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Synopsis
The Culture—a human/machine symbiotic society—has thrown up many great Game Players, and one of the greatest is Gurgeh: Jernau Morat Gurgeh, the Player of Games. Master of every board, computer, and strategy. Bored with success, Gurgeh travels to the Empire of Azad, cruel and incredibly wealthy, to try their fabulous game ... a game so complex, so like life itself, that the winner becomes emperor. Mocked, blackmailed, and almost murdered, Gurgeh accepts the game, and with it the challenge of his life—and very possibly his death.
Release date: December 1, 2009
Publisher: Orbit
Print pages: 416
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The Player of Games
Iain M. Banks
The story starts with a battle that is not a battle, and ends with a game that is not a game.
Me? I’ll tell you about me later.
This is how the story begins.
Dust drifted with each footstep. He limped across the desert, following the suited figure in front. The gun was quiet in his
hands. They must be nearly there; the noise of distant surf boomed through the helmet soundfield. They were approaching a
tall dune, from which they ought to be able to see the coast. Somehow he had survived; he had not expected to.
It was bright and hot and dry outside, but inside the suit he was shielded from the sun and the baking air; cosseted and cool.
One edge of the helmet visor was dark, where it had taken a hit, and the right leg flexed awkwardly, also damaged, making
him limp, but otherwise he’d been lucky. The last time they’d been attacked had been a kilometer back, and now they were nearly
out of range.
The flight of missiles cleared the nearest ridge in a glittering arc. He saw them late because of the damaged visor. He thought
the missiles had already started firing, but it was only the sunlight reflecting on their sleek bodies. The flight dipped
and swung together, like a flock of birds.
When they did start firing it was signaled by strobing red pulses of light. He raised his gun to fire back; the other suited
figures in the group had already started firing. Some dived to the dusty desert floor, others dropped to one knee. He was
the only one standing.
The missiles swerved again, turning all at once and then splitting up to take different directions. Dust puffed around his
feet as shots fell close. He tried to aim at one of the small machines, but they moved startlingly quickly, and the gun felt
large and awkward in his hands. His suit chimed over the distant noise of firing and the shouts of the other people; lights
winked inside the helmet, detailing the damage. The suit shook and his right leg went suddenly numb.
“Wake up, Gurgeh!” Yay laughed, alongside him. She swiveled on one knee as two of the small missiles swung suddenly at their
section of the group, sensing that was where it was weakest. Gurgeh saw the machines coming, but the gun sang wildly in his
hands, and seemed always to be aiming at where the missiles had just been. The two machines darted for the space between him
and Yay. One of the missiles flashed once and disintegrated; Yay shouted, exulting. The other missile swung between them;
she lashed out with her foot, trying to kick it. Gurgeh turned awkwardly to fire at it, accidentally scattering fire over
Yay’s suit as he did so. He heard her cry out and then curse. She staggered, but brought the gun round; fountains of dust
burst around the second missile as it turned to face them again, its red pulses lighting up his suit and filling his visor
with darkness. He felt numb from the neck down and crumpled to the ground. It went black and very quiet.
“You are dead,” a crisp little voice told him.
He lay on the unseen desert floor. He could hear distant, muffled noises, sense vibrations from the ground. He heard his own
heart beat, and the ebb and flow of his breath. He tried to hold his breathing and slow his heart, but he was paralyzed, imprisoned,
without control.
His nose itched. It was impossible to scratch it. What am I doing here? he asked himself.
Sensation returned. People were talking, and he was staring through the visor at the flattened desert dust a centimeter in
front of his nose. Before he could move, somebody pulled him up by one arm.
He unlatched his helmet. Yay Meristinoux, also bare-headed, stood looking at him and shaking her head. Her hands were on her
hips, her gun swung from one wrist. “You were terrible,” she said, though not unkindly. She had the face of a beautiful child,
but the slow, deep voice was knowing and roguish; a low-slung voice.
The others sat around on the rocks and dust, talking. A few were heading back to the club house. Yay picked up Gurgeh’s gun
and presented it to him. He scratched his nose, then shook his head, refusing to take the weapon.
“Yay,” he told her, “this is for children.”
She paused, slung her gun over one shoulder, and shrugged (and the muzzles of both guns swung in the sunlight, glinting momentarily,
and he saw the speeding line of missiles again, and was dizzy for a second).
“So?” she said. “It isn’t boring. You said you were bored; I thought you might enjoy a shoot.”
