The Assassination of Billy Jeeling Read online




  THE ASSASSINATION OF BILLY JEELING

  by

  BRIAN HERBERT

  Produced by ReAnimus Press

  Other books by Brian Herbert:

  The Unborn

  © 2018 by DreamStar, Inc.. All rights reserved.

  http://ReAnimus.com/store?author=brianherbert

  Cover Art by Clay Hagebusch

  Smashwords Edition License Notes

  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 purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  ~~~

  This book is for Jan, the most complex and interesting woman I have ever met.

  I have loved you since the summer I met you in California, when you were 16, and I was 17.

  ~~~

  Table of Contents

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  CHAPTER 29

  CHAPTER 30

  CHAPTER 31

  CHAPTER 32

  CHAPTER 33

  CHAPTER 34

  CHAPTER 35

  CHAPTER 36

  CHAPTER 37

  CHAPTER 38

  CHAPTER 39

  CHAPTER 40

  CHAPTER 41

  CHAPTER 42

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  CHAPTER 1

  He’s the most famous man in history, and the most misunderstood.

  —B. Villison, The Sky Monarch (unauthorized biography)

  High above AmEarth, an immense gold and silver craft flew on one of its regular rounds, as it had been doing for years. Skyship was legendary. The air-cleansing and restoration station—in the shape of an oblate spheroid—was almost fifteen kilometers long, and rose four thousand meters from its main level to the glittering domes on top, and the pinnacle that rose above them. It formed the nucleus of the largest geoengineering project in the history of mankind.

  The solar-powered ship was also a flying city, with a human population of more than 100,000, and even more robots—mechanical sentients who performed a wide range of duties, including most of the police and security work, and the piloting of small onboard aircraft.

  On the command bridge, beneath the forward dome, a crippled black man sat on his custom maglev chair. He gazed out on mists of purple gas emitted by onboard generators, and at a steady stream of small orbs that exited the enormous vessel, a fleet of skyminers assigned to vacuum pollutants, gases, and specific compounds from various grids of the atmosphere and accumulate them in inflatable tank-trailers, to be loaded aboard the massive mother ship when full.

  More than seventy years old now, Billy Jeeling was the heroic, celebrated figure who had saved hundreds of millions of lives with his incredible technology—keeping people from dying of melanoma, emphysema, lung cancer, and a whole host of other ailments—all caused by UV damage to their skin and by inhaling polluted, carcinogenic air. He had dramatically reduced the acid rain that had caused so much damage to classic buildings and sculptures, and had improved the climate by controlling CO2, thus slowing the rise of oceans and climate change caused by higher global temperatures. Through his many efforts he had made the atmosphere cleaner all over the world, allowing humans and other life forms to breathe easier, and to see more clearly through the air, without harmful smog and other airborne particulates.

  This afternoon Billy had a lot on his mind, more than the slight vibration he felt in the deck or the faint odor of ozone gas that he detected—matters that only required minor adjustments by the vessel’s technicians—alterations that were underway at this moment, according to the instrument readings on the console in front of him. Ozone was only one of the ingredients in the secret gas mixture emitted by the great craft, and was the key to one of his most widely heralded accomplishments. With Skyship’s hidden technology, Billy Jeeling had repaired ozone holes all over the world, including the largest one over Antarctica.

  The gigantic vessel was more than an air-cleansing and restoration station, and much more than even Billy himself could ascertain—many of its operations were mysterious even to him. He was constantly discovering new things about its ability to purify the atmosphere, surprising and impressive features. If anyone ever learned how limited his knowledge really was, they would ask how this could possibly be the case, when he had directed the construction of the great ship and was supposed to know everything about it. But during the long years of fabrication and testing he had only followed the secret, detailed instructions of the late genius, Branson Tobek.

  A highly unusual man, Tobek had worshiped Jesus Christ in his own way, without most of the trappings of organized religion—he never attended church services or adhered to any formal Christian belief. Yet he professed to be a follower of the peaceful ways of the Messiah, and had even designed a huge symbol to honor Jesus into the construction of Skyship—a high walkway and maglev track in the shape of a Christian cross, beneath clear domes arranged in the same shape. When the lights of the cross were activated and illumination was cast into the domes, anyone above the great ship—presumably including God himself—could see the glowing emblem in the heavens.

  Brilliant and reclusive, the great scientist had not sought any credit for his fantastic invention. Above all else, Tobek had wanted Skyship to clean the air efficiently, for the benefit of AmEarth and its billions of inhabitants—and he’d insisted that Billy receive all of the recognition for this. So, the old man had remained in his hidden laboratories—first on AmEarth and later on Skyship itself—passing technical instructions on to Billy for implementation with workmen and the crew, and having Billy sign all government contracts.

  Then came Tobek’s strange and disturbing death—a tragic loss that Billy concealed, never revealing it to anyone but his most trusted robots. Nor had he ever mentioned the name of the great man to any living person; it was as if he had never existed. And that was the exactly the way Tobek had wanted it.

