Chapters 1. Joa 2. Ivan 3. Gregory Joa sits, waiting, nervous. The Mistress has summoned her, and her research is not yet complete. Unless, of course, she's been summoned for something she's done wrong, some matter of dissatisfaction. In which case, this can end in pain and blood. She's seen that happen. But rightfully. Rightfully! The Great Mission, she knows, is paramount. She joined it willingly, she knows for what they fight. All too painfully she knows. The chaos, the pain, the hatred, the false -- She closes her eyes. This is important. I must not fail. I must not. "Ms Nyobé." Joa's eyes snap open. She tries to get to her feet, an automatic reaction, but the table of the booth restrains her. "Mistress --" The Mistress gives her a look. "Oh!" Joa feels her face get hot. "Miss. Ma'am. I --" "My error," the Mistress says. "I should have used your first name." An error? Joa blinks. "And I yours, A--" "Alice Chan," the Mistress says. "Alice ... Chan." Joa slips out of the booth. "Alice. Its good to see you again." The casual English come naturally from her now, after a decade in the States, even if she still has the accent of her native Fulfulde, overlain with some French (never English!) learned as a child. "And you, Joa." She holds up a plate with a quartet of cookies. "They have good baked goods here, I'm told." The Mistress -- Alice -- gestures, and Joa slides into the seat, the other following suit. "I have a coffee ordered," Alice tells her. "Did you want anything?" "The coffee here is --" Joa pauses. "We have limited resources, and do not spend them on coffee in places such as this." Alice makes a face. "Yeah -- I understand." She smiles. "You're wise with the the resources you have. I approve." "All is for the Great Mission. Any surplus of what we earn to our expenses goes to a reserve for that purpose." Alice nods, her expression serious. "The purpose of the Great Mission is the happiness and fulfillment of all, beyond the artifice of money and the control of soul-crushing orders from supposed betters." A half-smile, then. "It's all right to occasionally indulge in something that brings you joy." Joa furrows her brow. "I -- the goals of the Great Mission are wise, of course, but to celebrate before it is achieved is an indulgence that --" "Discipline is important, but a system with no relief valve is unreliable and cannot be trusted." Joa nods. She thinks of life before she entered the service of the Master, the small joys and happinesses of that time. How they came to an end. "As you say, M-- Alice." Alice takes a bite of the cookie, cocks her head. "I believe they make these here, though the dough comes from an outside source. The health risks of the additives are negligible, probably less than from the refined sugar and flour in use. But, for the moment, please, enjoy." Joa nods. Thoughts of the old times disturb her, and she remembers a blessing her father used to say over food at the table. She banishes it from her mind; the Mistress would righteously strike her down for such sentimental religiosity. "How are things going at the store, Joa?" She smiles. "Well, Alice, quite well. We have improved operational efficiency by 12.3%. The other employees there have adopted the changes with little resistance. I have submitted to the FedEx corporate headquarters recommendations around the most significant improvements, so that they may be used elsewhere." The smile grows larger. "I have been told that I will receive one of the monthly commendations for one of them." Alice arches an eyebrow. "That seems positively corporatist of you, Joa." Catecholamines shoots through her system, filling her mind with panic. She restrains herself from fleeing, or from groveling for forgiveness, but sits shock-still, unable to speak. The Mistress frowns. "That was a complement, not a critique, Joa. Blending in, establishing credibility, increasing the financial resources you glean from the oligarchs -- those are all good things for the Great Mission." Relief floods through her, as abrupt as the panic had. Joa nods. "Thank you -- Alice." "And the trail?" "I have removed or damanged most of the records and information that helped us find you. Other elements remain in play, but scattered. I am working on them." "And your other assignment ?" "I -- I have data, but no analysis as of yet. The dataset remains small for the addresses you provided, so no patterns can be provided with confidence." Alice nods. "Good. I would worry if you were too quick to find a pattern." "There are some odd correlations, but outside of normal analytical rigor. If this is an emergency --" She holds up some fingers from where her hand sits ont he table. "Take your time, Joa. It is better that your analysis be correct than that it be overly-swift." "Yes, Alice." Alice frowns, and Joa realizes that her response was too formal in tone. She might as well have said "Mistress" or "Ma'am" as the cover name the Mistress is using. She tries again, letting her voice be as casual as possible. "Yes ... thanks." That draws a smile. Then, "How are the others doing?" Joa tenses. She had feared this was coming. Speak with confidence. "Ivan is working hard. He is most efficient, and has taken point on the management of our apartment. He --" She pauses, then continues, "-- he is an excellent cook. We do not indulge in valueless consumption of food, but he is skilled at taking staples, plus