Page 21 of Buying Time


  “Yes. That’s why I got the Stileman Treatment in the first place.”

  “When was the last time you ate?”

  “I … tried to eat lunch but nothing would stay down.”

  “Okay.” Eastwood wiped her hands on her napkin. “I think we’d just as well get started. You don’t have much of an appetite anyhow, do you?” Maria shook her head silently. “Tell Henry to hang on to my dinner. I’ll be back around midnight.”

  I got out to let Maria out of the booth. She hugged and kissed me, trembling, then put a finger on my lips. “Don’t say anything. I’ll see you.”

  I watched the doctor lead her out and slid back into the silence. “That’s wise,” Ulric said. “If she’s started to metastasize, it wouldn’t be worth putting her through the trouble. We’d chase cancers for a couple of weeks and lose her anyhow.”

  I looked out through the window but couldn’t see her for the blur.

  Selena Vaughn Shift Schedule

  (problems, call Baird now)

  Schedule will be updated after each major op. Try to keep your own schedule loose.

  This is the big test.

  11 yanvár

  General oncology inspection, cleanup

  Eastwood

  Belyayev

  Lewis

  Swim

  13 yanvár

  (Predicated on above) blood switchout, dialysis

  Zholobov

  Shower

  Hurd

  —Beregovoy and McAtee on call for mesenteries until fevrál—

  14 yanvár

  Liver 1

  Perkins

  Titov

  Taral

  15 yanvár

  Immune system 1

  Ulric

  Morvich

  16 yanvár

  Immune system 2

  Ulric

  Booker

  18yanvár

  Liver 2

  Perkins

  Taral

  21 yanvár

  Colon, large intestine

  Arcaro

  Prior

  Shatalov

  Winkfield

  {21-22 yanvár

  Liver 3 if necessary

  Perkins etc.}

  22 yanvár

  Gallbladder

  Bierman

  Gorbatko

  Stout

  23 yanvár

  Pancreas

  Artyukhin

  Borel

  Knapp

  24 {yanvár

  Is. Lang. if indicated

  Borel etc.}

  25 yanvár

  Small intestine

  Prior

  D. Wright

  27 yanvár

  Kidneys 1

  Goodale

  Koonze

  28 yanvár

  Kidneys 2

  Goodale

  McCreary

  30 yanvár

  Bladder

  Hartack

  Volkov

  1 fevrál

  Other urinary

  Rukavnikov

  York

  2 fevrál

  Adrenals

  Kurtsinger

  P. Ivanov

  4 fevrál

  Marrow team (adjust as needed)

  Bierman

  Sande

  Feoktistov

  Volynov

  Kiley

  Ben Ali

  Hanford

  8 fevrál

  Lower circulatory

  Lang

  V. Wright

  10 fevrál

  Parathyroids

  Cordeo

  Titov

  12 fevrál

  Thyroid

  Titov

  Garner

  13 fevrál

  Corp. luteum (ovaries n/a)

  Minder

  14 fevrál

  Duodenum

  Sarafanov

  Kurtsinger

  Velasquez

  15 fevrál

  Other stomach

  Velasquez

  Klimuk

  Legarova

  17 fevrál

  Pituitary body ant.

  Alan

  Dale

  Dzhanibekov

  Pituitary body post.

  James

  Z. Ivanov

  20 fevrál

  Esophagus

  Yegorov

  Rolfe

  21 fevrál

  Pharynx

  Ussery

  Adams

  22 fevrál

  Sinuses

  Turcotte

  Ryumin

  23 fevrál

  Cardiopulmonary team

  Lazarev

  Romanenko

  Dodson

  Franklin

  Shoemaker

  Rider

  26 fevrál

  Ears

  Lyakhov

  Boland

  27 fevrál

  Eyes

  Dobrovolska

  Notler

  Booker

  Rot2

  28 fevrál

  Mouth (teeth all implants)

  McHargue

  29 fevrál

  Salivary glands

  Barton

  Schedule for mart (and apryél if necessary) will be posted mid-fevrál.

  Dallas

  I wasn’t able to see her for ten days. Then they’d call me every few days, whenever she had lucid periods relatively free from pain.

  They gave her back her real appearance, removing the flesh tractors that had changed the shape of her face and body, which was comforting to both of us at first. Later it became disturbing, much more so for her than for me, the again familiar face daily becoming more haggard and old, not only from the constant pain and anxiety but also as a natural effect of the Stileman Treatment’s wearing off. Baird juggled the order of therapies so she could have facial plastic surgery as soon as it was practical.

  The visits were more for my benefit than hers. Sometimes we could talk, but she had difficulty concentrating and often would lapse into confusion or fall asleep. She did a good job of being brave, though she seemed always on the verge of collapse. Once she did crack and began crying hysterically; a doctor gave her a shot and she relaxed into sleep. I wondered whether it would have been better to let her cry.

  After a while I was on the verge of cracking myself, under the unrelenting pressure of helplessness. Baird offered me mood drugs, which I refused on principle for too long. Finally he said he wouldn’t let me see her if I didn’t take something; my gloominess was going to retard her progress.