  Hearing a voice behind him, Billy turned his chair and watched a slender woman approaching, carrying an envelope in one hand. Appearing to be around thirty, Lainey Forster was a light-skinned Caucasian woman, with short auburn hair and a graceful way of moving, like a ballet dancer. Her neck was long and swanlike—which fit her movements. She wore a dark gray uniform with silver buttons; the clear-blue-sky insignia of Skyship adorned her lapel. She had large hazel eyes, very pretty and inquisitive.

  Lainey was the Employment Manager of Skyship, and Billy had also made her his Director of Public Relations, assigned to deal with problems that had surfaced in recent months, huge public demonstrations against him on AmEarth. Some people down there were inciting the population by spreading false information about him, attempting to ruin his reputation, though he’d tried to put it out of his mind, and let her handle it.

&
nbsp; She leaned down and kissed him on the mouth. Her lips were warm and pleasantly moist. “How are you feeling today?” she asked. “Any pain in the stumps of your legs?”

  “No discomfort, I’m doing much better. Dr. Ginsberg adjusted my med implant.”

  She smiled warmly. “Good.”

  Billy cared deeply for Lainey, but there were things even she did not know, and he could never tell her.

  Despite the fact that Billy was a paraplegic without legs, he and Lainey made love often. He had been injured during one of the construction phases of Skyship, in an explosion of the secret gas formula—an event that caused only limited damage to the ship (due to containment procedures), but had a much more serious, disastrous effect on his legs, which had to be amputated. Nonetheless, Billy was a persistent man, and had resumed work in only a few weeks—aided by a high-speed maglev chair that carried him around the interior of Skyship. He preferred it to wearing prosthetics, which he found uncomfortable.

  Before the accident, Tobek had already designed a high-speed maglev system into the ship—using technology that was usually reserved for long-distance train travel on AmEarth. Its customized Skyship version proved to be highly efficient—and accommodated Billy’s maglev chair without the necessity of a passenger pod, because the chair had built-in features that provided him with the necessary protection against g-forces. Billy had designed the chair himself, customizing it to fit into Tobek’s onboard transportation system.

  Now Lainey took on a serious expression, and her eyes narrowed. She handed him the envelope.

  “I printed this without reading the contents,” she said. “It’s marked urgent, and for your eyes only.”

  He opened the envelope and read the confidential letter, which was from Renaldo Yhatt, the Prime Minister of AmEarth’s one-world government. At one time Billy and Yhatt’s maternal uncle—Princeton Kelly—had been close, when Kelly was Prime Minister himself, serving for two terms. The men had reached agreement about the operation of Skyship and the payment to Billy Jeeling of billions of amdollars each year—they’d even gone on vacation together to Europaea. The old man was still alive, but in recent months their relationship had been strained, ever since the bizarre and unfounded public demonstrations began. And lately, Billy had been feeling increasingly estranged, from not only the Kellys and the Yhatts, but from many other wealthy and influential people he’d known in the past.

  Balling up the letter, he tossed it into a trash recycler, heard the brief whir of machinery as it dissolved the paper.

  “What is it?” she asked.

  “Now the bastard wants me to resign, ‘for the good of the AmEarth Empire.’ He says I’ve been up here too long, that I’ve outlived my welcome and should allow others to take my place, that the care of the atmosphere shouldn’t be anyone’s private reserve. He wants me to turn over all operating instructions for Skyship to a government agency, so it can take over.”

  “I was afraid of that. The demonstrations are spreading to every major city, and are becoming more raucous. We tried to counter them with the public relations materials you authorized—but as I told you earlier, a more aggressive counter-attack program is needed. Much more aggressive.”

  “After all I’ve done for AmEarth, they want me to resign?”

  “Your detractors are saying your fleet of skyminers is sucking billions of ambucks worth of elements out of the sky, and you’re selling them for huge profits.”

  “What a lie! Many of those elements are ingredients in my secret gas formula, while other ingredients are segregated and sold to private businesses, admittedly—but we use all the profits solely for Skyship operation, not to dress me in silks and gold, not to pamper me with lavish banquets and dancing girls. They criticize me for being a good businessman? It’s character assassination, pure and simple.”

  “It’s outrageous, no question about it.”

  “I wish I’d never become famous.”

  For years, Billy had enjoyed the adulation he’d received, and he had deserved some of it, for contributing his efforts to the construction, and for designing most of the robots and computer systems on the station—features that were beneficial to the operations of Skyship, and to its security. But Billy didn’t deserve all of the accolades—and this wore on his conscience. Still, he had given his word to Tobek that the truth would never come out.

  And now, in view of the mounting criticisms against Billy, he could never admit anything. If he did, the furor would only increase.

