The Thursday Child; A Yoelin Thibbony Rescue
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Yoelin Thibbony performs Rescues of children, people, and articles, sometimes for a fee, sometimes for free. But she has begun to doubt her own identity; her childhood memories of abuse and slavery are starting to make less sense to her. Now, events tumble around her. A former lover who betrayed her has been killed, and the authorities are looking for her. His three-year-old son has been brought to Yoelin by a mysterious woman with an even more serious agenda; their spaceship is blown up at the Spaceport. Yoelin, unwilling to abandon a child in need of a Rescue, must follow a line of investigation that leads her into her own dubious past, and to a vast and secret conspiracy—a long game—that threatens the lives of the people she cares about most. This time, the confrontation is one that almost certainly she cannot win.But when did that ever stop her?
Tyree Campbell
Tyree Campbell writes primarily science fiction, plus some fantasy and some horror. He is the author of four novels [including the Nyx series], some 130 short stories, and three dozen poems. He has won SpecFicWorld's Speculative Fiction Contest, Crux Magazine's SF Writing Contest, a third-place Rhysling for poetry, and has been nominated for the James Tiptree Award, a Spectrum Award, and a Lambda Award. Currently he is working on three other novels, including the third Nyx novel [The Protectors], plus assorted short stories. In his spare time he is also the managing editor of Sam's Dot Publishing.
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The Thursday Child; A Yoelin Thibbony Rescue - Tyree Campbell
The Thursday Child
A Yoelin Thibbony rescue
By Tyree Campbell
Published by Nomadic Delirium Press at Smashwords
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
The Thursday Child: A Yoelin Thibbony Rescue is a publication of Nomadic Delirium Press. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including physical copying or recording or by any information storage and retrieval systems, without expressed written consent of the author and/or artists.
The Thursday Child: A Yoelin Thibbony Rescue is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, are entirely coincidental.
Cover illustration copyright 2020 by Laura Givens
Cover design by Laura Givens
First printing July 2020
Nomadic Delirium Press
Aurora, Colorado
http://www.nomadicdeliriumpress.com
No matter how much you want or need, they, whoever they are, don’t want you to get away with it, whatever it is.
Sometimes you get away with it.
~ John Leonard: Private Lives in the Imperial City
001: Her Own Client
Yoelin Thibbony watched the K4 star known as Karsh immerse itself into the ocean at the edge of the horizon. It seemed to her that she should hear a distant hissing sound as the fires were doused. She was sitting on a brown wicker chair on the beach of a small island on Havelox Rest, the world of her childhood, and smoking a maple cheroot. She had come back, hoping to relax from recent travails, but not even the meditation of a sunset could calm her mind completely.
At length her Palmetto binged. Her personal computer, aboard her spaceskiff Sequana, had decided to make an appearance. What is it, Abby?
she asked.
Darkness fell quickly, with Karsh extinguished for the night. The light from the Palmetto screen illuminated her face, and made her eyes glow pearl-gray. The only other light came from a sprinkling of stars.
The ‘skipcomp did not respond immediately.
Don’t keep me in suspense, Abby,
she said. It’s too nice an evening.
"Paul Wroclawski and his wife are dead."
The announcement slammed her back in her chair, and she dropped the device screen-down on the sand. Briny air wafted into her open mouth. Respiration came rapid and shallow. She stared out to sea, at the echelons of breakers marching onto the beach to die and seep into the sand, and at the infinity of the horizon. Her arms hung over the edge the chair like noodles.
Gradually, tentatively, questions filtered into her numbed mind. It was impossible for her to focus on any one of them. She would revisit them later; for now, Paul and Karola were dead. Karola, she didn’t mind so much. But Paul Wroclawski had been at one time her liberator and her lover.
She dragged fingers through her long black hair, dimly aware that after a day on the beach it badly needed a comb. The news made no sense to her. She had no doubt that the deaths were deliberate, not accidental. But how was killing Paul useful? He was the heir to Corporatia Mineral Resources, and his father was dying. Paul’s son Pavel, at three years old, might inherit, but he would require a regent until he was close to his majority.
If he reached his majority, she thought grimly.
Strength returned with the fading of shock. She reached down and recovered the Palmetto. Through it all, Abnoba had remained silent after delivering her message. Yoelin placed the device on her lap, laced her fingers behind her neck, and leaned way back, stretching. A yawn came over her; she did not fight it.
All right, Abby, thank you,
she said. How did you come by this information?
"It was on the news. Paul Wroclawski is one of my key search words."
Understood. Details?
"They were found on the couch in the activity room of their home on Lowella. Both had been killed by energy weapons and in the same manner, suggesting torture prior to death. He had burn marks on the outside of both lower legs, and a scorched circle in the middle of his forehead. She had the same circle, but in her case the leg wounds were through the patellas, the kneecaps. Both Wroclawskis had been traveling recently, and investigators are looking into any contacts either of them might have made."
