, agitatedly talking to
each other. Trying to figure out what had happened, most likely.
Trying to understand why they were still alive.
"Report," I said.
"The squadron reports all targets destroyed, Planetary Commander," the
comm officer said.
I wondered if Anna would ask what was going on. She used to be
curious, when she was herself. But this Anna wasn't, and she kept her
silence.
After that we waited. The rebelling city had been founded to exploit
rich and easily available deposits of heavy metals in the mountains
above it. Which it did quite nicely, but which also had the drawback
that the water and soil around it contained large amounts of heavy
metals. So it had to have all of its food shipped in, and all its
water purified before it could be used.
Which made it very vulnerable to an orbital strike that destroyed the
food warehouses and water purification plant. Six days after our
attack, the rebels surrendered unconditionally. My men started
shipping the rebel people out within a few minutes, and the executions
started as soon as they reached their assigned population
centers.
I don't remember exactly how many had lived in the rebel city. A few
tens of thousands, I think. As the most populated area on the planet,
the capital got about a fifth of them. The executions went on for
days, fast in the beginning and slowing down over time as the troopers
had to venture ever further from my palace to find unoccupied lighting
poles to hang the corpses from. The stench of rotting flesh paralyzed
the capital, and for once I think my troopers were glad to have their
hot but air-filtered helmets. Every day during this time, I'd walk
through the city after my office hours were over. Without any
protection except my lovely bodyguard, dressed in my usual pristine
white, I walked the streets of the capital, watching the dead and the
living. I saw few of the latter, since all who could stayed indoors,
trying to escape the smells and sights and sounds of decomposing
bodies. As the weak cattle they were, they fled from the face of
death.
If she had been able to, Anna Ai would have done the same.
I didn't let her. I knew what she was, how her mind had been designed
from the wreckage of my Anna. She was what the Alpha bureaucrats
considered a good soldier. Brave, as long as things went her way and
offered no surprises. Obedient, as long as the orders were not to
unpleasant. Harsh, unless it came to action rather than words.
Cowardly. Weak. Merciful.
Useless.
As we walked the city, I saw her face turn from just pale to sweaty
and greenish. The smells and sounds and sights got to her, spoke to
her well-structured artificial subconscious in the language of atrocity.
Anathema to her. Not so to my wild, untamed beloved.
"May I ask a question, Planetary Commander?"
We were a few blocks from the palace, on our way back after a long
walk through the carnage. The executions had stopped a couple of days
earlier, but it would still be some time before the local scavengers
had eaten all the carrion.
Something about the way she asked the question made me pay
attention.
"Yes," I said.
"Did you do all this for me?" she said. "Because, you know, a girl
might get touched at the extravagant gesture."
Anna.
I spun around. "You're back!" I said, tingling all over. She had her
eyes again, strong and arrogant and oh so lovely. Not the limp, weak
gaze of Anna Ai.
"I think I am," she said. "Again. What happened, Servalan? I remember
being on the station, then there's the sort of dream-like memories of
the Ai person, until it fled and let me out."
"You killed an officer," I said. "While in front of a security camera.
I'm sorry, but I had no choice but to do this all over again."
She looked away for a few moments. "Well," she said. "You brought me
back."
"Always, my love. Always."
"What do we do now?"
"We rule, my dear. We rule. You're my bodyguard, and always by my
side. We'll never have to be apart again."
She reached out and caressed my cheek. "Bodyguard, you say? Tell me,
does your body need much guarding these days?"
It was so good to have her back! It was as if a missing part of myself
had been returned. I felt whole, for the first time since
that terrible day on Alpha One.
"Oh yes," I said. "Particularly at night."
Life went on much as it had before, except that my presumed bodyguard
suddenly became a lot more outspoken and active. I promoted her a few
levels, to make it look less strange that one of the troopers was on
so familiar term with the Planetary Commander. No doubt rumours spread
about us, but I didn't care. It wasn't like anyone could complain
about me. The days passed. We spent months following up on the oh so
very public destruction of the mining city, making sure that everyone
on the entire planet had got the message loud and clear: disobey, and
you will be killed.
The nights... Oh, the nights. My quarters turned from an auxiliary
office into a wonderland of carnality. That first night after she
returned, we'd scarcely got inside the door before I started tearing
her uniform off, desperate to touch the body I'd been looking at for
the weeks since Anna Ai appeared. She laughed at my eagerness, but
never for a moment rejected it. She undressed me as roughly as I did
her, pushed me down on the bed and possessed me body and soul. We made
desperate love, hard and fast and careless. I remember thinking that I
would get bruises from her holding me so hard, but not caring the
slightest. I would wear the bruises proudly, as long as they came from
her hands, just as she would not mind the bleeding scratches on her
back as long as it was my nails that made them. Her tongue probed my
mouth, her fingers my sex. Everything was right again.