He dusted himself down and turned back toward the club house. Yay walked alongside. Recovery drones drifted past them, collecting
the components of the destructed machines.
“It’s infantile, Yay. Why fritter your time away with this nonsense?”
They stopped at the top of the dune. The low club house lay a hundred meters away, between them and the golden sand and snow-white
surf. The sea was bright under the high sun.
“Don’t be so pompous,” she told him. Her short brown hair moved in the same wind which blew the tops from the falling waves
and sent the resulting spray curling back out to sea. She stooped to where some pieces of a shattered missile lay half buried
in the dune, picked them up, blew sand grains off the shining surfaces, and turned the components over in her hands. “I enjoy
it,” she said. “I enjoy the sort of games you like, but… I enjoy this too.” She looked puzzled. “This is a game. Don’t you get any pleasure from this sort of thing?”
“No. And neither will you, after a while.”
She shrugged easily. “Till then, then.” She handed him the parts of the disintegrated machine. He inspected them while a group
of young men passed, heading for the firing ranges.
“Mr. Gurgeh?” One of the young males stopped, looking at Gurgeh quizzically. A fleeting expression of annoyance passed across
the older man’s face, to be replaced by the amused tolerance Yay had seen before in such situations. “Jernau Morat Gurgeh?” the young man said, still not quite sure.
“Guilty.” Gurgeh smiled gracefully and—Yay saw—straightened his back fractionally, drawing himself up a little. The younger
man’s face lit up. He executed a quick, formal bow. Gurgeh and Yay exchanged glances.
“An honor to meet you, Mr. Gurgeh,” the young man said, smiling widely. “My name’s Shuro… I’m…” He laughed. “I follow all your games;
I have a complete set of your theoretical works on file…”
Gurgeh nodded. “How comprehensive of you.”
“Really. I’d be honored if, any time you’re here, you’d play me at… well, anything. Deploy is probably my best game; I play
off three points, but—”
“Whereas my handicap, regrettably, is lack of time,” Gurgeh said. “But, certainly, if the chance ever arises, I shall be happy
to play you.” He gave a hint of a nod to the younger man. “A pleasure to have met you.”
The young man flushed and backed off, smiling. “The pleasure’s all mine, Mr. Gurgeh.… Goodbye… goodbye.”He smiled awkwardly,
then turned and walked off to join his companions.
Yay watched him go. “You enjoy all that stuff, don’t you, Gurgeh?” she grinned.
“Not at all,” he said briskly. “It’s annoying.”
Yay continued to watch the young man walking away, looking him up and down as he tramped off through the sand. She sighed.
“But what about you?” Gurgeh looked with distaste at the pieces of missile in his hands. “Do you enjoy all this… destruction?”
“It’s hardly destruction,” Yay drawled. “The missiles are explosively dismantled, not destroyed. I can put one of those things
back together in half an hour.”
“So it’s false.”
“What isn’t?”
“Intellectual achievement. The exercise of skill. Human feeling.”
Yay just grinned. She said, “I can see we have a long way to go before we understand each other, Gurgeh.”
“Then let me help you.”
“Be your protégée?”
“Yes.”
Yay looked away, to where the rollers fell against the golden beach, and then back again. As the wind blew and the surf pounded,
she reached slowly behind her head and brought the suit’s helmet over, clicking it into place. He was left staring at the
reflection of his own face in her visor. He ran one hand through the black locks of his hair.
Yay flicked her visor up. “I’ll see you, Gurgeh. Chamlis and I are coming round to your place the day after tomorrow, aren’t
we?”
“If you want.”
“I want.” She winked at him and walked back down the slope of sand. He watched her go. She handed his gun to a recovery drone
as it passed her, loaded with glittering metallic debris.
Gurgeh stood for a moment, holding the bits of wrecked machine. Then he let the fragments drop back to the barren sand.
He could smell the earth and the trees around the shallow lake beneath the balcony. It was a cloudy night and very dark, just
a hint of glow directly above, where the clouds were lit by the shining Plates of the Orbital’s distant daylight side. Waves
lapped in the darkness, loud slappings against the hulls of unseen boats. Lights twinkled round the edges of the lake, where
low college buildings were set among the trees. The party was a presence at his back, something unseen, surging like the sound
and smell of thunder from the faculty building; music and laughter and the scents of perfumes and food and exotic, unidentifiable
fumes.
