Man-Kzin - Man-Kzin Wars 09 - Man-Kzin Wars IX 3-Windows of the Soul # Paul Chafe.txt

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Windows Of The Soul 
Paul Chafe 


This is a work of fiction. All the characters and 
events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any 
resemblance to real people or incidents is purely 
coincidental. 


Copyright (c) 2002 by Larry Niven 


All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce 
this book or portions thereof in any form. 


A Baen Books Original 


Baen Publishing Enterprises 


P.O. Box 1403 
Riverdale, NY 10471 
www.baen.com 
ISBN: 0-671-31838-1 


Cover art by Stephen Hickman 


First printing, January 2002 
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data 


Niven, Larry. 
Man-Kzin wars IX / created by Larry Niven. 


p. cm. 
ISBN 0-671-31838-1 
1. Life on other planets-Fiction. 2. Space 
warefare-Fiction. 3. Animals-
Fiction. I. Title: Man-Kzin wars 9. II. Man-Kzin wars 
Nine. 
PS3564.I9 M36 2002 
813'.54-dc21 2001043635 
Distributed by Simon & Schuster 
1230 Avenue of the Americas 
New York, NY 10020 
Production by Windhaven Press, Auburn, NH 



Printed in the United States of America 
Windows Of The Soul 
Paul Chafe 


For Christian, with love 


Transport tunnel nineteen is one of thirty-two that 
run the fifty-kilometer length of Tiamat's axis to 
link the docking hubs. Normally it's full of 
twenty-meter cargo containers, gliding in virtual 
weightlessness. Last night a roller jammed in section 
A near the down-axis hub. The Port Authority shut the 
tunnel down and sent in a tech. The problem was a 
body. That's when I got involved. Pathology said it 
had been there nine days and the Scene Team had all 
the evidence. There was no reason to go down there 
myself, but I did. You can't get a handle on a crime 
if you don't get on the scene. I wished I hadn't. 
The body was M18JSK98-Miranda Holtzman, nineteen 
standard years old, engineering student at the 
Centaurus Center for Advanced Studies. Her dossier 
holo showed sparkling blue eyes and brown-gold hair. 
She was a Wunderlander, just arrived in the Swarm on 
a work-study deal with a spun metal fabricator called 
Trist Materials. Good looking, smart and last seen 
alive at a bounce-bar called the Inferno. She'd 
arrived with friends and left with a stranger. The 
witnesses agreed on dark hair and a Wunderlander 
build but little else. A movement trace came up 
blank. After she left the Inferno, she hadn't thumbed 
a single scanner-and on Tiamat that takes some 
effort. That was nine days ago. Pathology had it 
right on the money. 
We identified her through her on-file gene scans so 
her next of kin didn't have to. That was a good 
thing. She'd been badly mauled in jamming the track 
rollers, but that wasn't the worst of it. She was 
slashed open from throat to groin and eviscerated, 
her skin was flayed off and her limbs were missing. 
Her empty eye sockets stared at nothing. The coroner 
listed cause of death as "unknown." There wasn't 
enough left to tell. 
Now you know why I wished I hadn't looked. 



* * * 
I tubed over to Trist Materials. They were closing 
down early, hampered by a swarm of Goldskin 
investigators. I grabbed the top cop. "Captain 
Allson, ARM." 
"How can I help you?" He looked harried. 
"I'm looking for the primary witnesses." 
He pointed out the couple to me. They were sitting on 
a couch in the reception area holding each other. 
Tanya's face was drawn and pale, she'd been crying 
recently. Jayce looked sombre. 
"You got somewhere I can hold an interview?" 
"We have their statements." 
"That's not what I asked." He looked sour. ARM 
outranks the Goldskins, but they don't like it. He 
beckoned over a uniform to set me up with some cubic. 
I called up their dossiers on my beltcomp. It helps 
to know who you're talking to. 
PCL9C3N4-Koffman, Tanya C., 24. Born Tiamat Station. 
Graduate Serpent Swarm Technical Institute. Physical 
engineer for Trist. Unmarried. Holder of a 
non-current belt navigation certificate rated for 
polarizers and fusion. No outstanding warrants, no 
criminal record. 
BG309003-Vorden, Jayce I. F., 23. Born Tiamat 
Station. Also an SSTI graduate and Trist's Compsys 
specialist. Unmarried. No warrants but he had a 
record, two hits, public mischief. I tabbed the entry 
for the details. University pranks. He'd hacked in to 
the scoreboard during a championship skyball game and 
displayed insults for the rival team. Acquitted with 
a warning. Another time he'd gained access to the 
transit system and given himself priority routing and 
children's fare. Charged double back payments on his 
fares and five hundred hours community service. That 
was three years ago-he'd been clean ever since. 
On a hunch, I punched up my desk from the beltcomp 
and did quick movement trace. Multiple hits-the 
pattern was clear. Jayce and Tanya traveled as a 
couple, starting three months ago. I scanned forward 
and found trouble in paradise-ten days with no 
visits. I called up the comm logs for the period. A 
few calls, all very short, then a long one. Right 