As we lay naked in each other's arms, spent and sweaty, she spoke to me.
"You never answered my question," she said.
"Which question?"
"Did you kill all those people for me?"
"No," I said. "They were the example. Fairly standard pacification
procedure. Get them to rebel before they're really ready to, and bring
the rebellion down extremely hard. The probability of a recurrence
within a decade is less than five percent, when we do it this
way."
I snuggled in closer. "Although," I said, "it's not usual to have so
many corpses on display near the central Federation offices. So the
ones in the streets we've been walking through are for you, my love."
"My beast," she said. "My slender, dangerous beast. How the poor
humans must rue the day you descended upon them."
Her hand travelled along my body, and the fires so recently banked
flared again. We spoke wordless love to each other over and over again
all night, as the stars moved and the corpses rotted outside.
For a time, my life was perfect. My career was moving smoothly along.
I was the youngest Planetary Commander on record, and after putting
down the rebellion with no losses to my forces, I was all set to be
the youngest ever of higher and better things in the future. My
beloved was by my side. The wars of conquest beyond Ursa Tertius
heated up unexpectedly, and my ability to swiftly provide more ships,
food and mutoids for the war effort gained me an official commendation
from the Supreme Commander. I felt like nothing could possibly go
wrong.
I should have known better.
The first hints of trouble I didn't even notice. As Anna grew more
comfortable in her new identity and role, I occasionally sent her on
errands that I would otherwise had done myself but was hard pressed to
find time for. She got them done well enough, of course, but she
complained that the troopers didn't obey her quickly enough. I didn't
pay attention. As long as they obeyed, who cared if it was quickly or
not?
Had I thought about it for a few moments, I might have realized that
if it had been me they'd been tardy in obeying, they would've been
subjects for the biolabs faster than they could blink. Anna was used
to the same level of obedience that I was, since she was also
Ungraded. Except as far as the troopers knew, she was just a Beta
Grade jumped up the ranks above them. So they chafed. Not obviously or
badly, she was still a superior officer and my personal favourite. But
enough that she noticed. Noticed, but couldn't do anything about it.
At least not according to the book.
It was more than half a year after she awoke to herself. She still had
large gaps in her memory, and she had a hard time getting used to it.
She was, after all, used to always being the best, the flawless, the
perfect one who did everything right. Having a wound that would not
heal irked her, like an itch she couldn't scratch. To compensate, she
drove herself harder than ever before. She trained her body to heights
even I found hard to believe. She studied everything that had happened
since her first death at the Academy. She made damn sure that all the
tasks I gave her got done, quickly and efficiently, even if she had to
do everything herself. Later, after I'd lost her again, I heard
stories about how she'd got fed up with waiting for tardy troopers and
taken out entire buildings full of criminals all by herself. How she'd
vanished into the darkness near her uncooperative troops, and later
appeared again covered in blood, none of it her own.
And to me, she only said that her troopers didn't obey her quickly
enough. I can't say why I didn't find that noteworthy when I knew
quite well that she never complained about anything. Maybe I knew
subconsciously that it was a sign of a problem I couldn't fix. The
harbinger of doom, if you wish.
"I had to kill another trooper today," she said, casually, as if it
was the most ordinary of things to do.
It was some time after midnight, and we were in bed together. We'd
just made love, and I was slowly drifting off towards sleep when she
said it.
"What?" I said.
"Had to kill a guy again. Wouldn't obey me when I told him to hurry up."
"That's nice, dear," I said, and fell asleep.
But I didn't forget. The day after, when I sat in my cold and hard
chair of command, her words returned to me. She'd killed troopers? Why
didn't I know? One by one, I called up her reports of her missions,
starting with the one yesterday and moving on backwards.
She'd killed dozens of them. Previously, I'd just looked at the
summaries, so and so many criminals detained or killed, so and so many
troopers lost. I'd never thought to check how they'd been
lost. But there it was, as plain as possible. Killed by superior
officer for insubordination in the field. Again and again and
again.
My innards suddenly turned to ice. This couldn't be happening. It must
be a mistake.
"Call Major Ai to my office," I said towards my current communications
officer. "Right now. As soon as she gets here, everyone else leaves."
There was a muted chorus of "Yes, Planetary Commander" that I hardly
listened to. My brain was busy trying to figure out what had happened,
and why, and what to do about it.
"Is there a problem?" she said after everyone else had left.
"You've been killing troopers," I said.