The rush of Sharp Blue surrounded him, invaded him. The fragrances on the warm night air, spilling from the line of opened doors behind, carried
on the tide of noise the people made, became like separate strands of air, fibers unraveling from a rope, each with its own
distinct color and presence. The fibers became like packets of soil, something to be rubbed between his fingers; absorbed,
identified.
There: that red-black scent of roasted meat; blood-quickening, salivatory; tempting and vaguely disagreeable at the same time
as separate parts of his brain assessed the odor. The animal root smelled fuel; protein-rich food; the mid-brain trunk registered
dead, incinerated cells… while the canopy of forebrain ignored both signals, because it knew his belly was full, and the roast
meat cultivated.
He could detect the sea, too; a brine smell from ten or more kilometers away over the plain and the shallow downs, another
threaded connection, like the net and web of rivers and canals that linked the dark lake to the restless, flowing ocean beyond
the fragrant grasslands and the scented forests.
Sharp Blue was a game-player’s secretion, a product of standard genofixed Culture glands sitting in Gurgeh’s lower skull, beneath the
ancient, animal-evolved lower reaches of his brain. The panoply of internally manufactured drugs the vast majority of Culture
individuals were capable of choosing from comprised up to three hundred different compounds of varying degrees of popularity
and sophistication; Sharp Blue was one of the least used because it brought no direct pleasure and required considerable concentration to produce. But it
was good for games. What seemed complicated became simple; what appeared insoluble became soluble; what had been unknowable
became obvious. A utility drug; an abstraction-modifier; not a sensory enhancer or a sexual stimulant or a physiological booster.
And he didn’t need it.
That was what was revealed, as soon as the first rush died away and the plateau phase took over. The lad he was about to play,
whose previous match of Four-Colors he had just watched, had a deceptive style, but an easily mastered one. It looked impressive,
but it was mostly show; fashionable, intricate, but hollow and delicate too; finally vulnerable. Gurgeh listened to the sounds
of the party and the sounds of the lake waters and the sounds coming from the other university buildings on the far side of
the lake. The memory of the young man’s playing style remained clear.
Dispense with it, he decided there and then. Let the spell collapse.
Something inside him relaxed, like a ghost limb untensed; a mind-trick. The spell, the brain’s equivalent of some tiny, crude,
looping sub-program, collapsed, simply ceased to be said.
He stood on the terrace by the lake for a while, then turned and went back into the party.
“Jernau Gurgeh. I thought you’d run off.”
He turned to face the small drone which had floated up to him as he re-entered the richly furnished hall. People stood talking,
or clustered around game-boards and tables beneath the great banners of ancient tapestries. There were dozens of drones in
the room too, some playing, some watching, some talking to humans, a few in the formal, lattice-like arrangements which meant
they were communicating by transceiver. Mawhrin-Skel, the drone which had addressed him, was by far the smallest of the machines
present; it could have sat comfortably on a pair of hands. Its aura field held shifting hints of gray and brown within the
band of formal blue. It looked like a model of an intricate and old-fashioned spacecraft.
Gurgeh scowled at the machine as it followed him through the crowds of people to the Four-Colors table.
“I thought perhaps this toddler had scared you,” the drone said, as Gurgeh arrived at the young man’s game-table and sat down
in a tall, heavily ornamented wooden chair hurriedly vacated by his just-beaten predecessor. The drone had spoken loudly enough
for the “toddler” concerned—a tousle-haired man of about thirty or so—to hear. The young man’s face looked hurt.
Gurgeh sensed the people around him grow a little quieter. Mawhrin-Skel’s aura fields switched to a mixture of red and brown;
humorous pleasure, and displeasure, together; a contrary signal close to a direct insult.
“Ignore this machine,” Gurgeh told the young man, acknowledging his nod. “It likes to annoy people.” He pulled his chair in,
adjusted his old, unfashionably loose and wide-sleeved jacket. “I’m Jernau Gurgeh. And you?”
“Stemli Fors,” the young man said, gulping a little.
“Pleased to meet you. Now; what color are you taking?”
“Aah… green.”
“Fine.” Gurgeh sat back. He paused, then waved at the board. “Well, after you.”
The young man called Stemli Fors made his first move. Gurgeh sat forward to make his, and the drone Mawhrin-Skel settled on
his shoulder, humming to itself. Gurgeh tapped the machine’s casing with one finger, and it floated off a little way. For
the rest of the match it mimicked the snicking sound the point-hinged pyramids made as they were clicked over.