Which puts me right in the middle of it, thought Yoelin, and swore silently.
All right, Abby. Anything else.
"Dannik Exeter wishes to know whether you will attend the memorial."
Of course he would, she sighed wearily. The Director of Corporatia Security, for whom I worked for five years, and who is almost certainly overseeing the investigation himself, would want to ascertain my location.
She climbed out of the chair and began to trudge toward the rude wooden shack that served her as a temporary home. No,
she answered at last, along the way. And I don’t wish to speak with him right now; take messages.
Trees blotted out the stars. Except for a few low branches, she avoided them. A night-blooming flower had opened somewhere nearby, and was casting its scent about, inviting insects to come and help pollenate. The sweet aroma failed to improve her mood. The dark shadow of the hut loomed ahead. She had stayed in it, off and on, for the past fortnight; now, suddenly, it seemed almost alien to her, like an imposition from an unwelcome visitor.
Abby, raise Stefan Coppenrath and ask him to come over,
she said, at the door. I don’t wish to speak with him, just give me his reply.
"He said he is on his way."
She tucked the Palmetto into a back pocket of her cargo jeans, and went inside, leaving the lights off. There, in the dark, she prepared a coffee brewer. Moments later, the rich aroma of dark coffee filled the dinette. Already seated at the table, she closed her eyes and fought with past demons, now resurrected.
You will not shed a single tear for him, you will not.
You will not.
The command became a mantra.
But she did: one from each eye. Angrily she wiped them away with the heels of her hands. It was easy enough to remind herself that Paul was no longer worthy of her attention, much less her tears. He had betrayed her. In some way that she had not yet determined, he had been part of a long-term plot against her—a plot that she had foiled, at least temporarily, to her relief and her pain. It was best shunted into the past where it belonged.
He had also betrayed his own kindnesses to her: the liberation from her confinement as an adolescent courtesan, the recommendation to Corporatia Security that gained her training and employment, the moments of love that she considered all too brief over the years. Sixteen years, and counting.
In the back of her mind, she knew she would investigate the two murders. But she was not ready to consider them at length, not now.
The knock at her door startled her, although she had been expecting it at any moment. Even so, her hand dove to the Kreisler Energo on the table and aimed it at the door.
Yes?
she said simply.
Stefan.
Yoelin put away the sidearm and bade him enter. In the darkness, he was but a shadow. From him she detected the heady scents of oil paints and paint thinner. She also caught a whiff of whiskey and the faintest air of deodorant, as if he had taken a few seconds on the way out of his hut to make himself more presentable, if not palatable. She could just make out the unbuttoned flannel shirt with the rolled-up sleeves. He had, she quickly saw, managed to fasten the second button from the bottom into the hole for the lowest button. A light laugh escaped her as she invited him to sit down.
Coffee?
she asked.
I’ll get it,
he said, and did. You called,
he added, seating himself across the table from her.
Her voice tight, she summarized the news release for him, including a few pieces of context for him, so that he might grasp why this concerned her. By this time, she had finished her first mug of coffee and was halfway through her second, even though she did not recall having drunk anything. She had also shed a few more tears; she doubted he could see them in the dark.
As if sensing that doubt, Stefan reached for a dishtowel on the counter, and flipped it to her. Dry your eyes,
he ordered.
His tone did not annoy her; she needed a rock in these moments. But she flipped the towel back at him after she had finished with it.
You’re going after it,
he said.
She nodded.
Yoelin, this isn’t one of your Rescues,
he cautioned. There’s no one to rescue; they’re already dead. There’s no client.
She gave him the part she had omitted earlier. The Wroclawskis had three energy weapon burn marks each,
she told him. One on each leg, one in the head. I’m the one who shot them in the legs.
His Oh
was as soft as the distant waves.
So CorpSec will want a word with me.
Nice alliteration.
She flashed a smile. I try.
After draining her mug, she continued. "But you see, I’m the client. Somehow, this involves my past, whatever it was."
I can just make out your face in the dark,
he said. That’s a painting for me. Strong emphasis on the eyes. Maybe a bit of a haunted, hunted look. Dark and lovely. I should have brought my sketchpad.
What you really mean is, how can you help,
she said, her voice gentle now. The short answer is that you can’t, Stefan; at least, not yet. If I’m caught, you’re an accomplice.
Also, if you’re caught, I’m still free to come get you.
She got up and set their mugs on the counter. The thought had occurred to me,
she admitted. Stefan, there’s a lot I haven’t told you—
I know. It’s okay.
It’s just that I’m not sure where to begin . . . yet.
When you are,
he promised, and stood up. So: no more coffee. I take it I’m being dismissed.
She glanced at the bed, barely visible in corner shadows. Not just yet,
she said.