  By the end of February I had to stop seeing her anyhow; they had to put her into total biotic isolation for a couple of weeks, trying to control a runaway combination of infections that cropped up after the heart/lung team had finished with her. Baird said it was not any more dangerous than most of the planned therapies, but it did slow them down.

  Other than taking those occasional trips to the hospital, I stayed locked up in the villa. I had spent one day, right after they started on Maria, in frantic commerce: I sold most of our trade goods, paid off two months’ rent, and filled the pantry with food and drink.

  I bought more weapons and spent a lot of time sitting in the darkness watching the street. Too many people knew who I was. Sooner or later someone would come to collect me. I had to have an off-duty doctor or nurse drop in every night to stand guard while I slept, or tried to sleep.

  Sometimes people would come by during the day: Baird or Liz or, oddly, Big Dick Goodman, who was one of Baird’s fellow conspirators against the Stileman Foundation.

  Goodman was over seven feet tall, slender as a blade of grass but with an oversized head. He had more motivation than most Stilemans to help Baird. The last time he’d gone to the clinic he’d almost died because of the stress of spending six weeks in Earth gravity. There wouldn’t be a next time. He gobbled calcium and protein and exercised daily, but he couldn’t seem to build up bone and muscle mass. Born on Ceres, it was as if his body had de
cided he was going to be an actual extraterrestrial. They had called him Lysenko in school.

  I liked him. He was coarse and played dumb but was well read and had a gruesome sense of humor.

  On the tenth of March Dick showed up with Baird. I liked Baird, too, but never liked to see him during the day. I was always afraid he’d be bringing news.

  It was good news this time. “It looks as if we have the infections beaten. They’re working on the inner and middle ears this afternoon. Maybe you could see her tonight, before we go on to the next phase.”

  “Fine. Just going to pick up where the schedule left off, eyes next?”

  “Yeah, that’s Winnie Dobrovolska’s team; pretty easy stuff, but she won’t be seeing much until next week.” We floated in toward the kitchen, Dick homing in on the refrigerator.

  “You guys wanna beer?” I took one but Baird said coffee; he’d been up for twenty hours and still had to do ward rounds.

  I squeezed out a cup of coffee and zapped it. “Good time for her not to be able to see,” Baird said, “and for you not to see her. Finish up all the facial surgery.”

  “I always feel like it’s bad luck to ask how she’s doing.”

  “So don’t ask, I’ll tell you.” He took a sip of coffee and let go of the cup while he concentrated on sitting down. “That’s why I came. It looks like coasting downhill from here. There’s some painful stuff left, but nothing particularly life-threatening.” He caught the cup and looked at his watch. “In eleven days, if there aren’t any complications, we should be able to remove the zipper and glue her up.” She had a plastic zipper from the base of her chin to her pubic bone. “After that we do the skin replacement, which has to hurt, but she’ll know then that she’s made it.”

  “And then …”

  “That’s why we’re here,” Dick said. “We gotta talk about ‘and then.’”

  “How we’ll go about dropping our bombshell. How we’re going to use you and Maria.”

  “My notoriety, okay; we talked about that. I’m willing to do anything so long as it doesn’t expose her to physical danger.”

  They looked at each other and Baird let out a tired sigh. “There will be danger for all of us. There’s something we haven’t told you; something that not even all of the medical people know.”

  “Foundation’s been fuckin’ with us,” Dick said. “They been murderin’ us.”

  “The ten- to twelve-year cycle is artificially induced. There’s no reason the rejuvenation can’t last seventy, eighty years or more.”

  That was more than interesting. “What do they do to us?”

  “Something to do with the spleen; we’re not sure exactly what. It’s always atrophied when you do an autopsy of an ex-Stileman who’s died because of running out of money, but it seems normal for a Stileman who dies accidentally. Before the terminal degeneration has started.”

  “You’d think that would be common knowledge,” I said.

  “Would if you could get it published,” Dick said.

  “What actually kills you is not the spleen specifically, but a generalized breakdown of the immune system. That’s my bailiwick; that’s how I got started on this project.”

  “It’s pretty neat,” Dick said, “pretty cute. They go to old Stileman ’way back then and make the spleen booby trap part of the package. He’s this wet-handkerchief liberal who an’t ever recovered from bein’ born rich. They give him the magic wand: wave this an’ nobody’s ever gonna be super-rich again. Except they’re willin’ to die for it. More than die. Give up immortality.”

  “You can see why the limitation was necessary for the economic scheme to work at all,” Baird said. “If the first millionaire clients had traded their fortunes for seventy or eighty years instead of ten, the Stileman Foundation could never have grown so powerful so fast. They’d all be millionaires again in a few years, and then have most of a century to extend and consolidate their fortunes. They could in actual truth rule all of the world—including, eventually, the Stileman Foundation itself.”

  That was a lot to sort out. “So the foundation will be out to get you, not just because you can underbid them.”