Gurgeh beat the young man easily. He even finessed the finish a little, taking advantage of Fors’s confusion to produce a
pretty pattern at the end, sweeping one piece round four diagonals in a machine-gun clatter of rotating pyramids, drawing
the outline of a square across the board, in red, like a wound. Several people clapped; others muttered appreciatively. Gurgeh
thanked the young man and stood up.
“Cheap trick,” Mawhrin-Skel said, for all to hear. “The kid was easy meat. You’re losing your touch.” Its field flashed bright
red, and it bounced through the air, over people’s heads and away.
Gurgeh shook his head, then strode off.
The little drone annoyed and amused him in almost equal parts. It was rude, insulting and frequently infuriating, but it made
such a refreshing change from the awful politeness of most people. No doubt it had swept off to annoy somebody else now. Gurgeh
nodded to a few people as he moved through the crowd. He saw the drone Chamlis Amalk-ney by a long, low table, talking to
one of the less insufferable professors. Gurgeh went over to them, taking a drink from a waiting-tray as it floated past.
“Ah, my friend…” Chamlis Amalk-ney said. The elderly drone was a meter and a half tall and over half a meter wide and deep,
its plain casing matte with the accumulated wear of millennia. It turned its sensing band toward him. “The professor and I
were just talking about you.”
Professor Boruelal’s severe expression translated into an ironic smile. “Fresh from another victory, Jernau Gurgeh?”
“Does it show?” he said, raising the glass to his lips.
“I have learned to recognize the signs,” the professor said. She was twice Gurgeh’s age, well into her second century, but
still tall and handsome and striking. Her skin was pale and her hair was white, as it always had been, and cropped. “Another
of my students humiliated?”
Gurgeh shrugged. He drained the glass, looked round for a tray to put it on.
“Allow me,” Chamlis Amalk-ney murmured, gently taking the glass from his hand and placing it on a passing tray a good three
meters away. Its yellow-tinged field brought back a full glass of the same rich wine. Gurgeh accepted it.
Boruelal wore a dark suit of soft fabric, lightened at throat and knees by delicate silver chains. Her feet were bare, which
Gurgeh thought did not set off the outfit as—say—a pair of heeled boots might have done. But it was the most minor of eccentricities
compared to those of some of the university staff. Gurgeh smiled, looking down at the woman’s toes, tan upon the blond wooden
flooring.
“You’re so destructive, Gurgeh,” Boruelal told him. “Why not help us instead? Become part of the faculty instead of an itinerant
guest lecturer?”
“I’ve told you, Professor; I’m too busy. I have more than enough games to play, papers to write, letters to answer, guest
trips to make… and besides… I’d get bored. I bore easily, you know,” Gurgeh said, and looked away.
“Jernau Gurgeh would make a very bad teacher,” Chamlis Amalk-ney agreed. “If a student failed to understand something immediately,
no matter how complicated and involved, Gurgeh would immediately lose all patience and quite probably pour their drink over
them… if nothing worse.”
“So I’ve heard.” The professor nodded gravely.
“That was a year ago,” Gurgeh said, frowning. “And Yay deserved it.” He scowled at the old drone.
“Well,” the professor said, looking momentarily at Chamlis, “perhaps we have found a match for you, Jernau Gurgeh. There’s
a young—” Then there was a crash in the distance, and the background noise in the hall increased. They each turned at the
sound of people shouting.
“Oh, not another commotion,” the professor said tiredly.
Already that evening, one of the younger lecturers had lost control of a pet bird, which had gone screeching and swooping
through the hall, tangling in the hair of several people before the drone Mawhrin-Skel intercepted the animal in midair and
knocked it unconscious, much to the chagrin of most of the people at the party.
“What now?” Boruelal sighed. “Excuse me.” She absently left glass and savory on Chamlis Amalk-ney’s broad, flat top and moved
off, excusing her way through the crowd toward the source of the upheaval.
Chamlis’s aura flickered a displeased gray-white. It set the glass down noisily on the table and threw the savory into a distant
bin. “It’s that dreadful machine Mawhrin-Skel,” Chamlis said testily.
Gurgeh looked over the crowd to where all the noise was coming from. “Really?” he said. “What, causing all the rumpus?”
“I really don’t know why you find it so appealing,” the old drone said. It picked up Boruelal’s glass again and poured the
pale gold wine out into an outstretched field, so that the liquid lay cupped in midair, as though in an invisible glass.