spices and cooking techniques, and making them quite tasty." "Better than ration packs, I'd guess." "Much so!" "And that is what I spoke of when I talked about allowing some joy into your life. Ascetic discipline would call for you to eat the most flavorless food, lest you be seduced by flavor into indulgence and gluttony. A wise discipline allows for some pleasure amidst self-control." That actually makes some sense, and Joa is about to comment when the young man at the counter calls out Alice's name. "Can I get you something?" she asks Joa. Joa hesitates, then, "Black tea, if you would." Alice smiles. "I'll be right back." Joa sits at the table, quietly, nibbling her cookie. She ponders the similarities and differences between the Mistress and her father before her. She encountered Dr. Achilles Chin in person twice in her life -- the first time, when she was saved, and the second time, shortly before his death, when he staged his operation out of the Arlington Cell. On that first occasion, she could only remember his power, his kindness, his determination. On the second -- He is a great man. Was a great man, gone to his reward. His devotion to the Great Mission explains much, justifies much. She bows her head. The Mistress appears more like that first encounter. Do the seeds of the second rest within her as well? She glances over to the counter. The Mistress is gesturing sharply with a pointed finger at the person working the counter. Joa cannot hear her voice, nor see her face, but the young man -- tall, gangly, ginger -- looks pale. He rushes over to the back counter, busying himself with, it looks like, Joa's tea. Joa flushes. There is a line of people behind the Mistress. Joa would not have queue jumped in such a fashion; that the Mistress would makes her feel ... uncomfortable. In a few moments, the Mistress -- Alice -- is walking back with a tray bearing both her own coffee and what must be Joa's tea. She hands the cup, a tea bag dangling in it, over to Joa. "Here you are. Sorry, it's in a tea bag." "Thank you. You needn't have troubled yourself." "Nonsense. I take care of my own." Joa bows her head. "So, Ivan is doing well. What of Gregory?" This is the part where Joa knows she must tread carefully. After what happened to Enrico -- "Gregory is a diligent and hard worker," she replies. "He applies himself to our mission, often manning the front desk during our shift. His work allows me to use the computer systems at the store in service of your assignment -- Alice." Alice takes a sip of her coffee -- black, Joa notices -- and nods. She looks serious. "And outside of work?" "He -- labors hard at our apartment, keeping everything tidy, making sure that all chores are done." She shrugs. "He's our Fourth, but the work assignments are fair and he pitches in willingly for his part." "Is he happy with your assignment?" Joa stops her nibbling for a moment, then covers that by setting the cookie down and picking up the tea, taking a sip. It burns her tongue, but that's necessary. "He is eager for action. As are we all. Until then, we await your orders." Alice raises an eyebrow. Joa has seen that expression on her father's face, in person and on the viewscreen. "M-- Alice, it is not my place to question my Fourth." Her face softens slightly. "Joa," she says. Her hand makes a slight movement, as if abortively reaching out to touch hers, but that would be far too scandalous, and if that is her intent, Joa is glad she changes her mind. "Your loyalty does you credit, and I will not ask you to test your faith and friendship in Gregory, with your Fourth, against that which you owe to me." That stings. Her loyalty to her Mistress should be paramount. That is the fourth tenet of the Great Mission, is it not? But ... Joa realizes with a small jolt that Alice has cut to the heart of the matter. Greg has been there for her and Ivan -- protected her, seen that she had food and shelter (and though sometimes both were scant, he shared and shared alike). And she knows, she's seen -- the Master's cause attracted those who were cast out of normal society, sometimes for their poverty and politics, sometimes for their ability to fit in -- and there were many cases where their fervor, their zeal, even their madness, made them brutal and erratic masters of their own parts of the Mission. But Grego has none of that -- yes, a temper, to be sure, a willingness to violence at times that Joa both shrinks from and feels guilty at her fear in the face of his true belief. But he can be kind, companionable -- he even has a finely honed humor that rarely comes out but which has lifted their spirits in their darkest hours. (She puts aside in her mind what had happened to Gene, the erstwhile traitor in their refugee group. Gregory acted with firmness and dispatch, and could have rightfully punished him far worse before ending his life.) That is an immediate loyalty. She knows Greg, knows him as her personal leader, comrade-in-arms, even friend (within the bonds of discipline), for the past few years of desperation. She cannot betray him. But she owes so much to the Great Mission as well -- a sworn oath of loyalty for her rescue, of course, and of fealty to the man who led it, and to the cause which burns as a fire in her heart. The Mistress is the Master's heir, and hads shown in turn a loyalty to her people that cannot but help influence her. She cannot