"Yes," she said. "They were insubordinate. It's all in my reports."
"You can't do that," I said.
She stared at me as if I'd gone insane. "Excuse me?" she said.
"You can't kill troopers like that," I repeated. "Put them in the
brig, yes. Court martial them, yes. Give them the most awful duty
imaginable for the rest of their careers, yes. But you can't just kill
them. Not for something as small as what these had done."
"But they were just Graded! Who cares if they live or die?"
"I care!"
Somehow, I had got up from my chair and approached her. I didn't
remember doing so. I'm not quite sure what I had expected her to say,
but somehow I had thought that it would be different than this bold
statement that she had done nothing wrong. That the lives of those
troopers were hers to spend.
"Says the one who had tens of thousands of people killed just to send
a message! What's a few troopers compared to that?"
"Those thousands don't matter, they were locals. The troopers were
Federation citizens. They were my citizens!"
Anna sneered at me.
"Oh, come off it," she said. "There's no difference. Locals or Graded,
they're all cattle compared to us. We're stronger and better than they
are, and because of that we rule over them. Their lives are ours to
play with as we like, and you know it. Surely you can't have forgotten
how we used to play with the Alphas back at the Academy?"
"We were never responsible for those Alphas. Playing with them like we
did was... I don't know. Youthful folly. We're adults now, and the
world rests on our shoulders. We can no longer afford to play."
"You sound like our old teachers!"
As soon as she said it, I knew she was right. I did sound like our
teachers. Anna didn't. She still sounded like we both had, way back
before we left the Academy. In a flash of revelation, I saw how my
time out in the real world, short as it had been, had matured me into
a proper member of the Ungraded class. A ruler, as I should be. Anna
hadn't, of course. Most of the time she'd been brainwiped, and in the
few months she'd spent as herself I had always been there to take all
the responsibilities. She hadn't grown up. What was worse, since we
could never admit to anyone that she was even alive, she would never
get the opportunity to do so. As I was a shepherd, she was a wolf. And
no matter how much I loved her, I could not let her prey on my
sheep.
All the fight left me. I walked over to the windows and looked out
over the city. The sun was about to set.
"Maybe you're right," I said. "Maybe it is of no importance."
"You've been working hard," she said. "Maybe the view from that chair
has made you lose sight of what you are."
"Maybe," I echoed. "Stop killing them, will you? As a favour to me?"
She came up behind me and put her strong arms around my waist.
"As you wish," she said. "Will you be working late tonight?"
How I loved her smell. She never wore perfume, just her own wild and
heady scent.
"Probably," I said.
"I'll wait up for you," she said. "Before we sleep, I want to
apologize for upsetting you."
I closed my eyes and leaned into her. "I love you," I said. "I love
you more than I have the words to express. I want you to know
that."
She smiled, and kissed me, and left the room.
We made love that night, like most nights. Unlike most nights, I was
all but insatiable. In a few short hours, I had to get a lifetime's
worth of her, her inflaming touch, her wild laugher, her beautiful
eyes. I touched her body with my hands and my lips and my skin. I
tried to feel her so intensely that the memory of it would never fade.
Her lips, tasting of me. My fingers in her hair, pulling her face
harder against me. Her hard nipples pressing against my breasts. My
beast. My wolf.
Eventually, we stopped. We lay in each other's arms, panting and
spent. I felt her heartbeat slow down, and heard her breath soften
into sleep.
"I will always love you," I whispered in her ear, and then I pressed
the soporific injector to her jugular.
The next day, I refused to see anyone. I sat in my chair of command,
its dataslates inactive and dark. I tried not to think about what was
going on down in the medical section, tried not to think about my
betrayal, and failing miserably. My inner eye kept returning to the
last I had seen of her the night before, the last I ever expected to
see of her. After I was sure she was properly drugged, I'd dressed her
in a FSACS-issue jumpsuit and called for the medics to take her away.
The sight of her on the stretcher as they carried her away would be
with me to the day I died, I felt certain.
The door opened and my communications officer entered.
"I thought I made it clear that I do not want to be disturbed," I
snarled.
"You did, Planetary Commander. But the doctor wants to talk to you.
Apparently it concerns Major Ai. I judged that you would probably want
to know."
I don't remember if I told him he'd made the right call or not. Even
if I didn't, he probably figured it out from the way I got up and
rushed down to the med section.
Just like every other medical facility in the Universe, this one tried
to look calming and nice while actually coming across as sterile and
inhuman. It was too clean, too hard and angular to really be a place
where one could feel at ease. It smelled of disinfectant and fear.
The doctor looked up from her dataslate when I stormed in.
