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I ran through the medical latin I'd learned years ago, but
to no avail: and so I was left with nothing to do but head on in
and meet my host, a prospect that I found not a little daunting.
Given the vessel I was in, the sister I had met and the actions
for which I knew he was responsible, I calculated that this
Malcolm Tressalian--and again, there was something very familiar
about the name--must be an intimidating, perhaps an overpowering,
character, both physically and personally. But the encounter was
now inevitable, and so I resignedly knocked on the door and
stepped inside.
The nose of the vessel was a conical superstructure sheathed
entirely in the same transparent material I'd seen in Larissa's
turret, and the three levels of the space it housed--an
observation dome up top, a helm and guidance center in the middle
and a small conference area below--were connected by bare metallic
staircases. In fact, the fittings generally were in the high-tech
style I had originally expected to find on boarding; but coming
as it now did on the heels of the rather anachronistic decor
outside, the style was somewhat unexpected and even jarring.
The doorway through which I'd come was to the rear of the nose's
control level. Though there was little light to see by, I could
tell that there were two men sitting before the guidance panel,
and beyond them the decaying malls and decrepit housing
developments of suburban Florida spread out before us. I began to
move forward with trepidation, and then the man on the left
spoke, cheerfully enough but without facing me:
"Dr. Wolfe! Excellent, you managed to escape Larissa--which is far
more, I suspect, than our pursuers will do."
And then he turned, or rather the entire seat he occupied did:
for it was in fact a wheelchair, one that even in the near
darkness I could see contained not the formidable physical
specimen I'd anticipated, but a frail, somewhat pitiable form
that did not seem to match the vibrant voice it produced.
"I suppose I should offer you some melodramatic welcome," the
voice continued in the same amiable tone. "But we're neither of
us the type, eh? No, I suspect that what you'd really like is
some answers..."
"My name's Malcolm Tressalian--did my sister manage to
relay that much to you, or have you endured uninterrupted
seduction since you came aboard?"
"Yes--I mean no--I mean she did--"
Tressalian laughed and rolled closer to me, his face becoming
fully visible for the first time. "You must understand that she
almost never takes any interest in men--but when she does, my
God..." I smiled at this statement, though I was paying more
attention to his face than to his words. The features were not
unlike Larissa's--handsome in a fine-boned way--and the hair was
the same silvery color. The eyes, however, were quite different,
being of a peculiarly light, rather otherworldly blue. Yet there
was something far more important than any of this in the face, a
look I had seen many times in children who'd served harsh prison
terms, as well as in schizophrenic patients who had lived for
too long without treatment:
It was the imponderable depth brought on by compressed,
relentless mental and physical torment, a brand as unmistakable
as any birthmark.
"And I do apologize," Tressalian continued amiably, "for the way
you were brought aboard." As he said this, he shifted into
position to stand up, something he apparently felt was important
to do at that moment, given the pain that it evidently caused
him. He reached for a pair of aluminum crutches that were mounted
on either side of his chair, clipped them to his upper arms and
then managed to get to his feet. I didn't know quite what move to
make to assist him, especially since I guessed that he desired
none; and indeed, once upright, he looked very pleased that he
was able to approach me and shake hands on his own. "However," he
continued, "I'm sure you appreciate that we couldn't just leave
you behind to suffer a fate like Mr. Jenkins'." His expression
grew earnest. "I trust Eli expressed his condolences--let me add
my own. It was a sickening thing to do, even for that unkillable
beast we call Central Intelligence."
"Then it was the government," I said quietly, Max's face flashing
across my mind for an instant.
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