  “We can expose them. The basis of their financial power is murder and deceit. Even if they owned every legislature and judiciary in the world, and they don’t—that wouldn’t protect them from the wrath of their own clients. The ten thousand wealthiest people in the solar system.”

  “Slow down now,” I said. “We don’t know that all of the foundation is in on it. You say some of your own doctors don’t know. What would be the minimum number who are in the know on Earth—just the spleen doctors and the immunologists?”

  “And the overall coordinator, whoever my counterpart is there. Of course, like me, he could be one of the immunologists.”

  “But nobody on the board is necessarily part of it. They go in the clinic every ten years like everybody else.”

  “Go in an’ play cards for six weeks,” Dick said.

  “Presumably everyone who was in on the original proposal knew about the artificial limitation. Most of them must still be alive, some of them either on the board or serving as silent partners. I would be very surprised if everybody on the board did not know all about it. Probably everyone high up in Briskin’s Steering Committee, too.”

  “I wonder. He never dangled that in front of me, the possibility of a longer time between rejuvenations. But he did say there were things he wasn’t allowed to tell me.”

  “So who knows?” Baird said. “Literally, who? We ought to play it safe and assume everybody knows.”

  Dick shook his head. “Careful. We could maybe pick up some allies, you know? Half the board might be holdin’ out on the other half.”

  “Good point. We’ll keep that in mind.” He sipped the coffee and blew on it. “So we’ve got four things: The truth about the murders you’re accused of. Existence of the Steering Committee. The foundation’s cynical manipulation of the Stileman Process. Our duplication of it. They’re all strongly or weakly linked. But it seems to me we ought to feed them to the media one piece at a time. We don’t want to drop all the information at once.”

  “People’s lips only move so fast,” Dick said. “Average person’s attention span couldn’t handle it all.”

  We thought together for a minute. Dick belched by way of preamble. “You got the order right. We show ’em Dal an’ Maria to get their attention. And Eric’s TI. Maria’s old bodyguard, if they haven’t got to her.

  “This gets the ’phems interested. Here’s two of Dal’s victims, one alive and one not, sayin’ he’s innocent and not crazy. They point the collective finger at Briskin and also accuse him of murderin’ the Russian and the Strine.

  “How come he murdered ’em? Hold on to your hats. Conspiracy time, Steering Committee. That gets the Stilemans interested.”

  “Hold it,” I said. “Do we have anything on the Steering Committee other than my word against theirs? Against Briskin’s?”

  “Corroborative testimony,” Baird said. “You can’t be the only one they approached who had second thoughts.”

  “Yeah,” Dick said, “and even if nobody comes for’d right away, they will after we drop our little bomb. Foundation got you by the spleen! Here’s chapter an’ verse.”

  “I don’t know about that one,” I said, devil’s advocate as usual in these discussions. “That’s going to be pretty technical stuff. They’ll have scientists lined up twice around the block to prove you’re lying.”

  “That’s when we produce Maria’s records and show that we can duplicate the process, without the ten- to twelve-year limitation.”

  “Which won’t be proven for thirteen years. By which time I will have died in jail.”

  “You an’t gonna chicken out.”

  “Who said anything about that? I just don’t want you guys to think that Maria and I are only going to walk out on a stage, take a bow, and then go on with our business. Just going back to Earth, even if we didn’t an
nounce who we were, will be like playing catch with hand grenades.”

  “The public announcement should make you safe, at least from assassination.”

  “If the camera’s plugged in.”

  We had discussed this part of it before. Maria and I did have to go back to Earth. The foundation had an octopus grip on the news media. If Baird were to broadcast from here, his story would be released as NUTSO ROCKNIK CLAIMS STTLEMAN HOAX, appearing in all the finest tabloids, and nowhere else. And not even the tabloids would report the subsequent bloodbath on Ceres.

  The plan was for Fireball to return to Earth with somebody else piloting. Maria and I would go back as unregistered hitchhikers a couple of days before, on a stealthed vessel that might be able to slip into White Sands as if it were returning from the Moon.

  If we were caught, the pilot could claim he was returning me for the reward, and we might get uncensored air time anyhow. If things went as planned, though, we’d set up a controlled press release situation, with enough money spread around to guarantee us at least a few minutes of uninterrupted multichannel broadcasting. The foundation couldn’t edit us out of existence after we’d gone out live on a dozen local stations all over the country.

  “So what’s our timetable look like now?”

  Baird shrugged. “Depends on how long it takes until Maria’s surgically clean enough for a few gees’ acceleration. Maybe four weeks after she’s released, maybe three, depends. Mental recuperation might take longer than physical; nobody’s ever gone through this before. It’s still up in the air.”

  Dick cleared his throat. “Doc, you said we was gonna—”

  “That’s right. Look, Dallas. Suppose, uh, in the eventuality that …”

  “We an’t talked about what would happen if she dies. Would you still be with us?”

  I had thought about it. “Yes. I wouldn’t have so much news value, assuming you’d have to wait until you had a successful patient. The patient wouldn’t have as much news value as Maria, either. But we’d have plenty of time to work out—”