*
Sunlight seeping through the thin curtains slowly brought Yoelin from dreamstate to half-lidded eyes. She did not have to feel around to know that Stefan had already departed for his hut further up the hill. In the dark at the table, her pale face just visible, he’d been struck by an inspiration he had to pursue.
Artists, she thought wryly, sitting up in bed. Flashes of the night strolled past the eye of her memory. The loving, for her, had been born of desperation. It was Stefan, in her mind, who had helped her to gain release; not for an instant had she thought of Paul or imagined that in some way Stefan had become Paul. Still, she had writhed, and struggled, and fought, not against Stefan, but against herself. Momentarily sated, she began to wonder again who she was. Stefan, intuitive, had taken her mind off the wondering.
Somewhere along the line, the top sheet had spilled to the floor. She leaned over and snatched it up, flinging it over her legs. Gradually the aroma of freshly-brewed coffee reached her nostrils; he’d set the timer before he left. A piece of paper, crumpled now, slipped from the tousled sheet; he’d left her a note. She smoothed it out on her thigh and read it.
I’d like you to pose for me again. S
Three months ago, she had come back to Havelox Rest in pursuit of a Rescue she’d been hired for. An acquaintance struck up, she had agreed to pose for him, for Stefan Coppenrath, formerly an operative of Corporatia Security, and now the artist known as Copper. After the Rescue had been completed, she had spent a month with him, before the need to move on became unbearable. If they don’t know where you are, they can’t find you. The aphorism had helped to keep her alive all these years. Even though Havelox Rest, where she had suffered a childhood of abuse, was now a safe haven for her, she had to leave.
A moment of light-headedness assaulted her when she stood up. Not yet fully awake, she clung to the bedstead until it passed, and was replaced by a ringing in her ears. Hands blocking the sound, she moved to the table and flopped down on the chair. The Palmetto was glowing; she turned the thin, flat device until she could see the screen.
What is it, Abby,
she said, her throat dry. She managed to pour herself a mug of coffee without standing up. Dannik Exeter again?
"You’ve been pinged."
Yoelin felt a blush warm her face, though she knew Abnoba had not issued a double entendre. She took a sip, and burned her tongue. Well?
she pressed, impatient.
"It’s your Guardian Angel site. Her name is Trezsa Boteva. She claims the matter is urgent. I have visual."
The name sounded familiar, and Abby was unusually chatty. I’ll see her,
she said. Don’t let her see me.
I thought as much; you left the Palmetto on.
Yoelin sat back. Ye gods. So you heard everything Stefan and I . . .
A face shimmered into view on the screen. High cheekbones and slightly sunken, dark blue eyes dominated a pale oval face. Shoulder-length brown-black hair appeared slept-on. The lack of wrinkles in the outer corners of the eyes suggested a woman in her mid-twenties, but the eyes themselves made her twice that age. It was the fear in those eyes that Yoelin addressed, driving straight to the point.
Where are you and what’s wrong?
she asked.
My destination is The Dragons,
Boteva replied. She spoke with a heavy accent, the consonants harsh. They chase us.
The response raised more questions than it answered. Boteva kept glancing over her shoulder, although her expression did not admit to immediate danger. What sort of ship are you on?
asked Yoelin.
It is personal,
the woman replied. Her face twisted. No, that is not word. It is small. I shop in it, but is not mine.
Are you in null-Space?
I-it is called Track, is it not?
Yoelin drew a wrist across her forehead. Obtaining information from Boteva was like using a gaff to beach a whale.
All right, then,
she said. You’re safe for now. They can’t get to you in N-space. What’s the name of your ship?
"Is the Birchfeld. And—"
At the name, Yoelin shot to her feet, heart pounding. She leaned over the table, arms locked and braced, and stared hard into the Palmetto. Air clumped inside her lungs, refusing to allow respiration. Her ribs began to ache. She was about to speak when the woman added, And he is aboard with me. I implore you, save him.
Yoelin’s mouth worked. Him? Who are you talking about?
Little Pavel. Please, he only is three years old. We have nowhere else to go, we—
Oh, ye gods,
breathed Yoelin.
002: Refugees
Yoelin took three meditative gulps of air through her nose, exhaling each of them through her mouth, as the Reiki Master had taught her. By the time of the third’s departure, she had calmed herself, slowing her heart back down to its customary fifty-two a minute. A plan coalesced, sketchy but workable. She gave voice to it.
Reset your course for Havelox Rest,
she instructed. "The Port Authority will provide your ship’s computer with downdock instructions and coordinates. In the meantime, turn off the Birchfeld’s transponder."
Briefly Yoelin explained how to do that. Rather to her surprise, Boteva seemed to understand, but looked uncertain. Is legal?
she asked.
Survival trumps regulations,
she answered firmly. If you turn it off, whoever is chasing you cannot track you. Do you need any medical assistance?
Boteva shook her head. No, we all right. Just-just frightened.
You are safe in Track,
Yoelin told her. "And you will be safe here. Have you reset the