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closely monitored environments in the galaxy. Before Colonel Millisor leaps
out a lift tube, don't you think we'd better, uh, find some quieter place to
talk?"
"Oh. Oh, yes, of course, sir. Is your safe house nearby?"
"Er... Is yours?"
The young man grimaced. "As long as my cover identity holds."
Ethan gestured invitingly, and Cee led off. Safe house, Ethan decided, must be
a generic espionage term for any hideout, for
Cee took him not to a home but to a cheap hostel reserved for transients with
Stationer work permits. Here were housed clerks, housekeepers, porters, and
other lower-echelon employees of the service sector whose function Ethan could
only guess at, such as the two women in bright clothing and gaudy make-up
almost Cetagandan in its unnatural coloration, who started to accost Cee and
himself and shouted some unintelligible insult after them when they brushed
hastily by.
Cee's quarters were a near-clone of Ethan's own neglected Economy Cabin, plain
and cramped. Ethan wondered rather fearfully if Cee were reading his mind
right now - apparently not, for the Cetagandan expatriate gave no sign of
realizing his mistake yet.
"I take it," said Ethan, "that your powers are intermittent."
"Yes," replied Cee. "If my escape to Athos had gone as I'd originally planned,
I meant never to use them again. I suppose your government will demand my
services as the price of its protection, now."
"I - I don't know," answered Ethan honestly. "But if you truly possess such a
talent, it would seem a shame not to use it. I
mean, one can see the applications right away."
"Can't one, though," muttered Cee bitterly.
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"Look at pediatric medicine - what a diagnostic aid for pre-verbal patients!
Babies who can't answer, Where does it hurt?
What does it feel like? Or for stroke victims or those paralyzed in accidents
who have lost all ability to communicate, trapped in their bodies. God the
Father," Ethan's enthusiasm mounted, "you could be an absolute savior!"
Terrence Cee sat down rather heavily. His eyes widened in wonder, narrowed in
suspicion. "I'm more often regarded as a menace. No one I've met who knew my
secret ever suggested any use for me but espionage."
"Well - were they espionage agents themselves?"
"Now that you mention it - yes, for the most part."
"So, there you are. They see you as what they would be, given your gift. "
Cee gave him a very odd look, and smiled slowly. "Sir, I hope you're right."
His posture became less closed, some part of the tension uncoiling in his lean
muscles, but his blue eyes remained intent upon Ethan. "Do you realize that I
am not a human being, Dr. Urquhart? I'm an artificial genetic construct, a
composite from a dozen sources, with a sensory organ squatting like a spider
in my brain that no human being ever had. I have no father and no mother. I
wasn't born, I was made. And that doesn't horrify you?"
"Well, er - where did the men who made you get all your other genes? From
other people, surely?" asked Ethan.
"Oh, yes. Carefully selected strains, all politically purified." Wormwood
could not have set Cee's mouth in a tighter line.
"So," said Ethan "if you count back, let me see, four generations, every human
being is a composite from as many as sixteen different sources. They're called
ancestors, but it comes to the same thing. Your mix was just marginally less
random, that's all.
Now, I do know genetics. With the exception of that new organ you claim, I can
flat guarantee the 'just marginally. ' That is not the test of your humanity."
"So what is the test of humanity?"
"Well - you have free will, obviously, or you could not be opposing your
creators. Therefore you are not an automaton, but a child of God the Father,
answerable to Him according to your abilities," Ethan catechized.
If Ethan had sprouted wings and flapped up to the ceiling Cee could not be
staring at him in more shaken astonishment. It seemed as though these
perfectly obvious facts had never before been presented to him.
Cee strained forward. "What am I to you, then, if not a monster?"
Ethan scratched his chin reflectively. "We all remain children of the Father,
however we may otherwise be orphaned. You are my brother, of course."
"Of course... ?" echoed Cee. His legs and arms drew in, making his body a
tight ball. Tears leaked between his squeezed eyelids. He scrubbed his face
roughly on his trouser knee, smearing the tears' reflective sheen across his
flushed face. "Damn it,"
he whispered, "I'm the ultimate weapon, the super agent. I survived it all.
How can you make me weep now?" Suddenly savage, he added, "If I find out
you're lying to me, I swear I will kill you."
In another man's mouth they might have seemed empty words. Coming from Cee's
ragged edginess, the threat was stomach-
knotting. "You're obviously extremely tired," Ethan, alarmed, offered in
solace. Cee had not yet quite regained his self-control, though he was clearly
trying, breathing carefully as a yogi. Ethan hunted around the room and handed
him a tissue. "And I'd think looking at the world through Millisor's eyes, if
that's what you've been doing lately, would be something of a strain."
"You've got that straight," choked Cee. "I've had to go in and out of his mind
since this thing," he made the migraine gesture again, "got fully developed in
my head when I was thirteen years old."
"Ick," said Ethan, in heartfelt candor. "Well, that's it, then."
Cee emitted a surprised laugh that did more for his self-control than the
breathing exercise had. "How can you know?"
"I don't know anything about how your telepathy works, but I've met the man."
Ethan rubbed his lips thoughtfully. "How old are you?" he asked suddenly.
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"Nineteen."
There was no adolescent defiance in the reply. Cee was merely stating a fact,
as if his youth had never been an object in any test put to him. The insight
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