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Shadowline

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Twenty-Four: 2354-3031 AD

Michael Dee’s moments of happiness were tiny islands
scattered in a vast sea. His life was a swift one. He had so much
in the air that, when he found time to look around, he seemed to
have surfaced in an alien universe. In the year of the Shadowline
he had nothing but his schemes.

He always had been a little outside. His earliest memory was of
a fight with Gneaus over his being different.

Gneaus eventually accepted him. He had less luck accepting
himself.

Down on the bottom line Michael Dee did not like Michael Dee
very much. There was something wrong with him.

That he was different he first inferred from his mother’s
attitude. She was too protective, too fearful.

Boris Storm, the man he thought was his father, was seldom
around. Boris was preoccupied with his work. He had few chances to
be with his family. Michael developed no bond with the
paterfamilias.

Emily Storm hovered over her firstborn. She corrected and
protected, corrected and protected, till Michael was convinced that
there was an evil in him that scared her silly.

What was this dark thing? He agonized over it by the hour and
could find nothing.

Other children sensed it. They withdrew. He studied people,
seeking his reflection. He found ways to manipulate others, but the
real secret eluded him.

Only Gneaus accepted him. Poor bullheaded Gneaus, who would take
a beating rather than admit that his brother was strange.

Poor health complicated Michael’s childhood. Boris spent
fortunes on doctors. Bad genes, they would hazard, after finding
nothing specifically wrong.

He was weak, pale, and sickly into his teens. His brother fought
his battles. Gneaus was so strong, so stubborn, and so feared that
the other children ignored Michael rather than risk a fight.

So Michael began spinning tall tales as an attention-getting
device. He was amazed. His stories were believed! He had a talent.
When he recognized the power he had to shape the truth, he used
it.

In time he came to weigh every word, every gesture, before
revealing it. He calculated its effect on his audience carefully.
He reached the point where he could not be direct. In time even the
simplest end had to be accomplished by complex means.

He never found his way out of that self-made trap.

He was blessed, or cursed, with brilliance and an almost eidetic
memory. He used those tools to keep his webs of deceit taut and
strong. He became a master liar, deceiver, and schemer. He lived at
the eye of a hurricane of falsehood and discord.

In those days Academy’s minimum-age requirement was
fourteen standard years. As Gneaus’s eligibility year
approached, Boris Storm maneuvered to obtain favorable
consideration for his son and stepson.

Boris was the scion of an old military family. His ancestors had
been career people with the Palisarian Directorate, one of the
founder-states of Confederation. He had departed service himself,
but could conceive of no higher goal toward which to direct his
offspring. He aimed them at commissions all their lives. Their
early education took place in a private, militarily oriented
special school he set up for the children of Prefactlas
Corporation’s officers.

Michael and Gneaus first encountered Richard Hawksblood there.
He was Richard Woracek at the time. He took the name Hawksblood
when he became a mercenary.

Richard was the son of a management consultant Boris brought in
to improve his profit margin. The family had no service background.
Richard was an outsider among children who saw civilians as a lower
life form. Richard was, at the outset, smaller and more sickly than
Michael. He was Dee’s favorite victim.

Richard accepted slings and arrows with calm dignity and a
refusal to be aroused. His imperturbability infuriated his
classmates. He fought back by being better than anyone at
everything. Only Gneaus was able, on occasion, to rise to the
rarefied airs where Woracek soared.

His excellence only compounded his troubles with his peers.
Gneaus, who was his closest acquaintance, often became exasperated
because Richard would not fight back.

“The scores will even themselves,” Woracek
promised.

They did.

Eligibility time arrived, and with it Academy’s grueling
competitive exams. The youths flashed like spearpoints toward the
target at which their parents had aimed their young lives. They
streaked toward their chances to become card-carrying members of
the established elite.

The battery lasted six exhausting days. Part was physical and
psychological. A substantial fraction sampled general knowledge and
tested problem-solving abilities. The candidates knew Richard would
ace those forms. They were surprised to see Michael finish them
almost as quickly.

Richard turned in his final test sheet and calmly announced that
he had been deliberately answering incorrectly. The monitor asked
why. Richard told him that someone had copied some of his answers.
Could he retest in isolation?

Computer analysis indicated an unnatural relationship between
Woracek’s answers and those of Michael Dee. Richard was
allowed his retest. He came in with the highest scores ever
recorded.

Michael tried it the lazy way. The snake turned on him. He
watched his dreams collapse like the topless towers.

He knew it was his own fault. Still, he had a perverse streak.
Richard shared the blame. It was Woracek’s fault, if you saw
it from the right angle.

That was Michael Dee’s watershed point. He had begun
deceiving himself. His last bulwark of reality gone, he went
adrift. He became a one-man universe whose ties to the larger
existence were bonds of falsehood and hatred founded on untruth. He
had chained himself in fetters so intangible and cunningly forged
that even he could not define them.

He did bounce back from rejection. He found a new direction, in
a field which valued men with his ability to restructure reality.
He became a journalist.

The holonets, ratings foremost in the moguls’ minds, had
abandoned all pretense to objective reporting long ago. When
Michael entered the trade drama was the bait that got the audiences
to switch on. The bloodier the report the better.

Michael wanted to make it as an independent. He straggled hard
for years. Then the Ulantonid War broke.

He showed a knack for being in the right place at the right
time. He produced the best coverage repeatedly. His colleagues made
tape after tape of disaster after disaster as the Ulantonid blitz
smashed toward the Inner Worlds. Michael found the bright spots,
the little victories and heroic stands. His coverage elbowed to the
top.

While Boris, Gneaus, Cassius, and Richard fought for their lives
in what looked a foredoomed effort to stall Ulant, Michael had fun
making tapes. The Storms were impoverished by Ulant’s
occupation of Prefactlas. He grew rich. He set his own price for
his material. In the wartime confusion he evaded taxation deftly
and invested brilliantly. He bought huge chunks of instel stocks
when commercial faster-than-light communication seemed nothing but
wishful thinking. He got into interstellar data warehousing, a
sideline that would lead to the creation of Festung Todesangst.

Everything he touched turned to gold.

He never forgave Richard. Though his fortunes soared, he was
always the outsider at the party. Without that Academy diploma he
could not rise above the second social rank. Service officers were
the aristocrats of the age.

The war ended. Its chaos continued. Grand Admiral McGraw went
rogue. Sangaree raiders continued to harry the spaceways. There
were people to blame. Michael got into piracy.

He was careful. Hardly anyone ever suspected. He creamed
information from his instel and data corporations to parlay a pair
of broken-down destroyers into another fortune.

His extralegal adventures led him into another life-trap.



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