"Ah, Planetary Commander," she said. "There has been a complication,
I'm afraid."
"I don't understand," I said. "I thought a mindwipe was a well-known
and straightforward procedure well within your capabilities."
"It is," she said. "It turns out, however, that Major Ai's medical
file isn't complete. It doesn't mention that she has been mindwiped
before. Not only that, I'm quite sure that she's been through the
procedure more than once before."
I didn't know what to think or feel. Fear that she was dead fought
with fear that she was still herself.
"What happened?" I asked.
"She has suffered from a syndrome so rare it doesn't even have a name.
I only know about it because I used to work with Central Security. It
occurs only in victims of repeated mindwipes, and those are extremely
uncommon. What has happened, roughly speaking, is that her brain has
developed a kind of immune response to personality manipulation. She
has become a kind of blank slate over which larger or smaller sets of
her previous personalities come and go. If you were to speak to her,
she might recognize you for a minute and then, as a part of another
personality took hold, have no idea who you are."
"Can you fix it?"
"No. As I said, her brain has developed defenses to the tools we use
to manipulate it. We can still use them on her, but she will throw off
the effects fairly quickly. By using drugs and less orthodox
techniques, it's possible to get a certain personality to stay in
control for a few months, but no more. And even then, the memories
gained during that period will be mostly lost the next time that
particular personality surfaces. She will never be able to lead a
normal life again."
"So what are you telling me? That I might as well have her killed?"
"That might be the kindest thing to do. There is, however, one career
for which she is now perfectly suited."
And so, Agent Bartolomew was born.
The President
When I first arrived at Ursa, I expected to be there for a couple of
years at most. But the planet's importance grew and I continued to
meet or surpass the demands put upon it, so I was kept there. At the
end of my fifth year as the Planetary Commander it was decided that
the planet be brought into the Federation proper, and its puppet
government applied for colony status. It was granted, and I was
promoted from Planetary Commander to Military Governor. This meant
little on the planet, but it gave me a hugely increased importance in
off-planet circles. As a Governor, I was someone to be listened to in
Federation politics. A position I used to the best of my ability. I
used every bit of skill I had to increase my power base. I bargained.
I bribed. I flattered. I blackmailed. I threatened. I killed. Until,
finally, the President of the Federation appointed me Supreme
Commander of all the armed forces. Almost to the day twelve years
after I first arrived on Ursa Tertius III, I left it for Space
Command.
All that time, I kept an eye on Anna.
I still loved her. Intellectually, I could convince myself that I
ought to let her go, to leave her behind me and let my wounded heart
heal. But my heart wouldn't let me. Like one may pick on an old scar,
I followed her peculiar career in Central Security.
When we sent her to them, I think they expected to get the sort of
slightly sub-par ordinary trooper that one might expect to get
mindwiped. They didn't even ask about her, they were just happy to get
an agent who was incapable of turning on them. Imagine their delighted
surprise when that agent turned out to be eugenically enhanced and
trained to within a hair of perfection. Anna, or, rather, Bartolomew,
was all their wet dreams come true. In her first year with Central
Security she carried out three highly spectacular assassinations, all
without leaving a single trace. After that, I think they managed to
better stabilize the personality implants they gave her, so they could
assign her to slightly more long-term undercover work. She dropped out
of even my sight for long periods of time.
Time passed. Things happened. Blake came and went, although his small
group of useless rebels remained. We fought the war against the
Andromedans, and I assumed the Presidency. The long and arduous process
of rebuilding the Federation from the scraps left by the war began.
There were things that had been lost that had to be retrieved. There
were things that had been destroyed that had to be rebuilt.
And there were things that had been misplaced and forgotten.
When the war started Anna had been on a deep undercover mission, as
usual. She was posing as the wife of a member of the High Council,
Chesku, in order to investigate him for reasons I never tried to find
out. I don't know how they made him go along with it, if they took the
time to make him think that he married her of his own free will, or if
they just programmed him to think he was married to her, like I'd
heard they'd done to another man to make him think he was Anna's
brother. Because of the war, she wasn't called in to have her current
personality strengthened when she should have been, and it started to
unravel. Fragments of other personalities she'd carried began to
surface. And unfortunately, one of those personalities was that of a
violent rebel. Behind her supposed husband's back, she started
recruiting followers and executing attacks against the Federation.
Until one day she got the opportunity to go for the juiciest target of
them all.
Me.
I'll never forget the moment when she walked through the beaten-down
door to my new office. It was the first time in a decade and a half
that I saw her in the flesh, but it was as if we'd never been apart.
She still looked as beautiful as the day we met, and hardly any older.
