Escape from Altera
[Note: This is not a "sexy story". It is a mix of WW II "The Great Escape" and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's "The Gulag Achipelago"... set in outer space)
Chapter 4: Establishing an Equilibrium
Early the next morning I hobbled over to the hospital, a smaller version of the barracks building we were housed in. The walls on the inside were white, and the place looked cleaner than the barracks, and the wooden shelves actually had rough sheets on them, but otherwise it looked much like our barracks. There was no scientific equipment, no examining tables, and no medicines I could see.
Kerensky spoke and then argued with someone in charge, from the looks of it a fellow prisoner wearing a heavily stained and tattered white lab coat. I would have loved to have understood what they were saying, but all I could see was that they were arguing. The man in white was pointing to the beds and shaking his head, and Kerensky argued more furiously. Finally Kerensky dug into a pocket and shoved over something small wrapped in white cloth.
The man, without even looking, shook his head. Kerensky took out a second white clothed package.
The man considered, waiting.
But Kerensky didn't produce a third cloth wrapped object.
Finally, the man nodded, and pointed to one of the beds.
Kerensky turned to me. "It's done."
"What was that all about?" I said, as Kerensky led me to one of the bedding areas.
"He was just arguing about the price," said Kerensky. "I could only afford to put you here for two days, not more. Then you must be fit."
"Fit?"
"For work in the mines, and to tell me more," said Kerensky. "I have spent a lot on you, you had better be worth it."
And so, for two days, I rested! As long as I kept to my bed, no one bothered me, except during the periodic inspection by the Redcaps. They didn't seem to inquire too closely about my illness, leading me to believe that they, too, had been paid off. Some of the patients here were genuinely ill, and some of those moaned quietly from time to time, but I was so consumed with exhaustion that I blotted them out of my mind.
And the food! A full serving of the tasteless kem, plus parts of a long unidentifiable bitter root. I shuddered as I bit into it, and actually spat it out on the ground. Another prisoner scooped it off the floor like a pelican and swallowed it whole in his mouth.
He was right. Any food, however vile tasting, was better than nothing. Gritting my teeth the next time, I broke the root up into small chunks and forced myself to eat it. It settled uneasily into my stomach.
Two mornings later after breakfast, I was ejected from the "hospital", deemed "cured", though I had received no examination or treatment, and sent back to the mines. I endured another grueling day of mining, but nearly 48 hours of almost continual sleep and increased food rations gave me more endurance. I knew however, that I would not survive for long in the mines under any condition. Prisoners were expected to work six and a half days a week, and the half day of "free leisure" could be partially or totally consumed by punishment detail or mandatory state lectures. But if one were very, very lucky one might get five or six extra hours of sleep on Sundays, between inspections and head checks.
I was curious to see what would happen at dinner that night. Would Antonio and his thugs ambush me, or was I still protected? I found that answer immediately after I received my bowl of kem when I found Sasha, the giant with the feminine name, standing at my side. He motioned me to a far off table, where Kerensky and someone else sat.
Kerensky's dining companion made a disparaging remark as I sat down.
"In English, for our guest, Valonikov" said Kerensky sharply.
The man glared at me. "I think we have wasted a lot of time and effort on this one."
"If he gives me the information I want, neither will be wasted," said Kerensky mildly. But however softly he said it, the man, Valonikov, looked rebuked.
"Now," said Kerensky, "Tell me more about your League worlds."
I spoke rapidly, trying to prove my worth to him. He seemed fascinated by everything, our economic system, our culture, even the latest fashions on August. We talked into the night, and for several nights after that. Kerensky seemed satisfied with the answers to his questions, and all went well.
Until one night, as I was turning in, Valonikov said to me, "I think your time is just about up, Richman."
I stiffened. "What do you mean?"
"The Professor has learned nearly all he needs to know from you. Soon your time will be over."
"What do you mean?" I said again.
Valonikov gave me a condescending stare and walked away, laughing softly.
The next morning, I asked Kerensky what he meant. He gave Valonikov a sharp glare, but said, "I am protecting you, but protection comes at a price. As long as you give useful information, you are protected."
"And once I tell you everything I know?"
"Then you will be on your own again," said Kerensky.
Oh oh. Then I would be chased by the gangs again, beaten up, and half starved to death. I couldn't allow that to happen.
That night I told more details about life on League worlds. For the first few days everything was going well. But I noticed that Kerensky's questions, formerly coming in at a rapid pace, were becoming less frequent. At times he looked bored. Valonikov would give me sly glances. I knew my time was running out.
Kerensky wasn't interested in "popular literature" such as Bugsy Spagetti. What else did I have to offer him?
I noticed the topics that excited him the most were discussion of League politics and economies. When I first told him how everyone was able to vote in free elections, he scoffed.
"Come now, we have heard that before. It is all League propaganda. Your large corporations decide the results of your elections in advance."
And then I spent a half hour arguing with him to convince him that the League really did have a participatory democracy. He also had trouble believing other facets of life--that there were no internal passports, that people could travel freely, that anyone could start any business they liked without permission, even post their thoughts freely on the interstellar information network.
"And they would not be insulted, if they offended your President?"
"More likely they would get their own show," I said. And then that sparked an idea.
In my discussions with Kerensky I started asking him questions, challenging his assumptions and beliefs about political systems. I did it in a gradual way, still providing more information than I received, but over the next few days we spent more time arguing politics, culture, and economics, than we did discussing the nature of the League Worlds.