“It amuses me,” Gurgeh replied. He looked at Chamlis. “Boruelal said something about finding a match for me. Was that what
you were talking about earlier?”
“Yes it was. Some new student they’ve found; a GSV cabin-brat with a gift for Stricken.”
Gurgeh raised one eyebrow. Stricken was one of the more complex games in his repertoire. It was also one of his best. There
were other human players in the Culture who could beat him—though they were all specialists at the game, not general game-players
as he was—but not one of them could guarantee a win, and they were few and far between, probably only ten in the whole population.
“So, who is this talented infant?” The noise on the far side of the room had lessened.
“It’s a young woman,” Chamlis said, slopping the field-held liquid about and letting it dribble through thin strands of hollow,
invisible force. “Just arrived here; came off the Cargo Cult; still settling in.”
The General Systems Vehicle Cargo Cult had stopped off at Chiark Orbital ten days earlier, and left only two days ago. Gurgeh had played a few multiple exhibition
matches on the craft (and been secretly delighted that they had been clean sweeps; he hadn’t been beaten in any of the various
games), but he hadn’t played Stricken at all. A few of his opponents had mentioned something about a supposedly brilliant
(though shy) young game-player on the Vehicle, but he or she hadn’t turned up as far as Gurgeh knew, and he’d assumed the
reports of this prodigy’s powers were much exaggerated. Ship people tended to have a quaint pride in their craft; they liked
to feel that even though they had been beaten by the great game-player, their vessel still had the measure of him, somewhere
(of course, the ship itself did, but that didn’t count; they meant people; humans, or 1.0 value drones).
“You are a mischievous and contrary device,” Boruelal said to the drone Mawhrin-Skel, floating at her shoulder, its aura field
orange with well-being, but circled with little purple motes of unconvincing contrition.
“Oh,” Mawhrin-Skel said brightly, “do you really think so?”
“Talk to this appalling machine, Jernau Gurgeh,” the professor said, frowning momentarily at the top of Chamlis Amalkney’s
casing, then picking up a fresh glass. (Chamlis poured the liquid it had been playing with into Boruelal’s original glass
and replaced it on the table.)
“What have you been doing now?” Gurgeh asked Mawhrin-Skel as it floated near his face.
“Anatomy lesson,” it said, its fields collapsing to a mixture of formal blue and brown ill-humor.
“A chirlip was found on the terrace,” Boruelal explained, looking accusingly at the little drone. “It was wounded. Somebody
brought it in, and Mawhrin-Skel offered to treat it.”
“I wasn’t busy,” Mawhrin-Skel interjected, reasonably.
“It killed and dissected it in front of all the people,” the professor sighed. “They were most upset.”
“It would have died from shock anyway,” Mawhrin-Skel said. “They’re fascinating creatures, chirlips. Those cute little fur-folds
conceal partially cantilevered bones, and the looped digestive system is quite fascinating.”
“But not when people are eating,” Boruelal said, selecting another savory from the tray. “It was still moving,” she added
glumly. She ate the savory.
“Residual synaptic capacitance,” explained Mawhrin-Skel.
“Or ‘Bad Taste’ as we machines call it,” Chamlis Amalk-ney said.
“An expert in that, are you, Amalk-ney?” Mawhrin-Skel inquired.
“I bow to your superior talents in that field,” Chamlis snapped back.
Gurgeh smiled. Chamlis Amalk-ney was an old—and ancient—friend; the drone had been constructed over four thousand years ago
(it claimed it had forgotten the exact date, and nobody had ever been impolite enough to search out the truth). Gurgeh had
known the drone all his life; it had been a friend of the family for centuries.
Mawhrin-Skel was a more recent acquaintance. The irascible, ill-mannered little machine had arrived on Chiark Orbital only
a couple of hundred days earlier; another untypical character attracted there by the world’s exaggerated reputation for eccentricity.
Mawhrin-Skel had been designed as a Special Circumstances drone for the Culture’s Contact section; effectively a military
machine with a variety of sophisticated, hardened sensory and weapons systems which would have been quite unnecessary and
useless on the majority of drones. As with all sentient Culture constructs, its precise character had not been fully mapped
out before its construction, but allowed to develop as the drone’s mind was put together. The Culture regarded this unpredictable
factor in its production of conscious machines as the price to be paid for individuality, but the result was that not every
drone so brought into being was entirely suitable for the tasks it had initially been designed for.