Her soldiers flanked her, obedient to her as was her birthright. For
a moment, I forgot that she was no longer herself, and I spoke to her
as I might have back at the Academy.
"I take it these creatures belong to you."
Somewhere, deep within her eyes, I could see her respond. Somewhere,
deep inside, my Anna wasn't quite dead. Some remnant of her remained,
some small scrap of her original personality. The personality I had
caused to be destroyed three times.
Deep within her eyes, I saw love and hate fight for supremacy.
Before I could react, before I could say anything, one of her soldiers
struck me down. I heard her speak to me, but I didn't listen to her
words. They were empty, without meaning. It was her eyes that spoke to
me, spoke more clearly than words ever could. I don't know
whether to kill you or kiss you, they said.
Strange as it may sound, the thought the she might grow to hate me had
never occured to me. The reality of her hatred, even if tempered by
old love, hit much harder than the feeble blow from the soldier. I was
struck speechless. Stunned, I let them lead me down to the cellar and
chain me to the wall. On our way down, I was convinced that they were
taking me down there to execute me, and at the time I felt that that
was the right thing for them to do. Anna hated me. How could I deserve
life, when I had taken hers? I didn't even try to protect myself when
Anna's soldiers decided to beat me up. When Avon showed up, looking
for the one who had killed his Anna, it seemed like a cruel
joke. A distortion of hers and mine history together. The finding. The
losing. The false identities. The betrayals. The now you're dead now
you're not of Anna.
And then she was dead. Finally, and for real. When the immediate
crisis was past, when I was the only still living person left in the
cellar, I knelt by her side and kissed her cooling lips one last time.
"And then I left," Servalan said.
Merrilee frowned. "I believe you still haven't quite answered my
question," he said. "I guess that you came back here because it was
here she finally died, but why now? Why never before?"
She smiled at him.
"Part of it is that I wasn't ready to. It took me far longer to accept
her death, her true and final death, than I expected. The many years
of her being sort of dead but not really made it harder. I was so used
to the thought that I could somehow bring her back that the harsh
knowledge that I couldn't took a long time to sink in. The other part
of it is that today it's exactly fifty years since she died, and I
wanted to be here."
"And for that you threw away all your years as Sleer? All that work,
down the drain for a sentimental gesture?"
He sounded incredulous, almost upset. His dataslate lay forgotten at
the table, all his attention focused on his interrogation subject.
"Of course not," she said. "Those years weren't wasted at all.
Verifying that the right sort of people were in the right places took
me a long time. The war weeded a lot of you out, and gave openings for
the sort of people that we'd never have let into a position of
authority otherwise. I had to wait for several of them to retire
before I had a clear enough field to move."
"I don't understand."
"Nor should you, dear. Nor should you."
He reached for his slate and started to get up from the chair.
"I think we're done for today," he said.
"I don't," Servalan said. She looked steadily at him and uttered a
short series of nonsense words. He froze in place, right in between
sitting and standing.
Servalan got up from the bed. "Sit," she said, and he did as she said.
"What's happened to you," she said, "is a kind of post-hypnotic
suggestion planted deep within your mind while you were studying at
the Academy. All of you immersion-trained Alphas have it. An emergency
backup system, you might say, originally conceived by the Federation
leaders who became the first Ungraded and kept in service by us ever
since."
She moved behind his chair and slowly dragged her fingers through his
hair.
"You see," she said, "we're not just smarter, and stronger and
longer-lived than you poor Graded -- we also cheat. You are our sheep,
and the sheep never win over their shepherds. It's the order of the
Universe."
She took his dataslate from the table and held it out to him.
"This is what you will do," she said. "You will file a report that the
troopers who brought me in were mistaken. I wasn't Servalan after all,
just someone who happened to look a lot like her. The prisoner has had
a selective memory erase and been released. This entire incident is
over and done with."
He activated the slate with a thumbprint, and as she talked he wrote
on it, stiffly, as if in a trance.
"Once you have done that," she said, "you will send a message to the
members of the High Council, using the special code to summon an
emergency meeting of the utmost urgency."
"It is done," he said after a short while. "They are convening. They
will be waiting for me in the Council Hall in fifteen minutes."
Servalan smiled. "See?" she asked. "Where else but here could I get
them all assembled so quickly? All of the good, honest Alpha Grade
members of the High Council. A pride to the Academy that produced
them."
She took the slate from his hands and threw it on the cot.
"Let's go," she said. "It won't do to have the High Council wait. I
want them all to be there when we arrive. I have a speech to give
them."
He got up from the chair and moved towards the door. He opened it and
moved on into the corridor outside, followed by Servalan.
"I promise it won't be long," she said to herself and smiled.