  Secrets. They were double-edged, depending upon who knew them and who did not. In the case of Billy Jeeling’s monopoly on worldwide atmospheric repairs and the mining of the air, his technologies and chemical formulas were extremely valuable. The gas emitted by Skyship was a complex mixture containing ozone as well as cleansing agents to scrub CO2, methane, industrial gases, and other harmful ingredients from the atmosphere. The formula even had bonding and disintegration agents, and scramblers to keep any outsider from unraveling it—a formula that Billy knew, but only to a limited extent. He knew what Tobek had called “the initial stage” of the formula, and that initial stage, in its gaseous form, had to be loaded into Skyship’s distribution machinery, to be further refined through arcane, automatic processes, and then fired into the atmosphere through large nozzles on the hull of the craft.

  There were other Skyship secrets that Billy didn’t know, too—kept from him intentionally by Tobek—and they were proving to be troubling, and potentially embarrassing.

  Problems on top of problems.

  For one thing the huge craft, ostensibly under his control, had a way of mysteriously going onto automatic navigation programs. Much of the time Billy had control over where to go in the sky and in low planetary orbit, but if he forgot an area of the atmosphere that needed to be processed (or didn’t know about it), the ship would make up for this—and later would return the controls to him when the task was completed. All the time, Billy, like a lip-syncher trying to give the impression that he was singing a song, attempted to act as if he were fully in charge.

  “What would happen,” Billy now asked Lainey, “if I decided to disband the operations of Skyship and dismantle the whole thing, or mothball it? Sure, ozone-destroying CFC... chlorofluorocarbon... gas releases are down substantially in advanced provinces like AmEastica, and that helps the ozone layer. There are new industrial and vehicle emissions standards that are helping CO2 levels, too. But the underdeveloped provinces don’t understand clean-air technology. They’re way out of control, misusing industrial solvents, synthetic foams, cooling fluids, insulation, and halocarbons, flooding the atmosphere with inert chemicals. In the ozonosphere, those discharges break down in sunlight, creating chlorine atoms and other elements harmful to O3 molecules. And that’s just the ozone portion of the problem—I could go on and on about the rest of it—the burning of fossil fuels, causing air that is still so thick in some part of the world that you could chew it.”

  “Right, Billy.”

  He knew she had heard this before. Lainey probably thought he was addicted to repeating it, not seeming to recall the last time he’d said it, or to whom. She had made comments suggesting his short-term memory might be failing with advancing age, and one of the companion symptoms was that he could still recall details from decades ago with remarkable clarity, but not recent events. As if she were a clinical expert! Sometimes, she could be quite irritating.

  “If I bail out of this operation, the damned atmosphere is going to hell in a hand-cart. That’s worse than a hand-basket, much faster.” He smiled, but didn’t intend to be funny. It was more of a rueful smile, tinged with anger.

  “Right, Billy.” By her subdued tone and words, it was obvious to him that she was trying to calm him down. But he didn’t want to calm down. This was upsetting to him, damned upsetting.

  He glanced at his smart watch, depressed the crystal, illuminating its small screen. “Forty-five point seven-eight kilometers above AmEarth at this moment,” he said. �
��You know, there’s important work to be done here, and we don’t have time to lobby for popularity. Let ‘em stew. I do as I please, and it’s for the good of the people, whether they know it or not.”

  He heard loud alarm klaxons and saw a small flying wing outside the window, a flash of silver emerging from the mists of purple gas. The wing looped and went back into the proprietary gas, scooping samples from high concentrations in an effort to collect the formula before it dissipated into the atmosphere, and then take it somewhere for analysis. He didn’t see a pilot, assumed it must be remote-operated.

  This had been attempted before, with a variety of intruding craft—and it didn’t really matter if they took samples, because the formula had scrambling safeguards to prevent it from being identified and recreated by any outsider. The ingredients could not even be penetrated by spectral analysis, nor by any other known method. This was one of the scientific matters that Tobek had explained to him, and Billy understood some of it, enough to reassure him, to a degree. But Billy didn’t like intruders coming this close and bothering him—and besides, some smart scientist might figure out how to get around the safeguards if he ever got ahold of a more concentrated sample.

  “Ready to fire in seven seconds unless you countermand,” a voice said over the onboard tele-speakers. It was one of his men at the defensive guns that bristled all over the hull of Skyship.

  Billy didn’t respond.

  A white-hot laser light reached out from Skyship, like a living appendage of the immense craft, and placed the touch of death on the flying wing. Seconds later, the intruder craft exploded with only a little noise reaching Billy’s ears, scattering debris harmlessly in the stratosphere.

  “Just a typical day,” Billy said, nodding to Lainey. “See you at dinner this evening.”

  He touched a button on the control console of his high-tech chair, causing a wall to iris open on his left. The chair whirled around to face the opening, and a clearplaz protective cocoon surrounded Billy. He moved a control toggle, and the chair zipped on a cushion of air through the opening, onto a sidetrack that led to a high-speed maglev guideway that connected his work stations, apartment, and other locations around the vast interior of the ship.