Mawhrin-Skel was one such rogue drone. Its personality—it had been decided—wasn’t right for Contact, not even for Special
Circumstances. It was unstable, belligerent and insensitive. (And those were only the grounds it had chosen to tell people
it had failed on.) It had been given the choice of radical personality alteration, in which it would have had little or no
say in its own eventual character, or a life outside Contact, with its personality intact but its weapons and its more complex
communications and sensory systems removed to bring it down to something nearer the level of a standard drone.
It had, bitterly, chosen the latter. And it had made its way to Chiark Orbital, where it hoped it might fit in.
“Meatbrain,” Mawhrin-Skel told Chamlis Amalk-ney, and zoomed off toward the line of open windows. The older drone’s aura field
flashed white with anger and a bright, rippling spot of rainbow light revealed that it was using its tight-beam transceiver
to communicate with the departing machine. Mawhrin-Skel stopped in midair; turned. Gurgeh held his breath, wondering what
Chamlis could have said, and what the smaller drone might say in reply, knowing that it wouldn’t bother to keep its remarks
secret, as Chamlis had.
“What I resent,” it said slowly, from a couple of meters away, “is not what I have lost, but what I have gained, in coming—even
remotely—to resemble fatigued, path-polished geriatrics like you, who haven’t even got the human decency to die when they’re
obsolete. You’re a waste of matter, Amalk-ney.”
Mawhrin-Skel became a mirrored sphere, and in that ostentatiously uncommunicable mode swept out of the hall into the darkness.
“Cretinous whelp,” Chamlis said, fields frosty blue.
Boruelal shrugged. “I feel sorry for it.”
“I don’t,” Gurgeh said. “I think it has a wonderful time.” He turned to the professor. “When do I get to meet your young Stricken
genius? Not hiding her away to train her, are you?”
“No, we’re just giving her time to adjust.” Boruelal picked at her teeth with the pointed end of the savory stick. “From what
I can gather the girl had rather a sheltered upbringing. Sounds like she hardly left the GSV; she must feel odd being here.
Also, she isn’t here to do game-theory, Jernau Gurgeh, I’d better point that out. She’s going to study philosophy.”
Gurgeh looked suitably surprised.
“A sheltered upbringing?” Chamlis Amalk-ney said. “On a GSV?” Its gunmetal aura indicated puzzlement.
“She’s shy.”
“She’d have to be.”
“I must meet her,” said Gurgeh.
“You will,” Boruelal said. “Soon, maybe; she said she might come with me to Tronze for the next concert. Hafflis runs a game
there, doesn’t he?”
“Usually,” Gurgeh agreed.
“Maybe she’ll play you there. But don’t be surprised if you just intimidate her.”
“I shall be the epitome of gentle good grace,” Gurgeh assured her.
Boruelal nodded thoughtfully. She gazed out over the party and looked distracted for a second as a large cheer sounded from
the center of the hall.
“Excuse me,” she said. “I think I detect a nascent commotion.” She moved away. Chamlis Amalk-ney shifted aside, to avoid being
used as a table again; the professor took her glass with her.
“Did you meet Yay this morning?” Chamlis asked Gurgeh.
He nodded. “She had me dressed up in a suit, toting a gun and shooting at toy missiles which ‘explosively dismantled’ themselves.”
“You didn’t enjoy it.”
“Not at all. I had high hopes for that girl, but too much of that sort of nonsense and I think her intelligence will explosively
dismantle.”
“Well, such diversions aren’t for everybody. She was just trying to be helpful. You’d said you were feeling restless, looking
for something new.”
“Well, that wasn’t it,” Gurgeh said, and felt suddenly, inexplicably, saddened.
He and Chamlis watched as people began to move past them, heading toward the long line of windows which opened onto the terrace.
There was a dull, buzzing sensation inside the man’s head; he had entirely forgotten that coming down from Sharp Blue required a degree of internal monitoring if you were to avoid an uncomfortable hangover. He watched the people pass with
a slight feeling of nausea.
“Must be time for the fireworks,” Chamlis said.
“Yes… let’s get some fresh air, shall we?”
“Just what I need,” Chamlis said, aura dully red.
Gurgeh put his glass down, and together he and the old drone joined the flow of people spilling from the bright, tapestry-hung
hall onto the floodlit terrace facing the dark lake.
Rain hit the windows with a noise like the crackling of the logs on the fire. The view from the house
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