betray Alice, but -- She hasn't realized this challenge even existed. Now that she does -- Joa takes a deep breath. "Greg is a loyal soldier to the Great Mission, Alice. He has proven himself again and again." Alice smiles, though it is not a joyful expression. Again, she has seen that face on the Master as well. "Joa, you are one of my intelligence gathering and analysis experts. You, above all others, known the importance of complete information in making an assessment. I did not question Gregory's loyalty or devotion to the cause -- or to me --" Alice pauses there just a moment, then continues. "-- but whether he is happy. Is he driven solely by duty, or is he finding fulfillment in the mission given to him at this time." "Are happiness and fulfillment important?" Alice cocks her head slightly, then leans forward, and when she speaks, her voice is low and intent, her eyes drilling into Joa so that she cannot look away. "Remember, what we do is not for some faceless cause, some abstract call to duty. The Great Mission -- when we forget about the individuals for whom we fight, their particular happiness and fulfillment, then we treat them as soulless machines, faceless, even disposable, the same way the oligarchy and power structure see them. We become no better than that which we will overturn." She drums her fingers on the table. "But that also includes those who fight for the cause." Joa draws back a bit from that intense gaze, but does not break from it. "We sacrifice all for --" "-- for the Mission. Yes, I've heard the mantra." Joa can hear anger behind those words. "And each of us is called to do so, in small ways and great. But that doesn't mean we should seek out misery, or expect mindless drudgery in duty, or simple obedience. We are not robots, none of us. The whole cannot be great if the individual parts are not, if they are malnourished in body or in spirit. Seeking happiness is not an indulgence: it is a way to grow strong, better able to fulfill the Great Mission." Joa nods slowly. That all makes a strange sense, even if I cannot imagine the Master saying such words. But from the Mistress, here, now, it makes sense. "I -- yes, I believe I understand." Alice smiles, a wry twist to her lips. "It's an easy lesson to give, not so much to follow. Believe me, I do know." Joa returns the smile, though not sure why. It is a lesson she has had to fight with, I can tell. The Mistress is human, even if touched with the divine. That is -- something for me to remember. It makes her seem both lesser and greater. Her tongue touches her upper lip, then she says, "Gregory -- is not happy. He burns to act. He has been focused on finding you, to rejoin the cause, but now that he has, he aches for more direct action. He is frustrated, and that frustration ..." She trails off. Alice's smile thins. "As I thought." At Joa's attempt to speak again, to defend her Fourth, Alice holds up a hand. "I do not count that against him. He is a warrior. Give him a warrior's assignment and he is focused. Take that from him, and he is restless, looking to strike out at something." She snorts, again an oddly human expression. "I know the feeling." Alice leans back. "I'll need to find a way to better direct him. Meanwhile, Joa, I have a favor to ask of you." "Of course!" "I need you to keep an eye on him. Not --" She holds up a hand again. "-- spy on him, or plot any action to his detriment. Just -- if you can soothe his urge to war before the time is right, that would be of help." "I have. I've tried to urge patience." A smile. "Good. Excellent. You are a voice of reason, something that should help him. But -- if he seems to be planning something -- contact me." "Mistress?" An eyebrow. She feels her cheeks warm again. Conne ! It's difficult to fight against the customs of over a decade. "Alice. I --" "Take no action. Just contact me. I -- need to have a meeting like this with him, but that may take some time. If he is about to act precipitously, I need you to let me know, so that -- so that the Mission is not endangered, or the other threads I have built for the right moment are not disrupted." This time she does reach out, put her hands on Joa's where they are rested on the table. "Can you do that? For me?" "It would -- it would be an honor. Alice." A slight squeeze -- Alice's hands are warm, strong -- and she releases Joa. "Good." Her eyes flicker to the side. "I need to go." She takes a last sip of coffee. "I am well-pleased with you, with all of you, Joa. What you are doing is important, and your devotion to the Great Mission is clear." "And to you -- Alice." Something else flickers across the Mistress' face, too fast to recognize. She merely nods, shoots her with finger pistols (!), and slides out of the booth. "We'll talk again soon, Joa. Thank you." Then she's gone. Joa leans back and sips her tea, which has gone cold. The Mistress -- Alice -- is very different from her father. Younger. More human. More approachable. Even more caring. Her words are at variance with those of the Great Mission, but not in spirit, at least not as she explains it . She closes her eyes. One similarity remains. I would die for her. I would not be happy to give up my life, but she would be a worthy cause for it, no matter what doubts Greg has. Joa gets out of the booth, carefully counts out some change to leave on the table, and leaves. [to be continued] #Cutscene