after that, the visits started again. They'd fought 
and made up. The fight started a week after Miranda 
arrived and she'd gone missing the day they got 
together again. I called up her comm logs and found 
long calls to both of them, starting her first day on 
station. 
The facts suggested a scenario. Jayce and Tanya have 
a good thing going, then pretty Miranda shows up and 
gets in the middle. A week later they sort out the 
triangle and go out for a no-hard-feelings party, 
which goes bad. Someone kills Miranda and the other 
gets involved. They make up the dark Wunderlander as 
cover. It wasn't a perfect theory, but it was a start. 
I stuck my head out the door and called Jayce over. 
He was tall and slender with dark hair and eyes and a 
Flatlander's blended facial features. I tapped record 
on my beltcomp and began. 
"What can you tell me about the night Miranda 
disappeared?" 
He shrugged. "There just isn't that much to tell. We 
went to the Inferno after work like we always did. 
She was dancing with this Wunderlander. After a while 
they left together." 
"By 'we' you mean Miranda and you?" 
"Miranda, Tay and I." He was perfectly comfortable 
with his answer. 
"You and Miss Koffman have been seeing each other for 
some time, is that correct?" 
"Yes." 
"I understand you and she had a serious argument a 
couple of weeks ago." I stated it as a fact. 
He was taken aback. "What do you mean? 
I kept pushing. "I mean that Miranda Holtzman 
precipitated a rift in your relationship. That gives 
you a motive for murder." 
The shock he displayed was genuine. I just didn't 
know if it was due to hidden guilt or injured 
innocence. 
"What was your relationship with her?" 
"She was our friend, that's all." 
"You didn't have an affair with Miranda which brought 
on a fight with Tay?" 
"No." 



"Why did you go to the Inferno that night?" 
"We just did. It wasn't unusual, we went fairly 
often." 
"The three of you." 
"Yes." 
"Did anyone else go with you?" 
"There's a bunch of us who sometimes go out, friends 
of ours, but they didn't come that night." 
"Why not?" 
"I don't know, just busy I guess." He looked stricken 
as he said it. He felt he was digging himself in 
deeper with every word. 
"So there's no one who can corroborate your story 
that she left before you." 
"Tanya can." 
I waved a hand dismissively. "Anyone else?" 
"Maybe the bartender." 
"But you don't know for sure." 
He put his head in his hands. "No." 
I changed tack. "What about this man she left with?" 
He seized the question like a drowning man grabbing a 
straw. If I was asking it, I must believe his story. 
"He was a Wunderlander, thick dark hair. He had a 
glowflow bodysuit, set to rainbow smears." 
"Had you seen him before?" 
"Not that I recall." 
"Do you think he knew Miranda or that she knew him?" 
He was anguished. "I don't know, I wish I did. We 
just didn't know what was happening." Then, almost to 
himself, he repeated, "We just didn't know." 
He was devastated by the sudden loss. Perhaps he 
hadn't known Miranda that well but he'd been with her 
the night she was killed. It wasn't his fault but he 
felt responsible anyway. Survivor's guilt-or simple 
guilt. Either way, I wasn't going to learn anything 
more. The Goldskins would go over his statement and 
cross-check for inconsistencies. I just wanted a read 
on the first-pass prime suspects. 
"You can go now, Mr. Vorden." 
"What?" He'd sunken into a reverie while I pondered. 
"You're done. Thank you for your help." 
"Oh." He seemed bemused for a couple of seconds, then 
gathered himself. "Good luck, Captain." 



"Thanks," I said, and I meant it. I hoped he did too. 
After he left, I punched my beltcomp's audio log 
through to my desk. I've got a program that analyzes 
voice microtremors-sometimes it even works. My system 
told me that Jayce was telling the truth-mostly. He 
was hiding something about his relationship with 
Miranda. That concurred with my theory. There had 
been infidelity, a fight, a murder. I just needed the 
link. 
I had Tanya sent in. She was petite for a Belter-my 
height. Her eyes were red and she dabbed at them with 
a handkerchief. In other circumstances she would be 
pretty. 
"Come in, Miss Koffman. Please sit down," I said in 
my best good-cop manner. 
She sat, giving me a forced, trembling smile. She was 
barely holding herself together. If I pushed her, 
she'd go over the edge. At times like this it's a 
judgement call. Sometimes a little nudge brings an 
easy confession, sometimes it catalyzes uncrackable 
resolve. 
And sometimes you're just adding pressure to a 
bystander a...
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